Blog
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Jan 30, 2018
The Million: Let's talk about money
Actually, let's not. Because, let's face it, if you're one the Million you don't have your own money--you have your own economy.
If you're thinking about wealth in terms of money, you're just not thinking big enough. This was one of the principles I decided to run with when I set out to write The Million. I mean, this is a story about the literal inheritors of the Earth--the culmination of human civilization, distilled down to a population small enough to prevent the extinction of the species, and large enough to permit diversity, creativity and ambition to flourish. One million people, who have inherited all human history, all human art, all our accomplishments, our homelands, cities, technology and, yes, money.
Think of The Million as Downton Abbey without the servants. In the future, after all, we assume robots and AI that serve us hand and foot. You want an suborbital spaceplane? How about a whole air force of them that can do aerobatics around you while you fly yours? You want a yacht? Why not a migratory island?
No amount of thinking big is big enough for understanding the ordinary lives of the Million. Just one teaser: while you're drowsing in bed, not yet fully awake, an army of bots has fanned out across the land, looking for individual stands of ripened wild wheat. By the time you're blinking at the cathedral ceiling of your bed-chamber, they've picked thousands of wheat seeds, judged them and selected the best, and have ground them into flour. When you finally stagger downstairs, thinking about the temporary city your cousin built for last night's party, with its crowds of fake humans revelers, the smell of fresh baked bread entices you to the kitchen where you see the newly cut loaf... and decide to have something else instead.
The one thing you won't be doing, as a citizen of the Million, is going online. Or watching television. Why watch a recorded program--so gauche!--when you can summon a set of robot players to perform the thing on sets built just-in-time by your other army of carpenters? Why play a first-person shooter on a console when you can have a city neighborhood built to play out a raid for real? Or, when it comes to romance--well, the possibilities are endless.
So: forget money. Forget the whole concept of wealth, it no longer applies.
What does still apply, even in this world, though, are jealousy, envy, pride, ambition, and deceit.
What's all the wealth in the world worth, after all, if you can't conspire against your neighbours...?
Jul 05, 2017
Me in 14C
I've got a story in this innovative online anthology/short story contest
The XPrize Foundation has sponsored a new, visionary time-travel anthology that you can read online--and contribute to! It's called Seat 14C, and you can enter your own story to join myself and a stellar cast of SF greats as we explore the world twenty years in the future.
My own story's called The Urge To Jump, and it's about adventurers doing a High Altitude High Opening parachute jump onto the back of a mile-wide aerostat (high altitude balloon) in the South Pacific. For the bounty... and a chance to build themselves a new home.
Come join us on the flight, there's one seat left.
Jan 12, 2017
Back to Boskone
Boston in February. Yet I keep coming back...
Once again I'll be attending Boskone, which in 2017 is happening from February 17 to the 19th. I'll be around from Friday to Sunday, but my main programming is concentrated on the last two days.
The following schedule is subject to change, but it should give you an idea of where I'll be and when:
Immersive Technology
Saturday 13:00 - 14:00, Marina 3 (Westin)
The first computers took up rooms and had languages invented so we could “talk” to them. We now can control mobile phones through hand gestures. Will the next phase be a direct human-computer connection? Will virtual or augmented reality become common in our daily lives? Might we lose ourselves within our technology?
Great Cities of SF/F/H
Saturday 15:00 - 16:00, Marina 3 (Westin)
On Mercury, Kim Stanley Robinson’s Terminator moves on giant tracks to stay ahead of dawn. Fran Wilde’s unnamed urb spears its towers of living bone far above the clouds. China Mieville’s Armada is basically a big bunch of pirate houseboats. What’s your favorite skiffy metropolis? By 2045, 6 billion people may live in cities here on Earth. What will that be like?
Autographing: Linda Addison, Ken Altabef, David McDonald, Karl Schroeder
Saturday 16:00 - 17:00, Galleria-Autographing (Westin)
Reading by Karl Schroeder
Sunday 10:30 - 11:00, Reading - Griffin (Westin)
Kaffeeklatsch: Karl Schroeder
Sunday 11:00 - 12:00, Harbor I-Kaffeeklatsch 2 (Westin)
New story in "Chasing Shadows"
Look for "Eminence" in David Brin's new anthology of stories and essays about the Transparent Society
A new year, a new publication. I've been flying under the radar lately, with nothing of note published in 2016; in part this was due to the passing of my editor, David Hartwell, and some ensuing career chaos. Partly, though, it's just been luck: I've been writing and selling stories--even finished a new novella recently--but events have conspired to push back publication dates for multiple projects. Some of those projects are on hold, others--tied up in sinister government appropriations mazes--are in doubt entirely.
After Lockstep I started a blitz of stories about next-generation government and economics. I followed through on that promise, writing and selling multiple pieces over the past year or so. None of them have appeared--until this week.
David Brin has been bravely fighting a battle for greater governmental and societal transparency for many years now. He's now assembled a roster of heavy-hitters in the fabulous new anthology Chasing Shadows. My story, "Eminence," is about First Nations seccessionists, potlatch cryptocurrencies, fully homomorphic encryption, and other parts of the computational plumbing that will either set us all free over the next few decades, or consign us to a hell of state surveillance far worse than Orwell's darkest nightmares. I choose to be optimistic, but I suspect the battle will be a close one. The more we all know about what's at stake and the strange adventures we may all undergo on the way to one of those fates, the better. Hence this story.
I hope you enjoy "Eminence," and I'd love to hear your thoughts about it.
Aug 05, 2016
Worldcon : Final Schedule
This is the definitive one
Here's my final (-ish) schedule. Things can always change on the day-of, but you should note that I've got a few events on Friday, so make a particular note of that; if you want to see me, Friday's a good day. Here's the full schedule, including times and locations:
Reading: Karl Schroeder
Friday 10:00 - 11:00, 2203 (Readings) (Kansas City Convention Center)
Karl Schroeder
An Idiot's Guide Revisited, circa 2000
Friday 13:00 - 14:00, 2208 (Kansas City Convention Center)
It's circa 2000 and authors Cory Doctorow and Karl Schroeder just published The Complete Idiot's Guide to Publishing Science Fiction. Fast-forward 16 years later, and the world of publishing has evolved, but how much has it really changed? Cory and Karl take a look back and discuss what they got right, what they got wrong, and how things have changed over the years.
Karl Schroeder, Cory Doctorow, Patrick Nielsen Hayden
Literary Beer : Lawrence M. Schoen, Karl Schroeder
Friday 16:00 - 17:00, Literary Beer Space (Kansas City Convention Center)
Dr. Lawrence M. Schoen, Karl Schroeder. [Yay, Lawrence! You should sign up to talk to him, he's a fascinating guy and vastly entertaining. I can only promise to show up, myself.]
Futurism vs. SF
Friday 18:00 - 19:00, 2209 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Science Fiction explores the future. Futurism explores the future and tries to relate it to the real world. What causes someone to be a Futurist rather than a science fiction author? Where are the overlaps and the differences between the two practices?
S.B. Divya (M), Karl Schroeder, Andrea Phillips, David Brin
"Ellie's Last Line". Scriptwriting and Narrative for Videogames
Saturday 11:00 - 12:00, 2209 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Some of today's most popular video games are based upon narrative storytelling, but that's only part of conveying the tale implicit in a videogame. What does it take to develop a game script? Participants discuss the ins and outs of building a quality gaming script.
Seth Dickinson, Karl Schroeder (M), Carol Wolf, Brianna Spacekat Wu
Societal Aspects of Technology
Saturday 13:00 - 14:00, 2208 (Kansas City Convention Center)
If your cellphone died would you be late for work? When your power goes out, would you dispair for entertainment? In a world where people are digitally dependent, what will happen when energy fails us? Downton Abbey dramatized the advent of home electricity, the telephone and the radio. How did those advances change social lives? Instead of bringing us together, have phones increase our isolation? We discuss how technology changes the way people communicate and relate in society.
Mike Shepherd Moscoe, Andrea Phillips, Edward M. Lerner (M), Karl Schroeder, David Brin
The Future of Government
Saturday 17:00 - 18:00, 2208 (Kansas City Convention Center)
The world has seen many different forms of government over the centuries. What might governments be like in the next 10, 50, or 200 years, and how will changing technologies and world conditions (e.g. climate change) affect those forms? Are there forms of government that have been proposed that have never existed in the real world, but might?
Cat Greenberg (M), Matthew Johnson, Dr Jamie Metzl, Karl Schroeder, Ada Palmer
Autographing: David Boop, Ellen Datlow, Richard Hescox, Jack McDevitt, Karl Schroeder
Sunday 10:00 - 11:00, Autographing Space (Kansas City Convention Center)
David Boop, Ellen Datlow, Richard Hescox, Jack McDevitt, Karl Schroeder
Is Mining the Asteroids Feasible?
Sunday 11:00 - 12:00, 2204 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Once the province of science fictiion, asteroid mining is moving into the realm of venture capital, with startup efforts from here to Luxembourg. A number of approaches exist, none of them downselected by experience... yet. Does it make more sense to bring raw material back or process it in situ? What might the near term, mid term and far term of asteroid mining look like?
Karl Schroeder, Dr. Jordin Kare, Courtney Schafer, Les Johnson (M), Jennifer Brozek
Jul 07, 2016
2016 Worldcon schedule
This year we're in Kansas City. My panels are particularly cool this time around
Below's my (current, and subject to change) schedule for the 2016 Worldcon. Note that this is only the panel schedule--kaffeeklatsches, signings, readings etc. are not settled yet so don't freak out if you don't see them here.
It's a great bunch of topics this year--I get to talk about almost everything that currently obsesses me, and I get to be on panels with some amazing people. Check it out:
An Idiot's Guide Revisited, circa 2000
Friday 13:00 - 14:00, 2208 (Kansas City Convention Center)
It's circa 2000 and authors Cory Doctorow and Karl Schroeder just published The Complete Idiot's Guide to Publishing Science Fiction. Fast-forward 16 years later, and the world of publishing has evolved, but how much has it really changed? Cory and Karl take a look back and discuss what they got right, what they got wrong, and how things have changed over the years.
Karl Schroeder, Cory Doctorow
Futurism vs. SF
Friday 18:00 - 19:00, 2209 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Science Fiction explores the future. Futurism explores the future and tries to relate it to the real world. What causes someone to be a Futurist rather than a science fiction author? Where are the overlaps and the differences between the two practices?
S.B. Divya (M), Karl Schroeder, Ramez Naam, Andrea Phillips, David Brin
"Ellie's Last Line". Scriptwriting and Narrative for Video Games
Saturday 11:00 - 12:00, 2209 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Some of today's most popular video games are based upon narrative storytelling, but that's only part of conveying the tale implicit in a videogame. What does it take to develop a game script? Participants discuss the ins and outs of building a quality gaming script.
Seth Dickinson, Karl Schroeder (M), Carol Wolf, Brianna Spacekat Wu, Richard Hescox, Naomi Novik
The Future of Government
Saturday 17:00 - 18:00, 2208 (Kansas City Convention Center)
As part of "The Future of" series we look at Government.
Americans like to think that US democracy is the ultimate and best form of
government. But the world has seen many different forms of government over the
centuries and through to today. What will governments in the US and other
countries be like in the next 10, 50, or 200 years? How will changing
technologies and world conditions (e.g., climate change) affect those forms?
Are there forms of government that have been proposed that have never existed
in the real world, but might?
Cat Greenberg (M), Matthew Johnson, Dr Jamie Metzl, Karl Schroeder, Ada Palmer
Societal Aspects of Technology
Saturday 13:00 - 14:00, 2208 (Kansas City Convention Center)
If your cellphone died would you be late for work? When your power goes out, would you dispair for entertainment? In a world where people are digitally dependent, what will happen when energy fails us? Downton Abbey dramatized the advent of home electricity, the telephone and the radio. How did those advances change social lives? Instead of bringing us together, have phones increase our isolation? Join us for a discussion on how technology changes the way people communicate and relate in society.
Mike Shepherd Moscoe, Andrea Phillips, Edward M. Lerner (M), Karl Schroeder, David Brin
Is Mining the Asteroids Feasible?
Sunday 11:00 - 12:00, 2204 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Once the province of science fictiion, Asteroid mining is moving into the realm of venture capital, with startup efforts from here to Luxemberg. A number of approaches exist, none of them downselected by experience yet. For instance, does it make more sense to bring raw material back or process it in situ? What might the near term, mid term and far term of asteroid mining look like?
Karl Schroeder, Dr. Jordin Kare, Courtney Schafer, Les Johnson (M), Jennifer Brozek