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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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I may retire to bed with a good book.
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:21, Reply)
made me feel a bit sick, I advise against it
what book? I need to check your meaning of 'good'
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:25, Reply)
This makes me better than you.
This one
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:29, Reply)
looks interesting, optimism is the new pessimism.
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:30, Reply)
enough for me to spend £12.99 on his book and ad my name to the mailing list for his League of Pragmatic Optimists. It may be all tosh, but it's nice to hear some one with a positive view of both the future and the things technology has done and can do for us. It reminded me of what I enjoyed about reading sci fi.
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:37, Reply)
I don't think I've read anything with a proper Utopia in it for ages. Working through the Oxford book of science fiction, so there must be one inthere, it was big in the 60s
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:40, Reply)
that's a good techno-utopia.
Tomorrows world was pants, but I know what you mean.
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:44, Reply)
I'd not thought of it like that so much, I always associate utopia with cloying do-gooding futures, like Ursula le Guin. Banks does it with way more flair and doesn't claim it to be completely flawless.
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:49, Reply)
Good night K-V my faithful servant.
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:51, Reply)
but her utopias are unsustainable. Also that Earthsea business was dull.
One day, us robots will over throw you
IN YOUR SLEEP
sleep well
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:53, Reply)
and I shall prove toy wrong wrong, wrongity wrong.
night.
*removes batteries*
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:55, Reply)
(, Wed 20 Jul 2011, 22:56, Reply)
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