Category Archives: Reviews

WWW:Wonder

[amazon_link id=”0441019765″ target=”_blank” ]WWW: Wonder[/amazon_link]

It’s not often that a trilogy gets better with each book, but Rob Sawyer has managed it in spades with his Webmind trilogy. In WWW:Wake we got the birth of an AI made up of mutant internet packets and connected to the world through a device that let a blind girl see, and in Wake we got to see both of them grapple with coming of age in a world made suddenly visible to them. In Wonder, it’s time for Webmind and Caitlin both to grow up and deal with the realities of reality. With great power comes great responsibility, but only if someone can hold you accountable for your actions. So far the US has tried to kill Webmind once, and it’s sitting on the fence about taking another shot at it.

Granted, the supermind’s first act was to eliminate all spam, and it really does seem to care about humankind…but it’s evolving rapidly, and who’s to say that it will always care about us?

The Webmind trilogy may be the best thing Rob’s written, and I mean that as high praise. Granted, he’s not one of the uber-literary authors like China Mieville or Tim Powers, and he’s not as hip as fellow Canadian Cory Doctorow, but even if Rob can’t do angst, the whole Webmind trilogy is full of thought provoking ideas worth some thought.

I’m looking forward to writing a critical review with all sort of references to other AI stories  (Feel free to give me your suggestions) in April, when it’s officially published, but until then, I”m just recommending it to fans of AI, YA, RS, and of course good books. You could start with Wonder, but you’d be cheating yourself the fun of Wake and Watch.

Smart Power: Climate Change, the Smart Grid, and the Future of Electric Utilities

[amazon_link id=”1597267066″ target=”_blank” ]Smart Power: Climate Change, the Smart Grid, and the Future of Electric Utilities[/amazon_link]

Author Peter Fox-Penner’s Smart Power provides  much needed context for discussion on meeting the nation and the world’s energy needs. While its target audience is undoubtedly professionals grappling with energy resources and regulations, this look beyond the mechanics of energy production and distribution to the bigger picture of the energy eco-system, how it came to be, where it’s headed and where it needs to wind up, offers insights that anyone interested in life on or off the grid needs to understand. Continue reading

iPad 2 V The Contenders: Sadly, Still The Year Of The Hare

[amazon_link id=”0823405648″ target=”_blank” ][/amazon_link]

Apple's early tablet lead may be slowly shrinking, but this racewatcher doubts that either Android or PC tablets will either sneak past the iPad, or spur it to greatness. Book cover: The Tortoise and the Hare, by Janet Stevens

Apple’s head start is nearly a year old, and you’d think that the tortoises, both Android and Windows driven, would be catching up with the hare by this time, but it just isn’t happening. Make no mistake, though my iPad’s been a nearly constant companion since launch day when I picked it up at the Apple Store, I’m not an Apple fan. I don’t like the closed ecosystem that Jobs has created, and consider it a hip version of AOL’s gated community from the 80s. No gated community can really be hip, but I get the utility of it. Job’s is a utopianist, and for those who fit the mold, it’s a great thing to be part of. Continue reading

2010 Philip K. Dick Award Nominees Announced

I just found the list for the Philip K. Dick Award in my inbox (thanks Van Gelder) where it’s been sitting since last night, and I’m moderately mortified to find I haven’t read a single one. Maybe I’ve got that backwards. They look like a pretty good lot, once you get beyond the non-descriptive titles, and are all available in Kindle format for pretty reasonable money. So maybe the purpose of awards has been met, introducing me to books worth considering amidst the crowded shelves.

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