Technobabble vs Environment

Star Trek rant again !

The Deep Space Nine episode I’m re-watching at the moment (might not be for long, might skip it) has a rather curious story running through it. You’d usually expect Star Trek to champion the environmentalist utopia cause, however this one is about as Anti-Environment as you can get.

Ok – the core of the story is that one of the senior officers has been sent to evict some farmers from a moon so they can wreck it by stripmining its core for energy. So that’s a habitable moon, with viable farming land going to get made uninhabitable in the pursuit of power that could easily come from an alternate source like solar.

Curious is one word, Insane! is another ! The one constant we’ll find when we eventually break out of Earth’s orbit and unleash ourselves on an unsuspecting galaxy is that inhabitable planets and moons will be as rare as hen’s teeth. So real estate where people can live and grow food should be prized above all else.

Back to Star Trek … but I’ll be distracting myself with getting some food ready.

PS Getting to read a bit of Heinlein’s Time Enough For Love. This one comes after quite a few of his timeline novels and I’m getting to read it again after reading some of the more key books in that timeline. It has Heinlein’s typical wit running through it and has definitely got me laughing at what’s coming off the pages 🙂

Olympiad

The build up’s all done now and the main event’s here and underway. Every 4 years we get a great festival of sport, covering most of the team and individual events that people play. There’s some obvious ones in there, some less obvious ones but what it does mean is a sportnut like me gets to see some sports on the telly that otherwise don’t get a look in. The sad thing is the time zone, because China is 7 hours ahead of British Summer Time most of the events will take place when we’re either asleep or at work. The GB evening time neatly coincides with the Chinese sleeping time.

Today is an excellent day already for GB 🙂 We have a gold medal winner ! That would be Nicole Cooke who had a superb ride in the Women’s Cycling Road Race in atrocious conditions. They seem to be having monsoon type conditions over in China at the moment, to the point where the BBC presenters have a bucket in their studio.

I’ve just been watching the Women’s team bronze medal match in the archery. That’s one of the first sports I got involved with, over in N.Ireland as a boy. (It was something that my mum & dad could send all 3 of us to every week) GB were involved in this one too but unfortunately just missed out by 2 points. Ah well – they’ll be hungrier for it when the Games come to our place in 4 years 🙂

Right – Olympics had temporary reign over the Telly, time for the Test Match again ! After watching Nicole Cooke get her gold that is. There won’t be too many chances to stand up for the anthem in these games, best to make the most of what opportunities we get 🙂

Thursday Thirteen – A To Z Challenge

This one’s about books I’ve read over the last year. Joy has a challenge running at the moment, with the aim being to read 52 books, 26 with titles covering the whole of the alphabet and 26 with authors covering the alphabet. For more, take a peek at my long neglected Sleepypete Stories blog (link in the blogroll). I’m sneakily using that one so that the A To Z post can remain at the top without being lost in my various random ramblings.

Thirteen Things about Books I’ve been reading lately

1…. First up, The Algebraist by Iain M Banks. This is one of his later books but the first one I read. Instant classic. There’s a very well realised setting here, which doesn’t sci-fi cheat too much. Rule Number One – Do NOT mess with the Dwellers.
2…. Robert A Heinlein’s Starship Troopers. This books is much better than the film, although the animated series comes close. This is a book that deals far more with ethics and government with the alien shooty bits actually being rather limited.
3…. David Weber’s At All Costs. Much better than the previous book, War Of Honor, because it has a lot more action in between the tedious politics bits. But, the series is definitely suffering from the escalation that most sci-fi space opera series tend to burn out on.
4…. Avatar series by various D&D authors. This series has the gods of Toril getting thrown out of the heavens due to not doing their duties properly. So their boss sets out to teach them a lesson. Cue a series of stories crossing most of the Forgotten Realms D&D setting, with gods dying, cities being destroyed, mortals being corrupted, a little bit of love and madness and rather spectacular re-ordering of the pantheon there.
5…. Consider Phlebas by Iain M Banks. This is the introduction to The Culture, a hugely mixed society of the future which is run by machines. These machines very definitely have personalities of their own, which leads to names like Resistance is Character Forming, No More Mr Nice Guy and Now Look What You Made Me Do. This one is the first Culture book and is nigh-on essential reading for any sci-fi fan.
6…. Chasm City by Alastair Reynolds. Gotta admit, I was a little disappointed with this one. It had a reasonable setting to work with but suffered from being too drawn out and too rushed. The beginning takes ages to get through, the end rushes through very quickly.
7…. XWing series by Michael Stackpole and Aaron Allstom. These are in the Star Wars universe, taking up the story about 2-3 years after Return of the Jedi. They’re well worth a peek, not so much for the Star Wars but for the interplay between the characters.
8…. Use of Weapons by Iain M Banks. Another Culture book, tough to describe. So I’m not going to 🙂 Besides, spoilers would happen very easily with this one !
9…. Time Enough For Love by Robert Heinlein. This one is about his Lazarus Long character, aka the oldest living human. He’s about 2500 years old when this one is set and is a kind of biography of the character. I’ve read a lot more Heinlein than when I first read this quite some time ago, I’m hoping to get more out of it this time.
10… Harry Turtledove’s Worldwar series. I’m two books in with these and I’ll get started on the third after Time enough For Love. The premise here takes you back to World War Two. Things are going as we know. Apart from aliens from space choosing that time to invade ! Bit long winded these, which is why I haven’t bombed through the series just yet.
11… Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams. I’ve read all 5 of these. The first three are very, very good, with all of the famed Douglas Adams wit shining through. The fifth isn’t that great though.
12… All those documents from work that I can’t tell anyone about 🙂
13… Larry Niven’s Ringworld series. Not read any of these for a while but anything by Niven is worth checking out.

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More news ! I have a plan …

I wasn’t quit…

More news ! I have a plan …

I wasn’t quite sure how I’d be putting in the A to Z, to keep it in a fairly prominent place and stop it dropping off the bottom of the posts where I’d forget it.

But … I have another blog sitting idle because I haven’t organised my thoughts properly ! Will convert that one into a place for the A to Z 🙂

PS I have an author who will fit the ‘Z’ …

You are welcome to join the A ~ Z Reading Challeng…

You are welcome to join the A ~ Z Reading Challenge, but your link needs to go to the post that indicates you are participating or you can post the image and lists on your sidebar. I deleted your name because when I followed the link there was no “book talk” here. Sign up again with a link to your post, if you’re interested in participating. We’d be happy to have you join us.

Changing the guard

There’s been some big stories prowling around the sports media over the past few days, all about who becomes the next Captain of the England cricket team.

What’s happened is that the pressure of being In Charge has gotten to the two people who had the job last week. Michael Vaughan had that pressure steadily grinding him down to the point where he couldn’t get the consistency going with his batting and Paul Collingwood could barely score a run for all of this season. And when that happens to a player, it undermines their position in the team, let alone their ability to lead that team. They’re both excellent captains with their tactics but the pressure does get to players after a while.

I’ve had the captaincy job a few times in my cricketing life, in fact I had an absolute ball running the indoor team that we had going in our project for a few years. We always punched above what we should have done and I had a lot of pride in leading that bunch of players. I had to lead that team by example too, as it was when I could take a full part with my bowling. Nowadays, I’d have had to be a non-playing captain because my bowling is That Bad.

Indoor cricket tactics* are pretty much limited to who bowls or bats when though, there’s no subtleties with fielding positions. There’s a certain amount of pressure involved, as the skipper has to keep track of the bowlers to make sure his weaker ones don’t get absolutely murdered. However, most of the work came before a game to make sure there was a full side of six players turning up. Which could often be a challenge …

(Kinda appropriately, the last iTunes track was “We Are The Champions” and the current one is “When I Was Young” by River City People – spooky)

So, I’ve had a little taste of Captaincy, albeit with much different pressures than the two who have just stepped aside for England. They had selectors doing the chasing thing but I don’t envy them having to talk to the media. I’ve also never had my exploits on the cricket field analysed in a National newspaper, although I did get my name in the local paper fairly regularly due to putting in bowling that did lots to further our side’s cause in games.

I can fully understand why Michael Vaughan and Paul Collingwood have stepped aside. Captaincy is a great honour and a blast while it lasts however there’s a definite Hump where it becomes a chore instead of the rush that it should be. For me, I think running around before games to scare up a team was getting noticed by The Bosses, plus work itself was getting much busier. It was detracting from the day job, so I needed to step aside and hand on the reins. For Vaughan and Collingwood, the Captaincy was detracting from their day job (getting heaps of runs batting).

They’ve both been excellent Captains, setting a high standard for the next guy. That’s Kevin Pietersen and if he carries through the fresh approach that he has with his batting, then we’re in for a few High-Octane, Fun years as England supporters. Let’s hope there’s a good few Test wins in amongst the spectacular, plus I’d like to see a change in England’s ability in one day games too.

*I appear to have been knocked off the top of Google for searches for “indoor cricket tactics”, so I think I’m honour bound to attempt to regain that position.

Friday Fill In #83

Not done one of these for a while, so here goes ! For more Friday Fill-ins, please see Janet’s site here.

1. If I could travel back in time, I’d go to when some idiot broke his shoulder and tell him not to play silly badminton shots, or the 60s so I could try and get into the astronaut program.

2. Give me popcorn or give me a low fat torture diet!

3. I am listening to the end of a Deep Space Nine episode, although I’ll break out iTunes later.

4. Somewhere, someone is thinking nefarious thoughts about the ice-cream they have in the freezer.

5. I’ll always be up for helping out the team just one more time, no matter how tired or sore I might be.

6. My idea of a good time includes good company and a good game.

7. And as for the weekend, tonight I’m looking forward to chilling out to some sci-fi, tomorrow my plans include watching the cricket while hoping my aching muscles decide to relax and Sunday, I want to make a dent in finishing Look to Windward by Iain M Banks !