Apr 4

Robot in the Woods: HARDWIRED IMPERATIVES, by Sarah Castle

Category: Robot Writing 1.0

Sarah Castle, a self-described “consumate welsh-woman” graduated from Medical School in 1996 and then spent six years in the Royal Navy. She now works as a Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist. In her free time, she writes science fiction, fantasy, and fiction about mind control. Today, she presents us with an edgey piece of robot fiction about a neural pattern of shutting down once the robot’s mission is accomplished.

 

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Apr 2

Bigfoot vs Cyborg: “…a rare treat.”

Category: FYI

Man in Argyle SuitA Cryptozoological Behavioral Specialist, Virgil Smackey, captured a series of blurry, but unmistakable, photographs of a bigfoot, near Buffalo, NY. According to a nonchalant Smackey, “I don’t think I have ever seen a robot fight a bigfoot. Wow! A rare treat.” Scientists from the National Cryptozoological Service and The International Society of Roboticists are examining these photos for authenticity but are otherwise detecting clues into the socio-dynamics and history of the robot and Bigfoot feud. Territoriality is the most widely assumed cause for these decades long battles for supremacy.

frame6.JPGRobot in the Woods


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Apr 1

Robot in the Woods News Flash: APRIL SHORT ROBOT FICTION UNDER REVIEW

Category: Robot Writing 1.0

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To those just joining in. Robot in the Woods Publishing runs original short fiction about Robots every friday at 7:59am. We are deeply interested in quality content, with matters of intellectual property and with making friends. We are also interested in your robots! Written or drawn! Robot-o-philes and robot-o-phobes please participate.

In the meantime, we are in the review process of the April themed stories, The Robot’s Point of View. Thank you to everyone who participated. We can announce the following:

  • One is definite if she’ll consider changing the title to “Hardwired Imperative.”
  • We are reviewing some titles for only two 7:59 Stories timeslots on April 11 and April 18.
  • The fourth piece of the month, penned by our editor, is titled “Nanite of the Starship Tumbleweed” and will appear on April 25, 2008 at 7:59am.

Also, we are gearing up for May’s round of weekly short robot fiction. We are interested in hearing from people who enjoy the notions of a robot and who enjoy crisp, edgy, cute, but well-written science fiction about robots. Please consider this a call for submissions. We are still considering the theme for the month. Anyone want to toss a theme idea into the hat? Please comment.

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Apr 1

Robot Fiction Special: A SPACESHIP NAMED MCGUIRE, by Gordon Randall Garret

Category: Robot Writing 1.0

This is a piece of robot fiction from 1962. It is stored at the Project Gutenberg website. The story starts after all the Project Gutenberg licensing information. Please see their website for more information about this fascinating project and for more stories in the public domain.

Its a fun story that combines a spaceship with a robot. What could be better? And it is illustrated by a person named Douglas. “The basic trouble with McGuire was that, though “he” was a robot spaceship, nevertheless “he” had a definite weakness that a man might understand….” Read more

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Mar 28

Robot in the Woods: 13 WAYS OF LOOKING AT A ROBOT (and other poems) by Greg Beatty

Category: Robot Writing 1.0

Robot in the Woods is proud to publish a small collection of robot poetry by Greg Beatty. Another of Greg’s poems, “Making Robot Poets Great“, can be found on the Strange Horizons Poetry website. Greg Beatty lives with his wife in Bellingham, Washington, where he tries, unsuccessfully to stay dry. He writes everything from children’s books to essays about his cooking debacles. He has a particular fondness for speculative poetry—he won the 2005 Rhysling Award—and flash fiction.

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Robot Read more

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Mar 28

Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin Celebration and Science Fiction Art Party at Art Whino in Alexandria, VA

Category: FYI

Yuri’s Night is a celebration of the first man in space, Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin. Art Whino, in Alexandria, is throwing a party in his honor and will have and Art Exhibit, Space Burlesque, Bands, Stoli Vodka, and Costume Contests. April 12 @ 8:00PM. Tickets are $20. Should be fun!!

April 12, 1961 Russian Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin embarked on the historic first manned space flight. Twenty years later on 12 April 1981, the US launched the first space shuttle flight. We think that’s something worth celebrating! Every year on April 12th Yuri’s Night parties are held all around the world; it’s like the St. Patrick’s Day or Cinco de Mayo for nerds.

Visit Yuri’s Night for a list of worldwide parties.


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Mar 26

Robot in the Woods: A RUSTED ROBOT IN THE WOODS, by Tom Kerr

Category: Robot Writing 1.0

 

Tom Kerr is a writer based in Asheville, NC, USA. His children’s stories have been published in the USA and abroad and he may be contacted via GURU.com, a professional Web site for freelancers. Please click on headline for this fun-filled juvenile-market robot story.

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Mar 24

Robot Notes on TWIT Interview with Jonathan Coulton, Feb 24, 2008

I have been listening to This Week In Tech Episode (133) with an interview with Jonathan Coulton, from Feb 24, 2008. It is a very interesting interview with a musician who has developed a scalable and sustainable business model to support artistic endeavors in the Web 3.0 era. He caters to a niche market and gives them high quality content. This is the Robot in the Woods Publishing Model. That is, producing high quality science fiction stories and robot art.

I like that they refer to him as patient zero, because they are accepting that it is not only a viable model, but it is possible for others to do the same. Please take a listen, but in the meantime, here are a few thing I took away from the interview.

  • A niche finds you, but community building is key to success. You don’t need to be famous with a 100 million people, but with 10,000 people, and if its the right 10,000, you can make a living out of it.
  • Engagement is critical. You should serve exactly the people you want to serve.  That is people that like the same things that you like.    A high quality audience.
  • Meritocracy: You can’t fake goodness. Great things, great content, great people and great ideas will float to the top. “I don’t think everything good rises to the top, but it has to be good to rise”
  • “I wanna as many people to hear my music, get famous now, figure out how to make money on it later!” Requires an openness thats about more than just making money or getting something for free. Its about giving your access to a set of things that might interest you. In return, for the artist, a transparency about wanting support is an honest approach is required.  I love a business model that thrives in honesty!
  • People still like Tangibles!
  • Live and die in the niche. You can’t fake quality. You approach it with passion, doing what you want to do, knowing there are others interested in your work. You enjoy it. You are of the niche.
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Mar 22

Assessment of Calanacis’s “official WEB 3.0″ Definition

Category: Book Review

“Web 3.0 is defined as the creation of high-quality content and services produced by gifted individuals using Web 2.0 technology as an enabling platform” - Jason Calanacis, October 3, 2007. For more information about his work, please visit his website or “Slackers of Web 2.0 Unhappy With Calanacis.”

Visualize Chris Anderson’s The Long Tail, with an third dimension; the z-axis as a measure of accessibility to professional creativity. Long-tail economics. in tandem with this operational Web 3.0 definition usher an end to the market for one and enables individual access to niche based creative productions. The Zipf-Anderson-Calanacis Conical Constant (ZACCC) seems an appropriate name for an economic model based on a sustainable professional creativity in niche marketing.

Consider Andrew Keene’s Cult of Amateur. He offers the correct assessment that in many economic sectors, the traditional Authority is transferred to individuals and that this transfer has resulted in tangible impacts in the form of job loss and loss of revenue. But social movements often result in economic upheaval, but Keene both acknowledges this transfer of Authority to the individual, and argues that Freidman’s flattening should be curbed. Keene takes swipes at the Surowiecki’s Wisdom of the Crowd mentality, but so does Calanacis. His critique of the Wisdom of the Crowds is entirely unique from Keene’s. Rather than a Keene-like attack the phenomenon, Calanacis requires the emergence of the crowd and of a creative authority not offered by Surowiecki. Oh, and Clay Shirky offers the idea of clout in “Here Come’s Everybody: The Power of Organizing with Organization.”

Some other qualities I am seeing about Web 3.0:

  • The Open-Source tends to be open and honest
  • It delivers a product people actually want
  • It encourages partnerships in creativity
  • The Web 3.0 has built-in economic trustability
  • Ownership of intellectual property remains important, but new licensing models will emerge
  • Creative participation is professionalized
  • Craigslist-type sustainability in a shift from profit-driven monetization model to a sustainable business practice, which covers both operational and intellectual labor costs


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Mar 21

FYI: RETURN TO LUNA - A Short Story Science Fiction Contest

Category: FYI

FYI: I came across this contest today for a short story (2000-6000 words) contest sponsored by The National Space Society (NSS) and Hadley Rille Books. They are looking for science fiction stories that show the adventure of lunar settlement and accepting submissions for stories that deal with humanity’s return to, and colonization of the Moon. Visit www.nss.org or www.hadleyrillebooks.com for updates story guidelines and rules. The deadline for submissions is June 15, 2008.

I love some of the ideas posed by the editors:

  • How have we set about establishing a lunar base, and then a colony?
  • What are living conditions like?
  • What is the lunar wilderness like? What kind of exploring to settlers do?
  • What are the buildings like and how do people get around the lunar surface?
  • What kinds of transportation do they use to travel to and from the Moon?
  • What kind of society lives there? What are the challenges to human social structures?
  • Are lunar colonies self-sufficient or do they depend on Earth?
  • What kind of industries exist and how do the colonists make use of lunar resources?
  • Does the colony resemble Las Vegas or is it more like a science outpost?
  • Will there be settlements on the far side — a radio telescope array, perhaps?
  • Is the colony located near one of the poles where miners extract ice from the permanently shadowed areas?
  • Why have we established a colony on the Moon?
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