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  • 12 August, 2008

    Papercraft Camerahead from Little Brother print

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 1:44 pm permalink

    My inbox overfloweth with WIN today. Christopher Beaumont, one of the recipients of the Little Brother print I made (inspired by the eponymous book by one Cory Doctorow) created this kickass papercraft model of Camerahead, one of the characters in the print. He will be posting has posted a downloadable printout on his site, Cubeecraft.com, later on today, so that you can make your own.

    Go check out Cubeecraft, they’ve got a busload of cool papercraft figures for your crafting pleasure. My favourite (aside from this one, of course)? Why, Rusty Venture, hands down.

  • 5 August, 2008

    From the Void: A Bit of Speculation.

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 9:56 pm permalink

    Jo Walton has a fantastic breakdown of possible solutions for life on other planets, based on different takes on the Fermi Paradox by various SF luminaries over on Tor.com. This reminded me of this post which I’d begun to write a little while ago, but languished in the obscurity of my ‘pending drafts’ queue for some reason or another. Regardless, here it is:

    Scientists in Australia have determined that some of the organic compounds found on a meteor they’ve been studying were created in space and survived the meteorite’s entry and impact on Earth. From the paper’s abstract:

    Carbon-rich meteorites, carbonaceous chondrites, contain many biologically relevant organic molecules and delivered prebiotic material to the young Earth. We present compound-specific carbon isotope data indicating that measured purine and pyrimidine compounds are indigenous components of the Murchison meteorite.

    The big news is that some of those molecules are basic components of amino acids, the building blocks of life. So, what does this mean, exactly? Phil Plait has a great post on his site, Bad Astronomy, where he clearly explains the discovery, outlines the possible implications, an debunks all the “Iz I teh alienz?” chatter that’s been making the rounds through the internet since this discovery was announced.

    In short, it is possible that some of the elements that created life on this planet may have come from space, but it’s also equally possible that they developed here on a young Earth, since any conditions that would enable the compounds to survive after impact would also be conditions primed to host the development of these compounds independently.

    Regardless, it’s big news, and brain-candy for those of us with a science-fictional bent, who like to extrapolate from these scientific discoveries. This discovery, while not necessarily implying that life on Earth has its origins elsewhere in the universe, does seem to indicate that the elements required for the development of carbon-based life exist outside of our planet, and could have found a hospitable environment in which to develop and flourish into life on some other planet. This opens up the possibility for many interesting scenarios.

    There could be very distant genetic cousins to humans living on a hospitable planet somewhere out there. Given the right conditions, such as those on Earth, they could have developed into as wide a range of flora and fauna as we find on Earth, and even developed sentient life forms. Unfortunately for xenophiles, cross-breeding would probably be out of the question (assuming we are still tethered to our meatspace bodies by the time we discover our cousins).

    There could also be sentient life just now crawling out of their primordial ooze as we speak, giving us a chance to observe, sometime in the future (when our technology is sufficiently capable to observe direct, on-the-ground action in faraway places), the initial stirrings of evolved life. Could we also, at that point in our technological development, have access to tools that enable us to edit and alter that genetic evolutionary process? This is very likely, and opens up the door to some ethical debate as to whether our involvement would be appropriate. This could turn into the hot-button, abortion-like issue in the political world of the 24th century. Trekkies will bust out copies of the Prime Directive as reference. Furious debate will ensue regarding the age-old question: When does life begin?

    In short, a bit of news that helps to place humans as a species, and humanity as a civilization, into perspective. Every new discovery like this helps us realize that more than even global citizens, we’re denizens of the universe, which serves to reinforce the need for us to explore the stars, and start working towards taking our place among them.

  • 5 August, 2008

    SF/F Book Cover Review, Hugo Edition, Parte Dos…

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 9:34 pm permalink

    Is live (and has been for most of the day, I’ve just been…busy. You know, with the day job and all). Check out my review of the cover for Halting State by Charles Stross here, along with a whole bunch of really insightful comments from the Tor.com community. It’s been fantastic to have a place where people can sound off, and react to my particular views on cover design.

  • 28 July, 2008

    Comic Con debrief, and An Unexpected Personal Day

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 1:31 pm permalink

    Comic Con is now over. It was fun, and hectic, and full of work, and some booze, and lots of cool, cool people. One of the highlights for me, as with Comic Con New York, was to meet so many awesome people who I either know only through IM or Twitter, or who I don’t know at all, but am familiar with their work. Among the former group, Tobias S. Buckell (one of our writers at Tor. Go check out his work now, you won’t be disappointed) and I found that we have even more in common than we thought before we met face to face and had a few drinks. Among the latter, I got to meet Charles Stross and Vernor Vinge, two of my favorite authors. Additionally, Annalee Newitz and Charlie Jane Anders from io9 turned out to be some of the coolest, most gracious, fun, and genuinely kind people I’ve met here. I’m honored to have them as colleagues.

    And then there are the illustrators. I’ve met and gotten to know many people whose work I’ve admired from afar for a very long time, such as Gregory Manchess (whose demo was fascinating. Watching him work is awe-inspiring), Jon Foster, Terry Moore, Donato Giancola, Dave Palumbo, Rebecca Guay, Dan Dos Santos, Todd Lockwood, and Stephan Martiniere; and have found them to be wonderfully witty, gracious, intelligent, and incredibly interesting, to a person. As I sat at a hotel lobby bar last night, having a beer with all these cats (and trying not to nod off due to lack of sleep), I couldn’t imagine that I could be luckier. Who would have thought, five years ago, when I was grinding through and drowning in the advertising world, that I would be sharing good times with the very same people I’ve admired from afar since I first went to college, waaay back in 1998?

    Speaking of luck, my flight back to NYC last night was canceled due to weather, so I’m ‘stuck’ in San Diego until tonight. This means that I get to go to the San Diego Zoo later on in the day, as I’d originally planned to do before the Con started, but didn’t have the time. Even better: I get to go with a bunch of the aforementioned illustrators. Life works out, sometimes.

  • 20 July, 2008

    It’s go-live time for Tor.com

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 12:12 pm permalink

    The not-so-super-seekrit project that’s been sucking down so much of everyone’s time over at Tor Books finally goes live today. Tor.com is a new science-fiction and fantasy themed community site, where a whole lot of luminaries from the SF/F fandom community will be contributing content about ‘Science Fiction. Fantasy. The Universe. And Related Subjects.’, as the tagline says.

    Tor.com started as a glimmer in the eyes of Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Teresa Nielsen Hayden, Irene Gallo, and Fritz Foy, over a year ago. With the design direction of regular badass Jamie Stafford-Hill, they’ve been working tirelessly, quietly, and sometimes not-so-quietly on it since. Tor.com will feature original content from some of SF/F’s most talented voices, such as John Scalzi, Charles Stross, and Cory Doctorow; as well as blogging from both genre authors and genre fans (including yours truly). It also features a kickass gallery of SF/F artists, with work from cover artists, game designers, conceptual artists for film and TV, you name it. Additionally, the site is a social network, so you can create a profile and connect with artists, writers, and fellow fans.

    As launch date loomed closer, and it came time to recruit bloggers and beta testers, pnh and Irene approached me to see if I would be interested in contributing, to which I replied “Yeah!”. Once they realized that launch date would be the same week as Comic Con San Diego, and that they’d need people there to cover what is probably one of the largest fandom events of the year, Irene popped into my office and asked me if I wanted to go to Comic Con, to which I replied “Fuck yeah!”.

    So I’ll be going to and blogging from Comic Con San Diego this week. Don’t hate me too much.

    Aside from reportage, I’ll also be posting about other SF/F-related stuff on Tor.com, including a regular column which was originally planned for this site. A while ago, the crew in the art department at Tor realized that there really was no SF/F-specific book cover review blog out there, and we felt there should be. After all, SF/F book design is a very particular thing: we are much more illustration heavy than other genres, we have a particular visual language and ideosyncracies that may be beyond (or beside) the scope of traditional book cover reviews. I shot off an email to my co-workers proposing to start something up, and it became incredibly obvious that the perfect home for a feature like that would be Tor.com. So there you go. Here’s a link to the initial post for that, outlining all the ins-and-outs of how it’s gonna work.

  • 19 July, 2008

    Getting inky at Tor

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 10:08 pm permalink

    Irene Gallo has blogged and posted some pictures of yesterday’s Tor.com silkscreening session in the conference room at Tor. She says I worked my ass off, but really, I just had a blast. Having everyone bring in their shirts and other materials, showing them how to pull a print, and seeing the looks of surprise and glee once they lift up that screen and grok the results of their work was worth it, tenfold. We have to do it again sometime, and soon!

  • 15 July, 2008

    Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog: Live!

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 1:50 am permalink

    And by ‘live’, I mean ‘online, for your streaming pleasure’, of course. I’d embed it here, but the idea is for you to check out their site, and prove, via the power of your mighty and unique view, that this is a viable method of delivery for entertainment. That, and it’s on Hulu. They don’t allow you to embed video elsewhere. Bastards. But it’s also on iTunes, which is a promising step (except that, even after buying the Season Pass, priced at $3.99 for all three 15 minute episodes [see? I'll pay for something I support, it's not all piracy around here] the downloads won’t start. Double bastards).

    Regardless of a few day-one hiccups (and despite the fact that it’s on Hulu, which I don’t like simply because they pulled Battlestar Galactica away from the iTunes store–yes it’s a grudge thing, so sue me), it’s funny, precious, witty, self-deprecating, and sing-along-y, just like the Whedon your mama used to make ya on the teevee. I’ll review in full once all three eps are up, probably on Tor.com (yes, we’re getting closer to that July 20 launch date…).

  • 9 July, 2008

    More Little Brother Goodness.

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 11:58 am permalink

    Cory Doctorow alerted me to some pics he snapped at the University of Washington Bookstore of this badass cosplay costume based on the print I made, which was inspired by Cory’s latest Tor book, Little Brother. To paraphrase Irene Gallo, I’m digging the creativity that’s coming off of this book. This is so, so awesome. Click through for Cory’s photoset, wherein he plays the role of Marcus, complete with slinghshot!

  • 1 July, 2008

    Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 11:30 am permalink


    Teaser from Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog on Vimeo.
    I can’t wait to see this. The fruits of extra-curricular (as in, not within the studio system) efforts from Joss Whedon during the writer’s strike, Dr. Horrible promises to be the beginning of a slew of independent productions from established old-media talent, taking their toys and playing elsewhere, away from the profit-crazed monolith that is Hollywood. The plan is to release three episodes for free streaming on July 15th, 17th, and 19th. They’ll keep them online for a short while, then take them down in order to sell downloads and an extra features-packed DVD. Sounds like a good idea to me. From the Dr. Horrible youtube site:

    The story of a low-rent super-villain, the hero who keeps beating him up, and the cute girl from the laundromat he’s too shy to talk to. Featuring Neil Patrick Harris as Dr. Horrible, Nathan Fillion as Captain Hammer, Felicia Day as Penny and a cast of dozens.

    Fillion. Whedon. The intertubez. Doogie Howser. Full of win. The cast and Whedon will be on a panel at Comic Con San Diego later this month, I’m going to try to catch that, and grill ‘em with questions. In the meantime, here’s a fansite which has been keeping everyone up to date on Dr. Horrible-related happenings.

  • 25 June, 2008

    It’s Tuesday, I’m packing. Have some Stross.

    posted by Pablo Defendini at 7:57 am permalink

    Here’s an oldie but a goodie. I’d read this before, but came across it again last night while reading the comments on a BoingBoing post. Charles Stross on the future of history, the future of lifelogging, and the future of privacy. Utterly fascinating stuff.

    EDIT: And by ‘Tuesday’, I mean ‘Wednesday’, of course. Slow down, week! I’m not done with you yet!