Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Speak now or for ever hold your peices
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Your sci-fi is my reality. Submit or die.
- Zerotonine
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Yeah man, I read http://www.io9.com every day. I'm not so much into real mindbending hard far-future sci-fi, I like mine a little more grounded.
Allons-y!
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
guilty as charged. I'm probably going to get shit for this but I'm hooked on stargate. I know nerd of freaking doom.
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
I'm into Sci-Fi anime. I got this Dvd called Spriggan the other night. It was allright but so much Sci-Fi anime is so cliche now. Allways the same themes and scenarios. I'm a bit bored of it. I haven't read a good sci-fi book in a long time either. I think the last one was Quarantine a few years ago.
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Any recomendations for good Sci-Fi anime or movies? Not Akira, or Ghost In The Shell, or Battle Angel Alita, or Spriggan, or Macros Plus, something new and different. I'm dieing for a good new sci fi anime movie. And not fucking, Appleseed either with that, 3d animation stuff where it looks like a barbie show.
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Nano Nano, Dr. Spock tbh.And not fucking, Appleseed either with that, 3d animation stuff where it looks like a barbie show.
- FoundationStepper
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
battle star galactica the best sci fi output in years yanno
space epic. very good scripting, characters etc
nice corrupted dirtied humanity as well
space epic. very good scripting, characters etc
nice corrupted dirtied humanity as well
croaking lizard... jungletasticdubcorebadness (brap brap)
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
dig that battle star's rad
- apophenian
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Ya to Asimov - must read the foundation series again, before they ruin the movie version...
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Big fan of io9!Zerotonine wrote:Yeah man, I read http://www.io9.com every day. I'm not so much into real mindbending hard far-future sci-fi, I like mine a little more grounded.
I'm not as big a sci-fi fan as I used to be...
As a kid I watched just about every sci-fi possible - Blakes 7, Space 1999, Original BSG, Buck Rodgers, Thunderbirds, Jetsons
Loved William Gibson/Cyberpunk too.
I'm not such a big nerd anymore though.
*hides videogame collection*
Ready to drop, Audio rock, here comes the boy from the South!
-= www.funkyj.com =-
-= www.funkyj.com =-
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
FoundationStepper wrote:battle star galactica the best sci fi output in years yanno
space epic. very good scripting, characters etc
nice corrupted dirtied humanity as well
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
If you want some good sci-fi reading get into Peter F Hamilton. Epic.NakedAge wrote:I'm into Sci-Fi anime. I got this Dvd called Spriggan the other night. It was allright but so much Sci-Fi anime is so cliche now. Allways the same themes and scenarios. I'm a bit bored of it. I haven't read a good sci-fi book in a long time either. I think the last one was Quarantine a few years ago.
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Stray wrote:FoundationStepper wrote:battle star galactica the best sci fi output in years yanno
space epic. very good scripting, characters etc
nice corrupted dirtied humanity as well
fk yeah, speshly season 3....last episode, cliff hanger.
Then I watched the whole season 4 in one sitting, lol...insomnia can be good at times.
William Gibson rocked it for so many years. Give his last book (Spook Country) a miss, a bit weak, but then again he is like 80 sumfing.
Now reading Anathem - Neal Stephenson.
Was also looking for new writers.. a couple out there, but nothing seemed solid enough.
Don't hate on Macross. Give Macross 7 (tv series) a miss and head straight for Macross Frontier, just finished watching. good stuff!NakedAge wrote:Any recomendations for good Sci-Fi anime or movies? Not Akira, or Ghost In The Shell, or Battle Angel Alita, or Spriggan, or Macros Plus, something new and different. I'm dieing for a good new sci fi anime movie. And not fucking, Appleseed either with that, 3d animation stuff where it looks like a barbie show.
Not exactly sci fi, more paranormal..kinda Check out Ghost Hound created by Production I.G and Shirow Masamune.
You could always check out http://www.veoh.com/ an run a search, gives you a preview* lot's of fan subs.
sci fi escapism.
- FoundationStepper
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
so what does the other macross have to do with macross plus (the only ones ive wtached - with sharon apple etc)
bsg back in the new year, not too long now! (feb/march?)
bsg back in the new year, not too long now! (feb/march?)
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
The 3min webisodes start on the 12th December.
And the series returns in Jan!
Also, the prequel series Caprica has been given the go ahead.
Caprica is set 50 years before Battlestar and traces the feud between two families, the Graystones and the Adamas, of the 12 Colonies and the creation of and development of the Cylons. Season one has been set for 20 hours.
Kicks off in 2010
And the series returns in Jan!
Also, the prequel series Caprica has been given the go ahead.
Caprica is set 50 years before Battlestar and traces the feud between two families, the Graystones and the Adamas, of the 12 Colonies and the creation of and development of the Cylons. Season one has been set for 20 hours.
Kicks off in 2010
- FoundationStepper
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
!Stray wrote:The 3min webisodes start on the 12th December.
Not so sure about the caprica thing - seems too dynastic. Like how r2d2 and c3po turned up with anakin skywalker
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
last good piece of scifi I read was a book called axiomatic by an aussie writer greg eagan. Awesome short stories.
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
FoundationStepper wrote:so what does the other macross have to do with macross plus (the only ones ive wtached - with sharon apple etc)
bsg back in the new year, not too long now! (feb/march?)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macross#Series_chronology
- FoundationStepper
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
got to admit im a sucker for the new dr who
which is best appreciated from the beginning, there are some brilliant long strands of plot in there
which is best appreciated from the beginning, there are some brilliant long strands of plot in there
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- youthful_implants
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
william gibson, orson scott card, jeff noon, neal stephenson, neil gaiman, iain m banks, frank herbert, asimov
have read nearly everything by these writers.
I didn't like battle star galactica or star trek on the TV - too anodyne and bland imo.
my favourite sci fi novels are the diamond age by neal stepehenson and mona lisa overdrive by gibson.
have read nearly everything by these writers.
I didn't like battle star galactica or star trek on the TV - too anodyne and bland imo.
my favourite sci fi novels are the diamond age by neal stepehenson and mona lisa overdrive by gibson.
- Zerotonine
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
FoundationStepper wrote:got to admit im a sucker for the new dr who
which is best appreciated from the beginning, there are some brilliant long strands of plot in there
David Tennant was absolutely brilliant in that role. He's being replaced, but there's so many rumours on who is replacing him. I'd like to see a black Doctor (who could very well be Paterson Joseph if you believe the rumourmongers) or a ginger Doctor. He's always wanted to be ginger.
Allons-y!
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
You cant be talking about the new BSG then...youthful_implants wrote:I didn't like battle star galactica or star trek on the TV - too anodyne and bland imo.
best thing about new dr who is that the main writer is going to be steven moffat! (blink, girl in the fireplace, the library...)
but not till 2010... except for 2 specials... we might see the next doctor in this years xmas special
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- Zerotonine
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Duuuuuuuuuuude, good selections. I have every William Gibson novel, although I've kind of lost interest in his story telling as of late. Wasn't that impressed with Spook Country.youthful_implants wrote:william gibson, orson scott card, jeff noon, neal stephenson, neil gaiman, iain m banks, frank herbert, asimov
have read nearly everything by these writers.
I didn't like battle star galactica or star trek on the TV - too anodyne and bland imo.
my favourite sci fi novels are the diamond age by neal stepehenson and mona lisa overdrive by gibson.
I've always been happy with Neal Stephenson's writing though, however he does get a little self indulgent. I haven't picked up Anathem though, any recommendations? I must say that it took me about 5 attempts to actually finish Cryptonomicon though
Allons-y!
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Zerotonine wrote:FoundationStepper wrote:got to admit im a sucker for the new dr who
which is best appreciated from the beginning, there are some brilliant long strands of plot in there
I'd like to see a black Doctor (who could very well be Paterson Joseph if you believe the rumourmongers) or a ginger Doctor. He's always wanted to be ginger.
LOL.
This just made me think of Samuel L. Jackson and snakes on a Tardis!
which possibly could be a thread all on it's own....lame
- ghetto kitty
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
same here, nice list youthful!Zerotonine wrote:[
Duuuuuuuuuuude, good selections. I have every William Gibson novel, although I've kind of lost interest in his story telling as of late. Wasn't that impressed with Spook Country.
I've always been happy with Neal Stephenson's writing though, however he does get a little self indulgent. I haven't picked up Anathem though, any recommendations? I must say that it took me about 5 attempts to actually finish Cryptonomicon though
i havent read anathem either, though i think someone here recommended it to me a while ago...
cant seem to find jeff noon at any normal bookstores though? have read most of them but need copies to pass onto other peoples!
i have read cryptonomicon twice, and liked it though i get lost in the coding lingo.,.
is one of those books ill go back to again and again im sure...Snow Crash is about my favorite book EVER in the cyber fiction genre...
and yes to Dr Who. Its all about the rustling cellophane aliens and daleks and great plot lines as opposed to big $$$ CGI and some puppet with a big name....
- system
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
greg egan is a fantastic and very under appreciated sci fi writer.By design wrote:last good piece of scifi I read was a book called axiomatic by an aussie writer greg eagan. Awesome short stories.
DRS wrote:It’s uplifting while we drift through time,
‘cause we keep pushing the vibe.
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
In relation to Cryptonomicon, all the coding stuff was the perfect example of Neal being self indulgent I also enjoyed Zodiac quite a lot, stupid punk/skinheads thinking hidden PCBs was actually a hidden cache of PCPghetto kitty wrote:
i have read cryptonomicon twice, and liked it though i get lost in the coding lingo.,.
is one of those books ill go back to again and again im sure...Snow Crash is about my favorite book EVER in the cyber fiction genre...
As for Snow Crash. Such great humour, pacing and techno-geekery. Perfect blend.
Allons-y!
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
I recommend the Nights Dawn Trilogy of books by Peter F Hamilton;
The Reality Dysfunction (1996)
The Neutronium Alchemist (1997)
The Naked God (1999).
But try not to read anything about these books from wikipedia as they give a lot of the story away!
The Reality Dysfunction (1996)
The Neutronium Alchemist (1997)
The Naked God (1999).
But try not to read anything about these books from wikipedia as they give a lot of the story away!
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
He wrote the last Sci-Fi book I read as well I think, Quarantine I think it was called, hang on I'll check.system wrote:greg egan is a fantastic and very under appreciated sci fi writer.By design wrote:last good piece of scifi I read was a book called axiomatic by an aussie writer greg eagan. Awesome short stories.
Yeah Quarantine.
See, my dad was always into Sci-Fi and mythology, and his take on it was always stuff like 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea, Hercules, Dune, Star Wars etc.
But our common ground was, Marvel & Dc comics because he was a big Phantom fan. So, I don't know if it classes as Sci-Fi/Fantasy, but stuff like Marvel movies/cartoons/comics I really love. (I know it sounds very uneducated), and so from that artistic format, Anime. Ie: Akira etc.
Macross Plus, with Sharon Apple, I have on Dvd. It's great. Theres a line tho in Anime where shit just becomes cool, but stupid. Ie: Eurosikidoji: Legend of the Overfiend & Legend of the Demon Womb. You can tell it's some guys wet dream worked into a animation, with demons and shit to try and add some scale of context so it can be classed as Sci-Fi/ Fantasy, and a bunch of violence for the sake of it. Which is fine, I love that shit, but I don't think it translates well into good story telling. Macros Plus does. Akira does, but then, you have Spriggan. Which is basically Akira but instead of finding Akira, they find Noahs Arc. So thats why all these anime are wearing thin on me because they're so similar as far as the story goes to one another. Appleseed, Ghost in the Shell etc.
The quality is so far gone now days. The ninja ones are great tho. Ninja Scroll is awsome, and I brought the whole series of Samurai Shamploo. (If I told you why you'd think I'm a dick.)
How many times can you write Fist Of The North Star? How many appocolypses can the Earth have? How many new cyber cities can we live in?
What I used to find as really good, kind of Fantasy/Sci-Fi, were the stories or scenarios dreamed up surrounding the WarHammer 40K board games. It was a whole new world.
The board game itself, forget it. But that whole concept was so simple. "Future at war", yet the detail in it all made it so exciting.
Now days the best Sci-Fi thrill I get is watching quantum physics documentaries on ABC. .. And it REALLY interests me. But I miss the quality of Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Cult media that used to be available. I just feel like the standard has dropped and I'm wanting something more. Maybe I haven't looked hard enough, but, thats why I'm here
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- FoundationStepper
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
for animation, the bar is set by miyazaki, mostly fantasy rather than sci fi
i fully recommend nausicaa and the valley of the wind for a good taste of scifi/fantasy from him.
after watching his output its really hard to watch poorly animated anime again
and Eurosikidoji! lol (its urotsukidoji) eurosikidoji sounds like some kind of demonic pop talent quest with spandex and diamontes...
i fully recommend nausicaa and the valley of the wind for a good taste of scifi/fantasy from him.
after watching his output its really hard to watch poorly animated anime again
and Eurosikidoji! lol (its urotsukidoji) eurosikidoji sounds like some kind of demonic pop talent quest with spandex and diamontes...
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- apophenian
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Yeah Greg Egan is great!
A.A. Attanasio is another favorite of mine - My favorite of his, 'Radix' is a complete mind bender.
So is his website, but not in a good way - http://www.aaattanasio.com/
A.A. Attanasio is another favorite of mine - My favorite of his, 'Radix' is a complete mind bender.
So is his website, but not in a good way - http://www.aaattanasio.com/
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Absofuckinlutely. Greg Egan is frankly farkin genius. Diaspora is a personal fav.system wrote:greg egan is a fantastic and very under appreciated sci fi writer.By design wrote:last good piece of scifi I read was a book called axiomatic by an aussie writer greg eagan. Awesome short stories.
Highly recommend the Mars Trilogy by Kim Robinson. Utterly realistic imo of colonising Mars.
Asimov, Arthur C Clarke, Michael Moorcock, Frank Herbert are legends have read most of them.
Would also recommend some slightly older ScFi stuff that deals with far future fiction. A Clarke did it in Childhood's End (and City and the Stars), even H G Wells was a brilliant writer. Gene Wolfe is another old school writer that is quite good.
Speculating on a million years in the future or more, where humans have evolved really floats my boat.
Another pick is a series by Stephen Baxter who talks about human beings subjected to the hive mentality and a series he did stretches from Ancient Rome until a billion years into the future. Very interesting. Its the Destiny's Children series. HIs series of short stories called Evolution I guarantee will rock your boat.
Fuck I could rant for hours on Sci-Fi. Dont get me started on fantasy genre books either.
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
WHAT???????????????????????????????apophenian wrote:Ya to Asimov - must read the foundation series again, before they ruin the movie version...
ok GOOGLING.
- ghetto kitty
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
totally @ self indulgent. zodiac, never heard of it! is that by him too? sounds right up my alley!Zerotonine wrote: In relation to Cryptonomicon, all the coding stuff was the perfect example of Neal being self indulgent I also enjoyed Zodiac quite a lot, stupid punk/skinheads thinking hidden PCBs was actually a hidden cache of PCP
As for Snow Crash. Such great humour, pacing and techno-geekery. Perfect blend.
im getting some greg egan too after reading all this...
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
lol you are correct.FoundationStepper wrote:for animation, the bar is set by miyazaki, mostly fantasy rather than sci fi
i fully recommend nausicaa and the valley of the wind for a good taste of scifi/fantasy from him.
after watching his output its really hard to watch poorly animated anime again
and Eurosikidoji! lol (its urotsukidoji) eurosikidoji sounds like some kind of demonic pop talent quest with spandex and diamontes...
I think I've seen Nausica, but, I need more violent stuff. Sci-Fi and violence go hand in hand.
I don't want to watch some little girl fly on a dragons back, I wanna watch the dragon bite her head off
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- a1studmuffin
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
I highly recommend Frederik Pohl's work... "Gateway" would have to be my favourite. Also I enjoyed Larry Niven's stuff ("Ringworld" in particular... although he seems to be a bit of a crazy now).
- system
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
he got the info (and perl snippet) from other people tbh.Zerotonine wrote:In relation to Cryptonomicon, all the coding stuff was the perfect example of Neal being self indulgentghetto kitty wrote:
i have read cryptonomicon twice, and liked it though i get lost in the coding lingo.,.
is one of those books ill go back to again and again im sure...Snow Crash is about my favorite book EVER in the cyber fiction genre...
</pedant>
DRS wrote:It’s uplifting while we drift through time,
‘cause we keep pushing the vibe.
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Yeah man - bigtime sci-fi boy here
Love reading the old classics - but have a real soft spot for William Gibson. Love the simple, yet effective, stacatto way in which he writes.
I like that time between the early 70's and early 80's where sci-fi took on that whole new look - droids, computers, mods, implants, etc, etc
Am reading 'American Gods' by Neil Gaiman right now. Not essentially sci-fi - but sort of crosses a few genre's. I dig the authors who somehow tap into something new, then run with it.
Love reading the old classics - but have a real soft spot for William Gibson. Love the simple, yet effective, stacatto way in which he writes.
I like that time between the early 70's and early 80's where sci-fi took on that whole new look - droids, computers, mods, implants, etc, etc
Am reading 'American Gods' by Neil Gaiman right now. Not essentially sci-fi - but sort of crosses a few genre's. I dig the authors who somehow tap into something new, then run with it.
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Not American Gods.
It's won the Nebula, Bram Stoker, Hugo, and Locus awards for being best book in each awards respected genre.
About as far from a kids book as you get.
I haven't read any of his other books, so I'm guessing there's some young adult there?
It's won the Nebula, Bram Stoker, Hugo, and Locus awards for being best book in each awards respected genre.
About as far from a kids book as you get.
I haven't read any of his other books, so I'm guessing there's some young adult there?
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
oh okay...i didnt know that..
i read 'neverwhere', and it had some good concepts but was kinda 14 year old in its delivery...
i read 'neverwhere', and it had some good concepts but was kinda 14 year old in its delivery...
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Not read it - but will try it on next. If it's too 'Harry Potter' for me, I will give it to my little bro.
- Zerotonine
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
Neil Gaiman can get pretty damn dark, but his work does smack of young adult. But that's not necessarily a bad thing Neverwhere is a young adult book, same as Stardust. His collection of short stories Fragile Things I wouldn't really rate as a young adult collection though.
I just read this again http://www.neilgaiman.com/p/Cool_Stuff/ ... /I_Cthulhu
At least he has a good appreciation for humour
I just read this again http://www.neilgaiman.com/p/Cool_Stuff/ ... /I_Cthulhu
At least he has a good appreciation for humour
Allons-y!
- system
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
neil gaiman also wrote the 'sandman' series of graphic novels. definitely not directed at teenagers.
DRS wrote:It’s uplifting while we drift through time,
‘cause we keep pushing the vibe.
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Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
How could I forget those? Damn!system wrote:neil gaiman also wrote the 'sandman' series of graphic novels. definitely not directed at teenagers.
Allons-y!
Re: Any Sci-Fi fans here?
I GOT NEW ANIME!
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