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Offworld Report July 2004: Weird Science

Sir Arthur C. Clarke on terraforming, the Cassini probe closes in on a weird moon, scientists teleport atoms, the invisible Nordic warship, has Atlantis finally been discovered, and more SpaceShipOne and X-prize coverage than you'll know what to do with.


This month's worthy content roundup of all the stuff found 'offworld the 'Nest from the world of online space science, cutting edge research and ... well, just plain weird stuff. Jessica Martin is your web scout for July.

Red Home
Sir Arthur C. Clarke speaks on the science of Terraforming.

Reach for the Sky
The tale of SpaceShipOne.

Nasa needs Reform
Well, so says President Bush.

The Invisible Wall
Transparent walls? Whatever will they think of next?

20 Space Winners?
The companies in the running for the X Prize.

Crusing with Cassini
Saturn, here we come.

Cassini closes In
The moon Phoebe - not from Friends, dummy - comes into view.

All Change at NASA
Travel to Mars. Not with NASA in the state it is currently is.

Why Humans?
Is human space exploration a waste of space?

Energy for NASA
Beaming solar power to earth from orbit.

Save the Spysat
Has the spysats been unfairly maligned?

Teleporting Atoms
But don't beam up just yet.

Teleporting Atoms II
Are quantum computers around the corner?

Robot PDA
Will NASA's robotic sphere be an astronaut's best friend?

Space the reality Show
Why SpaceShipOne makes for bad TV.

Cold Mars
Is Mars entering a new winter cycle?

Stealth Ships get Steaming
The future of invisible ships.

Little Spaceport on the Prairie
Oklahoma wants a spaceport.

Going Quantum
Why quantum technology is going to be big.

Dinkin's Big Idea
The recipe for change at NASA.

Pseudoscience Kills
Bruce Sterling on why political purges are slaying US science.

From Reagan to Space
Ronald Reagan legacy for space exploration.

Bricks on Mars
How the Martian settlers will build bases from local material.

Missile Defense Shield.
The U.S Star Wars anti-missile shield moves ahead.

International Space Station Raccoon Problems
Inquisitive raccoon raids supplies on the space station.

Die Cassini-Huygens, Die
Why Cassini will be last mission of its kind. And good riddence.

Dark Matter Lights Up
Andromeda IX sheds light on the dark matter mystery.

Atlantis Found?
Satellite imagery may show the remains of the lost city of Atlantis.

 


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OTHER CONTENT - July 2004

Oasis Star Trek

NEW. Add this news to your own web site for free!

Tricia Sullivan Interview
On why her SF novel Maul was a twisted response to Sheri S. Tepper's 'The Gate to Women's Country', her regard for authors Justina Robson and John Courtenay Grimwood, and imagining an extremely disturbing future.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)

Offworld Report July 2004: Science Fiction and Fantasy
Interviews with authors Sean McMullen, John Crowley , Bruce Sterling, Richard Morgan and Kim Stanley Robinson; a look at the Stepford Wives and the sequel to Pitch Black, fiction by Gardner Dozois, and a report from the first African-American science fiction festival.
(NEWS)

Offworld Report July 2004: Weird Science
Sir Arthur C. Clarke on terraforming, the Cassini probe closes in on a weird moon, scientists teleport atoms, the invisible Nordic warship, has Atlantis finally been discovered, and more SpaceShipOne and X-prize coverage than you'll know what to do with.
(NEWS)

Looking Upward
Scots SF author Ken MacLeod muses on all our imagined societies of common ownership, and wonders if poor old human nature just keeps on getting in the way of utopia.
(NEWS)

The Day After Tomorrow: Mark's Take
In this new movie Mark finds global warming launches a quick-freeze ice age, killing billions of people. Roland Emmerich brings us a special-effects-laden look at the human race reeling under the havoc caused by the worst natural disaster in 10,000 years, a super-cold cyclonic storm that covers the face of the planet. The story is compelling and plausible enough for non-experts.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: Mark's Take
Harry Potter is back at Hogwarts and this year he has a crack at the man who betrayed and murdered his parents. But Mark discovers this is a family film, not a children's film. The adults may like it as much as any of the children in the audience, but the series is reaching a point of diminishing returns.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: Frank's Take
Author J.K. Rowling’s bespectacled boy wizard wonder is back and better than ever. In fact, he’s matured and the subsequent growth of this sorcery student is evident in the burden of angst good old Harry carries around as his magic-in-training mode continues to dominate his colorful yet chaotic existence.
(FILM REVIEWS)

The Day After Tomorrow: Frank's Take
Frank reckons 'The Day After Tomorrow' will most likely be viewed as a long-winded and loopy meteorology mishap for weather forecast freaks. Justifiably so, Emmerich’s furious yet flimsy convention of cartoonish catastrophe gives a whole new meaning to the classic movie title Gone with the Wind. It’s too bad that this global gloom session couldn’t sweep away any sooner than its two-hour running time.
(FILM REVIEWS)


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