No Icebergs but Plenty of Ice.

Caroline, who has a fascination with the Titanic, booked us up to go to the O2 yesterday (O2 is of course a better name that ‘Millennium Dome’ and its associations with the laughable ‘millennium experience’ and about a billion in wasted money, for a fucking tent) but, with the weather we’ve been having, we were starting to have second thoughts. However, in the end I said let’s just go for it, so we did.

There was ice and snow everywhere and the road leading down to Althorne station was a sheet of ice (apparently roads to railway stations are not main routes that need gritting?), but if you don’t drive like a dick that wasn’t a problem. We parked at the station where only three cars occupied a car park that was normally full, and waited for out train, which was only a few minutes late. This would take us to Shenfield where we would then change for a train to Stratford, then hop on the Jubilee line heading for the O2.

However, the train stopped at Wickford and we then had to wait for three-quarters of an hour for another train to take us to Stratford. Luckily the pies and coffee there were cheap and good and, during the ensuing journey, some lunatics dressing up as super heroes (on their way to a party) were aboard to cheer us up.

At Stratford, because we hadn’t actually checked which stop we had to get off at to get to the O2 we did that old-time British thing and asked direction from a couple of policemen. They hadn’t got a clue and were in danger of putting us on the wrong course until another traveller put them right. We had to go to North Greenwich. From there to the O2 is just a short walk, and soon we reached the ‘Bubble’ where the Titanic artefacts display was located. Unfortunately I can’t put up any photographs because we weren’t allowed to take pictures inside. It was all pretty interesting and the American staff there were very informative and helpful. We spent an hour and three-quarters checking out the exhibits.

What they do, when you go in, is issue you with copy of a ticket for one of the Titanic passengers so, on the way out, you can see whether or not you survived. Both Caroline and I did survive, though she wasn’t in first class like me. They also take a photo against a green screen so on the way out you can buy a picture of yourself standing before the staircase Leonardo Dicaprio swanned down in the last scene of the film. Within the exhibition there is also a block of ice maintained at the temperature of the sea most of the passengers went into. Really, all they needed to do was turn off the heating.

After this we enjoyed a meal before heading home. On the way out I got a proper look at what I have to put forward as a contender for any ‘ugly building’ awards there might be.

Stratford was a nightmare. It took us half an hour to find a platform at which a train was due to head in the direction we wanted to go. Whilst waiting there we watched the train before ours arrive, full of people and with loads of people on the platform wanting to get on. It was like a scene out of some disaster movie with the crowds trying to escape the tsunami or the Martian war machines. When the doors finally closed, leaving a lot of passengers behind, I half expected to see severed limbs on the platform. When our train arrived the scenario was little different and, of course, you find that once aboard the train the problem stems from selfish dicks clustering about the door and not moving on down the carriage.

This train took us to Shenfield where similar scenes were being enacted. I was waiting for station staff to come out with machine-guns and leashed alsations, but station staff were notable by their absence. Here, and at Wickford station was where I started to feel the urge to lob a brick at any visible loudspeaker. The phrase, ‘we apologise for any inconvenience caused’ tends to cause one to doubt if there’s any contrition involved when it’s a recording being played ad nauseum. It then occurred to me then that a better name than the one painted on the sides of the trains might be ‘National Excuse’. I also noted how the phrase, ‘for your safety and comfort smoking is prohibited’ was always immediately followed by ‘for your safety and comfort this station has CCTV’ (note: I might have the precise wording wrong here, but you get the gist of it). Another one was something along the lines of, ‘due to the adverse weather conditions the platform is extremely slippery’. Well, no shit Sherlock.

When we finally got home I had to drive back from the station in second gear, never going above about 20 miles an hour. The car is in the garage now and I’m sitting next to the radiator, never to venture out again unless for essential supplies. You guys who have to go through that shit every day have my deepest sympathy.

Arsenic-based Life.

Ah, so this was what all the fuss was about:

NASA-Funded Research Discovers Life Built With Toxic Chemical12.02.10 Image of Mono Lake Research area

NASA-funded astrobiology research has changed the fundamental knowledge about what comprises all known life on Earth.

Researchers conducting tests in the harsh environment of Mono Lake in California have discovered the first known microorganism on Earth able to thrive and reproduce using the toxic chemical arsenic. The microorganism substitutes arsenic for phosphorus in its cell components.

“The definition of life has just expanded,” said Ed Weiler, NASA’s associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at the agency’s Headquarters in Washington. “As we pursue our efforts to seek signs of life in the solar system, we have to think more broadly, more diversely and consider life as we do not know it.”

S is for Saberhagen and Silverberg

FRED SABERHAGEN:
THE BROKEN LANDS

BROTHER BERSERKER
BERSERKER’S PLANET

JOHN SCALZI:
OLD MAN’S WAR
THE GHOST BRIGADES
THE LAST COLONY

BOB SHAW:
THE WREATH OF STARS
SHIP OF STRANGERS
THE PALACE OF ETERNITY
NIGHT WALK

LUCIUS SHEPARD:
THE GOLDEN

ROBERT SILVERBERG:
THE BEST OF ROBERT SILVERBERG
THE SEED OF EARTH
STOCHASTIC MAN
UNFAMILIAR TERRITORY
THE GATE OF WORLDS
THE OPEN SKY
PROJECT PENDULUM
BORN WITH THE DEAD
TOWER OF GLASS
SF HALL OF FAME (EDITOR)

CLIFFORD D SIMAK:
ALL FLESH IS GRASS
WAYSTATION
CITY
SHAKESPEARE’S PLANET
CEMETERY WORLD

PHIL SMITH:
THE RESURRECTION MACHINE

BRIAN M STABLEFORD:
DAY OF WRATH
JOURNEY TO THE CENTRE
SWAN SONG
RHAPSODY IN BLACK

NEAL STEPHENSON:
CRYPTONOMICON

MICHAEL SWANWICK:
VACUUM FLOWERS

NASA Announcement

Here’s a bit more on that upcoming NASA announcement. Still the rumour mills are turning and no one really knows what’s going to be said.

It could be arsenic based life on Earth, life on Mars or life on Titan. Who knows? The announcement is at 2.00PM EST which is, I think, 7.00PM GMT???

Update:

Here’s the Register’s take on it. I guess the clue is in the words:  “a finding that will impact the search for evidence of extraterrestrial life”.

R is for Reynolds and Reed

Last year I was steadily going through my SFF book collection, cataloguing it and photographing it, and putting the pictures and lists up here just for interest. This morning I woke at 5.00 and couldn’t get back to sleep, so I got up, cut my hair, had a shower, then climbed up into the loft and started sorting through those books again. I’d reached the letter P before, so now let’s go on to R.

There’s not many Rs here and looking through my ‘Encyclopedia of Science Fiction’ I can’t see any others I would have wanted to include. Maybe if I had an encyclopedia of fantasy I would have found more, and maybe I should have included Rowling, but they’re Caroline’s books.

ROBERT REED:
MARROW
SISTER ALICE

ALASTAIR REYNOLDS:
CHASM CITY
REVELATION SPACE
ABSOLUTION GAP
REDEMPTION ARC
GALACTIC NORTH
THE PREFECT
PUSHING ICE

MICHAEL SCOTT ROHAN:
THE ANVIL OF ICE
THE FORGE IN THE FOREST
THE HAMMER OF THE SUN

ERIC FRANK RUSSELL:
WASP

Plasma Rocket

Interesting…

Top boffins working at a NASA spinoff company are thrilled to announce that their plasma drive technology – potentially capable of revolutionising space travel beyond the Earth’s atmosphere – has checked out A-OK in ground tests.

According to the Ad Astra Rocket Company, building the Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR), the firm’s VX-200 prototype engine has just completed its latest round of trials with flying colours.

WTF!

Thanks to Jan Harald Fonas for putting this my way. I wonder what, exactly, it means?

WASHINGTON — NASA will hold a news conference at 2 p.m. EST on Thursday, Dec. 2, to discuss an astrobiology finding that will impact the search for evidence of extraterrestrial life. Astrobiology is the study of the origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe.

Here’s the link.