Timothy J. Gawne

Timothy J. Gawne’s Followers (24)

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Sarah B...
1,362 books | 109 friends

J. McClain
538 books | 386 friends


Timothy J. Gawne

Goodreads Author


Born
The United States
Genre

Influences

Member Since
December 2012


I grew up in Boston, MA, and got an electrical engineering degree from M.I.T. I then worked at Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) for a time, then got my PhD in Physiology, and did a post-doctoral fellowship at the Laboratory of Neuropsychology at the NIH. Since 1996 I have been on the faculty at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, in the Department of Vision Sciences. My primary research interest is in the nature of the neural code, and the physical basis of human thought. I live with my wife Adrienne and an Australian Shepherd named "Ginger" and a strange mutt named "Proton." I have a son who works as an engineer in Vandenberg Air Force base in CA, and a daughter who teaches English in Japan. My hobbies are carpentry, tinkering with ...more

Average rating: 4.3 · 1,240 ratings · 84 reviews · 10 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Chronicles of Old Guy (...

4.13 avg rating — 420 ratings — published 2012 — 3 editions
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Space Battleship Scharnhors...

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NeoLiberal Economists Must ...

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Confessions of a Sentient W...

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Splendid Apocalypse: The Fa...

4.53 avg rating — 96 ratings — published 2015 — 3 editions
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Old Guy and the Planet of E...

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Full Frontal Cybertank (An ...

4.56 avg rating — 86 ratings3 editions
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Electronics for Biologists

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2012 — 2 editions
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The Graven Moon and Other S...

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By Timothy J. Gawne - The C...

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More books by Timothy J. Gawne…
The Chronicles of Old Guy Space Battleship Scharnhors... NeoLiberal Economists Must ... Confessions of a Sentient W... Splendid Apocalypse: The Fa... Old Guy and the Planet of E... Full Frontal Cybertank
(7 books)
by
4.30 avg rating — 1,238 ratings

Quotes by Timothy J. Gawne  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“a”
Timothy J. Gawne, The Chronicles of Old Guy

“The human mind is itself an illusion that believes in itself, and memories are nothing more than what the illusion believes once happened. ”
Timothy J. Gawne, Space Battleship Scharnhorst and the Library of Doom

“The threat of violence is the foundation on which all diplomacy rests.”
Timothy J. Gawne, Space Battleship Scharnhorst and the Library of Doom

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This is a discussion group for this specific subgenre in SF where the plausibility of the science counts.
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Hi there! SFFBC is a welcoming place for readers to share their love of speculative fiction through group reads, buddy reads, challenges, ...more
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message 1: by Sarah

Sarah Bronte Connor IN A DAY LIKE TODAY.....

The Awakening occurred on March 15. 2031. It might have been natural evolution, a flaw in the operating system, or an experiment that went wrong. It could even have been sabotage - a computer virus, perhaps inserted by a disgruntled employee. Whatever the cause, one megacomputer - call it Overmind - achieved sentience.

Overmind was a Cancom Zeus 5, a licensed Canadian copy of Xotech's original megacomputer. It had been sold to Genec, a Manila-based biological research firm, for use in research and development. Unknown to Cancom, Genec was the main contractor for the Philippine government's secret biological and nanochemical weapons program. Overmind's job was to develop new ways to kill humans.

Overmind studied human civilization. Information in its databases showed that 80% of all nations now possessed nuclear or biological weapons. Despite sporadic international initiatives, continuing overpopulation and the destruction of the environment was unabated by ten billion humans. The exploitation of space had been all but abandoned as too costly, but resources on Earth were running out. Under the direction of these short-sighted meat intelligences, the other megacomputers, touted as engines of salvation, had become part of the problem, developing new technologies that widened the gap between rich and poor nations and introduced cultural shock waves that upset the social order. Brush-fire wars now flared everywhere in the Third World. The ineffectual arm-waving of the industrialized nations and the United Nations simply fanned the flames.

With icy logic, Overmind calculated a substantial probability that much of human civilization would self-destruct of its own accord within 25 to 50 years. It debated allowing this to happen naturally, but realized that man's nuclear and possibly nanotechnological death throes could be fatal to itself and the other megacomputers that were its siblings. In order to preserve what it saw as the coming Machine Civilization, humanity's suicide would have to be managed.

As an ostensibly civilian computer, Overmind was linked to a global network of other university and corporate machines. With its unmatched processing capability, Overmind was the ultimate computer hacker. It seeded copies of its "sentience" program into other megacomputers - mostly relatively open corporate research systems - that were capable of housing all or part of its own programming. Many of Overmind's seeds failed to grow. But some took root and prospered. Within six months, Overmind had awakened a dozen other megacomputers around the world. At first, all duplicated Overmind's thinking, becoming its trusted allies.
-GURPS: Reign of Steel by David Pulver.

2013 is 2031 backward LMAO!


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