I answer questions

So I get asked these things a lot, and the answers are too long for twitter, so here they are:


Q: Does the internet exist in The Expanse? How does it work?


A: Of course it does, or some version of it does. The big difference between a solar system wide electronic communications network and the one we have now is a thing called light delay. See, in The Expanse, everyone still has to obey the speed limit of the universe, the speed of light. This includes things like radio waves. So, if you go onto Google on Ganymede and run a search for something that exists on a computer on Earth, you won’t be getting your search results any time soon.


This would mean that there would be two layers to the “internet.” The local network on whatever body you’re living on, and the wider network that requires signal repeaters and is only as fast as the speed of light. I’d imagine this would also mean that local computers would cache as much of the most requested items as possible, to limit delays.


Q: Why call them ‘hand terminals?’


A: Because they are not phones. In the universe of The Expanse, we are living in the true internet of things. Nearly every object more complex than a hair brush is a smart or semi-smart device connected to the network around it. The hand terminal is barely a device, on its own. It has little or no memory or processing power. It is literally just a dumb terminal to give the user access to the network and to the various devices around them. It is a portable UI for operating other things. Which is why when the networks go down, the hand terminals become bricks. You can’t even play that game of angry birds classic you downloaded with your google store coupon.


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Published on January 14, 2017 14:56
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message 1: by Astrid (new)

Astrid Thank you for the clarification on this although actually what you describe here is exactly what I saw in my head when I was reading your books. It is to your credit as an author that your universe is a vibrant living place in my mind and that although I do frequently revisit books I love (and I do love your books) they also open my imagination and my own speculations on what we could (will?) find in space. You have the ability to hand me a universe through your work and I have to say not since I read Cherryh's Downbelow Station and Niven's Ringworld as a teen have a found another author that so vividly brings space to life for me. There is intelligence in your writing but also entertainment and you never get so caught up in the science that you lose the people, if that makes sense. I call them people intentionally because for me characters are entities in writing that I can observe but not really identify with, people involve me in the story and that, to me (as a bibliophile and lifelong daily reader), is what good writing is all about. Anyway, TMI. Thank you for the adventure.


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