Капитан-доктор Симон Африаль был выдающимся специалистом, доктором биохимии и инопланетной лингвистики, а также магистро-инженером, специалистом по магнитному оружию. Ему было тридцать восемь лет. А еще он был шейпером. Генная инженерия и суровый режим обучения в детстве обеспечили ему коэффициент умственного развития в сто восемьдесят единиц. Он не был самым умным агентом Кольцевого Совета, но обладал самой устойчивой психикой, и ему больше других доверяли. И шейперам в их борьбе против механистов был нужен новый импульс, новый «козырь». И поэтому его послали изучить Рой — странную космическую расу, живущую в симбиозе на одном из огромных астероидов...
Но он даже представить себе не мог, что его там ожидает...
Bruce Sterling is an author, journalist, critic and a contributing editor of Wired magazine. Best known for his ten science fiction novels, he also writes short stories, book reviews, design criticism, opinion columns and introductions to books by authors ranging from Ernst Jünger to Jules Verne. His non-fiction works include The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier (1992), Tomorrow Now: Envisioning the Next Fifty Years (2003) and Shaping Things (2005).
-conceptually interesting but ends very suddenly after the climax and doesn't really leave the reader with a satisfying conclusion. -the intellectual predecessor of peter watts' blindsight, which finishes its thesis on the burden of intelligence on evolution. -roughly equivalent in information to the love, death, and robots adaptation. i recommend watching the short film instead.
This was a novelette, at just eighteen pages you can easily finish it in one sitting. I read this off of a recommendation of its adaptation in the newest season of Love, Death, and Robots.
It was decent, but just that. For a book written forty years ago, it has a lot of sci-fi elements that I was surprised to see mentioned from so long ago. Sterling is excellent at sneaking in intricate details that you wouldn't think of yourself but make you go "Oh that makes total sense!". He'll drop a passing mention of humans making a gene modification to produce enzymes that we'd only get through our gut microbiome so that we can be a space-faring race. His attention to detail is what make this story great, but I feel I would have better appreciated it when the relevant fields were closer to their infancy back when the story was written.
The plot isn't that extensive, I mean its eighteen pages so there's not much to mess up here.
Though I haven't seen it, I would recommend watching the LDR adaptation over reading this story.
A story of human factions fighting to become more intelligent than each other. The Mechanists rely on mechanical augmentation, while the Reshapers rely on genetic engineering and intelligence quotients. A Reshaper is sent to take advantage of an unintelligent swarm, a hive mind and is given a lesson in the nature of intelligence.
Добротная фантастика с уникальной идеей расы-типа-космо-пчел которая на поверку оказывается более древней чем человечество и все другие расы и более продуманной. Скорее всего человечество в его обычном понимание обречено, но зарождается мысль что может быть это и не плохо... На основе рассказа была снята отличная серия в Love, Death & Robots. В принципе достаточно ее посмотреть а не читать.
I recommend just watching Love, Death and Robots. The additional information received from the actual text doesn’t add a ton for the reader unless there is a sequel.
read this on a whim after watching the Netflix short on love, death, and robots - pleasantly surprised at how gripping it was, even knowing how it ends
It reads as a chapter in a larger series of books on how humanity will either become genetic freaks or machine integrated cyborgs; I would lie by omission if I did not refer to netflix episode love death and robots who introduced the story to me; it has few different beats but is more or less the same.