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Offworld Report: Weird Science: August 2004

Inflatable space stations, why we never went to the moon, the Project Icarus study on deflecting asteroids with very large atomics, Stephen Hawking on black holes, Cassini orbits Saturn, 'and Beagle 3' looks for an American ride.


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 August.

NASA and Mars
Politicians want to slash NASA's budget by $1.1 billion; kiss goodbye to Mars.

Mars Mole
Why the next generation of Mars Landers are planning to explore under the surface of Mars.

Ammonia on Mars Equals Life?
Why ammonia in the Martian atmosphere could be a sign of microbial life.

Martian Meteorite
A rock from ancient Mars has been discovered in the Antarctic.

Mars Found at the South Pole?
Wired magazine’s take on the rock from ancient Mars discovered in the Antarctic.

Webb's Giant
Article on the history of the Soviet Union’s giant moon booster.

Inflatable Space Stations
Article on the latest wave of ideas for inflatable modules in space.

Suborbital Sucks?
How the suborbital industry will evolve depending on how many customers there are.

Heavy Lift Debate
Should NASA develop a new heavy-lift launch vehicle?

We never went to the Moon (No, really.)
There have been many rumors that the Apollo 11 landing was faked. The Space Review fits all the pieces of the puzzle together.

Inter-galactic Traveller Mystery Woman Safe in Hawaii
Yes, well.

No Windows to Space
The next generation of supersonic jets will use aerodynamic shaping to minimize sonic booms - but there won’t be any windows.

Sunspot High
The Sun is now more active now than at anytime in the past 1,000 years. Are we in danger?

Relaunching NASA
Why the US military need an independent space force.

Giant Atomics and Project Icarus
Imagine a Saturn V launching a 100-megaton bomb: the Space Review Take another look at Project Icarus.

Don Quixote
The European Space Agency plan an anti-asteroid mission called Don Quixote, to launch a scout & destroyer pair to alter the course of an Earth-bound asteroid.

Maryland Mystery
Maryland mystery animal spotted again.

The Aldridge Report
Boldest calls for change within NASA and its relationship with private industry.

Beam Up
Scotty may soon be able to beam us up

Hubble discovers 100 new planets
Hubble finds as many as a hundred new planets around stars in our own galaxy.

Battlefield Robots March Forward
Military robots are coming ... but don’t expect T3 any time soon.

Exploding Eggshells
Exploding eggshells could reduce space junk risk.

Hawking’s New Bag
Stephen Hawking says: "I’m sorry to disappoint science fiction fans, but if information is preserved, there is no possibility of using black holes to travel to other universes."

Rovers Get Second Life
NASA wants to extend the mission life of their Mars rovers.

Japanese Ghost
Mount Fuji climbers dazzled by the 'Brocken specter'.

Nanotechnology Team in a Spin
Ultra-strong carbon nanotubes are spun into the first continuous fibres.

Cassini enters into Saturn
The Cassini-Huygens probe slips into Saturn orbit for four years.

Probe sees Titan's methane clouds
The Cassini-Huygens mission spies what appear to be clouds and a large crater on Saturn’s largest moon.

Cassini Victory
Cassini Reaches Saturn Orbit

The Sound of Saturn
So what does a waterfall sounds like on Saturn’s moon?

The Days on Saturn
Why Saturn’s days vary significantly.

Bad Spirit
Evil spirits' possess high-school girls in Zamboanga City.

Ariane’s Big Lift
Europe's Ariane 5 rocket makes ready to launch the world's largest satellite.

Robots in the Library
The robot prototype for a companion worker for librarians is revealed.

The March of AI
Wired on why machines are becoming more and more like the rest of us.

Pokemon Death
Reasearchers study 'Pokemon' seizures.

NASA Shake Up
NASA needs to consolidate its programs in preparation for its long Mars mission plan.

Rocket Hobbyists Dropping Out
Since 9/11, hobby racketeers have to jump through a lot of new FBI hoops. For many, it's just not worth it.

Beagle 3 wants an American Hitchhike
Professor Colin Pillinger begs NASA to could zap the new Beagle package to Mars for him.

Star Travelers Queue Here
Don’t hold your breath for a private space excursion, says Wired.

Space Exploration Stumble
Major early stumbles in the U.S.’s new ‘Vision for Space Exploration’.

Less Movement Please
Why space advocates need to focus less on movements and more on industries.

The Moon and Mars
NASA seems to be lumping together its Moon and Mars exploration effort. Big mistake.

Moore's Law for Space Travel?
Is space exploration poised for revolutionary advances along the lines of microprocessors. Not inevitable, by any means.


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OTHER CONTENT - August 2004

Oasis Star Trek

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Elizabeth Hand Interview
Sasha talks to SFF writer Elizabeth Hand about the art of developing characters, drawing on real events and people, and why it now takes Elizabeth at least two years to write a book.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)

The Dead Lines of Greg Bear
Author Greg Bear on his new novel, turning to horror after success as a science fiction writer, and Greg's in-production SF work about law enforcement on an international scale
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)

Marianne de Pierres Interview
The author of Nylon Angel on the dark futures of cyberpunk, cutting her teeth on A.C. Clarke, media manipulation, and how studying Film and TV as an undergraduate has influenced her science fiction writing.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)

Why, Robot?
Scots author Ken Macleod on why the idea of a tool, a machine, that replicates our most distinctive features - a machine with a face, a voice, a mind, a hand - is disturbing and uncanny.
(COMMENT)

Stones
Short story from Radi Todorov Radev, a 26-year old science fiction author from Bulgaria. As well as his fiction, Radi usually writes the Bulgarian SF news reports for Locus.
(FICTION)

Offworld Report: Science Fiction and Fantasy: August 2004
Interviews with Alan Moore, Geoffrey Landis, Steve Erikson and Robert Silverberg, why elitism in the genre is good, and Kim Stanley Robinson on the really dumb science of The Day After Tomorrow.
(NEWS)

Offworld Report: Weird Science: August 2004
Inflatable space stations, why we never went to the moon, the Project Icarus study on deflecting asteroids with very large atomics, Stephen Hawking on black holes, Cassini orbits Saturn, 'and Beagle 3' looks for an American ride.
(NEWS)

Fantasy Filmfest 2004
Sasha tells how starting out in Munich, and cutting a creepy swathe through Stuttgart, Cologne and Frankfurt, to a final week-long blowout in Berlin, the Fantasy Filmfest dishes everything from haute horreur to gore-n-splatter.
(CON REPORTS)

I, Robot - Mark's Take
In 2035 there is a murder at U.S. Robotics and a robophobic policeman, played by Will Smith, believes robots are responsible. Mixing animation and live action nearly seamlessly, I, Robot turns Isaac Asimov's robot world into the backdrop for a prosaic summer action film. It is not a film Asimov would have enjoyed much.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Spider-Man 2 - Frank's Take
In director Sam Raimi’s explosively action-packed superhero saga Spider-Man 2, he picks up the pleasurable pace of the web-slinging wizard. Tobey Maguire is back in full form as the angst-ridden crime-fighting cobwebbed crawler. Lost in a perpetual haze of conflict and courageousness, Maguire’s Peter Parker/Spider-Man is a harried hero with a tainted blue-collar badge that he proudly dons.
(FILM REVIEWS)

The Chronicles of Riddick - Frank's Take
Four years after Pitch Black, filmmaker David Twohy decides to follow up his celebrated pet project with the disjointed and bloated sequel The Chronicles of Riddick. Utterly ponderous and as clunky as a crater rock, Riddick fails to capture the spontaneous spirit of its predecessor.
(FILM REVIEWS)

The Stepford Wives - Frank's Take
The writing is on the wall when a casual comedy that boasts a high-powered cast doesn’t have a single clue as to what it wants to accomplish. And that’s certainly not a vote of confidence for a dark SF movie looking to make mincemeat commentary about the awakening of feminism and the imprisoned role of domicile divas looking to grow beyond their restricted boundaries.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Around the World in 80 Days - Frank's Take
Poor Jules Verne must be spinning in his grave. Out of all the remakes that had been done regarding Verne’s whimsical classical story, director Frank 'The Wedding Singer' Coraci delivers a botched and banal affair of lackluster lunacy in his updated version of Around the World in 80 Days.
(FILM REVIEWS)


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