Friday, December 25, 2020

Fa la la la la, la la la la.

Well, as I like to say, the system works.  I received almost everything from my modest seasonal wish list this year:  ALL of the books, and two of my three graphic novel asks.  My thanks to my gorgeous spouse Karli for her gifts from the list, and I greatly appreciate the contributions from Karli’s mother and stepfather – although lord knows what they thought of a Christmas gift list containing a book about someone named Murderbot, another novel inexplicably titled Nophek Gloss, and something with this on the cover:

Well, it IS the season to be jolly...merry Christmas, everyone!

- Sid 

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

The Rest of the Robots.


 

Karli brought the Roomba home today!  It's a well-behaved early Model 800 Series, apparently too early in the product line for wifi access, but otherwise in excellent shape.

Ah, but I felt so bad the first time we pressed the CLEAN button! I'd put the charger in a quiet corner beside the wall unit in our dining area, and the poor thing was just confused - the table was right there, and the dining chairs, and Karli's mother had warned her that it got a little confused by things like that.  

It got frightened and hid under Karli's white chair, the one with the little fabric skirt, but then it got caught on the cord for the Christmas tree lights - it was SO SAD.  So tomorrow night we're going to let it start in the hallway, where it's nice and straight...hopefully that will makes things easier.

Jaq the Cat, who suffers a bit from PTSD for whatever reason, was surprisingly calm, although a little suspicious - I don't think he's going to be one of those cats that becomes internet famous by riding around on our new robot.

As you can see from the above, it's ridiculously easy to anthropomorphize Stabby* the Roomba as it trundles around the living room in an apparently random fashion, going back and forth in something rather like the pattern that a vacuuming human would use. Karli has suggested that we should get stick-on googly eyes for it, which I think is the best plan ever.

However, as with Opportunity, the defunct exploratory Martian rover, it seems like a bad idea to give robots like Stabby artificial intelligence.  In the case of Opportunity, it was due to the danger of its task - in the case of Stabby, it's the opposite: boredom.  

Stabby doesn't need to be able to calculate rocket trajectories or write Oscar-winning movie scripts, in fact, it would seem cruel to make Stabby too smart.  Ultimately, if it were possible to give Stabby some level of AI, it would make sense to make him about as smart as Jaq, and with similar interests:  taking pleasure in long naps, and deriving much excitement and enjoyment from chasing little pieces of dust around the apartment.  But no purring - Jaq needs something to maintain his unique status, and Stabby will never be quite as cuddly as our little feline friend.

- Sid
 
* Based on a somewhat obscure science fiction internet meme about a space Roomba with a knife taped to it - to quote the 12th Doctor, "Google it."

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Victorious IV: "Allons-y!"


Most annoying thing about paradoxes, besides the impending reality collapse. 
They make conversations so repetitive.

The Tenth Doctor, Defender of the Daleks

Although some of my purchases in the Doctor Who Time Lord Victorious event weren't available at the time I placed my order, Indigo was able to immediately ship the two stand-alone novels, Engines of War and Combat Magicks, along with the first of the TLV purchases, the Defender of the Daleks graphic novel.  I've booked some extra time off for the holiday season, so I was able to immediately settle down for a leisurely read.

It took me a few chapters to realize that something was bothering me about the first book.  My initial reaction was that it was reasonably well written and that the plot was engaging, with some interesting concepts that fit nicely into the Whoniverse, but it was also somehow a bit flat, a bit lacking – what was missing?

The problem is that essentially, the books are an extension of the television version, which assumes that you’re an ongoing viewer – just as they don’t have to explain who Meredith Grey is at the start of every episode of Grey's Anatomy*, if you don’t know why there’s an obsolete blue police box called a TARDIS that’s bigger on the inside, you’re on your own. 

Obviously I have all of that knowledge, but my subconscious reading mind kept looking for the kind of explanatory exposition that a stand-alone novel would have. (Although, one of the novels breaks some new ground by dealing with the legendary Time War, which has never been fully documented – probably just to give writers some room to work in situations like this.)

The flip side of this coin is that, due to that existing knowledge of the show, it’s impossible not to compare the written Doctors with their live action equivalents – just how well does the character in Defender of the Daleks match up with David Tennant’s performance, or with Jodie Whittaker and John Hurt for the two novels? 

As you might expect, the results vary – there’s a fine line between accuracy and parody when writing someone’s verbal style, and the process is an odd inversion of the usual method, with an author attempting to recreate the actor’s style rather than the actor interpreting a script. In my case, I found that I ended up mentally delivering the lines in the actor’s voice to see if they worked. For the most part, the writers succeeded, although there were a few places in the graphic novel where it didn’t quite feel like David Tennant, and a few places where it felt a bit too much like David Tennant - if that's even possible.

However, all of this is secondary to the real question: WHY DON'T THE DALEKS IN DEFENDER OF THE DALEKS REMEMBER THE GREAT TIME WAR????  It may seem like a trivial time-travel thing to the casual reader, but as a fan, that may well keep me awake tonight. Let's hope they cover that off in one of the books that I'm still waiting for, I'd hate to have to hunt through the entire event in search of the answer.

- Sid
 
* Are there stand-alone Grey's Anatomy books?  Or is that sort of thing restricted to science fiction shows?