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Soonish: Ten Emerging Technologies That'll Improve and/or Ruin Everything (2017)

von Kelly Weinersmith, Zach Weinersmith

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7122631,915 (3.87)9
"From a top scientist and the creator of the hugely popular web comic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, a hilariously illustrated investigation into future technologies--from how to fling a ship into deep space on the cheap to 3D organ printing. What will the world of tomorrow be like? How does progress happen? And why do we not have a lunar colony already? What is the holdup? In this smart and funny book, celebrated cartoonist Zach Weinersmith and noted researcher Dr. Kelly Weinersmith give us a snapshot of what's coming next--from robot swarms to nuclear-fusion-powered toasters. By weaving their own research, interviews with the scientists who are making these advances happen, and Zach's trademark comics, the Weinersmiths investigate why these technologies are needed, how they would work, and what is standing in their way. New technologies are almost never the work of isolated geniuses with a neat idea. A given future technology may need any number of intermediate technologies to develop first, and many of these critical advances may appear to be irrelevant when they are first discovered. The journey to progress is full of strange detours and blind alleys that tell us so much about the human mind and the march of civilization. To this end, SOONISH investigates ten different emerging fields, from programmable matter to augmented reality, from space elevators to robotic construction, to show us the amazing world we will have, you know, soonish."--Jacket.… (mehr)
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This book was fun, but obsolete about five minutes after it was published. ( )
  MylesKesten | Jan 23, 2024 |
This is a fun book that describes several near future fields of research in an accessible, funny way. Each subject has the feel of mad science (from space projects to brain surgery), but people are actually working on them, and the current state of the art, near future implications, and potential risks are described. Also there are cartoony illustrations! ( )
  yaj70 | Jan 22, 2024 |
A fun American book from 2017, with coloured cartoons, concerning many facts about: Burj Khalife the tallest building in the world at half a mile high, OSIRIS-REx (asteroid sampler return mission), National Ignition Facility, the difference between fusion (good for humans) and fission, Project Plowshare - the peaceful purposes for atomic bombs in 1961, Walt Disney's film Our Friend the Atom (in which Tinkerbell makes the atom symbol with her wand), Ford releasing a concept car design for a future nuclear vehicle called The Nucleon, early environmental protests, Professor Skylar Tibbits' programmable straw changing shape when added to water, MIT, Ernst Neufert's Hausbaumaschine - semi-automatic machines he invented to build ten houses a week using mass production on rails, and human nostrils alternate activity.
I couldn't quite understand what age-group this book was aimed at as sometimes it referred to school, and other times it talked about going to work. Also it had Americanisms such as the Dunkin donut "sawdust and tears", the crisper drawer in fridges, kibble. Nonetheless, an interesting and entertaining read. ( )
  AChild | Aug 31, 2023 |
This is the month that the internet becomes book form and then I read it? Except, in contrast to the other book-form internets that I've read this month, Soonish isn't based on a blog, but rather the webcomic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal. Which is one of those things that makes me feel a little less lonely: there are a nonzero number of people out there who, like me, eagerly wake up in the morning to read the newest math/D&D/physics/astronomy joke-based comic strip. I'm not alone in the universe.

Soonish is actually primarily by the wife of the SMBC guy, Dr. Weinersmith, who is a PhD in parasitology and her scholarly publication list certainly dwarfs her lay publications. In my opinion, the scholarly bent showed: it's easy to go off of the scifi deep end here, but Dr. Weinersmith both explained things clearly, but also evidently spent a lot of time interviewing the top scholars in the field and making sure she was accurately depicting the current state of each field as well as the promises that it might contain. Ultimately, because the book focuses on multiple future technologies in a fairly rapid fire way it was light reading, but I don't think overly simplified.

I always have pause to see my own field depicted in the lay literature: here in the form of CRISPR, synthetic DNA and precision medicine, but I found it mostly well done, with a couple of metaphors that didn't quite work out. If that's the barometer for the overall scientific rigor of the book, I would say it's in about the 95th percentile of pop science writing.

And the illustrations certainly helped! As a reader of SMBC, I found the comics absolutely consistent with the tone of the webcomic -- funny and a little dry. ( )
  settingshadow | Aug 19, 2023 |
This was great and makes me want to follow them on twitter. Would highly recommend ( )
  martialalex92 | Dec 10, 2022 |
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Kelly WeinersmithHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Weinersmith, ZachHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
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"From a top scientist and the creator of the hugely popular web comic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, a hilariously illustrated investigation into future technologies--from how to fling a ship into deep space on the cheap to 3D organ printing. What will the world of tomorrow be like? How does progress happen? And why do we not have a lunar colony already? What is the holdup? In this smart and funny book, celebrated cartoonist Zach Weinersmith and noted researcher Dr. Kelly Weinersmith give us a snapshot of what's coming next--from robot swarms to nuclear-fusion-powered toasters. By weaving their own research, interviews with the scientists who are making these advances happen, and Zach's trademark comics, the Weinersmiths investigate why these technologies are needed, how they would work, and what is standing in their way. New technologies are almost never the work of isolated geniuses with a neat idea. A given future technology may need any number of intermediate technologies to develop first, and many of these critical advances may appear to be irrelevant when they are first discovered. The journey to progress is full of strange detours and blind alleys that tell us so much about the human mind and the march of civilization. To this end, SOONISH investigates ten different emerging fields, from programmable matter to augmented reality, from space elevators to robotic construction, to show us the amazing world we will have, you know, soonish."--Jacket.

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