Brief Haitus

I wanted to give you all a heads up that there likely won’t be many SMBH posts for a little while. I have an ailing mother, and I’m going home to spend some time with her for a few weeks. While I’m out of town, my social media posts will be somewhat sparse. But if I do post something awesome, I’ll be sure to share it with you.

Be back soon!

A Week of Finishing Things

Wednesday was a banner day! I finished all of the following:

(1) most importantly, the deep scene-by-scene edit of Duality. YOU GUYS.

(2) Cyberpunk 2077, by taking V to space. Seriously, how cool is it that this was an option? Fun game - not life-changing, but fun.

(3) The pictured beautiful yet absolute monstrosity of a puzzle. 5,000 pieces, 5 months. 3.5 ft x 5 ft. It's been glued (puzzle glue is awesome), and #MrJennsen insists he will be able to surround it with some sort of "frame," so it can live on forever somewhere OTHER than my dining room table.

Originally posted on Facebook and Instagram.

Haegemonia

Can we take a moment to appreciate this gorgeous artwork, titled “Haegemonia” by Gergely Buttinger ("Skylow"): https://www.deviantart.com/skylow/art/Haegemonia-18016851?

Is this not Alex to a T? Specifically, Alex in Transcendence, taking a small spacewalk in the middle of a dramatic battle to break into an enemy superdreadnought and turn the tide of the battle in humanity's favor? Space is exploding around her, and she's all... "I'm coming for you. Try to stop me."

Originally posted on Facebook.

CosmoQuest-A-Con 2022

I'm excited to announce I will be a panelist at CosmoQuest-A-Con this weekend! The con will take place live on Twitch and Discord, Oct. 21-23.

Watch the Twitch panels for free here: https://www.twitch.tv/cosmoquestX , or grab a ticket and enjoy the Discord panels, backstage insider fun, a bunch of vendor halls, and contests, all while supporting CosmoQuest's science and science education activities: https://cosmoquest.org/x/cosmoquest-a-con-2022/ .

My schedule:

SATURDAY:

4:30pm EDT: You Should Be Reading These Books (Discord)

6pm EDT: Writing the Future (Twitch)

SUNDAY:

6pm EDT: So Cool and Yet So Terrible (Twitch)

(A discussion of the opportunities and harm of satellite internet megaconstellations. Are the benefits worth it?)

Originally posted on Facebook and Twitter.

Webb's Pillars of Creation

Webb has captured a lush, highly detailed landscape of the iconic Pillars of Creation using its near-infrared camera.

For comparison, see Hubble's visible-light view of the Pillars. Hubble's view highlights the presence and thickness of dust around the pillars, while Webb's infrared vision peers through that dust to unveil the stars and protostars within the dust.

Learn more and download here: https://esawebb.org/images/weic2216b/.

Originally posted on Facebook and Twitter.

Duality Update

Well that was a scene and a half to edit!

On that note, if it seems a little quiet around here, with a bit less posting, that's because I'm editing. As in full-on, underwater deep-end editing. All the time. And, honestly, I'm going to be doing so for the rest of the month.

So send cookies and wine! I guess some food, too....

Originally posted on Facebook.

Boom! DART Crashes Into Asteroid

NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirect Test (DART) crashed into the surface of an asteroid called Dimorphos at over 14,000 miles per hour. Researchers are hoping that the collision will change the asteroid’s orbit, speeding it up just a tiny bit (we won’t know how successful it was for a little while).

Neither Dimorphos, nor its larger companion, Didymos, pose any danger to Earth, but the experiment is designed to test whether or not a similar impact could make a difference if scientists ever discovered an asteroid that posed an imminent threat to life on Earth.”

Via https://www.theverge.com/2022/9/26/23371372/watch-nasa-dart-collision-asteroid

And everyone was watching. We’ve got visuals from the LICIACUBE cubesat that went along for the ride with DART, as well as from both Webb and Hubble!

Originally posted on Facebook and Twitter (2).

Dragon Con Postmortem

TL;DR: It was one of the best experiences of my professional life. I banished the inner introvert for a week and met so many incredible people - authors, artists and most of all readers.

Have a bunch of pictures! In order (hopefully):

1) Ready for prime time? The books were, at least. I'm happy to report that I almost sold out of both Starshine and Exin Ex Machina.

2) Me, dressed as a pirate and imbibing some liquid courage so I could go dance on a stage in front of people, all to support the wonderful literary cosplay Page to Stage Costume Contest , organized by the utterly heroic Cisca Small. Not pictured: one eyepatch.

3) Heinlein: The Later Years. I had the incredible honor of speaking on this panel with two absolute legends of science fiction, Larry Niven and Gregory Benford. Nathan Ameye and I soaked in all the stories they told, and it was a joy to hear about the impact Heinlein had on so many in the audience.

4) The Future Is Now - Predictive SciFi. With a panel that included renowned scifi author (and terrific human being) Chuck Gannon and a repeat appearance by Gregory Benford, there was no way this wasn't going to be a stimulating, challenging and insightful hour of lively discussion and debate, and it delivered in spades.

5) Dune. We tried to get Kevin J. Anderson to simply talk for the entire hour, but the moderator insisted on the rest of us pitching in. So we talked about ornithopters in action and how they managed to fit so many, ah, 'lovely' people into the film. Also a little about that book the movie was based on....

76,703 steps were taken, or ~14.5 miles. Dozens - nay, surely hundreds - of incredible people were met. I'll never forget it!

...and I'll probably do it again next year.

Originally posted on Facebook (with more pictures)

The Light of Jupiter

Webb slays us once again by turning its infrared camera toward the giant of the solar system. We've got auroras, we've got moons, we've got rings! Most of all, we've got enough ethereal beauty to pang the heart and bring tears to the eyes.

“Webb Telescope Sees Jupiter and Its Auroras in a New Light”: https://www.universetoday.com/157261/webb-telescope-sees-jupiter-and-its-auroras-in-a-new-light/

Originally posted on Facebook.

Meeting Your Heroes

So at Dragon Con (it's almost here!), I'm doing a panel on "Heinlein's Later Years." I've reread the books falling under this rubric and taken extensive notes in prep for the panel. Today, I found out who my co-panelists will be....

Larry Niven and Gregory Benford. (Yes, this is a thing that is going to happen. Smelling salts and Valium can be directed to my email address.)

In light of this new information, I have made a few revisions to my notes for the panel.

Originally posted on Facebook.

Logarithmic Map of the Observable Universe

This is wicked cool! The image is so tall, I had to cut into 4 pieces, so follow the link and check out the full image.

"A Logarithmic Map of the Entire Observable Universe": https://www.visualcapitalist.com/cp/map-of-the-entire-known-universe/

Originally posted on Facebook.