Zurich researchers have created hexagonal robots that can dock together on ground and and fly in a connected swarm. The Distributed Flight Array Robots (PDF) use magnets to dock and propellers to fly. Their altitude is controlled by having a human in bright yellow gloves catch them when they go too high. When moving, they …
Tag Archive: flying
Jun
10

Although Ryan Oakley began his career as a simple rake (drunk) he has since become Toronto’s most renowned flaneur (no car) and notorious dandy (overdresses). A misanthropic composer of psycho-geographical fictions (sci-fi), he is also a server of food, a tender of bar and a washer of dishes. While performing all these functions with efficiency and elegance (disdain and malice), he somehow finds the time to publicly criticize friends, strangers and cultural crap.
Praise
"Ryan Oakley kicks all kinds of butt. This is the story Philip K. Dick would have written if he'd lived to today: over-the-top, incisively satirical, and packing a major wallop. The prose sings even as the story makes you squirm; underneath all the slickness and sickness there's a passionate human heart, beating so damn fast it warps space. Oakley is a supernova about to blow – a major new talent ready to burst on the scene – and with this, his first novel, he'll light up the entire sky."
-- Robert J. Sawyer
Hugo Award-winning author of HOMINDS
Nebula Award-winning author of THE TERMINAL EXPERIMENT
*
"Reading Ryan Oakley's writing is like being lit-jacked. Once Oakley's forty-five caliber prose is aimed between your eyes, you'll never forget it."
--Minister Faust
Phillip K. Dick Prize Shortlisted author of THE COYOTE KINGS OF THE SPACE-AGE BACHELOR PAD
The Carl Brandon Society Kindred Award, Special Citation (Runner Up) Phillip K. Dick Award author of FROM THE NOTEBOOKS OF DR. BRAIN
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"Oakley isn't so much concerned with what science fiction has been, but rather where it can go. And, unlike most of his contemporaries, he doesn't just write from his head, but from his gut. His work somehow manages to be both unsettling and deeply absorbing."
--Jeff Lemire
Eisner-nominated Graphic novelist of the ESSEX COUNTY TRILOGY,
THE NOBODY,
SWEET TOOTH from Vertigo.
THE ATOM and the upcoming SUPERBOY series for DC Comics
Might Be Clues
- Jeff Mills: Techno Futurism (1998) | Hari Kunzru
- Monoculture: How Our Era's Dominant Story Shapes Our Lives | Brain Pickings
- Data Self Redux < PopMatters
- FBI releases file on Wu-Tang Clan's Ol' Dirty Bastard | Music | guardian.co.uk
- LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS | Cronenberg
- Somatosensory cortex dominated by the representation of teeth in the naked mole-rat brain
- Why We Like the New and Shiny: A History and Future of Neophilia | Brain Pickings
- Dancing mania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Why successful black guy is successful » Cyborgology
- A Publisher’s Year: A quest for Survival | Afterword | Arts | National Post




