Friday, 7 September 2018

A Mitsui Sculptor

Poul Anderson, The Byworlder, IX.

The flagship has:

data lines;
computer banks;
worldwide visiphone service;
a ReaderFax that can print books from libraries elsewhere;
a Mitsui Sculptor that can reproduce, e.g., statues, ceramics or paintings whose scans are filed.

Thus, the Sculptor is a 3D printer. This technology began ten years after the novel was published.

4 comments:

  1. Kaor, Paul!

    While technically feasible, visiphones have still not yet come into widespread use. Soon, I wonder?

    Sean

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  2. I'm not sure. Skype has been fairly successful, but a visual add-on makes a number of ways of using a telephone impossible -- you have to commit totally, the way you do to a face-to-face conversation. That's sometimes good, but often not.

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  3. 3-D printing was predictable once full digital imaging of solid objects was recognized as possible -- but it wasn't -easily- predictable. Poul was very good at extrapolation like that.

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  4. Dear Mr. Stirling,

    Because I have very bad hearing, ordinary telephones are difficult for me to use. But in 2016 I got a CAPTEL phone, in which I read on a monitor what people are saying to me. For the first time in my life, that has made a phone something I can use with out struggling. And probably better than a visiphone!

    Agree, what you said about Anderson's skills as an extrapolator and 3-D printing.

    Sean

    ReplyDelete