Here’s part two of Spider Robinson’s reading of my story Human Readable, recorded for my collection WITH A LITTLE HELP.
IO9
Makers is a book for the lovers of technology, for the gleeful optimists more than the cynics. It’s for the people who love the kooky engineering projects you see on Boing Boing, for the people who believe that, as the poster says, “The future belongs to the few of us still willing to get our hands dirty.” It’s for the people who can’t wait to own a 3D printer, and who believe that while technology has its missteps, it’s going to change our lives in wonderful and unexpected ways. It’s for the people who hate Disney’s corporate tactics, but still get a thrill at the idea of visiting the Magic Kingdom; for the people who believe that, even if they can’t change the world, they can at least improve their little corner of it. It’s for the people who think that, while the future may not be all jetpacks and hover cars and all the world’s people people singing Kumbaya, we as individuals have the power to make it awesome in its own right.
The audiobook of my latest novel, Makers has been published by Random House Audio, strictly in DRM-free formats over the net (this means that Apple won’t carry it in the iTunes store, even though Audible was willing to carry it without DRM).
The reading is by Bernadette Dunne, a very talented actor. I just listened to this for the first time yesterday and I was blown away by Dunne’s reading. I’m a huge audiobook nut, and I’m incredibly glad to have professional audiobook adaptations of my books from Random House — and doubly grateful to them for supporting my commitment to DRM-free distribution. When you buy this book, you own it. The “terms of service” are “Don’t violate copyright law,” not “By buying this audiobook, you agree that we get to come over and kick you in the ass.”
The audiobook of my latest novel, Makers has been published by Random House Audio, strictly in DRM-free formats over the net (this means that Apple won’t carry it in the iTunes store, even though Audible was willing to carry it without DRM).
The reading is by Bernadette Dunne, a very talented actor. I just listened to this for the first time yesterday and I was blown away by Dunne’s reading. I’m a huge audiobook nut, and I’m incredibly glad to have professional audiobook adaptations of my books from Random House — and doubly grateful to them for supporting my commitment to DRM-free distribution. When you buy this book, you own it. The “terms of service” are “Don’t violate copyright law,” not “By buying this audiobook, you agree that we get to come over and kick you in the ass.”
Here’s part two of the podcast of my story in progress, MARTIAN CHRONICLES, being written for Jonathan Strahan’s YA Mars book, LIFE ON MARS.
WSJ
Technology lets low-cost providers take market share away from established companies, as Detroit auto makers and Paris fashion house designers have seen. Even high-tech companies have a hard time building sustainable businesses now that good ideas are copied so quickly that they become commodities.
In a time of great change, fiction can sometimes provide better understanding than facts alone. “As the pace of technological change accelerates, the job of the science fiction writer becomes not harder, but easier—and more necessary,” he writes. “After all, the more confused we are by our contemporary technology, the more opportunities there are to tell stories that lessen that confusion.”
Here’s the audio from my reading last week at the Harvard Bookstore, along with Q&A.
Here’s the audio from my reading last week at the Harvard Bookstore, along with Q&A.
Here’s an interview I did with Radio Berkman — the podcast of the Berkman Center at Harvard.
Congrats to my wife Alice, on winning four British Interactive Media Awards! What a clever spouse — I’m a lucky, lucky man..