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'Real' Sci-Fi

trekjiro

Lieutenant
Red Shirt
Interesting Sci-Fi to real-life article.

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The 5 Most Scientifically Plausible Sci-Fi Movies

IronMan Image

Great science fiction isn't just about gooey aliens and gee-whiz technologies like teleporters. Unlike, say, the ever-popular fantasy genre, sci-fi is often grounded in the human condition and based on plausible—if speculative—science. Of course, some science fiction films are more plausible than others: Would the Galactic Empire really have enough manpower to build (and then rebuild) the Death Star in the Star Wars films? While legions of sci-fi nerds debate that question, here’s are flicks that stand out:

1. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
It's no accident that the classic sci-fi film 2001 was rooted in good science, having sprung from the mind of the late, great Arthur C. Clarke. Clarke's background in science informed and inspired the setting in 2001, describing geosynchronous satellites, artificial intelligence, and commercial space travel. Clarke lived long enough to see the satellites he envisioned actually put into orbit, and in the deserts of New Mexico, a "spaceport" is planned that will allow paying passengers to see our pale blue dot from near space.

2. The Truman Show (1998)
It's hard for many young people to remember, but there was a time before the 24-hour news feed and the reality TV craze. The Truman Show, starring Jim Carrey as the unwitting star of a voyeuristic television show watched by billions around the planet, foretold the coming of America's weekly entertainment. Not only was close, continuous surveillance plausible, it already exists in current hits like Big Brother and Survivor.

3. Gattaca (1997)
In the not-too-distant future world of Gattaca, children's genes are pre-selected by their upper-class parents for the best traits; those babies whose genes are imperfect are treated as second-class citizens. Today DNA analysis is common, and several companies offer genetic testing for as little as a few hundred dollars. Genetic profiling? Health insurance companies potentially denying claims based on genetic predisposition to a disease? For many, this fear is not science fiction but science fact.

4. Iron Man (2008)
Marvel Comics hero Tony Stark is a genius inventor whose suit of armor—basically a souped-up mechanical exoskeleton run by computers—is probably more scientifically plausible than most superheroes. Though Iron Man's nifty gadgets, including his handy laser repulsors and jet boots, remain science fiction, in many cases the underlying scientific principles are sound. Practical problems, such as the suit's cost and weight, would make a real Iron Man unlikely.

5. Jurassic Park (1993)
Part of what made Michael Crichton an enormously popular writer was his ability to extrapolate current science technology. Science fiction has always been about "What if?", and few modern authors blended science fact with science fiction so successfully. Though scientists are a long way off from cloning dinosaurs—they haven't gone much past Dolly the cloned sheep—the scientific fundamentals are there. By the end of the century, real cloned dinos might just be chasing down tourists!

Source: http://www.newsarama.com/film/081116-top-5-plausible-sci-fi.html
 
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trekjiro, I hate to sound like a hardnose in the first three posts you've made, but just an FYI, if you're going to put an image in a post, please make sure it's hosted on space you own and follows the board rules for images. I'll edit to a link for you, but please remember that the hotlinking rule is a board-wide thing.

That said, welcome aboard!
 
Oh man, sorry about that.
Yeah, i guess I should read the rules first.
Is there rank below cadet? A redshirt i guess. ;)
 
I read about something in a science magazine about some powers that humans would certainly be able to have within a couple of hundred years.

Engineered telekinesis.

That is, by using computer technology small enough to wear in gloves or even be in nanobots in the human body, a person could use them to take control of vehicles and any other device run by computers remotely and utilize them.

One could imagine an agent or scout in enemy territory electronically seizing control of a small private flying machine of some kind to fly to his rescue and take him to safety.
 
Yup, Iron Man fails.

No way to get the immense amount of power required. Fist-sized fusion power plant would need to put out at least 50,000hp and would melt him into a puddle... gimme a break, the ones that can work for a few seconds in the labs are the size of giant office buildings. Unobtainium, fuel-less thrusters that dont exist and MiracleShielding don't cut it.
 
Without undermining The Truman Show's claim to prescience, a Nigel Kneale TV play, The Year of the Sex Olympics, nailed the entire Big Brother/Survivor 'voyeuristic TV' scenario back in 1968.
 
No way to get the immense amount of power required. Fist-sized fusion power plant would need to put out at least 50,000hp and would melt him into a puddle...

I got one word for you multiple nano-reactors....

gimme a break, the ones that can work for a few seconds in the labs are the size of giant office buildings.

yeah, so were computers at first, and only a few years ago...



Unobtainium, fuel-less thrusters that dont exist and MiracleShielding don't cut it.

I had no problem using some ordinary organometallic chemistry, mixing transparent titanium with a little kinetically-stabilised compound containing double bonds of element 15 and voila.....

Harmonic Miracle Shielding!!!!!

on my planet, even first year science students can do this one.....












k'riq the uninhabitable
 
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