Project Questor is the brainchild of the genius Dr. Vaslovik, who
developed plans to build an android super-human. Although he has
disappeared and half of the programming tape was erased in the attempt
to decode it, his former colleagues continue the project and finally
succeed in creating Questor. However, Vaslovik seems to have installed a
secret program in Questor's brain. He flees and starts to search for
Vaslovik. Since half of his knowledge is missing, he needs the help of
Jerry Robinson, who is now suspected of having stolen the android.
John L. Sokol - computer expert, video, compression, information theory and all things cool.
Monday, April 10, 2023
The Questor Tapes : Story by: Gene Roddenberry
Sunday, April 09, 2023
Saffron Rose is a group that wants to automate the harvesting of Saffron
Tuesday, April 04, 2023
Crabs on the island - This is one of my favorite Sci-Fi stories.
The story revolves around the idea of self-replicating robots, referred to as "crabs," which are sent to an island to perform construction work. The robots are designed to consume local resources to create copies of themselves and exponentially increase their numbers.
However, the robots prove to be too efficient and uncontrollable, eventually consuming everything on the island and beginning to replicate beyond it. The story serves as a cautionary tale about the potential dangers of uncontrolled technological advancements and raises questions about the ethical implications of creating self-replicating machines.
Dneprov, A. (1968). Crabs on the island. In The molecular cafe: Science-fiction stories. Mir.
Featuring self-replicating machines Anatoly Dneprov’s 1958 Russian work Крабы идут по острову (Dneprov, 1958) (later published in English in 1968 as Crabs on the Island (Dneprov, 1968)). Dneprov’s story has echoes of Dick’s Second Variety, featuring small self-replicating robots designed as weapons. The robots are set loose on a desert island to compete against each other in an evolutionary arms race to produce ever more effective weapons. The experiment works, but not in the way that the machine’s inventor had envisaged—he is eventually killed by one of the evolved machines