My Boskone Schedule

I'll be on programming at Boskone again this year, and got my preliminary schedule over the weekend:

Satur 10am Tunguska at 100

Guy Consolmagno, Jeff Hecht, Chad Orzel

On June 30, 1908, an exploding asteroid leveled 2000 square kilometers of Siberian forest, producing a fireball from the sky which knocked pine trees over like matchsticks near the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in Russia. Such an explosion today over more populated areas could lay waste an entire city. What was it? (Do we know, yet?) What are some of the older theories, and why were they discredited? How likely is a repeat? How common are events like this? Are there any other historical records? Would we expect there to be?

Satur 2pm Who'd'a Thunk It? Unexpected Uses of Technology

Tobias Buckell, Chad Orzel, Karl Schroeder, Charles Stross

Numerous technologies wind up getting used for quite different purposes than their originators expected. Consider dynamite, bubble wrap, speed trap radar, screensavers, the Internet's massive if not main use as a conduit for pornography, and laser pointer cat toys. What other example suggest themselves? Does this phenomenon make basic research more desirable, or less? Is it ever discussed in SF? Consider some of the great SFnal inventions (the hyperdrive, AIs, cyperspace, anti-gravity, boosterspice, positronic robots, personal force fields). Can you extrapolate some unexpected uses for them?

Sunda 10am Quantum Teleportation

Chad Orzel

Looks like a fun slate of topics. That last will be an hour-long talk about quantum teleportation. I'm not sure yet whether it will include reading the relevant dialogue from Chapter 8 of the book-- I don't know if I'm willing to do the dog voice in public...

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Kate and I will be attending Boskone agains next week, and the preliminary program has been posted. Kate's posted her thoughts on what looks interesting, and mine are below the fold: Friday 7pm Otis: The Rise of Modern Science What happened in the Middle Ages which led to the rise of modern…
I usually post something here about what panels look interesting when the Boskone program goes up on the web. This year's program went up over the weekend, and I'm just now getting around to making a list of worthwhile items. This tells you what kind of week I'm having. Anyway, I looked the program…
Kate and I will once again be attending Boskone in a couple of weeks, and for the second year running, I'll be on a handful of panels. I had a great time as a panelist last year, so I volunteered again, and I've been looking forward to finding out what I'll be on. I got the preliminary schedule…
tags: researchblogging.org, Tunguska event, Siberian explosion, Podkamennaya Tunguska River, Lake Cheko, planet earth, astronomy Flattened trees cover vast areas of Northeastern Siberia after the mysterious Tunguska explosion in June, 1908. Image: TASS/Sovfoto (public domain?) [larger view].…

Well, you could recruit somebody else to do the dog voice...

I was actually hoping to do Boskone this year, believe it or not, but the whole laid-off/new-job-doesn't-give-me-time-off-yet thing kind of got in the way.

Seems like real fun! Both of these items would be marked in my con program if I was there. (I haven't been to a convention for over a year, I miss it.)