Physics of creating a deliver-to-Earth-in-future signal

In summary: Indestructiblec) Widely availabled) Can be read with simple technological devicese) Multiple such time-capsules should be creatablef) A believable plot device for a sci-fi story
  • #1
nxr134
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Physics of creating a "deliver-to-Earth-in-future" signal

Hi,
Assume we had to send a signal to space so that it is automatically bounced back to Earth at some point in the future (~a few thousand years),
i.e a space based signal-time-capsule.
How could this be done hypothetically?

I am assuming we can use some form of Time Dilation or leverage Black Holes in some sort, but I am stumped as to how it could be done.

Any suggestions, no matter how wild would be greatly appreciated.
thanks
-Newt
 
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  • #2


nxr134 said:
Hi,
Assume we had to send a signal to space so that it is automatically bounced back to Earth at some point in the future (~a few thousand years),
i.e a space based signal-time-capsule.
How could this be done hypothetically?

I am assuming we can use some form of Time Dilation or leverage Black Holes in some sort, but I am stumped as to how it could be done.

Any suggestions, no matter how wild would be greatly appreciated.
thanks
-Newt

Sure, just stick your message in a rocket and send it on a round trip. You don't even need to invoke exotics for that. Ever see the movie Star Trek 1? That was essentially the plot! :wink:

If you're talking about shooting some form of EM radiation out, I can't imagine how you would protect the signal, or WHY you'd want to invoke differential aging or time dilation.
 
  • #3


you could just shoot the beam at something really far away...and wait for it to reflect (if at all).

If you shoot a beam at a "reflective object" 500ly away, the light beam should return to Earth in 1000ly...
 
  • #4


Matterwave said:
you could just shoot the beam at something really far away...and wait for it to reflect (if at all).

If you shoot a beam at a "reflective object" 500ly away, the light beam should return to Earth in 1000ly...

Hmmmm, but could you do that, maintain signal integrity AND assure that the reflection will return to where Earth WILL be? I'm not even sure that's possible given recession speeds. This is a lot more than bouncing a laser off our moon...
 
  • #5


lol, I'm speaking very hypothetically. I don't think there are any reflective surfaces in space (non-man made) which are nearly reflective enough. Dissipation of the signal would be a huge problem (just from the light spreading out). Red-shift/blue shift would also have to factor in.

Predicting where the Earth will be shouldn't be too bad in comparison imo. Recession speeds are not significant in comparison to the speed of light for distances such as 1000ly which is still well within our galaxy. If you wanted to shoot a laser beam 13.7Gly to a distant galaxy however...
 
  • #6


Matterwave said:
lol, I'm speaking very hypothetically. I don't think there are any reflective surfaces in space (non-man made) which are nearly reflective enough. Dissipation of the signal would be a huge problem (just from the light spreading out). Red-shift/blue shift would also have to factor in.

Predicting where the Earth will be shouldn't be too bad in comparison imo. Recession speeds are not significant in comparison to the speed of light for distances such as 1000ly which is still well within our galaxy. If you wanted to shoot a laser beam 13.7Gly to a distant galaxy however...

Oh I know, I didn't think you were making a case for perfect space-mirrors! Thanks for clarifying the recession speed issue, I really wasn't sure about that at all.

Given all of this, I think it's fair to ask the OP: What made you think of this? It's an interesting concept; a REAL time-capsule so to speak... but why a 'signal' rather than a 'rocket'?
 
  • #7


Thanks for your replies. Although I was really hoping there would be a way :-(

As to the reason for this question
> What made you think of this?
A plot-device for a sci-fi story. Imagine this scenario,
'Earth has suffered a catastrophic disaster. Population reduced to a few million, forced to live in a technologically backward culture.
Human knowledge is in danger of being lost forever. Worse, as expected, this gives rise to a totalitarian regime which seeks to hoard all knowledge for itself to remain in power. Thus this regime is actively destroying all other forms of information in public hands.
A set of people work on a time-capsule which is the sum total of all knowledge.
It should have these characteristics

a) It should be available to Earth after a few 100 to a few 1000 years when mankind can make better use of it
b) It should be indestructible. Should not decay.
c) It should not be capturable by the evil-powers
d) Should be widely available to all in all parts of the globe when it is opened
e) Should be able to be read with simple technological devices. Not DVD drives or disk drives.
f) Multiple such time-capsules should be creatable with different "open-dates."
'

The space-based signal-time-capsule fits the bill.
It's better than a rocket in many ways
a) Evades capture. Once sent, it's hard to be caught by someone else
b) Indestructible in space. Cannot collide with space debris. (Assuming we can solve the dissipation problem)
c) Multiple signals can be sent. One will return after 500 years, another after 600 years and so on.
d) Once the signal comes back to earth, a simple radio reciever can be built which can read this signal at many parts of the globe.
So it's hard for a regime to enforce a total black out.

I thought of a simple satellite sent to a Lagrange point, L1 or L2, that will just beam signals back. But this can be destroyed by an evil regime(assuming they have some rockets left)

Another wild-idea was to have the signal rotate near the Event horizon near a black hole. Thus traveling forward to the future due to time dilation.
Not sure whether it was possible, hence the post.

-Newt
 
  • #8


Gravitational time-dilation of your signal will just red-shift it, and would have nothing to do with when you receive that signal. Time-dilation to a photon is simply a red-shift.

I don't think there are any currently conceivable devices that would fit all 6 of your points...there may be certain extremely complicated devices which can fit a,b,c,d, and f; however, I don't see point e being fulfilled.

Any signal can always be intercepted...there is no way to create something that cannot be intercept-able at this time. The best bet at the moment involves quantum encryption which is in principle unbeatable...however, that doesn't mean someone can't intercept the signal...it just means that the receiver will KNOW someone has intercepted the signal.

I think your best bet is a really fast rocket...with enough of a head start, the current "regime" wouldn't be able to catch up. You could fill the rocket with thousands of leaflets or w/e you want to leave information on, and at command return to Earth and disperse that information everywhere.

E-M wave signals will be dispersed by the ISM, and very little will reflect back to you after traveling such distances.

Some ideas I have which may fit some of the criteria, but not all:

1) Encode the information in the genetic code of your species (or other species with complicated DNA). There's a lot of our DNA that's, as far as we know, not used (called non-coding DNA). I could imagine people encoding information in these sections of DNA and waiting for a future advanced civilization to decode it.

Advantages are that with enough offspring from the original person who's DNA was spliced, the spread of information would be large and very hard to control. Coding the DNA wouldn't be too tough, although, one could not do it with primitive technology. There is pretty good capacity for information in the billions of non-coding codons. However, with this method, there will be degradation of the "signal" due to random mutations in the DNA...which should be manageable if the time-scales are not too long (e.g. <1000 generations). I don't have any math to back this up haha. I like this option the best.

2) Beam the information to multiple satellites with stable orbits. The satellites would beam the information from one to another in a non-predictable fashion which would make interception of the signal difficult. However, this method doesn't guarantee against the "regime" simply destroying ALL satellites.

That's about all I can think of...
 
  • #9


Essentially what you are speaking about is an instance of a class of delay-line storage. The options for variations on the theme are immense. The practical complications vary vastly depending on the details. For instance, if the recipients are likely to be re-emerging from barbarianism there is no point to hiding the signal in technology-dependent media such as space-transmission of photons, or encoding it into Nuclear DNA. Also, remember that if the signal is something transient, it needs to be regenerated so that it does not simply pass by and vanish on its return.
Human DNA would not be able to contain a great deal of data by modern storage standards. Firstly, there is not a great deal of capacity, only a GB or so total. How much of that is significant is grossly unclear, the very term "junk DNA" has become Non-PC. "Non-coding DNA" simply means that it is not transcribed, not that you could survive without it, or even without a great deal of its functional information. Watch this space!
A more viable approach might be to design a class of microbes, say something like a strain of beneficial cyanobacteria, that could quietly live in every mud puddle without harm, possibly being of great food value to a large range of organisms. It could house segments of data, say a few MB per cell, possibly as plasmids, together with a really serious error-correcting function, plus a sequence marker so that segments could be fitted together intelligibly. The organism should be strongly spore-forming so that soil, blown dust, and marine ooze all could store huge repositories of data, formatted for easy and reliable interpretation.

Similarly, some of the spores could be sent into space. You never know...
Cheers,

Jon
 
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  • #10


I would use a VERY powerful gun, probably using compressed hydrogen, to shoot very hardy modules set to "sleep" for 10, 20, 100, etc.. years. Each would be set for a relatively short period of transmission, and would otherwise be dark. Fire these in some large asterois, or lodge them in periodic comets.

Rely on the celestial body to return periodically, and embed transmitters all over the world, or have those probes triggered by some passive means unique to Earth (can't be magnetic field, that fluctuates). Then, you conserve power, don't open a signal to interception (the probes can be hardy and made to self-destruct upon ANY tampering). Use that swarm, and only ONE needs to survive the current 'evil regime', and you also avoid the need to extremely energy-intensive means of launch, or ones that would be easier to trace.

I would then combine that with every other method concievable... including Jon's. In fact, I might insert the relevant code into E. Coli, and have it live in our own guts. That should protect against some mutation due to UV spectrum, and you could program them to express information through... say... transformation of a person when they die. A dead person is still a vat of chemical energy, that could be used, and apoptosis on a large scale could also trigger secondary function in bacteria, or disparate sequences.

To expand on Matterwave's #2, and what Jon Richfield have said: The "fantasy-sci-fi" would be to use something like Herpes to encode the information in our DNA, maybe as introns. The hardcore fantasy would be to use a retrovirus to make that information "appear" in one's brain. In that case, cashes of inert viruses in their 'crystalline' formation would last 100-1000 yrs without even NOTICING, and even barbaric humans just need to open the vessel and become infected.

If the people of that time have drifted so far from 'human', or so deeply into barbarism that none of these means are effective, I think that civilation would need to follow a natural course anyway, or they would no longer be people you wish to impart knowledge to. That brings up the final issue: what motivates such a complex plan for the 'opressed' in this regime? Human nature is not to preserve knowledge in that fashion, but to fight and die.
 
  • #11


Fascinating info on genetic encoding. Didn't think of that.
Going back to the drawing-board!

Many thanks for the insightful replies.
 
  • #12


One thing that I'd do if I were in this sort of situation is to try *everything*. If you do one method, there may be a flaw in it that causes it not to work, but if you end up trying 20 or 30 different methods, then maybe one of them will end up working.

Also there is an interesting problem which you should be aware of...

In 221 BC, the Emperor Qin Shi Huang unified China (which from the point of view of the people living there was the entire civilized world). He then proceeded to burn any book he could find in order to destroy any trace of history from before he was was Emperor. Now he lived only about 20 years before his dynasty collapsed.

After the Qin dynasty collapsed, there was a great effort to reconstruct the missing texts. One thing that they did was to interview scholars that had escape death and write down what they remembered of the books, This created what was known as the "new script texts." Now while all of the books where being burned, some people managed to hide some books and so over time fragments of the old books appeared, and people put them together to form the "old script texts."

Now the interesting part is that for the last several thousand years, Chinese scholars have debated which set of texts were the better texts. The 'new script" texts were reconstructed from memories, but the 'old script" texts were created from fragments of books.

The other interesting thing about this happened in the 19th century. When the Europeans first arrived, Chinese scholars were under the mistaken impression that the science and mathematics that the Europeans were using had actually started in China, and if people could piece together the ancient texts that they would get some of the lost knowledge that would allow China to fight off the Europeans. Now it turned out that this wasn't the situation at all, and after a few decades it became obvious to everyone that this there was no secret lost knowledge in the ancient texts, but this caused China to lose some time in mounting a defense against Europe in the 19th century.

(Replace the Europeans with space aliens, and you have a story.)
 
  • #13


Here is a not so scientific idea. Everyone in the world (or those who are trying to keep the knowledge) gets a tattoo with certain letters on their body. By itself the letters mean nothing but when you take the letters and add them to other letters from the same family you get words...the family makes small "pages" of the knowledge to be passed on..and then extended family makes up a larger version of the message and by doing the whole 6 degrees thing you get the whole picture when you put the whole world together.

Just an idea.
 
  • #14


Lycanmedic,

Though it doesn't offhand strike me as practical in the context of the question, I like the 6 (or is it 7... or 9...? No matter) degrees aspect of the idea. Mmmm... I wonder. I can't think of a story or a scheme that it would fit into, but it is worth thinking about.

Anyway, the tattoo aspect reminds me of the Saki (H.H. Munro) short story "The Background". In case anyone online has never read it, it is at:
http://www.readbookonline.net/readOnLine/501/
Enjoy. Saki is read too seldom nowadays, much to many people's loss.
Cheers.
Jon
 
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  • #15


Actually FD, I have on occasion mulled over the idea of hiding serious amounts of information that intelligent survivors of a nearly-terminal civilisation crash could use and read, not really millions, but certainly thousands of years into the future. I was thinking of something low-tech, like a building that savages could not easily damage (how about walls of SiC with imprinted pictures etc, say?) It is quite an interesting line of speculation. You need something durable, not obviously valuable, with tricks for teaching reading, writing, pronunciation, maths, science ... the whole tutti. Anyone bright enough to realize that there is something to learn, should be bright enough to learn it. I have roughed out some technology and future history, but not the politics, nor a satisfying plot as yet.
But the general idea hath its attractions...

Jon
 
  • #16


Jon Richfield said:
Actually FD, I have on occasion mulled over the idea of hiding serious amounts of information that intelligent survivors of a nearly-terminal civilisation crash could use and read, not really millions, but certainly thousands of years into the future. I was thinking of something low-tech, like a building that savages could not easily damage (how about walls of SiC with imprinted pictures etc, say?) It is quite an interesting line of speculation. You need something durable, not obviously valuable, with tricks for teaching reading, writing, pronunciation, maths, science ... the whole tutti. Anyone bright enough to realize that there is something to learn, should be bright enough to learn it. I have roughed out some technology and future history, but not the politics, nor a satisfying plot as yet.
But the general idea hath its attractions...

Jon

Larry Niven used this idea in "Footfall": Take huge granite blocks and etch them with lasers all the way through. (this prevents anyone from chiseling away the writing or it eroding away). Scatter these blocks over the planet, with the simplest information in places easy to find and the more advanced in more and more remote spots.
 
  • #17


Janus said:
Larry Niven used this idea in "Footfall": Take huge granite blocks and etch them with lasers all the way through. (this prevents anyone from chiseling away the writing or it eroding away). Scatter these blocks over the planet, with the simplest information in places easy to find and the more advanced in more and more remote spots.

That was the inspiration for my idea (using periodic comets/orbits in the place of scattering)... :biggrin: I even read the man-kzin wars (and YES, I am ashamed of that!) when I was younger...

To be fair, I also thought of the Code of Hammurabi, which relied on little more than placement, materials, and really REALLY nasty threats.
 
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  • #18


Also, it would be interesting to imagine a society in which advances in knowledge involved decode semi-secret messages from the past, it would be a *very* different society than the one we live in.
 
  • #19


Jon Richfield said:
Actually FD, I have on occasion mulled over the idea of hiding serious amounts of information that intelligent survivors of a nearly-terminal civilisation crash could use and read, not really millions, but certainly thousands of years into the future. I was thinking of something low-tech, like a building that savages could not easily damage (how about walls of SiC with imprinted pictures etc, say?) It is quite an interesting line of speculation. You need something durable, not obviously valuable, with tricks for teaching reading, writing, pronunciation, maths, science ... the whole tutti. Anyone bright enough to realize that there is something to learn, should be bright enough to learn it. I have roughed out some technology and future history, but not the politics, nor a satisfying plot as yet.
But the general idea hath its attractions...

Jon

Ahhh, but then the Evil Regime could destroy that. I suppose the best way would be to follow the lead of the Sumerians and Akkadians, use clay, and follow the Niven-"pollen" model.
 
  • #20


twofish-quant said:
Also, it would be interesting to imagine a society in which advances in knowledge involved decode semi-secret messages from the past, it would be a *very* different society than the one we live in.

That might be the idea however... knowledge along with warnings... a kind of reversed "Star Trek" Prime Directive. If you've properly seeded the world, you could actually accept the rise and fall of petty dictators using that knowledge, until eventually it fell into better hands.

That brings me back to: "Why?" Why do dying people want to share the information that led in some way to their destruction? Why would people exert their final (but not inconsiderable) effort to something OTHER than immidiate survival? That ALREADY sounds like a very different society.
 
  • #21


Since you want the information to be widely available upon its receipt, broadcastnig is a better way to go than a phyiscal library.

But there's no need to loop it to cause the delay. Simply fire a probe to land on Pluto with a thousand year timer on it.
 
  • #22


DaveC426913 said:
Since you want the information to be widely available upon its receipt, broadcastnig is a better way to go than a phyiscal library.

But there's no need to loop it to cause the delay. Simply fire a probe to land on Pluto with a thousand year timer on it.

True... but once again the "evil regime" could presumably destroy or disrupt a single probe. (re the OP). Otherwise... it seems like this might not be a bad time to do just that, in real life. :frown:
 
  • #23


Frame Dragger said:
True... but once again the "evil regime" could presumably destroy or disrupt a single probe. (re the OP). Otherwise... it seems like this might not be a bad time to do just that, in real life. :frown:

My scenario assumes the ER (Evil Regime) cannot reach Pluto. if it can, just put the probe farther away. And make multiples.
 
  • #24


DaveC426913 said:
My scenario assumes the ER (Evil Regime) cannot reach Pluto. if it can, just put the probe farther away. And make multiples.

Hmmm... I don't know, that's not much of an ER if they can't send a kill-vehicle to pluto. :wink:
 
  • #25


Frame Dragger said:
Hmmm... I don't know, that's not much of an ER if they can't send a kill-vehicle to pluto. :wink:

They're a civilization recovered from a setback to pre-industrial age. They might be lucky to get a rocket into space, let alone target something on Pluto.
 
  • #26


DaveC426913 said:
They're a civilization recovered from a setback to pre-industrial age. They might be lucky to get a rocket into space, let alone target something on Pluto.

Killjoy. :biggrin:

I still prefer my notion of using periodic comets, moons and possibly the rings of Saturn. Titan would seem to be ideal, or a very tough probe to Venus. You simply could not reliably retrieve a dark probe in a dense atmosphere.

How about using simple ballistics (a BIG gun) such as this: http://alfin2100.blogspot.com/2010/01/ocean-space-launch-from-barrel-of-gun.html (yes, it's from popsci originally, but the guy who's trying to make it has chops, and funding).

You could rapidly fire hardened probes, packed with information, and with no rocket plume even a futuristic ER would be hard pressed to keep up (until the gun is destroyed). I also wonder if procuring a Boomer (lets say Ohio class) and repurposing some Trident III's would be possible, if you greatly decreased the payload?

It seems that a multi-staged approach is the way to go, from clay tablets in the desert and on mountains, to probes set to broadcast from Pluto. I really like this notion, and in fact one could turn this on its head:

Imagine your ER is lead by an utter psychopath, or ideologue... and they see humanity as irredeemable. So, they decide to establish these probes, monuments, etc... and then use EMPs and orbital bombardment to eliminate most of the human population. You could in fact, try to SHAPE a future by erasing your present, and setting the stage for people becoming dependant on this technology, and information. Madness, yes, but not impossible (technologically) even now.
 
  • #27


Frame Dragger said:
Imagine your ER is lead by an utter psychopath, or ideologue... and they see humanity as irredeemable. So, they decide to establish these probes, monuments, etc... and then use EMPs and orbital bombardment to eliminate most of the human population. You could in fact, try to SHAPE a future by erasing your present, and setting the stage for people becoming dependant on this technology, and information. Madness, yes, but not impossible (technologically) even now.
No need to imagine; it's the plot of several James Bond films, and uncountable other high-action sci fi films.
 
  • #28


DaveC426913 said:
No need to imagine; it's the plot of several James Bond films, and uncountable other high-action sci fi films.

Hmmm, I can't think of which follow quite that pattern. Moonraker might come close, but that involves the continuation of the species based on personal selection. I'm talking about killing yourself, and reducing the (effective) pop to 10,000-20,000 acrosss the entire world. I'm not sure I've seen that before in fiction... it would be too odd as a motivation. "Villains" always seem to want to destroy, or rule the world, but not just reset the dial to "Neolithic"
 
  • #29


Janus said:
Larry Niven used this idea in "Footfall": Take huge granite blocks and etch them with lasers all the way through. (this prevents anyone from chiseling away the writing or it eroding away). Scatter these blocks over the planet, with the simplest information in places easy to find and the more advanced in more and more remote spots.

Thanks Janus, I have read most of LN's stuff, but missed FF. The principle of simple info leading intelligent inquirers to more advanced stuff I already have used. I think it is fundamental to any scheme that attempts to convey really serious volumes of material for functional purposes.

Huge blocks? Yes, where huge means no one would be able to carry them away, overturn them, or destroy them. Granite? Not so sure.

Firstly, I wonder what the most weathering-proof and decomposition-proof rock would be. I have seen granite that had obviously eroded drastically and had turned crumbly, leaking horrible lateritic clay in quantities that had left whole ranges of hillsides. (Where I live in point of fact! It is a major component of our farming land and the nightmare of recently built residential areas.)

As for etching the granite all the way through, I would say that really deep etching or melting, depending on the nature of the rock, ceramic, scrap glass, or concrete matrix (there is not a lot of percentage in using natural rock when you come down to it) filled in with resistant contrast material would be much better. Just the change of texture would remain legible indefinitely. Anyway, anything more than a metre deep is unlikely to be practical or functionally advantageous. Any population that could or would want to destroy anything like that would hardly need it.

You know, I don't just think along these lines for F&SF purposes. I really think that the way things are going, we may well have successors that need to re-boot. Helping them could shorten the process by possibly ten thousand years. A good text on animal husbandry for example could greatly improve their attempts to breed rats as food, guard, and draft animals.

You might scoff at using rats, but what else would be left? Anyway, who are we to sneer? What have we produced from rats? Not counting politicians and celebs of course?

Cheers

Jon
 
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  • #30


twofish-quant said:
One thing that I'd do if I were in this sort of situation is to try *everything*. If you do one method, there may be a flaw in it that causes it not to work, but if you end up trying 20 or 30 different methods, then maybe one of them will end up working.

If you have enough time before the operative disaster strikes, certainly. We really should be looking into the time-capsule field already. Also, space is not the only place to hide stuff from merely moderate (pre-20th Century) technology. Those granite boulders or whatever medium we choose could be dropped into benthic ooze, or covered with marine stony growths in shallow waters. Maps in the simpler info repositories could point out where to look. Sonar, magnetic or induction-friendly markers could show the way to sufficiently advanced descendants.

Also there is an interesting problem which you should be aware of...

That is a great story already. How sound are your sources? (Not being rude; genuinely curious. There is a lot of fake oriental history being published, some of it hugely successful, slavishly accepted as gospel by the fans.)
(Replace the Europeans with space aliens, and you have a story.)

Damsure! But it had better be a good story, making points that purely terrestrial scenarios could not handle adequately. The alternative is lousy SF.

Thanks for that posting,

Jon
 
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  • #31


Jon Richfield said:
Thanks Janus, I have read most of LN's stuff, but missed FF. The principle of simple info leading intelligent inquirers to more advanced stuff I already have used. I think it is fundamental to any scheme that attempts to convey really serious volumes of material for functional purposes.

Huge blocks? Yes, where huge means no one would be able to carry them away, overturn them, or destroy them. Granite? Not so sure.

Firstly, I wonder what the most weathering-proof and decomposition-proof rock would be. I have seen granite that had obviously eroded drastically and had turned crumbly, leaking horrible lateritic clay in quantities that had left whole ranges of hillsides. (Where I live in point of fact! It is a major component of our farming land and the nightmare of recently built residential areas.)

As for etching the granite all the way through, I would say that really deep etching or melting, depending on the nature of the rock, ceramic, scrap glass, or concrete matrix (there is not a lot of percentage in using natural rock when you come down to it) filled in with resistant contrast material would be much better. Just the change of texture would remain legible indefinitely. Anyway, anything more than a metre deep is unlikely to be practical or functionally advantageous. Any population that could or would want to destroy anything like that would hardly need it.

You know, I don't just think along these lines for F&SF purposes. I really think that the way things are going, we may well have successors that need to re-boot. Helping them could shorten the process by possibly ten thousand years. A good text on animal husbandry for example could greatly improve their attempts to breed rats as food, guard, and draft animals.

You might scoff at using rats, but what else would be left? Anyway, who are we to sneer? What have we produced from rats? Not counting politicians and celebs of course?

Cheers

Jon

I think I would use Cicades and fruit beetles...

EDIT: Actually, you could spread this information across a number of hardy insect species, and maybe Crocadilians. Sharks might also be a good candidate, as well as tortises, and turtles. Mammals... just breed too quickly, and are too prone to mutation.
 
  • #32


Frame Dragger said:
That was the inspiration for my idea (using periodic comets/orbits in the place of scattering)... :biggrin: I even read the man-kzin wars (and YES, I am ashamed of that!) when I was younger...

Ashamed of that? You should be ashamed! No shame no gain! Reading trash is part of your education, and even trash of good quality contains valuable material. Good F&SF (which certainly includes much of the Niven & Pournelle material) is fertile stimulation, even when one is reading it at more than one level of criticism! Authors can't all be Wellses, and actually much of even Niven's pot boilers is pretty good material.

To be fair, I also thought of the Code of Hammurabi, which relied on little more than placement, materials, and really REALLY nasty threats.

It was in contemplating such things in the context of the volatile nature of modern information storage media, that I began to think over the need for and nature of the problems.

Go well,

Jon
 
  • #33


twofish-quant said:
Also, it would be interesting to imagine a society in which advances in knowledge involved decode semi-secret messages from the past, it would be a *very* different society than the one we live in.

If I understand you correctly, right. Our history is peppered with examples of predecessor contempt and predecessor near-worship, often in combination. Reading the history of such, one wants to scream at one's ancestors "No! Don't go there! Look a bit deeper! Think a bit deeper!" even knowing that one would have done no better.

Advice for our successors should include admonitions against dogma, including dogmatic belief in what we say. It also should include reverence for information, as one of the most precious things each generation can pass on, and generally irreplaceable.

Excuse me. I talk myself into suffering.

Jon
 
  • #34


Jon Richfield said:
Ashamed of that? You should be ashamed! No shame no gain! Reading trash is part of your education, and even trash of good quality contains valuable material. Good F&SF (which certainly includes much of the Niven & Pournelle material) is fertile stimulation, even when one is reading it at more than one level of criticism! Authors can't all be Wellses, and actually much of even Niven's pot boilers is pretty good material.



It was in contemplating such things in the context of the volatile nature of modern information storage media, that I began to think over the need for and nature of the problems.

Go well,

Jon

This is true, although in my case I just have read, and read so much, I essentially denude entire genres. That leaves me with the lesser offerings, even when they come from talented authors.

As for the latter... given how people respond to chain-letters... it might not be as hard as it seems. We also have so many generations of storage, and even those we've disposed of could be useful to future archaeologists. In all likliehood, it will be our dumps that are most telling.
 
  • #35


Frame Dragger said:
Ahhh, but then the Evil Regime could destroy that. I suppose the best way would be to follow the lead of the Sumerians and Akkadians, use clay, and follow the Niven-"pollen" model.

Oh sure, but I am not primarily ER-oriented. Mainly incompetence-obsessed. IMO we don't need any ER; we are doing very nicely on our own thank you.

No?

Jon
 

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