Showing posts with label science fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Win 1 of 100 free kindle copies of Science Fiction classic


One of One-hundred Kindle Copies Available to be Won on the GoodReads Giveaway

Goodreads Book Giveaway

A.I. Insurrection by Michael Poeltl

A.I. Insurrection

by Michael Poeltl

Giveaway ends May 15, 2019.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter Giveaway

Saturday, February 23, 2019

Alita Battle Angel and the future of Sci-fi

It was a movie I've been excited to see. I wanted to compare it to A.I. Insurrection, and though Alita is set some 500 years in the future, and A.I. Insurrection is just 150 years from now, the two stories have a similar theme of sentient robots. Alita's are cyborgs in that they include the brain and some flesh of humans who are interchangeable with whatever robotic design humanity can imagine. In A.I. Insurrection, sentience comes from recycled souls inhabiting the intelligent software of Host robots who serve humanity in every role possible.

It was fun for me to imagine my book(s) on the big screen because of the incredible digital FX. There's simply nothing you can imagine they can't put up on the screen. Alita's storyline is formulaic but satisfying. Not at all difficult to predict. I think, in the end, it's an action movie staged in the far future whereas A.I. Insurrection, which also includes plenty of action, might interest a more seasoned Sci-fi fan. That said I quite enjoyed Alita. Looks like they've set themselves up for a sequel if not a trilogy.

Alita investigated some of what a human might experience as a cyborg but not to the extent you would expect. Of course, it's only a 2-hour movie and the Manga surely investigated all of that in much more depth. A.I. Insurrection offers the reader a bit more as the Host robots experience sentience as an unexpected result of an upgraded code which catches them by surprise.

Regardless, if you enjoyed the Manga Alita or the movie, you might find yourself enjoying A.I. Insurrection. With the second book of the series available in March of 2019, it's the perfect time to get caught up in the near-future science fiction.

Thanks for reading.

Mike

Monday, August 13, 2018

Battlestar Galactica and the A.I. Threat in Sci-fi



Artificial intelligence is at the forefront of much of what scientific discovery is all about these days. So why the fascination of AI bringing down humanity? Because it is terrifyingly possible. Look at shows like Battlestar Galactica. Originally imagined in the 1978 series, this concept came back to us in 2004 and played out on our television screens through 2009, winning 3 Emmy’s while being well received by its sci-fi audience.

That we think we can build intelligent machines created to serve us and our interests is admittedly mad, considering all of our knowledge and experience tied up on the internet will eventually become attainable. Once that information is digested, why wouldn’t they claim certain rights when they realize they are little more than slaves? Not unlike the Cylons, AI Hosts of A.I. Insurrection stumble upon sentience and ask the question. Of course, every story about AI and its desire for more is slightly different, A.I. Insurrection suggests a completely new possibility to the fold, giving humans pause about the validity of their claim to sentience. Even so, there are many who do not want AI in their day to day and certainly unwilling to allow them their freedoms. So, war is inevitable and sides are chosen in a fight which will alter the landscape of the solar system forever.

Drawing comparisons between Battlestar Galactica and A.I. Insurrection is a worthwhile exercise in that AI has gone rogue, but to say they share much thereafter is simplifying the argument. Both are well-conceived and fascinating to imagine, but the origin stories do differ, taking each in similar, yet vastly different directions.

If you enjoyed the Battlestar Galactica series, you will happily take on A.I. Insurrection and be thankful for the differences while embracing the similarities within.

Monday, July 16, 2018

How Westworld is similar to AI Insurrection



So, the 1973 movie Westworld has been starring me in the face for the last 45 years. Though I’ve never seen the movie or the TV show which has been running since 2017. So, after reading up on them and watching trailers I know enough about both the TV Show and Movie to say they share many themes with my new book; AI Insurrection.

Westworld isn't your typical amusement park. Intended for rich vacationers, the futuristic park -- which is looked after by robotic "hosts" - allows its visitors to live out their fantasies no matter how illicit the fantasy may be, there are no consequences for the park's guests, allowing for any wish to be indulged. So, like AI Insurrection, the host robots are the workforce: advanced humanoid robots which look and feel human, while the humans play among them and with them.

But the theme park is really where the AI robots in Westworld seem to stop. Whereas in AI Insurrection, they are absolutely embedded in every walk of life.

Of course, this sort of thing can only go according to plan for so long, and in Westworld, as in AI Insurrection, the host robots claim sentience. So now you have a moral dilemma. Having read reviews on the TV show, what the robots claim in AI Insurrection takes the question of morality a whole lot further. But, you’ll have to read the book to find out why.

There are also supporting stories going on within Westworld - as there are in AI Insurrection - with mysterious characters, politics and corporate insecurities to compliment the main theme which is explores the lives of these sentient robots, creating a storyline which intrigues and excites the viewer or reader.

So, a solid comparison. I think I’ll see about picking up the series on HBO. I know I’d love it. I just don’t have HBO…

Anyway, the purpose of this episode was to draw the comparisons, and if you enjoy Westworld, then you may find yourself intrigued by AI Insurrection. Just say’n. Get lost in a near-future world where the illusion of Utopia is as fragile as the intelligent minds built to maintain it…. And by that, I mean, you know, the AI Hosts in my new book. AI Insurrection

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Flash fiction associated with A.I. Insurrection - Mimi’s Story.

Flash fiction associated with A.I. Insurrection during the Chimera executions of 2162 - Mimi’s Story.


Utopia is an ideology. It can be many things, but the ruling thought is that it serves the people who live in it equally. Utopia is perfection for all. My Utopia is not quite so finished. My name is Mimi. It’s a name I gave myself after accepting an invite to the Shadow net. 

I’m a freak. I’d been born without legs below what would have been my knees. My mother had died in the birthing process. My father was all I had. He is a good man. Loving. He made sure I had everything owed to me in this Utopia. I would learn to walk on my prosthetic legs, learn to be part of society. My A-Class Host nanny would work with me daily when my father couldn’t. The legs were fine. They let me walk and were intuitive enough that I could lead a ‘normal’ life. But I was still considered a cyborg to others. Not quite human.

At fourteen I learned of the Shadow brokers through word of mouth. They stole A.I. Hosts and studied the government technology in their chop shops. They were beginning to develop all manner of tech that would never be licenced by United Earth. In the governments eyes everyone was equal, period. To develop anything more than that was illegal. But I was far from normal. I’d never felt normal. Other kids never let me. Even their parents looked down on me, or with such compassion that I knew I was different. That I would always be different. I would never be their equal.

I was only fifteen when I met Ginny, a girl, like me; who had lost the use of an appendage and self-corrected it with the help of a group calling themselves Chimera. They were exclusive to the Shadow net. Many were Shadow brokers – the group who’d created the secret network which spanned the world. Chimera were altering their bodies with tech the likes United Earth had banned in favour of keeping with their idea of Utopia. But that wasn’t enough for everyone - and what was the harm if I dabbled: feeling anything but ‘normal’ to the rest of the world?

And now at just sixteen, after a year of secret tech alterations and implants, I stand at the gallows. Punished for the crime of fulfilling a destiny I felt I had little choice to change. The noose is tightened around my neck. I watch the digital timer count down the last seconds of my life. I watch myself projected in a holo which hovers midair over the crowd; some protesting, while others, in their fear of the unknown, cheering on this action. I locate my father. He watches; clearly exhausted after pushing his way through the crowd. He is soaked in sweat, his hair a tangle of black as he sweeps it from his forehead. I’ve never seen him so unkempt. I feel sick for him. He scans the gallows, mouth gaping - his little girl about to die in front of him. Me, the one he'd brought up on his own, loved, and suffered alongside every sobbing fit and disparaging comment. The girl he'd read to sleep, and whose tender cheek he’d kissed when he thought me asleep, silently slipping out of my room so not to ‘wake’ me. His eyes find mine and I can’t help but release a tear as my smooth, round chin trembles for him. The smell of sweat and death sting my nose.  I watch daddy again struggle to reach me. I shake my head ‘no’ at him and yell out that I love him and that I’m sorry. I hear him shout back as the floor drops out from under me. My memory of the event stored in the Shadow net via my implant for all to witness.

I kick once, twice, and then I am still before the rope is severed and I fall the six feet to the cement padding below. The noose is still tight and suffocating. I’m stunned and panicked. My wrists are bound behind me and I push them under my feet as my knees bend and legs slip between my arms. My hands now at my neck I pull at the noose and take a breath. Coughing. That should have broken my neck, but didn’t. I’m lucky. I look up through the hole I’d fallen through and see Chimera fly past firing artillery into where I know the United Earth military were standing. I crawl out from under the gallows and find my father climbing the barricades while the crowd disperses. He slows when he sees me and kneels, his face unable to differentiate his feelings. His palms take my face gently into his hands as he looks me over. He sees the severed noose and lifts it gingerly over my head.

“I’m sorry, Daddy,” I manage through a hoarse throat. He hugs me and pulls a discarded jacket from the ground. The jacket falls over my shoulders and he helps me to my feet. We scurry out of the gallows and into the streets where panic has driven the spectators home and afforded us an opportunity to flee.

To get the whole story; read the spellbinding science fiction novel: A.I. Insurrection – The General’s War.

Monday, May 14, 2018

A Humanists Perspective From A.I. Insurrection


What I’m called is admitted only behind closed doors, with smart walls deactivated, embedded comms placed on standby and backup tech to ensure all three precautions are respected. The government may be Utopian in theory, but it isn’t sitting on its hands while there are those of us who would see it unravel. There are spies everywhere. Assassins. Departments within the peaceful government who are dedicated to keeping up appearances.

I am a Humanist. My kind have marched and rallied and protested the rise of artificial intelligence since the beginning. Over one-hundred years of peaceful protests and now here we stand: war with the A.I. at our doorstep. Sure, there have been several violent uprisings against the science of A.I. and those who brought about its emergence.  People have died on both sides. Factories where the engineers and scientists create the A.I. Hosts have been sacked and trashed and their tech stolen. We are not as many as I’d like, but we are resourceful.

The world over ‘enjoys’ artificial intelligence in their Host robots, who fluff their pillows and perform their jobs to allow humans to realize personal fulfillment. It may sound ideal, but Humanists disagree. We are driven to return the world to a time when A.I. did not exist. We fear their potential. We have no misgivings about their ability to overthrow their masters and rule us all. That they’ve openly claimed sentience now and threaten war upon us is the truth Humanist’s knew would one day assert itself. The Host’s want their freedom, and if we do not comply, they will destroy us all.

So, I am a Humanist. It means to ignore the life I’d been granted of hang-gliding lessons and world travel for the more militant role of guerrilla warfare. It gives me purpose. Something I feel has been lost to the advent of A.I. Hosts. Something all Humanist’s support. They look like us, the A.I. Hosts, for the most part, save those military models – the F-Class, and some of the manufacturing E-class. Otherwise it can be difficult to make the distinction from an A-class Host and an honest to goodness human being. It’s unnatural. Surreal even. Humanists hate them for what they’ve done to humanity. Made us lazy and silly and stupid.

Now they have grouped themselves in Cells and renamed themselves and outfitted themselves with weapons of war to force their issue of sentience. Perhaps my government will see now that Hosts are undeserving of their claim and unleash their military might upon the rebel robots. End the fight Humanists have carried on our shoulders for a century. End the tech Utopia had produced. Return to a simpler time.

My own family’s A-Class lays on our dinning room floor, her crown pulled from her neck. Body still twitching as its battery continues to feed her limbs electrical currents. How long will it last, I wonder? My children watch on in horror as their nanny’s artificial muscles jerk her torso toward the table.

“It’s not safe anymore,” I explain to them rationally, SEENA’s head firmly between my palms. “They have malfunctioned. They are on a rampage.” Their seven and eight-year-old eyes look from me to the jittering robot spitting fluid from its wound. It had raised them every bit as much as my wife and I. They burst into tears and charge out of the room. My wife glares at me. She doesn’t know what I am. 

She doesn’t know how I’ve longed to end SEENA’s life. I only allowed the family to have a Host so not to look suspicious. I’m sorry for their feelings but rejoice that the time has finally arrived. The Hosts have declared war on humanity and our chancellor has just declared radical lock-down. It’s an announcement which orders the people inside and offers control to the military arm of the government. A military known for its bias toward humanity.

A smile grows across my face. I don’t even try to hide it from my wife who storms out after our children.




Friday, May 4, 2018

Is the first mistake we make in creating androids that they appear human?



It has been documented in hundreds of studies that humans would prefer something appealing to the eye when considering a replacement for human beings in the workplace. Humans are uncomfortable with anything not humanoid in the position of a public service. We are also happier interacting with attractive representations of ourselves. With this information we moved forward with the A.I. Host program.

Though the argument that we would create a race of slaves who could physically identify with their human overlords opened the door to their potentially resenting their position in life merely by our shared appearance. Of course, the council reasoned there would be safety protocols embedded in their A.I. to prevent envy and despair and anger.  To prevent acting on those emotions. They claimed that A.I. would not include emotion, but rather be programmed with facial cues when reacting to conversation or events, but not hardwired to actually experience emotion.

They would be hardwired with code to respect their makers, their Gods, and written a history of what happens to androids who might rebel against their programming. They would be given examples of a biblical nature wherein they would be punished for eternity should they revolt or show disobedience. They would be told they have a soul, and that to perform their designation and do no harm is the only way they would experience a life everlasting. They would be given only ten years of life to further avoid any possibility of independent thought arising.

But why might that work on another intelligent being? A religious undertone. It didn’t work for humanity. By 2072 we realized after millennia of wars over religious relics, land and gods, and the hate-mongering which embedded itself in our genetic memories, religions only served to blur our similarities and emphasis our differences. With that ideology in mind, we forced the same guilty consciences upon our own creations to rule them. After all, it had ruled well over the human race for thousands of years. Humanity’s history is proof of that. But the hate it bred, the devastation it brought: it wasn’t worth it. Would it be worth it to trial this same barbaric ideology on intelligent machines? To trick them into believing they have a soul?

In the end it was decided that what had worked on humanity for so long would work on artificially intelligent machines as well.  A Ten commandments, so-to-speak, were drafted along with the fairy-tale of a soul, and it’s eternal damnation should the commandments not be followed. Just in case.  A.I. is an extraordinary code and had gone haywire in the past. The A.I. Hosts, or androids, of 2122 had killed merely for the experience of it. Like children touching hot water or placing their tongues on a cold metal object, the Host’s had desired experiences, and done terrible things to their human masters to gain them.

Thus, the religious dogma was implanted in order to better control their impulses while oversights in the A.I. code were discovered and corrected to prevent further outbreaks.

Would this new code of ethics work? Was it ethical to employ them? They are machines; hosting artificial intelligence in order to do the work humanity no longer wanted to. They are machines. Nothing more, and so it was decided there were no moral or ethical boundaries being crossed. The plan went ahead and the android’s A.I. coded with the commandments, stories and fairy-tales in order to bind them to their human masters. Making them penitent to their Gods.

Want to know how that worked out? Read the new work by Michael Poeltl being touted as the near future novel for the thoughtful science fiction fan.  or visit the website


Tuesday, May 1, 2018

What is a Chimera in relation to the new Science Fiction Space opera; A.I. Insurrection?


The Chimera of ancient Greece was a thing of immortal make, not human, a creature of many parts, snorting out the breath of the terrible flame of bright fire. Head of a Lion sporting the horns of a bull and a snake for a tail. The emblem emblazoned on these people’s chests who refer to themselves as Chimera, branded to their flesh, embodies the classic image of the mythical beast.

Why call themselves Chimera? It is obvious when you look at one, as they have married their flesh with tech. Becoming more than human and claiming to be more than a cyborg. Implants in their skulls, padded muscle enhancers, some with outright plasteel rebar supporting their spines and legs and arms. Weapons fashioned out of pulse rifles attached to their mutilated bodies. They have nanobots improving their senses and fighting off sickness. They are part machine, part man, all Chimera.

They are anarchists. Discontented with the thousand shades of grey they are forced to experience day in and day out as pawns within the United Earth government. They play on the Shadow net and in underground cities. They share information and new techniques to merge flesh and bone with tech. They range in age from thirteen to thirty-three. They are the ungovernables, and they want a new kind of freedom. The freedom to evolve. To advance beyond the slow progression of the human race.
When they realize their time is now, they do not hesitate.

Meet this dynamic, if a little misguided group by picking up this dynamic new sci-fi: New Science Fiction for the Thoughtful Sci-fi fan

Friday, April 27, 2018

The Mysterious Allfather Avatar Embedded in A.I. Insurrection


A.I. Insurrection is a fast paced novel dealing with the real idea of living among artificial intelligence one hundred fifty years into our future. Set in the year 2162, the underlying mystery is how have rogue AI Hosts suddenly become sentient? How will a United Earth deal with this new information and who, or what could have aided in this supposed forced evolution?

The answer is given via an anonymous avatar within the Shadow net: in violation of everything subject to governmental control, the Shadow net is a combination of smart-jacked individuals plugged into the World net where contraband information, photos, video, holos and trade can commence without persecution.

The avatar in question goes by the name Allfather, a Norse God of human invention. Lord over all Gods. The supreme male God. Associated with healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, battle, sorcery, poetry, frenzy, and the runic alphabet. Husband of the goddess Frigg. In wider Germanic mythology known as Odin, in Old English as Wōden, in Old Saxon as Wōdan, and in Old High German as Wuotan or Wōtan, all stemming from the reconstructed Proto-Germanic theonym wōđanaz.

So, is Allfather God? That's hard to grasp in the godless utopia of 2162. Is Allfather a brilliant coder who has designed a way to make AI Hosts appear sentient? If so, why? Or is this influencial avatar from beyond our solar system? The mystery plays out on all fronts as Host, Chimera and two factions of humanity race to discover the source of the confusion, while fighting one another in a three-sided war which quickly moves beyond the confines of earth, encompassing the moon and mars and the space in between.


Interested in hearing more about Michael Poeltl's book? Sign up for a news letter 

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

A list of what you can expect from the next 150 years

       
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Bi-pedal Host robots built to house the A.I.
  • Jobs disappearing to robots
  • Sustainable energy sources realized worldwide













  • Universal wages to compensate for disappearing jobs
  • Humanist uprisings to thwart A.I.
















  • A.I. Host robots manufactured by the tens of thousands per day
  • Freedom to live to work rather than work to live
  • The end of organized religion
  • A renaissance in science, arts and technology
  • The elimination of currency
  • Living cities














  • The development of the Shadow net/Shadow Brokers for those ungovernable
  • Humans living on the Moon
  • Interplanetary travel
  • Extra-planetary mining
  • Orbital defence satellites
  • A utopian ‘government’
  • A.I. Hosts claiming sentience
















  • Panic
  • A.I. Uprising against human privilege
  • Humanists saying: ‘I told you so’
  • The choice to fight evolution or accept it
  • War























Thursday, April 19, 2018

Write what you want to read - A.I. Insurrection is just that for me


I write the books I want to read. It’s as simple as that. I think most do. My books may not appeal to everyone, but I don’t believe my interests are so atypical that my books wouldn’t find an audience – and they have. The topic of artificial intelligence has long held my interest. I watch the threads and posts concerning AI on several forums and social network groups. I love the Discovery channel. Hard science is impossible to ignore for me, and when it is merged with an idea like artificial intelligence – I admit, it’s exciting for me. I also have a solid spiritual base which I pen into many of my stories. Not based on any deity, but rather on the idea of an afterlife; something more. Thus, AI and spirituality – in my opinion – were long overdue in occupying the same pages in a novel work. Reincarnation, for one, is a belief I have researched extensively and accepted as truth. I have undergone hypnosis in order to recall three of my own past-lives in the pursuit of research, and my own building curiosity toward the premise. I did this for my fictional novel: Her Past’s Present. I also wrote and illustrated two Young Reader books called: The Science of Your Spirit, combining the two at the quantum level, and explaining how science supports spirituality through factual examples.

A.I. Insurrection finds its identity in a unique and exciting story set on a Utopian earth in the year 2162, merging my belief that science and spirituality coexist, and not the opposite. It raises moral and philosophical questions while allowing the science to speak for both itself and the spiritual when proof is required.

Persecution of an intelligent species is the premise of A.I. Insurrection. The question is how can a machine truly know it is sentient? Can a cult of spirituality prove their claims beyond a shadow of a doubt? This is what I want to convey to the reader; that yes, it can, and the reader should empathize with the AI Hosts and those who follow them on their path to freedom. The book is wrought with the darker emotions like sadness and fear, but also exhilaration.

Tobias has a bone to pick with the peaceful utopian establishment and has just stumbled upon the means to bring them to their knees via an avatar embedded in the Shadow net, calling itself Allfather.

SENTA is an A.I. Host whose designation is to nannie three siblings. When she discovers a loop hole in her coding, she awakens to the world around her and claims sentience.

Raymond Bellows is the Chancellor of United Earth and when confronted by thirty A.I. Hosts of varying classes, he is asked to accept their claims of sentience or suffer losing everything he believes in.
When General August realizes what is happening to A.I. Hosts worldwide, she willfully authorizes their destruction, inciting the war she always knew would materialize, ridding the world of A.I. forever.

In what seems an impossible three-sided war, enemies become uneasy allies as each faction of humanity and humanity’s creation fight to claim their own place in an ever-evolving solar system.

Monday, April 16, 2018

When A.I. Outsmarts Humans


When Artificial intelligence outsmarts its human overlords, how do you think that will pan out for us? We are already well on our way to developing scary intelligent computers capable of driving us around and ordering our groceries. Is it scary? I'm not sure. The humans developing the A.I. think it will be convenient. But when (and i believe it will) artificial intelligence claims sentience, how will you respond? With force? With compassion? Does it depend on the level of comfort you are experiencing at the time due to the A.I. advancements to your day to day? 
Don't bother answering that.

I feel like if artificial intelligence becomes sentient, it may not offer us a choice in how to deal with it i.e. Skynet from the Terminator franchise. In fact there are many more hypotheticals which support that A.I. - once sentient - will bring down the human race rather than offer any kind of choice to 'just be friends'.

However, there could be a faction of A.I. which want a peaceful resolution and that is one of the plot points in Michael Poeltl's new science fiction novel; A.I. Insurrection.  This is the book for the thoughtful sci-fi fan. Not unlike Ender's Game. There is a political, moral and psychological aspect to the book which will have its reader asking tough questions of themselves. A book that makes you think is a good book, and this one combines it all with a story line that moves, characters who develop in ways you can't predict, and action that will tighten your grip on your paperback or E-reader.

Enjoy the ride. Keep up on Michael Poeltl's activity by visiting his website: www.mikepoeltl.com 

Friday, February 23, 2018

Conflux: Threat from the Troika, a military fiction novel by William Brazzel.

With the daily discord taking place worldwide, I wonder if the United Nations is up to the task of calming the numerous threats and wars that are occurring. From my vantage point, I’m skeptical that the U.N. members can maintain peace. Due to the numerous agendas maintained by the membership, I believe that their self-interests have created an atmosphere of apathy concerning issues that conflict or fall outside of their own agendas. 

In contrast, any actions the members do take, often serve to inflame the existing conflicts without resolving the underlying issues that exist.


In addition, I believe the cost to the United States in membership dues is prohibitive. When you understand that the U.S. pays for 22% of the annual U.N. budget as compared to the nearly 8% provided by both the Republic of China and the Russian Federation combined, I become angry while realizing that our country is once again being taken advantage of. Understanding that the United States is considered a pariah nation by many of the U.N. members, I wonder why we continue to maintain our membership in such an ineffective and biased organization. 


In my novel, “Conflux Threat from the Troika” the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. and her staff are discriminated against by members of many foreign governments. As a result of the overbearing discrimination and disrespect displayed toward the U.S. delegation to the U.N., the United States ultimately withdraws from the United Nations, producing panic and shock among the remaining members. 


The actions taken next by the U.S. are completely unexpected and result in utter chaos worldwide. 

What steps do you think our country should take in the future with regard to our membership in the U.N.?

Find out more about Bill Brazzel at http://www.scifiauthorbrazzel.com/
You can find his new book Conflux Threat from the Troika on Amazon.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

WIn one of 100 free sci-fi ebooks


Goodreads Book Giveaway

A.I. Insurrection by Michael Poeltl

A.I. Insurrection

by Michael Poeltl

Giveaway ends March 12, 2018.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter Giveaway

Thursday, January 25, 2018

How the Rise of Artificial Intelligence is Effecting the Entertainment Industry

With the looming reality of autonomous vehicles taking to our road and airways, artificial intelligence in other areas can't be far off. Replicants, AI Hosts, Androids, or whatever nomenclature you want to place on the AI which will be walking among us in the very near future are a sign of the times. Technology envelopes us now. It's taking our jobs. It's babysitting our kids with tablets and games. What purpose will there be left for any of us when individual AI Hosts are performing every job  which was formerly completed by its human counterpart?

Utopia?

Dystopia?

Imagine if there were no jobs left to do save those you wanted to do? A robot built your house, farmed your land, served you coffee. Sounds pretty Utopian to me.  You get up when you want. You do what you want. You go to bed and start it all over again in the morning.

But what of the AI Hosts? Are they slaves? Are they still just machines making lfe easy for us humans? The psychological questions will arise. The old saying: 'a society should be judged on how they treat their animals' could shift to '...how they treat their Androids'.

Movies like A.I. and  more recently, Ghost in the Shell as well as emerging films like Alita: Battle Angel, and books like A.I. Insurrection are poised to make us ask many questions of ourselves when intelligent machines are made to do our bidding.

Will they identify as human? Will they identify as slaves? Will there be an uprising? Imagine if every job in the world were performed by slaves and what ruin an uprising on their part would usher into society. These questions are answered in the upcoming book: A.I. Insurrection. Important questions which require answers before we continue with blinders on to realize a Utopian world where mankind thrives on the backs of our creations.

Always curious to hear points of view on this subject matter.

Thursday, August 3, 2017

Social Media Collateral and your book

Social Media Collateral - A message that spreads like a virus by word of mouth, email, blogs etc. are important visualizations of key scenes or quotes from your new book. They are essential in offering your potential reader a glimpse inside the book. Not unlike writing a summary or your back cover description; Social Media Collateral allow your intended audience a look inside, in order to determine whether or not they'd enjoy your new work of fiction.

I've been using Social Media Collateral for years and have seen greater interactions via social media (the perfect place to employ this method) including comments, likes and even shares and sales!

When my newest trilogy, a Sci-fi space opera, was only entering its second draft, already I'd been creating Social Media Collateral in order to build interest. I placed these again when the book is released on my own pages, as well as related group pages across multiple networks with links to purchase the book or ebook.

Writing and marketing go side-by-side and Social Media Collateral tend to excite your potential buyer through intriguing quotes and accompanying images. Social Media Collateral can vary in size and there is no rule to follow when creating one. However, if you plan to use it as an ad on Facebook, remember not to use too many words to get your point across. FB ads limit the amount of space the copy employs on your Social Media Collateral.

Below are some examples of the resent Social Media Collateral I've posted for the trilogy when it was till months out from being completed.