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Capacity by Tony Ballantyne
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108256,859 (3.38)3
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Spectra (2006), Mass Market Paperback, 416 pages

Member:KBurnham_Wish
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Tags:sf, priority: low
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  mcolpitts | Aug 15, 2009 |
Ballantyne’s characterization is improving from the first book— the characters have enough worldly attachments that it’s easier to develop sympathy for them than the batch in the last book— but his world is still so heavily manipulated by the artificial intelligences that run the place that the viewpoint characters just seem to be rats tracing out a maze. The science fictional ideas are intriguing, though some of the physics requires a great deal of effort to suspend disbelief if you actually know much about quantum mechanics. The book leaves many questions unanswered about the relationship between human beings and vastly superior artificial intelligences; this is an unpleasant take on themes explored more hopefully by Iain Banks’ Culture and Neal Asher’s Human Polity. ( )
  slothman | Aug 4, 2009 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0553589296, Mass Market Paperback)

Welcome to the year 2252—and congratulations! You’re now a personality construct. We know that can be a daunting stage of personal development, especially if you don’t remember making this life-changing decision. But we’re here to help….

Helen is waking to a dark new reality—one that she’s certain she didn’t choose. In this borrowed existence, she finds an unexpected guide in Judy, a geisha-faced virgin who’s on a mission of her own. Together, the two of them begin a dangerous run through dozens of imagined worlds in an attempt to trap a psychopath haunting the shadowed areas of virtual space—a killer who brutally murdered an earlier version of Helen and who plans to kill again. Meanwhile, Justinian is investigating a peculiar rash of AI suicides on far-off planets—and finds that not only is there more to these “deaths” than he thought, but that they may be linked to his wife Anya’s mysterious coma.

In a future where AIs have taken over human life and the Environment Agency runs everything for our own good, the fact that we can live on after physical death as sentient digital beings should have been a good thing. Instead, as Helen and Justinian are about to discover, it just means there are more ways to die.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)

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