Question for the room: would transporter technology revitalize small towns? Why or why not?
@Annalee Like a teleporter!?
@ErykDonovan precisely! If people could commute to work from anywhere in the world, would that ease up the pressures of urbanization?
@Annalee @ErykDonovan This is something I wish Dan Simmons had explored in his Hyperion novels, but his focus was elsewhere.
@starbreaker @ErykDonovan Right--same with Star Trek. They don't really get into the impact of transporter tech on earth and how it would change conceptions around sense of home and place.
@Annalee @starbreaker @ErykDonovan The transporter in Star Trek was conceived for production reasons so they didn't have to film the ship or shuttlecraft landing in every episode. It was a time/money saver, so they never explored the broader implications.
@ErykDonovan @starbreaker @Annalee I do feel that some of the novels delved into it more, how you could transport from Starfleet HQ over to, say, MIT to do some research for a few hours.
@jenrjones @ErykDonovan @Annalee Has anybody read Alfred Bester's *The Stars My Destination* (aka *Tyger, Tyger*)? That novel features personal teleportation, called jaunting, and presents it as a skill the vast majority of people can learn. It gets to the point where having spaces that people can't jaunt into is a status symbol (because of assassinations and such).
@jenrjones @ErykDonovan @Annalee
It's pretty old, and probably problematic in terms of Bester's treatment and characterization of female characters, but it might still be worthwhile. I hope you enjoy it.
@starbreaker @Annalee @ErykDonovan I haven't, but that sounds really interesting! *adds to reading list*