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- Path: sparky!uunet!crdgw1!rdsunx.crd.ge.com!galen!leue
- From: leue@crd.ge.com (Bill Leue)
- Newsgroups: rec.puzzles
- Subject: Re: message for the future
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.152947.18704@crd.ge.com>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 15:29:47 GMT
- References: <10159@ncrwat.Waterloo.NCR.COM>
- Sender: usenet@crd.ge.com (Required for NNTP)
- Reply-To: leue@crd.ge.com
- Organization: General Electric Research & Development
- Lines: 28
- Nntp-Posting-Host: galen.crd.ge.com
-
- In article 10159@ncrwat.Waterloo.NCR.COM, tjgerman@53iss6.Waterloo.NCR.COM (Trevor German) writes:
- >
- > Re: sending a message to the future.
- >
- > Obviously anything placed on earth is likely to be destroyed
- > by plate techtonics etc so no good burying something. A transmition
- > that takes that long to get back would be hard to receive even if
- > you were expecting it.
- >
- > I have a much better idea. Take a dead satelite. A big one,
- > like say the moon. Then blast its surface with enough nukes to
- > make an easily recognisable pattern that would be only partly
- > erased by comet and meteoride collisions. Then just for good measure,
- > adjust the rotational velocity of the moon so that the message
- > always faces the earth. The message could be something like
- > a big face......................
- >
- >
- > Came to me in a dream.
-
- Well, if you say so. On the other hand, it's exactly the central gimmick
- in Jack Vance's SF novel "The Face", published in paperback by DAW as number
- four of the five "Demon Princes" novels. In the novel, the motivation for creating
- the giant face on the moon of a certain planet was revenge, not information
- retrieval.
-
- -Bill Leue
- leue@crd.ge.com
-