gridlore: Doug looking off camera with a grin (Penguin - Carpe)
[personal profile] gridlore
Last week has been pretty busy at work. Most days I was there late, and due to my stupidity (long story) I don't have a bus pass, so I've been getting picked up by Kirsten. So I've been coming home dead tired and not really up for much of anything but eating and falling over into the Village of the Bears (aka our bed.)

But I have had some interesting days. Like Wednesday. On Wednesday I did a sort of split route.. half the West Bay driver and half mine. Did the usual pile of stuff for Genetech's campus expansion (if you apply for a job there, ask if you'll be working in buildings 41 or 42.. awesome views of the Bay) and then had a delivery at Monster Park Candlestick Park (the Faithful know the place's True Name.) I drove up to the security guard, who directed me down a tunnel... and I drove onto the field. They were repair the irrigations system, and I was one of four trucks being off-loaded. So I had some time to kill. I got out, and walked to the edge of the field. It was already striped and the end zones had been painted in anticipation of tomorrow's home opener. One of the foreman told me I could run around on the field since they "had all done it already."

Don't need to ask me twice. I lined up at the 25, playing tight end on the right side. At the snap, I went downfield on a slant pattern, then seeing Montana scrambling right, came back across at the goal line. He saw me, and drilled a pass between two Cowboy defenders right into my numbers. Touchdown, 49ers!

I have a rich fantasy life. I swear I could hear the crowd.

That was the highlight of my work week. The rest was just a lot of driving and some annoyances caused by a supplier who over-promised and then over-committed their delivery truck. So I got to go on two successive days and grab close to 6,000lbs of material each trip. They owe us so bad for saving their asses.

In other news, Kirsten and I took [livejournal.com profile] madelineusher to Grand Central Starport. She immediately fell in with the usual suspects, and when we left she was clutching a sheet of paper filled with LJ user names and email addresses. [livejournal.com profile] mdlbear also played Cicero in the 21st Century for her. All in all, a pleasant day with our High School Senior niece.

Yes, that makes us feel old. Amanda starting UCLA is even worse.

The Giants are killing me.

I've done some more work on the Concordat after letting it sit for a long time. I've fixed what was a major roadblock in my history. Y'see I need two major events to occur: The Warpox plague, a bioweapon that goes out of control and kills a good 15-20% of Earth's human population, and some sort of event that isolates Earth for a few generations, long enough to allow colonies to develop, fail, and get lost without the 900-lb gorilla of Terra intervening.

At first I was having the Warpox come before the first major expansion to the stars. Then it struck me that Warpox was the perfect excuse for Earth dropping out for a few dozen years. A plague that is depopulating entire nations would scare the shit out of the inhabitants of Luna and the Lagrange habitats, let alone the millions living in extra-solar colonies where closed environments were still the rule. So I've moved the development of the FTL drive to the 2050s and have Warpox coming in the first years of the 22nd Century. This really cleans up my history section and creates an era outside the main setting that would be interesting to play in. As I picture it, one of the Lagrange colonies will get infected and be destroyed to keep a thousand potentially infected refugee ships from scattering.

It is also looking like I'll have three full members of the Concordat in Sol system:

The United Nations of Terra

The UNT is a federation of the five most powerful blocks on Earth, The North American Union (US, Canada, and Mexico), the European Union, the Russian Federated States (Russia plus many of the former Soviet states who cooperate because small independents have no pull in the UN), the Greater Asian Cooperative (Japan, Korea, parts of China, Indonesia and many other former states now divided between the main players) and the Allied Free States of South America. These mega states comprise the Security Council, the planet's supreme executive. The Big Five have considerable internal autonomy. The rest of the world toes the line or UN Peacekeepers arrive by the division to "restore order"

The Commonwealth of Cislunar Settlements

Comprised of the Moon, the colonies at L-4 and L-5, and other habitats above LEO, the Commonwealth was formed during the Warpox Plague to prevent the infection from leaving Earth. Today they exist to insure that the billions of Earth do not dictate policy to the fragile habitats. Capital is at Gagarin, a lunar city in the Ocean of Storms. Each member station sends a representative to Gagarin. These representatives vote for a First Speaker who serves as chief executive.

The OutWorld League

Barely a government, the League claims to represent everyone in the asteroid belts on out to the scattered Kuiper Belt settlements. In practice, actual control is limited to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn and major settlements in the asteroid belt. Officially a democracy, the normal functioning of government appears to be more of an anarchy devoted to disassembling itself as quickly as possible. Laws are passed, and widely ignored or counteracted within days. The lack of seriousness most Outworlders take in government is reflected in the titles of the chief executive council: the Grand High Administrators.

My current default "current date" for the book is looking to be somewhere around 2250-2300.

Tomorrow, I need to do laundry, and hopefully rebuild my outline and get some writing done.

Date: 17 Sep 2006 11:37 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cmdr-zoom.livejournal.com
Notable omission: Mars?

Date: 17 Sep 2006 14:26 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gridlore.livejournal.com
I think I'm going to leave Mars fallow. It really doesn't offer much in the way of resources so it wouldn't really attract colonists. It could be a planet-sized natural park and training area for the Colonial Legion.

Date: 17 Sep 2006 20:11 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cmdr-zoom.livejournal.com
What it has, mostly, is real estate that's SLIGHTLY more hospitable than the rest of the Sol-system-minus-Earth. And enough resources to make it sustainable, though they're all at the bottom of a (shallow) gravity well.

Date: 17 Sep 2006 20:32 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gridlore.livejournal.com
In my revised time line the period between the opening of space (space elevators and fusion torch drives) and the development of FTL is pretty short - forty years or so. So while there might have been attempts at colonization on Mars, they would have fallen by the wayside when garden worlds were discovered nearby.

The colonies in the belt and around the Jovians thrived because they produce needed resources (metals and 3He). Mars just faded away, becoming a backwater.

Date: 18 Sep 2006 04:52 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cmdr-zoom.livejournal.com
When you put it that way, it's a neat, quirky little detail of the setting - something a setting needs. Visiting "present day" Mars would be a bit like visiting one of the towns passed by when the Interstates went in... historically fascinating, if mildly depressing.

Date: 18 Sep 2006 12:17 (UTC)
kengr: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kengr
Given space elevators and torch drives, there *will* be settlements on Mars, Mercury and possibly Venus.

Mostly research facilities. though I could see a bit of mining on Mercury and maybe even on Venus. The "geology" of both is apt to result in some rather odd minerals. And even odder deposits.

Mercury isn't so bad. Just a pain to get to and get back from, plus the heating & cooling problems over the course of a "day".

Mars? everybody knows what Mars is like.

Venus is the killer. But I bet on at least an orbital station controlling robot probes on the surface, and maybe even the occasuional manned mission.


Date: 19 Sep 2006 01:54 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gridlore.livejournal.com
Settlements, yes. Large colonies that qualify for full membership in the Concordat? Not likely.

I'd imagine that most of Sol system gets a special status so that well established but small colonies like Mars and Mercury don't fall under the control of the Colonial Office.

Date: 19 Sep 2006 05:07 (UTC)
kengr: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kengr
Ah. Well the way you were writing sounded like the wasn't anything on them at all.

I agree that there needs to be some sort of special legal provisions for those outposts. Otherwise you run into serious legal problems if any sort of crime takes place, or if someone tries to claim them.

Which could provide fort some interesting adventures. Sort of like the federal marshals in the Old West (or in Outlands :-). Or the Mounties in the old Northwest Territories.

Date: 17 Sep 2006 13:56 (UTC)
mdlbear: blue fractal bear with text "since 2002" (Default)
From: [personal profile] mdlbear
You think you feel old! My nephew has three kids already.

Date: 18 Sep 2006 05:40 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] supersniffles.livejournal.com
Your story about the 'Stick reminds me of a call I got a couple of weeks ago (during pre-season); one of my doctors called from there (One of the players got hurt) as I was contacting the doc he wanted to talk to he mentioned, "I'm surrounded by 49er's cheerleaders. Man, this sports medicine is tough!"

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gridlore: Doug looking off camera with a grin (Default)
Douglas Berry

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