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What if humanity could find some alien tech and thus greatly accelerate its own technological progress? But what if that tech was hoarded by a small group of people? Anyway, here's a review of Theft of Fire by Devon Eriksen. It's a 22nd century hard science space opera set in our solar system, written by a retired engineer. One of the more successful indie sci fi books in recent years. It's also one of the most successful books to have bitcoin in it; it's a small background role, but bitcoin is one of the leading types of money in the solar system. Marcus, an indebted down-on-his-luck asteroid miner (and secretly, a bit of a space pirate as of late, given how bad things have gotten) finds his ship taken over by a wealthy genetically modified corporate heiress named Miranda. She has bought his defaulting debt contract that his ship collateralizes, and has gained admin access over his ship's computer. And she knows he is secretly a space pirate, which altogether gives her multiple types of leverage over him. She wants him to take her on a mission to the edge of the solar system to do something she won't say, involving unimaginable treasure, and he has little choice but to go along with it. Secretly, however, he plots how to regain control of his ship as they go, because he recognizes how much of a suicide mission it is because of who guards the space out there. Pros: -The hard scientific realism in the book is great. The type that basically takes an engineer to write. No wonder he has endorsements from like, the co-founder of Autocad and such. It's also a smooth read, all from Marcus's perspective. -Although the story mostly takes place on one ship with a few characters, the worldbuilding is a solid start. I assume it'll be expanded later in the series. The technological situation and structure of society are very fleshed out relative to how little we actually see, given the tight setting. The world feels realistic and lived-in. -High nostalgia factor. Fans of Firefly and Cowboy Bebop, and more recently the Expanse, and all sorts of classic sci fi literature over decades, will find a lot of references or similarities in a good way. The author is very well-read on the genre. -The audiobook is pretty unique and great. Unlike most audiobooks, it has a full-cast production, meaning that each line of dialogue sounds like the person speaking it, rather than just one person reading a given chapter's narration and dialogue. I listened to this one rather than read it. You can only buy the audiobook on the author's website though, not Amazon/Audible. (Amazon/Audible have been kind of shitty to authors lately.) The other version of the book are available on Amazon. -AI gets a really good treatment here, and the third main character, an AI, is my favorite character in the book. -There's a lot of suspense throughout. Most of it is not really predictable how it's going to end since it doesn't follow a basic tropey structure. Even if you don't particularly like some of the characters (and indeed they're designed to be rather unlikable), you're likely to find yourself reading further to see what happens. Cons: -The book is about 500 pages, and I think 50+ could have been cut out of the middle to make it stronger. The dialogue between Marcus and Miranda gets rather repetitive after a while. And because of the limited setting (mostly on one ship), most of the worldbuilding is done via exposition by Marcus. So if readers hate "info dumps", they'll probably get annoyed at this. I personally don't really mind exposition as long as it's good, so this wasn't a dealbreaker for me (the "don't do exposition!" advice to authors is overdone in my view). I just think the middle could have used a trim. And although most of the book is not predictable, one aspect imo very much is, and that's where a lot of the repetition is. -There are some unnerving aspects/scenes in it. I can't really say what they are without spoilers. Let's just say being in Marcus's head for 500 pages isn't, uh, my cup of tea. The book is self-aware about it, though. It's an intentional choice to have put these unnerving aspects in, so it's not a con per se but it's more something that will put off some readers. And it's a little more understandable by the end. Overall, a unique story. And for the audiobook, I do think that over time more audiobooks will be made with this more complete type of cast. Audiobooks used to be very expensive and a small piece of the market, and only in recent years have they become very popular. As they become a bigger and bigger share of the fiction market up to some substantial percentage, I think more work will go into their quality and details. image
2025-11-16 16:18:54 from 1 relay(s) 19 replies ↓
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“AI gets a really good treatment here, and the third main character, an AI, is my favorite character in the book.” —My first and only dystopian novel i wrote 15 years ago had an ai character and it was fun as hell to write!
2025-11-16 16:24:51 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply
For on-chain transactions it is not a problem. You can still receive blocks, even if they were mined hours or days ago. So sending a transaction to the network and receiving confirmations could just take a long time. For the mining itself the consensus rules could be changed to increase the time between blocks when expanding the network to other planets or other solar systems.
2025-11-16 16:42:17 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply
Cashu, for instance, or opendimes, would work just fine, because you're not broadcasting anything to chain necessarily. Both would require trust at that point, as would any other custodial solution. But give them some sort of a seal that can't be broken, and maybe tie in WoT ideas to add in some tamperproofing, and i think given the circumstances you could arrive at something vaguely acceptable. Still not better than subspace radio, but some science fiction actually tries to be plausible...
2025-11-16 17:49:44 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply
That's such an interesting idea, I've never thought about it that way... Earth is roughly 8 light-minutes from the sun, but Mars gets a maximum distance of 20 light-minutes away from Earth... So I guess a Mars-Earth Bitcoin Blockchain is "kinda" feasible, but once you get out to the Belt, other systems would be needed...
2025-11-16 18:14:20 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply
As long as all the hashpower is in one place it’s fine, you just wait longer to see the conformations. You can use a local lightning network on the same chain fine. It’s when the hashpower gets distributed that things start to fall apart.
2025-11-16 20:14:23 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply
This would from a pan galactic aggressors point of view be a single point of attack on the network, Satoshi would not be pleased! Space Zionist pirates are out there plotting to retake control always! What about a galactic wide mesh network using instant quantum comms that combines multiple nodes to a single pan galactic BTC chain. Each star system could have its own sub chain running at light speed locally and obv our SOL system might be famous for being No 1 originating chain, some may call it Satoshis star. Meh, now i need to shut up and read this book lol
2025-11-21 18:27:32 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply