Archive for the ‘Television’ Category

To Create an Oligarchy You Must Regulate.

KvFinkenstein-Sopranos

Yes it’s a protection racket…
do your really think it is us they are protecting?

Well, we’re wending our way through another round of renewal hearings on the television industry up and we are being assured that this time they will fix things. They won’t change anything of course but if we all wish really hard then they are sure that things will work out better this time ‘round.

Not that anything is decided at these hearings, not even the in-camera portions. I would bet that any changes, or lack therein of, will be agreed on over lunches and in backroom meetings that we never hear about.

I say it is time that the CRTC slept with the fishes.

The CRTC was originally created to conserve and regulate a scarce resource of spectrum to ensure that Canada’s culture is protected.

First off, their is no scarce spectrum any more- we can have a million channels if anyone wanted to fill them. The CRTC is trapped pretending that the industry they oversee hasn’t changed in the last half century. They can’t work with the world as it actually is or it would be obvious that they serve no purpose and are simply an anachronistic throwback that needs to be trimmed to help balance the budget.

What’s that you say; they are still charged with protecting Canadian culture? And how good a job are they doing there? The rules they create are designed to ensure that Canadians will be protected from the cultural imperialism of the big bad American media machine by… uhh… continuing to prop up a business model where all the profit for Canadian broadcasters comes from mainlining American content into Canadian living rooms?

Sure they say that, without the profits from the American shows they couldn’t afford to create all the great Canadian content that they do. Do they mean that rare interstitial content between American shows that they spend the absolute minimum of time and money creating?

Really, if you wanted to create a system where all that matters is quarterly profits for the broadcasters then you couldn’t do much better than the CRTC has done. Hell, when an American broadcaster sends a feed into Canada they are supposed to automatically strip out their own advertisement and substitute in the ads from the Canadian broadcaster- the Canadian broadcaster makes money for doing absolutely nothing but get in the way.

To make it look better to the rest of Canada they suggest that broadcasters put some content on the air that could be wrapped in red tape to meet incredibly lax rules to be considered Canadian content. Of course this FauxCanCon gets the lowest possible expenditure in resources- it takes a lot more effort, skill and money to create content than it does to buy a plane ticket and bid on someone else’s content so teh CRTC isn’t going to push them too hard on it.

When it comes right down to it, Canadian content is not the business of Canadian broadcasters, it is a cost of doing business. Like electricity or printer paper, Canadian content is an expense that they will continuously try to cut in search of a better bottom line. The actual business of Canadian broadcasted is to barge in between American content owners and Canadian citizens so they can transfer something they didn’t create to an audience that they demand be forced to go through them.

Keep in mind that this is standard operating procedure for ALL government regulatory proceedings. The lack of knowledge and experience on the part of the regulators is used by the industry stakeholders to twist and distort the rules to their own needs while asserting that it is all being done in the best interests of the country at large.

The corruption of regulation by those who are regulated isn’t a flaw that can be eliminated, it is a feature that is inherent to regulation. The business and organized labour that comes under the aegis of the regulators will do everything in their power to tilt the field in their favour. This isn’t evil, it is human nature and to think they would do otherwise is naive to a destructive level.

When a regulating body like the CRTC can move billions of dollars into and out of bank accounts with the stroke of a pen, there is no way that the people who have the most to gain or lose can avoid manipulating it. The companies shareholders and the union members could reasonably make a case of negligence against the board members or union reps.

What is taking place with the CRTC is taking place in greater obscurity in the agriculture, banking, housing, energy, resource, health… hell, there is no corner of our lives that is safe from over-regulation and mis-regulation.

That isn’t to say there is no need for regulating, just that the harm done by current regulations is outstripping the good. The cleanest, safest and least corrupting regulation is that which regulates only as much as it needs and no more. For example, the Canadian film and television industry doesn’t need regulating outside the rules against fraud and crime that we are all subject to.

If you really want a corporate oligarchy, all you need to do is create a highly regulated industry.

A Man Has to Have Standards

Ain’t no relationship without a bit of compromise… but there are some things that just step too far beyond the pale.

Usage Based Billing?

LucraMatrix

I will start off by stating that I am a libertarian and that it is an infringement on the rights of the people running these companies when the government steps in to regulate how the Internet service providers bill us. The statists among us will insist that the ISPs need regulating because they have a quasi-monopoly on delivering this access… ignoring the fact that it was created for them, and is sustained for them, by the CRTC in the first place.

It is the usual Charley Foxtrot of the bureaucrats and politicians using problems they created as justification to step in and intervene even more. Like the financial mess in the US where they regulated themselves into a real estate bubble and then come to the rescue by “solving” the problem with… yet more regulations? These are perpetual job creation program for bureaucrats and a never ending source of vote purchasing for politicians. It also allows corporations to buy their way into protected and very profitable situations. This is never in the best interests of the population at large and often not in the corporations bet interests in the long run. I think this is one of those cases.

That said, I have no moral or philosophical objection to usage based billing. It seems eminently reasonable to pay for what you use. I do have a pragmatic objection to it as they are proposing to implement it here.

You see, their state protected position allows them to artificially throttle the usage and cripple access to the Internet in the name of short term profits. They set the baseline usage ridiculously low and then charge several orders of magnitude more than it costs for the inevitable overrun. This is bad for the customer but also damages the business in anything but the next few quarters.

IP is poised to take over our communication infrastructure, entertainment delivery and work via interaction with data in the cloud. Everything we exchange that can be reduced to bits will be and because of that, we can set a baseline of usage that encompasses everything we do now that falls under that umbrella.

Our protected ISP industry has held us back to a developing world level of Internet access- we’re lucky if we can get a 10Mbps feed and then they pretend that it is high speed Internet access. Uhhh no, 100Mbps is high speed Internet access; 10Mbps hasn’t been high speed since the last century and 1 Mbps being advertised as “High-Speed Lite” is actually insulting. To make matters worse, this advertised 10Mbps is small-printed as “up to”. This means they have covered their ass as long as, every once in a while, they manage to get up to 10Mbps. I have yet to meter out more than 7.5Mbps on an “up to 20Mbps” package.

If they were honest, they would advertise the minimum they hit rather than the maximum. It should be “no less than” not “up to”. The only use for listing a maximum theoretic limit is to deceive the customer. The only use.

So the first thing they need to do is drag themselves out of the dark ages. Make no mistake, this isn’t easy or cheap. Small countries with large populations have a distinct advantage in building out the infrastructure. It costs far less to do much more when you have a population density of South Korea at 487 people per square kilometres rather than our 3.4 people per square kilometre.

But it certainly isn’t a hundred times more expensive, much of our population lives in metropolitan centres located within a hundred kilometres of the Canada/US border. While rural homes may have to accept 10Mbps access for a while, the ISPs have some explaining to do about urban homes where they want to charge $150 for a hobbled “up to” 100Mbps package.

And we will need true high speed access if we want to fully utilize the Internet and stop falling further and further behind.

The big data hog is entertainment, television being the main culprit. Whatever form the broadcasters and cable networks take in the future, we will always watch a lot of television. What we won’t do is all watch the same television. The average home has three televisions and three people living in in so the Internet feed needs to handle three HD streams at once.

Good compression algorithms mean that an adequate image can be streamed for about 10Mbps… so you can see where an “Up To 10Mbps!” is some seriously weak sauce. The average peak television usage would be 30Mbps and would allow the Internet Service Providers to offer an acceptable base package starting at “No Less Than 50Mbps” that would meet demand and leave a comfortable buffer for the next decade or so.

There are a significant number of households that would require more than this. Some would simply have more people living in the household while others would be more intensive in their use of the Internet with multiple HD feeds going in the background along with several streaming radio and a self hosting website that consumes a few tens of megabits per second on its own. There are also going to be more and more people working with software and data that lives in the cloud – many of who will need tens of Mbps for that alone.

To service these higher usage households, the ISP would be remiss if it did not add one or two tiers above it- let’s just go with 75Mbps and 100Mbps. The pricing of these services should reflect what we are currently paying for Internet access as well as our cable bill and a land phone line- with a healthy discount for consolidation. It would be crass of them to take undue advantage of the situation to try and hide an increase inside that consolidation… so I fully expect them to try to do that very thing.

In a competitive market, the delivery of actual broadband services should making a healthy profit at $1 for 1Mbps. Practically every urban household in Canadian will be subscribing to Internet access and it would behove the ISP to try and deliver the best bang for buck to capture those millions of customers for decades of $50, $75 or $100 every damn month.

So now that we’ve spent several screens to establish how fast the data need to come into the house, we need to figure out how much data would be pulled down every month.

Going back to that three people per household and using the average of four hours of television watched per day- let’s round down from that and assume there is some overlap on what is watched and go with ten hours of distinct television per day. That is mostly for ease of use in the napkin math I am using here but I also think it is a reasonable metric to use.

Since we are using 10Megabits per second as the HD data rate, that works out to 1.25 Megabytes per second which is 75MB per minute for a total of 4.5 GB per hour. I know that using the better algorithms and lowering our quality demands can give us a compromised image for only 1.5GB or a little more. I really don’t want to watch an image full of compression artefacts and so I won’t use numbers that reflect the lowest common denominator when projecting forward.

So, using my quality standards and some napkin math and statistics gets us to 45GB per day on average for television alone. One of the three is streaming radio stations, another is playing a serious game online and the third is working from home complete with video conferencing and cloud computing… we can easily round that up to 50GB per day as a working basic usage rate.

So, in a household in a developed country- the Internet Service Providers should be looking at 1.5 Terabytes drawn down over a 50Mbps service as a working model for what they need to deliver monthly for not a great deal over $50. Right now, that 1.5TB would cost them between $30 and $40 to deliver and they would have to work on the economy of delivery as well as alternative revenue streams… but building a working business model based on the real world is their job. I am just pointing out the parameters to them.

Now, there are other households, with six or seven occupants who have a serious Netflix addiction and watch two or three movies in addition to the twenty hours of TV every day. So these people will be using closer to 5TB of data per month and so the ISPs will want to meter that and charge a reasonable rate. If it costs them two and a half cents to deliver a GB of data then we are looking at an additional cost to them of about $90. This household is a high usage should probably already be paying the $100 for the higher bandwidth and their usage would be partially covered by that higher rate… but the ISP would have to charge an additional $75 to $100 for the higher than average usage.

This household’s bill could easily hit $200 a month and I don’t have a problem with that- it is a reasonable usage based billing scenario.

The closest I could find to this hypothetical baseline service is the maximum service offer of SHAWS “Nitro” package. This advertises “Up to 100Mbps download speed” which realistically might be able to sustain a “No less than 50Mbps” data rate in the few places that it is offered. How does the rest of the package measure up? Well, they cap it at only 350 GB per month which is about 23% of a reasonable baseline and they want $150 which is about three times what it needs to be.

So in reality, they are not that far off what they should be delivering. Since it is actually closer to a true 50Mbps service than a true 100Mbps they need to charge a third of what they are charging and allow four times as much data transferred. These aren’t order of magnitude differences and should be reachable in a reasonable timeframe. We don’t have to live in a second rate information topology.

Internet Topology

Now that we can see what they can and should deliver, what are they actually proposing?

The big telecom companies that built and operate the pipes for the Internet in Canada want to impose a 25GB per month cap and then charge for every GB you go over that. The CRTC was created to consolidate the bureaucracy into one-stop shopping for the telecom industry so they rubber stamped it and gave the companies $1.90 per GB in English Canada and $2.35 per GB in French Canada.

So let’s get this straight, they want to cap it at less than 2% of a reasonable base usage and then bill the customer $2,850 per month in overages to get the other 98%?

How about those poor ghettoized Quebecois who could then be charged $3,525 per month? Or that hypothetical high usage household above that would be dinged $9,500 or $11,750 respectively?

Obviously it would not be possible for Canadians join the developed world if they have to pay what the telecom/CRTC are asking for – and we will fall further and further behind the rest of the world as they build out for the future and Canada entrenches themselves in the 1990s.

So my message to the ISPs of Canada is to look out past the next few quarters of their bottom line and work toward a business plan that will make them competitive in the developed world and deliver what the customer needs rather than crippling them with last century’s data plans. If they are too blatant about the money grab and do to much harm to the customers- that leaves them vulnerable to politicians sacrificing them on the alter of votes.

I am pretty sure that I am yelling into the void on this one.

Watched the Rookie Blue Pilot

I was going to do a quick review of The Gates but I’ll put it off to talk about Rookie Blue. I bitch and moan about the Canadian networks not creating their own content so I will make an effort to take them seriously when they do.

rookie-blue

Because they don’t make as much money off creating original content as they do putting the shrinkwrap back on used American programs- Canadian networks have been loath to waste money on promoting their own shows. They are usually shoved out the door with no fanfare and this is quite often held up as a reason for their lack of ratings. Hell, no matter how good or bad they are, they aren’t going to find much of an audience if nobody even knows they exist.

I give Global all due respect this time out. They made a huge effort to promote the show and it will now have a chance to win or lose based on its own merits.

And what are those merits you ask? Well, even with one strike against it for being YACS – Yet Another Cop Show… closely related to the YADS and YALS with doctors and lawyers… you know, I think we are going to have to add another one for YAVS what with all the vampire shows (I will probably be getting back to The Gates)… but I digress… where was I?

Oh yeah, what are Rookie Blue’s merits?

First, don’t underestimate the likability of the very photogenic Missy Peregrym-

- the actress who portrays the main protagonist of the ensemble case, rookie officer Andy McNally.

AndyMcNallyMissyPeregrym

As cute as she is (and she is pretty damn cute i’n’t she?), the lady can act as well. Let me tell you, I got a part for her riiiiight here… ohhh yeahhhhh… as the female lead in Saving the Dead, a Lovecraftian redemptive horror I am writing on spec. She can deliver a real sense of vulnerability without coming across as overly weak – you want to step into the screen and go to her rescue.

In her big scene near the end as she walked out of the abandoned house with the young guy in cuffs- as she walks up to the camera I was reading pride, desperation for any sign of respect, fighting back tears from the aftermath of fear and adrenaline- all without a word. Very expressive.

I don’t mean to short the rest of the cast, they all do good work with some solid writing. Airing down in the US the quality and production values will not look out of place on ABC. After the initial first episode bump, I think it should settle in with solid numbers of around 6 million viewers in the US and just over a million viewers here in Canada… with a much stronger skew to the ladies than most cop shows.

Because this is not really a cop show for the guys. (The new cop show for us would be The Good Guys from Fox and re-wrapped here in Canada on Global.) There is no grit here and all the rookies are… soft?… sensitive?… oh so very “Grey’s Anatomy”?

This is the anti-Shield or anti-Wire and there is nothing wrong with that. Workplace dramas are all fantasy depictions of the jobs they portray- this one just happens to fit more with a feminine fantasy of the police world.

It is good to see another competently done television series that shows we can create here in Canada and not just do service work and buy American shows. I won’t be follow this show, not because there are any glaring faults in it like Scoundrels, but because I am not its intended audience.

Good luck Rookie.

Watched the Scoundrels Pilot

Since I want to write for television, I watch a lot of television. If there is a pilot coming on and I’m not actually repulsed by the premise, I will watch it. Last night there were two – Scoundrels and The Gates. I’ll write up on ABC’s Scoundrels first.

spoiler-alert

There are some minor spoilers in here so consider yourself warned.

Scoundrels

If you are in the US, you can watch the pilot at ABC’s website- it is geoblocked here in Canada. In the Great White North the government is protecting CTV’s profits so you can watch the Scoundrels pilot on CTV as long as they keep it on their servers… then there are the not so legitimate websites that collect and serve.

It irks me that Canadian networks get the government to block American programs so that they can pretend that they are performing an actual service when they are simply functioning as parasites when they fly down to Las Angeles with suitcases full of money so that they don’t have to do the hard work of creating their own content.

Yes, the Canadian networks do create a little of their own stuff, the government won’t give them that lucrative cartel on American programming if they don’t… but I’ll rant about the state of Canadian regulations and network programming another time… okay, I’ll rant about it many, many other times- but right now I’ll get back to Scoundrels.

I didn’t like it.

Okay, the actors are good so the blame can shift from them. Virginia Madsen is always reliable and David James Elliott, especially toward the end of the pilot, shows that he can be a real prick when the part calls for it.

The problem for me was that the characters are not good people and they aren’t interesting of unique enough to get me to engage with them. When characters are actually bad people there has to be something about them that really grabs the audience’s attention or makes us empathize or sympathize with them – and the West family leaves me cold.

The only character on the show that was less likable than the Wests was the photographer who tried to roofie and rape Heather West… and all that happened to him was that she stole some pictures from him.

Scoundrels-HeatherWest

She didn’t care in the least bit about all the girls this guy had done this to before and all the girls that he will do this to in the future. She got what she wanted and moved on with a smile and a clear conscience- to hell with everyone else.

And that sums up the sentiments of the whole family. There is no remorse or conscience in the lot of them, it is like the family unit is sociopathic. They may care about each other but everyone outside is there simply to be used. They resent that there are repercussions to their actions and they seem to find it inexcusable that the father is actually sent to prison for stealing, or that one son may do time for a home invasion.

The writers did try to build some empathy by having them exposit on the “West Code” where they don’t do violence and they don’t deal in drugs. One- this seems like an artificial construct that wouldn’t exist in the real world. Two- if you break into my home and steal what I have worked long and hard for- that you don’t break my arm while doing it does not make me like you. Three- the non-violent production and distribution of drugs is not morally wrong and a step up from stealing.

The series is supposed to be about Cheryl trying to get herself and her three children to pursue legal means of making a living now that Wolfgang, the father, is sent to prison… not because what they do is wrong but because she isn’t as good at stealing things as Wolfgang was and Cal is too dim-witted to take over. She is worried that more of her family will get caught and put in prison- that is her incentive to change.

That incentive is one of the purposes of the criminal justice system- to make the price they may pay for committing a crime great enough for it to replace the moral compass that some people are missing.There are a lot of real people like that and the world would be a better place without them.

If you want to build a show around characters that have twisted moral codes and who blithely prey on other people- It takes a very strong combination of writing and acting to get me to engage with those characters. It has worked before, and with characters who did far worse things than the Wests.

Tony I watched right through to the cut to black.

DexterDark

A sociopath trying to play by our rules is interesting.

Hell, I actually have one series idea that takes place inside the world of art heists and another set in a boxing club that gets tied up with Russian organized crime… so I don’t have anything against writing in that world and with characters that are not good people… but it is not easy to make those characters relatable or empathetic.

In the sentiment of not breaking something if you can’t fix it:

It might have been better if Wolfgang West had been a more overtly vicious and domineering figure who had given them no choice in what they did- if he had used beatings, lies and threats to force the family to a life of crime they really didn’t want. Once he is sent to prison and could no longer get to them they would try to right their lives. They would have known no other life and would have to struggle to leave the world world of crime. There would also be the always looming threat of the eventual release of Wolfgang.

That show I might have been able to get behind. The one that actually got made loses its “Record All New” setting on my DVR.

PS. Kudos to Neal McDonough for sticking to his principals and getting fired for it. All he had to do to play Wolfgang was to make out with Virginian Madsen… and he’d be making a million dollars or more working on this show. Making out with Virginia Madsen is not an onerous task, I would do it for free as a matter of fact, but years ago Neal drew a line in the sand saying that he would not simulate sex on camera, that it is against his principals. He stuck by that and was replaced. I’m not saying David was wrong or that Neal was right in what they are willing to do- just that Neal should be commended for sticking to what he thought was right.

SpaceX Moving Faster Than Space Inc.

All the key components are coming along nicely in the real world to meet the needs of my fictional world. There is a chance that someone will step up and announce an actual asteroid retrieval mission before I have any chance of building the contacts and experience needed to shepherd my TV show Space Inc. through development.

SpaceX just announced a couple days ago that Iridium Communications has signed a contract with them for launch services in 2015 through 2017 to help put their next generation of satellites into orbit. At $492 million it is the largest private launch contract ever. Don’t think that SpaceX will be twiddling their thumbs and waiting for the next five years, they already have over 20 launches on their manifest ahead of the Iridium NEXT launches.

Since Iridium will be down to 72 satellites, shouldn’t it be rebranded as Hafnium?

   Electron_shell_077_Iridium  Electron_shell_072_Hafnium

Anyhow, SpaceX is exactly what my fictional William Barron needs to launch the components and crew for his Pathbreaker spacecraft.

But this fictional mission needed another rocket that could move an asteroid and SpaceX is all about launching to orbit. While the Merlin engine could be repurposed to push Pathbreaker out to meet the asteroid- it is not suited to changing the delta V of something as massive as my fictional asteroid Vazquez-Koski – not enough to put it into Earth orbit.

Good thing that there is another rocket company working on that problem.

vasimr

 Ad Astra Rocket Company is developing what they call a VAriable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR®) that is so weak it can’t even lift itself off the launch pad let alone anything to orbit. Which is exactly what I want because once a rocket like SpaceX’s Falcon 9 gets it off the planet, electric thrusters like the VASIMR can burn for months rather than minutes. As gentle a push as it has, a lot of velocity change can build up if you push for long enough. The potential for these ion rockets is looked at in a recent article in Aviation Week titled Ad Astra Ponders Vasimr Mission To Asteroid.

The author of that article, Mark Carreau, writes about the potential of the ion rockets for a mission to an asteroid and back… Mars as well but that is for season six. In season one, William Barron would be using several of these high efficiency rockets to push on the asteroid for months on end to shifts it into Earth orbit… that is, if he can beat the Chinese to the asteroid.

Once in orbit, the TV series would be working within the scenario that I wrote about two posts back in Space Inc. and the Unspillable… hey, I ain’t spoiling if it is the Chinese who are controlling this or the Americans via William Barron.

As much as I love writing, I just wish that after getting out of high school I had carried on with pursuing a degree in Aerospace Engineering like I had wanted to – before becoming disillusioned by the governments lethargic domination of the arena. Instead of just imagining it, I could be bending iron to actually make us a spacefaring civilisation.

Right now, SpaceX “Careers” page shows they are trying to find another 125 people.

Stay is school kids.

Space Inc. and the Unspillable

I’ve been saying it for years – hell, it is an integral part of Space Inc., the spec pilot I wrote for the dramatic television series set in the current civilian space race. Space based solar power could be the thing that takes us to space.

The news obsessing with the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico created an opportunity that someone at the National Space Society took advantage of to create a nice graphic to drive home a salient point.

unspillable

I found it on the NSS blog entry Space Solar Power is Unspillable and figured to pass it on… even though the “space solar is five times the power of Earth-based solar” line makes it look like the energy from the sun is five times greater in orbit than it is on Earth. In fact a clear sky at noon attenuates only about 25% of the solar energy.

That “clear” and “at noon” are where the power differential shows up.

There are only so many days without clouds, dust, volcanic ash, smoke, smog and fog… at least down here, up in GEO is is always sunny and cloudless. Well, not always sunny. The availability of the sun in GEO is actually more like 23/7 than 24/7… but that is a lot better than the losses incurred on the surface. Down here, the sun is only visible on average of 12/7 and that “12” varies from a best of about 75% at noon on down to that sunset/sunrise of <1% – as compared to the space based solar panel that gets 100% for all but the hour or so per day that it is in the Earth’s shadow.

It is the overall collectability of the energy that may be considered to be “five times” Earth-based solar- which is good but it still takes a pretty big array of solar panels to replace one of those fossil or fissile burning power plants- and big means heavy.

The cost of getting a kilogram on a GTO (Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit) is about $20,000 depending on what you launch with. Then you have to burn some of that mass to stabilize it into a GEO (Geostationary Earth Orbit) so that it remains properly positioned over the rectenna on the Earth’s surface.

20100604_launch

Space X is on target to cut that significantly with their Falcon 9. They are offering to put a 4,680 kg payload in a GTO for $51 million… or about half what it is with the various Ariane, Delta or Atlas rockets. Their Falcon 9 Heavy is being designed to launch 19,500 kg to a GTO and may well cut the costs in half yet again – maybe $5,000 per kilogram to GTO. The cost would also have an inverse relationship to the number of flights – so more launches would mean a lowering of that cost yet again.

falcon_9h

Even a reasonably optimistic forecast of $2,000 per kilogram would mean tens of billions of dollars when we are talking about launching the infrastructure for a space based solar array able to generate the 4GW that can come from a good sized coal or nuclear power plant.

The estimates for the weight of 4GW capable array of panels and the supporting infrastructure are quite preliminary but they start at about 4 million kilograms on the low end. If that was all launched from Earth, we’re looking at $40 billion which is not competitive with the $8 billion or so to get the same energy from nuclear power.

Now let’s look out five years to the Falcon 9 Heavy and it still takes over 200 launches and costs around $20 billion. I’m sure if I someone called up Elon and said they’d buy 200 launches they would get a discount… although it still wouldn’t be cost competitive.

But what happens when most of the material is already there and we just have to launch a couple dozen Falcon 9 Heavies to get the equipment up there to take advantage of it?

What if someone took that first step and went out to retrieve an asteroid into Earth orbit? An stony asteroid that is about 40 meters in diameter would come in at something like 150 million kilograms. They usually run 18% silicon so we’re looking at roughly 27 million kilograms of solar panel raw material. Fabricating that much silicon into solar panels and you could build six 4GW solar power satellites.

So if a mission like that could be done for $7 billion to go get the asteroid and another $30 billion to build the six powersats then we are talking the tipping point for space based solar power generation. Maybe the tipping point for becoming a space faring civilization because when that asteroid starts running low, there are thousands more NEAs where it came from… and the second one will be a lot cheaper than the first.

If you are willing to go to it and do the processing in situ before shipping the refined materials back, one near Earth asteroid call 1036 Ganymed (not Jupiter’s moon Ganymed) is about 32 kilometres in diameter. That is about 17,000 cubic kilometres of raw material massing 33,000,000,000,000,000 kg.

Since 1036 Ganymed is a S-type asteroid that 18% silicon means about  5,940,000,000,000,000 kg of raw silicon. With that one asteroid, we could build solar power satellites that generate millions of terawatts.

We won’t build million terawatt solar arrays any time soon because, even ignoring the cost of doing it, the entire planet only uses 15 terawatts right now.

Someone could make hundreds of billions of dollars giving the world cheap and abundant energy. This would allowing billions of people to lift themselves out of poverty and hardship to enjoy the standard of living that the developed nations rightfully don’t want to lose.

Or the governments can cap and trade the developed nations back down to join in the suffering of those billions in poverty and hardship – and without cheap energy, none of us will have a way to climb out of it.

 

Caveat lector, this is napkin engineering and is not meant to be a definitive set of calculations that can be taken to the bank to get a loan for $7 billion to go capture 40 metre nickel-iron asteroid – but it is meant to spark interest in those who can spend the millions of dollars it would take to do the definitive calculations that can then be taken to the bank for that $7 billion loan.

Despair May Be A Sin…

…but it is often hilarious.

 demotivators_despair

Seriously folks, we really shouldn’t be filled with so my angst and woe. Every pundit, politician and activist seems to be carrying around the same sign- sure it sells their books, gets them voted into office and makes them feel like they’re saving the world… but they are wrong.

The End is Far

We need to stop every once and a while and remind ourselves that never in human history has humanity had it better than we do now and despite the way over-hyped but news selling negatives, our succeeding generation has a strong probability of living in an even better world.

The world we wring our hands over today would seem pretty fantastic to time travellers from fifty years ago, amazing to those from a hundred years ago and an unimaginable utopia to visitors from 150 years ago… as long as they actually looked around rather than read all the doom and gloom.

Sure there are still great wrongs in need of righting and there are real dangers to be faced- but I truly wish that, every once in a while, folks would revel in the positive rather than wallow in the negative.

In pursuit of that, I’ve written a pilot on spec that is set in the current civilian space race where, instead of building the spine of the show around stopping a looming negative, I set them a magnificent positive goal and then let the villains get in the way.

It will be a tougher sell to the executive suite than one wrapped in the status quo narrative of setting them up as being on a desperate mission to save a dying earth.

BUT I also think that there is a massive, pent up need for a show like this. I look around at the slate of dramas and I see nothing but show after show that are constructed entirely around the negative. The goals are to stop something bad from happening… and that is it.

Stop the bomb from going off, stop the serial killer, stop the Hellmouth from opening, stop the disease from killing the patient, stop the aliens from taking over the earth, stop the terrorist from assassinating the president, stop the devil from bringing on Armageddon, stop the smoke monster from tricking someone into pulling the island’s butt plug – it seems that the only pro-active people out there are the villains.

I’m not saying that those shows are not great; how desolate would the dial have been without Jack, Buffy and the Winchester boys? I’m just saying that it would be nice for once to have the villains playing catch-up.

David Brin on Business in Space

The speculative TV project I am working on that is closest to my heart and mind is ‘Space Inc.’. It is a one hour dramatic series built around a fictional player in the civilian space race that is actually taking place as I write this.

The show would be an action/drama set in a workplace that is the most dangerous, dramatic, important and history changing environment that humanity will ever deal with. It would be a series built around the most significant action that is is possible for not just humanity but for life itself to undertake- becoming a space faring civilization.

Here is a short series of videos that science fiction writer David Brin recorded and put up on Youtube. He is one of my favourite writers (both his fiction and his blog are must reads) and while there are a few things in here that I disagree with him on – there is a lot in these videos that I wish more people were aware of.

Earth is the cradle of life and, while we can hope and speculate, as far as we know it holds the only life in the universe. If we want to ensure that life flourishes, it has to leave the cradle. Humanity, and the magnificent intellect that sets us apart from all other life forms that we know of, may be the only hope for life to spread beyond this one little spec in the cosmos and the sliver of time allotted to it.

When is Celtx Going to Get Act Breaks?

 Celtx-Act-Breaks

Celtx doesn’t do act breaks inside its script structure. The stageplay format allows it but that isn’t usable for teleplays and there is no “teleplay” format available that has the act structure baked in like it should.

I really appreciate what the great team over in St. John’s has done here but I wish they understood that all broadcast (and most cable) television lives and dies by the act break.

The structure of a television show, the arc and the flow of action, is dictated by the act breaks and it is quite possibly the single most important element of a teleplay. Your act out is what brings the viewer back from the commercial break and you had better make it good. Feature films have it easy, once the customer has travelled to the theatre, paid their money and taken their seat… it take a powerfully bad show to have them get up and walk out. I’ve only done it twice. Television shows are an entirely different beast and every time there is a commercial break there is an opportunity for the audience to pick up the remote and surf away.

When you break a television show – you do it by the acts. When you write it – you write within the acts. When you rewrite it – you rewrite to serve the acts… with special attention to the hour and half hour when more new shows are starting up on a hundred other channels. If you hand in a spec television script that has no act breaks, or incorrectly plotted act breaks, you better hope that they don’t mind retraining you for the job because that is what they will be thinking as they read the script.

It has been one of my (maybe only?) peeves with Celtx from the beginning that there are no built in act breaks for teleplays. The use of ‘ALT-RETURN" allows me to insert a manual page break so it is functional if inelegant.

I guess the reason is that working writers use Final Draft while wannabe writers use Celtx… and there are far more wannabe feature writers than wannabe TV writers. Celtx might be taken more seriously by working writers if it was understood that there are a thousand pages of TV written by working TV writers for every page written by working feature writers.

And yes, despite having being hired to write one feature film, I still consider myself to be one of the wannabes and I will be right up until it pays the rent… I’d like to take Celtx with me on that journey but it isn’t ready to work in television yet.