HACKER Q&A
📣 blockwriter

What technology and adjacent world would work in literary fiction?


My recent experience coding makes me wonder about the possibilities of including a well-researched depiction of the genesis of a certain technology in a work of literary fiction. Is there any programming language, hardware revolutions, or companies that you think could work as a central element of literary fiction? These technologies run our lives, but I find them stunningly difficult to depict. I have to wonder if I am simply looking in the wrong place. I wonder how Tolstoy would write about today’s world and the forces that drive it.


  👤 mikewarot Accepted Answer ✓
Imagine that the NSA realizes that capability based security might make their jobs much more difficult once they get a good look at the Burroughs B5000 in 1961. They decide to squelch it through a number of covert channels, resulting in the stupid checkbox to enable location services we have to day being called "capabilities" instead of the real deal.

Or the Atomic Energy Agency decides that Thorium based nuclear reactors would make proliferation free nuclear energy too cheap to meter, for real, and that would cut into the profits of the energy sector.

Or that Tesla had a means to tap into the Terawatt of energy stored in the ionosphere from the charge of solar winds, and JP Morgan was interested in selling copper wire instead.

There are many, MANY different ways things could be different, some of them actually plausible.


👤 drakonka
Oh wow, I think the possibilities of working modern technology into fiction in interesting ways are endless. The only thing is, you'll need to decide how accurate the story needs to be. You COULD do a fully historically accurate portrayal of a company, person, technology, etc. Or you could make it a mix of true and fictionalized events _inspired by_ a real thing, but not married to historical accuracy.

Random idea that just popped to mind:

The reinvention of Microsoft (or "Seemingly-Outdated-Fictional-Megacompany-X") as an open-source, progressive tech pioneer. I don't know the details of the history here, and I'd make up a different name for the company to give me more leeway even if I wanted to keep details as accurate as I reasonably could.

The story of a company (Tinyhard Corporation) whose founders viewed open-source as a threat to their company's very existence. A scourge upon the world! Or rather, maybe a story from the perspective of a long-time employee (or group of employees) who started off fully believing their company's skepticism toward open source software.

Through their eyes we witness things like the Halloween (or "Christmas", for Tinyhard) documents and other internal communication about their employer's anti-open-source stance. Maybe the main character is intricately involved in putting into motion some of the company's tactics to squelch the rise of open-source software?

But then something happens (an "inciting incident"), during the course of our main character's efforts against open source on behalf of the company. The employee or group start becoming converted toward open source acceptance. These characters can be entirely fictional, showing us true (or inspired-by-true) events of the company through their eyes. Maybe the employee meets a rebel who they first see as an open-source-loving, good-for-nothin', irresponsible hacker who doesn't understand how bad open-source is and a love interest develops that also surfaces questions about everything they believed about their fight against open-source.

Maybe as they are converted, they slowly start advocating and eventually fighting for open source internally, sowing dissent (resulting of course in conflict and a threat to their position).

The culmination of this character's efforts results in Tinyhard's first ever open-source release: Tinyhard Intaller XML (TiX).

That can be the end of the story: the first step toward a brand new world. An ending of our character taking one small step for them, one giant leap for the future of Tinyhard.