January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 3 of 8: Show-and-Tell, Plus 1923’s Predications for 2023

This is the third of eight posts today.

6) SHOW-AND-TELL

For those participating on ZOOM, today, we open the floor to any club members who have “fancraft” projects to showcase—sci-fi scale models, SF/F woodworking or needlecraft, whatever genre-themed, hands-on project it may be that you are working on at present, or have recently completed. 

Those not able to join our ZOOM chat for the show-and-tell may contribute by using this post’s “Leave a Comment” feature to type in a quick description of any such project on which they are currently working.

Or, they may find the following interesting:

7) WHAT THE FUTURISTS OF 1923 PREDICTED FOR 2023!

Surrounding any new year, ruminations on the previous 12 months, and predictions regarding the next 12 are a staple of media features in newspapers, on radio and TV, and on the Internet. Articles about what is to come always fascinate, and we are both awed and amused by reviews of how prescient, or not, were past prognostications.

We came across the following snippets on what those living in 1923 imagined life would be like in 2023. Paul Fairie, an educator and researcher at the University of Calgary, is interested in and collects such material, and we thought to share a few of his examples with club members.

Here, then, is a sampling of what prognosticators in 1923 were suggesting life would be like one hundred years hence, in the astounding year 2023!

  • Envisioned for 2023 was a world in which “many varieties of aircraft are flying thru the heavens.” This was not an unreasonable extrapolation in the early years of heavier-than-air flight, only twenty years after the Wright Flyer first flew at Kitty Hawk.
  • Aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss thought that “gasoline as a motive power will have been replaced by radio, and…the skies will be filled with myriad craft sailing over well-defined routes.” Radio replacing gasoline? Not quite sure how that was supposed to work!

    a few Popular Science magazines published in 1923.
  • Watch-sized radio telephones were anticipated by 2023, allowing global communication. Pretty much bang on!
  • Newspapers were foreseen to have disappeared by now, with people instead listening to the news rather than reading the morning paper at the breakfast table. Not quite yet, but we do seem to be moving in that direction.
  • People in 2023 were expected to live longer than those of 1923—a safe bet—but the estimates of just how long would be the average human lifespan were a tad ambitious: 100 years, with particularly hardy individuals reaching as much as 150 and 200 years old! One scientist of the day speculated that the average lifespan would be 300 years! Not quite.
  • Cancer, tuberculosis, polio, leprosy, and other afflictions were expected to have been eliminated by now, necessitating fewer doctors. Yes and no. We have found cures and effective treatments for many diseases in the past 100 years, and we do currently have fewer doctors and other medical professionals, but the latter is the result of poor choices made by politicians and administrators, not because diseases have been eliminated.
  • To protect their kidneys, people in 2023 would wear “kidney cosies” in cold weather. Nope.
  • Beauty contests would be obsolete by 2023 because pretty much everyone will be physically beautiful! Beauty contests still exist, though are seen as less acceptable, but for entirely different reasons than cited here. And, men and women today are no better or worse looking on average than people were in 1923.
  • Curled hair was predicted to be the stylish choice for the men of 2023, shaved heads and blackened teeth all the rage for women! Not particularly and definitely not!
  • Automation would have resulted in a four-day work week by 2023, it was thought. Long days of drudgery and toil would no longer be the norm, with some estimating work days of just four hours thanks to the wonders of electricity. Yes, to some degree, but also no, not yet.
  • Electricity would ensure that every town was spotless. Not at all!

    a couple of Science and Invention magazines published in 1923.
  • British scientist/inventor/author Archibald Low, once president of the British Interplanetary Society and a writer of “scientific romances” (early SF) invented a nascent version of television, the first drone, and prophesized that “the war of 2023 will naturally be a wireless war.” Electricity promised endless possibilities, he stated, putting forth an invention of his own that he believed would render artillery obsolete: jets of water highly charged with electricity. “Wireless telephony, sight, heat, power and writing may all play important parts,” said Low of wireless technology. He also predicted department stores, the internet, and speculated that by 2023, civilization may well have advanced enough that mental telepathy might develop as a means of communication. Swing and a miss on that last one!
  • Technological and industrial advances would open more of North America to habitation by 2023. The population of the United States was forecast to grow to 300 million, with Canada’s pegged at 100 million. A good guess, the number under the mark by just a little regarding the U.S., and a little more with regard to Canada.

January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 2 of 8: Where We Store Our Ideas

This is post 2 of 8.

5) PRESENTATION: WHERE WE STORE OUR IDEAS

This is a brief history of information storage. In some cases, this meant very hard copy. Humans have this need to record our thoughts. This became institutionalized through religion, bureaucracy, graffiti, Shakespeare, and science fiction. We’ve painted on cave walls, carved on stone, used animal skins, plants, and chopped up trees. Now we’re on the least archival of all: computer storage.

Where will our thoughts be a century from now? A millennium from now? Beyond that? Will our digital media fall apart faster than a pulp science fiction magazine in the hot sun?

Video: Manufacturing papyrus today

Egyptian village revives Papyrus production

Video: Log Driver’s Waltz – Kate and Anna McGarrigle 

Canada Vignettes Log Driver’s Waltz

Video: April 2020 – pulp digester explodes in Jay, Maine
Amazingly – no injuries

RAW See the moment of the massive Jay, Maine mill explosion

January 2023 Virtual Meeting, Post 1 of 8: Introduction, Agenda, and Amazing Prognostications for 2023!

This the first of eight posts this afternoon.

1) INTRODUCTION

Welcome to MonSFFA’s first gathering of the New Year; this is our January 2023 e-Meeting!

Mid-winter. -Sigh-

With shovelling snow and scraping ice in the near-future for many of us, post-pandemic anxieties plaguing society, the lingering COVID-19 virus still in the air, and a looming recession… Well, we need a break from all that, if only for a few hours!

So sit yourself down in your most comfortable chair, shake out some potato chips, beer nuts, chocolates, cookies or other such snacks into a bowl, pour yourself a cup of coffee or hot chocolate, tune in the fireplace channel on your TV, and join us for an afternoon of SF/F fun and conversation!

Today, we’ll be examining the means by which humans have recorded and kept information over the centuries. We’ll also have a look at more of those cool cameos in science fiction and fantasy film and TV. And, we’ll hold our annual election—by necessity, online again!—to select MonSFFA’s Executive Committee for 2023, plus a lot more!

Today’s agenda is a busy one, so let’s fire the starter’s pistol!

2) JOIN THIS AFTERNOON’S VIDEO-CHAT ON ZOOM!

To join our ZOOM video-chat, which will run throughout the next few hours, simply click here and follow the prompts: This Afternoon’s MonSFFA e-Meeting on ZOOM 

If you’re not fully equipped to ZOOM, you can also take part by phone (voice only); in the Montreal area, the toll-free number to call is: 1-438-809-7799. From out of town? No problem; find your ZOOM call-in number here: Call-In Numbers

Also, have this information on hand as you may be asked to enter it:

Meeting ID: 860 4368 3500
Passcode: 626294

3) MEETING AGENDA

Here is the agenda for this afternoon’s get-together:

As always, all scheduled programming is subject to change.

4)

MonSFFAdamus Reveals His Amazing Prognostications for 2023!

1) Dubbed Kraken, 2022’s latest and, to date, most virulent COVID-19 variant will dominate in the early months of 2023, only to be supplanted mid-year by Dragon, an even more contagious form, one so infectious that a person may well catch it during one of their past lives! By the end of 2023, Medusa will rise and quickly become the prevailing strain, turning everyone who contracts it to stone!

2) The federal government will inaugurate a cross-country road race to turbo-charge public interest in EVs. The electric vehicles participating will dash, east to west, along the Trans-Canada Highway, symbolically speeding right past gas stations all along the route! Long stretches of the highway in Saskatchewan and Alberta will be lined with angry protesters. Some provincial governments will seize upon the opportunity to reduce overcrowding in hospitals by moving patients out to the middle of the highway!

3) The world’s population reached 8 billion in 2022, and astoundingly, will balloon by another billion or so in 2023, bringing the global population to a near-untenable, “Mark of Gideon”-level of some 9 billion by the end of the year! And Quebec premiere Francois Legault will refuse entry into Quebec to any who don’t speak French!

4) As global climate change intensifies, Montreal will, in late September, experience an alarming EF5 tornado! Not built to survive winds of such force, city landmarks like Place Ville Marie and St. Joseph’s Oratory will be devastated. Office and hotel towers will sustain severe damage, and the cross atop Mount Royal will collapse into twisted wreckage. Thousands will be injured or lose their lives after seeking shelter in the Olympic Stadium when howling winds rip away the retractable roof. In the aftermath, Mayor Valerie Plante will announce that clean-up operations are to begin immediately, starting with the city’s bike paths.

5) On the international front, mounting losses of personnel, equipment, and military prestige in Ukraine will at last prompt Russian army leaders to rebel against leader Vladimir Putin and overthrow him in a successful coup. But Putin will evade capture and retreat into a fortified underground bunker just outside of Moscow. The military will blast through the thick walls of the bunker, only to find a slightly smaller bunker nestled within. Blasting through that bunker as well will reveal a still smaller bunker tucked inside. By year’s end, Putin will not yet have been apprehended.

6) Having called a federal election in 2023, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will invoke emergency measures when a zombie apocalypse suddenly manifests just as the campaign is getting underway. The prime minister will find himself facing not only new Conservative leader, Pierre Poilievre, but the risen corpse of his own father, who garners enough support to run! Meanwhile, the Freedom Convoy will roll again in opposition to the emergency measures, but this time face two Trudeaus!

7) South of the border, meanwhile, while visiting grade schools, both President Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris will, tragically, suffer permanent incapacitation in two separate shooting incidents. Next in line to accede to the Oval Office is newly-elected Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy! What could possibly go wrong?

President Kevin McCarthy and Congresswoman Lauren Boebert dodge reporters after a news conference during which McCarthy announced Boebert as his pick for vice-president.

8) Here in Quebec, in an effort to assuage concerns over Bill 96—now law—the CAQ government will enact legislation specifically guaranteeing the language rights of English-speaking Quebecers, but will define “English-speaking” as limited to mother-tongue-English citizens who are fans of the Toronto Maple Leafs. English Quebecers are to be issued identity cards clipped to a lanyard and imprinted with a large scarlet-coloured letter “A,” for “anglais”—the “maudit” is implied!—so that government workers, shop owners, and others may recognize them as someone with whom it is legal to communicate in English, though only if absolutely necessary. Detractors will dub this legislation the “Scarlet Letter Act,” and the Anglophone population will take to the streets in droves to protest, understandably angry and exasperated. The Leafs! Really?

9) Inflation, fueled by rising interest rates and continuing supply-chain issues will trigger a recession in 2023, pushing the cost of groceries to unprecedented heights for many citizens! A jar of strawberries will cost $150!

10) After a frustratingly futile search in 2022, MonSFFA will finally secure a surprisingly inexpensive function space in which to hold its monthly meetings! Club members will be instructed to gather at the appointed time in front of the Villa-Maria Metro/Bus station in NDG, then, as a group, board the Number 24 Bus and secure seats in the back half of the vehicle. The meeting will unfold as the 24 travels east on its route, arriving some 60-90 minutes later at the Montgomery/Sherbrooke bus station in the city’s center-east Sainte-Marie neighbourhood. Our group will disembark for the mid-meeting break, then catch a west-bound 24 for the ride back to Villa-Maria, during which time the second half of the meeting will take place. Post-meeting dinner at a restaurant in the Monkland Village, or along Decarie Boulevard, and voilà!

11) Montreal’s new REM elevated commuter train, after a delayed launch in 2022, will finally begin operation in 2023. During a heavy snowfall mixed with freezing rain, however, the REM trains will stall when too much ice accumulates on the tracks. Engineers will explain that this breakdown was the result of a chance occurrence, a once-in-365-day weather event! The REM, they are confident, should be able to operate normally in the winter, provided Montreal does not again receive a copious measure of snow and freezing rain!

12) As war rages, prejudices flourish, the climate crisis worsens, the middle-class withers, and democracy falters, and MonSFFA searches desperately for a viable meeting hall, scientists in 2023 will confirm that there is, in the end, no intelligent life to be found anywhere in the universe, this planet included!

Agenda for our meeting on the 14th

MonSFFA meets on the 14th, 13h. Visitors are welcome. The meeting is on Zoom, and the link will be posted on our website at the start of the meeting. The link may also be requested by contacting <president@monsffa.ca>.

AGENDA: JANUARY 14, 2023

1:00PM (Post 1 of 8)—Introduction, ZOOM details, agenda, and predictions for 2023.

1:30PM (Post 2 of 8)—Joe Aspler’s presentation: Where We Store Our Ideas.

2:30PM (Post 3 of 8)—Show-and-Tell (Zoom) and predictions about 22023 from 1923 (Website)

3:00PM—(Post 4 of 8)—Break

3:15PM (Post 5 of 8)—Josée’s presentation (Cameos in SF/F Film and TV).

4:15PM (Post 6 of 8)—Financial and other reports, annual election of club’s executive.

4:30PM (Post 7 of 8)—What Are You Reading/Watching?

5:00PM (Post 8 of 8)—Thank you, next meeting date, wrap-up.

e-fanzines: New and archive issues added

New and archive issues just added at https://efanzines.com:

Nic Farey’s The Incompleat Register 2022. Guide and ballot for the FAAn Awards for 2022

Andy Hooper’s CAPTAIN FLASHBACK #49

Christopher J. Garcia’s Claims Department #35

Archive issues of Heath Row’s Telegraphs & Tar Pits #44-47, Explosion Containment Umbrella #5, Brass Hat Mind #2, Losconzine #48, Theoretically: Game #1

Zine to share!

From the N3F:

As updates, we do need a new Editor for Films Fantastic, failing which it will be merged for the nonce back into Tightbeam. We are also running short of writers for various reasons. In particular, FanActivity Gazette has lost in one fell swoop most of its writers. Please recruit fellow fen who write, whether they are current Neffers or not, as writers.

Tightbeam340

ANOTHER X-CLASS SOLAR FLARE

Space Weather News for Jan. 9, 2023
https://spaceweather.com
https://www.spaceweatheralerts.com

ANOTHER X-CLASS SOLAR FLARE: Earth-orbiting satellites detected another X-class solar flare today–the second in less than a week and a possible harbinger of more to come. There are now two large, unstable sunspots capable of producing these strong explosions, and both are turning toward Earth. Full story and forecasts @ Spaceweather.com

Instant X-flare alerts: Sign up for Space Weather Alerts to receive instant text messages when strong solar flares are underway.
[] 
Above: An X1.9-class solar flare on Jan. 9, 2023, recorded by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory.

CSFFA will be at Pemmi-Con

Dino fans: Science GoH is Philip John Currie AOE FRSC, Canadian palaeontologist and museum curator  –CPL

CSFFA will be at Pemmi-Con

Pemmi-Con* is happening in Winnipeg 20-23 July, 2023.

Eight of the nine Pemmi-Con Guests of Honour and the Toastmaster are Canadian. They are Julie E. Czerneda; Waubgeshig Rice; Nisi Shawl; John Mansfield; Philip John Currie AOE FRSC, Canadian palaeontologist and museum curator; Lorna Toolis, Ghost Guest of Honour; katherena vermette; George Freeman; Tanya Huff.

The Pemmi-Con website: https://main.pemmi-con.ca/

*Pemmi-Con is the 2023 NASFiC (North American Science Fiction Convention). NASFiCs occur in a North American city in a year when Worldcon is happening elsewhere than in North America.

Wonderful anthology from Africa

Gail Jamieson from South Africa has sent me a link to a wonderful anthology from Africa. The art is magnificent!I posted the table of contents below the message from Gail., but be sure to read the editorial which is delightful.  https://omenana.com/2022/12/23/omenana-issue-24-special-south-african-focussed-edition/

At 08:52 2023-01-07, Gail wrote:
Hi Cathy

I thought you might be interested to see what is happening in SF&F in Africa

https://omenana.com/2022/12/23/omenana-issue-24-special-south-african-focussed-edition/

Happy New Year BTW….

Best

Gail

Essays
1: A History of The Science Fiction & Fantasy South Africa (SFFSA) Club – Gail Jamieson
2: Men, Women & Other Beings From the South: An Overview of South African Science Fiction & Fantasy – Deirdre C. Byrne and Gerhard Hope
Stories
3: Amadi on the Concrete – Jarred. J. Thompson
4: Into the Hyacinth – Mandisi Nkomo
5: Naruoma, the Cow Detective of the Millennium – Rešoketšwe Manenzhe
6: What Pushes Against This Moment – VH Ncube
7: The White Necked Ravens of Camissa – Nick Wood
8: TAAL – Abigail Godsell
9: Slipping – Lauren Beukes

Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine is published quarterly by Seven Hills Media. All rights reserved. For feedback or information, please email sevenhills.media@yahoo.com

 

January 14 meeting feature  presentation, by Joe Aspler

January 14 meeting feature  presentation, by Joe Aspler

This is a brief history of information storage. In some cases, this mean very hard copy. Humans have this need to record our thoughts. This became institutionalized through religion, bureaucracy, graffiti, Shakespeare, and science fiction. We’ve painted on cave walls, carved on stone, used animal skins, plants, and chopped up trees. Now we’re on the least archival of all: computer storage.

Where will our thoughts be a century from now? A millennium from now? Beyond that? Will our digital media fall apart faster than a pulp science fiction magazine in the hot sun?

 

Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association