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Air rafts and grav tech

Heh, I spent a day recently in this theme.
Consider this, "Island Effect in the Local Spacetime region"
That is a good explanation. I can sort of wrap my head around how something like that might work in theory. Considerations about how much energy that might take is another thing, like flying around in an atom bomb.
 
That is a good explanation. I can sort of wrap my head around how something like that might work in theory. Considerations about how much energy that might take is another thing, like flying around in an atom bomb.
Heh...

Believe me I have been going through all the permutations that Traveller hangs the Gravity answer on, and the above is the simplest for Contragravity.

Amusingly Contragravity equipped space/star ships makes Traveller straight line travel times make sense.
 
Heh...

Believe me I have been going through all the permutations that Traveller hangs the Gravity answer on, and the above is the simplest for Contragravity.

Amusingly Contragravity equipped space/star ships makes Traveller straight line travel times make sense.
Yup, been thinking about it for a looong time. lol
 
Air/raft iirc is from Piper, like the Cosmic Computer maybe.
It does not seem to be the case. I checked all three books mentioned in this other thread as likely candidates (Four-Day Planet, The Cosmic Computer, and Space Viking) and neither seems to contain the word raft or any derivative thereof.

Yet elsewhere, it was suggested that the term might originate with The War Against the Rull by A. E. van Vogt. However, as with The Winds of Gath (which I have since verified), the concept features prominently but the particular term used is simply (antigravity) raft.

So to me this looks like the concept of the Air/raft was clearly inspired by The Winds of Gath as well as possibly other sources, while the particular spelling in Traveller was, at least that would be my guess, Marc Miller's invention.

PS: This poster (Kerry Harrison) on rpggeek.com also states "According to Loren Wiseman, it's air/raft because Marc Miller said it was, it's apparently one of things that makes Traveller unique."

Anyway, this has been very enlightening as far as my reading list for classic SciFi is concerned. :)

Sources:
 
Yet elsewhere, it was suggested that the term might originate with The War Against the Rull by A. E. van Vogt.
As another aside: The main character in that story is called Jamieson -- the origin of Traveller's example character Jamison?

NB: I just played way too much internet detective to confirm that our Jamison was in turn the inspiration for default Commander Jameson of the computer game Elite.
 
Minimalism.

marie-kondo.jpg
 
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