The Satori Effect 74
The Satori Effect | |
author | David Pesci |
pages | 615 |
publisher | David Pesci www.thesatorieffect.com |
rating | 8.5 |
reviewer | 11131719 |
ISBN | n/a |
summary | Kick-ass Internet murder mystery with a techie hero and one killer app. |
One Killer App What the hell is the author of Amistad doing writing a contemporary mystery about hacking, viruses, a computer forensics specialist and the FBI? That was my first thought as I started reading The Satori Effect, the new novel by best-selling author David Pesci. By the time I hit page 20, I could see exactly what he was doing: kicking ass.
Pesci, best known for his novel Amistad (inspiration for the Steven Spielberg movie), steps out of history with The Satori Effect and lands firmly in a future that might be just a few months away. The story, a mystery wrapped around the world of hacking, e-mail viruses and apps, opens with a suicide and quickly moves to a possible homicide: the victim is decapitated when his computer monitor explodes. This turns out to be the second such incident in less than a month. The FBI suspects a Unabomber type, dubbed "The CyberBomber" by the media. A computer forensics tech named Flint, who works in a top-secret government facility, is charged with going through the overwrites on the victims' hard drives in search of clues.
What Flint finds is not the traces of a bomber but pieces of code, one that he comes to believe are part of an app designed specifically to use the system's hardware to kill the user. It's a wild premise, and not even Flint's co-workers believe such an app could be written. But as Flint and his partner (the very hot, seen-it, done-it Special Agent Buhner) begin to investigate, the clues start mounting up. So do the bodies, and it becomes a race to find out who has the app and catch him (or them) before the code is given a replication subroutine and turn it into a full blown Internet virus.
All this is revealed in The Satori Effect's first 120 pages, which are posted online (PDF format) for free at www.thesatorieffect.com. There is also a rich cast of characters, including a dark-hat hacker with a serious information addiction, Flint's boss (who makes Machiavelli look like one of the Backstreet Boys), Flint's co-worker -- a know-it-all wise-ass lesbian tech named Berlow -- and an ever-deepening plot where almost nothing is as it seems on the surface. The writing is first-rate, the details accurate, the story flies and there are more than a few surprises.
My only real hit against The Satori Effect is that it's not available in book form yet. I found out about it after a friend sent me the URL for the book. According to the Matrix-flavored website built around the free pages, Pesci's publishers have hedged on putting this out because he is known as a history writer and they don't think his readers will follow him to technofiction. Pesci, who oozes attitude in the site's copy, has flipped them the bird by posting this online. If readers like the free 120 pages posted on his site for free, the rest is available in PDF format for $10 via PayPal. I quickly found that didn't like reading the book on screen, so I was printing out 100 pages at a time and carrying them around loose, which sucked. Still, I think Pesci's going to get the last laugh on his publishers. The Satori Effect rocks. Neal Stephenson beware: Pesci may be eating your lunch soon, if not your Captain Crunch.
Interesting... (Score:2)
In the right direction... (Score:3)
PDF on a PDA? (Score:2)
The only reason to take the subway into work is so I can sync my palm before I leave, and catch up on the news, etc... it'd be nice if I could download books to it, too, without needing some other piece of hardware to carry with me.
What will e-books do to us? (Score:2)
IMHO, the closer the e-book gets to reality, the closer our society starts to resemble "Fahrenheit 451" and "1984". The government has been lying to us; the final frontier isn't space, it's THEM.
Don't download it! (Score:1)
Reading on the screen (Score:3)
. I quickly found that didn't like reading the book on screen,
I used to have difficulty reading long pieces off the screen. After I really got into fanfic, distributed via mailing lists, I got used to it and now have no problems. It's just a case of getting aclimated.
Now the only time I print something off is to read in bed (still not comfortable curling up with a laptop), to read on the bus or if I need to show it to someone who doesn't have a computer.
Stephen
Re:PDF on a PDA? (Score:3)
Apps that kill users are nothing new (Score:2)
Tell me you haven't ever thought to look at the coronary-heart-disease rates of your average fat bearded sysadmin? Where I work, it may have been the pizza and nachos that pulled the trigger, but it was Unix which cocked the gun.
Well, well (Score:1)
The REAL jabber has the /. user id: 13196
Have you all lost your minds? (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Howdunnit? (Score:1)
So what does this fictional trick involve then? Darned if I'm going to cough up 10 bucks to find out.
Regards, Ralph.
Re:Interesting... (Score:3)
Hell, email me and I'll send you the whole thing. I'm a cheap ho.
Paper! PAPER! (Score:1)
But releasing the whole book in PDF? That seems kind of self defeating. I think even the most hardcore slashdotters will agree that most of the charm of books is that you can put one in your bag and carry it anywhere, and that you can hold it, and physically flip the pages.
PDF is for spec sheets and boring manuals (though i personally prefer HTML in those instances). But regardless, i think that the electronic book format is cool as a supplement, say if you wanted to search for something, etc. But needing a decent speed PC with you should not be a prerequisite to reading a book. Nor is printing out a good solution if you ask me.
After all, you can't put a PDF file on a shelf with the proud satisfaction of having finished it, so it can stand there until you recommend it to your kids or lend it to a friend.
If it's that good, I really hope they decide to publish it old-school.
Re:What will e-books do to us? (Score:2)
When I get my eBook I'm going to buy or build a lead cover for it so that it's contents cannot be remotely altered.
Re:Reading on the screen (Score:2)
Exploding monitors? (Score:1)
Re:PDF on a PDA? (Score:1)
Eric S Raymond - Cathedral and the Bazaar
Woah, dude. You just found yourself an open source project.
Dead trees... (Score:2)
I don't think that online book distribution will catch on for reasons far more mundane than finding the right marketing / payment scheme. The fact of the matter is that almost everybody (the reviewer obviously included) hates reading things on a screen and prefers the tactile sensation of a book in their hands. Face it, even the hardest core get sick of man pages after a while and consult whatever paper guide is closest at hand.
People enjoy books for reasons which transcend the content. I have an early edition of the Lord of the Rings which, I feel, adds to the enjoyment of the book. Not b/c it's rare, but because its rough, feels and smells old -- namely, it has character... something your monitor isn't likely to have, ever.
Someday, perhaps, e-books (the hardware) will mature and replace dead tree books -- good, I like the forests -- but not yet. The market isn't there because people don't want to read 1000 pages of text on a monitor. It's just not the same experience...
-k-
krb1@email.com
Re:Have you all lost your minds? (Score:1)
Re:Press Enter (Score:2)
John Varley, actually, and it was only 16 years ago [husted.com]. Of course, the seminal work in the net-comes-alive genre is Vernor Vinge's 1980 True Names [jademountain.com].
But there's a catch to all this (Score:1)
Orson Scott Card has been doing this forever (Score:1)
Other add ons for the e-book (Score:1)
It's all about choice, and I think this would be a neat choice for an "e-book" product.
Print them (Score:1)
DeathRay? (Score:2)
Regards, Ralph.
Again! (Score:2)
Just in case you missed it the first two times:
Neal Stephenson beware: Pesci may be eating your lunch soon, if not your Captain Crunch.
Neal Stephenson beware: Pesci may be eating your lunch soon, if not your Captain Crunch.
I'm an investigator. I followed a trail there.
Q.Tell me what the trail was.
Paper survives a hd crash (Score:2)
Most of the really good books are also really long (Score:1)
PDF for me is a synonem for printing (Score:1)
PDF is for spec sheets and boring manuals (though i personally prefer HTML in those instances). But regardless, i think that the electronic book format is cool as a supplement, say if you wanted to search for something,
etc. But needing a decent speed PC with you should not be a prerequisite to reading a book. Nor is printing out a good solution if you ask me.
What I would like to see is a method of being able to alter in a WYSIWYG format the contents of a PDF document or simply create one from scratch in an open source manner. I wonder if such a project exists.
Re:When a horn goes down (Score:1)
killing app (Score:1)
Re:What!! (Score:1)
I'd much prefer one long page. A la slashdot.org.
Encapsulated in one big bloody table too. Yeah, that'd be neato.
Re:Apps that kill users are nothing new (Score:1)
Don't worry, Microsoft is trying as hard as it can to catch up!
Re:What will e-books do to us? (Score:1)
Getting back to point, "Fahrenheit 451" was not about burning books, so much as control of the press and information distribution. Reading was not a crime (as the movie may have suggested), reading certain books were. E-books allows us to create our own books and distribute them. I can create a book and upload it to memoware.com (for the Palm OS). I can also beam it to whoever wants it.
E-books, if they catch on, could mean more independant books being published/distributed. There may not be any money made by the artists, but they may be more concerned with getting their point of view out into the world than with making money from it.
Hackernews.com has a great quote on their page:
Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one. - A.J. Liebling
faceless masses (Score:2)
Good lord, they don't even refer to us by name anymore...
Re:DeathRay? (Score:1)
Regards, Ralph.
Re:Have you all lost your minds? (Score:1)
+1 karma whoring
PDFlib (Score:1)
You're in luck - PDFlib [pdflib.com] can help. Sadly, your hands are tied if you actually want to release anything you write - Aladdin only allow you free-as-in-beer distribution of your stuff.
Prior Art! (Score:2)
Hey, prior art!
Yes, after reading the Death Ray hoax, and the XFree86 HowTo, I dreamed up the idea of a virus that would
I thought about this for so long and so hard, that the idea must be kind of out there in the noossphere now, in the world of objective contents of thoughts...
Then, when your fridge and microwave are on the Internet (IPv6, of course), I've got another one...
And the recipe has so much tobasco and what-have-you, that you'll not know whether it's been cooked to a cinder or if it's still raw. In any case, it's teeming with life, and you've just been killed by a computer virus, poisoned by the Internet....
Oh, won't the future be wonderful with Outlook and IPv6 controlling you groceries...
bunch of whining geeks (Score:2)
A few thousand years ago, people write books on bamboo slices in China. Then someone invented paper, and then suddenly, everyone write books on paper. And then, guess what, someone complained that books on bamboo are the best, because paper smells bad, it's soft, it's too light, and you don't have the feeling of "having the book on your hand".
Put all books and documents in digital format, I'll buy them in that format. And I'll carry a 50GB HD and have my whole library on it.
Welcome to the future. I'd rather live in the future than in the past.
Re:Prior Art! (Score:1)
Re:Dead trees... (Score:2)
it has its own sort of built in 'memory'--
If I look at the edge of my old camel book (the new edition I haven't quite beat down this far yet), not only can I see the slight discoloration from thumbing through certain sections more than others, but if I were to put the book on its spine, and let go, I know it's going to pop open to the function reference section.
Whenever I've started a new job, if I'm taking over something from someone who's left and they didn't take the reference books with them, at the very least, I can look through the manuals and see if they've folded down any corners, scribbled in the margins, highlighted a few lines, or stuck in a few post-its to bookmark something. With man pages, I'd have to look through their shell history, and see if I can find out what they found so interesting that it was worth consulting repeatedly.
Now, if they'd start making books from a more renewable material, and not from trees (cotton rag, hemp, even bamboo fibers, as they have a quicker growing time), and as they're now using soy based inks, I'd say that printed manuals and books definately have their benefits, even if you can't just grep for what you're looking for.
Re:Paper vs Screen (Score:1)
I used to print out my code to read it before IDE's got to where they are now. I guess its just human nature to resist change. But I wouldn't have expected it from Slashdot readers.
Re:What will e-books do to us? (Score:2)
Re:RIght on! (Score:2)
That was one of my points. I don't know how you linked "Fahrenheit 451" to the book-burning part (I did separate those two with a two-line gap, didn't I?). I know that F451 wasn't just about burning books; it was about thought control. I see it already; the RIAA, MPAA, and FBI trying to supress "crimethink". I wonder which federal agency will be put in charge with burning all those books, maybe the ATF...
Re:Dead trees... (Score:1)
You really should see my monitor, I got two colors orange and blackish orange. And it smells (something about 10 years of pizza).
Re:What will e-books do to us? (Score:1)
Dealing with pixelation, radiation and oter -ations is a technical problem which will be resolved soon enough. E-book revolution will allow us to purchase books cheaply, carry huge libraries in very small packages, search in text of the books, use dictionary on the spot when we see a new word, and many, many other things that we absolutely can not do with regular books.
There will be no central location for all the books, just like the regular books, e-books will be scattered across multiple devices and locations. There also will be hard copies, for the unlikely event if those EMF radiating atomic bombs start flying.
After the library of Babylon people learned not to keep all the books in the same place, so global censorship will not be a problem. If anything, it will be easier to distribute unwanted books. Electronic samizdat [dictionary.com] is a lot easier than messing with a lot of paper. Besides, I hope you just noticed how neat the dictionary lookup feature of electronic medium is
Re:Paper! PAPER! (Score:1)
Re:Paper vs Screen (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Satori Effect vs Snow Crash (Score:1)
a. Satori Effect
b. Snow Crash
a. Code is written which actually manipulates the physical world (monitor blows up)
b. Code is written which actually manipulates the physical world (Hacker put in a Coma)
a. FBI agents investigate
b. A cool ass cyber-skateboarding pizza delivery boy investigates.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Re:Paper vs Screen (Score:1)
YMMV, but reading on a PDA fills a certain niche for me. At any given point, I'm plowing through between 2 and 8 various books. There's one by my bed, one in my office, one in the kitchen, one next to the comfy chair...and one on my Palm.
The one on the Palm is for when you're locked in some time-wasting mode; whip out the PDA and fill that time with something better than the dentist's 4 year old People mags (or the CEO's annual state of the company address...) It's portable, and most importantly, always with you, because it's hard to predict when you're really going to need something worthwhile to read.
Added bonus: Andrew Lang's colored fairy books are all in the public domain; several are available [memoware.com] in DOC format. If you ever need something to read in the dark to a sick 5 year old at 3 AM, a backlit PDA is a blessing. Pretty good stories for adults too, if you're into that sort of thing. They're the originals, before DisneyCo got their saccharin mouseclaws into them.
Re:Reading on the screen (Score:2)
Now if M$ would just fix the damn Reader software so it can handle encrypted stuff from Barnes & Noble (or better yet, is anyone working on cracking M$ Reader's encryption scheme? I pay for my books, but I really want to avoid the hassle of the stupid encryption. If I pay for it, I'll read it where and how I please, thank you).
BTW, Baen [baen.com] has a great sci-fi selection, and they carry eBooks. They are currently giving three away for free. They use a subscription model, so you can pay a small monthly fee and get something like 10 books a month.
-Vercingetorix
Gripe: Pesci calls UNIX a language (Score:1)
"The training he had received to acquire his MIS degree nearly 15 years ago gave him a basic background in program architecture and several programming languages, all of which were no longer in use, except for UNIX, and that had evolved significantly in the interim."
e-book on e-paper? (Score:1)
The example used was actualy a Uber-book that could become any book, althouth they said a more practical usage might be for re-usable storefront signs.
Re:Press Enter: Poor moderation (Score:2)
Premise is not completely impossible (Score:1)
On that system, it was possible to cause the monitor to "blow" using software by sending a 255 to one of the OUT ports (33, I think - it's been a while). It wasn't usually an explosion, but smoke was definitely involved.
I never did it myself, since I depended on the kindness of the Radio Shack people to let me use their computers before I got my own, but I had a friend who used to love to blow up the demo units in the store.
The particular vulnerability on those machines had to do with poor voltage regulation, I think, but still, it was a cool trick.
Fahrenheit 451 (Score:3)
The point of the story isn't that books-as-paper were banned -- it's about books-as-ideas.
--
$10 (Score:3)
--
Re:Again! (hope he's hungry;) ) (Score:2)
The duplicated sentence was utterly and completely my fault. In the course of editing, I did a copy-and-paste because I'm paranoid about cut-and-paste, and then failed to clean up the original copied item. Repeat: the writer didn't do it, I did.
Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. My apologies to both writer and reader
timothy
Some publishers are beginning to catch on. (Score:1)
At least this is a step in the right direction.
Re:PDF on a PDA? (Score:2)
--
Weekly World News has been horked! (Score:1)
Why so costly? (Score:1)
Why are e-books so expensive in light of the great cost reductions in materials and distribution?
Re:Reading on the screen (Topic Drift) (Score:2)
numb
Re:bunch of whining geeks (Score:1)
The battle between soft and hard cover seems to have met a stalemate with neither being a complete victor, there is a balance in the pros and cons.
The battle of e-text vs. pulp will be decided in the near future. I suspect it will end in a similar stalemate with both existing since there are reasons that each is prefered by certain sizable market segments.
Re:faceless masses (Score:2)
Reader 11131719 contributed this review...
Good lord, they don't even refer to us by name anymore...
I was thinking the same thing. >:^) Everyone's complaining about Slashdot's moderation system, stories getting posted too late, Signal11 leaving (well, maybe not that...:^))... Basically they're tearing Rob Malda to shreds over these issues, but they're ignoring the real reason Slashdot sucks these days-- that "User #xxxxx Info" link.
It used to say just "User Info", but Rob doesn't want to bother remember our names anymore. Now, I'm reader #144525. You're reader #16212. Since our comments and traffic are helping Rob and co. stay rich, we're not people -- we're just numbers. If we were citizens of a country, we'd have UPC-style barcodes and machine-readable numbers tattooed on our foreheads at birth.
You'll never get away with this, Taco! I am a person, not a number!!
Bookstores should get books online. (Score:1)
Bookshops should just download and print books on customer demand.
Scenario:
Bookstores only stock a few paper copies of the popular books.
You can still look at unstocked books online, when you want one, they just print the whole book for you (better to wait 15 minutes for a book than pay obscene shipping costs). So they just need a fancy book printer, raw materials and the documents.
It's still too much hassle for the public to print their own books - in the real "book" format, and it can actually be more expensive too given the usual consumer grade printers. So bookstores can fill that gap. Plus the publishers may not want to trust the public that much, but it's easier to keep an eye on a few booksellers. They can give accounts to the bookstores and revoke them - just imagine if you're a bookseller and you get banned because you were naughty and printed more than you reported to them.
bullshit (Score:1)
There are reading glasses specifically for using the computer (and they work dandy for reading too
--
Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
Re:Press Enter (Score:1)
Good Times. (Score:1)
It's even based around the whole "Good Times" email virus hoax. Blech.
Jason Pollock
Paperbacks are $6??? (Score:1)