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Terror in the Stars by John A. Sentry:
Science Fiction Inventions, Technology and Ideas
"Darkly mysterious was the lost spaceship with its mummified crew. But darker still was the dreadful secret of the Truns."
Man’s potentialities as both a builder and a destroyer have left so ineffaceable a mark on human history that a visitor from the stars might consider him a truly terrifying enigma. But if an age of pure creativeness should supplant that up-and-down spiral and man should grow in stature throughout all eternity might not such a growth inspire terror too — if our star visitors should be the Deelans of this stirring story. Select
an invention:
Technovelgy.com is devoted
to the creative inventions of science fiction authors and movie makers. Look
for the Science Fiction Invention Category that
interests you, the Glossary of Science Fiction
Inventions, the Timeline of Science Fiction
Inventions, or see what's New.
Find new authors and technologies - Shop for yourself,
your library and your lab.
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Science
Fiction
in the News
Japan's AI Buddharoid Automonks
re: Ray Naylor
(1/25/2026)
MIT Computerized Bionic Leg Is Part Of The User
re: Charles Recour
(1/23/2026)
The New Habitable Zones Include Asimov's Ribbon Worlds
re: Harl VIncent
(1/23/2026)
California Governor Candidate Calls For Voting By Phone
re: John Brunner
(1/21/2026)
Robots For Hire En Masse
re: Raymond E. Banks
(1/19/2026)
China's Handheld Electromagnetic Gun
re: Richard Morgan
(1/17/2026)
3D Printing A 12-Meter Boat Hull
re: Murray Leinster
(1/15/2026)
China Still Working On Rescue Robot That Eats People
re: Various
(1/13/2026)
Lawyer AIs Create Chaos In Our Legal System
re: David Brin
(1/11/2026)
Chinese Hospital Tries Vonnegut's 'Harrison Bergeron' Cosplay
re: Kurt Vonnegut
(1/9/2026)
Robot Clerks Become A Reality In China
re: Miriam Allen deFord
(1/7/2026)
Can One Robot Do Many Tasks?
re: Robert Sheckley
(1/5/2026)
Atlas Robot Makes Uncomfortable Movements
re: James Cameron
(1/3/2026)
Boring Company Drills Asimov's Single Vehicle Tunnels
re: Isaac Asimov
(1/1/2026)
More
SF in the News
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