PCMag Digital Network
Seen a hot gadget?  Tell Us   
Contact Us  
Sites We Like
Gearlog on Twitter
Gearlog for Kindle
GoodCleanTech Recycling Superguide
Categories:  

robertvenditti.jpg

In September, an adaptation of Robert Venditti's Top Shelf graphic novel The Surrogates will hit the big screens starring Bruce Willis and Ving Rhames. The book is a sci-fi thriller about future technologies. Venditti explains it thusly, "The basic idea is a that a Surrogate is a representation of yourself that you send out into the world. You do it virtually, so you experience everything it does. You're controlling all of its movements and getting all of its sensory data in real time."

The idea was born out of an examination of the social implications of sites social networking and online gaming. "That started out with me looking at online culture," explains Venditti. "People have crazy personas of themselves through gaming and chatting. At some point you have to surrender that persona to go to work or whatever. My idea was to take it out of the machine and put it into the world."

The technologies in The Surrogates are entirely a figment of Venditti's imagination, of course, but since writing the book seven years ago, something odd has started happening--the science fiction of The Surrogates is beginning to become a reality. "It was something I made up," Venditti tells me, "but since writing that in 2002, I've heard news stories like one about a professor who lives in Japan, but he doesn't want to have to commute to work because the traffic is really bad, so he actually has an android version of himself in the classroom, so he teaches class by remotely linking from home."

Smells like a sequel to me.

Mixx It Mixx It Digg It Digg It StumbleUpon Toolbar Stumble Share More...

Content Recommendations from Evri
* = required
    Remember Me?
  
Please keep your comments on topic. Intelligent, thoughtful comments and questions are appreciated. Comments that contain personal attacks or profanity may be edited or removed. Comments containing personal information such as phone numbers, credit card numbers, or addresses may be edited or removed. Comments with advertisements will be removed.


 
Info Centers
Special Offers
         
 
  Ziff Davis Home | Contact Us | Advertise | Link to Us | Newsletters | RSS Feeds | Ziff Davis Media International
Digital Edition Customer Service | Subscribe to PCMag Digital Edition | Reprints
AppScout | Cranky Geeks | DigitalLife | DL.TV | ExtremeTech | GearLog | GoodCleanTech | PC Magazine | PCMagCasts | Security Watch | Smart Device Central | TechSaver
AppScout Mobile | Gearlog Mobile | GoodCleanTech Mobile | PCMag.com Mobile
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Linking Policy | Contact Us
Copyright © 1996-2009 Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved. PC Magazine, the PCMag.com logo and Gearlog are registered trademarks of Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Ziff Davis Media Inc. is prohibited.