Posted: 17 Nov 2008 23:38
If he keeps cropping like that, he's going to end up with just your shoulder or something.SandChigger wrote:Whoa...Arnie's a bit fixated on me, isn't he?
Jesus God, what a tool.
DUNE DISCUSSION FORUM FOR ORTHODOX HERBERTARIANS
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If he keeps cropping like that, he's going to end up with just your shoulder or something.SandChigger wrote:Whoa...Arnie's a bit fixated on me, isn't he?
I know this.chig wrote:SandRider...people who even consider suing (or threatening to? ) have already admitted that they're unable to deal with a problem in any other way.
In his pathetic way arnie is just trying to do what I and others have done before him (poor little guy, always playing catch-up), to Kevin and Brian and Byron, etc.
And from the In-story information box:Wikipedians wrote:Accidentally locked inside a test chamber during a nuclear physics experiment, Jon Osterman is completely disintegrated. But rather than dying, Osterman gains godlike powers, the first use of which involves re-constituting his own body. Manhattan's powers include superhuman strength, the ability to teleport himself or others, the manipulation of matter at a subatomic level, and near total clairvoyance.
Test chamber, torture chamber; Jon, Norma. Fucking hell: not even at his most original can Kevin have an original idea.Abilities:
Control over space and time,
Regeneration,
Energy and matter manipulation,
Flight,
Immortality,
Superhuman strength, speed and durability,
Intangibility,
Precognition,
Teleportation,
Self-duplication,
Superhuman growth,
Genius intellect
Is that suppose to be Chig or Simon?SandChigger wrote:Explain/defend this!
I agree. The idea of killer robots and A.I. is not new, but James Cameron made his use of them unique in "The Terminator."GamePlayer wrote:Technically, stealing ideas is how innovation works. It's building upon what was done before. But the key ingredient in creativity is creation and if you use an existing concept, you must use it in a creative way and make it your own.
Sci-fi novels existed before Frank Herbert came along as did the conventions he used. But Frank made those ideas his own and created new ways to tell a sci-fi story. It was Frank's creative vision that made Guild Navigators and space travel fascinating in Dune, even if the end result was just another kind of FTL we've all come to know.
By contrast, there is nothing new in KJA's raping of Dune. Oh sure, KJA's ideas are "new-to-the-Dune-universe" in as much as Dune never had "Terminators" or "Doctor Manhattans". But none of these concepts have been innovated by KJA or made his own. These ideas taken from others have had their names changed and been slapped into the Dune universe.
KJA's "creations" are not new to sci-fi; not conceptually, not thematically and not practically. He has brought nothing new to the genre in which he writes and has made no contribution; no art, no innovation, nothing of note. KJA's only contribution to sci-fi has been sales; I hope he's comfortable with that, but his publicly hurt ego indicates otherwise.
I would add that sales is not enough to Combover. He wants to be worshipped as a Sci-fi godling greater than all who have come before him, including Frank Herbert.Frybread wrote:I agree. The idea of killer robots and A.I. is not new, but James Cameron made his use of them unique in "The Terminator."GamePlayer wrote:Technically, stealing ideas is how innovation works. It's building upon what was done before. But the key ingredient in creativity is creation and if you use an existing concept, you must use it in a creative way and make it your own.
Sci-fi novels existed before Frank Herbert came along as did the conventions he used. But Frank made those ideas his own and created new ways to tell a sci-fi story. It was Frank's creative vision that made Guild Navigators and space travel fascinating in Dune, even if the end result was just another kind of FTL we've all come to know.
By contrast, there is nothing new in KJA's raping of Dune. Oh sure, KJA's ideas are "new-to-the-Dune-universe" in as much as Dune never had "Terminators" or "Doctor Manhattans". But none of these concepts have been innovated by KJA or made his own. These ideas taken from others have had their names changed and been slapped into the Dune universe.
KJA's "creations" are not new to sci-fi; not conceptually, not thematically and not practically. He has brought nothing new to the genre in which he writes and has made no contribution; no art, no innovation, nothing of note. KJA's only contribution to sci-fi has been sales; I hope he's comfortable with that, but his publicly hurt ego indicates otherwise.
Then there is Combover, who simply repackages existing SciFi ideas without making them uniquely his own.
Ah, yes, the magical soostone, forgot to mention THAT important ingredient.Simon wrote:Sounds very Norma like. Ceptin' she gained her powers from torture and a mood rock, no comparison!![]()
Very true. But I think it is about how you use the paints and the canvas - it was all there before, and it is all in the mix.GamePlayer wrote:Technically, stealing ideas is how innovation works. It's building upon what was done before. But the key ingredient in creativity is creation and if you use an existing concept, you must use it in a creative way and make it your own.
...
By contrast, there is nothing new in KJA's raping of Dune.
It's like every space opera idea that has ever been written was thrown into a blender and then stretched out into seven books' worth of hiking and dictating. Not an original thought to be found.Frybread wrote:Speaking of stealing from other sources, isn't Kevin's "The Saga of Seven Suns" series just a hodge-podge of other authors' SciFi ideas?
More like he ate space opera and puked it in seven books...TheDukester wrote:It's like every space opera idea that has ever been written was thrown into a blender and then stretched out into seven books' worth of hiking and dictating. Not an original thought to be found.Frybread wrote:Speaking of stealing from other sources, isn't Kevin's "The Saga of Seven Suns" series just a hodge-podge of other authors' SciFi ideas?
So he's a bird trying to nurture his young?Rakis wrote:More like he ate space opera and puked it in seven books...TheDukester wrote:It's like every space opera idea that has ever been written was thrown into a blender and then stretched out into seven books' worth of hiking and dictating. Not an original thought to be found.Frybread wrote:Speaking of stealing from other sources, isn't Kevin's "The Saga of Seven Suns" series just a hodge-podge of other authors' SciFi ideas?