cience Fiction and Fantasy for Women" reads the banner at the Yo-Da Sisterhood, a discussion community where female fans can talk about written, televised and filmed SF as well as sharing fanfic, art and favorite links.
Keeping discussion of its members' favorite SF and fantasy topics as its main priority, this site has little flash and few frills. All of its content is built around the forums. The main page offers a handy list of the most recent Yo-Da posts, along with recommended links and a poll. Web surfers who want to catch up on older discussions can browse through posts without joining the Sisterhood, but only members can access certain features, like posting art to the galleries. Within the forums, visitors will find book reviews, news on franchises from Star
Wars to Harry Potter, discussions about writing, video-game chatter and tips, DVD reviews and just about everything else imaginable.
A potential new member of the Yo-Da Sisterhood need have no fear of getting lost among an established in-crowd on this site. The Sisterhood is, in fact, one of the smaller SF fan forums on the Web, low-traffic enough that participation is far from overwhelming. Discussions tend to be low-key and friendly, posters stay on topic, and the staff is open to member input on issues such as site design. (According to the staff page, they are also looking for more active volunteers.) Female fans looking to bring fresh insights to a warm community of people who truly
love SF and fantasy would do well to give Yo-Da a serious look.
A.M. Dellamonica
Site of the WeekJanuary 10, 2005
he mad scientists and megalomaniacs of planet Earth are probably already well aware of World Domination Toys, a site tailored to the unique needs of anyone seeking to conquer and enslave us all. For those humans who dream on a smaller scale, however, this Web page may be just the place for helping to fund a world coup without having to do all the dirty work.
"Taking over the world, one toy at a time," is the motto of this e-commerce site, which offers high-end products like a remote anti-gravity flying saucer (for $625,000.99 U.S.) as well as smaller items such as a line of Rabies Babies plush toysthey foam at the mouth when squeezedand world domination video games. The unfortunate catch, of course, is that the site's fictional mastermind, one Doctor Steel, doesn't currently have the funds to build many of the products he is advertising. (Being an up-and-coming world dominator is an expensive prospect, after all.)
In creating a store filled with fictional products, Doctor Steel has tapped into a fundamental truth about shopping: Often, looking is as enjoyable as actually buying. The fun in this Web page is all in the surfing. The product photographs and descriptions are witty, and many an SF fan will wish these items were for real. (Though not every product is simply a gagthe site's best-sellers section includes postcards, a Doctor Steel Propaganda Journal and bumper stickers, among other souvenirs.) What World Domination Toys really offers is a perfect Internet getaway for SF fans, a quick and frivolous source of laughs that provides a spirit-lifting break from the mundane world.
A.M. Dellamonica
Site of the WeekJanuary 3, 2005
here science meets fiction," reads the banner of the Technovelgy (pronounced tek-novel-gee) Web page, and that is exactly what this site deliversinformation on hot new inventions being created around the globe. This is no dry science-news page, though: All the stories are cross-referenced with tantalizing snippets referring to similar technologies created by SF writers, often years and even decades before real-world science caught up with their visions. Readers can thus find a news item about the fastest elevator in the world linked to a short excerpt from Isaac Asimov's Foundation about "gravitic repulsion elevators." Next upa piece about a man who survived a fall into an industrial garbage compactor, an article that just happens to have a picture of Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia caught in a similar fix.
Technovelgy is a unique fusion of practical science and unadulterated dream. Its backbone is its extensive list of SF inventions, each indexed by its creator, be it Douglas Adams or Roger Zelazny. Each entry includes a small snippet of text from the novel it came fromessentially the critical few paragraphs that explain what the gizmo is and how it works. Visitors can also browse inventions through a timeline that dates back to the 1726 "invention" of bio-energy by Jonathan Swift in Gulliver's Travels. If one is looking for
something particular, these fictional technologies are also indexed by category.
Any real-world technology that is at all similar to a Technovelgy item is fair game for this Web page, which cross-references every news item with as many relevant fictional devices as the site owners can find. Movies are not ignored either: A piece about research into computers that can analyze human voice samples and draw conclusions about the speaker's emotions contains references to I, Robot and 2001: A Space Odyssey. The site accepts new entries all the time: If a favorite author has been overlooked, visitors are invited to help Technovelgy add to their store of knowledge.
Technovelgy is one of those sites with unlimited surfing potentialits articles are short and punchy, and each offers links to another item or three just as intriguing. With more than 700 entries in its SF inventions archiveand a fiction sample appended to eachit is also a great place to go to sample new authors, particularly those writing hard SF. Inspiring inventors and engineers to create real versions of imagined technologies is one of SF's greatest spinoff benefits. This site celebrates that ongoing accomplishment with panache and humor.
A.M. Dellamonica
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