Thanks for doing an interview! Right out of the gate, tell us about your series!
In short, it’s about a handful of characters whose lives are dramatically impacted by the discovery of cross-temporal communication (or in other words, a primitive modem that sends and receives binary data across different threads of time). It’s alternate world, set in a vast Pangea-like land mass, pre-continental drift. Different countries surround a large bay, each in various stages of technological advancement and economic development. Most of our characters live in Tenoch, a coastal nation-state currently undergoing a rapid industrial revolution, outpacing its former allies. Without giving too much away, the mass adoption of this new forward-looking technology has transformative effects on civilization.
How did you come up with the ideas that fuel your futuristic world? What kind of things give you inspiration?
I’m a software engineer by trade (and an amateur roboticist on the side), so the idea of interacting with binary data was already semi-familiar. Reading about quantum entanglement and how it violates relativity fascinated me; I got to wondering how exactly it’d work with time dilation at a binary level. I remember reading Jurassic Park as a kid, and Michael Crichton’s explanation of getting dino DNA from fossilized mosquitos blew me away. His inclusion of genetics in the plot provided a sense of plausibility that I hadn’t felt in a story before. I tried to emulate that feeling with this series. My hope was to promise the reader something that would make a huge impact on civilization—as lofty as the wheel, electricity, the internet etc.—without it being a let-down.
Sci-fi is full of awesome technology and terrifying advancements. Tell us about one thing you expect to see invented in the future that will benefit mankind and one thing that will ruin it.
I read about researchers in Russia who’ve been semi-successful in reconstructing imagery using brain waves, similar to those captured in an EEG. Elon Musk is working on something along those lines as well, with AI/ML enhancements. Some people may imagine this as a step toward some Cyberpunky/dystopian wasteland, but honestly, it sounds awesome. It’ll take a while for the technology to mature (obviously), but with all the time people spend interacting with phones and computers and tablets, the idea of a direct neural interface seems like a logical step forward. (On my never-ending task list, I have this absurd project to buy a home EEG kit with a USB output, hook it up to a Raspberry Pi and record my brainwaves while I think about something discrete, like a specific color or object. Then I can run that data through an ML image classifier and see how distinct the patterns are. Maybe I can change channels without a remote!)
Biggest threat to humanity? Maybe this is too serious of an answer, but any sudden imbalance of “mutually assured destruction” is truly terrifying. I realize the Cold War is over, but still…the sheer volume of annihilation that could occur in under five minutes absolutely boggles my mind. Rich Sanchez would say “just don’t think about it,” which is probably good advice. (Also, if you’re in Arizona, check out the Titan Missile Museum—lots of interesting stuff about MAD there.)