Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
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Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
First two episodes are out. The look and sound seem very faithful to the original film. There's also a Blade Runner-esque exploration into alternate forms of humanity. I like that, I like how it's trying to do an Alien film that can have other sci-fi ideas going on. And in a franchise that's all about a xeno with many morphs, why can't human beings do likewise?
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
I had an extra-immersive Alien Earth experience.
Started watching it yesterday, realised I'd accidentally taken some prescription medication twice and had to stop and go to the ER. They decided I needed to be in observation until 4am so I got to spend 5 hours listening to someone having a mental health crisis while being gently escorted by two police officers.
More immersively someone in the bed two bays down was complaining loudly about something inside him which he was convinced was getting out and which was probably due to drunkennes, but I did make a plan as to who I was pushing into the xenomorph's path just in case.
Having then crashed out 'til 1pm today I got onto finishing it.
Overall I think the first two episodes are "watchable" will need to see more to know if I would upgrade to "recommend" to any but Alien die-hards.
Started watching it yesterday, realised I'd accidentally taken some prescription medication twice and had to stop and go to the ER. They decided I needed to be in observation until 4am so I got to spend 5 hours listening to someone having a mental health crisis while being gently escorted by two police officers.
More immersively someone in the bed two bays down was complaining loudly about something inside him which he was convinced was getting out and which was probably due to drunkennes, but I did make a plan as to who I was pushing into the xenomorph's path just in case.
Having then crashed out 'til 1pm today I got onto finishing it.
Overall I think the first two episodes are "watchable" will need to see more to know if I would upgrade to "recommend" to any but Alien die-hards.
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
The show has revived the chestnut about Star Trek transporters killing people. Found a long attempt to argue how they might not be.
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
From what I've seen of that transporter argument, when you dive deep enough into the arguments of both sides you're left with one side saying that the person is still alive because the person who went into the transporter is identical to the person who comes out. While the other side points to some part of the process and says that it killed them. I'm not sure if I could say that either side is objectively correct.Battlehymn Republic wrote: 2025-08-14 07:06pm The show has revived the chestnut about Star Trek transporters killing people.
But when I try to think about how one could treat the person who has been transported, trying to treat the person who came out of the transport as anyone other than the person who went in gets uncomfortable very quickly. Especially when you get into the legal aspects of their identity, including property ownership, contracts and criminal activity. It gets worse when you can't be sure if someone was transported.
So I'm on the side of saying that transporters don't kill, and I'm not sure any society with them would be able to maintain the "transporters kill" position.
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
I think the actual conceit is the introduction of this "virtual neuron" mechanism that could theoretically preserve the "impulses which form his consciousness" as they're being squeezed through a wormhole. The thing is, that depends on 1) consciousness really simply being a gestalt of neural impulses, and 2) that could be accurately simulated with prosthetics, but it's a neat enough idea.
Going back to A:E, I'm skeptical that
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Just saw one of the comments in the Reddit thread mention neural energy, which is stored in transporter pattern buffers. Has the entire ASVS bashing of Trek transporters been based on overlooking this detail developed by the lore? lol
Going back to A:E, I'm skeptical that
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Just saw one of the comments in the Reddit thread mention neural energy, which is stored in transporter pattern buffers. Has the entire ASVS bashing of Trek transporters been based on overlooking this detail developed by the lore? lol
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
That long attempt to justify it assumes facts that are contradicted by what we see on-screen. Things like "Since we have wormhole technology, actually, we’ve solved the problem. We don’t need to kill Captain Kirk, we’ll just open a Kirk-shaped hole in the universe and move his whole horny ass from one place to another." When Star Trek transporters are usually described as taking a person apart and reassembling them elsewhere. Though I have seen other sci-fi that does use a wormhole based teleport, not a dematerialization based one.
In the end, what matters is to me is the end result. While the people saying that transporters/uploading kills the subject point to some part of the process that they say kills them, ignoring what comes out the other end.
If you want me to go into detail on why I think a society with transporter/upload use will be unable to maintain the belief that they are deadly, let me know and I'll start another thread about it. I'll be mainly focused on transporters.
In the end, what matters is to me is the end result. While the people saying that transporters/uploading kills the subject point to some part of the process that they say kills them, ignoring what comes out the other end.
If you want me to go into detail on why I think a society with transporter/upload use will be unable to maintain the belief that they are deadly, let me know and I'll start another thread about it. I'll be mainly focused on transporters.
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
I recall two interesting treatments of the transporter technology
One is in the novel Kraken by China Miéville. The transporter thing is but one detail among so many other weird things in the novel, although ultimately very important. In that universe the teleporter technology does, in fact, kill the person and create a new identical person at the other end. The inventor of the technology winds up severely haunted by all the former versions of himself he killed. They are very not happy with him.
Another was a series of books whose titles and author I can't remember at the moment where interstellar travel involves scanning a person to get a complete data set on them then transmitting that data to another star system. An identical copy walks out of the receiver light years away and the originals goes about his business as if nothing had happened. There can be multiple transmissions, resulting in identical copies all light years apart. This can also be done in the other direction. At one point a protagonist is transmitted back to Earth and goes in search of the original, friends, and family. This totally creeps out everyone because it turns out the original died years before in a scuba accident.
One is in the novel Kraken by China Miéville. The transporter thing is but one detail among so many other weird things in the novel, although ultimately very important. In that universe the teleporter technology does, in fact, kill the person and create a new identical person at the other end. The inventor of the technology winds up severely haunted by all the former versions of himself he killed. They are very not happy with him.
Another was a series of books whose titles and author I can't remember at the moment where interstellar travel involves scanning a person to get a complete data set on them then transmitting that data to another star system. An identical copy walks out of the receiver light years away and the originals goes about his business as if nothing had happened. There can be multiple transmissions, resulting in identical copies all light years apart. This can also be done in the other direction. At one point a protagonist is transmitted back to Earth and goes in search of the original, friends, and family. This totally creeps out everyone because it turns out the original died years before in a scuba accident.
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Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.
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Re: Alien: Earth show on FX on Hulu
Transporter duplicates are always going to complicate things.
Now, back to the series, I'm wondering if the opening text will turn out to be a lie.
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Now, back to the series, I'm wondering if the opening text will turn out to be a lie.
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