September 2022

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
181920 21222324
2526 27282930 

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Wednesday, July 16th, 2003 06:32 pm
With one week to go before flying to Houston, freefall is naturally on my mind a lot right now. And I was just thinking...

Assume a standard SF belter society. The gestation thing turns out to be a null issue, so people spend almost all their in freefall.

The question is, do they still juggle? This could only be done when under acceleration, or with excessively complicated little devices (not unlike our space robot, only much, much smaller) that would use thrusters to mimics motion under gravity. Either one is expensive. So I'm imagining juggling as a very elitist skill, something only done by rich jerks into conspicuous consumption or by people who spend a lot of time under acceleration. Old hands on the rare high-g ships would do it as a sign of their sub-culture, and to impress the passengers (most of whom would be afraid to even walk under real acceleration). At times, a fad would pass among rich jerks who would want to emulate the edgey coolness of the high-g hands. Sales of the ridiculously expensive juggling toys would spike, at which point the real high-g people would stop juggling to distance themselves from the poseur-jerks.

Maybe they'd take up hackey-sacks.
Wednesday, July 16th, 2003 08:41 pm (UTC)
Naw. Juggling would just become a different thing. It would be tossing objects from hand to hand and trying to keep them moving in fascinating patterns without letting them fly away in any direction, rather than just keeping them *up*. The way juggling works now, you have to come back to each object in the air and give it a boost upwards before it falls too low. The way it would work in freefall, you'd have to reach out to each object in the air and give it a push back in toward your juggling-space before it flies too far away.