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Beyond Contact: A Guide to SETI and Communicating with Alien Civilizations
 
 
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Beyond Contact: A Guide to SETI and Communicating with Alien Civilizations (Hardcover)

~ Brian S. McConnell (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Contact with Alien Civilizations: Our Hopes and Fears about Encountering Extraterrestrials by Michael A. G. Michaud

Beyond Contact: A Guide to SETI and Communicating with Alien Civilizations + Contact with Alien Civilizations: Our Hopes and Fears about Encountering Extraterrestrials

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

As many earthlings already know--including more than 2 million computer users with firsthand experience--our best hope for finding extraterrestrial intelligence might just lie with an ingenious little screensaver. So it's not surprising that this introduction to searching for and communicating with intelligent life begins with some of the details behind UC Berkeley's groundbreaking, massively distributed SETI@home project, which processes intergalactic noise for pennies on the teraflop. But that's just the start of the story. Inventor and software developer Brian McConnell continues with an overview of whether and why we might find something out there, who's doing what to look for it (including the folks at Berkeley), and--once some ET picks up on the other end--what we might say and how we might say it.

This last problem, which occupies the final half of the book, proves to be the most thought-provoking, and McConnell has put together a methodical, nuts-and-bolts walkthrough of both the challenges involved and how binary code might be enlisted to solve them. If you've taken even a single computer-science class in your life, you'll probably skip ahead through explanations of data structures and Boolean arithmetic, but McConnell doesn't want to leave anyone behind in fleshing out his alien-friendly lingua numerica. The book's first half surveys various SETI projects, past and present, and includes generous sections on signal processing, what sort of radio and laser hardware has been mobilized for the search, and how exactly SETI@home works. (So, if nothing else, now you can know how your computer decides if it's talking to aliens while you're off having lunch.) --Paul Hughes



Review

"'Beyond Contact' summaries well what is the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. I recommend it for anyone as an entry level book on the subject." -- Stephane Dumas, Physicist

"A refreshingly even-handed treatment of one of the greatest puzzles of our age, the question of our apparent loneliness in the universe." -- David Brin, author of

"Remarkably fresh ideas on how to achieve contact. Wide-ranging engrossing, enjoyable. This book is definitely a winner!" -- Dr. Allen Tough, coordinator of the Web-based

"This thought provoking book ventures boldly where I fear to tread." -- Kent Cullers, Signal Detection Team Leader, Director for SETI Research and Development, SETI Institute

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 350 pages
  • Publisher: O'Reilly Media; 1st edition (March 15, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0596000375
  • ISBN-13: 978-0596000370
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,354,498 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars can't take it seriously, April 14, 2002
By Ronald W. Garrison (Chapel Hill NC USA) - See all my reviews
Here's a book that superficially looks like a serious technical discussion of SETI, even to the point where many potential readers may be intimidated by the diagrams, equations, jargon, and so on. But in reality, it's very lacking in solid scientific information.

For example: On page 116, one of the factors mentioned as a limit to OSETI (finding laser beacons and such) is extinction--the attenuation of light due to dust in the intersteller medium. This, it is said, limits our ability to see laser beacons to "a few dozens light years" for visible wavelengths. Really?? Then how come you can go and see stars farther away than that with your naked eye? Oh, because they're brighter! Well, how bright does a laser beacon need to be? How much attentuation is there, in per cent, dB or whatever, at, say, 100 light years? How much does a beam spread out over, say, 100 light years? How much variation in the signal is there over time as a result of dust? Not a BIT of quantitative data on this stuff!

Like all other SETI enthusiasts I've seen, they also ignore another issue: As communication techniques get more advanced, they look more and more like random noise. Our millions of chattering cell phones and internet hosts will almost certainly be undetectable to anyone outside the earth environment, let alone the solar system: Those transmissions have no directionality, they are low power precisely because they are efficient and advanced, and their advanced modulation causes them to look like white noise. Consider a 300 bps modem, with its old-fashioned tone signaling; then listen to a 56k modem, which, except when it's hooking up, sounds almost like rushing steam. It's hard to escape the idea that we will only pick up radio from ET if he intentionally beams it at us, a doubtful proposition unless he's within 60 light years, as he has no way to know of OUR radio transmissions.

A final word about copy editing: I've yet to read a book with absolutely no errors, but at least they could get three-letter words like "its" right. There are other serious errors, such as missing words, the ubiquitous "different than," and other less glaring mistakes. If they can't do better than that, perhaps they should just record audio tapes.

All in all, about a third of the way through, I decided that other books must surely be able to better satisfy my curiosity on this subject.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A decent review of the basics, but more than a little dry, March 12, 2002
By Chris from San Francisco (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
<.>

I like the idea of this book, but the execution left a bit to be desired.

The first two sections ("Are We Alone?" and "Getting a Dial Tone") do a passably good job of introducing some of the basics of interstellar communication, ably introducing both the fundamentals of radio and optical technologies and the unique challenges of communicating a signal (any signal; the details of the signal to be sent are reserved for Part III) across interstellar distances.

Problems with the first two sections are:

(1) inconsistent readability: the author seems not to have found a consistent tone for the book, and wanders between wide-eyed pie-in-the-sky speculation and bone-dry technical detail;

(2) organizational flaws: the author routinely discusses a concept or entity throughout early chapters without a decent introduction or explanation, only to treat the subject in question at length (with the proper explanatory introduction) later in the text -- the discussion of the SETI@home distributed computing project is particularly guilty of this;

(3) lack of investigative reporting: almost every piece of information in these sections could have come out of a textbook or a web search, and it's clear that the author hasn't bothered to interview the movers and shakers in the SETI community and find out anything much about the "story behind the story," which might have made for some interesting reading;

(4) bad editing: there is a typo every few pages, which is a minor beef but in the age of spell-checkers hardly excusable.

Nonetheless, if you've never read a "Scientific American" article about SETI, the first two sections of the book would be educational. If you have any exposure to SETI prior to picking up the book, chances are that you won't learn very much (except possibly about optical SETI/CETI, which relies on the production and/or detection of laser light aimed at a specific star system, and which is grossly undertreated in the literature).

The third section ("Communicating with Other Worlds") treats the specifics of the author's ideas about what sort of message could be sent by us (or, by extension, might be received by us from others). The author makes an analogy between modular messages encoded in binary code and genes encoded by DNA, and sets up one potential system that might be used to send a complex message from star A to star B. This section is definitely the weakest in the book, for the following reasons.

(1) It treats at punishingly great length only one possible system of a presumably great many for communicating with alien intelligences, glossing over other approaches in favor of a detailed treatment of the author's pet approach. While I don't have a specific complaint with the approach described, I will say that as a working biologist, I found the author's biologically motivated analogies ("igenes," "binary DNA") strained and in some cases laughable. It probably makes the material "sexier" in the computer-science and SETI literature, but as a life scientist I mostly winced a lot.

(2) In part because of this, the author doesn't put his approach in any kind of context -- e.g., how else might we do it?

(3) It's way too long and inappropriately detailed: a great deal of theory of computation stuff that's not at all unique to SETI or the challenge of communicating with a non-human intelligence ends up in this section, and I don't think that benefits the reader more than just saying, "We'll send computer programs using the benefit of knowledge reaped from the maturing fields of cryptography and computer science and our impressive knowledge of the physical universe," and focusing more on reasons why any approach like this has shortcomings and might not work regardless of how clever you are.

All that having been said, this is an OK book. I wouldn't recommend that it be the only thing that you read about SETI, nor would I recommend that you read it cover-to-cover (unless you have troubles with insomnia), but if you're an avid reader of the SETI literature, it certainly can't hurt to pick this one up.

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2.0 out of 5 stars too boring and technical., August 6, 2009
This book might be enjoyable for those who love technical
details, math, formulas, theories of contact with aliens, etc.
The author does _not_ write about what actually did happen...
his ideas were not utilized in sending signals or establishing contact with aliens.
He writes what he hopes or advises SETI and others to use in creating
a message for ET.
I feel like I've read dozens of books on this topic, and do not need someone's
opinions who was not directly involved in creating messages for aliens.
Had Mr.McConnell worked alongside Carl Sagan and others in creating a message for aliens, and had in fact that message(s) been sent out to the stars, then we could've had a whole different ball game.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting Premise and Valid Questions
This book examines the questions that will need to be resolved at some point in our existence (my opinion). It's good to ask and it's good to get thinking on this. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Fred

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome!
This is the kind of book you need to understand the details of SETI, how does it work, what its limitations would be, and what technology is behind. Read more
Published on July 11, 2007 by J.A.

5.0 out of 5 stars Get's down to the skinny when it comes to communicating with aliens
This is a very all-encompassing book about extraterrestrial communication, and goes to considerable length explaining how it would be done through binary language. Read more
Published on June 19, 2007 by S. OBYRNE

4.0 out of 5 stars A highly technical book on interstellar communication
Readers who want a general introduction to questions related to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence should look elsewhere. Read more
Published on January 15, 2002 by M. A Michaud

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting info about SETI but too boring part 3
Good introduction to SETI and the description about the mechanisms used is very good.

The third part of the book is much too boring. Read more

Published on December 29, 2001 by Gerhard Poul

5.0 out of 5 stars Essential SETI Reading
Easy to understand and yet almost exhaustive in it's survey of SETI past, present and future.

This book's presentation is exemplary. Read more

Published on June 17, 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Along with 'Are We Alone In The Cosmos' (edited: Ben Bova), this book is the most comprehensive and up to date summary of SETI. Read more
Published on June 10, 2001 by D. A. Murray

5.0 out of 5 stars We Are Not Alone..or Are We?
This question has confounded people for generations. Are we the only intelligent lifeform capable of space travel and communicating with others, or are there other similar races... Read more
Published on May 27, 2001 by Todd Hawley

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