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The idea of “transfer
booths” is introduced in Ringworld by a character named Louis Wu. It is the evening of Louis’ two hundredth
birthday, and he wants to extend the celebration as long as possible.
As Larry Niven describes: “Louis Wu had
gone
alone, jumping ahead of the midnight line, hotly pursued by the new day. Twenty-four hours was not long enough for a
man’s two hundredth birthday.” (Niven 1-2)
So Louis enters a booth,
dials a number corresponding to a place, inserts his credit card, and
finds
himself in the “reality” of an entirely different area of the planet. Such an ability to travel without jet-lag,
luggage, cramped seating or long flights seems fantastical to say the
least.
But Larry Niven was
not far off
from our own reality when he wrote of transfer booths.
Louis Wu’s ability to travel vast distances
in the blink of an eye may be possible
within our lifetime. But only if you
don’t mind dying first.
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