dune
Dune is an epic science fiction novel from Frank Herbert set in the distant future.
What Do You Think The Near Future Holds For Technology Over The Next Ten Years?
What do you think the future holds for technology over the next ten years? In ten years from now…maybe It is possible that the predicted rise of tech hubs in Singapore, Penang, Vietnam, Bangalore, Shenzhen, and Silicon Valley will be the result of a combination of factors.
By Estalontech3 years ago in Futurism
The Use of A.I in Marketing Can Help Businesses
This can include things like offering products and services that are tailored to the local market, building relationships with international partners and suppliers, and being able to effectively communicate with customers and clients from different cultures. Additionally, businesses will need to be able to handle the challenges that come with operating on a global scale, such as managing complex supply chains, dealing with differences in laws and regulations, and managing a diverse workforce. To do this, businesses will need to be flexible and innovative, and be willing to adapt to changing market conditions and consumer demands.
By Estalontech3 years ago in Futurism
String Theory - The Theory Of Everything
Where do we come from and where does the world come from? What is the world made of? We are privileged to live in an age where we have come close enough to some of the answers. String theory is our latest attempt to answer the last of these questions - the "Theory of Everything".
By Viorel Secareanu3 years ago in Futurism
CIRCLING CHAOS
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. Althea had been told not to go off the ship, she had been warned. The consequences would be dire but she couldn’t stay away; the stairs called to her, beckoning her to have a look, that’s all—just one simple look.
By K.H. Obergfoll3 years ago in Futurism
In the Shadow of a Great Dead God
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. Above falls a fiery black object. It breaks through Earth’s stratosphere and trails the greatest plume of smoke from behind. Its fall sings like a siren, stabbing through the sound barrier faster than light. Smoke builds above and coats the naked blue sky in a gray mask, hiding the blazing sun from sight.
By Coraline Ismael Karim3 years ago in Futurism
‘Dune’: The Unadaptable Comes to Fruition With Villeneuve’s Vision
A film, years — even decades — in the making, Denis Villeneuve’s passion project opens with a mysteriously strange and deep voice, recognized among the Dune universe as the language of the Sardaukar — “Dreams are messages from the deep.” For Villeneuve, faithfully adapting Dune to the big screen was his dream, his biggest challenge yet; Dune is a message from the depths of his soul and heart, a creation pure in passion and enthusiasm, sparkling in Denis’ love of the source material.
By MovieBabble4 years ago in Futurism
'Dune' Casting Update
My anticipation level for this movie (or will it be franchise now?) was high enough when Villeneuve was announced as director coming off the back of modern sci-fi classics in Arrival and Blade Runner 2049, and if we look back further, Villeneuve has not made a bad movie yet with Sicario and Prisoners also on his filmography.
By Neil Gregory7 years ago in Futurism
Let's Talk About Dun(e)can Idaho
The Duniverse (that is, the Dune Universe), whose life began with the publication of Frank Herbert's original masterpiece in 1965, is a lush wonderland of possibilities, despite its arid world of inception. One character in particular single-handedly explores a majority of those possibilities on his own: Duncan Idaho. I have never had the great pleasure of looking at Mr. Herbert's original manuscripts, so I cannot tell you exactly when Herbert decided that Duncan Idaho, not “the Atreides,” was the main character of his Dune books. But rest assured that he is, and any further reading by anyone who has not finished the main Dune series (that is up through the end of Sandworms of Dune) will be riddled with spoilers.
By Caleb Sherman7 years ago in Futurism
Looking Forward to Legendary 'Dune'. Top Story - July 2018.
Dune, Frank Herbert's 1965 science fiction masterpiece and the series that followed, should be the cinematic master series of the 21st century. In a cinema culture dominated by the continuing Star Wars series and the ever-present Marvel Cinematic Universe and DC Expanded Universe, Herbert's Dune series stands with at least seven possible main series movies and even more prequels and expansions already written by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson. Herbert's legends represent a much beloved yet mostly untapped potential pool of multimedia products. With Legendary Entertainment's acquisition of film rights, we may well stand to get the first successful film adaptation of this epic saga.
By Caleb Sherman7 years ago in Futurism










