| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 679.1 | Commercial interruption | NUTMEG::BALS | Vi Veri Veniversum Vivus Vici* | Thu Aug 25 1988 13:11 | 14 | 
|  |     >The moderator(s) are welcome
    >to change the title of this note when the answer is found.
    
    It should be pointed out to less-experienced noters that an author
    of a note has the ability to modify the title of his/her note. In
    other words, you can do it yourself. The command is:
    
    modify note/title="string"
    
    Can't help you with the title of the book, `tho the part about the matter
    transmitter sounds *very* familiar. I wouldn't be surprised if it
    was an old Scholastic Book title. Maybe *Escape to Andromeda*? :-)
    
    Fred                      
 | 
| 679.2 |  | MINAR::BISHOP |  | Thu Aug 25 1988 13:41 | 12 | 
|  |     Re .2, rathole:
    
    Ok then, the first member of the set {author, moderators} to
    see that this question has been answered will modify the note.
    
    I didn't think I needed to spell this out.
    
    The part about the transmitter might sound familiar for other
    reasons--Larry Niven wrote a piece about ways to get around the
    light limit, and the self-transmitting transmitter was one of
    the ideas.
    			-John Bishop
 | 
| 679.3 | publisher? | ESP::CONNELLY | Desperately seeking snoozin' | Thu Aug 25 1988 22:54 | 2 | 
|  | The Winston juvenile series had a rocket on the spine, i believe.
							Paul
 | 
| 679.4 | story | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Tue Aug 30 1988 09:40 | 14 | 
|  |     The book you're looking for, is, I believe, _The Last Spaceship_
    by Murray Leinster.  The matter-transmitter "state" is actually
    a series of principalities based on the abuse of matter-transmitter
    technology.  The hero manages to circumvent this by using an alloy
    that alters his atomic/molecular signature so that the tuning devices
    can't get him.
    
    The rationale that's supposed to make all this work is a sort of
    sideways approach to inertialessness, through a modification of
    Newtonian momentum -- but then, Leinster was writing an adventure,
    not a treatment on FTL technologies (only Doc Smith could do both
    simultaneously).
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
 | 
| 679.5 | Theory and Practice of Teleportation | SKITZD::MESSENGER | Dreamer Fithp | Wed Aug 31 1988 17:28 | 12 | 
|  |     re: .2
    
>    The part about the transmitter might sound familiar for other
>    reasons--Larry Niven wrote a piece about ways to get around the
>    light limit, and the self-transmitting transmitter was one of
>    the ideas.
    
    It's not about FTL speculation, it's about teleportation, and it's
    called "Theory and Practice of Teleportation", and it's in (I believe)
    "All the Myriad Ways".
    				- HBM
 |