Colossus Audiobook By D. F. Jones cover art

Colossus

Colossus Trilogy Series, Book 1

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Colossus

By: D. F. Jones
Narrated by: P.J. Ochlan
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About this listen

Charles Forbin has dedicated the last 10 years of his life to the construction of his own supercomputer, Colossus, rejecting romantic and social endeavors in order to create the United States' very first Artificially Intelligent defense system.

Colossus is a supercomputer capable of taking in and analyzing data rapidly, allowing it to make real-time decisions about the nation's defense.

But Colossus soon exceeds even Forbin's calculated expectations, learning to think independently of the Colossus Programming Office, processing data over 100 times faster than Forbin and his team had originally anticipated.

The President hands off full control of the nation's missiles and other defense protocols to Colossus and makes the announcement to the world that he has ensured peace.

However, the USSR quickly announces that it too has a supercomputer, Guardian, with capabilities similar to that of Colossus.

Forbin is concerned when Colossus asks - asks - to communicate with Guardian.

The computer he built shouldn't be able to ask at all.

©1966 D. F. Jones (P)2017 Tantor
Adventure Science Fiction Technothrillers Thriller Fiction Suspense
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the relevance to today's AI

Needs to be made into a movie, updated for the characters to use updated tech such as cellphones instead of landlines.

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A wonderfully thought out story

The (newer) cover on this book really caught my eye.  I picked this up on Kindle when it was 99 cents a while back not realizing that it was an older technothriller.  When I saw that Tantor Audio was going to bring this to life on audio, I had to listen to it.

Throughout my reading of this book, I kept thinking to myself "was this really written in the 60's?" There were so many pieces that made this feel like it could have been written in the 80's or early 90's.  It reminded me of Crichton in that way.  He was able to write about things that just became normal technology way before they were popular.  Sure the "teletype" is the only dead giveaway that it was written before desktop and laptop computers took hold, but honestly, if they changed the word teletype to desktop or mainframe or anything -- you wouldn't be able to place this as far back as it was written. 

Even the way that the United States (now Canada and the US combined) was run felt like it was ripped from the headlines of today, not 50 years ago. 

The book itself was really believable which made it even scarier.  I found myself thinking, oh yea, this is definitely plausible and honestly should be on the mind of every single engineer who is working on AI in some for or another. 

I've read other books with an AI who does things that are not expected and this was definitely as enjoyable as those books.  I can tell that Jones was way ahead of his time in the things that he was scared of.

The narration by P.J. Ochlan really lent itself well to this audiobook, he was able to voice this in a way that really made it feel like I was there while all of this was happening.  Combine that with Jones' incredible insight into what computers might become and you have a great technothriller.

If you enjoyed this review, please vote for it! Every vote helps. If you'd like to see more books like this please check out BriansBookBlog DOT com.

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Great story!

I recall seeing the movie in the 70"s. Scared the heck out me and still a great, realistic A I. story.

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The narrator had a wide range of voices and accents

I was very impressed with this audiobook. I've only listened to 9 and this was by far the best performance. Kudos to this man! I hope he narrates the other two books in the series.

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a clasic

One of the first Terminator Movies in big scale.. the 1960 Movies do poor justice to this book.

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A great computer-takes-over-the-world story!

This story is a favorite of mine. I remember seeing the movie in the 1970s with Eric Braeden and Susan Clark. It is a true classic. I named one of my computers Colossus and my red laptop, Guardian.

The book seems to be fairly close to the movie or is it the other way around? I love that the voice of Colossus is heard in the audio book version. By having the voice, it gives it more of a personality. I found it funny that Colossus picked a British accent for reasons you can learn.

I enjoyed the book, although it is a bit scary. I plan to listen the rest of the series.

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How incredibly different the book is from the movie.

The story of a cold blooded, logic driven antagonist has never been told better than this book. Colossus makes HAL look like a diapered baby in comparison and there isn't any mental breakdown in Colossus.

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The best

This is one of the best sci-fi books that I’ve ever read. It is a little slow in spots, but it makes up for it by being very creative and well written.

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Good story, good reading

Excellent science fiction. The reader was excellent, he nicely represented different characters by voice but didn’t overdo it. One quirk: He consistently pronounces “sure” like “shore”, same for surely and insure, which he pronounces shorely and inshore, regardless of the character speaking.

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1960's version of computer AI

D F Jones’ Colossus is a prescient 1960’s tale where a supercomputer designed to handle US defensive arsenal takes its job a bit too seriously. Shortly after turning operational control to Colossus, a second supercomputer of similar capability under Soviet control is detected. The two computers begin talking to each other and gradually merge to comprise a single entity. Charles Forbin, Colossus’ designer attempts to stop the supercomputer, but ultimately fails.

Jones crafts an engaging and compelling tale. While the overall thrust of the plot is well executed, the character of the President was a bit too arrogant and bombastic. At the same time, the notion that with no one in the room other than Forbin and the President, flipping the switch to turn over total control to Colossus seemed a bit too rushed.

The narration is good with decent character distinction. Pacing is brisk.

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