186 pointsby ColinWright2 hours ago18 comments
  • CGMthrowaway33 minutes ago
    >INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER

    Boy, it sure would be nice if real LLMs were capable of giving an answer like that.

    • bargainbin15 minutes ago
      You’re absolutely right! I do have insufficient data for a meaningful answer. This is not an *insightful prediction* — it’s *Dunning-Kruger masquerading as qualified intelligence*
  • jasongillan hour ago
    This is one of those stories, just like the SR-71 "ground speed check" story, that every single time I see it posted I just have to read the entire thing again. I love it.
  • jjice8 minutes ago
    An absolute classic! Was just telling a buddy about this one the other day while talking about The Egg by Andy Weir (another short story I really enjoy). Every time I read this one, I get chills at the end. Asimov really was a master.
    • ANTHONY66325 minutes ago
      Totally agree, that ending sticks with you for a long time. Asimov had a way of making simple ideas feel massive.
  • Procrastes25 minutes ago
    I remember the first time I heard this story. I was maybe 7 at a planetarium and they animated it with music little hand drawn starships and retro computers floating among the stars. They turned the stars all out for the final scene.
    • jjoonathan4 minutes ago
      Outer Wilds vibes! I love it!

      (It's a video game that does a brilliant job touching on similar themes to The Last Question. If you liked The Last Question and can fit a video game into your life, you will probably like Outer Wilds. Warning: if you start searching for "outer wilds," the algorithm will aggressively try to spoil you. Progression in the game is gated behind knowledge, so this is worse than usual. If you have trouble resisting the temptation to google past a rough description, it's a sign you should just jump in and play it. End recommendation.)

  • OhMeadhbh5 minutes ago
    In the 80s, our local planetarium did a show based on this story. The executive director of the museum associated with the planetarium had a very nice deep voice and was the perfect narrator, though it gave the Cosmic AC a slight Texas accent.
  • sebgan hour ago
  • larryklugeran hour ago
    A classic. It was dramatized by the Rochester NY, USA Museum of Science as a planetarium show, and I saw it there about 1974 with my father. Great times.
  • quentindanjouan hour ago
    I wasn't expecting to find my favorite short-story on HN today! That's a pleasant surprise! This is how I started my journey in reading Isaac Asimov, I really recommend it!
  • 0xmattf40 minutes ago
    One of my all-time favorites. Almost every time I'm involved in a conversation about books, I always mention this. It amazes me how many people have never heard of it.
  • RajT8812 minutes ago
    Somehow never read this one. But did write a short story ~20 years ago with a similar arc. I guess reading a lot of Asimov and Clarke and others will do that to you.
    • ghaff3 minutes ago
      You should. It's short and it's one of Asimov's best.
  • ANTHONY66326 minutes ago
    I like the concept, has anyone tried this in production?
  • grimgrin33 minutes ago
    okay so i'll be the sole commenter of: hex.ooo is an incredible domain name to me, maybe because i dig its UI, but certainly just in general

    didn't know about ooo, maybe because it's not available on namecheap!

  • moffersan hour ago
    My favorite short story of all time. Between this and Deep Thought in HHGttG, I couldn’t believe the prescience when the bitter lesson was learned and LLMs and GPUs started eating the world.
    • shivaniShimpi_an hour ago
      the LLM parallel does hit different on this read multivac says insufficient data across ten trillion years and the whole story is basically if more compute and more data eventually gets you there. what's weird is the story answers yes, not on any timeframe that helps the people asking tho.

      feels uncomfortably close to the actual situation where the models keep getting better and the answer keeps being "not yet, ask again later" while the answer is getting ready years late

      • mercer25 minutes ago
        maybe 42 was just the end of sequence token...
    • baqan hour ago
      It only takes understanding the exponential function and some imagination, right? Apparently an uncommon combination of traits in people ;)
  • bitshiftfacedan hour ago
    For a while I thought I really liked sci fi novels and short stories, and maybe that's somewhat true. But I've started wondering if maybe I just liked Asimov's writing in particular. Other writers in the genre are more hit or miss. Can anyone recommend other writers that are on his level?
    • NetMageSCW4 minutes ago
      Have you tried Arthur Clarke? I would say he is close to Asimov in many ways, being from the same time.

      For others who share some similarities, though with a greater emphasis on character and adventure, perhaps Hal Clement, Larry Niven or Robert L. Forward.

    • Arainachan hour ago
      Ted Chiang is the greatest living science fiction short story writer I'm aware of, and ranks highly on my all time list.
    • phkahler34 minutes ago
      >> But I've started wondering if maybe I just liked Asimov's writing in particular.

      A less commonly mentioned Asimov book that I really enjoyed and will read again is "The End of Eternity". If you've not read it, the ending is IMHO amazing and unique.

      Last Question reminds me of it because of the style.

      • sjg17293 minutes ago
        I was also quite fond of Palimpsest by Stross. It’s a retelling of EoE but a more modern treatment (and the writing is quite a bit better, IMO)
    • shivaniShimpi_an hour ago
      ted chiang if you haven't already. story of your life, exhalation, the lifecycle of software objects. same thing asimov does where the sci fi premise is really just a frame for a very human question. except chiang does it in like 30 pages and you feel it for a week
    • npilk44 minutes ago
      It's not "sci fi" but you should read Borges' short stories, particularly from Ficciones.

      You may have already read his story The Library of Babel: https://sites.evergreen.edu/politicalshakespeares/wp-content...

    • jakeinspacean hour ago
      Stanislaw Lem, if you can handle something a little more poetic and less strictly hard sci-fi.
    • NickDouglasan hour ago
      Try "The Illustrated Man" by Ray Bradbury, but skip the terrible frame story. The actual short stories are beautiful literature and canonical sci-fi.
      • NetMageSCW5 minutes ago
        As someone who loves the Big Three (Asimov, Clarke, Heinlein) and have read a lot of SF, I pretty much despise Bradbury. There’s no science in his science fiction.
    • robrain28 minutes ago
      Becky Chambers - Wayfarer series and several enjoyable short stories/novellas. Low on blasters, high on sentient life in all its many forms.
    • boxedan hour ago
      I mean.. a genre can't be all hits, that makes no sense :P

      If you want good sci-fi a good list can be:

      - Ender's Game

      - The Martian + Project Hail Mary

      - A Fire Upon the Deep

      - Dune

      • xeonmc7 minutes ago
        Though Dune is highly acclaimed for its concepts, I couldn’t quite get into it personally.

        They’re just too dry for my tastes.

      • comicjkan hour ago
        A Fire Upon The Deep is a fantastic novel for programmers to read, and I think the prequel A Deepness In The Sky is even better. There are some amazing old-school coding jokes in there, like that everyone thinks the universal time counter started at the first moon landing, but programmer archaeologists know it was really 15 megaseconds later.
      • rationalistan hour ago
        The Expanse series starting with Leviathan Wakes.

        (I second Ender's Game, The Martian, and Project Hail Mary.)

      • baqan hour ago
        - Hyperion
    • arc_lightan hour ago
      [dead]
  • charvan hour ago
    All time great short story. Has shaped my world view since I first read it many years ago.
  • eschulzan hour ago
    I love this story. When I first read it online in college many years ago I was surprised, and disappointed, when I suddenly realized it was a short story. It's a great one to recommend to people.
  • Aliyektaan hour ago
    Claude Mythos
    • ramon156an hour ago
      [reference] [reference]