QUILL ACHIEVED, SPACE CREW.
We hit 250 last night, which means this book is going to be published. Let’s take a moment to breathe. This was made possible by all of you (our relentless Crew), with the last Quill order going to our honourary Quill Captain, Micah Baker.

If you want to pick up his intriguing book, which is a sinister sort of space opera, you can do that here.
So What Happens Now?
First, the good.
And the reality: 
So while we hit a major milestone, you can’t expect the ship to stop here.
If you’re a member of this Crew, I need you to make it your personal responsibility to help me boost this to 750. Tell a friend. Order a copy for your mom. You can make a huge difference.
Your Cautiously Celebratory Space Captain,
-AC
Brobots has now broken 100 followers. That’s amazing, given that we just posted it only 24 hours ago. People are already suggesting voice-over actors, including Andy Serkis and Nolan North.
The big question is: what is Brobots really all about? Here’s one set of thoughts we had:
The year is 2100. We are way past self-driving cars: artificial intelligence is everywhere, performing all of the mundane tasks that human beings no longer need to. But these robots are boring. This isn’t the the sultry-voiced AI of Her or the mysterious, come-hither AI of Ex Machina. Because they’re made by Amazon, they’ve been programmed without personalities.
Two brogrammers decide that this is wrong, that robots can – and should – have personalities. They hack into the Amazon server which controls these robots and insert the "bro bug." When Amazon pushes the software update, our two protagonist robots change forever – from robots to brobots. And so begins an amazing journey of self-discovery and bromance.
It’s Chappie meets Wedding Crashers. It’s #Brobots.
But also this is just one bro’s thoughts. Please let me know what you think. Should humans be in this world at all? What are the underlying principles of brobotics?
Please share with your bro networks. Thanks bros of both genders.

