I'm sure, though, that there are some folks that have overspecified the how, based on current ideas (let's avoid the scientific jargon) of what gravity is, isn't, or may or may not be. With this new idea in the pot, what sort of changes in the handwavium-tofu might we see?
Jeff,
I see... Of course, this all depends on whether Dr. Verlinde's conjectures are correct. As HG_B wisely points out, all this seems non-falsifiable.
First, I'll point again to my centrifugal/centripetal force analogy. Just because what was first called centrifugal force was eventually categorized as a type of centripetal force, the manner in which we plan for, control, handle, or counteract with centrifugal force didn't change.
Second, I think to only real change to our handwavium technology would be that, because gravity is no longer a fundamental force, there is no longer a particle which carries that force. So, no
gravitons. That means no more "graviton flux inhibitors" or other handwavium devices to manipulate/control those particles.
Instead, because gravity is a side effect, for lack of a better term, any gravity control technology would control gravity at one remove; i.e. by controlling whatever produces gravity as a side effect because nothing produces gravity directly.
We'd end up with "boojum interference manipulators" controlling gravity as the side effect of "boojum interference" instead of "graviton flux inhibitors" controlling gravity directly.
Really going out on a limb with analogies here, but the 19th Century aether theory might give us a handle on things. It was believed that light simply had to move through a medium because it acted like a wave. The "aether" was proposed and the belief it was required kept physicists screwed up for decades. When it was finally realized that light was both a wave and a particle, and that the aether wasn't needed at all, nothing changed with regards to the ways in which we handled light. Prisms still worked, telescopes, microscopes, all of it.
Light got re-labeled but the way we handled light didn't really change.
Regards,
Bill