Monday, May 31, 2010

Monday Link Roundup

I have been crazybusy lately. I've been looking for a new full time gig, and that sort of search is forty-plus hours a week itself. The good news is that I also have a new boyfriend, yay me!

So, yes, I apologize for the lack of content and will endeavor to provide more.

But for now, your weekly link roundup!

I was a teenage werewolf!. In Texas, no less!

One step closer to Snow Crash? The first man to claim he has been affected by a computer virus. Science marches on?

Okay, he didn't write Snow Crash, but he's still the granddaddy of cyberpunk. And now, William Gibson has given us his ten favorite novels.

The quest to unlock the mystery of the mighty mighty corn.

It looks as though scientists have discovered a certain strain of bacteria that can make you smarter. And, perhaps, happier. The bug mostly lives in the dirt, which may explain the irritating cheerfulness of some hikers.

Video games can control lucid dreaming.

Have a spare million? Want to live in one of the most famous haunted houses? Guess what house just went on the market?

Monday, May 24, 2010

Monday Link Roundup

I know this space has been quiet lately, I've been rather busy. I shall endeavor to provide you with more fascinating content!

At least you still have your weekly link roundup!

Finally, the definitive Mark Twain biography will be published. Estimates put it at three volumes, at least.

After six deaths on a particular stretch of roadway, the Austrian government tried something a bit unorthodox. Druids. And it worked.

In the Wierd World, a Wikipedia article on the enigmatic Toynbee Tiles.

Remember those Golden Books you were likely read to from as a small child? They've grown up.

As the absinthe fad winds down, it looks like the next trendy liquor is moonshine. I wonder if it's any coincidence that both absinthe and moonshine are rumored to cause hallucinations?

And now there's a movement to convince the Grammys to open up an award category for Heavy Metal. Fine, but I expect they'll keep giving them to non-Americans.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Monday Link Roundup

I went camping this weekend!

Now, back to the weekly slog. Aren't you glad for this weekly link roundup?

Throw the horns for Ronnie James Dio, who passed away yesterday. Ye shall be missed, O Beloved of the Metal Gods. \m/ \m/

A cute little black and white short cartoon based off Murnau's Nosferatu and Stoker's Dracula.

Studies have proven it. The longest life is the one with the most pleasure.

The ACLU, protecting your right to profanity

For your weekly dose of Forteana, a fun article on the 23 enigma.

A roundup of vampire-themed role-playing games. You mean there are other role-playing games than White Wolf?!

And lastly, now that John's e-store is up, you can buy the pdf of Game of Tears. Only five dollars!

Monday, May 10, 2010

Thoughts on Fan Fiction

I do not write fan fiction; nor do I read it. Years ago, I would - and then I read a Star Trek/Les Miserables crossover with Javert as the main character. In a Better Than It Sounds moment, the story was not only the best fan fiction I'd ever read, it was better than most short stories I'd read, too. I realized that was it - never again would I find another fan fiction as good as that one. So I stopped reading it.

I have also never been inspired to write fan fiction. Creating my own characters and world is vastly preferable than yanking someone else's. Though I realize other fans feel differently, writing fan fiction would make me feel a bit like I'd snuck into the house of a good friend while they were away and drank all their beer.

In a now-vanished post by Diana Gabaldon (who I have not yet read), she laid out her reasons for disliking fan fiction in general, and those who wrote in her setting as a result. Cue Internet hue and cry. Authors and fan fiction writers are obviously chatty bunches, so it seems like everyone has something to say about the topic.

I have to say, I can see both sides of the issue. For every Star Trek/Les Miserables crossover, there's a gigabyte of Kirk/Spock slashfic or Mary Sue self-inserts. I can understand authors being dismayed at their lovingly crafted characters being used for porn or wish fulfillment fantasies. But I also realize that the fans, by and large, write fan fiction out of love. Well, all and good, but I don't think 'love' is a sufficient excuse in all cases. Not when the author is averse (for whatever reason) to people playing around in their own hard-won IP.

One common concern from the anti-fan fiction authors appears to be copyright, in that some authors are concerned over losing their copyright if they don't defend it by quashing fan fiction. Now, it is entirely accurate that copyright and trademark holders must assiduously defend their intellectual property in court or risk having their work fall into the public domain. However, most of the copyright cases of which I am aware deal primarily with someone allegedly trying to make a profit from the infringement. No one is really trying to make a living publishing fan fiction. There hasn't been a test case yet to see if fan fiction is enough to cause an author to lose their copyright. Personally, I don't see free fan fiction as a copyright infringement. Jim Butcher has a very good system worked out for his fans - everyone who writes Butcher fan fiction has to do so under a Creative Commons license. Butcher's copyright is protected and fans are happy to scribble away. I don't think Creative Commons has been tested in court, either, but it certainly makes sense to me (and while I appear to be surrounded by attorneys, I am not a lawyer myself. This is just me rambling a bit, so feel free to correct me if my facts are wrong).

Some fan fiction writers I've encountered have been rabidly pro-fan fiction. Their argument is that art, once created, becomes universal. While copyright is to be respected, an author should not be expected to object to fan fiction done out of love. There are arguments as well for promotion of the work and developing a fan community. And I can certainly get some of those - to a point.

See, not every fan fiction is good. Some of it is terrible, thinly disguised excuses for porn. And not that I have a problem with porn. The issue I have with most slashfic is not it's pornographic nature, it's the author gleefully defies established character and canon. In my current project, I have written two characters: Roy and Teague. Roy is a middle-aged gay construction worker; Teague is a middle-aged straight combat vet. If someone wanted to write porn about Roy having hot, wet, dripping sex with another man... well it's certainly in character for him to do that. There's a scene where it's implied he does just that after a hunt. But Teague is straight, and I would be highly annoyed if someone ignored established character to write their own slash fiction in which Teague had sex with any of the other male characters (even Roy. Especially Roy).

Annoyed enough to ask people to stop, though? Probably not. As long as no one expects me to read it. But that's just my personal opinion, as an unpublished aspiring author.

If people want to spend their time reading and writing fan fiction - well, everyone needs a hobby and I'm sure there are less constructive things one can do. However, I do believe that if an author like Diana Gabaldon or George R. R. Martin or Anne Rice comes out and asks people to please not write fan fiction based on their work, the fans ought to respect that. After all, the fan fiction writers themselves are the first to claim their stories are products of love. And part of love is respect.

Monday Link Roundup!

Here you are!

Scientists in India are using math to analyze om

Like the European man found in China, now they have found the skeleton of an African man, born in Tunisia and buried in Ipswich in the 13th Century.

Steampunk is cool. So are vampires. And now, steampunk vampires!

Japan's most decrepit dormitory.

National Geographic takes on sleep.

From the Cat Corner, a YouTube video of a cat grooming a fox.

And lastly, for your humor sign off, The Six People You've Never Heard of Who Probably Saved Your Life.

Monday, May 3, 2010

The Cell Phone Tribes

Not vampires, but every so often, I get a little cyberpunk.

The Development of Cellular Tribalism

Many scholars of the pre-post-secondary-modern period (generally agreed to have begun with the Reagan Administration in 1980 and ended with the Biden assassination in 2016) have spent several careers analyzing the science fiction published within this span for their predictive accuracy. Most have agreed upon Philip K. Dick as the prophet of post-Millennial period, with William Gibson coming in second to Isaac Asimov. Neal Stephenson completes the quad.

One of Stephenson's predictions, a popular 'cyberpunk' prognostication, was the eventual granting of national sovereignty to multi-national corporations. And had the Wall Street Wars not occurred, with the bloodless Data Wars following them up, he might have been correct. Stephenson further predicted post-Millennial humans would self-select their own tribes, loosely based on these corporate nation-states.

Stephenson came so close, and yet ended up missing his mark entirely in the long view.

While the Wall Street Wars were devastating to most sectors of business, telecom was smart enough to remain aloof from the fracas. As such, these companies emerged virtually undamaged from their pre-post-secondary-modern incarnation - though they were not unchanged. To better weather the chaos, Bill Gates of Microsoft allied with Verizon Wireless and the company then known as Sprint/Nextel. A rapidly declining in health Steve Jobs took this move as a threat. In retrospect, his paranoia was likely unjustified and was in fact the first sign of Jobs' eventual descent into insanity. At the time, however, few questioned his business decisions (it is unlikely Jobs had his now-famous alligator pits built at this time, most historians place the construction of the pits at sometime after the Biden assassination).

Jobs' reaction was to initiate a hostile takeover of AT&T, the company which provided phone service for his iPhone, the first iteration of Apple cellular phones we know know as iOmega. AT&T, being the weakest of the major telecom companies, had no choice but to accede to Jobs' demands. The most salient was denial of service to non-AT&T customers. Before this momentous decision, a customer with an active cell phone could place a call to any other person, regardless of service provider. There were few distinctions at this time between the various service providers - only socioeconomic signifiers: how nice a phone a customer had. Now, users could only call those who also were Apple-T customers.

Bill Gates, suffering his own mild insanity as the result of then-unknown Wicketts' Syndrome (ironically traced back to a swarm of mosquitoes he released as part of a business presentation), responded in kind. Had he refrained, it is quite likely that prevailing market forces would have forced Jobs to recant his decision - perhaps sparing countless interns and programmers the alligator pits. But Gates held as firm as Jobs, and the result was: Verizon and Sprint/Nextel customers could now only call other Verizon and Sprint/Nextel Customers.

Landlines, at this point, began to earn their current sacrosanct status. While Apple-T could only call Apple-T cell phones, and the same was true for Verizon and Sprint/Nextel, no one wanted to anger Ma Bell. Courier services began to be set up by young entrepreneurs - an Apple-T customer could call their landline-based courier and have a message relayed to their Verizon friend. This method, however, was clunky and almost as expensive as getting a second phone - which many did in the early years.

Again, things might have fallen out differently if not for Gates' untimely death due to Wicketts. After Gates' death, the scramble was on, earning him the posthumous title, "Charlemagne of the 21st Century." His vast empire was divided up into three pieces as Microsoft, Verizon and Sprint/Nextel each re-formed into their previous individual corporate identities. While Verizon and Sprint/Nextel attempted to maintain friendly relations, their treaties dissolved during the Data Wars and the Sprint/Nextel split. Nextel, now calling itself WorldNet, had absorbed what some were calling the Boost Ghetto - the collection of prepaid cellular users left out in the cold by the upper and middle-class skirmishing between the Gates and Jobs camps.

Energized by the absorption of Boost, WorldNet instituted it's own service boundaries, forcing Verizon to adopt the same philosophy. Around the time of the formation of WorldNet, dual subscriptions dropped off sharply. Few had the inclination or financial ability to maintain three separate cellular identities, and chose to cancel the extraneous as well. With the success of Friends and Family plans, the lines had been drawn.

After only half a generation after the implementation of service boundaries, the social implications became clear. One's cellular service provider became as much an indication of one's tribal identity as ethnicity or religion. There were distinct geographic and class divisions, though racial divisions petered out within two generations. These tribal identities were only solidified during the Second Data Wars and the Great Internet Divide.

Which leads us to our current social climate, which some have likened to the class structure of Victorian England. By and large, we only consort with those who are in our 'cellular class,' and there is rarely deviation. Large companies, with their preponderance of land lines, are somewhat free of this bias. However, small business, families and informal social networks are all defined by who one is able to call. The rivalry is certainly not as dire as Theoderick Coppola-Kinsey's recent re-interpretation of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, with Romeo as a Verizon member and Juliet a WorldNet woman... but they are not so far off, either.

Monday Link Roundup!

I know I haven't been posting much, I've been fighting a cold. However, there is no sickness dire enough to keep me from giving you your Monday Link Roundup!

What do you get when you combine Alan Moore, the Gorillaz and John Dee? Opera, of course!

A good argument for cinematic sci-fi television. The special effects technology we have is mindblowing, I'm sure HBO or AMC could come up with a captivating series with the same production values as Rome or Mad Men. Also, the author makes a wonderful case for turning one of my favorite graphic novels, Transmetropolitan, into TV.

A very fascinating article about oxytocin & trust.

Was the father of calculus Newton or Leibniz? A new scholar suggests he might have been Indian!.

Vampire Movies That Suck. Just what it says on the box!

Shameless promo: my sister is a painter (and, I think, a very good one). She has the goal to complete 100 (awesome) paintings in one year. She's blogging about it, and I highly recommend subscribing to her blog, too.

And for your humor sign off, The Seven Most Disastrous Typos of All Time.