Little Brother

Little Brother

author: Cory Doctorow
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2008
rating: 5
read at: 2009/12/30
date added: 2009/12/30
shelves: fiction, kid-lit, sci-fi, technology
review:
Read in html, oddly enough. I still need some time to process this one, but I found it intensely moving.

best of the year

There’s been a lot of stress and frustration over this last year, but in an effort to be positive & optimistic, here’s a few of the highlights of my 2009, the things that make me smile almost instantly when I think about them:

Creamsicle the cat…he actually came into our lives in the summer of 2008, as a crazy stray tom with matted dreadlocks of orange and white fur. But after keeping him safe through the snowpocalypse, he began to be part of the posse.

In March, we officially adopted him via a trip to the animal shelter — he was so ill-mannered in the cages that he was set to be killed — while he had a wound in his head from fighting, so bad that it had to have a tube put in it. We weren’t sure if it was going to work out, what with the fighting (not with ours, oddly enough), running away, spraying, etc., but wow! Neutering worked wonders. 🙂

His bad behavior gradually ended over the course of a few weeks, and with lots of love and attention he’s become a lovely friendly kitty, crazy about laps and treats. He’s the only cat I’ve ever had who sits on my lap in a way that allows me to keep typing, which I love. He still has a tendency to be “talkative” at night, but often if you just yell “hey” back at him that’s good enough to calm him down.

The Xtracycle, about which I have written several times: my awesome, awesome new bike this summer, the load-hauling machine.  Rides to the river, massive grocery trips, and plenty of commuting.

Working with Drupal — I converted my employer’s site this year, and so spent a lot of time playing with it, learning, and getting to know the delightful Drupal community. Even went to two (free!) events in Seattle this year, both of which were immensely helpful, even if the second one was cut short by C’s brush with the flu. I’m getting that feeling of mastery that’s so joyful (and a little addictive) — I feel like I could do wondrous things with Drupal.

And finally NaNoWriMo, which gave me back confidence in my creativity. As I’ve mentioned before, I’ve made a couple of unsuccessful attempts. I’ve also been stalled out on my writing for several years, stuck unable to finish the novel I’ve been puttering at since…um… 1994? NaNoWriMo gave me a chance to jump into something entirely new, and to commit to finishing it. I even tried some entirely new (to me) techniques, and discovered to my surprise that a little bit of planning ahead worked really, really well. (Snowflake method FTW!) Plus I found the fabulous Scrivener. I finished above the goal and before the deadline.

If you’re wondering, I’ve decided to continue with it, after some wonderful feedback from Paula, and after rereading it myself. I still like this story and its characters. I’ve already done some early editing, mostly continuity stuff. (There’s only one character whose name didn’t stay consistent, and he’s a pretty minor one at that!) I’m planning on getting through a complete second draft early in the new year. What happens after that I’ve no idea.

Which is how I feel about 2010 in general: I’ve no idea what happens now, really.

obsolete tech? maybe not.

Got this article about “obsolete technologies” from Thomas Myer this morning on Twitter, and after reading, had that “I don’t know where to begin with how that’s wrong” response. Too much to tweet, even, and at his prompting 🙂 am writing up a little point-by-point response.

  1. Fax machine – I’ll admit, these should DIE. NOW.
  2. Cigarette lighter car electrical plugs – these suck too, but would have to be phased out gently because there’s a whole ecosystem of stuff that assumes the presence of this type of “plug,” plus all the existing cars out there. (Besides, I bet there’s plenty of people — unfortunately — who still smoke in their cars.)
  3. WWW – yeah, ok, I get that too. (I ran into this one at Pierce. Still irritates me.)
  4. Business cards – nope, not at all obsolete, even if they are a far less than ideal solution. This is the first of several of these items that assumes everyone has a high level of technology in their lives, higher than most folks do, I think. He also elides over the experience of going to a big event where you don’t know who you’re going to meet…or who you’re going to care about contacting later. Putting a contact into my phone is a big deal, partially because it’s a PITA, but also because it assumes that I’ll definitely need it. Exchanging business cards has a certain face-saving quality, plus it’s easier to do while maintaining eye contact and staying engaged in conversation.
  5. Movie rental stores – alas, he’s probably right, although I miss the video store that used to be up the street from us. There’s a gap between what’s available on disc and what’s available online, too, so that in between mailings the choices aren’t always exactly stellar. Here too the assumption of a certain level of technology: the computer that can play movies and the connection that’s fast enough for them.
  6. Home entertainment remotes – WTF? Like business cards, the current state of things is less than ideal, but his solution doesn’t seem quite right. Again the requirement for a high-end phone — added to the assumption that the people who don’t take the time to program together their existing remotes will take the time to program their phone-as-a-remote…and that each person in the household will do the same with their own phone. Also: how do the kids use a remote? Now the kids have to have their own iPhones?
  7. Landline phones – now we come to it: if you don’t have a cell phone that you use all the time for everything, you’re obsolete. Yes, we are cell-only in our household, but I don’t think that’s the choice for everyone. Landline phones are handy for contacting a household…as it is, we have to decide whose phone number to give out in situations where either of us is actually the contact. (Again the kid question rears its head, especially in emergency situations.) A landline can still be impressively cheap, too. If three-quarters of the country is still doing it, there must be some pretty good reasons why.
  8. Music CDs – assumes that good internet connection and fancy phone again, plus I personally don’t trust that “they” won’t try to revoke my music someday. I own those discs…some of them for quite a few years now. I can always turn them into files, as I have before, whenever I want, without asking anyone’s permission. If I were an audio snob, I’d probably have a big box of LPs, too.
  9. Satellite radio – have never used it, don’t much care, although I’ll note again that he assumes not just a nice phone/etc and mobile broadband (not available in huge swaths of the country), but a fairly new car or at least car stereo. We have a car less than 10 years old that doesn’t even have a CD player. Then again, if you’re upgrading from one high-end luxury to another, I guess it’s not that big a deal.
  10. Redundant registration – seems strangely nitpicky against all these other things, but I will note that ZIP code doesn’t always correlate with a single city, or vice versa. I think there are three different cities partially inside of our zip code, and the city I live in has several different zip codes. It’s actually a fairly tricky problem.

In general, his list of “obsolete” basically means, “can be replaced with the newest high-end stuff.” It doesn’t much take into account families (6 & 7), people with tight budgets  (2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9), people outside of major metropolitan areas (7 & 9, at least) or people who don’t like cell phones (4, 6, 7). And it puts a surprising amount of trust in the “cloud” one way or another, which doesn’t seem entirely warranted.

So: obsolete? Not so much, at least not in the world I’m living in.

I probably didn’t need to respond to such a thin troll of an article, but it was getting on my nerves. There, now I can let it go. 🙂

Musings

Christmas Eve. My vacation is tick-ticking away; I go back to work on Monday after nearly two weeks out…only the second week was a vacation, though. I spent all of Wednesday & Thursday last week, plus a sizable chunk of Tuesday, knocked out flat by a cold. Someone asked me if it was H1N1, and definitely nothing so dramatic. Just a really ugly headcold: sore throat, tired, snotty, headachy, with a lot of time spent either sleeping or crashed out in the recliner watching nature shows on Netflix. (The entire Life of Mammals with David Attenborough. I found his quirky delivery startlingly relaxing.)

Which pretty neatly crashed out our plans for card & gift-giving…even writing an Xmas letter to put online! (Yes, C had the same thing, a few days ahead of me…he spent the weekend before out of commission.) Just in the last two days I’ve started manically baking cookies. We’ll make cards together, probably, and then figure out how to pack off cards & cookies. I don’t know if that’s we’re known as lousy as sending holiday cards, or if it actually notes a change in culture, but we only got three cards this year: Mom, C’s folks, and Aunt Susie. At work we switched from paper cards to ecards, and hardly got any cards from our usual vendors. BTW, eCard module for Drupal was pretty decent, although if I’d had/made more time ahead of time I’d’ve made some changes to the module.

This time last year we were slogging through the Snowpocalypse; happily this Christmas looks to be mostly sunny and not too cold. (Last week was WARM and rainy; week before was freezing, but unbelievably dry.) Something in the air has been reminding me of holidays when I was a kid, with the low hazy sun and cool still air. A little colder, obviously, but the same feel. I’m thrilled to be heading the other side of the Solstice. Waking up “late” and having it still be dark out is the pits. If I sleep until the sun wakes me, it’s past 8:30.

I did a tiny bit of decorating, then spent the afternoon making cookies while C, L & J played Gauntlet Seven Sorrows; J brought over a basket of snacks, so plenty to nibble on while hanging out. A lovely way to spend Christmas Eve, all things considered. Happy holidays to everybody. 🙂

Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much

Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much

author: Maggie Mahar
name: Elaine
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2006
rating: 3
read at: 2009/12/10
date added: 2009/12/23
shelves: economics, health, history, non-fiction, politics
review:
Alas, I can’t remember a whole lot, since I read it back before the hell-cold, but I do know that it was a good compliment to The Healing of America, with lots of detail about our current system.

Flashman (The Flashman Papers, #1)

Flashman (The Flashman Papers, #1)

author: George MacDonald Fraser
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.99
book published: 1969
rating: 4
read at: 2009/12/22
date added: 2009/12/23
shelves: fiction, history
review:
Discovered this book via an Ask Metafilter question, looking for books about the British empire in Afghanistan. It’s fiction, but with rich historical detail. Wild tale of a obnoxious fellow, a liar and a weasel who somehow always turns out looking like a hero. (As an aside, First Afghan War: horrifying.)

The Survey for People Who Make Websites

A List Apart is running their 3rd annual survey…if you’re a website creator, go take it. (Dylan & I have played with the data in the past to muse on theories we have about web generalists, so I’ll be interested to see the progression of data over time.)

I took the 2009 survey and so should you!

The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science

The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science

author: Richard Holmes
name: Elaine
average rating: 4.03
book published: 2008
rating: 4
read at: 2009/12/09
date added: 2009/12/11
shelves: biography, history, non-fiction, science, writing
review:
An examination of (primarily English) science from Joseph Banks to Charles Darwin — using the round-the-world voyages of each as bookends, follows the early professionalization of science as it evolved from "natural philosopher" to "scientist." The other major figures of the book are William Herschel, his sister Caroline, and Humphrey Davy. Fascinating biographies: lots of folks literary and scientific wander through. I would have liked to have seen more of the Romantic poets, although I think he’s written about them in previous books.

He makes a good case for more of an overlap of science and poetry, one that gives me a great deal of personal satisfaction. Davy actually wrote some beautiful poetry, along with messing around with nitrous oxide and inventing the safety lamp. It makes me want to simultaneously write more poetry and watch a bunch of PBS science shows. 🙂

Wonderfully evocative writing, although the pacing was a little jumpy, and it assumed more knowledge of late 18th/early 19th century British history than I’ve got. Still, definitely recommended.

Rosemary and Rue (October Daye, #1)

Rosemary and Rue (October Daye, #1)

author: Seanan McGuire
name: Elaine
average rating: 3.76
book published: 2009
rating: 4
read at: 2009/12/10
date added: 2009/12/11
shelves: fantasy, fiction
review:
A clever little book, sort of a hard-boiled detective novel but with fairies. And not happy cute Victorian fairies, but complex dangerous pre-Christian fairies. Strong narrative voice. Compelling enough to keep me up until 11:30 last night finishing it up.

My top books of 2009

There’s still a couple of weeks left, but I was adding books to my Goodreads list and thought I’d pull out this year’s 5-star books. It’s interesting to go back and see what I thought was incredibly good over the course of the year….

In alphabetical order, with some notes about what’s stuck with me since reading:

  • The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America Is Tearing Us Apart
    Read right at the beginning of the year, and I still agree with my 5-star assessment. This book is incredibly important in understanding the social and political landscape of the US now.
  • The Healing of America: A Global Quest for Better, Cheaper, and Fairer Health Care
    I think the clearest thing I’ve read on health care ever. If nothing else, helpful in providing a framework for understanding proposals. Don’t have time to read the book? He also did a Frontline special.
  • The How of Happiness: A Scientific Approach to Getting the Life You Want
    Embarrassed to say that the lessons I got from this one have faded over the course of the year. I should probably go buy a copy.
  • The Invention of Air
    This one pairs nicely with The Age of Wonder, which I just finished — same period of history, similar focus on the cross-over of science and other endeavors (politics in one, poetry in the other). If you only have time to read one, though, go with this one. Shorter, more direct connections to the present, and fabulous writing style.
  • The Magician’s Book: A Skeptic’s Adventures in Narnia
    The particulars didn’t stick much — had to reread my review to remember why I was so enthusiastic — but while I was reading it, the book got right inside my head.
  • Nine Gates (Breaking the Wall, #2)
    Sequel to the one listed below. I really enjoyed the narrative voice and the integration of magic. Also, these were the last novels I read before vanishing into NaNoWriMo, and the author’s techniques were very helpful as I got started, especially the descriptions of magic in practice. Am anxious to get book #3.
  • Sea of Poppies: A Novel
    Big and sprawling; my review calls it “strangely compelling.” 🙂 I’m wondering if the complex POV work in this one subconsciously affected my writing last month.
  • Thirteen Orphans (Breaking the Wall, #1)
    Ditto to my earlier thoughts.
  • This Is Not a Game: A Novel
    Walter Jon Williams continues to be awesome. Seriously, I actually had a hard time putting this one down…a few lunches went over their usual time because I wanted to read “just one more little bit.”

Some 4-star special interest honorable mentions…

  • The Weather of the Pacific Northwest. Gorgeous and fascinating reading, and the tidbits that stuck have turned out to be useful in my day to day life. If you’re a local, definitely check it out.
  • No Plot? No Problem!: A Low-Stress, High-Velocity Guide to Writing a Novel in 30 Days. For the writers in the crowd. Lots of good advice and encouragement, even if you’re not trying to write for NaNo.
  • Kneadlessly Simple: Fabulous, Fuss-Free, No-Knead Breads. I only managed to make one recipe out of this book before it had to go back to the library, but that one was fantastic. Took a few attempts to work out decent timing, but after that, very easy and very tasty.

One final thought: virtually all of my reading in 2009 was courtesy of the library. (I bought Dreams from My Father at the Austin airport.) If you’re in Oly, consider joining the Friends of the Olympia Library. It’s only $5! (Why yes, I am the secretary. Why do you ask? ;)) If you’re not already taking advantage of the great services of your local library, wherever it may be…well, you should.