Archive for December, 2009

Project Runway Proves Parkinson’s Law

Wikipedia: Parkinson’s Law

It comes down to:

Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.

Most of the design challenges in Project Runway seem to be one-day things with a little bit of work on the second day when they have to present on the runway. And most of the time, the designers get it done.

Yet, when they give them 2 full days for a challenge, the designers still run right up to the deadline, even though it seems like with the extra time they shouldn’t be sweating it quite as much. Is it just that they spend more time designing at the beginning because they know they have more time? Even if that is the case, it only serves to prove Parkinson’s Law.

It’s sort of funny because it was started as an economic principle, but as a general rule it applies to time management in a way that I admit I hadn’t thought about until listening to Tim Ferriss’ 4-Hour Workweek

Another example: I participate in a fantasy basketball roundtable, which is run on a weekly basis, with the deadline being Tuesday night. Guess how many people (including me) email their submissions at 11:59pm? Yeah. I realize that’s not an exact example of Parkinson’s Law, but if the deadline was Monday night, would it still take until Tuesday night to get it done? No. It would be done on Monday at 11:59pm – a full 24 hours earlier.

Young Writers…

Weren’t we all once?

The Babbling Flow of a Fledgling Scribbler: Young Writers…ROCK ON!!.

I feel like I could have written this post myself…

I recently stumbled across a blog with a post written about college students and why they shouldn’t try so hard to get published while in college–because they’ll miss too much of the “college” experience. … After college I got a job in marketing. And then in Government consulting. And then in teaching (math, of all things). I wasted those five years, nine actually, if you count the four while in school. If I’d focused on writing during that time, maybe I’d already have a few books in the stores.

Myself, I did a lot of idea development during my college and post-college years. I guess if you count the start of my wanting to be a professional writer for real as 2007, then really, that’s only 3 years post-college, but I went to college for 6 years when you include undergrad and grad school. So, all told, I also “wasted” nine years, just like Sara.

My one comfort is that I can usually look up writers I like on Wikipedia and find that they are a lot older than I am. Of course, most of them also have a bibliography that go back a ways, but I try to ignore that so I can tell myself that it’s okay to if I have to write for a few more years before I actually get anything worthy of publishing.

The Evolution of Romance

or: What Will/Has Become of The Mixtape in The Digital Age?

I’m working on a playlist for NYE. I also just recently watched Season 1 of (the excellent) How I Met Your Mother, in which (not ironically at all) Barney brings his “Get Psyched Mix” along for the NYE ride. His mix is on a CD. That was 2005.

While I firmly believe that giving someone a Mix CD was never even in the realm of romantic… what are the choices these days?

“Guys, I’m going to make her a mix SD card?”

I suppose if you wanted to make a “Mix iPod Shuffle”, that might say something since the cheapest Shuffle you can get is $59. Spending that kind of cash on a girl or guy when you’re in high school or college (or just out of college) means there’s some seriousity involved.

Now, sure, there is some coolness involved in this product (which, okay, might actually work):

I like that you can hand write the track list on there and make notes and put smiley faces, stars, and hearts in the margins. Still…

So much of the romance left when the mix went from tape to CD. Any chump can bring up iTunes, pick 14 songs, and click Burn. But do people even use CDs any more even to transfer music to someone else?

Back in the analog age, when you made a 90-minute mixtape, it actually took 90 minutes (at least) cause you had to dub each song over to the new tape. There was an obvious investment of time in the end product that was created.

Muxtape had it going until the Crushing Boot of Legal smashed them like infant flower. At least there you had to upload all the songs you wanted, so it took a little bit of time and patience.

My favorite site, Lala, lets you embed playlists on a website, but that requires that you have a website, or else you basically have to send it as a Facebook message. Of course, youngsters these days might think that getting a playlist sent in a Facebook message is the height of romance. I mean, there’s some that think that sending nude cameraphone pictures is a good way to seduce someone, right?

The WriteRunner: Iapetus999’s Top 9 Writer’s Blogs for 2009

The WriteRunner: Iapetus999’s Top 9 Writer’s Blogs for 2009.

Found this because I’m subscribed to the #1 blog on Iaepetus999’s (aka Andrew Rosenberg) list, Edittorrent.

I’m looking forward to adding a bunch of new writing advice blogs to my Google Reader.

I’m also fairly interested in subscribing to Mr. Rosenberg’s blog, because he says “Dawn’s Rise is the first novel that I’m going to publish” which kind of sounds like he’s going to publish it himself. As someone who’s trying to decide which route to go while finishing up a bunch of projects, I’m always interested to see how people execute on different publishing plans and the corresponding level of success they achieve. Also, since he’s writing Sci-Fi and Steampunk Romance, it’ll be kind of fun to be on the cutting of reading new genre work from a new writer.

SF Signal: ‘Judgement’ – The eBook That’s Both Free and Cheap

SF Signal: ‘Judgement’ – The eBook That’s Both Free and Cheap.

The story here obviously isn’t really about the book. You can click through if you want a description of thigns like plot and characters.

What really matters is that John at SFSignal says:

You can either buy the novel in various eBook formats at Smashwords for the more-than-reasonable price of $2…or, you can read it online for free.

This flies in the face of conventional wisdom that says people will not pay for what they can get for free. Will it work? The thinking is that people will pay for what they like, especially if it’s cheap enough. I’d be interested in hearing a few months from now how well this works…

I have to point out, though, that the “read it online for free” part means you have to read it on the author’s website on a really, really, really… really, really, really long web page. So, really, it’s not an experiment to see if people will pay for something they can get for free because what they get for free is not the equivalent of what they pay for. It’s more of a test of how much people are willing to punish themselves before they spend a small amount of money.

Of course, I did a quick test, and was able to get a high quality version of the book simply by copying the really (really, really, really) long web page into an Open Office Writer document. I’m pretty sure there’s a script the author could embed on the site that would prevent people from selecting and/or copying text – if he really wanted to see if people would pay for something they could read online for free.

Of course (number 2), it would also be interesting to have 2 versions and do split testing to see if you get better conversions to the pay version from the site that doesn’t allow copying, or if people would just give up and not even read the book. As Tim O’Reilly says, “Obscurity is a far greater threat to authors and creative artists than piracy.” (h/t: Cory Doctorow)

SF Signal: SFFMeta: The MetaCritic for SF/F/H Book Fans

SF Signal: SFFMeta: The MetaCritic for SF/F/H Book Fans.

So, this is kind of cool. It will be a lot better once they have more than 3 review sites to aggregate from. I was looking at the All-Time High Scores list and was like: Cool! Easy To-Read list. Then I realized that a few – oh wait, most – of the books only have 3 reviews compiled. So maybe Caine Black Knife isn’t the #1 book of All-Time. Though it does get 4.5 stars on Amazon.

I Don’t Know How They Did It

You hear how all the Great Writers (okay, yeah, not all of them) were big time drinkers, right? Here’s me after a few glasses of wine trying to compose a sentence:

propelled by a massive amount of compressed air and magnoelectricity were absorbed by a Quietwater shield around Jensu.

MAGNOELECTRICITY?

What the Eff did I study in college? Certainly couldn’t have been any combination of Physics, Quantum Electronics, or – I don’t know – Electromagnetics!

No more drinking and writing.

Panda Shops at Hot Topic

hot_topic_panda

Click for full size.

Thanks to Infinite Comic

When Science Fiction Becomes Mainstream

Yes, by now, we should all realize that Science Fiction is being viciously and excessively co-opted by the Mainstream. But, when things like Wolverine and Transformers are Action, what does that leave for Science Fiction?*

In her article on the Internet Review of Science Fiction, Kristine Kathryn Rusch says:

“I think science fiction as a genre will be dead in just a few years.”

I think a few years is a little too “shock and awe” to be realistic. But the rest of the arguments she makes in the article are valid.

Then there’s Paul over at Barnes & Noble’s Unabashedly Bookish who quotes Orson Scott Card saying that science fiction is “no longer a cutting-edge genre – the edge is now in fantasy.”

And while that’s certainly plausible, it could also be that the genre-melding of SF and Fantasy that Paul claims is happening, is, well, actually happening. Or, if not a genre-melding, then at least a large blurring of the line between the two:

I believe some of the very best – and most innovative – science fiction will actually be categorized as epic fantasy. Take Ken Scholes’ Psalms of Isaak saga, for example. It’s actually post-apocalyptic science fiction cloaked in grand-scale fantasy. Last year, reading the first installment in the series, Lamentation, was an almost surreal experience. I knew almost immediately that I had stumbled across a novel that was not only surely destined to be a classic but also the beginning of a series that could very well redefine both science fiction and fantasy.

I mean, was there not a time when quote-unquote Paranormal Fantasy was actually Horror because it had vampires in it?

And then there’s the never-ending question of where Star Wars fits in. Since it takes place “a long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away”, then isn’t its setting better compared to a fantasy world (like Game of Thrones as an easy example)? I actually believe it should be, because they’re basically battling it out with laser-broadswords, and flying around on X-wings instead of dragons using robots instead of faeries. But since “literary SF” (as opposed to “TV/Movie SF”) had been growing for so long when Star Wars broke out, it’s literary scholars headed further and further into the Hard SF category, where everything has to be explained (or else derided). Did George Lucas have to explain how “Light Speed”, or “Light Sabers”, or “Light Side” worked within the limits of traditional physics? Certainly not.

And here again I use Kristine Kathryn Rusch so as to not have to rebuild arguments already made:

I read fiction for entertainment, relaxation, and enjoyment. If I want to work, I read the history, literary essays, biography, science, and legal books that grace my shelves.

Last week, for the first time in more than a decade, I saw an sf novel on the bookstore shelves that made my barbarian self reach for the book with joy. The cover had a picture of a derelict space ship. The back cover blurb talked about far futures and finding artifacts in outer space. The cover quote said, “In the old tradition of Astounding.” … the novel promises the very things that Star Wars gives: An escape, a journey into a new yet familiar world, entertainment. A good read.

The things you still find in fantasy fiction. The things that sf jettisoned in the erroneous cold equations practiced by the New Wave.

Thank you.

And again:

“Good” sf can retire to the specialty press where the Science Fiction Village can read and discuss it. It’s time to return to the gosh-wow, sense-of-wonder stories that sf abandoned when it added literary values to its mix, the kind of stories that Star Wars, and by extension, Star Trek, Stargate, and all those other media properties have had all along.

I’m happy that some people are acknowledging the need for some sort of alteration to the Science Fiction genre as it stands. I’m busy (at least, I try to be) writing a space opera, an advanced-tech-future action serial, a post-apocalyptic quest, a surreal futuristic adventure, and story which is essentially characters representing science fiction and fantasy battling it out on a global scale. I plan to give no explanation about the technology in any of those other that what is necessary in a Star Wars sense.

When Science Fiction becomes Mainstream, you have to give people what they want. It’s not selling out if you are still writing what you want to write. It’s just a happy coincidence (and happens to be a good business practice).

* Honestly, I’d rather have things I write classified as Action as opposed to Science Fiction because then you can get all those Mainstream people who don’t realize that they like Science Fiction to check it out, where they might not be apt to have a look if they see that it’s marketed as Science Fiction. Yes, Science Fiction may be Mainstream, but call it Science Fiction, and a lot of people will still think it’s for dorks who live in their mom’s basements and play D&D. (Kind of like bloggers, that way)

Dragon Dictation for Your iPhone

Lifehacker recently informed me that Dragon (the people who brought you Dragon NaturallySpeaking) now have a dictation iPhone app!

500x_dragon

No more calling my Google Voice number and dealing with their fairly inaccurate transcriptions. I’ve already downloaded the app and given it a quick tire-kick. It’s super simple, but that’s really what you want when you’re On The Go (or doing something else where you want to use an iPhone for dictation instead of something more complex). It’s functions include: Recording (and subsequently transcribing), Typing (you can add text to your transcription via the virtual keyboard), and Sending (you can Email, TXT, and Copy to Clipboard).

The only drawback (and this could be an issue if you’re doing something in a hurry) is that if you close the app (i.e., go to the iPhone home screen to access another app) you lose the current dictation. In other words, you have to make sure to send your transcription somewhere right after you record it, or that brilliant idea to for the vampire with Irritable Bowel Syndrome will be lost forever.

Of course, the fact that the app is free pretty much makes up for any shortcomings (of which, as I said, there appears to be only one). And free is a very good price.

tom-peterson-gloria-too

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