Embrace the new

Categories: Culture

Speaking of Quicksilver, Neal Stephenson has caused a Quicksilver wiki (original) to be generated. Clever man.

September 24, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Follow the gambling

Categories: Politics

California Indian tribes have donated $6.7 million to various recall candidates (original) this year. Most of that’s gone to Bustamante (and he’s had to return (original) most of them). Schwarzenegger has reacted with attack ads (original) directed at the tribal gaming lobby; deeply ironic, considering his anti-immigration stance. Then again, he’s not really anti-immigration; he’s pro European males. It’s ok to immigrate illegally (original) if you’re him.

September 24, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

A distant roar

Categories: Sports

Earlier tonight, while I was sitting around enjoying an evening of daring adventure, we heard a huge cheer from across the Boston rooftops. Brant’s place is not far from Fenway, so it was pretty clear what was going on. About fifteen minutes later, there was another cheer — this one even bigger, and longer, and more passionate. It was a three run homer in the bottom of the ninth, and a homer in the tenth (original). The reporters are calling it the comeback victory of the year. I knew, from the sound and timbre of the crowd, that it must have been something of the sort. From the time I heard the second cheer to the time I got home and read the news, I had the warm glow of satisfaction that comes from knowing the Red Sox did something spectacular. And now, I’m just happy that the sounds of cheering from across the Boston rooftops told me what was going on. ...

September 24, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Kill a horse

Categories: Reviews

Quicksilver is so damned big. My god, it’s big. It’s 900 pages, and it’s really really big, and it’s the first volume of three. And it’s Neal Stephenson, so you know it’s going to be even more wordy than that. I’m about halfway through, thanks to an early shipment to a bookstore which will remain nameless. The book’s divided into thirds, more or less. The first third is Daniel Waterhouse’s story, which can in no way be considered to have a plot. Halfway through the second third, one character mentions the picaresque genre, in which a random character wanders through an interesting landscape without direction. That would be the first third of the book. Just to put a cherry on top of it, the story opens quite late in Waterhouse’s life, and then proceeds to tell us all about his earlier history in flashback. So no tension, unless you count the pirates. ...

September 23, 2003 · 2 min · Bryant

WISH 65: Workin' for a Living

Categories: Memes

WISH 65 asks about jobs and gaming: Does what you do for a living have any impact on your gaming? Have you had occupational details intrude on your descriptions of how something works? Have you ever dared a player to go “Hotwire a car, then, if that’s how you think it’s done?” I’m a computer guy, but the answer’s really “Nah.” I’ve played Shadowrun, and I don’t really mind that decking is nothing like real computer work — it’s just an analogy for magic anyway, so I can take it at that level happily enough. I don’t mind if someone gets their hacking descriptions wrong, and I generally assume any modern-day game takes place in a slightly alternate universe. ...

September 23, 2003 · 2 min · Bryant

Monday Mashup #10: Dukes of Hazzard

Categories: Memes

Somewhat later than I would like, it’s time for another Monday Mashup. I was forcibly restrained from doing Finnegan’s Wake. People have no sense of fun. So instead I’ll do something classic. Dukes of Hazzard. It’s a fun-loving family who’s continually plagued by incompetent venal lawmen for no good reason — kind of an updated Robin Hood, in a way, but without the political aspect. There are lots of car chases, which are close to any gamer’s heart. Have at it, and damned be him who first cries “Hold, enough!” (Couldn’t figure out how to mash Macbeth, but maybe next week.)

September 23, 2003 · 2 min · Bryant

More linkage

Categories: Navel Gazing

Busy day, but I take time to note the following additions to the list of VeriSign referrals: bareinnocence.net innocencetop.com

September 22, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Western politics

Categories: Reviews

Bravo finished showing the first season of The West Wing, which seems like as good a time as any to talk about it. I’m gonna keep watching, and I might even buy the DVD set. When you get right down to it, Aaron Sorkin knows how to write really good dialogue, and he knows how to pluck the heartstrings. The closing moments of “In Excelsis Deo” are really drop dead beautiful and touching. I care about the characters, too. ...

September 21, 2003 · 2 min · Bryant

Quashing classification

Categories: Culture

This is very sad. The Online Computer Library Center, who owns the Dewey Decimal System, is suing the Library Hotel. Apparently one’s not permitted to use the DDC without purchasing a license. Since Melvil Dewey first published the DDC in 1876, one would think that at least the early editions would have passed out of copyright, but perhaps there’s a wrinkle I don’t understand. It’s still a malicious, nasty lawsuit. “A person who came to their Web site and looked at the way (the hotel) is promoted and marketed would think they were passing themselves off as connected with the owner of the Dewey Decimal Classification system.” ...

September 21, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant

Vamp said were said

Categories: Culture

Haven’t seen Underworld yet, but it’s in the theaters. Here’s one take on the similarities between White Wolf’s mythos and the movie. Here’s someone disagreeing (original). Maybe I’ll get out to see it this afternoon and chime in with my own thoughts. I’m getting PACER access so I can read the court documents, but once you request access they send you the password via regular mail so it may be a couple of days yet before I can go hunting for minutae.

September 21, 2003 · 1 min · Bryant