Wanderings

Keith P. Graham is a Programmer, Harmonica player and Science Fiction Writer. This blog reflects these and many other areas of interest.
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24 July 2008

John Brunner - Catch a Falling Star

Bad Cell Phoine Picture of Catch a Falling Star I used Brunner's Shockwave Rider as required reading in a course I taught in Artificial Intelligence. In 1975 Brunner was able to predict the WWW, if not in specific details, in attitude. The book describes a world wide interactive information network. He was the first person to describe a "worm" or self replicating computer program that is able become part of the network and change its behavior. 

15 to 20 years before writing Shockwave Rider, Brunner was producing a large number of books and short stories. He always was prolific and wrote sometimes four books a year. Many of these were short novels, about 60,000 words or less, that appeared in Ace Doubles. I collect Ace Doubles and I must have 20 Brunner titles.

Unfortunately, these are not always a good read. Brunner often writes in a very dry style, almost as if he is affecting an accent. His characters have little depth and the best that you can do is follow his complex plots and hope to understand motivations. The better books were written in the second half of his career, but many later novels were rewrites of his early works with extra material added with a new title.

I grabbed a book from my unread pile after I finished Louis L'Amour's The Man From the Broken Hills, a very typical, but forgettable book from L'Amour's Sackett series. The Man From the Broken Hills took only two days, three and a half 50 minute bus rides, to finish.

Catch a Falling Star is a rewrite of his earlier (1959) The Hundredth Millennium, which I might have read since the plot of Catch a Falling Star seems familiar. It is short, about 70,000 words, by today's standards. Brunner notes that The Hundredth Millennium was shorter still.

The story is about a man, 100,000 years in the future, who discovers that a star will destroy the Earth in about 288 years. He sets out to find out who can help him avoid this catastrophe, but since it will happen after they have died, no one cares. Brunner's characters wander through a strange world where people live with genetically engineered plants and animals that provide for their every need. There are History Trees that have the racial memories of men going back thousands of years. These trees have all of mankind's memories, but seduce those that enter them and when people come out they are obsessed with some period of time.

Brunner's amazing imagination drags us along from incident to incident, but the characters mostly just worry about the future and don't interact emotionally on any level. Their names are odd and hard to remember and I found myself wondering which character was speaking many times. They all talk and act pretty much the same.

I have about 25 pages to go so I do not yet know if the main character Creohan (or is it Chalyth?) finds a way to divert the star. I suspect that they will use the history tree to discover an artifact from the past or contact descendants of those that traveled to the stars. Perhaps they will just give up and the decadent cultures left on Earth will die a well deserved death.

As you see, I am not thrilled with the book. Brunner did so much better in his books Stand on Zanzibar and The Sheep Look Up. I read his Squares of the City in the late 1960s, which was a book based on a famous chess game. Each character corresponds to a piece in the game and every plot point reflects a move. It was fascinating as it had the game moves in the book and I could follow the plot on a chess board.

Catch a Falling Star is mostly a quick rewrite of a mediocre novel making it a longer mediocre novel. I was disappointed.


Boom

It's raining heavy this morning. I slipped on the wet terrazzo floor in the lobby of office building where I work. I hit hard. Nothing is broken, but boy am I sore. The longer I sit in this chair, the more my back hurts. It is going to be a long day.

I did not spill my coffee. Years of training in office arts has taught me that the coffee cup comes first. I held on to it and kept it upright the whole way down.

23 July 2008

Blues/R&B for Barack Obama

Sam Waymon is providing the music for an Obama voter registration drive in Nyack at the Gazebo in Memorial Park. Sam is the brother of the Late Nina Simone and an avid Obama supporter.

I've played harmonica with Sam many times at the jams in Nyack and other places. I hope the weather holds out, he's a good guy and the music will be great.

Tuesday, August 5 at 6:30 PM
Memorial Park (Nyack, NY)
The Gazebo at Memorial Park

Speaking of good music, My brother Larry will at Casa Del Sol in Nyack this Saturday at 9:30pm. This is fun because the swing dancers come and tear the place up. It's free, so stop by. If you recognize me, I'll buy you a beer.

Search Craigslist with Google

I made a form to search all CraigsList.org locations with one click. This should be useful to someone.

Search Craigslist with Google

Tor.com

I signed up with Tor.com's community because I see many other SF people there. I used the handle JT30, which is a special kind of microphone. harmonica players know me as that JT30 guy.

I am still trying to figure out what to do with the Tor site, but I have been assured that it is a good thing.

Tor.com Keith's Profile - JT30

Chitika Ads Hijacked my Site

The link above is to a discussion forum that had similar problems to the ones I had with Chitika. The comments on my original posts from a Chitika rep claim that this was impossible, but I have found several instances in the last two weeks where Chitika ads were hijacking web pages and causing pop-ups - even porn.

I used to like Chitika and I haven't pulled it from one of my low yield websites, but I will not put it on my higher quality sites until I get some kind of guarantee that they will prevent this kind of behavior in the future.

From Chitika's own site:
Chitika is using a Right Media reseller to fill their CPM inventory. right Media's inventory is full of RON crap....spam ads, blinking OMG YOU WON ads, popups, malware....just crap. You're supposed to be better than this, chitika. Whoever made this decision, from the top down, is a fool.
22 July 2008

Science Fiction Review from Antiquarian Weird Tales

Chris Perridas has been scanning the front page of old Science Fiction Review newsletters and posting them to his blog. This was a very good zine of reviews, news and gossip that was produced in the 1960s and many of the early issues were typed by hand and copied or printed offset. Erica produced a newsletter around the same time for Sweepstakes, using the same technology.

Chris only does the first page, which is intriguing, as there are some great articles. One by Andre Norton explains the development of plot and characters in some of her novels, including Witch World.

The January 1965 has a review of Davy, by Edgar Pangborn - one of my favorite books by one of my favorite writers. It has a review of Heinlein's collection The Menace from Earth.

It has a horrible review of Herbert Kastle's The Reassembled Man.

Now The Reassembled Man is not literature. It is a novel that reflects its time, and I read it recently for the first time. It has aged fairly well. I gave it to a friend who writes screenplays and suggested that it would make a great movie. He read it and did not see it. I thought about writing the screenplay myself. In any case it does not deserve the review that Robert Franson gave it.


Chris Perridas: Antiquarian Weird Tales
21 July 2008

Chitika Premium problems

I turned off most of my Chitika ads today. Their new premium ads were the cause of the browser hijacks. They never did more than a dollar a day for me on about 8,000 exposures, but I considered this to be a problem with the fact that I placed them below the fold, near the bottom of a long pages.

What they did was resell their ad space to doubleclick and other advertisers. Along the way they were not very careful about who they were selling to, because the ads resulted in the execution of javascript that produced popups and in some cases page redirection to other websites.

Popups suck and I never want them on my page. Browser redirects are unacceptable. I opted out big time. I am now going through and removing Chitika code from websites. I don't need users calling me up about problems for a lousy dollar a day.

Tor.com

Tor.com has a new website. It is a nicely done CMS (Content Management System), likely Joomla or Drupal. I really like the way it was put together. It has everything you would need at an SF site, without obnoxious flash that would get in the way. I really like the Buck Rogers rocket that they use for a logo.

I generally don't like reading on a computer screen (I do it for a living and I don't like doing it for pleasure.) I will sign up and give a few stories a try. The bookmark is going in my "good morning" folder so when I click "Open All In Tabs" this will be there waiting for me.

I have experimented with CMS systems for use as webzines. They are difficult to modify, but very easy to use. Another Realm used a CMS, but did not keep up with the security patches and the site was hacked, bringing it down for months. E. Jim uses geeklog for his blog. I used geeklog and liked it. Here at work we use Joomla for the Intranet as it rates as having fewer security breaches over the years.

The main problem with CMS systems is that you have to hire a geek to modify and maintain them. It is not something the average webzine editor has time to do.

Tor.com / Science fiction and fantasy / Weblog, short fiction, art, and discussion
20 July 2008

Harpamps Hacked

My site harpamps was hijacked. It seems to have come from one of my advertisers. Someone made some kind of malicious javascript that sends  browsers to another web site. I am the process of removing everything I can from the site.

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19 July 2008

Pompton Lakes Town Wide Garage Sale

It seems that I have been seeing a lot of New Jersey's Lakes lately. This is fine with me. I like lakes.

We went down to Pompton Lakes - about 30 miles down 287 from Nyack. There was no traffic today. The price of gas has hit $4 and like someone turned off a switch, the traffic stopped.

We went to at least 50 garage sales. It seemed that at least 25% of the homes were having a garage sale. There were lots of sales that we didn't even get to. Every block had two or three sales.

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I bought some odd stuff like a USB hub and US government publication on ethanol from 1980. (I want to make a post just on this book).

Erica found a few frames and an antique black walnut mirror for $8.

Here are some pictures of Pompton Lake. It was hot and hazy.

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Justine's Bird House

Justine sent a birdhouse from Martha's Vineyard. It's a Claire Murray design - hoity-toity.

I screwed a 1/2 inch steel pipe flange on the bottom with an 8" nipple. I used a 10 foot 3/4 inch electrical conduit as a post. The conduit is galvanized and should last 20 years.

 

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This is the view from the back deck.

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18 July 2008

Astound Me

I complained to Amazon and worked out the glitch that had kept my CD in limbo. Here it is for sale. I received the sample by Fed Ex today. It is three stories that I recorded. I am afraid that my voice is a little flat and uninteresting. I have received a few nice reviews from listeners, though.

Save your money, unless you are very rich, then you can buy a dozen. I think I make about a buck on each one I sell. The CD probably costs Amazon about 50 cents. I am guessing that Amazon makes about 6$ on each sale after all the overheads are charged.

Astound Me

I just found the Astound Me MP3 Download on Amazon.

Jess Manafort and Stella Maeve Podcast


Stella, the only Movie Star that I know, is in this podcast.

Jess Manafort & Stella Maeve Podcast

More Merged Movies

Jed:

The Picture of Dorian Gray's Anatomy: a specific part of Dorian never ages....

Don Quixote Ugly: a knight walks into a bar...

The Executioner's Torch Song Trilogy: serial killer meets drag queen and has epiphany...ok, not really, he just kills him

The Sixth Sense and Sensibility: M. Night Shamalamadingdong's romantic comedy of a boy who sees dead people in 19th century England


Robert:

"Misery Love Company"
Bobby Baby meet his biggest date ever. Watch for Elaine Stritch in a cameo role. Scr: Stephen King Mus: Stephen Sondheim

"Das Glass Bottom Boot"
German submarine crew experience the tedium and terrors of boat touring in Florida. Feat. Doris Day, Arthur Godfrey. Dir: Wm. Peterson

"Little Big Man O' War"
Just after WWI, Jack Crabb finds himself riding a prize-winning race horse. Later he and the horse retire to a stud farm.

"The Road to Iraq"
Camels, oil, dictators, explosions. Featuring two songs by Dorothy Lamour.

"Annie Get Your Guns Of Navarone"
Annie Oakley takes down the fortress while firing behind her back using a mirror. Gregory Peck, David Niven, Ethel Merman.

"Harry Potter and The Magic Christian"
Harry, Ron, and Hermione search for Valdemort on a trans-Atlantic cruise ship. Peter Sellers, Ringo Starr, Daniel Radcliffe

"Five Easy Mystic Pizzas"
Robert returns home to Gloucester, MA from the oils fields of Texas upon hearing his father took ill while working a double at the shop. Hold the chicken salad calzone.

"Memoirs of a Geisha Boy" The life a Geisha presented in flashbacks as she waits to start the telethon. Miyoshi Umecki, Jerry Lewis

Twitter / kpgraham

If you notice, there is a twitter this button now on each post. I am testing this. The bad thing is that it does a "tinyurl" on the url so it fits nice in a twitter line. Good for users, bad for SEO purposes.

I am not a big fan of twitter. I suspect that you already know enough about my life and would not want to know my thoughts and mood every few seconds. This microblog thing is not such a useful tool for me.

It would be, however, a good way to get traffic. I will make a page explaining how to add it to any web page next week. It will be more than one line long so I won't be using twitter.

Twitter / kpgraham

Twitter bookmarklet test

Excuse me while I use the blog to test a twitter bookmarklet.

This might be a twitter this button

Writing for an Extraterrestrial Audience

SPACE.com has a interesting article about writing for ET.
there is a critical difference from other creative writing classes. The intended audience for this class — if it exists at all — lives on a planet circling a distant star
SPACE.com -- Writing for an Extraterrestrial Audience

Jim C. Hines - I am the Very Model of a Modern SF Novelist

Jim C. Hines has created some very clever words for this Gilbert and Sullivan ditty. (Here's just 4 lines).

In fact, when I know what is meant by "grok" and "droid" and "FTL",
When I can tell at sight the sword Excalibur from Anduril,
When twists in stories I perceive by reading just one paragraph,
And when I know precisely how to pen a clever epigraph,

I am the Very Model of a Modern SF Novelist