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ozan (oz) yigit's noteblog at sun. all my text and photography is released under a cc attribution-noncommercial-noderivs license. all my poetry requires explicit permission.



20050609 Thursday June 09, 2005

accelerando.org online accelerando

charlie stross's accelerando.org is now open. the text of his upcoming "Accelerando" will be available for download under a creative commons license later this month (June 2005).

(2005-06-09 18:40:41.0) Permalink Comments [0]

apple, intel, yawn.

here is what i think: this is not a big deal. apple has a medium-grade operating system, mostly first class industrial design, very good to excellent [depending on where you look] UI design. all it needs is a common denominator architecture to compete more effectively, and get more mileage out of the first three. better energy usage, less heat. [drm gets mentioned, but that is just some potentially useful side detail for the future]

recall this timeless exchange:

Brain: Pinky, are you pondering what i'm pondering?
Pinky: Uh, I think so, Brain, but we'll never get a monkey to use dental floss.

[recommended listening while pondering: the modern jazz quartet, blues on bach, atlantic, 1974]

(2005-06-09 18:35:02.0) Permalink Comments [0]

time travel notes: langford's complete critical assembly critical assembly

lately i have been enjoying david langford's witty and sharp white dwarf SF reviews between 1983-91, collected in the complete critical assembly [cosmos books, 2002]. it is a reader's time travel: nearly every review mentions SF books i still have on my shelves or in my overflow boxes. first piece, march 83 review includes asimov's foundation's edge and heinlein's friday both of which i had read that year. [never wanted to re-read them since]

Robert Heinlein's Friday was also enthusiastically greeted, largely because it came as such a relief after his unreadably awful The Number of the Beast.

i could not agree more. NOTB is beyond awful, and it has a special place in my memory because it is the only book that i have ever thrown in the garbage, a place rarely so well deserved. even going back to pulp through recycling is too good for this.

june 83 review includes stanislaw lem's more tales of pirx the pilot which i have re-read a couple of times since. lem is a genius, and i wish some of his other writing would show up in english. [for example, his 2003 dilemmas has yet to be translated. peter swirski had mentioned that there was interest in translating summa but i do not know if there is a translation underway.]

lem dilemmas/dylematy

july 83 review includes amazing randi's the truth about uri geller, flim-flam, and this line:

Even if inclined towards the loony, i mean the uncritical viewpoint, you should consult these books for the devil's advocate arguments. They are important. In a world where an ounce of sensationalism sells better than a ton of rationality any day, they are very important.

two decades later, we are in a lot worse situation, but at least flim-flam is still in print.

jan 84 review includes lem's masterpiece his master's voice, and douglas adams and john lloyd's the meaning of liff. i have been meaning to go back to HMV, and liff of course have been re-released.

massachusetts: those items or particles which people are searching for when they look into their hankies after blowing their noses.

may 84 review includes the robots of dawn, a good but not great followup to asimov's great caves of steel and the naked sun. [i treasure my original pbk copies of these two now because of the cover art as well]

A considerable improvement on the terminally flatulent foundation's edge, it recaptures the feel of those two robotic puzzles which most critics regard as asimov's best books.

[to be continued]

(2005-06-09 12:32:54.0) Permalink Comments [2]

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