Tuesday various

Wednesday various

  • Mike Daisey remembers Steve Jobs:

    Mr. Jobs’s magic has its costs. We can admire the design perfection and business acumen while acknowledging the truth: with Apple’s immense resources at his command he could have revolutionized the industry to make devices more humanely and more openly, and chose not to. If we view him unsparingly, without nostalgia, we would see a great man whose genius in design, showmanship and stewardship of the tech world will not be seen again in our lifetime. We would also see a man who in the end failed to “think different,” in the deepest way, about the human needs of both his users and his workers.

  • Actress sues IMDb for revealing that she’s totally old and gross. It’s an interesting case, although I don’t think IMDB has a responsibility to lie in order to combat Hollywood’s unfortunate age- and sexism.
  • Mysterious paper sculptures [via]
  • I’m sure by now you’ve heard this, but it’s still pretty remarkable: Online Gamers Make Discovery in HIV Battle
  • And finally, learning the wrong lesson from 127 Hours.

Speechifying

I finished playing Portal 2 this afternoon. On the one hand, it’s sort of great to finally be finished, but, on the other hand…dear lord, was that ridiculously entertaining. I think you need to play the first game to really appreciate the second, not just for the massive amount of story it throws at you, but simply because the first one basically teaches you the mechanics of the game. I am highly disappointed to realize I live in a world in which there is not yet (or perhaps ever?) a Portal 3.

I spent the rest of the day doing Saturday-like things. At one point, a very strong wind flung a plastic garbage can lid straight into my back. That thankfully doesn’t happen every day.

Also working on finishing the layout for Kaleidotrope #13, the last print issue, so I can then figure out the actual printing. It’s going to be a small print run, mostly just for subscribers and contributors, but there are twenty stories in this one, so it’s going to be several dozen pages no matter what I do. I think I’ve managed to bring it down to 93 pages, which is still absolutely ridiculous, but hopefully in a not entirely ridiculous sort of way.

This evening, I watched The King’s Speech. It’s quite good, and I think Colin Firth in particular probably deserved his Oscar win last year, but the best picture (and best screenplay) nods do seem a bit much. At times, it seems like a whole lot of effort — of acting, writing, direction, design, etc. — for something that’s…I hesitate to call it inconsequential. Because George VI was an important historical figure, and he came to the crown in tumultuous times. And my hat’s off to anyone who overcomes the very real difficulty of stuttering. But at the same time…the movie’s quite entertaining and well done, but it’s far from brilliant, and this was far from the most important moment in history, or even perhaps the most important aspect of this particular moment.

A paid non-holiday

For some you, today was Columbus Day. For some, it was Thanksgiving. For me, it was pretty much just a regular Monday.

They upgraded me to Windows 7 at work, which is a weird coincidence given that I’d only just seen it for the first time this Saturday when my parents’ new computer arrived. I think I can give it a resounding “Ehh, I guess it’s okay.” I’m less annoyed by some the cosmetic changes than by the things, like my internet bookmarks, that were lost in the transition.

At least I got my Portal 2 password working again.

The trains home…well, not so much. More “signal problems” delayed my train about forty minutes. Considering that I pay a little over $250 a month for a monthly ticket, and these sorts of problems are happening quite often, with little indication that the Long Island Railroad is prepared to do anything but slap a Band-Aid on after the fact, it’s quite aggravating. At least the train was reasonably uncrowded this evening.

You know, with all the people for whom today was a holiday.

Sun day

Less than a week ago, we turned on the heat. Today, I had the air conditioning back on. The weather has been weird, to say the least. Remember when we had those things called seasons? Fall and spring particularly seem like fond and distant memories.

Anyway, beyond spending a lot of the day watching Breaking Bad episodes and thoroughly failing at the Sunday crossword (so far), I spent a little time tidying up the layout and making corrections to the next issue of Kaleidotrope. I think, despite my best efforts at avoiding this, it’s going to be a Very Big Issue Indeed, maybe even 100 pages. That gets a little difficult when you start folding and stapling paper — at the zine’s trim size, 100 pages translates into 25 sheets, plus a card stock cover — but I don’t see how I can avoid it. And really, it’s the last print issue for the foreseeable future, as I make the uncertain transition into online zine, so is it such a terrible thing? Lots of interesting stories this final (printed) go-around.

I also wrote this odd thing:

This is the story of how Coyote tricked the world into never ending.

Once there was a time machine. The elders say that like it ought to mean something, and I guess maybe once it did, when there used to be things like machines, things like time. When there was some kind of real division between what is now and what was then. This machine opened doorways, but not just from one room to another like we see every day, doorways between the crowding dark outside and what life we have in here around the flame. These were doorways in the fabric of reality. That fabric’s grown tattered over the years since then, frayed so much along the edges that we don’t even realize, wouldn’t realize even if we knew how to look, those of us who came after it. These were doorways swung wide between what the elders call “the past” and what we, thanks to Coyote, know only as the now.

I’d like to say I’m getting ahead of myself, which is something that Chief Little Owl likes to say, when it’s him telling this story. But you and I, we know that isn’t possible. We both know we won’t remember this when the story’s done, not the way Little Owl and the others say they remember things, remember a world before the time machine, before the end of time itself. Before this living hell.

But is it hell? If you were born in hell, had known nothing else your entire life, would you know? Would you care? The elders tell us we should care, that time as we who were born after know it is deeply flawed, cracked and broken in Coyote’s fun. The world may never end, but neither will it ever begin. Nothing will ever… They have a word for it, one they say with hushed tones of awe like it means more than it seems, more than those few letters could ever mean.

The elders have a word for this thing that never happens anymore, and they call it change.

But once, they say, there was a time machine, built by a man who imagined himself a god, but whose plans Coyote thought to reveal as demonic. Coyote, the trickster, looked down on this man from the heavens, the black void that used to only be above, not all around, us, and then only in the depths of night. And Coyote grinned, for here was his chance to remake — or maybe unmake — the world.

It’s difficult to tell a story in a world with broken time. We have only the faulty and fading memories of the few who lived in a world before then. To even understand phrases like “before then” we need their guidance. We live in a world as constant as theirs was changing, and we maybe don’t have enough common vocabulary to bridge the gap.

So. Once, when there was a “once,” there was a time machine. It was made to see the world, or perhaps to free the world. What does it matter now? If stories are designed to teach us moral lessons and prevent us from repeating the mistakes of the past, do they have any use beyond a passing distraction in a world where those lessons can never be applied, where those mistakes can never be made anew? Once there was a time machine. Coyote stole it. And with it, he broke time.

The man who invented it, Chief Little Owl calls Smith, which sounds like a strange name in an already strange story. He worked for a man named Jones, but secretly wanted the time machine for his own. Coyote came to make an offer; he told Smith he could take the machine so far into the future that no one, not even Jones, would ever find him. And because Smith wanted the machine, because there was greed in his heart, which had turned twisted and ugly before Coyote even turned his attention to this game — because of this Smith believed Coyote, the trickster who walked amongst us once, and who now is all there is in the great dark that presses in from outside.

I never claimed this story would make any sense.

I’m really not sure what’s going on there. The Native American elements, inspired very directly by a writing prompt, feel like half-remembered window dressing. I took an English class my senior year that was, in part, about the trickster myths, and I find it interesting, but it’s not a tradition I’m heavily steeped in. (Nor would I necessarily recommend anyone reading that term paper I linked to above. I certainly haven’t read it in over ten years.) But, these Sundays are free-writing sessions, forty minutes of putting words to paper (or iPad) without really caring if they’re good or not.

I don’t know if that’s easier or harder since the three-day novel. I definitely had plenty of experience then getting words down without worrying if they were any good or not. (And knowing they probably weren’t but still going forward.)

Anyway, that was Sunday. I didn’t play a single level of Portal 2…though really only because I’m having an issue with my log-in credentials and need Steam/Valve to re-set them. (I love the games, and think I get why they’re on Steam instead of wholly downloaded to my computer, but it does make for some annoying moments like this.)

Yep, that was Sunday.