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Seitan and vegetable stew, quick and easy. I added dumplings . . . I think it could use an additional cup of water, as it scorched a bit while the dumplings steamed.
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I tried to watch this just now, didn’t get very far. The POV seemed so skewed. Is there no responsible way to harvest/extract resources? You wouldn’t know it from the first few minutes and you might not care enough to watch the rest.
Author: paul
old school
But with a week of it ending, I woke with a well-remembered dream, a reasonably good-sized chunk of a story that has so far resulted in 18 pages (double-sided, folded down in half) of longhand scratching.
…It’s an Aurora and I think it’s a student pen, as it has a steel nib (most of them use gold).
NaNoWriMo has come and gone and I sat it out this year. But within a week of it ending, I woke with a well-remembered dream, a reasonably good-sized chunk of a story that has so far resulted in 18 pages (double-sided, folded down in half) of longhand scratching. I think I am able to physically write more this way, as I am a lousy typist (still mostly two fingers and a thumb). I can’t go for long runs of typing, so I lack the ability to keep up. What my penmanship lacks in legibility, it makes up in quantity 😉
Using an old fountain pen I haven’t used in awhile adds to the experience. I don’t like ballpoints or even rollerballs all that much. I’ve had this one forever, it seems. It’s an Aurora and I think it’s a student pen, as it has a steel nib (most of them use gold). Probably just as well for me. Though a browse through eBay turns up all kinds of reasonably priced, good quality pens. The one I have seems to be out of production.
I figure the best way to get this digitized is to read it and then get it transcribed. The kids can’t read it (see note above on legibility) so I have to read it if they’re going to experience it.
what does a successful publisher think of ebooks and ebook hardware?
My advice to publishers and authors is this: figure out what it costs to produce what you sell, estimate what kind of volume you’ll be able to achieve using the best available data, and then set your prices at a level that will deliver a reasonable profit from your efforts.
…This is not to say there won’t be lots o’ Kindles in this season’s holiday loot, but there were a lot of Yugos back in the day as well.
Strangely enough, his opinions dovetail nicely with Charlie Stross’s. Hmm, a successful publisher and an author differ from a department store/distribution channel owner: wonder who to listen to?
My advice to publishers and authors is this: figure out what it costs to produce what you sell, estimate what kind of volume you’ll be able to achieve using the best available data, and then set your prices at a level that will deliver a reasonable profit from your efforts. Sound familiar? That’s what you do in business today. Don’t expect any suspension of the law of gravity. Leave that to the subprime folks, who followed on the heels of the dotcommers in coming up with new math that ultimately didn’t make any sense. [From Bad Math Among eBook Enthusiasts]
This is not to say there won’t be lots o’ Kindles in this season’s holiday loot, but there were a lot of Yugos back in the day as well. Not so many anymore . . .
links for 2007-12-05
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I want to see the answers to this. It’s been a long time since I was involved in this kind of thing, but there are some good questions that can illuminate the candidate’s mind.
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The future will be more evenly distributed and it will need people who can read and write. This is how we can get there.
Stross, Charles: 1, Bezos, Jeff: 0
If Amazon had designed their hardware a little bit differently, then stitched up a deal with Elsevier and the other big publishers of peer-reviewed journals and textbooks, they could have rented pre-loaded Kindles out to students for $1000 a year and shifted container ships full of the things on day 1.
But instead of designing a device that will allow college students to carry all their (expensive) textbooks around in a single notebook-sized package, Amazon seem to be going after the consumers of (cheap) popular literature and fiction.
This is exactly right. $400 is a lot of sub-$10 paperbacks that you can’t loan to friends or give away. This kind of permanence and ease of transport lends itself to some segments and not to others.
The ideal launch market for an ebook reader exists; it’s college students and academics. They’re used to paying over $1000 a year for textbooks and often up to $100 for a single book. The books are big and heavy and they need to carry them around. The books go out of date — an ebook reader with an online subscription service for correcting errata and adding supplementary material would be perfect. If Amazon had designed their hardware a little bit differently, then stitched up a deal with Elsevier and the other big publishers of peer-reviewed journals and textbooks, they could have rented pre-loaded Kindles out to students for $1000 a year and shifted container ships full of the things on day 1.
But instead of designing a device that will allow college students to carry all their (expensive) textbooks around in a single notebook-sized package, Amazon seem to be going after the consumers of (cheap) popular literature and fiction. Readers who are unwilling to spend much more than US $7 on a mass-market novel in the first place, and very unlikely to read more than 100 titles per year. And then they’re expected to put up with intrusive DRM that devalues their purchases, intrusive privacy-invading monitoring, and (to add insult to injury) a $400 entry price before they can join the party. [From Why I don’t like Amazon’s Kindle]
got a second?
Please sign the Online petition – World-Class Education for Washington: Support School Libraries & Information Technology .
links for 2007-12-04
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file under: unintended consequences. Saddam allowed Christians to co-exist with the diverse Muslim factions but with him gone, they are doomed. Heckuva job, Bushie & co.
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almost 16 million words in 30 days?
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Mmmmm, a clear winner here. Easy and inexpensive, but very satisfying. Add some good chevre to each bowl if you want to take it over the top.
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who needs a wish list? This has it all. And there’s still time to shop, if I forward it on quickly 😉
yikes
The post this came from is full of alarming weather-related happenings, but none as awe-inspiring as this:
–Waves as high as 70 feet are reported off the North Oregon coast, and, says KOMO, “the weather buoy off the Columbia Bar become ripped from its tether and is now adrift in the Pacific.”
The post this came from is full of alarming weather-related happenings, but none as awe-inspiring as this:
–Waves as high as 70 feet are reported off the North Oregon coast, and, says KOMO, “the weather buoy off the Columbia Bar become ripped from its tether and is now adrift in the Pacific.” [From Mega Rainstorm All Up in Our Shit]
70 feet?
quote of the day
We’ve got some bad-looking trend lines; all the indicators point toward a system that is more complex, less well-understood and more interdependent. With infrastructure like that, who needs enemies?
We’ve got some bad-looking trend lines; all the indicators point toward a system that is more complex, less well-understood and more interdependent. With infrastructure like that, who needs enemies? [From Security in Ten Years]
links for 2007-12-03
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The Conspiracy to Keep You Poor and Stupid is very much at work: the people who hate the life sciences and cosmology don’t understand statistics either.
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more proof that god loves us and wants us to be happy