feedback for the aspiring author

Through a strange series of events, I discovered that someone I knew from my publishing days in Atlanta had simultaneously worked her way up the ranks to become an associate publisher and (though she would demur) had been key in making the firm as strong as it is today.

I had some childrens’ stories I had written for my own amusement and that of my young’uns, and since I made the above discovery while looking for information on submitting them, I ended up sending the stuff off a few weeks ago. I just received some really helpful feedback this morning.

Now I know where to go next. Thanks, Kathy.

The Vice President of Fun

At my last job, there was some discussion about how best to handle team-building and other extra-curricular activities. The rank and file hate what management comes up with, and management doesn’t trust the other ranks to come up with something reasonable.

So I came up with the VP of Fun. The idea was simple. A job that gets staffed by a new person every three months, and that person has to plan three events. They get a budget, some basic guidelines, a box business cards that have their exciting new title on them, and they go have fun with it.

Like so many of my ideas, it met with an enthusiastic response and was then ignored. I offer it gratis for anyone else to use.

no one will get rich as a Google Answers researcher

At $2 a question and an hour or more of research (who knew the Air Force’s Basic Training Manual was so obscure?), it’s going to take a lot of work to get anything from this. Since they won’t even send you a check until you earn $50, this is not going to cover a whole of my hobby budget.

copyright protection or vendor protection?

TCPA / Palladium FAQ

Seen in these terms, TCPA and Palladium do not so much provide security for the user, but for the PC vendor, the software supplier, and the content industry. They do not add value for the user. Rather, they destroy it, by constraining what you can do with your PC – in order to enable application and service vendors to extract more money from you.

This is all being sold as making the personal computer more trustworthy.

The Trusted Computing Platform Alliance, or TCPA, was formed by Compaq, HP, IBM, Intel and Microsoft. All five companies have been individually working on improving the trust available within the PC for years. These companies came to an important conclusion: the level, or “amount”, of trust they were able to deliver to their customers, and upon which a great deal of the information revolution depended, needed to be increased and security solutions for PC’s needed to be easy to deploy, use and manage. An open alliance was formed to work on creating a new computing platform for the next century that will provide for improved trust in the PC platform.

If you want me to trust you, then let me see what you’re doing and answer my questions.

It’s an odd use of the word “trust”: it has nothing to do with users being able to trust their computers. It’s not aimed at end-users at all: the intended customers are the media companies who can’t figure out how to distribute their wares without worrying about someone getting more than they paid for.

Thanks to the hardware and software being devised by the Faithless Five above, it makes the whole digital lifestyle that we hear so much about seem less like freedom and more like some dystopian future, where everything you read or hear is billed, no matter where you are and what you’re doing. The Attention Economy doesn’t begin to cover this: instead of selling your interest in entertainment to advertisers, we get billed for the entertainment as well. Super Bowl Party? Better not invite too many friends. New CD? Don’t turn the volume up too loud: could be unlicensed sharing.

summertime, now available in 5 lb bags

The unfairly reviled QFC grocery chain has 5 pound bags of nectarines on sale right now. I have never seen them in that quantity before. I believe in rewarding good behavior, so I bought a bag.

This takes my QFC advantage card savings past the $200 mark, or 2 weeks of free groceries. Hard to complain about that.

exercise

What a miserable slob I must be. This is the shortest ride I can take, and it’s all I can do sometime to get through it.

It’s just over 2 miles, so it only takes about 15 minutes, but none of it’s flat. There are grades going both ways on both the in and outbound legs. I am re-learning how to pedal standing up (even with 18 gears, it’s no fun trying to stay seated and crank up these grades).

If this was the Burke-Gilman trail, I could do all 12 miles in no time at all: I share the locomotive’s disdain for hill-climbing. If I had a bike-rack, I would do just that. The 70th street access point to Tracy Owens station in Kenmore is about 6 miles, less than an hour there and back.

i’ve been syndicated

Syndic8.com – Welcome!

Welcome to Syndic8.com. This is the place to come to find syndicated news feeds on a wide variety of topics. There is a lot here; be sure to explore all of the tabs at the top of the page. Here’s what we have:

* A community-driven effort to gather syndicated news headlines…
* A readable master list of syndicated news content…
* An XML list of syndicated news content…
* Quality of server measurement of all feeds, with statistics and history…
* Complete statistics on every aspect of the site’s content…

* Reviews and pointers to syndicated tools and sites…
* A very complete set of XML-RPC services…
* A plan to evangelize sites to syndicate their content…
* A categorization system which uses existing schemes such as DMOZ
* Articles and tutorials on syndication…

Never heard of them before.

Lewis and Clark bicentennial

Amazon.com: buying info: The Journals of Lewis and Clark

Since I was lucky enough last week to find myself across Ecola Creek from where Clark explored the Pacific, I find myself getting interested in reading more about the Corps of Discovery.

I just ordered the book from the library: now I can look forward to a lengthy excursion through non-standard orthography and flowery prose as I trace the search for the Northwest Passage.