Heat wave in Seattle may take down the Murk

As many of y’all know we’re heading into what’s getting called a probable record-breaking heat wave here in the greater Seattle area. Which does, in a word, suck.

It sucks extra given that the Murk does not have full-house AC. While we do have a nice little portable unit we can park in the media room, and which will therefore keep userinfosolarbird, userinforisu, userinfospazzkat, and myself from melting into shapeless puddles, our server closet isn’t so lucky. It’s gotten pretty hot in there today and the heat wave is only just getting started.

So Dara fears she may have to conduct controlled shutdowns of our servers during the hottest parts of the day so as to prevent the boxes from overheating and frying themselves. Should this happen, mail and web services hosted by the Murk will unfortunately be affected. So if you’re wondering where any of the blogs we host went, or why our mailing lists aren’t relaying mail, or why the MurkMUSH went down, this’ll be why.

We’ll try to get notice out as we can, but that notice may by necessity be short. Keep an eye on userinfomurknet for any updates as they happen. And if you need to get in touch with me for any reason this week, it’ll probably be better to do so at my gmail address.

Thanks all, and those of you in the PNW, stay cool!

Happy birthday, tor.com!

Public Service Announcement: Tor.com is celebrating its first birthday today by doing a whole bunch of posts, every hour on the hour, offering free swag to be given away in random draws for folks who leave comments on the various posts.

Go to tor.com and check it out! They’re giving away tons of nifty stuff; I’ve already dropped a comment on three different posts for a shirt + a recent hardback book of one’s choice, one post for a DVD edition of Coraline, and so far, my hands down favorite, plushy Godzilla!

Enjoy, all, and good luck to anybody who wins one of the draws!

The Surprise could be sailing again!

So there have been rumors about Russell Crowe doing another Master and Commander movie for a while, but apparently there are now slightly heftier rumors! According to this AP wire article, there is an actual script for The Reverse of the Medal, and there are early-stage talks going on with the rights holder for the novels to see if it can happen.

To which I must say YES PLEASE OH PLEASE OH PLEASE OH PLEASE. Because I definitely need me some more Jack Aubrey in my life.

Tales of the Mouse, Part 1

As promised, this is the first of the writeups of our Disneyland trip, giving a bit more detail than what y’all got off my Tweets from the park. This will I fear be a purely textual writeup, since I didn’t yet have the still-to-be-named iPhone on this jaunt; userinfosolarbird, however, got a boatload of pictures. Those of you who are on Facebook have probably seen her post them already; those of you who aren’t, keep an eye on her LJ and she’ll probably be posting pics there too.

Continue reading “Tales of the Mouse, Part 1”

iPhone thoughts

And now that I’ve blown an entire evening, some initial thoughts on the shiny, shiny iPhone goodness!

The interface is a win although I will need to take a bit to get used to typing on the virtual keyboard. I’m still kind of slow and pokey at it. I don’t think this’ll be a problem even if I remain slow and pokey at it, just because when I write, I oftentimes get ahead of my fingers when trying to compose the prose. Being forced to type slowly may well help me think things through better.

Definitely grooving on the variety of apps available. I installed a lot of them tonight and very much like QuickOffice’s ability to let me mount the device as a drive over Wi-Fi and drag and drop files across. Not as elegant as an actual file sync, but the various options I’m aware of for that don’t appeal to me right now. So I’m pondering if I can do something clever with rsync whenever I have the device connected. The one minus to this app is that I discovered it doesn’t actually do RTF format, just DOC, so I’ll have to jump back to writing in DOC format. But that’s okay.

Meanwhile, I also installed Amazon’s mobile app as well as the Kindle one (and tested the latter by buying an actual Kindle book I was thinking of getting just because the new style of cover on the series annoyed me and I didn’t want to look at a physical copy of it), the Facebook app, the Touchterm SSH app, the WordPress app, and Stanza.

Stanza turns out to be a bit of a problem, I fear. Most of the ebooks I currently own are in PDF format, and Stanza is not terribly clever about rendering PDF files. Fortunately, however, QuickOffice turns out to solve this problem for me quite nicely because it can read PDF files. Which means I can finally read all the Drollerie Press ebooks I’ve bought. Yay!

I got all my music and podcasts and audiobooks and videos and such synced onto the thing, and broke it in as is right and proper by playing “Ordinary Day” as well as my video of Russell Crowe’s surprise GBS show encore of “Folsom Prison Blues”. <3 All in all I do believe this device and I are going to get along nicely. Now I just need an appropriate icon to convey my feelings of "oooo shiny".

Okay, iPhone users, let’s talk apps

Shiny new iPhone goodness is mine! I picked up the lovely thing this morning and am endeavoring to keep from playing with its shiny, shiny, candylike buttons while I’m at work. This is not, however, keeping me from pondering what apps I want to slap onto it the moment I get home.

I know I’ll need QuickOffice, for compatibility with Office files and ability to write on the device. The ability to mount the device as a drive over Wi-Fi and then to drag and drop files back and forth will be very helpful.

I will also need an ebook reader of some sort. Stanza seems highest priority on this, as that’s the one I keep hearing about, but I’m willing to be swayed to other suggestions if folks want to chime in? Note that almost all of the ebooks I have right now (free ones yoinked from various places) are in PDF format, but I have a couple of Microsoft Reader ones as well. Chances are high that I’ll probably buy further books either from Fictionwise or from Amazon’s Kindle store, and I know Stanza in theory talks both of those formats. Anybody got any counterarguments on appropriate apps?

And I’ll need a Sudoku app. Just because I use the old iPaq pretty much only for playing Sudoku these days and I will clearly need to be able to do that on the iPhone. Although I am wondering how you’ll do a proper Sudoku game with the iPhone’s touchscreen.

Just about everything else I’ll be doing on the iPhone will be functionality that comes with it. But talk to me, people; are there other cool apps out there that you cannot live without? If so, tell me about them!

Off to see The Mouse!

Folks, I am off to Disneyland in the morning! Don’t nobody burn down the Internet while I’m gone. Talk amongst yourselves–and be thinking of what I ought to name the iPhone I will be acquiring most likely on Monday! ;) And when you’re done thinking, drop a comment over here or here!

I may or may not Tweet from the park, but either way, rest assured there will be tales of Mousey goodness upon my return.

And now, a book roundup

I know I’ve been neglecting personal posts as of late, but in the interests of literary thoroughness, here’s the roundup of books I’ve picked up as of late:

A Kiss Before the Apocalypse, by Thomas Sniegoski; this is the first book of the series touched on in the Mean Streets anthology, about the angel who’s trying to pass as a human PI

A Red Heart of Memories, by Nina Kiriki Hoffman; I’ve been looking for this for ages and managed to find a used copy at Third Place

Smoke and Ashes, by Tanya Huff; third of the Smoke trilogy featuring Tony Foster

Why Mermaids Sing, by C.S. Harris; this is the third of the Sebastian St. Cyr mystery series

A Spell for the Revolution, by userinfoccfinlay; second of the Traitor to the Crown series

And, mentioned already in my post about Vancouver, but noting for the count: Salt Fish Girl, by Larissa Lai

This brings the grand total of books purchased in 2009 up to 41. I’m still ahead on books read, but only just; I need to get caught up on my book review posts, too!

Today in Vancouver

So yeah, Saturday in Vancouver has failed to suck. Made it safely up here to Chez userinfocow, with hardly any wait time at all at the border. And today, we went out on various and sundry shopping sorts of excursions.

userinfocow took userinfosolarbird and userinfospazzkat and me over to the nearby HMV–which proved to be a way more fruitful visit this time around than on the two previous visits, because this time I actually scored an album by La Bottine Souriante! Also picked up one by the Punters, who I’ve been meaning to listen to anyway by way of introducing myself to more Newfoundland music; plus, this album has the magic words “Produced by Alan Doyle” on the back, so I’m figuring that’s a strong recommendation right there. Lastly, got one by the Rankins, since I like their track on Fire in the Kitchen.

Relatedly, userinfocow also gave Dara and me a copy of userinfohsifyppah‘s very first filk CD, Steel Cage Match. Looking forward to listening to this, in no small part because “I Fell Asleep (Reading the Silmarillion)” made me LOL, and also, I want to hear “Livejournal Shanty” too.

And, userinfocow snagged me a couple of loaner copies of La Bottine Souriante albums from the Vancouver Public Library as well. These shall have to stand me until I can acquire actual copies of these albums–which I have now ordered from Amazon, since apparently Amazon’s actually stocked up on La Bottine Souriante a lot since the last time I looked. To wit, bitchin’. Or should that be bitchin-ez moi?

Anyway, aside from all this musical love, we stopped in at Little Sister’s, which is Vancouver’s oldest queer bookstore. Which was kind of neat. I walked out with a novel called Salt Fish Girl which sounded interesting to me and SFnal (it mentions shapechanging and biotechnology), even though it doesn’t call itself a science fiction novel. I told the dude at the counter that I was a bit surprised that they didn’t have Tanya Huff in their (teeny) fantasy section, given that she’s a queer Canadian author and that she has a whole trilogy of books starring a queer boy, set in Vancouver even! He thought that was cool, so who knows, maybe they’ll stock ’em. Also, they had a big black Labrador-lookin’ doggie who reminded me a lot of Sheriff, the doggie who lives along the goat trail.

OH OH OH, also, they had a magazine on the rack there with a cover blurb about an interview with the actress Alex Hedison. Wait a minute, I thought, Hedison? She did look suspiciously familiar, so I thumbed into the zine to check the interview–and yep, that there was the daughter of David Hedison, my very own Captain Crane from Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. And she’s not only queer, she’s the former partner of Ellen DeGeneres! That’s some pretty high-profile queer there.

And after that, userinfocow went back to his place while Dara and Paul and I proceeded to hop on the bus and head down to the Asian-heavy community in Richmond, where they have a couple of largish Japanese/Chinese/Asian-friendly shopping mails. That was neat. Quite a bit of flashbacks to Japan there what with the layout of the stores and the sorts of stuff they sold. We snagged a couple of gifts for folks, had tasty lunch and later on tasty yogurt, and eventually staggered back to Chez userinfocow for zzz’s.

We’ll be heading to Steamworks for tasty food in a little bit, and to meet up with userinfogerimaple and possibly also userinfoelfmaid. Which should be a fine closer to a pretty fine day indeed.