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Wednesday 06-Dec
  • It's Not A Cliché... Yet: a World Fantasy Convention 2006 panel (0)

  • Tuesday 17-Oct
  • "A Scanner Darkly" by Philip K. Dick: FACT group discussion and my own opinion (0)

  • Wednesday 11-Oct
  • Stump the Panel: an ArmadilloCon 2006 panel (0)

  • Saturday 26-Aug
  • Larval Mode: a Linucon 2005 panel (0)

  • Monday 14-Aug
  • What You Should Have Read This Year: an ArmadilloCon panel (0)

  • Saturday 12-Aug
  • Building the Perfect Universe: an ArmadilloCon panel (0)

  • Tuesday 18-Jul
  • Robert Charles Wilson's "Spin": FACT reading group discussion and my own opinion (0)

  • Wednesday 15-Feb
  • Linucon 2005: Pros and cons of the GNU General Public License (0)

  • Monday 23-Jan
  • "Iron Sunrise" by Charles Stross: my opinion and FACT reading group discussion (0)

  • Thursday 12-Jan
  • Neil Gaiman at Book People (0)


  •  Nebula Awards 2008  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Wednesday, April 30 2008 @ 05:34 PM PDT
     Viewed:  117 times  
    Conventions

    This year the Nebula Awards took place in Austin, TX on April 24-27. Being in Texas, the award ceremony had to have some Texas flavor, and that was amply supplied by the MC John Moore and the toastmaster Joe Lansdale. Moore started by explaining Texas dialect to the out-of-state folks. He said, "in Texas you don't say 'I'm going to have a glass of wine', you say 'I'm fixing to mosey down to Hospitality Suite and rustle up a Shiner Bock'. And right now I'm fixing to introduce our toastmaster. He's a kick-ass Texas writer, and I mean it literally: he founded a school of martial arts."

    Joe Lansdale's speech was the highly anticipated highlight of the award ceremony. Everyone in the Texas fandom knows Lansdale is pretty damn funny. And his speech was funny indeed, although a bit rambling. I managed to remember a couple of anecdotes Joe told; for the sake of brevity, I'll compress the details which, in my opinion, didn't add much to the story. (Though what do I know? Perhaps readers adore Joe Lansdale precisely because of those details I consider rambly.)

    His point was that Texas is such a weird place it can't help but inspire science fiction. Here is an incident that happened to him and an even stranger one, to another Texas writer. Lansdale also listed his rules for the attendees of science fiction conventions.

    Michael Moorcock, who was bestowed a title of SFWA grandmaster, had his own funny stories to tell about life in Texas -- and why he likes it here.

    Pictures from the Nebula awards can be found in my photo gallery.


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     Richard Dawkins at UT Austin, March 19, 2008  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Thursday, March 27 2008 @ 04:36 PM PDT
     Viewed:  226 times  
    Interesting People

    On March 19, 2008 Richard Dawkins, the famous evolutionary biologist and popularizer of science, gave a public lecture at the University of Texas in Austin; it was preceded by a reception hosted by the Center of Inquiry Austin. Though I didn't have a chance to exchange more than a few sentences with Dawkins at the reception, I formed some kind of impression of him as a person. For example, he speaks in perfect phrases and is hip on technology. (Though I bet he would never use the word "hip". :-)) His lecture topics I found familiar, even though I haven't read his books where he expounds on them. I guess I've absorbed his ideas by osmosis. The questions the audience asked revolved around whether atheists should adopt an in-your-face or a conciliatory tone with general public; some of the questions were more unusual. (Would you ask a well-known skeptic to support his reasoning with astrology? :-)) Then someone asked what does Dawkins think of transhumanist visions. Finally, a concept he wanted us to take away from this lecture, if it was the only thing we would take away: why evolution is NOT equal to random chance.

    Pictures from the reception and the lecture can be found in my photo gallery.

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     Salman Rushdie at the Texas Book Festival in 2005  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Thursday, November 15 2007 @ 11:39 AM PST
     Viewed:  141 times  
    Interesting People

    (As the date indicates, this item is old; I'm posting it here for the sake of completeness as I am reorganizing my web sites and blogs.)

    Texas Book Festival took place October 29 - 30, 2005 in Austin, TX, and featured some well known authors like Lemony Snicket and Salman Rushdie. I went to see Salman Rushdie being interviewed by Evan Smith.

    Among the topics touched upon at the interview there was the inevitable topic of the publicity agency from Tehran, writerly quirks (where do characters' names come from?), which parts of his books are autobiographical; he gave an advice to an ex-Muslim woman who said her life would be in danger if she publishes a book on Al Qaeda she has written; what could be done to help Americans understand Muslim world, and vice versa; literary criticism summed up in a word 'jump', and other things.

    Pictures from the interview and book signing can be found in my photo gallery.


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     Authors and the fans who love them: maybe a little too much: an ArmadilloCon 2007 panel  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Saturday, September 01 2007 @ 07:48 PM PDT
     Viewed:  347 times  
    ArmadilloCon2007

    Description in the program book: Ever wonder why your favorite author looks a little scared when they see you? The panelists will talk about the tale-tell signs of a stalker and tell amusing stories about what has happened to them in the past. (For instance, did they call you at home during a baseball game?)

    Since the stories told on this panel are a bit personal in nature, the panelists' names are omitted.

    Tips on how to properly stalk a writer

    Unconventional gestures of admiration

    A writer who lied to a priest

    Guests Of Honor with unusual demands


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     Create a World: an ArmadilloCon 2007 panel  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Saturday, August 18 2007 @ 09:48 PM PDT
     Viewed:  429 times  
    ArmadilloCon2007Panelists Alexis Glynn Latner*, Samantha Henderson, Rachel Caine, R. Cat Conrad, Deborah Chester, James Stoddard, Mikal Trimm

    Every ArmadilloCon has a world-building panel, where the panelists and the audience "create" a science-fictional or fantasy world by collective brainstorming. Artist R. Cat Conrad often participates by drawing scenes from this world on a whiteboard.

    For starters, the panelists and the audience decide by voting: are they building a science fiction or a fantasy world? The audience is almost equally split between the two, but, but science fiction prevails by a small margin.

    To keep the scope of the task manageable, we'll focus on one city in this world we are building. The city is half-submerged in water. Or it maybe be fully submerged and exist under a dome of a force field. What kind of inhabitants will it have? What kind of conflicts will arise in this society? They may arise from the different species' fight for dominance, or natural cataclysms. What kind of religion will they have, and what part will it play in the conflict? What myths will this society tell itself? And finally, some silly touches.

    More pictures from ArmadilloCon 2007 can be found in my photo gallery.


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     Con disaster stories: an ArmadilloCon 2007 panel  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Saturday, August 11 2007 @ 06:29 PM PDT
     Viewed:  503 times  
    ArmadilloCon2007

    The program book said: "Want to hear about the best disasters in the fandom world?" Indeed, some of the fiascos, or merely weird stories, mentioned in this panel, were real pearls.

    They swooned over Brad, even though he wasn't Pitt

    To stir things up, put a dyslexic in charge of printing the program

    Sprinklers are not a sex toy

    Panelists: Janice Gelb, Patty Wells, Stephen Boucher, Brad Denton, Lynn Ward

    Pictures from ArmadilloCon 2007 can be found in my photo gallery.

    UPDATE: Thanks to Janice for corrections! They have been incorporated in the text.


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     Armadillocon 2004: Opening ceremony  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Sunday, July 22 2007 @ 08:18 PM PDT
     Viewed:  311 times  
    ArmadilloCon 2004

    Following the ArmadilloCon tradition, toastmaster K. D. Wentworth gave a humorous speech. She addressed the audience as a fourth grade schoolteacher, which she actually was for the most of her working life. She chastised SF fandom for forgetting their geeky, eccentric roots and becoming too mainstream. Then she and several other guests performed "The Fan Eye for a Mundane Guy" makeover on a guy they picked from the audience.

    Note: My transcription of this speech is not completely accurate since I had to work off of a poor quality tape recording. And yes, this event is 3 years old, but I'm posting it here for the sake of completeness.

    Pictures from ArmadilloCon 2004 can be found in my photo gallery.


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     How Friendly Were Frodo and Sam? An ApolloCon 2007 panel  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Monday, June 25 2007 @ 01:44 PM PDT
     Viewed:  649 times  
    ApolloCon 2007

    Description in the program book: Was there a homoerotic subtext to Lord of the Rings? Is subtext in the eye of the beholder, or is Spec Fic friendlier to GLBT characters and readings than the mainstream? Panelists discuss the perception of alternative sexualities in SF/F.

    Panelists: Alexis Glynn Latner (moderator), Lee Martindale, Jess Nevins, Selina Rosen, Mel. White

    What was it really about:

    The discussion didn't focus so much about a relationship between Frodo and Sam (though there was some speculation), or even whether SF is friendlier to gay / lesbian / bi /transsexual (GLBT) characters than mainstream literature. Mostly it revolved around fan fiction, especially slash fiction.


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     "Accelerando" by Charles Stross: FACT reading group discussion  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Tuesday, February 27 2007 @ 02:51 PM PST
     Viewed:  537 times  
    General News

    On January 23, 2007 the FACT reading group discussed "Accelerando" by Charles Stross. Here are the main observations made at the discussion.

    "Accelerando" is too discontinuous to be called a novel. The stories that make up "Accelerando" revolve around the same set of characters, but there is no plot arch to unify them. That can be a good thing, too. The characterization was mediocre. But it was offset by innovative ideas, which "Accelerando" is chockfull of. The readers were most impressed by: Charles Stross' portrayal of the technological Singularity; his answer to the Fermi paradox; his humorous treatment of lawyers, spam, pyramid schemes and other life's small annoyances.

    Some people thought that parts of Stross' futuristic vision were too sketchy. Especially Economics 2.0, which, many readers agreed, was explained in no more than a hand-waving fashion.


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     The God or the Machine: A World Fantasy Convention 2006 panel  View Printable Version 
     Author:  elze
     Dated:  Wednesday, January 17 2007 @ 09:35 PM PST
     Viewed:  738 times  
    World Fantasy Convention 2006

    Panelists: Ted Chiang, Louise Marley, Michael A. Stackpole, W. J. Williams, Janine Ellen Young (moderator)

    What it was supposed to be about (synopsis from the program book): When do "scientific" worldview elements move a concept out of fantasy? Systematic magic, planetary bodies, rudimentary experimentation, the cusp of alchemy into chemistry...

    What it was really about

    First, the panelists admitted they didn't really understand the topic of the panel as stated in the program book. They didn't get much mileage out of "scientific worldview elements moving a concept out of fantasy". After addressing the distinction between technology and magic, and Ted Chiang stating why he believes Clarke's famous adage is incorrect, the panelists quickly became mired in the age-old debate of what is science fiction, and what is fantasy. Oh no, not again, you say! Well, this discussion wasn't quite like beating a dead horse. I heard some interesting insights.

    A lot of western fantasy writers prefer magic to be systematic, i.e. to have laws, rules, constraints. An arbitrary magic, where everything is possible or impossible, depending on whether it is convenient for the author, they don't find very interesting. But does systematizing magic move it closer to science? Not necessarily.

    Traditionally it's thought that it's the presence or absence of scientific / technological elements -- the so-called furniture -- that causes most people to view a certain story as science fiction or fantasy. But actually, the worldview expressed in a story may be more relevant. (Though apparently there are no universal criteria how to determine the genre a particular story belongs to, because some people in the audience disagreed over which genre certain books belonged to.)


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