Category: Linkage

  • You has want tribble?

    Okay, look. I’m going to warn you right up front: What you’re about to see (should you follow the hyperlink) is just plain wrong. You know those now-ubiquitous “cat macro” pictures, the ones with the cute cats and the bad grammar text in the large blocky font? (Examples) Somebody took that approach to… a classic Star Trek episode.

    No, seriously. You can’t make this stuff up. Er, that is to say, I can’t but obviously somebody did. It’s even just a bit funny. It’s also a bit brain damaging, so don’t say I didn’t warn you. Unless, of course, the part of your brain which remembers not to say I didn’t warn you is the part that gets damaged.

    Anyway. Boldly go, already.

  • Much Ado About Authoring

    My goodness but this is going to be an intense linkfest. Are you ready?

    Good.

    LJ user “britpoptarts” posted an entry about Jim Butcher’s “Dresden” novels and how they transated to the television experience, and included links to entries at Mr. Butcher’s LJ which I found enlightening and even a bit inspiring. At about the same time, the roomie emailed me a link to software called yWriter which purports to make the process of writing a novel into something just a teeny bit less dreadful than normal, by virtue of turning every piece into a mobile element which one can rearrange as one sees fit. (There are many other features, but that’s the gist.) The software developer is also a published genre author who has posted some helpful articles about such things as laying out the novel’s plot (in which he highly recommends some “mind mapping” software I was looking at just last week, namely FreeMind) and actually writing the novel (in which he recommends reading someone else’s article about writing the perfect scene, which strangely echoes Jim Butcher’s advice on that particular topic).

    As you can probably guess, all of this has gotten me thinking. I’m not promising anything, but I’m thinking. And taking notes. And taking a mental machete to a lifetime’s worth of worldbuilding, paring it down to just the Really Good Stuff.

    Lest you wonder if I’ve taken complete leave of my senses, I do remember the lessons of NaNoWriMo: There’s a very good chance that I’m still not cut out to be a Professional Writer. I’m just about fired up enough, though, to take one more stab at telling a good story.

  • Biff and his mashed potatoes

    Added to the list of things I can’t believe that I didn’t know about before now is the webcomic called “The Book of Biff.” It’s entertaining and educational! For instance, I now know of a fantastic way to harvest mashed potatoes.

    If you end up reading the entire comic archive and find yourself gasping for breath with tears of laughter rolling down your cheeks, don’t run crying to me.

    Er, wait…

  • Let’s Make Believe

    Tell you what.

    I’ll pretend that I filled the last couple of weeks with post after post about how tired and out-of-sorts I’ve been, and you’ll pretend to have read those posts, with or without the requisite rolling of the eyes or the deep sigh of boredom and/or frustration.

    This past weekend we moved a bunch more of Kyla’s stuff from her old home to her new home. We also picked up a new television for her, mainly so there’s something to watch DVDs and play video games on. The highlight of the previous weekend was taking the kids to see “TMNT,” which was a better movie than I expected. (No, seriously. It’s good. While it’s not grand or epic, it’s still a solidly entertaining little film. If it doesn’t do well in DVD sales I’ll be terribly disappointed.)

    I haven’t been completely idle on the writing front, though. Consider how much time I put in over the last two months to get the new anime forum, A.E.I.O.U., up to speed!

    Now let’s see if I can strike a balance so that I’m not letting this poor journal gather dust so often…

  • Meedio to Yahoo to MeediOS

    Some time back, Yahoo purchased Meedio and turned it into Yahoo Go TV, with some of the better features removed and a few of their own grafted on. Then they mothballed it.

    Meedio as a product is dead, but apparently enough people use it and love it that there’s a community dedicated to plugin and add-on development as well as to recreating the product entirely.

    So, for the sake of remembering where to look the next time I get a chance to build a HTPC unit… MeediOS.

  • Big Block o’ Icons… auf Deutsch!

    The list of available selections is somewhat arbitrary, but the results are still mildly amusing:

    POWERED BY PUBLICONS.DE

    Keep in mind that if you decide to make your own, you’ll be dealing with German-language instructions. Your mileage may vary.