Addicted to RSS, Really

February 7th, 2003

I should point out that RSS makes weblog reading very much like reading USENET. –Mark A. Hershberger in Phil Ringnalda’s comments

I’m still up, reading all the blogs I never get around to because it’s just so difficult to follow fifteen geek blogs and fifteen fan blogs. At first I found the name NetNewsWire a little confusing, since I think of news as NNTP (e.g., alt.startrek.creative), but now I se that just as newsgroups are much more convenient than mailing lists, RSS is much more convenient than web pages. Less clicking around means fewer fic taxes.

At the moment, I’m trying to figure out how to get a second RSS feed here, one that does the whole entry content rather than the entry summary (which MT generates automatically). Yes, I should be sleeping rather than geeking, but RSS is just too cool for words.

Addicted to RSS

February 6th, 2003

I checked out the Surfin’ Safari blog today and ended up at inessential.com, blog of the maker of NetNewsWire for MacOS X. I also grabbed TigerLaunch while I was there.

NetNewsWire looks like a newsreader or an email program, but instead, it reads blogs and other RSS newsfeeds. I set it up to read my blog and others, along with some of the defaults. Here’s a screenshot for anyone who doesn’t grok RSS, the way I didn’t until very recently. It’s a cool little app, in which you navigate between the panels with the tab key, through the blogs and entries with the up and down arrows, and open the original page in your default browser with the right arrow. It’s much simpler than browsing through all the pages individually, and cleaner than a friends page.

I’ve added a bunch of LJ blogs, whose RSS URLs look like this: http://www.livejournal.com/users/synaesthete7/rss. Not surprisingly, they’re pretty flakey with whether they provide summaries. MovableType does summaries by default in your index.rdf page. I’ve linked the RSS feed (the MT “syndicate” link) using one of the buttons from antipixel: XML
You, too, can be an RSS addict.

Under the Wire

February 5th, 2003

I have two new stories up, thanks to last Friday’s ASC Awards deadline. Up until now they’ve been available at my revived mirror at Crosswinds. The redirector is still pointing there because some people can’t reach Freeshell at the moment due to old DNS. Note that the mirror at Prohosting is no longer supported - the stories below are not there.

What’s Left of Her (30k) is an alternate, more realistic ending to “Unimatrix Zero,” starring the EMH. It was supposed to star Tom Paris, for Seema’s sake, but it didn’t quite work out that way.

The Lamne’rau (24k) is about Seven’s brief childhood, as glimpsed in “Dark Frontier,” “The Raven,” “Author, Author” and other episodes. This is the first story in the forthcoming “Tertiary” series (the long-promised Seven Saga). The Tertiary index page also has a list of all my Seven and Borg stories.

On the Mac front, the new iMacs came out yesterday. Once I have one, I think I’ll go shopping for SG-1 DVD’s and get myself a new, less depressing fandom.

Return of the Blog

February 5th, 2003

After being summarily evicted from its colocation and wandering the streets of Seattle homeless for a week, Freeshell is back in action. Our troubles even made the news at slashdot.

I have to admit, my apartment is cleaner than it’s been in months.

The Morality of Reading

January 29th, 2003

LJ is too slow to look up the exact quote, but I believe A.J. Hall commented in RJ’s LiveJournal that she could understand people not reading slash for moral reasons. Ah, here it comes:

Some people, it is true, who I know and who write slash have difficulty in understanding the “I never touch slash on principle because it can never be canonical” attitude. Most would have considerably more sympathy with a consistent moral position.

I was thinking about that, and came to the conclusion that there is no legitimate moral reason for not reading slash. There’s a moral basis for avoiding smut, and insofar as slash is smutty it falls under that reason, but slash without the smut is not a moral issue.

Why not? We read murder mysteries, even though murder is wrong. Were there an entire genre devoted not only to murder but to the glorification of murder it might be wrong to write in it, but not to read the occasional story. Even in non-fiction, we read about terrible things without feeling that reading about them makes us culpable in them.

The objections to slash are more basic than moral differences, and I think they fall into two categories: the literary and the visceral. A visceral dislike for slash is often identified with homophobia, but it’s more commonly human nature. Heterosexual men, especially, are deeply squicked by the notion. It’s not as strong as the incest taboo, but it’s out there and it’s a good enough reason not to read slash.

My objection falls into the literary camp. I have nothing against reading fiction that’s about homosexuals - I particularly enjoyed LMB’s Ethan of Athos, even though it’s not one of her better works. I don’t even have anything against writing about homosexual characters, be they Willow/Tara or characters in my own original fic. It’s not homosexuality as a topic that disturbs me but slash as a genre. A host of fans explicitly devoted to reversing canon sexual orientations, to writing stories because they are risqué, and to being generally contrary or rebellious do not appeal to me. It doesn’t make me want to know them, to be part of their clique, or to read their stories. The slash description adds no value for me - it merely alerts me that the story wasn’t directed at the general reader but at a subcommunity whose motives and principles I barely understand, never mind share.

I think when RJ exempted “Lust Over Pendle” from the slash genre she meant it in this sense - not that the story wasn’t about a non-canon homosexual relationship, but that it wasn’t about contradicting canon for its own sake. It was not about being slashy. I haven’t read it so I can’t say for sure.

There are other subcommunities of fandom that are just as self-congratulatory and anti-canonical as slash is - J/C fandom comes to mind immediately - but most of them don’t assert or assume a literary superiority over other fans. It is entirely possible that slashers are better writers, overall, than non-slashers, but that’s a matter of statistics which does not make slashfic better in principle than other kinds of fic. Being slashy is not a literary good in and of itself, and no amount of claiming it is will make it so.

Move to Iceland

January 28th, 2003

Evil link of the evening: Ariel Sharon eating babies, from The Independent. You’d think it was still 1939 across the pond.

While stalking the wild Mac Rumor, I found some cool links. Check out this switch commercial, and its switch to Linux companion. MacEdition has an interesting article on the rapid changes Safari has made to OS X browser demographics. Watch TV on your mac with EyeTV from El Gato software.

New PowerMacs

January 28th, 2003

New PowerMacs have popped up at Apple, along with much cheaper studio displays and the long-predicted 20″ model.

I’m still holding out for new iMacs with the swingy arms. The word on the information superstreet is February 3rd.

All Fanned Out

January 27th, 2003

Cool link of the day: Borg, especially the Borg Queen wavs at the bottom.

I started this entry about a week ago in a spirit of BOFQness and didn’t finish. After a day of writing fic and playing with FicML, I’m not so jaded - but the conclusion should be the same either way.

There’s a lull on ASC between February 1st and awards time in April. (I know they start earlier, but I only do VOY so for me, it’s April.) I’ve been thinking of spending the lull not writing fanfic.

You may say that I already spend too much time not writing fanfic, and that I hardly need to dedicate two months to not doing something I fail to do so naturally. I certainly am not pretending that I will devote the next two months to not reading fanfic. I already don’t read so much fanfic that no extra effort is necessary in that area. Moreover, I don’t feel that I’m voting properly unless I read the entire year’s worth of Voyager fic during the month of April itself, and preferably during the actual voting period. I love a challenge…

No, I want to stop writing fanfic because for the past few weeks, the ghosts of original fics past have been haunting me. Wasn’t I a cool idea? they say, and I was almost ready for submission. It’s the Tolkien-inspired ones that have been at me lately, not that they’re fanfic in any real sense of the word - they’re more like Tolkien in Space. I’ve been neglecting the original writing impulse, and the muse should never be thwarted when she’s willing to work.

I’m counting on the ASC Awards to inspire me to write more fanfic, after my break for original fic. Wish the muse luck!

The Jemima Manifesto

January 26th, 2003

A Voyager fan manifesto, à la Liz.

  1. I think publishing RPF is wrong, unless you have the Real Person’s permission.
  2. I don’t particularly care if you think it’s offensive of me to say what I think. If you choose to read insults into other people’s opinions, then I’d recommend you stop reading other people’s opinions.
  3. I have no interest in slash, mainly because I don’t see a non-political motive for changing canon sexual orientations (in either direction). I’m not in fandom for the gender politics. See #4 also.
  4. I have no interest in smut. I’m not in fandom for titillation, pornography, or free biology lessons.
  5. I have very little interest in angst, but I don’t mind a good tragedy.
  6. There’s nothing in the world like a good crew story, unless it’s a good AU.
  7. I have a muse and she’s not afraid to use me.
  8. I have a not-so-secret weakness for J/P, and a well-known one for C/7. I’m still working on the T/K - the bun is in the oven.
  9. No, you may not archive my fic. Why should your site get hits out of my labor? Feel free to link my fic with the links provided at the beginning or end of each story, but don’t think I’m going to pay any fic taxes to get you to do that, either. I’m not in fandom for the marketing degree.
  10. It’s the 24th century, people! Please stop killing your characters in childbirth.

Mirror Move

January 25th, 2003

Prohosting sent me a reminder invoice today, so I edited my main pages there to warn people away. I’ve also put more of the site back up at Crosswinds, which, for lack of a faster alternative, will be my new mirror. They still have popups, but anyone who doesn’t have a popup blocker by now is just asking for popups.

I’ve taken the occasion to fix a few typos and add two more songs to the originals page for my filks. Everything should be up-to-date in a few minutes. Not bad, considering the food poisoning - that’s the last time I keep leftovers in the fridge at work.