sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I got a tumblr: http://subdee.tumblr.com/

Tumblr is really easy and fun to use. Customization is just CSS, so you can do anything you can find a hack for. There are about a billion ways to crosspost. You can search all your posts AND - after the right hack - all your comments. Really, it's much easier than LJ...well, of course it's easier, it's about 10 years newer. *g* Not sure whether I'll put anything important there. Plan was to crosspost EVERYTHING, but I've already gotten cold feet - no one needs a record of my twitter feed, least of all me.

Anyway, if you have one, add me if you like.

Also got a goodreads account: http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/2191076. Add me!

Currently reading this book on Hugo Chavez. M-Mission Accomplished? ^^; Though to be fair to myself, it's also because we skipped Venezuela entirely in that US Interventions in Latin America seminar I took back in 2006 (christ! has it been that long?) - professor didn't feel we'd achieved enough distance to judge. That was an eye-opening course for me so I really didn't want to weigh in on this one with no information. So far, very good book, if maybe too focused on who said what, when, and how it was received. Very well written. Most opinions are quoted, not the author's, although the author is sympathetic. More after I've finished.

Yay for fake!productivity XD.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Updated post @ [livejournal.com profile] saiunkoku with links to translations of the novels:

http://community.livejournal.com/saiunkoku/265940.html

Next update should be in May, when the fourth gaiden comes out. I want to thank this blogger for her work since she isn't a member of the community, but as Charmian reminded me, LJ is BANNED in mainland China, so she wouldn't be able to see what I was thanking her for. ^^; Previously considered adding the links to my website (or WP blog) but was lazy and couldn't be bothered. Maybe I will do that now. Html-izing is tedious but it seems a shame for E-fandom to be almost totally cut off from C-fandom.

Orrrrr I could just (continue to) be lazy, and wait for someone else to add links to the wiki. ^^;
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Note to self: DEMAND BACKPAY before applying for unemployment in two weeks. =_= Yeah, that's right, I'm out of a job. All it really means is that I now have a hard-and-fast reason to step up the job hunt, which I'd kind of let slide. In any other economic climate this would be a blessing in disguise. No, really. ^^ Decided not to do the low self esteem thing anymore so I am trying to convince myself that I am a blameless victim of the recession economy - they are eliminating my position - although the truth is that I haven't exactly been a model employee, either. More work, less procrastination...

Ah well, that's all in the past! Today I went to the Borders in Upper Saddle River and bought:

1. Peter Doherty - Grace/Wastelands
2. Graham Parsons - Grievous Angel
3. Yuki Urushibara - Mushishi vol. 6
4. Matsuri Hino - Vampire Knight vol. 6
5. Fuyumi Ono - The Twelve Kingdoms: The Vast Spread of the Seas

Flist fail! Why did no one tell me this was out?
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Post on last weekend's mini-vacation at the other livejournal. Includes a review of Glasvegas, who weren't really worth coming back into town for, but at least now I know that. *g*

Finished a book on the train from Boston to NY - The Myth of the Paperless Office by Abigail J. Sellen (an anthropologist specializing office cultures - very cool!) and Richard H. R. Harper (an economist). This was groundbreaking when it came out...in 2003, which is probably why it was only $3 at MIT bookstore. ^^; Interestingly many things the authors claim paper does better have since been implemented electronically - like this desktop application which tries to imitate physical workspaces, or this site which supports annotation of webpages. Reminded that close reading is best accomplished with lots of highlighting and notetaking, I signed up for an account there. We'll see if this will help me to read online material less superficially.

Also finished Pattern Recognition. Hadn't realized that all of William Gibson's books are set in the same universe. See what [livejournal.com profile] petronia meant about a single narrator being hard to work with - I don't think everything that happened while the protagonist was in Tokyo was in-character. Wonder if more knowledge of systema - the Russian maritial art practiced by the KGB - would make the least interesting of the three protagonists in Spook Country more interesting. Speaking of Spook Country, diigo's web-annotating function really reminded me of the "geospatial" digital art in that book: an invisible world that intersects with ours in ways that only the properly-equipped are able to detect. Pattern Recognition also has that alternate-world thing going on, only this time the world is marketing. The protagonist, a coolhunter who is the daughter of a security expert, resists being drawn any world she won't be able to discuss over dinner. (I know how she feels.) She's investigating the source of a cult movie on the web. I really liked the footagehead angle, it felt familiar. XD; Lots of people in fandom who also have day jobs!

Biiiiig post on blip.fm and music fandom coming up. In fact it is so long that I've decided to put some reviews of bands here first:

The Whigs at Bowery Ballroom March 7: Read more... )

Mark Olson and Gary Louris CD came in the mail. Thoughts after listening to the whole thing: Read more... )
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I decided to finish Clea (final book in Lawrence Durrell's Alexandria Quartet) instead of Anathem. Hard to discuss this series without giving away key plot points but I will try.

Justine: See previous post.

Balthazar, Mountolive, Clea - see Justine first )

Other commentary:
Charmian (no spoilers), Charmian (spoilers)

Someone who's read these books and remembers them, please come discuss the characters with me! Darley, Justine, Clea, Melissa, Nessim, Narouz, Scobie, Balthazar, Pursewarden, Liza, Mountolive, Leila, Da Capo and Pombal are the ones I really remember, though Telford and Maskelyne made an impression as well.

EDIT: spoilers in comments. terrible ones! don't look.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Writing from the café in the Big Box Bookstore on my new(!) laptop. It's an HP Pavilion with a 14" screen and five hours of battery life. Without the battery, it weighs 3 pounds. The case is metallic and has a brown-gray sheen that reminds me of the dress I almost wore to prom (or steampunk - that brushed aluminum look), plus an inscribed hexagonal pattern on the back. There's a matching steel mesh pattern on the front that makes it look durable. Very stylish and professional. I actually wanted the navy blue one with the light blue racing stripes, but they were out.

The keys make a very satisfying click click clack sound when you type on them. More processing power and memory than I will ever need. External volume control, which was a biggie. And I could walk out of the store with it, another plus (hate online shopping). For $600! I'm thrilled.

Have about an hour before I have to put another quarter in the meter (it's paid wireless). Let's see if I can review the two other general psychology/self-help books I read this week in that time. Though there's a large part of me that hesitates to say anything...no hard feelings, okay?

***

Sharon Heller, Too Loud, Too Bright, Too Fast, Too Tight. Subtitle "what to do if you are sensory defensive in an overstimulating world". Inspired by Graham Coxon and er this fic. These are people who notice more in their external environments than others and feel overwhelmed. They may also have poor balance and "overreact" to light touch. I have a sneaking suspicion that if you put ADD and SD on a spectrum, attention-deficits would be on one end (inclined towards/programmed for high stimulus and don't function well without it) while sensory-defensives would be on the other (inclined towards/programmed for low stimulus and don't function well within it). But these two are still sometimes confused with each other, because the obvious symptoms - high distractibility and anxiety - are the same. Read more... )

Edward M. Hallowell and John Ratey, Delivered from Distraction. Subtitle "getting the most out of life with attention-deficit disorder". I shouldn't have read this. I don't need the encouragement! ^^; According to the authors, ADDers succeed by 1) marrying people who will pay the bills, and 2) landing jobs with secretaries who will manage the details. Great if you can swing it, but some of us have to do our own laundry. There's a slight gender bias here too I think: if you're a woman, it's harder to find a significant other who will clean up after you. Read more... )

***

Next up: Spook Country by William Gibson and Anathem by Neal Stephenson. I think it'll be interesting to compare them, XD.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I am a fallen woman:

http://twitter.com/subdee

(AOL stuff I promised here ended up over there. There's not much more to the story, anyway...)

Read through Barry Schwartz' ode to limits, The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less. All kinds of issues with his chapter detailing the specific "excessive" choices of modern life, including:

1. There's a grumpy old man vibe here. In the future we'll probably adjust to the cognitive drain - at least to the point where we stop noticing how non-optimal it is - like the scene in Back the Future II where Martin McFly's son is watching 11 television screens at once.
2. Only thing I'm prepared to agree with is the burden of always looking for the next better career opportunity. And that's only because I kind of hate job applications right now.
3. You know, Barry, women have had to deal with too many wardrobe choices for ages.
4. "Wherever we look, we see almost every arrangement of intimate relations" - if I was still on board at this point, the author would have lost me here. Even the idea that we are somehow worse off as a society because straight monogamy isn't the only way to be!

The psychology of decision-making is interesting though. I feel like Schwatz is on more solid ground in these chapters. Mostly because he's largely recapping established truths. Highlights:

• maximizer vs. satisficer. According to Schwartz, maximizing and depression are strongly correlated.
• maximizer vs. perfectionist: "I think the difference is that perfectionists have very high standards they don't expect to meet. Maximizers have high standards they *do* expect to meet."
Framing. Not just a is-the-glass-half-full-or-is-it-half-empty thing: also talks about how advertisers reframe to make not purchasing a loss, instead of purchasing a gain (because people are generally more loss-avoidant than gain-seeking).
• Diminishing Marginal Return of Income: here's one of many papers refuting the claim that as you move up the pay scale, more money buys less happiness. (Most of them are mathematical like this one: intuitively, it makes sense. This is the argument behind Obama's proposed cap on CEO salaries, anyway...)
• Optimists are people who forget the past and pessimists are people who dwell in it.
• There has always been choice. (Camus: should I kill myself, or should I make a cup of coffee?)
• However: "Our social fabric is no longer a birthright but has become a series of debilitating and demanding choices"

Overall: Just like I liked Daniel Brook's claim that rising income inequality has created a real problem for highly-educated members of the upper middle classes who now "have" to decide between (meaningful) public-sector jobs and (awful) private-sector jobs that will put the kids through expensive private schools, I like Scwartz' claim that is it's largely the well-off kids at the best universities who suffer the most from having too many choices. And I like it for the same reason: it's aimed at me. See, I'm suffering too!

One thing that is really nice though (no sarcasm here) is reading a book that ends with guidelines for improving your life by changing your attitude, which is written by a man and aimed at men! (At least, Schwatz claims that men tend to maximize more than women. And maximizing leads to unhappiness. So, therefore...) When I was working at the used bookstore, I noticed a definite gender split in the self-help books -- the ones aimed at men focused on improving external circumstances, while the ones aimed at women focused on improving attitude. So here we have another example of how some gender distinctions are breaking down, maybe. (Granted the self-help books at the used bookstore were at least 5 years old.)
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
This will probably be the last batch - no real reason for these to be here, right, when they are also over there. (Secretly I repost so that I can edit -- blip.fm doesn't allow it.)

cut because it's LONG )

Coming up: notes on Owen Pallett, sordid stories from The Web circa 1999. And maybe a review of Slumdog Millionaire?

Also: Possession by A. S. Byatt, for [livejournal.com profile] bibliophages.

A. S. Byatt is the older sister of Maragaret Drabble! Apparently she has been accused of being persnickedy and repressed, even by English standards. I definitely felt something of that while reading Possession, but it's hard to hold it against her, because she is self-aware about it, and brings it up within the text. (And ditto for every other critique I could possibly level.) Great observations about academia -- especially in the field of literary criticism -- brought back memories of archival research for my History thesis.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Coincidences: The lawfirm representing AOL in a case I have been co-opted into sorting through boxes of old materials for is the same one Ben Fountain worked for before he quit to become a writer.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Anyone in Central Jersey want to see a movie this Friday? I'm interested in:

Frost/Nixon
Slumdog Millionaire
MILK
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

...in that order, but I'd see Gran Turino or Revolutionary Road as well.

In other movie-related news, I was going to see I Love You Philip Morris no matter what, so I'm glad it's been getting good reviews.

(According to the investigative reporter who wrote the book, it's the true story of a brilliant, possibly insane, definitely charismatic con man (Jim Carrey) who escaped from prison four times in five years but always found himself back behind bars because his love for his cellmate (Ewan McGreggor) was the one true thing he found in a lifetime of assumed identities. According to McGreggor, it's a gay prison romance. ^____^)

ETA ETA ETA!

At Rutgers they are screening Let the Right One In! The Swedish Realist Vampire Movie! On Friday, Saturday, and Sunday two weeks from now. Is anyone interested in that?

March 2022

S M T W T F S
  12345
67 89101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

  • Style: (No Theme) for Transmogrified by Yvonne

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags