MostlyMcGee : "The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity." - Ellen Parr
Updated: 2/4/2004; 9:36:43 AM.

 

 
 

Thursday, July 04, 2002

> You Snooze You Win, Learning Study Reveals [Scientific American]

> Clarion 2002 is in full swing.
As I mentioned earlier this morning, it's been ten years (!) since I attended the Clarion science fiction writers' workshop (though it hardly seems it!). Patrick Nielsen Hayden, my editor at Tor, has just left for the MSU campus at East Lansing, MI, to be the guest editor there.

My year at Clarion was really the first wired year of the workshop. Nearly everyone had a computer -- those who didn't bring their own got brand-new loaner 486s from the college -- the sole exception being Nathan Ballingrud, who insisted on his beloved manual typewriter. I remember how expressive his manuscripts were, dark vivid keystrokes where he was on a roll, tentative, faint characters where he'd slowed down, faint hand-written corrections on the photocopies. We critiqued three or four stories a day, five days a week, for two to six hours, and I wrote a story every week. Our instructors varied from wonderful to ineffectual to out-and-out abusive. I had a modem and I spent a fair bit of time dialed up to GEnie, a primitive online service, keeping online track of what was going on at the workshop.

There was a fair bit of handwringing from the instructors over the idea that students were "wasting time online," gossiping and spilling the beans about the politics at the workshop. This theme continued in subsequent years as students continued to keep online Clarion journals, sometimes quite intimate ones that were critical of or wounded at the instructors. An interesting feedback loop developed one year, when instructor Lucius Shepard read a student's online journal and commented on it in person, prompting another journal entry and another conversation, which prompted another journal entry, and so on.

This year, a Clarion student has formalized the online journal process, putting up a portal with links to all the student journals. They're in their third week now, half way through, and the journal entries fill me with nostalgia. Taken as a body, the journal entries comprise a fascinating window into the hothouse of the legendary "sf writers' boot-camp." Six weeks at Clarion can change you forever. It took five years for me to overcome the writers' block that resulted from the amount of information I needed to assimilate after my year; Octavia Butler reports the same experience.

This year's instructor line-up is fantastic: Terry Bisson, Karen Joy Fowler, Tim Powers, Geoff Ryman, Leslie What, Patricia C. Wrede and Patrick Nielsen Hayden. I'd love to teach Clarion some year myself, though God knows where I'd find the time.

A word of advice to this year's students: The MSU library has all of the previous Clarion students' stories on file. If you're ever feeling down about your work and worried that you'll never make it, swing by the library and have a peek at some of the work that has preceded you. Check out Bruce Sterling's submission story, or Lucius Shepard's, or hell, check out mine. Everyone starts somewhere.

The Clarion 35th anniversary party is at the end of July. I won't be able to make it, but it sound like it's going to be a lot of fun. I'll see you at the 40th. Link Discuss [Boing Boing Blog]


> Singular chat with Kurzweil and Vinge.
Last night, Raymond "Spiritual Machines" Kurzweil and Vernor "True Names" Vinge met online and discussed the Singularity in a chat hosted by scifi.com. Here's the transcript.
Gardner: Seems unlikely to me that EVERYONE will have an equal capacity for keeping up with it. There are people today who have trouble keeping up even with the 20th Century, like the Amish.

RayKurzweil: The Amish seem to fit in well. I could think of other examples of people who would like to turn the clock back.

RayKurzweil: But in terms of opportunity, this is the have-have not issue. Keep in mind that because of what I call the "law of accelerating returns," technology starts out unaffordable, becomes merely expensive, then inexpensive, then free.

vv: True, but the better analogy is across the entire kingdom of life

vv: When dealing with "superhumans" it is not the same thing as comparing -- say -- our tech civ with a pretech human civ. The analogies should be with the animal kindgom and even more pershaps with things enve further away and more primitive

Link Discuss [Boing Boing Blog]

> Mathematical Lego Sculptures [Slashdot]

> Linux Centric Cartoons; Well Geek Cartoons in General.

Linux Centric Cartoons; Well Geek Cartoons in General

Well I find this funny.  I know Adam and so will Demitrious too.  What about you?

And if you have ever had a "Honey Do" list, you'll love this:

And this is just plain too good to not point out (for the Mac folk out there like Paolo and crew): 

And, finally, I promise to NEVER, EVER do this to an SO (for the die hard bloggers out there):

(SO = Significant Other)

 

[The FuzzyBlog!]

> Options for Adults with Renewed Interest in Math? [Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters]

> Afternoon naps are a more effective performance booster than financial incentives (scroll down from the link to the subtitle Siestas and Learning
>)...[Matt Pope's Radio Weblog]

As Bucky once said, "When in doubt, nap." [Steven's Weblog]



© Copyright 2004 Jim McGee.



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