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Journal Journal: Wierd... 3

Before S/N opened, I spent a lot of time commenting at /. Any more, I check messages and read little of /., partly because stories have been showing up at S/N before /. and partly because there are so many more short bus riders at /. Oh, and slashdot's "stupid quotes" annoy the hell out of me.

I hadn't had mod points at /. for years, despite being at karma cap.

Comment Re:Without the stupid smart quotes .... (Score 1) 33

It's their problem, I'll just link to S/N when I have an entry that might be in a book until they fix it. I'm not going to take extra effort because of someone else's lack of competence.

The problem you or I can't fix is quoting a newspaper in a comment, seeing it's fine in preview, and having /.'s garbage generator shit on it; you can't edit a comment.

Comment Re:Without the stupid smart quotes .... (Score 1) 33

Yes, if I enjoyed murder mysteries. It was well written, far better than that best-selling hack James Patterson. Stephen King is a great writer, but I've read few of his books because I'm no fan of dark fiction. I did enjoy The Green Mile, though.

Since you're looking to turn writing into a career, you did in fact choose the best genre. I don't care for them, but murder mysteries sell like crazy.

Comment Re:Without the stupid smart quotes .... (Score 1) 33

I compose in Open Office. Since what I write will probably wind up in a book, unicode is necessary and removing it is a hassle we should not have to put up with.

What's most maddening is that when previewing a journal or comment, slashdot's garbage generator doesn't shit all over it until you hit "submit". There's simply no excuse for it. Soylent News uses slashdot's code, and they had it fixed within a month or two of opening.

This should be especially embarrassing for what's supposed to be a tech site.

Comment Damn it, slashdot... FIX YOUR CODE! (Score 1) 4

It looked like they had fixed it when I previewed. Why in the hell do smart characters work in preview but not posted? What's the point of previewing when slashdot's retarded code will fuck it up anyway?

For a version that hasn't had slashdot's garbage generator shit all over it, go here.

User Journal

Journal Journal: Grommler 4

This story takes place in a bar on Mars over a century later than "Mars, Ho!". Kudos to slashdot for finally fixing its handling of smart characters.
“Joe? Is that you? You're still tending bar? I thought you'd be retired. How you doin', you old rascal?”
Joe frowned. “Sorry, son, I must be getting old, do I know you? And can I get you a drink?”
“It's Dave, man.

User Journal

Journal Journal: Missed Deadlines 1

I "finished" writing Mars, Ho! early in the summer, and since it became a horror story I was aiming to publish it by Halloween. Well, that didn't happen.

I wanted it to be done by then so it would show up in bookstores by Thanksgiving. I still had hopes of getting it at least for sale on my web site by then, especially since a fan wrote with news he was planning to buy several copies as gifts.

Comment Re:Not always (Score 1) 10

But books and movies are completely different. If "Mars, Ho!" were a screenplay, it would have to be written completely differently. If it were a movie, the opening scene would be the withdrawing addict killing the bouncer. In the book, this shows up halfway through.

Movies are completely passive, you're spoon-fed everything in a movie. With literature, it's almost as much the reader's imagination as the writer's. It would be a boring book indeed that described every aspect of everything.

In a movie, everyone sees the same couch. In a book, everyone who reads it sees a different couch.

Likewise, these different mediums demand a different approach to getting the audience interested.

The inside of the book jacket used to be the place to hook people on the content - but with the move to digital, "What's a book jacket, gran'ma?", which is eventually going to become "What's a hardcover?" I for one welcome the demise of those pretentious not-to-be-touched hipster coffee-table books.

I used to think so, and thought the only reason I prefer physical books is because I read thousands of them before ever seeing a computer, but have changed my mind since publishing "Nobots" and "The Paxil Diaries". First was my 28 year old daughter's reaction when she saw a hardcover of "Nobots". "My dad wrote a book! And it's a REAL book!" Even though she grew up with computers in the house, she's not impressed with text on a screen. Perhaps because she grew up with them.

What cemented this for me was site stats. More people have paid for physical copies than have downloaded the free e-books. The vast majority simply read the HTML on the web pages.

If physical books die, it will be the publishing industry that kills them with stupid moves and policies, much like the music publishers have trashed sales of their physical wares.

Comment Re:Not always (Score 1) 10

Agreed. With "Nobots" you had to get a few chapters read before it starts to make sense, but a woman who read it told me "it usually takes a chapter or two to get me sucked into a book, I was hooked on that one in the first paragraph."

OTOH "Mars, Ho!" has a Mise en scene (which slashdot's lack of unicode prevents us from easily spelling correctly), its first chapter. Different stories take different approaches.

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