From 43 Folders: Hack your way out of writer’s block. Lots of useful tips. While it’s geared towards fiction, many of them would apply to non-fiction as well.
…excerpt from: www.backupbrain.com…
Sysloggin' one day at a time.
By Jim
From 43 Folders: Hack your way out of writer’s block. Lots of useful tips. While it’s geared towards fiction, many of them would apply to non-fiction as well.
…excerpt from: www.backupbrain.com…
By Jim
I got the following from a family member today:
Starting Jan 1, 2005, all cell phone numbers will be made public to telemarketing firms. So this means as of Jan 1, your cell phone may start ringing off the hook with telemarketers, but unlike your home phone, most of you pay for your incoming calls. These telemarketers will eat up your free minutes and end up costing you money in the long run.
According to the National Do Not Call List, you have until Dec. 15th
2004 to get on the national “Do not call list” for cell phones.
It turns out that this one is mostly an urban legend. Snopes.com…, the Urban Legends Reference Pages, has this one covered. Snopes is great for checking the veracity of alerts like this that you get via email. Plus, it’s a fun read for all sorts of urban legends.
According to the Snopes page, here’s the gist (I’ve edited for length):
“So…it is misleading in stating that such a directory will “soon be published”…and in directing readers to sign up with the The National Do Not Call Registry. The latter step…is premature…and largely unnecessary…because FCC regulations already in place block the bulk of telemarketing calls to cell phones.
Adding one’s cell phone number to the National Do Not Call Registry (even if currently unnecessary) won’t likely have any adverse effect, but customers should be aware of exactly what that action will or will not accomplish.”
…excerpt from: www.backupbrain.com…
By Jim
BBC NEWS | UK | 1914 ‘football truce’ anniversary
This Christmas is the 90th anniversary of the World War I truce when British troops took on the Germans at football.
The soldiers sang Christmas carols before leaving their trenches to play a match in sub-zero temperatures in no-man’s land near Armentieres, France.
By Jim
Excerpt:
Salon Arts & Entertainment | “Star Wars” despots vs. “Star Trek” populists, by David Brin
Anyway, I make a good living writing science-fiction novels and movies. So “Star Wars” ought to be a great busman’s holiday, right?
One of the problems with so-called light entertainment today is that somehow, amid all the gaudy special effects, people tend to lose track of simple things, like story and meaning. They stop noticing the moral lessons the director is trying to push. Yet these things matter.
By now it’s grown clear that George Lucas has an agenda, one that he takes very seriously. After four “Star Wars” films, alarm bells should have gone off, even among those who don’t look for morals in movies. When the chief feature distinguishing “good” from “evil” is how pretty the characters are, it’s a clue that maybe the whole saga deserves a second look.
By Jim
Excerpt:
Poynter Online – What Journalists Can Learn From Bloggers
Blogging isn’t just a Wild-West free-for-all of publishing with no rules or ethical guidelines. Bloggers are making up the rules of their emerging and increasingly powerful medium as they go, and they do indeed have ideas to offer those practicing traditional journalism.