thefourthvine: Two people fucking, rearview: sex is the universal fandom. (Default)
Keep Hoping Machine Running ([personal profile] thefourthvine) wrote2006-06-04 12:34 am

Slashy Awards 144: Strephon's a Member of Parliament!

I've been trying del.icio.us for a while, and I've come to the conclusion - well, it's nice to have all my bookmarks resident on the web. And it's nice to be able to put everything up there. But - well, okay. It makes me not want to do actual recommendations sets, and that's kind of why I have this journal, and it's the thing I love most. So that doesn't seem like such a great idea, basically.

And then I got to thinking - maybe there's a different bookmark system, probably not a social one, that's web-resident. Maybe someone out there knows about it! So, hey, if you do - tell me, okay? Actually, there's a few other things I'd like you to recommend to me.



You people were right about the iPod. You were right about the computer chair. I'm hoping you can be right about these things, too. My friends list thinks so that I don't have to!

  1. A (probably not social) web-based bookmarking system. Where I can store my bookmarks. And access them anywhere. But that won't give me Recommending Ennui or Need for Shyness (because you can't put spoilers in the description, and you can't really put your honest reaction sometimes, and I'm generally not ready to give an opinion when I bookmark something).

  2. A firewall. One you like, I mean. I hate my current one. I liked my old one, but it conflicted with nearly every piece of software ever coded. I want something that is highly configurable, something that has a lot of flexibility and allows me a lot of control, something that does not declare war on every other program on my system the second I install it. I am willing to pay for this. I mean, I paid for the piece of crap I have now, so.

  3. A spam filter. Here, my requirements are a little less stringent; I just really want a spam filter that filters out spam. Norton, my current filter, has not yet implemented this little piece of functionality - instead, it filters out stuff kind of at random. And it occasionally decides that one of the women I work with is a spammer, even though I've put her on the allowed list maybe eight times, and that's not good. Tell me about a spam filter that actually does its job, if you will; I'm tired of the lazy bitch I have going through my inbox right now. The thing acts like it smoked way too much pot before it came to work, and it's all, "What? Big pupils? No way, man. My eyes are just naturally blackballed." And I'm all, "Yeah. And those 18 emails from Sleepwalk X. Baghdad and Crushing J. Pendleton that you let into my inbox? Are those just natural, too?" And the spam filter's like, "Whoa. Chill, dude." And then I resort to threats. It isn't pretty.

  4. Your favorite fandom newsletters. [livejournal.com profile] sga_newsletter has totally spoiled me; I look at newsletterless fandoms and get all whiny: "I don't waaaaaaant to have to find links all by myself! I want them handed to me on a plaaaaaatter!" As a result, my reading is really heavily biased in favor of SGA right now, and not just 'cause I love the fandom (though god knows I do). It's also 'cause it's easy. (Yes, I'll cop to being lazy. This is why I want a spam filter that isn't. And also why I want someone else to do the work of, you know, finding stories for me. I just want to lie back and let the FF roll over me. Maybe you could recommend someone to print it out and hold it up in front of my eyes, too, while you're at it.)

  5. The best fan fiction you've read lately that wasn't SGA, Supernatural, or RPS. I need to broaden my reading horizons. (See also: newsletters, dependence on.) So now is the chance to tell me about that great Doctor Who x Pride and Prejudice story you read last week, or about this fantastic new fandom you're a part of. (One Tree Hill does not count, [livejournal.com profile] estrella30. Or, okay, it only counts if you can find someone totally sane to pimp it to me.)

  6. The best non-fiction book you've read lately. I'm big on travel essays, myself, but I'm pretty omnivorous when it comes to reading. Like, once Best Beloved was trying to come up with a book that I wouldn't read no matter how well it was written, and we had the following conversation:

    BB: A natural history of water?
    Me: Oooo! I'd definitely read that.
    BB, sighing: How 'bout floods? A history of floods?
    Me: Potentially depressing but very gripping. I would totally read that.
    BB, in slightly desperate tones: A history of flood insurance, then.
    Me: OMG SO FASCINATING.
    BB: You would not read that. You wouldn't. No one in her right mind would.
    Me: I -
    BB: Oh, right. We're talking about you.
    BB: *hand wavy gestures*
    Me, looking offended: I-
    BB, crossing arms and looking menacing and dangerous: Okay. Fine. What about actuarial tables for flood insurance? Big ol' book of nothing but actuarial tables.
    Me, in a very small voice: Actually, actuarial tables are quite interesting.
    BB, staring: Remind me. What do you call your home planet?

    My point is, if you think it's good, I'm willing to give it a shot. I'm not picky, here. Non-fiction! You! Me! It's a date!

    Hmmm. Got derailed somewhere in there. But my point is: tell me what you're reading, folks.

  7. Something Best Beloved should watch. Bonus points if it's anime!


Anyway. My point is, for those of you who have just read through the cut tag and have thus forgotten what the hell this post is about, even, is: del.icio.us is sapping my will to rec. So I says to myself, says I, "Return to the classics. Crossovers will bring meaning back to your journal!" And then, just to throw in even greater incentive, I lifted my usual stricture on crossovers. I mean, normally I get all on my high horse and say, "There shall be no repeats in any of the crossed over fandoms in a given crossover set." But life is too short, people.

The One That Is a Delightful Blend of Two Tasty Flavors of John. Plus Added Hotness in the Form of Claudia Black, Which Is Just Never a Bad Thing. Flying Low at Night, by [livejournal.com profile] cofax7. Farscape x Stargate: Atlantis, John Sheppard/Aeryn Sun. Have you ever found yourself standing in a TV on DVD aisle saying, "Sci Fi channel series about guys named John with special Ancient mojo who are stranded in distant universes. I wonder what the difference is?" Well, okay, first: if you have, don't admit it. You will bring shame on all of fandom. Just read this story and you'll be able to tell real, real well. A quick cheat sheet, though: Farscape has the John whose life kind of defines "out of the frying pan, into the fire." (And almost no one writes stories about his hair.) Whereas Stargate has the John whose life kind of defines "the road to hell is paved with good intentions." (And his hair has about the same number of fans as he does.)

So what I love about this story is that it - no, okay. I need to be honest. I love a lot about this story. I mean, I adore that it starts after the crossover - way after, in fact. We don't worry about how John (Hair-John, as I will be calling him for the rest of this summary, so as to avoid confusion) got to the Farscape end of the universe. He's there, and it's pretty consistent with the way his life has gone thus far, so that's fine. We pick up with him after years in Farscape, in fact, and we get to see what it's done to him. (Basically, it's turned him back into the guy in Antarctica. With about four hundred years' worth of added world weariness.) And then we get to see him cope with the other John's (Can I just call him Crichton? I'm getting kind of lost amongst all the Johns, here.) situation. It's just...wow. But what I was going to say (just re-read the beginning of this paragraph; if I go into it again we'll never get out of here) is that most of all I love the ending. It's hopeful and it's - it's just - god. I want a million more stories telling what happens after this, because I think that part of the universe is in for some very interesting times.

The One in Which Charles Gunn Is Confused about Why Everyone in Pegasus Speaks English. Right There with You, Gunn. Outward Bound, by Hth, aka [livejournal.com profile] hth_the_first. Stargate: Atlantis x Angel the Series, Charles Gunn/Wesley Wyndham-Pryce, Charles Gunn/Ronon Dex. Before, we had a character from SGA sucked into another universe. Now we have a character from another universe sucked into SGA. And this...okay. First, let me just admit that I couldn't face watching any of Angel after season one - frankly, I think it was very brave of me to keep watching after Doyle did his Flying Wallenda - and so I never really got to know Gunn that well. I didn't ever meet Fred, or follow the whole Arc of Incredibly Complex Complexity that characterized Wesley's, um, last few seasons. But I love this story anyway.

Hth makes an excellent point, here - the Angel crew and the SGA crew aren't that different. They're both operating without much of a plan, and sometimes they both fuck up royally. And all the characters in both have kind of grown accustomed to living in greater danger - a higher state of alert, if you will - than most humans even know is possible, from creatures that aren't supposed to exist. So, you know, I wasn't too sure about this concept at first, but then I realized it is perfect. Plus, Gunn and Ronon get it on. Pretty much your ideal universe, right there. Well. If you discount the very high probability of death, and I totally couldn't, but I think Gunn and Ronon have both reached the point where "constant threat of death" equals "situation normal" in their minds.

The One That Explores Humanity's Basic Inability to Follow the Rules. And Isn't That What Makes People Great? The Sound of One Hand Clapping, by Gale, aka [livejournal.com profile] iphignia939. Firefly x Stargate: SG-1, gen. (Ha! I bet you totally thought this would be another SGA crossover. But once again, the hand was quicker than the eye!) Um. I am unfamiliar with Firefly, but I think this story is about a Major Spoiler. Yes. And I'm not sure if it's the kind of thing that everyone in all of fandom knows, or if it's more of a new thing. So I'm going to slip this summary behind a cut, just in case, and can someone please tell me if it's necessary or not?

It's also about a Major Spoiler from SG1, but I think everyone knows that one by now. Basically, what we have here is the two Major Spoilers interacting with each other. Oh. Right. I'm allowed to go into detail about the spoilers now. So. A dead guy named Wash walks into a bar. And there's a dead guy named Daniel there. And Daniel proves that "non-interference" is not a term in your average earth human's vocabulary - not the average earth human who gets to ascend, anyway - and then Wash backs him up. (And incidentally probably provides the impetus for yet another defection from Team Glowy Squid. If the Ancients keep beaming up modern humans, it's eventually going to start raining naked amnesiacs, I'm thinking.) And then there is a reunion scene. I found it touching even though I know absolutely nothing about any of the characters reuniting. That is pretty much the definition of a happy ending, no?

The One That Gives a Lot of Depth to a Certain Hair-Bedecked Guy Named John. And, Hey - This Totally Explains That, Too, Come to Think of It. Just As Required, Without Excess, by [livejournal.com profile] liviapenn. Stargate: Atlantis x DCU, gen. (Yep, it's the all Stargate crossover set. If you wish this trend not to continue, check under the first cut tag.) Okay. This story made me swoon with joy. When I tried to write up a description in del.icio.us, I ended up with a lot of exclamation points and random squealing. (Of course you can squeal in print. I'm not saying it's pretty, but it can be done.) I'm not sure if it'll be quite the same orgasmic experience if you don't know the DCU, but if you don't recognize the crossover character, Livia provides a helpful link at the end. And I'm pretty sure it will still work. Just - it's worth learning a bit about the DCU just so you can wave your hands about incoherently right along with me, okay?

You know, we all read (and sometimes write) a lot of stories trying to explain John's weirdness. (No, I can't describe it better than that. If I could, I'd write my own damn story, 'kay?) And this one did it so well. I don't really want to spoil it, and I really don't want to add another damn cut tag to this entry, but - look. This story provides a back story for John that I can absolutely and totally buy into. After you read it, I invite you to reflect upon what it says about the character (and the actor and the writers, maybe) that this had me nodding and saying, "Yeah! Oh my god YES! That so totally works! And also, RODNEY IS TIM AND TEYLA IS BATGIRL." (Lately I've discovered that all my fandoms can be translated into the Batverse. Like, Fraser is Tim and Ray K. is Nightwing and Stella is Oracle and Frannie is Steph and Ray Vecchio is Jason Todd. Um. Not that I've put a lot of thought into this or anything. Really. And I haven't even considered writing a paper about how Batman is the only character that doesn't usually have an analog, possibly because he's too fucked up for there to be more than one of him in the multiverse.)
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[identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 07:37 am (UTC)(link)
Well, mostly I've been reading Firefly lately, so um, The Maharani's Mocking Bird (http://nimori.livejournal.com/222574.html), which is about River and Simon - and is River/Simon (which is brother/sister incest, if that's a problem) - and River's been experimented on by the govt and so she's kind of a mind reader and it makes her a little crazy and she has no sense of boundaries and needs Simon to make everything better, and well, there's a reason they call it crazy space incest. Really good story, though, with a plot and everything.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 09:11 am (UTC)(link)
Well, but, see - incest is the reason I said no Supernatural. I've got an incest squick that just refuses to go away. I'd love a rec of Firefly gen, though - is there any story you can think of offhand that might work as an introduction to the fandom or characters?

If it helps, I've read a few Firefly crossover stories (besides this one, I mean), and, going by those, I think I'd be most interested in (in order of probability): Simon, Mal, River. Also possibly Kaylee (although I've hardly seen mention of her in stories, the few lines she's had have been interesting) and Wash (everyone seems to like him, but I only have slightly more data about him than Kaylee).

[identity profile] katie-m.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 02:52 pm (UTC)(link)
You've read Big Damn Zombies, Sir (http://glassonion.populli.org/archive/7/bigdamn.shtml), right?
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[identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 04:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmm... I'm not so much with the Simon, personally, but there's Par for the Course (http://moodfic.livejournal.com/30029.html?style=mine) by [livejournal.com profile] voluese, about Simon learning to live with less than he's used to having.

Reliance (http://www.geocities.com/roseveare/reliance.html) by Roseveare is a gen novella that captures the feel of the show really well, I think, and might serve.

Another Horsedreamer's Blues (http://www.livejournal.com/users/loneraven/460803.html?style=mine) by [livejournal.com profile] loneraven is a great Mal story. (Er, most of what I read and rec centers on Mal somehow, so...)

Embracing a Life of Crime (http://macha.healthyinterest.net/archives/2005/10/embracing_a_lif.html) by Macha is a fun pre-series story about Wash becoming part of the crew, and wooing Zoe...

Sweet Dreams and Flying Machines (http://users.livejournal.com/_astralis/57404.html) by [livejournal.com profile] _astralis is a missing scene from the movie that feels like it should have been in there, in which Mal and Kaylee survey the damage to the ship.

and if you're looking for utter hilarity, there's Can't Stop the Turtle (http://uarazy2.livejournal.com/45710.html) by [livejournal.com profile] uarazy2, which is a Firefly/Discworld crossover that literally made me laugh out loud...

And of course, "Big Damn Zombies" is totally worth reading. *g*

[identity profile] wildgreentide.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 11:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't read a whole lot of Firefly fic, because I felt like the show itself gave me almost everything I needed, but I can rec two excellent stories that I've read and loved: [livejournal.com profile] vee_fic's Cradle Elbows Wide (http://glassonion.populli.org/archive/6/cradleelbows.shtml), gen, about Mal and Zoe and their regiment in the Battle of Serenity Valley, and [livejournal.com profile] nestra's Leaves are beginning to fall (http://nestra.livejournal.com/133543.html), a beautiful and very short post-Serenity story about acceptance.
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[identity profile] wistfuljane.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 07:53 am (UTC)(link)
Hmm...I don't know if you know this, but del.icio.us has a private saving feature (go setting > private saving & enable the option so that whenever you bookmark a link, you can make it private) if you want to go that route. I'll get back on you about other bookmark softwares 'cause I need to look them up.
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[identity profile] wistfuljane.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:12 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, yes, I've seen Furl (http://www.furl.net/index.jsp) recommended, but I haven't used it myself so I'll like you to this artcle (http://www.dlib.org/dlib/april05/hammond/04hammond.html) for a comparision of social bookmarking softwares (scroll down to tools).

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 09:12 am (UTC)(link)
Ooo, cool. Thank you!

*points, clicks*

[identity profile] hannahrorlove.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 07:53 am (UTC)(link)
4. The only ones I read are [livejournal.com profile] the_cortex and [livejournal.com profile] house_notice which aren't spectacular but work fairly well enough for me.

5. Old, but still good: A mix - not quite a crossover - of Firefly and 'The Ship Who Sang' books. (http://coelogyne.livejournal.com/26309.html) [Link to part five.]

A supernatural, surreal piece in the 'House' fandom. (http://users.livejournal.com/_ares/9189.html)

Another from 'House' - gen! It exists! (http://pwcorgigirl.livejournal.com/27244.html)

6. The Quitter by Harvey Pekar and Dean Haspiel, which is an autobiography. Before that, it'd be Bringing Down The House by Ben Mezrich, which is a very fast read and a lot of fun. Stiffby Mary Roach is probably right up your alley; it's all about cadavers.

7. Dead Poets Society. Witness. The Station Agent. American Beauty. The Blues Brothers. A Night At The Opera. The Squid And The Whale. Stiff Upper Lips. Roger Dodger. The Secret Of Roan Inish. The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. The Wild Parrots Of Telegraph Hill. Porco Rosso.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 09:28 am (UTC)(link)
4. Wheee! Thank you.

5. Further "Wheee!" And further thanks, too.

6. Yet further whee. The latter two are familiar to me, but I'd not heard of The Quitter. *adds to wish list*

7. Best Beloved has seen about half of these, but the others look interesting, particularly Porco Rosso and The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill. *adds to Netflix queue*

[identity profile] ficbyzee.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 07:54 am (UTC)(link)
I have such insane, insane amounts of love for Outward Bound. Because... dude, Gunn. And Ronon. And--and really, yeah, that's all I got.

The best non-fiction book I've *been* reading lately is A Death in Brazil, by... uh. I am too lazy to actually go pick up the book and look at the author name. *koff* But it's really good! Trust me! Erm.

As for fanfiction, as anyone who's glanced at my journal can probably tell, I've returned to obsessing to a dangerous degree over comics. Which is a fandom I think you also follow, so I don't know if I'll be able to offer anything new, but stories I have enjoyed *immensely* lately have been Both Alike in Dignity (http://petronelle.livejournal.com/211107.html#cutid1) by [livejournal.com profile] petronelle (yes, the pairing probably makes sane people flinch, just look *past* that) and Off Page Six (http://glossing.livejournal.com/236701.html?#cutid1) by [livejournal.com profile] glossing (again, don't let the pairing put you off, this fic is brilliant and just HOT); on the gen side of things, I'm sure you've already read [livejournal.com profile] c_elisa's fucking amazing Hank fic that has been recced all over LJ-land, so I am too lazy to find the link I won't bother to repeat other fans' more coherent reccomendations of that story. Also, [livejournal.com profile] petronelle gives awesome Jim Gordon in Squandered My Resistance (http://www.aliencorn.net/obscura/squandered.html).

And... well, okay, I don't know if this will relate at all to your original request for recs, but should you have a craving for Super-people with Bat-people, I uh. I've started collecting stories of that nature under the World's Finest bundle here. (http://del.icio.us/zeelee) Yes I know the obsession is just sad at this point, shut up shut UP

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 09:37 am (UTC)(link)
I loved Both Alike in Dignity. What's icky about the pairing? Kon! Barbara! There's no bad there. (And there's *really* no bad in a sweet happy Kon story, what with, uh, recent events. Now I just need a hit of Classic Tim and my happiness will be complete.)

And I also loved Off Page Six and Squandered My Resistance (OMG EEEE about sums up my reaction there). And of course I've read [livejournal.com profile] c_elisa's Kingdom of Heaven, and it SO GOOD. It was a tossup between two sets tonight, and I went with crossovers, but if I'd done the other Kingdom of Heaven would've been on it.

*happy sigh*

And speaking of all things comics-y, do you happen to know if there's a DCU (or Marvel, for that matter) newsletter? I remember, um, was it Minisoo? Maybe? Except probably it was really someone else? talking about starting one, but I never heard if it got going. Because there are so many great stories in those fandoms. A newsletter would be excellent.

(Of course I knew about your pervy little World's Finest collection. Wonderful idea. Super-anything plus Bat-anything does in fact equal joy.)

[identity profile] ficbyzee.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Kon! Barbara! There's no bad there

See, that's what *I* think, but people kept giving me horrified looks when I said that. (Yes, I know it's the internet. I can just tell they're giving me horrified looks.)

There is no comics newsletter that I know of, which is too bad. There's [livejournal.com profile] dcfic_index and [livejournal.com profile] marvelfic_index, of course, but--well, DC as a fandom is kinf of... irregular? I mean, from *my* point of view in the fandom, it seems like we get a few days of tons of great fic being posted, and then dry spells. So having a newsletter published every day--well, it might be incredibly depressing, or at least weird. Heh.

[identity profile] ficbyzee.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 07:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Also:

And I haven't even considered writing a paper about how Batman is the only character that doesn't usually have an analog, possibly because he's too fucked up for there to be more than one of him in the multiverse.

Angel, man! If only because they are both such assholes, and because their lady friends seem to find refrigerators at about equal rates.

[identity profile] murklins.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:01 am (UTC)(link)
1. I love delicious a lot, but it took me a while to get there. I still mark everything "do not share" if I have to be brutally honest and call it like it is. Still, I would be sad to lose your social bookmarks. I sort of look at them once in a while, because sometimes you seem to go *back in time* and pull out old links, which is very cool. But yeah, do not share is my friend and it could be yours too. But I find delicious has not enough space for notes, so if you find something with more notes, I'd love to know.

4. Probably I should say the [livejournal.com profile] sshp_prophet because it's the one I edit, but really it's the [livejournal.com profile] vm_navigator because Veronica Mars fic is my guilty addiction. I can't stop reading it, but it hurts so bad. So I need the newsletter to see when fic I might be able to stand gets posted.

5. Recs. Hard to rec things to you -- not sure which ones I found out about from here in the first place.

Benevolent Sibling (http://mercurial-wit.livejournal.com/31848.html) by [livejournal.com profile] fahye, BSG. Galactica's residents star in the Cylon hit reality series Benevolent Sibling. Excerpt: “You can’t activate him now,” Sharon added, obeying. “He hasn’t slept with Gaius yet.” Six choked on a peanut. “That being the really important thing, of course."

Like New (http://penknife.livejournal.com/188620.html) by [livejournal.com profile] penknife, Good Omens. Crowley has amnesia and has forgotten he's a demon. Aziraphale suspects it's just a new way for Crowley to annoy him. Funny and sad and altogether lovely.

Pop Divas After The End of the World (http://meyerlemon.livejournal.com/302490.html) by [livejournal.com profile] meyerlemon, RPF and BSG. What if the resistance on Caprica were led, not by sports stars, but popstars? Crack, of course. Excerpt: "Shit, Kara," Britney said, sounding a little annoyed, "it's the end of the world. Let it go."

The Fifty-Point Scrabble Bonus (http://fox1013.livejournal.com/1008402.html) by [livejournal.com profile] fox1013, Grey's Anatomy. Izzie plays Scrabble with rabid intensity. Somehow this leads to Scrabble porn. Excerpt: Izzie beat Cristina, 316 to 149. She followed it up with her victory dance, reserved for only the most special occasions. Cristina declared war.

I can't resist reccing RPS, but it's really old, so maybe that makes it okay?

Pancake Mouth (http://helpwess.livejournal.com/66534.html) by [livejournal.com profile] helpwess, Olympics Swimming RPS. Michael Phelps is the unlikely yenta in this Olympics RPF story. Excerpt: "HA, HA," bellows Pieter's subself, and capers about in glee. "You're going to die! Your feeble Dutch gay is no match for the Thorpedo!"

6. Never read non-fiction successfully. But I did like Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0393050939/104-5339888-6537525?v=glance&n=283155) by Mary Roach. Everyone on the planet has read it though, so this wasn't very helpful.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
sometimes you seem to go *back in time* and pull out old links

Yup, I do. If I go back to something I have bookmarked in my old folder for any reason - and because of the way I rec and read, I do that fairly often - I try to put it into del.icio.us, too. If I went once, I'll probably go again, that's my reasoning.

Somehow this leads to Scrabble porn.

*amused*

Scrabble porn! That is totally appealing. (And now, of course, I'm thinking - if I like it, that will make two stories about Scrabble in two different fandoms. Will there one day be enough for a recs set?)

[identity profile] murklins.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 07:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmm. The only other Scrabble fic I remember is Scrabble (http://martianhouse.livejournal.com/1659.html) by MartianHousecat ([livejournal.com profile] schmevil). The Slytherins take Scrabble very seriously. Hilarious gen, no porn at all, except for hints of Draco/Pansy. A few comma problems, esily overlooked (by me, at least, because as you can see I'm no stranger to comma abuse).

[identity profile] harriet-spy.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:05 am (UTC)(link)
7. Something Best Beloved should watch. Bonus points if it's anime!

Invader Zim! Not quite anime, but all awesome.

If only the world could know *exactly* what went into "Just As Required"'s being written for me, you all would think that I had *almost* earned such a wondrous story. But not quite. I'm still over the moon about it.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Invader Zim! Not quite anime, but all awesome.

*heads over to Netflix*

*reads summary*

*blinks*

Well, Invader Zim wins at unexpected. Also, Netflix thinks BB will like it, too. I have to respect any series that is somehow linked (in Netflix's recommendations system, anyway) to Red Dwarf, Trigun, Farscape, and Spirited Away.

*adds to queue*

If only the world could know *exactly* what went into "Just As Required"'s being written for me, you all would think that I had *almost* earned such a wondrous story. But not quite. I'm still over the moon about it.

*interested*

I thought it was just, you know, for your general fabulousness. Did you have to save the universe, too? Because that story is good enough that it's totally worth a universe rescue or two.

Obviously, you should write a fearless, searing expose: "Behind the Scenes of 'Just As Required': Passion, Heroism, Zeal, and the Occasional Musical Interlude."

*looks hopeful*
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[identity profile] ziplockeddaze.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:10 am (UTC)(link)
4. My favourite is [livejournal.com profile] who_daily. A daily roundup of (it seems) all the Doctor Who links on LJ, this one can get very long though. I also like [livejournal.com profile] ds_weekly, [livejournal.com profile] farscape_weekly, [livejournal.com profile] hl_flash and [livejournal.com profile] despatches (age of sail).

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I already had [livejournal.com profile] despatches, of course. Age of Sail cannot be denied. And [livejournal.com profile] ds_weekly, because Ray and Fraser will always be one of my very happy places. But I had never heard of the Farscape or HL ones. Excellent.

*adds*

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:12 pm (UTC)(link)
And, of course, the Doctor Who one. I knew I was forgetting something.

*adds again*

[identity profile] lalejandra.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:16 am (UTC)(link)
I was really really really dubious about One Tree Hill when [livejournal.com profile] ethrosdemon first tried to get [livejournal.com profile] estrella30 and me to watch it--but then I watched it. If for no other reason, you should watch it because the dialogue is at the same time true to the way people, especially teenagers, really speak--and isn't annoying the way people sometimes are. The characters are deftly drawn without seeming two-dimensional. Moira Kelly! (But I'm only on episode #7, so I might not be the best judge.)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:16 pm (UTC)(link)
*thoughtful*

Do you think it's still something I might like (and I refer here to FF, not the actual show; if I decide to start reading OTH, Best Beloved will be doing the watching of it) if I, in general, am not too keen on teenagers? (I mean, I acknowledge that it's a phase we all must go through, and teenagers have my complete and total sympathy. But I way overdrew my account at the Adolescent Angst and Drama Savings Bank in my own teen years - still paying it off as we speak - so I tend to avoid teenagers in fiction. We're always the most judgemental people who are a lot like we used to be, right? Wow. I really hope that's not just me.)

[identity profile] lalejandra.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Hm. In that case, no--probably not. Right now, according to [livejournal.com profile] ethrosdemon, most of the OTH fic sucks--and I can't see that anyone who'd start writing in it (her, me, [livejournal.com profile] estrella30, um, maybe some other people I don't know) would take it to a place where it's more like dS or SGA or SV or something, with the crack and the futurefic. So, in conclusion, no. Le sigh!

[identity profile] flambeau.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:17 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not very helpful on useful stuff like firewalls and spam filters, alas. My ISP has a great spam filter, so basically I never have to think about it.

But!

5, A bunch of stuff in last month's Jeeves & Wooster recs at [livejournal.com profile] crack_van.

6, Does it have to be just one? I love travel books, and would rec Mary McCarthy's The Stones of Florence and Venice Observed to just about anyone (there's a handy both-in-one Penguin pocket edition, too), and lately I've been rereading Wilde's Essays and Lectures (because I was rereading the plays and somehow I mind less being lectured when it's actually lectures), and Umberto Eco's How to Travel with a Salmon & Other Essays (this one recced with a slight question mark because I've no idea what the translation to English is like, but I have no reason to think it shouldn't be good *g*), and Alberto Manguel's A History of Reading (the act, not the place), and Schindler's and Morton's travel books, and also a bunch of stuff in Swedish that isn't translated, alas. Oh, and Mark Kurlansky's book about the history of cod fishing.

7, Shoujo Kakumei Utena, Full Metal Alchemist, Neon Genesis Evangelion, Cowboy Bebop, Rurouni Kenshin, Cardcaptor Sakura, Bleach, Slayers, Here is Greenwood, Yami no Matsuei, Escaflowne, Wolf's Rain. Or maybe some other stuff. *g*

[identity profile] out-there.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:55 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, god, yes, she's right about the anime. I can't vouch for Rurouni Kenshin, Bleach, Escaflowne or Wolf's Rain, but the rest of those are damn good (so I'd assume that entire list is worth watching).

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:26 pm (UTC)(link)
A bunch of stuff in last month's Jeeves & Wooster recs at [livejournal.com profile] crack_van.

Ooo! Right! Last month I was totally swamped with work, so I didn't get a chance to read much, but I very much meant to go back and read those. In other words, thank you for providing a much-needed backup for my highly unreliable memory.

Read Mary McCarthy and the Wilde, but the Eco book sounds innnnteresting. As does A History of Reading.

Clearly, you should be recommending all the stuff you read to me. The stuff that's in English, I mean; Swedish is a fine language, and I hear it's very popular with moose, but I don't speak it. *sad*

Shoujo Kakumei Utena, Full Metal Alchemist, Neon Genesis Evangelion, Cowboy Bebop, Rurouni Kenshin, Cardcaptor Sakura, Bleach, Slayers, Here is Greenwood, Yami no Matsuei, Escaflowne, Wolf's Rain.

*thoughtful*

A lot of people have recommended Bleach. Obviously, this will require further investigation. And no one has recommended Here Is Greenwood except you, but your taste seems to jibe fairly well with Best Beloved's, so...

*heads off to Netflix*

Our Netflix queue will long remember this day in history. "Oh, right. The day I doubled in length. Who could forget that?"

Wait. Netflix doesn't have Bleach. This...this sets my whole world atilt. I don't even remember how we got visual media before Netflix.

[identity profile] out-there.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:29 am (UTC)(link)
Something Best Beloved should watch. Bonus points if it's anime!

I say Full Metal Alchemist because, yeah, I don't care if everyone else in fandom's already seen it, I only just started watching it on Wednesday and through a strong determination and hours staring at a computer screen am three-quarters through the 51 episodes and *desperately* wanting to know what happens next.

It's got magic. It's got anime humour. It's got Heroes on a Quest. It's also got more adult themes of government, rationals of war, and the horrible things that people will do to acheive their aims (either knowing or not knowing the consequences and costs).

It's also got continuity.

That gets bolded because finding an anime series where the character met in episode four turns out to be met again in episode 26, proving part of the governments lies and still hinting at other truths we don't yet know, is rare as all hell. This is a series where I'm paying attention to all of the tertiary characters because any of them could show up again later and it could *mean something* and good god I want to be able to *understand* it when it happens.

So, yeah, in short: Full Metal Alchemist = good watching.

[identity profile] lwdagreat.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
Whee - I just posted my rec, and laughed to see I'd been beaten to it - although I must say you articulated the reasons why it's such a good show much better than I ever could. So once I again I second - watch Full Metal Alchemist :)

[identity profile] out-there.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:56 am (UTC)(link)
And yet you could explain the characters -- which is a bit beyond me. I get caught up trying to explain literally *everyone* and no-one can follow my meaning.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:28 pm (UTC)(link)
*thoughtful*

I'm not sure if Best Beloved has seen FMA or not. But you make a very compelling argument, so...

*provisionally adds to list*

[identity profile] lwdagreat.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:35 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know if these can be really compared to actuarial tables, as they're humor (although non-fiction) but I've really enjoyed Dave Gorman's "Are You Dave Gorman?" (the story of one man's quest to find all the other Dave Gormans of the world) & his "Googlewhack Adventure" (totally hilarious - this can also be obtained on DVD and should be viewed for the pie charts alone. Also, who among us hasn't woken up drunk in an airport with a plane ticket to a city we hate on the other side of the planet and no idea how we got there. And then decided to go and while there, contact a total stranger with whom you once exchanged an e-mail). Also Danny Wallace's Join Me (the story of how a personal ad created a thousands-strong cult of people with no actual cause).

If you want anime recommendations here are two:
1. Full Metal Alchemist - the story of one arrogant loud-mouth food-obsessed abrasive genius who finds himself working for the military/government after publicly displaying his genius at the age of 12, who reports to the dark haired ladies-man major-later-colonel with the mysterious past he doesn't like to speak about from a religious/power war in the desert and who likes to lounge around smirking, avoiding paper work and pulling the genius' chain, all supported by a cast of total rejects struggling to find the ultimate power source and fight off evil immortal beings trying to kill them. A story unlike any we've heard before. :) Overall, this story is sometimes funny, but mostly dark, with some interesting thoughts about life, politics, religion, family, etc.

2. Bleach - A great story with a large cast of characters you actually care about. Ichigo can see spirits, and when a dark one called a Hollow is attacking his home and the Shinigami (or Reaper) who fights them off is injured, she lends him her powers despite this being against the laws of the spirit world. Lots of fun, exciting plots & interesting characters.

Both series are described with more information at www.animeindepth.com

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:35 pm (UTC)(link)
All those books sound fabulous, and I'm only sad that my library system doesn't have them. To Amazon I go.

And, ooo! thanks for the animeindepth link; Bleach and FMA are definitely proving to be the winners of the Rec Something for Best Beloved to Watch category. Must read up on this further.

*clicks with joy*

[identity profile] lwdagreat.livejournal.com 2006-06-09 06:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I just remembered this...FMA is playing on Cartoon Network & is on sale in some places, but Bleach isn't yet - if you're interested in it, all 83 episodes so far are available via torrent at http://yhbt.mine.nu/t/

So if you do decide to go with Bleach, that's the easiest way to get it. Sorry I didn't mention that earlier. :)

[identity profile] cupidsbow.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
I can't remember whether you already know about my multi-fandom rec comm or not: [livejournal.com profile] rec_room. I think there's over 900 recs in there, although about half of them are SGA.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Oooo! No, I totally didn't know about [livejournal.com profile] rec_room. Thanks for pointing me there! (If there was a fandom-wide competition for "Fan Most Likely to Be the Last to Know," I would be a strong contender. Although I might end up losing to a fan in a coma, or one spending a year in a distant, internet-less location.)

[identity profile] cupidsbow.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 09:17 am (UTC)(link)
Noted :) Although, to be fair, I've never pimped [livejournal.com profile] rec_room on a major comm, so it's quite reasonable for you not to have known about it.

While I'm here, it occurs to me that you probably haven't seen my rec the reccers (http://cupidsbow.livejournal.com/147221.html) listing either. That should keep you going for a minute or two. Happy reading.

[identity profile] anoneknewmoose.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:37 am (UTC)(link)
Non-fiction book recs: Barbara Kingsolver's The Bean Trees (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0061097314/sr=8-1/qid=1149409435/ref=pd_bbs_1/103-2449747-6870240?%5Fencoding=UTF8) and its sequel Pigs in Heaven (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/006109868X/ref=pd_bxgy_text_b/002-8117737-1880828?%5Fencoding=UTF8) (I also recommend The Poisonwood Bible (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060786507/sr=8-2/qid=1149409865/ref=pd_bbs_2/002-8117737-1880828?%5Fencoding=UTF8)). Re-reading them now and still love them.

On an entirely different shelf in the bookstore, [livejournal.com profile] naominovik's Temeraire series (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/stores/series/-/91728/ref=pd_sr_ec_ser_b/002-8117737-1880828), which are (to quote the mod of the fan community) an "AU historical regency naval fiction" series. Absolutely fantastic: well-researched, fleshed out characters that feel real, funny but appropriate scenes, and a Jacobin dragon. In the Napoleonic wars.

[identity profile] anoneknewmoose.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:39 am (UTC)(link)
Wait. Sorry. For some reason I...thought non-fiction meant fiction. Um, sorry about that; they're great books, but definitely fiction, and obviously this means I should go to bed.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:04 pm (UTC)(link)
This comment made my heart swell with love, because - have you seen Sports Night? Danny at one point has a discussion in which he confuses "secular" and "non-secular," and this gave me a sudden happy memory of that scene.

Oh, Sports Night. How I love thee.

*glows*

But, in any case - hmmm. See, I am much, much pickier about fiction than I have any right to be. My ratio tends to be about 9:1 non-fiction to fiction. But that doesn't mean I don't read it at all. Kingsolver, hmmm?

*considers*

*has epiphany*

Wow. I just realized that I've always been stupidly biased against The Bean Trees because the title makes me think of The Milagro Beanfield War (read it way, way too young, didn't realize a rotting donkey was a central theme until much too late, never really recovered). But I do know that that's not actually a logical reason to avoid all fiction with "Bean" in the title.

*departs to check it out*

[identity profile] anoneknewmoose.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Haha. No, I haven't seen it, but that's great.

Rotting donkey? Bzuh?

Bean Trees has no rotting donkeys. Enjoy! ;)

[identity profile] flyingtapes.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
darling--as an interjection, you know the temeraire series was written by the same fair writer as "Transcendental" and "A Beautiful Lifetime Event?" while that alone gave me cause to read it, I stayed 'cause it's done in the style of patrick o'brien. and since you were the saucy broad who pimped that to me, I suspect you will like it quite well.

[identity profile] damned-colonial.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:39 am (UTC)(link)
1. A friend of mine developed a thing called "rubric" that might do what you want. It's very much like del.icio.us but supports a tag called @private which means nobody else can see the entry. There seems to be a publicly usable version of the site here: http://de.lirio.us/

2. I've got nothing here. I mean, I get the impression that what you really want is something that prevents you from getting spyware and other such nasties? My only suggestions is that you stop using Windows and, if you have a simplistic cable modem that's not also a router, get one that's a router and that will put you inside a NAT type network. That'll mean that your machine itself won't be reachable from the wider internet. Firewalls don't belong on your computer, they belong *between* your computer and the Internet.

3. There are no really good spam filters, sorry. A Bayesian filter in your client might help, though, if you don't have one already. They're quite good at learning what's spam and what's not based on you training them for a while. Of course that depends on what client you use. I know that Mail.app, the mail client that comes with a Mac, has a Bayesian filter built in. The other thing I do, that you might want to consider, is that I have a gmail account that is used for backup. *EVERY* piece of email I get goes there too, as a copy, before any spam filtering occurs. Then if someone says "No really! I did send it to you!" and you find yourself thinking "oh God, my spam filter probably ate it" you can just log into gmail and say "OK, where is it?" and the search thingy will find it for you.

4. [livejournal.com profile] despatches. Which I really ought to just hand over to [livejournal.com profile] nolivingman at this point, since I haven't been doing my share at all for ages.

5. Errr, I'm sure you read my "recent fanfic reading" posts so a) if I read it, you already know about it, and b) you'll see that I, too, have been sucked into the laziness that is the SGA newsletter. Um. Absolute best one recently would have to be "Green Ice", though, the Jeeves and Wooster/Lord Peter Wimsey crossover.

6. Haven't been reading much non-fic lately, I'm afraid, so can't rec anything particular. "Nelson's Navy" by Brian Lavery is rather a favourite, though.

7. Brideshead Revisited. I'm picking this totally at random from the pile of DVDs on the shelf that *I* should watch, actually -- I bought the set, watched some, then read the book and never finished watching the DVDs. What was I thinking?

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)
There are no really good spam filters, sorry.

I was beginning to suspect as much, but I cling to the hope that there is one and it's just really well hidden. A stealth spam filter, if you will. Ninja Anti-Spam! It sneaks onto your hard drive late in the night and dices the spam into itty bitty pieces. Then it tracks the spam back to its origin point and embeds a poisoned dagger directly into the heart of the spammer.

I would pay good money for that program. I so totally would.

The other thing I do, that you might want to consider, is that I have a gmail account that is used for backup.

This is a brilliant idea. *awed*

[livejournal.com profile] despatches

Abundantly familiar with it. Of course. All the Age of Sail, in one handy post! (Which, speaking of that - have you read the new Susan Cooper AoS book yet? I want to order it, but...I love her other books so much that I'm afraid my expectations are wildly inflated.)

Errr, I'm sure you read my "recent fanfic reading" posts

Yup. And thank you for re-instating those. I love them intensely. (You're excused from both the FF rec question and the non-fiction rec question, thanks entirely to your diligence with your reading lists. See? Entirely worth the effort! Well, for some definitions of the word "worth," anyway.)

"Nelson's Navy" by Brian Lavery is rather a favourite, though.

*adds to wish list*

I'm picking this totally at random from the pile of DVDs on the shelf that *I* should watch, actually -- I bought the set, watched some, then read the book and never finished watching the DVDs.

*doubtful*

I've read the book. I didn't realize there was a - movie? TV show? - based on it, though. Is it. Um. Is it any good?

[identity profile] damned-colonial.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm in the middle of Susan Cooper's "Victory" right now and it's DAMNED GOOD. It flips between the story of a young boy pressed into service aboard Nelson's flagship, and that of a homesick English girl living in Connecticut with her blended family, who finds a book about Nelson. I'm not sure how the two are going to connect just yet, and I don't really care all that much about the girl, but the bits with the boy are great so far.

BR was made into a TV series in the 1980s, with a youthful Jeremy Irons as Charles Ryder and Anthony Andrews as Sebastian. They are *adorable*. The series itself is long and lavish and very true to the book.

There are rumours that Andrew Davies (1995 Pride and Prejudice, Bridget Jones' Diary, the Vanity Fair mini-series I made the vid out of, etc) is going to make another BR mini-series with Jude Law and Paul Bettany, but he got himself on my shit list forever for saying that he was going to remove any homoerotic subtext. This after making "Tipping the Velvet". Fucker.

[identity profile] damned-colonial.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Warner Brothers, too, is to bypass the big guns for its film version of Brideshead Revisited. Andrew Davies, the man who sexed up Pride and Prejudice, has been brought on board and he is already bent on butching it up. His version will be "darker and more heterosexual", he claims, concentrating on Charles Ryder and Julia Flyte's doomed love affair, rather than his more effete relationship with her brother Sebastian.

(http://film.guardian.co.uk/cannes/story/0,,957901,00.html (http://film.guardian.co.uk/cannes/story/0,,957901,00.html))

And also here: http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1193983,00.html

And a few other places if you google. Bastard. *spits*

[identity profile] exceptinsects.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 02:03 am (UTC)(link)
[gasps]

There is a Jeeves and Wooster/Lord Peter Wimsey crossover??

[goes off to find these so-called "recent fanfic reading" posts of yours, omg]

[identity profile] annavtree.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 08:53 am (UTC)(link)
5. There's fanfiction that isn't supernatural or RPS? Really? Where?

6. The Last Shot by Darcy Frey is this absolutely wonderful book that uses basketball to talk about larger issues like culture and race and class.

'68 by Paco Ignacio Taibo about the Mexican Student Movement of 1968 before it was crushed by the Massacre at Tlatelolco.

Taylor Branch's Civil Rights Movement Trilogy.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:21 pm (UTC)(link)
There's fanfiction that isn't supernatural or RPS? Really? Where?

Oh, it's about. It's just using its natural camoflage to escape detection.

*sets up portable FF tracking device and author radio-tagging system*

The Last Shot by Darcy Frey is this absolutely wonderful book that uses basketball to talk about larger issues like culture and race and class.

Innnnnteresting. *adds to wish list*

'68 by Paco Ignacio Taibo

You know, I wouldn't know anything about this movement if it wasn't for the internet. Makes me wonder if anyone in the US knew about it when it was actually happening.

*likewise adds*

Taylor Branch's Civil Rights Movement Trilogy

Once more into the wish list!

[identity profile] annavtree.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
*sets up portable FF tracking device and author radio-tagging system*

Admires your pretty, shiny technology.

I hope you enjoy the books. There was some knowledge of Mexico '68 at the time but the US news coverage of Mexico is never great and the movement was so short that most people who do know about it don't realize how deep it went.
abbylee: (Default)

[personal profile] abbylee 2006-06-04 09:04 am (UTC)(link)
You write too long for me to keep track, so bear with me.

If you use firefox, mostly from the same computers, you might be interested in this extension:
[Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<a [...] http://www.wordpress.org</a>') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.]

You write too long for me to keep track, so bear with me.

If you use firefox, mostly from the same computers, you might be interested in this extension: <A href="https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/14/</a>Bookmarks Synchronizer</a>, and using the web-browse feature. Another alternative is weblog software such as <a href="http://www.wordpress.org</a>WordPress</a> that you can customize to make quick bookmarks. If you're just saving bookmarks for yourself for later, I actually used to just draft emails in gmail and organize them later.

I like <a href="http://www.zonealarm.com">Zone Alarm</a>, but my brother recently installed a software firewall I liked onto his computer, so I sent him an email for that rec as well.

If you use Outlook/OE, try <a href="https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=61702</a>SpamBayes</a>. I've not used it myself, but I've heard good things. Or switch to Thunderbird, that I have used and liked. Either way, you have to make sure that you train your spam filter - and that means spending a week telling it when it gets things wrong AND when it gets things right.

I would totally read actuarial tables for flood insurance. Insurance is cool, especially if you're not on the crappy end of it, because ideally it's all about finding that perfect balance where everyone's happy. Plus, if you can pretend no one gets hurt from flooding, it's also neat because there's all this rising water and geographical changes. I'm with you on that. However, I can never remember book names and I am refusing to get out of bed, so you get no recs from me.
abbylee: (Default)

[personal profile] abbylee 2006-06-04 05:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Dammit, I didn't realize I messed up and didn't preview. Here's the edited version, with some new links.

You write too long for me to keep track, so bear with me.

If you use firefox, mostly from the same computers, you might be interested in this extension: Bookmarks Synchronizer, and using the web-browse feature. Another alternative is weblog software such as WordPress that you can customize to make quick bookmarks. If you're just saving bookmarks for yourself for later, I actually used to just draft emails in gmail and organize them later.

I like Zone Alarm. My brother has been using Sunbelt Kerio Personal Firewall and has been really pleased with it.

If you use Outlook/OE, try Spam Bayes. I've not used it myself, but I've heard good things. Or if you only care about it's emailing capabilities, you might want to switch to Thunderbird - it is pretty smart about spam. Either way, you have to make sure that you train your spam filter - and that means spending a week telling it when it gets things wrong AND when it gets things right.

I would totally read actuarial tables for flood insurance. Insurance is cool, especially if you're not on the crappy end of it, because ideally it's all about finding that perfect balance where everyone's happy. Plus, if you can pretend no one gets hurt from flooding, it's also neat because there's all this rising water and geographical changes. I'm with you on that. However, I can never remember book names and I am refusing to get out of bed, so you get no recs from me.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Another alternative is weblog software such as WordPress that you can customize to make quick bookmarks.

This is a deeply brilliant idea. *impressed*

My brother has been using Sunbelt Kerio Personal Firewall and has been really pleased with it.

I have Zone Alarm issues, but I've never tried Kerio. I think I may go with a physical firewall in the end, but I may check out Kerio in the meantime.

If you use Outlook/OE, try Spam Bayes.

I was looking for something exactly like this! Thank you.

*downloads for later examination*

I don't at all mind spending a week teaching it at all. (I've housebroken two dogs, and that's pretty much the same thing, except you don't have to take the spam filter out at two in the morning.) I just mind when I teach it and then it forgets, all: "Nuh-UH. You never told me to do that!" It gives me urges to hurt my spam filter. That can't be healthy.)

I would totally read actuarial tables for flood insurance.

THANK YOU. I feel extremely justified now. It really is very interesting, and Best Beloved is a fool not to see this.

However, I can never remember book names and I am refusing to get out of bed, so you get no recs from me.

I entirely support this way of thinking. Sleep > Recs any day.

*applauds*
abbylee: (Default)

[personal profile] abbylee 2006-06-04 10:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Some wordpress examples:
[livejournal.com profile] theantimodel: recs.killerstar.net
[livejournal.com profile] isilya: untruism.net/blog

I've got one I'm still playing with, so I'll link it and delete it in the next comment. I've tweaked it in some different ways, but I'm still not happy with it.

Some not-too-heavy but interesting reading:
The Neptune File by Tom Standage - The story of the mathematicians and astronomers, as well as the science and the politics, surrounding the discovery of Neptune (and some other planets).
Uncle Tungsten by Oliver Sacks - The best biography ever, it's 1/4 footnotes and follows Sacks as a youngster reading every book and doing every experiment he can get his hands on. (Seriously - at one point he's playing with esters and goes so far down the period table he manages to stink up his family's garage so badly they can't use it for a year. Or something.)
The Burning House by Jay Ingram - Brains are cool. If you've read brain stuff then you probably already know all these stories, but otherwise it's neat to know all the ways we can screw things up.
ext_166: Over a Canadian flag: "No, don't you get it? If you die in Canada, you die in real life!" (Default)

*sigh* ignore that last one

[identity profile] lizamanynames.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 09:41 am (UTC)(link)
4) Someone has already pimped [livejournal.com profile] farscape_weekly - but I'm pimping it again, cause it rocks.

5) I'll limit myself to the past month (I have a funny idea of "lately") [livejournal.com profile] andrastewhite's Coalecence (http://andrastewhite.livejournal.com/304457.html) (X-Men Movieverse), [livejournal.com profile] redstarrobot's Portrait of the Timelord as a Yong-Old Man (http://community.livejournal.com/allen_road/6044.html) (Dr Who), eclipse's Occam's Razor (http://terrafirmascapers.com/index.php?topic=10035.0) (Farscape, NC17) (Link to last part, with links to earlier parts), Captain Morigyn Leri's Through the Eyes of a Child (http://terrafirmascapers.com/index.php?topic=9693.0) (Farscape), [livejournal.com profile] hybridbabe's Won't Fade Away (http://terrafirmascapers.com/index.php?topic=9663.0) (Farscape), [livejournal.com profile] thehallway's Fly Me To The Moons (http://terrafirmascapers.com/index.php?topic=9641.0) (Farscape/Firefly)

6. It's by no means lately (unless you count re-reading) but my pereenial favourite is Don Kulick's Language Shift and Cultural Reproduction : Socialization, Self and Syncretism in a Papua New Guinean Village (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0521599261/qid=1149411836/sr=1-14/ref=sr_1_14/103-2276560-4231064?s=books&v=glance&n=283155) - don't let the title fool you - it's actually very approachble, and gives fascinating insight into Papua New Guinean village's slow loss of languae and culture as western influences twist it into something almost unrecognizable - and I promise, you'll start caring about these villagers, and find thier interactions and relationships fascinating. It's the first textbook that made me laugh out loud - well, the first one that made me laugh when it was trying to be funny, and not just stupidly innacurate. :D

7. Ayashi No Ceres (http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=12)

Re: *sigh* ignore that last one

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay! Farscape recs. And I've already subscribed to the FS newsletter, because it's clearly a thing that everyone needs.

Language Shift and Cultural Reproduction : Socialization, Self and Syncretism in a Papua New Guinean Village

Oh my god that looks fascinating. The intersection of language and culture is just about the most interesting thing ever. I geeked out for a week about the Piraha, for example. Still may possibly be doing so, because wow.

*adds to wish list and very seriously considering just ordering the thing, even though I never do that without thinking about it for a day or so*

Ayashi No Ceres

Huh. Never even heard of that one. *checks it out*
ext_166: Over a Canadian flag: "No, don't you get it? If you die in Canada, you die in real life!" (Default)

[identity profile] lizamanynames.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay! Farscape recs. And I've already subscribed to the FS newsletter, because it's clearly a thing that everyone needs.

It is a joy forever - it aides and abets newbie puppy piles, and keeps the fandom connected and aware - it is love. :D (You need, BTW, to do a Fandoms I Have Loved: Farscape - but I'm sure you get that a lot.)

Oh my god that looks fascinating. The intersection of language and culture is just about the most interesting thing ever.

Yay! a fellow linguistics geek. Plus as I said, the characters of these villagers are great. Kulick has a gift for bringing his subject matter to life, making these people so much more real than the usual "subjects" of Anthropological and Linguistic studies - and making the readers care.

Huh. Never even heard of that one. *checks it out*

It is one great big angst-fest, and slightly squicky in places (implied incest non-com, anyone?) but on the whole utterly beautiful. And obscure as all hell. I got exposed to it by a freind sitting me down with a crapload of fan-sub'd avi files.

[identity profile] aspacer.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:22 am (UTC)(link)
if you haven't seen Angel Season 5 you haven't lived. Seriously, Season 1 sucked. Season 4 was interesting but kind of dark. Season 2 it was getting better. Season 3 well, it was necessary. Season 5 of Angel definately makes the best of TV EVER list.

[identity profile] brooklinegirl.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
okay, that is the BEST SUMMARY of the Angel progression EVER. So entirely true.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 12:50 am (UTC)(link)
Hey, I liked Season 1. And, okay - 2, 3, and 4 seem like the Character Arcs of DOOM, and then I do hear Season 5 is good, yes, but don't you have to watch the other three seasons to understand what's going on?

*very wary when it comes to television*

[identity profile] aspacer.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
to get the full effect yes, you have to watch it all

[identity profile] aspacer.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:35 am (UTC)(link)
1. There are tons. Tons I tell you. But the best ones are those with Firefox plug-ins and those seem to be soecial bookmarkyies. (Del.icio.us and blinklist)

2. I like ZoneAlarm's Firewall. They have a free and a pro version.

3. I love my Thunderbird. *hearts, hugs, squeezes it* It's spam filter *learns* what is and isn't spam. Sometimes it misses spam, but it has yet to delete anything important. The best thing however isn't a filter, it's this: buy your own domain name. Get the email set up so that everything defaults to one account. Then if you're at buy.com you use buy@domainname.com or amazon you use amazon@domainname.com and then you keep track of who is sending you things and it's easy to set up rules to filter people out if one of them starts becoming a spam email address.

4. Newsletters: [livejournal.com profile] house_news and [livejournal.com profile] ncis_newsletter

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 12:55 am (UTC)(link)
But the best ones are those with Firefox plug-ins and those seem to be soecial bookmarkyies.

Only if you use Firefox, though. (I use Opera, because Firefox is a resource hog, and so am I, and two resource hogs on one computer never ends happily.) So, hey, if you know of some without Firefox plugins, feel free to rec those to me as well.

I love my Thunderbird.

Oooo. You know, I gave up on the idea of Thunderbird when I realized Firefox and I had to live separately, but there's no special reason why I had to. Maybe I should look into it. Could be good.

Thanks!

[identity profile] ruric.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 10:38 am (UTC)(link)
Other people have recc'd the newsletters I read - so let me deal with the firewall.

I'm using ZoneAlarm because (a) it's free! and (b) it seems to work well without causing conflicts with other software.

*touchwood*

With ZoneAlarm running in tandem with Grisoft AVG (free anti-virus) plus regular runs of Spybot Search and Destroy (again with the free) - and so far I've not had any problems.

Hope that helps some *G*
ext_1310: (Default)

[identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 03:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I'd second ZoneAlarm's free firewall - the paid-for one won't let stay logged into LJ and won't open my webmail, but the free version is awesome.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 12:59 am (UTC)(link)
I use Lavasoft (also a free adware and spyware killer, although with my Mutant Computer Configuration it has been years since I actually got any ad or spyware). And I use Norton, because right now it's free for me to get the updates, although I'm totally checking out Grisoft when my subscription to Norton dies. But, sadly, I can't use Zone Alarm. Fights like a little bitch with my Mutant Configuration. Which is sad, because I miss it; it worked well, it learned quickly, and it didn't ever forget anything.

*hostile look at current firewall, which is OF THE EVIL*

At this point, I'm seriously thinking of a physical firewall. Then I will have the most Mutant Computer Configuration of all!

[identity profile] ruric.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 04:16 am (UTC)(link)
Ah - I'd heard that some people had problems with Zone Alarm - I just consider myself lucky that I don't.

And Grisoft are well worth checking out.

As a skinflint I use the free stuff - and I've found it be to very reliable *touchwood* so far!
gumbie_cat: smiling white cat against a colourful background (Default)

[personal profile] gumbie_cat 2006-06-04 11:08 am (UTC)(link)
6. H2O: A Biography of Water by Philip Ball

Because water is seriously fascinating stuff and this guy is a very good writer.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
...I don't have a single water icon. Three billion umbrella icons and not a single water one. I feel I'm letting the side down fairly badly, here.

But YES on the biography of water because OMG SO INTERESTING. Any thoughts on Life's Matrix: A Biography of Water v. H2O: A Biography of Water? (Both by the same author. And I am easily confused.)
gumbie_cat: (Duck feet!)

[personal profile] gumbie_cat 2006-06-05 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Same book, different editions? His website http://www.philipball.com/ only mentions one.

It's a really interesting, well written book. I've read a couple of his others and enjoyed them, but this is my favourite. It's full of fascinating information. Did you know the Mediterranean used to be a desert? And London sank a bit when the breweries moved out of the city? Philip Ball will tell you about all this and more.
wychwood: Rodney's having a bad day (SGA - Rodney bad day)

[personal profile] wychwood 2006-06-04 11:09 am (UTC)(link)
On your point 4, newsletter-type things:
[livejournal.com profile] despatches is the newsletter for Age of Sail on LJ. Includes a bunch of fic and also other interesting things. Mostly Hornblower and PotC, although you do get Aubrey-Maturin and other things.

[livejournal.com profile] maryrenault is a comm rather than a newsletter, but it's fairly low-volume and includes fanfic, which is still pretty rare for her.

[livejournal.com profile] universe_today is another newsletter, for Babylon 5. There isn't much fic listed because there isn't much written these days (it's about eight years since the show was on the air, after all), but most of what's around will be linked there, I think.

There was talk of an X-Men newsletter, but I'm not sure if it ever happened.

And for 6, I can only rec (yet again) Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond, which I totally think that everyone should read. And, because you sound like the sort of person who would enjoy it, Queen Victoria's Gene by DM and WTW Potts.

Also, do you realise that with your Batman analogues, you just effectively mapped Rodney onto Fraser?? I am trying so hard to think of points of correspondence. Beyond the "from Canada" thing.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 02:21 am (UTC)(link)
Ooo. Guns, Germs and Steel is totally familiar to me - I've even nearly forgiven the author for NOT INCLUDING A SERIAL COMMA IN THE TITLE. (Um - we all have issues, and look! There's one of mine!) But Queen Victoria's Gene sounds oh so very interesting. I love historical genetics.

Also, do you realise that with your Batman analogues, you just effectively mapped Rodney onto Fraser?

I know it sounds that way, but it's one of those misleading Venn diagram type situations. Fraser and Tim aren't a perfect correspondence - maybe 60%. And Rodney and Tim REALLY aren't a perfect correspondence - more like 30%, but I'm not familiar enough with the DCU to be able to figure out who Rodney really is. (There are a number of mad scientists clamoring for the honor.) And the percentages don't overlap much.

But the biggest difference is that IMO Fraser ~= Tim prior to a Major Spoiler Event, and Rodney ~= Tim after said MSE. I'm not going to spell out what the MSE is or the effect it had (unless you ask - I mean, I'll totally satisfy any curiosity you might have, but I'm not going to risk spoiling you if you don't want to be spoiled), but said effect was HUGE. So, really, not mapping Fraser onto Rodney. Just mapping them both onto different parts of a very, very changed character. (Hmmm. It occurs to me, totally as a side note, that comics characters undergo MANY more changes and 180s than characters in other fandoms - even Joss Whedon characters don't come near it. Interesting, and I must ask one of the real comic book fans in these parts why that is.)

But! Getting back to the point! There are still things that Fraser and Rodney share. They're both highly intelligent. They're both incredibly dedicated, focused, and driven. They're both very good at their jobs, but not given a lot of credit for that in the pre-series time. (The Mounties don't even want Fraser back in Canada. Rodney, Siberia, you know the story.) They both lack some social skills, especially ones relating to the opposite sex. And they both sometimes hide behind their jobs - Rodney resorts to the "I'm a genius" thing when he's unsure of himself, and Fraser resorts to the "I'm a Mountie" thing when he's unsure of himself.

So, you know, there is some correspondence. But, no, not a lot.

*snickers*

I wrote a commentfic once in which Fraser and RayK ended up in Atlantis (Bob was having an off day). Rodney really did not like Fraser. At all.

*easily amused*

[identity profile] omnia-mutantur.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 11:35 am (UTC)(link)
i mostly read nonfiction books about cooking, or food history, and my favorite of those lately has been Salt by Mark Kurlansky. I intend to go read Cod shortly, as well.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 02:33 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, yes. Any other recs? Because I'm familiar with Kurlansky's stuff, and I'd love more in that vein.
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[identity profile] dzurlady.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 11:51 am (UTC)(link)
Newsletters - I, uh, actually really love [livejournal.com profile] spnnewsletter (it links to so much stuff! Not just fic and songvids and news, and (because they're out there, most probably) lots of interviews and picspams and what meta there is, but my absolute favourite - links to recs. Bliss. Because it's hard to know what's good sometimes based off a title and pairing, unless you know the author (which isn't to say you can't guess, but I'm sure I miss good stuff, and god knows I've hit stuff I wouldn't have clicked if I'd seen the header info).) But you seem to be staying away from the fandom, so, not so useful (although if you're just avoiding the Wincest/RPS I can give you some great gen recs, because there is a lot of great gen in the fandom.)

Have you seen [livejournal.com profile] ds_weekly? Once weekly. *not so sekkritly hopes for future dS recs*

Book rec - A short history of nearly everything, Bill Bryson. *Really* interesting, easy to understand, and theoretically easy to put down and pick back up again (it's very moreish). Although the title says 'short', there's a lot of nearly everything, so it's a decent sized book (I took it to read on a planetrip to Argentina, and then plane trips within Argentina, and it was bliss) and although the title says 'nearly everything' it's focused on science. Also it is funny. ♥

TV rec - I'd rec Foyle's War, but I think it's pretty hard to get hold of. Have you heard of 'Life on Mars'? BBC cop drama where a 2006 cop gets hit by a car and wakes up in what seems to by 1973. The show proposes several different theories - he's actually travelled back in time, he's in a coma and dreaming he's back in time or he's just plain mad - and also plays with the different policing styles of Sam (and his modern approach) and his collegues in 1973. Very interesting and wonderfully shot. 8 episodes so far; I don't think the dvd is out yet, but assorted fannish people are squeeing about it so it's around on the internet. *waves at icon*

Let me get back to you on the fic recs.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
although if you're just avoiding the Wincest/RPS I can give you some great gen recs, because there is a lot of great gen in the fandom.

My problem is that so far there's only one author whose gen I know will be gen. SPN, like other OTP-intensive fandoms, has become largely a pairing buy-in fandom - in other words, the fandom is big enough and has enough FF that there are a lot of stories that only work if you already believe in (buy into) the OTP.

That, in itself, is not a problem. But the next stage in the OTP fandom's evolution (and, Jesus, I'm so sad that I'm squicked by incest, because I adore OTP fandoms, and normally they suck me in like a black hole of love) is a problem. In most intensively OTP fandoms, a lot of the stuff that is labeled gen will have the OTP implied, or in the background, or suggested. Which is a problem for me, given the intensity of my incest squick.

So I've encountered a lot of SPN gen that still includes pairing stuff, and I...I seriously cannot take that. Just can't. At all. So it's better for me to avoid the fandom altogether, I'm finding.

Which sucks. I truly expected my incest squick to go away when I needed it to, but it's like my RPS squick: the harder I try to get rid of it, the more intense the squick becomes.

*curses brain*

A short history of nearly everything, Bill Bryson.

I read this basically the instant it came out (I love Bryson, I love science, I love history), and I enjoyed it (particularly the footnotes and asides - all these little details that I totally didn't know, mostly about various scientists). Although I still prefer his travel books.

Have you heard of 'Life on Mars'?

OH! Thank you for reminding me! I downloaded all 8 episodes, but I forgot to burn them to a DVD so BB could watch them! And it sounds fabulous. Plus: only 8 episodes! Even I could watch this one, surely.

*bounds off to start burning*
zillah975: (Default)

[personal profile] zillah975 2006-06-04 12:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Firewalls/Spam filtering:

ZoneAlarm worked well for me, but when I got DSL I went ahead and got Norton Internet Security -- I forget why, now, but it may have been a combination of factors, none of them having to do with whether ZoneAlarm did a good job. It may have been because I was using an old version of ZoneAlarm and figured probably something newer would be better, and because ZoneAlarm was such a bitch to configure that once I got it working I was afraid to change anything for fear of breaking things again, and that included being afraid to upgrade.

I did have to uninstall and reinstall Norton, though, when I installed it on the Windows ME machine, because the first install didn't take -- something was missing so I got an error every time I tried to configure anything. But uninstalling and reinstalling worked. And it worked fine right away on Windows XP.

Also, I'd recommend against using Black Ice -- my stepdad did and it slowed his computer to a crawl. He uses Norton Internet Security now too.

I have no idea about Norton's spam filtering because I use webmail exclusively these days, and never email download to my computer. However, Gmail's spam filters seem to work pretty well. I have no idea whether Gmail is opened up to new users without invitations yet, but if you want to try it and need an invite, just let me know what address to send it to.

Fandom/media:

I don't read fandom newsletters, but now that I know they're out there I'ma see if I can find some I want to read. :)

I've just started catching up on [livejournal.com profile] kittyfisher's PoTC fic, Diving For Pearls (Norrington/Sparrow) and am really enjoying it a lot.

Also, you should not miss [livejournal.com profile] tigertrapped's House/Constantine crossover fic, Diagnosis: Demon. I've never even watched House and I found myself really rooting for the characters and really sucked into the story, which is just one more piece of evidence that even when she tries to just write a piece of very very silly crossover nonsense, she winds up with something really very good.

Latest non-fiction: Gay Fandom and Crossover Stardom: James Dean, Mel Gibson, and Keanu Reeves, by Michael Deangelis (Duke University Press (August 2001)). I'm not quite sure what to make of it, but it does make me want to watch all my Keanu Reeves movies again.

I have three others waiting for me: The Last True Story I'll Ever Tell: An Accidental Soldier's Account of the War in Iraq, which is written by a guy who joined the Florida National Guard and wound up getting sent to Iraq for his trouble; The Zombie Survival Guide, which arguably isn't exactly non-fiction, but it isn't precisely fiction either, and it has already afforded me and my friends a certain amount of fun and has generated plans for a zombie movie marathon weekend at the house of a pal whose place can so be fortified against zombies; and Ultimate Spy, which is a coffee table book about spies and spy tactics and spy gadgets.

Also, Scene & Structure from the Elements of Fiction Writing series, because I'm sure I have a story in me about spies and zombies if I can just figure out how to write it.

And finally, everyone should see Howl's Moving Castle, if only for the amazing voice talents (at least in the English version -- I haven't seen the Japanese version). Christian Bale, Billy Crystal, Lauren Bacall, Jean Simmons, and Blythe Danner. What's not to love? It's also a really interesting story about overcoming fears.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2006-06-05 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
I have no idea whether Gmail is opened up to new users without invitations yet, but if you want to try it and need an invite, just let me know what address to send it to.

I have a Gmail account for fannish purposes, but I never considered using it for real life purposes before this post. People have come up with such novel uses for Gmail: backup of RL account, forwarding through Gmail to take advantage of the spam filter, etc. I love Gmail all the more now. *huggles it*

I don't read fandom newsletters, but now that I know they're out there I'ma see if I can find some I want to read.

I was kind of meh about fandom newsletters for a while, but now I know the truth: they are LOVE. Let me know if you find any interesting ones - there are a lot mentioned in this thread. And [livejournal.com profile] witchqueen has, in her nearly infinite coolness, collected a ton of newsletters and noticeboards here (http://del.icio.us/zvi_likes_tv/newsletter). So if you're wanting to experience the LOVE, well, I'm guessing you'll be able to find something interesting there. (I'm reading it in stunned joy as we speak.)

Diving For Pearls

Oh, wow. It's been so long since I've read PotC. *clicks*

And finally, everyone should see Howl's Moving Castle

I've been wary 'cause I love the book. (Diana Wynne Jones is great, except when she's, um, really not. But she's great about 8 books out of 10.) Have you read it? Did you think the movie was true to the book? Or not true to the book, but not in annoying ways? 'Cause if it's either of those, I'd love to see it; Diana Wynne Jones + Hayao Miyazaki should be the movie match made in heaven.

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