/ / News, Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town

When I lived in San Francisco, I was just down the street from the amazing Borderlands Books, who would take orders for my books with inscriptions. I’d stop in a couple times a week and sign the special orders and they’d ship ’em out. Since moving to London, though, this deal has been a little harder to pull off — a 9,000 mile commute to the shop makes this not very practical.

However, I’ve got the next-best thing: a bookstore in Canada and a store in the UK that are taking special orders for my books with signature and inscription requests, who will ship them out once they’re signed. I’m doing the Toronto signing on July 11 and I’ll be meeting up with the UK seller in late July. Place your orders before then if you want signed copies!

Canadian Store

I’m doing a book-launch at Toronto’s BakkaPhoenix on July 11, and the good folks there have graciously agreed to take orders for signed and inscribed copies of any or all of my books. Simply contact them before the 11th of July with your order and I’ll sign it when I swing by the store — they’ll ship out the signed articles shortly thereafter.

Here are the shipping rates:

All shipping rates in $CDN and do not include the cost of the books:

Canada: 1 book $8, 2 books $10, 3 books $12
USA: 1 book $10, 2 books $13, 3 books $15
UK/Europe: 1 book $16, 2 books $21, 3 books $25
Australia: 1 book $22, 2 books $28, 3 books $30.

For larger orders, or destinations not listed, please email them directly.

Here’s all the contact info:

BakkaPhoenix Books
697 Queen St West
Toronto ON
Canada M6J 1E5
inquiries@bakkaphoenixbooks.com
+1.416.963.9993

UK Store

For Europeans — or those who are too late to order with Bakka — your best bet is Iain Emsley’s Aust Gate, in Oxford. Ian’s offering free second-class shipping in the UK, and very reasonable rates to the rest of the world:

UK – First class: £2.00
Europe – Printed Matter Air: £3.00
Rest of the World – Printed Matter Air: £4.00

The Aust Gate
13 Yew Close
Greater Leys,
Oxford OX4 7UX
United Kingdom
+44(0)1865 787948
orders@austgate.co.uk

/ / News

On Wednesday, I gave a talk at the London campus of Florida State University on the American Broadcast Flag and the coming European Broadcast Flag. A friend of Alfie’s brought down a couple of camcorders and filmed the whole thing and now it’s up as a pair of streaming Quicktimes.

(Thanks, Alfie!)

Part 1, Part 2

/ / News

I’m giving a talk at London’s Ecademy next Wednesday night. I’ll be talking about America’s Broadcast Flag, an unsavory piece of work that would have given Hollywood’s would-be device czars a veto over the design of PCs and digital TVs. We had a crushing victory over the forces of darkness, but the evil Flag isn’t dead yet — and what’s worse, it’s going to come to Europe soon, in the guise of the DVB CPCM system for restricting television at home.

When: Wednesday, 1 June – 6:00pm to 10:00pm
Where: Marriott Hotel Marble Arch, 134 George Street, London,
Agenda:
6.00 – 7.30 Ecademist Networking (in the bar)
7.30 – 7.45 Ecademy Announcements
7.45 – 8.30 Talks
8.30 – 10.00 Ecademist Networking (in the bar)

Review:

Paul Di Filippo

This book dazzles by walking a dangerous high tightrope pulled taut between the widely separated poles of the story. The fairy-tale childhood, with its startling yet archetypically resonant improbabilities, has to consort with the hacker realities of the Kurt-based story, which in itself is not overtly unlikely, but still slightly gonzo. But, like the best mashup tunes, Doctorow’s narrative wedges the most consensually disparate elements together into a brilliant whole.

What probably carries the whole project is Doctorow’s deft, deep depiction of his characters. I have to say that he’s never done a better job of limning real people. However weird they are, they are certainly not cardboard or one-dimensional. They all contain the essential pressure points, drives, caprices and emotions that power the folks we encounter every day. Damaged yet striving to survive and do good, Alan and his cohorts demand that we empathize with their human foibles. This essential believability pulls us in, easing our acceptance of any grotesqueries.

Paul Di Filippo, SciFi.com

/ / News

The Preshrunk blog is a wonderful site where Jason Cosper posts entertaining reviews of t-shirts that you can buy on the Internet, as well as a variety of t-shirt related news and projects (e.g. turning a treasured old tee into a pair of underpants).

One of Jason’s gimmicks is interviews with his friends and various bloggers about what kinds of t-shirts they own. He convinced me to give him an exhaustive tour through my t-shirt drawer and has just
posted the outcome, with URLs and photos.

Top Drawer [not black, not white]

* A chocolate-brown Blogger/Google shirt from SXSW two years ago
[URL]
* Navy blue shirt from monochrom.at: OH MY GOD THEY USE A HISTORY THAT REPEATS ITSELF
[URL]
* Navy blue shirt from downhillbattle.org: PEER-TO-PEER KILLS PAY-FOR-PLAY
[URL | Photo]
* Kermit green shirt from FxxxPxxx: [THIS IS GOOD]
* Khaki Fantastic Four tee from Spitalfields Market
* Olive green Wonder Woman tee from Spitalfields Market
* Red tee from engrish.com: I HATE MYSELF AND I WANT TO DIE, with a rainbow. I usually can’t bring myself to wear this.
[URL | Photo]
* Red Walt Disney World tee A PIRATE’S LIFE FOR ME with Goofy’s hat being blown off by a pirate’s cannonball. I can’t BELIEVE they offer these for sale!
[Photo]
* Light brown Blogger/Google shirt also from SXSW two years ago
[URL]
* Chocolate brown shirt from spamshirt.com, with orange writing: FWD: VEDOXHERABAL VIAGRASUPP
[URL]
* Orange tee from monochrom.at, featuring a man in a tophat saying: UFO-Beobachtungen muB man skeptisch gegenüberstehen Nur dann er-kennt… …man bösre Fälschungen”
[URL | Photo]
* Khaki B * A * S * H tee
[URL]
* Grey downhillbattle.org tee: HOME TAPING HIS KILLING THE MUSIC INDUSTRY AND IT’S FUN
[URL | Photo]

/ / News, Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town

The Sci Fi Channel has a stupendous print and web-presence, with net resources like the Sci Fi Wire and Sci Fiction.

That’s why it was such an honor to have my novel chosen to launch the SciFi Channel’s new book club, Sci Fi Essentials. SciFi specifically asked for my book to lead the program with, and we delayed it from March to July to line up with the program’s launch. Sci Fi will be promoting the book across its media properties, including the Web site and the magazine.

Thanks, Sci Fi — and welcome new readers!

/ / News

I’m giving a lecture next Tuesday at Florida State University’s London program. I’ll be talking about the Broadcast Flag and the coming European Broadcast Flag and what we can do to make sure that the former stays dead and the latter never comes to life. Seating is limited, so you need to email to get your spot:

When: Tuesday, May 24, 2005, 3PM

Where: Lecture Theatre, Florida State University, London Center, 99 Great Russell St., Bloomsbury, London, UK

RSVP: keith@art.fsu.edu

/ / News, Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town

Dorothea Salo, of textartisan.com, did the conversion of my first novel to html, converting an ASCII text file into something well-formed, with great typography and easy-to-hack semantics in the stylesheet.

Dorothea graced me with her skills again, producing the stupendous HTML verion of the book, producing something that is, again, standards-compliant, pretty to look at, and easy to mod.

Thank you, Dorothea.

/ / News

My column in the May issue of Popular Science magazine is online: this month, I talk about how the RIAA is trying to create a Broadcast Flag for digital radio:

Today you can buy similar devices for radio—sometimes called RiVos—including Griffin’s Radio Shark and Neuros’s MP3 Computer, that connect to your computer and record programs to your hard drive. The next generation of these gadgets will go those one better, recording all of the radio stations in a frequency band simultaneously, then picking out individual songs and arranging them into playlists. Goodbye channels, chatter, idiot DJs and throwaway music. Who needs live radio when you’ve got a RiVo?

The problem is that tomorrow RiVo may be illegal. A new generation of radio called Digital Audio Broadcast (DAB, a.k.a. digital radio) is coming, and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is dedicated to making sure no RiVo-like device for digital radio ever reaches the marketplace. DAB is just beginning to show up in the U.S., but it will eventually replace analog FM and AM broadcasts. What worries the RIAA is that a DAB signal sounds better than analog, and it can carry information such as names of tracks and artists and be easily recorded to a hard drive. RiVo functionality could be in every DAB tuner.