Last week I recorded an interview with Mur Lafferty, of the I Should Be Writing podcast. Mur wrote the book on Podcasting (literally) and I was privileged to have her as one of my students at the Viable Paradise workshop in Martha’s Vineyard.
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I’m delighted to announce that I’ll be the guest of honor at the science fiction convention Orycon, in Portland, Oregon, November 17-19. I’ve never attended an OryCon before, but its reputation as an excellent event precedes it, and I’m excited to be there with other guests including Vincent DiFate, Ellen Datlow and Michael DeMerritt. The room block is filling up quick, so register ASAP if you want to get the convention rate at the hotel.
While in Portland, I’m also giving a talk on copyright at Portland State University on November 16 at 5PM — it’s free and open to the public.
Last year, I spoke at the Roboexotica cocktail robotics conference in Vienna and a bunch of the speakers did a little TV interview for an Austrian indie TV producer. The video’s online now, featuring me, Jake Appelbaum, Francesca Birks, Kal Spelletich and Johannes Grenzfurthner.
(Thanks, Magnus!)
I’m one of the guests of honor at Utopiales, the international science fiction convention being held in Nantes, France on November 2-5. Other guests include Kim Stanley Robinson, Martha Wells, Lucius Sheppard and Norman Spinrad.
Du rouge au vert des petits hommes, Mars en aura vu de toutes les couleurs et demeure à ce jour le sanctuaire de tous les fantasmes en science-fiction. Dernier correspondant, K. S. Robinson aura poussé plus que nul autre avant lui l’identification à la planète rouge. Invité d’honneur du festival, il emmène avec lui cette année une cohorte d’écrivains pour des tables rondes passionnantes. Adeptes des magies noires de l’ère technologique, tels C. Priest, M. Wells ou K. J. Bishop ou rebelles, à l’image de R.C. Wagner ou N. Spinrad, ils rêvent tous de Marx depuis leur enfance. Les Libraires Complices proposent une nouvelle fois, dans le cadre du salon du Livre et de la Bande Dessinée, plus de 25000 ouvrages représentant toutes les maisons d’édition.
The talented folks at DaveFilms have produced a full-cast audiobook adaptation of my award-winning novel Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. They’re transmitting it in ten parts, as a podcast — part 1 just went live.
This is the second audio adaptation of Down and Out — the podcaster Mark Forman read the book aloud on his podcast in August 2005.
I love the different adaptations of the book — it’s amazing to hear my words read by so many different people, with so many different choices about how to dramatize it. Often, the reading isn’t how I heard it in my own head when I wrote it, which is cool — it’s wild to hear how your own words sound to someone else.
Link to part 1 as MP3, Link to part 1 as streaming Quicktime, Podcast feed
The talented folks at DaveFilms have produced a full-cast audiobook adaptation of my award-winning novel Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. They’re transmitting it in ten parts, as a podcast — part 1 just went live.
This is the second audio adaptation of Down and Out — the podcaster Mark Forman read the book aloud on his podcast in August 2005.
I love the different adaptations of the book — it’s amazing to hear my words read by so many different people, with so many different choices about how to dramatize it. Often, the reading isn’t how I heard it in my own head when I wrote it, which is cool — it’s wild to hear how your own words sound to someone else.
Link to part 1 as MP3, Link to part 1 as streaming Quicktime, Podcast feed
The video of my keynote at ToorCon 8, the annual hacker’s convention in San Diego, is online. I talked about how the future of computing is endangered by new trends in our approach to computers and the Internet, treating them as systems to be locked down in a return to the dark ages of mainframes.
Last night, I did an interview on The Linux Link Tech Show, a venerable free software radio show/podcast. We talked DRM, mostly, and the audio is here (MP3 — also available as OGG).
My Creative Commons-licensed, Hugo/BSFA-nominated story “I, Robot” has been translated into Hebrew by the Israeli sf magazine Bli Panika. They’ve posted the story, translated by Haggay Averbuch, and the translation is under a Creative Commons by-nc-sa license.
ארטוּרוֹ איקאזה דה אראנה-גולדברג, בלש דרג ג’, תחום מסחר אמריקה הצפונית, מחוז שלישי, רשות רביעית, מחלקה שניה (פרקדייל) חווה שלל הרפתקאות במהלך הקריירה המכובדת שלו. כשלכד נוכלים עשה זאת באמצעות שילוב מנצח של חריפות חושים ומסירות בלתי מתפשרת לחובתו.
בשלושה אירועים שונים זיכו אותו מפקדו והמנהל המחוזי של המחלקה להרמוניה חברתית בעיטורי כבוד, ואמו טיפחה מקדש של גזירי עיתונים וציונים לשבח, שתפס את מרבית חדר האורחים הצפוף שבדירתה הסמוכה לשדרות סטילס.
See also:
I, Robot on The Infinite Matrix
I, Robot, the podcast
Joseph Petviashvili is a fan of my novel Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom — he likes it so much that he’s created a software version of “Whuffie,” the reputation currency that forms the basis of the Bitchun Society I described in the book.
Bitchun.org is runs on open source code (still in alpha release), creating a marketplace for trading and rewarding favors for your friends and like-minded strangers. It’s pretty amazing to have something I invented for a science fiction novel turned into running code!
What’s the Bitchun Society and what’s whuffie?
Whuffie is a high five, it’s that look of appreciation you give for a job well done, it’s a thumbs up. It’s your personal capital with your friends and neighbors. It’s whuffie! People who give out and receive whuffie are in the Bitchun Society. It was first mentioned in Cory Doctorow’s novel, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom.What is the Bitchun Society for?
Right now, being part of the Bitchun Society lets you find people who share your interests and can help you through the use of a special Skype bot we call the Bitchun Butler.
(Thanks, Joe!)