/ / Down and Out In the Magic Kingdom, News

The fall edition of Currents in Electronic Literacy contains a tremendous scholarly essay on Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom by Eric Mason, called “Remediating the Magic Kingdom: Notes Toward a Poetics of Technology.”

This description of the process of flash-baking reveals the textuality of technology because the experience of the Presidents’ lives that the technology delivers is achieved specifically through texts such as “newspaper headlines, speeches, distilled biographies, personal papers.” The technologicity of texts that this description constructs is one that downplays the specific technological context of these textual genres (i.e. attempts to obscure their specific technologicities). The techno-logic of “gestalts” presented above suggests as well that the experience of a technology is irrelevant to its content–that you can place content from newspapers and biographies into the technology of flash-baking without any loss or change. Such a technologicity of texts works to undermine the specificity of a text’s technological context and the lived experience of technology. Conversely, a responsible poetics of technology refuses to ignore and refuses to obscure the irreducible differences of technologies, arguing that a text and the technology used to create and consume it are consubstantial elements that can be articulated but never transcended.

/ / News

I’m speaking at next week’s Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference in Seattle, Washington. I’ll be doing two appearances:

  • a panel called “Cyberliberties and the World of Tomorrow—Science Fiction Authors on the Future of Computers, Freedom, and Privacy” with David Brin and Eileen Gunn, Thursday April 14 at 4:15PM and,
  • emceeing EFF’s Pioneer Awards at the Sci Fi Museum, 7:00PM on Wednesday, April 13th.

Hope to see you there!

/ / News

If you’re seeing this, it’s because I’ve successfully completed the changeover from the original craphound.com to my spiffy new MT site. Yay me. Here’s an RSS feed — it will get updated with all new pubs, appearances, reviews, articles, press mentions, etc.

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I carry a camera with me wherever I go, and shoot avidly. I upload the best of these photos to the incredible image-sharing service Flickr (disclosure: I once served on the advisory board for Ludicorp, the company that made Flickr). You can check out my pix here.

/ / News

I built the original craphound.com back in 1999, so that I could send Jim Van Pelt something to link to on his Campbell Awards site. I was the proverbial shoeless cobbler’s son: I had been earning my living on the Web for seven years, but I’d never bothered to build a personal site.

That was before there was anything like a blog-engine for easy management, so I did it all by hand, and I maintained it (or, in fact, didn’t maintain it) by hand for the intervening years.

It’s time to retire the old boy. The site did me well, but it’s an unmanageable mess. If you want to access it still, I’ve left all the old pages online — check them out here (if you must).

Now that I’ve got a sweet, ligthweight content management system on my back-end I’m hoping that I’m going to be able to keep the site more up-to-date, with each new publication and each new interview or press-mention.

/ / News

Back in 2003, Mena Trott was kind enough to build me a website for my first novel, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, putting together a beautiful Movable Type template that was simple, elegant and flexible.

I’ve now implemented variations on that template three more times: for my short story collection A Place So Foreign and Eight More, for my second novel, Eastern Standard Tribe, and now for this re-design of Craphound.com itself (I’ll be re-implementing it again, shortly, for my next novel, Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town).

Each time I re-implement this, I am struck anew by how easy and clean Mena’s design and implementation are. She is truly a virtuosa MT haxx0r, and I’m a lucky man to have had her assistance.

Thanks, Mena!

/ / Eastern Standard Tribe, News

One of the coolest remixes that anyone’s done of my books has been the speed reader that Trevor Smith put together, which flashes the books one word at a time, at high speed, inside a Java applet. Though the words fly past so fast that they practically flicker, they are still readable — there’s some heretofore unsuspected talent buried in our brains for parsing sentences when rendered as rapid-fire flashcards.

Now Crutcher Dunnavant has adapted the speed-reader to run on Java-capable mobile phones, which makes sense: the screen on a handy is just the right size to show one word at a time.

(Thanks, Crutcher!)

Review:

SF Reviews.net

What I like about Doctorow is that he possesses a skill few writers today, in an age when literary windbags are editorially indulged, possess: his tales are short, sweet, and get down to business. From the 50’s to the late 70’s, most of SF’s finest talents were forced by market-driven publishing conventions to keep their books in the 175-to-225-page range. And while any artist would chafe against such creative restrictions, these writers took lemons and made lemonade, training themselves in the craft of storytelling efficiency. Even today I find myself consistently impressed by how well short novels from that period by the likes of Anderson and Silverberg and others hold up, and I see Cory Doctorow as a new talent who has studied well and learned some valuable lessons at that school. Hopefully other newcomers will get the message that you don’t need 950 pages to get the job done.

TM Wagner,
SFReviews.net
Review:

Single for Now

Who *wouldn’t* want to live in Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom, with no other responsibilities than to mind operations at the Haunted Mansion (Best ride ever.)? As it happens, our hero Jules is afforded this opportunity in near (?) future as part of the Bitchun Society, where death has been rendered obsolete, replaced by a memory storage process which requires everybody to be “online.” Live forever, download into a new body when necessary or whenever the mood strikes – imagine the Fountain of Youth as an FTP site.