
I gave a talk in Beijing this week at the Beijing Bookworm, an excellent bookstore/cafe. Filmmaker Victor Muh recorded the whole thing and put it up on YouTube!
(Thanks, Jeremy!)

I gave a talk in Beijing this week at the Beijing Bookworm, an excellent bookstore/cafe. Filmmaker Victor Muh recorded the whole thing and put it up on YouTube!
(Thanks, Jeremy!)

A couple weeks ago, I was on a great panel on copyright at the World Science Fiction Convention in Yokohama, Japan, called “Defending the Public Domain from Corporate Copyright Maximalism.” Steve Stair videoed my introductory remarks and posted them to YouTube.
The Clarion Science Fiction Writers’ Workshop has announced its instructor lineup for summer 2008 — and it’s a stellar bunch! Clarion is a kind of six-week boot-camp for sf writers (I’m a graduate, sometime instructor and member of the Board of Directors for The Clarion Foundation, the nonprofit that oversees the workshop), and this year’s teachers are: Kelly Link, James Patrick Kelly, Mary Anne Mohanraj, Neil Gaiman, Nalo Hopkinson and Geoff Ryman.
Not to be outdone, the Clarion West workshop (a kind of sister workshop, but located in Seattle instead of San Diego) has announced its lineup for this summer: Paul Park, Mary Rosenblum, Cory Doctorow, Connie Willis, Sheree R. Thomas, and Chuck Palahniuk.
Yes, I taught Clarion this past year and will teach Clarion West next year. There’s a pretty good chance I’ll end up doing another (undisclosed) Clarion next year, then I’m taking a several-year hiatus. These things are incredibly rewarding, but man, they’re hard work!

Rock band Wintergreen’s latest video — “Can’t Sit Still,” directed by Keith Schofield — features one of the musicians reading a copy of my latest short story collection, Overclocked. Sweet!
(Thanks, Terry!)

Rock band Wintergreen’s latest video — “Can’t Sit Still,” directed by Keith Schofield — features one of the musicians reading a copy of my latest short story collection, Overclocked. Sweet!
(Thanks, Terry!)

Michael Buckbee, proprietor of a “Fabjectory” (Bruce Sterling’s neologism “fabject” + “factory” = Fabjectory) has created a Second Life version of the print-and-fold minicomic of Printcrime, created by talented comics artist Martin Cendreda (the story appears in my collection Overclocked. He sez, “We use rapid prototyping machines to create real life objects from the avatars and sculptures that people make in SecondLife and I’ve been vainly trying to explain to people that this isn’t so much about creating expensive immobile dolls for people as it is breaking ground for a new way to interact with the world, something Print Crime does so well.”

Michael Buckbee, proprietor of a “Fabjectory” (Bruce Sterling’s neologism “fabject” + “factory” = Fabjectory) has created a Second Life version of the print-and-fold minicomic of Printcrime, created by talented comics artist Martin Cendreda (the story appears in my collection Overclocked. He sez, “We use rapid prototyping machines to create real life objects from the avatars and sculptures that people make in SecondLife and I’ve been vainly trying to explain to people that this isn’t so much about creating expensive immobile dolls for people as it is breaking ground for a new way to interact with the world, something Print Crime does so well.”
I’ve started a new gig as an essayist/columnist for Search Engine, a new show on CBC Radio. They’ve got me reading adaptations of my Guardian columns, starting with my piece on Digital Lysenkoism. They’ve done a great job with the editing — it’s nice having other people around to help me sound smart!

Thomas Crampton cornered me in China this week with a video camera and asked me how to blog — here’s a video of my answer. In a nutshell: pretend you’re a wire-service stringer and you’ll end up writing better headlines.
I’m coming to Beijing, China next week and I’ll be stopping in at the Beijing Bookworm to give a talk on China, the Information Economy and copyright — and I’ll be reading a little never-before-seen new fiction while I’m there. Hope to see you!
When: Wednesday 12th September 7.30pm
Where: The Bookworm, Building 4, Nan Sanlitun Road, Chao Yang District, Beijing, 100000, P.R. China, (010) 6586 9507, books@beijingbookworm.com