- Islands in the Stream
Whatever happened to the Bee Gees?
- Strange Horizons Reviews: 2015 Hugo Awards Short Fiction Shortlist, reviewed by Martin Lewis
Reviewed by @nine_below (Martin Lewis).
- Better advice for ‘Bothered’
When your adviser keeps looking down your shirt.
- Google on Artificial-Intelligence Panic: Get a Grip
But what about the ethics board?
- G7 moves on climate
How Merkel did it.
- France’s Tweeting Ambassador to the US
Nice profile.
Monthly Archives: June 2015
Links I found interesting for 08-06-2015
- Updated GoT/Who common cast guide
Deeply important and useful list.
- Which (ex)MP is backing which candidate in the Lib Dem leadership race?
(ex) MEPs?
- Puppies in Their Own Words
Comprehensive.
- Jackalope Wives, by Ursula Vernon
Winner of the Nebula Award for Best Short Story
- A Guide to the Fruits of Hawai’i, by Alaya Dawn Johnson
Winner of the Nebula Award for Best Novelette
- Leverage these linguistic modalities!
Ow ow ow!
Links I found interesting for 07-06-2015
- The story of Minnesota: increase tac and minimum wage, improve the economy
Done by a Republican governor.
- Why Facebook Is the Junk Food of Socializing
So talk to a human instead!
- Other perceptions of China: Views from Africa, Latin America, and Europe
Brookings analysis of polls.
My vote for Best Dramatic Presentation (Short Form), Best Fan Writer, John W. Campbell Award
I usually enjoy tracking down the various entries in this category (I rarely have time to watch the movies nominated for the Long Form equivalent). But unfortunately three of the finalists in this category were helped to get onto the ballot by a campaign led by a misogynist racist whose declared intention was to destroy the Hugos. I am not going to vote for them, and am not going to any great lengths to watch The Flash: Pilot or Grimm: Once We Were Gods.
4(?): I did see Game of Thrones: The Mountain and the Viper when it was broadcast, and while I'm generally a fan of the series I thought that there were at least three better episodes last year – #2 The Lion and the Rose (Joffrey's wedding), #4 The Laws of Gods and Men (Tyrion's trial) and #10 The Children (series conclusion). So I'm voting No Award ahead of all of the slate-supported finalists, including this one, with a clear conscience. But I may vary from my rule of simply not giving them a vote of any kind, and give The Mountain and the Viper my fourth preference. It's a reasonable bet that it does not owe its place on the ballot solely to the efforts of the slate-mongers.
3: No Award
2: Orphan Black: By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried. It's pretty difficult to judge a show with an insanely complex plot by the episode which ends its second season, especially since the only previous episode I've seen was the one on last year's Hugo ballot. My first instinct was to put this too below No Award, but there are several redeeming features which made it work for me. Even after only having seen two episodes, the revelation about the clones at the end is a stunning reveal. The scene where four different clone sisters, all played by Tatiana Maslany, dance together is absolutely brilliant, not only from the technical trickery point of view but because she clearly differentiates each of the characters she is portraying. And the medical icky stuff is horrible but well conveyed. Some day I may try and watch this from the beginning.
1: Doctor Who: Listen. In a Doctor Who season with one very low point (Kill The Moon) this was very much a high point, Moffat with some of his best lines – Clara in particular getting some good ones ("People don't need to be scared by a big gray-haired stick insect but here you are" balanced by "If you're very wise and very strong fear doesn't have to make you cruel or cowardly – fear can make you kind") in a story that actually makes sense and taps into some deep human fears. Gets my vote without any hesitation or special pleading, and I suspect it will win.
Also, just to record a couple of items here which are not worth separate posts: I'm voting No Award for Best Fan Writer, and giving Laura J. Mixon my second preference. I take very seriously Matt Foster's argument that a ballot with only one non-slate finalist does not offer enough choice to make the award meaningful. I also happen to think that Best Fan Writer should go to a body of work, not a single work, and the article for which Mixon has been nominated belongs in the Best Related Work category (one other piece by her has also been included in the Voter Packet, but you wouldn't know it from the on-line discussion that I've seen). This is not in any way to minimise the importance of Mixon's article, still less to defend or minimise the actions of the person she wrote about (who has clearly learned nothing and forgotten nothing). But if we're concerned about the integrity of the Hugos, that concern needs to be consistently applied. Sure, the Best Related Work ballot has been comprehensively wrecked by the slates this year, perhaps worse than any other category, but to me that doesn't justify nominating or voting for something in the wrong place, no matter how deserving it may be. However, I will happily give Mixon my second preference, to maximise the chance that my vote will count against the slate candidates.
I'll add that I've been entertained by Jeffro Johnson's pieces in the Voter Packet, and by his contributions to the debate on File770.com, and I can imagine giving him a preference if he is a finalist in a future year; but not this time. Some of the others in this category have perhaps not chosen terribly wisely in their contributions to the Voters Packet, at least if their intention was to win hearts and minds. That may not have been their intention, of course.
Finally, I am also voting for No Award in the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. This was an easy choice. Apart from Matt Foster's point above, I couldn't really get into The Deaths of Tao by Wesley Chu, who is the only non-slate finalist in that category (I finished but didn't much like the previous book in the series). I will however give Wesley Chu my second preference, to maximise the chance that my vote will count against the slate.
As noted previously, I am voting for No Award in the three short fiction categories, Best Related Work and Best Professional Artist. Three of those were swept by the slates, and the other two have only one non-slate finalist. We do at least have a decent range of choices for Best Novel, Best Graphic Story and Best Fan Artist. And we can hope for a better ballot next year.
2015 Hugos: Initial observations | Voting No Award above the slates | How the slate was(n't) crowdsourced | Where the new voters are
Links I found interesting for 05-06-2015
- Why Technology Hasn’t Delivered More Democracy
Several different answers.
- We stand on the brink of global cyber war
But is it a nuclear power, or two guys in a basement?
- Belgium expels a pensioner who worked here almost 50 years (French)
Disgraceful.
Thursday Reading
Current
Watership Down, by Richard Adams (a chapter a week)
The Complete Robot, by Isaac Asimov
The Charterhouse of Parma, by Stendhal
Palace of the Red Sun, by Christopher Bulis
Last books finished
None! Only about two-thirds of the way though Asimov and Stendhal, and less than half-way through the Who novel.
Next books
The Balkans: Nationalism, War & the Great Powers, 1804-1999, by Misha Glenny
Martial Power and Elizabethan Political Culture: Military Men in England and Ireland, 1558-1594, by Rory Rapple
Sometime Never…, by Justin Richards
Books acquired in last week
An Infamous Army, by Georgette Heyer
A Close-Run Thing, by Allan Mallinson
Links I found interesting for 04-06-2015
- Theresa May wants to ban pleasure
@telegraph demonstrating its strengths – dissecting Tory policy!
- NATO’s 1964 UFO investigation
The Soviets were a bigger threat.
- INFOGRAPHIC: A world of languages – and how many speak them
Brilliant from @aLucasLopez at @SCMP_News.
Links I found interesting for 03-06-2015
- Iran’s ‘Generation Normal’
Sorry about FT.com paywall, but this is very interesting.
- Charles Kennedy – a lovely man, a talented politician, a great friend with a shared enemy
Alastair Campbell’s moving tribute:”our shared friendship was built on a shared enemy: alcohol”.
- Love and Liberty: Charles Kennedy
Alex remembers.
- The Agency
Russian trolls spreading fear, uncertainty and doubt.
- Experiment confirms quantum theory weirdness
The waveform collapses retrospectively!
- Hell Is Working at the Huffington Post
Far from unique!!!
Links I found interesting for 02-06-2015
- How To Share Your Unpopular Opinion (Without Being An Asshole)
Words of wisdom!
- Drawing the Undrawable: An Explanation from Neil and Amanda.
Gaiman, Palmer, Art Spiegelman and the New Statesman
- Ex-Lib Dem leader Kennedy dead at 55
How awful.
Links I found interesting for 01-06-2015
- Muslim Woman Says Plane Crew Denied Her Unopened Soda Can Because It Could Be Used ‘As A Weapon’
@United again!!!!
- 7,530,000 mainlanders petition Taiwan actress to change her name
…from 張鈞甯 to 張鈞寧. Or 張鈞宁.
- 89 people banned from Russia.
Includes Nick Clegg and Malcolm Rifkind.