#NaNoWriMo update
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 11/11/2008 - 20:28So far today, I’ve only gotten out slightly over a thousand words on my novel. To pull this off, I’m going to need to increase this substantially. Yet the novel is taking on a life of its own. The other night, I had a dream, in which people’s feet were turning black and swelling up. It struck me that this must be part of the plague predicted in the novel.
As I work on the biology of the novel, I frequently ask Kim for pointers to make sure that I’m still making sense, and at least on somewhat solid footing scientifically. However, today, I started writing about the travels of one of the characters. I won’t say whether or not he is a key character, because many of the characters are fighting for my attention to be key characters.
With this, I’ve needed to research a little bit, the history of the potato and the coffee bean. I also need to be much more up to speed on the geography and history of Ethiopia, Yemen, Turkey, Indonesia, perhaps some additional places in Africa, such as Kenya, Uganda, and the Congo, although those stops may play minor roles. Then, I need to be much more versed in Columbia and Peru. In need to be able to write much more intelligently and coherently about radical Islamic clerics as well as early to middle archaic Peruvian culture and archeology. I could get lost in all the research.
So, if this sounds interesting and you’re an expert in any of those areas, please let me know. I can always use good sources and informed readers.
Two Giant Steps Sideways
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 11/11/2008 - 16:27When I was a kid, we had a small black and white television with rabbit ears antennas. We could receive three stations, an ABC affiliate, an NBC affiliate, and a CBS affliate. The CBS affiliate also broadcast on a UFH channel and we could receive that as well.
My father had been an amateur radio operator in his younger days and there were plenty of books about radios around the house. I read various books and in my teenage years made an antenna out of junk from the basement, that we put up in the attic. With it, we managed to pull in another television station from 130 miles away.
Some evenings, my mother would go out to sewing circle, a time she and her friends would get together, work on the sewing that needed to be done for the family and talk. On these nights, she would ask us to copy down the weather map from the evening news. I guess she trusted our rendition of the weather maps more than she trusted our recollection of the weatherman’s predictions.
She would look at the weather map and make decisions about the coming day. Was it likely to be sunny enough to do laundry and hang it out to dry? What did the coming weather tell us about the chores to be done in the garden?
That was probably forty years ago, and yet it came back to me as I checked the weather online. Yesterday was a nice sunny day. It has been clouding up a bit, and I wondered if I could get another load of laundry dried outside before we got rain again.
We are renting a small house, and don’t have a clothesline, so I hang the clothes on various lawn chairs and other places outside. It has worked well enough for us, and we almost never use our electric clothes drier.
Some of this is because of my desire to live a ‘greener’ lifestyle. Some of it is due to our tight financial situation and my intrinsic frugality. We’ve saved quite a lot by rarely using the electric clothes drier.
Since Kim is working full time in Hartford, and my work is sporadic and often from home, I can do many of these sort of tasks around the house.
Over the next several weeks, I expect I shall have to do much more of this. The various oral antibiotics that has been taking to fight her Lyme disease just hasn’t been working. She’s been feeling pretty miserable, and today, the doctor prescribed another round of intravenous antibiotics. Hopefully, it will be approved by the insurance company and will help her feel better soon. However for the next several weeks, I’ll have to do more of the tasks, especially if they involve any sort of lifting. One giant step sideways.
As she was off at the doctors, I was meeting with some lawyers about some of the complicated legal situations surrounding our efforts to downsize and start over. Between the different legal proceedings going on, there are at least six lawyers involved, and depending on how things progress, could get resolved easily, or could get more protracted.
One the one hand, I am hoping that it will all just simply get resolved and go away. On the other hand, I’m not sure that is in the best interest of many of the parties involved. Today, I met with two lawyers, to help them understand the details, at least from my perspective. This will result in additional negotiations between lawyers, more filings in court, and the outcome is unclear. At least, it felt like the two lawyers got a much better understanding of the issues and provided another giant step sideways.
So, now, I’m back home, trying to get a little writing done, and figure out how to be prepared for whatever comes next.
Another Random Day, IPv6 and NaNoWriMo
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/10/2008 - 23:21Today was another day of random geeky and NaNoWriMo stuff. I helped configure a Windows 2008 Server. It provided a good opportunity to test out some more IPv6 stuff.
Out of the box, Windows Server 2008 seems to be working with IPv6 and I briefly connected via IPv6 from the Windows Server 2008 server through a couple IPv6 tunnels to my Linux box. I access both web pages and used SSH. Google Chrome and Firefox both connected to the Apache web server that I have running and PuTTY, a windows client that supports SSH and IPv6 connected to the sshd on my linux box.
Unfortunately, the IPv6 tunnel that the Windows 2008 Server seems to be using is slow and flaky. I kept dropping connections. I want to see if I can find a better tunnel for the Windows 2008 Server.
This took, traveling, and random house keeping tasks took up much of the day. I did manage to visit my quota of blogs today, but didn’t end up leaving as many comments as I normally would. I also managed to get a little farther in my novel. It is going well, but today I didn’t even make 1,667 words, let alone what I figure I need to do to make up for lost time. Tomorrow, I have some personal issues to deal with, but hopefully I’ll get more interesting writing done, both here and in the novel.
Recent ma.noglia bookmarks
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/10/2008 - 04:02Here are pages I've recently bookmarked with ma.gnolia:
Blanca DeBree Blog: Doors Open, Boys!
Random Notes:
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 11/09/2008 - 21:47Trying to catch up on my novel is great fun. It is like I’m reading a novel that I find very interesting, that I can’t put down, but instead of it being someone else’s words, it is my own words pouring out as I write them. Yet it is time consuming and a bit draining.
I am now up to 7,610 words. Way behind where I should be today, but catching up. I spent time with my extended family yesterday and today, and Fiona did another episode of her radio show.
I wrote down more of my thoughts for my speech to a communications class that I’ll be giving on Friday in Second Life. In certain ways, writing down my thoughts for that feels similar to writing my novel. The words flow quickly and easily, but at the same time it is draining and there are time commitments and deadlines.
To unwind, I’ve been visiting various blogs and I found a great post. Blanca DeBree wrote a blog post entitled, Doors Open, Boys!. Blanca starts off, “Thank God the Californians decided to pass Proposition 8 and write discrimination into their constitution.”
Following that theme come several suggestions: “How about Proposition X: marriage is between a white man and a white woman.” and “Poposition M: marriage is between a non-Mormon man and a non-Mormon woman.”
I noted that here in Connecticut, Love Makes a Family has set up a Wedding Catalog for people who want to get married in the Constitution State.
I follow up with the comment, “It will be good for business here in Connecticut, and if we benefit from a brain drain from the Discrimination State to the Constitution State, we'll I hope that will help grow business in our state as well.”
Another part of my unwinding has been hacking my cellphone. I’ve finally started applying some mods. I’ve changed the default skin and am looking to create my own skin for the phone. I tweaked it so that my ringtone can be a whole song, and I’ve enabled, although not yet configured, the email client.
I guess that’s enough for one day, even if I didn’t have the energy to write as many words for the novel as I would have liked.