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24 July 2008 @ 01:54 pm
Don't Look Back Before You Run Chapter 1  
Title: Don't Look Back Before You Run
Author: broadwayshobo
Character/Pairing: Ten/Rose, Peter Petrelli
Rating: PG-13
Summary: He can feel something coming. Something darker than before
Disclaimer/Spoilers: I wished i owned these shows but i don't have a genie
Author's Note: I love Doctor Who and I love Heroes so a fic was born 

 
 
24 July 2008 @ 10:07 am
Spotlight on . . . #4  
One of the five core projects of the OTW is to support the noncommercial sharing of fanworks within fan communities. The official OTW website says:

The OTW believes that fanworks are creative and transformative, core fair uses, and will therefore be proactive in protecting and defending fanworks from commercial exploitation and legal challenge. This help will not be limited to those fans or projects directly connected with OTW.

I'm not a lawyer, nor do I understand much about law -- in twenty-first century America, it seems a tool of the powerful and the rich. When I was younger, I saw the law as a way to facilitate social change, but not so much anymore.

However, even cynical me acknowledges a need for legal resources at times, and a special kind of legal resource for online services. The existence of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a "civil liberties group defending your rights in the digital world," and the work it's doing is one indication of the need for legal analysis and protection.

Spotlight


The other core projects of the OTW )

To keep up with Legal's activities, follow Killalla's updates in the OTW News bi-monthly newsletter.

Written by Mirabile Dictu, with help from the OTW Legal Committee, and with help and support from ComRel.
Tags:
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 12:22 pm
Best Laid Plans (11/11) - Mag 7/SPN/SV  
This is the sequel to Ghost Town which should be read first.

Title: Best Laid Plans (11/11) - Epilogue
Author: [info]strangevisitor7
Beta: [info]lyl_devil and [info]pen37
Rated: PG
Fandom: The Magnificent 7, Smallville, Supernatural

Characters: Sam and Dean Winchester; Chloe Sullivan; The Seven: Chris Larabee, Buck Wilmington, Vin Tanner, Ezra Standish, Nathan Jackson, Josiah Sanchez, JD Dunne; OMC – Mathew Tanner; Eventually - Sam/Chloe

Disclaimer: The characters you know and love all belong to their respective creators. Mathew Tanner is mine

Summary: In New Mexico investigating the latest Luthorcorp activities, Chloe finds a possible lead while reading about the legal battle for the town of Four Corners and travels to find Mathew Tanner. Meanwhile Sam's been having visions about Vin Tanner so the Winchesters head back to the ghost town. Will the ruse played on the brothers by Mathew and the ghosts be revealed?

Chapter Summary: All is resolved and now it's time for Poker

Chapter List:
Chapter 1; Chapter 2; Chapter 3; Chapter 4; Chapter 5; Chapter 6; Chapter 7; Chapter 8; Chapter 9; Chapter 10;

Chapter 11: Epilogue

..
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 11:46 pm
Fanart  
I've never posted before but I've been following this community for ages. Maybe it was time to finally share something.

I'm not much of an artist and this is my first time having done a Doctor fanart.  Hope you like it.

Erm, slight spoilers for Journey's End...I think...

Clicky )
Tags:
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 12:09 pm
Fic: Taking the Plunge 3/?  
Title: Taking the Plunge
Author: Shen
Characters: Rose, Ten, Donna, Jack, Owen, Ianto, Gwen, Tosh
Rating: PG
Genre: Fluff, humor
Setting/Spoilers: No spoilers whatsoever. Part of my Peril-verse (LJ). 'Verse recap here. Post-reunion fic. You SHOULD be alright if you're not caught up, though. :)
Teaser: Trouble in paradise! The Doctor's really done it now, and his friends suggest a rather drastic solution: Marriage?!

Chapter 1 Chapter 2

Chapter 3: Popping the Question
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 12:03 pm
mobile thoughts  

  • 02:42 The Sextective, naked save a fedora, watches the west coast fall, one by one, into a slumber he is denied. #

Automatically shipped by LoudTwitter
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 09:00 am
[travel] In transit gloria Thursday  

In DFW, loitering near Gate C17. Flight down was uneventful. I did find some lunatic fringe Christian spam in comments on jlake.com, which I deleted. Not sure that was quite the right move, because it wasn’t technically spam so much as rant, but I don’t have time right now for pointless rhetorical combat with someone who confuses faith with facts.

Given my recent adaptation to a toilet-based lifestyle, I’m spending a lot more time in airport men’s room stalls. (Yes, this is almost over — the antibiotic course is working well. But it’s not over yet.) I’ve been ranting about the lack of outlets in airport lounges for a long time. Here’s a thought: why are stalls designed as if no one ever carries luggage? Have you tried maneuvering a roller bag and a computer satchel into one of those things. Rant, rant, rant. It’s like the good old days on this blog! I must have woken up feisty.

Just now loaned my cell phone to a Marine sergeant passing through on his mid-tour home leave from Iraq. He needed to call some of his family and was messing with some nearby payphones. I have a very strong negative view of the war, but I don’t for a moment confuse corrupt and venal Republican policymaking with the dedicated service of the men and women in uniform. (That was one of the great errors of the Left during Vietnam — inhumane, inhuman, and simply mistaken.)

Off to forage for food shortly.

Originally published at jlake.com. You can comment here or there.

 
 
24 July 2008 @ 11:49 am
 
This article explains so much of my condition these days.

I have been up for three hours, but I have yet to make it out the front door to run the errands I need to carry out today. Deciding on dinner is hard, and what's easiest tends to win. I spend my free time reading mindless comfort books, and have no social life because making that happen requires decisions, and those take energy.

Could this be because I spend my days organizing and packing the house (and doing things like picking a moving company) and my nights writing a brain-intensive book? While also trying to assemble enough of a committee to walk out of here with my master's?

Nah.

It doesn't fix the problem to have scientists tell me "you've got a limited amount of decision-making capacity and it gets harder the more you do it," but it makes me feel better about being a lazy slug for whom picking which Netflix movie to watch seems like an awful amount of work.
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 11:43 am
rec: the history of the kings of britain  
Story: The History of the Kings of Britain
Author: [info]livii
Rating: All Ages
Word Count: 1336
Author's Summary: Ancelyn and Bambera: happily ever after, with sword fights.
Characters/Pairings: Brigadier Bambera, Ancelyn
Warnings: None

Recced because: This is another one of my all-time favorites that I am thrilled I got the chance to rec. The author absolutely nails the characterizations here, to the point where this story is now my personal canon. There is no doubt in my mind that this is what happened after Battlefield. It funny, it's charming as hell, and by the end of it you are almost as in love with these two as they are with each other.

a small taste... )
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 11:12 am
Dude. Post-novel ennui *exists.*  
Reposted from the comment threads...

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=tough-choices-how-making
Tags:
 
 
Output: complacent
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 11:01 am
i went to hell and to the races  
Item the first: Tiny cute computer is tiny and cute. I have gotten all my habitual software (WinAmp, assorted Popcap timewasters, the Zune manager, Semagic, Electric Sheep, Eudora, etc.) and am halfway through the semi-endless process of moving my music and other files over. The hard drive is already groaning in anticipation of the 60+ gigs of music I plan on upholstering it with. Good thing I'm not a gamer.... 

(The new laptop, for those who are interested in the technical specs, is a 14.1" wide-aspect Dell Latitude D630 core 2 2.0 GHz with 160 gig hard drive--something like double the capacity of the previous machine at half the weight and energy costs. It has a nice big keyboard and it runs XP cheerfully. I had originally fallen in love with the XPS, which brings the shiny and has a bigger hard drive, but that one only allows for Vista and no.

Also, it's [info]netcurmudgeon's experience--and mine--that the business laptops, though they have less chrome, are more durable. So I am now the proud owner of Daphne the Laptop, at about two hundred dollars more than I paid for Ethel the HP in 2003. God, I love Moore's Law as it applies to my personal electronics. (Yes, you do deduce correctly from these data that the desktop is named Phred and the Zune is named Ginger. Because dancy! Ahem.)

Item the second: my climbing is getting better. My strength/weight ratio still sucks, but it sucks less (not because I've lost any weight: rather, I continue to gain slowly, though perhaps I have topped out around 245, and maybe now that my body has built a completely unreasonable amount of muscle (I've gained twenty pounds in the last ten months while dropping a shirt size and half a jeans size) it will consent to giving up some of the dead weight. Anyway, it's on cereal, sandwiches, soup, and salads until further notice... and maybe the occasional cookie. Because dammit, I want to climb better still. (The good news is, I have been doing all this work in the equivalent of a sixty pound pack, so if that weight does come off and I get down to a nice sensible 170 or so, I will be flying up those overhangs.)

Anyway, as I was saying, strength, balance, and recovery time are all improving, and I think I'm actually back to what I consider a reasonable level of fitness for the first time since 2001. Yay! I've climbed three days this week--Sunday, Monday, and last night, and still managed to go out for a three mile run this morning, in the driving rain, getting soaked to the skin in my new ugly Prana stretchy shorts. I swear, I am 50% more physically competent in the rain. What's up with that?

I started a 5.8 on Monday--couldn't stick the transition over the lip, but I got up on it, which is more than I have ever done on a 5.8 before, and I'm getting to the point where there are a couple of 5.7s that I can send reliably, though I have to dog on the rope a bit on both of them. (There's another one I'm going to try on Monday--or Saturday, if it's still rainy/wet and we don't get to climb out doors.) Yesterday, I did six routes, if you count the bouldering route I made four tries at before I just said "fuckit" and cheated on the last pusbucketing move, which I cannot quite swing.

...Okay, I also rainbowed a bit on #6, but it has a big mantle move and I was le tired by then. Sewing machine legs and the whole deal. (Rainbowing is when you cheat on a route by using hand/footholds intended for other routes. Mantling is when you have to press down on something at chest level to get your feet up higher: it's hard. Sewing machine legs is.... well, self-explanatory if you have ever seen a sewing machine. *g*)

But that last route I'm still proud of, because I used to thrash terribly on the bottom part, and now I'm sailing up that bit. I think any other gym would call it a 5.8, but Prime Climb is special. Their 5.5s are like 5.6s or easy 5.7s I've climbed in other gyms...

Anyway, visible progress. Which makes me think I may someday attain my goal of being able to do 5.10s. And I have to remember to ice my left elbow and take the NSAIDs today, because I do not want the tendinitis getting worse, thanks.

It's nice having a sport again. It's been a long time. And my last sport did not have couches.

Item the third: Tomorrow I have to revise "The Red in the Sky is Our Blood." And do laundry.  Saturday is climbing and maybe late lunch at Tapas with The Jeff and Alisa and Tanya. Sunday, to Fall River for an AD&D game. Monday, nose to the grindstone again, as my post-Readercon recovery is pretty much over by then and I have Deadlines To Hit.

Today I am having a goof-off and play with computers day, and then I am going to archery. It has occurred to me that in other jobs, you get, you know, days off. And that maybe I should look into that idea.

Item the fourth: Lone Star Stories, the 'zine with the fastest turnaround time on the block, will be publishing my maudlin Tam Lin poem "Seven Steeds," which some of you may remember from when I posted the very rough draft to this blog last year.

Item the fifth: Dora Goss is smrt.


...I really love this little computer.

64 miles to Lothlorien.
 
 
Output: chipper
Input: David Byrne - Like Humans Do (Radio Edit)
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 10:47 am
Check out a copy of Socialist Worker?  
Socialist Worker gave Under My Roof a rave, saying in part In real life, the years since 9/11 have seen not only utter insanity in what passes for mainstream political discourse, but also an increasing rejection of the worst elements of U.S. society--especially among young people. High school students around the country led walkouts for immigrant rights on May Day 2006; on the fifth anniversary of the Iraq war, 250 students at Princeton High School walked out of classes in protest; and so-called Millennials, on college campuses, at work and in the military, are to the left of decades of prevailing social policy on issue after issue.

It is young people like these, turning against the absurdity of American policies--within its borders and outside them--but often feeling alone in their critique, who I think will benefit the most from reading Under My Roof.



Yeah, you may have noticed that, generally speaking, Socialist Worker reviews don't really review. My fave SW review is still the UK version's take on Independence Day — it went something like "This film is racist, sexist, jingoistic, rather juvenile, virtually totally nonsensical at any rate... and you must go see it immediately!"

I don't know the author of my review, or at least don't remember anyone by that name. I wonder if she knows I was a comrade once upon a time...
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 10:39 am
Fic: This is Forever (3/?)  
Title: This is Forever (3/?)
Rating: PG-13
Disclaimer: The BBC owns all, I am merely borrowing.
SPOILERS: 4x13 Journey's End

Part Three: "Oh." He grimaces. "That’s just...wizard. Coffee I can live with, but complimenting Jack’s physical attributes..."

Previous Parts and Summary Beneath the Cut )
 
 
Output: amused
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 07:11 am
Fic: The First Five Times (4/5)  
Title: The First Five Times
Author: [info]pellnell
Character/Pairing: Ten/Rose
Rating: Adult
Summary: Set post-"Journey's End," I felt inspired by a Stars song, "The First Five Times." It's not necessary to have heard the song, but each segment is loosely based upon the song.
Disclaimer: Oh, how I wish I owned them and not the BBC. Then I would know what all that stand-in hubbub is about.
Author's Notes: So, this is the official smutty chapter. Sex, and also my love of Stardust and Joss Whedon shines through a bit. Also, mood music can be found here.

Fourth time, I said 'that's that.' You've agreed to give me everything. )
 
 
Jack Terminal: The living room
Output: full
Input: Gilmore Girls- "One's Got Class and the Other One Dyes"
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 03:09 pm
Fic: Cry To Me (PG-13)  
Title: Cry To Me
Author: Jade
Rating: PG-13
Archive: Yes, please
Pairings/Characters: Ten, Thirteen (mentions of Rose, Martha and Donna)
Spoilers: 'Journey's End'
Summary: After the events of Journey's End the tenth Doctor meets up with the thirteenth Doctor.
A/N: Set in the 'The Thirteenth Doctor (Technically) Chronicles' universe. I wrote this while suffering from a bit of writer's block for the main fic. This is set after it, but that doesn't need to be read to understand it. Contains a tiny bit of slash but it's nothing major. It turned out a bit angstier than I expected. Sorry about that.
Reviews are welcome!!! (I tend to squee ever time I get a review!)

( The tenth Doctor sat at the bar in San Francisco, nursing a glass of whiskey, staring into his glass as if it held the answer to the universe. )

Comments are love!!
 
 
Input: Under The Bridge - All Saints
 
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 08:37 am
Fic: No Rest from Sound (Part 15)  
Title: No Rest from Sound (Part 15)
Pairing: Ten/Rose
Characters in this part: The Doctor, Jack, Martha, Jenny, John Hart, Rose, Lucy, The Master
Rating: Adult overall, this part PG-13 for violence
Spoilers: Completely AU after 4x06
Summary: The rescue.
Teaser: “Where’s the forgiveness?” the Master asked, panting in pain through clenched teeth.
 
 
Output: tired
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 08:47 am
Bone to Pick - SLINGS AND ARROWS Edition  
OK, LJ, I have a bone to pick with you.  Why didn't anyone ever recommend SLINGS AND ARROWS to me?

(Before I go on, SLINGS AND ARROWS was a short-season Canadian TV show (originally airing on Movie Central and the Movie Network.)  It's about the fictional New Burbage Shakespeare Festival, and it stars Paul Gross, Stephen Ouimette, and Martha Burns.  The first season - the only one I've seen so far - is about a disastrous staging of HAMLET.)

I am absolutely, completely, 100% in love with this show. 

I sort of feel like I've just learned a new word, and now I hear it everywhere.  A couple of weeks ago, my editor sent me notes on THERE'S THE RUB (set in an imaginary theater in Minneapolis, starring people you've never heard of before, creating a disastrous staging of ROMEO AND JULIET.)  At the top of the notes, she said, "I can tell you must have loved SLINGS AND ARROWS."  (I'd never heard of it at that point.)

Then, two weeks ago, I went to dinner with our long-time usher friends, after a fantastic production of JULIUS CAESAR at the Shakespeare Theater.  One of our dinner guests, a professional actress from Pennsylvania, said, "It must have been just like SLINGS AND ARROWS, as they worked out the details of running Caesar with ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA."

So, I finally talked to Netflix.

And now I'm a convert.

If you have a theater bone in your body, watch SLINGS AND ARROWS.

Mindy, back to editing RUB, and waiting for Season 2 to arrive...
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 07:23 am
fic: Voodoo Child [29/?]  
Title: Voodoo Child
Rating: R [language and Disturbing Jack-Related Themes]
Spoilers: Exit Wounds/The Doctor's Daughter
Disclaimer: I plead insanity, M'Lud

Summary: They've never needed a maternity-leave policy before, because Torchwood employees don't live long... but when the odds catch up with a vengeance, Jack is left scrambling to fill in the gaps, any which way he can.

Notes: Whacko!AU!Muse still appears to be free-associating, but at least this time it doesn't involve bacon. Count your blessings while you can, kids.

[Chapter 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, and 28.]

Overcrowding. We're going to the short-bus hell for this. )
 
 
Output: weird
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 05:11 am
[links] Link salad, in which I apparently have a lot to say  

Article serie: Building Jay Lake’s Colon — More from the indomitable Mary Robinette Kowal.

stacia_kane on how to be a sex-writing strumpet — Some pretty good stuff on writing sex and erotica. (Thanks to calendula_witch.)

Newspaper Misspells Own Name on Front Page — (Thanks to danjite.)

World’s Oldest Bible Pieced Together — Interesting story, but the story-behind-the-story looks even more interesting.

Portuguese team makes first paper based transistor — Whoa. Serious cool potential here. (Thanks to lt260.)

Fish pedicures — Um, right. (Thanks to lillypond.)

A disease called “previous cesarean” — Another triumph of market-based healthcare finance. Speaking as someone with the mother of all pre-existing conditions, my interest in, and anger with, the distorted system of healthcare finance in this country only mounts. And I’m one of the lucky ones. I have compassion and sympathy for the 40 million uninsured, and the 40 million more underinsured. What I don’t understand is why the Republican Party, the AMA, and so many conservative voters do not. HSA’s (a long time Republican panacea) are meaningless to the unemployed, the underemployed and those on or near minimum wage. I had one in a previous insurance plan, and it was damned near meaningless to me. There’s an underlying unspoken social assumption that the poor somehow have earned their lot (residual Calvinism perpetuated by the GOP and other social forces, I think), combined with a spoken social assumption that if they’d only work a little harder they’d be fine. That’s an opinion which speaks very poorly of Americans’ human nature. Is it good social policy to force people into $1,000 ER visits because they don’t have the insurance coverage or the cash for a $120 doctor visit? It’s not like the market-based system has produced a viable outcome, not when you look at American life expectancy (42nd worldwide) and infant mortality rates (34th worldwide) — two very basic measures of healthcare success. (Thanks to dinogrl.)

Amanda Peet apologizes for calling vaccination protestors “parasites” — She goes on to explain her position. Very long time readers of this blog will recall I am passionate on this subject. the_child has a disease-specific immune disorder which means she is a lifetime carrier (asymptomatic and healthy) of a rather nasty viral disease which part of the ordinary childhood vaccination course. Almost half her kindergarten class were unvaccinated due to a high prevalence of vaccination protestors among the Waldorf population. Several parents suggested my daughter not be included in the class because of the health risk she presented to their children. My child, who was completely unresponsive to a widely-available vaccine, was considered a health risk by parents who were one clinic visit away from medical safety. You can imagine my response to this at the time. It’s an iteration of the free-rider problem, but basically, anti-vaccination parents are banking on all the parents around their child doing something they would not do to their own child in order to protect their child from communicable diseases. I’m sorry, “parasite” might have been a poor word choice, but Amanda Peet was right in the first place.

Exposing Bush’s historic abuse of power — An investigative report from Salon on domestic spying. Nothing to see here, citizen. Move along smartly, now. (Thanks to my Aunt M.)

Maryland State Police spying on peace activists — Because, you know, all the great American terrorists of recent years have been leftie peaceniks. Like Eric Rudolph! And Timothy McVeigh!

Why you should vote for McCain — Straight from the Great Orange Satan, whom I don’t usually bother to link. (I rather imagine that most of you already read Daily Kos, or you don’t care.) But this is very funny, because it has the benefit of being objectively true, as opposed to editorial opinion.


7/24/08
Time in saddle: n/a (airport walking today)
Last night’s weigh-out: n/a
This morning’s weigh-in: n/a
Currently reading: Green by Jay Lake

Originally published at jlake.com. You can comment here or there.

 
 
 
 

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