Holiday next week

We’re off work next week, and we’ve just made a hotel booking at the Auld Kirk Hotel in Ballater for next Wednesday. We’ve been past the hotel any number of times on our way through Ballater, and have always thought that we ought to try a stay there some time. On one of trips through Scotland we even popped in and tried to get a room there, but they were fully booked. So we’re definitely looking forward to finally getting to stay there next week.

We’ll be bringing Grandma McLean with us, in the hope that she’ll help us win a car again. (It’ll also help Alex to not wreck her house completely as he runs around with his boundless energy.)

Hugo nominees

Took me ages to track this one down (I must have injured my Google muscle): the 2002 Hugo award nominees.

And just for the record, the ConJos&eacute web site is a bit rubbish. Does their web site include a link to the Hugo nominees on the home page? Nope. Does it include a link in their sidebar? Nuh uh. Does the site even have a way of searching their content? Tee hee.

No: you’ve got to know that Hugos fall under “WSFS business.” (World Science Fiction Society). Only there do you find a link to their press release with the nominees on it.

So how long will it be before they put up a link to the final voting results? Anyone’s guess. But they’ve been putting their press releases here: http://www.conjose.org/Pubs/PressRel/.

Movable Type client?

I need a better writing tool for Movable Type. Inserting the proper HTML tags into a paragraph really interrupts the flow of one’s thinking, and gets to be a pain in the ass after a while. The MT interface is great, but it’s geared towards writing HTML–not content. I could really do with a rich text editor that allows me to publish to MT. And I’m sure I’ve seen one of these puppies…if only I could remember where…

Alternatively, it shouldn’t be that difficult to knock one together myself. MT supports XML-RPC, so getting the rich text editing would be the hard part. The actual upload to the blog itself should be a caker.

Books

On Friday evening, while I was tidying up some other parts of this blog (the reviews section) I re-read my review of Michael Marshall Smith’s collection of short stories, What You Make It. This gave me the link for MMS’s web site, where I found out that his long-awaited new novel The Straw Men is now out in hardback. Ooh! Ooh!

So I picked up a copy yesterday afternoon while we were in town. It’s published under the name “Michael Marshall”, without the “Smith”:

“The big news is that Michael has just announced that THE STRAW MEN will be coming out under a – slightly – different name. In both the US and UK the novel will be published under the name Michael Marshall. The move was initially precipitated in the US, due to the publishing last year of a book called STRAW MEN by Martin J. Smith. On consideration, however, Michael has decided to consolidate the split in names in order to create the possibility of publishing different types of novels under the two names. His next novel will also come out under the name Michael Marshall, but he does already have plans for a forthcoming Michael Marshall Smith novel.”

Looks like he’s doing an Iain (M.) Banks, then, because it looks like The Straw Men is more of a mainstream thriller rather than a whacked-out paranoid slipstream detective/SF crossover kind of thing. But that’s cool.

By coincidence, yesterday afternoon was also when I found out that Banks has a new novel coming out next week: Dead Air. I saw the poster for it in Ottakar’s bookshop on George St. (And since when is that an Ottakar’s? Last time I looked it was James Thin.) It’s an “Iain Banks” book, so not SF. His last mainstream book, The Business was fun, but a bit lightweight. I’m curious to see what this one will be like.

And while I was snuffling around Amazon looking for the link for Dead Air, I happened to see that “customers who bought this item had also bought”: Engine City by Ken Macleod (not out until November). This is the final book in his “Engines Of Light” trilogy, and I haven’t even read the first two yet. They’re sitting on my “to read” shelf next to my desk right now, staring up at me with baleful spines as if to warn me that if I don’t read them soon, there’ll be trouble.

Also on the list of “customers who bought” Dead Air was Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson. (It isn’t going to be out until March 2003, so at least that will give me time to get my copy of Cryptonomicon back from James and re-read it.) Apparently Stephenson has been writing Quicksilver with a fountain pen:

“I’ve written every word of it so far with fountain pen on paper. Part of the theory was that it would make me less long-winded, but it hasn’t actually worked. I think it has improved the quality of the actual work somewhat, simply because it is actually easier to edit something on paper than on screen. So usually every page of the original manuscript has been gone over 2 or 3 times before it goes into the computer and then when I type it into the computer that’s another pass again where I can make changes if I want to.”

The novel is set about 300 years ago, with some loose familial connections to the characters in Cryptonomicon, and should delve further into the history of cryptography. Cryptonomicon was an utterly fascinating read. Even though I’ve only been through it once, it has definitely registered as one of my favourite books of all time. (Note to self: must do a “favourite books” page at some point…)

Finally, the Hugos. Worldcon is happening this weeken in San Jose. I’d thought that the Hugo awards were being presented on Saturday evening (last night), so I went scurrying across the web this morning to see who’d won. Couldn’t find a damn thing, though. Probably because they’re not due to be announced until this evening (Sunday). But while I was looking, I did stumble across Neil Gaiman’s weblog, where I found out that he has a new book out: Coraline. I’ve read–and loved–all of Gaiman’s Sandman work, but I haven’t read any of his novels. They always hover on the borderline of “buy me” when I’m browsing through a book shop. Coraline, though, looks like a must have.

New Opera features I would like

I think I’ve been using the Opera browser for about a year now. I tried it out because that’s what you do, but I stuck with it because of what it could do. I have really found that, for my purposes and surfing habits, Opera is the best web browser of the current bunch (IE, Mozilla, Opera). IE is a better application platform, but that’s not quite the same as a browser.

The web is exactly that: a web. Hyperlinks weave disparate sites together into a rich tapestry of information, and I like being able to look at multiple parts of that tapestry at the same time. If I’m reading a site, or a story, I usually find several links I want to visit, so I click on them. In Opera (and in Mozilla now, as well), I can open these new pages up in separate windows (or tabs) within a single application space.

Right now, for example, I have 20 windows open in my Opera session. I’ve been snuffling about a variety of weblogs, and more than any other kind of site blogs are just full of interesting hyperlinks. Opera opens up these new windows quickly, and in the background. That way the flow of my reading isn’t interrupted.

When I exit Opera, it saves the list of windows that were open. So, when I start it up again, it re-opens them all, and I can carry on browsing where I left off. This is just so nice, I want more of it!

The feature I would really like to see in Opera (and Opera 7 is just round the corner, so fingers crossed) is the ability to save these sets of window setups.

For example, these 20 windows I now have open are mostly related to blogs and blogging. It would be great to save these to a file (say “bloggin.sav”), and then start with a clean slate. I could go back to this list of saved windows whenever I wanted to.

You can sort of do this now already in Opera 6, but it’s not exactly slick: you can create a new bookmarks folder, and stick the URLs of all the current windows into that folder. You can then use the “open all folder items” feature to open up all the URLs in one go. But you have to do the work of putting all those sites into the bookmarks folder yourself. Even a function to put all current windows into a bookmarks folder at once would be pretty cool.

Movable Type macros for Everything2

Back in the (good/bad…proabably bad) old days when the sunpig site was running on some scraps of PHP code I’d cobbled together myself, it had the ability to automatically convert Everything2 style hard links and pipe links. This meant that we could copy and paste content between here and E2 without doing any extra editing.

When we moved over to Movable Type, though, we lost that facility We gained much, much more in the process, though. But now that Movable Type has support for macros, thanks to the incredibly cool Brad Choate, I can put these E2 links back.

All that is required are two macros:


<MTMacroDefine name="e2hardlink" pattern="m/\[([^\|]*?)\]/">
<a href="http://www.everything2.com/?node=<MTNull encode_url="1"><MTMacroMatch position="1"></MTNull>" title="<MTMacroMatch position="1">"><MTMacroMatch position="1"></a></MTMacroDefine>

<MTMacroDefine name="e2pipelink" pattern="m/\[(.*?)\|(.*?)\]/">
<a href="http://www.everything2.com/?node=<MTNull encode_url="1"><MTMacroMatch position="1"></MTNull>" title="<MTMacroMatch position="2">"><MTMacroMatch position="2"></a></MTMacroDefine>

Nifty! But probably of more use to Abi, because I don’t tend to post on E2 these days.