This seems to have been my first posting to the old blog, on 27 August 2002: "I love the train. Especially Trains that tilt. These are similar to, but different from, the Talgo ‘pendular’ trains used on Amtrak for the Seattle-Vancouver and -Portland runs. Hereabouts the tracks suck too bad for them to go anything like 125mph, to say nothing of 140."
Despite the sucky track, the Talgo makes the Portland run in substantially less time than the alternative (3.5 vs 4.5 parsecs) and the return leg on the alternative is always late. And the Talgo has business class, which everybody at my house will be taking not too many hours from now.
Limited-perspective news
From Sarah, 18 August 2002: "Another extremely narrow way to look at the news (one of my current interests), the corrections column of the New York Times."
My favorite part is it doesn’t ask you who the hell you are before letting you see the corrections page.
Follow you, follow me
From Sarah, 22 August 2002: "When you learn a new thing, you see it everywhere. While looking for craft blogs, I found someone’s links to a rec.arts.dance Lead and Follow FAQ. The snippet that was quoted in the blog reinforces my thought that I have much to learn."
Hand importing, or reruns
In an effort to make the old blog go away, or at least make myself stop checking to see if it’s still there, I’m going to do more reruns from it.
On 18 July 2002, my esteemed co-blogger wrote: "How long will adflip last? They claim fair use on the basis of research for, of all things, goofy vintage ads you can send as ecards. A bit of a stretch. Download all the ads (1940 to today) you need for your own fair use before they get the inevitable cease and desist ecard."
And if somebody wanted to remind me tonight to check to see if my copy of the 1st edition AD&D Player’s Handbook is a true first or merely a first printing, so I can price it according to this guide, I’d be grateful. How grateful, you may ask? Well, it turns out better judgment prevents my saying here; you’ll just have to take your chances.
13 Treasures
The Thirteen Treasures of Britain are pretty cool, if excessively practical.
But Buffy's not a sidekick
Russell Davies says his new Doctor will have a "modern action heroine" for a sidekick. Which seems to me to miss the point of a sidekick. If your sidekick is too able to take care of herself, you end up requiring badder baddies to create any sense of peril (or you have to make her twist her ankle during the chase scene, or something), and your hero has to get commensurately more powerful, and you end up risking a ridiculous escalation.
I’ll just hope the reporter is not accurately representing Mr Davies’s intent.
Mysterious Literary Trends
Not one, but two fiction books on the subject of synesthesia came out this year, and both are written for teens. A Mango Shaped Space by Wendy Mass and Mondays are Red by Nicola Morgan.
Retirement Options
A retirement community for homo- bi- and trans- sexual seniors is opening soon in Santa Fe, and people in Huntsville are thrilled!
But seriously, I’m looking forward to the broader choice in retirement and care options as the boomers get older, and I hope the horrible ones will be bankrupt by the time I’m ready to sign up.
Not sure if I can wait until spring!
Todd Oldham, that Target stylemeister, designed the cutest reconfigurable sofa for the folks over at La-Z-Boy! I MUST have it for my ladies’ lounge.
Just enough to get you in trouble
MedlinePlus has well-organized and reliable information on illnesses and medications, but you need to buy something like this to really annoy your doctor. Does anyone have good tips on social engineering in the doctor’s office? I need tips on how to gently guide a doctor so they don’t think you’re a loony.
