This parlor game
comes via
talvinamarich:
Comment to this post and I will pick seven things I would like you to
talk about. They might make sense or be totally random. Then post that
list, with your commentary, to your journal. Other people can get lists
from you, and the meme merrily perpetuates itself.
He gave me: Lisp, On the Mark, Accessibility, Books, Role-Playing Games, Filk,
Faroe Islands (one of these things is not like the others).
LISP turned out to be a
longer story.
On the Mark,
ditto.
Books
I've been in houses that have no visible books. They're creepy.
I learned to love reading early on. I remember as a child going to the
library at least once a week and coming home with my arms full of books.
I bought some books through a school program that provided wholesome
material at low prices and would let me order from grade levels above
mine.
I still enjoy reading, though I've slowed down -- that pesky "job" stuff
gets in the way, and is it my imagination or are fonts getting smaller?
I received a Kindle as a gift a couple years ago and I love it (and it
solves that small-font problem), though I've been slow to invest in
purchases for it because when I buy a book I want it to last forever,
not just until the DRM stuff breaks. So I've bought some e-books and
downloaded more for free, and I read at a slow-enough rate now that
that's sustainable. I'm currently reading the second book in the
Hunger Games trilogy, for which I believe I paid $5, and
1634 (free) is still waiting for me, and the short-story
anthology from Apex that includes work by my friend
mabfan...
I won't run out.
As for the many physical books, I'll just point to
this post and
mention that last year when we added about 40 shelf-feet of space we
mitigated the problem, for now. We like books. :-)
Role-playing games
I learned to play D&D in high school (out of the blue "basic" book).
I learned to role-play (instead of roll-play) sometime after college,
and that's when it got good. Yes of course I enjoy the fantasy aspect
of "being"/playing a character with exotic useful skills, but it turns
out what I really enjoy is being part of am extended, collaborative
storytelling experience. Hack-and-slash dungeon crawls appealed to me
in an earlier time and I still enjoy the occasional one-shot game of
that sort, but learning the craft side of these games is the real win
for me.
I've also found that writing helps this introvert to process a game
and, perhaps, enhance it. Ralph's D&D game led to me writing an
in-character journal in
ralph_dnd, and sometimes the other
players contributed pieces too, and that meant there was a second layer
of game experience outside of the gaming sessions. Neat! This is
an aspect I want to keep for any future games I play in.
Filk
My first encounter with filk music was the tape Minus Ten and Counting,
a collection of songs about space from a variety of performers including
Julia Ecklar and Leslie Fish. So I was spoiled early. :-)
I enjoy filk, both the simpler parodies that characterize the early genre
and the polished renditions with rich accompaniment and original melodies.
I tend to drift toward the latter, but there are gems in the former too.
One place I do not want to hear filk, though, is in the main areas of
SCA events. Post-revels or bardic circles around the fire in someone's
camp, sure. On the performance stage or in the main hall, no. I like
filk; I also like modern folk music, but I wouldn't perform Fred Small
songs in the SCA either.
Accessibility
It's going to be hard to do this one without ranting.
By any broad measure I am not "handicapped". I'm not blind, all my
limbs work, I'm no more easily fatigued than most other people... I should
not be bothered by accessibility problems. And, yet, I live in a world
full of devices and interfaces that were clearly designed by and for
folks with 20/20 vision that just do not degrade well. If this stuff
bothers me, I shudder to think what it's doing to people with
bigger problems.
You'd think that software interfaces would be some of the easiest to fix.
Road signs that are too small or have poor contrast are expensive to fix;
software with too-small fonts or bad colors should be easy. So why does
so much software disappoint me so badly? Why do so many designers, even
now in the 21st century when we should all know better, hard-code their
visual designs on the theory that one size fits all? Why is form so much
more important than function to so many?
My coping strategy is to use technology to my advantage when I can
(e.g. Firefox Stylish, which is forcing me to learn more than I want to
about CSS) and to just punt when I can't. Yeah, I miss out on some stuff,
but at least where recreational technology is concerned, it's not like
I want for ways to spend my time.
Faroe Islands
If the average temperatures were about 10 degrees warmer and if there
were a Jewish community there, it sounds like it'd be a pretty nice place
to live. I'm assuming that these days everybody has good internet
connectivity... The trip to Pennsic would be challenging, though. :-)