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I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 10:32:02 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: wrote in message removed for brevity "Em" seems so CSS, Em. But it works for me. Ursula Le Guin did write the Earth Sea Trilogy, too, which I enjoyed. Those books were more in the Fantasy or Heroic Fantasy genre. I thought her "Left Hand" more masterly. To be honest, I haven't read "The Darkness Box." I'll add that to my list (the interminable list). I read a lot of Asimov when I was in my teens, including "I Robot," and I would have to reread the books to discuss them adequately. I do remember that Asimov was markedly proud of his three laws of robotics. And I'd read "Stranger in a Strange Land," too. I read a lot of Heinlein back then (including "The Rolling Stones," the possible genesis for Gerrold's "The Trouble with Tribbles"). (In fact one of my research papers in college used references from Heinlein's testimony before Congress concerning NASA spinoff technology.) The one heralded author that I never really explored much as I probably should have was Arthur C. Clarke. I had read a couple of his books, I know. I don't remember the titles, though. Bradbury was an intriguing author, also, I'd have to agree. I don't think he ever forgave Michael Moore for 'borrowing' the title from his "Fahrenheit 451." Not sure what CSS means... sorry... didn't take it as flip. My name is a series of M's, so sometimes I'm called M&M, shortened even more to Em. The Darkness Box is a very short story. I don't think it's available online. My favorite I Robot short story is Robbie. Moore, I think, was trying to make political points with the title. I guess it sort of fits, but.... CSS stands for cascading style sheets, Em. It's a web design mechanism - sort of an html thing. If I can find "The Darkness Box," I'll definitely read it. I think I can slip in a short story :) Wow... never made that connection. I even googled up acronyms of CSS. lol I had gotten up in the early morning hours with a bit of a fever this morning, Em, for some reason. I decided to check the headers before I went back to bed and subsequently decided to respond to some of the posts. So, I wasn't the most lucid when I responded. I didn't fully explain myself. "Em" in CSS is a unit of measure. It is equal to the width of an "M." The other units are "pt" and "px." A percentage can also be given to determine positioning, padding, etc. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
On Fri, 02 Oct 2009 01:00:46 -0400, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: On Thu, 1 Oct 2009 19:18:54 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Heinlein (Stranger in a strange land... I still re-read it) Which version - unedited or edited. The unedited version is better and by comparison, the edited version sucks. Heinlien was good only up to a point. If he kept within the bounds of his Libertarian views, he wrote some great stuff. When he started wandering off the reservation trying to match Silverberg and Dick (who by the way was a complete and total asshole as befits his name), he lost it completely. Read "Grumbles from The Grave" sometime - that will give you a whole new opinion of Heinlien. Issac Asimov was a good friend of my Father's. They met through another friend of my Dad's Clifford Simak - another scifi author. My favorite Asimov story was when I was in high school - I came home from football practice on my way to my job at the TV store and sitting in my living room with my Dad was Asimov, Simak and Martin Greenberg (the publisher, not the anthologist) yucking it up like there was no tomorrow. :) What did you Dad do for a living, Tom? Clifford Simak was one of the early Sci-fi authors that I read (early in my exploration of the genre). I loved his book "City." I don't think that novel had any genuine critical acclaim, though. Another book of his that I remember reading was "The Werewolf Principal." I had read others; but, I'd never be able to remember the titles. I personally thought he was as good as Asimov, if not better. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
wrote in message
... On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 10:32:02 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message removed for brevity "Em" seems so CSS, Em. But it works for me. Ursula Le Guin did write the Earth Sea Trilogy, too, which I enjoyed. Those books were more in the Fantasy or Heroic Fantasy genre. I thought her "Left Hand" more masterly. To be honest, I haven't read "The Darkness Box." I'll add that to my list (the interminable list). I read a lot of Asimov when I was in my teens, including "I Robot," and I would have to reread the books to discuss them adequately. I do remember that Asimov was markedly proud of his three laws of robotics. And I'd read "Stranger in a Strange Land," too. I read a lot of Heinlein back then (including "The Rolling Stones," the possible genesis for Gerrold's "The Trouble with Tribbles"). (In fact one of my research papers in college used references from Heinlein's testimony before Congress concerning NASA spinoff technology.) The one heralded author that I never really explored much as I probably should have was Arthur C. Clarke. I had read a couple of his books, I know. I don't remember the titles, though. Bradbury was an intriguing author, also, I'd have to agree. I don't think he ever forgave Michael Moore for 'borrowing' the title from his "Fahrenheit 451." Not sure what CSS means... sorry... didn't take it as flip. My name is a series of M's, so sometimes I'm called M&M, shortened even more to Em. The Darkness Box is a very short story. I don't think it's available online. My favorite I Robot short story is Robbie. Moore, I think, was trying to make political points with the title. I guess it sort of fits, but.... CSS stands for cascading style sheets, Em. It's a web design mechanism - sort of an html thing. If I can find "The Darkness Box," I'll definitely read it. I think I can slip in a short story :) Wow... never made that connection. I even googled up acronyms of CSS. lol I had gotten up in the early morning hours with a bit of a fever this morning, Em, for some reason. I decided to check the headers before I went back to bed and subsequently decided to respond to some of the posts. So, I wasn't the most lucid when I responded. I didn't fully explain myself. "Em" in CSS is a unit of measure. It is equal to the width of an "M." The other units are "pt" and "px." A percentage can also be given to determine positioning, padding, etc. Sort of an em dash? I know about that terminology. I actually heard someone joke about that once, since I used to dash about. Sorry about your fever... maybe you're now immune to the H1N1. -- Nom=de=Plume |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 10:22:19 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote: "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Thu, 1 Oct 2009 19:18:54 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Heinlein (Stranger in a strange land... I still re-read it) Which version - unedited or edited. The unedited version is better and by comparison, the edited version sucks. Heinlien was good only up to a point. If he kept within the bounds of his Libertarian views, he wrote some great stuff. When he started wandering off the reservation trying to match Silverberg and Dick (who by the way was a complete and total asshole as befits his name), he lost it completely. Read "Grumbles from The Grave" sometime - that will give you a whole new opinion of Heinlien. Issac Asimov was a good friend of my Father's. They met through another friend of my Dad's Clifford Simak - another scifi author. My favorite Asimov story was when I was in high school - I came home from football practice on my way to my job at the TV store and sitting in my living room with my Dad was Asimov, Simak and Martin Greenberg (the publisher, not the anthologist) yucking it up like there was no tomorrow. :) Heinlein wrote "Friday". Was a great book until he decided it was time to end the novel and crapped it completely in 1 final chapter! I agree, although I always saw, being a contrarian by nature, that "Friday" was Heinlein's attempt to replicate and expand upon "Starship Troopers". A lot of the themes found in "Starship Troopers" that were never fully explored show up in "Friday" somewhat twisted and warped. I didn't think it was worthy of a Nebula or Hugo award though - a lot of "Friday" was unreadable - in some ways, it out Clancy'd Clancy. :) |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 10:35:12 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Thu, 1 Oct 2009 19:18:54 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Heinlein (Stranger in a strange land... I still re-read it) Which version - unedited or edited. I'm not sure... never checked or even knew there was an edited version. The book I have (somewhere) is a paperback handmedown from years ago. It was the edited version then. The unedited version, with footnotes and commentary, was released by Virginia Heinlein about ten or so years ago. Gives you a much clearer idea of what Heinlein's ideas were. The unedited version is better and by comparison, the edited version sucks. Heinlien was good only up to a point. If he kept within the bounds of his Libertarian views, he wrote some great stuff. When he started wandering off the reservation trying to match Silverberg and Dick (who by the way was a complete and total asshole as befits his name), he lost it completely. Read "Grumbles from The Grave" sometime - that will give you a whole new opinion of Heinlien. I never really considered Heinlein that political. I'll check out the Grumbles if I can find it. Really? Interesting. "Starship Troopers", is a pure Libertarian political novel spiced up with a little was action (including some really funny scenes), then there's "Methuselah's Children" and "Time Enough for Love" which are all part and parcel of the Lazarus Long saga - lot's of Libertarian political thought in those, "Friday", was a Libertarian manifesto in some ways. Almost all of Heinlein's novels and shorts had some social themes and follow the Libertarian ideals: individual liberty/self-reliance, individual social obligations, the influence of organized religion on culture and government, and most importantly the tendency of society to repress non-conformist thought. Those are all strong Libertarian concepts as expressed by Heinlein. Issac Asimov was a good friend of my Father's. They met through another friend of my Dad's Clifford Simak - another scifi author. My favorite Asimov story was when I was in high school - I came home from football practice on my way to my job at the TV store and sitting in my living room with my Dad was Asimov, Simak and Martin Greenberg (the publisher, not the anthologist) yucking it up like there was no tomorrow. :) Ah, but there _is_ no tomorrow. Island, Aldos Huxley. Huxley was a hack. Tomorrow is all we have. :) |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
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I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 10:37:14 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... I didn't like that book... the movie was awful The David Lynch version was fairly good, the second version by John Harrison sucked pond scum and there is soon to be a third version by David Berg because Hollywood seems to have run out of original ideas for movies. "Dune" was a pseudo-intellectual's dream book. Thematically, it was a freakin' mess, but because it was so bad, everybody thought it was good. And of course it spawned a whole series of pre/post quels if you will all written by his relatives trying to keep the franchise alive. I think that was my feeling at the time... it wandered about and I got tired of the wandering/wondering. Hebert is L. Ron Hubbard, only nobody spawned a religion off of "Dune". Don't bet on it. I've never heard tell of one - that doesn't mean there isn't though. Thinking about it, yeah - The Church of Global Warming. :) |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
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I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
On Fri, 2 Oct 2009 15:41:45 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: maybe you're now immune to the H1N1. I learned something interesting the other day when I made my visit to the immuology specialist. People my age, or those who were adults in 1976 which was the most recent occurance of the Ham and Bacon Flu, have an immunity to the disease if (1) they had the Ham and Bacon Flu, (2) were exposed to somebody who did have it. |
I'll Stick to Boating, Thank-you...
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