THOTCON
I perused this convention's website. So, not formally a book, magazine, or anything of the like. But it seems worthy of mention... and here's the spot where I do that sort of thing.These communities have an appeal. There is no doubt about that. But I doubt I am attendee material. I say this having previously decided it was not worth my time to attend PyCon and that I would be better off viewing the videos online. Of course, I say all this. But the intent when looking over the site was to decide whether to attend or not. Um, that's not going to happen. They were sold out. So, maybe it's sour grapes. On the other hand, I consider DefCon to be the more important convention. And even if I could get a ticket for $250 (tickets for Thotcon are only $150, if I remember correctly), I doubt I would go.
Still, I liked looking at the pictures... and the (Power Point) slide decks, which were available.
From there, I zipped over to SchmooCon's site. Their tickets sold-out in under twenty seconds last year. There were three releases. And each release sold out in about 6 seconds. So, I think it's safe to say that as long as I am on the fence about attending, I don't want it enough to make it happen.
Still, Thotcon has a nice site. Thumbs up. I like the feel.
The Things They Carried
This is a much better book than the length of my review may indicate. For whatever reason, when starting to read this book, I decided to make no notes. That decision fell apart around the second chapter. But was reinstituted prior to the third. Meaning, I really did just read this book (almost all of it), letting the words flow over me rather than dissecting the story bit by bit. I enjoyed the flow. It was a very good book. Who knows how accurate it was? In fact, towards the end, the impossibility of accuracy (in a war story) is, perhaps, the entirety of the book's theme. Still, I enjoyed my time. Ironically, I have touched this book (or the stories contained within it) before, as the imagery was highly reminiscent. As in, I had watched that kid die before. It was a familiar track in my mind. Of course, if there is a failure in all this, it is my (now) callus disregard for his tragic demise. I have turned the corner. And I find it hard to continue to care about those who died fifty years ago in a senseless war... when I cannot muster any empathy for those currently dying in senseless wars... as I must assume, all wars are.
Dell
Fun-to-Solve
Easy Crosswords
These Crosswords were, indeed, both Fun-to-Solve and Easy. I am only five crosswords in and I'm not entirely sure why I am throwing this book away. Well, the putative reason is that I don't want to do anymore. But I was having fun solving them. And it really is the wrong time of day (when I am bored and tired) to be making such decisions. But then, if I don't want to do something when I am bored and tired, perhaps it is not the activity for me.Eh, in truth, it may be as simple as looking at the time commitment (let's call it 100 hours) that doing the entire book would represent and knowing (just knowing) I'd rather spend that time working on something else equally inane... like building something out of LEGOs.