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posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 04:31pm on 2004-06-24

Still feeling overwhelmed and under-energized; I missed both rehearsals this week due to my body's failure to cooperate with my plans and have shifted other things I'd meant to do this week a few times. Going through the past-due items on my Visor to-do list and re-scheduling several of them for next week helped a little emotionally once I "gave myself permission" to do that (yeah, I recognize the implied upfuckedness there; I'm working on it, but have made only small progress over the years so far). Not feeling especilally communicative despite knowing that's a bad thing right now.

But I did manage nearly five hours of sleep last night if one overlooks waking up "not long enough to count but long enough to notice" four times (and annoying Perrine because I did so in the cat-fur-free room, so she spent the night curled just outside the door). To say that I feel rested only makes sense in relative terms, but it does help.

And surrendering to how crappy I felt yesterday and just curling up with a novel (The Tyrant) much of the afternoon meant that at least I was doing something more pleasurable than just tossing and turning and feeling frustrated about neither being able to get to sleep nor feeling well enough to Get Things Done, especially when Perrine, who doesn't seem to have trouble getting enough sleep, stretched out against my hip and thigh to nap while I read. I've decided that as long as my financial situation is so dire, free e-books are a blessing. I can't afford to buy the dead-trees editions that I still find more comfortable to read, so I'm glad to be able to take advantage of the Baen Free Library and Project Gutenberg. I feel a little bad about not being able to support Baen's decision to make some current titles available for free by going with the "find out I like a series or an author and then go buy the rest of those books on paper" path to letting Baen make money off of this, but at least I can tell other people what I'm enjoying that I wouln't have known about otherwise ... (So far I've enjoyed The Tyrant by Eric Flint & David Drake, but the real gems have been 1632 (Eric Flint) and 1633 (Eric Fline & David Weber), which I'll get around to saying more about later, I promise. Next up is L. Frank Baum's The Wizard of Oz, which I've been meaning to read (probably the whole series, actually, unless I really hate the first one, which I don't expect to be a problem from what I've heard) for quite some time.

But oddly enough, what inspired me to sit down and write this entry (instead of a bunch of other things I feel I should be writing about (or rather, feel I should already have written)) was wanting to do a quick calculation and having my Visor already in my hand (otherwise laziness would have dictated using paper or doing it in my head), firing up a calculator program that's two thirds of the way through its free evaluation period, catching myself thinking in Reverse Polish Notation and reminding myself to translate to Algebraic Entry ("infix"), making a mental note to look for an RPN calculator app., noticing the program do something as soon as I tapped the division button, and realizing that the program I was did in fact have an RPN mode and was currently set to that. (Yeah, I was inattentive enough to fail to notice the presence of an "Enter" button and the lack of "Equals" at first.)

It made me feel really good -- satisfied, even reassured, as well as just plain tickled -- to do my arithmetic in RPN and to realize the tool I'd planned to search for was already in my hand. I'll have to look up how much it costs to register; I downloaded it because I wanted a graphing calculator, and it does that adequately but turned out not to be as useful for the problem I got it for as I'd hoped -- now I've got a different reason to want to keep it past the demo period. The three-numbers-two-operations calculation I did this afternoon would not really have been at all painful to do using infix (or, for that matter, on paper), but the times I really do want a calculator rather than just using it because it's already in my hand, I'd much rather use Reverse Polish ("postfix"). I do like having my comfortable tools. Usually when I want a calculator these days, if I'm near a computer, I open a telnet window and use 'dc'.

And that's what sparked an "it's the little things that cheer me up sometimes" journal entry. Being able to type "230 enter 24 / 1.9 *" instead of "230 / 24 = * 1.9 =" (well I did say it wasn't a problem that needed a calculator (or even really a pen and paper), didn't I?)), and being surprised by that fact, is just that sort of little thing.

Speaking of little things, I wonder whether I'll be able to scrape loose enough spare cash to buy one of those ... oh, I forget the name: little notebook thingies with two or more wooden leaves containing wax tablets, a convenient size to hang from one's belt ... at Pennsic this year. Now that I've got a PDA, I'm not sure which I want more, the real thing, or a lookalike that serves as a PDA case to make the modern toy less conspicuous in medeival settings (I first decided I wanted one when I was carrying a DayRunner instead of the Visor), but I think I still want the actual wax tablets.

Now if only I could lick some of the big things, like utility bills, insurance, government forms, carrying air conditioners upstairs without re-injuring my right elbow, and feeling well enough to get to Arlington and College Park more reliably.

There are 11 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] redaxe.livejournal.com at 01:44pm on 2004-06-24
one of those ... oh, I forget the name: little notebook thingies with two or more wooden leaves containing wax tablets, a convenient
size to hang from one's belt


Diptych. Or triptych, for three leaves.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 12:20am on 2004-06-26
Thanks. I keep thinking of the painting/carving meanings of those words and forgetting that they also mean the wax tablet notebooks.
 
posted by [identity profile] thette.livejournal.com at 02:03pm on 2004-06-24
Squeee! Finally someone else who has heard of and likes Eric Flint's books! Especially the 163* universe! Squee! And RPN is so lovely! I used an HP back in secondary school, and I loved it back them. (Of course, prefix notation isn't bad either.)

By the way, if you have a Webscription account, I could always donate 1634: The Gallileo Affair.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 12:18am on 2004-06-26
I hadn't heard of him until an argument started on a mailing list, about whether all time travel stories inherently suck, and the 163* stories were mentioned as a counterexample. (Personally, time travel in SF makes me nervous because it often sucks, sometimes in ways that break an otherwise good tale, but there have been a significant number of time travel stories I've enjoyed.) So I went looking for it, discovered I liked 1632 as much as the person who suggested it, and had to grab the next book as soon as I'd finished the first.

He makes history as interesting to me as Parke Godwin does, though his scope is more ... sort of Asimovian in a way. And he makes politics as fascinating as The West Wing does (though again, with a different feel). And actually, while reading 1633 (and a bit in 1632) I did find myself wondering about reactions of European readers compared to my own reactions.

I too was exposed to RPN by way of HP in high school. I was skeptical when a friend tried to explain why his HP-29C was so much better than my TI-30, but once he convinced me to shut up, pay attention, and actually try it for a couple of days, I was asking my parents for one. (They eventually gave me an HP-34C, which I loved ... and abused the power of, writing programs that took two or three days to run because hey, despite the lack of speed, I finally had a tool that'd do those things at all.)

When I got to college, started playing with the HP-3000 computer in BASIC, ForTran, and SPL, and then got access to the manuals that described the assembly language for it, I was tickled to realize that in important ways it was my calculator's big brother -- not only were the arithmetic operations all stack based, the part of the stack copied into hardware registers for speed was four words deep, just like the pocket calculator.

So I figured RPN was nice but quirky (I really liked the speed, of course, but thought it was just for people with brains wired like ,mine and a few other people) until I tried to write a program that would parse and evaluate infix expressions (trying to teach myself compiler design) and discovered that the easiest way to do so was to have it convert to RPN on the fly. That's when I decided RPN was more than merely "nice" and not quirky after all. But I still had people convinced I was setting up an ethnic joke when I tried to explain it. ("No, no, it's really called that. No, I didn't make it up...")

Prefix notation makes more sense to me intellectually as a math weenie -- it seems a more reasonable way to write math -- but when it comes to interactive usefulness, pushing buttons, it doesn't hold a candle to Reverse Polish. (At least for me.)

As for 1634, I'm not going to turn down such an offer ... I've registered "dglenn" as my Webscription userid. :-) I'm dying to see what happens next in that universe. Thanks.
 
posted by [identity profile] thette.livejournal.com at 05:08am on 2004-06-26
Oh, bugger. Webscriptions seems to be lacking a proper gift giving mechanism. (Something I will be complaining about.) Apparantly, I need full access to the account to do that. (So much for surprise gifts.)

If you'd change your password to one you don't use anywhere else, and send it to me at lilla_pi@hotmail.com, I'll give you the book. *grumbling*

I liked 1632 and the sequels, since they were rather insightful and quite decently correct (except, in places, such as the rix dollars and the Swedish gentry, but Eric Flint don't mind retrofitting wihen he finds out how it really was). However, it amused me greatly that each grand pattern of European history was explained in great detail (see, the prince chose which religion his every subject should follow), but that the reader was presumed to know the personality traits of American presidents in detail. I hope this doesn't show the difference between our history educations.

Also, the engagement between Sharon and Hans amused me. First, Hans had his mother's ring? And had carried it through how many years of battle? Second, the whole ring thing is rather late. Swedish customs at the time, where the engagement rather than the wedding was the legal commitment, dictated no rings, except among the nobility. Rings (two for the engagement, one for the wedding) came later, and the whole stone bit is extremely new, only since the diamonds in South Africa were found. (I read up on that when we got engaged.) I don't think the German customs were different by much.

Your HP memories were a treat to read, and deserves an entry of their own!
 
posted by [identity profile] keith-m043.livejournal.com at 02:17pm on 2004-06-24
Why not put something together which has your visor on one side and your wax tablet on the other.

And now for something completely different. Wanna trade some mac geeking, for me doing some spoon intensive work around your house? I have the one computer that must be salvaged somehow and two smaller projects involving second hand laptops that need doing also. thanx.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 01:23pm on 2004-06-25
"Why not put something together which has your visor on one side and your wax tablet on the other."

I thought of that. I haven't ruled it out. If I see one like that and can afford it, I may well get it. If I have to make it myself, the round tuit supply becomes a factor. Ideally that'd be a triptych so that when I wanted to hide the PDA even while writing, it could stay concealed.

"Wanna trade some mac geeking, for me doing some spoon intensive work around your house? I have the one computer that must be salvaged somehow"

This is the machine with a bad motherboard where you want to salvage the data from the SCSI hard drive? Yeah, I have SCSI Macs to use for that, and was going to post a comment in your journal offerring help.

"and two smaller projects involving second hand laptops that need doing also"

Depending on what kind of laptop and what needs doing, I can try. I'm not too good with Windows; ought to be able to help with MacOS or Linux, I think.

Trading such effort for spoons-intensive house stuff sounds like a good plan to me. Thanks.
 
posted by [identity profile] keith-m043.livejournal.com at 07:08am on 2004-06-26
Ok the getting back online part of my problem is solved. Data salvage and the rest is still up in the air but is less critical. I guess I will get with you on that after the memorial or at 3LF. ttfn.
 
posted by [identity profile] silmaril.livejournal.com at 02:40pm on 2004-06-24
I can help you tell something good about Baen Books, three words to be exact: Lois McMaster Bujold. I don't know if any of her stuff is available for free, though.

(On the other hand, I can say two bad words about Baen Books, too: John Ringo. But that's just based on dislike of the man, as I haven't read anything of his.)
 
posted by [identity profile] thette.livejournal.com at 03:01pm on 2004-06-24
Bujold only has one short story free, since she's very wary about the possible stealing of her books.

However, everything but Memory is up on Webscriptions, for a modest sum per omnibus.
 
posted by [identity profile] austin-dern.livejournal.com at 04:33am on 2004-06-26

Can't say what you might think of Baum; although I've got a generally good feeling about his Oz books I still haven't found time to read more than a handful. The Wizard of Oz, 1939 version, covers only about the first two-thirds of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the book, although not much important stuff (that I remember) happens in the last third. Baum's style is ... well, kind of like a good roleplaying session written down, but it is a good roleplaying session, which makes up for a lot of faults and occasionally shaky world-building details.



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