Re: What's to read?

2009-09-22 Thread Doug Pensinger
Pat wrote:

  I have a Sony 505. The books on my reader are on my reader and on my
 desktop, not on my account on someone else's server. If anyone wants to
 delete them [think 1984] or whatever, they have to physically steal my
 reader and then delete the book. I own them outright. Nobody else has any
 rights in the copies I own except, in this state, if I had a legally married
 spouse. (Community property state).

 No one gonna take my 505 away 


That's nice, but if I was a best selling author I think I'd be pretty
reluctant to sell my book that way for fear that someone would make copies
and give them away a la mp3 file sharing.  And unlike musicians, authors
aren't likely to make a lot of money on tour so once their book is being
distributed for free, they're SOL.

Other than the ownership factor, how do you like your reader so far?

Doug
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Re: What's to read?

2009-09-22 Thread Doug Pensinger
John  wrote:

 But hopefully none of that is necessary in the future. I just want to see
 the book selection increase. It still boggles my mind why so few books
 released before the Kindle, but in the last 30 years or so, have come out in
 Kindle or other e-book formats. Someone must have a digital copy of the book
 text somewhere, and it is trivial to convert it to the Kindle or ebook
 formats. It seems like free money for someone.

 By the way, have you investigated how the book selection compares for Kindle
 vs. your Sony 505? Particularly with science fiction titles?

 I'm still waiting for Brin to release the various Startide books on Kindle.

I think the reason you're still waiting for Brin's books is also the
answer to you're question about the number of titles available.
They're probably negotiating with a lot of authors for the rights or
dealing with copyright issues.  After the 1984 debacle I'm sure
they're being very careful about what they make available.

In the meanwhile there's a lot of stuff already available that I want
to read, so I'm not to worried about it yet.  Also, you've probably
noticed that you can prompt publishers to release their titles from
the Amazon page.  On the left hand side of the page theres a little
dialog box entitled Tell the Publisher etc.  Here's one you all can
help me out on 8^)

http://www.amazon.com/Consider-Phlebas-Iain-M-Banks/dp/031600538X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8s=booksqid=1253600088sr=8-1

Doug

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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Doug Pensinger
Dave  wrote:

 Amen, brother! I think that the harsh immune response from some quarters
 to the merest mention of religion is a symptom of our general inability to
 be generous, kind, civil, open and _listening_.

Yes but, calling the U.S. a Christian nation is a little beyond the
merest mention.  That said, I agree with the tenor of the message
forwarded by Chris.  I've been disturbed enough by the hate speech
from the right; Beck, Limbaugh et al, that I've considered taking some
sort of action to express my displeasure.  This is the only
constructive thing I've found so far:

http://colorofchange.org/

If anyone knows of any similar campaigns I'd be interested in checking them out.

Doug

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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Charlie Bell


On 22/09/2009, at 7:57 AM, Chris Frandsen wrote:


A referral to Religion without being specific often sparks a  
response on this list.


Sure, but this isn't one of those times. Asking non-Christians and  
Christians alike to be more civil is one thing - civility in discourse  
is one thing. But what you forwarded was specifically saying we should  
ask What would Jesus do? and to the millions of non-Christians in  
your nation and elsewhere that's meaningless at best.


My wife is not a follower so she did not write this with this  
illustrious group in mind. Guys, I suggest taking her to task on  
this is part of the problem. There are many out there with religious  
beliefs be they Christian or otherwise. Being civil means respecting  
their beliefs though not necessarily accepting them.


Being civil has nothing to do with respecting beliefs. Being civil  
means not being unnecessarily offensive while pointing out where  
beliefs are damaging our societies. Some beliefs deserve ZERO respect  
(creationism, anti-vaccinationism etc). However playing to Christian  
beliefs if it helps frame a debate in a way they'll understand can be  
useful and help keep the tone civil.


But the way I see it, if someone is lying about you or something you  
do or say or believe, as so many in the lunatic fringe that has such a  
disproportionately loud voice in American politics do - Coulter,  
Limbaugh, Beck, then call them on it. Don't pander. Call them on it,  
and then move on by.


I agree with Bruce that in general lessons ascribed to Jesus are  
about love and acceptance of the other.


That's the widely perceived view of them, yes. Doesn't totally hold  
water if you actually read the New Testament, but yes - if people  
tried to act a bit nicer to each other we'd be better off.


Charlie.

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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Bruce Bostwick

On Sep 22, 2009, at 1:36 AM, Doug Pensinger wrote:


Yes but, calling the U.S. a Christian nation is a little beyond the
merest mention.


More than a little, although in this case, the usage didn't seem to be  
malicious.


The origin of that phrase is a multilayered equivocation on the part  
of certain right-wing religious movements whose doctrine involves a  
fundamental rejection of even the concept of separation of church and  
state, and the equivocation is both in the glossed-over distinction in  
meaning between nation composed mostly of Christians (true) and  
nation whose government rests on, and is meant solely to promote and  
enforce, Christianity as a state religion (false, but an often  
intended misinterpretation), and the equally glossed-over distinction  
between the broadest and narrowest possible definitions of  
Christian.  Ultimately, it's a code-phrase, one that means very  
different things to the in-group that uses it as a rallying point than  
it does to those outside that group, and the resulting confusion is by  
design, at least at the origin.


And it's often repeated by people outside the group without a full  
understanding of the memes it belongs to and the agenda those memes  
serve.  As I believe happened in this case.



That said, I agree with the tenor of the message
forwarded by Chris.


As do I.  Whatever the language used or the associations it might  
have, to me, the underlying message was clearly a call for civility,  
empathy, and compassion for others, whether we agree with them or not,  
and I am completely in agreement with that message.


I've been disturbed enough by the hate speech from the right; Beck,  
Limbaugh et al, that I've considered taking some sort of action to  
express my displeasure.


The worrisome thing to me about voices like Beck and Limbaugh is that  
they're symptoms, not root causes.  There are far more hateful people  
in this country than the ones we hear on right-wing talk radio.   
(Radio is nothing compared to what circulates via viral chain-email  
back channels on the right wing.)  Neither Beck nor Limbaugh would be  
on the radio at all if they didn't draw listeners by telling them what  
they want to hear.  And it's their audiences that worry me, because  
the fact that guys like Beck or Limbaugh make money doing what they do  
is a clear sign that those beliefs are already out there.


No, I'm disagreeing with you. That doesn't mean I'm not listening to  
you or understanding what you're saying. I'm doing all three at the  
same time. -- Toby Ziegler




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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Chris Frandsen


On Sep 22, 2009, at 3:20 AM, Charlie Bell wrote:



On 22/09/2009, at 7:57 AM, Chris Frandsen wrote:


A referral to Religion without being specific often sparks a  
response on this list.


Sure, but this isn't one of those times. Asking non-Christians and  
Christians alike to be more civil is one thing - civility in  
discourse is one thing. But what you forwarded was specifically  
saying we should ask What would Jesus do? and to the millions of  
non-Christians in your nation and elsewhere that's meaningless at  
best.


Charlie, I think you are being a bit defensive here. First her message  
was as much to those that claim to be Christians than anyone else so  
the question is appropriate to that audience and of course he is  
considered as a prophet to millions of other religions followers


My wife is not a follower so she did not write this with this  
illustrious group in mind. Guys, I suggest taking her to task on  
this is part of the problem. There are many out there with  
religious beliefs be they Christian or otherwise. Being civil means  
respecting their beliefs though not necessarily accepting them.


Being civil has nothing to do with respecting beliefs. Being civil  
means not being unnecessarily offensive while pointing out where  
beliefs are damaging our societies. Some beliefs deserve ZERO  
respect (creationism, anti-vaccinationism etc). However playing to  
Christian beliefs if it helps frame a debate in a way they'll  
understand can be useful and help keep the tone civil.


One of the ideals behind the foundation of this country was religious  
freedom. To me that means that we respect the right of an individual  
to have his/her own religious beliefs. Another principal was the  
separation of church and state.  I think it is appropriate to point  
out when religion crosses that line but not by attacking the beliefs  
themselves.


learner
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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Charlie Bell


On 22/09/2009, at 11:24 PM, Chris Frandsen wrote:


Being civil has nothing to do with respecting beliefs. Being civil  
means not being unnecessarily offensive while pointing out where  
beliefs are damaging our societies. Some beliefs deserve ZERO  
respect (creationism, anti-vaccinationism etc). However playing to  
Christian beliefs if it helps frame a debate in a way they'll  
understand can be useful and help keep the tone civil.


One of the ideals behind the foundation of this country was  
religious freedom. To me that means that we respect the right of an  
individual to have his/her own religious beliefs.


Respecting that right, and respecting the belief is not the same  
thing. I'll defend vigorously the right of someone to believe and  
claim the earth is 6000 years old, even as I'm ridiculing that belief  
as stupid. But I'll do it politely...


Another principal was the separation of church and state.  I think  
it is appropriate to point out when religion crosses that line but  
not by attacking the beliefs themselves.



I disagree strongly. Some beliefs are stupid and wrong. Attacking  
stupid ideas is vital to our progress. We've been far too  
accommodating to daft ideas in recent years. But always addressing the  
idea and not the person is equally vital, as long as they're doing the  
same courtesy.


Charlie.

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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Nick Arnett
On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 1:20 AM, Charlie Bell char...@culturelist.orgwrote:



 That's the widely perceived view of them, yes. Doesn't totally hold water
 if you actually read the New Testament, but yes - if people tried to act a
 bit nicer to each other we'd be better off.


I know what you mean, I think, but I've stopped using the word nice to
describe it.  I know churches that are perfectly nice to gays, for
example, but in doing so pretty much fail to accept them.  Sort of a
welcome to our church, we're glad to have you here and we're certain that
you're going to hell.  Except that the last sentence is implied, not spoken
aloud.

I guess another way to say what I'm saying is that hypocrisy and
self-righteousness can be extremely nice, and I find the combination to be
not only irritating, but destructive to community.  There's a
passive-aggressiveness present.

I'd rather call on people to be real, rather than nice, I suppose.

Nick
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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Charlie Bell


On 23/09/2009, at 1:46 AM, Nick Arnett wrote:


I know what you mean, I think, but I've stopped using the word  
nice to describe it.  I know churches that are perfectly nice to  
gays, for example, but in doing so pretty much fail to accept them.   
Sort of a welcome to our church, we're glad to have you here and  
we're certain that you're going to hell.  Except that the last  
sentence is implied, not spoken aloud.


I guess another way to say what I'm saying is that hypocrisy and  
self-righteousness can be extremely nice, and I find the combination  
to be not only irritating, but destructive to community.  There's a  
passive-aggressiveness present.


Well, I guess that's better than the lynchings. But I hear you.

C.

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RE: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Pat Mathews

We started with a plea for civility and niceness. Because it invoked religion 
and the name of Jesus, the thread was promptly taken over by those who felt it 
their bounden duty to object to the Christian content - not on the grunds that 
they were not Christian, but because they consider it their bounden duty to 
attack Christianity whenever and wherever they see it, apparently, as evil, 
superstitious, and whatever else they object to.

This is not civil - it is clean contrary to what was wanted - and in the name 
of the Maiden, Mother, and Crone, must a polite request that people be polite 
be taken over by the rabid culture warriors? Gaah. 


http://idiotgrrl.livejournal.com/







Date: Tue, 22 Sep 2009 08:46:21 -0700
Subject: Re: Wife's suggestion!
From: nick.arn...@gmail.com
To: brin-l@mccmedia.com



On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 1:20 AM, Charlie Bell char...@culturelist.org wrote:




That's the widely perceived view of them, yes. Doesn't totally hold water if 
you actually read the New Testament, but yes - if people tried to act a bit 
nicer to each other we'd be better off.

I know what you mean, I think, but I've stopped using the word nice to 
describe it.  I know churches that are perfectly nice to gays, for example, 
but in doing so pretty much fail to accept them.  Sort of a welcome to our 
church, we're glad to have you here and we're certain that you're going to 
hell.  Except that the last sentence is implied, not spoken aloud.


I guess another way to say what I'm saying is that hypocrisy and 
self-righteousness can be extremely nice, and I find the combination to be not 
only irritating, but destructive to community.  There's a 
passive-aggressiveness present.


I'd rather call on people to be real, rather than nice, I suppose.

Nick
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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Dave Land

Folks,

I admire the work done by the Public Conversations Project:

http://publicconversations.org/

Their purpose is to facilitate conversations about hotly contested
issues, training leaders and participants to avoid position-taking
and recitation of talking-points and focus instead on building
relationships among people whose views differ widely.

Their first FAQ covers it nicely:

Are dialogue participants expected to change their minds?

No, and participants' core beliefs rarely change. Dialogue
surfaces new information that softens stereotypes and leads to
more accurate understanding of participants' hopes, fears, life
experiences, and values. Participants often say their views have
been deepened and enriched through dialogues with those who
think differently. Without changing their core beliefs,
participants' views of one another do typically change.

I think it is their focus on transforming how participants —- who
usually come in with opposing views on some of the most intractable
issues in the world —- view each other (rather than getting them to
change their positions) that is their greatest contribution to
civil dialog.

Dave


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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Bruce Bostwick

On Sep 22, 2009, at 3:20 AM, Charlie Bell wrote:

I agree with Bruce that in general lessons ascribed to Jesus are  
about love and acceptance of the other.


That's the widely perceived view of them, yes. Doesn't totally hold  
water if you actually read the New Testament, but yes - if people  
tried to act a bit nicer to each other we'd be better off.


The New Testament comes from a variety of sources and at least a  
couple of major generations of editing and translation, though.  See  
the research done by the Jesus Seminar, which did a lot of work on  
tracking down authenticity of the gospel texts virtually word by word,  
with interesting and somewhat revealing results.  Among other things,  
there were some appallingly bad translators working for King James,  
and one in particular whose work was of such poor quality that they  
could actually trace which passages he worked on by characteristic  
errors.  (Camel through the eye of a needle was one of his more  
spectacular goofs.)


There was also a lot of content rejected from the canonical Bible  
around the time Christianity ceased to be an underground religion and  
became an official state religion, under Constantine, most notably at  
the First Council of Nicaea, and a lot of the content that *was*  
included tended to be more supportive of the idea of centralized  
church authority, based on surviving examples of books omitted from  
the canonical version.  So, I find the New Testament less than  
authoritative as a whole in terms of how well it conveys the message.   
Others may disagree.


There are entire dissertations' worth of theological discussion under  
this rock, though, and a lot of the subject is rather controversial,  
particularly within circles where belief in the literal truth of the  
entire Bible is an article of faith.  But that's the tip of the  
iceberg ..


Almost nothing that trickles down is fit to consume. -- Davidson Loehr


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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Bruce Bostwick


On Sep 22, 2009, at 10:46 AM, Nick Arnett wrote:

On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 1:20 AM, Charlie Bell  
char...@culturelist.org wrote:



That's the widely perceived view of them, yes. Doesn't totally hold  
water if you actually read the New Testament, but yes - if people  
tried to act a bit nicer to each other we'd be better off.


I know what you mean, I think, but I've stopped using the word  
nice to describe it.  I know churches that are perfectly nice to  
gays, for example, but in doing so pretty much fail to accept them.   
Sort of a welcome to our church, we're glad to have you here and  
we're certain that you're going to hell.  Except that the last  
sentence is implied, not spoken aloud.


I guess another way to say what I'm saying is that hypocrisy and  
self-righteousness can be extremely nice, and I find the combination  
to be not only irritating, but destructive to community.  There's a  
passive-aggressiveness present.


I'd rather call on people to be real, rather than nice, I suppose.

Nick


I suppose it comes down to a distinction between a largely superficial  
pleasantness in discourse, which is what it seems like you're getting  
at there, and more substantive civility which involves some form of  
acceptance and a baseline level of respect, aside from philosophical  
disagreements ..


Oh yeah? Well, I speak LOOOUD, and I carry a BEEEger stick --  
and I use it too!  **whop!**   -- Yosemite Sam





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Re: What's to read?

2009-09-22 Thread John Williams
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 11:19 PM, Doug Pensinger brig...@zo.com wrote:

 I think the reason you're still waiting for Brin's books is also the
 answer to you're question about the number of titles available.
 They're probably negotiating with a lot of authors for the rights or
 dealing with copyright issues.

Brin said he already signed the contract for Kindle versions.

But author reluctance may be an issue, as you say. I read that J. K.
Rowling refuses to have any of her books be released electronically.

Still, I'd think that science fiction authors would tend to be willing
to have their books released electronically.

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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread John Horn
On Mon, Sep 21, 2009 at 3:20 PM, Michael Harney
dolp...@mikes3dgallery.comwrote:

 Oh, as for an example of Jesus not respectfully disagreeing, call to
your recollection what
 Jesus did to the vendors in the temple.  I believe it had something to do
with shouting,
 throwing over tables, smashing merchandise and even wielding a whip.  It's
been a while
 though, so I may be a little cloudy on the details.

This is the first thing I thought of too when I saw this thread.  But I do
agree with the general sentiment.  Just when you think things can't possibly
get any more nasty, they do.  It makes Dr. Brin's prediction after the 2000
elections all the more prescient.

 - jmh
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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Charlie Bell


On 23/09/2009, at 2:37 AM, Pat Mathews wrote:

We started with a plea for civility and niceness. Because it invoked  
religion and the name of Jesus, the thread was promptly taken over  
by those who felt it their bounden duty to object to the Christian  
content - not on the grunds that they were not Christian, but  
because they consider it their bounden duty to attack Christianity  
whenever and wherever they see it, apparently, as evil,  
superstitious, and whatever else they object to.


This is not civil


Um. No, ascribing false motive to others and lumping all objecters  
together is not civil.


Arguing whether something is effective because it invokes What would  
Jesus do? is not the same as attacking Christianity.


Charlie.

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RE: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Pat Mathews

If I was uncivil, I apologize. I said what it appeared to me to be, but I may 
be wrong. At any rate, this was addressed, not to those who considered the plea 
ineffective, but those who began religious arguments. 

Pat


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 Subject: Re: Wife's suggestion!
 From: char...@culturelist.org
 Date: Wed, 23 Sep 2009 08:24:50 +1000
 To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
 
 
 On 23/09/2009, at 2:37 AM, Pat Mathews wrote:
 
  We started with a plea for civility and niceness. Because it invoked  
  religion and the name of Jesus, the thread was promptly taken over  
  by those who felt it their bounden duty to object to the Christian  
  content - not on the grunds that they were not Christian, but  
  because they consider it their bounden duty to attack Christianity  
  whenever and wherever they see it, apparently, as evil,  
  superstitious, and whatever else they object to.
 
  This is not civil
 
 Um. No, ascribing false motive to others and lumping all objecters  
 together is not civil.
 
 Arguing whether something is effective because it invokes What would  
 Jesus do? is not the same as attacking Christianity.
 
 Charlie.
 
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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread Charlie Bell


On 23/09/2009, at 8:26 AM, Pat Mathews wrote:

If I was uncivil, I apologize. I said what it appeared to me to be,  
but I may be wrong. At any rate, this was addressed, not to those  
who considered the plea ineffective, but those who began religious  
arguments.


Well, this is a list where we could start a pretty indepth discussion  
on whether Jaffa Cakes are biscuits or cakes (um, I'm agnostic on  
this). So I don't think it's entirely surprising if someone posts  
something, then you're going to get a range of responses from complete  
agreement to complaints that the idea is based on faulty premise,  
whatever the content. Especially as a large portion of the members of  
this list live in other places...


Anyway, it's a gorgeous morning in Melbourne, if a little windy, so  
I'm going to hop on the bike and ride along the creek trail to work  
(about 10 miles/16 km rather than the usual 10km direct route). Dust  
storm in Sydney though. If it rains next they'll all be covered in red  
mud.


Charlie.



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Re: Wife's suggestion!

2009-09-22 Thread David Hobby

Charlie Bell wrote:


On 23/09/2009, at 8:26 AM, Pat Mathews wrote:

If I was uncivil, I apologize. I said what it appeared to me to be, 
but I may be wrong. At any rate, this was addressed, not to those who 
considered the plea ineffective, but those who began religious arguments.


Well, this is a list where we could start a pretty indepth discussion on 
whether Jaffa Cakes are biscuits or cakes (um, I'm agnostic on this). So 


Charlie--

Just to prove your point, I'll say they're cookies.
(Which are not biscuits, since those are typically
made with buttermilk.  : )  )

The Christian nation bit rubs me the wrong way
too.  Probably because I've heard it used to justify
things I strongly disagree with.

---David


Mr Potter ruled that the Jaffa Cake is a cake. McVities therefore won
the case and VAT is not paid on Jaffa Cakes.  --Wikipedia




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NASA sets Ares I-X test launch date

2009-09-22 Thread Ronn! Blankenship
NASA sets Ares I-X test launch date | Space News from The Huntsville 
Times - al.com - al.com - 
http://blog.al.com/space-news/2009/09/nasa_is_targeting_oct_27.html





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Where’d the Dinosaurs Go?

2009-09-22 Thread Ronn! Blankenship

http://danielomcclellan.wordpress.com/2009/09/20/wheres-the-dinosaurs-go/



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