Archive for the 'Books' Category

How times change; how books change

Posted in Books, Computing, Education on May 3rd, 2008

Studying for class by jakebouma
Penguin’s promoting some exploration of the concept of “book” in their We tell stories series, where six authors have contributed new works, each of which explores some aspect of on-line story-telling, sometimes quite distinct from more traditional printed books.

Not all of these are equally successful (I thought the idea of “The 21 steps” was better than the execution). My favorite of these is probably “Hard times”, by Matt Mason and Nicholas Felton. It’s a short, but (for me) very effective collection of data points making it clear how much things have changed and are changing, and hinting about what it might all mean down the road. Most of the info was at least somewhat familiar to me, but I love the way the details are brought together into a compact compelling argument — a sort of data poetry.

From Part VII: “Ideas are travelling faster” (crediting the data to Seth Goodin’s Unleashing the idea virus):

The time required to achieve Ten Million Users:

  • Radio: 40 years
  • Television: 15 years
  • Netscape: 3 years
  • Hotmail and Napster: < 1 year

Part IX-A has a tremendous title — “Our parents killed bad ideas with music. We kill bad ideas with new buiness models” — and delivers excellently on that promise.

Thanks to jakebouma for the cool photo.

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A heck of a party!

Posted in Books, Computing, Education, Events, My writing, Research, Sabbatical, Science, Writing on March 27th, 2008


Last night’s unveiling of A Field Guide to Genetic Programming was a huge success! We had one of the poster “stalls” with 50 copies of the book that we’d purchased from Lulu as our initial “print run”. We were wearing cool t-shirts sporting that wonderful cover, had the nice poster shown to the right, and even had spiffy postcards with the cover to give away.

The book was a big hit with the Evo* crowd, and we sold out the full set of 50 pretty quickly. Lots of folks had us autograph their copies, many of which are now destined to be collector’s items with the signatures of all three of the authors. Some even have the signature of Tyler Hutchison, who did the nifty cover art for us and helped a lot with the roll-out.

There were tons of photos taken at our booth, including candids of us signing and working the crowd, and posed shots with our cool Field Guide shirts. People have promised to send us photos and links, so check back in the next week or two for some of the finest in EC book release amateur photojournalism! (And if you’ve got a photo from the event, or a nifty shot of your copy in its place of pride on your bookshelves, please pass it along.)

As mentioned before, the book is now officially released and available to any and all via lulu.com, both in an inexpensive printed form (what we were selling last night) and as a free downloadable PDF.

So go check it out - 50 whole Field Guide fans can’t be wrong!

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Almost ready for EuroGP!

Posted in Art, Books, Computing, Events, My writing, Research, Science, Writing on March 22nd, 2008

EuroGP poster
We’ve ordered a couple of boxes of advance copies our book (a privilege of being the authors). They look really nice, and we’re quite excited about the grand unveiling on Wednesday at EuroGP! For those of you coming to Naples, definitely stop by our table at the poster session that night — you’ll be able to check out printed copies and maybe even score a postcard featuring that wonderful cover :-).

Whether you’re coming to EuroGP or not, we’ll be “turning on” the Lulu site Wednesday, so people can buy printed copies and download the PDF for free. As a teaser, the poster above contains the entire book — just really, really small! If you click on it you can see it a little bigger, but I still recommend waiting a few days for the Real Deal.

Thanks to Riccardo for using some of his major LaTeX mojo to create the mosaic of all the pages, and to Jess and WeatherGirl for their suggestions regarding the design.

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JOCP! At revision 400!

Posted in Books, Computing, Education, My writing, Research, Science, Writing on February 28th, 2008

Revision 400 screenshot

It’s pretty cool when you update your repository and see

At revision 400

We just hit that on the genetic programming book that Riccardo and Bill and I are working on; we’re currently averaging close to 10 commits a day here in the final stages. We hope to wrap it up in the next 1.5 weeks and then off to the printers for fun (and no profit in the traditional sense)!

P.S. Anyone want to proof read a few pages? Get in touch and we can work something out.

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New ways to bore you with our holiday photos

Posted in Art, Books, Events, Family, Photography, Travels on January 20th, 2008

Cover of our 2007 Year in Photos book on Blurb

I can’t really imagine that anyone’s going to want one of these, but just in case…

As a Xmas present for our various family members we used Blurb.com to create a photo book of some of our images from 2007. But hey, you can join the family by purchasing one as well :-). It’s 127 photos on 38 pages, and they have a PDF preview so you can see what you’re getting into before you put your money down.

This was our first use of Blurb, and their software was pretty decent. Amazing, really, how easy it is these days to publish books that no one really cares about. It used to be hard to publish books no one cared about; they regularly gave people degrees for it.

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Twilight of the novel?

Posted in Books, Computing, Education, Writing on December 2nd, 2007

Minority report

The death of the book has been oft prophesied, and so far the old dear keeps hanging in there. Here Bill Janssen is quoted by Peter Brantley, suggesting that what the casualties may be are forms of content rather than forms of publishing.

Will the novel become a marginal form like opera?

In the hype around the Kindle, I haven’t noticed a mention of Monday’s NEA report, To Read or Not To Read. Seems much more interesting.

I’ve been saying for a few years that we are entering an age where textual fiction is becoming less and less significant, particularly for the canonical long text, the novel. The novel is a relatively recent innovation in entertainment, and the popular novel is a product of cheap production and distribution, thanks to the industrial revolution.

The delivery channels have multiplied, and the economics have changed. Television killed off the pulp magazine (and crippled the market for short stories). What would replace the novel? Something which would produce a ludic experience for hours at a time — a movie. But movies have not succeeded in killing off the novel. They’re too expensive and too complicated, and major players control the distribution channels. The best they could do was to absorb years of talents like Chandler and Faulkner.

But now we have kids who don’t read, the Web, game engines, and the writers’ strike. Game engines and machinima make it possible for writers to produce and direct their own work without actors or sets, for a relatively modest capitalization (a game machine). The Web provides free distribution. Kids provide a hungry audience. But the wild card here is the WGA strike. Suddenly all the folks who normally spend their days creating teleplays are looking for other outlets for their creative energies. Maybe write that novel they’ve been talking about? Maybe not. People like Rob Long (Cheers) are suddenly blogging. Maybe someone will tell them about machinima. We may be entering a twilight for the popular novel, perhaps relegating it to a niche more like opera.

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Squeak book available under Creative Commons license

Posted in Books, Computing on November 25th, 2007

In a neat confluence of recent posts on both Squeak and book marketing, Squeak by example is being made available as a free PDF or in printed form via lulu.com. Cool.

Big ups to open… for the tip.

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It’s not quite like seeing yourself on TV

Posted in Art, Books, Family, Gardening, Photography on August 28th, 2007

Yesterday I had the happy experience of finding out that my photos were being used in two rather unexpected (but cool!) ways.

Moreover banner image

The first was completely out of the blue. I got a nice note from the on-line editor of Moreover letting me know that they had used one of my photos (”Alice, and her beside book of birds“) as the starting point for a new banner image (above) for their website. I don’t know anything about the blog than what a quick look around would indicate, but it seems a reasonable blog of book commentary and review, as part of a (new?) magazine (Intelligent Life) owned by the Economist magazine. They presumably found my photo through a search on Flickr (probably looking for books), so thanks to Flickr, and thanks to Mary and Larry, whose house the photo was taken in.

Dragonfly on blazing star in Vorhees' garden

The second was a little less suprising, but still cool. Dad’s an active member of the Benton County Master Gardeners group in NW Arkansas, so I showed him my notes and examples on photographing gardens that I put together for a garden and art tour earlier in the summer. He then asked if he could share them with his group, and what were really just some rough notes have subsequently turned into the lead article in their monthly newsletter! Dad had told me that they were probably going to use some of my notes, but I certainly didn’t expect them to feature so prominently, or to be included in toto (over two issues).

Hee, hee, hee…

And just a few hours after posting this, I found out that a photo from our previous UK sabbatical is being used on the Tate St. Ives Wikipedia page!

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24 Hours of Flickr

Posted in Books, Events, Photography on May 5th, 2007


Popu, originally uploaded by fraud_art.

The Flickr folks are finally getting around to doing a “Day in the life of Flickr” sort of event called “24 Hours of Flickr“. (It seems like such an obvious idea, I’m really surprised they haven’t done it earlier.)

Today (5 May) is the big day, and the photos are already collecting with enthusiasm, with nearly 500 photos there now. (I’d expect many thousands before it’s all over - there are over 22K people that have joined the group.) So go take some cool shots and add them to this record of the day on the planet. If you’re lucky (and good) they may include your image in a book they’ll be producing later.

It’s all wet and dreary here (but we needed the rain!), so I’m not quite sure what I’m going to do. We have the annual Byte Bash (UMM computer science club picnic) this afternoon, and I was hoping for some cool shots there, but the weather makes that less clear. We’ll see, though. Unfortunately the business of both the day and the end of the year (grading! grading! grading!) mean that I can’t go out on a photo safari of any consequence. Such is life.

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Hot damn! I’ll be in a DK book!

Posted in Books, Events, Family, Photography on March 5th, 2007

Young Person\'s Guide to Philosophy
When Sub-Evil Boy was a younger lad, a favorite publisher in our household was Dorling Kindersley. Cool concepts, solid information, and excellent graphics and layout made them a hit with both him and his parents. When your 7 year old starts getting metaphysical on you, for example, it’s awfully nice to be able to pick up a copy of “A young person’s guide to philosophy” to lend a hand :-). He’s outgrown a lot of their children’s line now, but they were a definite win at the time and much appreciated.

Imagine my surprise, nay complete shock, when today I received an e-mail via Flickr from that very same DK asking if they could use one of my photographs in an upcoming book! They’re apparently putting together a book entitled Viking in their Eye Wonder series. This series is aimed at ages 5-8, and aims to combine “exciting facts and bold photography” to take children to “the heart of each subject”.

And, in that heady atmosphere, they want to use the photo below that I took in Reykjavik! Wow, that’s pretty darn cool, and I’m quite chuffed. I realize it’ll be one little picture amongst zillions of images in one book amongst even greater zillions, but still, to play a role in the development of the reading skills of children is a pretty excellent thing. All the evidence says that if you can get them reading, most everything will work out, but if you lose that battle early, you’re in serious trouble. Given that I’m unlikely to start cranking out Horrible Histories anytime soon, this is probably as close as I’ll get in the near future to contributing in any broad way to that worthy cause.

Across Reykjavik (left)

The photo itself continues to surprise me. It’s nice enough, but it seems a really “obvious” photograph to take from the bell tower of Hallgrímskirkja, and it doesn’t seem to be blessed with particularly excellent light or a terribly interesting sky. I keep feeling like someone local ought to be able to catch dozens of shots as good or better sometime when the light’s really cool.

Still, people obviously like it. It’s currently my 16th “most interesting” photo (out of 954 posted to date) according to Flickr’s mysterious algorithms. And DK wants to put it in a book.

Ain’t life strange.

Sundial at Shakespeare's birthplace
Oh, and I also was asked last week if the sundial photo at left could be used in an entirely different book. This is a picture I really like, and which is one spot lower on my list (17th, which is still really good and makes me happy). The book in this instance is, as far as I can tell, an Italian religious text as part of a program aimed at bringing young people (back) into the church there. Not being a big fan of evangelical behavior of any stripe, I’m less excited about this (hence the lack of an earlier post). Still, one of the realities of a Creative Commons license is that you don’t get to (pretend to) control all the possible uses of your work. And, as Mike pointed out, their use of my photo doesn’t imply any sort of support on my part, anymore than their use of something like Firefox would imply any support on the part of the contributors to that project.

Memories of last fall
Now I just need to get the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster to use one of my photos to balance the scales. Maybe this wonderful fellow? I’ve long thought that I see the mighty FSM in this, and wondered if there was a lucrative retirement to be had in promoting pilgrimages (and charging followers a pretty penny for the appropriate paraphenalia and special FSM rose water). Hmmmm…

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