SFF/BSFA AGM Event
Jun. 19th, 2018 06:53 pm Some of you may be intending to go to the SFF/BSFA AGM event in Clapham this weekend. If you haven't seen, there was a mix-up with the venue booking and it is now starting at 11:00.
More information on the SF Foundation website.
More information on the SF Foundation website.
Helsinki station
Sep. 8th, 2017 11:58 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I did manage to take some photographs, and have finally downloaded them from my camera.
( Read more... )
Worldcon 75 and after
Aug. 16th, 2017 09:31 pmWell, I haven't posted for a week, but there was a Worldcon in that period.
My duties at the business meeting took up a fair chunk of my time. I had agreed to be the official timekeeper, something I'd never done before. For those that don't know, when a motion is brought before the business meeting, the first thing that is done is to decide how long is to be spent discussing it. That time is to be divided between those speaking for and those against. But some speakers are asking questions, etc., and that time has to be divided equally between both sides. I was told the easiest way to do this was to time each speaker with a stop-watch and keep running totals on a piece of paper. I got through several convention centre notepads during the course of the meeting.
By Sunday, I'd got the hang of it. But, as luck would have it, all the business on Sunday was non-contentious and there was little debate so I hardly used the stop-watch. The convention had set aside five hours for the final session just in case, but we only used 30 minutes. (It could have been longer. In 2015, I went straight from the business meeting to the closing ceremony.)
Others have mentioned the unexpectedly large size of the convention and the effect that had on room allocation. I got to little on the first two days, but surprisingly I was able to get to the iZombie discussion session, which was scheduled in a room with a capacity of just 16, set up boardroom style so the discussion resembled a Jomsthing. The door had been left open so that latecomers would know that there was room. At one point, someone mentioned an episode where a zombie character was in prison and was needing a supply of brains to survive. "How hard can it be to smuggle brains into a prison?" they asked, just as someone was walking past the door.
The convention was able to get more space by the convention centre partitioning off areas of an exhibit hall. I bumped into Martin Easterbrook outside one of these extra rooms. He was intrigued about the way that the partitions went all the way to the ceiling, so noise didn't bleed between items. "Not that I'm bitter," he said, remembering what happened at Glasgow in 1995.
That said, I found the large room in which the Hugos were presented had bad acoustics and I often couldn't hear what was being said. Alas, the subtitling was unable to keep up much of the time.
Since the end of the convention, it has been mostly museums. Everyone told me I had to visit Suomenlinna, the fortified islands to the south of Helsinki. The fortifications were built by the Swedes in the eighteenth century when Helsinki was just a small town of 1,500. Now there are several museums and restaurants and cafes on the island (and Helsinki has grown somewhat). There's even a submarine you can go around.
Every day I've been here, I've been walking past what I thought was a large church at the end of the street. Turns out it is actually the National Museum of Finland. I suppose that the street is called Museokatu - Museum Street - is a bit of a giveaway.
And today it was Seurasaari Open Air museum, a large number of preserved buildings from the last three hundred years or so. Lots of low doors, but I only hit my head once. Alas, the 1912 telephone kiosk marked on the map seemed not to be there.
On my way to the museum, I stopped for a snack at the Regatta Café next to the Sibelius Monument, sitting outdoors. As I sat there, a couple of sparrows landed on my table, eyeing my blueberry pie and vanilla sauce. One tried to take a bite before I scared it off. And when I was finished and sat back to check my map, about a dozen of the buggers landed on the table and attacked the remains on my plate.
It's not just the sparrows. Later, walking out of my hotel I saw a large gull land on the middle of the road clutching a paper bag in its beak. It then put it down and started trying to peck it open.
My duties at the business meeting took up a fair chunk of my time. I had agreed to be the official timekeeper, something I'd never done before. For those that don't know, when a motion is brought before the business meeting, the first thing that is done is to decide how long is to be spent discussing it. That time is to be divided between those speaking for and those against. But some speakers are asking questions, etc., and that time has to be divided equally between both sides. I was told the easiest way to do this was to time each speaker with a stop-watch and keep running totals on a piece of paper. I got through several convention centre notepads during the course of the meeting.
By Sunday, I'd got the hang of it. But, as luck would have it, all the business on Sunday was non-contentious and there was little debate so I hardly used the stop-watch. The convention had set aside five hours for the final session just in case, but we only used 30 minutes. (It could have been longer. In 2015, I went straight from the business meeting to the closing ceremony.)
Others have mentioned the unexpectedly large size of the convention and the effect that had on room allocation. I got to little on the first two days, but surprisingly I was able to get to the iZombie discussion session, which was scheduled in a room with a capacity of just 16, set up boardroom style so the discussion resembled a Jomsthing. The door had been left open so that latecomers would know that there was room. At one point, someone mentioned an episode where a zombie character was in prison and was needing a supply of brains to survive. "How hard can it be to smuggle brains into a prison?" they asked, just as someone was walking past the door.
The convention was able to get more space by the convention centre partitioning off areas of an exhibit hall. I bumped into Martin Easterbrook outside one of these extra rooms. He was intrigued about the way that the partitions went all the way to the ceiling, so noise didn't bleed between items. "Not that I'm bitter," he said, remembering what happened at Glasgow in 1995.
That said, I found the large room in which the Hugos were presented had bad acoustics and I often couldn't hear what was being said. Alas, the subtitling was unable to keep up much of the time.
Since the end of the convention, it has been mostly museums. Everyone told me I had to visit Suomenlinna, the fortified islands to the south of Helsinki. The fortifications were built by the Swedes in the eighteenth century when Helsinki was just a small town of 1,500. Now there are several museums and restaurants and cafes on the island (and Helsinki has grown somewhat). There's even a submarine you can go around.
Every day I've been here, I've been walking past what I thought was a large church at the end of the street. Turns out it is actually the National Museum of Finland. I suppose that the street is called Museokatu - Museum Street - is a bit of a giveaway.
And today it was Seurasaari Open Air museum, a large number of preserved buildings from the last three hundred years or so. Lots of low doors, but I only hit my head once. Alas, the 1912 telephone kiosk marked on the map seemed not to be there.
On my way to the museum, I stopped for a snack at the Regatta Café next to the Sibelius Monument, sitting outdoors. As I sat there, a couple of sparrows landed on my table, eyeing my blueberry pie and vanilla sauce. One tried to take a bite before I scared it off. And when I was finished and sat back to check my map, about a dozen of the buggers landed on the table and attacked the remains on my plate.
It's not just the sparrows. Later, walking out of my hotel I saw a large gull land on the middle of the road clutching a paper bag in its beak. It then put it down and started trying to peck it open.
I'm in Dortmund now for Eurocon. Spent most of the day travelling on trains.
But something happened before I set off this morning.
One of the disadvantages of being in most days is that if delivery people can't get a reply from my neighbours, they ask if they can leave packages with me. There are students next door. Just before Easter I was asked to take in a package and no-one came to pick it up before I went to Eastercon, and then nobody seemed to be at home, and the package was sitting in my hall for about three weeks before I saw someone going in the front door and managed to catch them.
Yes, you guessed it. I was just finishing my packing this morning when the doorbell rang. A man was standing there with a very large package - came up to his waist. Could I take it. I told him I was going on holiday in ten minutes, which seemed to be the best thing to say.
But I've now told a complete stranger my house is going to be empty for a week.
But something happened before I set off this morning.
One of the disadvantages of being in most days is that if delivery people can't get a reply from my neighbours, they ask if they can leave packages with me. There are students next door. Just before Easter I was asked to take in a package and no-one came to pick it up before I went to Eastercon, and then nobody seemed to be at home, and the package was sitting in my hall for about three weeks before I saw someone going in the front door and managed to catch them.
Yes, you guessed it. I was just finishing my packing this morning when the doorbell rang. A man was standing there with a very large package - came up to his waist. Could I take it. I told him I was going on holiday in ten minutes, which seemed to be the best thing to say.
But I've now told a complete stranger my house is going to be empty for a week.
Charger update
Nov. 16th, 2016 11:02 amWell, I guessed wrong. As I was coming back from Tesco this morning the postman recognised me in the street. He had an envelope that was too big to get through my letterbox and he was just about to ask my neighbour to take it. It was a Park Inn envelope and contained the missing charger.
When I plugged in the netbook and started it up it was showing 20% charge, so I don't think it would have lasted the day. I also have just received an e-mail from Amazon saying the spare is due to arrive Friday.
When I plugged in the netbook and started it up it was showing 20% charge, so I don't think it would have lasted the day. I also have just received an e-mail from Amazon saying the spare is due to arrive Friday.
Forgetfulness
Nov. 15th, 2016 06:45 pmSo, I get home from Novacon yesterday afternoon and go to switch on my netbook computer and i can't find the power connector for it. I looked in both of my bags. I know I had it in my hotel room that morning so I guess I must have left it there when I finished packing. The netbook was the last thing I put in my bag.
I phoned the the hotel who told me that they'd ask house-keeping to get back to me. There was no phone call as of ten o-clock this morning so I phoned them back and was put through to house-keeping immediately. They said they had it and would ask front desk to post it back to me (as it is unlikely I'll be in Nottingham again before next Novacon). So I then had to wait for the front desk to phone me back. They did after about an hour or so, and said they'd post it, charging the cost to the credit card I'd used to pay the bill.
However, in the interim I'd ordered a replacement from Amazon, thinking that having a spare would be useful just in case I do something like this again. Meanwhile, last I checked the charge on the netbook was down to 50% and I presume that as Windows computers don't power down completely when you shut them down, there is a constant power drain even on a swtiched off computer. It will be a race as to which will happen first, the original connector arrives, the new connector arrives, or the battery goes completely flat. My guess is that all three will happen about simultaneously.
I phoned the the hotel who told me that they'd ask house-keeping to get back to me. There was no phone call as of ten o-clock this morning so I phoned them back and was put through to house-keeping immediately. They said they had it and would ask front desk to post it back to me (as it is unlikely I'll be in Nottingham again before next Novacon). So I then had to wait for the front desk to phone me back. They did after about an hour or so, and said they'd post it, charging the cost to the credit card I'd used to pay the bill.
However, in the interim I'd ordered a replacement from Amazon, thinking that having a spare would be useful just in case I do something like this again. Meanwhile, last I checked the charge on the netbook was down to 50% and I presume that as Windows computers don't power down completely when you shut them down, there is a constant power drain even on a swtiched off computer. It will be a race as to which will happen first, the original connector arrives, the new connector arrives, or the battery goes completely flat. My guess is that all three will happen about simultaneously.
Spokane and Sasquan
Aug. 25th, 2015 06:38 pmI'm still in Spokane. I fly back tomorrow. (That's Wednesday, my time. It's currently Tuesday afternoon. I'll be home Thursday afternoon if all goes to plan.)
On the whole, I think the convention went well, but it was dominated by two big issues.
I first heard about the forest fires as I was leaving Seattle last Monday. I saw something about them on the TV news on a set in the hotel lobby and then the guide on the train pointed out the smoke over some of the hills.
Tuesday was OK but after the opening ceremony on Wednesday, there was an outdoor event, a sort of fair with booths for future cons and bids and food stands and beer. It was glorious sunshine when this started around four o'clock, but I was sitting having a beer when it started to get dark like an impending thunderstorm. Only it didn't rain. And the sun went blood red. It was as dark as night long before sunset.
Thursday was OK, too, as far as I remember, but Friday was the day it looked like a London fog. Apparently at the Masquerade, the the host announced, "Smoking is forbidden in the auditorium. If you want to smoke, go outside and inhale deeply." The con will probably live in memory as "Smokane".
As it was darkening outside on Wednesday night, I was attending a meeting of the WSFS Mark Protection Committee. And that was the other thing that dominated the convention. The business meeting averaged about three hours a session, and the final session, on the last day of the convention, itself an oddity, lasted from 10:00 to about 13:30, to be followed by another MPC meeting. By which time there was just enough time to go to the closing ceremony.
In the end, I don't think the business meeting was more eventful than past years, it was just there was an awful lot of business to get through.
And this ties in to the Hugo ceremony. I liked the idea of allocated seating. I went past the auditorium at around six and peope were handing out tickets to whoever wanted them. I picked one up, went back to my room to check my e-mail and then sauntered down to take my seat about half an hour before it started. I'd brought a book with me to read, but there was a televised discussion on the screen which was actually quite interesting.
I thought the ceremony was very well done. Gerrold and Due, the hosts, did a great job. Unlike some years, there were not separate presenters for each award. Many were presented by the hosts, especially the ones that had no award as the winner. I'm sure this was known before hand. But the highlight was getting a dalek to do the Best Dramatic Presentation awards - he had some of the best lines of the night - and getting Kjell Lindgren to present the Best Novel from the ISS. (That bit had to be recorded. And a note for any future conventions to be held if free-fall: you need velcro badges. Lindgren's badge kept floating up past his face and I though it was going to garrotte him at one point.)
The Three-Body Problem was not my first choice for Best Novel - that was The Goblin Emperor, and Ancilliary Sword was second. But I would have been happy with any of those three winning.
Helsinki winning site selection on the first round of counting was a bit of a surprise. After the official announcement at the Saturday business meeting, and after the meeting was over, I went past their table to see iif they were ready to take memberships and got roped iinto validating the forms of those who had voted and was there for three hours. I did fill in a form for myself and got someone else to vallidate it.
The Grand Hotel has only been open a couple of months and still has some teething problems. Duriing the convention, the wait for a table for breakfast was about 20 minutes if you went down after eight o'clock. I took to rising at 7:15 and then going through my e-mail after breakfast before going to the business meetiing.
The lifts are of the type where you need a key card to go up to your room and the key card is the contactless type, like an Oyster Card. But several times I found the lift ignoring the key leaving me stranded (unless someone else was in the lift to press a button). Not had any problems getting into my room, though.
I wish there was a bath as well as a shower. I always feel unstable in a shower, and there wasn't even anything to hold on to whilst showering. Hand rails would be useful.
But one plus point. The TV set had an option on its menu called "World radio" and it was exactly that. I'm listening to BBC Radio 3 as I type.
Now I have to do some packking.
On the whole, I think the convention went well, but it was dominated by two big issues.
I first heard about the forest fires as I was leaving Seattle last Monday. I saw something about them on the TV news on a set in the hotel lobby and then the guide on the train pointed out the smoke over some of the hills.
Tuesday was OK but after the opening ceremony on Wednesday, there was an outdoor event, a sort of fair with booths for future cons and bids and food stands and beer. It was glorious sunshine when this started around four o'clock, but I was sitting having a beer when it started to get dark like an impending thunderstorm. Only it didn't rain. And the sun went blood red. It was as dark as night long before sunset.
Thursday was OK, too, as far as I remember, but Friday was the day it looked like a London fog. Apparently at the Masquerade, the the host announced, "Smoking is forbidden in the auditorium. If you want to smoke, go outside and inhale deeply." The con will probably live in memory as "Smokane".
As it was darkening outside on Wednesday night, I was attending a meeting of the WSFS Mark Protection Committee. And that was the other thing that dominated the convention. The business meeting averaged about three hours a session, and the final session, on the last day of the convention, itself an oddity, lasted from 10:00 to about 13:30, to be followed by another MPC meeting. By which time there was just enough time to go to the closing ceremony.
In the end, I don't think the business meeting was more eventful than past years, it was just there was an awful lot of business to get through.
And this ties in to the Hugo ceremony. I liked the idea of allocated seating. I went past the auditorium at around six and peope were handing out tickets to whoever wanted them. I picked one up, went back to my room to check my e-mail and then sauntered down to take my seat about half an hour before it started. I'd brought a book with me to read, but there was a televised discussion on the screen which was actually quite interesting.
I thought the ceremony was very well done. Gerrold and Due, the hosts, did a great job. Unlike some years, there were not separate presenters for each award. Many were presented by the hosts, especially the ones that had no award as the winner. I'm sure this was known before hand. But the highlight was getting a dalek to do the Best Dramatic Presentation awards - he had some of the best lines of the night - and getting Kjell Lindgren to present the Best Novel from the ISS. (That bit had to be recorded. And a note for any future conventions to be held if free-fall: you need velcro badges. Lindgren's badge kept floating up past his face and I though it was going to garrotte him at one point.)
The Three-Body Problem was not my first choice for Best Novel - that was The Goblin Emperor, and Ancilliary Sword was second. But I would have been happy with any of those three winning.
Helsinki winning site selection on the first round of counting was a bit of a surprise. After the official announcement at the Saturday business meeting, and after the meeting was over, I went past their table to see iif they were ready to take memberships and got roped iinto validating the forms of those who had voted and was there for three hours. I did fill in a form for myself and got someone else to vallidate it.
The Grand Hotel has only been open a couple of months and still has some teething problems. Duriing the convention, the wait for a table for breakfast was about 20 minutes if you went down after eight o'clock. I took to rising at 7:15 and then going through my e-mail after breakfast before going to the business meetiing.
The lifts are of the type where you need a key card to go up to your room and the key card is the contactless type, like an Oyster Card. But several times I found the lift ignoring the key leaving me stranded (unless someone else was in the lift to press a button). Not had any problems getting into my room, though.
I wish there was a bath as well as a shower. I always feel unstable in a shower, and there wasn't even anything to hold on to whilst showering. Hand rails would be useful.
But one plus point. The TV set had an option on its menu called "World radio" and it was exactly that. I'm listening to BBC Radio 3 as I type.
Now I have to do some packking.
Smoke gets in your eyes
Aug. 21st, 2015 03:49 pmWashington state has a forest fire problem this week. At the moment, it looks as if Spokane is in the middle of an autumn fog, only it isn't. You can smell the smoke in the air, even in the convention centre. One of the convention staff just now apologised to me for the conditions, the worst he's known. I think the smoke is getting to my throat.
The joke is going around that this is the first Worldcon to be held in Mordor.
The joke is going around that this is the first Worldcon to be held in Mordor.
Dysprosium
Apr. 8th, 2015 11:38 amAs I am Sasquan's European agent, I spent a lot of my time at Dysprosium stting behind a desk. (This also means I am not going to talk about the Hugo nominations.) I didn't do my usual stints in the Green Room, although Kathy Westhead tells me they managed without me. My Friday night panel on the Golden Age of Television seemed to go well.
But, the important questions. In the bathroom of my hotel room in the Park Inn, there was a standard mixer tap on the washbasin. Turn it left for hot water, right for cold. Why was is that most nights when I wanted to clean my teeth, with the lever hard right, it delivered hot water for what seemed like minutes before it turned cold?
I had a room facing the airport and I wondered why most mornings I woke at about seven and had difficulty getting back to sleep for a final hour. I think it was because even through the double glazing, I could hear the planes landing and taking off. The exception was Friday morning when I slept right through to nine. I have a new alarm clock that I don't use at home as I have a clock radio, and I thought I'd switched it on, but it was in fact the daylight saving quick adjust button, and the DST icon on the display looks very much like an alarm icon when I'm not wearing my reading glasses.
Another exception was Tuesday morning, when I awoke in agony with a cramp in my left leg. This always seems to happen to me at conventions. At least I didn't fall out of bed clutching my leg as I did on the Tuesday after Illustrious in 2011.
As I was travelling on Tuesday, albeit only the 20 miles or so to Guildford, I put on a shirt, tie and jacket before going down to breakfast. Was it my imagination, or were the staff in the restaurant more deferential towards me than they had been of previous days when I'd been wearing a tee-shirt? The person checking room numbers actually said, "Good morning, Mr Dormer," once he found my name on the list. It wasn't even as if it was a neat jacket, although the tie is only a few months old.
Didn't stop them clearing my table away and giving it to someone else after I had finished my cereal and I was getting some hot food from the buffet.
But, the important questions. In the bathroom of my hotel room in the Park Inn, there was a standard mixer tap on the washbasin. Turn it left for hot water, right for cold. Why was is that most nights when I wanted to clean my teeth, with the lever hard right, it delivered hot water for what seemed like minutes before it turned cold?
I had a room facing the airport and I wondered why most mornings I woke at about seven and had difficulty getting back to sleep for a final hour. I think it was because even through the double glazing, I could hear the planes landing and taking off. The exception was Friday morning when I slept right through to nine. I have a new alarm clock that I don't use at home as I have a clock radio, and I thought I'd switched it on, but it was in fact the daylight saving quick adjust button, and the DST icon on the display looks very much like an alarm icon when I'm not wearing my reading glasses.
Another exception was Tuesday morning, when I awoke in agony with a cramp in my left leg. This always seems to happen to me at conventions. At least I didn't fall out of bed clutching my leg as I did on the Tuesday after Illustrious in 2011.
As I was travelling on Tuesday, albeit only the 20 miles or so to Guildford, I put on a shirt, tie and jacket before going down to breakfast. Was it my imagination, or were the staff in the restaurant more deferential towards me than they had been of previous days when I'd been wearing a tee-shirt? The person checking room numbers actually said, "Good morning, Mr Dormer," once he found my name on the list. It wasn't even as if it was a neat jacket, although the tie is only a few months old.
Didn't stop them clearing my table away and giving it to someone else after I had finished my cereal and I was getting some hot food from the buffet.
Just noticed
Sep. 4th, 2013 06:45 pmOn the Riverwalk here in San Antonio, there are three restaurants in a row, Lonestar Café, which is a steakhouse, Café Olé (nice name), which is Mexican, and Michelino's, Italian. When I was eating on the terrace of Café Olé the other night, I noticed that the terrace was connected to Michelino's and, indeed, wait staff from one would wander into the other.
I've just been checking my credit card transactions online and noticed that they seem to be all one company, with two transactions for "Michelinos Ole Lonesta". (I ate in the Lonestar on another night.)
There used to be an Indian and a Mexican restaurant next to each other in Guildford - now branch of FCUK, I think - and I often wondered if they were connected. Not that much difference in Indian and Mexican cooking.
I've just been checking my credit card transactions online and noticed that they seem to be all one company, with two transactions for "Michelinos Ole Lonesta". (I ate in the Lonestar on another night.)
There used to be an Indian and a Mexican restaurant next to each other in Guildford - now branch of FCUK, I think - and I often wondered if they were connected. Not that much difference in Indian and Mexican cooking.
The con is over
Sep. 3rd, 2013 09:37 amThe two main events on Sunday were the Site Selection session of the business meeting and the Hugo ceremony. The results of both site selections must be well known by now. The follow-ups, where presentations of future bids was made, was interesting. James Bacon gave advance notice of an Ireland bid, partly in Irish. Well, I think it was Irish, it could have been goobledegook for all I know.
I thought Paul Cornell did a marvellous job of presenting the Hugos, although I've heard that there were some complaints about his "smof" jokes. I voted in three categories, and my first choice won in none of them. Ah, well.
I seem to be getting to bed around midnight at the moment, so by the time the Hugos finished and the lines for the lifts went down to a manageable level, it was time to go to bed, so no parties.
Rory McCann, who plays the Hound in Game of Thrones accepted the Hugo alongside George R.R. Martin at the ceremony. I found myself sitting next to him at breakfast the next morning. I hope I didn't stare.
I had volunteered to help clean up after the Hugo losers party Monday morning, but that was hardly strenuous, mainly involving squashing up large sheets of paper and stuffing them in black bin bags. I was then able to get to the 50 years of Doctor Who panel.
I did a final session on the Loncon 3 table, a final panel on the Grimm fairy tales, and then it was the closing ceremony, which started late and had a number of technical problems, including the lights going out at one point. Whilst waiting for it to start, a dalek appeared in the audience, which livened things up a bit.
I'm sure all the people thanked merited this, but I'm also sure it could have been done a lot faster. But I hope the Loncon 3 video "Game of Cons" appears on the website, assuming it hasn't already.
I don't know when the news came out about Fred Pohl's death, but nobody mentioned it after the closing ceremony, nor did I hear about it at the Dead Dog Party. It was only after I went to my room mid-evening to unwind that I read about it online.
I thought Paul Cornell did a marvellous job of presenting the Hugos, although I've heard that there were some complaints about his "smof" jokes. I voted in three categories, and my first choice won in none of them. Ah, well.
I seem to be getting to bed around midnight at the moment, so by the time the Hugos finished and the lines for the lifts went down to a manageable level, it was time to go to bed, so no parties.
Rory McCann, who plays the Hound in Game of Thrones accepted the Hugo alongside George R.R. Martin at the ceremony. I found myself sitting next to him at breakfast the next morning. I hope I didn't stare.
I had volunteered to help clean up after the Hugo losers party Monday morning, but that was hardly strenuous, mainly involving squashing up large sheets of paper and stuffing them in black bin bags. I was then able to get to the 50 years of Doctor Who panel.
I did a final session on the Loncon 3 table, a final panel on the Grimm fairy tales, and then it was the closing ceremony, which started late and had a number of technical problems, including the lights going out at one point. Whilst waiting for it to start, a dalek appeared in the audience, which livened things up a bit.
I'm sure all the people thanked merited this, but I'm also sure it could have been done a lot faster. But I hope the Loncon 3 video "Game of Cons" appears on the website, assuming it hasn't already.
I don't know when the news came out about Fred Pohl's death, but nobody mentioned it after the closing ceremony, nor did I hear about it at the Dead Dog Party. It was only after I went to my room mid-evening to unwind that I read about it online.
Another day, another business meeting session. It went a lot more quickly than the first session (which did its job to weed out what was not necessary).
When I voted in site selection yesterday, I was asked if I had voted in a preferential ballot before. "Well, I ran site selection in 1987," I pointed out. I didn't add that I was also Hugo administrator in 2005, and have voted in just about every site selection since 1981.
Got caught out by a common problem at Worldcons yesterday afternoon. There was a panel of the Fermi paradox listed in the pocket programme but when I got to the room as shown, it wasn't there. Then I went looking to see if there was a new pink sheet listing changes to the programme and found that it had been moved to a room the other side of the convention centre. Missed the first ten minutes.
After that I went and ate and returned to the hotel ready for the parties. There was a college football game being shown on a big screen in the hotel lobby. Never really got into college football, so I had no idea who the teams were or whether they were particularly favoured. College football always seems an odd concept. Is any university sport in the UK televised with so much razzmatazz (except possibly the boat race)? Also, the giant screen was suspended from one of the balconies in the lobby, so it moved in the wind, which was mildly disconcerting.
Fought my way up the lifts to get to the parties. At the London party, the person on the door (whom I didn't know) decided just by looking at me that I was over 21. Stayed around the parties until the site selection result was announced. I met one of the Finnish team in the corridor who told me, "Spokane by 35 votes, Helsinki had led on the first round of voting." Ah well, always had an idea about going to Spokane ever since reading the name in a Doc Smith Lensman book when I was a teenager.
When I last stayed in this hotel for a Worldcon, not only Princess Diana died, but also Mother Theresa and the conductor Sir Georg Solti. I see this morning that Sir David Frost has died and I saw Seamus Heaney died the other day. Who's next?
When I voted in site selection yesterday, I was asked if I had voted in a preferential ballot before. "Well, I ran site selection in 1987," I pointed out. I didn't add that I was also Hugo administrator in 2005, and have voted in just about every site selection since 1981.
Got caught out by a common problem at Worldcons yesterday afternoon. There was a panel of the Fermi paradox listed in the pocket programme but when I got to the room as shown, it wasn't there. Then I went looking to see if there was a new pink sheet listing changes to the programme and found that it had been moved to a room the other side of the convention centre. Missed the first ten minutes.
After that I went and ate and returned to the hotel ready for the parties. There was a college football game being shown on a big screen in the hotel lobby. Never really got into college football, so I had no idea who the teams were or whether they were particularly favoured. College football always seems an odd concept. Is any university sport in the UK televised with so much razzmatazz (except possibly the boat race)? Also, the giant screen was suspended from one of the balconies in the lobby, so it moved in the wind, which was mildly disconcerting.
Fought my way up the lifts to get to the parties. At the London party, the person on the door (whom I didn't know) decided just by looking at me that I was over 21. Stayed around the parties until the site selection result was announced. I met one of the Finnish team in the corridor who told me, "Spokane by 35 votes, Helsinki had led on the first round of voting." Ah well, always had an idea about going to Spokane ever since reading the name in a Doc Smith Lensman book when I was a teenager.
When I last stayed in this hotel for a Worldcon, not only Princess Diana died, but also Mother Theresa and the conductor Sir Georg Solti. I see this morning that Sir David Frost has died and I saw Seamus Heaney died the other day. Who's next?
There was a lot to get through at the preliminary business meeting yesterday - I'm sure the details are by now on-line somewhere - and it was done without taking a recess. A few years ago, I would have had a problem with that, as the session ran for over two hours.
There was a programme item about crosswords, especially trying to interest Americans in the UK style cryptic crosswords. Not well attended, but an interesting discussion. I'm not the only one who finds cryptic crosswords more satisfying than the the US general knowledge crosswords. Coincidentally, the Independent crossword I'd been doing had a reference to Mr Spock in it: Fictional logician having no positive impact (4)
Final item I got to last night was about Cordwainer Smith. It had completely passed me by that this year is his centenary. Must re-read Norstrilia. There were calls that his non-SF works should be republished (and one of the people on the panel was from the agency that currently represents his works). I have read two of these early novels, Ria and Atomsk, but have never seen Carola. (I paid what at the time seemed a small fortune for a copy of Atomsk in a Worldcon dealers' room about 25 years ago. Roger Robinson found a copy in a charity bookshop in Essex for 50p, which he keeps reminding me of.)
Tried to get to more of the bid parties last night, having only made the Helsinki party the night before. Maybe I'm biased, but the Helsinki one seemed the best. I especially like the Finnish for Fans video they were showing on a loop, giving the Finnish equivalents of things like "Live Long and Prosper" and "These are not the droids you are looking for", each phrase spoken by a couple of cute kids. I'm told that the translation for "Are you my mummy?" actually means "Are you my [embalmed Egyptian royal]?" but this was the actual subtitle that appeared on Finnish TV when that episode was broadcast.
Something I drank last night has given me the runs this morning. I hope the business meeting session is not as intensive today.
There was a programme item about crosswords, especially trying to interest Americans in the UK style cryptic crosswords. Not well attended, but an interesting discussion. I'm not the only one who finds cryptic crosswords more satisfying than the the US general knowledge crosswords. Coincidentally, the Independent crossword I'd been doing had a reference to Mr Spock in it: Fictional logician having no positive impact (4)
Final item I got to last night was about Cordwainer Smith. It had completely passed me by that this year is his centenary. Must re-read Norstrilia. There were calls that his non-SF works should be republished (and one of the people on the panel was from the agency that currently represents his works). I have read two of these early novels, Ria and Atomsk, but have never seen Carola. (I paid what at the time seemed a small fortune for a copy of Atomsk in a Worldcon dealers' room about 25 years ago. Roger Robinson found a copy in a charity bookshop in Essex for 50p, which he keeps reminding me of.)
Tried to get to more of the bid parties last night, having only made the Helsinki party the night before. Maybe I'm biased, but the Helsinki one seemed the best. I especially like the Finnish for Fans video they were showing on a loop, giving the Finnish equivalents of things like "Live Long and Prosper" and "These are not the droids you are looking for", each phrase spoken by a couple of cute kids. I'm told that the translation for "Are you my mummy?" actually means "Are you my [embalmed Egyptian royal]?" but this was the actual subtitle that appeared on Finnish TV when that episode was broadcast.
Something I drank last night has given me the runs this morning. I hope the business meeting session is not as intensive today.
LoneStarCon 3 - day one
Aug. 30th, 2013 09:09 amSo the con has started. At noon yesterday, they had the official cutting of a ribbon at the entrance to the concourse area. Ironically, earlier in the morning when I walked over to the convention centre from my hotel, I came in a side entrance which led me into the concourse area through an unguarded door. They seem to have fixed that loophole later in the day.
The Loncon 3 desk seemed to be doing a brisk trade when I sat on it, although it was mostly people asking to check on their status and ask when the hotel rates will be available.
The official opening ceremony, emceed by Paul Cornell, was in a large ballroom in the convention centre, but they held it in a curtained off area about a quarter of the whole area available. This was probably too small an area as there were many people standing at the back (although there were a few empty seats if you searched, so I didn't stand for the whole thing).
I went to the Helsinki in 2015 party last night. Because of the strict alcohol laws in Texas, you needed to show ID to get a green wrist tag to allow you to get drinks from the bar. I realised when I got there that I'd left my passport in my room but then had the idea of showing them my Senior Railcard, which they accepted. Maybe this was a mistake, as I had a headache this morning.
The Loncon 3 desk seemed to be doing a brisk trade when I sat on it, although it was mostly people asking to check on their status and ask when the hotel rates will be available.
The official opening ceremony, emceed by Paul Cornell, was in a large ballroom in the convention centre, but they held it in a curtained off area about a quarter of the whole area available. This was probably too small an area as there were many people standing at the back (although there were a few empty seats if you searched, so I didn't stand for the whole thing).
I went to the Helsinki in 2015 party last night. Because of the strict alcohol laws in Texas, you needed to show ID to get a green wrist tag to allow you to get drinks from the bar. I realised when I got there that I'd left my passport in my room but then had the idea of showing them my Senior Railcard, which they accepted. Maybe this was a mistake, as I had a headache this morning.
A phone call
Aug. 27th, 2013 08:29 pmThis afternoon, I was in a shopping mall when my phone rang. I get so few calls on my mobile that at first I didn't realise it was my phone ringing even though the ring tone is the Buffy theme tune. I fumbled in my bag for the phone and without my glasses on, I couldn't even remember which button to press to answer the it but even though I pressed one at random, it was the right one.
It was my bank. My debit card had been used at an ATM in Texas and they wanted to know if it was me doing it. I said it was, as I was in Texas at the moment, and he then said he had my travel plans in front of him. I'd notified my bank last week that I was travelling. So why was he checking? He then asked me to confirm I'd used the card in Tesco last week.
I was standing outside some toilets at the time, about to use a drinking fountain. At least I wasn't actually using the loo when it went off.
It was my bank. My debit card had been used at an ATM in Texas and they wanted to know if it was me doing it. I said it was, as I was in Texas at the moment, and he then said he had my travel plans in front of him. I'd notified my bank last week that I was travelling. So why was he checking? He then asked me to confirm I'd used the card in Tesco last week.
I was standing outside some toilets at the time, about to use a drinking fountain. At least I wasn't actually using the loo when it went off.