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I'm ISO tech-themed books for toddlers to start Kit off on the right foot re... I guess "digital citizenship" is one phrase that works.

There are a million things about online safety and security, and those are good too. I mean more like... we're teaching Kit etiquette and social interaction rules and things, and I'd like some board books that normalize online interactions as well. We have board books about going to sleep, using the potty, body parts, gross things... Surely somewhere there's one about "my friend who lives far away" or "video chatting with gramma!" or "your feelings and being online".

Being online can be fun,
But don't forget to get some sun!
Go outside and move around
And make a bunch of silly sounds!


or

This is my Gramma!
She lives far, far away.
We see each other a lot, though.
That's because we use video chat!
I can show her my artwork,
and she can show me her doggies!
I love my Gramma.
I'm glad I get to see her a lot,
even though she lives far, far away.


or

My teacher wants to put up a paper sheet of where we all live.
Ha ha ha!
Displaying personally identifiable information insecurely is not okay!


(Maybe not that last one. (Maybe.))
nonethefewer: A blank, pieced-together jigsaw puzzle. (orderly)
There's a wiki page that outlines the plot of a book. In it, I added a link for a proper name, which had no wiki page; I set the page it linked to to redirect to the correct page. Only, I'm reading the ARC of the next book in the series, and it turns out that due to Plot Reasons™, my linking was -- will be? -- incorrect.

Should I leave the linking as-is until the book is properly out?

My assumption is "of course yes, otherwise you might spoil things!", I think I'm just twitchy about leaving incorrect information up when I currently know better. Maybe I'll make a calendar alert to correct it once the book comes out...
nonethefewer: The list that the Mayor held in BtVS s3e14. (list)
I sort of want a cross between LibraryThing and any given ILS software.

LT does a good job, for the most part, at what it does. But I want more than it has to offer, which is unfortunate.

Incomplete list follows. )
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Death Masks, Jim Butcher:
Kincaid took a couple of steps up and glanced warily around the street. "Make up your mind, Dresden. I'm not keeping her out here for long."

"What about him?" I asked the Archive, and nodded toward Kincaid. "Can he be trusted?"

"Kincaid?" the girl asked, her voice whimsical. "Can you be trusted?"

"You're paid up through April," the man replied, his eyes still scanning the street. "After that I might get a better offer."

"There," the girl said to me. "Kincaid can be trusted until April. He's an ethical man, in his way."


Enchanter's End Game, Book 5 of the Belgariad, David Eddings:
"Can he be trusted?" Droblek asked bluntly, pointing at Issus.

Sadi's expression became whimsical. "Can you be trusted, Issus?" he asked.

"You've paid me for up to the end of the month." Issus shrugged. "After that, we'll see. I might get a better offer."

"You see?" Sadi said to the two seated men. "Issus can be trusted until the end of the month - at least as much as anybody in Sthiss Tor can be trusted. One thing I've noticed about Issus - he's a simple, uncomplicated man. Once you buy him, he stays bought. I think it's referred to as professional ethics."


No real point, just a note.
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I am liking Kim Harrison's Hollows series more than I expected to, given that it's not Dresden Files and I dislike change.

Originally posted on Dreamwidth.  Number of comments so far: comment count unavailable
nonethefewer: (Default)

I have a backlog.

*) Alternet: 40 Books About Sexuality That You Have to Read

Some are articles, instead of books, but hey.  Nice to print out and save somewhere.

*) Rebel Raising: Is that child crazy?

If you lived in a world where you were constantly confronted by new things, which you were expected to assimilate and understand quickly and without showing concern? If you pretty much never got to choose your own activities? If you were regularly touched, lifted and restrained without your permission? If you lived at the mercy of, however loving, people who were in total charge of your comings and goings, your access to food and drink, your access to activities you enjoy?

I'm not trying to say that we all traumatise our children horribly for no reason. This is not mother-blaming central. But too often we don't see children as people; we don't think, hey, if I were taken from something I was absorbed in, strapped into a pushchair and hurried down the road without anyone checking I understood what was going on, would I scream and struggle? Probably.

*) Raising My Boychick: What is appropriate parenting advice?

I don't think there is no place for parenting advice; that is, to unwind that double negative, I do think parenting advice has its place. The point of the previous post was that while it's sometimes tempting to dismiss parenting advice from someone solely because of their child-less/free status, that's not actually a good enough (or good at all) reason.

So what is appropriate parenting advice? It certainly is not "unsolicited… not-so-masked criticism of [one's] parenting." That's inappropriate at any time, from any source, yet is one of the most common — and most infuriating — types of "advice" parents get, and why we get so defensive on the topic in general.

Advice on parenting is least likely to be received as an attack — or to phrase positively, is most likely to be listened to and reflected on, whether adopted or not — when it is: solicited; humble; experiential; and in line with the receiver's own basic parenting philosophy.

*) Fugitivus: Not a real post

I'm a pretty big believer that wherever you are, that's where you need to be. I don't want to say that's where you "deserve" to be, because that drags in ideas of entitlement and punishment that are really arrogant and cruel. But I do believe that individuals only stay in a place as long as that place is meeting their needs. Not all their needs, and maybe not always the good ones, but people don't stick around for free; there's got to be some return investment, even if that return investment is only "staying here helps me avoid something I perceive to be worse."

*) Fugitivus: Stuff What Boys Can Do

[...] asking men to be allies isn't really a cut and dry case. Privilege is its own kind of oppression; to maintain privilege, one must maintain a very specific and strict mode of behavior. Stepping out of that behavior strips you of your privilege, and leaves you vulnerable for a pretty significant degree of attack. There are times when an ally can pull an Afterschool Special, and there are times where even deigning to disagree could get a guy beat to within an inch of his life. I'd like to see, and hear, more ways that men can be allies in all the different contexts they find themselves in.

Originally posted at Xtinian Thoughts.  Comment here or there.

Travel.

Mar. 31st, 2009 02:00 pm
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Lessee.

* Chattery motherfuckers at SIX IN THE MORNING can-- well, I'd say "go down in flames", but I was on the same plane as them.  Nrrgh.  Dear teenagers: a sense of other people, get you some.

* Thanksgiving was splendid.  The 14-year-old was way more mature than I was expecting, mostly out of assumptions based on age than anything else.  The 5-year-old was infinitely cute, even when she was testing.  Sometimes especially so.  It was a struggle not to laugh (and therefore encourage her) sometimes.

* Josh is in hearts with the city.  He was very pleased that I was willing to go out, and wasn't put off at all by the fact that I was managing expectations.  I typically do not get along well with the city, and I don't like being away from $home for too long regardless of where I am, so I was careful to emphasise fairly frequently that he would likely be off on his own or with [livejournal.com profile] sinboy or suchlike.  I didn't want him expecting that I'd be up for a tromp every five minutes, because then he's upset and I'm upset, boo.

* I am, however, on better terms with NYC than before.  I think part of it is I'm more willing nowadays to say "This is outside my limits, and I would like $this_much going-out, then home", and similar-sounding things.  So I don't go on for hours being very grumpy and not telling anybody because how can people walk for that long oh god I just want to go home, which means I'm more free to appreciate what's around me.

I still get spurts of "I wonder what this looked like before the city infested it?  *morose*".  I remain myself.

* One thing I definitely appreciate about NYC is, you know that awareness of other people thing?  Where you see someone coming up on your left, so you edge to your right, or someone's going to cross in front of you so you slow down so they do that and you keep walking and it's all good?  I bloody love exercising that, and it gets a workout here.

(I'm sure there's a term for it in German.)

* Speaking of German, one of my pipe dreams is to somehow acquire a roomful of used books, where I can go through each book one-by-one and assess them individually.  I always feel like I'm missing something when I just scan through piles.  I'm not very thorough.  Talking about this with [livejournal.com profile] sinboy turned into something involving a will and a knife-fight with [livejournal.com profile] regyt, which I am okay with.

* I am on vacation, and it is glorious.  Right now, I am drinking coffee, writing this post, and catching a bit up on my various to-read places.  (Friends list here, blogs elsewhere, &c &c.)  I may go to a thrift store later.  Or back to The Strand to get this one book.  Later, dancing with Rose.  No phones, no coworkers, no getting up at bloody 5:30 in the goddamn morning.  *relaxes*

* I am making great strides in not taking responsibility for others, but I still sometimes get stuck with poly situations.  Josh can reassure me a million million times that of course I'm here to see Rose and of course he doesn't mind (wtf) my sleeping in her room a lot, but I still get worried that he will feel left out or like a third wheel, blah blah blah.  So, I told him that he can pull me aside at any time for any reason to discuss whatever's on his mind, and then I did not bring it up again.  And so every time I get that twinge, I think, "Self, he is a big boy and can tell me if there's a problem, and I reminded him so my responsibilities have been covered, so shutcher piehole."  So far, it's working.

* Any post on how wonderful it is to see Rose and how fucking gorgeous and amazing she is will descend into me beaming like an idiot and forgetting to do things like type real words with meaning and things.  I am a doofus.  She and Josh conspire against me to turn me into food, and she and I conspire against Josh by talking about feminist stuff shortly before he comes in the room.

J: I'll be in shortly!
R: So what, you think it's impossible for two women to be by themselves?  You think we need a man?
J: ...quoi??
R/X: *cracks up*
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I remember a bit from the book Cunt by Inga Muscio, where she encourages the reader to spend a year only reading female authors, only going to female-owned businesses, and so forth.  It's a good idea, but I couldn't do it.  I know me well enough to know that there are things I want to do that would insanely benefit me that I don't get around to, so conceptual things like this?  Ha ha ha, ha.

Not to mention, I have comfort books, books I've reread a zillion times because I like the story and I'm comfortable with it.  I understand that the point of these sorts of things is to push one out of one's comfort zone, but… I dunno, maybe I'm bad at activism.  *shrugs*

Anyhow but, I do listen to Pandora Radio all day.  I have two stations on it – one for classical music (!!), and one for everything I like forever (in order to confound PR).  So, I made a new station, that'll just have female artists on it.  That means blended-gender bands (like Prozac For Lovers, I think) don't get in, either – female-only or bust.  (It doesn't mean female-only artists automatically get a thumbs-up.  See also certain Alanis Morissette songs.)  I seeded it with Poe, Garbage, and Aimee Mann, as those are three female-only artists I could remember off-hand.

I make no resolutions, because I am bad with follow-through.  But I am going to leave this station on here at work, and when I'm at home, and I'll continue to restrict it to female-only artists, and we'll see.

So far, holy crap there's a lot of stuff I forgot I loved.  Like "Ready To Go" by Republica, and "Cannonball" by The Breeders.  And there are a couple of songs that are already dead awesome, like a cover of "Spooky" by Imogen Heap, and "All The Things She Said" by t.A.T.u.

*hums*

Originally posted at Xtinian Thoughts.  Comment here or there.

nonethefewer: (baffled.yes!)
I adore my Rose quite a great deal, even when she adds books to my book queue.
nonethefewer: (Default)
When I read SF stories or books where humans are thrown in with other aliens, it always pleases me when "Human" is capitalised.
nonethefewer: (coffee.doom!)
I'm catching up.

Dr Who, S04E11 - 'Turn Left' )



And now to watch (no, I don't know why that post was still in this post, I'm confused as well) the episode again, whilst I wait a half hour for the next one to come to me.
nonethefewer: (reading)
I had shards of broken glass in my skull all day yesterday!  That was disfortunate.  I drank water, had caffeine, ate food, ate more food, napped on the subway, took an ibuprofen, and relaxed with an ice pack and a book about a trans woman.  (The last is actually not usually a part of my list, the bit with the book, but why not.)  It would wane sometimes, but usually I was dead.  Bleh.

Today it's still here, but not as much.  I have more of a feeling that coffee and time will help.  That's nice.

In other news, there's a radical bookstore in the Lower East Side of Manhattan!  It was so amazingly pleasant to see a magazine rack that didn't leave me wincing or having to ignore half of it.

In conclusion, I have an awful lot of books on my to-read list.

[eta] A knitted/crocheted jellyfish.
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Awesome linkage.

  • Amanda Marcotte talks about decreasing the risks of pregnancy, and just how full of shit that is.  bean comments in a way that sums this up well: "With regard to my stance, I agree that women should have as much information as is out there so they can make informed choices during their pregnancies. What I disagree with is the tone in which the information is usually presented: panic! You women must be perfect during pregnancy or ELSE!"
  • Selling Anxiety: How the News Media Scare Women, by Caryl Rivers.  "Selling Anxiety does a great service to public debate by debunking the erroneous data upon which such shoddy journalism is based, and providing accurate information to counter sexist narratives. To wit: Workplace discrimination (not "women's choices") causes pay disparities, science doesn't prove men are biologically smarter, and research shows mothers with rewarding jobs have the hottest sex! The news just got a little less gloomy."
  • How to support someone with an eating disorder?

Originally posted at Xtinian Thoughts.  Comment here or there.

Miske.

Nov. 1st, 2007 07:52 pm
nonethefewer: (livejournal)
- Work today was good.  Finally got around to having that meeting about the bug tracker, which means hooray, implementation.  The tracker was developed with SQL Server 2k, but I'm using 2005, to get used to it.

- Amanda at Pandagon reviews the book Born to Buy, by Juliet Schor.  Excerpt: "I found the book to mostly be fascinating, especially the second part where Schor conducts a research study on two populations of children, one in the city of Boston and one in a suburb, to see what kind of effect this increasingly commercialization had on the well-being of children, and found strong evidence that kids who watch excessive amounts of TV and otherwise engage in excessive amounts of participation in marketing to children suffered strongly for it both physically and mentally, and more to the point, that the engagement with the commercial culture caused the depression, anti-social behavior, excessive weight gain, lowered grades and other ill effects on children."

Interesting.  My wishlist for books is incredibly huge.

- You know, I like bagpipes fine, and don't understand the antipathy towards them.

- I have 700 tags.  oO

- Whuh... why is Faye's shirt sparkly?  [eta] Uh.  Well, it was sparky...
nonethefewer: (outdoors)
My therp's recommended reading list:

Jonathan Livingston Seagull - Richard Bach
The Prophet - Kahlil Gibran
The Alchemist - Paulo Coehlo
Ishmael - Daniel Quinn
Way of the Peaceful Warrior - Dan Millman
The Power of One - Bryce Courtenay
Chronicles of Tao - Deng Ming-Dao
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There may or may not be spoilers to this.  I'm comparing Dresden Files the show to the books.  I cut anyways.

[eta] I reference the books a lot to compare things, and I've read all the books.  (Twice.)  Sooo yeah.  Spoiler alert, or at least "You may or may not get it if you haven't read that far" alert.

(I mean, I read books 8 and 9 before ever reading the others.  I'm not a spoiler-worrying person.)

I've only seen 5 eps, but don't worry about spoiling it for me.  I'm kinky; I like that sort of thing.

Comparison. )

More later, once I watch more and/or wake up.
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With the power of the library and the internet, I can now be annoyed within a week!

I read all available books on Dresden Files in the past week; I'm now watching the first ep.

- Uncle??
- Brunette??
- Laura??
- British??
- Tall??
- Jeep??

I'm not sure yet.  Mmph.
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Brief interesting thing of note, in Sandman. )
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My book today is Why Gender Matters: What Parents and Teachers Need to Know About the Emerging Science of Sex Differences by Leonard Sax.  I am in ♥s with this book.

Basically, Dr. Sax discusses the differences between boys and girls, focusing on those in the birth to teen age range.  What he seems to seek is to both show that raising children in a gender-neutral environment may be actively harmful to both genders and that different doesn't mean better.  I really appreciate the effort he's going through to emphasize that he's looking to improve how each gender is educated, not necessarily what.

Some of these differences are deeply neat.  I'd heard before of the fact that girls can generally hear better than boys, or that boys tend to be more aggressive than girls.  What I hadn't heard was this:

Apparently, there are rods and cones in one layer of the retina.  Rods are black/white sensitive, and cones are colour sensitive.  The rods and cones talk to the ganglion cells.  There are two types of those, magnocellular (large) and parvocellular (small); M cells talk to the rods, and P cells talk to the cones.  M cells send their information to the region of the cerebral cortex that handles spatial relationships, and P cells send their info to the region that handles texture and colour.

Every part of that above is different in males and females.  "We're not talking about small differences between the sexes, with lots of overlap.  We're talking about large differences between the sexes, with no overlap at all.  Every male animal had a thicker retina than any female retina, due to the males having more M cells…"

That is fascinating to me.  All of this book is fascinating to me.  And I haven't even gotten to his chapter of LGBTE (exceptions) kids yet.  *delighted*

Originally posted at Xtinian Thoughts.  Comment here or there.

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