Ron's Info-Closet Annex

Up front and out there.

Watch your eye!


The online extension of Ron's Info-Closet.


The original (walk-in) Info-Closet, circa 1995

Book links are usually to my Powell's affiliate program; game links are usually to Funagain Games, and benefit the Games to the Rescue Project.

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Ron Hale-Evans
rwhe@ludism.org

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  • Alter Ego: Running Windows XP Pro on Ubuntu with Qemu and KQemu (Qemu accelerator) ...

  • Installation/QemuEmulator - Community Ubuntu Documentation ...

  • ProjectPlan40 - The Linux Foundation ...

  • SLOCCount User's Guide ...

  • Giving Away Software For Free Costs More Than You Would Think (Part 1) | fsckin w/ linux ...

  • Index of /ftp/fedora/linux/9/Fedora/source/iso ...

  • SLOCCount ...

  • Counting Source Lines of Code (SLOC) ... Debian 3.1 ("Sarge") had grown to about 230 million source lines of code, with an estimated 60,000 person-years and billion USD redevelopment cost.

  • Zen Marxism ...

  • NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Birthday problem ... perl -e 'for (1..23) {{int(rand(365)+1)}++}; for (keys %h) {print __END__ , ": ", {__END__ }, " timesn" if {__END__ } > 1}'

  • Steven Levy on How the Chumby Could Become Man's New Best Friend ...

  • Specifications - The Linux Foundation ...

  • SpecDatabaseSchema - The Linux Foundation ...

  • LSB RPM Uplift - The Linux Foundation ...

  • Specifications - The Linux Foundation ...

  • Sun, 22 Feb 2004

    Doing my bit...

    ...to spread santorum far and wee.

    Entered 23:26 [/polyticks] permalink


    Oz in the Emerald City

    A redundancy? Not necessarily. "The Emerald City" has long been a nickname for Seattle. This post will tell you where to get the Oz books relatively cheaply in Seattle, and some other places if you have the misfortune not to live here. :)

    Half Price Books is your dear, dear friend. As of early 2004, you can pick up all 14 of the L. Frank Baum Oz books by hitting various Half Price Books locations in the Seattle area. Each book is $4.98, so a complete set will cost you about $70 plus tax. At present, there are nine stores in metro-Seattle. The new Capital Hill store on Belmont Avenue seems to have the widest selection, but you will probably have to visit more than one store to get all the books. The editions being remaindered, by the way, are published by a company calling itself "For Your Knowledge" or "Mundus". (The company seems to have changed its name at one point; the books published under one name do not differ in any significant way from those published under the other.) These are hefty trade paperbacks -- not quite Dover quality, but I have no complaints at $5 apiece.

    Half Price Books has stores in Arizona, California, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas (of course), Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Wisconsin as well, so if you live in those states, you may also be in luck. Unfortunately, they seem to have discontinued web orders.

    If you do want Dover-quality paperbacks, the Elliott Bay Book Company in Pioneer Square has most or all of the Baum Oz books in Dover editions. They cost twice as much as the Mundus/For Your Knowledge editions, but that's still only $10 or so, and they will last you the rest of your life. Alternatively, order the Dover editions directly from Dover.

    The University of Washington Bookstore has half a dozen of the Mundus/For Your Knowledge editions, plus remaindered copies of the Centennial Edition of the Annotated Wizard of Oz for about $10. This book from 2000 is well worth making a special trip for. The UW Bookstore also has several of the Dover editions, and they sometimes stock Edward Einhorn's influential Paradox in Oz. (It's where I got my copy.)

    If you don't care much about illustrations, you can find all 14 of the Baum Oz books at the Online Books Page and then some, in free ebook form. Share and Enjoy!

    If none of these options suit you, try ordering Oz books from Powell's, which has an incredible variety of them, new and used.
    You'll support this site if you order via the link I just gave you. SURRENDER AMAZON!

    Entered 19:59 [/books/oz] permalink


    Sunday is Friday at Carvel's

    If you grew up on the East Coast during the late 70s or early 80s, you may remember ice cream tycoon Tom Carvel's decision to do his own commercials for his ice cream chain, anticipating Dave Thomas's Wendy's commercials by 15 or 20 years. Unfortunately, unlike Dave Thomas's voice, Tom Carvel's was a guttural monotone that seemed to indicate the intelligence behind it was ravaged by age and perhaps didn't have too much to work with in the first place. One of the stellar business decisions made by Tom (or whoever made his mouth move) was to use a single mold for all Carvel ice cream cakes, so that Cookie Puss (an attempt to cash in on the movie E.T., whose TV voice sounded like a chipmunk in an echo chamber) looked suspiciously like Fudgie the Whale upside-down. Then there was the amnemonic advertising slogan "Wednesday is Sundae at Carvel's", which attempted to convey that you got two-for-one ice cream sundaes every Wednesday at Carvel's, but ended up conveying to viewers that Thursday was Sundae, or perhaps Tuesday was Sundae, or maybe Tuesday was Thursday... Why bother?

    Tom Carvel is probably long dead, and I don't care whether Carvel's is still a going concern on the East Coast enough to Google for it, which is saying something, I think. In any case, since I'm doing my Friday Five on Sunday, I just wanted to announce that Sunday is now Friday.

    Friday, 20 February 2004

    1. Kickass new cellphone: Because I was stupid enough to lose my old cellphone but smart enough to have signed up for the replacement program with Sprint, for some reason when I ponied up my $35 deductible, they did not send me a reconditioned phone of the same model, but a brand new phone that is much, much better. It's a ruggedised Sanyo RL2000. It has a colour screen almost as big as your average PDA, and besides doing ordinary cellphone things with it, I can surf the web, read and send email, and if anyone I know ever gets a similar phone, I can use it as a sort of walkie-talkie. The customer service dudelet told me, "Man! I wish I could afford one of those! Your new phone can run circles around your old phone without even moving. Why did they send you one of those, anyway?"

    2. Games magazine: On a day when I wasn't expecting any particularly good snailmail, the April 2004 Games magazine arrived. The cover story, "The New Oldest Game in the World", by R.H. Wei, tells the story of the discovery by Vincent Hughes, the "real-life Indiana Jones", of an ancient Egyptian board game called "The Game of Flying Obelisks". The game is extremely complex for one of that period; it more closely resembles a modern Chess variant than anything else known to exist at that time.

      Yes, it's the April 2004 Games magazine. Geddit? I didn't buy the article as a whole for a minute, but I thought at least that Vincent Hughes might exist, since the article says he studied at Yale, and I recall reading about a "real-life Indiana Jones" etc. etc. in the Yale alumni magazine. However, relevant Google searches return nothing on the great man.

      The Game of Flying Obelisks looks like fun, though, and receives a much more in-depth treatment than Games usually gives games it publishes, even if half of the coverage is fiction.

    3. Nonestica: OK, a couple of weeks ago I talked about receiving a "current" or "spark" of inspiration from a friend, and said that I was collaborating on a project around this inspiration with him. Now I can tell you. My friend and I were working on a piecepack game based on the 14 Oz (as in Wizard) books by L. Frank Baum. The collaboration has fallen through; my friend had never collaborated on a game before and was uncomfortable doing so. Oh well; at least I can now blather about Oz (or Nonestica, as the continent of which Oz forms a part is commonly (?) known), without outing myself and spoiling my anonymity for the latest piecepack game design contest. More later; meanwhile, check out this collection of Ozzy/Nonestican links I've collected. I don't have many at the moment, but they are all key resources.

    4. Game design: So it looks as if Marty and I will be entering at least one game in the new piecepack contest. I like it so far, and that's all I'm going to say.

    5. Great EGG meeting: We had another great meeting of EGG, our local game design group. Kisa Griffin had a new piecepack game for us to playtest, and AlphaTim Schutz had a new Alpha Playing Cards game. I always come out of these meetings high off my friends' brilliance, and thankful (when I'm demonstrating a game) that I have a community to support me. As much as I love Seattle Cosmic, and as unfinished as the games brought to EGG tend to be, I have to say I usually have more fun at EGG meetings, because the games I'm playing were not designed by someone I don't know in Europe (say), but by someone I know and sometimes even love -- and if I don't like something about the game, I can suggest a fix and the fix may be incorporated into the rules on the spot. EGG meetings are so intense, though, that it's probably good they're only once a month rather than once a week.

    Have a fine week, everyone, and remember: Fudgie the Whale makes a great gift!

    Entered 18:43 [/personal/friday5] permalink