So the power went down at 4:45 last night, just when I was starting to fill in the DMCA form because Yet Another person thinks it’s Perfectly OK to steal from us. I was in a foul mood, because, well, people stealing from us — and instead of writing, I’d be form-filling, and it’s not like I have enough time in the day to write anyway. Then the power went off and that was Just. . .Ducky.
Which, as it turned out, it was. Steve hooked up the reading lamp in the living room to the Big Green Battery and we read together on the sofa for the next five hours. Very pleasant and cozy. We should do this more often. Possibly without requiring the destruction of innocent utility poles as a prompt.
In other news — The Catechism of Cliche — or at least parts of it. Go, read, enjoy. Then get thee to the Dalkey Archive Press and purchase for your own The Best of Myles, which collects all the “Cruiskeen Lawn” columns from the Irish Times, giving you access not only to the Catechism, but to the sordid details of the Ventriloquists War, news of The Brother, and all the various schemes launched by Myles na Gopaleen, the Da, to make money.
Also highly recommended are the na Gopaleen novels The Third Policeman and At Swim-Two-Birds. The former is a science fiction novel disguised as a literary novel. The latter is a writer’s novel, detailing the adventures of a young, layabout writer, whose characters, fed up with his sloth and his bad treatment, turn on him. Both are very, very funny.
And now — no, wait! Everybody saw the article about the “Rosie computers” during the war, right? Here, in case you missed it — worth a read.
And now I better get some coffee and get on the road.
Originally published at Sharon Lee, Writer. You can comment here or there.
no subject
Date: 2011-02-10 12:18 pm (UTC)I don't know, perhaps in Britain we were more aware of the work done by women during the War at places like Bletchley Park, but by the 60s it didn't seem to be much of a secret here that women had done that sort of thing and been involved with the early electronic computers. Certainly as computer operators (who in some places were also the programmers) most of the pictures I saw of computers had women using them; that may have been as publicity, of course, but I certainly got the impression that they were involved.
Perhaps that era dropped out of sight later...
no subject
Date: 2011-02-10 03:50 pm (UTC)http://www.savagechickens.com/?p=5000
Go back to 1877
Date: 2011-02-10 04:58 pm (UTC)http://www.womanastronomer.com/harvard_computers.htm
but searching on Pickering, Leavitt or Jump Cannon will get you there.
Lauretta@ConstellationBooks
PS Apologies for being a geek - but once a female astronomer, always a female astronomer.
Re: Go back to 1877
Date: 2011-02-10 05:30 pm (UTC)I knew that there were women doing such things earlier, I hadn't however heard them referred to as 'computers'. Thanks for the information and the link. I love the bit where "the director of Harvard Observatory became disgruntled with the sloppy work of his male assistant, saying his housekeeper could do better" and proved it...
So in fact my assumption that women were better at it than men wasn't so far off the mark. By reports they seem to have been more diligent and accurate (possibly the men resented the 'boring' work).
Hey, Sharon, thank you!
Date: 2011-02-10 06:51 pm (UTC)'Rosies.' I didn't know they had a documentary.
And then I got sidetracked on how early women got called computers...heh.
Lauretta
no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 12:30 am (UTC)Rosie...
Date: 2011-02-11 12:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 02:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 02:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 02:54 am (UTC)Anyhow he, the vendor, claims to be the "copyright holder or resale agent" of all those books. And some of them are ours, of which he is most certainly NOT the copyright holder and if he's a "resale agent", then damnitohell, I want my royalties.
And Ebay of course, can't police everything that people sell within its precints. And the law puts the burden of proof in the instance of pirated intellectual property on the IP owner. So, if I want this guy to stop selling our books illegally, on Ebay, this week, then I have to file a DMCA notice. For each infringed work.
I need a secretary.
Or possibly a Legal Department.
no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 03:39 am (UTC)Re: Go back to 1877
Date: 2011-02-11 03:43 am (UTC)Re: Go back to 1877
Date: 2011-02-11 09:30 am (UTC)Obviously not universally true (I tend more to the 'elegant' side myself, and I've known women who wrote inscrutable messes) but as a general tendency I think it's fair.
(And back in the days when we used coding sheets which were then typed up onto tape or cards women had a lot better success rate than men -- their handwriting could be understood! You don't want to see my handwriting *g*...)
Unfortunately many bosses see "lines of code" as a statistic and ignore things like testability, robustness, and maintainability in favour of quantity, because that's the only quantifiable aspect they see. This can then disadvantage those who write slower but more thoroughly.
no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 09:36 am (UTC)Or a gang of 'boys' to go round and beat the bejaysus out of the idiot? *g*
Of course, it would be quite nice if he were putting the books on the Kindles and paying you royalties up front. But that's not likely to happen.
(I have seen those offers of "large number of books" with e-readers, they hold no interest for me because few of them are books I'd want to read. Now if they said "We'll load a hundred books of your choice" on there it might be an incentive, but some random "bestseller" or "classics" not.)
no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 12:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-02-11 12:11 pm (UTC)DMCA Notices
Date: 2011-02-12 07:48 am (UTC)Reward: points in heaven.
C.