Virginia Republicans require women seeking abortions to be raped first

Virginia Republicans want women to be raped with this device.

Virginia Republicans want women to be raped with this device.

This is a transvaginal ultrasonic probe. Normally, it is a valuable diagnostic device that promotes women’s health. It is used by putting it into a woman’s vagina. The Virginia legislature now requires its use on women seeking abortions, whether or not she or her doctor agree, and for no medical reason. The only motivation for this bill is to obtain and force the woman to look at ultrasound pictures of the fetus, hear possible fetal heart sounds, and get a detailed description of the fetus’ gestational development, with the idea that she will then be dissuaded from having the abortion.

So I’m thinking that what the Republicans who have rammed this through (yes, I’m aware of the imagery) have done is legalized “rape with an object for political purposes.” Yes, I think the courts will have something to say about this. But that doesn’t make it any less extreme, or any less disgusting or shameful.

The bill requires that women will be furnished with a list of facilities that will perform the rape at no charge. I suspect that no insurance company will be willing to pay for the procedure (since it’s not medically necessary), so the facilities will just so happen to be the phony “pregnancy crisis centers,” which are scams by anti-abortion fanatics that act as medical facilities, but really only exist to coerce women into not having abortions.

Virginia’s governor, the execrable Bob McDonnell, has said that he plans to sign the bill into law. Bob is term limited out of his office, and he really wants to be picked as someone’s Vice President. So he’s all for any insane right-wing idea that will give him a boost. Let’s hope he pays a serious political price for this abomination.

Attack of the Return of the Kindle Plunging

A while back, I mentioned how I had ordered a $99 Kindle Touch, and said that I’d report back after I’d had it for a while. Here are my mostly positive thoughts.

Size: I like this thing a lot. It’s smaller than my iPad, which needs to either be in a bag or under my arm the whole time I have it out of the house. Because if I’ve taken my iPad for reading purposes to a restaurant, there’s just no way in hell I’m going to leave it unattended if I need to go get another plate from the salad bar. Yes, I have a particular jacket that has a pocket big enough for the iPad, but you know, I don’t wear that jacket all the time. The Kindle is smaller enough than the iPad that I can stick it in regular-size pockets in other coats, and into the thigh cargo pockets of the shorts I like to wear in hot weather.

Readability: Turns out I like e-ink displays like the Kindle’s. The type looks good, though because of the variability of the ebooks I’ve put on the device (some books converted from Calibre, rather than gotten from the Kindle store), sometimes I have problems getting exactly the type size and format I’d like. I think I actually prefer reading books on my iPad a bit more from the readability and font standpoint. It’s better to use the Kindle outdoors, versus the iPad. The Kindle’s matte screen is great. And the naysayers who moaned that the screen would get all mucked up with fingerprints turned out to be wrong. I notice fingerprints on the glossy iPad screen way more than on the Kindle. On either device, a quick wipe is all it takes anyway. At the beginning, I had a bit of trouble with the Kindle because I’d tap the screen and it would advance two pages, and I’d have to go back one. I just needed to learn a bit different, and lighter, tap behavior.

Responsiveness: The iPad is faster, no doubt about it. The Kindle takes a second to change pages when I tap it. But I got used to that pretty quickly. It hasn’t turned out to be a big deal except when I want to do anything other than read on the Kindle, like browse the Kindle Store, or change settings, or the like. Then I get impatient with the slow screen redraws. But that’s generally offset by the next category. I’ll typically buy books on the Kindle Store on the Amazon Web site (rather than on the device), and send them to the Kindle or other devices running a Kindle app. I understand that the Kindle Touch Software Update Version 5.0.3 helps with speed issues, but it just came out yesterday, and I haven’t updated yet. Update: OK, so I installed the software update, and yes, it improves the Kindle’s responsiveness quite a bit. For example, the Kindle Store is now usable, rather than feeling painfully slow. I expect this update alone will end up selling more books for Amazon.

Battery life: No contest here; the Kindle is good for at least a month between recharges. The iPad is good for about a day. I’ve put the Kindle down for a week or so, and the battery indicator has barely moved.

Other stuff: The Kindle Owners Lending Library for Amazon Prime members is a gateway drug like you can’t believe. I used it to borrow (for free) the first two books of The Hunger Games in November and December. I said I had the $99 version of the Kindle Touch, which is the version that displays ads. They don’t intrude on the reading experience, and I’ve taken advantage of two of the ads, including one that offered a good deal (50% off) on a Marware case for the device (I decided I wanted this case because I wanted to protect the screen, and it has a hand strap that improves one-handed reading).

So there you have it. Though I already had two other handy devices I could use to read ebooks (my iPhone 4 and iPad 1), the Kindle Touch has proven its worth to me. I’m happy I got it.

iCloud: Visual QuickStart Guide is now available!

iCloud: Visual QuickStart Guide CoverI’m happy and proud to announce that my latest book, iCloud: Visual QuickStart Guide, from Peachpit Press, is now widely available. It’s one of the newer breeds of Visual QuickStart Guides, with all-color screenshots.

It covers virtually all of the aspects of iCloud, from setting up the service on Mac OS X, iOS devices, and Windows, to using iCloud to synchronize email, contacts, calendars, and reminders. It also covers using iCloud with iTunes (and iTunes Match), iPhoto, the iWork programs, and using iCloud’s people and device location features. For a book that took me only a bit more than a month to write, I’m pretty happy with it, and I think it will be useful for your favorite iCloud newbie. Please join me in spreading the word that the book is out.

You can find it in the following places:

Nuclear Weapons Storage

If you’ve ever wondered about where nuclear weapons are stored, here is an infographic that shows where they are (nothing too specific; no interest to spies here). There’s general info about the number of weapons storage sites per country, and a breakdown of US storage locations.

Like most folks, I think that any nuclear weapons are too many; it’s all but unthinkable that they will ever be used in war again. And I find the graph of the declining numbers of stockpiled weapons heartening. It’s one of the good things that the first President Bush did with the START treaty, and that work was continued by President Obama (with the New START treaty).

Full disclosure: this was pitched to us as a paid ad placement. But I thought that it was interesting enough in itself that I agreed to put it up.

Via: Mozy

Taking the Kindle Plunge

I’ve written here about the Kindle twice before. When it was first released in late 2007, I predicted that it was going to be a hit, and many really smart friends (and my wife) told me I was dead wrong and that it was going to be a flop.

Then, when the Kindle 2 was released in early 2009, I wrote about it again, and said that the only reason I didn’t buy one was that I had gotten used to reading books using Stanza on my iPhone. Now, of course, I have an iPad, and I read ebooks on that. But the iPad has some significant disadvantages as an ebook reader. It’s heavy in the hand; you have to prop it on something or put it on a table. It’s too big to fit in a jacket pocket (except for my ScottEVest jacket), and the iPad, having email, tends to interrupt my reading experience. And the Kindle has that just-about-forever battery life.

I’d been thinking that I was going to try a Kindle when it hit the magic $99 price point. So after today’s Amazon announcements, I sprang for the $99 Kindle Touch (the one with the ads, because I’m pretty good at ignoring ads, the ads don’t interfere with the reading experience, and I didn’t mind saving $40). I’ll report back when the thing arrives in November. We’ll see if I like it or not. But my track record so far has been pretty good.

Our Worldcon Schedule

Between August 17 and August 21, we’ll be attending Renovation, the 69th World Science Fiction Convention, in Reno. What started out as a pleasure trip has turned into business for both of us.

I’m speaking on three panels. Dori is representing her employer, Stack Exchange, which special emphasis on two Stack sites: Science Fiction and Fantasy and Writers. Stack Exchange is also sponsoring the Green Room for program participants. You’ll be able to find Dori roaming the halls with Stack Exchange swag, including shirts, stickers, and pens.

Both Dori and I will be making occasional posts on Stack Exchange’s Science Fiction and Fantasy Community Blog during Worldcon.

My panels are as follows (all at the Reno Convention Center):

Thursday, Aug. 18, 1 PM, Room C01:

Making It as a Full-Time Writer

In the 1940s and 1950s, writing SF paid a few cents a word and an apartment in New York was $100/month. SF — sometimes — pays a little more now, but … How does a part-time writer become a full time one? Can he or she do so? What are some of the differences for non-fiction writers?
Panelists: Carol Berg, Tom Negrino, Christina York, Bud Sparhawk, Dean Wesley Smith

Thursday, Aug. 18, 6 PM, Room A09:

Online Networking Before Social Networks

Before MySpace, LinkedIn and Facebook, there were CompuServe, AOL, GEnie and USENET. Yes, people were married, divorced, friended and unfriended (remember kill files?) online before 2005.
Panelists: Walter H. Hunt, Tom Negrino, Brad Templeton, Lynn Gold

Friday, Aug. 19, 11 AM, Room A03

Social Media for Writers

Writers know the Internet, but not all writers take advantage of its full potential. With the evolution of Social Media, potential readers are only a click away. But what exactly is Social Media? At this panel, you will pick up the vocabulary and background of exactly what Social Media is, what it can do, and what it cannot do.
Panelists: Tee Morris, Tom Negrino, Rose Fox, Cory Doctorow, Brenda Cooper

Hope to see you there!

If it ain’t one thing, it’s two things

We’ve been busy getting two book projects out the door (JavaScript: Visual QuickStart Guide, 8th Edition and Dreamweaver CS5.5: Visual QuickStart Guide). The latter is an ebook supplement to the printed Dreamweaver CS5 Visual QuickStart Guide. Between that work and some family issues, I’m afraid that we just haven’t had the bandwidth to get back to working on updating things around here. It’s gonna happen!

I’ve temporarily turned off commenter registration

The past day or so, we’ve just been slammed with obviously bogus user registrations. More than 400. I had previously installed the Stop Spammers plugin, which had done a great job, but something’s changed. Then yesterday I added the Register Plus Redux plugin, which segregates the bogus, but hasn’t seemed to stem the flow, even though I have it set to verify email addresses. So I think I’ll just turn off user registrations off altogether for a while, and try to do some research as to what’s going on. In the meantime, you can always email us a comment that we’ll post, and I’m happy to create new user registrations (for real people) by hand. For obvious reasons, I’ve also disabled comments on this post.

Hope to turn things back on soon.

Help me pick a new paperless office organizer

I’ve been a big fan of the journey (you never quite get there) towards the paperless office for years, since I first bought a Fujitsu ScanSnap scanner. It’s a terrific device; you drop one or more sheets into its hopper, press the button on the front, and it scans both sides of each piece of paper and turns them into a PDF. I use it with Acrobat Pro, and take advantage of a nice AppleScript that Joe Kissell created for his book Take Control of Your Paperless Office (it’s a good book; you should buy it). The script uses a Folder Action to automatically fire off Acrobat’s Optical Character Recognition, so the scan gets turned into copyable, searchable, indexable text. After the paper goes through the scanner and becomes a PDF, I shred it. I try to only keep the paper that you must have around (important legal documents, for example) and those live in a fireproof lockbox.

Organizing the files

When you have so many documents, you want some way of organizing them. When I bought the ScanSnap, I also bought Yep, from Ironic Software. It’s designed to manage, organize, and retrieve PDFs, and you don’t have to copy PDFs into a central database. You can use it to add tags to your documents and search them. It was just what I wanted. I’ve added a couple of thousand documents to Yep and tagged them (bills, contracts, statements, etc.). Then Ironic came out with Yep 2. I considered upgrading, but the new version didn’t seem to have enough compelling features (the company didn’t help matters by failing to put up a clear page explaining the differences for their existing customers). And now, many other Yep users are complaining that Yep 2 seems to be moribund, with no updates for more than a year. Yep 1 isn’t working correctly anymore; the tagging is messed up and I can’t fix it. So I’m in the market for a new organization tool. I’m resigned to retagging everything, though it will take a long time. A program with the concept of tag groups would be helpful (so I could apply multiple tags at once).

The tools I’ve been thinking of are:

I’m already using Evernote for general notes and snippets, so I’m strongly considering upgrading to Evernote Premium ($45/year) and using that; I’d just dump all of the already scanned PDFs into it. But I have some concerns. First, the info I’ve been scanning isn’t exactly secret, but it is sensitive (bills, personal data). The idea of putting that into the cloud makes me uneasy. Second, Evernote doesn’t appear to have great options for getting information out once it goes in. I’d have to retag all of those documents, which would be a drag. And I use the Evernote iOS apps, and were one of those devices lost or stolen, I’d hate to have all that personal data exposed with it.

I know the least about Paperless. It’s reasonably priced ($50). It appears to have pretty much the same feature set as Yep, plus modern and expected additions like Smart Collections. I’d have to retag my documents, but don’t know how easy that would be. Anyone have experience with this program? Update: Paperless clearly isn’t going to meet my needs, so it’s off the list. Tried it, hated it, deleted it.

Some people swear by Devonthink ($80). It seems fairly complicated to learn and use. The company touts their AI that does automatic classification and grouping. But is that smart enough so that I wouldn’t have to retag every file manually?

As you can see, I’m most interested in reducing the labor in retagging files. And now that I need to migrate to a new program, I want to be able to maintain my time investment if I have to do it again in the future (sadly, no software is forever).

I’m sure that people I know have solved this problem for themselves. Can you help me solve it? I’m open to the programs above, or others. The restriction is that it has to be a Mac, program, of course. I’ve previously used Yojimbo, but migrated to Evernote.

Our 10th Wedding Anniversary

Ten years ago today, I was standing on the lawn at Madrona Manor here in Healdsburg, surrounded by our family and friends. I was about to marry the woman of my dreams. She was smart, funny, pretty, geeky, brilliant, thoughtful, and kind. I was crazy in love with her.

Tom & Dori's Wedding on the lawn at Madrona Manor

Best of all, she had said “yes” when I asked her to marry me. We had already been together for years when we got married. We’d gotten a cat. We’d moved to Healdsburg from Los Angeles. We had bought a house, and we were raising a son.

Tom & Dori's wedding; leaning over Dori's car

She’s still all of those wonderful things that made me want to spend my life with her. Ten years on, I love her more than ever. It’s been a decade with ups and downs, triumphs and tragedies, joy and sadness.

It’s been a marriage.

A toast on the day of our wedding.

Happy Anniversary, Dori. Thank you for the past 10 years. I love you.

Tom & Dori's wedding; group picture with guests.

Their love was forbidden — but would not be denied!!

We live in a farming community. Sure, the main crop around here is wine grapes. But there’s still a fair amount of livestock. Just a few blocks away from home, we’ve got a pasture with a couple of sheep (we’re waiting to see if we get more incredibly cute lambs this year).

A bit farther away is something a bit weirder. There’s a pen with a burro and an ostrich. Now, we’ve had ostriches here in town for quite a while; one place in the city limits has (or had; haven’t looked in a while) three or four of them. But this is different. In this pen, the burro and ostrich appear to be in love. Or at least really good friends. They are always within a few yards of one another. See for yourself:

A local burro and ostrich

I’ve mentioned this to a few friends, and keep getting the response “Pics or it didn’t happen.” Here you go, folks.

Our Macworld Expo Schedule

We’re making the trek to San Francisco this week for Macworld Expo; it’ll be my 26th SF Expo (yep, I’ve been to them all).

We’ll be at the show from Wednesday through Friday. Specific events:

On Thursday, I’ll be leading a BOF (Birds Of a Feather) discussion:

Building Your Home Media Center
January 27, 2011, 5:30 PM – 6:30 PM
A flurry of hardware and software solutions have hit the market to get video and audio media into your living room and onto your iOS devices. Apple TV, Plex, Boxee, and many others are competing for your attention and dollars. In this discussion, we’ll share the best ways to put together a home media center that works for you.

On Friday, Dori will be presenting one of the User Conference sessions:

Mobilizing Your Web Site
January 28, 2011, 1:00 PM – 2:15 PM
As a web designer, you used to be able to assume that everyone had at least a certain size display. But now many of your site’s visitors arrive via iPhones and iPads, and to support them you’ll have to re-do or duplicate your entire site – or do you?

No, you don’t have to create an entirely new site for mobile devices, or rework everything for the lowest common denominator, or even remove all your image rollovers.

In this session, you’ll learn what you need to know: not just to make your sites work well and look good, but also how to enhance sites to take advantage of the functionality that Apple built into Safari for the iPhone and iPad.

We’ll see you at the show!

Letter to Senator Jon Tester

I got a campaign pitch from Montana Senator Jon Tester today. No surprise, as I’d contributed money to his 2006 election, and had expected to support him in the future. But a few days ago, he voted against the DREAM Act. If you’re not familiar with that, here’s a paraphrased description from Wikipedia:

The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (the DREAM Act) is a piece of proposed federal legislation in the United States…This bill would provide certain illegal and deportable alien students who graduate from US high schools, who are of good moral character, arrived in the U.S. illegally as minors, and have been in the country continuously and illegally for at least five years prior to the bill’s enactment, the opportunity to earn conditional permanent residency if they complete two years in the military or two years at a four year institution of higher learning.

All the Republicans in the Senate voted against the DREAM Act. No surprise there; the GOP is the party that not only shelters racists, but institutionalizes their beliefs. Five Dems, including Tester, voted against the Act, effectively killing it. Here was my letter to him.

Dear Senator Tester,

You voted against the DREAM Act. You were one of only five Democrats to do so. By doing so, you ensured that tens of thousands of innocent young people’s lives will be ruined, and the US will be deprived of that human capital. That’s stupid and wasteful. I didn’t think you were either.

Excuses don’t cut it. And false excuses like “it’s amnesty!” are even worse. Of course it was amnesty, of a sort. But it was one in which the recipients, illegal immigrants here by no fault of their own, were earning a path to citizenship. You know, that’s exactly what we want in America. And you chose to kill these kids’ American Dream. That’s shameful.

On this one you were either a Democrat or you aligned yourself with the racists that are in charge of the Republican Party.

We know which side you’re on now. You chose to stand with the racists.

I am ashamed that I ever supported you financially and publicly. I will not do so again.

Sometimes, deciding to no longer support a politician you believed in is difficult. For example, it was painful to leave John Edwards behind, as I genuinely thought he had the best policy prescriptions in 2008, especially on my most important issue, healthcare reform.

But this breakup? This was an easy call.

When critics don’t think

Before seeing Tron: Legacy today, I checked out the reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, as usual. I saw that most critics hated it, but that audience reviews were strong. I kind of expected that; Tron isn’t going to be a movie that makes your average film critic sing its praises. I took special note of the set of critics that I think are tools: O’Hehir of Salon, Phillips of the Chicago Tribune, Stevens of Slate. They’re valuable to me as negative indicators. I find that if it’s a movie that I’m interested in seeing, and they hate it, I’ll often have a good time. As expected, they all trashed the film.

I usually ignore Claudia Puig of USA Today, because, well, she’s not often of any interest. But this one should be in the annals of critics foolishly Not Getting It: “For a far more thought-provoking tale about the virtual realm, try The Social Network.”

One, the movies are in completely different genres; it’s fundamentally wrong to compare them in that fashion. Two, The Social Network isn’t about the virtual realm at all. None of it is set in “Facebook world,” the way the virtual world exists in Tron. Three, this is the sort of incisive comment made by someone who thinks, “Well, they’re both sort of about computers.” And then stops thinking.

I understand being under deadlines. But that’s embarrassingly shallow writing.