prog: (jenna)
I like to hear people talk about their jobs, if they enjoy them. Here is a survey of people on my friends list whom I know mainly through an admiration for their work, and who have blogs where they often talk about what they do. (Are there others I ought to be reading?)

[livejournal.com profile] jwz runs a nightclub in San Fransisco, and frequently posts of his adventures, often including a copious amount of his photography. Occasionally posts something that draws from his cred as the maintainer of xscreensaver or the brash alpha-hacker responsible for much of Netscape Navigator, back in the day. Grumbles about macs sometimes (he is maybe the most famous Mac user known to the Slashdot crowd, besides Jobs and Woz I guess). Most of his posts, though, are either fascinating links or crazy photos and movies. His tastes in non sequitur are quite similar to mine, I suppose.

[livejournal.com profile] grrm is still writing the Song of Ice and Fire series, that thing I repeatedly declare that I hate forever and then continue plowing through. Posts infrequently, but often enough to assure us that he's still there. Likes SF cons and football.

[livejournal.com profile] tmcm is a cartoonist most famous for Too Much Coffee Man and whose cartoons haven't really been all that good in a long time. But I love his posts and photographs about his life otherwise, including his recent adventures in producing an opera based on his famous character. He posts all of his finished cartoons, as well as many preliminary sketches and doodles. Sometimes he gets the blog involved: in a recent post he grumbled about not being satisfied with a particular punchline, and ended up replacing it with one that a fan suggested in comments.

[livejournal.com profile] urbaniak is an actor living in New York City. He's most recognized for his roles in the film Henry Fool, which I have not seen, and Venture Brothers, which I adore (he provides the voice for Dr. Venture). About half of his posts are bizarre, slow-paced flamewars with (so far) two particular LJ users who might not even be real people. These are not very interesting. Much of the rest is stories of being an actor in New York, and are great. His fans enjoy making animated gifs of his babies beating each other up.

[livejournal.com profile] officialgaiman is Neil Gaiman. Much of the content is public responses to fan mail, which gives it a very different feel than the other journals listed here. Most of the comments are the ladies swooning every time he posts a picture of himself, which is often.

(Was going to add [livejournal.com profile] zarf for the yuks "gee he's been quiet lately" but he doesn't actually use his website as anything remotely like a blog, so.)
prog: (Default)
Dashed-off hypothesis based on my previous poll: Dots and Boxes (under any name) never gained much traction as a traditional children's passtime in the northeast. I believe (based on what I know of y'all) that most respondents who said that they had played it grew up in other parts of the country, and most of those who had never heard of it before (Y.T. inlcuded) grew up around New England.

This is not why I asked about it; it's just an unexpected and somewhat interesting observation based on the response. I asked because I just wanted to gauge how obscure the game was. Obscurity (from the mainstream's perspective) is a prerequisite for a game's being featured on The Gameshelf, and the possibility of an interesting special-guest opportunity made me wonder about the suitability of this game. I suppose I could always bend the rules a bit, especially for a game that appears to be at least regionally unknown.



For all my activity, I have been rather bummed lately. Not depressed, or even sad; more like the height of my baseline mood has dropped a few notches very recently. For all the blogging I do, you think I'd have gotten around to the personal introspection necessary to attend to this, but no. I think I've gotten too needy about having an audience for everything I write. Peh...



Hey [livejournal.com profile] xach spawned, hurrah. As always I applaud the efforts of my smart friends to reproduce. Even though I generally find babies to be the igriest creatures on earth, I can't help but feel a twinge of existential nervousness at the child-free paths that I and lots of my nerdzoid friends walk (including the paired-off ones). Seeing counterexamples is a relief. I am not kidding.

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