Of Gods, Games, Linux and more
Feb. 12th, 2012 04:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This is a particularly long post, given my astounding neglect of livejournaldreamwidth for the past fortnight. I am feeling rather harsh on myself with a lack of sufficient 'blogging (with the dozen or so that I contribute to). Particular recent events included attending the Melbourne book launch of Life Without Money, from Frans and Anitra, a proposition which I think is a economically unsound with the book unavailable as downloadable PDF under a Creative Commons license (for example). The Unitarian Philosophy Forum met last Sunday with an excellent attendence to hear Roger Boyce provide an introduction to Buddhism and the question on whether it is a religion or philosophy. Finally, big social event of the fortnight was
recumbenteer's fortieth birthday party, an excellent evening with fine food, wine, conversation a good jazz-funk fusion band (a rare form of jazz - actually tolerable) and with Jasper visiting from Perth.
Went to an small fundraising dinner run by the Progressive Atheists association, specifically for the One Law for All group. There is a very real concern that religious law is been introduced to secular countries under the guise of multicultural policy - and many members of the nominal left are utterly failing on this level, falling into relativism rather than universalism. Being sensitive to cultural contexts does not mean being entrapped by them; universal rights transcend any cultural particulars. Today's presentation at the Unitarians, by Ralph Catts, member of the Glasgow congregation, also touched upon the issue. On a related issue next Saturday the Victorian Secular Lobby is holding a meeting on "Religious Education in Public Schools: What Can We Do?"; RSVP here or via the Victorian Secular Lobby's Facebook page. The speakers for this event include Mike Stuchbery and Stephen Stuart of the Victorian Humanist Society. The Humanists have tried to introduce a secular values class for replacement for compulsory religious instruction in public schools. I also had the good fortune to hear Mr. Stuart speak last Sunday at the Unitarian Church as he gave a report on last year's World Humanist Congress in Oslo.
Much of the past fortnight has been spent putting the final touches on RPG Review 13 and 14, a 128 page special double issue on D20 games and Planescape. A very late interview from Crafty Games came in, requiring a fair bit of reformatting, plus I needed to finish a 20 page article which tries to convert the stats given in Horror on the Orient Express and the Masks of Nyarlathotep, two of the greatest Call fo Cthulhu adventures, to D20 Call of Cthulhu. The experience, a damn difficult one, illustrated to me that the two systems are not as obviously convertible as one may think. The next issue of RPG review will be dedicated to independent games, the punk fanzines of the gaming community, with an interview with Liz Danforth. An interesting temporal and structural correlation will be be between independent systems and narrativism. For the last fortnight, games I've played or run include Agon, which worked very well, Pathfinder Planescape and Pendragon. Looking forward to GURPS Korea today and Best Friends next Thursday.
Last Tuesday was the first meeting of the year for Linux Users of Victoria; Andrew Chalmers gave a well-received presentation on micro-kernels and the GNU Hurd project in particular. In lieu of a second speaker there was edited compilation of the keynote speakers from Linux Conference Australia; the full collection of video presentations are readily available (with yours truly acting as MC in a number of speeches). A couple of recent public pieces of work from yours truly include brief remarks on how to add content the body of Drupal nodes and more importantly (and one I neglected previously in a previous post), a response from an otherwise good site, clients from hell for en masse conversion of documents to PDF. Looking forward to Multicore World in New Zealand next month, where I'll be taking up MC duties again.
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Went to an small fundraising dinner run by the Progressive Atheists association, specifically for the One Law for All group. There is a very real concern that religious law is been introduced to secular countries under the guise of multicultural policy - and many members of the nominal left are utterly failing on this level, falling into relativism rather than universalism. Being sensitive to cultural contexts does not mean being entrapped by them; universal rights transcend any cultural particulars. Today's presentation at the Unitarians, by Ralph Catts, member of the Glasgow congregation, also touched upon the issue. On a related issue next Saturday the Victorian Secular Lobby is holding a meeting on "Religious Education in Public Schools: What Can We Do?"; RSVP here or via the Victorian Secular Lobby's Facebook page. The speakers for this event include Mike Stuchbery and Stephen Stuart of the Victorian Humanist Society. The Humanists have tried to introduce a secular values class for replacement for compulsory religious instruction in public schools. I also had the good fortune to hear Mr. Stuart speak last Sunday at the Unitarian Church as he gave a report on last year's World Humanist Congress in Oslo.
Much of the past fortnight has been spent putting the final touches on RPG Review 13 and 14, a 128 page special double issue on D20 games and Planescape. A very late interview from Crafty Games came in, requiring a fair bit of reformatting, plus I needed to finish a 20 page article which tries to convert the stats given in Horror on the Orient Express and the Masks of Nyarlathotep, two of the greatest Call fo Cthulhu adventures, to D20 Call of Cthulhu. The experience, a damn difficult one, illustrated to me that the two systems are not as obviously convertible as one may think. The next issue of RPG review will be dedicated to independent games, the punk fanzines of the gaming community, with an interview with Liz Danforth. An interesting temporal and structural correlation will be be between independent systems and narrativism. For the last fortnight, games I've played or run include Agon, which worked very well, Pathfinder Planescape and Pendragon. Looking forward to GURPS Korea today and Best Friends next Thursday.
Last Tuesday was the first meeting of the year for Linux Users of Victoria; Andrew Chalmers gave a well-received presentation on micro-kernels and the GNU Hurd project in particular. In lieu of a second speaker there was edited compilation of the keynote speakers from Linux Conference Australia; the full collection of video presentations are readily available (with yours truly acting as MC in a number of speeches). A couple of recent public pieces of work from yours truly include brief remarks on how to add content the body of Drupal nodes and more importantly (and one I neglected previously in a previous post), a response from an otherwise good site, clients from hell for en masse conversion of documents to PDF. Looking forward to Multicore World in New Zealand next month, where I'll be taking up MC duties again.
no subject
Date: 2012-02-12 07:00 am (UTC)How square can you get !
Louis Armstrong's Hot Five , Duke Ellington , Charlie Parker , John Coltrane , etc .
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Date: 2012-02-12 10:06 am (UTC)Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane... yeah, I've listened to them, but it's not for me.
I've been called many things but 'square' is probably not very appropriate.
The short list is:
I like baroque and gallant, gospel, chanson réaliste, psychedelia, afro-beat, progressive, punk, funk, minimalism, goth, acid house, industrial, trip-hop, electronica.
I don't like blues, nearly all forms of jazz, soul, ska, brass, folk, disco, adult contemporary, country, western, pub rock, and rap.
no subject
Date: 2012-02-12 10:50 am (UTC)I also like Bach , Händel , Mozart , Stravinsky , Indian Ragas and Chinese and Thai classical music .
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Date: 2012-02-13 12:26 am (UTC)And yes, taste does vary a great deal. Such is the subjective...