Geekery & Other Subjects
27/7/02 19:13![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Does anyone know why the following things would happen? Any help would be appreciated.
a.) Why the computer would crash in the middle of burning a CD and then insist that it didn't have the CD burner drive anymore until I went into Setup (the old DOS version of last resort) and changed the drive designation from "Auto" to "CD"?
b.) Why any DVD which has over 20 "chapters" or sections on it would have a hard time running on a computer, but works fine on a regular DVD player? I didn't hear that this was a common problem until I invited my friend Becky over here to watch Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which has more than 20 chapters. It froze at chapter 20(like that time I watched it with you, IW, but earlier on in the film) and Becky then said that she'd often seen this problem with DVDs over 20 chapters being played on a computer.
The first problem was irking, but easily fix-able. The second one is downright annoying - I mean, I bought the DVD and should be able to watch all of the movie no matter how long it is or what it's playing on. Right?
I am terrified of grad school after having talked to a co-worker and fellow BMC English major who says that all the schools are either theory or teaching - which I'm not interested in - or creative writing, which I suspect frowns on writing in the SF genre - and I have my own philosophical reasons for not wanting to go to grad school to 'learn how to write', anyway. On the other hand, she reassured me that I'd picked a great major advisor and gave me tips on how to pitch your thesis so the only profs who are interested in it are the ones that you wanted to be interested in it.
I got my hair cut at a new place today and read the fourth volume of Clover at Showcase, which had a few nice surprises. I also noticed they had the first volume of Planet Ladder, done back-to-front in the Japanese format, but didn't read it.
In other news: the Bryn Mawr public library has decided that they're going to be annoying. They moved all the hardcover science fiction books into the regular fiction shelves, so now you can't browse and have to know what you're looking for first. A pity, as browsing is the way I've found many good books. The softcover SF books still have their own shelves, which I find odd to say the least.
I am currently church-shopping. Again. Oddly enough, a conversation with Randal about traditional New Zealand creation mythology and Christian theology poked me into it again. I walked by a church (the one by Acme) to see if they had hours posted up, but decided that since they didn't, Our Lady of the Immaculately Clean Stained Glass Windows could just do without my presence. I'm probably going to go back to the Methodist Church of the Tiny Desperate Congregation instead. It's better than the Presbyterian Church of People as Stony as the Outside of the Building. There's nowhere else within walking distance, which says interesting things about the demographics of the population (says the little Cities-minor section of my brain). They are either a.) almost Godless or b.) commute into Philly for church, like they do for everything else except dry-cleaning and Ferraris.
a.) Why the computer would crash in the middle of burning a CD and then insist that it didn't have the CD burner drive anymore until I went into Setup (the old DOS version of last resort) and changed the drive designation from "Auto" to "CD"?
b.) Why any DVD which has over 20 "chapters" or sections on it would have a hard time running on a computer, but works fine on a regular DVD player? I didn't hear that this was a common problem until I invited my friend Becky over here to watch Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which has more than 20 chapters. It froze at chapter 20(like that time I watched it with you, IW, but earlier on in the film) and Becky then said that she'd often seen this problem with DVDs over 20 chapters being played on a computer.
The first problem was irking, but easily fix-able. The second one is downright annoying - I mean, I bought the DVD and should be able to watch all of the movie no matter how long it is or what it's playing on. Right?
I am terrified of grad school after having talked to a co-worker and fellow BMC English major who says that all the schools are either theory or teaching - which I'm not interested in - or creative writing, which I suspect frowns on writing in the SF genre - and I have my own philosophical reasons for not wanting to go to grad school to 'learn how to write', anyway. On the other hand, she reassured me that I'd picked a great major advisor and gave me tips on how to pitch your thesis so the only profs who are interested in it are the ones that you wanted to be interested in it.
I got my hair cut at a new place today and read the fourth volume of Clover at Showcase, which had a few nice surprises. I also noticed they had the first volume of Planet Ladder, done back-to-front in the Japanese format, but didn't read it.
In other news: the Bryn Mawr public library has decided that they're going to be annoying. They moved all the hardcover science fiction books into the regular fiction shelves, so now you can't browse and have to know what you're looking for first. A pity, as browsing is the way I've found many good books. The softcover SF books still have their own shelves, which I find odd to say the least.
I am currently church-shopping. Again. Oddly enough, a conversation with Randal about traditional New Zealand creation mythology and Christian theology poked me into it again. I walked by a church (the one by Acme) to see if they had hours posted up, but decided that since they didn't, Our Lady of the Immaculately Clean Stained Glass Windows could just do without my presence. I'm probably going to go back to the Methodist Church of the Tiny Desperate Congregation instead. It's better than the Presbyterian Church of People as Stony as the Outside of the Building. There's nowhere else within walking distance, which says interesting things about the demographics of the population (says the little Cities-minor section of my brain). They are either a.) almost Godless or b.) commute into Philly for church, like they do for everything else except dry-cleaning and Ferraris.
Re: Writing
28/7/02 09:22 (UTC)Three points: I have met some "of those insufferable idiots in publishing." They are quite very nice people, most of them, and wouldn't be in publishing if they didn't like reading and finding good stuff. Most of them know their job isn't to crush the writer's soul.
Another point - if your story is filled with spelling errors, it shows you don't give a damn about your work. Would you listen to a concert if the song's lyrics had impossible-to-understand syntax, even if the music itself was great? I think not. I do think that it's good to write first and nitpick over punctuation later...but your phrasing of it could have been better handled.
Please cut out the generalizations about grad school, okay? It might not be for everyone, but some people actually do need it to get where they're going. Thank you.