Perchance to dream.
Grok Headline matches for Perchance to dream.
To write: perchance to try again: ay,
there's the rub or Do I Write Another
Book?
To write: perchance to try again: ay,
there's the rub or Do I Write Another
Book?
01/15/2003 08:47 AMTo write: perchance to try again: ay, there's the rub1 or Do I Write
Another (PHP2) Book?
Anyone who was IMing me in the May / June / July time frame may be
surprised to see this entry. Things change and time makes pain and
bad memories drift away. I am speaking, of course, about the O'Reilly
Essential Blogging writing process which was just plain awful and made
me swear that I would N_E_V_E_R write another book for money. And
here I am.
I've been approached by Sams to write a PHP 5 in 21 Days book and I'm
torn. I just don't know whether I want to walk this road again.
Here's the situation as I see it:
Pros
I am the PHP Journal columnist for "On the Horizon" which talks about
new PHP 4.x and 5.x features so it makes sense to write this
I'm virtually certain that I'd enjoy working with this editor more
than my last. Shelley strikes me as just plain cool (she handled
giving out books to a pack of ravenous open source folk at PHP CON
with a lot of style and grace).
Good self promotion
Would probably generate consulting work although that is by no means
clear
Establishes my credentials more firmly and anchors me to PHP even more
Chance to talk about things like templating and event driven coding
$$$ (although there is never all that much of it)
Having an editor
Cons
Having an editor
Have to create a __good__ website for the book
How will they bungle the online side of it in a new and creative way?
Lose the source code? Post it wrong?
Managing the book writing and blogging and consulting process
concurrently
Will I actually make money
Does promoting parts of it on my blog make me a schill
Questions
If anyone out there can help with these questions, I'd appreciate it:
Anyone out there buy Sams books? I haven't in years and I don't know
the rep these books have. Thoughts? Example of Similar Sams Book
Has anyone written for Sams?
Do they pay well
What are they like as a publisher?
Positive, Negative, Details?
Was it a good or bad omen when I dropped my review copy of "Cold
Fusion in 21 days" in the sink when shaving this morning?
Would you buy it?
Do people buy PHP books as opposed to using PHP.Net? I myself have a
bunch of PHP books but don't turn to them all that often.
There is something just plain addictive about walking into a bookstore
and seeing yourself on the shelf. That and once you've written one
book then there is just something about it. As Robert Heinlein once
remarked (and the quote is inexact) "No one likes writing but people
like having written". He was definitely correct about that.
Thoughts, feedback, comments strongly appreciated.
1To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub; Hamlet, Act 3,
Scene 1. [_Go_] (sorry for the bad link but their search engine
doesn't give easily linkable results)
2Oh and if you're wondering why I put PHP on the title, with PHP being
the target audience I figured it would get this more attention (and
syndication to other sites) from the target audience
My dream
My dream
01/28/2004 11:22 AM Last night I had a dream that I was trying to explain to John Kerry
that the Internet is like free speech: Its value comes from its
openness to possibility, and that the government should regulate it as
little as possible. Yes, I actually had this dream....
Is this all just a dream?
Is this all just a dream?
09/03/2004 06:17 AM
Did a Boeing
747 really hit the Pentagon? Warning: [flash movie, sound]
Dream a little dream
Dream a little dream
01/28/2004 02:20 AMUSA Today Jan 28 2004 6:51AM GMT
The dream is over
The dream is over
04/20/2004 01:43 AMMy quest for data comes to an end as the local 7-11 is no longer
giving out iTunes cups and I can't seem to find any iTunes Pepsi
bottles anymore. If you've
been following my progress, the final tally was 5 for 7. Only two
losers in seven outings, putting my winning percentage at 71%. Given
that they claimed 33% would win, I'm either really lucky (doubtful),
they wanted almost everyone to win, or demand wasn't nearly as high as
they thought.
I had a dream...
I had a dream...
12/02/2002 01:17 PMLast night I had the strangest dream I ever dreamed before. Well, not
exactly. But I dreamt that Yahoo bought Google. That's funny for a lot
of reasons. But it was pretty cool in the dream. I'm still on West...
Dream job
Dream job
04/04/2005 12:36 AMThis news hasn't exactly been a secret up until now, but it hasn't
been official either. Starting tomorrow, I'll be hanging up the
Creative Commons jersey to start work full-time at Google, as a
product advisor and eventually product counsel. Before I go, I have
plenty to say about, and many people to thank for, the amazing
experience Creative Commons has been.
Just over three years ago, I started work at Creative Commons with
little idea of what I was getting into. It involved copyright, I knew,
and it involved Lawrence Lessig, and that alone was enough to ditch my
plans to practice law in New York. (Ok, practicing law wasn't too
tough to pass up, but New York was.) It became clear shortly into the
job that the decision was even better than I'd ever imagined. It was
as if everything I'd done, in school, at work, and through my hobbies,
had culminated in this position working for an embryonic nonprofit
called Creative Commons.
Here are three little anecdotes that give a glimpse into how
winding up at Creative Commons was, for me, like making a brand-new
friend whom I felt I'd known forever.
In college, I played in a band. We weren't particularly good, but
we had a great time, and over two years I learned the single most
important lesson about creativity that I've learned to date: Next to
romance (with which creativity shares a few features), making
something with friends, with everyone contributing different but equal
parts, has got to be the most fun thing in the world. It's also, I
realized, the only way things really get made. I don't care if you're
Bob Dylan -- nothing comes out of your own head and into life without
the influence of others, whether living or dead. (Every time you pick
up a guitar, you're collaborating with the dead.) I started looking
more closely at CD liner notes, at writers' biographies, at the
acknowledgements sections of books, looking for clues into the
real story behind the creation of anything credited to only
one person. I didn't find much, and I didn't understand why.
In law school, I wrote an article about the musical Rent
-- not my favorite piece of art, by a long shot, but one with a great
joint-authorship dispute at its center. The playwright worked closely
with a dramaturge to get the show into Broadway shape, and pretty much
everyone agreed that without the dramaturge's contributions, the final
show would never have existed. Problem was, they had no contract, and
no other paperwork demonstrating an intent to share authorship credit.
So, a federal court gave the full copyright to the playwright. In the
article I argued that it was nonsense to expect artists to begin a jam
session by filling out paperwork. (If you've seen "Get Creative," our
first flash movie, the line "we interrupt this brainstorm to call the
lawyers" comes straight from that experience.) But, as sure I was that
the rules were wrong, I had no idea what to recommend in their
place.
By the time I finished school, and thanks to a lot of people at the
Berkman Center, I was fully infected with the IP bug. I was genuinely
obsessed with the riddle that we're all still trying to figure out:
How will all this stuff work in the future? How can we keep up this
technological progress without giving artists the shaft? I still
didn't have an answer. I remember very well doing my first stab at
public speaking on a panel at a conference in New York. Siva
Vaidhyanathan also spoke, as did the Dead Kennedy's Jello Biafra.
Biafra was railing against the music industry and professing his love
for Napster (which was then at its peak), but also explaining how he
didn't want his songs winding up in Coca-Cola commercials. I remember
saying something like, "Hey, Jello, you can't have it both ways."
That statement ranks right up there with the time in 1995, when I
told a scholarship interview committee that the Internet "was
overrated," as the dumbest thing I've ever said.
It wasn't until I finally wrapped my brain around the idea behind
Creative Commons, cooked up collaboratively by our board of directors,
that I felt someone had begun to crack the riddle. That epiphany was
the first of many in my three years here; over and over again I found
myself the lucky steward of other people's amazing ideas. From our
logo (thank you, Ryan Junell) to our icons (thanks, Molly) to the
vision of iCommons (Lessig, Christiane, Roland) to the Tech Challenges
page (Hal Abelson) to the sampling licenses (Negativland!) to the
WIRED CD (Conde Nast and the whole editorial staff) to CC Mixter
(Neeru) to CC Publisher (Nathan Yergler) to CC Search (Mike, Nutch,
Yahoo!) to our site re-design (Matt, Adaptive Path) -- the list could
go on and on -- I've had the chance to stand at the hub of a giant
collaborative creation without really doing much of the creating. It's
been a bit like being in a band, but I feel more like the guy behind
the soundboard than one of the musicians. And I feel awfully fortunate
to have been there to witness it all.
I'm sure that, in some form or other, I'll carry on with the CC
effort. But in any case, I like to think that like Menudo or Spinal Tap,
we're the kind of band that stays together regardless of the
particular line-up at a given time.
(This is the first of a few posts I'd like to write before
offically signing off. I'm a lame-duck with a few hours of
bully-pulpit left, so bear with me.)
Geek Wet Dream
Geek Wet Dream
01/03/2004 12:15 AMMy New power adapter. On the back row are my speakers, phone
charger, printer and lava lamp. The front row has a...
Maitreya's Dream 3.2
Maitreya's Dream 3.2
12/26/2004 05:09 AMSoftware for Western and Vedic astrology (Jyotish).
Dream groaners
Dream groaners
06/02/2004 08:44 AMI woke up this morning from a vivid dream. Someone had been talking
about a philosopher who liked to fast before he thought. Not for me, I
replied, or else, Rene a la Carte would have written "I think,
therefore I yam." Look, it was just a dream, ok? At least I didn't
have Jean Paul Sartre writing Being and Muffinness. Nor did Sartre say
"Hell is other Peeps." Nor did Kant issue his Categorical Aperitif. So
just leave me alone....
Acting Out A Dream
Acting Out A Dream
05/25/2004 12:50 AMA few years ago, students used simple video recorders to make their
movies. Now they have access to more sophisticated technology
including green screens, sound recording music and various computer
programs -- including Final Cut Pro, iMovie, Final Cut Express and
iLife. By Erin Snelgrove, The News-Review (via MyAppleMenu)
Not Really Satisifed? You Can Still
Dream, Can You?
Not Really Satisifed? You Can Still
Dream, Can You?
09/02/2004 07:21 PMPeter
Rojas, in Engadget: Here's our pet theory/secret dream: Apple
didn't include features such as TV tuner because they don't want the
iMac to cannibalize sales of an even nicer media center Mac they have
int he works.
"A Pedophile's Dream"
"A Pedophile's Dream"
02/01/2005 09:08 PMKids'
blogs a 'paedophile's dream': I don't think I'd ever let my kid
have a blog. We've schooled him repeatedly on never giving anyone his
real name on EverQuest.
I think he calls himself Frank on that game.
A forensic psychologist has warned that children's blogs pose new
threat to children online. She said blogs are "a paedophile's dream",
because of the insight they give into a child's life, habits and
movements.
[...] She said: "This [blogging culture] is just a paedophile's
dream because you have children uploading pictures, giving out details
of their everyday life because it's an online journal," BBC Online
reports.
Dream Bloat
Dream Bloat
12/26/2004 06:38 PM
Everything's bigger in Toulouse. The
world's biggest plane has started rolling off
assembly lines and is expected to take its first flight in March 2005.
The quarter-billion-dollar, twin-deck, four-aisle plane can carry 555
passengers. Thanks to its design's outsized wings, future versions of
the
economical plane may carry as many as 800
passengers.
With the A380,
Airbus hopes to do to Boeing what Boeing did to
its competitors over 30 years ago with the 747. Already, Airbus
Industrie has
outsold and out-delivered Boeing for the
last two years. But don't boycott just yet! It turns out the A380 is
51% American-made. Parts are so big they don't fit
in this
whale-like record-size
transporter (though this
Russian monster may have a
claim); they are transported to Toulouse on a
barge.
More pics. Let's hope this latest
high-tech aerospace gamble does better than
the last
one.
Europe, of course (troll alert), already makes the world's
biggest truck, the
fastest trains, the
best
cars (sorry Japan), and the
most successful rocket launchers.
On a darker topic,
10 years ago, French commandos
boarded an Airbus and killed Islamic terrorists planning to fly it
into the Eiffel Tower.
"zamppas dream"
"zamppas dream"
02/19/2004 06:44 AMI dream of Gmail
I dream of Gmail
04/12/2004 11:20 AMNOTE TO SERGEY BRIN: stop dressing yourself in drag, fire one of your
PhDs, and use the money to buy yourself a cluestick. Then beat your
developers with it until they start taking accessibility seriously.
(703 words)
Keep the dream alive
Keep the dream alive
06/14/2004 09:03 PM
Movies for Music From the
press
release:
"Movies for Music" (moviesformusic.org) is
an online film contest with a simple aim: to give the public a clear
and honest look at the music industry. As more people learn how the
music business works, major label CD sales will plummet faster. The
contest launches Monday.
The
short film
contest launched today, and first place is a
ZVue handheld video
player.
IndyJunior dream
IndyJunior dream
04/21/2004 03:47 PMI user a neat little application called Indy Junior to map my travels. But apparently something's
gone wrong with the XML file I output with Movable Type, because IJ
still thinks I'm in the Caribbean, where I haven't been since early
March. If only I were still on the beach. Thanks for the nice dream,
Indy!
My Dream Home
My Dream Home
06/24/2005 07:51 PMLike general contractors with a psych degree, the architectural firm
called fathom plumbs the depths of your soul to design the house you
want. Our writer gets the blueprints of his dreams.
Dream Mergers
Dream Mergers
03/28/2005 11:15 PMIn this time of wacky M&A, I thought I would start a list of dream
mergers. Please add yours, even if they don't entirely make
sense....
Dream DRM Receiver
Dream DRM Receiver
12/17/2003 02:32 PMDream 1.0 released
You need a license to say "I have a
dream"
You need a license to say "I have a
dream"
12/17/2003 02:40 AMMartin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech is still in copyright (as
is almost everything else familiar in our lives), and Dr King's heirs
strictly enforce the copyright. Wendy Seltzer points out what this
means for free expression and political commentary.
You can always quote a few lines without asking permission, but that's
likely to be the same few lines that have become cliched with
repetition. Quote the whole speech to make a more substantial point,
and you face thousand-dollar license fee claims from the estate. Quote
them to make a point critical of King, and you may be denied a license
entirely.
LinkDream while being Awake
Dream while being Awake
12/08/2002 03:58 PMOblivio points out
a very interesting fact:
All mammals but platypuses dream.
Also: Dolphins have split brains so that when one brain is
dreaming, the other is awake. Otherwise they'd drown.
Poor platypi, lucky dolphins.
To dream of the Turkish Guy
To dream of the Turkish Guy
02/12/2004 10:02 AMAudible Revolution, in The Guardian today, talking about Chris Lydon,
Grant Henninger and Audible. Delayed for ages due to some unforeseen
actual breaking news. Meanwhile, Lydon is now at Minnesota Public
Radio, home of Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion. Keillor,...
Distant dream?
Distant dream?
07/02/2004 03:04 AMCNET Asia Jul 2 2004 6:55AM GMT
Dream deferred
Dream deferred
06/23/2004 05:31 PMUSA Today Jun 23 2004 9:50PM GMT
A LCD Screen to dream for
A LCD Screen to dream for
06/29/2004 01:00 AMThis is one time in my life when I wished I had a rich family
member who I could beg for some pocket change. Engadget has a review
of a soon to be release 1 billion LCD by NEC. All I can say is wow and
as the reviewer at Engadget is predicting the price will probably be
on the extreme high side. But it's always nice to dream. For those of
you who are design artist and photographers you need to check this bad
boy out. [Engadget]
American Dream?
American Dream?
11/10/2003 11:15 PM''I lived the American dream,'' says Baglio, 70, whose last workday
was Oct. 30. ''I would have never thought I'd last 45 years here.''
That's Louis Baglio speaking, as reported in an article by Johnny Diaz
in the Boston Globe on Sunday. This guy cut hair for 45 years in
downtown Boston and he thinks he lived the American dream! What a
moron! First, not only did he stay at the same job for his entire
career, he only changed his place of employment twice. Even school
kids know that if you want to ratchet your salary, you move from...
An Amateur's Dream
An Amateur's Dream
06/19/2004 01:25 PMDaniel J. Watkin (NY Times): His Moment in the Sun. It was the ultimate in surround-sound,
and not surprisingly, because I was sitting smack in the middle of the
stage at Avery Fisher Hall, an amateur clarinetist embedded in the
clarinet section of the New York Philharmonic.
Some
people wish they could play center field for the San Francisco Giants.
Watkin got his dream, to play with one of the world's
great
orchestras. What a cool story.
Reading his account brought back some memories for me. My first "real"
instrument was clarinet, which I started playing in third grade. I had
to stop playing it (and the sax, which I took up in fifth grade) many
years later when a ruined front tooth, from a bicycle accident, was
replaced with a kind of dental bridge that didn't allow the kind of
pressure you have to exert when playing a reed instrument. But I've
always loved the clarinet's sound, whether it's in classical or jazz
or just about any genre where the instrument makes an appearance.
I never was nearly good enough on clarinet to have dreamed of playing
in a serious orchestra. But in seventh grade, before my voice started
to change, I was selected to join a soprano boys choir that performed
in one of Bach's many masterpieces, the
St. Matthew
Passion, in New York's
Carnegie Hall. I confess I was
a bit bored when we weren't singing, but it was an amazing experience
to stand on that grand stage.
Maitreyas Dream
Maitreyas Dream
07/25/2004 12:39 PMRelease 3.1
dream machine
dream machine
08/04/2004 08:19 PM
dream machine
The
dream
machine is a creation of
Bri
on Gysin, a Canadian-English expatriate colleague of
William S. Burroughs and
Paul Bowles. Timothy Leary
called this device "the most sophisticated neuro-phenomenological
device ever designed." A
dream machine is being
exhibited this week in San Francisco. If you can't make it there, you
can perhaps
build
your own.
The Dream Comes True
The Dream Comes True
11/19/2003 08:05 AM Back in 1995, I was VP of Strategic Marketing at Open Text, which at
the time was 25-person SGML indexing company. The company had
initially built itself on a single lead project in the late '80s:
Indexing the Oxford English Dictionary. Doing a full-text index of
such a massive work was considered impossible. Who could dream of
indexing tens of thousands of pages, hundreds of thousands of words?
But under the technical direction of Tim Bray, breakthroughs were made
and full-text retrieval took an important step forward. Fifteen years
later, Tim Bray and Open Text have moved onto other...
Welcome to a narrowcaster's dream
Welcome to a narrowcaster's dream
11/20/2003 12:40 AM But I've never
heard of any of these artists... Say hello to iRATE radio. The
premise is simple: mp3's collected from various free sites are
collected and indexed on a common server. You, through your spiffy
iRATE client, are fed mp3's, which you then rate. Over time, your
musical tastes are matched against others, and you are then fed mp3's
which you will like, ostensibly. [...via Bifurnicated Reinvents]
i dream of a man whose hopes never end
i dream of a man whose hopes never end
12/05/2003 09:05 PMCouple of nifty news items that I think are pretty cool -- I get
mentioned in an Los Angeles Times story about blogging, and Reuters
picks up a Hollywood Reporter story about my O'Reilly deal. Even
better, both of the stories aren't framed negatively!
I Dream of Paris (Hilton)
I Dream of Paris (Hilton)
08/27/2004 03:59 PMThe nocturnal mind offers insight into a Fool's investing beliefs.
Microsoft researchers dream big
Microsoft researchers dream big
06/09/2004 06:56 PMFrom "band-aids" for fresh security holes to software that will read
your news for you, Bill Gates' think tank is on it.
My bric a brac dream
My bric a brac dream
06/29/2004 03:16 PMI dreamt last night that I realized that "bric a brac" spelled
backwards is "CARB A CRIB" (ok, so my dreams don't go into reverse
very smoothly) and then spent what felt like an hour of dream time
trying to come up with situations where one could sensibly utter such
a statement....
the inflation of the american dream
the inflation of the american dream
04/29/2004 04:31 PMlies, damned lies, and made-up statistics
Living the bug-free dream
Living the bug-free dream
05/03/2004 03:08 PMAn interesting post about Wh
ere Bugs Come From -- the computer kind, not the creepy crawly
kind (we know where those come from).
...[A] classic tale of slippery assimilation, trying
to find that ridiculous cut-off point where a program went from being
short enough to be bug-free, to long enough to be inevitably
buggy...This, of course, is the promise of structured programming, of
functions, of objects. If we can write 137 lines of code without a
bug, then we can structure our programming style so that we’re always
writing units of fewer than 137 lines. We can build those units into
components, and voila! No more bugs.
If only it were so simple! Having used various approaches to
programming -- from the by-the-seat-of-the-pants methodology to
hard-core unit testing for each and every class that's written -- I
can say that there's no magic bullet, no magic number of lines, no
magic anything. It's just freakin' work, and lots and lots of testing,
to get your software to the point that it does what it's supposed to,
and when it doesn't, to gracefully alert the user that something's
gone amiss.
Grok Description matches for Perchance to dream.
GrokA matches for Perchance to dream.
CamelBones
CamelBones
04/01/2005 07:03 AMCamelBones 1.0.0-beta1 Released
CamelBones 0.2.3
CamelBones 0.2.3
04/26/2004 11:42 AMA Cocoa/Perl bridge for Mac OS X.
CamelBones - What’s New in
1.0.0-beta1
CamelBones - What’s New in
1.0.0-beta1
04/04/2005 01:47 PMCamelBones
1.0.0b1: “This new approach is a huge improvement over the
old proxy-based bridge, and makes a number of things possible with
this new version that could not be done previously: Support for Cocoa
Bindings, NSDocument-based applications, Custom NSView
subclasses.”
Interviews With Martin Fowler
Interviews With Martin Fowler
12/31/2002 01:58 AMIn this six-part interview, which is being published in weekly
installments,
Fowler gives his views on many topics, including refactoring, design,
testing,
and extreme programming.
In Part I, Fowler makes
the business case for refactoring and testing, and describes the
interplay
between refactoring, design, and reliability. In Part
II, Fowler discusses design principles of avoiding duplication,
separating
presentation and domain logic, being explicit, and describes how
refactoring
depends on code ownership. In Part III,
Fowler
differentiates between planned and evolutionary design, suggests that
focusing
on superficial problems can lead to the discovery of substantial
problems, and
claims that doing a good job won't slow you down.
In Part IV,
Fowler discusses design decay, flexibility and reusability versus
complexity,
four criteria for a simple system, and interface design. In Part V,
Fowler describes the unhurried quality of test-first design, defines
monological
thinking, and distinguishes between unit and functional testing.
In this final
installment, Fowler describes how to balance maintainability and
efficiency and create tunable software, and discusses the role of
patterns
and the Agile Software Manifesto.
"zeldman.fcelyfce"
Sun's Fowler: Rising Sales
Sun's Fowler: Rising Sales
09/15/2004 01:31 PMComputer Reseller News Sep 15 2004 4:51PM GMT
"Martin Fowler posted about this today "
"Martin Fowler posted about this today "
05/26/2004 04:41 AM"Donnie Fowler Endorses Governor Dean"
"Donnie Fowler Endorses Governor Dean"
02/07/2005 02:03 AMMartin Fowler: Can average developers
use agile methods?
Martin Fowler: Can average developers
use agile methods?
05/02/2004 03:30 PMI've often heard the claim that agile methods can only be used by
the better developers and that average or below average developers
should avoid agile methods. When I get asked this, I have to answer
that I don't know the answer - and that this ignorance is natural with
any new technique.
Two points.
First Martin points out that
the bazaar (open source methodologies) is an agile method.
Secondly, although PHP in itself is not an agile metholodogy (err, its
a language), it has a pragmatic flavour that makes it suitable for
people of all levels.
Two opinions.
I believe the wide growth of open source and even more explosive
popularity of PHP is proof that agile
methods work with people without expensive computer science
degrees.
However if Martin is trying to say that you cannot create great
projects with only mediocre contributors, than i agree. Good
leadership is always important. Ask Linus.

On your mark
On your mark
07/31/2004 02:05 AMUSA Today Jul 31 2004 6:04AM GMT
Mark VII
Mark VII
06/16/2004 08:47 AM
Commodore 64
Hip-Hop that you might enjoy, depending on your tolerance for
lowfi obsoleet funk freakin.
Question Mark #121
Question Mark #121
05/06/2004 02:26 PMHow about a 12-inch Bespin Leia and a 12-inch Lobot, has Hasbro ever
considered making these figures available? Is there any chance that we
might see a V-19 Clonefighter toy from the animated series? Why do you
think Hasbro is afraid of releasing solid cases of Stormtroopers? Find
out the answers to all these questions and more in the latest edition
of Question Mark!
CompreXX mark 3
CompreXX mark 3
01/05/2004 09:17 PMArchives behave like folders in Explorer. Browse, copy files from, and
add files to archives just like any regular folder. The plug-in based
product ships with 7 plug-ins that have full support for 28 and
extract support for 47 archive types. The product also contains 4
stand-alone archive applications - command line, wizards, WinZip
style, and a professional archive studio. Email attachments you send
with Outlook are automatically compressed. [Shareware $29.95 30 Days
4.12 MB]
Question Mark #132
Question Mark #132
09/07/2004 04:23 PMIs there a web site I can go to so that I can value my Action Fleet
collection? Which, if any, of the figure-and-cup-set figures are new
and which are re-packs? Is there any word on re-releasing the Count
Dooku, Mace Windu, and Darth Vader with and without helmet Unleashed
figures in the new artwork packaging? Find out the answers to all
these questions and more in the latest edition of Question Mark!
"Mark Steyn"
"Mark Steyn"
07/12/2004 09:04 AM"On Your Mark, Get Set, Unwire!"
"On Your Mark, Get Set, Unwire!"
12/27/2003 09:04 AMUK downloads hit 500,000 mark
UK downloads hit 500,000 mark
06/02/2004 12:07 PMBBC Jun 2 2004 3:54PM GMT
On Your Mark, Get Set, Unwire!
On Your Mark, Get Set, Unwire!
12/25/2003 05:37 AMMatt Adams, founder of a company that creates mobile multiplayer games
fusing wireless virtual space with real space, talks about his current
and future projects. Xeni Jardin reports from Madrid, Spain.
Question Mark #112
Question Mark #112
12/23/2003 02:12 PMSince Sly Morre seems to be a possibility for figurization next year,
it has me wondering if perhaps she's loaned her likeness to the Clone
Wars' own Asajj Ventress? The springboard on my Deluxe Force Powers
Yoda with Super Battle Droid doesn't pop open as suggested, am I doing
something wrong, or is my purchase defective? What odds do we have,
however slim they may be, that when Lucasfilm says we're getting the
"original trilogy on DVD" do you think it's at all possible they mean
the true originals not the special editions? Find out the answers to
all these questions and more in the latest edition of Question Mark!
Question Mark #111
Question Mark #111
12/16/2003 06:29 PMI just found the super articulated Clone Trooper; fourteen points of
articulation and no place to connect to a stand, what's up with that?
If Red Leader's X Wing were to be made, would you have any information
on what it would look like in terms of details? Do you know which
online retailers are selling the second set of Cantina figures? Find
out the answers to all these questions and more in the latest edition
of Question Mark!
Martha on the Mark
Martha on the Mark
09/23/2004 08:56 AMMartha Stewart hooks up with reality television guru Mark Burnett to
reinvent Martha.
Mark your calendars...
Mark your calendars...
12/25/2004 05:30 PMApril 13, 2029 is the date that asteroid 2004 MN4 — a
quarter-mile wide chunk of rock — may hit the earth. (Of course,
it's already got a Wikipedia entry!) If you're wondering if that is a
Friday, I checked already; it is.
The risk rating for asteroid 2004 MN4 was raised Friday by NASA and
a separate group of researchers in Italy. The asteroid's chance for
hitting Earth on April 13, 2029 has now been categorized as a 4 on the
Torino Scale. The level 4 rating -- never before issued -- is
reserved for "events meriting concern" versus the vast majority of
potentially threatening asteroids that merely merit "careful
monitoring."
The Christmas Eve announcement was unusual in that the the Torino
Scale rating went up, from 2 to 4. Most asteroids tend to drop on the
scale following further examination.
I wonder if Bruce Willis has been put on alert yet.
From a Space.com story.
Question Mark #150
Question Mark #150
04/01/2005 04:43 PMCan I assume from the AT-TE gunner figure that Hasbro is planning to
issue an AT-TE toy? Has anyone heard anything about a 12 inch Revenge
of the Sith Obi-wan? I found the first wave of ROTS figures at my area
Wal-Mart last week and actually got as far as the register, but they
would not scan; how are others getting around this if they are not yet
in the system? Find out the answers to all these questions and more in
the latest edition of Question Mark!
Question Mark #149
Question Mark #149
03/30/2005 03:28 AMDo you know if there are any plans for any new Animated Clone Wars
Figures in view of the new episodes? Did they ever release Art
Portfolio’s for AOTC, and do you know if they plan on it for ROTS? Why
does the Saesee Tiin figure from Revenge of the Sith have both horns
when he had a broken horn during the Clone Wars? Find out the answers
to all these questions and more in the latest edition of Question
Mark!
Question Mark #148
Question Mark #148
03/28/2005 08:03 PMYou never have returned to the issue of Marmits, is it dead? With the
huge demand for Master Replicas, have you heard of any plans to do
Boba Fett’s blaster rifle, or Chewie’s bowcaster? What's with the
EPIII Sneak Peak Wookiee Warrior?! Find out the answers to all these
questions and more in the latest edition of Question Mark!
Mark Your Calendars!
Mark Your Calendars!
06/16/2004 10:10 AMHallmark's 2004 Keepsake Ornament Premiere is coming up fast...
Question Mark #120
Question Mark #120
04/28/2004 07:00 PMAre there going to be any more updates to the vintage line within the
Rebelscum Photo Archives? Have you heard any info about deleted scenes
on the Trilogy DVD's? Can you help get some definite facts about the
Jawa Sandcrawler? Find out the answers to all these questions and more
in the latest edition of Question Mark!
Question Mark #119
Question Mark #119
04/26/2004 01:04 PMWhy is it that the "collector's characters" figures are scaled down
compared to the rest of the figures? Has anyone else mentioned finding
a variation on the 12-inch Garindan? Can you list what the original
release for each of the Toys 'R' Us multipack figures was? Find out
the answers to all these questions and more in the latest edition of
Question Mark!
Mark of a killer
Mark of a killer
05/14/2004 06:15 AMUSA Today May 14 2004 10:43AM GMT
Question Mark #123
Question Mark #123
05/20/2004 04:12 AMAre there any plans to do any more mini LEGO sets? Do you think we'll
see all 92 vintage figures ”re-released” in the OTC line? Will there
be more Marmits or what? Find out the answers to all these questions
and more in the latest edition of Question Mark!
Mark your calendars
Mark your calendars
05/17/2004 02:44 PMAs I'll be in Boston June 17th to give a talk to the Boston chapter of
the ACM. Details on the details page. (The summary: An overview of
parrot's architecture, then some in-depth on the tools we've built and
the techniques we're using to actually create the software, since we
do some odd things that folks may or may not have thought of)...
Perchance to dream.