vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
I've just finished my marathon viewing of a large bunch of videos on catchup from the Glasgow Worldcon this summer. Watching on catchup I missed out the chance to take part in the live Q&As. And I also found the user interface rather cumbersome, that I had to watch on my laptop, which limited how frequently I could do so. But I still managed to get through quite a large number of talks.

Here are the events I watched, each one about an hour long, typically with 45 main minutes of discussion, followed by 15 minutes of audience Q&A:
  • AI and Work - Do Androids Dream of Taking Your Job?
  • ENIAC and the Post-War Dawn of the Computer age
  • The Horror Out Of Space
  • *Scot-ish: The Influence of Scotland on Fantasy Worldbuilding
  • It's Life, Jim, but Not as We Know It
  • *Iain Banks: Between Genre and the Mainstream
  • All the Shakespeare: the Bard's Influence on SFF
  • The Untold History of Worldcons
  • Inadvisable Rocket Science
  • A Fireside Chat with Samantha Béart
  • Guest of Honour Interview: Ken MacLeod
  • *The Many Legs of SF: Creepy Crawlies in Space
  • 50 Years of TTRPGs
  • Comics Can Save Your Life
  • Faeries in Fantasy Literature
I've marked out above those with asterisks that I especially enjoyed. To pull those out specifically these were:
  • Scot-ish: The Influence of Scotland on Fantasy Worldbuilding
  • Iain Banks: Between Genre and the Mainstream
  • The Many Legs of SF: Creepy Crawlies in Space
The first two of these had obvious Scottish connections, which I unsurprisingly appreciated. But I also found them particularly rewarding in other respects. But I enjoyed something in everything I watched, not just these particular highlight talks.

Martin and I had originally hoped to be at the Glasgow 2024 Worldcon in person. We had low cost attending memberships in place. But things didn't work out that way. However I was able to watch on catchup, and have very much enjoyed that. I was also active in the Discord during the convention, and treated myself to some purchases inspired by the Dealers' Hall.

vivdunstan: Muppet eating a computer (computer)
Just updated my Mac laptop from MacOS 12 (Monterey) straight to MacOS 15 (Sequoia). I'd previously downloaded the 15GB Sequoia installer application. Thank goodness for our faster home broadband now! The MacOS update this morning took just 45 minutes, and seems to have gone very smoothly. I had to update my Reunion genealogy program (free maintenance update for my older version) because that was now crashing. But that's the only thing. Best of all my key apps are working, including MS Word, Excel, Ulysses for writing, Inform for coding interactive fiction games, BBEdit and Notion for sheet music notation writing. I've just been updating the Homebrew installations in the Terminal. ffmpeg that I use there to make my accordion recording videos is working too. Everything seems very nippy at the moment.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Delighted to be working on some accordion music arranging, for the first time in far, far too long. This time a rarely heard tune from Guys and Dolls - skipped in the movie. Agog at the chord progressions as I figure them out. Never seen anything like them before. Arranging in Notion on my MacBook Pro with a MIDI USB controller keyboard.

Picture of a Mac laptop computer with sheet music editing in progress for "My Time of Day, and I've Never Been In Love Before" from Guys and Dolls. On top of the laptop's keyboard sprawl an open sheet music book for the musical and a very compact USB AKAI black and white keyboard.
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
This afternoon I was photocopying a small number of pages from a borrowed library book using a rather old DSLR camera. That Panasonic LUMIX camera still has double the number of megapixels of my final generation iPod touch, and more than most mobile phones today. And given that this was a pretty dense text book it was easier to just use this camera. Which was already charged and available and ready to hand. I can copy over the pictures quickly using my laptop which has a SD card slot, and have tweaked them and turned them into a PDF to add to my research folder for the relevant academic journal paper I'm working on. If I was photographing in an archive extremely dense old handwriting I would also use my old DSLR.

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vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
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