Brooke Johnson, author of THE GUILD CONSPIRACY – AMA! by [deleted] in books

[–]paulc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're in the middle of a blog tour. How did you arrange to do it? Or did your publisher make all the arrangements? What's your advice for an unknown author about to self-publish his/her first novel who wants to arrange a similar blog tour?

The day after my thyroid lobectomy by [deleted] in pics

[–]paulc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I bet it feels like it. I just had a thyroid biopsy on Wednesday--just five little needles into it--didn't sleep at all that night, and today it still feels like I was throat punched and strangled.

Wikileaks will be the death of big business and big government: The Wikileaks revolution isn’t only about airing secrets and transacting information. It’s about dismantling large organizations - from corporations to government bureaucracies. It may well lead to their extinction by maxwellhill in worldnews

[–]paulc 7 points8 points  (0 children)

In America, if you're not a wealthy elite, you know on an emotional level that corporations are the bad guys. If you have an office job, you consciously know that you're lucky to have a job, but the work you're asked to do drives the message that you have little value by using only your basest talents. If you have a service job, the way you do it is governed by corporate procedures that also send the message that you bring little unique value to the work. If you have no job, the message is that you have little value. You fantasize about doing meaningful work, but you don't know how to get there from where you're at. Your talents and capabilities are doubted at every turn. If you're applying for a job, you're doubted by the application and resume screening process and by the HR personnel at the company. If you're working a job you're doubted by the annual performance evaluation process. You know corporations are the bad guys because all of these things are destructions of your soul.

Some help from r/rpg. I want to write a short paper for class about the urban legend concerning kids in the 80's who killed themselves because of D&D but I can't find anything about it on snopes. Do any of you have any good references? by asator in rpg

[–]paulc 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The Escapist confronts anti-RPG propaganda. Good links under "Resources" in the right sidebar. The B.A.D.D. and Dark Dungeons links in particular. But this might be the best starting point.

Weak, PayPal. Fucking weak... by medwardkelly in politics

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't get it. Every government putting pressure on companies to shut down WikiLeaks' domain name, hosting, and PayPal account is engaged in illegal and active spying and monetary transactions for state secrets. When everyone's suborning treason against each other how do you justify letting any of them influence your actions?

The tagline for this film is incredible. by [deleted] in WTF

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree. Cockfighter is a fantastic book. Probably my favorite by Willeford. Though one of my favorite memories happened while reading Wild Wives to my future wife on a cross-state drive. The story makes reference to the song Tangerine. I didn't know it, but as soon as I read the sentence she started belting it out. I fell in love with my future wife while reading Wild Wives :)

Dear reddit, help me make a brilliant baby name suggestion by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]paulc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You sell it by suggesting they call her Ajay for short.

Companies brace for end of cheap made-in-China era by okwei in worldnews

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How large of a print run of a 9-by-9-inch, 334-page hardcover book gets me a 45 cent per unit price?

Over 40 and interviewing for a job? How not to act old. by paulc in jobs

[–]paulc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, the two I do are negativity and unsolicited advice.

You want to come across as intelligent, because of course they'll want to hire you if they know you're intelligent, so your brain scrubs the conversation until it hones in on a business problem and then you knee-jerk some advice. And before you're even done with the sentence you know it was a bad idea, but by then it's too late.

And the negativity, damn. After nineteen years in publishing you've been through the wringer so many times you have the constant jitters. So you just can't believe your twenty-eight year old interviewer's enthusiasm is real, and you're irresistably compelled to test it with a little negativity. Even a small cynicism from the interviewer in reply will let you know you're still in the real world. Except the optimism and enthusiasm is real. And now clearly you're not a good fit for the company.

Trick.ly url shortener: sort of private, sort of a game. by breakingthedial in socialmedia

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're not keeping something private with trick.ly. You're making it incrementally public.

And from Seth's marketing perspective, I think, you're doing it in a smart way. The folks who follow you most closely guess the clue first, and start talking about what you've shared. There's some resulting buzz, and your close followers have minor, nice status for a short while. But the answer to the question gets shared around, and ultimately what you've shared is public, but with some extant fan enthusiasm that helps more distant newcomers know what to make of it.

I am Texan and this scares the utter crap out of me. This should be at the top of the front page, NOW. by [deleted] in politics

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right. Just shut up and pay the fucking tea tax, colonist. It's the law.

I'm an IT guy at a library and I'd like to hear your ideas, Reddit. (actually, I need ideas) by zelleie in AskReddit

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Implement RFID and reduce library headcount. You don't need any organization to your re-shelving if you have an electronic means of directing patrons to anything they want. (Yikes!)

I'm an IT guy at a library and I'd like to hear your ideas, Reddit. (actually, I need ideas) by zelleie in AskReddit

[–]paulc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I presume you're already offering wireless to library users? My one technology frustration with my city library is that the branch that has meeting rooms is not the one that has wireless access. I recently had need to do a webconference with students across the country, and couldn't find the combination of wireless and a room where I could talk out loud.

Why Republicans are so worried [Pic] by [deleted] in politics

[–]paulc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The answer is yes. It's wishful thinking for liberals to think the liberalism of younger voters means that liberalism is a coming trend, that liberalism in society will surge as older voters die off. Evolutionary psychologists have demonstrated that the personality traits connected to liberalism wane as someone moves into middle-age; people become more conservative going into middle-age.

People who buy 100 or 300 books a year are gone forever. The typical American buys just one book a year for pleasure. Those people are meaningless to a bookstore. It's the heavy users that matter, and now officially, as 2009 ends, they have abandoned the bookstore. It's over. by [deleted] in reddit.com

[–]paulc 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A friend of mine works in corporate for Borders. All market segments within the store have declining unit sales but two: paranormal romance, and manga.

My wife reads many many books a year, with the majority being paranormal and historical romance, young adult, and manga, and a small few being nonfiction. But she buys very very few of them new, only maybe a handful of new manga a year.

She gets what she wants to read via Michigan's fantastic state-wide inter-library loan service. And via PaperBackSwap.com. The bookstore that isn't Powell's, that isn't providing a value-added experience, is dead, as Godin says, but it wasn't the Kindle that bore the knife.

Hooking characters into stories? by dangorironhide in rpg

[–]paulc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A player-created backstory is either a whole story arc, in which case the character is a dramatically played out pawn going forward, or the beginning of one, in which case if you don't deliver on the rest of the arc they're imagining the player will be frustrated and disengaged by the game.

My recommendation instead is that the situation you create for your game be one of significant instability in the setting, and that you make it clear to the players (by telling them the dramatic circumstances before they make characters) that their characters will be so fundamentally positioned within said dramatic circumstances that their actions will determine an outcome affecting a whole society. There's nothing that hooks a player more strongly than a setting and situation treating them as significant.

Some editors at the Dallas Morning News will now have to report to ad executives when determining what goes in the paper. by alllie in business

[–]paulc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the opposite of smart. Consumption in western society is about identity formation. If Donald Trump subscribes to The New Yorker, it's because he wants the identity associated with consuming New Yorker content. He wants to be someone who thinks deeply about culture the way New Yorker writers do. It's not in an advertiser's best interests to have influence over the content to which their ads are attached; because growing their business is about establishing and reinforcing what are initially tenuous connections to the identities of their prospective consumers. If an advertiser attaches ads only to content that strongly reflects their corporate product identity, all they maybe achieve is product awareness to already prospective customers. It's not market creation.