Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Dreams Made into Realities

Yesterday, on November 4th, 2008, still within our life time, we witnessed a dream come true.
May we, and the children of today, experience more moments like this, in the years to come.
What is your dream?
~Natasha

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Living in a world of change can be painful.

On a recent favorite talk show of mine, it was lovely to see ladies hashing out a discussion about what racial terms mean in different contexts; it led to a very moving moment between two women of different races and ages, one young, white, and with athletic appeal; the other, black, older, heavier, and worked all her life to get to where she is now as a famous actress.

What could look like a divide between one generation and another, one race and another, is truly a mark of the transition we are in as a country and as people of the earth when these folks get together around a table and talk (or argue). In this case, the younger one melted when confronted about the "different world" she lives in compared with that of the older one.

Words are like vehicles, imbued with the style and meaning of the driver. If it's road rage or resentment that is being felt or expressed, make no mistake that it was actually meant as a term of endearment.Then there is the case of say one thing, but really do another, turning the meaning into an unconscious statement. For instance, my friends and I say we aren't prejudice, but how many of us have companions or friends of different color? Everywhere I've lived, except New York of course, it's been a hard fact of waking up and realizing that I could count the number of black people I saw that day on my hand.

There's no doubt the world needs the idealism of the younger woman, as a dose of hope for the future. On the other hand, as the older one pointed out, one needs to acknowledge the past and the present, make it conscious, so we can better understand each other now and know what it is we are trying to forgive.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Post-hype blues

I’m still recovering from the expected, anticlimactic ending of the presidential nominee race on June 4th, when America witnessed the final appearance of a trail blazer, Hillary Clinton. Even if she runs again in 2012, she’ll be recovering paths already found. It’ll just be a matter of breaking a previous record and making it to a redrawn finish line.

It’s interesting that the historical significance of what has happened until now in the American election process has descended into a pile of fire fueled by like and dislike. For me, that has nothing to do with what matters in the long run. At best, she was a victim of circumstance, being part of the old and part of the new (a position I know all too well, being someone who made personal choices considered liberal against old standards, but not respectable enough to put me in any leadership-type roles). Indeed, Hillary Clinton’s duel positions about experience and change were mutually exclusive.

Should Obama make it into the White House, his character dictates that he will likely surround himself with people he has chemistry with. This is also part of the new. Even so, keeping Clinton within arm’s reach (as a White House advisor, perhaps?) could be an efficient and effective use of her experience, filtering out her less effective aspects.

And if these next 8 years don’t clean Hillary Clinton’s slate well enough, someone else—possibly another ambitious woman politician—will no doubt be grooming herself in the wings, preparing herself mentally, emotionally, and physically, to slip into those shoes. Let’s hope whoever it is at least brings common sense, if not some experience at dealing with people here and abroad, a good memory, and running shoes.

Friday, May 23, 2008

How much of a risk-taker are you?

Whoopi Goldberg just told a wonderful story about feeling like a risk-taker by nature, until she knows what the risks are. She was walking in the woods in Africa, thinking of it as a safe risk ("Hey, I'm from New York!"), when her guide told her about a skinny snake that drops from trees and bites you in the ear to deliver the poison. "What!" she said, "What the hell are we doing walking out here, for!"

I've got my own tale as well. I thought well enough of snakes when living in the Northeast, as mostly my encounters were with the small, 5" garden variety. Then, moving to Tennessee, my encounters started stretching to 2-foot long, 2"-diameter black and blackish red snakes appearing curled up on window sills of abandoned property, in the middle of roads, or stretched across our garden paths. "They don't bother me. I don't bother them," I thought, a carry-over from my New York City days.

We recently discovered two living in our meadow when one got caught in the blades of the lawn mower tractor. The other one soon emerged and ended with a similar fate. Did I feel guilty? No--even though it's actually against the law to keep snakes as pets or deliberately kill them--not until I told the story at a recent graduation party, where all the locals sided with the snakes and their virtues. I definitely lost points on getting in with the locals that day.

Maybe they do eat mosquitos and rid your property of vermin, but I still feel less the risk-taker--especially when my two cats drag them into the house for play. So, I don't deliberately aim a vacuum cleaner at them, but I have a creative move with my barbecue tools and husband's spare wood. My aim is improving each time I get to fling them across into the neighbor's garden.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Spades with Spades

During a conversation with a friend, who so happens to self-publish her books, I mentioned the idea below, about writing a book on the evolution of technology applications. In essence, it seems that this giddy fascination of mine is to be shared with the few (yet another "esoteric" subject that occupies me in the hours of the night). So, e-book it will be and in my spare time.

On the other hand, she was enthusiastic about another topic that we all share in common. Truly, no one escapes this other story. Care to guess what it might be about?

Friday, May 02, 2008

The Technology Wave -- 2


Having had a chance to sleep on the idea, it's appealing more and more to me, this trace of technology history, like a wave, since the birth of the personal computer. How about "E-Merging Technologies: The Waves of the Future"--in the spirit of Alvin Toffler's Second and Third Wave works, and be a play on words with the E-bit?

Any thoughts?

I still don't believe there's an advantage to fully developing the idea within a blog, however. That would be like handing over a book proposal to the public. That said, there are areas and positions ("premise" for the literary minded) that may be useful to "debate" here, however. So, let's give that a whirl.

My thoughts are the following. In the 1980s...
>Videotex, electronic bulletin boards, and Apple's hypertext blended into what became a precursor for the Internet
>AT&Ts videophone was the precursor to Skype
>Car phones and other types of modular phones were precursors to cell phones

Do you have to be a techie to appreciate this? It is about the human interface, after all.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

E-merging Technology book concept

Prelude
======
The notion for a book about the history of technology since the birth of the PC (personal computer) was hatched somewhere between the end of the educational panel at the Knoxville Writers Guild's April 26th gala last Saturday, and the first of many glasses of wine that evening.

The air was full of juice and electricity about the latest technological advancements and local applications of web site capabilities, blogging, and print on demand before an audience of seasoned writers. Suggestion to do it as an e-book as part of making the point about the significance of the medium being the message.

So, here we are. Hatching the egg electronically, or is it the chicken?

Luckily, my stints in traditional publishing have been enough to persuade me on these basic points. No matter what, you still need:
>a good story,
>someone else to look over your work and put some editing muscle into it,
>ways to get the work out in front of people


The Story Begins
--------------------------
Sunday, April 27, 2008
This one is beginning inside my calendar of Outlook, so I don't lose the inspiration of the moment, sans spell checker, sans formatting. If I follow the directions prescribed to me yesterday, this now needs to move out to a blog that I then list with the News-Sentinal and the radio station, so it can receive critiques. Against all odds, my heart in my mouth with years of copyright fears digested, I'm going to do this, then see what happens. I now challenge what everyone told me yesterday to see if it's true.

Some ideas to include in this book about
the history of technology since the 1980s
--------------------------------------------------
After the printing press, technology is the next major revolution is publishing.
How technology took the human race by storm
Will the human race be better for it?

Laundry list of stuff (add list later, but includes European videotex, IBM PC, Apple Mac and hypertext, fiber optics, CDI, first viruses [Jerusalem?], frame creation machines and scanners, SIGs, games, copying software, CompuServe, Atari/Commodore 64s, electronic bulletin boards, videophones, audio/videoconferencing, freeze frames)

What obstacles need to be overcome?
Is technology a challenge by the future upon the past?
The medium is the message, but content is everything.
In communities, not groups, is how we see ourselves.
The community of folks involved in any work can help to make the art better, and no matter how good the product.
All content needs integrity
After serendipidity and dating services, the Internet has become the next major way
for people meet each other
Will the human race fight wars through technology (from pac man to "war games")?

How does "The Technology Wave" work as a working title? Or better, "E-merging Technology: The History of Technology since 1980"?