Already have Razor. Thanks.
George A
- Original Message -
From: William T Goodall [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs (David Brin et al) Discussion brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2008 8:48 AM
Subject: Re: Battlestar Galactica
On 6 Apr 2008, at 08:00, G. D. Akin wrote
William T Goodall wrote:
Subject: Battlestar Galactica
That was not disappointing.
Please, please, please, announce **SPOILERS** if you talk about season 4.
I live in Korea. I just finished the season 3 DVD set last night (and can't
wait for
My 13th level Druid is very quiet this evening.
George A
- Original Message -
From: Mauro Diotallevi [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Brin List brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 4:58 AM
Subject: Gary Gygax
Gary Gygax, the man who more or less invented the modern role-playing
Try Locus. I've been a subscriber for 11 years.
George A
- Original Message -
From: jon louis mann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs (David Brin et al) Discussion brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2008 1:35 PM
Subject: SF reviews
can anyone tell me which prozine or any
I've been married to a Korean woman for going on 35 years.
Kimchi just ages. What you need is a kimchi refrigerator--they really have
these and they work wonderfully. Kimchi keeps for much longer before
attaining that state from which the phrase you're in deep kimchi arose.
Of course, all
I have been looking for on-line writing workshops. In Writer's Digest's,
The Writer's Yearbook 2008, I found a full-page ad for the Gotham Writers'
Workshop. At their site, www.writingclasses.com, I found that they have
classes in numerous types of writing, including Science Fiction.
Does
Julia Thompson wrote:
http://lihan161051.livejournal.com/28786.html
He hasn't read any of the KSR Mars books.
(If you comment, don't shred him - I'd like to be able to have lunch
with him again! Thanks.)
Julia
-
Allen Steele has a very thorough calendar for
That is cool!
George A
- Original Message -
From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Sunday, June 25, 2006 6:59 AM
Subject: Optical Illusion (really . . . not a gag)
Click on the link and follow the instructions on the page.
I remember reading last year about a movie based on one of Ray Bradbury's
best short stories, A Sound of Thunder. Then I never heard of it again
until today when I saw (and bought) the movie on DVD.
What happend to this. Was it meant for general release or was a SciFi
channel movie?
NO
Ronn!Blankenship wrote:
At 05:46 AM Wednesday 4/5/2006, G. D. Akin wrote:
I remember reading last year about a movie based on one of Ray Bradbury's
best short stories, A Sound of Thunder. Then I never heard of it again
until today when I saw (and bought) the movie on DVD.
What happend
Damon Agretto asked:
Not yet, but it is on my to-read stack. Read Ilium.
Both on my to-read stack. How was Illium?
I really enjoyed it. It started out a bit confusedly, for me at least. I
had trouble recalling all the God and the battle of Troy.
Doug Pensinger asked:
...anyone else read it yet?
---
Not yet, but it is on my to-read stack. Read Ilium.
George A
___
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I just sent in my nominations for this year's Hugo novel.
Building Harlequin's Moon - Larry Niven and Brenda Cooper
Mammoth - John Varley
Mindscan - Robert J. Sawyer
Spin - Robert Charles Wilson
Seeker - Jack McDevitt
George A
___
Robert G. Seeberger
Just finished a great new book, Spin, by Robert Charles Wilson.
http://tinyurl.com/77uqp if you want to read some Amazon reviews of
Spin.
I've read both of Wilsons previous efforts and they were good reads
but lacked something and left me feeling somewhat indifferent
LOL!
- Original Message -
From: Robert G. Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 1:20 PM
Subject: TV comedians target Cheney hunting accident
Television talk shows took aim Monday at U.S. Vice-President Dick
Cheney's accidental weekend
Hi,
I just finished Kurt Vonnegut's latest, A Man Without a Country. It
is a short book, 146 pages, mostly about his life and his views on the path
America seems doomed to travel.
One comment, a scary as it might be, made me laugh out loud.
I was once asked if I had any ideas for a
Doug wrote:
I had no real attachment to either team, but I thought Seattle got a raw
deal on the officiating; a ticky tack offensive interfearance call that
negated one touchdown and a phantom hold that negated another.
I guess I shouldn't be surprised. The officiating was uniformly
Michael Harney wrote:
Given the Sci-fi Channel's past, I think it's a better hope that the
show reaches a conclusion before it's canceled. I like this new BSG
too, and I never was a fan of the original, so that says a lot, but
Sci-fi only cares about the same thing that other networks do:
LOL!
George A
- Original Message -
From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Brin-L brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Friday, December 02, 2005 6:20 AM
Subject: From the Onion . . .
Now, this one is really funny:
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/43014
--Ronn! :)
Since
Ronn!Blankenship asked:
snip
#24 Supergirl (1984) - DVD (Lowest Price: $ 8.99)
Have I missed some reason this would be such a big seller at the
present time (particularly given that many who saw it back then rated
it right up there with Lucas's adaptation of Howard the Duck . . . )?
Ronn!Blankenship wrote:
Because Helen Slater is a babe, can't act much, but still . . .
Is or was 21 years ago? I don't recall seeing much of her recently .
. .
Was is probably the operative word. I haven't seen her in a
Maru Dubshinki wrote:
How about some discussion of the book? I'm pretty happy with this
one; for all the exposition and mild climax, I've always been slightly
miffed that all the pre-existing bits of alchemy and magic and old
fairy tales and such that Rowling borrowed from were not really
Gary Nunn wrote:
Saw Batman Begins tonight, and it is flat out the best Batman movie so
far.
There were a couple of slow parts while we learned about his personal
angst
and motivations, but it was great. Christian Bale made a good Batman,
Michael Caine made a good Alfred, Katie Holmes was
Dave asked:
I'm sure this has come up before, but what software is there out there
that
can help you manage versions. As I get further into my English program,
I
find that I'm having a hard time keeping track of what's what and when I
wrote what when?
Low- and no-cost preferred but I
I'm sure this has come up before, but what software is there out there that
can help you manage versions. As I get further into my English program, I
find that I'm having a hard time keeping track of what's what and when I
wrote what when?
Low- and no-cost preferred but I am interested in all.
d.brin suggested
It's almost out of theaters and this is one you really have to see on
the wide screen. It's not Ridley Scott's best film, but it is by far
his most vivid - and that's saying a lot.
Entering the theater, I passed posters for Bewitched, Mr Mrs
Smith, Zorro, Fantastic
Be careful not to leave out the -.
George A
- Original Message -
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
Sent: Friday, April 08, 2005 5:33 AM
Subject: [SPAM] Re: Woobs (was: Tits (a womans perspective))
From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer
Robert Seeberger wrote:
Here's an Andre Norton update from ANSIBLE:
ANDRE NORTON, who was 93 on 17 February, was hospitalized
with 'flu and pneumonia but has since returned home for
terminal hospice care. On the 21st, her carer Sue Stewart
explained that Norton preferred to await
Lately I've been reading only what is required in my courses, and an
occasional peek into my PKD collection.
However, for Christmas this past year my brother-in-law got me Jethro Tull:
A History of the Band, 1968-2001 by Scott Allen Nollen. If you're a Tull
fan (and I am), this is a must read
William T Goodall wrote:
SCI FI Channel has ordered a second season of its hit series
Battlestar Galactica, which has aired five episodes of its first season
of 13 episodes. Details of the renewalincluding which cast members
will return, how many episodes will be produced and when the second
kerri miller asked:
Wouldn't it be cool to have a show where the cast changed every week
because it took them 14 generations to get to the next star system?
---
That WOULD be cool and COULD be very interesting, if done well.
Warren Ockrassa wrote:
snip
Um. Why the hell do I care anyway? I don't think I do. After trying to
like the first Tek war novel I gave up totally on Shatner's writing
abilities.
---
I read the first two Tek War books and said enough is
Warren Ockrassa wrote:
Somebody (I think it was Berman) said that the Trek franchise might
continue
as original theatrical movies, after resting for a few years.
IMO, Berman is more or less directly responsible for the destruction of
the Trek franchise. He believed, for instance, that
The Star Trek Movies in order of quality (IMHO, of course)
1.The Wrath of Kahn
2.The Voyage Home
3.First Contact
4.The Undiscovered Country
5.Generations
6.Insurrection
7.Star Trek 1
8.Nemesis
9.The Search for Spock
10. The Final Frontier
For the choice
I just finished reading COYOTE RISING by Allen Steele. Good story--REALLY
good!
If you like books where you escape from tyranny by going to another planet,
struggle to survive on the new planet only to have tyrrany follow you to
your new home, and then you fight for your freedom, these are for
Robert G. Seeberger wrote:
Briton Surfs Tsunami, Survives
Fri Dec 31,10:41 AM ET
HIKKADUWA, Sri Lanka (Reuters) - British surfer Martin Markwell had
always
dreamed of catching that perfect wave -- but when it finally came
along, it
was a nightmare.
Markwell was paddling on his surfboard
Robert Seeberger wrote:
Gives new meaning to 'lap-dances.'
Yeah.but you have to pay extra if you actually want to lap while
she is dancing.
--
LOL
George A
(Lapping Out Loud)
___
Travis Edmunds asked George A:
Next term I'm taking Major American Authors.
Do you know who you'll be covering?
-Travis
According to the course syllabus, here is the list with comments by the
instructor (who I've take
Stargate SG-1:
Most of you may know, if you are fans of the show, but we are only into
Season 7 over here in Korea. Ironically, I have Season 7 on DVD and
SPOILER
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*
*
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*
*
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*
*
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*
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SPOILER
In part two of Heros Dr. Frazier died.
Its about over, sigh!
Last night I finished up my final project for my Distance Education SF class
I've been taking and now must turn to my take-home final. I have to write a
1000 to 2000 word keynote address. Scenario: It is the year 2025 and I'm a
well established SF author and I'm the Guest
kerri miller answered:
--- Doug Pensinger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anyone else hear use Itunes extensively?
I do I do!
Me too! Not only to play music on the PC, but as my interface with my iPod.
First, are you using this on mac or winders?
WindowsXP Pro (not SR2, yet)
1.
Alberto Monteiro wrote
G. D. Akin wrote:
And in RAH's Future History, the USA becomes a religious dictatorship
by 2012
Is that If This Goes On . . .
No, If This Goes On... is the Fall of the Dictatorship. The Rise
of the Dictatorship is something like The Sound of His Wings
Albert wrote:
Miron Murcury wrote:
There is a Heinline novel about an actor who becomes
President of Earth.
Double Star
And in RAH's Future History, the USA becomes a religious dictatorship
by 2012
snip
--
Is that If This Goes On . . .
Good luck!
WOW them.
George A
- Original Message -
From: Bryon Daly [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2004 12:59 AM
Subject: Wish me luck...
I'm off to Orlando for a job interview - I don't know much about the
position yet, but
Ronn wrote:
I thought the sugar-based aliens story was by Ray Bradbury, but its
been
so long since I read it, I'm not sure.
Nope. Asimov. One of his many stories in the shaggy-dog genre.
-- Ronn! :)
Which collection?
George A
___
JDG wrote (belatedly):
At 08:19 AM 8/25/2004 -0700 Nick Arnett wrote:
Doesn't science fiction require *fictitious* science, i.e., stuff that
hasn't been discovered/invented yet?
This would eliminate novels like _Alas, Babylon_, _On the Beach_, and _A
Canticle for Leibowitz_ - which I would
Russell Chapman wrote:
Wow - a big thankyou to all who helped. The level of consensus was
interesting - makes the choices easier.
We will now set out to track the short list down.
-
Please let us know what you finally decide. And later tell us if your
Horn, John wrote
snip
I would NOT suggest the Songs of Ice and Fire series by George R. R.
Martin. I really liked it but it is a VERY mature series and might
not be right for a 14 year old. Lots of sex (LOTS) and gory
violence.
---
William T Goodall wrote:
snip
Stephen R Donaldson - Lord Foul's Bane (Thomas Covenant #1)
Richard Adams - Watership Down
Donaldson's Thomas Covenant books are not worth the effort, IMHO, of
course.
However, WATERSHIP DOWN is a great suggestion.
Russell Chapman wrote:
I seek the assistance of my fellow Brinellers on my quest...
The only fantasy books I have ever read are the Harry Potter books, and
I have so many other books in my waiting pile, I don't see that
changing anytime soon.
My daughter, however, has taken rather a keen
William T Goodall wrote:
The 2004 Hugo Award Winners
Best Novel - Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold
Best Novella - The Cookie Monster by Vernor Vinge
Best Novelette - Legions in Time by Michael Swanwick
Best Short Story - A Study in Emerald by Neil Gaiman
Best Related Book - The
Damon Agretto wrote:
snip
Ohhh I dunno about that either, considering the
culture has a real tech-fetish (seems like a lot of
asian cultures do...the Koreans and Chinese seem to
have it too). It may be that the only stuff that's
been out lately has that SF-Fantasy bend, but then
if you're
Bryon Daly wrote:
On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 12:03:39 -0400, Erik Reuter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Tue, Aug 24, 2004 at 08:45:57PM +0900, G. D. Akin wrote:
My question is this: what makes a book/story SF?
Simple. It should be fiction, and it should involve science or something
related
Erik Reuter wrote:
On Tue, Aug 24, 2004 at 12:44:51PM -0400, Bryon Daly wrote:
On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 12:03:39 -0400, Erik Reuter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Tue, Aug 24, 2004 at 08:45:57PM +0900, G. D. Akin wrote:
My question is this: what makes a book/story SF?
Simple. It should
Erik Reuter asked:
So, Stranger in a Strange Land is not Science Fiction?
I don't remember any science. Do you?
-
They got to Mars and back in a spaceship. There are Aliens. SF in its
simplists form.
George A
___
Dan Minette wrote:
snip
Nope, but it (Stranger) is generally considered to be a classic work of
science
fiction. That's why I think the definition of SF isn't all that cut and
dried.
Dan M.
--
I think you're correct, not cut and dried at all. I've
Dan Minette wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Erik Reuter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 4:08 PM
Subject: Re: Definition of SF
On Tue, Aug 24, 2004 at 04:09:42PM -0500, Dan Minette wrote:
So, Stranger in a Strange
On another list a few months, we were discussing Margaret Atwood's The
Handmaid's Tale
and Oryx and Crake. Someone mentioned that Ms Atwood was adamant about
her works being NOT Science Fiction (apparently, if they are mainstream
novels, they sell better))
One member disagreed and even
Travis Edmunds asked:
Been listening to a fair bit of Tull lately, and I came across something
odd. There is a song - Quiz Kid - that starts off exactly the same way
as -
Too Old To Rock N' Roll...Too Young To Die - before morphing into it's own
thing. Just wondering if anyone knows anything
I went to the Post Exchange today where, to my surprise, they actually had
the B5 Movie DVD set. I picked it up.
So much SF, so little time.
George A
___
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FYI to those running MS Windows XP Pro.
Apparently, MS was going to start force feeding XP Pro users SP2 the next
time they logged into Windows Update. At the link below, you can download a
script that will write an entry into the Windows registry that will stop the
force feeding for 120 days.
This past week I picked up my airline tickets to NOREASCON.
Anyone else on the Brin list attending?
George A
___
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
Well, I've signed up for a DE course with The University of Maryland,
European Division. The course is ENGL476, Modern Fantasy and Science
Fiction.
The course runs from August 23rd to Dec 18th. The works to be covered are:
1. Arthur C. Clarke, Childhood's End
2. Connie Willis and Sheila
Well, I've signed up for a DE course with The University of Maryland,
European Division. The course is ENGL476, Modern Fantasy and Science
Fiction.
The course runs from August 23rd to Dec 18th. The works to be covered are:
1. Arthur C. Clarke, Childhood's End
2. Connie Willis and Sheila
Doug Wrote:
Turning fifty in about 32 days?
--
Ah, you're still a puppy :-)
George A
___
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Doug Pensinger wrote:
I finished this one a month or so ago and while some of it was interesting
I thought the endless train of riddle solving got tiresome and that the
twist near the end was poorly done. Has anyone else here read it?
-
Doug Pensinger wrote:
I'm feeling so badly for the Lakers now that they're down 3-1 in the
finals. Poor Kobe. Poor Shaq. Poor Phil. Poor L.A.
--
Doug
Go Pistons maru.
-
I'm a BIG TIME Laker fan from a long, long time
Who's going to the Worldcon this coming Labor Day?
I get there the evening of Sep 2nd and am staying at the Marriott.
This is my first Con ever and am really looking forward to it.
George A
___
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Robert Seeberger wrote:
Perdido Street Station is a Fantasy dressed up in Science Fiction
Drag.
-
PSS was a very, very hard book to read. I wrote a review that said
something to the effect that I hadn't had to wade
David Hobby wrote:
I honestly don't know. I've heard about it, and have no desire
to read it. It could be that I'm put off by the classical
allusions, present even in the titles. Heavy-handed references
to THE CLASSICS usually signal a pompous and self-important
author. Not that I'm
Gautam Mukunda wrote:
I hate to do a me too - but, me too. The whole
Hyperion series taken together ranks among the finest
works of science fiction I have ever read - offhand, I
can't think of _anything_ I would put ahead of it, and
only a handful of other books that are even close.
While looking for the precise release date of Ringworld's Children at the
Tor site, I came across a Dune short story by Brian Herbert and Kevin J.
Anderson. It takes place just before Dune: The Butlerian Jihad.
http://www.tor.com/hunting.html
George A
Dave Land wrote:
Deborah Harrell wrote:
I don't recall reading any Vonnegut novels (though I'm
sure I must have read some short stories in
anthologies) - have to remedy that.
Not sure whether my word has any weight for you, but I read most of what
he wrote, and have enjoyed it
Julia Thompson wrote:
Dave Land wrote:
G. D. Akin wrote:
Carries weight with me; I've read everything he's written. The only
book I
didn't really like was God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater.
To begin reading, go to Slaughterhouse Five first, then The Sirens
of
Titan.
Yes
FW: [Larryniven-l] Kurt Vonnegut on the state of the worldFrom the Larry Niven list:
George A
A bit too long to post.
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0512-13.htm
___
Robert Seeberger wrote
snip
The channel of course!
SciFi can put out really good shows such as Children Of Dune (Which
was quite excellent I have decided after a few viewings) and then plop
excrement like Riverworld on our plates. Its not necessarily the
networks fault exactly, it appears
I know this subject is old new to the list, but we finally got the 2 part
pilot of Battlestar Galactica in Korea last week. It aired on AFN-Korea on
Monday and Tuesday. I have to admit I was sceptical--the old series was
pretty bad. However, I was, for the most part, satisfied with the updated
Robert Seeberger wrote:
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2004 9:16 AM
Subject: U.S. to pull out most forces from Korean DMZ this year
http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/breaking_3.html
---
Old news, at least to those of us in Korea. The
Just received my periodic mailing from the SFBC. They have Kiln People
for $2.99.
George A
P.S. Plus $14.95 for shipping and handling ;-)
___
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I just found out that my mother is going to need hearing aids as her hearing
is deterriorating in both ears. She had local vendor in Eugene, Oregon
quote her a price of $2995 for digital hearing aids (lifetime warranty and
adjustments as her hearing worsens over time).
Does anyone have any
27.
George A
___
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
ritu wrote:
G. D. Akin wrote:
Fist
fights in the
parliment are frequent (happens even more in Taiwan, but
that's elsewhere).
Has any parliament managed to break our record - fisticuffs and throwing
of shoes, mikes and furniture in the first ever televised parliamentary
debate
Gary Nunn wrote:
As much as I hate to interrupt all of the love that is flowing back and
forth on this list, I was wondering if anyone has been following
Stargate?
You gotta love the conversation they had about the Simpson's. :-)
I am not quite sure where they are going with this story
Gary Nunn wrote:
snip
I also fear that the original series will go downhill, especially with
Richard Dean Anderson's role being greatly diminished. I read an article
a few months ago that said Richard Dean Anderson would still be on the
series, but in a greatly diminished role so that he
Jan Coffey
Can explain why. TA has allways been a big part of Sci-Fi and Sci-Fi
fandom.
So much so, that furrism is a direct offshoot of sci-fi fandom.
There was a lot more skin back in the STOS days. Kirk was getting
some way more often that Archer. Even Picard and Rieker were getting
it
Jim Burton wrote:
On Mar 15, 2004, at 4:25 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
BTW anyone see the Enterprise Season Final? Enterprise is getting its
ass
kicked... Very cool.
My local station decided to pull it for the current season, the
bastards!
Is Enterprise being carried on
Matt Grimaldi wrote:
The very first episode (aired on Showtime) had full frontal nudity.
How's that for TA?
-- Matt
not that I mind... ;-)
--
THAT was a good episode ;-)
George A
___
Julia Thompson wrote:
snip
Trying to think of something that TA would hurt, and I'm drawing a
blank right now.
---
Apparently, just a little T hurt the eyes and senses of good taste of
thousands of Superbowl halftime viewers.
George A
Kevin Tarr asked
G. D., were you out of the country for a while? What's going on there? I
saw some bizarre images on TV about the SK government, yet it was only
covered once on PBS news hour. Asking what you can add or clarify.
-
As a matter of
Robert Seeberger wrote:
How much are you paying in your part of the country?
$1.56 or so down the street from me, but the picture on drudge that
linked to the article below shows $2.28. Yikes, that is high
--
In Korea, gas prices at the Army and Air Force
Tom Beck wrote:
Well, let's see...Stand On Zanzibar, Ringworld, Startide Rising,
Hyperion, Dune, The Left Hand of Darkness, The Moon is a Harsh
Mistress, The Man in the High Castle, Neuromancer, Starship Troopers,
A Canticle for Leibowitz, Lord of Light...I think those could be said
I was looking at Locus on-line
(http://www.locusmag.com/2004/Reviews/02Horton_1953Best.html) the other day
and
noticed an article by Rich Horton on Retro Hugos.
He mentions that the Retros are controversial because most voters lack the
experience with older works and knowledge of the authors to
Robert Seeberger wrote:
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/hubble_super_040219.html
Way cool! Thanks.
George A
___
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Chad Cooper wrote:
Read it some time ago. What's your mail system, Pony Express? :-)
jabNo, he ordered it from Amazon!/jab
-
Gotta defend Amazon here. We (many US folks in Korea) order from Amazon a
LOT! I would say we are very happy with
Miller, Jeffrey wrote:
Just got my copy in the mail today. Anyone already been through it?
---
___
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
Miller, Jeffrey wrote:
Just got my copy in the mail today. Anyone already been through it?
---
Read it some time ago. What's your mail system, Pony Express? :-)
Pretty good read though the pacing is inconsistent. I was satisfied with
the conclusion and
LOL!
George A
___
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
I just received three e-mails stating:
---
This is the Senti-Metrics Mail Server program at host www.mccmedia.com.
I'm sorry to have to inform you that the message returned
below could not be delivered to one or more destinations.
For further assistance, please send mail to
Dan Minette wrote:
snip
He and Steve Weinberg had a forum on cosmology and God in Houston about 6
months ago.
--
How did he ever get God to go to Houston?
George A
___
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
Well I'm a little closer to my first ever SF convention. Last week I
upgrade my Noreascon4 membership from Supporting to Attending and yesterday
I made reservations at the Marriott in Boston (I opted for the non-party
hotel).
Anyone else going?
George A
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