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TL;DR: Hits the spot for show fans.
Score: 1 chrome-plated toaster

Lewis Carroll remarked that, “When I was ten, I read fairy tales in secret and would have been ashamed if I had been found doing so. Now that I am fifty I read them openly.” And so it came to pass that I read The Elements of Harmony, the My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic official guidebook, on the train one day.

My daughter loves the My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic (MLP: FIM) series, and reads all the books that have come out for it. Now, I don’t consider myself a full-on Brony, but I do enjoy watching the show with her. This particular guidebook does a great job of appealing to both the older fans and younger ones.

The book works as a standard TV show guide book, listing out the major and minor characters, which episodes the minor ones appear in, beautiful color prints, concept art, and an episode guide (seasons 1-3, the only ones released so far).

It’s the small touches that I really appreciate. For instance, the book is named after the book in the show in episode 101. It’s cover is the same as the one in the show, and the first pages (even before the colophon) have the same story and pictures as the book in the show.

For myself, the better parts of the book were the quotes and thoughts by the staff of the show. These come across as really honest, and not made with the target demographic in mind (young girls). For instance, Mitch Larson, a writer for the show, said, “Playing against type is always fun.” I don’t know many adults who would understand this bit of shop lingo.

I also really enjoyed that the only real-world place discussed in the book was Austin, Texas: “Someone was dressed head to toe in this fuzzy costume in 110-degree heat!” Keepin’ Austin Weird.

The worst part of the whole book comes from the quote by Donna Tobin, the senior director of global brand strategy and marketing at Hasbro. She brings home the idea that, in the end, it’s all still a brand, and a successful way to get an old property lots of money for Hasbro.


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I wanted to take the original tune and make more of a club sound. Also, the original had issues with too much of the bass instruments walking over each other. This time, I used more of the filters to better isolate them into their own space. I still have problems with the back beat snare and clap sounds using up too much of the headroom.

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Score: 3 bananas

My second Noam Chomsky book. This one contains transcriptions from lectures he gave, from about 1989 to 1994. It covers a wide variety of subjects, from his theory of media, to activism. The book kept an overall focus on the rise of corporate power.

To me, the most interesting parts were his discussions on what Mr. Chomsky idealized as his preferred form of government.


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Back in 1990, I had a vivid dream that I turned into an awful short story that I only half completed. It was written in Word Perfect for DOS, and I believe I still have a copy of it burried somewhere. Then, in the summer of 1991, I attempted to turn it into a screenplay by starting first with the story boards. I have since lost that, but I believe I wrote as far as 20 seconds into the film. Then, in 1992, after some deep research into The Aeneid, I was insipired to turn it into an epic.

I wrote The Ulangar under the pen name “Viktur Conan Slayson,” and it took me the better part of 6 years to write. It started off with pen and paper, filling a giant 3 ring binder for the first two and a half books. After that, I began the revisions and started writing it on a computer. Fortunately, I had the forethought to save it in RTF format, rather than some custom OS/2 format (which I was using at the time).

It was intended to be split into 10 “books” in poetic form, with an epilogue book 11 in a more standard novel form. After I started on book 5, I soon lost all my saved files during a move, including the end of book 4 and the progress on book 5 which I hadn’t printed to a hard-copy, which led me to abandon the project. Fortunately, back in 2011, I found a backup of these last parts, and I started publishing them to the web.

Update: I have started reprinting it here.


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I finished working on a “stutter” patch for LMMS, and posted it to the mailing list. This allows for the audio file to remember the last played position when starting a new note. This means that it’s now easy to move along notes during the playback, along with other nifty features.

This tarball can be dropped into either the “stable-0.4” GIT branch, or the 0.4.15 source code from the Sourceforge project site.

stutter_fixed.tar.bz2 [10.9 kB]

The GIT patch off of “stable-0.4” is here:
stutter_fixed.stable-0.4.patch.bz2 [4.4 kB]


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Smashwords is having a promotion in the month of July where all books that are normally $.99 are now free. This will include some incredible books like The Nineteenth Encounter and Hungry.

Though I normally don’t like to promote stuff like this, I have a vested interest in promoting these specific books. Also, I would prefer for anyone to actually purchase said book, I don’t mind free press like this.

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