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I missed posting on Wednesday (because of a little matter of a 32 hour workday that kept me away from the computer) on my legacy blog, but here in the WordPress environment I can do an entry and publish it to the date desired. So this is a Bonus Blog Entry, on a topic I will plug into my legacy blog this weekend. BBC Radio just launched a new segment they call the SciFi Season. They are spreading the programs across three of their audio channels, BBC3, BBC4, and BBC7. The programs can be heard by listening in real time online, of course, but they are also available as part of their Listen Online series for channels 3, 4, and 7. For some specific shows, you also have the option to download the programs, or save them as Podcasts (see this explanation for the differences to each format).

Happy Square Root Day! It happens only 9 times a century, when the day and month are the square root of the last two digits of the year; and this year it happens only a few weeks before Pi Day, first celebrated at the Exploratorium back in 1988. Then there is Pi Approximation Day on 22/7 of course, also known as Casual Pi Day. For fun from a different direction Reaper returns to the airwaves with the season 2 premier tonight. I didn’t expect to like the show so much when it first aired, but Ray Wise was the absolute best choice to play the Devil, and all by himself brings the show up several levels. Hope they can keep both the comedy and suspense up for another full season!

This one got a grin… William Shatner is reportedly considering running for Prime Minister of Canada. Here in the US we have had an actor running the country, and lots of actors running California, so there is precedent. And while the comment was probably a joke on some level, he might just get elected if he did run.

I have not seen a project that excites me like this one in a while. Someone who appreciates Doug Adams (or else why would he go with the name Douglas442) is building a Steampunk Tardis! At least the central control panel; for a full look at what is involved with creating a Tardis, check out the Weird SciFi Tardis page, and the Tardis Tech Data site. There was a Victorian-era Tardis control room in the original Tom Baker years of the series, which I will link here as soon as I can find an online reference, and an Steampunk Tardis Art version. Then there are things like a Steampunk Dalek and a whole lot more. Or maybe you are just looking for some Steampunk Wallpaper. I also found a video of a Steampunk Tardis Key you might enjoy, after seeing this real world version… I have a lot more to add here, but this should get you started…

Earlier this week the NY Times published an opinion by Roy Blount Jr., president of the Authors Guild, railing against the Kindle’s Speach To Text feature, saying Amazon never paid for audio rights to the works it sells. Over in the Wall Street Journal, Paul Aiken of the same group claims it is illegal to have the machine read out loud, an infringement of Copyright law. I think we saw something similar with the SFWA Takedowns, where the leadership of a writers organization attempted to bite the hand that feeds it. And just like the last time, a whole lot of the authors they represent disagree. John Scalzi scoffs at the thought that a computer generated voice could match the quality of a human rendition, saying Yes, one is free and the other isn’t, but you do get what you pay for. Cory Doctorow points out that one part of the legal argument would end up concluding that email, web-browsers, computers, photocopiers, cameras, and typewriters are all illegal, too. Neil Gaiman points out that when you buy a book, you also buy the right’s to read it aloud, have it read to you by anyone, read it to your children on long car trips, record yourself reading it and send that to your girlfriend…, and that this is the same sort of thing. And yes, I know I exceeded 25 words on the Gaiman quote, but his writings don’t lead me to believe he is the kind of person to sue me for plagiarism for supporting his opinion in public (since we are on a copyright topic, I thought I should mention that). Wil Wheaton brought Scalzi’s argument firmly home in his own post on the topic, with a downloadable MP3 of him reading a segment of text, followed by his computer reading the same passages. Since he was reading from a book he wrote, no one can give him any copyright grief either. So, the question is, what planet are the leadership of the Author’s Guild living on?