Tuesday, February 12, 2008

times are changing

While trawling through the net while waiting for my iPod to disgorge its music into the new laptop (the best way without third party software, by the way, is to link up the iPod, treat it as an external device and view the hidden files - which is where all the music is - and copy-paste everything into the destination iTunes), I found an article by Elmer Ordonez about last year's PEN 50th anniversary.

"Fifty years ago the first national writers conference organized by Philippine PEN had for theme β€œThe Filipino Writer and National Growth.” Times have changed. Where nationalism was the overriding concern of writers of the fifties, now the writers particularly the younger ones, are into literature without frontiers, novel ways of writing like β€œspeculative fiction,” literary blogs and the migration of at least eight million Filipinos working abroad.

(more)

On one hand, it's great to note that we're being noted. On the other hand, it's amusing to note that some people consider genre fiction a novel way of writing. Fantasy, science fiction and horror have been around much longer than 50 years, after all. But what matters to me is that spec fic is being written today, in all its different forms. There are markets (magazines, periodicals, anthologies) that are growing (and while it isn't spec fic, crime fiction is clearly genre fiction, and PGS is prepping a special issue guest-edited by Ichi Batacan, author of the prize-winning "Smaller and Smaller Circles") and being read and talked about. I especially like the fact that it is younger writers who are doing most of the writing. Hopefully, in generations to come, there will less and less angst and guilt about writing spec fic (in the context of national literature).

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Wednesday, July 04, 2007

live, dammit, live!

In the middle of Elliot Yamin's new song, my iPod Video froze, which caused me to panic. Nothing I could do could make it play. It was stuck there, seemingly forever.

But thanks to the wonder of the internet, I found how to reset it, which I will share just in case something like this happens to you.

1. Toggle the Hold switch on and off. (Slide it to Hold, then turn it off again.)

2. Press and hold the Menu and Center (Select) buttons simultaneously until the Apple logo appears, about 6 to 10 seconds. You may need to repeat this step.

I had to strip off the black devil sheathe Nikki gave for my iPod (she has a matching white angel one for her nano) and place it on a flat surface to make the reset work. Make sure that you use two fingers - one for the center button, and one for the menu (and make sure you press towards the outside of the menu button).

It seems to the season for iPod breakdowns. Nikki's was in the shop for a week, and Andrew needed a new battery.

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