Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Dude.

So, over at Questionable Content creator's Jeph Jacques livejournal, which I periodically peruse, I found this comic. If you're too lazy to click, the important part is this statement: "Stop using 'win' and 'fail' as complete sentences."

The post's a month old, so rather than post a comment there, I'm just gonna put it here, where no one will see it.

I can't really understand the animosity towards this practice. People have been using one-word reactions to things since long before the internet. Back in the Jurassic era when I was a kid, it was things like "cool" and "awesome" (and "tubular", but I'd like to forget about that one). Or, of course, the all-purpose "dude", which, depending on tone, can convey a myriad of reactions. There's even a precursor to "pwned" from pre-internet days: "burned".

Sure, it gets annoying when the only thing someone seems to be able to say is "LOL" (or, more likely, "lol", because the shift key is apparently only for SHOUTING these days), and I want to smack each and every person on the internet who uses it as punctuation (lol i guess lol *smack*). But "win" and "fail" aren't trying to convey anything more than an instant reaction to something, so why should it be any longer than that one word?

Friday, December 18, 2009

You can't put a price on human life

Unless, of course, you are Joe Lieberman.

Or anyone else who has done their best to gut health care reform.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Well, I'm disappointed

Three chefs. I liked two. The third one won.

My reaction? A big 'whatever'.

I recommend....

Over at Making Light, this post on cold-weather safety contains links to helpful posts on how to avoid hypothermia and other winter troubles. (If you're in the Southern Hemisphere, save until June.)

Right now it's a comparatively balmy 36°F outside here, and I'd be willing to bet at least one of the sets of sirens I've heard this morning has been for someone who thinks that means it's not cold enough to be dangerous. (I live near a fire station, at which all the ambulances for the area are also housed.) They were wrong.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Sure. I believe you.

Via Penny Arcade, I was linked to this post about a group called the Entertainment Consumers Association. To sum up if you don't want to read:

ECA is an online organization. They offered a free one-year membership coupled with some discounts on video games. Some people who signed up decided to cancel after some of those discounts disappeared. A few people found a cancel button online, but it was later removed. People were instructed to use snail mail to cancel their purely online service.

Now, the post I link to includes a letter from the president of the organization that attempts to explain this by placing the blame for the cancelled discounts and the need for snail mail cancellations on scammers. In part, he says:
We explained that we are working on ramping up infrastructure to become more automated going forward, but due to a small but active number of members who were repeatedly joining, leaving and re-joining the organization – in an effort to exploit our member benefits and unduly take advantage of our partners' generous offers – we would require a mailed letter, as per our membership agreement.
The problem with this statement, in my mind, is that they require you to provide a credit card number, and therefore presumably a billing address and a real name, to join (yes, even with the free membership). It would be trivial, one would think, to prevent people from signing back up again if their name and billing address matched a recently-cancelled account, or to prevent them from getting any deals aimed only at new members. So I'm a little dubious about their reasoning.

Please note I have no dogs in this fight. I'd never heard of the ECA before today, in fact. But I was struck by the completely sense of dishonesty I felt behind the published statement, not simply in that passage, but overall. It had the distinct odor of CYA, with just a hint of the scent of Lying Corporate Bastards.

The moral of the story, if there is one, is this: don't piss off the intarwebz. Everyone, including people not even remotely connected to you, will find out.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Pet Peeve #ILostCount

I just love reading a random blog and seeing, in the comments, someone roundly and smugly criticize someone else for using singular 'they'. I especially love it when that comment is followed up by a person basically saying how it's the result of how uneducated modern people are.

Look, you may not like it, but a) it's been in use a long, long time, b) it's accepted professionally by some editors and style guides, c) IMO, it's a lot less clunky than saying 'he or she', and d) (also IMO) it's a lot less bother than rewording your sentences entirely to avoid it.

If you're going to bitch about it, at least show some awareness that it's a matter of opinion.

Next up: I will tackle the myth of the double negative in my essay, "Why conversation is not mathematics."