Category Archives: Uncategorized

There, I Did It Again

Despite the fact that, very occasionally, I get an irate email such as one that came over the weekend, set in pink font and reading in part

 


we are an aging population-that means that an evergrowing percent of the population is getting older and,consequently, not as interested in change for its’ own beau self.if you are going to futz around endlessly with your emag’s layout,give us some kind of a guide or template to your layout staff’s latest little brain-fart,please! after spending 20 minutes deciphering the latest yellow brick road,i am usually pissed at you for weeks. [sic]

 

–Despite this rare kinda thing, I did in fact tweak the layout of the homepage yesterday and today. Partly I wanted to revive the ‘highlights’ box at the top of the center column, to keep visible substantial content that has scrolled down below more ordinary posts; and partly to try to clean up the clutter of various archive and info links that were accumulating at the top of various columns. You can compare the new layout to the previous layout on this now archived page.

 

Only the placement of various links has changed, not the underlying structure, so I hope it won’t require 20 minutes for anyone to adjust to the change. I’m still not entirely happy with the placement of the Google search box, but I haven’t been able to think of anywhere better to put it. (I moved it from the left column so that Future events and Blinks could remain as high as possible at all times.) One other change I made is to place my own name on the homepage, as a result of doing a recent Google ego-search and finding my ISFDB entry, and my own long-long-neglected Compuserve webpage, coming in at the top of the rankings; even a 2001 review I wrote for Locus magazine and reprinted on the website comes in ahead of any indication that I’m responsible for the entire Locus Online site itself. Ironically, the Locus Online homepage does turn up in the results, because of

 


King, Karen Joy Fowler, Ray Bradbury, R. Scott Bakker. … H. Greenberg, Alexander Potter,and Mark Tier; novels by … John Kessel & James Patrick Kelly, Larissa Lai

 

Isn’t that funny?

Reader Queries

An anonymous reader asks,


Can you describe what constitutes a “valid ballot?”

I’ve heard a lot of noise over the years about “unexpected” results being discarded. The Sharon Lee and Steve Miller controversy comes to mind.

Reply: There are roughly three types of *invalid* ballots. The most common is when someone filling out the online ballot inadvertantly hits the ‘enter’ key (rather than the tab key) and causes their partially filled-out ballot to be submitted via email. They realize their error, complete their ballot, and submit again. This results in 2 email ballot submissions from the same person within a couple minutes of each other. In these cases, the latter is counted as valid; the earlier (partially completed) is discarded.

Another kind of invalid vote is where someone deliberately votes for the same item more than once in the same category. The rules say not to do this, but some voters try it anyway (sometimes 5 times in a category!). Needless to say, we here at Locus Online have sophisticated database queries to detect such multiple votes — since we can’t personally examine every one of the 5 or 6 hundred ballots — and all such invalid votes are discarded. We could be much harsher than this, and discard the entire ballots of those who commit this violation, but we don’t–we count one vote per item per category, in the lower/lowest position the multiple voter placed it, and disregard the others.

A variant of violation #1 is where a voter submits a second ballot several weeks after submitting their first. Sometimes they even fill in their name and subscriber number both times–as if to flaunt their violation. (Well, maybe they forgot they’d voted before.) Other times they don’t, but the pattern of votes (along with survey responses) is obvious. Again, we could be harsh and disregard *both* submissions, but we don’t; we disregard obvious repeat votes, but count the first (or most complete) from each voter.

The final category of suspect ballots is where numerous submissions are received within a short period of time that all vote for the same item–often only a particular item, leaving the rest of the ballot blank. This presumably occurs when a notice is posted about the Locus Poll ballot on some writer’s site, whose fans are prompted to link to the online Locus Poll and vote for their favorite writer’s currently eligible book. To some degree, this happens almost every year. In most cases, it doesn’t affect the final outcome. This happened a few years ago described as the “Sharon Lee and Steve Miller controversy”, though in that case the online poll was a parallel poll, and those votes didn’t affect the official Locus Poll results whether or not those votes were included or not.

Another anonymous reader asks,


What’s the print run of LOCUS?

Answer: roughly 9000. Less than 10K. Locus Online, meanwhile, has 5-6K unique visitors per day, or 30+K unique visitors per week.

Locus Poll Stats #1

I said back at the beginning of this year’s Locus Poll process that I would post some observations about voting patterns — how many voters vote in how many categories for how many items, etc. — without discussing the actual results themselves. Now that all the results are in, and the winners have been announced (and published), I’ll return to this theme — again, without implying anything about who or how many voted for what.

There were 629 valid ballots. On the ballot, there were 14 categories in which voters could vote for up to 5 items per category — a total of 70 votes.

How many of the 629 submitted all 70 votes?

Answer: 29. Out of 629. Not very many.

Average? 29.78. I.e., of all ballots, of all 629, on average the number of votes in those 14 categories was 30 out of 70. So lots of people vote, but not in every category.

More stats over the next few days. If you have any particular query you’d like to pose, that I don’t supply the answer for, let me know.

Updating

Wow–Blogger recognized me for some reason; I didn’t have to re-enter my username and password. Is it finally working as advertised?

Sitting home alone on a Friday night updating the site and catching up on email. That’s what we dedicated fen do. What do people do on Friday nights who don’t have websites to update? Sometimes I wonder. (This is an old CNB joke.)

–Actually, my partner Yeong has flown off to China, to the city of Qingdao (aka Tsing Tao, like the beer), for two weeks to visit his father, cousins, and siblings. During which time I’ll catch up on this and that–the website, reading, and my ongoing project to expand the Awards Index and database to include all the Canonical tallies and chronological profiles I’ve been planning for, well, years now. An ultimate guide to the top 100 novels, novellas, novelettes, short stories; the best in each category in every year. Soon; any year now. On CD ROM.

Cheryl Morgan has already blogged about the peculiar results of the Wooden Rocket Awards, though she didn’t note the result that struck me — Best Print Publisher to Tor Books. Tor may be the best SF publisher, but its site is notably lacking in detail and currency. I note this as someone who compiles descriptions of Notable New Books regularly (every week now) for the Locus Online website, looking for links to excerpts and descriptions; for my time, Baen’s is by far the best publisher site, with descriptions and generous excerpts for every single new title. Eos is a fair second place; Warner and Bantam are in the running. But Tor… Now that I check it, they do have content for a couple current titles, but.. but… (And I really should notify them that they have a long obsolete link to the Locus Poll index.)

Which raises the question of how valid any awards results are. A question which, as a compiler of awards results, I am careful not to probe. And as a recipient of a Wooden Rocket Award (they sent me a certificate last year), I would be foolish to dispute.

Locus Awards Winners

The results are posted, after finally hearing from Locus HQ that it was OK to do so. (I’d wanted to post the results 6 weeks ago when I tabulated them. Why wait?) Perhaps I should anticipated the confusion about when it was OK to release the news, given the earlier confusion over when the voting ended– Locus announced in the May issue editorial that voting would remain open until May 15th, but didn’t tell me; I counted down the number days left to vote on the homepage for an entire week up to May 1st, then removed the ballot. Apparently the office staff was too busy to glance at the site that week.

Oh well; my problems are pretty minor compared to the major shakeup in Locus Magazine’s editorial staff just concluded this week. But you will have to read about that in the July issue editorial (which, this time, I saw in advance).

Where Were We…

Been a busy couple weeks, for assorted reasons. I’ve been placing more ads on various pages of the website, hesitantly, and so far no one has complained. Have yet to find out what the first month’s earnings will be from them; what they amount to may well guide further decisions about placing ads. I haven’t yet put one of the supplied ads on the homepage, because I already have a top of page banner there (and the space there is reserved for the next several months). Yet pay-outs from ads there could be substantial, the ad folks say, hinting at numbers easily double what the flat fee banners I’ve been selling there so far earn.

I never got around to writing about my tour of the then-uncomplete SF Museum in Seattle, which I saw during Nebula Awards weekend back in April; now the museum is open, and articles about it have run in dozens of papers, so there’s not much point. I will mention that the museum’s website, now called www.sfhomeworld.org, has recently undergone a slick redesign, though I must say that some of their bibliographic data, in the book recommendations lists linked from here, are less than completely accurate.

I need to update the right sidebar cover thumbs, I know; I have been reading a few books at least these past couple months.

Technical Difficulties (Again)

My DSL service at home (from SBC), after having been flaky for the past several days, gave up entirely last night about 8, and is still down this morning. No time to call and sit on hold, so will see to it this evening after work. Meanwhile I can access my inbox, slowly, via a web interface, but there are emails that downloaded before 8 last night sitting at home unanswered.

Pamphlet Found in a File Cabinet

Cleaning out old file cabinets recently, I came across what might be quite a treasure to someone: a ‘souvenir program’ pamphlet from the original 1977 Star Wars, which I attended at Graumann’s Chinese Theater (or was it already Mann’s by then?) with a group of college friends who, frankly, were more interested in the space opera flick that I was. We stood in line for a couple hours, and in those days–not even for this film–owners didn’t clear the theaters after each show, and so the four of us cheerfully (well, less so in my case) sat through two successive screenings. I have never watched the film again (though I’ve dutifully seen all the sequels, once each). I don’t recall if the programs were free, or if (more likely) we bought them; I see now on the inside back cover, underneath the list of credits, it says


For additional copies of this souvenir program, send $1.50 plus .50 handling and postage to: S.W. Ventures, Inc., 45 East 55 Street, New York, N.Y. 10022. Printed in U.S.A.

I wonder what would happen if someone tried this now.

I am an eBay virgin, to echo a theme on one of the newsgroups I subscribe to, but I presume people there sell and shop for things like this all the time. What would this item bring, I wonder? Perhaps a commentator can offer a clue.

Busy Weekend

Despite the fact that I didn’t attend any of the many SF conventions held around the country this past weekend, I was busy enough, managing some website updates in between family events and seeing movies.

Some quick takes: I liked Troy better than I thought I would, considering the reviews. Perhaps it’s my already-lowered expectations of standard Hollywood flix, or my relative unfamiliarity with the source material (I’ve never actually read The Iliad) so that I can’t quibble closely about the changes made; but overall, despite this quibble and that quibble, I enjoyed it and thought the time seeing it was well spent.

Also saw The Day After Tomorrow, with its great FX drowned in a wholly implausible silly plot, garnished by occasionally witty bits. (OK, if they had to burn books to stay warm, Tax Law books were OK.)

An hour after seeing that movie, I saw the US edition of Kim Stanley Robinson’s novel Forty Signs of Rain on the shelves at Barnes & Noble, and realized that KSR’s book is basically a realistic, un-sensationalized version of The Day After Tomorrow, the overall plot arch remarkable similarly. Will Bantam take advantage of this fortuitous timing in any way? Not that I can tell so far.

I’m gradually introducing the new advertising onto pages of the website, and making a point to create separate News pages where possible (reversing a trend toward the blog style of the Locus Online homepage since January). Thanks to A.R. Yngve for his PayPal contribution… Several feature articles are in fact forthcoming in the next few weeks. Next up is Cynthia Ward’s essay about manga, as soon as I can read and edit and format it.

Almost Free

The web is free, except for ads. Publishing on the web pays nothing, except for ads. Today I finalized arrangements with Gorilla Nation to begin placing ads on Locus Online. For the moment, just the usual banners at the top of the page, and for the moment, just generic ads, though targeted ‘brand’ campaign ads should be forthcoming. For the first set, see the June issue pages, posted today, beginning with the Profile page. Also available are tower [vertical] ads, wipeovers, interstitials, and so on, and though apparently they pay far more than the standard banner ad, for now I am declining them to see how the initial banner posts work out–if they really pay enough to be worth the effort to post them, and if the resistence from readers of the site is not too great. I find ads as annoying as the next guy, but at the same time I think, what’s good enough for (or tolerable by) the New York Times and The Onion should be good enough for Locus Online.

Meanwhile, I have no less than three special articles/reviews/features lined up for posting on the site, over the next week or so (by David H, Claude L, and Cynthia W), and I hope readers keep in mind that the ads are what’s paying for those contributions. Myself, I’m still working for free. Because… um, …