Arter/Writist
"...having neither the talent of an artist nor the dedication of a writer, he fashioned himself a title with a nebulous mandate..."
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
First online handles
From Good, an article by Amanda Hess on The Eternal Shame of Your First Online Handle.
So how did I choose to define myself in this new world? I booted up my parents' modem and launched head-first into online forums with an alias inspired by my cat's name. Later, I spent hours negotiating with AOL's log-in field, testing out various combinations of Nine Inch Nails lyrics until I found one that hadn't already been snagged by an equally tortured soul (I was later forced to explain to a college admissions counselor why my e-mail address was ImDrowningIn@aol.com).
My first handle was "derbis", which is how I thought "debris" was spelled until far later in my schooling than one might expect of a native English speaker. It actually started as a self-imposed nickname IRL...these guys I knew in college DJ'd parties and they all had their DJ names and not wanting to be left out, I picked one for myself. To date, I still have not DJ'd a single event, but the first thing I ever designed was a flyer for a friend's rave party; I signed it "cybergraphics by derbis" (all lowercase, naturally). It had a lot of fractals on it.
And if you thought that wasn't sufficiently embarrassing, my AIM name is still "damptrousers". IIRC, Greg remarked that the phrase "damp pants" was hilarious right around the time I signed up for AIM but "damppants" was taken (?!!) so yeah. (via ★natalie)
Tags: Amanda HessOxford Writing and Style Guide no longer recommending the Oxford comma
What the hell? Is the sky still blue?
As a general rule, do not use the serial/Oxford comma: so write 'a, b and c' not 'a, b, and c'. But when a comma would assist in the meaning of the sentence or helps to resolve ambiguity, it can be used -- especially where one of the items in the list is already joined by 'and'.
The kottke.org style guide still advocates the use of the Oxford comma, but take that with a grain of salt; I also misuse semicolons, use too many (often unnecessary) parentheses -- not to mention m-dashes that are actually rendered as two n-dashes in old-school ASCII fashion -- use too many commas, and place punctuation outside quotation marks, which many people find, in the words of Bill S. Preston Esq. and Ted "Theodore" Logan, "bogus". Oh, and in another nod to the old-school, I also use "dumb quotes" instead of the fancier and, I guess, technically more correct "smart quotes". (via, who else?, @tcarmody (or should that be "whom else?"))
Tags: languageThe Dark Side of Making L.A. Noire
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
