by Suw on January 30, 2006
I've started packing up the things that I don't use on a daily basis. Books, some of the linen I don't need right this second, clothes it's too cold to wear. I've half-filled one suitcase (it's waiting for the bed linen and pillows that are either in the wash or which I am using right this second), and completely filled a second. Two medium-sized crates of books, one of papers, one half-full of stuff I might throw out. One small crate full of various leads, one of stationery. Two empty large crates for the rest of my as yet unpacked crap. Guitar in case. Boots and shoes in a small rucksack.
Now a few days of limbo, where i can't pack stuff because I'm using it, or because I haven't decided if I'm going to throw it out yet.
Need to find someone who can drive, though, because my brother's unable to help me as I'd hoped. Thinking of hiring a small van because I have just at much too much to fit it all in a car. Unless it was a Zafira or something. Anyway, volunteer drivers welcomed.
And then, once T'Other and I have located suitable permanent lodgings, off we go again. I will likely not unpack anything but the essentials once I get to my friend James', because there's just no point. That's the plan, see: move here to James' spare room, then once I'm back from the States and Ireland, me and T'Other look for something permanent – nicely appointed, close to work, and not too far from the gastronomic delights of Borough Market.
I can't wait for this period of dislocation to be over. But when it is, that will be the end of a very long, very tedious chapter of my life. And as I sit here, looking at ten beautiful red roses, I know that it's all going to work out just fine.
by Suw on January 30, 2006
Was the headline that I chose not to run with in today's Open Rights Group press release, despite the fact that's pretty much how I felt about it.
If you're a regular reader of either my or Neil's blog, you will of course already know that Neil's our Patron, but it's nice to finally fess up publicly about it. I'm pleased about it for a few reasons. Neil's very clued in when it comes to copyright, digital rights and authors' freedoms. He even won the Defender of Liberty Award* from the CBLDF in 97. It's wonderful to see someone whose creative processes are so very analogue – Neil writes his first drafts longhand with a nice pen and a Moleskine notebook – becoming so deeply immersed in the digital world.
It's also great because Neil and Cory Doctorow, who is on our Advisory Council, are the very people that the rights-grabbing publishing oligarchies claim that they are trying to 'protect' using that annoying DRM crap, plus they're the people that you are I are supposedly 'stealing' from every time we read their books more than once. I've always found Cory to be quite pleased to have his work downloaded, repurposed and redistributed (within the terms of his Creative Commons licence, of course). And I know for a fact, because he's said so on his blog, that Neil's very keen on people reading his works more than once, turning them into tattoos, and using them as inspiration for interpretative dance.
Plus, of course, and you know how much I love stating the blindingly obvious, I'm chuffed because I've been a huge fan of Neil's for a long time, and finally I have a good excuse to email him and ask for quotes. To wit:
“We're in a world in which digital rights, the world of the internet, and the exchange of information is getting more and more important and relevant to all our lives, wherever we are,” said my new friend Neil. “I'm delighted that there's now a group of people committed to preserving and extending civil liberties in a digital world and to being sane and sensible as we careen into a digital future. I was honoured to be asked to be Patron of the Open Rights Group, and I look forward to working with them for years to come.”
So, don't forget to sign up to support ORG, and especially don't forget that we have an evening of free drinks, nibbles and Cory Doctorow on Feb 7th.
* Hm… wonder if ORG should start a Defender of The Digital Realm awards…