Baxil [bakh-HEEL'], n.
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Below are the 11 most recent journal entries recorded in the "Baxil" journal:
04:45 am
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BaMoTTuStoTTwo wrap-up November's now behind us, and it's all over but the voting.
I refer, of course, to BaMoTTuStoTTwo (my second Month of TTU Stories). It was a nice challenge. This year's 18,500 words didn't quite meet the prolificity standard set by the first attempt's 40,532, but I'm proud with what came out.
Part of that pride is that I tried something I hadn't done with TTU yet: Write stories in its present day. Virtually all of my offerings have been set within a year or two after the Changes. Leapfrogging forward to the era of New Atlantis' raising, and taking a look at a time when therianthropy is fading into uneasy acceptance, was a good way to stretch the world's boundaries.
Another part of my pride is that I also made good on my choice to go all-culturalia this year. (For you readers who haven't been here a while, "culturalia" is the term I've coined to describe my occasional artifacts-from-a-parallel-universe. Fictional non-fiction.) Not only did I produce eight slices of TTU life rather than "stories", I wove them together in a single strand. I mention this because it's worth marveling at how these things can flow out when you find your creative groove.
Anyway, I'm going to take a cue from last time, and give y'all a chance to weigh in on the BaMoTTuStories ...:
Poll #887897 Pick a winner or three
Open to: All, results viewable to: AllPick up to three of November's offerings that you think were this year's best.
* (You can read the e-mail conversation mentioned above, and all of the other stories along the way, by following these links in order: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]. Non-convo posts: [8] [dwivinations]; [9] [Elements].)
Additionally, I'd love to hear any random feedback below. (And/or egoboo -- it's no big sin to have Praise Whore Moments once in a while.) It'll help keep my enthusiasm buzz at a nice high while I lay the groundwork for the TTU wiki.
... Oops, was that my outside voice? :)
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11:59 pm
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Chapter 7: In which a crazy idea gets taken a little too far To: "CB Fox" <cbf@feralnet.net> From: "claw n fang" <redwolves@therimail.com> Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2006, 22:22:23 GMT -0800 Subject: Re: Getting some DWIM answers
Lucky me, I can't sleep. :-( At least this means I was up to receive both your letters. Might as well respond to them right away and see if that gets me any closer to shut-eye.
( The e-mail exchange draws to a close ...: )
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04:42 pm
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The search for search answers (1 of 2) To: "Fang, Claw N" <redwolves@therimail.com> From: "Technical Support - FeralNet" <cbf@feralnet.net> Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2006, 21:53:17 GMT -0800 Subject: Getting some DWIM answers
Yay new magitech! Hee hee ... sorry to laugh at your frustration with 3T, but you have to admit that's funny :-D
As for the search. Whoah. Let's see if I can explain this.
First of all, I passed it on to Geo, who gave me the dwim lead in the first place. You and Claw met him last year at Jen's wedding. He's on the dwim development team. They love little mysteries like this.
Don't worry, I didn't mention the Gold search. I'm not stupid ;-)
He's getting back to me with what he finds out. I'll pass that on probably later tonight.
But he did explain to me a little about what they call "dwivinations." It's only a few searches that can turn up freaky results like that. If there's too little information available on the web, it will say essentially "I don't know", like with the Discovery location. If there's a lot of information available, it will go for the most reliable, like with the Gold murders. So basically neither of those is going to turn up different results than you got, no matter how you word it. Unless new facts come up and get made public.
btw, my search results for the government search thing were the same. So it wasn't just you.
I also tried out the search you suggested, about latitude and longitude. What it gave me was totp://dwim.mag/search?type=saved&user=justthefox&id=f6aAqj38CehS4b&authas=redwolves, the coordinates of the island the vacation pictures you mentioned were taken on. Those pictures were the first result in the plus sign. So I got a more specific answer but based on the same info. Hehehe ... I guess your search with the Pacific map shows dwim has a sense of humor :)
As for Claw ... I don't know. :( I'm worried too but I'm worried for both of you. You guys have been with each other a long time ... please don't let this hurt you, ok?
He owes you an explanation but you don't even know he was involved with whatever happened. Don't assume he lied until you have a chance to talk. If you think it would be easier maybe I can ask him. Let me know.
And look ... I hate seeing you like this. Maybe it would help to come over on Saturday and we can spend the night? I know it's been a while ... I don't want this to be awkward, I never did. But you've been having some rough times. I'd hate myself if I couldn't make the offer. Getting some of this off your chest or maybe getting a little distracted might do you good?
Love you, wuffie. Things will be ok.
## ## ## CB Fox, Systems Analyst and Senior Technical Support ## ## ## Phone (510) 555-HOWL ext. 144; cbf@feralnet.net; on-call 9am-9pm Mon-Sat # FeralNet - The nation's first theri-run ISP, serving the S.F. Bay Area Open to all * Quality service * Dial-up, ISDN, DSL. http://feralnet.net
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04:36 pm
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The search for search answers (2 of 2) To: "Fang, Claw N" <redwolves@therimail.com> From: "Technical Support - FeralNet" <cbf@feralnet.net> Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2006, 21:54:02 GMT -0800 Subject: FWD: Re: That search we were talking about
And here it is.
-- Forwarded Message ------------------------------------- To: "CB Fox (Feralnet)" <cbf@feralnet.net> From: "George Sinclair" <geosincronous@dwimail.com> Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2006, 18:16:34 GMT -0800 Subject: Re: That search we were talking about
> > A mystery indeed! Do you mind if I do a > > little digging and blog about your friend's > > search? > > Should be alright :) But just in case, maybe you > should take his name out of it entirely, and any > context for the search? I know he wants his > privacy.
Fair enough. Here's what I posted.
Subject: A dwivination Discovery Tags: dwivination, tinfoil hat, current events
Regular readers of our dev-team blog already know that one of our favorite games here at bwim is trying to puzzle out "dwivinations," those search results that are so counterintuitive or bizarre that even magic seems insufficient to explain them.
Another stellar example comes to us today by way of a friend of mine who just got hired to dwim-dev. (Congratulations, and see you in the office!) He related to me a search that someone shared with him regarding the New Atlantis Project's recent run-ins with the U.S. government. Take a look at totp://dwim.mag/search?type=saved&user=geosincronous&id=f55HX2aOTp95dB and tell me that didn't send your jaw to the floor.
For those of you following along without magitech or who are too lazy to click on the link, that would be a dwiv for "Why isn't the government magically searching for the Discovery?" (the Discovery being the NAP's flagship on their island-raising mission; great reading on them in the current Vanity Parade.) The top link goes to www.annapolis-usna.edu/journal/archive/2006-09-27/06jackson.html (subscription wall; BugMeNot). In a nutshell, a September news brief about a history professor being injured in a natural gas leak.
As others have written here, us non-digital beings can easily create ways to link two seemingly unrelated events -- albeit implausible and/or uncomfortable ways. We just don't expect our computers to have that same power. And they don't; search results follow a strictly logical and verifiable process. While DWIM's searches are based on proprietary magical technology, that magic serves exactly two well-defined purposes: Organizing the end user's thoughts, to distill vague desire for knowledge into a coherent question with a coherent answer; and comparing that question against a database of human-generated knowledge.
It can't know anything we don't already know; it can't play the what-if games that lead us into conspiracy theories. It can only search for and connect public facts. The chain that DWIM follows unrolls from question to partial answer to refined question to better answer, etc. It can't go anywhere the facts don't lead.
So how did it make the seemingly conspiratorial link between the continuing inaction of the world's most powerful government and a single barely notable pipe failure? As usual, the results of dev-team research are below the fold, to give readers a chance to scour the Web themselves before seeing the "official" conclusions.
( Read more ... )
Readers, feel free to flesh out the research or post questions below. As always, we welcome your dwivination submissions at dwim_dev@dwimail.com.
- geo
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02:34 am
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The dark side of magical search To: "CB Fox" <cbf@feralnet.net> From: "claw n fang" <redwolves@therimail.com> Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2006, 16:07:46 GMT -0800 Subject: Meanwhile, with my new DWIM membership
Hey, vix!
Sorry I haven't gotten back to you -- I got unexpectedly busy. I've been falling a little behind in my Search & Rescue qualifications. I kept meaning to take care of that, but Kev finally managed to corner me about it, and I couldn't put it off any longer. I've just spent most of the last two days on my WFR re-cert, (because if I did it next week like I was planning I'd have to miss the glacier refresher).
In the meantime, the MagiTech Input Sphere (tm) I ordered on Sunday arrived! I didn't get a chance to set it up until this afternoon, (blew off work for an extra day, since if I'd hit the office this morning I would have been a zombie), but I've been playing with it for a few hours, and it's an incredible piece of technology.
( Thought-to-text translation, a DWIM test drive, and the disturbing relevance of the following article: )
Naval Academy Journal Annapolis, Md. September 24, 2006
Professor Injured In Weekend Explosion Journal Staff Report
A freak accident on Saturday in Washington, D.C. left nine people injured, including an Academy naval history professor.
Cmdr. Ryan Jackson was taken to the hospital in serious condition after what the Defense Department described as a "natural gas explosion" in the Douglas MacArthur Memorial Building in Washington, D.C. Jackson suffered second- and third-degree burns over large areas of his body, broke three fingers, and fractured a rib. He was released from the hospital on Monday evening.
Defense spokesman Tim Adrian said that an underground gas line apparently was leaking into a room where Jackson and others were holding a private meeting on the Academy's 2007 outreach programs.
"We did detect the leak, closed off the pipe, and were taking steps to evacuate the area for safety," Adrian said. "Unfortunately, something sparked off the gas that had already been released. The whole department's thoughts are with those injured in the incident."
Jackson teaches post-WWII history, post-Changes history and the interdepartmental class "The Changing Face of The Navy." He was chair of the school's Department of Magical Studies in 2003 before the short-lived department was closed.
Jackson assured students he would be back in the classroom by the end of the week. Substitutes will handle his lectures until then.
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05:20 am
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Hey, and about that movie ...
To: "Fang, Claw N" <redwolves@therimail.com> From: "Technical Support - FeralNet" <cbf@feralnet.net> Date: Mon, 23 Oct 2006, 09:41:04 GMT -0800 Subject: Re: Well, THIS sure takes me back
On Sun, 22 Oct 2006, Claw N Fang wrote: > We should get together sometime. Want to jump up here next weekend?
Silly wuff! I haven't seen your new place yet. You'd have to come get me, but as long as you're visiting anyway, let's hit the Cineplex near my apartment. I like their popcorn.
> We could hang out in the UDist some and then catch a movie. _Holding Fire_ just started.
Oooh! New Kat Crowne movie! I love love love Kat!!! She reminds me so much of who I wanted to be. She makes it look so easy. Of course, the high lasts for maybe ten minutes after the movie. Then I remember how it all came crashing down for us ... yeah.
So, yeah, I guess I'm just trying to say, I'm sorry about Claw. How can he go back to that? But at the same time I hope it works out. Somebody needs to have that dream.
... I don't mean to get all depressing on ya, pal. I also wanted to remind you how lucky you are to live in Seattle. You get to read V&V in the paper instead of online. BOTH of them are worshipping _Holding Fire_ this week. So it really MUST be good .... hehehe.
Sunday work for the movie? We can meet for Indian lunch buffet first and maybe hit that arcade in Santa Clara?
## ## ## CB Fox, Systems Analyst and Senior Technical Support ## ## ## Phone (510) 555-HOWL ext. 144; cbf@feralnet.net; on-call 9am-9pm Mon-Sat # FeralNet - The nation's first theri-run ISP, serving the S.F. Bay Area Open to all * Quality service * Dial-up, ISDN, DSL. http://feralnet.net
( Pretend this is you clicking your bookmark to the Strange City's Movie Reviews section. )
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03:08 am
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It is done! And so back to the shorter stuff ... To: "CB Fox" <cbf@feralnet.net> From: "claw n fang" <redwolves@therimail.com> Date: Sun, 22 Oct 2006, 04:13:44 GMT -0800 Subject: Re: Well, THIS sure takes me back
Good to hear from you too, vixy. ;-) We should get together sometime. Want to jump up here next weekend? We could hang out in the UDist some and then catch a movie. _Holding Fire_ just started.
On Fri, 20 Oct 2006, cbf@feralnet.net wrote: > How's Claw? Is he still overseas on that Atlantis project?
They're going to be out there for ... I don't know. Years, probably. :-( He comes home every time the boat hits port, but things are getting kind of dicey out there and they're spending a lot more time holed up at sea. I see the weariness in his eyes more and more every time he returns and I just don't know what to do.
Claw keeps trying to convince me to go along -- I always was the better mage, and he just doesn't think he's doing a good enough job. But it scares me to see where this is going. I read things like that big feature Vanity Parade just ran (copy attached -- Claw's even in the story; he's "Ben") and the secrecy and paranoia give me flashbacks.
This is a dream he needs to follow. I can't and won't stop him. But after all we've been through, I just want some peace and quiet. Is that so wrong?
- Fang
p.s. Re the job - oh my GODS is that cool. Magically assisted Web searches? Time for me to get a trial subscription. Hee hee ... maybe that'll even help us track down Kiasu for you. ;-)
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06:09 am
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BMTS2 Sidebar: Now introducing Elements Anyone for cards?
n.b.: If any PBXers out there want to read through the rules, beta-test the game, and send me a log, I would be seriously in your debt. Possibly involving ice cream. Or a story commission.
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05:03 am
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BaMoTTuStoTTwo Sorry for the radio silence lately. I've been writing.
... No, I'm not participating in NaNoWriMo this year. (Although kadyg is. And I'm sure many of you guys are, as well.) Let me explain.
You may recall that back in the prehistoric days of the Internet -- we geologists like to call it the epoch of "2003" -- I set myself a challenge that came to be known as BaMoTTuSto, Bax's Month of TTU Stories. The end result was an unqualified success: One story a day consistently, except for Thursdays, which gave me an impossible work turnaround.
Fast forward to this year. I'm currently flipping between two part-times jobs adding up to a ~50-hour, six-day workweek. I've gotta do something for November, but a novel like 2004's is out of the question. So the thought comes up ... why not resurrect my short-story variation?
I didn't say anything about it, because I wasn't at all certain how far I'd get; I figured I'd just plunge in and explain myself along the way. And I'm rather glad now I didn't give people a big build-up and raise expectations, because after the first two days, dead silence so far.
On the other hand ... by the original BaMoTTuSto standards, this month is already a success.
Day Number Three's piece turned into a monster. What started as a quick magazine blurb turned into a feature article, then a chronicle ... I ran to the Web for hours of research, polishing it up, breathing life into a ship full of people I'd meant to be a one-off. Six thousand five hundred words so far for my throwaway culturalia, and I'm still one to two days from being finished! By itself, this single story passes my "minimum output" threshold for BaMoTTuSto One ... so I'm not giving up on 11/2006 yet, by any means.
In the meantime, I keep hitting little digressions ... like trying to make up a card game on the fly for a ship full of bored mages to play. I spent today writing down the full rules. I can't find a place to wedge it in to the article or the e-mail convo that's serving as a package for my slice-of-TTU-life pieces, so I'll just present it as a piece of bonus material tonight.
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02:41 am
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(There's a theme building here ...) Hey, wuffie, good to hear from you again. How's Claw? Is he still overseas on that Atlantis project?
On Fri, 20 Oct 2006, crimsonfang@seattle.net wrote: > Found this while sifting ...
That article does take me back. Speaking of which, what ever happened to Kiasu? There's a face I haven't seen in forever. Hehehe ... maybe I shouldn't push my luck by asking. It's sort of cool being one of the few mages that's ever met him without getting an ass-kicking.
I haven't heard a final word back on the job yet, but I'm hoping. It would be really awesome. Dwim is still determined to push at the bleeding edge of magitech and it's good money. I could use some steady cash.
I just wish I felt more secure about my chances. I tested really well, but my resume is crap. For obvious reasons I can't tell them about my practical magic experience, so all I've got is skill. Every time we group-interview I'm up against suits with red-hot degrees. We all know who the recruiters love to pick.
I'll let you know how it goes ... in the meantime, because of the NDAs I can't talk much about the projects they'd have me work on, but here's a link to their investor relations page, which sums it up.
http://dwim.mag/about/investor/
## ## ## CB Fox, Systems Analyst and Senior Technical Support ## ## ## Phone (510) 555-HOWL ext. 144; cbf@feralnet.net; on-call 9am-9pm Mon-Sat # FeralNet - The nation's first theri-run ISP, serving the S.F. Bay Area Open to all * Quality service * Dial-up, ISDN, DSL. http://feralnet.net
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05:29 am
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Transcribed for your enjoyment CB -
Found this while sifting through some decade-old magazines at the pagan bookstore. It's kind of interesting seeing how things look in hindsight. Hell, some of this stuff I never even heard about at the time.
p.s. I hope you got the job. I got a call yesterday checking your references and I gave you the most glowing review I could.
- Fang
SCARY STORIES By columnist Tor Torkleson From _Aquarius Ascended: A Journal of Real Magic_, vol. 27, No. 10 (Nov. 1997)
It's our November issue, which means that by the time you get this, you'll be experiencing one of the only three certain things in life: Christmas advertising. But I'm sitting here writing this article on the evening before Halloween. My partner is preparing our costumes, the veil between the worlds is still drawing back, and I can't help but think of ghost stories. Except in this case, I don't think what's sticking in my brain is actually a story about a ghost. You all remember Killington Hall, right? The vengeful spirit of the "Killington knifer" that got some serious media attention three months ago after that spooky murder? Then other near-victims of the ghost came forward into the media blitz, then a few big inconsistencies started popping up, and then ... well, Valdine and Gold robbed all the headlines. (We ourselves wrote about Killington back in Issue 27:7, but due to its timing we could only pass on some of the earliest reports, and by the time we started writing 27:8, we had a lot of other things on our minds.) Now the truth is coming out: The police have been working quietly behind the scenes, with some good old-fashioned detective work, and they say they've unearthed the murder weapon, a knife with some good old-fashioned human fingerprints on the handle. As it happens, I have some friends in Florida, so I've been following the story pretty closely -- and the evidence that this was just good old-fashioned criminal malfeasance seems convincing. But as I write this, it's been three or four days since the police press conference. They didn't name names and they said they weren't in a position yet to make any arrests. So the news was barely a blip, and nobody seems interested in following this up. Unless a big development happens between now and when our magazine's published, this will probably be the first you've heard of it, and I wonder whether the rest of the world is ever going to hear about it at all. Killington Hall wasn't exactly a high point for magic in the media. And ... well. If it was just a single harmless ghost story gone bad, maybe it wouldn't bug me so much. But it's just one in a long string of events that have really started to make me wonder. Who doesn't hate mages and magic these days? Where aren't we under attack? I guess bad media attention is the fourth certain thing in life, so Killington shouldn't have surprised me. Political backlash like ATPA and Matt's Act was probably inevitable. But what's up with the commercial market for mages -- which at the beginning of the year was so hot that a company like Logos Dei could become a Wall Street darling out of nowhere -- sliding down and starting to tank? Why is technology so inexplicably hostile to magic, with reliable thaumometers selling like candy but magic foci and boosters being entirely the realm of snake-oil hucksters? Some days, it even seems like magic itself is starting to work against us. Let's take teleportation as an example, since Vick Tannigan's recent cover story about it in a Boston alt-weekly is starting to get some wider attention. (See our "Magic in the News" article, p.6.) Vick makes much of his lament that safety issues have for all practical purposes ended the use of teleportation. I find it interesting, though, that neither Vick nor anyone else who writes about the subject ever mentions one odd fact: There WERE no safety issues until that first accident report in late January. It's inconceivable to me that in all of the thousands of teleportations necessary to arrange Dennis Redwing's big meeting, there wasn't a single incident of the now-infamous "ping timeouts." No mages teleporting into trees. Why, then, are these such real threats now? I hate to start throwing accusations around, but I don't even think all of these attacks on magic can be blamed on external factors. Dennis Redwing's "use this safe thing with caution" was vastly idiotic, as his many critics are right to point out, but we need to wonder whether there was more to it than that. How could a warning that obviously hypocritical have been anything but intentional? The man who personally oversaw the biggest orgy of teleportation the world has ever seen, now warning people not to do as he did? But wait! Conveniently, the rules of magic seem to shift in just the way he's talking about! Okay ... this is starting to sound like a conspiracy theory, and I'm not getting paid to spout off wild-eyed ravings. Despite the weird rumors and the fact of him being the first one to change, I don't really believe our dragon all-star has the power to change the world's rules, and I don't think you should either. But there is something fishy there -- an honest whiff of behind-the-scenes maneuvering. I wish I knew enough to tell you why. Just like any good conspiracy theory, any one element by itself seems too implausible to take seriously, but once they start to add up, you start seeing patterns that make you stay awake nights. Take another random example, which (I hope) is completely unrelated: The odd unicorn theri who calls himself Kiasu (see article in 27:4 and our "Duelist Watch" in every issue since). In a nutshell, here is a completely unknown mage who has made seemingly random visits to mages around the world, challenged them to magical duels, and beaten the snot out of them. Every one. (Those who have loudly claimed otherwise have been, shall we say, rather publically refuted; one such rare Kiasu sighting is discussed on p.12.) Usually alone, sometimes in groups, his victims all describe one thing in common: Being exponentially outmatched. Here, again, is a case of someone not obeying the rules that us merely mortal mages suffer through. What's going on? Are these people the public face of some force behind the scenes yanking our chain? In the absence of some rational explanation, a conspiracy seems like the most sane solution to the puzzle. Of course, that's what deceased scumbag Matthew Gold thought -- if his filing cabinets are any indication. And it's possible reaching that conclusion got a whole houseful of people graphically murdered. I really wish the big media hadn't so completely overlooked the plain fact of a folder being stolen from his cabinet by the killers (as we, among a few others, reported in 27:8). He knew something we aren't supposed to. Given the manner of the killings, it probably has nothing to do with our magical conundrums, but the bottom line is that we just don't know. There's a lot that we just don't know. Another example: I haven't heard a single good theory about the two-thirds of a second that astronomers have confirmed Earth is missing. It's scary to think that every spell I cast might be working only because the Earth hiccuped ten months ago. But look -- I've been telling ghost stories after all. Ghosts of explanations, shadows of conspiracies. And even a few scary twists to boot. Looks like I did get into the spirit of the season after all. I hope you had a happy Halloween, and I hope that maybe this winter will bring a few more answers than this year has.
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