random bits
I didn't know about the
Netflix
prize until
siderea posted about it. Nifty! Improve
their predictions by 10%; win a million bucks. It'll be interesting if
the psychologist ends up beating the mathematicians.
I recently attended a religious service that had a lot of poetry in it. Or, at least, I assume it was poetry, but it made me wonder: surely modern (meterless, structureless) poetry is more than just doing things with white space, right? I mean, I understand a sonnet or a sestina at some level; I see the challenges that faced the author and can appreciate the artistry worked within those constraints. I have, thus far, been unable to develop such an appreciation for the choice of where to put a line break, except in the small subset of cases where that creates a change in meaning or creates an accrostic or some such. It feels, to me, sort of like composing music without concerning oneself with key, mode, or time signature. Obviously I'm missing something.
I was asked a few days ago to read a short torah portion this Shabbat. I wondered how long it would take me to learn (it's about 12 lines in the scroll). Answer, for first-order learning: 35 minutes. That was surprising. Of course, it will require daily reinforcement to keep it, but that's fine.
Note to self: I was talking with someone recently about what I look for in candiates for the laurel (the SCA's highest award for arts and sciences), and remembered that I had written about this a while back. Yup, still believe all that, almost six years later.
no subject
BTW, IRT peerage requirements, I take exception to your characterization of Masters of Arms. And so, for that matter, does Corpora. I don't need to tell you that the orders are entirely equivalent except for the swearing-fealty thing. Yes, there are some MoA's who revel in being "Northern Army Thugs". But are you going to call Kobayashi Yutaka and Randall of the Dark unchivalrous?
The existence of MoA's is the fault of the SCA's hardwired notion of "Global Solutions for Local Problems". If, so long ago, the King of the West (was that Henrik I ?) had said to Richard the Short, when Richard couldn't "swear" due to mundane religious convictions, "Oh, okay, Rich. Then don't. ARISE SIR RICHARD!", we wouldn't need or have Masters of Arms today.
no subject
It also took me the longest time to stop reading iambic pentameter with that duh-DUH duh-DUH rhythm and just read the text. (Ok, dialogue -- we're talking Shakespeare here.) So just because it has form doesn't mean I can leverage that form for reading. Less-blatant forms seem to work better for me; I can read a sestina and while one part of my brain is digesting the content/imagry, another is appreciating the form.
I responded to your other comment over on the other post. Thanks.