Weekly diary, June 30, 2019
Jun. 30th, 2019 06:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Summer weather is back, I've survived the biggest crunch time of the year at work, things are looking up. I wonder what I'm forgetting.

This is Monty (originally Shiitake, for those who read about him on Facebook). Now just over a year old, he's another ex-feral, but you'd never know it from the way he's developed into an absolute love bug.
The weekly anime commentary happened. FIFTY-EIGHT EPISODES.
The summer anime preview got written, and should be up soon. I'll have 14 premieres to watch if they all get licensed.
Spikecon finally posted its schedule. I don't have to moderate anything. Disappointed to not see any moderators reaching out before the con. I always send out a quick "here's some questions to think about, and is there anything you want to make sure to get a chance to say?" message to panelists beforehand when I'm moderating.
Still have a second reading project to blog about. Now that work crunch is over, might actually get myself to do that.
Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse made it to Netflix, so we watched it last night. WOW. Absolutely would not mind if that won the Hugo.
It's a good thing I only had two anime shows left to watch this week, because I have many closing thoughts about Attack on Titan. And about the incredibly misleading buzz that was circulating about this part of the story, and anime fandom and its ability to grapple with sf generally. Okay, some of those thoughts should not be put into print.
Sezan did not do so well this week, so next time I promised to bring my Time Traveller deck.
I thought I'd try practicing with it ahead of time, so I tried out The Crucible, which allows online casual play. Unfortunately it turns out not to have the cards from the expansion implemented.
But there was a GitHub repository mentioned on its help page, meaning it's an open-source project that people can just show up and help with. No, turns out there's no code there, it's just used for issue tracking. A little later, I learned that development has stopped because Fantasy Flight Games is working on its own official online play offering. No one knows when it's going to be released, though.
Maybe I can find someone up for a casual game at Spikecon.
The debates happened but you've probably heard about that.
Cat

This is Monty (originally Shiitake, for those who read about him on Facebook). Now just over a year old, he's another ex-feral, but you'd never know it from the way he's developed into an absolute love bug.
Fandom
The weekly anime commentary happened. FIFTY-EIGHT EPISODES.
The summer anime preview got written, and should be up soon. I'll have 14 premieres to watch if they all get licensed.
Spikecon finally posted its schedule. I don't have to moderate anything. Disappointed to not see any moderators reaching out before the con. I always send out a quick "here's some questions to think about, and is there anything you want to make sure to get a chance to say?" message to panelists beforehand when I'm moderating.
Books and media
Still have a second reading project to blog about. Now that work crunch is over, might actually get myself to do that.
Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse made it to Netflix, so we watched it last night. WOW. Absolutely would not mind if that won the Hugo.
It's a good thing I only had two anime shows left to watch this week, because I have many closing thoughts about Attack on Titan. And about the incredibly misleading buzz that was circulating about this part of the story, and anime fandom and its ability to grapple with sf generally. Okay, some of those thoughts should not be put into print.
Gaming
Sezan did not do so well this week, so next time I promised to bring my Time Traveller deck.
I thought I'd try practicing with it ahead of time, so I tried out The Crucible, which allows online casual play. Unfortunately it turns out not to have the cards from the expansion implemented.
But there was a GitHub repository mentioned on its help page, meaning it's an open-source project that people can just show up and help with. No, turns out there's no code there, it's just used for issue tracking. A little later, I learned that development has stopped because Fantasy Flight Games is working on its own official online play offering. No one knows when it's going to be released, though.
Maybe I can find someone up for a casual game at Spikecon.
Politics
The debates happened but you've probably heard about that.