erifneerg / Dorian

There is one person in erifneerg’s collective.

Huffduffed (63) activity chart

  1. GitMinutes: GitMinutes #08: Drew Neil on Vim and Workflow

    In this episode we talk to Drew Neil. He is the man behind Vimcasts, and the book Practical Vim. A couple of years back he did a whole bunch of screen-casts on how to use Git from inside of Vim, and this is what made me want to get him on the show.

    http://episodes.gitminutes.com/2013/05/gitminutes-08-drew-neil-on-vim-and.html

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    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 4 weeks ago

  2. Changing my operating system | Derek Sivers

    Derek Sivers Home, Blog, About, Projects

    http://sivers.org/os

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 3 months ago

  3. CSS for grown ups

    http://speakerdeck.com/u/andyhume/p/css-for-grown-ups-maturing-best-practises

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 3 months ago

  4. Internet Insecurities | Unfilter 41 | Jupiter Broadcasting

    U.S. intelligence officials claim Cyber-attacks and cyber-espionage pose a greater potential danger to U.S. national security than terrorist groups.

    http://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/33401/internet-insecurities-unfilter-41/

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 3 months ago

  5. Writing Excuses 7.32: Astronomy 101 for Writers » Writing Excuses

    Eric James Stone, Nebula winner and “graduate” of NASA’s Launchpad workshop, joins us to talk about astronomy in our world-building.

    We talk about tides, habitable zones, planetary orbits and axial tilts, stellar life-cycles, and other fun factors for authors to take into account. But obviously we can’t teach you everything you need to know about astronomy in 15 minutes, so we wrap with some handy resources for you to begin your continuing education:

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 4 months ago

  6. Writing Excuses 7.38: Writing Love Scenes » Writing Excuses

    Shanna Germain joins Brandon, Mary, and Howard in front of a live audience at GenCon Indy to talk about writing love scenes. They’re not easy to get right, and they can be even more difficult to talk about it in a way that leaves the Writing Excuses team’s “clean” rating intact.

    We cover the ways in which the love scenes must support the story, and the importance of tension in setting those scenes up. Mary asks the question foremost in all our minds: how do you write a sex scene so that it’s not silly? Shanna fields it with aplomb, explaining how she lets the characters drive it, washing unintentional humor out of the scene.

    We also talk about how difficult it can be for those writing the POV of the opposite sex to get the head-space details right, and how love scenes fit into the pacing of your work.

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 4 months ago

  7. Generational 019 - Context and Projects with Jeff Hunsberger

    http://www.70decibels.com/generational/2013/1/26/019-tasks-contexts-and-projects-with-jeff-hunsberger.html

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 4 months ago

  8. Writing Excuses 7.53: Secret History

    Hey, guess what 2012 has fifty-three of? Mondays! So you’re getting a fifty-third episode of “Writing Excuses” this season. (You’re also going to be getting a fifty-fourth, because we stuck an extra in there a few weeks back.)

    Hopefully this excuses (no pun intended) the fact that this episode is a full three days late. Merry Christmas!

    Let’s talk about secret histories. A secret history is a subset of alternate history, in which historical events are given new explanations, typically fantastical ones, but in which the reader is invited to believe that this is the world we all currently live in.

    We mention Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Tim Powers’ Last Call, and Jo Walton’s Among Others, and why secret history has the appeal it does, especially when it’s done well. And because you want to know how to do it well, we spend some time on that, as well as discussing some of the ethics of creating secret histories in the first place.

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 4 months ago

  9. Writing Excuses 7.36: Writing Gaming Fiction with Monte Cook » Writing Excuses

    Fans of role-playing games should know the name Monte Cook well, because he’s been writing some of the highest-profile tomes in the field for two-and-a-half decades now. Monte joins us in front of a live audience at GenCon Indy 2012 to talk about writing games.

    We start by talking about some of the differences between straight-up prose, and prose tooled for games. With role-playing games, this often boils down to the fact that it’s not the writer doing the storytelling — it’s the role-players. The writer’s job is to provide the gamers with the tools they need. Monte and the hosts cover the roles of world-building, character development, and plotting, and talk a little about the path you might consider if you’re looking to get published in this field.

    If you’re ready to relinquish story control to your readers, if you are prepared to let them breathe life into the places, monsters, and characters you’ve created, this is the episode for you.

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 4 months ago

  10. Web Performance | The Breaking Development Podcast | Fresh Squeezed Mobile brought you by Breaking Development

    Fresh Squeezed Mobile is Breaking Development’s channel to get fresh ideas out there about mobile web development and design.

    http://fsm.bdconf.com/podcast/web-performance

    —Huffduffed by erifneerg 6 months ago

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