Hi all,

I'm currently running a kickstarter to fund an audiobook version of Hidden Things (my NaNoWriMo novel, once upon a time, published in 2012 by HarperCollins).

We've hit our basic funding goal (which will create both an audiobook and a free, DRM-free podcast-released version), but I've been watching the community here, and checking out the great projects everyone's working on, so I thought you'd appreciate seeing what a fairly modest kickstarter can accomplish.

Thanks!

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/doycet/hidden-things-audiobook

Hidden Things Audiobook
A new Hidden Things audiobook. Available on as many platforms as possible, and airing as a DRM-free podcast in early 2014.

"If you’re buying a new laptop this holiday season, you should probably get a MacBook Air. Its build quality is best-in-breed, its 12-15 hour battery life (on the 13" model) absolutely embarrasses the competition, and its operating system is extremely reliable and polished. Plus, despite what you may have heard about Apple products, it's actually quite affordable compared to the competition."

I've spent 25 years either actively avoiding Macs, or considering them and deciding "they're good, but they're not so good it's worth paying 50% more."

The MacBook air is better than its competition in every aspect but the touchscreen (which I don't give a hot damn about), and is, unbelievably, either cheaper or the same price as any windows machine that even comes CLOSE to the same specs. I've gone from someone who simply didn't have time or budget for a Mac to someone who uses his mac in preference to any other machine in the house… in the space of a month and a half. Amazing machine.

The Laptops Worth Buying This Holiday Season
If you’re buying a new laptop this holiday season, you should probably get a MacBook Air. Its build quality is best-in-breed, its 12-15 hour battery life (on the 13″ model) absolutely embarrasses the competition, and its operating system is extremely reliable and polished. Plus, despite what you may have heard about Apple products, it’s actually quite affordable compared to the competition.

"Dwarven Chronicles"

The wise. What kind of tests does something like this apply to? I'd really like to rack up the uses I need on this thing so I can get rid of it :), but we can't seem to come up with tests where the bloody thing applies, so I welcome brainstorming.

Thoughts? Speak, my dwarven brethren.

Upgrading my Macbook Air to the new Mavericks OS and led to really frustrating, rare-but-not-unheard-of power management programs – terrible active battery life, and a system that was draining the battery to 0 while allegedly asleep

Considering one of the main draws of the Macbook Air (for me) is battery life, this was a huge problem.

It took many hours (largely due to my never having done any of this on a Mac before), but yesterday I decided to back up my apps via time machine, format the drive, reinstall Mountain Lion, and restore apps via the backup. (Huge thanks to +Mark Brueschke for SMS tech support throughout the process.)

Despite the time it took, and some browser syncing frustration that was really an unrelated issue, the whole thing really went swimmingly – remarkably painless, all things considered.

And, best of all, I got up this morning to a machine will the same battery levels (63%) as when I closed the lid at noon yesterday. And I've been working on it, on battery power, for the last three hours, and I still have an estimated five hours of power left. I love this machine.

I'm a little frustrated by the issue with Mavericks, especially considering the OS upgrade was supposed to dramatically increase battery life, but I can live without the Mavericks features for awhile (and the next time I upgrade, I'll have a full Time Machine backup to jump back to, rather than the half-assed thing I had to do this time around. In this situation, I think +Dave Hill and +Kate Testerman 's practice of waiting for #.#.1 versions of system upgrades is the way to go.