Installed a new Firefox extension today (RetailMeNot, if you must know), so it's time for a restart. And I might as well clean up these tabs while I'm at it:
Stanford Magazine and the Interstitial Arts Foundation are both looking for short stories to publish--up to 2,500 words by November 5th and 4,000-10,000 words by December 2nd, respectively. I probably have a better shot at the latter, which is likely to more receptive to genre (rather than "literary") fiction.
I really shouldn't be spending more money right now, but these Gamestop coupons are awfully tempting.
A fellow Viable Paradise graduate's (not my class, but still my tribe) short story "Chrono-Girl Vs. Kid Vampire" has been published online.
The latest issue of ACM Queue is online. Probably my last, since I didn't renew my membership for next year.
GrooveLily has posted "The Flash Point," another demo track from their new show Long Story Short.
Courtesy of Lifehacker, links to two things that sound cool but I don't really need: Windows registry hacking and a utility that clears all the "Recently Used" lists in Windows.
Viable Paradise linkage: Jim McDonald's recommended Emergency Kits and Elizabeth Bear et al.'s seriously serious Criminal Minds fanfic, Shadow Unit.
We need some kind of toy hammock to keep things from falling behind the corner bookshelf in the living room.
More things I really don't need: USBCell rechargeable AA batteries, a $50 Stargate mirror, and a $40 print of Serenity Valley.
I don't remember why I was looking at the Superstruct Game.
Another VP alum got her poem published online at Expanded Horizons.
A great collection of photos from VPXII--thanks, Alberto!
Charity art project to fight malaria, co-sponsored by open-source screenwriting software Celtx.
Writing links from VPXII.
Researching uses for our ancient WiFi access point: Avaya/Lucent/Orinoco RG-1000 Residential Gateway notes and WDS page from Wikipedia.
More from VPXII: Preditors and Editors™ and First Lines from Famous Books.
Read Free Star Trek Comics Online!
Last but not least, Writer's Digest reveals 28 Agents Who Want Your Work. But that list was published in August, so they're probably swamped with queries at this point.
~CKL
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