Archiving the Web

Slight side topic from a simple review to have a little chat about something I have learned recently about archiving that I found rather interesting. And not just archiving books, for about 10 or so years now people have been trying to archive the web. For something that can be so brief in existing it certainly seems like a strange and vast task, but there is a reason. The ephemeral nature of the web means that sites that were there last week may not be there the next, domains are changed, pages deleted, and links are removed and information is then lost.

I mean, this blog post is a new webpage, one that did not exist yesterday, one that may not exist in the future if it gets deleted, and if it is not archived then it is gone forever. I assure you my quaint little recently neglected website is not going to be up for archiving at any possible time soon, but in the tumultuous degree I insist on partaking in, I am rather amused to find I am actually learning something rather interesting. Actually properly fascinating information about libraries, and books, and the internet, and the fact that technology is moving so fast everything is already practically obsolete before we have had a chance to appreciate it.

Something I learned about quite recently whilst researching for one of my assignments is that the 1086 Doomsday Book created by William the Conqueror still exists, nearly 1000 years after it was created as well all expected it should. It is a famous book that was crucial in documenting what is now Britain…or just England. I can’t actually remember and the Horrible Histories episode that discusses it escapes me just now. But the fact is it still exists, as does the few copies that were made of it in order to preserve the original.

What is more fascinating however is that on the 900th anniversary of the Doomsday Book, in 1986, the BBC in London did a Doomsday Project. They made a pair of interactive videodiscs to celebrate the anniversary to try and capture what England was like at the time. Yes, videodiscs, not even a beta tape, a floppy, a video tape, or a…some other kind of technology I can’t recall from the 80s. So essentially this time capsule was not that effective because while the videodiscs will remain readable for many more years, the computers that read them, and the software they used, were not lasting. They couldn’t even be viewed a lot in the 80s because the technology was expensive and therefore rare. There are a few working examples left to read them, but there is the fear that the 1986 Doomsday Project will soon be lost. I mean, they tried so hard and it just did not work. They are however rushing to try and retrieve this information but it is just sadly beautiful that it did not work.

That is a key issue of archiving anything, (and why books are triumphant if looked after correctly), there needs to be software and technology to be able to access the information. The same goes for everything, I recall an episode of South Park where Cartman freezes himself because he is too impatient for the new Wii. Instead he ends up too far in the future where he can get the Xbox, but there is no method of playing on it any more as the technology and power sources do not exist.

Books are very good at being archived, but space issues, and the fact that people tend to destroy them, intentionally and unintentionally, is a problem. We had a lecture a few weeks ago about all the risks and occupational hazards books are prone to from being in a library. The basics were those delightful little sleeves that were glued in the front or back of the book for the borrowing card, as well as library stamps, the Dewey number scribbled in there, and that is all before it is unleashed to the public. So all of this plus people damaging the books as they read make books tainted and can make it hard to preserve them.

The lecture also went on a little bit about theft, and how can you conserve and archive when people keep stealing books. My lecture was making books sound like high end art deals the way he was discussing the lengths people had gone through the get rare maps or rare books from collections. You only have to see the care people take with white gloves and air tight seals to realise books are precious, but at the same time your mind just goes to that one hardcover book your library has that has been “repaired” by the staff with masking tape to keep the spine on, and the one with the scribbles and underlines paragraphs in thick black pen that’s dug into the page it pops out on the other side, and random stains, so many random stains. Then you cannot imagine anybody secretly using a pen knife to extract anything from books and selling it on the black market as a high priced item. But it happens.

But as for the web, because it has become such a big deal and everyone upon everyone is using it, not just for trivial things like social interactions, but there are historical and culturally significant things being published on the web that hold importance. Things like information about the events of September 11, or about the Olympics, or research discoveries any other cultural or historical thing that happens would probably begin online, and this must be preserved or future researches will have nothing to look back on because the web pages have all been lost, unpreserved, taking all the information with it. No longer are books being written about events, (well they are, but there is a lot more on the web) and anybody and everybody is contributing.

You never really think about the web as having a lot of importance, there are fifteen different websites for the same song lyrics, there are strange things on Yahoo answers, and a website dedicated just to popping virtual bubble wrap. But there are also other websites out there that discuss evolution, dinosaurs, scientific discoveries old and new, religion, the history of the world, and how colonies were formed, kingdoms were created and lost, government creations and collapses, and all of these are important and will remain important for a long time. They show us where we have come from and it does so in an easily accessible manner. These are important as they have information that capture the culture at the time, what beliefs were, where technology was at, and what we were thinking of as a society. And the way to keep this information long after the fact is to archive and preserve these sites in ways that can keep both the intellectual information, but also the context and the structure of a site if necessary, in a form that can be accessed easily in the future. We have been preserving books for as long as they have been around almost and now we are recognising that the web has the same potential and are trying to capture it before it disappears. And I just thought all of that was really interesting and wanted to share that with you, even if it isn’t as eloquent and academic as it could be. Who knew the web was such a complex little thing?

When did November arrive? Call first November, we’re not ready!

So! November has snuck up on us once again and now it is almost half over. I am doing so much this month and I am being stubborn and not giving any of it up so it has been stressful and chaotic and interesting to say the least. I have uni work coming at me from every angle, assignments that decide they all want to be due the same week or on the day day, I am behind on my NaNo word count (though with a two day reprieve from uni work I managed to close the gap a smidge), and I am determined to keep reading even if it is just a chapter or two a day just so I can escape the madness and actually finish a book some time soon and not let this beloved blog of mine fall into disarray. 

I hope all of you out there who are doing NaNo are powering through. NaNo (short for NaNoWriMo which is short for National Novel Writing Month) is an excellent competition where the goal is to write a 50 000 word novel in the month of November. Because of uni not finishing until some time in November I have always started late. This was ok in my undergrad degree because it was usually like the 10th, or 8th, only once on the 17th, but I still won and reached by 50k. Then one year I was given the full 30 day writing spree which was divine…until my Masters. Now uni doesn’t finish until the end of the month which means we cannot ignore NaNo until we’re done, so we are doing it all side by side. But I adore NaNo, it is wonderful, which is why I am not letting the fact I have uni assignments and exams until the 29th deter me from following my yearly NaNo quest.

This is my sixth year and I know it can be tough, especially those moments when you cannot think of where to take your plot. The best advice I can give is to just write, write anything, start describing your character eating a meal or doing housework, have them look at their surroundings and find something strange, anything, because I know from experience if you force yourself to write, your mind will kick in and you will start to create scenes and get the ideas as you go. You just need to begin and let your imagination do its magic, over thinking is never a good thing.

I remember a few years ago I had been planning my NaNo story for months, since about April. I had it all planned out, characters, plots, even basic ideas for dialogue and conflicts. Come November I started to write and realised that I did not know where to begin. I had already done so much that I could not think of where to start writing. I changed my idea and still managed to win which was wonderful but I realised that you can over plan a bit too much. Don’t get me wrong, planing is excellent, knowing your characters and where you want them to go and experience will start you on a wonderful path and help guide you as the month goes on, but even if you haven’t got a basic plan set out yet do not feel like you cannot just start in the middle of your story or with a random scene and work your way out from there. Currently my story is broken into so many fractured scenes across so many different years it is a mess, but I know that the best thing for me to do is when I get an inspiration for a scene, or hear dialogue in my head, is not put it off until I chronologically reach that point because I will have forgotten it by then most likely, or it will not have the same fire behind it that it had when I first thought of it.

The rule I learnt from NaNo is ‘Quantity not quality’ followed by ‘November is for writing, December is for editing’. DO NOT EDIT! Relish in those little red squiggles and the fact you find yourself breaking contractions into possible grammatically incorrect sentences just to add an extra word in, that is half the fun, once you reach that 50k you will be feeling wonderful. Then you can ride the glory wave and realise it was not as hard as you thought and maybe you didn’t need to make so many trivial or unimportant scenes because you still haven’t finished your story. That is when you just keep writing and see how far you go before the strike of 12 on the 30th. I wish all participants the best of luck, and if I do not make it to 50k after all my motivational babble then I shall be terribly cross. But my stubbornness will keep me going, uni shall not defeat me this year, it hasn’t before and it won’t start now. Oh also, WriteorDie is your friend, your saviour and a god among writing programs. Take this and use it well to reach your glory. (ALL HAIL THE GLOW CLOUD WRITEORDIE!)

Since I won’t bore you with the uni traumatics, I will let you know I am still reading Around the World in 80 Days by Jules Verne, one slow chapter at a time. It is rather interesting to say the least. It is so much better than that terrible movie with Steve Coogan and Jackie Chan may I say, so don’t look at that as a basis for the book. It is very detailed in the descriptions as well as the complicated journey, some may say dull but I don’t think so, you get used to it after awhile. I suspect this is so you can understand just how the journey was taken and the route they took. I am only about halfway through but it is worth the read I assure you.

And before I go, yes I know I just spent too much time writing this when I had two assignments and NaNo I could have been writing but that is besides the point. My story plot is always butting in to brain when I am trying to do uni work and uni guilt is hanging over me no matter what I do so why not ignore them both for an hour or so and do something else.

News: Apologies

NewsYou don’t really need to know this but I thought I’d offer a friendly explanation, I have a lot of reviews to finish and post but uni is taking over my life. I have four assignments due in the next week or so but after the 8th I think it is I should have some breathing space until about the 18th when the next batch are due so I am going to squeeze some serious catch up in there. Plus NaNo starts on Friday so this should be interesting if not horribly painful and stressful. Any who, just thought a quick update was in order. After my grand return speech I kind of fumbled and now it’s the end of October and I still hate uni, still haven’t written finished reviews, and I’m trying to actually finish some books in the few  minutes I find through the day otherwise we’ll just go mad or cry, either one is possible right now.

So fingers crossed we can get through the next month alive and sane! Here’s hoping!

Good news! They didn’t change the locks on me!

*Blows dust from blog and wipes away cobwebs with a broom*

NewsHello all! Yes I know, it’s been so long and I feel so guilty and I am very cranky with myself for being gone so long (so long it actually took four goes to get back in because we forgot the password). BUT I have excuses and I am feeling totally fine using them, despite still feeling guilty. One is of course I was away on holiday for three weeks and with naive intentions thought I could blog at the same time (laughs mockingly at my past self). The second excuse is that upon returning home, well, I had to recover from the holiday, and I kind of postponed it again by having a Disney movie marathon and I figured I’d get back on top at the end, but that marathon went for three weeks, a lot longer than I expected and then ended the night before Uni started. And yes, third excuse is Uni. Even in those early first few weeks when nothing much was happening I always would think, I should get back to the blog, I should finish and post this review, I should. But I didn’t, because I hadn’t written what I am writing now: The explanation post. So if I just jumped in without the explanation post I’d have to back post and explain out of order, and even on Twitter and Facebook (also equally and unhappily neglected) I could have been sharing but I just haven’t and now here we are.

Don’t get me wrong, I may still back post, because that’s what I do, and I have some author birthdays I really wanted to post about and review things for, and, because I have an it’s my blog I can do what I like attitude going on, I am going to. Also, I was thinking of bragging about what I did on holidays because there was some epic book related, author related, and other related stuff that happened so I may sneak a few I went here and there and scatter them about and see what happens.

I think I just need to get back into the swing of things. I truly have about four half finished reviews of some pretty excellent, mind blowingly amazing books to finish so that’s going to be awesome. Plus some other posts I wanted to write so we are going to make time for them. Uni is going to get worse (it’s already pretty bad now in all shapes and forms) before it gets better, I’m only half way which is also terribly depressing, but we’re going to try, even if it means cutting back on the posts or back posting when I get time. I don’t want to stop doing this, it is too much fun. Oh and NaNo’s coming in November too. Oh what a chaotic few months we’ve had. November isn’t going to be pretty, but, we’re powering on because that is what we do best and it’s been the theme of the past few months so why stop now?

Also, my stats show that people still visited so that was a complete surprise. Yay you for still coming to see me, it is much appreciated. I also completely forgot about the competition that was running before I left, I thought I’d be back in time to mention it but I was still getting on the plane on the day it was drawn, and then yeah, completely forgot after eventually getting home essentially two days later. Darn those time zones. I did try and see who won that but I couldn’t find it, but whoever you are congratulations!

So here’s hoping after this we can get back into the swing of things, try and keep this going and make it into a good little blog after all the issues we had at the beginning with that other site, then my hiatus, we have had a great first year of things to work around.  But it does feel good to be back.

 *throws self a welcome back party* *hunts for Toby to ask why he wasn’t running things while I was away*Room2

Artemis Fowl and the Last Guardian (#8) by Eoin Colfer

Published: July 10 2012
Goodreads badgePublisher: Puffin Books
Pages: 306
Format: Book
Genre: Junior Fiction/Young Adult Fantasy
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

Opal Koboi, power-crazed pixie is plotting to exterminate mankind and become fairy queen.

 If she succeeds, the spirits of long-dead fairy warriors will rise from the earth, inhabit the nearest available bodies and wreak mass destruction. But what happens if those nearest include crows, or deer, or badgers, – or two curious little boys by the names of Myles and Beckett Fowl?

 Yes, it’s true. Criminal mastermind Artemis Fowl’s four year old brothers could be involved in destroying the human race. Can Artemis and Captain Holly Short of the Lower Elements Police stop Opal and prevent the end of the world?

Finishing The Last Guardian was like finishing Looking for Alaska and The Book of Lost Things. It is just so divinely written, perfectly executed in its story, storytelling and structure, and just leaves you so emotional and filled with joy and feelings of sadness and happiness and all those half-half emotions, that you just have to stop and sit and just recover for about half an hour to a fortnight.

This final story in the Artemis series and one that exits with a lot of grace, a lot of action, a lot of laughter, as well as suspense and adventure, just like we have come to expect from Colfer and all his characters. As the blurb reveals, an old foe has returned to seek power and most likely world destruction, and once again it is Opal Koboi. There is a point where you do start to marvel at Opal, her plans are extremely clever and complicated, and they are not basic smash and grabs, there is an eerie patience in her that adds to her danger. She is willing to wait for what she wants and doesn’t really care who gets in her way.

Her intent this time around is to bring ancient fairy warriors back from their long-dead state and wreak havoc on the land to bring about the end of humanity. So a little more smash and grab than before but with a great level of complexity attached. After seemingly escaping a paradox in the previous book, Opal creates a new one, this time one that impacts not only on the Underworld, but the human world as well. With the human world in total chaos, and the Underworld trying to stay standing, there is a lot of pressure for Artemis to fix things before they get any worse.

I liked the idea behind Opals plan, it was a great, grand, last book plot, one that I think Opal was ideal at leading. There are so many small details and connections throughout that make it work. Being Opal’s plan there are many individual factors that must work, but there are limitations when stage one events do not always go to plan which creates the suspense and drama.

Colfer leads us into the story and main events with an even pace where we see the resolution of the previous book, one I was very glad about, and then we’re lulled into a nice rhythm and safety before everything erupts. Then you relish as you try and keep track of the multiple storylines that are running simultaneously, all eventuating in the inevitable collision where your anxiety and suspense really develop the further you read.

It is hard not to make this sound like a fast paced action book, and in a way it is, but it also isn’t. If you know the previous Fowl books you know the pace Colfer provides. It is one where there is a lot happening, a lot of drama and action, but while it seems you are racing through things you really aren’t. You get caught up in the emotion and the theories running through your mind about what is going to happen next and you get so involved that it doesn’t matter how Colfer paces it, it flows seamlessly and you just ride it along, opened eyed and mouth agape from what has happened and what on earth possible will next.

We are shown a lot more of the twins Myles and Beckett this time around, as well as Juliet which is nice, though not always as we’d expect. As characters the twins really do grow on you, even in this book when they are not always themselves, there is a strange charm displayed by a four year old possessed by an ancient fairy spirit. When they are not possessed the true Fowl nature and Artemis influence emerges again which either delights you, or you could just think they are already that pretentious at four, where will they go from here? It could go either way. Though Colfer’s decision about the differences between Beckett and Myles is interesting, while it appears one is much further advanced, there are moments when they are both as formidable and intellectual as each other.

What I also enjoyed what that even as the series comes to an end we are still learning about The People, their history and humanity’s role in their past, not to mention more secrets of the Fowls and their estate.  It just goes to show that even in the final book there are still things to learn.

There also seems to be a lot more humour and strange comments from characters this time around. With the stakes so high and with the excitement almost continual in some places, the comments made sound extremely confusing out of context and certainly are abnormal at the best of times. There is something about Artemis and the others that the more peril they are in and the worse things become, the more sarcasm that escapes their mouths. Always a bonus I must say, but even the less sarcastic simple statements of fact can be fairly humorous at times.

Colfer writes in much the same way he always has, it is essentially just another Artemis Fowl book, but with everything that happens in this book that really isn’t true. It is the ultimate Artemis Fowl book. The outcome of seven previous books, watching that little twelve year old grow up through the pages and marvelling at all his antics, not to mention the world of The People, all comes together in 306 pages of bliss.

Moving away from the general drama of Opal and her grand plan, there are some gorgeous moments about the characters. We really see just what the past eight books have done not only to themselves, but to their friendships and outlook on the world. Half the wonderfulness of this book is the characters and who they have become.

As usual Colfer connects to his previous works, and the events in the previous book are not forgotten, not by a long shot. What is wonderful is that even all the emotion we had for Artemis in the previous book resurfaces and we see that even though he is cured, there remains a fear of the Complex returning. It is only happens occasionally but there is a certain moment I adored, it is almost a throw away sentence that you could miss, but in that simple sentence you know that under the chaos around him and the confidence he projects, you know the lingering fear remains that he will return to what he was. In the previous book we s how he saw himself, saw how he saw the world and the people around it, and it rightly terrified him. And in that simple moment where he has to double check he hasn’t reverted you see that he is truly petrified of it returning, and Butler sees it and it is just something that makes Artemis so much more beautiful as a person.

The close friendship of all the characters really shines here, especially the relationship between Artemis and Butler, and Holly and Artemis. With both worlds on the verge of collapsing Colfer keeps the focus well on Opal and certain key characters, drifting only when necessary. You almost forget that humanity is falling apart in the distance, but the relationships really help drive this narrative as much as the events.

As a final book the sense that things are being wrapped up is there, but you do not even notice at the time. Colfer weaves it in from the beginning so we gradually see how things have changed and where characters are in their lives. Familiar faces return, new faces are introduced and you’re almost lulled into thinking it is just another Fowl novel but there is too much emotion and joy and wonderment to ignore that this is Artemis’ finest hour and Colfer is going to make it tug at your emotions through the entire thing, laughing, crying or otherwise. I am giving nothing else away but emotion and vagueness as it is customary, because as another reviewer rightly put it, “to give anything away would be far more criminal than anything Artemis has got up to in the past”.

It is a bit sad to have finished the series, but I couldn’t think of a better way to go out. This book, its beginning, the middle, the ending (oh god the ending!), the detail, the conflicts, the development, the reflection, the references you only just remember in the nick of time, it is utter perfection and an excellent way to conclude a series.

Total, utter, perfection.

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