From: Damien Broderick (damien@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Thu Dec 03 1998 - 12:25:58 MST
Hi Eli
At 06:13 PM 12/2/98 -0600, you wrote:
>I was kind of hoping that would be my great-grandparents' generation.)
Well, I'm just hoping like blazes that *I* can hang on long enough. I have
my doubts, alas.
>Are any of "us" in this new book?
Robin Hanson gets a nod. Jeff Dee the >Humanist is cited several times.
'gene is quoted. You're not; sorry 'bout that. :)
>Are you looking for proofreaders?
Aaargh. It's just abt to go to the printers, after a typically nightmarish
sequence of sloppy editing and proofings, re-set endnotes and superscripts,
lost details, etc (despite everything being done electronically; I suspect
much of the last minute stuff was *physically re-keyed*, thereby losing my
own careful proofing). Thanx for the offer.
>The Spike from a relative
>He says that it was "popular" in
>Australia.
Very loosely speaking. I doubt that it sold as many as 5000 copies.
Still, that's pro rata equal to what, 45,000 in the States? Barely
visible, really, but better than a slap in the face with a dead fish.
>I really have to move to Australia someday. A surprising proportion of my
>favorite people are there, and it's out of the path of nuclear fallout.
Not a bad place to live, especially if you have some money or a decent
alternative (well-placed research set-up, whatever). I suspect if India
and Pakistan nuke each other we'd still get some crap in the air.
But even with email et al, we still *so fucking isolated* over here. Lots
to be said for the States as a base.
Best, Damien
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