Looking for More ITotD Topics—and Authors

We are rapidly approaching the end of May—the point at which 365 consecutive Interesting Thing of the Day articles will have been published, as promised. And, as I’ve also indicated, that is the time when I anticipate making some pretty significant changes to the site. (See also the follow-up article here.) But even now, I’m discovering—to my shock and horror—that I’m running out of topics. Yes, it’s true. Although I have no doubt that the world is full of many thousands of interesting things that have not yet appeared on this site, my personal list is pretty well depleted.

Many of the topics discussed so far have come from reader suggestions, which I appreciate enormously. And I have a few more such articles I’m still planning to write. But the pickin’s are slim right now. I could really use a large infusion of new ideas! If there’s something interesting you’d like to read about on the site, please follow the instructions (including, especially, the request for reference sources) on the suggestion form. To help jog your creativity, here are the themes for the next few weeks (and remember, I interpret these themes as broadly and ambiguously as possible):

May 8–14: Missing in Action
May 15–21: Preconceived Motions
May 22–28: Odds and Ends
May 29–31: Less Is More

There will, by the way, be more new articles after that, but (a) not until I’ve had myself a nice long vacation; (b) not every single day, as they have been; and (c) probably without the weekly themes I’ve relied on over the last year. More information about the upcoming changes at ITotD, which I’m actually quite excited about, will appear at the end of May.

One small disclaimer: not every suggestion turns into an article (not even the ideas I’ve come up with on my own). For every article you read on ITotD, perhaps 8 or 10 ideas were considered and abandoned. This happens for a variety of reasons. Sometimes a suggested topic is too broad (“Write something about flowers!”); other times, I can’t dig up enough information to justify writing a whole article. (For example, trivia facts, while interesting, are not what the site is about.) Then there are times when a topic is too complex, too controversial, or in some ineffable way just “not right.” I can’t always say precisely why a particular topic doesn’t work, but I’ve developed a fairly good feel for what I can and can’t turn into an article. All that to say: if you’ve offered a suggestion that has not appeared as an article, please don’t feel bad. It may yet appear; and if not, it wasn’t for lack of trying. I routinely spend an hour or two researching a topic only to find, sadly, that it won’t work out for one reason or another.

So: do send in suggestions, but better yet—become a guest author! Over the past year, about a dozen articles have been contributed by five other authors. I’d be ecstatic if that number jumped to one or more guest articles every single week. If there’s something interesting that you’d like to write about from your own experience, that would be tremendous. Everything you need to know about writing for ITotD is on our Write for ITotD page (or in the style guide). Please do run your ideas by me before actually starting work on an article, and bear in mind that there are a few (easily navigable) hoops to jump through on the way to publication. But I’d deeply appreciate some help with the writing—both now and after May 31.

Day of the Tiger, and then some

Well, it’s a big day for Mac fans, sci-fi fans, and authors.

Today (technically, this evening at 6 p.m. local time) marks the official world-wide availability of Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, though some customers received their copies more than a week ago. This is a huge release with lots of amazing new features, about which you can read more on any of a thousand other Web sites.

Also at 6 p.m., my new ebook Take Control of Upgrading to Tiger goes on sale. If you’re a Mac user who’s planning to upgrade, that ebook will be the smartest $5 you can possibly spend. There’s also an excerpt from the ebook on the Macworld Web site. In addition to my new ebook, three other new Take Control ebooks will go on sale today: Take Control of Customizing Tiger by Matt Neuburg, Take Control of Users & Accounts in Tiger by Kirk McElhearn, and Take Control of Sharing Files in Tiger by Glenn Fleishman. These four ebooks will also appear in print Real Soon Now as Take Control of Tiger from Peachpit. (And yes, my ebooks on Apple Mail and Backups will be updated for Tiger in the near future too.)

Shortly after 6 p.m. my time, I will be about three blocks away from the nearest Apple Store in San Francisco, watching The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy with Morgen and some friends. I’m a huge fan of the late Douglas Adams—even met him once at a book signing. I’ve been looking forward to this movie for years, and I certainly hope it does the story justice.

Last but not least, today is my mom’s birthday!

Nose to the Grindstone

Although I never intended to update this blog as frequently as Interesting Thing of the Day, it’s looking like the next few months will be an especially lean time. I’m working on several new ebooks and articles that have quite challenging deadlines, and my free time is unbelievably limited. I currently anticipate that around June 1 my schedule will become significantly more relaxed, but until then, expect very few new posts here.

Frackin': My new favorite word

OK, I’m not ashamed to admit that I’ve gotten sucked into the new Battlestar Galactica series. I had to watch at first just to see what the SciFi Channel had done to the series I knew and loved as a kid. (A female Starbuck?! What in the gods’ names could they be thinking?) I’ve been genuinely impressed with almost every aspect of the show—the amazingly realistic visual effects, the interesting story lines, the clever twists. But most of all, I’ve enjoyed hearing the characters cuss.

Rather than simply sanitizing the scripts of all four-letter words, the writers wisely chose to assume that, this being a different time and place, different vocabulary could be considered profane. Hence: frack. In every episode, you’ll hear things like “No frackin’ way!” and “Oh man, we’re really fracked!” and “What the frack are you doing?” And because these lines are delivered without the slightest irony or humor, we buy them as real swearing. Improbably, it works extremely well.

Thus, I’m giving up “flippin'” for “frackin'”—at least for the time being. Oh, you think that’s silly? Go frack yourself.