Fanfiction, Story Sharing Sites, and Online Samizdat

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, February 28, 2019

This month’s tech program will explore sites and apps for those who want to read literature that might not yet be ready for prime-time but that still might be just the thing they were looking for.

Fanfiction goes back to before the Internet first came online. At least since the days of Star Trek’s original series,1 fans of various works in many (possibly all) genres have been writing stories that take place in the universes of their favorites and that tell stories about the works’ characters that the original creators never imagined. Similarly, people have long shared their original creative works with others without publishing them through an “official” publisher.

Granted, the quality of self-published work is quite variable, but Andy Weir’s The Martian was first distributed online in this way as was E.L. James’ 50 Shades of Grey (originally a fanfic of the Twilight series). Also, under the former Soviet Union and other restrictive regimes, samizdat (Russian for ‘self-publishing’ but with the implication of distribution in violation of censorship) has brought out works like Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, Václav Havel’s “The Power of the Powerless”, and some of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s material.


1 See “Fanfiction.” Fanlore (last modified on 11 February 2019). Accessed February 25, 2019. https://fanlore.org/wiki/Fanfiction:

“However, the point at which ‘true’ fanfiction – or at least, identifiable amateur stories by fans using copyrightable creative works – started to be written is difficult to determine and depends on how broadly one defines the term itself. Jane Austen fanfic has been around since Austen’s nieces started writing it. (See ‘Jane Austen fandom history.’) Sherlock Holmes appeared in fiction written by other authors as early as 1891’s An Evening With Sherlock Holmes, the first of three Holmes parodies by James M. Barrie. Sherlockians were writing pastiches about the Great Detective in their journals in the early 1900s [see here]. A fictional account of 19th century fanfic writers can be found in Little Women, suggesting that the pursuit was widespread, if undocumented. Possibly the first published Tolkien fanfic appeared in I Palantir in 1960. And Star Trek fans started publishing zines (lots and lots of zines) with fanfic in the late 1960s, starting with Spockanalia.”

Cutting the cord

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, January 24, 2019

The question of whether one can cancel cable TV comes up more and more. Though the answer still seems to be “It depends,” the venues for finding online video entertainment, documentaries, and other things cable provides continue to increase.

This month we’ll look at online video services and at devices you can use with them to get a larger picture than your computer screen provides.

Niche News and the Blogosphere

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From Language Log to KnitHacker

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, December 27, 2018

Aside from seeing pictures and videos of cute dogs or cats, what do people expect from the Internet? One thing they want is solutions to problems, whether that’s “How many teaspoons are there in a tablespoon?” or “What should I look for in choosing daycare for my child?”

With our hobbies, work, or passions, though, we don’t have just a short, one-time list of questions that we can Google the answers to and be done with it. We have ongoing growth and learning that lead us to new, deeper questions as we go along. For centuries there have been professional journals and hobbyist periodicals that spoke to that need for deeper, ongoing conversation about the general issues in a field. The Internet has broadened that field by making it possible for individuals and smaller organizations to write regularly for audiences of others who share their interests. Blogs are a means of distributing that content in a way that makes it easy to keep up-to-date with it.

This month’s tech program addresses questions about how to find blogs and other sites with niche news that are relevant to your interests. We’ll also look at software and services that facilitate keeping up with those sites.

Online Book Clubs

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, November 29, 2018

Often after you’ve read a book that you really enjoyed, you want to discuss it with other people who’ve also read it. That impulse has long been one of the motives people have had in forming or joining book discussion groups.

Maxwell has two fine groups that meet here monthly, but what if your niche reading isn’t part of the focus of either group? Well, just like Facebook and other social media apps let you keep in touch with far-flung friends, there are sites on the Internet that host book discussion groups on all sorts of topics, eras, genres, authors, and so on.

Staying Secure Online

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, October 25, 2018

Hovertext: “All I want is a secure system where it’s easy to do anything I want. Is that so much to ask?”
XKCD #2044 (“Sandboxing Cycle”) by Randall Munroe
License: CC BY-NC 2.5

This month’s program will introduce various apps, techniques, and habits that can help keep your online life as safe as it can be on an inherently unsafe internet.

The lack of safety results from the fact that we want machines and applications that can communicate with each other and send each other commands that get executed.

There is, however, an essential tension between this kind of utility and the security we want to maintain. We want apps that can communicate with each other or websites that can deliver active, dynamic content, but we also don’t want viruses on our machines, and this conflict establishes the conditions for an eternal arms race or dialectic in which our thesis of a secure but useful cyberspace is countered by the hackers’ antithesis of a Wild West where we are their vulnerable victims. Security app developers provide the synthesis that begins the dialectical cycle anew.

The Taming of Google

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Search Engine Tips and Tricks

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, September 27, 2018

The rumors of the death of the reference librarian have been greatly exaggerated.

Just as electronic books have killed neither paper books nor the libraries that provide them, neither has Google made the specialized skills of a good reference librarian obsolete. As Neil Gaiman told us, “Google can bring you back, you know, a hundred thousand answers. A librarian can bring you back the right one.”

There are ways, though, to tame the beast. This month’s tech program at Maxwell will introduce you to some of the ways you can tweak your online searches to get results that better answer your actual questions. You won’t come out with all of a reference librarian’s skills, but your Google searches will be more productive.

Finding Job and Career Information Online

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, August 23, 2018

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

French proverb

Whatever the world is, today, good and bad together, that is what Gutenberg’s invention has made it: for from that source it has all come.

Mark Twain

When you see articles with titles like “What do people look for on the Internet?” one of the topics that’s sure to be on the list is information about job hunting and career planning. In this class we’ll look at some of the sites and search strategies that can help you efficiently find the job and career information you’re looking for.
Back in the day, before the Internet was available to all, the job-search experts advised job hunters that using the classified ads in the newspaper should only be one element of their search and that they should primarily rely on their networks — professional and personal — for leads, information, and access to the people who actually make hiring decisions.

The experts have now updated their advice to be that we should not rely on online job boards but, rather, on our networks. However, some of those networks are also online now. And the job boards, like the classified ads of yore, are not entirely useless.

Things stay the same.

At the same time, the Internet and computers in general make some things doable that once were effectively impossible. Just as with Gutenberg’s development of movable type.

Today’s workshop will look at some of the types of resources available on the Internet to help with the job hunt. We’ll talk about networking tools, but we’ll also talk about tools to help with researching companies and, yes, about job boards.

Ваша информация на Facebook …, er,

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Your Information on Facebook: Controlling What Social Media Shares About You

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, July 26, 2018

Credit: Privacy by Owen Moore
License: CC BY 2.0

As has become all too clear over the past year-and-a-half, what you share or view on social media platforms is probably being shared with more people that you think you’ve authorized, and it is being used to affect what sorts of ads and other publicity get fed to you.

This month’s tech program will look at

  • How to change various settings to gain some measure of control over what you see and what you share,
  • Safe habits to cultivate online, and
  • Critical examination of memes and articles that might otherwise get you to hit Reblog before you’ve thought about it.

Using the Google Docs suite

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Nah… What’s up [Google] Doc[s]?

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, March 22, 2018

If you’ve worked with a suite of office software such as Microsoft Office, Apple’s iWork, or Open Office, then you are familiar with word processing apps, spreadsheets, and presentation software.

Google Docs, Sheets, & Slides are Web-based office applications that let you create or work with these formats. You can create documents, work on them in real time with other people, and store them in your Google Drive account for free. You can access your documents from any computer with an Internet connection, and there are also apps for Android and iOS.

Some of the things you can use the Google office suite for are:

  • A grid for letting group members update who’s available for what events
  • Working with others in writing an article
  • Working on a document all by yourself that you want to be able to access at home, at work, and elsewhere or on both your laptop/desktop and your mobile devices.

This session will show you how to set up a Google account and will teach you the basics using the suite, how to share documents, and how to define the groups they’re shared with.

Setting a Network up at Home

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, February 22, 2018

The modern household generally has several computers and other devices that could potentially communicate with each other. A network allows them to engage in that communication, whether it’s as simple as making your printer available for all devices, as complex as running your own Local Area Network (LAN), or something in between like simply sending files from one machine to another.

In this month’s tech program, we’ll see how to set a network up. This includes:

  • The details of getting WiFi properly installed and tweaked,
  • Connecting a printer to the network (even if it isn’t network-ready out of the box), and
  • Getting devices running different operating systems to talk to each other. Network printing

Staying Safe Online in Public

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Internet Safety out in the Wild

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, January 25, 2018

This month’s Tech Program at Maxwell will introduce various tools, techniques, and practices for maintaining digital safety when using mobile devices or laptops at public locations.

You may recall that in October 2017, some computer scientists at the University of Leuven in Belgium found a way that hackers could crack WPA2 — the most widely used and most secure Wi-Fi protocol around. While there are now patches to protect against such a so-called KRACK attack, the discovery reminded us all that any technology is subject to hacking.

That continuous weakening of the effectiveness of security fixes is why you keep up with updates for your devices and their software. But when you venture out from your home, you now have to interact with various devices whose security level is not clear.

Meet Libby

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Overdrive’s New App

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, November 30, 2017

Overdrive says that eventually they will be discontinuing the old Overdrive app, so eventually only Libby will be available. Libby has a more attractive look and feel than the Overdrive app, and it has some features that make using it somewhat more straightforward. However, for the moment, if Overdrive is working well for you, then switching might not be worth it.

Zen and the Art of Computer Maintenance

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Computer Fixes You Can Do Yourself

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, October 12, 2017

Source: Munroe, Randall. “Tech Support Cheat Sheet.” XKCD 627 (2009-08-24) https://xkcd.com/627/
License: CC BY-NC 2.5

As the flowchart in the cartoon hints at, a big part of what separates the “computer geniuses” from “not computer people” is a level of comfort with an iterative process of having no idea what’s going on, trying a few things, looking a few other things up, lather, rinse, repeat until the problem is solved or seen to be beyond your (current) capabilities.

Buying a Mobile Device

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, September 28, 2017

Things to look for in shopping for devices

Handout (PDF)

Dr. Google Will See You Now

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Finding Reliable Health Information on the Web

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, August 24, 2017

It’s easy to find health “information” on the Internet. But which results are from reliable organizations? Even if a source is reliable, what facts are relevant for a given situation?

In this month’s tech program, learn how to find trustworthy Websites for medical information, conduct searches to get the most relevant information, and navigate databases like PubMed.

I’ve Come to Look for America

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Using Digital Libraries on the Internet to Explore American Culture

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Thursday, July 27, 2017

In the 1960s we hopped on our motorcycles and rode from town to town, following hints and rumors that promised interesting information or events that would help us find …

In the early days of the Web we surfed from site to site, following links that promised interesting side information from one page to the next in search of …

In this month’s tech program we’ll see what some of the country’s cultural institutions make available on the Internet. Digital collections allow museums, galleries, archives, libraries, and similar organizations to share rare or unique items with the world. These items can be historical photos or other works of static visual art, film clips, maps, music scores, manuscripts, pamphlets, books, and more.
Join us as we surf around in the digital collections of some of the US’s cultural institutions in a search for America.

The Sky’s the Limit

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Understanding and Using the Cloud

Maxwell’s Tech Program for Tuesday, June 20, 2017

In general, the Cloud refers to computer resources that are located on a network rather than on your own machine. In the media, the concept often gets reduced to services for storing files (for example, Dropbox, Google Drive, or Onedrive), but there is much more to the Cloud than storage of static files. The Cloud also includes services that work like the applications on your computer to allow you to create and modify text documents, spreadsheets, pictures, videos, and so on.

Staying safe online

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Tuesday, May 16, 2017

There are two aspects to online safety: security and privacy. There is overlap between the two, but security refers to the steps you can undertake to keep your machine, your data, and your identity from being attacked or stolen while privacy focuses on how broad an audience you want for information you share online.

Both of these concepts are important, but different individuals will have greater or lesser desires for privacy. Security needs to be high regardless of how much or little privacy you feel you need. This month’s program looks at how to manage both.

Facebook for Beginners

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Tuesday, April 18, 2017

How to sign up for and tweak Facebook

Digital Library Basics

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Tuesday, March 21, 2017

eBooks & eMedia available at Maxwell

Streaming Internet media to your TV

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Maxwell’s Tech Program for Tuesday, February 28, 2017

With streaming media, TV shows and movies can be accessed over the Internet, so you can watch them as soon as you want. At first, this was only possible on devices like computers, tablets, and smart phones that had Internet connections built into them already. Streaming media players make it easy to watch such media on your TV.