Geek Catalog Update for 8/9

People And Profile

And the Geek Catalog project continues – and I keep finding more fascinating resources and initiatives.  I’ve written some scripts to help me out, and yes, eventually this is going to get anchored or just put into a database.

What amazes me is that I just keep finding stuff.  Things I heard of, things I didn’t hear of.  We geeks have a lot of ways to change the world.

So what’s added this week?

Computing

  • Charity
    • Little Geeks – A Canadian charity that refurbishes donated computers, and gets them to children in need.
  • Female Geeks
    • The Ada Initiative – An organization that supports women in technology, with a heavy emphasis on codes of conduct, training, and an embrace of open source.

Fans-Harry Potter

  • Charity
    • The Harry Potter Alliance – A chapter-based alliance of HP fans engaged in charitable works, with a heavy emphasis on social justice and leveraging fandom for the greater good.

General

  • Community
    • Hackerspaces.org – A site dedicated to hackerspaces, from the latest news, to tools to make one, to lists of one you can join. Great to find people of a like mind so you can work together.
  • Education
    • MIT Open Courseware – Classes available online for free – from MIT. Sadly the major way to get involved is to donate, but it’s a good cause.

Space

STEM

  • Wildlife
    • Project Noah – A software platform that brings citizen scientist together in various projects to record and preserve biodiversity and understand nature.

Writing

  • Literacy
    • Kids Need To Read – A charity promoting a culture of reading, providing books to various institutions, especially those that support disadvantaged children.

 

There you go – get active!

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, publishes books on career and culture at http://www.informotron.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

Boost The Signal – The Professional

Scientist Scope Technology Science

It looks like Boost The Signal isn’t done yet. Thanks to some suggestions from Serdar, contributor to this site and author of many novels, including one I joyfully edited (see, signal boosted), I have one more subject I haven’t discussed in promoting the works of others.

If you’ve deemed yourself an Ambassador for someone and their work, most of the advice I’ve given you is for things most any dedicated person can do. It’s general advice, depending on your level of commitment.

But what if you’re a fellow professional, either inside the same profession as the person you’re advocating for or on an equal level elsewhere? What happens when you’re on the “same” level or even higher for that matter?

I’m glad you asked, because I’ve got some special advice for you. Here’s how you can help someone get the word out about their work and even help them be better at what they do.

OK, you didn’t ask, but play along here.

In The Same Profession

So let’s say you’re in the same profession (or roughly the same) as the person you want to Boost The Signal. What can you do to help them out?

Reach Out: Just contact them. Imagine the boost they’d get alone from just having you talk to them, a fellow expert? If you’re more well known and further along in their career, the effect would be even more pronounced.

Don’t worry about annoying fans, I find that stereotype is usually far more fiction than fact.

Speak As You: Got a blog, interview, whatever that gives you a platform? Mention them. People are listening to you, and I think that an honest recommendation will be accepted.

(Note that depending on your position, image, and policies this may not fit).

Make An Appearance: Does the person or group you’re trying to promote have a blog, podcast, etc.? Make an appearance, do an interview, guest-post – then link back to it. Share yourself and your publicity with their work.

Network: You know people in similar professions, publishers and coders and scientists and what have you. Introduce people to whoever you’ve become ambassador for. They can help out – bring the person into your network.

Coach and Mentor: Provide advice. You may be in a senior position (trust me, it’ll sneak up on you) so help the person out. Edit something, give feedback, offer advice, talk to them. I’m sure they’ll appreciate the help.

If they’re arrogant enough to turn it down . . . well maybe it’s time to rethink your Ambassadorship.

Credit When Due: If the work in question really inspired you, mention it in one of your works. How many authors credit this person or that book? Do that too – give appropriate recognition. Actually you should do this anyway for your inspirations – good promotion is a complex web.

Invite Them Along: Going to a trade show, convention, etc.? Invite the person you’re playing Ambassador along. They can be at your table, maybe do a panel with you, etc. Give them a boost.

In A Different Profession

So if you’re in a different profession than whoever’s Signal you’re trying to Boost, it gets a bit more complex. I’m a Program Manager, so what am I going to do, make a Gantt chart for someone?

Actually . . .

Use Those Skills: Maybe your skills will help out the person you’re advocating for. Promote a writer by doing pictures of their character for a website. Help out a software engineer for work by assisting with a resume. Brainstorm what you can do to help out and apply yourself – it may be a surprise.

Be The Gate: You may not be in the same profession as someone, but their work may be of interest in your profession. Several times I’ve mentioned works to people in my sphere – IT – because let’s face it, we’re all geeks and me recommending books and video games is normal.

Explain Your Market: You can also talk to the person who you’re playing Ambassador for by explaining the market you’re in to them. Maybe that game is going to be too long for your typical busy geek, or that comic will appeal to RPG fans if there’s stats or a world dictionary.

(And the PgM market in IT? Our time is limited so we want damned good stuff that’s fun. Also for you to publish on time, because, hey, schedules.)

Crossover: You may be a different profession than those you’re trying to help, but a lot of the advice for being in the same profession applies. Interview, mention them, make an appearance, etc. You just need to assess what is affective and what’s not – and you may be surprised.

For myself I meet a lot of remarkable people who aren’t in my field, and I pass them on to Kurt who isn’t in my field, because interviews are his big thing

Use The Tools You Have

So you’re a pro – use what you have to help others. It may be not what people expect, but you’ve got the skills to help others pay the bills. You just need to figure out where you can assist.

I also find that there’s something special abut leveraging one’s professional life to help others. You see yourself differently, and you see others differently. It deepens the value of your professional life and your sense of social involvement.

Too often we can think of our jobs and skills as just things we do at work, or want to get away from. Sometimes the latter is true, but by asking what more we can do . . . we do so much more.

Keep Boosting The Signal!

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, publishes books on career and culture at http://www.informotron.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

Way With Worlds: Heroes and Villains – I’m With The Agency

Wild Dive

So let’s talk Heroes and Villains and your world.

I should note that when I talk Heroes and Villains I’m using that to pretty much mean the same thing as “Protagonist” and “Antagonist.” Why? Because it’s a hell of a lot easier to write “Hero and Villain” and sounds a tad less academic. I’ve got enough trouble going academic as it is.

So for the duration of my digressions, I hope you’ll forgive the simplicity.

But hey you have your main character(s) right? They’re the heroes and villains, correct? They’re the ones you focus on, right? The hero, especially, is the main character, right?

Not necessarily.

You may have a main character but they may not be a Hero. Oh there may be a Hero, but it’s not your main character.

For some writers, this is a problem, and it brings up an important issue in telling the stories of your world.

A Critical Definition

As noted earlier, when you’re writing, your Main character(s) of your story are essentially viewpoints on the world. In a few cases if you use a first-person writing style, quite directly so. But just because the story is from their perspective it may not mean they’re the Hero or Vllain.

When I try and define Hero and Villain, Protagonist and Antagonist, one thing that is critical is that the Heroes and Villains have effect. If your Hero is the main character the story is told from the perspective of someone affecting the setting. A Villain is the same way.

They may be morally different, but both are rather active, even if reluctantly or reactively (in the case of some Anti-Heroes).

In a way, Heroes and Villains are defined by a sense of Agency, of the ability to act and direct and change things. It may not be in a good way, or an effective way, or a competent way. They may fail, but their activity upon the environment is what makes them Heroes and Villains as much as their motivation.

You could be exceedingly evil, but if you’re in a coma due to your last drug binge in your lair of evil, you’re not really an Antagonist. You’re more an After-School Special for supervillains.

You could be exceptionally heroic, but if that results in no direction and activity, then you’re not really the Hero, are you? Yes you may be a nice guy, but you’re not really the Hero, you’re a well-meaning victim of circumstance.

Sense Of Agency, Sense of Story

Thus when you are deciding on your story, if you’re telling a tale of Heroism and/or with villainy, Heroes and Villains require agency, initiative and direction. If they do not act, they are merely acted upon and at best responding, and even then poorly.

This is a critical definition, as a few things happen to those who make tales that can ruin the sense of Agency.

  • We focus so much on worldbuilding, our characters bounce round like pinballs. Ever read a book that seemed to be an exercise in tourism? You get the idea.
  • We conjure up characters to tell the story or have it happen too. The Hero is there so stuff happens and things get done, but they’re not a character, not part of the world. They’re a camera with legs, making your tale the equivalent of a found-footage movie.
  • We spend too much time inside the Hero’s head we forget to make them a person. You don’t notice how unfurnished a room is if you keep looking out a window.

Now in a few cases if your Villain is a phenomena like a plague or something, then the Villain can lack agency in a human sense. Their “agency” comes from pure brute force and circumstance. But if you’re writing from a hero’s point of view and they have no initiative they’re no Hero.

You’ve probably read stories like above. Someone gets all the hero trappings but never does anything, never shows any initiatives. Never does anything. It’s boring – you find yourself wishing for a Mary Sue/Gary Stu because at least they’d do do stupidly overblown stuff.

(And if you can write a story where the Hero is a faceless force and the Villain has a sense of agency, I want to talk to you.)

However sometimes your main character doesn’t always have a sense of agency. In a few cases, this is actually OK.

The Narrative Character

If a main character is not a hero, not a person with a sense of Agency, then in many cases that can be quite lame. It’s not interesting to read about someone bouncing around. It’s annoying to just watch things happen to someone in a world, even if the world is well written.

Except in some cases, I do think this is a valuable form of storytelling – if done consciously.

Sometimes the main character isn’t a Hero, it’s what I call a Narrative Character. A Narrative Character is someone who relates what is happening but has little role in shaping what is going on. That may not sound interesting at the start, but I believe it can be done well if handled properly. Thus, I think in cases where this is deliberately chosen, this is a legitimate form of storytelling.

Now I should note that I think truly Narrative character, the victims of circumstance, are relatively rare. Usually they’re on a scale between Narrative Character and Hero. The exceptions are usually narrative stories, where someone is reiterating what’s going on.

But it’s a legitimate choice if you do it right.

I feel some of the best examples of Narrative Characters are often found in horror stories, especially those about people in the grip of unfathomable evil. Their narrative ability both explains the horror but also communicates their sheer overwhelming sense of being trapped. Lovecraftian tales often do this quite well.

Though I wouldn’t limit the idea of the Narrative Character just to horror.

Make Your Choice and Move On

So when writing and picking perspectives, remember that Heroes and Villains have a sense of Agency. If your main character lacks suck, there’s either a flaw in your choices, or you’re really writing a Narrative Character.

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, publishes books on career and culture at http://www.informotron.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.