* The Road to Glory is Lit by Coherent Light * This immense assemblage of text [I think Corwin referred to it as "thesis grade quantity"] is a general review of the last few cons and overall chain of events that have comprised the HitherTo of 1987. It tracks the further development of the floating laser show and general bunch of hackers known to many as the Frob Mob. In part this promises [threatens?] to be a bit of a brag about crewing light shows ["We came, we set up, we lased"], but it's appropriate in some way because we really *have* put a lot of time and energy into this stuff. An effort will be made here less toward chest-pounding and and more toward entertainment. This also is the last flame created on our last surviving tops-20 system, red.rutgers.edu, may it either rest in peace or supply lots of spare parts for someone else's 20, whatever DEC decides to do with the thing. Sigh. A lot of us got somewhat emotionally attached to that machine; I spent quite a bit of January 88 shoveling out 5 years' worth of old dusty files and adapting all my cute hacks to work on the VMS box I'm now mostly living on. But back to the story... We first encounter Evecon, which was actually *in* 1987 this year as opposed to its usual scheduling right before NewYears. Since the weekends were a bit screwy it was scheduled to begin Jan 2 instead. However, the month or so before this was the usual frenzied Christmas rusharound, most of which I spent bending hunks of brick strap into little handy positionable mirror mounts. We had learned at Philcon that "gooping" and duct-taping mirrors to the walls was not really the correct way to run a laser show -- they soon suffered from inevitable sag, and everything would drift out of alignment, especially as the room became warm from being closed up and dark with a lot of people and lasers in it. No, the plan here was to vastly enhance the traditional EveCon light show, hitherto the undertaking of Glenn, Spam, Chris and associates, with as much laser light as we could crank out and splash around the room. The idea for this had started back at PhilCon in November or so, when Glenn wandered into our room to see some laser things and we got to talking. It was obvious that the argon laser simply had to come to EveCon and be part of the show, along with whatever else we could drag along. Thus it was tentatively agreed on, so as the end of December drew nearer, I kept realizing that I didn't have this or the other bit of hardware and sitting down and building it. No, I didn't get a lot of "real work" done, either. One important supply stop was the Rutgers surplus-property warehouse, where I discovered a most wonderful building full of *history* -- most of it was full of old desks and such, but in the "lab equipment" section I found some of the most amazing old contraptions, most of which were completely useless for my current purpose but held my attention for many minutes while I turned them over and over and tried to figure out their functions. I heartily recommend a visit to anyone interested in blowing the dust off old vacuum tubes and silk-wrapped hand-wound coils and realizing the painstaking work and attention to detail that went into the construction of scientific equipment back then. Armed with this inspiration and the pile of junk I'd culled from those shelves, I went up front to the desk fully expecting to empty my wallet for it all -- a piece of a projector of some sort containing more front-surface mirror than I'd ever use, what was left of an *old* He-ne laser, a couple of slow-rev motors, etc -- I handed the guy the *five dollars* he asked for and walked out in complete amazement. A week and a half before I'd been frantic trying to determine where I'd get enough front-surface mirror to construct about fifty of my little positionables, because Edmund Scientific was being rather backward about shipment, and now I had *tons* of the stuff. Breaking it off the double-sticky tape in the old cabinet without cracking the glass, however, was another matter entirely, but with a sharpened piece of brick strap and perseverance I had soon junked the scrap metal and was happily spreading little tiny shards of glass around my room. There is something sexually gratifying about glass cutting. You make this tiny, almost invisible line, across its surface, and apply pressure. Bang! It breaks precisely along that line, defying everything your mind usually assumed about glass, in that you could normally never tell which way it would break. Many times did I marvel at this phenomenon, until I had a large heap of little 1x1 inch squares of the stuff. And as you might expect, the old stuff from Surplus was better than the smaller, more expensive piece I'd ordered from Edmund -- the silvering was denser, less flawed, and a lot more robust. It turns out that front-surface optics are really essential to this sort of thing, because the thru-glass attenuation and beam spreading given by rear-surface mirrors quickly becomes a problem if you have a lot of them. Thus the majority of December, in between work and finding the Christmas presents to fill the frighteningly miniscule demand I'd been informed of, was spent procuring and building laser toys. [My family never knows what it wants for Christmas, within the limits of practical purchasing power, that is.] In a while I had a small army of completed mirror mounts lined up in ranks across my desk; the slow motors received lubrication and brackets from which to hang them at the proper angle. I then went shopping for appropriate things to hang from them; I already had a small version of those little round faceted glass balls you hang in your windows, I needed more like it. I holstered the portable and headed down to the local flea-market type place, where I purchased a larger ball and found an antique store that had skads of glass frobs from crystal chandeliers. Here I had the most trouble I ever encountered in *buying* something. I was shopping through the boxes of these things using the portable, of course, and the large overbearing lady with a thick Dutch accent or some such runs up and starts waving her arms and yelling at me because she didn't understand what I was doing to her merchandise and her dog, who seemed intensely interested in the little moving red light. Luckily I had already picked out a reasonable selection of the things; I informed her that she could choose to accept my money for the things or not, but either way I was walking out of there with what I had come to obtain. She took my money, but when I tried to reassure her that there was nothing to be afraid of, she started up again and making threats of calling security. I told her "Call who you like, I've done nothing to harm you or your store" and walked out. But at least I had my little glass frobs to hang from the motors. One more stop for a roll of monofilament, and I was ready to make interesting shapes walk across the walls. One more idea-turned-reality, actually completed at home on Chrismas Eve, was a sort of kludgey keyboard with which I intended to quickly switch beams around to various places. The idea was to set up a bunch of interesting destinations for the switched beams, and in effect "play" this keyboard in sync with a musical track. This was alpha-tested at my parents' house in the living room, where I took the argon and Mom's laser and set up the first of a series of impromptu optics benches. [Oh, I didn't mention Mom's laser? Oh yeah -- one of the first things to do that month was to throw together a power supply and a box for a spare He-Ne tube I had sitting around, and present it to her for Christmas as a very late birthday present. Having seen what lasers could do with her collection of miscellaneous crystals and such, she wanted her own and was promised same, "someday", and since I missed her birthday, I managed to get this done for Christmas. Had a helluva time getting it to work, too, since this tube apparently wanted through-the-glass triggering instead of through the electrodes like a normal tube -- but finally I had a nice little compact package that started reaonably reliably, and she was utterly delighted to receive same, in a Vadic 3467 box yet.] Anyway, I canvassed the house for the sturdiest coffee table I could find, and set up what I envisioned to be a reasonable testbed laser show in the living room. Dad obligingly provided a bit of smoke from his cigarettes, and with the lights out things were looking pretty nifty in there with beams being switched into Mom's cabinet full of rocks, through the spinning glass thingies, all accompanied with Jarre on the tape drive. It was here that I noticed the chief problem with the keyboard: when the finger lifting the piece of brick strap holding the mirror was slightly off-center, the beam would miss a faraway target. I found I could correct for this reasonably easily by rolling my finger under the key, but it detracted from the "instant switching" effect I was looking for. I wanted beams to go blam, pow, zap instead of zap, fzz -- er, uh, fix, pow, well, I meant *pow* really, oops, my finger moved again, etc. Anticipating being placed in a smallish function room at the hotel like the light show always had before, I didn't worry about this too much because with practice I got better at making the beams go where they were supposed to. Sometime in here I received a message from Phil entitled "More blue sex!!", which was a huge win because now we had *two* nice powerful and pretty argon lasers. Using the data I'd obtained from mine, he had gotten his working, and in the same way I'd done back in August, shoveled a deskful of parts into a box and brought them along. Our total inventory now stood at two argons, a pile of random He-Ne's, two deflection systems, a mess of my little mirror mounts and crystals, and shitloads of duct tape. We were ready to roll, we thought. And roll we did. We all eventually arrived at MGrant's Luxury High-Rise, only to find his position in it being lowered somewhat and the place in a state of utter chaos. Apparently the person who they were renting the original apartment from had decided to sell or re-rent it, and they were in effect being forced to move from the old unit to another one in the other tower of the same complex. Thus Mike and his brother and Bob, the other roomie, were making frequent trips with hand trucks through the basement of the place. The building has a large number of really brain-dead rules, one being that the "proper" way to move is between the hours of 8am and 5pm or some such, and you have to hire "professional" movers to do the work for you. Feh!! All sixteen tons of that stuff was schlepped down, across and up again by the cheap, 24-hours available, muscle power of the residents, and quite a bit of it within the two days I was there and lending occasional help. Another brain-dead rule is that no waterbeds shall be owned by any resident. Mike drained his out the window, nineteen floors down the side of the building, and the maintenance people thought a pipe had broken on the roof. Luckily we caught said maintenance person downstairs looking at the water raining down outside the back door and told him what was going on. He laughed and thought it was funny and was glad of not having to go fix something, but the story got back to the building association president lady with who I was currently embroiled in a battle over their parking policy, which is even more brain-dead than the rest of it all. My association with the "offending" waterbed owner blew this little fight right out of the water, and she refused to talk to any of us anymore. Oh well. One of the last things to go was the snake tank. This contained the boa, which besides being in violation of the "no pets" rule and previously owned by Vicka was very large, and when we were there was due up to be fed. Six rats were introduced one by one into the cage, and while Geoff Goodfellow, Mike, Phil, I, and some other people stood around and offered comments, the food chain continued inside. The normally quite sluggish serpent would sort of slowly drift its head toward the hapless rodent, and in a blinding flash of speed would strike and roll itself over about three times headfirst, around the rat, and exert a steady squeeze for a good five minutes until it was sure the rat was dead [it could probably feel the rat's heartbeat through its body]. Then the carcass would be released, and ingested whole, while the body of the snake went through some amazing contortions to facilitate this. It was a surprisingly clean operation -- the only blood spilled was from the initial holding bite, small punctures. However, I think I'd prefer to continue eating the same way I do now... Anyway, the Thursday before the con rolled around, which was also very close to their last day of residency in the old apartment. Some more loads made their way across, including the support structure for the now-empty waterbed [that sucker was *heavy*!]. It wasn't really until midnight or so that we actually got out of the place and headed down across DC to the hotel, which was just across the Potomac in a place called Crystal City, which sounded eminently appropriate as a place to go do a laser show. We cruised down the deserted street and finally found the thing. It seemed appropriate to head for the loading dock to unload all the stuff, for which we had to drive all the way around the other end of the block and up this weird little service road behind another building. I got out of the car and immediately noticed a *loud* high-pitched squeal, looked up and saw the business end of an ultrasonic motion detector. The loading dock was locked, so I danced around in front of this frob until finally one of the security people came out to find out what was triggering the detector, and was a bit nonplused to discover a bunch of random people pulled into his loading dock, wanting to unload lots of equipment at 2 in the morning. However, they were eminently helpful once they realized what we needed -- they provided a couple of big flatbed pallets, which we loaded up and thus quickly filled our room with the stuff. The first thing we noticed was the *motion detector* on the wall of the *hotel room*. This gross invasion of privacy was quickly investigated and found to be powered off, but just to be sure we hung a sonalert on the power leads so that if it ever did power up we'd know about it in short order. The next thing we found was that the room next to us had an open connecting door, and was a magnificent suite. We decided that moving into it would get the hotel upset, and besides, it had two doors to the hall, and I didn't have enough extra Frob Mob locks to fill the doors. It also contained a motion detector which was similarly powered off, so we considered ourselves safe moving around it to investigate. Then the beds in our room got moved up against the connecting door, and we left it alone and empty. I had talked to Bruce Evry, the founding force and chief masochist behind EveCon, about what and when, and it turned out that he had planned to put us in the *main ballroom* on *Friday night*, as opposed to a small room on Saturday like I'd expected. Thus it was rather imperative that we arrive early so we could spent the day Friday setting up, before the con really got rolling at all. When we arrived we found some other hard-core con folk wandering around, one of which was Andy Kaufman who came by and deposited this weird thing with two fresnel lenses at either end of a tube in our room. We did some cursory first-level exploring and found cameras all *over* the place -- one of the most paranoid-seeming hotels we'd ever found ourselves in. But the important places, like the roof, were essentially completely unguarded by anything. When we arrived there was a *house* in the lobby constructed entirely of sugar frobs -- but this was gone the next day. Apparently the hotel didn't trust the convention folks to leave such a thing alone. But the main thing to do now was sleep, so we could rise early and start dealing with things down below. We regained consciousness sometime around noon, actually, and wandered down to survey what we had to deal with. The ballroom they were going to give us was at the moment split in two by one of the removable walls, and the stage was up against another one which was going to remain closed the whole time. So we had two-thirds of a rather large ballroom to work with. I convinced one of the kitchen help that I had legitimate purpose in borrowing one of their room service carts, which we used to haul the equipment down in a couple of trips. My next task was to find a half-decent table to use as an optics bench. I would have thought that a hotel like the Stouffer's, which had lots of "old wood" as one of the reservation people had told me, would have plenty of really sturdy classic oak furniture and such. They didn't. The best thing that two or three employees put together could find me was a relatively new standard folding table which I opened up and found to be ridiculously rickety. But having found nothing better, I decided to make do, and wrapped plenty of duct tape around the legs and supports, and duct-taped it to the wall and floor and got it reasonably steady. However, there was a roomful of gamers on the other side of the removable wall I was against, who kept knocking into it and worse yet trying to come out the little door my argon was right in front of. I eventually walked around there and informed them unambiguously what the situation was [read "yelled at"], and someone from the concom placed a large fluorescent sign across the door, and that problem eventually ceased. The setup was as follows: Carl Zwanzig and his sound board were in the rear right corner, or rather the side, when the other folding wall was opened, and Phil and I were in the front right corner. Glenn and Spam and crew showed up with their ton-and-a-half of stuff, and set themselves up just left of the stage. We hung scrim behind the stage to project floor floods and beams into, and the next hack was to hang the little positionables around the room so I could hit them from my little corner. Now, there was only one tall ladder capable of reaching the ceiling, and it was in constant use, and there were all those damn chairs in the way. Consequently it took me a long time to place the mirrors where I wanted them, and even then, with them stuck in the moldings at the front of the room and under the fan housings in the middle, it wasn't optimum placement. But I didn't really know what optimum was going to be, really, only having done this once before in a much smaller room. But I eventually figured out a few bounce paths that would look good through fog, and hung them off the keyboard. Oh yeah, I didn't mention the fog machine yet. Nick, who is originally from that area, arranged to rent us a genuine theatrical fog machine from Kinetic Artistry which MGrant was suppose to pick up while running errands during the day. Through some foulup, Nick went there and picked up a Rosco Fogger, and then MGrant went there to pick up the fog machine and they without checking their records handed him a Martin Fogger, which he lugged into the hotel and set down next to the Rosco, while we all went "Oh, no!!". MGrant was mightily pissed; it took me a long time to convince him that the fault lay with Kinetic who should have told him that the machine had already been picked up. But all that aside, we now had genuine fog machines to evaluate and learn about, as well as *infinite* amounts of fog to throw beams through, or so we thought... But as soon as we fired up the Rosco and filled it with juice and started testing it, some clown from the hotel came running into the ballroom and told us we couldn't use the fogger in there, because it would set off the smoke detector. We refused to believe him until a test was made; after the room was absolutely thick with this wonderful long-duration smoke, the detector finally realized that there was something akin to combustion products floating through it and sounded off. Our next suggestion was that we either take down that particular detector or have the hotel ignore it for the rest of the night. Apparently there was a human in the loop to the fire department; if a detector went off it showed on the operator's board, and the operator would then call the fire dept. False alarms cost something like $5000, apparently. Carl Ginter went off to deal with the political end of things while we continued our setup; he later came back with the good news that we could go ahead and fog the room and the hotel would ignore alarms from that area until we were done. Hooray! We did a lights-out check of things next, and discovered that laser beams look really *wonderful* through that stuff especially when they're switching around fast. Things were starting to look really good, and it was about time, too, since it was now around 8PM and we were on for 11PM or so and still had more things to do. By this time there were wires trailing everywhere, Phil's argon wound up going into Mason's galvo pair to make nifty blue Lissajous loops on the ceiling, I had aligned most of the errors out of the keyboard switching, and in the meantime Spam and crew were frantically banging assembly code into the TRaSh-80 that runs the sequential Christmas light strings. Meanwhile Larry was out in the hall with Rosethorn and some other people trying to choreograph some dance routines for our Laser Dance idea. As Time 0 drew near we started to realize many things: We hadn't really talked about the proposed soundtrack, I hadn't even thought about setting up the slow-rev motors anywhere and there seemed to be nowhere near the ceiling to get power for them anyway, and there were a zillion other things we wanted to set up but were out of time. In addition, everything went on hold for an hour or so while there was a song-and-guitar recital by someone whose name I forget. However, it should be kept in mind that this was our first "industrial-grade" stab at doing this. Finally our hour of reckoning struck. People started wandering into the room and we powered everything up again, killed the house lights, started throwing fog, put on some music or other, and basically sat there intending to play with the toys for the next hour or so. The time was right for the Big Oops: Carl Ginter suddenly comes running over to our side of the room waving his arms going "ixnay on the ogfay". *What?!??* Nothing much came out of our corner of the room while we tried to find out what the fuck was going on, but the upshot right then was that we couldn't use the fog machine anymore. Thus Karyn, who was at the switch of same, suddenly had nothing to do. Very pissed off and confused, we limped along without it for the rest of the hour or so. The things I had set up suddenly looked like little colored dots on the ceiling instead of the zapping beams I'd expected. Spam's side of the room was doing okay since his things were mostly the polarization projector and the Christmas light strings, while we attempted to follow along from our side with shapes on the ceiling and generic crystal beamspreads. Meanwhile things were slowly drifting out of alignment, so by the "end" of the show [i.e. when everyone sort of got bored] I was relying mostly on holding things in a beam right near me so the spread would go on the ceiling over the stage. At the back of the room, however, was a whole bunch of people running the beams from all the "leftover" lasers around the room, so there were still things to look at, I suppose. We were told that those who were there for it generally thought it was impressive. This was indeed a surprise, becase the entire crew agreed among themselves that we could have done a whole lot better with a little more thought and coordination [and, of course, fog]. We all learned a lot from this gig; many things about placement of equipment, arrangements with the management, hints about how to streamline setup, etc. At this point there wasn't much left to do but take it all down again and ship it upstairs [which was a lot easier!]. We spent the rest of the wee hours doing so, and having absolutely no energy left after the completely hectic day, fell horizontally comatose. During the next day, what was left of it, we discovered that there was *no* hot tub in the pool area but there were saunas whose heaters had been off long enough to make the rocks manageable, so we played with those for a while. The weight room contained these strange machines that use air pressure for resistance -- you dial your level of difficulty with a regular old valve. The pool itself was cold. We therefore couldn't do the hot-tub-to-wintry- outdoors hack. When we eventually tired of this, there was some convention wandering, more small bits of exploration which were stymied somewhat by the plentitude of cameras and on-duty staff members, and retired to the room to set up the lasers again in a more cozy and controlled environment. Now we could do our own *real* light show -- the smoke detector was disabled behind plastic bags and tape, Phil's argon was over on the windowsill busily fogging up the window with its output heat, and the rest of the lasers were down on the floor available for people to idly play with through the fog. We set up a round-the-room beam spiderweb of sorts, using my newly conceived positionable mirrors. I finally got to use a spin motor; since there was nowhere convenient to hang it one of the small switching tripods went up on the dresser and became a skyhook for a revolving "crystal" ball. [This is one of my favorite effects. Running a faceted glass ball through a beam gives sort of a "walking" hexagonal distribution of dots; when you slowly revolve and x-y precess such a crystal the dots drift lazily around like a swarm of bright insects.] To run Phil's argon we ran a power cord into the next room and disabled the fridge under the bar so its compressor startup wouldn't blow the breaker. Thus our room's power feed was left to handle everything else. Mark's galvos received an audio feed from somewhere and there were suddenly lots of little red squiggly things on the walls after the output was passed through a transmissive diffraction grating. We sat back, declared it Pretty; the miscellaneous electronic music was popped on to the drive and we were in business. However, this was Saturday Night at the Con, so we didn't want to just hide in the room all night -- there were halls to be wandered and people to see. Armed with entirely too much communications hardware we emerged into the noisy hallways and stairwells. The usual Topheavy Evecon Security Staff was doing its thing; wandering around attempting to preserve some concept of Order and yakking back and forth with their 49MHz headset radio toys. On more than one occasion I was called upon to relay messages between distant members of this group, since my radio had the Muscular Modifications installed and everyone could hear *me* but not each other. This year I wound up not taking a shift on the security staff, though, and neither did any of the rest of the Frobbers -- we'd already put in enough of what we considered work and it was time to essentially kick back. Somewhere in here our room received a delivery from the K&K Food Service; Karyn and Kelly found themselves in the kitchen at some point, and next thing they knew they had found a *25-pound* box of chocolate chips, an enormous jar of grapefruit slices, and a huge brick of white chocolate, all of which wound up in our bathroom. Don showed up after this with a hair dryer and proceeded to try and make chocolate syrup out of the chips and some frozen strawberries. The result was a small disaster area around the sink, but later we found all this and the rest of the strawberries which were perfectly good and found it exceedingly hilarious. Karyn brought her radio-controlled tank which we found out could be driven, after a fashion, with the 150MHz radios, but its actions were fairly unpredictable. We found the Dismal Depths -- at the bottom of a stairwell there was a metal hatch that someone had puked right next to; but being as this was the only thing nearly resembling a good vad we'd found all night we opened it up anyway. Below was a concrete pit with about a foot of brownish water on the bottom and sump pump hardware. It could generate rather glorious echoes but little else that was exciting. The AT&T card ferns in the lobby had the usual timeout bug that allowed one to call anywhere; I placed some random calls via Sprint to nowhere in particular just to generate some billing weirdnesses between the two companies. The elevator rooms and roof, besides being *cold*, were fairly mundane as such things go. We encountered the first few instances of the Standard Elevator Bug which continues to plague us to this very day -- we would pile into an elevator talking animatedly about something or other, continue to do so while the doors closed and eventually realize that nobody had pushed a floor button yet. I drifted through the con suite and found the bathroom there to be packed almost solid with cans of Coors -- just after asking someone "Is there any beer left?" Between supervisory visits to the room to make sure that nothing was on fire yet, we wound up in the second floor hallway where most of the people seemed to be hanging out. I had a radio in each hand; the scanner occasionally squawking from "Them" and the other one keeping me in touch with "Us", and the headset in my left ear providing a window to "Bruce's Bouncers". It was sometimes difficult to carry on a conversation with someone with all this extra bandwidth going on. At some point a boring twit started following us around because we looked less bored than other people. To ditch this person we first tried splitting up and evasive maneuvers, until this person up and said something to Phil about ripping his balls off if he ran away again, whereupon we all basically told him to get the fuck lost. [This was the same one who tried to tell *me*, the on-paper owner of the room, to "not worry" about a couple of large drunken randoms who barged in with all the attitude of party-crashers. What a twit.] I found myself briefly seated in a corner talking with a somewhat intoxicated Gnome sitting in my lap, but she soon headed off to crash. The con-security was up to its usual overkill tactics; a half-heard mention of some small situation over the radio would bring umpteen "what was that?"s and eight or nine people descending on one place to find absolutely nothing wrong. The biggest "problem" all night was the people playing the Assassin game and noisily wandering away from the designated play floors. Meanwhile the hotel security folks made themselves quite scarce, which is the correct thing for them to do during such a shindig -- so scarce, in fact, that we couldn't get any sort of rise out of them by running Karyn's tank around on the parking garage floor in front of the camera. Either that or the camera was powered off or so burnt by passing headlights that they couldn't see it. By this time it was well toward dawn, and time to look for something to build structures out of. We could find *nothing* for a while -- briefly considered some random metal posts in a cage in the garage, but there weren't enough of them and it was watched by a camera anyway. Chocolate chips weren't really quite versatile enough, although a small "VAD" spelled out with them appeared on the bathroom counter. We wandered downstairs and found a couple of boxes full of "Isaac Asimov Science Fiction" subscription postcards, which Phil grabbed and I suddenly got the idea he looked like Lazlo from Real Genius standing there with armloads of little yellow cards. So we hauled these down to the now-empty Ballroom and started cutting slots into them and sticking them together. I formed a concept of a strange sort of starship, while Phil got bored with these and started examining the chairs instead. While the rest of us ripped and tore and sliced and giggled, Phil was sliding the chairs around on the floor and trying to stick them together in various non-standard ways. Suddenly he straightened up, looked around and ran off into the kitchen, soon returning with an armload of plastic bags. He soon had constructed a "basic building block" of four chairs with their legs interlaced and four lashings holding them together. Leaving the postcards spread all over the stage we pitched in and started putting together more of these things, until there were about ten of these units spread around the floor. The next problem was to do something with them. They would sit on the tips of two chair backs and lean against something; but then I noticed that when one was standing vertically on the tip of one back that the two seats at the sides were sort of parallel at a slight angle. The next thing that fell out of considering this was that if the next unit was standing at right angles to the first one, the legs sticking out could be interlaced, which led to the idea that four such units would be able to hold themselves up by being interlaced. This wasn't quite true since each basic unit was lashed only on one side, but with enough people holding them up, Phil almost getting stuck in the middle while lashing the four of them together, and almost losing it all more than once, we finally had the assemblage of sixteen chairs reasonably stable. The next obvious thing was to take another building block and nest it neatly into the space on top, with its chair backs in between the ones sticking up. And then the structure was done -- the entire crew, which was rather large at that point, agreed that additions to what we had so far probably wouldn't be particularly elegant and would be downright dangerous to construct since things were starting to sag in what appeared a dangerous manner. So the next thing to do was to see how many people it could hold up and event-log the results. Vicka was immediately selected, being the lightest person there, and we lifted her atop this thing where she stood for a picture. It didn't move although she was ready to jump for her life at the first sign of collapsing. Okay, Phil figured, how about someone heavier -- he was soon seated sort of astride the thing bemoaning the possible fate of the family jewels; I was seated there next and realized that since so many people were sitting on top of this thing that its proper name was the Throne of Evecon. Karyn and Kelly next went back to back and still it held fast, although a couple of the side building blocks seemed to be leaning odd ways by now. It was well into the morning by now, and who should walk in but Bruce Evry himself, who found the goings-on highly amusing. He had participated in the large artistic hack of the previous year, which was a 7-foot-tall humanoid figure constructed out of about 200 of those skinny balloons. He pointed out that the convention would soon need the ballroom intact and we assured him that the whole thing could come down and go back into neat audience-oriented rows in ten minutes. But we had more than ten minutes -- we had another couple of hours in fact, so Phil came up with the idea that we should take it apart very slowly by playing roulette with the plastic lashings. The Swiss Army knives were brought forth and everyone took a turn cutting and completely removing *one* lashing of choice. He upon who the structure fell apart would lose. Soon there were little crumpled bits of plastic film scattered all around it, but it was still quite upright although starting to make dangerous saggy noises. Finally, appropriately enough, Phil removed one more lashing which seemed to have no effect, but then the creaking became more pronounced as one side, i.e. one building block, slowly leaned away from the whole, and although it took about a minute to do so, finally fell away from the Throne, leaving the remainder still more or less upright but now on three points of contact. These three points soon became four again as one unit sagged far enough over to touch a chair seat to the floor. But it was still standing, with the only remaining lashings being my strange ones in which I'd addressed all four tie points of the building blocks with one long lashing instead of four little ones. And to our complete amazement, even after these were removed, the remaining four units refused to fall over but remained firmly interlaced in their lopsided way. And before it was all over this ungainly heap supported *three* people at once without losing it. It would not die and finally had to be explicitly disassembled. By now it was 10 Sunday morning, checkout was at noon or some oddball time like that, and we returned to the room and beheld the incredible *mess* in the morning light. There were lasers and clothing and radios and chocolate chips and bodies everywhere. We really wanted to sleep at that point -- this is another Standard Con Bug, that of staying up far too long on Saturday and having to tear down and leave on Sunday afternoon on no sleep. Fortunately we only had to get back to MGrant's place and not go all the way home, but still it took a long time to take apart and pack away all that equipment. We were able to employ the same large pallet trucks we'd used to bring it all in, and after a while the cars were sitting in the loading dock loaded to the scuppers once again, while the desk accepted our checkout a full hour late, handing me that reassuring piece of paper containing a zero balance on it. But the con wasn't over yet! In lieu of the traditional mass run to Pizza Slut that usually finishes off EveCons, the concom had some place deliver about a hundred pizzas to the hotel instead. The entire con's attendance was there in the ballroom, which now had tables set up in it. The Frob Mob was sitting up front near the stage, and we all started playing around with the dry ice that mysteriously appeared somewhere along the line. Mark piled some into a pitcher and went around the room "dosing" the water pitchers on the table so they'd start bubbling and sending forth steam. The pizza eventually arrived and there was much crunching and slurping. And only then did some of those long skinny balloons we had wanted all this time make their appearance. More building materials! We took a few of them up to the stage and started inflating them, but found that they really *are* a bitch to initially blow up, so the volume of construction here was rather low. But then Phil and I remembered the helium tank we'd seen somewhere in the bowels of the hotel, and the fact that he still had a 5-foot weather balloon stashed somewhere in the car. We slipped out to retrieve and combine these things; wound up muscling that damn helium tank down about five flights of stairs to find a relatively isolated and camera-free place to inflate the rubber goods without the entire staff hearing the hissing. We got the thing about half-inflated and realized that any more would prevent our getting it back through the stairwells to the ballroom, so we guided this big brown Thing, which now had a rather strange consistency, through the halls and presented it to the con at large [Now here's a *serious* balloon]. It turned out to be just barely bouyant, after we sliced off part of the heavy nozzle. By now the room was *full* of balloons -- some of the long ones had escaped into the light fixtures, and people were firing those weird ones designed as propulsion units all over the place. Between this, piles of pizza crust, and the remaining people sitting around diddling with the dwindling little bits of dry ice, EveCon ended in a glorious orgy of Play, topped off by the announcement that the hotel was already working out the contract for next year. Yow!! By now we were *extremely* tired, however. After bidding random goodbyes, with little further ado we adjourned to MGrant's house for some very welcome sleep. -*- -*- -*- The next go-round down the line was two short weeks later: Esotericon. This isn't really a typical *SF con* so much as a gathering of people into various areas of magic, spirituality, wiccan, and other esoterica, thus the name. In addition, for *me* this one represented a departure from the con "norm" of the past 8 months or so. In the mail that flew around beforehand it turned out that none of the Boston people could make it, and none of the DC people said *anything* indicative. My usual urge to have things relatively organized was completely defeated in this case, but I decided to not worry about it too much, especially since the con was right over in New Brunswick, almost within walking distance of Suite Pea, which is no longer my residence. Thus, I simply packed my gear into the shitbox, strapped on the full hacking rig [to the amusement of my roomie who hadn't seen it before], and took off for the hotel. This is the same Hyatt that NyClone was in last summer; the place looked exactly the same except there was snow on the roof and a couple of floors had all the wallpaper in the halls stripped off for renovations. The fire exit alarm switches I'd taken care of six months ago were *still* disabled. I entered via the same old route from the parking deck I'd used last time, which was theoretically impossible, and headed down to the lobby to figure out if the con was there. Well, Lissanne was there, firmly parked in the art show, and Gary was hunched over his pad creating the Saga of Schwaa, which began with a big schwaa [one of those upside-down "e"'s] and a most gloriously conceived train of complete non-sequiturs. "Head butts of cosmic awareness -- the Schwaa will save you all..." People were filtering in and starting to drag stuff in for the dealers' room; I ran into Carolyn Whitney, one of the driving forces behind the con, who immediately set me to creating little signs for the dealer tables so the incoming dealers could find their spots. This provided for some experimentation with those flat-pointed calligraphy markers, so the little signs received cute lettering. I noticed a couple of people wondering how the hell they were going to get a carful of merchandise upstairs to the room, so to help them out I applied our standard algorithm and went downstairs to browbeat the security people into giving us pallets or carts or whatever they had. I first had to convince the guy that he should leave the loading dock *open* because there were a lot of people bringing things in, even if it *was* after 5, and while he was puzzling this out I found a cart and helped the dealer folks pile their stuff on it and take it upstairs. I had to inform at least two officious hotel people what we were trying to accomplish, so they'd leave us the fuck *alone* for being in the employee areas and using the service elevator. These people seemed to have no function except to stand around neatly dressed and yell at guests for what they considered infractions. The ultimate insult came when I found myself wandering through the lobby, and found someone I knew and stopped to talk. Out of the corner of my eye I could see into the executive office lobby through a small window in the door next to the lobby desk. I noticed a woman walk past this window, do a double-take, and come *flying* out the door toward me, whereupon she proceeded to interrupt the conversation I was in to dress me down for a> being barefoot and b> carrying a bottle of soda. Incorrectly claiming "health department regulations" as basis for the former, she went on to inform me that nobody was allowed to bring in their own beverages and such; they had to buy same from the hotel. Now think about this once. Such a policy is completely unenforceable, but exists because most people are gullible enough to be told this "rule" and go "oh, okay" and go ahead and get raped paying hotel marked-up charges for drinkables. This sort of taking advantage of people really pisses me off, and the general attitude of the place which assumed right off the top that any guest was incapable of thinking for itself irked everyone present before it was all over. To keep this bitch happy -- I do not use the word lightly, either, it describes her perfectly -- I found my shoes and hid the Jolt in the dealers' room and continued being useful. As soon as I matched her trivial little specifications, she completely ignored me. Unfortunately this person was also the convention liaison. I noticed along the way that they had upgraded their security staff -- instead of the blind, deaf, and dumb ex-police-officer- retiree type from last time they had a couple of younger goons who were obviously kicked out of police school for being too hot-headed, but were ideally suited to work for the current management of the place. Eventually the con actually *started*, with opening ceremonies consisting of a circle and chant and miscellaneous blessings. { while (!bored) sing ("Frost and fire, wind and sea;\ earth and moon, star and sky"); } Then the only convention-provided food made its appearance: a catered pile of munchies that quickly vanished since it was dinnertime. There was no food in the con suite due to the brain-dead hotel policy and the concom's fear of "breaching their contract" by bringing in their own food. Feh, who the fuck cares, especially since it's generally been decided by any convention that's tried to hold one there that the New Brunswick Hyatt is *evil* and to be avoided. NyClone has since moved, as has Esotericon. Don Hopkins showed up after all, as did Karyn, and after being *cussed out* by yet another wandering stuffed suit for coming down the service elevators, we wound up sitting around near the art show door playing with Rubik's Magic toys. These seemed to be the current favorite playtoy, and the subject of some subsequent research culminating in a failed attempt to get Matchbox to listen to some ideas for improvement. I had left mine in the art show room and someone pulled on it too hard the wrong way, and one of the little squares jumped out of its bindings. This led to our tearing it apart slightly further and winding up with a long single-wide string of squares which illustrated just how each one could move with respect to its neighbors. We then managed to get it back together, sort of, in a flat ring and then try to compact it again, which simply doesn't work. We played with it quite a bit during the con, but afterward I seemed to wind up with all the pieces. Further research told me that the things are really rather easy to get apart and together, and by combining two of them into larger units you can make ones bigger than 8 pieces which are much more versatile than the original model. After working out some of the more subtle moves you could do with, say, a 10-piece model, I contacted Matchbox to see if they'd figured this out yet, and was told that the "next version" would have more pieces in it... The hotel was completely sold out of rooms for that Friday night due to a lot of *other* things going on as well, which from what I could see was a meeting of some "get rich quick" marketing group, which was running around with a lot of dumb-looking sales charts and drinking a lot. So later that evening we dispersed to our various residences. However, I had managed to grab a room for Saturday, so I'd have a place to set up the argon. There's a reason a blue laser is appropriate at a con like this: Darkover. If you haven't read any of Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover series, you won't know that they involve a concept called "matrix mechanics", which is basically psi-magic involving telepathy and crystals -- a "matrix" is a certain type of crystal which on the Darkover world serve as amplifiers and focuing devices for mental energy, allowing people to do nifty and sometimes destructive things. A side effect of this, as described, is lots of blue fire dancing in and around the matrix workers, the crystals, and the room where they are. Well, the argon can generate plenty of blue fire in crystals, so given a certain attendance of Darkover fans, it was an entirely appropriate thing to bring to the con. Saturday I pulled into my usual spot in the parking deck again, claimed a room and schlepped the hardware up the fire stairs and down the hall to it. The next task, since nobody else was around to help, was to singlehandedly reduce an ordinary hotel room into something reasonable where I could put the laser stuff safely out of the way and have people come in and sit roughly in a circle with a piece of beam in their laps and play with crystals. Most of the furniture got stashed outside on the balcony so it was out of the way; the beds got piled double high in one corner, the stereo against one wall and the rest of the floor was bare except for a small table in the middle from which the argon beam was distributed around. The tripod switched between a spin-motored glass ball near the door and a bunch of diffraction gratings which can split up the beam a bunch of different ways. These latter parts were further routed from the tabletop down away toward the floor near the walls, so that when a person sat facing the table the beam would be right there to hold a crystal in. Once this was all set up, the next thing to do was go distribute propaganda pointing at the room, so that people would know where to find it. This consisted of the Avian signs with "Laser crystal working" scribbled down one side -- all the activities at the con seemed to be called "workings", so this was in keeping with it. One of my first customers was Mom, who had decided to come down for the con and see what it was all about. She of course produced some of the best rocks at the con; everyone else had some pretty small wimpy ones, but quite a few people actually did show up to wield the magic blue matrix fire, and thought it was lots of fun. At some points there were quite a few people sitting around in the room playing with crystals and my bits of glass and dropping tapes into the drive and talking about hypnosis and witchcraft and magic and, of course, lasers. ["It's all magic; lasers don't exist."] As things went on and people started drifting off to bed, there were only a few people left in the room, including a woman who was holding forth to a couple of others how she'd gotten really annoyed one day and had completely trashed the room she was in without moving from where she was sitting. Her given justification was that she'd been mentally "screwing around with things she shouldn't have". A rather wimpy claim, I thought; every time I hear of such claims I really wish I could have been there to objectively evaluate exactly what was going on. If you're going to summon a demon and expect me to believe it, I at least want to ask it a couple of questions... Eventually came the time to shut down and go to sleep; all the visitors were gone, Don reappeared, Gary came stumbling in at some point, and we shoved the tiny table to one side and crashed. Checkout was at something fascist like 11AM, so I had to get up and start packing the equipment and dragging the furniture back inside. By this time it was *snowing* outside -- sort of a heavy wet gooey snow, not really that much fun, but I got the tables and such back in the room before they got completely soaked. Leaving the room in something like a reasonable condition [although I hope they had strong housekeeping personnel] we schlepped our stuff back outside, down the now- slippery fire stairs, packed it away into the car and went back in to see the rest of the con, i.e. closing ceremonies. This was actually rather long and involved, with everyone in attendance in a couple of concentric circles in the main ballroom. There were more chants, Om's, a ceremony involving planting all the seeds we'd been given at the beginning in a large pot of dirt, and a long session of awarding gifts to the GOH's. These took the form of crystals, tarot decks, fancy cloth bags, and other wiccan support hardware. An announcement was made that the committee was going to try and get Marion Zimmer Bradley as GOH for next year, and Clam Chowder to supply music. A late update indicated that these two entities were going to be at *Darkover Council* in November, a con that's even *more* Darkover-oriented and to which the argons should indeed travel. I next headed up toward the Gripe Session. This was packed out. Everyone had beefs and bitches against the hotel, and a few complaints about how the con itself was run. The committee members behind the table were trying to be somewhat reasonable and calming toward those complaining, but through it all and the subsequent wind-down party in the con suite I saw a general milieu of highhanded arrogance running through all the concom members, who by now were tired and even more jumpy than before. Why, I don't quite understand -- tiredness and some irritation yes, the overall attitude, no. At least everyone agreed that the hotel was evil and not to be used for such activities again if *anyone* present was intending to have any fun. The hotel people probably knew this by the time it was all over, too, but I'm sure they didn't care. -*- -*- -*- Even before Esotericon happened, things were already in the works for Boskone, the huge yearly second-only-to-Worldcon bash in Boston. The pre-registration flyers for same had come out in the mail, containing all the details for interfacing one's self to the con. Included in this was the Weapons Policy, which contained the usual "Massachusetts law provides that..." stuff, leading into how pistol replicas, edged steel, shurikens and other martial arts stuff, and a host of other things were forbidden ... and then one word jumped off the page and bit me: LASERS ... in a sentence that ended "... and anything else which in the judgement of the committee presents a hazard to other attendees." Wrong-*O*, guys! -- I typed this in and sent it, with a slew of relevant comments, to the rest of the laser heads on the net, and the flamage started to fly. It was clear to us that if certain parties hadn't been bringing lasers to conventions in the past, nobody on the committee would ever have thought to include the concept. It was obviously then a purely political thing, but we couldn't figure out why someone in NESFA [the SF association behind Boskone] would arbitrarily try and screw us. The intermediate result was a carefully worded letter to NESFA pointing out the "error" in their weapons policy, which brought a reply from Mr. Chip Hitchcock [bless his soul and retinas with coherent wavefronts] suggesting that I "address the committee in writing". In a reply caused by the fact that I had just done exactly that. Now, can you blame me for being "rather annoyed" [to put it mildly] by all this?? The exchange further supported the idea that the policy was purely political and that the committee was going to hide behind its petty authority for as long as it could until the convention actually happened. I have since figured out that NESFA is based heavily from MIT, which loves to dump arbitrary political horsepatties on selected people and be flamingly arrogant about it, so NESFA was basically doing what it had been taught to do from its infancy. The misconception that small handheld lasers were dangerous allowed them to touch off what they hoped would be a political bonfire. Our eventual solution? To lug all our hardware to the convention anyway, and have fun despite their stupid rules. Politics, in the minds of the hard-logic advoctes, were made to be bypassed. They are a waste of time. Without further ado I addressed the rest of the preparations for my northward journey. Lois Steinberg seemed to find it odd that I called but all this was quickly straightened out as she graciously provided crash space and optional company for the couple of days before the con. As in previous years, the idea was to stay in Boston as long as possible, to see people and vad buildings and maybe build some last-minute toys and hack at the Holy Land. In the meantime, a couple of new toys were added to the collection and my argon received a significant cooling upgrade in the form of two boxer fans mounted on the side instead of one on the top. This allows a much higher volume of air to move through the box, and in the thermally correct direction such that the hot air blows out the top of the box, not down into the rest of the works. Thus the box stays nice and cool even at high output power levels, which I discovered I could now get out of it by messing about with more big studly ceramic POwEr resistors in the path of the tube current. The next thing to fix was the pulsing problem, which was caused by the tiny little filter capacitor I was using. I frantically combed the storage places of Hill Center looking through lots of old dead equipment for big caps of the right voltage rating. The highest I could find was 70 volts or so; useless for my 150 feed. I still hadn't found anything when came the time to pack it all into boxes and take off, and then it started snowing with a vengeance the day before I was actually going to go. But this didn't matter. Said snowstorm passed through by morning and the sun and plows and salt trucks came out and by evening all the major roads were dry again. I was able to stick to original scheduling, and loaded all the toys into the car and headed forth to Boston. Now, this here snowstorm had passed to our northeast, so I wasn't *too* surprised when I was just going by the Gr1me Computer plant on the Mass Pike and watching the radar detector go nuts, and it started snowing again. As I drew nearer to Boston the snow got heavier, until when I finally got off in Watertown it had become a very pretty snowy night with a couple of inches already on the roads. I had effectively chased and caught up with the same storm, which was now once again dumping the white stuff all over me. I found Lois's house and pounded the bell, and wound up surprising her just coming out of the shower. She hadn't expected me to actually drive up in "all this foul weather", whereupon I explained about chasing the storm. Residual confusion having thus been laid to rest, we spent the rest of a rather mellow evening sitting in her cute rebuilt-attic apartment talking about life and MIT and puzzles and toys and paganism and eating yogurt. Lois owns two small birds which continually make rather obnoxious squeaky noises, even after you cover the cage and shove them off into the kitchen; but it didn't take long for me to get used to these. There were other things more worthy of being bitched about, for instance having to get up at 7AM to shuffle cars around in the driveway because a> Watertown has the stupid "no overnight street parking" rule, and b> most of the car owners had to get up early and leave for work. By that time of the AM, of course, the cars could go back out on the street. However, the first morning I was there everyone was outside *shoveling* all the cars out, and everything around was under a very pretty blanket of new white stuff. After all the 9-to-5ers took off I spent the next half hour cheek by jowl with the owner of the house, finishing off the rest of the driveway, after which I went back inside and crashed for another few hours [which felt wonderful]. I didn't want to climb buildings yet; I was on *vacation* and figured I could be lazy for a day or two. I found some things to do such as fix Lois' answering machine so the tape transports didn't squeak so loudly you couldn't hear any of the messages. I went off to the Heartland Food Warehouse, an interesting bulk-food emporium, and bought some supplies for myself, Lois, and the con; that subsequent evening we hacked up some strange but delicious stir-fry and then went over to Leor Zolman's place to do the hot tub. Leor is Lois' ex, although you'd wonder sometimes due to how frequently his name was mentioned... anyway, he was off in California or something, leaving his palacial 4-story condo unoccupied. The condo is part of a complex that has an indoor pool and hot tub, which is a really great place to spend an hour or two when it's tinkly-cold outside. We left all this behind before too many old memories could impinge on Lois' happiness, and headed back to Watertown. One more go-round with the cars and the fact that the week was continuing to pass by convinced me that it was time to move on and bury myself in the tech-square-hacking-buildings-and-computers-and-talking-shop context. Lois doesn't really do computers; although we found plenty to talk about I began to miss my usual lifestyle's props. Not to mention that Phil had finally dug up Lois' number and called up saying basically "where the fuck *are* you". I packed up all my stuff and headed off to MIT to meet up with the rest of the gang. It wasn't a couple of hours later Phil and I were walking down a hall in the Patrol building when we came across a big heap of large electrolytic capacitors that someone had chucked out. Imagine my amazement when I picked one rack of them up and found that they were rated at over 300 volts?!?!? Here, only at MIT and there for me to *stumble* over, were the argon filter components I'd been so frantically searching for down home. We collected and left with two tied-together bunches of them, and headed back to Lexington to rebuild the template door lock left over from last year so we could replace the Sheraton's hardware with some kind of our own magic. We went through a few ideas and finally wound up with a simple touch switch mounted near a small slot that could be hit by a piece of metal bent just so -- quite secure against randoms and hotel goons simply by being obscure. [I just *wish* we had the appropriate chip-blowing facility at our disposal so we could just drop a whole new rom in the puppy.] But given that the 9-volt could hold out, this kludge would last the entire con. We turned our attention toward other features of the Lexington house, like dealing with the large piece of marinated meat that was about to become dinner, and the carcass of the CO2 laser sitting in the living room, and the parts for Mark's plasma sphere, and Pete's recumbent still in the making downstarirs [not to mention the Honda box with its engine in pieces all over the garage]. That house had an incredible amount of *stuff* contained in it, including the old 27-watt argon laser tube downstairs, Pete's harpsichord, various dead computers of varying ages, and lots of other nifty stuff that could be rebuilt into something really winning given time and initiative. Not to mention Nick's black Caddy sitting out in the driveway collecting snow. Later that evening Pete finalized a way to mount the seat on the recumbent and 'long about 4 in the morning we all took it outside for some test runs. Such a machine feels really wonderful because you can transfer so *much* of your leg power into forward motion; air resistance is reduced because you're close to the ground, and the forces are all different since you can push from your butt instead of trying to use your weight downward to generate pedal force. They had come up with steering geometry that made cornering very quick [as we all watched the frame flex with some degree of horror...]. Eventually Pete and Mark went down around the next bend of Mass Ave and didn't return for a long time, and the rest of us realized we were freezing and went back in. They returned some time later, glowing and very happy after turning about ten miles and not even noticing. It was then about time to check out the spare bedding and use it for the next few hours. Everyone sort of split off in random directions the next day; Mark and a large amount of laundry headed down the road, Larry was off at work or something and Pete disappeared into Harvard Square with the recumbent to go to the Human Powered Vehicle meeting. Nick and I dithered around a bit trying to decide on something else to do and finally wound up ourselves in HSQ at the Bicycle Exchange, hereafter referred to as BiEx. This establishment is the epitome of expressing many Bostonians' love of the Most Elegant Way to Get Around. The building contains three large floors packed end to end with a complete bicycle parts orgasm -- box after box of threaded shafts, bearing races, struts, tools, brakes, sprockets, you name it, just about *any* part for the most obscure machine they either have or can build. The bottom floor where the HPV meeting was is mostly dedicated to sales and has lots of new bikes sitting around, but you go upstairs and that's where all the real magic happens -- the repair shops and stashes of parts. Here you can break old frames apart and re-weld them into completely new machines, fit on wheels and pedals and chains and experimental shifing mechanisms and wind up with a machine that while it may look really odd transfers an ever-higher amount of human muscular output to the road. This love for innovation in maximally using this unfortunately scarce resource for propulsion is what drives the members of the Human Powered Vehicle club to give a lot of their time to the projects. Pete was in the limelight this evening; he'd come up with a simple, stable design which while having some room for improvement was significantly *different* from a standard bicycle, and everyone was standing around in the sales shop talking animatedly about design improvements, poking and prodding at the works and noting stress points here, oddly-fit parts there, and just generally having a wonderful time. There seems to be this strong sense of elegance and pride in such accomplishments in and around Boston; I really don't think you'd see a bunch of hacker-types deriving so much enjoyment from riding their own machines to a place and clustering around an odd collection or two of scrap metal down here in Piss That-a-way NJ. I haven't seen anything remotely resembling a recumbent in this state, period. If they're around they are well-hidden for some odd reason -- if I had the time and shop resources I would definitely go for one of my own. Someday I *will* own one and with it attempt to train all those yuppies out there on Hoes Lane that there is Another Way which uses less gas than their Nissan Turbo ZKX Euro-tour Luxury Sport Sedan. Perhaps the oddest part about their prevalence in Boston is that it goes on in a town with some of the crappiest possible road surfaces extant. I am hoping that the recumbent market will eventually reach some sort of stability in design, like ten-speeds did, and I'll be able to go out and *buy* a good one for under a grand. But all this devolved into the usual retiring to MIT to hack. We decided that we needed some kind of logo that would really emphasize the idea of lasers and not-so-subtly say "Fuck NESFA". I'd previously come up with the only Stupid Yellow Diamond that I will actually put in my car -- "Laser on board!" with the appropriate star-and-beam-coming-out symbol through the middle of it. We hit the 5th floor, convinced the person hacking the microvax there to make the laserwriter work, and then work it did as we dove in and had some sex with the PostScript engine. We printed off a few random logo-ish things and squinted at them critically. I am not exactly sure wherefrom the idea sprung but the phrase "Coherent Central" had a nice ring to it. Done: we blew the laser-beam symbol up larger and put in the appropriate text, and ran off a bunch of them. Okay, we now had things to hang on the door and around the hotel so people could find us. Phil then started playing with reduction on the copier downstairs and came up with the idea of reducing the whole thing, via iterative copying or PostScript or whatever, to the size of a button. Between bashing the copier against the wall to make it work right and hunting up a stash of obnoxious yellow paper, we soon turned out a bunch of little Coherent Centrals that were just the right size to be made into buttons. Which, as it was getting on toward dawn, was the next task. The button equipment, which I hadn't known about, was in EECS, so while I cut the circles out Phil figured out which little aluminum ring had to be mashed into what other little aluminum ring at the right time, and after a while we had a small pile of official Coherent Central buttons, including a couple with our own logos included. We packed up the button stuff and headed back to Lexington, found the crew watching Real Genius [the only appropriate movie for what we were thinking about!!], walked in and handed out buttons. We sat around and talked about designs for the "spirograph generator" using two little motors with mirrors on their shafts, and watched the laserdisk until it started to completely lose on its tracking, and then went to sleep, for the next day was Friday when the con started. The actual details of getting there involved a lot of driving. First we went deep into the depths of Somverville to visit the Wizard. He is an old guy who runs a gloriously antiquated theatrical supply shop; this place would be the parallel of BiEx for amounts of history leaning up against the walls, I suppose. But he was fresh out of Rosco fog fluid, which was what we were looking for. We found one other place run by a bunch of good ole boys who a> didn't seem to really want to deal with us and b> didn't have fog fluid either unless we wanted something like 5 gallons of it, so we punted, stopped off at MIT for the alternative -- 25 pounds of dry ice -- and headed for the hotel. And just like last year, we temporarily parked right outside but this time just out of sight around the pillar so that the defective doormen from last year couldn't have anything to yell at us about. After obtaining a room, no mean task in itself since the entire lobby was packed with back-and-forth queues of people waiting to check in, we moved around under the building to the loading dock. We scribbled "Loading" on a couple of the Coherent signs and stuck them in the car windows, and then threw the stuff on the nearest hefty cart we could find such that the personnel didn't object to our taking. This was further proof of what is now our standard in/out shipment algorithm. Hotel kitchen/ housekeeper/security personnel are generally perfectly content to lend out wheeled carts and such. It's the bellhops out front that get all paranoid about *their* carts, the nice ones with carpets and large pneumatic wheels -- but not only does the loading dock generally open right into the service vator area, the people down there either don't care or are so completely nonplused by our appearance, mannerisms, or whatever that they just give and assume they'll get their carts back sometime. If one of them raises an objection of some sort the answer is a simple "we're the lightshow crew, and we need to get these lasers upstairs" -- with the unspoken but quite evident implication "this equipment is worth more than you make in a year, son; one side", and they melt harmlessly into the corner. This always works as long as we're careful to park where we won't be in the way, because trucks do still come in on Friday afternoon to deliver weekend supplies. Okay, so we got it all upstairs and in this case via a rather circuitous route since the South Tower was on the *other* goddamn end of the building from the loading dock. It turned out that this was a *large corner room*, at the regular old price!! Winnage. First thing to go was the door lock, but there were some parts incompatibilities and in the resultant furious adapting of parts my small phillips-head vanished for the entire rest of the weekend, but we got our kludge convincingly mounted, tested, and approved. The next thing to do was rescue the cars from imminent danger of someone realizing what we were up to and having them towed, so we took them over to MIT and parked quite legally on Vassar Street and rather than take the T back to the hotel, decided to take the "Stud Test" and walked back across the Smoot Bridge in the freezingass cold wind off the Charles. At the other end we helped a bunch of guys lift someone's car off the wooden construction barriers it had somehow become caught up on. Phil got one or two incredulous comments about his wearing shorts in subfreezing weather, but he's used to that by now. Anyway, we got back to the hotel and by now it was past dark. Now, this being Boskone, there were soon people milling around all over the hotel making merry and meeting and greeting, and it seemed a lot of this was centered in our room which by now had the appropriate documentation stuck to the outside of the door. Even with the size of the room, it seemed that there were soon multitudes sitting around on the floor, which made it difficult to start seriously setting up the laser toys because for a standard hotel-room configuration, we have to bounce all over the room to tack up mirrors and hanger ropes and in this case, strings of Christmas lights to serve as our "police line" behind which all the delicate stuff sat. The room didn't have nice strong moldings to hang things from, so I had to bend up a bunch of S- hooks and stick them in behind the wallboard, which was not as strong as I would have liked but between them and a hole Phil drilled into the steel ceiling panel and Bob Mende's strange blue twine [which I still have somewhere] we got the spinmotors hung up. Phil stuck his argon and the 30 mil HeNe on the windowsill and fired them up; I eventually got my argon tucked as neatly back in the corner as I could, started it on low power and began aligning the optics bench, in this case a fairly sturdy table that came with the room. But then we thought about power considerations, and lo and behold, when I tried to bring mine up to normal power, *POP* went the breaker. We went out into the hall and opened up the breaker panel and scratched our heads at it for a while and figured out that the bathroom lights and GFI was on a different 20-amp puppy, so the obvious thing to do was run the long extender cord from there under the bed where it wouldn't get tripped over to power my side of things. The addition of some duct tape holding it to the carpet completed our electrical connections. We took a break to go down to what was billed as the "Weapons Policy Gripe Session", only to find that it consisted of one guy flaming his guts out about nothing in particular to an assembled group and not letting anyone else get a word in edgewise, and then we discovered that *none of the people in that room were NESFA* to begin with, but some *other* politically-motivated-to-dictate- to-others group, so we fled in disgust back to the room to continue setting up. In a while things started to look fairly pretty: some crystals and such were hung off the spin motors and other places, and some beams were getting out there and hitting them, making red and blue spreads, splotches and dots on the walls. We were still a ways from done, but by this time someone had nuked the lights and we were working on further setup in the dark. I suddenly realized that I hadn't planned for any red in the switcher-tripod setup and carefully kludged in a second mirror, so that the one tripod would switch both blue and red feeds to places at the same time. I wound up with about 5 meaningful positions that would light up things in the room, but by this time it was over 6 hours later. We were beginning to learn that this was the standard drawback to doing any laser gig: the inevitable result was that we'd spend all our time hiding in the room babysitting the equipment, and not seeing much of the con. One reason for this is that we're always pushing the fine line between pretty lights and bonfires, so someone technically aware should always be on hand in case something *does* decide to thermally eat itself. The other problem is that since setup does take a certain amount of time, people tend to show up in the middle of it all and stick around because there's *something* to look at, but all they really do is get in the *way* until everything's really ready to go. But neither Phil or I, who were the ones trying to step around and over everybody scattered around on the floor, had the heart or initiative to say "Everybody *out* until we're finished", especially since we were conversing with them all while tweaking mirrors and twisting wires and ripping duct tape. It's all for fun, though, even if roadying and partying don't always fit into the same space-time. We discovered that we could manage even if we had to occasionally get someone to temporarily move over. By the time we were happy with what we had it was sometime after midnight. I had set up a mirror farm on the table in the middle of our little tech area, which looked like a duct-tape disaster but served quite well to fire beams around and get them out to the correct places in the room. The open window and blower circulating incoming wintry air provided enough cooling for the argons once the silly curtains were duct-taped to the window so they'd be closed and out of the way at the same time. Phil's lissajous generator was doing its thing on the ceiling, and later on we kludged in Mark's set for a flat scan. Basically the whole setup was a few crystal-on-spinmotor spreads, the punch cup over in the corner, and the lissajous; all fairly simple in theory but it still looked interesting. The evening rolled along with all this and occasional wanderings forth into the rest of the con and bumping into countless people I knew or should have known. There were a couple of the expected fire alarms -- the kind where the siren frobs go off a few times and the voice comes on to inform the general populace where the alarm was. As long as it wasn't "12 south", we ignored it. The hotel, however, did not, since each false alarm in theory was costing them fairly serious money. The Event Logger eventually has me telling someone "We're going to the con suite, we've been stringing mirrors all night", which is what we did -- after shutting down the room, and after that went off to vad the upper reaches. The top floor turned out to hold a lot of the HVAC stuff; all the roof doors and elevator control rooms were wide open almost like someone was working on them, but at that hour the entire thing was deserted. This place provided the loan of a couple more extension cords which we needed, and a quite wonderful view of Boston and Cambridge. While digging more soft goods out of the closets we discussed some ideas for the morrow, and near dawn, as usual, headed back to the room to rest up. There was more convention wandering the next day, but I should emphasize that I spent a lot of time in the room and if you were looking for a good general overview of Boskone, this isn't it. Phil and I decided to get serious about setting up a room that people could come visit without getting stepped on, so we *did* essentially kick everyone out this time [or they left on their own in most cases] and we set to and realigned everything correctly and cleaned up the already large amount of trash lying about. I tackled the problem of everyone's *stuff* thrown haphazardly around on the floor, and decided that the best way to sort it all was not by ownership, since those who could claim such were gone, but by type. Shoes wound up in a heap by the door. Bedding got stuffed into the little alcove near the closet. Packs and such got stacked up in the closet where they'd be out of the way and incoming randoms wouldn't be tempted to lift things. All loose items of value were collected into a place where people could pick them out and stash them elsewhere lest they be lifted in the dark. All of this was quite necessary because it seemed that we had much more than one room's worth of *stuff* that people had brought to the con -- there weren't *that* many people officially staying in the room, it seemed, but there was an almost unmanageable pile of *posessions* there anyway. Eventually we had a half-decent setup: the tech stuff behind the police line, and a lot of open bed and floor area for all comers to occupy. Having to tell the residents where their stuff had gone was easier than the potentially deleterious alternative. The con suite provided a lot of food throughout this; it was the usual wonderful Boskone con suite with real cheese, vegs, and other good solid stuff that one could subsist on. Between this and the survival rations we'd brought along [lots of tuna fish] we actually ate quite well without leaving the hotel. This place apparently didn't have the silly "no food or drink" sort of rule; in Boston I'd expect people running a hotel to be intelligent enough to realize that such a policy was inane. However, there are still limits -- Kelly reported that the Dork Suits, i.e. official-looking uniforms, had a lot of people confused as to whether she and Karyn worked for the hotel or not. All the employees of the hotel wear suits that say "Sheraton Boston" on the sleeves, but they didn't think to look for this... Night fell, and it was time to start utilizing our space. By this time all the other parties were starting: the Generic Fandom folks were going strong, the Tanstaafl suite was fired up, and there were numerous other things going on all over. Those who weren't running parties were party-hopping; those doing neither were nonexistent as far as I could tell. It seemed like a couple of the Coherent Central signs on the party board weren't quite enough; I took a bunch of them and a roll of tape and went off on a mad zing through the hotel, deploying them in high-traffic areas and on the walls at other parties. We'd worked hard on our setup, and we now wanted to show it off. I got them all out around 9pm; we intended to basically kick the randoms *out* around midnight and limit occupancy to "just us" and known folks after that. [But there are an awful lot of "known folks", it seems.] As time went on there was a good in/out flux through the door, while I jumped around explaining how things worked to people and switching beams back and forth with the tripod. We were attempting to generate enough miasma with incense sticks, but Nick realized that this wasn't really doing a whole lot so he sat down and constructed a glorious kludge from a soda bottle, some tubing, duct tape and the dry ice. The idea was to run a hot water feed from the bathroom, via the tubing, over a bed of dry ice, which usually generates large amounts of vapor. And best of all this thing actually *worked* -- it was installed near the window with the tail water from the chamber dribbling out and down 12 floors of everyone else's windows. It generated fairly copious amounts of fog, which wanted to just stay in that part of the room, but some of it mixed with the incense smoke and kept the room somewhat foggy anyway; enough to see beams fairly well in. Now we had two weird things coming out from under the bathroom door -- the extension cord for my argon, and this crazy tube kludged up to the faucet somehow. And it all turned out to be *worth every minute* we'd spent on it. It seemed that some NESFA concom people were party-hopping along with everyone else, and they stuck their heads into our room. "No lasers" indeed -- they were *immediately* very impressed by what we'd done. Unfortunately Phil at this moment was out wandering around somewhere, so I talked to them and showed them the setup and relayed the subsequent "We win *huge*!!" to Phil when he came back. I made sure to tell them to change their silly policy next year, and that lasers were not weapons but fun toys, etc, etc, with them *agreeing* with me. Essentially, right at that moment, I got to laugh in their faces and have the last word, and wow, did it feel wonderful. [Although I *was* polite about it since they now seemed willing to treat us like human beings.] So, to celebrate this turn of events, we finally *did* kick out the randoms around 1AM, and although the room was still fairly full, it was now all trusted, known people we could party hearty with. Down in one corner, I dragged out my pile of pictures and Phil and I detailed the construction and eventual death of the Throne of Evecon, using my flashlight for limited illumination that wouldn't interfere with the laser stuff. As the description went on and my batteries got weaker, this all became very amusing. There was lots of nifty context warpage; basking in the recent winnage I had nothing against jumping up every few minutes to lean over the optics bench and play wizard. Phil decided that our usual procedure was shaping up to be "push the envelope until we lose, and then subtract epsilon and record the point". I realized that what was holding this wholes mess together was duct tape and brick strap, from which it seems one can build anything. Part of the gathering spilled out into the hall where there was relative quiet and mundane light; my attention was called there a couple of times to evaulate things, but I really wanted to be in the room because things were so much more fun in there. Don showed up with his gorilla mask on the usual way -- backwards, with his long tail of red hair sticking out through the mouth of same. This configuration took a lot of people at the con completely by surprise until they figured out what it was. Lois correctly pointed out that there was a lot of "intense shit" going on in the room. There was. It was sort of a tribal gathering of All of Us, and there was a warm comfortable feeling through the whole place that wasn't just draft from the argons. Lots of hugs and fuzzies were going around. I kept feeling the cord from the bathroom which was rather warm but it didn't increase beyond a certain point. It was just another couple-of-load-ohms for the laser, dissipating its share of watts, but that didn't prevent my having to explain numerous times that was fine. Eventually I decided that it was an artery, supplying us with the electrical lifeblood that made the room so much fun, and it should be accepted, warm or not, as part of the organism that our room had turned into. I noticed that the tripod handle could sort of be equated to a ship's tiller; where this ship was going with all of I wasn't sure of but it was a happy place. Then I found a bag of some really crusty-looking granola stuff under the bed, couldn't figure out for a while what it was in the dark, and used it as an excuse for a good long laugh fit. Between all this and runs to the con suite for more food and to see who was still alive the night passed and dawn came, but we were still quite awake and decided that it would be a win to stay up until the hot tub opened and move the entire silly lot of us down there. To pass the time in between I dug out the write rings and we tried building things out of them. The process of notching enough of them so they'd stick together at the edges proved much too arduous to deal with, so we tried various ways of just twisting them together. Kelly took this to extremes and wound up with a big weird tangle of them which I believe still exists and has been named as a "diagram of VMS internals". I sort of crocheted a bunch of them together into a chain; the rest were cut up, stacked, bent, unbent, and thrown around until they became boring and we went to check out the hot tub. But it was *closed*!! The bloody bastards had rendered bogus our reason to stay up that long. We were not amused but there wasn't much we could do about it, so we settled for showers [in the pool facility since the available degreasing bandwidth was much higher there] and crashed. And as one might expect, most of us slept until close to dinnertime on Sunday. Four-day conventions are a *moby* win, because the norm for most cons is that everything has to be shipped out Sunday afternoon, while the help is standing around wondering if we'll ever vacate the place. But we got up in time to head out into the connected underground mall thingy and visit a Brigham's for some "real" food. Phil and Mikki got sidetracked by a small vad under where the pool was; I had the other radio which kept crackling things about "lots of pipes". After absorbing what Brig's had to offer and completely freaking out most of the help in the process, we went back to the con because it was time for Punday Night. A pile of us filtered into the ballroom they'd allocated for same, and sat over on the floor in front near an exit door that kept blowing cold air on everyone's butts. The contestants filed in, including Gub who so gloriously walked away with it last year, and the contest was on. It was somewhat less than we expected; it was less organized it seemed, felt more like a shouting match at some points, and was generally fairly wimpy. Possibly the best one was on the subject of computers, where someone threw the "old geezer to wife" line "Looks like we should trade in our SX-11, Em..." If enough people *really* insist I can transcribe the bits I actually logged. Gub got gonged about halfway through it, but the interest level in general seemed to be sagging around then anyway. Chip walked over for some of it and manned the gong, which was right near our little clutch, and studiously avoided looking at any of us the whole time. Most of the punsters seemed more interested in the large tub of cold beer next to the stage than in punning. Eventually someone was left, won, got applauded, etc, and we all filed out. We went back upstairs and powered up all the toys again, but things were much more subdued this time. Some additional visitors who hadn't shown up yet did so, including Cindy Gold who'd been down in the con suite all weekend busting her butt cutting up vegetables, but at this point as the night went on the expenditure of energy and lack of sleep began to seek us out, and we died rather early that night. Besides, we had a lot of work to do the next day... And work we did. The Sheraton didn't *think* to give the convention a reasonable checkout time like 4PM, so we had to lean on it a bit to get out at some sane hour. First thing to do was recover the cars from MIT, and then we got kicked out of the loading dock we'd originally used. The hotel people realized that the convention was over and were starting to become their usual militaristic selves. One of the guard types pointed us at the *other* loading dock which was actually better because it was under the South Tower. However, while we were in the process of shipping things down, the security desk whose office overlooked this dock called us *twice* to move things because other delivery trucks were coming in. On what was supposed to be a holiday, yet. Well, at least they did us that favor instead of calling the tow trucks. We eventually worked out with them places to park where we'd *definitely* be out of the way, and the problem vanished for the time. That wasn't the least of the small pains as we sorted the tremendous heap of stuff in the room, and *then* packed up the tech toys and fixed the lock. It took a good 3 hours with two carts and everyone helping to get it all down, and then it was time to hit the hot tub. Since they'd screwed us for Sunday morning, we took our shot at the tub on Sunday afternoon. Someone had left a bottle of champagne in our room -- I have no idea who, but it was there. There was the box of write rings. There were the bathing suits that didn't get packed into the cars. *After* checking out of the room, we descended en masse on the pool and took the hot tub by storm. The remaining weather balloon was inflated and tossed around. Most of what was left of the write rings got dumped into the hot tub. We popped the bubbly and passed it around. And just like last year, the damn tub was too cold -- a decidedly inferior heater, apparently... Phil went around behind the wall to the pump room to try and rectify this, but didn't realize that my frantic feeping from the tub was a warning that the lifeguard was on the way, so he got yelled at [but that's all]. Naturally the lifeguard type couldn't do anything about the heat either. We annoyed her further by playing with the "life cycles", the ones whose little processors are powered by pedaling a generator, and if you pedal very slowly they crash and do all kinds of crazy things with the blinkylights. After what must have been two hours of this everyone cycled through the showers and made ready to leave. Changed and much refreshed, we headed out to the lobby to regroup, and wound up in the little bar enclosure out front. This wasn't open yet but there was a piano there, so Larry started banging out a theme from some play and doing quite a good job of it. Soon a couple of flatheads came over and insisted that Larry quit; we all questioned this since he obviously wasn't hurting anything. The response was less than tolerant, let alone friendly: one of the flatheads mumbled something about us, or Larry, or whoever, having a "mental problem" and "being intoxicated". Realizing that this guy was already way out of line, we questioned his evaluation of Larry's state of mind since he was obviously cold sober; but they insisted loudly and rudely that Larry cease with the piano and that we all leave the bar area. Next thing I knew the two of them had slammed Mason up against the wall and were probably getting ready to rough him up -- I have no idea what Mark said to provoke this but we all converged post-haste on these two clowns. Nick demanded some identification from both of them. The more vocal one refused, while his fat oily cohort vanished into some back room or other. The first excuse they came up with for molesting Mark was something about "He was falling over, and I caught him" -- an obvious lie since most of us saw the two of them forcibly dragging Mark over to the wall. We were incensed at all of this, and took the matter immediately to the desk and demanded to see the highest manager they could find. This took about 15 minutes, for them to raise some guy who was probably sitting no more than 50 feet from the front desk. Then to "resolve" the matter they insisted that Mark go, alone, into the nether regions of office space to make his statement about how he was treated, leaving the rest of us milling around like a disturbed nest of hornets. Another person from the security staff emerged and we asked him for the desired information on the other two. They had apparently sent him forward because he was the smooth talker of the bunch; he launched into this spiel about how their names weren't public information and that they were special police from somewhere -- more lies, as they were clearly trying desperately to dig themselves out of a nasty situation that one of their trigger-happy members had caused. Then they tried to kick us out before Mark returned, which we refused to comply with. We finally did get a couple of names out of them; the oily cohort showed up again but wouldn't talk to anyone, and the other hotel people had obviously decided that this was the last straw, they had irreversably embarrassed themselves and the best hope they had was to try and get rid of us asap. Unfortunately they more or less got their way because we were now an hour late for dinner. Scraping together what remained of our dignity we left in disgust and headed to Lexington. The next thing on the agenda was to char-burn lots of chicken and eat it. To accomplish this we first had to go shopping, but soon everyone was happily stuffing themselves while Phil was outside performing packing algorithms to get as much chicken as possible on the grill at once. Mark and I were working on vanishing the rest of the Monastery Gold. Soon enough after all this an overpowering lethargy set in, and despite the winning company that I could normally have spent until dawn talking to, I was soon completely out of it on the living room floor. Karyn in the meantime had headed over to Lois's house to crash, and the next afternoon Phil and I and they met at MIT to go vad around some buildings. Phil took us over a couple of rooftops and into an HVAC room above some offices that contained not only the usual chair [which we've theorized is someone's sign-in, because there are chairs in many odd places around the Tute], but a *shower* stall only accessible now through a small crawl-hole. Evidently there was a full bathroom there once, whose space had been reclaimed at some point for additional HVAC space. We signed in here and in a couple of other places, and then Phil went home and I went with Karyn and Lois back to Lois' house. There we talked about many things, including hair -- both of them seemed to think that I didn't buy the right products for mine for some reason. [I have often wondered how I can lose so much every time I shower and still *have* so much.] Anyway, Karyn was at the moment unemployed and perfectly willing to extend *her* stay in Boston by this extra couple of days, so she had punted going home early with the people she'd come up with in favor of riding home with me. The idea was to leave that night but we had a long discussion about it and didn't leave until the next afternoon... -*- -*- -*- After our triumph at Boskone Phil and I essentially agreed to take a vacation from the laser business for the duration of Lunacon. First, Lunacon is sort of a small con and I remembered from the previous year that the rooms were sort of small. I had therefore proposed our first "off" con in quite a while, to which we could bring *other*, possibly lighter and less bulky, toys. The ride was a milk run up to Tarrytown from here; I went and picked up Charles McGrew who also wanted to go and whose projected timeframes seemed concurrent with mine. We got there early Friday afternoon and got to watch everyone else filter in. A lot of people I knew did appear, however; I must have heard "Where are the lasers?" about fifty times and had to say "this is our vacation" in reply. For alternative room lighting we simply hung up christmas light strings. The most fun toy was the molecular modeling kit that Phil had found around MIT somewhere, consisting of lots of wooden balls about 2 inches in diameter and skads of aluminum rods to stick them together with. Each ball has holes at various 90-degree spaced points around it; some have all six and some have less. Holes at different angles can be added with a hand drill, although this is somewhat tedious. It's easier to bend some of the rods to obtain strange angles. Essentially it's like a big limited-axis tinkertoy set. We began sticking the parts of this together and quickly came up with some of your basic 90-degree lattices, and some odd sprawly things with random balls sticking off at odd angles. Phil started trying to balance them on the carpet, which was a rather strange carpet itself. Some of it went into dumb-looking headgear, complete with parts that could spin. When combined with the Green Frobs, which were also present, the molecular kit could take on hinges and some different angles and other modifications. Unfortunately two of the rods would *just barely* fit through the center holes of the Green Frobs, and a few of them broke under the strain. At one point we took a bunch of the stuff downstairs to the hallway where everyone was hanging out, to entertain the populace at large with the modeling-kit concept. I sat down and started building the flat lattice I'd envisioned a while back, and somehow this became the final outcome and Group Project with everyone pitching in and working on it. The result was this large heavy square thing constructed basically like O---O---O--- @-+-@-+-@-+-@- | O-+-O-+-O-+ ... etc ... where @-+-@-+-@-+-@- O = yellow ball | O-+-O-+-O-+ @ = red ball @-+-@-+-@-+-@- + = green frob | O-+-O-+-O- -,| = aluminum connecting rods and all interlaced correctly so it would hold together. And once this thing was finished, we took it out and carried it around the rest of the con just to be weird. The easiest way to hold it was by the middle, with the lattice horizontal; since it was about the size and coloration of a very large pizza, the phrase "Domino's Molecules" suddenly popped into my mind and immediately the thing was obviously a Pizza Molecule, showing the basic crystalline structure of pizza and how the dough atoms and pepperoni atoms and oregano atoms all fit together. This concept was well-received at the subsequent Saturday night parties since everyone was fairly twisted anyway. Later on I wandered into the Sound Room, where someone had set up a fairly studly stereo and was playing SF soundtrack CDs. He had on some Tangerine Dream album, very loud, and it sounded absolutely marvelous. He had a delay box going to a pair of back speakers so the room sounded much larger. All it needed was darkness and lasers firing around all over; I told him this and we got to talking a bit. It turned out that just for bringing all his equipment and volunteering to babysit the room for a certain number of hours during the con, the con had not only found him a function room but had bought his membership for him as well. Phil had earlier mentioned someting about coming up with an audience-contributed means of financing all the laser stuff, and I realized that this fellow was getting floated by the concom for doing exactly what *we* were doing, and he didn't have to work nearly as hard to set up. I went back to the room and we discussed this a bit, and didn't come up with a reasonable-sounding way of making it work. For one thing, cons are funded primarily in terms of lots of work supplied by the people who run it. Charging any sort of admission to our shows, especially at a con, still seemed out of the question, especially since they weren't really *shows* per se, just laser playrooms we did mostly for our own fun and amusement. MGrant and Swa meanwhile spent most of the evening in the pool splashing around and talking to some random nympho or other and playing with her mind. I later found them downstairs, and Mike decided to use the AT&T Card Fone Bug to talk to his buddy across the Pacific for some time, while Swa and I sat around and watched the late-night hotel employees walk by and give us strange looks. Swa was on another comic purchase kick; he picked up some more Freak Brothers stuff, which contains some really incredible and painstaking detail in some of the full-page "oh wow" scenes. We tried to determine the original purpose of the Green Frobs; they'd come from the Boston Museum of Science, but their original purpose still escapes us. I thought they'd make appropriate trade- show giveaways or something, but you really can't do that much with them unless there are *lots* of them, sort of like Legos. They still exist, having even remained for a time at Level Zero, but their number seems to be steadily decreasing. I ran into Rathmere later on who had been harassed by the local police in connection with drunk mundanes in the bar. The usual hotel bug here is that a lot of mundanes who know nothing of the con often come into the bar on Saturday night and while the bar is usually fairly-well separated from where the fans hang out, there is some interaction. Usually it's Mundane: "What is all this?" Fan: "A science fiction convention, where a lot of people come to be weird and party together." Mundane: "Oh." Well, perhaps they learn something, but usually the mundanes are quite happy to hang with their own kind and drink. Apparently things got a bit ugly in this particular bar and police were called, but simply by being within 50 feet of it Rathmere somehow got involved, when all he'd done was drifted down the hallway leading to the bar at just the wrong time. Apparently this happens to him often. I took to porting my flute around and wound up in the con suite for a while, where I ran into someone who remembered all the high obnoxious fingerings I'd forgotten. Chip Hitchcock wandered through and simply shrugged when I asked him how *his* con was going. None the better for my presence, I suspected, not that this was going to affect *my* lifestyle any. And then the high point of the evening came around 4 in the morning, after most of the people had gone to bed. We decided to do a little elevator riding, since there were about 12 floors to work with and nice tame elevators. We lassoed one of the user vators [as opposed to the service vators] and Phil transferred to the other one in the same shaft, and we were just getting ready to rat race for a while when the fire alarms went off. The first thing I did was look up the shaft at the smoke detector on the ceiling to see if it had triggered for some ungodly reason. I saw that it was still blinking, which usually means it's okay, but I had the more immediate problem that my elevator was homing to the first floor like they usually do when there's an alarm, and I had to get *out* of there. Phil's was already stopped somewhere above me, and there was no time for conversation to figure out if we'd done anything to trigger the alarm or not. I heard elevator doors banging and for a sickening instant thought someone knew we were in there and half-expected to see some security flathead sticking his face into the shaft up above me. It was still closed up, but now the car was on the first floor and I cracked the doors in front of me, found the coast clear on the second floor and exited. Not ten seconds later two flatheads went pounding past me in the other direction, their radios crackling in unison with my scanner, which had been on their frequency all this time. People were starting to congregate downstairs, MGrant showed up with the other HT and I finally found out where Phil had gone -- back to the room to make sure none of our stuff was out of order [more than usual, that is]. And then we learned that the flatheads were scanning floor by floor telling people to get out of their rooms [at 4 in the morning, mind you] and go to the lobby until the alarm had been cleared, which was why there were so many people down there. Phil returned and told me that one of the flatheads had come running along the hall and told Phil to "go get the people out of 8 and 9" or some such -- here's Phil in shorts and tie-dye, but the flathead saw a small box with a rubber dickie antenna and took him for someone official anyway. [This has since happened again to one or more of our crowd, with frequency that refutes coincidence. People apparently just see radio, think "official".] So anyway, all this time the flatheads were frantically looking all along the second floor or something for the offending fire detector -- the alarm panel only shows them which *area* has triggered, not which exact detector. They couldn't find it, and they couldn't reset the alarm with it still triggered, so they were still poking into rooms and closets and telling the desk, and us, of their efforts the entire time. By now most of the con was downstairs in the lobby waiting for them to get done so they could go back to sleep, and Phil and I and the rest of us were standing over by the window with the scanners, and suddenly everyone got quiet and was looking at us, since we were holding Progress Reports in our hands. We turned them up and toward the rest of the lobby so everyone could hear what was going on, which I found highly amusing because apparently because nobody else thinks to bring scanners to cons, suddenly there was a context in which they were worth having. And when a flathead keyed up and said "Tell them the alarm has been cleared", a great cheer went up. Everyone then went back to bed, except Isaac Asimov who apparently checked out and left in disgust on the spot. I spent the rest of the night sitting around in the same second-floor mezzanine where I'd spent a good deal of last year's Lunacon getting deb-trapped, but this time Vicka and I were just shooting the breeze about nothing in particular and wandering in and out of the little balconies over the pool. We both tried to stay up all night and were doing just fine until about 9AM when I simply *had* to get some sleep, but we were all up soon after this to clean up and get out. The Bostonians and the Molecule loaded into Donna's car and headed for home, MGrant headed out fairly early and all who were left were Vicka and me and a box of coffee stirrers from which we created lots of cute little shapes. Charles McGrew, who I'd come up with, was still busy with something downstairs and was in no hurry to leave, but eventually we decided it was time to go home. -*- -*- -*- I mentioned that the laser stuff wasn't really a *show* per se yet, but the next "gig" certainly came close. At Lunacon and even Boskone we'd spent a lot of time with the Generic Fandom folks, a loose organization based out of RPI/Troy NY where Genericon is held every year. I believe I've been to every one of these, since this was only their third one, and it's been massive fun every time [see previous flamage about it]. It's traditionally held in this wonderful old academic building called Sage Hall, which clings precariously to a hillside just above the campus boiler plant. Its basement is full of strange twisted bits of metal that people have designed as art, the inside of the place has been sort of re-done with new coats of paint and trim and good carpets, and it's got lots of little hidey-holes and crannies where fans can go crash when they need to. There's plenty of undisturbed parking out back, although it's a long uphill toil from the lot to the first floor of the place. During the last few cons the Generic folks had asked us to "do a show" for Genericon because they liked it so much, and how could we refuse, indeed. So it was agreed that we'd port all our stuff to Troy and try and give them a good one. As is also traditional I picked up Lissanne and her artwork and we trucked merrily off up the Thruway, arriving at RPI in the afternoon. Since we were essentially going to live in Sage for the next two days I went shopping; it turned out that all one had to do was go north a few blocks and there was a large mall. Radio Shack provided some insight as to the frequencies used by the RPI peacekeeping force, and I went back to my car with large amounts of groceries from the food store, and sat there eating a yogurt and watching this sad old retiree parking lot guard try and slim-jim open a car for a lady who'd locked her keys inside it. He eventually popped it but I was finished with my yogurt by then; I left, made an illegal left off the highway to get back to RPI [there was no other obvious way], and showed up to discover that Phil and Donna had arrived. We headed down toward the registration desk where we used their button maker to construct more Coherent Central buttons. Someone from ConOps was liberated to find us a room to store all our stuff in, which was right down the hall from the con suite on the 5th floor. We swapped in our own door lock, rearranged all the furniture, trucked in the toys, and called it home. The first thing to do was hack up something resembling dinner out of tuna fish and ramen noodles; Karyn had brought a hot plate along that facilitated this. Frodo in the meantime was thinning down pieces of his new pick set. Phil's latest addition to his tool kit was a small round room deodorizer ["This is a good place for a stick-up"]. He'd been talking to Paul Earls, a guy from Boston who owns some largish lasers and does an occasional show. Paul gets trailed around by the CDRH, the federal organization that deals with "radiological safety" and makes volumes of paranoid rules about lasers and what you can and cannot do with them if you're going to run a laser show. I have often considered it fortunate that so far, all our stuff is of a low enough power that nobody would really worry about this. However, even the smallish HeNes are considered "class IIIb" and thus "dangerous" by the governmental paranoids, although even the upwards-of 100 milliwatts one of the argons can crank out is pretty tame as far as "radiation" goes. Earls, however, is pushing a couple of watts, at which point it's easy to burn holes in target objects including eyeballs. He was complaining about having to fill out large piles of paperwork for *each* *show*, not just in general. The upshot, as usual, is that we're just slightly "in violation", but not enough that anyone would worry about it and enough that we and those around us. If and when we acquire some bigger lasers will perhaps be a different story, but at this point the informality of it all is part of the charm, and gives us the freedom to do development work without burdens of bureaucratic worry. Apparently getting an official variance for a given state isn't that difficult anyway. We'd been scheduled for midnight Saturday, which is sort of the high point of any con, *in* the con suite. Yes, that huge wonderful room with all the nice strong mouldings to stick mirrors in, and all the good heavy tables to use as benches. We thus had Friday essentially free, so after eating and reviewing the pictures of the recent Boston Tie-dye Party [where a lot of people went colorfully overboard] we went to wander about and familiarize ourselves once again with some of the nifty features of RPI and discover some more. We first went up to that fun little greenhouse thing on the roof of Sage, this time with *real flashlights* instead of a couple of Bic lighters and in the daytime so we could see what things looked like from up there. I found myself in the attic at one point and since it was there, I removed and examined one of the smoke detector modules and found that they were all easy bayonet-mounts. The reason behind this interest was that it was pretty clear that we *would* have a Rosco fogger for the show. Some guys playing keyboards had set up a small concert thing down in the lecture hall, and were busily attempting to emulate Tangerine Dream. We briefly enhanced their gig by hanging a glass ball on a mike stand and hitting it with the portables, which looked even better than expected because they were the people who had originally wangled the Rosco out of the RPI theatrical group, and we threw some fog into the room to make beams more visible. The guy doing their sound, who went by the name of Crash, seemed in charge of all the equipment and claimed we'd have the fogger for our stuff Saturday. Wow! There is nothing that makes a laser show magnitudes better than some miasma in the room to show where the beams are going. With enough fog they look almost like luminous solid bars criscrossing the air. Once this idea became known we realized that the fogger was *essential* to make an impressive show, and having one available would be a huge win. We realized that there was a lot of work ahead of us to get this thing set up for Saturday, so sometime toward dawn we went back to the con suite and started initial planning for where we were going to put things. The room is enormous with a high ceiling but one side of it is taken up by this half-height office suite where some dean or other hangs out. The roof of this is still only about halfway up to the real ceiling and consists of unfinished plywood and a couple of funny skylights. On the other side of the room is something similar but much smaller, which houses a small kitchen in one end and soda machines in the other. The two halves are separated by sort of a peaked roof thing in the middle, but there are small level places on either side of this. It quickly became obvious that this was what we wanted to do the show from; beams would already be well overhead, and the equipment would be out of harm's way, and initial tests showed that these little risers were quite strong. There were outlets nearby that appeared to be on separate circuits, and given the generally robust nature of construction in the building we anticipated no power problems. I placed a random table up next to the riser and hauled myself up on it to survey the situation. It looked like we wanted to suspend two spinmotors about five feet in front of these things and fire beams through hanging frobs at the bare walls in the corners, and downward on to the front of the riser. The first thing I needed, of course, was an optics bench up there, so we grabbed one of the low tables around the room with the intent of handing it up there for this purpose. It didn't move. We pulled harder and finally it rose up, but we examined it more closely and realized that the top was made of solid steel or something and weighed about 150 pounds!! I should have known, this being a college -- this was standard dorm-grade stuff that wouldn't be easy for students to steal. It took four of us to actually lever the damn thing up there on top of the riser, but it got up there and was soon set firmly in place at the edge mouldings with a book under the fourth leg. It didn't move a micron for the rest of the weekend -- a truly wonderful table to work on, and well-worth the effort getting it placed. While people slept on the floor underneath, Phil and I ascended into the high reaches of the beams across the ceiling and strung the ropes for the motors and removed the smoke detectors. The access path to these beams involved hopping up on one of the funny little pillar struts at the ends of the room, grabbing a steam pipe holder and pulling up that to the beams, a good 20 feet up. By the time the con was over there was an indistinct trail of footprints up the wall where the pipe hanger was, but not so's you'd really notice. This arrangement was only on one wall, so to reach the far end of the strutwork I had to monkey along the beams to the other end, fix the rope, and walk back [the rope was probably strong enough to hold my weight but I wasn't about to try coming down on it]. The final configuration was a three-point suspension for each motor, one in front of each riser, and once they stopped swinging everything was nice and stable. By this time it was past dawn, so we went back to our little room and crashed. Soon after we awoke, MGrant arrived, dragging Spam's old Spectra-Physics HeNe and a new toy concept we'd talked about -- a Spirograph generator. This is simply two [or three in this case] small DC motors with mirrors mounted on the shaft ends at a slight angle from perpendicular. An incident beam bounces back off one of these at a continually varying angle, and the result describes a circle. If this circle next hits another mirror spinning at a different speed, the circles modulate each other and you get rosette patterns. Mike's prototype was done with mirrors from compacts epoxied to Rat Shack motors, all strapped down to a hunk of wood. And it worked just fine, throwing strange loopy figures all over the ceiling. Two motors seemed to give the most symmetrical patterns, while three seemed to deliver spaghetti and didn't look quite as interesting. For someone who'd been feeling somewhat peripheral with regard to the laser toy business he certainly came through First with a Working Concept, and then followed up by putting a lot of work into the show, so his theory about being "left out" must have been wrong to begin with. This all increased the psychedness of everyone considerably. We opened up Spam's laser and diked out the silly beam polarizer and put a paper wad in under the sidearm tube so it would be in proper alignment, but it could still only kick out about 2 mW. *Where the fuck was Larry with the 30mW HeNe?!?!* we were asking at this point. We even went as far as to call Lexington and find out, and the upshot was that nobody else was coming to Troy as far as they knew. We had to do without it, so my red side was destined to be pretty wimpy. We went off to explore around some and possibly find a ladder, along with John Galvin who is one of the founding folks behind Genericon. We wandered into the Fiz Plant boiler house down below, hoping to find someone on duty who would also be able to find us a ladder, and ran into a large jovial individual sitting behind the same desk the old black guy from last year had been. He seemed to sense no threat in our presence there, and then when we told him the story about the old black guy at 4 in the morning last year, his eyes opened wide and he went "oh, that was *you* guys? My boss made me *clean the sign-ins off the tank*". And we all had a good laugh riot about this, because they'd repainted the tank anyway, and so few people were ever going to see the oil tank anyway that we all realized that keeping it looking nice was completely academic. He told us how his boss would sit up in the little tin shack that served as his office, above the boiler room floor, and occasionally stick his head out and yell down at the grunts. And then we expressed a desire to go look at the works again, and he said "Sure, go explore, do what you want, but just come out through here so I know you haven't died in there". What a win!! With the wonderful sound of throttled-back steam all around us we went off through some old familiar tunnels, signed in *again* in the freshly-painted tank room but this time on the ceiling above the tank itself so the boss-man might not find it, and went off down a tunnel we'd never seen before. This one was a good deal more crufty and old than the others we'd hitherto found, in a more rounded cross-section and full of crumbling old brick. At the far end there was a ladder up to an access plate outside somewhere, and a tiny hole past the pipes that turned right into oblivion. I stripped off my gear [the only way I'd fit through it] and wiggled my way around the corner, under some other stuff and into the basement of the next building down the hill from Sage. Whereupon I soon ran into what looked like an IR alarm sensor, and the only reason I saw it was because its light was on meaning I'd tripped it. Damn! I quickly looked for another way out, and there was the obvious doorway and stairs, but just as I started to go up these two random ladies came into view, sat down in some chairs right next to the stairway for a smoke and a chat. I waited there for about five minutes, far longer than I should have with what could be the entire RPI police force converging on the building, and finally gave up and scrambled back through the tiny hole to the tunnel. By this time I was completely filthy and hadn't signed in anywhere in there. We exited soon after this, taking with us a tall stepladder the guy decided to let us have after all, with the proviso that we bring it back Sunday afternoon before the boss-man got in and wondered where it was. No problem, we told him. Upon our return to Sage we discovered that some clown had broken the elevator, rather hopelessly as we discovered upon going down to look at the controller, so we schlepped the ladder up 5 tall ones to get it to the room. And thus continued our many trips up and down those risers, lifting all the expensive stuff up and coming down again to align mirrors across the room, drink more Jolt, and headscratch about where the next piece was going to go. We spent most of the evening on this. By the time it neared completion I had two tripods on the table with a bunch of catch mirrors taped down, which could route the blue and the red to various places, mostly to the hanging frobs but some just out across the room and back such that they could switch around fairly fast. Frodo and Karyn went out and returned with a *case* of ramens, which we made dinner out of. There was a sickening moment of doubt when it was learned that the fog machine had been allocated only for the previous night and was to be returned to the theatrical group before we could use it. I ran off yelling for Crash, found him down in the lecture hall again and we went upstairs and found the closet that someone had stashed the machine in. We then liberated it and took it up to the room. There was no fucking *way*, especially with setup so far along, that we would survive without it. We hung our various corporate logos and bits of propaganda on the front of the risers -- all this time I thought I'd never get to hang my paperwork in someone's *con suite*, but here we were and there it was. We had essentially taken over the entire con suite to set up, which later on became increasingly difficult as more people filtered in and wound up in the way. We were suddenly glad that the equipment was safely up top. Someone had brought a fairly studly stereo for con use in general; we appropriated this and took his amp topside, ran telco wire out to the two little pillar things at each end and levered his two *large* *heavy* speakers up on top of these. This made things acoustically interesting since the music had to bounce around some before actually reaching the people down below. And as midnight approached, so did our state of readiness. For the first time we were actually *ready* to go, *on schedule*, including having had time to go off and do some other things. And amazingly enough, nothing was drifting out of alignment. Praise be to good old solid buildings!! We discussed musical selection; Phil in a stroke of genius came up with the idea of using the first bit of Zoolook as an opening, with things afterward to be determined. Regis and someone else ran off to quickly create a mix tape of some good TD and such, which at something like 11:45 was delivered back to us. The room by now was quite packed with people, many of who were already sitting on the floor waiting. A captive audience, you might say -- after all, we'd taken their con suite! At about ten minutes to, Phil and I sat up on the peak of the little roof between the risers [a summit conference, of course] and overviewed how things were going and told each other the equivalent of "Let's kick ass". We then retired to our respective sides and waited for the Midnight Sacrifice. Somewhere just past midnight someone yelled up to us "start". Some confusion ensued, in which I couldn't figure out for a while how to get the damn lights to turn off and someone thought the Sacrifice was either done, or punted, or still supposed to happen. The result was that we finally got the lights out and about ten seconds into Zoolook and a "hold it!" cry went up. No, the Sacrifice hadn't happened yet. It then did, which was rather amusing with someone intoning lugubrious ceremonial incantations and thumping a large walking stick on the floor. The victim, a young lady, was officially declared dead, Crash took his place down on the floor with the fogger, the lights were nuked, and we were on. This particular piece of music starts with a rather slow and dreamy part, punctuated by strange noises suggestive of animal grunts, that goes on for about 7 minutes or so. During this time all the lasers were on but only two little weakish red beams from the handhelds were wandering around the room, chasing each other through the rafters [the "mating flies" stunt], occasionally residing in a hanging crystal or two but not strong enough to really show what they were, and being generally low-key. Meanwhile Crash was shooting fog and the room was filling with miasma. Somewhere around the time when people began to wonder if this was all we were going to do, the music shifted and oozed into a section with a faster rhythm, but it was still fairly mellow. The small red beams' paths became more random as those running them around started to quietly reach for other equipment -- Phil had some object blocking his main argon beam, and I reached one hand up for the tripod handle... the soundtrack gave its three preparatory bass drum licks, BOOM BOOM BOOM, and in one of the most glorious moments I've ever experienced, I yanked the tripod handle over just a little and Phil removed the blocking object. Ka-pow!! It was perfectly timed: on the next phrase of the music, which started the loud lively part, bright blue and green beams suddenly leapt everywhere around the room, and a most rewarding involuntary "Oooh!!" drifted up from the audience. The next few minutes had beams dancing in all different directions, through crystals, back and forth overhead, and red and blue patterns from the galvos and the spirograph frob danced on the ceiling. The fog made an incredible enhancement to it all; it showed every beam path in vivid colorful detail. The only thing wrong with this approach was that we'd only come up with a beginning. Not a middle or an end. So the show was rather like a Grand Finale that went on for the next couple of hours -- we ran through everything we'd set up in about five minutes, and then sat there wondering what the hell *else* we were going to do with it all! Having not thought about it before I quickly vectored a "hack beam" off the riser edge so I could sit there and hold things in it, letting the results go on the ceiling. We spent the rest of the time switching the same things back and forth and trying to do something different, and basically just playing, until people began to get tired and drift out. We noticed this, had a brief conference over the roof peak, and decided to recover by slowly fading out the lasers and slowly fading in the lights. Since they were mercury lights that take a while to come on anyway, this was perfect -- I left a crystal spread spinning around and jumped down, sneaked over to the light switch and started them up. The bulbs were just starting to go from dull orange to purplish by the time I got back up on the riser and dropped the argon output power a notch or two. As the lights caught and brightened we blocked beams until everything coherent was contained and the room was light, although it was still quite full of fog. And unexpectedly, a rousing ovation went up from those who were still left. Yow. What a post-orgasmic feeling, indeed. We had used *all* the fog juice -- over a quart of the stuff. I powered down the argon