1. Fantastic review. I may have to check this one out. I loved Deep Space Nine and one of the things that I really enjoyed about it was the unique way amongst Star Treks that it portrayed people of faith as more than just “idiots who believe nonsense”.

  2. notleia says:

    Tangent: Now I only have to scroll through the porpskillion Paul Lees on Facebook to find out which one is bainespal.

    • bainespal says:

      If there’s another one with my pixel sword avatar, I’m committing suicide.

      But I don’t really use Facebook. The only reason I joined it last winter was because David James offered to talk to me on Facebook after I was being all mopey and depressive on Spec Faith.

      • notleia says:

        Did I mention there are a PORPSKILLION Paul Lees (and permutations of Paul and Lee)? And I think the search engine prejudices based on activity levels. I scrolled for about five minutes before I couldn’t take it anymore. Can I at least have a geographic like a state to narrow it down by?

        • bainespal says:

          I didn’t fill in any information other than my name and birth date. I guess I don’t mind revealing that — 2/6/91.

          I’m not really a private, paranoid type, but I don’t think Zuckerburger has a right to own information about everyone in the world. Even though I didn’t give Facebook any unnecessary information and did not add any friends or allow it to go through my email contacts, it still had many very accurate friend suggestions.

          This unnerved me, and I tried to find out how Facebook knows who you probably know, even if you’ve never had a Facebook account before and you haven’t told Facebook where you went to school, where you’ve lived — or anything other than your birth date. Publicly, Facebook says that its friend suggestions are based on friends of friends, but that couldn’t have been the case for me when I first joined. It turns out that nobody knows how Facebook knows so much. It’s a “trade secret.”

          So, Facebook has the right to know stuff about me even before I ever created a Facebook account, and I don’t even have to the right to know how it knows about me? That doesn’t seem right.

          • notleia says:

            I still can’t find you. I’d throw up my info all up in here, but I actually am paranoid about keeping my online life separate from what Google can pull up for my name. If you don’t mind helping me out, you can go to my Blarg and use the contact junk I set up just in case. Or instead of Facebook you can give me an email and I can directly spam your inbox with things I find interesting on the Internet, especially if I’m killing time while on my evening shift.

  3. Julie D says:

    Another reason I really should watch Star Trek. Any Star Trek.

    • bainespal says:

      You should watch Star Trek, but I think your experience with it will very likely be similar to my recent experience with Doctor Who. Where Doctor Who is cheesy to the point of being bizarre to the uninitiated, Star Trek can be dry and repetitive. Still, if you start in The Next Generation and soldier through (or skip) the bad first two seasons and then continue through Deep Space Nine, you’ll find some truly excellent storytelling and worldbuilding.

      I recommend Babylon 5, too.

What do you think?