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Wooden Rocket update
The 'Oscars' of the online science fiction world have opened with
over 3,000 votes for 632 different web sites in the first month. Jessica
takes a look at some of the early nominations in the Wooden Rocket
Awards.
Since
the Wooden Rocket awards
were announced last month - the debutante year for an annual award
specifically set up to recognize excellence in online science fiction
- the flood gates have opened to a whole range of votes being cast
for many fine and worthy web sites.
There's been a little over 3000 votes for some
632 different sites in every category of the 'Woodies',
so I thought I'd regale you all with a selection of some of the
initial front-runners and some sports card stats for the voting.
The hottest category for votes to date has been
best online-only magazine and best print-to-web magazine.
The widest choice of entries have been seen in
the online-only mag category, with the vote being split so that
a head-and-shoulders winner has yet to emerge.
Some of the names in the lead at the moment include
old favorites such as aphelion-webzine.com,
SFlare.com, SciFidimensions.com,
StrangeHorizons.com,
2000adonline.com and
InfinityPlus.co.uk.
On the print side, there's been a strong showing
for CineFex.com, Ansible.co.uk,
and by far and away the most popular to date, LocusMag.com,
the site of the Wall Street Journal of the SFF genre, Locus.
Online or off, it seems you can't get enough of
the serious reportage offered by Charles N. Brown and his merry
band of West Coast colonials.
As an aside, thanks to everyone who voted for the
'Nest, but your flattery is somewhat wasted, because as sponsors
for the Wooden Rocket, we're
disqualified from entering in any category. Vote for them please,
not us!
One surprise hot spot for the Woodies
has been the incredibly strong showing for best foreign (non-English
language) web site. This is an area of the awards we thought would
get the silent treatment, but instead we've had over 500 votes for
sites in this category.
Doing rather nicely at the moment are Aolai.de,
Bemmag.com, E-nigma
and Noosfere.com.
One point of clarification Mark Lewis, the awards
director, has received from many webmasters surrounds what is and
isn't considered fair encouragement of a site's users' to vote.
If you're a Webmaster and you want to stick up
a link on an e-mail newsletter or a hyperlink on your site pointing
to the awards and saying, hey, vote for me, this isn't against the
rules. Mark has now even added an official range of Wooden Rocket
badges for this purpose.
However, if you send out an e-mail newsletter,
newsgroups post, or hyperlink saying "hey, vote for me ten
thousand times each," this is counter to the rules, and is
self defeating, as the Woodies' anti-cheating system is fairly sharp
and will catch you out.
In our April 1st 2003 issue I'll bring you another
update including some interesting news surrounding the tough level
of competition slugging it out for honours in the Best Publisher
Site, Best Author Site, Best TV Site, Best Movie Site, and Best
Artist Site categories.
Ending on a positive note, the Woodies
have had a surprisingly low volume of votes from users discounted
because they haven't met the entry criteria or bothered reading
the rules - less than 1.5% - and no major cheating attempts yet.
Glad to see the fans are keeping it real. Remember,
this Award is open to you, the SFF fans of the 'Net, so if you haven't
voted yet, hop on over here
and strike a blow for online science fiction and fantasy.
Jessica
Related sites:
http://www.WoodenRocket.com
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OTHER CONTENT - March 2003
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Discworld
Divinity
An interview with the man with a trademark floppy hat. No, not Indiana Jones
(or even Dr Who), but ... Terry Pratchett. He talks about his latest works,
Discworld and, well, the art of being Terry.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
McMullen'ing
it Over
One of the brightest new voices in science fiction writing to hit the genre
for a long, long time. And struth cobber, he's Australian. Author Sean McMullen
is most definitely interviewed.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Hart
to Hart
Publishing guru David Hartwell, currently filling the hotseat as a senior editor
at Tor, chats with Stephen Hunt about why only one per cent of the SFF slush
pile is of publishable quality, the joys of owning The New York Review of Science
Fiction, and the contribution made by the Philip K. Dick Awards to the field.
(PUBLISHING SPOTLIGHT)
Windy
Miller
Frankly, what science fiction and fantasy illustrator Ron Miller doesn't know
about fine painting could be etched onto a pinhead using nanotechnology. And
he's not really windy … we made that bit up because it sounded good as a title.
Paul Barnett of Paper Tiger interviews Ron for the Nest.
(ARTIST INTERVIEWS)
Noreascon Four News
Next year's world science fiction convention is about to put up its prices before
opening its doors, so jump in quick.
(CONVENTIONS)
Fans Will Battle(star) Fans fed up with Farscape being cancelled are now up in arms about the re-imagining of Battlestar Galactica. In fact, they're calling for a boycott. (NEWS)
Darkness Falls Darkness Falls is the latest slight and extraneous scarefest to hit the big screen in dull, meaningless fashion. Director Jonathan Liebesman helms a ridiculously familiar and arbitrary cheesy horror tale that doesn't effectively challenge the simple conventions of the fright genre. (FILM REVIEWS)
Daredevil
There were elements of grandeur thrust upon writer-director Mark Steven Johnson’s
dark superhero flick Daredevil. Despite the anticipation of the famed stoic
blind crime-fighter’s arrival on the big screen, Johnson’s sensationalistic
fantasy is, surprisingly, another arbitrary stunt-infested movie that has plenty
of kinetic movement yet never really goes anywhere with its energizing format.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Dawn After Trip's shuttlepod is attacked, he finds himself stranded on a rapidly heating moon with an already inflammatory enemy. More Star Trek Enterprise deconstructionalism from the pen of Timothy W. Lynch. (TV REVIEWS)
Eulogy for a Dream Marianne Plumridge asks, with the Columbia shuttle disaster, just what happened to our dreams of space? And will we ever dare dream them again? (ARTICLES)
Offworld report: February 2003 William Gibson makes a break from the world of science fiction with his much lauded Pattern Recognition, Peter Jackson is interviewed - about Lord of the Rings, what else - and Gary Westfahl stirs up a storm over the space shuttle disaster. (NEWS)
Wooden Rocket update The 'Oscars' of the online science fiction world have opened with over 3,000 votes for 632 different web sites in the first month. Jessica takes a look at some of the early nominations in the Wooden Rocket Awards. (AWARDS)
Arthur
C Clarke Shortlist
The Arthur C Clarke Awards shortlist has been announced and includes M. John
Harrison's 'Light' and China Miéville's masterpiece 'The Scar'.
(AWARDS)
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