julieandrews: (Default)
I was going to post about Readercon first, but then the Chik-Fil-A (see previous rant) thing annoyed me more in the moment.

So, Readercon.

I used to live in Waltham and work in Burlington, and yet Readercon never crossed my radar as something worth considering going to. I don't know how or why I missed it. Maybe I never heard of it. Maybe it sounded boring. (Compared to anime cons? Yea.)

It wasn't until I'd moved north to New Hampshire, and gone away to California to attend Clarion, that it really entered my radar. Some of the instructors mentioned it. Some of my classmates mentioned it.

But, see, I made the mistake of going to a Wiscon first. I cannot sing the praises of Wiscon highly enough. Will do my best to never miss one.

Readercon was crap by comparison. Unfair comparison? Perhaps. But it's not exactly comparing apples to oranges. Just crappy apples to delicious apples. :) Without having a mediocre apple in between to temper my opinion.

I posted con reports. They're around here somewhere if you want to read them.

* Hotel wifi is EXPENSIVE. (For all numbers above $0 I think it's a ripoff, but I mean EXPENSIVE. And it was moreso the second time! The price kept going up!)

* Hotel location is crap. You can't walk to anywhere to eat. The hotel shuttle is unreliable. If you want food, you're stuck with the hotel food, ordering in, or knowing someone with a car going somewhere you can eat (vegetarian, though I have no other dietary restrictions).

* Repeat, hotel location is crap. I don't have a car. It's easier for me to get to a con in BOSTON than it is to get to a con ~20 minutes away from me. My options are 1) expensive or 2) ridiculously convoluted and time-consuming.

* Hotel layout is crap. There's a 'lounge', but it's not conducive to lots of small groups talking. Unless you're the type who likes hanging out in people's hotel rooms, or your own, you're going to be stuck in this crappy lounge or in the hotel bar. (Contrast to Wiscon which has a nice lounge, random chairs other places, lounges on other floors, and just lots of random spaces for conversations. And organized parties everyone's invited to.)

* Getting on programming. Good luck! You have to be a Big Name, or a Medium Name, and know the super secret password or something. Broad Universe didn't even get a reading this year. (I don't know the circumstances behind that. Which is part of the problem.)

* The programming itself. Some of it sounds cool, some of it sounds different, some of it sounds ultra-academic and niche and what and I'm-too-stupid-to-be-at-this-con.

I didn't go this year. I thought about it. I waffled. I wiffled. I booked a room, but did not buy a membership. I knew lots of cool people that were going. Clarion instructors, Outer Alliance people, Broad Universe people. I would have only gone to see them. And y'know what? I can see them at other cons.

Every year K reminds me I didn't enjoy myself the times I did go, so why was I even considering it this time? Because it's so close! It should be cheap and easy and fun! But it's.. none of the above.

So this crap they pulled with the harrasser? The admitted harrasser? The serial harrasser? The two year suspension? Yea, it's crap.

The only time I felt uncomfortable at a con was at Readercon. I know some geeks lack social skills. I honestly think if I wasn't socialized female, I wouldn't have as many social skills as I do. It was probably just that. It was maybe just that. But I was wary of him the next time I went to Readercon. I didn't want to have a conversation of any type with him.

And now to know if he'd gone beyond 'this guy makes me uncomfortable' and I'd reported it, I'd be lucky if anything happened? Yea.. y'know.. not so welcoming, Readercon. And you were already not so welcoming on other fronts.

I had a conversation on the bus home from one Readercon where I was complaining about the location and suggesting other hotels in the greater Boston area that might be better. That I'd be willing to pay more for a better location. And a couple of the people I was talking to said in effect, y'know, get involved, we need fresh blood, etc etc.

Yea, no, sorry. Been there, done that. I know the work involved. And to be constantly fighting an uphill battle against an entrenched concomm? No thank you. I'd sooner go off and start my own con. One a lot closer to the Wiscon model than the Readercon one.

One with well-considered policies we were ready to enforce.
julieandrews: (Default)
I was shopping on Amazon for some gifts for some relatives in New York. I was happy with what I had in my cart, and I'd gotten it up to the level for free super-saver shipping. Though I'd forgotten to go through MyPoints or Memolink. Whoops! But that's beside the point, because I was in the process of checking out when I saw something odd in my total.

Sales tax!

... My state doesn't charge sales tax. What's going on here?

Some investigating led me to learn that starting June 1st, Amazon was charging every order shipped to New York, a New York sales tax. (Though how they decided on the percentage they did, I don't know. It didn't seem quite based on the county it was being shipped to, but it was more than the state base rate.) Their website also noted they were already in the process of suing NYS about it. Which would lead me to be on Amazon's side.

Except... that after further reading, the state documentation seems to say (I'm not a lawyer) that the sales tax* is only for New York customers. And news articles have said things like 'people residing in New York'.

I am not a New York customer. I do not reside in New York. I do not work in New York. My credit card billing address is not in New York.

All I was trying to do was buy something and have it sent directly to relatives in New York.

It seems Amazon (and New York) would rather I have it shipped here, to the nice sales-tax-free state, and reship it myself to New York. It won't cost me significantly more! But it'll sure eat into our national gasoline consumption.

So from where I'm sitting, it looks like Amazon wants to charge me a 7% tax, payable to New York State, for the privilege of exporting some books.

I wrote an Email to Amazon pointing out to them that I'm not a New York customer. We'll see what they reply with. Meanwhile, I'm going to be checking about B&N and Overstock** to see if they have the books I want for a comparable price.

And I'm contemplating writing my state reps.

* The new sales tax wording targets Amazon in particular because it goes after companies that have ties to companies and people in New York state who advertise to people in New York state. In other words, Amazon Affiliates.

**Overstock cut ties with their New York state-based affiliates rather than pay this sales tax. Amazon didn't want to take that step. Both companies are suing NYS.

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May 2014

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