What kind of moderation should Twoism.org adopt?


Dear Twoism members,

Since its beginning, Twoism has been a space where people come together through a shared love for Boards of Canada and related topics. Over the years, this forum has always embraced a wide range of conversations, sometimes sharp, sometimes philosophical, sometimes deeply personal.

But times change, and so does the internet. That’s why we'd like to hear from you: how should Twoism approach moderation in the future? There’s no right or wrong answer, this is an opportunity to reflect together on what we want this community to be, and how we interact with one another.

Please take a moment to vote in the poll. Your input will help us shape the future of Twoism in a way that reflects the values of its members.

Help we’re fighting,
Twoism crew

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What are you reading?

Random chat: movies, books, games, technology, etcetera.

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Dayvan Cowboy
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Treefingers wrote:Still on Mason and Dixon, it seems to be really hitting its stride right where I am (the chapter I just read was kind of a Frankenstein parody (or of that kind of Gothic 'modern Prometheus' style narratives) narrated by a self-exiled French chef, which centres around a mechanical duck purported to have a working digestive system (amazingly, I found that this is based in fact: in real life, though, it was a hoax that the duck could actually digest food, and this chapter extrapolates on that fiction brilliantly)).


Woah just caught this. Cheers mate. What a book!

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I'm on page 432 of IJ and I started it around 5 months ago... I have been taking my time with it though and often end up rereading pages/footnotes as I go as to ensure I'm not unconscious of important details , not to mention 1 page of IJ is really like 1.75 pages of a normally sized book. I also have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and if don't through the prose smoothly i reread words - and there are plenty of words to stumble over in IJ. I am feeling though, for this second half I want to delve in and keep the momentum flowing and try to finish it before the end of Summer. I was surprised to see Dave Eggars in the foreword refer to IJ as a crazy single month of reading. I'm also reading Consider the Lobster at the same time for when I'm on the move since IJ is often too heavy an object to carry around. Just finished the Kafka essay. Going to hit up Girl With Curious Hair after. I think if you really feel a connection with DFW read Infinite Jest first. It's almost inevitable if you like his non-fiction and short stories and for me I figured if I didn't read it now I'd wouldn't be able to not face when I'm older. I wanted to have experienced it now and gained insight on addiction while I'm younger (22) ... personally, there is no way I could have seriously read this book in highschool.

In IJ the last amazing passage to me was the Eschaton game... holy! OTIS P. LORD. the book is very sad, but it is also incredibly entertaining.

Anyway, David Foster Wallace is just one of those people... words fail. He reminds of Elliott Smith in way... he was a genius with so much heart. just tuned to a different frequency... and he eliminated his own map for keeps. He was also extremely prophetic with IJ in regards to entertainment.

but honestly turning back is for bitches so fook all the people who didn't even read past page 200 then flooded amazon with unfavorable critiques.

P.S another thing I've noticed with IJ is that it is sort of like training in reading. After reading that book, between the length and the language, almost nothing will ever phase you in reading again...


before I started IJ I had just finished Man, Nature, and Woman and a book of essays called This Is It by Alan Watts .

also will be reading You Are Not A Gadget per recommendation from M. Sandison

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d e n wrote:I'm on page 432 of IJ and I started it around 5 months ago... I have been taking my time with it though and often end up rereading pages/footnotes as I go as to ensure I'm not unconscious of important details , not to mention 1 page of IJ is really like 1.75 pages of a normally sized book. I also have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and if don't through the prose smoothly i reread words - and there are plenty of words to stumble over in IJ. I am feeling though, for this second half I want to delve in and keep the momentum flowing and try to finish it before the end of Summer. I was surprised to see Dave Eggars in the foreword refer to IJ as a crazy single month of reading. I'm also reading Consider the Lobster at the same time for when I'm on the move since IJ is often too heavy an object to carry around. Just finished the Kafka essay. Going to hit up Girl With Curious Hair after. I think if you really feel a connection with DFW read Infinite Jest first. It's almost inevitable if you like his non-fiction and short stories and for me I figured if I didn't read it now I'd wouldn't be able to not face when I'm older. I wanted to have experienced it now and gained insight on addiction while I'm younger (22) ... personally, there is no way I could have seriously read this book in highschool.

In IJ the last amazing passage to me was the Eschaton game... holy! OTIS P. LORD. the book is very sad, but it is also incredibly entertaining.

Anyway, David Foster Wallace is just one of those people... words fail. He reminds of Elliott Smith in way... he was a genius with so much heart. just tuned to a different frequency... and he eliminated his own map for keeps. He was also extremely prophetic with IJ in regards to entertainment.

but honestly turning back is for bitches so fook all the people who didn't even read past page 200 then flooded amazon with unfavorable critiques.

P.S another thing I've noticed with IJ is that it is sort of like training in reading. After reading that book, between the length and the language, almost nothing will ever phase you in reading again...


before I started IJ I had just finished Man, Nature, and Woman and a book of essays called This Is It by Alan Watts .

also will be reading You Are Not A Gadget per recommendation from M. Sandison


In much agreement for this post, DFW was so passionate and genuine - huge respect for the man. Keep at it though man, its just a beautiful book. Also I definitely sympathise with the whole meticulous way of re reading something, I do it myself too.

One tip for IJ if you haven't already done it: Use two book marks so flicking becomes much easier :)

Im about to start The Magic Mountain again, so so good.
Sagan: In order to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

Basinski: I wanted Cascade to become this crystalline organism like a star or a liquid crystal spaceship, a jellyfish traveling through the galaxy…

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fujee wrote:
d e n wrote:I'm on page 432 of IJ and I started it around 5 months ago... I have been taking my time with it though and often end up rereading pages/footnotes as I go as to ensure I'm not unconscious of important details , not to mention 1 page of IJ is really like 1.75 pages of a normally sized book. I also have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and if don't through the prose smoothly i reread words - and there are plenty of words to stumble over in IJ. I am feeling though, for this second half I want to delve in and keep the momentum flowing and try to finish it before the end of Summer. I was surprised to see Dave Eggars in the foreword refer to IJ as a crazy single month of reading. I'm also reading Consider the Lobster at the same time for when I'm on the move since IJ is often too heavy an object to carry around. Just finished the Kafka essay. Going to hit up Girl With Curious Hair after. I think if you really feel a connection with DFW read Infinite Jest first. It's almost inevitable if you like his non-fiction and short stories and for me I figured if I didn't read it now I'd wouldn't be able to not face when I'm older. I wanted to have experienced it now and gained insight on addiction while I'm younger (22) ... personally, there is no way I could have seriously read this book in highschool.

In IJ the last amazing passage to me was the Eschaton game... holy! OTIS P. LORD. the book is very sad, but it is also incredibly entertaining.

Anyway, David Foster Wallace is just one of those people... words fail. He reminds of Elliott Smith in way... he was a genius with so much heart. just tuned to a different frequency... and he eliminated his own map for keeps. He was also extremely prophetic with IJ in regards to entertainment.

but honestly turning back is for bitches so fook all the people who didn't even read past page 200 then flooded amazon with unfavorable critiques.

P.S another thing I've noticed with IJ is that it is sort of like training in reading. After reading that book, between the length and the language, almost nothing will ever phase you in reading again...


before I started IJ I had just finished Man, Nature, and Woman and a book of essays called This Is It by Alan Watts .

also will be reading You Are Not A Gadget per recommendation from M. Sandison


In much agreement for this post, DFW was so passionate and genuine - huge respect for the man. Keep at it though man, its just a beautiful book. Also I definitely sympathise with the whole meticulous way of re reading something, I do it myself too.

One tip for IJ if you haven't already done it: Use two book marks so flicking becomes much easier :)

Im about to start The Magic Mountain again, so so good.


To be honest, I was using about three or four bookmarks by the time I finished, ie one for reading, one for end-notes, one for the page with the list of years (Year of the Trial-Sized Dove Bar, etc), etc. Plus a few more to mark pages of interest, since I don't like highlighting or marking up my books.

It's been only a few months since completing IJ and I'm already considering re-reading.

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Beavercanoe wrote:
fujee wrote:
d e n wrote:I'm on page 432 of IJ and I started it around 5 months ago... I have been taking my time with it though and often end up rereading pages/footnotes as I go as to ensure I'm not unconscious of important details , not to mention 1 page of IJ is really like 1.75 pages of a normally sized book. I also have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and if don't through the prose smoothly i reread words - and there are plenty of words to stumble over in IJ. I am feeling though, for this second half I want to delve in and keep the momentum flowing and try to finish it before the end of Summer. I was surprised to see Dave Eggars in the foreword refer to IJ as a crazy single month of reading. I'm also reading Consider the Lobster at the same time for when I'm on the move since IJ is often too heavy an object to carry around. Just finished the Kafka essay. Going to hit up Girl With Curious Hair after. I think if you really feel a connection with DFW read Infinite Jest first. It's almost inevitable if you like his non-fiction and short stories and for me I figured if I didn't read it now I'd wouldn't be able to not face when I'm older. I wanted to have experienced it now and gained insight on addiction while I'm younger (22) ... personally, there is no way I could have seriously read this book in highschool.

In IJ the last amazing passage to me was the Eschaton game... holy! OTIS P. LORD. the book is very sad, but it is also incredibly entertaining.

Anyway, David Foster Wallace is just one of those people... words fail. He reminds of Elliott Smith in way... he was a genius with so much heart. just tuned to a different frequency... and he eliminated his own map for keeps. He was also extremely prophetic with IJ in regards to entertainment.

but honestly turning back is for bitches so fook all the people who didn't even read past page 200 then flooded amazon with unfavorable critiques.

P.S another thing I've noticed with IJ is that it is sort of like training in reading. After reading that book, between the length and the language, almost nothing will ever phase you in reading again...


before I started IJ I had just finished Man, Nature, and Woman and a book of essays called This Is It by Alan Watts .

also will be reading You Are Not A Gadget per recommendation from M. Sandison


In much agreement for this post, DFW was so passionate and genuine - huge respect for the man. Keep at it though man, its just a beautiful book. Also I definitely sympathise with the whole meticulous way of re reading something, I do it myself too.

One tip for IJ if you haven't already done it: Use two book marks so flicking becomes much easier :)

Im about to start The Magic Mountain again, so so good.


To be honest, I was using about three or four bookmarks by the time I finished, ie one for reading, one for end-notes, one for the page with the list of years (Year of the Trial-Sized Dove Bar, etc), etc. Plus a few more to mark pages of interest, since I don't like highlighting or marking up my books.

It's been only a few months since completing IJ and I'm already considering re-reading.


yeah, i got p. 223 marked as well. DFW did say how it was sort of pretentious for him to write such a long book that was designed to be read twice, haha. when I am finished i plan to reread the first chapter immediately to see how it ties together.

my copy of infinite jest already looks archaic. i think it looks sick all beat up though.

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About to start this bad boy. Can't wait 8)

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Slow down...

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About to start this bad boy. Can't wait 8)

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Slow down...

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Dayvan Cowboy
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Mexicola wrote:About to start this bad boy. Can't wait 8)

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Just started this myself. Race ya. :)

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It is very good.

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My favourite Pynchon, Against the Day is close second.
Sagan: In order to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

Basinski: I wanted Cascade to become this crystalline organism like a star or a liquid crystal spaceship, a jellyfish traveling through the galaxy…

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Island by Aldous Huxley. Simply incredible so far. Also, I had a panic attack in a Barnes and Noble the other day (don't ask) and in my weird emotional haze I left with the complete works of Alan Ginsberg, so I have that to look forward to.

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WeHadNormality wrote:Just started this myself. Race ya. :)


Ha! Sadly, I'm still midway through another book. Won't be starting this for a week or so yet.
Giving you a head start :wink:

Incidentally, apologies for the double-post above. Bleedin' dodgy mouse... :x
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René Barjavel - Ravage, uber old Sci-Fi from 1943, precursor to so much other things, good read so far.

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The Unwinding by George Packer

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Who REALLY won the space race? - by Thom Burnett. Great conspiracy book for anyone interested in post war/cold war space race insight.
Sagan: In order to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

Basinski: I wanted Cascade to become this crystalline organism like a star or a liquid crystal spaceship, a jellyfish traveling through the galaxy…

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Minority Report: Collected Short Stories of Philip K. Dick

Oh, and the Viz :P
36 digit code hidden in Cold Earth? Enter your prediction here www.intraludus.com

Discussion thread

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miklatov wrote:Oh, and the Viz :P


Viz as in Sid The Sexist and Roger Mellie etc?? Superbly puerile!! Highly recommend Roger's Profanisauras. :lol:
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Mexicola wrote:Cold Earth by Susan Moss.

'Six young people meet on an archaeological dig in a remote corner of Greenland. Excavating the unsettling remains of a Norse society under attack, they also come to uncover their own demons, as it becomes apparent that a plague pandemic is sweeping across the planet and communication with the outside world is breaking down. Increasingly unsure whether their missives will ever reach their destination, each of the characters writes a letter to someone close to them, trying to make sense of their situation and expressing their fears and dwindling hope of ever getting back home...'

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Wow! that sounds intense! interesting

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