(no subject)

Nov. 20th, 2025 08:07 pm
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
I keep flirting with books - and I do not need to acquire any more books.
I have 100s of books on a TBR list as it is.

Latest? The Botanist's Assistant by Peggy Townsend

Blurb: "A murder in the science lab shatters a woman’s quiet and ordered life when she decides she must solve the crime herself in this entertaining and uplifting mystery.
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And this review via Smart Bitches got my attention.

"This is a book about a quiet, steady woman in her 50s who is dogged in her pursuit of justice. Margaret is a research assistant and she’s perfectly suited to the job: she’s methodical, reliable and devoted to science. When her boss dies unexpectedly, it is Margaret alone who suspects murder. In the way of these things, she is dismissed and not believed.

As to that disbelief: the book is frank about how older women who don’t conform to beauty standards are invisible to the greater world. When they are seen, they’re a topic of pity or ridicule, depending on the viewer’s degree of kindness. Margaret is a figure of fun to many of her colleagues. She’s a big boned tall woman and she’s called ‘Big Bird’ as a cruel nickname."

Hmm, I've not really run into that? Or no one has said that to my face? Of course I work for an organization that you could get fired for doing that.
And people aren't "pretty" or "striking" in Civil Service - that's only in the Glamour Industries, High Finance, and Advertising. I didn't think it was true in science or academia, though?

Although this review and the blurb may be enough to talk me into purchasing it. I don't want the audiobook though, I think I want the Kindle? Or I'll hunt it at Lofty Pigeons.

***

Today's Question from Question a Day Meme:

20. How often do you declutter? Is there somewhere you need to declutter, but haven’t got around to it?

Sigh. Constantly. I'm waging a losing battle against paper clutter. Partly due to the insane amount of junk mail that I receive.

Ugh, how do I get it to stop?

Right now, I need to declutter a pantry, and television stand, and a end table.
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Posted by Devin Reese

The throaty roar of an African lion has long inspired wonder or struck fear, even for those who have never seen a wild lion. In the 1980s, MGM Studios finally trademarked the majestic lion’s roar that preceded its movies since the company’s founding in 1924. But the lion’s roar we’re all familiar with is only one of its call types, according to a study published today in Ecology and Evolution. Using machine learning models, researchers have classified three other calls, including a newly named “intermediary” roar.

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In 2023, researchers deployed recording devices in Nyerere Park, Tanzania, to capture video and audio data from a resident population of African lions (Panthera leo) there. Now, using the 2023 recordings, 1,216 male lion vocalizations were classified into categories with the help of a machine learning model. In addition to the “moans” and “grunts” typical of the big cat species, the scientists learned that a roar previously thought to be a single type actually consists of two types. The new intermediary roar is lower in max frequency and shorter-lasting than the iconic full-throated roar.

When the researchers applied the AI model trained on the Nyerere Park lion sounds to 1,733 male vocalizations from another population of lions in the Bubye Valley Conservancy, Zimbabwe, it classified lion call types at an accuracy of 95.4 percent. The model was also better at identifying individual lions from their sounds than human observers.

NOT QUITE MGM MATERIAL: This lion is engaging in the “intermediary” roar captured and described by researchers with the help of a machine learning model. Video by Matt Wijers
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Still, researchers had to lend the AI a hand. They report that they needed to give the machine learning model assistance for it to achieve high classification accuracy. This help included determining start-stop points of roars and eliminating the moans that preceded roaring bouts.

It’s particularly important to recognize individual lion roars, since African lions are ranked “Vulnerable” on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Red List. Their roars can serve as signatures that allow researchers to track individual lions and estimate population sizes. “Until now, identifying these roars relied heavily on expert judgment, introducing potential human bias,” explained lead author Jonathan Growcott, a doctoral student at the University of Exeter, in a statement.

Read more: “How to Tell a Leopard From Its Roar

The bioacoustics techniques pioneered in this study set the stage for better accuracy in monitoring not just lion populations, but other African wildlife of concern for conservation, such as leopards and hyenas, which also produce loud, identifiable vocalizations.

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In their paper, the study authors suggest that their methods are easy to understand and implement. Added Growcott, “We believe there needs to be a paradigm shift in wildlife monitoring and a large-scale change to using passive acoustic techniques,” added Growcott.

Lions may be joined by other species caught making previously unappreciated vocalizations if researchers can deploy such high-tech eavesdropping in more ecosystems.

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Lead image: Courtesy of Growcott, J., et al. Ecology and Evolution (2025).

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Kinokuniya On the Way Out

Nov. 20th, 2025 04:53 pm
lovelyangel: (Kyoko Distraught)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Skip Beat! Vol. 51
Skip Beat! Vol. 51

Last week Kinokuniya has another 20% everything sale for members. I was ignoring the sale until Saturday night when I checked my Anime / Manga Tracker and saw that Skip Beat! Vol. 51 had been released earlier this month. Actually, there were several gaps in my collected series that I could plug with the 20% discount.

Anime / Manga Tracker, Nov 2025
Anime / Manga Tracker, Nov 2025

Sunday was the last day of the sale, so Sunday after church I drove into Portland. I located street parking a block from Kinokuniya Portland. In downtown Portland, metered parking doesn’t start until 1 pm on Sunday, and it was just before noon.

In Kinokuniya Portland, I struck out – 0 for 3 on series. Not only did they not have the new release – they hardly carried the series at all – maybe one random volume. It was extremely disappointing.

I drove back to Beaverton and decided I might as well swing by the much smaller Kinokuniya in Beaverton. I was pleased to find a single copy of Skip Beat! vol. 51 alongside two other Skip Beat! volumes – and none of the other series.

My Kinokuniya membership expired at the end of August. I didn’t renew right away. Once a Kinokuniya cashier gave me the tip to wait until I actually needed a new membership. That could save me a few months – and it does. I didn’t have to pay for September or October. The new clock starts in November and will expire on November 30 next year.

The thing is, I’m trying to keep my book purchases under control, and I’ll cut back on art book purchases. And since Kinokuniya seems to stock maybe half of the series I’m collecting, maybe I don’t need to buy a membership anymore. You have to spend $250/year to break even – easy to do if you’re buying art books – but not so easy on just manga volumes. And I have to buy half the manga volumes online anyway. Perhaps this is the last membership I buy; could be the end of an era.
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Posted by Kristen French

Some 360 million years ago, a terrible and strange sea monster named the Dunkleosteus patrolled shallow seas around the world, terrorizing its neighbors with its formidable razor-like jaws. The early fish was covered in armor, stretched 14 feet from head to tail, and could chomp enormous chunks of meat from its prey. Now an international team of scientists has published a detailed study of the fearsome apex predator revealing that it also had a really weird feature: Dunkleosteus technically had no teeth.

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The fish has fascinated and perplexed amateurs and scientists alike since the first fossil was unearthed in the 1860s. One of the largest of the arthrodires—an extinct group of armored, shark-like fishes—Dunkleosteus gets its name from vertebrate paleontologist David Dunkle, who studied it in the 1950s. Despite all of the attention it has gotten over the decades, details about the fish’s anatomy and lifestyle have remained mysterious.

“The last major work examining the jaw anatomy of Dunkleosteus in detail was published in 1932, when arthrodire anatomy was still poorly understood,” said Russell Engelman, a graduate student in biology at Cleveland’s Case Western Reserve and lead author of the new study, in a statement. “Most of the work at that time focused on just figuring out how the bones fit back together.”

JAWS: Newly described muscle anatomy and overall jaw anatomy of Dunkleosteus terrelli, compared to a more typical arthrodire. Image from Engelman, R.K., et al. The Anatomical Record (2025).
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The team of researchers examined specimens from the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, which has the best collection of Dunkleosteus in the world, and compared them to other members of the arthrodire family. While the fish likely lived all over the planet in the Devonian period, known as the age of fishes and lasting from 420 to 359 million years ago, conditions were ripe in Cleveland for a mountain of remains to accumulate in the ancient seafloor, now preserved in a layer of black shale. The scientists focused on five near complete skeletons of juvenile and adult Dunkleosteus terrelli—the largest and most well studied of the Dunkleosteus genus—which had been preserved in a flattened state, using 3-D modeling to bring them to life.

When they took a closer look at the fish skulls, the scientists uncovered a wealth of surprises. Most arthrodires have teeth. But in place of teeth, this oddball sea monster had razor sharp bony plates that it used to slice flesh and crush bones. It also had shark-like jaw muscles, they discovered, and a more cartilage-heavy skull than they thought. Given what they learned, the scientists say they will have to re-evaluate how much force the Dunkleosteus had in its bite.

Read more: “The Fish That Took a Century to Name

Previous research suggested the fish might have used suction to capture its prey, but most fish that are suction feeders have specific kinds of teeth that serve to hold the prey in the mouth, and Dunkleosteus lacks these, the scientists found. Instead, they have tusk-like, bladed mouth structures that are more similar to those of so-called “ram” feeders—such as herring, gar, and water snakes—as well as to those of land mammals like hyenas and wild cats that dismember and chop up their prey. These kinds of jaws allow them to cut through tougher tissues like skin and break prey items down into bite-sized pieces.

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The findings help scientists understand the Dunkleosteus’s place in evolutionary history: Its unusual cleaver-like jaws allowed it to take enormous bites of flesh out of its prey, an adaptation it evolved so that it could hunt down bigger and bigger fish for dinner.  

Despite its lack of teeth, this frightening fish was all bite.

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Lead image: James St. John / Wikimedia Commons

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brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

Music adjacent to economics

On BBC Newshour yesterday, I heard a story (which I can't find online at the moment) about Kraftwerk's instruments and equipment going up for auction. Besides the historical value because of their association with Kraftwerk, many of these items were inherently valuable because they're rare examples of early electronic musical instruments. The vocoder used on "The Robots" sold for about $200,000. The expert they talked to said that there were only about 20-30 surviving examples of this model of vocoder. I hope that these instrument went to musicians who will put them to use and not to tech bros who'll put them on a shelf.

Music adjacent to politics

Due to rising tensions between China and Japan (which I am forced to admit that I was unaware of), one of the cultural disputes going on between the countries is a petition in Japan asking Aespa member Ningning (who is Chinese) not to come to Japan. At the same time, Japanese performers who have built a portion of their career in China have been going out of their way to express pro-China feelings. I'm going to have read more about this situation. If any of you have a link to an article that explains what's going on, I'd appreciate it.

Music adjacent to fandom and statistics

In an article related to Blackpink members' performance at the Grammys, Rolling Stone referred to Blackpink as "(without a doubt) the biggest K-pop group in history, and has been for years." So of course ARMY (BTS's fandom) turning out in force, coming for Rolling Stone and bringing sales records, number of awards won, and chart performamce. the biggest K-pop group in history, and has been for years.) Within six hours, Rolling Stone had revised their article to refer to Blackpink as “the biggest K-pop girl group.” (A characterization that ONCE really ought to have something to say about.)

Music adjacent to bad machine translation

Weki Meki's Kim Doyeon won a Blue Dragon award (which seems to be the Korean equivalent of the Oscars), and her appearance on the red carpet caused quite a stir. The headline on one website uniquely expressed it by saying "Kim Do-yeon, Audrey Hepburn Reincarnation... a person who causes a single disease". I knew this was some sort of translation error, and asking the question on Threads led someone to clear it up for me. Apparently what they were trying (and failing) to say is that she is triggering an obsession for short bob haircuts.

STAR-Bunny

Nov. 20th, 2025 11:25 pm
vivdunstan: Warning sign re risk of being mobbed by seagulls (dundee)
[personal profile] vivdunstan
Photographed in the back garden of Martin’s company STAR-Dundee today.

Self-seeded gifts

Nov. 21st, 2025 11:43 am
mific: (A rainbow)
[personal profile] mific posting in [community profile] common_nature
Some might call them weeds, but I like them in my spring garden.

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2025 National Book Awards

Nov. 20th, 2025 09:47 pm
[syndicated profile] file770_feed

Posted by Mike Glyer

The 2025 National Book Award winners were announced on November 19. None of them is a genre work. Fiction Young People’s Literature Nonfiction Poetry Translated Literature The winners will be announced on November 19. Winners receive $10,000, a bronze medal, and … Continue reading

[ SECRET POST #6894 ]

Nov. 20th, 2025 05:02 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6894 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


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Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 06 secrets from Secret Submission Post #984.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
dewline: (canadian media)
[personal profile] dewline
Oh this is mischievous as all get out. And it took me two years to find out that it exists?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqqWcZF2Syc

TDoR 2025

Nov. 20th, 2025 01:29 pm
lovelyangel: (Mahoro Sad)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Today is the Transgender Day of Remembrance, when we remember and honor the many transgender people who lost their lives in acts of anti-trans hate and violence. A thoughtful summary of history and insights is at the Trans Remembrance Project. (via [personal profile] dolari – thank you, Jenn!)

Violence and bigotry are on the upswing in this country; these are extremely difficult times. I have no good advice for my trans siblings. I myself am grateful for the good fortune of living in an urban area on the left coast, where there is some amount of grace and acceptance.

May you all be safe – and loved.

First Snow of the Season

Nov. 20th, 2025 03:08 pm
yourlibrarian: Groot holds a Snowman (HOL - Groot Snowman - sietepecados)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] common_nature


Rather tardy at this point, but why not? A few weeks ago we were still getting very little color around here.

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Posted by Molly Glick

Moss can make it practically anywhere, from the blustery coasts of Antarctica to high up on Mount Everest—and even in lava fields on the flanks of active volcanoes. That’s because bryophytes, the plant group comprising mosses as well as liverworts and hornworts, were among the first plants to make the transition to terrestrial living some 500 million years ago. On land, they encountered threats like ultraviolet radiation, shifting temperatures, and dry conditions, yet they held on strong and even survived multiple mass extinction events.

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Now, moss can add space to the long list of extreme environs they can endure. Astronauts affixed moss spores to the outside of the International Space Station for nine months, and more than 80 percent of them survived. This suggests that moss can tough out the vacuum of space for extended periods, according to a new paper in iScience.

Scientists had previously subjected mosses to lab conditions mimicking those on Mars, but the authors say their findings offer direct evidence of how the low-lying plants fare when exposed to an unforgiving extraterrestrial environment.

“This provides striking evidence that the life that has evolved on Earth possesses, at the cellular level, intrinsic mechanisms to endure the conditions of space,” said paper author Tomomichi Fujita, a plant evolutionary and developmental biologist at Hokkaido University in Japan, in a statement.

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Read more: “The Moss That Could Terraform Mars

Fujita and his colleagues first challenged the moss species Physcomitrium patens with space-like conditions in a lab, including extreme temperature swings, extreme UV radiation, and vacuum conditions. By assessing the impacts on three different structures from the moss—juvenile moss, specialized stem cells, and spores contained within reproductive structures called sporangium—they determined that the shielded spores had the best chance of making it among the stars. For example, the spores showed around 1,000 times more tolerance to UV radiation than did the stem cells.

The scientists chalked this up to the sporangium, which protects them from perils including UV exposure and extreme temperatures on Earth—a feature that has perhaps enabled them to ride out multiple mass extinction events.

Then, it was time for the ultimate test: In March 2022, the team handed off hundreds of spores to astronauts headed toward the International Space Station on the Cygnus NG-17 spacecraft. Once the crew made it to the ISS, they secured the spores on the station’s exterior. Spores were divided into groups and exposed to one of three different conditions: exposed to visible light uncovered but protected from UV radiation by a filter, blocked from any light (including UV) in a control group, or exposed to all the visible light and UV radiation hitting the ISS. After 283 days in the extraterrestrial elements, the spores returned to Earth.

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“We expected almost zero survival, but the result was the opposite: Most of the spores survived,” Fujita said in the statement. “We were genuinely astonished by the extraordinary durability of these tiny plant cells.”

Testing revealed that more than 80 percent of the spores survived the experiment, and had germination rates of up to 97 percent for those not exposed to UV radiation in space. Meanwhile, the spores that weren’t shielded from UV radiation had a germination rate of 86 percent.The paper noted that a form of chlorophyll showed signs of damage in the spores exposed to space light but not in the spores kept in the dark.

With the data gleaned from the lab and space experiments, the team estimated that these moss spores could survive up to roughly 15 years in space. Now, this moss joins the ranks of other rugged Earthlings who have endured the space elements, including tardigrades and fungi.

The researchers say they hope that moss can aid extended human missions to other planets by providing oxygen and boosting soil fertility for crop growth on long cosmic journeys or on extraterrestrial outposts.

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But scientists still have much to learn about growing Earth-plants in space, Agata Zupanska, a biologist at the SETI Institute, toldThe Guardian. The ISS doesn’t entirely reflect “the complexities of true deep space conditions,” she said. “The value of space plants is realized only if they can actively grow and thrive away from Earth.While spore resilience is important, it represents only an initial step toward the broader goals of growing plants in extraterrestrial environments.”

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Lead image: Tomomichi Fujita

fic title alphabet meme update: J

Nov. 20th, 2025 03:32 pm
pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
[personal profile] pauraque
A couple of weeks back I did the fic title alphabet meme and discovered I was missing J, K, X, and Z. Here's J!


Just a Cool Guy (200 words) by pauraque
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Fellowship (2025 video game)
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Rime (Fellowship), Elarion (Fellowship), Sylvie (Fellowship)
Additional Tags: Double Drabble, Friendship/Love, in a totally neurotypical way
Summary: But not that kind of cool.


Apparently I thought the optimal way to make my glorious return to AO3 after over a year would be to write a silly, inside-jokey ficlet for a video game that just started early access and as yet has no story, no worldbuilding, no relationships, and no characterization except for a few voice lines and a paragraph of nebulous backstory for each playable character. I appear to be the first person to write anything for this fandom; I can't imagine why? (Too bad I just missed [community profile] bethefirst, though I guess I can start planning for [community profile] launchtheship.) Anyway, this one goes out to my loyal Fellows [personal profile] dragonque, [personal profile] sdk, and [personal profile] zorealis, aka the only three people who know what the hell I'm talking about. ♥

(no subject)

Nov. 20th, 2025 03:26 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Carolyn: My stepdad died suddenly of a heart attack two years ago, and my mom let me move in with her. Her place is huge, so she doesn’t want to live there alone. She can’t sell the house because she didn’t really inherit it; she can live there until she dies, then it goes to my stepbrother. My mom doesn’t charge me rent; she said I should save and invest the money instead, so it’ll be there when I do get a place. She doesn’t try to run my life, and I have plenty of room, plus there’s a pool, sauna, tennis court, etc., so it’s a great deal and we both benefit.

This arrangement makes my dad and stepmom crazy. They keep telling me it’s hurting me since I’m not living in the “real world.” And they complain that they can’t visit me at my home. My parents are okay with each other but haven’t been in the same room since my college graduation six years ago. My mom and stepmom don’t get along. But I go over to their house all the time, so it’s not interfering with our relationship.

My dad and stepmom even made my little sister ask why I’m living still with my mom — because no way a 15-year-old is asking that on her own.

I am banking money, I cook for myself a lot of the time and do my own laundry. With work, dating, getting enough exercise and sleep, life is hard enough. Why should I deliberately make it harder on myself just to prove a point? How do I shut them down while staying on good terms?


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