DRAM errors and cosmic rays: space invaders or science fiction?
Nov. 17th, 2025 09:47 pm- 2025‑11‑17 - DRAM errors and cosmic rays: space invaders or science fiction?
- https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.16487
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/ECCD8
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/ECCD8.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/ECCD8.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
Fall Round: Authors Revealed!
Nov. 18th, 2025 12:26 pmReveals doesn't mean you should stop reading and commenting, so we hope you continue to enjoy all the great drabbles.
DVD commentary meme
Nov. 18th, 2025 05:44 pmSo here we go, and I'm making it a meme: choose one of my fics—not the FotH, TWN or Flemington ones or any podfic, please, but anything else is fair game; that link is filtered accordingly—and I will write you a DVD commentary on it.
And if you would like to do this with your own fics or other fanworks, you are encouraged to do so. :)
Cleaning Day
Nov. 18th, 2025 08:53 amPlus, maintenance is scheduled to come do our floor today. They are replacing batteries in thermostats and smoke detectors and replacing air return filters. Should be pretty darned exciting.
My bathroom sink started dripping a couple of weeks ago. Didn't bother me. But the drip is now getting pretty aggressive so I just put in a work request to have them come fix it. Oh how I love not owning my own home. So. much.
This time last year, we were about to embark on a 5 day power outage that was actually more of an adventure thanks to Timber Ridge's giant generator and fabulous staff. Also Myna was starting her downhill slide. And I was having to watch every penny as the condo hadn't sold and I had no idea if or when it would. Turned out, I was needlessly pinching those pennies because the condo did sell relatively easily.
This year, I wouldn't mind gliding right through to December sans drama.

And lo, the song of the Mybug was once more heard in the land....
Nov. 18th, 2025 03:57 pmNot OK? Booker winner Flesh ignites debate about state of masculinity
No, really, you don't say? Can it be that - once again, or perhaps, still MASCULINITY IS IN CRISIS?
Does it not sound as though the author goes in for 'dumb, dark, dull, bitter belly-tension'? (Sigh.)
I am sorry to discover that an excoriating retrospect on John Fowles with particular reference to The Magus by DJ Taylor in the latest Literary Review does not appear to be fully accessible online, chiz, chiz -
[E]ach of his novels when stripped of its fashionable appurtenances - The Magus, for example, is rife with Jungian animas - is ultimately about male entitlement.... the books are all about men expecting to get the things they want and being mortified by their absence.
....
[A] series of exercises in what Maurice Bowra called 'the higher bogus'.
I recently had the apercu, following my re-reading of The Golden Notebook, that besides being about the themes that Lessing found readers took from it - The Woman Question, the crisis of the Left at the period, mental health - surely it was also about Crisis of Masculinity/Men R Terribly Poor Stuff (I think Dame Rebecca remarked on that in her critical essay on younger woman writers). Which they were expressing/excusing largely in Freudianism terms (so many of them in analysis or had been). Wonder if current deployment of The Neurodiversity Plea is the current allotrope of He Couldn't Help It Because Reasons Beyond His Control (I suppose at least these do not blame Mummy, unless you are into to the What She Did That She Shouldn't When Pregnant narrative....).
I note that there was a BBC programme last night on the 'manosphere': young men who have drifted towards misogynist influencers – and finds them lonely, heartbreaking and on ‘semen retention journeys’ to control their sex drives. They sound rather sad and confused. (And historian is appalled at the persistence of a panic drummed up by an early C18th quack....)
Am trying to think of period when one could reliably say that masculinity was not in (some kind of) crisis.
England Ashes Teams
Nov. 18th, 2025 04:22 pmRank-balanced wavl trees.
Nov. 18th, 2025 02:11 am- 2025‑11‑18 - Rank-balanced wavl trees.
- https://sidsen.azurewebsites.net/papers/rb-trees-talg.pdf
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/IZV9W
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/IZV9W.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/IZV9W.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
2025.11.18
Nov. 18th, 2025 08:30 amThe prototypical “roadside colossus” inspired dozens of other Midwest cities to create similar works in the decades that followed.
by Jennifer Kleinjung
https://www.minnpost.com/mnopedia/2025/11/the-origins-of-bemidjis-iconic-paul-bunyan-and-babe-the-blue-ox-statues/
It’s deer hunting season, and if you’re heading to the woods, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources wants your help in fighting a disease impacting deer. KTTC reports “chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a contagious fatal brain condition that affects deer. … Hunters in affected areas must provide CWD samples if it’s in a mandatory sample requirement area.” Via MinnPost
https://www.kttc.com/2025/11/17/minnesota-dnr-asks-hunters-help-fight-chronic-wasting-disease/
Jeffrey Epstein’s emails reveal a disdain for morality among the elite
Moira Donegan
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/nov/17/jeffrey-epstein-emails-elites
Doing your own research isn’t a bad thing, I tell my patients. But just how will they spot the fraudulent papers?
Ranjana Srivastava
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/nov/19/doing-your-own-research-isnt-a-bad-thing-i-tell-my-patients-but-just-how-will-they-spot-the-fraudulent-papers
The wild old wicked gang: great Irish writers – in pictures
Edna O’Brien on her sofa, Joseph O’Connor in his garden, Seamus Heaney surrounded by books … British photographer Steve Pyke on capturing the greats of Irish literature
https://www.theguardian.com/books/gallery/2025/nov/18/edna-o-brien-seamus-heaney-steve-pyke-irish-writers-in-pictures
Fights for our material survival’: documentary goes inside the battle for trans rights
In Heightened Scrutiny, the fight driving activist and lawyer Chase Strangio is backgrounded by a deep dive into how the media has helped to push an anti-trans agenda
Veronica Esposito
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/nov/17/heightened-scrutiny-trans-documentary-sam-feder
Legendary game designer, programmer, Space Invaders champion, and LGBTQ trailblazer Rebecca Heineman has died
News
By Ted Litchfield published 15 hours ago
Shamelessly stolen from Andrew Ducker
https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/legendary-game-designer-programmer-space-invaders-champion-and-lgbtq-trailblazer-rebecca-heineman-has-died/
Pimp: Blocco 181 by maevedarcy
Nov. 18th, 2025 10:47 amIf you answered yes to any of the above, you might love Blocco 181.
Welcome to a fandom so tiny, there are only 4 fics of it on AO3 and 3 are mine lmao.
The series is set in Milan and follows a ménage à trois between two men, Ludo and Mahdi, and a woman, Bea, and their criminal career. Intrigued? More details below the cut. Warning: mentions of drugs.

( Read more... )
Did you watch it already?
Then please talk to me about it I'm starving. There's only like 20 fans of this series all over the world and we're tired of each other by now.
Canton
Nov. 18th, 2025 01:57 pmSince Victor recently spent 1100 words on various people's "best approximations of how they think they are saying 'Canton'", "expressed in common spelling (not a phonetic alphabet)", and has resisted requests to provide audio, I thought I'd provide some examples of how a Canton resident pronounces the city's name. As I've explained many times, I don't think that IPA transcriptions are an effective way of representing how people actually talk, and this case will continue to support that view. Instead, a good place to start is a sample of audio clips along with graphical representations of waveforms, spectrograms and other kinds of acoustic analysis — and there are several possible directions to go from there.
I used the YouTube video "Living in Canton Ohio", which starts this way:
Are you wondering more about what Canton Ohio is all about?
Zeroing in on Canton:
The residue of the /t/ is a glottalized region (marked with the red arrow) about 80 milliseconds into the nasalized (and raised) /ae/ vowel, leading into the second syllable which has a brief [ɪ]-like region followed by 80 milliseconds of nasal murmur.
Playing the first and second syllables separately makes what's happening a bit clearer:
The next Canton in that video:
Everything you can imagine I'm gonna try to go over it for you
and give you a truer idea of what Canton is all about
Zeroing in again, we see the same thing as before:
Is the third time the charm?:
First up is what I'm onna talk about is when it comes to living in Canton
It sounds similar to the first two. But zeroing in, we see what looks more like a glottal fricative followed by a syllabic nasal (though again, an IPA transcription wouldn't really tell us what's happening):
There are more Cantons in the rest of that video, and we'd need to look at more of them to get a better sense of the full range of this guy's pronunciations. Victor's informants may well have even more variation — but I don't think that it's very helpful to learn how people try to apply their intuitions about standard English orthography to describe how they talk, unless we also have some recordings to illustrate what they're describing.
Open (More or Less) Post on Covid 222
Nov. 18th, 2025 09:31 am
We are now into the fifth year of these open posts. When I first posted a tentative hypothesis on the course of the Covid phenomenon, I had no idea that discussion on the subject would still be necessary all these years later, much less that it would turn into so lively, complex, and troubling a conversation. Still, here we are. Crude death rates and other measures of collapsing public health remain anomalously high in many countries, but nobody in authority wants to talk about the inadequately tested experimental Covid injections that are the most likely cause; So it's time for another open post. The rules are the same as before:
1. If you plan on parroting the party line of the medical industry and its paid shills, please go away. This is a place for people to talk openly, honestly, and freely about their concerns that the party line in question is dangerously flawed and that actions being pushed by the medical industry and its government enablers are causing injury and death on a massive scale. It is not a place for you to dismiss those concerns. Anyone who wants to hear the official story and the arguments in favor of it can find those on hundreds of thousands of websites.
2. If you plan on insisting that the current situation is the result of a deliberate plot by some villainous group of people or other, please go away. There are tens of thousands of websites currently rehashing various conspiracy theories about the Covid-19 outbreak and the vaccines. This is not one of them. What we're exploring is the likelihood that what's going on is the product of the same arrogance, incompetence, and corruption that the medical industry and its wholly owned politicians have displayed so abundantly in recent decades. That possibility deserves a space of its own for discussion, and that's what we're doing here.
3. If you plan on using rent-a-troll derailing or disruption tactics, please go away. I'm quite familiar with the standard tactics used by troll farms to disrupt online forums, and am ready, willing, and able -- and in fact quite eager -- to ban people permanently for engaging in them here. Oh, and I also lurk on other Covid-19 vaccine skeptic blogs, so I'm likely to notice when the same posts are showing up on more than one venue.
4. If you plan on making off topic comments, please go away. This is an open post for discussion of the Covid epidemic, the vaccines, drugs, policies, and other measures that supposedly treat it, and other topics directly relevant to those things. It is not a place for general discussion of unrelated topics. Nor is it a place to ask for medical advice; giving such advice, unless you're a licensed health care provider, legally counts as practicing medicine without a license and is a crime in the US. Don't even go there.
5. If you don't believe in treating people with common courtesy, please go away. I have, and enforce, a strict courtesy policy on my blogs and online forums, and this is no exception. The sort of schoolyard bullying that takes place on so many other internet forums will get you deleted and banned here. Also, please don't drag in current quarrels about sex, race, religions, etc. No, I don't care if you disagree with that: my journal, my rules.
6. Please don't just post bare links without explanation. A sentence or two telling readers what's on the other side of the link is a reasonable courtesy, and if you don't include it, your attempted post will be deleted.
7. Please don't post LLM ("AI") generated text. This is a place for human beings to talk to other human beings, not for the regurgitation of machine-generated text. Also, please don't discuss large language models (the technology popularly and inaccurately called "artificial intelligence" these days) except as they bear directly on the Covid phenomenon. Here again, my finger is hovering over the delete button.
Please also note that nothing posted here should be construed as medical advice, which neither I nor the commentariat (excepting those who are licensed medical providers) are qualified to give. Please take your medical questions to the licensed professional provider of your choice.
With that said, the floor is open for discussion.
Interesting things from American Historical Review
Nov. 18th, 2025 08:05 amThis morning I was reading the September 2025 issue of American Historical Review and I happened across two things that struck me as particularly interesting.
The first thing was a typical graphical matter. A page in American Historical Review contains 21.5 cm of text, of which 1 cm is occupied by the divider separating the article text from the footnotes, so 20.5 cm of actual text. A typical page is divided up with somewhere in the nature of 13 cm of text and 7.5 cm of footnotes. However, this being history writing, footnotes are prone to swell up to take more of the page. But I had never, in all my reading of history, encountered a page like page 1044[^1] of this issue, which contained 3 cm of text and 17 cm of footnotes! To make matters even more extreme, when I started looking at the footnotes, I noticed that one of the footnotes continued over onto the next page, so that actual ratio was 3 cm of text to 22 cm of footnotes! This was in the section of a paper that detailed the background historiography of the matter being discussed, so more extensive footnotes are to be expected, but even so, I've never seen anything like this before.
The second thing was a historical matter. It was at the beginning of Giuliana Chamedes' paper "Unpaid Debts: Socialist Internationalism and Jamaica's Bid for a New International Economic Order" (which also contained the extensively footnoted page above). I was so amazed by the first paragraph of this paper that I'm going to type it out in its entirety in order to share it with you:
In 1973, the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted a resolution calling for a New International Economic Order (NIEO) by an overwhelming majority. The initiative called for the literal and figurative settling of the debt between imperial and formerly colonized countries. Rather than just redistributing wealth within countries, the time had come to address wealth inequality on the world scale. To do so, the NIEO called for the reorganization of international trade, debt relief, the stabilization of commodity prices, and the institution of oversight for multinational corporations. It insisted on the protection of economic sovereignty for decolonized and decolonizing countries to "correct inequalities and redress existing injustices," suggesting that decolonization was an ongoing struggle. Many countries participated in the NIEO's drafting, including Jamaica, one of the founding members of the Group of 77 (G77). A "high point in the expression of a new internationalism, namely, that of countries emerging from colonialism," the NIEO represented a landmark in global history, as Sabrine Kott and others have argued. But by the early 1980s, the project was dead in the water.
My mind was blown upon reading this paragraph. Despite having a master's degree in history and having done a lot of reading outside of school in matters of history and politics, all of this information was new to me. I'd never even heard of the Group of 77. I read this paragraph a couple of days ago, I've done a lot of thinking about it since then, and I'm still trying to puzzle out how different the world would be if the NIEO had proceeded as planned.[^2]
[^1] American Historical Review uses continuous numbering across a volume, so this issue actually started on page 1009.
[^2] The phrase "the early 1980s" should give you a clue: The Reagan and Thatcher governments played a large role in stopping the NIEO.
cannibal
Nov. 18th, 2025 07:15 am(Here’s that pin from yesterday.) Okay bear with me, and not just because, yes, this is stretching things as a food word, as it’s also stretching things as a Taíno word. I mean, we did get it (via Spanish caníbal) from Taíno Caniba, their name for the Carib peoples who migrated from the South American coast into the Windward Islands—but Taíno speakers got it from Island Carib name for themselves, Karibna (lit. “person/people”), which had been retained from the Cariban they spoke when they lived on the mainland, before adopting as their main language the Arawakan spoken by those they’d defeated/displaced. Taíno speakers feared the Caribs as fierce fighters, and passed on to Columbus both their name and their reputation as eaters of their defeated foes. [Sidebar: Said rep was greatly exaggerated.] The word Karibna also became Carib itself, and so named the Caribbean, as well as caribe, another name for piranhas. So, yeah, an endonym that became derogatory.
---L.
more things I don't understand
Nov. 18th, 2025 05:56 amThen there's Larry Summers. It's news to us that he was pals with Epstein, but he's acting as if it's just as much a surprise to him as it is to everybody else. He didn't know that he was pals with Epstein??
rain of errror
Nov. 18th, 2025 05:41 amAmerica Has a Baby-Formula Problem—Again
Nov. 18th, 2025 08:00 amThree years ago, America was in the midst of an infant-formula crisis. Abbott, one of the world’s biggest formula producers, had issued a nationwide recall after two children who consumed its products died of Cronobacter, a bacterial infection that can lead to complications such as meningitis. Because Abbott produced about 40 percent of the U.S. supply of infant formula, the recall contributed to a monthslong nationwide shortage stemming partially from pandemic-related supply-chain issues.
Federal investigators suspected that the outbreak originated in an Abbott factory in Michigan. FDA inspectors found that the plant had a leaky roof, standing water, and colonies of bacteria. Abbott has denied that its plant was the source of illness, and its products were never definitively linked to the outbreak. Nevertheless, the incident led to congressional hearings, a consent decree for Abbott, and assurances from FDA officials that the agency would more closely police formula manufacturers so that a situation like this would never happen again.
And yet, it has. Twenty-three infants have fallen ill in recent months from infant botulism after drinking powdered formula from ByHeart, a high-end brand whose stated goal is to “make the best formula on earth.” Infant botulism can cause muscle weakness, difficulty breathing, and, if untreated, death. One child was on a feeding tube for four weeks, according to Bill Marler, a food-safety attorney who filed a lawsuit last week on behalf of the child’s family. Last Tuesday, ByHeart issued a nationwide recall for all of its products.
In response to detailed questions, a spokesperson for ByHeart told me that the company is focusing on “implementing the recall as quickly as possible and supporting the FDA’s investigation into the source of the outbreak.” The company wrote in a November 8 update to customers that “there is no confirmed link between ByHeart’s infant formula and infant botulism.”
Infant formula is perhaps the most highly regulated sector in the U.S. food industry, because the slightest lapse can cause serious harm. Nothing about formula itself is inherently unsafe; it’s essentially milk protein fortified with key vitamins and minerals. But microbes that most adults can ingest without incident—including the ones that caused the 2021–22 outbreak and today’s—can cause life-threatening complications for babies, because the newborn immune system isn’t developed enough to fight them off. The FDA inspects infant-formula plants at least once a year. (Regulators inspect facilities for other foods they deem at high risk of contamination only every three years, unless they’re alerted of a potential problem.)
Missteps in manufacturing happen, but most of the time, they are caught before they end up making kids sick. At least five other infant-formula recalls have occurred because of potential contamination since Abbott’s in 2022. It’s impossible to say that no children got sick from those incidents—parents may simply have not reported their kids’ illness—but in recalling the products quickly, the companies might have prevented major problems.
Although many smaller formula brands use a third-party manufacturer, ByHeart operates its own facilities, so the current outbreak appears to be contained to only its products. And unlike Abbott, ByHeart’s market share is too small—about 1 percent, per the FDA—to meaningfully affect the national supply. Infant botulism is less deadly than Cronobacter, and the condition is rare. The medical literature documents only a few cases that have been tied to infant formula prior to the current outbreak. In 2021, just 181 cases were confirmed in the United States overall.
[Read: The ominous rise of toddler milk]
Even so, ByHeart’s customers are clearly distressed. On the company Facebook page, parents—some of whom have fed their children the affected products—are venting their anger at the company. “I have yet to sleep in peace since we heard about this,” wrote one mother, who says she fed her three-week-old the formula before the recall. Others are frustrated that they purchased an expensive formula only to throw it all away. (Prior to the recall, ByHeart sold its powdered formula for about $1.75 an ounce; at Target, Abbott’s Similac Advance formula costs about $1.30 an ounce.) ByHeart told me in a statement that “we express our deepest sympathy to the affected families” and that the company is “working as quickly and diligently as we can to respond to each inquiry we receive.”
Experts I spoke with were adamant that food manufacturers bear most of the blame for foodborne outbreaks—after all, they produced the unsafe food. “It is the responsibility of a food company, whether they’re making baby formula or Pop-Tarts or selling romaine, to ensure that their food is safe,” Sandra Eskin, the CEO of the advocacy group Stop Foodborne Illness, told me. But regulators often share some culpability. In the 2021–22 outbreak, a whistleblower alerted the FDA to alleged rule-breaking, including falsification of records and the release of untested formula into the market, but regulators failed to follow up on the complaint until 15 months later. Abbott said in a statement on its website that the whistleblower “was dismissed due to serious violations of Abbott’s food safety policies, and after dismissal, through their attorney, made evolving, new and escalating allegations to multiple authorities.” Although the company has acknowledged that the plant at issue did test positive for certain bacteria, a spokesperson reiterated the company’s defense to me that it was never proved that the bacteria in its facility made it into formula.
As for the current outbreak, it’s too early to pinpoint exactly what went wrong. The affected powdered ByHeart formula must be rehydrated, so the bacterial spores that cause infant botulism—which are relatively common—could have contaminated the formula when parents were preparing it for their babies. But experts told me that that explanation is unlikely because so many children have now gotten sick from the same formula; nearly two dozen families would have had to make the same mistake around the same time. Plus, the FDA found manufacturing deficiencies at ByHeart’s Iowa facility—one of the two linked to the current outbreak—when it was last inspected in February, Emily Hilliard, a Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson, told me. (She declined to say what those deficiencies were.) The ByHeart spokesperson, when asked about the issues identified in February, said that “addressing observations and updating regulators is a continuous and routine process that is inherent in maintaining compliance and meeting the highest safety and quality standards.”
[Read: What parents did before baby formula]
In 2023, the company received a formal warning letter after the FDA found that the company did not have proper systems in place to make sure that formula was not contaminated at its since-closed facility in Reading, Pennsylvania. Months later, that facility was cited by the FDA for having mold in a water tank and thousands of dead insects on the premises, according to The New York Times.
The spokesperson for ByHeart told me that all of the issues in the 2023 warning letter have been resolved. But the FDA’s allegations against the company typify what food-safety experts and former FDA officials have described to me as ByHeart’s cavalier approach to food safety. “There’s a lot of red flags about the way ByHeart is managing this outbreak, which tells me they don’t have an experienced food-safety team at the helm,” Sarah Sorscher, the director of regulatory affairs at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, told me.
The company has, for example, downplayed findings by officials at the California Department of Public Health, who tested an open canister of ByHeart formula acquired from an infant-botulism patient and found the bacteria that causes infant botulism. After California alerted the public to these findings on November 8, the company announced a recall and put out a statement claiming that it was taking the results “very seriously”—but then questioned the state’s methodology in the next sentence.
In an open letter posted on the company’s website, ByHeart also noted that formula companies are not required to test for the bacteria that causes infant botulism. Frank Yiannas, a former deputy commissioner for food policy at the FDA, told me that the response was “not a really good answer,” because companies—particularly those in an industry like infant formula—should be doing their own analyses of hazards and risks, regardless of what is mandated by law. When California’s officials found the bacteria in that can of baby formula, the state’s public-health officer urged parents to “stop using ByHeart formula immediately.” The company, however, initially responded by recalling just two batches of its formula. (In the days since, the company has issued a nationwide recall to include all of its products.)
[Read: We’ve never been good at feeding babies]
In the coming weeks or months, regulators may find—as they did with Abbott—sanitation issues at ByHeart’s facilities. Or perhaps the evidence will indicate that the company acted responsibly and just got hit with a black-swan event. Whichever way the situation goes, it’s a reminder of how easily the baby-formula industry can crack, even when it’s supposed to be bulletproof.



