[syndicated profile] laughing_squid_feed

Posted by Lori Dorn

The brilliant actors of the Disney+ series Andor sat down with BuzzFeed to take a trivia quiz about other Star Wars movies and TV series.

Denise Gough (Dedra Meero) and Kyle Soller (Syril Karn) were one team while Diego Luna (Cassian Andor), Genevieve O’Reilly (Mon Mothma), and Adria Arjona (Bix Caleen) were on the other team. While they knew their own roles within the series, neither team excelled at the franchise’s canonical questions.

To celebrate Andor Season 2, we had the cast — Genevieve O’Reilly, Diego Luna, Adria Arjona, Denise Gough, and Kyle Soller — take a Star Wars trivia quiz to see how well they actually know one of the greatest franchises in the galaxy.

2025.05.13

May. 13th, 2025 08:24 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
The cardamom conundrum: what’s the difference between green and black pods?
Did you even know there is a black cardamom? And white and red ones, too? And that some are good for sweet recipes and others for curries? Our top cooks have all the spicy smarts
Anna Berrill
https://www.theguardian.com/food/2025/may/13/whats-the-difference-between-green-and-black--white-red-cardamom-pods-kitchen-aide-anna-berrill

Inside the world’s largest archeology museum - the Grand Egyptian Museum in pictures
Featuring pharaohs and sustainable design, the $1bn museum in Giza, Egypt, is finally opening after years of delays
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2025/may/12/grand-egyptian-museum-pictures

Watch dramatic moment monkey family defends baby from python
Leaf monkeys are close-knit family groups that work closely to protect themselves and newborns.
Produced by the BBC Natural History Unit.
https://www.bbc.com/reel/video/p0l9r1x3/watch-dramatic-moment-monkey-family-defends-baby-from-python

Language app

May. 13th, 2025 09:43 pm
fred_mouse: text 'elder queers didn't riot in the streets for you to argue about kink at pride' on top of  the inclusive pride flag colours (elder-queers)
[personal profile] fred_mouse

I've deleted my Duolingo account, and have a list of alternatives to try. The first one on the list is Mango Languages. I've picked this one because my notes on it say "Many library systems are offering access to this to free! Make sure to check to see if your library card gives you access to this resource."

And yes, my local library does offer it. I've achieved logging in, and I'm trying a free lesson. I'm not yet far enough to have an opinion, but if this works, it is something I'll be trying to add to the daily task set (I'll be dropping something else out, if that is the case; the current task set is at 'fine while not working' but also 'slightly more than can be done in an evening' and I often forget some of the tasks until after dinner, which isn't optimal).

D/S Hestmanden

May. 13th, 2025 02:30 pm
[personal profile] swaldman
I just got back from a lunchtime tour of the D/S Hestmanden, a Norwegian freighter built in 1911. In honour of the 80th anniversary of VE day, she and a small flotilla are outwith Norwegian waters for the first time since 1946, visiting ports in Northern Britain.

It was fascinating to tour this vessel, especially the engine room - because she still has her original steam reciprocating engine, now 114 years old. It was converted from coal to oil in 1947, but everything otherwise (aside from some modern safety items) works as it did.

The cargo spaces have been converted to a museum covering the experience of Norwegian sailors in WW2 and since. It's fairly brutal, without being hyperbolic - something that I admire. The Norwegian merchant fleet was split during the war: those in port and unable to escape at the time of the German invasion were put to use by the Nazis, while those elsewhere in the world - the majority - ended up part of the Allied war effort, as freighters under attack in convoys. I'd never really considered before the experience of being a civilian seafarer in this scenario, being on the far side of the world when you learn that not only are you suddenly in a war, you also can't go home.
The museum doesn't stop with the end of the war, but continued following the survivors, who mostly arrived home in 1946 and 47, after Norway had finished celebrating peace, and so far as I understand it got pretty much ignored. It gets into PTSD and lack of understanding of such at the time, and the relationship between the wartime seafarers and the Norwegian state up to when they got an official apology in 2013.

It was a fascinating, if at times saddening, way to spend an hour. It reinforced what I'm feeling quite a bit at the moment: the world is sliding back towards facism, but I have papers to grade.After this week in Orkney the Hestmanden is sailing to Aberdeen, then Edinburgh, then Newcastle, before returning home. If you get the chance, go see her.

View through a porthole showing volunteers and visitors on the outside deck. The ship is painted wartime grey.


Open (More or Less) Post on Covid 197

May. 13th, 2025 09:32 am
ecosophia: (Default)
[personal profile] ecosophia
smudge for the winWe are now in the fourth 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 more than three 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 are 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; public health authorities government shills for the pharmaceutical industry are still trying to push through laws that will allow them to force vaccinations on anyone they want; public trust in science is collapsing; and the story continues to unfold.

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.

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. 

NYR update - weeks 17 through 19

May. 13th, 2025 09:09 pm
fred_mouse: Night sky, bright star, crescent moon (goals)
[personal profile] fred_mouse

I've been procrastinating a lot on making this update. Tuesdays aren't the best of days for it, but I like the idea of sticking with actual full weeks. Letting it slide to Wednesday kind of works, but then it slides another day, and suddenly 'next Tuesday' sounds like a better idea. Which is why I'm cramming three weeks into one post

work - declaring this category done. It isn't a job I've got, but more study, just as soon as I get the paperwork done. And, more importantly, a scholarship.

craft - the 100 days 'finish WIPs' is in progress, and going well. I've finished another item that counts towards the 12 in 12 months, bringing me to 5/12 (I'm being somewhat picky about which projects count here).

reading - I'm not looking at the storygraph; I'm thinking that those goals will be met, and I can care about it later in the year. I've now read 2/20 books acquired so far this year, although I suspect that the list is incomplete.

house - I've been making large strides on 'make the library useable', mostly by trashing other sections of the house. I'm going to be moving stuff that is to be rehomed in there, because it has to be easier than what I have going on. The towel rail for the bathroom has moved from 'aspirational' to 'in progress'; it is getting double counted because it is listed in the 100 days of craft. The verandah isn't uncluttered enough for the swing lounge to be used on the verandah, but it has been cleared. As has the swing lounge, which as long as it isn't going to rain, I have set up out in the sun, and sat on to read a book today. I have removed the note that says 'make this a better list' because I don't have any other ideas to add at this point. If I finish the existing list, I can revisit.

music - because my right shoulder is giving me a lot of grief, I've only been playing recorder. I have, however, got through Malle Symon once without faltering (not without wrong notes though), but probably too slow. I'm struggling to maintain the starting speed, and am going to have to drag out the metronome. The Bach solo treble sonata isn't a disaster all the way through any more, although I still hate the third movement with the power of the sun.

learning - the 'do something from the drawing book' is working; the original goal was once a week, I've been aiming for every day at the moment, but that isn't doable. I haven't worked out how to balance that out.

family and friends - these are still aspirational and I haven't set any goals other than spend time with people.

physical / exercise - I've stalled out on Parkrun, because I hate dealing with mornings, and they wipe me out for much of the rest of the day, and I keep having other things on Saturdays. I'm also thinking that going back to skating class would be good, and if I do that Saturday it clashes with Parkrun. So ????. The 'going to bed before 11pm' is failing, but I've got a number of experiments going about how to improve that. Also, not in the goals list, but I'm also working on getting up earlier. The somewhat better pain management that has come about from saying to the doctor that one of the issues was sometimes having issues sleeping because of pain is (I think) causing better sleep, and I wake up more rested, and thus getting up somewhat earlier. Not the 7am I want to be, but I have hopes.

organisation - yeah, some of this is progressing, in tiny increments, and I don't want to think about it.

writing - journalling going well, blogging a bit erratic but I'm okay with that. I've given up on the 'write it in Shiny' goal, and appreciate the people who gave suggestions on other code bases to try. I haven't done that, but it might happen. I keep forgetting about neocities.

garden - other than plans for seedlings (I bought trays) and a tiny bit of sweeping, this is in stasis. The perpetual pruning calendar is about to be urgent, so I've moved it to the active to do list.

money - I've finally started tracking money in gnucash. I gave up reading the information, and I'm learning by stuffing up. Fortunately, I have a live in accountant (in training) who I've bounced several ideas off. Such as 'I have no idea what that payment was, how do I track it' and 'argh, that statement is missing, how do I implement a temporary fix that will need dealing with later?'. There is a lot of data entry in my future, and I've been slacking (I have all the mortgage data from 2019 to end 2024, which is the last 6 monthly statement; I learned that we all-but-paid it off earlier than I've been claiming).

[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

The last surviving semaphore tower.

This 60-foot tower was built in the wake of the Battle of Waterloo, a time when the threat of foreign invasion loomed large in Britain. As naval strategies evolved, so too did their methods of communication. In 1800, Sir Home Riggs Popham revolutionized signalling with a flag system for individual letters, and later designed a signalling system employing wooden arms for ship-to-ship communication. Just eleven days after the Battle of Waterloo, a land-based network of innovative signal systems were established using Popham’s design.

This distinctive octagonal tower, the only five-story semaphore structure on the semaphore route between Portsmouth and London, played an essential role in ensuring visibility across seven miles to neighboring stations. It transmitted messages swiftly between the Docks and Admiralty House, delivering urgent orders and critical reports on friend and foe alike. For over two crucial decades, from 1822 to 1847, this vital line was the artery of naval communication.

However, by 1847, the arrival of railways and the electric telegraph led to the decommissioning of semaphore lines.  Chatley Heath's semaphore tower is now all that remains of this once-crucial network. Complete with a functioning semaphore mast that once relayed the high-stakes communications of the Royal Navy, the tower now stands not only as a historical landmark but also a holiday retreat, housing up to four people.

Murder by Memory by Olivia Waite

May. 13th, 2025 08:49 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll



A dead woman is resurrected to solve a murder most foul.

Murder by Memory by Olivia Waite

Topic Tuesday - TV Variety Shows

May. 13th, 2025 02:45 pm
dancing_serpent: (Actors - Xiao Zhan - so very soft)
[personal profile] dancing_serpent posting in [community profile] c_ent
Welcome to Topic Tuesday! Right away I want to stress that discussion posts are always welcome to the community, you don't have to wait until a Topic Tuesday rolls around, and then maybe be disappointed by the current topic of discussion. Whenever you want to talk about something, please simply make a separate entry to this comm, no matter the week, the time, or the topic. All right? *g*

The topic I picked for today is TV Variety Shows. Do you like to watch TV variety shows? What do you like/dislike about them? Which are your favourites and why?

As usual, if you want to talk about spoilers, please use one of these codes to hide them.

or

(no subject)

May. 13th, 2025 01:42 pm
spiralsheep: Sheep wearing an eyepatch (Default)
[personal profile] spiralsheep posting in [community profile] endings
When I think about the red house, I wonder if it had to be the last building, if the volunteers couldn't have saved this one building until it was the only one left to save. Momentum can be hard to come by, and the last chance focuses the effort. There's a kind of urgency to the endling that's different from the last thirty, or even the last four, then three, then two. So often we can't hold onto the one until we have lost the many.

In which you cannot float my boat

May. 13th, 2025 01:34 pm
spiralsheep: Sheep wearing an eyepatch (Default)
[personal profile] spiralsheep
Having semantic argument. Send help!

Here is a boat-shaped wooden object that used to be a fishing boat in the 19th-20th centuries but was taken out of the water about 70 years ago and has, naturally, warped so much that it will never be seaworthy again. If the wooden object was pulled apart then individual planks would probably float but while they continue to be fastened together as a single object, the sum of its parts, it would sink.

Poll #33118 Bwahahahaha, no free space ticky for you!
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 4


Is the ship-shaped wooden object that can't float actually boat?

View Answers

Yes, it was built to be a boat, rowed as a boat, it remains an unfloatable boat
4 (100.0%)

No, it's a collection of wood and metal that looks ship-shape but it's lumber
0 (0.0%)

No, not an actual boat because it's not seaworthy but it is a conceptual sculpture of a boat
1 (25.0%)

Court Rules Against NSO Group

May. 13th, 2025 11:07 am
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

The case is over:

A jury has awarded WhatsApp $167 million in punitive damages in a case the company brought against Israel-based NSO Group for exploiting a software vulnerability that hijacked the phones of thousands of users.

I’m sure it’ll be appealed. Everything always is.

On writing process and style

May. 13th, 2025 11:40 am
la_marquise: (Default)
[personal profile] la_marquise
It's a truism that all writers are different and no-one has exactly the same process. Over the years, I've met writers who write detailed, scene by scene outlines and writers who start with a vague idea and a few opening lines. Some of us work out plot points on post-its or Scrivener peg boards. Some keep notebooks or ideas files. Some create playlists and moodboards. Some have complex rituals, others just sit down and start. I know writers who always create a first draft longhand, writers who work in bed, in garden sheds or in coffee shops. I know even more writers who vary, depending on circumstance and project.

I write both fiction and non-fiction, though rarely at the same time. A friend once observed to me that he found the two completely incompatible and needed a clear division between the two. I'm not quite in that category, although, again, it depends. Serious academic research takes up a lot of brain space and concentration and I've never been able to write the more literary end of my fiction if I also have an academic project on the go. On the other hand, I write non-fiction far faster than fiction. WIth history, at least, the article or book at the end is the final, often shortest stage. I've done all the research and the note-making and the thinking and the discussions. I'm just writing up. Again, though, this is me. I've had colleagues who find the writing stage slow and difficult.

I'm not an outliner: even with non-fiction, the most I do is come up with a list of chapter headings, with maybe a few key words about intended contents. WIth fiction, outlines trip me up. They feel too rigid, clsing down the creativity, the depth, the landscape of the book or story. I make running notes: in my long hand days, these were in the margins of whatever notebook I was using (usually Alwych All Weather, which I still prefer). This days I make them in bold at the front of the file. But I don't always remember to look at them. I also leave myself notes on scraps of paper, which I then lose or forget and rediscover months or years later and wonder at.

I don't always write in the same voice, either. With non fiction, a monograph or an article for a peer-reviewed journal requires a different style and tone to one intended for the popular audience. My first copy editor told me that I was unsually clear, even in the most technical sections, which I treasure as a comment and try to live up to. But at the same time I have peers who produce wonderful work in High Academic, and I enjoy that, too. It's just not how my thoughts tend to flow. (I can speak Post-Modern and Post-Structuralist if required, but I don't write it. this is at least in part because I'm an early mediaevalist and the sorts of source materials I work with don't lend themselves fully to these in terms of theoretical model -- too many absences and lacunae, which my personal academic sense of rigor feels it would be inappropriate to try and fill with models from theory.)

Fiction, though... Elizabeth Bear once said that all writers arrive with two skills already rooted. Mine are style and atmosphere: I feel my way into and through my books, reaching always for the emotional effect I want to create. Words are each of them layered and nuanced, bringing with them resonances from culture and context, history and daily use. No word is an island.

Flaubert, it is said, agonised over almost every word of Madame Bovary. Sometimes I know how he felt. Words matter and it makes me itchy when I can't find the right one. There are things I want to say that are unamenable in English. There are echoes I want to conjure. Words are beautiful and I want to use them to build structures worthy of their beauty.

So far, so literary -- and I am, alas, a literary fantasy author, in terms of style at least. It doesn't make for commercial books, which is not ideal. But I like Living With Ghosts and The Grass King's Concubine. I like how they sound and feel, even if I worry about my skill with plotting. My plots often go sideways, and that's not ideal.

Almost all my life, I've written stories and most of my childhood and teenage writing was essentially fanfic. I still have a lot of this stuff (no, not going up on AO3). From my mid teens onwards, it reads like me, in the way I stack and shape words and the games I play with grammar. Much of it is pretentious and annoying, and, well... (I once wrote a story in the style and language of Sir Thomas Malory, for instance. There's anotjher that's a literary allegory based on T S Eliot. They're appalling.) Every once in a while, I come across something I'd forgotteen I'd written, and, well, yes, that's my voice.

The Book of Gaheris has four different viewpoint characters, each narrating a section. They sound different, because each of the characters sounds different in my head. (The same is true of LWG and GGK, but the sections are more interwoven.) I always assumed that all my fiction writing was basically the same, however -- that the difference in character voice was somehow not the same as variation in style. Then Phil suggested I write a particular short story I was working on in my 'Gaheris voice'. Which... Well, it was a surprise. My writing is my writing. But I went and looked at the Gaheris material again (this was before I wrote the second two novellas or thought about trying to sell any of what I'd written in that background). It was me, yes, and it was the character, but it was also something further. It was demotic, somehow. It was that difference I already recognised from my non-fiction, between the technical and academic and the popular.

Not all The Book of Gaheris is in that mode: certain characters required a more literary tone. The thing I'm writing at present, though, is entirely in demotic voice. It reads, well, fun -- I tend to think my tone in fiction tends to the serious. It's fun to write. Maybe I'm changing as a writer. Maybe I'm just weird. I don't know. But what matters here, for me anyway, is that, finally, writing is once again fun.

Assignments out! Pinch hits to follow

May. 13th, 2025 11:14 pm
morbane: a pair of headphones that turns into a flower wreath (jukebox)
[personal profile] morbane posting in [community profile] jukebox_fest
We hope you enjoy your assignment! You can find it on your AO3 assignments page; it may also have been emailed to you. Please email the mods (jukebox.mod@gmail.com) if there is a problem with it. We're also happy to get less urgent questions, but may not answer them immediately this week.

Pinch hits will be posted shortly.

Your assignment is due Sunday 29 June, 11:59pm EDT.

Have fun!

Babylon 5 fanfic on fan-flashworks

May. 13th, 2025 02:56 am
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
The current [community profile] fan_flashworks prompt is "Underwater", and I took one look at that and uh apparently wrote 5300 words of B5 fanfic for it.

Posted on fan-flashworks: The Drowning Deep (Babylon 5, Londo & G'Kar, set between 5x09 & 5x10). This will be crossposted in the usual places when their exclusive period runs out.