The Late Wednesday Report

Dec. 10th, 2025 06:49 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

As previously advertised, it's snowing. I asked Google what the snow accumulation was going to be and it said, "One-point-three-seven inches," and I know it's just messing with me.

The WIP now weighs in at +/-100,700 total words, with more words yet to be written. Despite my having removed manymany words, this is still going to be a long book, as we here in the Liaden Universe(R) count book length. I apologize in advance.

The name of the belly dancer whose clip I shared on FB the other day is Rachid Alexander and at least one 10-minute performance is on youtube. In case anybody might be interested.

In other news, I'm out of cookies. I'm not sure how this keeps happening. Probably the cats eat them when I'm out running errands.

Michael Carbonaro, a magician, is coming to the Waterville Opera House in March and I wanna go see him, because -- Magic! Show! OTOH, I'm looking at the prices and -- eep. Well. He'll prolly sell out without any help from me.

I am going to have to call the lawyers handling the Anthropic business and get myself to a humanbean. It transpires that my affairs are not straightforward, what a surprise, and I'm running out phucks to give, which -- it would be smart to continue with the giving of phucks for a little while longer.

So! Since I'm done writing early today, and the lawyers are in Seattle, where it's just after lunchtime, I s'pose I'll get on the phone.

Bah.

Everybody have a good evening. Stay safe.

I'll check in tomorrow as can.

Oh, Firefly was caught on camera, Helping:


Space

Mar. 29th, 2025 11:47 pm
torkell: (Default)
[personal profile] torkell
Here's an outing from earlier in the year (post backdated to then) - Space by Luxmuralis, at Portsmouth Cathedral.





It was a rather spur-of-the-moment outing. I'd been in Portsmouth the weekend before, spotted it advertised (I think I was looking up something else on a Portsmouth events website?), and thought "this looks interesting". Fast-forward to Saturday afternoon and I realised this was the last day it was on and there was still time to book tickets and make my way down by bus and ferry. So here I am!

The theme is space, though in some ways time or progress might be more apt. One of the projections was a history of science, all the way from the beginning to the information age. A second was the history of space travel, and the final loop was space itself, with the church filled with an atmospheric soundtrack. The photos don't do it justice - it's well worth going to see and experience it in person.

More photos )

WTAF, 2

Dec. 10th, 2025 11:41 pm
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
[personal profile] davidgillon
US at the weekend (new National Security Strategy): We need to oppose Europe for insisting the right to stop hate speech overrides freedom of speech

US today: We're going to insist we can see 5 years of your social media* before we let you into the US in case you said nasty things about us.

So one rule for people saying things they like, and another for people saying things they don't? Not quite sure that's how the Founding Fathers anticipated free speech working.

* Also your phone numbers, your email addresses, plus the names and addresses of family members, including children. And if you've ever worked as a fact checker or in content moderation there is apparently a blanket ban,

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/10/tourists-social-media-trump
[syndicated profile] phys_social_feed
Young women in postrevolutionary Iran used audacious acts of public dance, particularly during the past decade, to resist unjust gender-based laws and cultural norms that disenfranchise women, a University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign sociology scholar says in a digital ethnographic study.
[syndicated profile] phys_social_feed
A new longitudinal study on Palestinian and Israeli families found that exposure to ethnic-political violence increased harsh parenting, which subsequently boosted aggression in children.

Advent, day 6

Dec. 6th, 2025 11:19 pm
torkell: (Default)
[personal profile] torkell


Over in the Jacquie Lawson calendar the Santa Drop game has been unlocked. I definitely did not spend far too long today playing it trying to get to a Santa...
[syndicated profile] yuletide_admin_feed

Posted by morbane

There's a new post up on the Yuletide Admin comm regarding Default deadline passed (and deadline change reminder). Please note that there may have been a delay between that post and this crosspost.

You can go through to DW to check the details:

Dreamwidth Post

If you have follow-up questions, they can be asked in the DW comment section using a DW login, OpenID with another login, or a signed anonymous comment.
[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Jake Currie

The branches of the human family tree have grown a lot more convoluted over the past 20 years. First, geneticists discovered that Neanderthals interbred with humans. Then, paleontologists unearthed the Denisovans in Asia, an archaic species or subspecies that also coexisted with modern humans. But perhaps the most peculiar addition to our genus in the past two decades is Homo floresiensis—the diminutive “hobbits” of Indonesia.

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These mini hominins stood around 3 feet tall, wielded tiny stone tools, and hunted pygmy elephants on the island of Flores in Indonesia for over 100,000 years before going extinct. Like much of their lives, their disappearance around 50,000 years ago remains shrouded in mystery, but now new research is offering some clues.

After analyzing stalagmites in Liang Bua, the cave where the hobbits were first discovered, an international team of scientists determined the area suffered severe drought conditions beginning 61,000 years ago and lasting for thousands of years. Oxygen isotope levels in the enamel of pygmy elephant teeth confirmed their pint-sized prey were suffering from the same water shortages. In other words, a long slow drying of the climate likely starved out both the hobbits and their main food source. The scientists published their findings in Communications Earth & Environment.

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Read more: “The Last Hominin Standing

“The ecosystem around Liang Bua became dramatically drier around the time Homo floresiensis vanished,” lead study author Mike Gagan, a paleontologist at the University of Queensland, said in a statement. “Summer rainfall fell and riverbeds became seasonally dry, placing stress on both hobbits and their prey.”

Modern humans inhabited Indonesia around the same time as the hobbits’ disappearance, and they could have played a role in their demise as well.

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“It’s possible that as the hobbits moved in search of water and prey, they encountered modern humans,” Gagan said. “In that sense, climate change may have set the stage for their final disappearance.”

Changing climate conditions causing shifts in migration patterns and conflict between groups—it’s a tale as old as time.

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Lead image: Cicero Moraes / Wikimedia Commons

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Another RPG Bundle - Magical Kitties

Dec. 10th, 2025 10:30 pm
ffutures: (Default)
[personal profile] ffutures
This is a new bundle of role-playing material for the introductory RPG / Story telling game Magical Kitties Save The Day from Atlas Games:

https://bundleofholding.com/presents/MagicalKitties

  

Atlas Games have published some very good introductory RPGs and story telling games - this one is very much in that genre, with some fun supplements for different settings and styles of play, from film noir to alien invasions. It's never been offered in these bundles before, it's cheap, and it's being run to promote a forthcoming kickstarter for a superhero rules supplement. Better buy it, or Streaky the super-cat will spit hair-balls at you at mach 5...

Rec-cember Day 10: Murderbot

Dec. 10th, 2025 11:33 pm
falena: [Generation Kill] Close up of the Iceman (iceman)
[personal profile] falena

Wikipedia has a pretty goog summary, for those who are not familiar with the books:

The Murderbot Diaries is a science fiction series by Martha. The series is told from the perspective of the titular cyborg guard, a "SecUnit" owned by a futuristic megacorporation. SecUnits include "governor" modules that control and punish the constructs if they take any actions not approved by the company. The ironically self-named "Murderbot" hacked and disabled the module but pretends to be a normal SecUnit, staving off the boredom of security work by watching media. As it spends more time with humans, it develops genuine friendships and emotional connections, which it finds inconvenient.

It's got humour, emotional depth, action; it's the perfect comfort read, because Murderbot grappling with what it means to have free will and catching human cooties feeling is weirdly heartwarming. Murderbot is the best protag, I swear. I can't believe I saw this series mentioned around for years and never checked it out because I thought it was going to be gruesome, since its titular character is called Murderbot, ha. It's now also a tv series,starring Brad 'the Iceman' Colbert Alexander Skarsgård. The tv series is fun, a good adaptation, really, but the books are far superior, imo.

All these stories probably contain spoilers, so do not read them if you haven't read the books (you won't be safe if you've just watched the show, I supspect).

In Control. 8K words. Four times having a governor module fucking sucked, plus one time [REDACTED: FILE MISSING]. (Or: Murderbot has Emotions for 8,000 words. ART tries to help. So does Dr. Mensah, but like, in a decidedly less assholish way.)

Re-Initialization. 38K words. When the infamous rogue SecUnit of the Preservation Alliance gets captured, the corporate techs assigned to it expected to be able to get some juicy data, or at least some insights into its cracked governor module. They didn't expect something so… basic.

Changelong. 377 words. helpme.file: Changelog Various additions made by the units who pass along Murderbot’s governor module hack. Tremendously fun!

The Pitt

I adore how most of fandom has decided that Frank is a good guy, despite his many flaws, that he has fallen head over heels in love with Mel and that he'd do anything to be with her. Sometimes I like a darker interpretation of canon, though. In this vein, let me offer you my kingdon for a horse  14K. Langdon drives Mel home after the longest first day in the world. This is an amazing fic, so perfectly in character, hot and it packs such an emotional punch. The ending is absolutely brutal. It needs many more hits, kudos and comments.


cvirtue: (cv sca)
[personal profile] cvirtue
From Truly Victorian on FB, today/yesterday:

FRAUD ALLERT UPDATE - We have identified the fraudster as Dorothy Ohare of thefarthingale.com and Farthingale Enterprise here on FB.

NOT Farthingales in Canada
farthingalescorsetmakingsupplies com <- this company is not related to the pirate in any way.

She has now removed her sales listings from her website of Truly Victorian, Laughing Moon Mercantile, and Margo Anderson patterns. I suspect those other patterns were fraudulent as well.

It looks like she has been doing this for some time, since 2023 possibly. I am sad to say that I know this person, and many years ago was a legitimate reseller of our patterns. We are such a small community of Historical Costumers, and it is hard to believe that one of our own would do this.

FRAUD ALLERT - I was just contacted by a visitor to the San Fransisco Dicken's Fair that she was sold a pirated copy of a Truly Victorian pattern. It was a printed version of our AO digital pattern. Not only was the pattern unauthorized, is was also incomplete. I have not yet ferreted out who sold the pattern, so if anyone has any leads, I will be thankful.

The unfortunate buyer was unaware that the pattern was fraudulent, and only contacted me to get the missing pages.
The buyer provided this photo of the pattern she bought.

If you ever see a Truly Victorian pattern being sold in a manila envelope, it is a pirated copy! If you see a pattern that has A1 in a circle (or other letter/number combo) on it, IT IS A PIRATED COPY!

This seller also created their own cover page, with illustration (without scrollwork frame), and self typed size chart and description.

If you see these patterns for sale, do not buy these patterns, and please contact me with any information you may have about the seller.

(no subject)

Dec. 10th, 2025 05:13 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
 Snow, slush, semi-melt: nasty weather, basically. But still went out to physio, shoving the walker through the recalcitrant berms. Something passed along the sidewalks at one point earlier: there were tire tracks a metre wide that hadn't cleared the slush but pushed it to either side, and in the middle a clear patch maybe a foot/ 30 cm wide ie not wide enoough for the rollator. Bobcats don't do that. I don't know what does that but it's remarkably inefficient. Thought the bobcats must have done Christie at least so took the side street over and no, no they had not. Was in fact worse than my street. But I pushed on, noting that-- cult though they may be-- the Jehovah's Witnesses alone had shovelled their frontage, and then the smoke house at the corner. Am sure this expedition counts as exercise, so go me.

Finished, I went over to Loblaws who hadn't shovelled either, obviously thinking the clear path under their overhang was sufficient to anyone's needs, and if one had to push through a sea of slush to get to the walkway, well, too bad. I hope I never have to use a wheelchair, even a motorized one. Of course there's still home delivery, and if Blawblaws persists in not having turkey roll, I may use it.

Coming home people either had shovelled or were shovelling, including in front of the vacant lot that will someday, in the far future, be yet more condos. I thanked the shoveller nicely, who grinned back at me and asked how I was doing. Obviously dire conditions bring out the best in Trawntonyans.

Finished Nancy Mitford's bio of Mme de Pompadour finally, so can put with the donatable books. Charles Finch, The Hidden City and Kashiwaba Sachiko's The Village Beyond the Mist. The last being a veeeery distant ancestor of Spirited Away, the only semi-common element being the character who turned into Yubaba. Also did a fast skim of Witches Abroad as a library ebook because I wanted something to read at the restaurant and Kobo is iffy on the phone.

Also finished the first set of Phantom Moon Tower side stories, some of which are parseable and some of which, um, aren't.

Then bought a couple of Dr Priestleys for the tablet because I need to get back to the bike machine. Though now am tempted to just reread Lords and Ladies and maybe Maskerade. This is hibernating 'line of least resistance' weather, and I have vodka and a comfy sofa. A pity to waste that on, say, the biography of Da Vinci.

Thanks!

Dec. 10th, 2025 05:19 pm
blueswan: (Default)
[personal profile] blueswan
Dine and Killerweasel, I received your cards today, thank you both very much.Oddly the one from KW had been opened. There was no notation to indicte when or where or why. As I recall when I used to buy off ebay any parcel coming from the states was stamped to indicate it was opened at the border. Maybe the pretty ribbon that had a thin strip of wire triggered a beep from something. Who knows? In any event, alls well, but I just found it a bit strange.
[syndicated profile] phys_social_feed
Online discussions are often dominated by a small group of active users, while the majority remain silent. This imbalance can distort perceptions of public opinion and fuel polarization.
[syndicated profile] phys_social_feed
It shouldn't come as a surprise that the Oxford Dictionary has named "rage bait" its Word of the Year. The quantity of live-streamed drama in 2025 has made it clear that outrage is now fueling much online content.

Write every day: Day 10

Dec. 10th, 2025 10:47 pm
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
Ugh, looong day at work; comment replies tomorrow. 100 words of longfic.

Tally:
Read more... )
Day 9: [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] chestnut_pod, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] china_shop,

Bonus farm news: When I came home this evening we had a dead wild boar hanging from a rafter in one of the sheds. It had apparently got stuck in a fence wire with its leg, and a neighbor helped my housemate to shoot it. But then he had to go to work and did not have time to gut it etc, and now it's too late. So no boar meat for us. But then, I bet it was super stressed by having its leg caught (poor boar!) and perhaps the meat would not have been good on that account. So now we have a boar carcass to dispose of somehow...
[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Molly Glick

Millennia before the Black Death pandemic killed nearly half of Europe’s population, a different strain of the same plague bacterium, Yersinia pestis, tore across Eurasia. It infected people across the region and lingered for 2,000 years before disappearing.

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While we know that the Black Death bacterium spread in part via fleas in the 14th century, it’s unclear how the earlier strain spread so widely and over an extended period of time during the Bronze Age, from about 2900 to 500 B.C. Previous research suggested that the older Y. pestis strain hadn’t yet evolved to efficiently travel via fleas. But the common carriers of that earlier, long-lasting pestilence remained mysterious for millennia.

Now, scientists think they have identified a critical piece in the puzzle of that Bronze Age plague.

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An international team of researchers found Y. pestis DNA in the bones of a roughly 4,000-year-old domesticated sheep from Russia’s Southern Ural Mountains, a finding reported in Cell. The discovery offers an intriguing hint into origins of this elusive ancient pandemic.

Read more: “The Magic of Herding

“Our plague sheep gave us a breakthrough,” said study co-author Taylor Hermes, an archeologist at the University of Arkansas, in a statement. “We now see it as a dynamic between people, livestock, and some still unidentified ‘natural reservoir’ for it.”

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This was a rare discovery—it’s difficult to find well-preserved animal remains from the Bronze Age because the archeological record of such material from that period mostly consists of ancient meal leftovers that were cooked and discarded, which degrades any genetic material within them. That’s why few research teams have reported intact pathogen DNA from ancient animals.

Hermes encountered the sheep skeleton during an ongoing study of ancient livestock DNA, which tracks how people shepherded domesticated goats, cattle, and sheep from the Fertile Crescent across Eurasia—movements that sparked empires and sustained nomadic communities.

He and his colleagues found the bones when poring over livestock samples dug up from this area of the Southern Ural Mountains in the 1980s and ’90s. “It was alarm bells for my team,” Hermes said. “This was the first time we had recovered the genome from Yersinia pestis in a non-human sample.” The sheep was excavated from a settlement that’s associated with the Sintashta people, a Bronze Age culture known for its early mastery of horse riding and bronze weapons, along with the construction of impressive walled cities.

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Ultimately, the Bronze Age plague probably resulted from increasingly close contact between people and animals as they herded and lived among livestock across grasslands teeming with wild creatures like birds, deer, and rodents, the latter of which serves as the primary reservoir for plague today. The Sintashta people also interacted with various nearby communities, which potentially facilitated the person-to-person transmission of disease. While sheep likely don’t spread plague among themselves, people might have caught the disease while handling or consuming them.

This finding matters today, according to Hermes, by highlighting the risks of human disturbance to the delicate balance of natural ecosystems. “It’s important to have a greater respect for the forces of nature,” he said.

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Lead image: Pixabay