Opinion – 12 November 2025

Nov. 12th, 2025 11:00 am
[syndicated profile] thinking_anglicans_feed

Posted by Peter Owen

Trevor Thurston-Smith The Pensive Pilgrim Remembering past Remembrances Colin Coward Unadulterated Love Changing Attitude England’s campaign goal: Full equality for LGBTQIA+ people in relationships and ministry Free to publicly bless same-sex couples in church Bosco Peters Liturgy King Charles, Pope Leo, and ‘full visible unity’

The post Opinion – 12 November 2025 first appeared on Thinking Anglicans.
[syndicated profile] cks_techblog_feed

Posted by cks

Today, while I was in the middle of using my normal browser instance, it decided to switch from DejaVu Sans to Noto Sans as my default font:

Dear Firefox: why are you using Noto Sans all of a sudden? I have you set to DejaVu Sans (and DejaVu everything), and fc-match 'sans' and fc-match serif both say they're DejaVu (and give the DejaVu TTF files). This is my angry face.

This is a quite noticeable change for me because it changes the font I see on Wandering Thoughts, my start page, and other things that don't set any sort of explicit font. I don't like how Noto Sans looks and I want DejaVu Sans.

(I found out that it was specifically Noto Sans that Firefox was using all of a sudden through the Web Developer tools 'Font' information, and confirmed that Firefox should still be using DejaVu through the way to see this in Settings.)

After some flailing around, it appears that what I needed to do to fix this was explicitly set about:config's font.name.serif.x-western, font.name.sans-serif.x-western, and font.name.monospace.x-western to specific values instead of leaving them set to nothing, which seems to have caused Firefox to arrive on Noto Sans through some mysterious process (since the generic system font name 'sans' was still mapping to DejaVu Sans). I don't know if these are exposed through the Fonts advanced options in Settings → General, which are (still) confusing in general. It's possible that these are what are used for 'Latin'.

(I used to be using the default 'sans', 'serif', and 'monospace' font names that cascaded through to the DejaVu family. Now I've specifically set everything to the DejaVu set, because if something in Fedora or Firefox decides that the default mapping should be different, I don't want Firefox to follow it, I want it to stay with DejaVu.)

I don't know why Firefox would suddenly decide these pages are 'western' instead of 'unicode'; all of them are served as or labeled as UTF-8, and nothing about that has changed recently. Unfortunately, as far as I know there's no way to get Firefox to tell you what font.name preference name it used to pick (default) fonts for a HTML document. When it sends HTTP 304 Not Modified responses, Wandering Thoughts doesn't include a Content-Type header (with the UTF-8 character set), but as far as I know that's a standard behavior and browsers presumably cope with it.

(Firefox does see 'Noto Sans' as a system UI font, which it uses on things like HTML form buttons, so it didn't come from nowhere.)

It makes me sad that Firefox continues to have no global default font choice. You can set 'Unicode' but as I've just seen, this doesn't make what you set there the default for unset font preferences, and the only way to find out what unset font preferences you have is to inspect about:config.

PS: For people who aren't aware of this, it's possible for Firefox to forget some of your about:config preferences. Working around this probably requires using Firefox policies (via), which can force-set arbitrary about:config preferences (among other things).

Wednesday 12/11/2025

Nov. 12th, 2025 11:04 am
dark_kana: (3_good_things_a_day official icon)
[personal profile] dark_kana posting in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day

1) going for a walk in the sunshine during lunchbreak

2) hubby's father is staying over for dinner

3) hubby gave me a back/shoulder massage. My muscles are way too tense...

Babylon 5 fic: To Your Health

Nov. 11th, 2025 11:41 pm
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
Fixits will continue until morale improves.

To Your Health (Babylon 5, 4500 wds)
The dinner party on Minbar in 5x21: Objects At Rest goes a little differently. Canon-divergent AU.

Just One Thing (12 November 2025)

Nov. 12th, 2025 08:42 am
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/179-180: Plum Duff and 'The Saint of the Bookstore' — Victoria Goddard
... it had been said -- it had been believed -- that much of the old, deep magic of Alinor before the coming of the Empire was gone.
The Fall of the Empire had made it clear that that magic was only quiescent... [Plum Duff, loc. 126]

Reread, because (as per the final line of my February 2023 review of Plum Duff) the seventh book in the series really is due soon... I note that on first reading, I found this wintry novel, full of solstice cheer and ancient traditions and the threat of the Dark, less enjoyable than the 'cosier, more mannerist' novels that preceded it. I do think it feels as though the scope of the story is expanding rapidly:  but given the miracles and wonders of the previous pair of novels, that makes more sense to me this time around.Read more... )

Book Review

Nov. 11th, 2025 10:48 pm
kenjari: (Default)
[personal profile] kenjari
A Wicked Bargain for the Duke
by Megan Frampton

In this historical romance, Thaddeus, the new Duke of Hasford, sets out to find himself a demure and refined lady for a bride. However, when he and the vivacious and slightly unconventional Lavinia Capel accidentally end up in a very compromising position, they a must marry to prevent a ruinous scandal. Thaddeus and Lavinia initially enter into a business-like bargain to produce an heir and then live separate lives. But when they find a passionate connection both in and out of bed, Thaddeus and Lavinia must alter their bargain entirely.
Although the start was slow, I ended up really liking this one. Lavinia and Thaddeus initially think that they do not like each other, but it proves to be only friction due to their differing personalities. Thaddeus is fairly buttoned-up and and stoic, while Lavinia is more forthright and fun-loving. As they get to know each other, they quickly develop an appreciation for each other's traits. I also loved how important communication is in this story - it's pretty much the answer to all the hurdles in their relationship. Luckily, while Frampton does give them some hurdles to overcome, none of them are ridiculous.

Pup in Flight

Nov. 11th, 2025 10:04 pm
marycatelli: (Reading Desk)
[personal profile] marycatelli
image

The book with it is available on his website. Click through to find the link

Mirror Mirror

Nov. 11th, 2025 10:04 pm
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
[personal profile] marycatelli
Mirror Mirror by Sarah Mlynowski

The adventures conclude! Spoilers for the earlier ones ahead!

Read more... )

Tuesday word: Pinchbeck

Nov. 11th, 2025 05:59 pm
simplyn2deep: (Default)
[personal profile] simplyn2deep posting in [community profile] 1word1day
Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2025

Pinchbeck (noun, adjective)
pinchbeck [pinch-bek]


noun
1. an alloy of copper and zinc, used in imitation of gold.
2. something sham, spurious, or counterfeit.

adjective
3. made of pinchbeck.
4. sham, spurious, or counterfeit: pinchbeck heroism.

Origin: 1725–35; named after Christopher Pinchbeck (died 1732), English watchmaker and its inventor

Example Sentences
With rough and homely fist he had copied this pinchbeck fervour.
Read more on Project Gutenberg

There was Robert--haggard and unkempt--still in the pinchbeck uniform, torn and bespattered now, with a peasant's frieze-coat thrown over it--a ridiculous disguise.
Read more on Project Gutenberg

What a snake in the grass, with his clever military plan and pinchbeck enthusiasm!
Read more on Project Gutenberg

But for love of the dear old Karnak, I must show up this pinchbeck Isabel; this dirty, disorderly floating prison, where no kind care alleviated one's miseries, and no suitable diet helped one's recovery.
Read more on Project Gutenberg

The public has in turn learned to expect the sudden start, the swift pace, the placarded climax, the clever paradox, the crisp repartee, the pinchbeck style, the bared realism, the concluding click.
Read more on Project Gutenberg

aurora

Nov. 11th, 2025 07:51 pm
mellowtigger: (astronomy)
[personal profile] mellowtigger

Hey, Minneapolis. Go outside tonight. Actually, nearly everyone should give it a try. The spaceweather forecast was for this storm to produce aurora to latitudes down to Minneapolis, but there are reports of people catching photos of it all the way down to Texas.

Open up your smartphone camera in night vision mode. Look everywhere. Look northeast, look overhead, look southeast.

There's beautiful aurora everywhere!

red, green, and even orange aurora in north Minneapolis, 2025 November 11

Is that even a narrow band of orange that I see between the green and red areas? That's just amazing.

I scared a rabbit at my front doorstep when I walked outside to take this photo. It scared me right back when it darted away.

tend to remain in motion

Nov. 11th, 2025 04:05 pm
jazzfish: Jazz Fish: beret, sunglasses, saxophone (Default)
[personal profile] jazzfish
I move a lot. I was an Army brat, that's expected. But I've moved more since becoming an adult. As an Army brat I moved about once every two and a half years; as an adult, it's one move every twenty months.

I feel like I am in a good position to declare that moving sucks.

However. I've been remarkably stable lately. The three and a half years I've been at Corvaric are now the longest I've lived in a single place as an adult, and the third-longest in my life. (Four years in a townhouse outside of DC for high school, preceded by the five worst years of my life in Fayetteville NC in late elementary and junior high.) I was in the same apartment complex for the almost-five years I lived in northern Virginia right after college, but I changed apartments to move in with Emily halfway through that.

This also pushes my total time in the lower mainland (the Vancouver area) above the eleven years I spent in Blacksburg VA. (The longest I've spent in any one locale is still northern Virginia, at not quite twelve years, spread across three separate occasions.)

Sure, I'd rather stay in the same place, put down roots, all that. Just never seems to quite come together for me. There's always a good reason to move: money, or job, or relationship, or just "this place is terrible." This time I'm betting it'll be money, though it might be any of the above.

No real point to this. I'm not moving imminently. It's just interesting to look back at where I've been, and for how short a time.

Although moving DOES suck.

Home Battery calculations

Nov. 11th, 2025 10:42 pm
fub: A blue LED glowing up and fading (Glowing LED)
[personal profile] fub

Our solar array is over-dimensioned for what we use ourselves. I don’t have all the numbers yet, but it seems like we produce more than we consume. Or at least: we feed more into the network than we get out. That will probably become costly from January 1st 2027, when “salderen” is ended. That allowed us to compensate our energy import with our energy export for the whole year. That’s great because in summer you have a lot of surplus, but in winter you don’t — and because we heat our house with a heatpump we use a lot of electricity in winter. But once that ends, we really want to maximise our use of electricity that we generate on our own.

One of the ways we could do that is by adding battery storage to the mix. There are now “plug-and-play” batteries available that you can just plug in that will charge and discharge from the same socket. Digital energy meters have a port that shows the current usage pattern, and you can hook the battery up to something that transmits that data so that it charges when there is a surplus of power generation and discharges when power is imported from the grid. They’re getting to a price point that I am seriously considering getting one, just a bit less than EUR 1400.

We have a “double tariff” for our energy: from 07:00 to 21:00 on weekdays we’re paying less for our energy. The idea being that on average, during the day, there’s lots of cheap solar energy available, so the price can be lower. This works out well for us, because we have a solar panel array on our roof as well. We want to use that electricity mostly ourselves, so we want to run heavy users (washing machine, dishwasher, baking and cooking) during the day as well. And we can: we both work from home. If we need more power than we generate ourselves, we import cheap(er) energy from the grid. So the battery would be best positioned for the energy consumption between 21:00 and 07:00.

And then the question becomes: how much surplus solar power do we generate on a day, and how much do we consume in the “expensive” hours? Because that’s the business case for such a battery for us.


And it just so happens that our Enphase solar array logs all the data. So I have for (most) of the year both our energy consumption and energy production per hour. (The integration with Home Assistant is not good and had lots of numbers that could not be right, so I downloaded the data through the Enphase app…)

With this data, I did the following calculations:



  • Let’s call the sum of the energy imported from the grid before 07:00 the “morning load” for a day;

  • Let’s call the sum of the energy imported from the grid between 21:00 and midnight the “evening load” for a day;

  • The evening load plus the morning load of the next day is the total “night load” for that day — that’s the total imported power from the grid that is the most expensive for us and thus the most interesting to get from the battery;

  • Let’s call the sum of the energy exported to the grid for a day the “surplus” of that day;

  • Because the battery has a 5kWh capacity, the “battery charge” for a day is the minimum between 5000 and the surplus of that day;

  • The power that we don’t have to import from the grid for a day, the “energy savings”, is the minimum between the night load and the battery charge;

  • The actual “money savings” is the price of the energy savings. For us, that is the energy savings (in kWh) times (the higher electricity price plus the feed-in tarriff (because we’re storing that in the battery, not exporting tot the grid) minus the price we get for a kWh from our supplier).


So now we have (almost) a full year of data to calculate with. Our savings up to date would be EUR 140. And it is all idealized, without conversion losses etc so the savings will be less. But they could also be more because the battery could also “dampen” our import from the grid during the day, even though the power has a lower price then.

But even then: with a price of EUR 1400, we’d break even in 10 years. That’s a long time, but with 6000 guaranteed charging cycles and assuming one cycle per day, that’s a lifetime of over 16 years.


Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post.

Canon queer cats!

Nov. 11th, 2025 01:26 pm
katherine: Dreamsheep striped with rainbow flag, thought bubble: dreamwidth (pride)
[personal profile] katherine
It's only taken some twenty-three years and more than eighty books, but there's an undeniable pair right there in so many words in canon now.

There's a hint in the third chapter of StormClaw's Folly about Galestar's former mate: "Pebblenose spent most of his time with Thrushcall now, and he seemed all the happer for it."

Three chapters and a year of story time later...
Thrushcall, Stripestar guessed. He was standing shoulder to shoulder with Pebblenose, whose expression was every bit as grim as his mate's.

Mudlarking 61 - ah! oh! Bovril

Nov. 11th, 2025 08:38 pm
squirmelia: (Default)
[personal profile] squirmelia
Putney Bridge

Putney

On Sunday morning, I went to Putney, as it was somewhere I hadn’t mudlarked before. I tried going down the Brewhouse Slipway, but it was too muddy. I then found the steps next to Putney Bridge, which were also muddy, but there was a handrail to hold onto for the top steps at least, so I made my way down slowly. The foreshore was covered in silt, as the tide must have started receding before the Uber boats started running again.

I made my way around the mud and the streams of water, and got to the river’s edge. I heard bagpipes being played. It was Remembrance Sunday, so I suspected they were coming from the church just above.

Other people on the foreshore included a person metal detecting, and a person who told me that it was muddy the way they came, and I told them that I’d found a Bovril jar.

At one point I was stood between the river and a large stream bit, as if I was on an island, and even though I knew the tide times and knew the water was still going out, I wasn’t sure I felt that safe, so turned around.

I didn’t take home:

1. A pink iPhone, smashed up, no screen, underneath Putney Bridge.

2. Hindu offerings, a collection of them washed up together.

iPhone

Offerings

I walked underneath the bridge and then came across some gates that had warning signs that said lights flash and that there could be sewer outfalls without warning. I walked quickly past, lights were not flashing.

Things I found:

1. A plastic frog head. I think it was a real animal to start with, so was glad to find it wasn’t!

2. A bracelet, perhaps?

3. Glass that says “blis” on it. Probably Chablis, but I like to imagine I found "bliss"

4. Glass that was part of an R White’s bottle.


Mudlarking finds - 61.1


Mudlarking finds - 61.2


More things:

1. A Bovril jar! Very excited by this one. It’s not one of the oldest types of Bovril jars as it doesn’t have a long neck, but it does have “oz” on it, so it’s certainly not recent.

2. Barrett & Elers bottle fragment

The “B&” were visible on this fragment, but the symbol on it is more of the giveaway - it’s of a vulcanite bottle stopper! The company was registered in 1897 and Henry Barrett invented this type of bottle stopper in 1872.

An advert from 1883: https://boroughphotos.org/lambeth/advert-barrett-elers-london/



3. Solo bottle fragment

On the bottom of the bottle it says “Property of Solo B”. The Solo Bottling Company were based at 10 Whitcher Place, NW1. Using 1940s - 1960s OS Maps, it says “Mineral Water Bottling Works” at this address. Whitcher Place does still exist but where this building was located is now UCL student halls.

From a listing of a 1954 receipt on eBay, I've found that Solo Bottling Company were linked to Solo Orchards, who made orange juice and other drinks.

There are various adverts from Solo Orchards, such as “ah! oh! SOLO” from 1948, and eBay also has a beer mat for sparkling orange listed.

Solo Orchards were taken over by Idris in 1960.

So the bottle I found could have contained sparkling orange from Solo Orchards, and is likely to be from the 1940s or 1950s.

1954 receipt:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/167796598399

1948 advert:
https://flic.kr/p/2fFCAWU

Sparkling orange beer mat:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/306036568891

--

After that, I continued along the river, through Wandsworth Park, and past Church Draw Dock (another place to mudlark) and a heron, and onwards, over Battersea Bridge, and past the sphinx benches, and then over Vauxhall Bridge, and I stopped my walk there. I walked about 11 miles that day.

(You need a permit to search or mudlark on the Thames foreshore.)
douqi: (fayi 2)
[personal profile] douqi posting in [community profile] baihe_media
Pre-orders are now open for the Taiwanese (uncensored, traditional Chinese) print edition of My Heart Beats for You (怦然为你, pinyin: pengran wei ni) by Min Ran (闵然). This is a contemporary romance which follows the main characters from their university days to becoming successful career women, with a separation and reunion in between. The designs for the cover and merch can be found here (Chinese fans have been complaining on Weibo about the character designs and saying that the cover designs remind them of their grandparents' floral-patterned sheets and upholstery).

The book can be pre-ordered via Feiqin. Other proxies may be available, but I haven't checked. The web version can be read here on JJWXC.