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30 Days of Blake's 7 - day 8

2026-05-08 09:59 pm
vilakins: Vila with stars superimposed (Default)
[personal profile] vilakins
Day 8: Favourite romance

I am not a romance person (being aromantic) so I don't have one. I've only noticed a few, and none of them grabs me.

Jenna/Blake - probably one-sided, or it's friendship, and I do much prefer the whole friendship thing. As people may have noticed. ;) Besides, Blake puts his cause well before people.

Avon/Servalan - there's a twisted attraction there on both sides. Avon knows it's not going anywhere, and though he's attracted by wealth and power, he's right - he wouldn't live long.

Vila/Kerril - too short to be a romance, and Kerril's playing a part to get Vila to come over all protective. He made the right decision not to stay on that planet: the pioneer life wouldn't exactly suit him, and Kerril would probably drop her act and be as contemptuous as she first was.

Servalan/Tarrant - also a short fling, and I'm glad the crew expressed their opinion of it.

Did I miss any? I'm pretty oblivious in RL.

All the questions are on Tumblr.

(no subject)

2026-05-08 09:50 am
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] white_hart!

New Worlds: Public Transit

2026-05-08 08:02 am
swan_tower: (Default)
[personal profile] swan_tower
It's possible, even in surprisingly ancient times, to have hugely sprawling cities -- but they're not quite the same type of sprawl we see today. The reason is simple: how are you going to get around?

A city that is a mile or so across can be traversed on foot in half an hour, give or take, depending on how fast the individual in question walks and how much traffic and crowding get in their way. Two miles, you can cross it in an hour, or get from the periphery to the center in half an hour. And when you look at historical cities in places like Europe, you frequently find that's about how big they are. One to four square miles is a manageable size.

Cities with a larger footprint did exist, but they require you to change what you imagine when you think "city." It's more like the agrarian version of suburban sprawl -- and, as Annalee Newitz mentions in Four Lost Cities when discussing Angkor, there's some reason to think that pre-modern urbanism in tropical areas simply looks different than it does in temperate zones, due to differences in agriculture. Lidar surveys indicate that Angkor may have covered three hundred and ninety square miles! But that's not a thousand square kilometers of densely packed buildings surrounded by a wall; that's a complex patchwork of fields, houses, temples, and markets, connected by the complex works of irrigation infrastructure that were necessary to maintain it all.

That infrastructure points us toward one possible solution for getting around an enormous city: go by water. I've mentioned before that water transport is often more efficient than land until you get motorized options . . . but when it comes to cities, that's far from a perfect answer.

See, odds are good that you'll be more reliant on muscle power to move the boat, with a paddle, oars, or pole, rather than being able to benefit from natural forces. A river's current will carry you downstream just fine -- but going home? Now you have to fight that force. (Unless the river is tidal in that reach, but then you're constrained to the timing of tides.) And within an urban context, you have much less space to maneuver about with wind. Don't get me wrong; water is still often better. One or two people can operate a boat full of produce brought in from an outlying field, as opposed to needing to wrangle a draft animal for a cart or being limited to what they can carry on their own backs. But it's not as dramatic of an improvement as being able to sail an entire ship or barge hundreds of miles for long-distance transport.

I'm talking about produce because that's going to be the most common reason people in a large city need to move around. (Other goods, too, but food is the first ten items on the list of "what needs to be transported in or the city dies." Water pretty much has to be there already or the city is dead to begin with.) Commuting of the sort that's a dreary feature of daily life for many people in modern times was vastly less common in the past, because most people lived at or very near their places of work, i.e. within walking distance.

This starts to change with the Industrial Revolution -- but not because we got motorized transport, not right away. Instead you started having factories that employed huge numbers of people in a very small area, and while some of them had associated lodgings nearby, the explosion of urban populations as people came thronging there for work meant that density became horrifically unmanageable. Cities had to spread outward, and somebody had to come up with a way to move people around faster.

Early on, the answer to this was the horse-drawn omnibus. (Which is where we get the word "bus" from; in older works, you see an apostrophe marking the bit we dropped, as 'bus.) They were essentially the same idea as the hired coaches between cities, just repurposed for urban use and focused far more on moving passengers than luggage. They also didn't require buying a ticket in advance, instead having the kind of hop-on, hop-off service we're used to nowadays. As the nineteenth century progressed, many of them became double-decker buses, with passengers sitting on the roof as well as inside the carriage -- though the top was usually only for men, as women would have more difficulty climbing the ladder in their dresses, and be exposing themselves to up-skirt ogling besides.

The earliest attempt at this was in the seventeenth century . . . so does that mean it could exist in any era? Perhaps, but I suspect the answer is that it's unlikely. The challenge of the omnibus is making it sturdy and stable enough not to be a hazard to its passengers -- at least, by the lax safety standards of the Victorian era -- and also making the service profitable. Industrialization meant it was easier to produce steel for things like braces and wheel rims, and the sheer scale of demand for transportation allowed for entire networks of routes, rather than just one line that might or might not see enough use. Earlier eras are not going to offer the same favorable conditions.

Of course, we didn't stop at horsebuses. Laying down metal rails in the street greatly increased the amount of weight the horses could pull (and gave passengers a smoother ride to boot); then we got engines that could move the trams in place of the horses; then we realized we could put the trams underground, where traffic wouldn't slow them down, and we were off to the races with subways. Meanwhile, motorized water transport made regular large-scale ferry services possible, without having to worry as much about the vagaries of current, wind, or tide.

Expanding public transit made it easier to expand cities, because now people could live farther away from the noise and the stench, without spending half their day getting to work and the other half getting home again. Even now, though, it can often be an imperfect solution, because not all areas are equally served. If you look at a map of the London Underground, you'll see that while the north side of the Thames has an abundance of lines, the southern bank -- where there are fewer elites and important institutions -- has vastly less. It isn't always the case, though, that elite = access; where I live, in the San Francisco Bay Area, the residents of wealthy Marin County to the north consistently oppose efforts to extend public transit up to their neighborhoods, because then the hoi polloi could get there more easily.

I should note in closing that public transit is not always mass transit. Our modern taxis and pedicabs are the descendants of horse-drawn hackney carriages and human-carried sedan chairs for hire, both of which became common long before we had omnibuses running regular services for large numbers of people. Those more individualized options really only require enough urban density for profit, and enough people with the money to pay for them -- you're not likely to see them hanging around slums waiting for passengers. (Even today, it can be notoriously difficult to get a taxi in a bad part of town.)

And, as usual, speculative fiction throws a few wrinkles into the mix! Science fiction often includes mass transit, because most of it assumes both the technology for such a thing and populations on a scale to make it necessary. Fantasy, by contrast, often leaves it out -- but it doesn't have to! Depending on how magic works, you could have self-propelled vehicles, animated constructs pulling them, even regular flying carpet service from the suburbs to the urban core . . . or no magic at all, beyond the straightforward ingenuity of past invention.

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/W9jkpG)
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by SB Sarah

An image of a VHS cassette with a label that reads FRIDAY VIDEOS Smart Bitches Ep. 21 against a pink crosshatch backgroundSo, wanna hear something a little embarrassing?

I have been Chroniquelly Onlinne since forever, but there were some mysteries that to me seemed like magic.

Like Photoshop.

To be honest, Photoshop remains a bit of a mystery to me, and the skills I do have with it probably amount to .00001% of its capabilities.

So when I first saw this video ages and ages ago (2001??! 25 years?) I could not believe how road signs and awnings and whatnot were all altered and looked so real. Ah, what an innocent time for me.

Even a random Ziggy sighting? This is quite a time capsule.

I hope your weekend contain all your base that belong to you.

[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by SB Sarah

Archangel's Eternity - two winged figures, one a blonde woman who is embracing a man whose face is hidden. She's wearing black leather clothing and has deepblue and purple wings. The man she is embracing has his face turned into her neck and is holding her with one hand on her leg and the other behind her bckNalini Singh is back to talk about Archangel’s Eternity, which I have been calling “Archangel’s Finale.”

We’ve got questions from readers and listeners, and some behind the scenes details about how Nalini organizes the massive worlds she’s built in her series.

Plus she teases some major surprises for the next Psy-Changeling book, and what she’s working on right now.

You can find the video of this episode on our YouTube channel if you’d like to watch us!

Listen to the podcast →
Read the transcript →

Here are the books we discuss in this podcast:

You can find Nalini Singh at her website, NaliniSingh.com, and on Instagram and Facebook as AuthorNaliniSingh.

Do not miss the chance to sign up for her newsletter!

We also mentioned:


Ophelia: A trilogy series. an image of a hand in a rose colored diaphanous blouse holding some glowing herbs. There's a round gold ring on the middle finger, and trees and a leafy arch surrounding the image. at the bottom it says Ophelia in a white scriptThis episode is brought to you by Hatch.

You know how you finish a romantasy and you just need the next thing immediately? Hatch made that thing.

It’s called Ophelia — an original audio drama, inspired by Hamlet, where Ophelia finally gets to be the main character.

Forbidden magic, a crumbling kingdom, a slow-burn love triangle with a prince and his very guarded, very intriguing, best friend. The kind of love triangle where you will absolutely pick a side and you will not be quiet about it.

Book one of the three part series is now available for free wherever you stream, with new chapters dropping every Tuesday. For books 2 and 3, check out hatch.co/Ophelia.

Stay tuned to the end of the episode for a sample of Ophelia, brought to you by Hatch.co! 

If you like the podcast, you can subscribe to our feed, or find us at iTunes. You can also find us on Stitcher, and Spotify, too. We also have a cool page for the podcast on iTunes.

Thanks to our sponsors:

More ways to sponsor:

Sponsor us through Patreon! (What is Patreon?)

What did you think of today's episode? Got ideas? Suggestions? You can talk to us on the blog entries for the podcast or talk to us on Facebook if that's where you hang out online. You can email us at sbjpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave us a message at our Google voice number: 201-371-3272. Please don't forget to give us a name and where you're calling from so we can work your message into an upcoming podcast.

Thanks for listening!


Podcast Sponsor

Support for this episode comes from The Undergrads: Student Union by #1 New York Times-bestselling author Julie Murphy–a sexy new rom com about a college marriage of convenience that goes way beyond chemistry 101…

Clover Rowan Walsh knows The Plan:

  1. Get a full ride to her dream school, Wexley University.
  2. Conquer the school of business.
  3. Say goodbye to the paycheck-to-paycheck life she and her mom have known for years.

There’s just one hiccup. With the first semester rapidly approaching, Clover learns her housing grant has fallen through. But a loophole presents itself: Married couples can live in the dorms for the price of one student. Clover is willing to sacrifice the sanctity of marriage…even if it means proposing to the one person she swore she’d never speak to again: Bennett Andrew Graves.

Bennett can’t refuse Clover, the girl he grew up with (and whom he completely devastated years ago). He owes her this, but that doesn’t change the fact that these two can barely carry on a conversation without getting at each other’s throats. Forget about sharing a dorm—much less one bed.

But as Clover and Bennett hide the true nature of their marriage, they find that playing house isn’t all that bad–especially with certain marital benefits in the mix. In fact, Clover and Bennett are soon forgetting the most important part of their fake marriage of convenience . . . that it’s supposed to be fake.

With tropes like forced proximity and friends to enemies to lovers, you won’t want to miss this first book in a new trilogy of romance novels that follows a group of girls as they navigate love, friendship, and new adulthood.

Ali Hazelwood calls The Undergrads: Student Union “one addictively swoony book.”

Available now wherever books are sold!

Remember to subscribe to our podcast feed, find us on iTunes or on Stitcher.

Follow Friday 5-8-26

2026-05-08 12:34 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] followfriday
Got any Follow Friday-related posts to share this week? Comment here with the link(s).

Here's the plan: every Friday, let's recommend some people and/or communities to follow on Dreamwidth. That's it. No complicated rules, no "pass this on to 7.328 friends or your cat will die".

torachan: (Default)
[personal profile] torachan
We didn't go to Disneyland last weekend because we were going to go to Universal Studios and then skipped it because of Jasper stress, and we're not going this weekend because Carla has a doctor's appointment tomorrow and might get her big toenail removed and might not want to be walking a lot after that, so we decided to do a weeknight trip.

Read more... )
rizzy_rosie8: (regina spektor)
[personal profile] rizzy_rosie8 posting in [community profile] poetry
“The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.”

Robert Frost

The Friday Five for 8 May 2026

2026-05-08 12:49 am
anais_pf: (Default)
[personal profile] anais_pf posting in [community profile] thefridayfive
These questions were written by [personal profile] pebbleinalake.

1. What do you consider your current main fandom? (This can include hobbies and collecting. Anything you feel fannish about!)

2. What was your first fandom?

3. Do you have any favorite headcanons or fan theories?

4. Have you ever created fanworks?

5. Are you still active in any old fandoms?

Copy and paste to your own journal, then reply to this post with a link to your answers. If your journal is private or friends-only, you can post your full answers in the comments below.

If you'd like to suggest questions for a future Friday Five, then do so on DreamWidth or LiveJournal. Old sets that were used have been deleted, so we encourage you to suggest some more!

Daily Happiness

2026-05-07 09:37 pm
torachan: arale from dr slump with a huge grin on her face (arale)
[personal profile] torachan
1. I got an email from the bike shop this afternoon that they've received the bikes and need a couple days to put them together, so hopefully we should be able to pick them up this weekend! Still haven't sold Carla's old bike, but I did get another inquiry on Nextdoor today, so hopefully they actually follow up on my reply.

2. We were planning on going to Disneyland this weekend, but Carla has a doctor's appointment tomorrow that might result in getting her big toenail removed, and she wasn't sure she'd want to be doing a lot of walking the next day, so we went down tonight for dinner instead and had a very nice time. The sun was still out while we were there, but the temps were pleasant and it wasn't too busy.

3. Sister time!

starandrea: (Default)
[personal profile] starandrea
Dahlia timeline, according to my journal which I guess would know~
March 5: potted tubers
March 13: first tuber sprouted
May 1: moved pots outside
May 7: FIRST FLOWER BUD

(Dahlias are supposed to take 3-4 months to flower. Allegedly some "special varieties" can flower in as little as 75 days. It has been 62 days since my tubers went into pots.)

Today I started transplanting the dahlias from patio pots to fence garden. Started, because somehow I thought this would only take a couple of hours?? There are SIXTEEN of them. (Which actually doesn't sound right, since I started with 22 and only 5 didn't sprout, so there should be 17? Did I miscount? Probably. Anyway, there's so many, is my point. I had to make two trips with the cart to transport them all.)

I got them all in the ground, but it was dark by the time I finished, so I watered them (8 gallons of water) and built cages around the four tallest. I will return to make cages for the rest tomorrow. And also take more pictures, probably.

dahlias )
[personal profile] tcampbell1000 posting in [community profile] scans_daily
Warning for horrific brutality, torture, fascism, slavery.

*Also, length. This update ran so long that I’m splitting it into two installments, even though that mucks up my numbering and scheduling a little. The second installment will run tomorrow!



Dan Jurgens, like John Byrne, is a neo-traditionalist: his work shows strong Silver Age influences but is splashy and of its time. Most of it boasts a direct simplicity, a sort of purity. Which is why the “Destiny’s Hand” arc is a shock: it lets him indulge those influences…but also shows a subversive streak well out of his usual register.

He doesn’t have a character say, ‘‘Those armbands are stupid! WE ALL KNOW SUPES IS COMING BACK!,’’ but that’s the vibe. )

4 ironies make a post

2026-05-07 11:27 pm
flamingsword: We now return you to your regularly scheduled crisis. :) (Default)
[personal profile] flamingsword
• I started a new migraine preventative midafternoon today, and about 5 minutes later got a headache, 🤕. Hopefully it’ll sort itself out by morning.

• I finally remembered to book the moving van today, yay for brain dumps! They seem to be the pen and paper equivalent of taking everything out of your purse and shaking it to find the keys you know are in there but can’t find. Sometimes you really do have to turn things off and back on again.

• I have started packing up the bathroom and the closet, and I feel less ready for the move than I did a few days ago? Dunno what that’s about.

• I feel better enough to work tomorrow, and am encouraging everyone to mask up bc even the illnesses out there that aren’t the flu and Covid are apparently still fucking miserable to have. Seriously, do not get this thing. I don’t even remember Tuesday, and Monday is real sketchy in some places but what I know of from my texts sent at the time is that I was “sleepy, groggy, dizzy, achey, cough-y, headaching, and cold. It’s like the seven dwarves of sick in here.”
maevedarcy: (nabrielise)
[personal profile] maevedarcy posting in [community profile] recthething
[community profile] polyamships is participating in [community profile] 3weeks4dreamwidth  and today's post is all about reccing art (you can see that post here)

This is my own post answering that call for recs.

Fandoms included in my post:
Teen Wolf
Arcane
The bastard son and the devil himself
All for the game
Sense8

Thursday Recs

2026-05-07 08:43 pm
soc_puppet: Dreamsheep, its wool patterned after the Queer Pride flag: An off-white background, with two downward-pointing chevrons in lilac and violet; the Dreamwidth logo echoes these colors. (Queer Pride)
[personal profile] soc_puppet posting in [community profile] queerly_beloved
This week's Thursday Recs are back to being on time 😅

This week, I'm going to take a moment to re-rec "The Queen of Ieflaria" by Effie Calvin. A while back, Effie got tired of her publisher jerking her around, so she got the rights back to her books and has been working on re-editing and self-publishing them. "The Queen of Ieflaria" is the first book in the series, and is the only one currently re-released (with 10,000 new words!), but "Daughter of the Sun" is on its way hopefully this summer. You can find out more about "The Queen of Ieflaria" and get some infographics to maybe perhaps possibly share around over here on the author's Tumblr account.


Do you have a rec for this week? Just reply to this post with something queer or queer-adjacent (such as, soap made by a queer person that isn't necessarily queer themed) that you'd, well, recommend. Self-recs are welcome, as are recs for fandom-related content!

Or have you tried something that's been recced here? Do you have your own report to share about it? I'd love to hear about it!

so that's a number

2026-05-07 09:00 pm
senmut: an owl that is quite large sitting on a roof (Default)
[personal profile] senmut
5300 works on AO3.

Can anyone imagine how high it would be if I hadn't grouped ficlets and drabbles back when I archived all my old fic?

Dotted Cloud Sunset

2026-05-07 08:37 pm
yourlibrarian: Dreamwidth Sheep in Green and Yellow (OTH-Dreamwidth Me Colors - soc_puppet)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] common_nature


A recent sunset seemed to be highlighting the dotted clouds in the area, which made the sky look more patterned than usual.

Read more... )
sineala: (Avengers: Steve/Tony: Red Zone)
[personal profile] sineala
Deepest Wish (4716 words) by Sineala
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Marvel (Comics), Marvel 616, Avengers (Marvel Comics), Guardians of the Galaxy (Comics)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Steve Rogers/Tony Stark, Gamora/Peter Quill/Richard Rider
Characters: Steve Rogers, Tony Stark, Gamora (Marvel), Peter Quill, Richard Rider (Marvel)
Additional Tags: Pining, Romance, Getting Together, Jealousy, Shame, Past Alcohol Abuse/Alcoholism, Star Trek References, Star Wars References, Comic: Avengers Vol. 9 (2023), Comic: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 7 (2020)
Summary: While trying to untangle the romantic relationships among the Guardians of the Galaxy, Steve tries to find out more about the Avengers' recent heist at the Grandmaster's Speculatorium. For some reason, Tony doesn't want to tell him anything about it.

A very belated fic post! I posted this a couple weeks ago for [personal profile] magicasen for our You Gave Me A Stocking event on the You Gave Me A Home Discord server, so here it is.

(I also got a great stocking in return. Yay!)

Happy World Password Day!

2026-05-07 08:23 pm
petra: Barbara Gordon smiling knowingly (Default)
[personal profile] petra
Time to update your AO3 password. It can now be 72 characters long.

Here, have a website that counts characters.

So far my favorite possible maximal password I won't use is:
Little pig little pig let me in! Not by the hair on my chinny-chin-chin!

(Sorry about the lack of vocative commas, but 72 is a harsh mistress.)

If you like poetry, there's always:
Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though

Bring me your favorite 72-character phrase that you Won't use as an AO3 password!
troisoiseaux: (reading 2)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Since my last update in War and Peace (yesterday), I'm back to The Great Comet of 1812 territory with the scene that's the source for "No One Else"— interestingly, it's Natasha's song in the musical but Andrei's experience in the book, after seeing Natasha for the first time while visiting the Rostovs on business and feeling the first stirrings that life might be worth actually living again, post-Austerlitz and post-Lise: First time I heard your voice / Moonlight burst into the room vs.

As soon as he opened the shutters the moonlight, as if it had long been watching for this, burst into the room. He opened the casement. The night was fresh, bright, and very still. . . .

His room was on the first floor. Those in the rooms above were also awake. He heard female voices overhead.

"Just once more," said a girlish voice above him which Prince Andrei recognized at once.

(On the other hand, the lyric I feel like putting my arms around my knees / and squeezing tight as possible / And flying away is an almost verbatim quote from Natasha, and the differences might only be in translation.)

I also forgot to mention that I've turned back to China Miéville's Three Moments of an Explosion, a collection of short stories that mostly take either a frog-in-boiling-water approach—you'll start out reading about a couple on vacation, or a therapist who's kind of unhealthily overinvested in one of her patients but in a normal way, and then halfway through it slips into folk horror, or a world where therapists are also assassins ("Sometimes the externalized trauma-vectors in dysfunctional interpersonal codependent psychodynamics are powerful enough that more robust therapeutic intervention is necessary"); I very nearly laughed out loud on the metro at the latter twist— or a peeling-the-onion one, where it starts out in a world that is overtly not our own and the parameters reveal themselves, slowly, as you keep reading. ... ) I'm a little over halfway through, although I did end up skipping one story after very quickly realizing that it was not a flavor of horror I had the stomach to read.

2026.05.07

2026-05-07 07:10 pm
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Health deserts, hospital windfalls, and a phalanx of pharma lobbyists: Inside the most controversial healthcare program you never heard of
The Minnesota Legislature is reckoning with 340B, a labyrinthine program that gives prescription drug discounts to nonprofit hospitals, for better or worse.
by Matthew Blake
https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2026/05/inside-340b-controversial-drug-discount-program/

Hmong photo exhibit at Walker Art Center reframes disability and identity
The “Many Ways of Being” show features eight stories of Hmong people with disabilities.
by Shubhanjana Das
https://sahanjournal.com/arts-culture/hmong-disability-exhibit-minneapolis-walker-art-center/ Read more... )

Today in plants

2026-05-07 07:08 pm
magid: (Default)
[personal profile] magid
I worked from home today because I wanted to check out the Arbor Week event at the library today. The city arborist was there with seedlings people could take. The choice was red maple, some kind of birch, redbud, or lilac. I chose the one shrub, because I know that lilac is edible (I’ve made lilac liqueur, which means lilac syrup also works). And I grabbed one of the little seed-implanted bits of paper they had in the shape of a tree.

There was also a table with information about a couple of city programs organized by GreenCambridge, which I didn’t know about before. The Canopy Crew offers a tree planted on private land by paid high school interns learning about forestry and environmental careers. The types of trees were chosen to provide habitat and provide biodiversity, as well as provide shade, clean the air, and reduce the chance of flooding. The other program is focused on Alewife Brook Reservation, which offers informational walks and the chance to help clear invasive species; I’ve joined the mailing list.

Once I was home, I checked the pawpaw seeds I’d put in the fridge last fall to see whether they’d survived without drying out or molding. Some looked ok, so I planted three in the corner of the back yard near where the neighbor’s cherry tree used to be (ie, it’s sunnier there than it used to be), along with the lilac seedling. The internet says I’d need to have at least two different varieties to get any fruit, because apparently the pollen isn’t ripe at the same time as the flowers being open (essentially), which seems like a non-optimized design….

I took the seed-implanted tree paper, along with some other similar bits of paper with seeds, and put them under dirt in the front yard, in a corner that looked rather patchy. Some of the shrubs in front had some dead branches, while others were getting overgrown, so I spent some time pruning. It’s not at all perfect, but it’s definitely better. I left the debris underneath, to decompose back into the soil. The only downside was that I managed to pinch some bits of my palm between the handles of the snips.

There were petals of tiny pink flowers that had fallen onto the moss in the front yard, which I hadn’t noticed before was so beautiful. I really do love having moss around, such wonderful colors and textures.

L&O season 3: Episode 4

2026-05-07 07:14 pm
sabotabby: two lisa frank style kittens with a zizek quote (trash can of ideology)
[personal profile] sabotabby
After having taken a wee break to watch some movies and the Great Pottery Throwdown (excellent telly btw), I am officially Back On My Bullshit.

Okay episode four of Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent, entitled "Forget Me Not," was...good? That's two decent episodes in a row. Granted I'm grading on a curve because, and I can't say this often enough, this is low-budget trashy copaganda, but I actually enjoyed this one as a story. And this is the first time that neither I nor Reddit have been able to determine what this is based on, so it's possible that the writers actually made up a story.

Also this deals with care homes and dementia, so if this is a sensitive topic for you, maybe skip it.

Forget Me Not )

(no subject)

2026-05-07 04:12 pm
roadrunnertwice: Scott fends off Matthew Patel's attack. (Reversal! (Scott Pilgrim))
[personal profile] roadrunnertwice

I'm not actually too much of a framerate princess, like honestly 30fps feels mostly fine once I've spent two minutes adjusting. But unfortunately it turns out I'm both an input latency princess and a screen tearing princess, and that's a combination that will guarantee you a bed full of peas.

[syndicated profile] ao3_news_feed

AO3 Logo with the words 'AO3 Update'

Today is World Password Day, and we'd like to take this opportunity to remind everyone of some best practices to keep your accounts secure.

Last year, AO3 saw a rise in users who lost access to their AO3 accounts due to reused or insecure passwords that were found in data breaches from other sites. In response, our Policy & Abuse committee alongside our Accessibility, Design, & Technology, and Systems committees took steps to recover, secure, and notify the owners of over 10,000 at-risk accounts.

Over the past year, we released many new features to proactively make AO3 accounts more secure, including:

  • Automatic confirmation emails notifying you when your username, password, or email has been changed
  • Adding a verification step to the process for changing the email associated with your account
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med_cat: (SH education never ends)
[personal profile] med_cat posting in [community profile] 1word1day
...I believe [personal profile] amaebi told me of this concept, a while back...

The Ship of Theseus, also known as Theseus's Paradox, is a paradox and common thought experiment about whether an object (in the most common stating of the paradox, a ship) is the same object after having all of its original components replaced with others over time.

You can read more about it in this Wikipedia article


Drawing Penny Arcade

2026-05-07 09:48 pm
[syndicated profile] pennyarcade_feed

I’ve posted another time lapse of the comic drawing process. This one is for Tattooine, the Maul comic strip we posted yesterday. If you like seeing how the sausage gets made, check it out below! 

What fascinating timing

2026-05-07 05:38 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Seen in email:



(QWOP)



Free League Announces Legends of Stormbringer RPG Based On Dragonbane Mechanics

Elric returns to the tabletop in an officially licensed RPG powered by the award-winning Dragonbane system
Hello!

Today, we are thrilled to announce Legends of Stormbringer, a new officially licensed tabletop roleplaying game based on the iconic fantasy works of Michael Moorcock, planned for release in 2027.

Legends of Stormbringer will carry you into the Young Kingdoms – a world of dying empires, warring gods, and doomed heroes – and bring Moorcock’s richly imagined setting to the tabletop using rules mechanics based on our award-winning Dragonbane RPG. The game will feature the same accessible, dynamic, and deadly approach that has made Dragonbane one of our most celebrated titles.

Returning to the Young Kingdoms as setting writer is Richard Watts, whose work on previous Stormbringer RPGs helped define how generations of roleplayers have experienced Moorcock’s world.

“This has been in the works for several months and we’re thrilled to finally share the news,” said Tomas Härenstam, CEO of Free League Publishing. “We are honored to bring Elric and the Young Kingdoms to the tabletop once more.”

Further details – including crowdfunding plans and additional creative team announcements – will be revealed at a later date.


Seen online:

Goodman Games secures official Elric of Melniboné license for 2027 release

The Big Idea: Jill Rosenberg

2026-05-07 06:43 pm
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

While it may seem like fantasy is as far from the real world as possible, author Jill Rosenberg suggests that indulging in fantasies and fiction actually connects people instead of isolating them from reality. Dive in to the Big Idea for her newest release, Now I’m Photogenic and Other Stories I Tell Myself, and see if our desires are really just human nature.

JILL ROSENBERG:

People often think of fantasy and the imagination as ways to escape reality, but I think there’s a more complicated and fraught relationship between the two. What we long for, the ways we wish to escape—this grows out of our real experiences of the world. But the reverse is true as well: our “real” experiences are colored by our fantasies. 

We might, for example, wish to be an Olympic-level athlete, as one of my characters does, but this wish highlights the absence of her athletic talent, which may not have shown up as an absence if she’d never longed to be an elite athlete. That feeling of absence and desire drives her behavior, which changes her reality, and the resulting experience changes her understanding of herself and what she really wants.

Our imagination can’t free us from the world because our imagination is made from the world.  But it can alter the way we see things and what feels possible. The first story in my collection is called “The Logic of Imaginary Friends.” This is where I present this big idea most directly. A single mother is left lonely and longing when her eleven-year-old daughter goes to sleepaway camp for the first time, so she reunites with her imaginary friend from childhood.

It’s great at first, until one imaginary friend is not enough, no matter how she morphs him in her mind to meet her shifting needs and desires. The fantasies are fun, but not satisfying, and she begins to feel that she’s choosing this fantasy life over her life with her daughter, but does she have to choose between the two?

As a child, I used my imagination to revise reality. Every Thanksgiving I’d feel so excited for my cousins to visit. I’d imagine myself gregarious, irresistible, rehearsing all of the interactions I’d have, writing their dialogue and mine. But when they arrived, I could never be that person or get the response from them I wanted.

Later that night, however, I could rewrite the dialogue to be more plausible but equally thrilling, given what actually happened. That was always my favorite part of the holiday, alone in my room, taking what happened and transforming it into the holiday I longed for. But the bigger the gulf between my fantasies and reality, the less I was able to enjoy the fantasies or the reality.

It’s this competing desire that compelled me to write these stories: the desire to be known, seen, recognized and special, to connect with those around us, and the desire to hide what makes us unique, to pretend we’re no different from everyone else.

On the one hand, my characters are often reminding themselves of their freedom. Maybe they really can be anything they want to be, but when they try to do it, out in the world, it’s not so easy. They can’t control reality or other people’s responses the way they can control their fantasies. But the more they shy away and hide from the real world, the more that fear of reality infects their fantasies, or, in the surreal stories, the events of their fantastical lives. As a result, their fantasies and their lives get weirder and worse. 

Of course, my strange characters and the unusual things that happen to my characters all stem from my own strangeness and my unusual thoughts and experiences. In my real life, I do not always feel like showcasing the ways in which I deviate from the norm, but I am happy and proud to put my strange and unusual characters out into the world because I do think that fiction shows us new and different ways of being. 

The role of fiction, even surreal fiction, is to bring us closer to the experience of being a human in the real world. That marriage between—and tension between—dream and reality is what I find most thrilling and ultimately satisfying in both my writing and my life.


Now I’m Photogenic and Other Stories I Tell Myself: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s|Watchung Booksellers

Author socials: Website|Instagram

Read an excerpt of one story from the collection: The Logic of Imaginary Friends

thewayne: (Default)
[personal profile] thewayne
A security researcher did some poking around and discovered a bad thing with the Edge browser. Every browser wants you to trust them with your passwords and credit card data. At least in the case of Edge and passwords, that trust may be unwarranted.

The researcher stored a password and then captured all the memory. And found the password in plaintext. Unencrypted, unhashed. Completely readable. Microsoft dismissed this finding, saying that the computer would have to be compromised by malware for this to be a vulnerability.

Well, guess what. COMPUTERS GET COMPROMISED BY MALWARE ON A REGULAR BASIS. THIS IS A PROBLEM.

The Edge browser is based on Google's Chrome browser. There are many browsers based on Chrome, and apparently they take the very minimal resources required to encrypt or hash said passwords.

No word if this problem exists on Edge browser on other operating systems such as Mac.

Now, here's the really bonus extra-stupid thing. If I'm a user on a computer, and I want to view a password for a web site, I HAVE TO ENTER MY LOGIN PASSWORD TO VIEW IT. It's already been decrypted and stuffed into memory in plaintext, but I have to authenticate myself to view it!

This is quite an amazing level of stupidity. The amount of CPU resources required to decrypt one password for one web site is miniscule. There is zero reason to decrypt all of those passwords and stuff them into ram where any malware can steal them.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/researcher-finds-microsoft-edge-stored-passwords-load-in-plaintext

https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/05/06/2014204/microsoft-edge-stores-passwords-in-plaintext-in-ram
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija
An advance copy of a new book by Lois Lowry, author of The Giver and other classics. It is unfortunately basically the bad version of The Giver. In fact what it mostly reminded me of was [personal profile] telophase's YA dystopia generator, which produces gems like Tweak: Sickness has been banned and the government controls shopping and Whimper: Cats have been banned and the government controls dancing the hustle. In the case of Building 903, books have been banned and the government controls popsicles. Yes, really.

In a future America ruled by a 200 year old dictator, books (ALL books), fiction, art, music, storytelling, playgrounds, live pets (robot pets are OK), free elections, religion, tattoos, matches and other fire-making tools, congregating in groups, iconoclastic clothing, travel, and eating meat or fish are banned. Old people, marriage, and popsicles are controlled by the government. Yes, really.

She leaned over, pushed the button that dispensed a frozen snack, and made a face when she saw it was green; she liked the orange ones better. But she peeled the covering from the green one and licked at it. I bet anything, Tessa thought, I could get Dad to invent a selector button so they wouldn't come out at random; I could choose orange. Or red: the red ones aren't bad. Then, though, the green ones would pile up, and it would be wasteful, I suppose, because no one would ever eat them.

To be fair, I'm just assuming the frozen snacks are popsicles. For all I know she's licking a piece of frozen broccoli.

Tessa's father and twin brother are supergeniuses. Tessa and her mother are just average. I did not care for this. Anyway, Tessa's brother vanishes and the book goes on and on and ON with nothing much happening. I skipped to the end.

Read more... )

Check-In Post - May 7th 2026

2026-05-07 07:54 pm
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What do you wish you could get right first time, every time?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



Birdfeeding

2026-05-07 01:30 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
Today is partly sunny, breezy, and cool.

I fed the birds. I've seen a few sparrows and house finches plus a fox squirrel.

I put out water for the birds.

I set out a few potted plants to get some sun.

More white peonies are blooming, along with deep pink ones under the apricot tree.

EDIT 5/7/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

I've seen a male Baltimore oriole eating the orange I put out. :D 3q3q3q!!!

EDIT 5/7/26 -- I planted the tulip poplar from Douglas-Hart at the north edge of the savanna. This species hosts multiple moths as well as the tiger swallowtail butterfly.

I've seen a male rose-breasted grosbeak, a male and a female cardinal separately, and a gray catbird.

EDIT 5/7/26 -- I did some bushwhacking to clear the mow space between the flowerbeds and the Midwinter Grove.

EDIT 5/7/26 -- I did more bushwhacking and stick pickup along the path around the prairie garden. I dumped a trolley of sticks into the firepit. There is still one sapling-sized branch too big for me to handle alone. Frustrating.

EDIT 5/7/26 -- We moved the big branch from the prairie garden to the ritual meadow.

I did more work around the patio.

I can see rain to the northwest, so I am done for the night.

Further Le Guin thoughts

2026-05-07 06:02 pm
oursin: George Beresford photograph of the young Rebecca West in a large hat, overwritten 'Neither a doormat nor a prostitute' (Neither a doormat nor a prostitute)
[personal profile] oursin

A further trail of thought more or less kicked off by this comment by [personal profile] flemmings on yesterday's post about Ursula as an anthropologist's daughter and the way that inflected her fiction -

- and then I went, hey, wasn't he part of that whole Franz Boas group that I read that book about at the beginning of 2020 (Charles King, The Reinvention of Humanity) and would she not have been aware of Significant Lady Anthropologists and their work (not just her own ma) -

Like, Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict?

(Maybe the forthcoming biography will shine some light there???)

Or was that going on in some entirely different compartment to the requirements of fictional narrative? (thinking of my 1920s gals and the gulf between what they were up to with their affairs and abortions and propagating birth control and what the protags in their novels were permitted to get up to.)

Or was there a whole generational thing going on there, which I sort of touched on in commenting about Mitchison on this post, though I think I could make a larger case about that generation that had had to fight for a lot of rights that were already accepted as given by UKleG's day even if there were still major constraints.

(Seem to recollect that I did not think Julie Phillips in that book on writers and motherhood quite brought out the extent to which she was writing of a very specific generation/time-period. With some exceptions.)

Thursday: The Letter "F"

2026-05-07 12:25 pm
templefugate: Icon of Wanda Maximoff from The Children's Crusade (Wanda)
[personal profile] templefugate posting in [community profile] comment_fic
Hi, everybody! Today's pinch hit is the letter "F", meaning that all prompts should have something to do with the letter "F". Let your freak flag fly and all that alliterative jazz.


As a reminder, we are using a new posting schedule. Sundays are for Lonely Prompts and sharing the fills that you completed during the week, Tuesdays and Thursdays are for new themes and prompts, and Saturdays will remain a Free for All.

Just a few rules:
No more than five prompts in a row.
No more than three prompts in the same fandom.
Use the character's full names and the fandom's full name
No spoilers in prompts for a month after airing, or use the spoiler cut option found here.
If your fill contains spoilers, warn and leave plenty of space, or use the above-mentioned spoiler cut.

Prompts should be formatted as follows: [Use the character's full names and fandom's full name]
Fandom, Character +/ Character, Prompt

Some examples to get the ball rolling...
+ The X-Files, Fox Mulder & Jenn, freedom
+ Any, any, flash in the pan
+ Any, any, fallacies (logical or otherwise)

We are now using AO3 to bookmark filled prompts. If you fill a prompt and post it to AO3 please add it to the Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2025 collection. See further notes on this new option here.

Not feeling any of today’s prompts? You can use LJ’s advanced search options to limit keyword results to only comments in this community.

While the use of LJ's advanced search options is available, bookmarking the links of prompts you like might work better for searching in the future.

If you are viewing this post on our Dreamwidth site, please know that fills posted here will not show up as comments on our LiveJournal site but you are still more than welcome to participate.

If you have a Dreamwidth account and would feel more comfortable participating there, please feel free to do so…and spread the word! [community profile] comment_fic


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