July 22nd, 2025
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
posted by [personal profile] tamaranth at 07:10am on 22/07/2025 under ,
2025/112: Betrothed to the Emperor — Kai Butler
I felt as taut as a bowstring pulled, ready to release the arrow and realizing that I had to build the target I needed to hit. [loc. 1690]

Airón, prince of the Northern Empire, has been raised as an assassin: his twin sister Eonai is to marry the Emperor of the fearsome Imperium, after which Airón will kill his new brother-in-law. He doesn't expect to survive, but the Imperium must be destroyed. Except it all goes horribly wrong when Eonai and Airón are presented to Tallu, 'a viper' reportedly responsible for the deaths of his parents and younger sibling. Because Tallu decides that he will, instead, marry Airón...

Read more... )
Mood:: 'cheerful' cheerful
posted by [syndicated profile] apnic_blog_feed at 04:54am on 22/07/2025

Posted by Dirk Doesburg

RPKI relies on digital signatures to secure Internet routing — but these signatures could be cracked by future quantum computers. RPKI needs to upgrade to quantum-safe signatures before that day comes.
posted by [syndicated profile] apod_feed at 04:19am on 22/07/2025
brithistorian: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] brithistorian at 09:18pm on 21/07/2025 under ,

One of my friends on FB was talking about the experience of having a daughter who's a bookworm (at her birthday, as soon as she opened a present and saw she got books, she wanted to go read). It reminded me of this story from my past:

One of my mom's favorite stories to tell about me was that the Christmas I turned 7, one of my gifts was a stack of books (Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz, Tom Sawyer, Treasure Island, and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea). As soon as I got those, Christmas was over as far as I was concerned - I opened Alice in Wonderland (because it was at the top of the stack) and started reading. In the back yard was a new swingset that my dad, my uncle, and my grandfather had spent all day Christmas Eve putting together. They had to drag me away from my books to go see it. I played for about 10 minutes or so, then went back in and went back to reading.

sovay: (Jeff Hartnett)
Major props to the Somerville Theatre for accommodating the accessibility needs of my still-healing mother so that she could get out of the house tonight for the first time in a month and a half and watch the original 3:10 to Yuma (1957), which she first showed me in high school on rental VHS. It was my introduction to Glenn Ford and my second experience of Van Heflin and remains on the long list of movies I love and have never written about, but I had never seen it on a big screen, either, and its silver drought winter-for-summer looks like nothing else in the Western catalogue. It's full of tensions and strange tenderness, high-angle shots like the sky soaring back, sweat beading like the rain that doesn't fall. It's a film about failures and fisher kings: how could I not love it? My mother had a wonderful time. I am so glad she had a wonderful time. It was her first movie in theaters in five years.
Music:: Lucy Dacus, "Talk"
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
posted by [personal profile] dewline at 09:20pm on 21/07/2025 under
I actually felt halfway okay walking around today, but for the knee and ankle joints.

Calling it an early night here.
Mood:: 'sleepy' sleepy
jazzfish: five different colors of Icehouse pyramids (iCehouse)
posted by [personal profile] jazzfish at 05:08pm on 21/07/2025 under
It's Noel's fault.

Noel came over weekend before last to try out a wargame he'd picked up, and while he was over he remarked on my copy of Ogre Designer's Edition (one Very Large Box, one somewhat more normal-sized box for the expansion, and a bunch of extra unpunched countersheets and neoprene map playmats). "Yeah, I've got the Pocket Edition," he said. (This is a mostly straight reprint of the original 1977 wargame: the counters are on slightly better cardboard and punch-out instead of cut-yourself, but pretty much the same otherwise. Same price, too: $2.95.) "I'd be happy to play the big version sometime, though."

Apparently this was all the incentive I needed. I spent much of the last week going through my Ogre stuff, punching and sorting and bagging, and researching to figure out exactly what it is I have. (Looks like it's just about everything, save a couple of neoprene map playmats that I missed out on. One of which I'd really like to have. Alas.)

Now. Ogre is a wargame which, in its original conception, was a small conventional if futuristic armor force of tanks, artillery, infantry, and oh yeah hovercraft, struggling to hold off a single gigantic cybertank (the eponymous Ogre). For the Designer's Edition, Steve Jackson went all out: huge and very pretty (and very readable) counters for most of the units, and even huger heavy-cardboard models for the various Ogres and structures (buildings, laser towers, etc). This all looks very impressive and honestly adds to the fun. It does take up an awful lot of storage space, though. More importantly: some of the models don't stay together very well.

The obvious solution is to put a drop of glue at each joint. Okay, sure, I'm not doing anything else for the foreseeable, I may as well do that.

But then I got to poking around, and discovered that a number of folks have gone over the edges of their models with Sharpies (or, in one case, acrylic paint). Makes them look a lot classier than the brown cardboard. This is, of course, much easier to do before you put them together. But if I'm taking them apart to glue them anyway...

Long story short, I just got back from a Michaels run wherein I acquired a pack of multicolour Sharpies (standard and wide-tip) and a thing of craft glue. Also some wax paper (I already have toothpicks) so I don't glue them to my nice table.

I blame Noel.

Honestly, my hope is that I will get really going on this and then in the middle of it suddenly get a job, so I'll have to leave it half undone indefinitely. Why yes I am trying to game Murphy's Law. I'll let you know how that works out for me.
yourlibrarian: Crow Silhouette (NAT-Crow Silhouette - yourlibrarian)
posted by [personal profile] yourlibrarian at 06:13pm on 21/07/2025 under , ,


I interrupt my travel series to share some photos from the last months of birds. This barn swallow was caught almost by accident as it headed off, coming towards us in the parking lot.

Read more... )
yhlee: a stylized fox's head and the Roman numeral IX (nine / 9) (hxx ninefox)
Poll #33394 best format for continued hobby mode Ninefox AU/reboot shenanigans
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 10


Best format for hobby-mode Ninefox reboot/AU shenanigans

View Answers

Ninefox MUD
0 (0.0%)

Ninefox text-only browser-based chapter-based adventure (Inkle Studios' Ink)
6 (60.0%)

Ninefox VN
1 (10.0%)

Ninefox comic (this one is happening regardless)
5 (50.0%)

Ninefox animation (Candle Arc is happening regardless because MFA project)
3 (30.0%)

Ninefox reboot/AU serialized novel (prose) [1]
3 (30.0%)

None of these! Something else I will explain in comments.
0 (0.0%)



In terms of sustainable effort:

MUD: medium-high bar if using existing codebase.

Ink serialized web-based text adventure: medium-low bar. Probably chapter by chapter releases.

ETA #1: Wait a second! You can compile Inform 7 to release for playing on the web! Either this didn't exist ca. 2007 or I suck at reading documentation. That's my choice, then. I enjoy writing parser IF (interactive fiction / text adventures) more than choice-based formats. Yay!

VN: high bar.

comic: I'm doing this for myself so it really doesn't matter what anyone thinks, but maybe people prefer this.

2D animated short (we're talking 5-10 minutes): SLOWEST. VERY SLOW. 2D hand-drawn animation is just slow. But I've proposed this for my final major project starting in 2028, so I'm doing this no matter what anyone else thinks.

[1] serialized reboot/AU novel (prose): This would require negotiating with my publisher, which has an option on further prose works. I control the relevant rights for other formats.

Discussion with Solaris suggested they would be happy to talk about a different Machineries trilogy with a new plot and a new set of characters but the two ideas I have aren't trilogy-length and I don't have a sense that any reader wants this! It's theoretically possible Solaris might let me play with a newsletter (etc) serialization if it's something they wouldn't have an interest in offering for and they are assuming zero risk since I doubt anything I do here would tank sales of the existing books. However, there are negotiation complications here that may make this Not Possible rights-wise so I'm hoping no one wants this and I can stop thinking about it with a clear conscience.

I'm sitting on something like 100,000+ words of disorganized prose bits (not a coherent single narrative, it's a bunch of different POVs) and I want to write about that crashhawk unit and Gödel's incompleteness theorems in hexarchate numerology. I have an outline.

But also. For health and family reasons, I'm not signing a book contract in the near future; any prose-format writing is going to be on spec or similar if at all, and if the answer is that it's just noodling that stays on my hard drive, it is what it is. Meanwhile, I have orchestration homework to do, ta!
sovay: (Silver: against blue)
[personal profile] sabotabby did me as a mermaid!

Music:: The Changelings, "Oceana (The Mermaid's Song)"
tellshannon815: (claire zomer)
posted by [personal profile] tellshannon815 at 09:33pm on 21/07/2025
If you’ve written fics for more than one year on AO3, go to your statistics page. Click on the different years at the top to see the categories of statistics for each year.

1. Which year did you write the most words? Do you know why? e.g. you had more time; you were caught up in an exciting new fandom or pairing; you got a rush of ideas etc.
Apparently 2023. That was the year I got into three of my top five fandoms of all time (Dark, From and School Spirits - there was also a new season of Yellowjackets, another of the top five, so I think those would have given me inspiration). Having said that, this was the year I started the epic Dark series which I'm only now coming close to finishing, and AO3 has carried that word count over to 2025 because the most recent chapter of that was posted this year.


2. Which year did you write the least words? Why was this? e.g. lack of time, too busy, no inspiration etc.
Technically it's telling me 2012, but I don't know if I should count that because I only joined AO3 that October so would have the least words for that reason. Out of the full years, it appears to be 2020, with 2021 following. That time period is pretty self explanatory, with a combination of lots of my shows being on ice for the pandemic and therefore not providing as much inspiration, but also I was not in a good headspace during that time due to the lockdowns and not seeing any family for over a year (for anyone who doesn't know this, my extended family is rather scattered across the UK)

3. Which years did you get most hits, kudos, bookmarks and fic subscriptions? Do you know why? (e.g. popular fandoms, lots of words written.) Are there years where you have the same amount of bookmarks and subscriptions?
2015 for hits, 2017 for subscriptions and that has just reminded me of another series I need to finish. Will someone please stop me from starting series? 2023 for bookmarks (blame that one on School Spirits.) 2015 just beats 2023 for kudos.

4. Which years did you get least hits, kudos, bookmarks and fic subscriptions? Do you know why? (e.g. niche fandoms, not many fics written.) Do you have any other conclusions?
2019, looks like quite a few niche fandoms that year.
poliphilo: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] poliphilo at 08:12pm on 21/07/2025
 I was talking to a woman who has just moved to Eastbourne and may start attending the Meeting House. She's from Liverpool. The only people I know in Liverpool are Odi- who is from Cameroon- and her kids. "Funny you should mention your daughter is Cameroonian" she said, "Because the two ladies I'll be sharing a house with are Cameroonian too...."

Low level synchronicity, but synchronicity nonetheless.....
ffutures: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] ffutures at 07:45pm on 21/07/2025 under
At some point in the last few years I printed out someone's parody of the BIG space sector hex map for an SFRPG, split up into various regions. For example, it has "Catgirl Empire" near the top middle, "Sufficiently Advanced Aliens Who Give Zero Fucks" near bottom right, "Space Vikings" next to "Psychic Space Communists" at bottom middle, and "Megacorps" above "Retro Space Feudalism" on the left. A big starfish-shaped central region is "Diverse Alliance of Nice Guys". Unfortunately I have a printout on A4 paper but it's a bit tatty, I don't know where it comes from, and I think I'd like to see if there's a BIG version of it I can print out on a couple of sheets of A3 the next time I rev up my old inkjet printer.

Does this ring any bells with anyone?
ffutures: (Default)
This is a repeat of a 2023 offer - Advanced Adventures Megabundle featuring 43 Old School dungeon crawls
from Expeditious Retreat Press.

 https://bundleofholding.com/presents/2025AAMega



Last time I said "As I seem to be saying a lot lately, this is not my preferred style of play, but it's probably worth a look if you like dungeon-bashing adventures."  Don't see any reason to change that.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
rolanni: (Nicky)
posted by [personal profile] rolanni at 01:53pm on 21/07/2025 under ,

DISCLAIMER:  This is not an easy read.  If you don't wish to read about the end-of-life situation of elderly coon cats, and their equally elderly caretaker, please pass on.  I'll look forward to checking in with you again tomorrow.

Background: My first cat was Archie McGee, who came to me as an orange-and-white kitten some time Pre-Steve -- say, the early 1970s. Some years later, when Archie was grown, I met Steve Miller. He had a gray and white cat of Extremely Regal Bearing named Arwen. The combined household eventually acquired a third cat, a brown tabby barn cat named Brandee. Steve and I kept cats together for 47 years. We have nursed sick cats, and assisted failing cats through their last days. And when we were let to know that it was Time, we let them go, with grace and love.

Trooper is 15 years old; 16 in December. He'd been fine until last summer when he began to lose weight. He was still sharp and took an active paw in raising his grandson. He took it ... badly when Sprite left us (as did we all), and that was when he began to decline. He's been steadily losing weight, and getting more and more demanding and more and more forgetful.

The problem here is not that his appetite is not tempted, nor that he is "sick" (all his blood work comes back perfect), but that he forgets food while he's eating it. He will, in fact, no longer eat crunchy food, though he will eat a few hand-fed crunchy treats, and (sometimes) freeze-dried chicken treats. He will not eat chicken baby food, the first cat I've ever had that refused this delicacy. He's ... disinterested in tuna water, and mostly ignores tuna. He will eat Delectables gravy, which is not food, necessarily, but he will lap it up -- until he forgets what he's doing, and then I need to show him the bowl again, push his nose down, and he remembers and finishes. He will eat the so-called "stews," by which I mean, he will lick up the gravy and ignore the inclusions.

This morning, after having smacked me over and over again to get up and feed him, he looked at his bowl, uncomprehendingly. What was this strange thing? I stirred the gravy and offered again -- still no recognition. I took the food up. He started yelling at me to feed him. When I went on making my breakfast, he curled up in his box on the desk. Later, I offered the gravy again. Again -- no idea what this is, Mom. I offered freeze-dried chicken and he ate a chunk. Then he figured out the gravy.

According to the vet, Trooper's problem is dementia. While there are apparently therapies for dogs that somewhat mitigate their symptoms, or at least the attendant anxiety (because Trooper knows there's Something Wrong), there are none for cats. I don't know about CBD, but I feel that his vet would have mentioned it, if she thought it would help. She's not a newbie, either.
I am going on at length with this because while these things have been reported in bits and bobs, as I mention what I do during my day, I have not laid the whole thing out in one place and some folks are coming in late, having not heard the whole story.

I am not asking for advice. I am taking expert advice, and I'm feet on the floor here, in a very fluid situation.

I do thank everyone for your support and concern.

Here's a picture of Trooper this morning:


oursin: My photograph of Praire Buoy sculpture, Meadowbrook Park, Urbana, overwritten with Urgent, Phallic Look (urgent phallic)

Be respected literary novelists, that is?

Here be blokes going wah wah wah about the plight of the male novelist, lo, the voice of the Mybug B heard in the land, no?

Is this the death of the male novelist? The lonely life of a man writing fiction in 2025:

“Being a middle-aged white guy and working in this space today feels, to me, like what it must have felt to have been a poet at the end of the 20th century,” Niven tells me, laughing. “It’s a very niche, very recherché area, with a tiny audience. Men just don’t read fiction in anything like the same quantities they used to, and fewer of us, it seems, are writing it.”

You know, women are notably broader in their reading parameters? I'm not convinced by this argument:
He tells me a story about a friend – “with a big public profile” – who published his first novel a couple of years ago. “It was very good, but it was non-genre, and he’s a middle-aged white guy, so I did my best to manage his expectations.” The novel was turned down by every major publisher before eventually being picked up by a tiny independent. The book, once published, came and went, as so many do. “If it had been written by a woman, it would have sold six, seven times as many as it eventually did. But this is where we are today.”

Or maybe it just Wasn't All That?

And apparently at least one of the lairy 'scabrous, satirical, and vigorously male' novelists of the 90s who cannot catch a break these days:

["W]rites crime novels now. The last refuge of the scoundrel is the crime novel. And I get it! There’s a definable audience for crime fiction, but if you’re not writing genre fiction, then it’s difficult out there.”

Because the damselly laydeez never, ever dabble in the waters of crime or genre fiction....

Oh, wait.

I do wonder WHY they want to write SRS LTRY FIKSHUN??? is it all about the Kultural Kred? (Am currently reading Norma Clarke on Goldsmith and Grub Street, and how it was Not Gentlemanly to be a hack who wrote for filthy lucre, and the delicate balancing acts Georgian literary figures had to engage in.) And why are they all about being warty boys when they do so rather than being, oh, Henry James or Scott Fitzgerald or noted for their exquisite prose style? is it also about Macho Cred?

My own literary tastes among the Blokes of the Pen whose works you will tear from my cold dead hands have been discursed of here and they range widely. I can't help imagining several of them waxing satyrik about this lot.

posted by [syndicated profile] charlie_stross_diary_feed at 05:28pm on 21/07/2025

Good news/no news:

The latest endoscopy procedure went smoothly. There are signs of irritation in my fundus (part of the stomach lining) but no obvious ulceration or signs of cancer. Biopsy samples taken, I'm awaiting the results. (They're testing for celiac, as well as cytology.)

I'm also on the priority waiting list for cataract surgery at the main eye hospital, with an option to be called up at short notice if someone ahead of me on the list cancels.

This is good stuff; what's less good is that I'm still feeling a bit crap and have blurry double vision in both eyes. So writing is going very slowly right now. This isn't helped by me having just checked the page proofs for The Regicide Report, which will be on the way to production by the end of the month.

(There's a long lead time with this title because it has to be published simultaneously in the USA and UK, which means allowing time in the pipeline for Orbit in the UK to take the typeset files and reprocess them for their own size of paper and binding, and on the opposite side, for Tor.com to print and distribute physical hardcovers—which, in the USA, means weeks in shipping containers slowly heading for warehouses in other states: it's a big place.)

Both the new space operas in progress are currently at around 80% complete but going very slowly (this is not quite a euphemism for "stalled") because: see eyeballs above. This is also the proximate cause of the slow/infrequent blogging. My ability to read or focus on a screen is really impaired right now: it's not that I can't do it, it's just really tiring so I'm doing far less of it. On the other hand, I expect that once my eyes are fixed my productivity will get a huge rebound boost. Last time I was unable to write or read for a couple of months (in 2013 or thereabouts: I had Bell's Palsy and my most working eye kept watering because the eyelid didn't work properly) I ended up squirting the first draft of novel out in eighteen days after it cleared up. (That was The Annihilation Score. You're welcome.)

Final news: I'm not doing many SF convention appearances these days because COVID (and Trump), but I am able to announce that I'm going to be one of the guests of honour at LunCon '25, the Swedish national SF convention, at the city hall of Lund, very close to Malmö, from October 1th to 12th. (And hopefully I'll be going to a couple of other conventions in the following months!)

conuly: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] conuly at 12:34pm on 22/07/2025
With a generous leave at one commute schedule and 2 hours between them


But then it turned out the first one had inexplicably been scheduled in GMT so I didn’t eat and barely made it out the door. And I’ll have to jog to get from one to the other, too!
July 21st, 2025
osprey_archer: (yuletide)
I had the vague idea that A Time to Keep: The Tasha Tudor Book of Holidays was a book of holiday celebration suggestions, and I suppose you could use it that way, but what it is really is a picture book of memories of Tasha Tudor’s holidays with her children. (Like the earlier Kate Greenaway, Tudor cheerfully clothes her children in the garb of an earlier and more picturesque era.)

She recalls dancing round the bonfire for the New Year; sugaring off in March; an Easter egg tree the decorated eggs of “goose, duck, chicken, bantam, and pigeon,” with tiny canary eggs at the very tip top. (What I would give for a sight of this tree in real life!) May baskets and Maypoles in May, watching the fireworks in the nearby village from the top of the hill on the Fourth, and her daughter’s birthday in August, with a stunning two-page spread showing the cake all glowing with candles as it floats down the stream.

Even if I had a stream, I don’t believe I would ever come up with the idea of floating a cake down it, or have the guts to do it. What if the cake capsized! But this is the difference between me and Tasha Tudor: Tudor doesn’t imagine what could go wrong, but how ethereally beautiful it would be if the cake floats down the stream all right.

A Halloween party for Halloween, with bobbing for apples and “pumpkin moonshines,” as Tudor calls jack-o-lanterns; and then Christmas, Christmas, Christmas, starting with the Advent Calendar and St. Nicholas Day (with St. Nicholas cake, whose existence I have hitherto not suspected), and a walk through the woods on Christmas eve to see the Christ child in a full size creche. And then back to the house for the Christmas tree, all glimmering with candles…

All of this is quite a lot of work, of course. A full size creche does not construct itself, and a Christmas tree with candles has to be fresh cut from the woods and watched like a hawk. But so much of the joy of holidays is in the work, if you feel the work not as a task that needs to be disposed of but a part of the celebration.

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