nanila: me (Default)
Mad Scientess ([personal profile] nanila) wrote in [community profile] awesomeers2025-07-31 09:02 am
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Just One Thing (31 July 2025)

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)
tamaranth ([personal profile] tamaranth) wrote2025-07-31 08:59 am
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2025/118: Stone and Sky — Ben Aaronovitch

2025/118: Stone and Sky — Ben Aaronovitch
I’d like to point out that a) none of this was my fault and b) ultimately the impact on overall North Sea oil production was pretty minimal. I’m a dad now, so I don’t go looking for trouble the way I used to. [loc. 54]

Latest in the Rivers of London series, purchased on whim when I couldn't decide what to read. I've enjoyed the series as a whole, but I'm finding recent works less engaging. This short novel (300 pages in print) feels like two novellas braided together, and could have done with a third.

Read more... )
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
tamaranth ([personal profile] tamaranth) wrote2025-07-31 08:59 am
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2025/117: The Travelling Cat Chronicles — Hiro Arikawa (translated by Phillip Gabriel)

2025/117: The Travelling Cat Chronicles — Hiro Arikawa (translated by Phillip Gabriel)
I am Satoru’s one and only cat. And Satoru is my one and only pal. And a proud cat like me wasn’t about to abandon his pal. If living as a stray was what it took to be Satoru’s cat to the very end, then bring it on. [loc. 2825]

Nana (not his choice of name) is a streetwise stray cat who, after being hit by a car, is taken in and cared for by a man named Satoru. They live together happily for five years, but then Satoru takes Nana on a series of road trips to visit old friends who he hopes will give Nana a home: 'Something came up, and we can’t live together any more'.Read more... )

azurelunatic: (Greater) Tits Against the RTE (the bird kind of tit). (put a bird on it)
Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 ([personal profile] azurelunatic) wrote2025-07-30 10:24 pm

Starlinography?

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/storage/yes-you-can-store-data-on-a-bird-enthusiast-converts-png-to-bird-shaped-waveform-teaches-young-starling-to-recall-file-at-up-to-2mb-s

Taking this proof-of-concept to a ridiculous destination, imagine taking a very simple secret message, converting it to sound, and tasking a starling to smuggle it out somewhere. (This seems very impractical compared to an amateurishly knitted scarf with a code in the seemingly random purl stitches.)
mific: John sheppard looking sad or worried against stone wall, half out of frame (Shep - sad)
mific ([personal profile] mific) wrote in [community profile] stargateficrec2025-07-31 05:04 pm

Fair (by Minnow) (Mature)

Shows: SGA
Rec Category: Alternate Universe
Characters: Rodney McKay/John Sheppard, Ronon Dex, Teyla Emmagan, Elizabeth Weir, John's mother, Rodney's mother
Categories: M/M
Words: ~18,500
Warnings: No AO3-type warnings apply
Author on DW: [personal profile] minnow 
Author's Website: [personal profile] minnow 
Link: Fair on DW
Why This Must Be Read: This is a lovely AU in which John's a fairy and he and Rodney meet as children, and then, many years later, as in canon. Meanwhile, there are shenanigans with an Ancient memory device, and of course there's angst and drama once John's heritage is revealed, and his mother gets involved. The story's beautifully written and a cracking good read, with plenty of feels and a satisfying ending. It's only available on DW so may not be as well known as stories on AO3. Very much recommended.

snippet of fic )
bluapapilio: sugishita, suou, sakura and nirei from wind breaker (winbre ot4)
蝶になって ([personal profile] bluapapilio) wrote in [community profile] fandom_icons2025-07-30 09:42 pm
Entry tags:

Wind Breaker

  

🎐 x39 icons here!
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
Redbird ([personal profile] redbird) wrote2025-07-30 10:07 pm

Macintosh (computer)

I got Cattitude to disconnect my old Windows PC from the peripherals, move it out of the way, and put the MacBook in its place instead.

Moving over is being more annoying than I expected. Some of that is that I don't remember offhand where I left some files. But I also spent a bunch of time wrestling with the Mail app, which decided for no apparent reason that the server was offline. Restarting the machine didn't help, and then the problem went away on its own.

Also, the displays for just about everything have too little contrast, and the text is too small. I thought I'd found a way to change that for everything, but apparently not, so I've only done a few.

I'm probably done for tonight. I have an appointment to get my teeth cleaned early tomorrow afternoon, and I may not work on this further until I get home afterwards.
hannah: (Martini - fooish_icons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2025-07-30 08:22 pm

With a big slice of lemon.

Earlier today I said the most exciting thing that's happened to me at all recently was meeting Tom Cruise at the red carpet, and that's still true. The most luxurious thing that's happened to me at all recently was having lunch today at Le Bernardin.

Yes. That one. The one with three stars.

One of my clients worked in finance back in the late twentieth century and invested carefully over the next few decades, so while she doesn't have the money to eat there anywhere close to frequently, she can afford to do so every couple of years and leave a big tip without worrying about it. She recently had major surgery and decided to celebrate being able to eat solid food again with lunch there. Herself, myself, and the mutual friend who put us in touch.

The website told me business casual, so I wore a nice dress. Not one of my fanciest dresses, but a very nice dress that's got a lot of good memories woven into the fabric. I made sure to clear my calendar and hold my calls - on Monday, I said I wouldn't be available to work today without any elaboration - and arrive with a smile and an empty stomach. I also arrived with good timing, walking up to the door just as my client got out of her cab. I told the woman at the coat check, "I'm with her," and felt a thrill at being able to say it, and another thrill at walking into a space that's designed for people to have a good time. It was like the best Frank Lloyd Wright house done to larger scale, with carpet to catch the noise and polished wooden ceilings to keep the air fresh. Window shades kept the dining room cool, butter came in itty-bitty tureens, cutlery and napkins were swapped out at every course, waitstaff never spoke to each other while serving patrons and instead saved all verbal communication for when they were out of hearing range. Wine was carried on trays instead of by hand, the women's bathroom had tampons and pads in the stalls, four kinds of breads were offered from a basket that got regularly replenished. I asked for one of everything.

There was a three-piece amuse-bouche at the start and a three-piece Petit Fours at the end, all brightly flavored, arranged to provide a nuanced and delightful texture experience - broth with a piece of sashimi topped with a basil leaf, a tiny salmon pie topped with roe, a cod croquette topped with just enough spicy sauce to keep things exciting; a passion fruit macaron, a tiny berry cake, a chocolate-pear truffle.

I thought about starting with a cocktail but went with a spiced thyme lemonade to keep my mind and tongue sharp. First course was cod, second course was hiramasa. Both came with a sauce poured at the table. Both were made of simple ingredients at the apex of quality served freshly cooked and still warm from the kitchen, and I ate as neatly as I could to make sure I didn't miss anything. The real amazement, like with the start and the end selections, was just as much the flavors as the textures. It didn't just taste great. It was fun to eat everything. There was always something going on, whether it was how deep the sauce went or the way the vegetables crunched. When you got it all happening, you had to stop to take it all in. But there wasn't a rush. We were there over three hours and nobody so much as nudged us.

After lunch was an espresso shot and a small pot of tea that smelled like a jasmine black, which tasted even better than it smelled. Dessert was a selection of four sorbets. They were all top-line, with three of the four being flavors you could find elsewhere, though probably not quite as masterfully made: mango, strawberry, blueberry. The fourth flavor was something I've never seen anyone do anywhere else, and that all three of us agreed was the standout item in the meal, more than any of the other courses, more than anything else. Thai basil. Sweet, spicy, summery, fresh. Lawn green, crayon green. It sparked my tongue up. I loved the cod and I had a great time with the hiramasa and the bread was excellent and it was all wonderful, and that almost incidental sorbet had us all awestruck.

The mutual friend left for an errand. The client and I took a taxi uptown, because there wasn't any other way to end the meal. One last moment of luxury for a meal I'll be thinking about for a very long time.
QC RSS ([syndicated profile] questionable_content_feed) wrote2025-07-30 08:55 pm
cassiope25: Typical Rodney meme, wrong-wrong-wrong (Rodney meme 1)
cassiope25 ([personal profile] cassiope25) wrote in [community profile] stargateficrec2025-07-30 11:51 pm

Crossing lines by WonkyElk (T)

Show: SGA

Rec Category: Rodney McKay
Characters: Rodney McKay, Laura Cadman
Pairings: Rodney & Laura
Categories: gen, emotional hurt/comfort, angst, discussion of consent issues, episode related, post-episode: s02e04 Duet
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Words: 2,884
Author's Journal: [personal profile] wonkyelk
Author's Website: WonkyElk on AO3
Link: Crossing Line

Author’s summary: Rodney and Laura talk about the events in Duet. (AN: An attempt to get a little resolution for a few things in Duet.)

Why This Must Be Read: The awesome Wonkyelk did an amazing job with this aftermath fic, written in alternating POVs and creating a long-overdue moment between Rodney and Cadman that addresses the unique and emotionally painful experience they both went through in Duet.
She combines lighthearted and somewhat funny glimpses with deeply emotional and meaningful ones, allowing both Rodney and Cadman to express themselves with honesty, thoughtfulness, and sensitivity. It shows that there’s not just right or wrong, but understandable reasons, and offers thoughts that bring balance and a first step toward healing for both of them.
This fic gives you what should have been in canon, and it stays with you in the best way.

snippet of fic )
wildeabandon: picture of me (Default)
Sebastian ([personal profile] wildeabandon) wrote2025-07-30 09:01 pm

Oop North

I've been Oop North for the last few days doing many things, most delightful, a couple less so. I have:

  • Seen Everybody's Talking About Jamie, including [personal profile] leonato being unreasonably hot as drag queen Laika Virgin
  • Been to the wedding of an old friend WINODW, and caught up with various Cambridge and ex-Cambridge folk
  • Travelled back from Keighley to York by bus, because the trains into and out of Leeds were completely fucked (one of the less delightful bits)
  • Had a lovely quiet Sunday with M, mostly reading whilst he pottered and packed to go away this week, interspersed with eating simple but tasty food, low key chatting, playing board games, and so on
  • Visited the mother of an ex-boyfriend who died last year, to share some of my memories of him (also not exactly a fun afternoon, but I think she found it helpful, so I'm glad I did it)
  • Stayed with my parents for another quiet day of low key and relaxing conversation
  • Discussed John 9 with Bible Club. We still haven't managed to find a theodicy that completely solves the problem of evil, but I'm sure if we keep coming back to it then we'll get there eventually.
  • Had someone shove a needle followed by a rather thick metal ring through my genitals three times in quick succession. (And yes, that definitely counts amongst the delightful parts of the trip. Getting my tongue done a few months ago has firmly reawakened the bug, and I may be in 'Pierce All The Things' (whilst being sensible about not getting more than three at once and giving my body time to heal between each set cos I'm a grown up now) mode for some time
  • Taken advantage of being in Manchester to visit [personal profile] cosmolinguist, [personal profile] angelofthenorth, [personal profile] diffrentcolours, and [personal profile] mother_bones


Now on the train home, which is of course running late, and looking forward to the sleep of someone who has been having altogether too much fun...
Whatever ([syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed) wrote2025-07-30 08:11 pm

View From a Hotel Window, 7/30/25: Indianapolis

Posted by John Scalzi

And boy, if the state capitol wrapped in scaffolding isn’t a metaphor for something, I don’t know what is.

Anyway, hello, here I am in Indianapolis for GenCon, where I am a Guest of Honor for the convention’s writers symposium. For the next several days I will be on panels, dispensing what passes as my wisdom on the subject of writing and publishing. Oh boy! If you’re here, come say hello. If you’re not here, maybe wait to say hello until I am in your vicinity.

— JS

wychwood: Rodney has lists of the ways you are wrong (SGA - Rodney list of wrong)
wychwood ([personal profile] wychwood) wrote2025-07-30 06:56 pm

gaming update

Just for [personal profile] isis!

I spent most of my week off playing Mass Effect: Andromeda obsessively, and am now about two-thirds through, according to the save game screen. Detailed thoughts - with spoilers )

Anyway, I think from here I am heading fairly rapidly towards the end game.

Other things I have played since my last gaming post:

  • A Normal Lost Phone and Another Lost Phone: Laura's Story - really nice tiny games, no more than an hour each, where you "find a lost phone" and have to look through it to find out whose phone it is and how it was lost. I got the first one in a Pride sale, and they're both fairly Issue-y, but felt well done. No real replayability, but well worth the couple of quid each they cost - I would buy more in this series.

  • Got a bit addicted to Terraforming Mars for a while and played quite a few games. I'd played this as a board game with S and her husband a few years back, but we ended up getting confused about some of the rules and failing to score things correctly - that sort of game is just so much easier as a computer game where it keeps track of all your special abilities and so on for you! Also, the music is gorgeous but sadly I can't find anywhere I can buy it.

  • I played the start of Paper Trail, looking for something a bit like Carto; it's not, really, but there's a somewhat similar mechanic where you origami fold the screen in order to reach the other side of a broken bridge, etc; I quite enjoyed it, and should go back to it.

  • Venba is a game in which you cook a series of South Indian recipes as an excuse to explore the immigrant experience (specifically as an Indian in Canada in the 1980s and 1990s). It's really charming, and I liked the whole family; the "puzzles" are really mostly an excuse, but it was quite fun anyway (...well, maybe except for the idli steamer when I had to do it a third time while trying to get the achievement for making everything correctly...).

  • I'd heard lots of good things about Chants of Sennaar, and picked up the demo, which was delightful; you're a mysterious hooded figure exploring a city? palace? and interacting with other mysterious figures, who talk to you in symbols which you can slowly work out the meanings of; once you do, you can hover over the speech bubbles and get partial and full translations.

    I loved the demo, and bought the full game a couple of weeks later in a sale, but have run into a wall of frustration ) I liked this enough that I do want to keep playing it, but I'm not sure I'm smart enough...

  • While I was on the watery games kick from last time, I also played a few hours of In Other Waters, where you are a scientist exploring an alien planet where another person had previously disappeared, navigating the underwater world and learning about the flora and fauna while trying to find her. Again, this was satisfying to play, but I got a bit stuck about an hour and a half in, and can't work out what to do next - and it's frustrating to backtrack, because you can't jump around or zoom out and see the whole map, you're stuck moving from visible point to visible point in your current map section.

  • Briefly went back to Submachine and did another couple of levels. Also played some Hidden Folks, which is a Where's Wally type of thing only monochrome and with some of the little figures animated, again using hint guides to find the last few items in most of the scenes! There are levels of varying difficulty, but mostly it's either "tiny level, dead easy" or "massive level, super hard", without much middle ground.

  • And I just started Monument Valley III, which was released about a week ago! I loved the first two games, which are very gentle meditative puzzles where you manipulate buildings in a sort of Escher-esque fashion so that your little person can get from one point to another, rotating a walkway so that your path is suddenly linked to the arch overhead etc. I'm playing it very slowly, no more than one level at a time, and having a good time so far.

  • I also just picked up Dorfromantik, which I'd heard a lot of good things about; again it's quite mellow. So far it seems a bit like a sort of single-player Carcassonne, you put hexagonal territory tiles together to build villages and forests and rivers and railways and fields, and the tiles come with point-bearing challenges to do things like connect village tiles together until you have 25 houses in a clump, or 465 trees, or whatever, plus there's points for having a hex where all six sides match their neighbours, and so on. I expect there's fiendish depths of strategy that I will never actually explore, but at the moment it's about 20 minutes for a game and I'm quite enjoying it; I can see myself picking this up every so often to play for a bit.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-07-30 04:00 pm

Hypothetically speaking

If someone asked for a list of issues with the Reactor site, what would be your top five? Not counting search. Assume search will be mentioned.
yourlibrarian: FemaleHeroes-liviapenn (OTH-FemaleHeroes-liviapenn)
yourlibrarian ([personal profile] yourlibrarian) wrote2025-07-30 02:07 pm

Breaking the Mold

1) When person after person said they watched Penguin even when it was uncomfortable to keep going with it, it sounded rather familiar. I saw it with The Wire and especially with S2 of Andor. These were stories exploring the failures of systems, their purposes sabotaged by failing to account for personal agendas and human nature.

To me, Penguin and Andor share other similarities of the "it's so well written I had to see more" variety. Both are shows set within a franchise that do not feature the main features of that franchise, and which deal with the ruthlessness of societies in recognizable and everyday ways. Read more... )

2) Finished watching Girls on the Bus. It was apparently meant to go on for another season though I think it ended in a good enough place. Shame though as it really came together as a story of four different women in the same professional arena and the political angles are very familiar. Girls on the Bus is about female political reporters following a presidential campaign and has a nice diversity of characters. It's also interesting to pick up details from actual candidate reporting. Read more... )

3) In movies, I watched Fahrenheit 451 because I never read the book. Had Michael B. Jordan not starred I don't know as I could have gotten through half of it. Depressingly topical yet also doesn't make a lot of sense, since they apparently tried to update it to account for current events. Read more... )

Poll #33445 Kudos Footer-532
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 2

Want to leave a Kudos?

View Answers

Kudos!
2 (100.0%)



james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-07-30 03:16 pm
Entry tags:

Bundle of Holding: BattleTech Shrapnel 2



11 digital issues of The Official BattleTech Magazine from Catalyst Game Labs, Shrapnel.

Bundle of Holding: BattleTech Shrapnel 2
ffutures: (Default)
ffutures ([personal profile] ffutures) wrote2025-07-30 08:01 pm
Entry tags:

Another SF RPG bundle - BattleTech Shrapnel 2

This is an offer of issues 11-20 of Shrapnel, the official BattleTech magazine from Catalyst Game Labs, plus an anthology of issues 1-4.

https://bundleofholding.com/presents/Shrapnel2



This isn't something I particularly want since I don't actually play the game, but it's cheap compared to individual issues and contains a lot of material you won't find elsewhere, including fiction. If you play BattleTech it's definitely worth taking a look.
rachelmanija: (Default)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2025-07-30 11:50 am

(no subject)

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 94


Which of these books that I've recently read would you most like me to review?

View Answers

Red Rising, by Pierce Brown. SF dystopia much beloved by many dudes.
14 (14.9%)

The Daughter's War & Blacktongue Thief, by Christopher Buehlman. Dark fantasy featuring WAR CORVIDS.
27 (28.7%)

The Bog Wife, by Kay Chronister. Very hard to categorize novel about a family whose oldest son can call a wife from the bog. Maybe.
29 (30.9%)

Katabasis, by R. F. Kuang. A descent into Hell by a pair of magic students.
42 (44.7%)

The Bewitching, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. Three timelines, all involving witches.
19 (20.2%)

Mexican Gothic, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. Exactly what it sounds like.
22 (23.4%)

Lone Women, by Victor LaValle. It's so much harder to write reviews of books I love.
34 (36.2%)

Troubled Waters, by Sharon Shinn. Small-scale fantasy with really original magic system; loved this.
44 (46.8%)

Hominids, by Robert Sawyer. Alternate world where Neanderthals reign meets ours.
21 (22.3%)

Under One Banner, by Graydon Saunders. Yes I will get to this, but it'll be a re-read in chunks.
9 (9.6%)

A round-up of multiple books (not the ones in this poll) with just a couple sentences each
16 (17.0%)



Have you read any of these? What did you think?
oursin: Photograph of small impressionistic metal figurine seated reading a book (Reader)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-07-30 07:12 pm

Wednesday has achieved renewed British Library Reader's Pass

What I read

Kris Ripper, Runaway Road Trip: A Definitely-Not-Romantic Adventure (2019) - a certain predictability that goes with the genre, really but kept up a reasonable momentum.

Annick Trent, By Marsh and by Moor (Marsh and Moor, #1) (2025): felt a bit so-so about this, not perhaps as taken by it as others of hers I've read.

Miranda July, All Fours (2024) - this was a Kobo deal so I gave it a try and eventually gave up. Is this maybe a generational thing? Hear it is quite A Thing, but really. (Was having pervasive flashes of my 'is it time to do some Doris Lessing re-reading?')

Also marked The Kellerby Code as DNF.

John Wyndham, The Midwich Cuckoos (1957), which was a Kobo deal and which I had not read for something like 50 years - had forgotten how talky it is. Some points for having Village Lesbian Couple, but these were fairly frequent in crime novels of the time, weren't they?

LM Chilton, Everyone in the Group Chat Dies (2025). I found this did the suspense thing pretty well once it got going but I had some cavils over the tone and the general idea of 'hilarious serial-killer thriller involving true crime social media mavens'. I am not sure this is quite the same thing as Universal Horror movies cycling round to 'Abbott and Costello meet [Monster]' as franchise grows tired.

On the go

Back to Lanny Budd - have now started Presidential Agent (1944).

Up next

That's likely to keep me going for a while, but I've got my eye on Jessica Stanley, Consider Yourself Kissed, of which I have heard good report.

rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2025-07-30 11:25 am

The Husbands, by Holly Gramazio



This book has a hilarious premise: a single woman's attic suddenly starts producing husbands! A husband comes down from the attic of Lauren's London flat, and she's instantly in an alternate reality in which she married that guy. The decor of her flat shifts, sometimes her own body or job shifts depending on whether she now works out regularly or some such, and sometimes there's wider ripple effects. Lauren is always aware of the changes, but no one else is. If the husband goes back into the attic, he vanishes and a new husband comes down.

I adore this premise, and the book absolutely commits to it. It is 100% about husbands coming down from the attic. Unfortunately, I didn't really like the way it explored the premise. It's largely a metaphor for dating in a time when you can swipe on an internet profile and instantly get rid of a possible match, so Lauren cycles through hundreds of husbands, often rejecting them at a glance, and we only ever get to know a very small number of them. Of the ones we do get to know, they're mostly fairly one-note - handsome and nice and American, handsome and nice but chews with his mouth open, handsome and nice but boring, or mean and hard to get rid of. The falling Ken dolls cover is apt in more ways than one. Lauren is also pretty one-note - shallow and frantic.

I also had an issue with the pacing. There's so much repetition of the same actions. A husband comes down, Lauren examines her text messages and photos for evidence of their history together, Lauren calls her friends to see what they know about him. A husband comes down, Lauren takes one look at him and sends him back. Some of this is funny but it gets old. The book felt at least 50 pages longer than it needed to be.

I would have liked the book a lot more if there had been way fewer husbands, and more time spent with each one. I never really got a sense of what Lauren wanted in a man, apart from some surface-level characteristics, or what she wanted in life. Her lives were also generally not that different, which didn't help.

There was one part that I really liked and was actually surprising.

Read more... )

Rec by Naomi Kritzer, who liked it more than I did. But thanks for the rec! It was an interesting read, and not one I'd have found by myself.

My absolute favorite alternate lives story remains the novella And Then There were (N-One), by Sarah Pinsker, available free online at that link.