Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Thor/Shazam #1

Nov. 21st, 2025 01:58 pm
laughing_tree: (Seaworth)
[personal profile] laughing_tree posting in [community profile] scans_daily
image host

Who holds Mjolnir at the end. I think Thor readers will appreciate it. -- Al Ewing

Read more... )
petra: Barbara Gordon smiling knowingly (Default)
[personal profile] petra
Here is your friendly reminder, especially for people in the US coming up to Thursday's Big Eating Day, that if you donate 25 USD worth of cash or food to a food bank or food pantry, you can prompt me to write for you: fanfiction, fanpoetry, or original poetry, anywhere on the sliding scale from staid, metered verse to filthy limericks.

This applies to recurring donations too!
petra: Woman making quote-unquote marks in the air (Alex Drake - Sarcastiquotes)
[personal profile] petra
I worked on my 2025 story index and found myself capable of forming the thought: "O poor pitful barely-productive me! I have been so depressed that I have only posted 199 fanworks so far this year."

It is definitely time for a seasonally-appropriate vacation and a hug or twelve.

"Yes, but so many of them were limericks!"

Fuck off into the sun, inner critic. Just because I would've liked to have written novels and haven't does not make the things I have made entirely negligible.
[syndicated profile] in_the_pipeline_feed

Here’s a phenomenon - yet another one - that never crossed my mind before. It’s long been known that enzymes that catalyze proteolysis (cleavage of peptide bonds) can, under certain circumstances, catalyze the reverse reaction of peptide bond formation. Folks who have had to think about chemical kinetics will immediately realize that those conditions would include high concentrations of the two cleavage products and low concentrations of the longer protein substrate, an example of Le Chatlier’s principle in action. It’s also an example of the principle of Microscopic Reversibility in action, too: the chemical steps are the same whether you run things forwards or backwards. That doesn’t mean those steps are always thermodynamically feasible, of course - the energies involved (with both enthalpic and entropic contributions) might be too great a barrier to run backwards very easily, as in unburning a piece of wood back from a cloud of soot and hot gases. Fire is not a good example of an equilibrium process, but peptide bond breakage and formation is a lot closer to balancing on a knife edge than combustion is.

This recent preprint suggests, though, that this “reverse proteolysis” is happening under physiological conditions, particularly with cysteine-based cathepsin enzymes. And it’s not just re-formation of the proteins that have just been cleaved (although that must be happening, too). No, you get mix-and-match combinations of various proteins to generate species that were certainly never coded for in the genome. And on top of that, you can even spot chimeras between human proteins and bacterial or viral ones (!)

Now, some species of this sort have been reported before (in reports going back to at least 2004) but this new work suggests that it’s a much more common process than anyone realized, one with implications for immunity and perhaps other cellular processes as well. Recall that antigen proteins are displayed to the immune system via the major histocompatibility complex, and that these antigens are cleaved from larger proteins via degradation. Displaying weirdo newly assembled protein sequences from this chemical splicing route could cause some real effects downstream. This could, for example, be one of the links between prior infections and later autoimmune disease, through those human/pathogen hybrid proteins.

The authors here shore up that connection by showing that auto-antigenic peptides implicated in Type I diabetes can be produced by cathepsins running in reverse, and that proteins that have been modified by citrullination (on arginine residues) seem to undergo the process more readily. That sort of Arg modification is already known to be over-represented in autoimmune antigens. In addition, the cathepsin enzyme subtypes that are most dominant in immune tissues (such as inside macrophages) seem to be the best at producing such splicing hybrids. These reverse reactions are also more prevalent at closer to neutral pH, which suggests that lysosomal dysfunction (where cathepsins and other enzymes normally work in an acidic environment) might be a source of increased neo-peptides.

Overall, it seems that we’re going to have to learn to deal with these species, and to study them in the context of both normal conditions and in infectious disease. Acute viral infections might well be producing waves of human/viral protein hybrid species, and we can’t expect them all to be silent! 

(no subject)

Nov. 21st, 2025 11:27 am
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
Well, I survived the wait for the blood draw and was very happy to sit down to my belated breakfast afterwards. Of course things didn't go completely smoothly getting there; I knew exactly where the entrance to the carpark was, but it was blocked off as they are resurfacing the area so I had to go past and find the next entrance, but since I'm not familiar with getting to that lab I overshot the next driveway and had to go quite a bit further along to find a place where I could turn around and go back. Then, inside the lab, there was no receptionist, just a couple of machines where you were supposed to check in. I couldn't find my appointment number but I could use my phone number and date of birth so that was ok, except that the machine was extremely slow and at times just seemed to freeze up. The final step was to scan your driver's licence and I wasn't sure that mine had been scanned because it's a photocopy and didn't fit exactly into the space. However, eventually I got myself checked in. There was another woman next to me having exactly the same problems and muttering "I hate these things!" but she eventually got through the process as well.

When I came out of the lab and approached my car, I saw that there was an identical car parked a couple of spaces further along (with no cars in between), so I was checking the other car to see if it really was identical. Then when I went to get into "my" car I saw an unfamiliar drink bottle in the holder and realised that the "other" car was the one which was mine. I don't often see cars exactly the same as mine; there are plenty of the same model Honda Accord but not many in burgundy like mine.

A bit later, just after I'd finished my breakfast, I had a call from the lab to say I'd dropped a copy of my driver's licence so I went back to get it, and once again, overshot the necessary driveway and had to find a place to turn around.

I think the rest of the day should be uneventful.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


A young scholar and his diverse companions are dispatched on an intelligence-gathering mission deep into enemy territory.

The Door on the Sea (The Raven and the Eagle, volume 1) by Caskey Russell

365 Questions 2025

Nov. 21st, 2025 08:23 am
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
14. How many hours a week do you spend online? Let's just say a lot and leave it at that.

15. What do you love to do? Spend time online. Walk, run, read, knit, crochet, spend time with my granddaughters.

16. What specific character trait do you want to be known for? Integrity.

17. Are you more like your mom or your dad? In what way? I'm a lot like my mother in ways I don't particularly like, such as being very nit picky. I'm like my father in having a good sense of direction and being good with my hands.

18. What is the number one quality that makes someone a good leader? Knowing how to motivate people.

19. What bad habits do you want to break? I can't think of any.

20. What is your favorite place on Earth? I have more than one place where I love to be, and I can't narrow it down to just one.

21. What do you love to practice? Learning new things.

(no subject)

Nov. 21st, 2025 08:08 am
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
I'm starving! My fasting blood draw this morning isn't until 9:40 am, and I can hardly wait to get home again and have something to eat. I didn't think I'd mind missing breakfast, but turns out it's harder than I expected.
[personal profile] tcampbell1000 posting in [community profile] scans_daily


Invasion #2 wrapped up the actual alien invasion, leaving the crossover issues to deal with the aftermath and then get a surprise ending, leading into Invasion #3.

Wonder Woman begins WW #26 feeling a much greater sense of camaraderie with the Justice League International than she would ever show again, including years later when she was leading the team. It’s hilarious, but relatable, that even though the JLI would sign her on in a heartbeat, she’s like, I know it’s arrogant to think myself worthy, but what if they might maybe someday possibly consider me? If I keep my numbers up?

It’s a damn shame this era’s Max Lord never got to meet this era’s Myndi Mayer. )

podcast friday

Nov. 21st, 2025 06:54 am
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
[personal profile] sabotabby
 This has been a great week for podcasts, which I'm sure will spill into next week as I'm still catching up. And in particular I'm on a pre-modern history kick. So what's more fun than adding dragons to that? Wizards & Spaceships' "How To Write a Kickass Fantasy Battle ft. Suzannah Rowntree" looks at the myths and truths behind medieval warfare and how you can apply those to fantasy writing. Inspired by the research she had to do for her own novels, which are historical fantasy, and Russia's war on Ukraine, Suzannah wrote an accessible guide to writing battles for those of us who will probably never set foot in a war zone. She talks about who gets it right, who gets it wrong, and why you shouldn't leave your comfy castle during a siege.
cimorene: The words "EGG AND SPOON RACE" in bright turquoise hand-drawn letters (egg and spoon race)
[personal profile] cimorene
In Non-functional public health appointments, part 2, we heard that when I called on the one day (out of 2 weeks) when you can book appointments with an MD, the appointments were all filled well before the end of the day and they told me to call back in 2 weeks as early as possible.

So that was Monday, and I called at 8:05 (5 minutes after opening) and put my message in their automatic callback queue. I didn't get called until after 11:00 and I could hear the receptionist's voice trembling with stress as she tried to gently and politely apologize because "It was so good that you called at eight, but unfortunately all the doctor slots were already full again!"

She asked again how soon I will run out of meds, and since I will not run out in the next two weeks, she told me to try calling back at eight am again on December first.

!!!!!!!

"Really really sorry, it's so unfortunate."

"Well, it's not your fault, I know," I said.

"Even so... yeah."

So. Two weeks. If I call at 8 on the dot, maybe I'll be early enough in the queue... or maybe I can't get an appointment until I'm about to run out and they therefore have to promote me to the 'urgent' (or semi-urgent) queue.

Wow... I'm so mad about this!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Remember that this was actually my third call because the first time I didn't call on the Appointment Day at all and had to be redirected (but unfortunately, even though she said they might fill up, I didn't realize it was like, CALL WITHIN FIVE MINUTES).

Vote - Week 15 Write Off

Nov. 20th, 2025 10:33 pm
clauderainsrm: (Default)
[personal profile] clauderainsrm posting in [community profile] therealljidol
A few words from [personal profile] clauderainsrm:

In a world filled with unspeakable horrors manifesting every day right before our eyes, it's nice to have one place where unspeakable horrors can be unleashed onto you personally by an impersonal Wheel that exists only to bring Chaos!

In this case, it has isolated the 3 contestants who lost their head to head matches and is forcing them into a cage match where one of them is not walking back out!

So make sure to Read, Comment and Vote for your favorite(s) to emerge on the other side of this Write Off!

The poll closes Saturday, November 22nd at 8pm ET. Good luck to everyone!


Poll #33854 ’WheelofChaos-Week15WriteOff’
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: Just the Poll Creator, participants: 15

Vote For Your Favorites!

alycewilson's entry
7 (46.7%)

halfshellvenus's entry
9 (60.0%)

roina_arwen's entry
4 (26.7%)

Short fiction

Nov. 21st, 2025 11:19 am
fred_mouse: pencil drawing of mouse sitting on its butt reading a large blue book (book)
[personal profile] fred_mouse

This covers August through beginning of November

At least one of the links was from [personal profile] coth; most I have no idea - some of them have been in my 'read later' for a very long time. There were also stories from All of Tor.com’s Original Short Fiction Published in 2022, which I'm guessing I've started working through before, but didn't remember what I'd read previously (18 short stories, 13 novelettes, 1 translation) (and didn't finish this time either)

Loved it!

  • Smoke and Sweetness by Zhui Ning Chang, from Jan 2025 - gentle, sweet, slice of life with touches of whimsy and sadness, set in a floristry
  • Fruiting Bodies - Kemi Ashing-Giwa, from Jan 2022 - very much body horror, in a far future on a different planet. Not quite zombies.
  • The Chronologist by Ian R MacLeod, from Feb 2022 - atmosphere and character and kind of an apocalypse
  • The Last Truth by Anamaria Curtis, from Feb 2022 - bittersweet, about how how losing oneself a memory at a time leaves nothing behind.

Not bad

  • Bone by Karl Gallagher, from May 2025 - heavy on the science, clunky on the rest.
  • If a Digitized Tree Falls by Ken Liu and Caroline M. Yoachim, from Sept 2025 (novelette) - snatches through time, as the ways in which the world is modelled by digital tech changes, and AI assistants evolved. I found myself distracted and unmotivated to finish, although it is beautifully written
  • Model Collapse by Matthew Kressel, from Oct 2025 - very clever body horror about the AI takeover.

Not for me

  • Saving the Gleeful Horse - K J Bishop, from March 2010. - creepy. But I managed to get distracted part way through, and then had to come back to finish it.
  • Synthetic Perennial by Vivianni Glass, from Feb 2022 - normally I like myself some surreal / magic realism details, but I just found this one disorienting. Not for those with medical trauma.
  • Hush by Mary Anne Mohanraj, from March 2022 - I get what this one is saying, but it is just a tad too real w.r.t fascism and racist supremacy. Unreliable narrator who thinks they are one of the good guys didn't help.
  • The Long View by Susan Palwick, from April 2022 - this went too close to farce for me. Seemed to be both attempting to be Meaningful and Funny.

DNF

Daily Check-In

Nov. 20th, 2025 08:15 pm
mecurtin: Icon of a globe with a check-mark (fandom_checkin)
[personal profile] mecurtin posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Thursday, November 20, to midnight on Friday, November 21 (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33853 Daily check-in poll
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 20

How are you doing?

I am OK
12 (60.0%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now
8 (40.0%)

I could use some help
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single
8 (40.0%)

One other person
8 (40.0%)

More than one other person
4 (20.0%)



Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.

Fandom Trees!

Nov. 20th, 2025 09:19 pm
trobadora: (Discworld: Hogfather)
[personal profile] trobadora
[community profile] fandomtrees posts have been going up, and mine was in the most recent batch, yay! This is one of my favourite events of the season (next to Yuletide) - I loved [livejournal.com profile] fandom_stocking back in the day, and this is still just as much fun.

Here's my tree, and this is what I'm requesting this year:
  • Grimm
  • 镇魂 | Guardian (TV)
  • Grimm/Guardian crossover
  • 镇魂 | Guardian RPF
  • Legend of the Seeker
  • Sherlock (BBC)
  • 绅探 | Detective L
  • 山河令 | Word of Honor, 天涯客 | Faraway Wanderers
  • Once Upon a Time in Wonderland
  • Chinese fic recs
  • food or cooking icons
Hoping to see some of you there too! Especially since this is one of those events where you're doing people a favour by signing up - the more requests there are, the more other people can find someone to create something for. :D

ETA: Sign-ups here!

Profile

jeshyr: Blessed are the broken. Harry Potter. (Default)
Ricky Buchanan