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Department of Couldn't Make It Up

Nov. 14th, 2025 09:31 pm
davidgillon: Text: I really don't think you should put your hand inside the manticore, you don't know where it's been. (Don't put your hand inside the manticore)
[personal profile] davidgillon

The House of Lords have been taking evidence on the Assisted Suicide Bill.

Disabled folk to Parliament: The possibility of being compelled into assisted suicide scares us

Pro-assisted suicide mob to Parliament: a few disabled people coerced into assisted suicide is still worth it.

Honestly couldn't make it up

 

Um what

Nov. 14th, 2025 01:36 pm
ysobel: (Default)
[personal profile] ysobel posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Miss Manners: What is the polite way to eat large sushi rolls? Sometimes they’re too big to comfortably eat whole without gagging!

Dissect them.

Miss Manners does not usually condone deconstructing food in public, but these are desperate times. Use your chopsticks to pull out the insides and eat them separately. Then either squish the remaining rice and seaweed together and eat it in two bites or use the side of the chopstick to cut it in half.

Perhaps the sight of their beautiful creations being desecrated will inspire the chefs to make more manageable bites. Or at least have them wonder why everyone is suddenly ordering them as takeout instead.

It's that time of the year...

Nov. 14th, 2025 09:31 pm
vriddy: Cat looking out of the window beside a cup of tea and books (window cat)
[personal profile] vriddy
My little corner of the northern hemisphere is getting colder, and the weather has been utterly horrendous, cold and wet and WINDY with gusts of sleet and rain aaaaah. Miserable.

Which can only mean...

It's Skyrim time!!

As usual, I'll probably end up stopping whenever I've built a house to my liking (one needs a home blacksmith forge you know!!) (sometimes two), but we'll see :D

And no I still have never finished the game despite pouring hundreds of hours in it over the years, and starting many many new games!! It could happen someday, though!

Do you have any seasonal games you replay? :D

Well, that was sub-optimal

Nov. 14th, 2025 08:55 pm
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
[personal profile] davidgillon

 After three days in a row of not getting to sleep until after the sun was up (and then being woken mid-morning), I've basically spent the entire day asleep, apart from answering several phone calls from my sister and then almost immediately falling asleep again*.

I answered those sitting cross-legged on the bed, and I fell asleep in that position and then slept that way for several hours. My hips are NOT happy with me.
 

* I was particularly impressed that I picked up the thread of a dream I'd been having before one call afterwards. Strange dream for me, unusually non-action movie style.

Opening the Black Box of EEBO.

Nov. 14th, 2025 08:52 pm
[syndicated profile] languagehat_feed

Posted by languagehat

A new Digital Scholarship in the Humanities article by Eetu Mäkelä, James Misson, Devani Singh, and Mikko Tolone (open access) examines Early English Books Online (EEBO):

Abstract

Digital archives that cover extended historical periods can create a misleading impression of comprehensiveness while in truth providing access to only a part of what survives. While completeness may be a tall order, researchers at least require that digital archives be representative, that is, have the same distribution of items as whatever they are used as proxies for. If even this representativeness does not hold, any conclusions we draw from the archives may be biased. In this article, we analyse in depth an interlinked set of archives which are widely used but which have also had their comprehensiveness questioned: the images of Early English Books Online (EEBO), and the texts of its hand-transcribed subset, EEBO-TCP. Together, they represent the most comprehensive digital archives of printed early modern British documents. Applying statistical analysis, we compare the contents of these archives to the English Short Title Catalogue (ESTC), a comprehensive record of surviving books and pamphlets in major libraries. Specifically, we demonstrate the relative coverage of EEBO and EEBO-TCP along six key dimensions—publication types (i.e. books/pamphlets), temporal coverage, geographic location, language, topics, and authors—and discuss the implications of the imbalances identified using research examples from historical linguistics and book history. Our study finds EEBO to be surprisingly comprehensive in its coverage and finds EEBO-TCP—while not comprehensive—to be still broadly representative of what it models. However, both of these findings come with important caveats, which highlight the care with which researchers should approach all digital archives.

1. Introduction

The purpose of this article is 2-fold. First, we aim to show, with major datasets often used for digital scholarship, that the collection history and composition of datasets matter, and cannot be ignored when doing research without jeopardizing the validity of results. Second, by demonstrating this principle in a descriptive manner across various dimensions of interest (including temporal, geographical, and linguistic coverage), we also wish to offer a solution: a series of practical guides for users of these datasets, with which they can make informed decisions about which imbalances they need to account for, and how. While this paper’s analyses of composition and its consequences will benefit users of the datasets of Early English Books Online (EEBO n.d.) and EEBO-TCP (n.d.) specifically, our guides offer a template which is readily usable for other collections, as evidenced by our sister publication on Eighteenth Century Collections Online (Tolonen, Mäkelä, and Lahti 2022).

It looks like a valuable read for anyone who uses those archives. Thanks, Leslie!

Wounded Christmas Wolf

Nov. 14th, 2025 11:43 am
sholio: tree-shaped cookie (Christmas cookies)
[personal profile] sholio
christmas book cover with a couple, falling snow, small town

It is free book time again! This is a Christmas romance, a full length novel unrelated to my other series (though obviously it has shifter-romance-style werewolves in it). The link will work until the book goes live on Amazon on the 21st.

This book went through heavier rewrites than my books normally do, so please let me know if you notice any typos or inconsistencies and I will try to fix them!

As always, no obligation, but feel free to download and enjoy.

Free download from Bookfunnel:
https://dl.bookfunnel.com/1c4ety8smh
[syndicated profile] lilisonna_tumblr_feed

jartita-me-teneis:

Sergio Outdoors

These are all fascinating, and Sergio clearly knows his shit, but some of these helpful hacks are so amazingly specific that I am struggling to find an actual use case outside of Major and yet Very Arbitrary Apocalypse.

Like, when an I going to have a large amount of cordage, a knife, lighter, giant water jug and over large syringe and *not* just have a camp shower?

(no subject)

Nov. 14th, 2025 02:49 pm
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
It was colder this morning, down around freezing point when I got up. I didn't go outside for exercise because although it was sunny, it was also windy, and I didn't feel like facing the wind chill factor again. Now I'm sort of regretting it, but I do go up and down the stairs quite a few times a day so I'm not completely sedentary.

I've realised that two of the three pairs of long pants I've been using were very frayed around the bottom of the legs because of friction against my shoes, so because both pairs were quite long, I was able to cut off the frayed ends and turn up a new (slightly smaller) hem. I did one pair a few days ago and the second pair this morning, and both look much better and are still plenty long enough. (I like my pants to be just below my ankles.) I did both pairs by hand because there's no really convenient place for me to set up my sewing machine here, so I was regretting that I didn't get around to this task before I moved here.
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher posting in [community profile] ebooks
 
https://earlybirdbooks.com/deals/best-ebook-deals

Filter genres and booksellers at top left.
 

Mirror Mirror

Nov. 14th, 2025 02:43 pm
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
[personal profile] marycatelli posting in [community profile] books
Mirror Mirror by Sarah Mlynowski

The adventures conclude! Spoilers for the earlier ones ahead!

Read more... )

Recent Reading

Nov. 14th, 2025 11:43 am
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Default)
[personal profile] sanguinity
Kelley Armstrong, Death at a Highland Wedding (2025)

Latest novel in the Rip Through Time series, in which a Vancouver B.C. police detective finds herself transported to 1870 Edinburgh, where she falls in with an undertaker who does forensic pathology work on the side, and they solve crimes together. This one is something like novel 5 in the series (with several additional novellas).

I wrote the... *checks AO3 to confirm* ...yes, still the only fic for Mallory and Gray (the Canadian detective and the Scottish undertaker). And every year since I wrote it, I know when a new novel has been published because there's a small influx of readers who turn to AO3 to self-medicate for the fact that Mallory and Gray still haven't gotten together yet. So I already knew from this year's comments that they don't get together in this book, either!

AND YET.
AND YET. (spoilers) Gray proposes a marriage of convenience, Mallory turns it down because she's holding out for a love match, Gray begins to say something about maybe in time she will develop feelings for him -- but cannily phrased, so that she doesn't realize HE ALREADY HAS feelings for HER, and she storms out. AND THEN. He writes her a letter explaining all! Which she doesn't get because of murder mystery shenanigans! Which is very Jane Austen of him, but he NEVER REWRITES THE LETTER, NOR CONFESSES WHAT WAS IN IT, and we're left with them deciding on the last page that if they can't come up with a better option by the time his sister gets married, he and Mallory will do a marriage of convenience after all -- WHICH IS VERY PINING IDIOTS OF BOTH OF THEM AND I WOULD GO AND BITCH TO THE ONLY PERSON ON AO3 WHO WROTE FIC ABOUT THEM. EXCEPT THAT PERSON IS ME. SO HERE I AM. BITCHING TO YOU.


Yes, I'll read the next book in the series. No, they still won't have gotten together. Yes, I'll be as mad about it as I am right now. ARGH. ([personal profile] grrlpup finds my frustration very amusing.)


E. Pauline Johnson (Mohawk), The Moccasin Maker (1913)

I have the impression that if I was Canadian I might have been more familiar with Johnson before this, as she was an early light on Canada's literary scene. She was more famed for her poetry than her stories, but I first heard of her because Chelsea Vowell (Metis) recommended the story "A Red Girl's Reasoning", which is included in this collection.

Johnson was mixed race herself, and a fair number of these stories feature protagonists in mixed-race marriages, sometimes happy, sometimes not. A lot of her characterizations are idealized, but I found the stories entertaining and sometimes thought-provoking. I very much enjoyed how often she centered indigenous women, and how she routinely insisted on their agency and dignity -- "A Red Girl's Reasoning" is a prime example.

I also enjoyed that chinuk wawa made the occasional appearance! Johnson lived her later life in Vancouver, British Columbia, which was within the region in which chinuk was commonly spoken. Her use of the language is a little different than what I was taught down here, but still entirely comprehensible to me. (And for people unfamiliar with chinuk wawa, she explains the terms that can't be deduced from context).

Warning for those who check out the Gutenberg edition: the included foreword about Johnson is as racist as all get out.


Rachel Poliquin (illus. Nicholas John Frith), The Superpower Field Guide: BEAVERS (2018)

Breathless, dynamic, humorous, chock-full-of-facts middle-readers book about why beavers are extraordinary. I learned a bunch of stuff, and have to agree: beavers are extraordinary! The illustrations are in a deft, mid-twentieth-century cartooning style that I found charming. Will definitely check out other books in the series.

Franklin Park gets posters

Nov. 14th, 2025 06:33 pm
[syndicated profile] universal_hub_feed

Posted by adamg

Three Franklin Park posters, focusing on Elma Lewis, the Emerald Necklace and the park's wildlife

Posters by Lindsay Crockett.

The city, the Franklin Park Coalition and the Boston Society of Landscape Architects recently announced the winners of a competition to highlight the pendant of the Emerald Necklace, such as Lindsay Crockett, who was honored for her "New Jewels" series featuring Elma Lewis - a local artist who organized summer concerts and cleanups - the park's location in the Emerald Necklace and all the wildlife that lives there.

Also winning: Becky Fong Hughes, who also saluted park designer Frederick Law Olmsted in her "Franklin Park: Alive with People, Place, Story" series:

The park map, Olmsted and Lewis

Helena Wang also took an honor for her "Franklin Park: Framed in Time" series.

Various park vignettes

All the winners.
All the entries.

Free tagging: 

Celebrating AO3’s 16th Anniversary

Nov. 14th, 2025 05:25 pm
[syndicated profile] ao3_news_feed

AO3 16

AO3 is turning 16! It's been another year of growth for AO3. Since this time last year, we passed both eight million and nine million registered users! We also passed 14 million, 15 million, and 16 million fanworks on the site, including one million works in Mandarin Chinese—the first non-English language to reach this milestone!

AO3's committees have also done a lot of important work this year! Accessibility, Design, & Technology published multiple important code releases, including security improvements like sending you an email when you or someone logged in to your account changes your username, password, or email as well as new features like allowing you to use CSS custom properties in site skins or add tags to your collections!

AO3's Tag Wranglers published four updates on "No Fandom" tags, which are tags that are not associated with any particular fandom. Many of the new tags they've made canonical (marked common) include commonly requested ones like Breeding Kink, Mind Break, and Rivals to Lovers. Check out the full list of new and modified No Fandom tags!

OTW Open Doors announced the import of five fanwork and two zine archives to AO3, including fanworks related to fandoms such as Harry Potter, Inuyasha, and Star Trek: The Original Series. You can look through all old import announcements by browsing AO3 news for the Open Doors tag.

Policy & Abuse published a series of important Terms of Service (TOS) Spotlight news posts that answered common questions about violations of AO3's TOS. Check them out here:

We're so excited about all the wonderful things that have happened this year and we can't wait to see what future years bring!

Prompt!

To celebrate AO3's 16th birthday, we want to prompt you to post a fanwork featuring 16 in some way! This could be a work about Season/Series 16 of a show, or a character with 16 in their name like Android 16 (Dragon Ball), or even a character celebrating their 16th Birthday. We encourage you to get creative! When you post your works on AO3 or social media, tag them #AO3Celebrates16!

Comment!

If you don't feel like creating a work, that's okay! Instead, celebrate this anniversary with us by commenting on 16 fanworks and recommending your favorite in the comments!

Thank you for celebrating 16 years of AO3 with us!


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan-run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

emotional support spinning

Nov. 14th, 2025 12:51 pm
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
[personal profile] yhlee
two-ply handspun

handspun singles

This one's going to [personal profile] helen_keeble. :)

Victory!

Nov. 14th, 2025 10:13 am
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
Yesterday the front door stopped latching.  Well, it would latch, but the tongue wouldn't depress unless you turned the handle.  Thus the door wouldn't pull shut as you went through it.  I am a person who doesn't throw away potentially useful items.  If it is broken, out it goes. If it is a reasonably small (not like the stove) piece that might come in handy, into a box it goes, with a label, and onto the shelf.  This morning I retrieved the "Door Handle" box. 


After removing the latch from the door and pawing through the box, I found a tongue latch that would work with the knob handles. It is older, but far, far superior in construction to the currently available hardware.  The door works again.  My reused tongue saved me $60.  It also got me to go out to the storage shed, put away the spare rolls of electrical wire I used for the shop along with some horse event decoration items.  Win all the way around. 



Celebrating AO3’s 16th Anniversary

Nov. 14th, 2025 05:23 pm
[syndicated profile] otw_news_feed

Posted by Elintiriel

AO3 is turning 16! It’s been another year of growth for AO3. Since this time last year, we passed both eight million and nine million registered users! We also passed 14 million, 15 million, and 16 million fanworks on the site, including one million works in Mandarin Chinese—the first non-English language to reach this milestone!

AO3’s committees have also done a lot of important work this year! Accessibility, Design, & Technology published multiple important code releases, including security improvements like sending you an email when you or someone logged in to your account changes your username, password, or email as well as new features like allowing you to use CSS custom properties in site skins or add tags to your collections!

AO3’s Tag Wranglers published four updates on “No Fandom” tags, which are tags that are not associated with any particular fandom. Many of the new tags they’ve made canonical (marked common) include commonly requested ones like Breeding Kink, Mind Break, and Rivals to Lovers. Check out the full list of new and modified No Fandom tags!

OTW Open Doors announced the import of five fanwork and two zine archives to AO3, including fanworks related to fandoms such as Harry Potter, Inuyasha, and Star Trek: The Original Series. You can look through all old import announcements by browsing AO3 news for the Open Doors tag.

Policy & Abuse published a series of important Terms of Service (TOS) Spotlight news posts that answered common questions about violations of AO3’s TOS. Check them out here:

We’re so excited about all the wonderful things that have happened this year and we can’t wait to see what future years bring!

Prompt!

To celebrate AO3’s 16th birthday, we want to prompt you to post a fanwork featuring 16 in some way! This could be a work about Season/Series 16 of a show, or a character with 16 in their name like Android 16 (Dragon Ball), or even a character celebrating their 16th Birthday. We encourage you to get creative! When you post your works on AO3 or social media, tag them #AO3Celebrates16!

Comment!

If you don’t feel like creating a work, that’s okay! Instead, celebrate this anniversary with us by commenting on 16 fanworks and recommending your favorite in the comments!

Thank you for celebrating 16 years of AO3 with us!

Random Castle

Nov. 14th, 2025 06:06 pm
purplecat: A ruined keep. (General:Castle)
[personal profile] purplecat

A stretch of high castle wall including an impressively solid gatehouse.  Two big turrets flank two stories.  Four windows on the upper floor and a single central arched entrance on the lower floor.
Beaumaris

Upcoming Speaking Engagements

Nov. 14th, 2025 05:08 pm
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

This is a current list of where and when I am scheduled to speak:

  • My coauthor Nathan E. Sanders and I are speaking at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, DC at noon ET on November 17, 2025. The event is hosted by the POPVOX Foundation and the topic is “AI and Congress: Practical Steps to Govern and Prepare.”
  • I’m speaking on “Integrity and Trustworthy AI” at North Hennepin Community College in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, USA, on Friday, November 21, 2025, at 2:00 PM CT. The event is cohosted by the college and The Twin Cities IEEE Computer Society.
  • Nathan E. Sanders and I will be speaking at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, on December 1, 2025, at 6:00 pm ET.
  • Nathan E. Sanders and I will be speaking at a virtual event hosted by City Lights on the Zoom platform, on December 3, 2025, at 6:00 PM PT.
  • I’m speaking and signing books at the Chicago Public Library in Chicago, Illinois, USA, on February 5, 2026. Details to come.

The list is maintained on this page.

[syndicated profile] universal_hub_feed

Posted by adamg

A distraught resident filed a 311 complaint this morning about the situation outside BLS on Avenue Louis Pasteur:

Cars and van parked on the sidewalk in front of Boston Latin. Children walking to school come up to me, tears in their eyes, asking why cops won’t do their job.

Neighborhoods: 

Friday

Nov. 14th, 2025 08:34 am
susandennis: (Default)
[personal profile] susandennis
I found the wine. I had some with dinner last night. It was good but not life changing good. Oh well, at least now I know. I do wonder however, if that half glass was partially responsible for my 97% sleep score last night. I am for sure a cheap drunk.

As long as it is not milk. I am a holier than thou person about health shit. I know it. I spent most of my life believing that allergies were psychosomatic. Until daily allergy pills helped (not cured, mind you, but helped) my forever runny nose. But, now, it's for sure, I'm also lactose intolerant. I have loved milk all my life. But a couple of years ago, it seemed to turn on me. So I quit drinking it. But, I miss it. So yesterday I tried again. One tablespoon over my oatmeal at breakfast. By noon, I was paying the diarrheal price. fuck. I cream is ok in small doses. cheese is fine. Dr. Google says that old person lactose intolerance is not unusual at all. Great. now I can't have milk and I'm a cliche. Fuck.

It's another dark and rainy day here today. I do love the cozy of that. And, of course, it takes my swim up several notches on the enjoyment scale. This is all because I do not have to ever go outside. One of the local Continuing Care Retirement Communities, I looked at (on web only) was a cluster of buildings. You had to go outside to get to the dining room, to get to the front desk, to go to the library... What a PIA that would be.

Since I rarely go outside... yesterday, I wore my crocks - ones with holes - when I went to the grocery. BAD idea. The rain was coming down, which was not an issue BUT the small lakes that that created in the parking lot were a big issue. I need outdoor shoes. Wellies for grocery shopping! Or at least shoes without holes. And I need to remember to wear them.

I have no plans to go outside today. My freezer is full and my meal money account is bursting at the seams.

I think I'll go make up the bed and hop into my suit and do a few dozen laps in the pool.


PXL_20251113_232128611.MP

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