oursin: George Beresford photograph of the young Rebecca West in a large hat, overwritten 'Neither a doormat nor a prostitute' (Neither a doormat nor a prostitute)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-02-05 10:21 am

Online attending conference

(This may get updated over the course of the day)

After struggling to get Zoom link downloaded and operating etc, managed to get into first session I wanted to attend, Foundling Hospital in early C20th, good grief, practices had not changed much in a century had they? Recipe for trauma in mothers, children, and the foster mothers who actually bonded with the children until they were taken away to be eddicated according to their station in life.

Then switched to a different panel and was IRKED by a lit person talking about the Women's Cooperative Guild Maternity: Letters from Working Women (1915) which they had only just encountered ahem ahem - was republished by I think Virago? Pandora? in 1970s - and women's history has done quite a bit on the WCG since then so JEEZ I was peeved at her assumption that the working women were not agents but the whole thing was being run by the upper/middle class activists who were most visibly involved. And wanted to query whether working women thought it was very useful to have posh laydeez able to put their cases re maternity, child welfare and so on in corridors of power, rather than deferentially curtseying??? (I should like to go back in time and ask my dear Stella Browne about that.)

Also on wymmynz voices not, or at least hard to trace, in the archives, I fancy this person does not know a) Marie Stopes' volume Mother England (1929), extracts of letters she had from women about motherhood and b) based on 1000s of letters surviving and available to researchers. I could, indeed, point to other resources, fume, mutter.

Update Well, there were some later papers I dropped in on and enjoyed (and was able to offer comment/questions on; but I was obliged to point out certain errors in a description of Joanna Russ's The Female Man (really I think if you are going to cite a work you should check details....) (and I suppose Mitchison's work was just outside the remit of what they were talking about, so I was very self-restrained and failed to go on about Naomi.)

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-02-05 10:16 am

(no subject)

Happy birthday, [personal profile] coffeeandink!
sholio: (B5-station)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2026-02-05 12:54 am

Recent fic (mostly Babylon 5) on AO3

I reposted some of my longer 3 Sentence Ficathon fills on AO3.

An Immodest Proposal (Babylon 5)
State of Change (Babylon 5)
Hypotheticals (Gattaca)

And a new B5 fic, written a little while back because I had the idea, but not posted until now:

Reliquary (Babylon 5, post-canon, canon compliant, character deaths)

Reposted under the cut.

Reliquary - Babylon 5 - 1500 wds )
vriddy: K-9 Volume 1 Cover (k-9)
Vriddy ([personal profile] vriddy) wrote2026-02-05 08:44 am

New K-9 fic: Clingy (Ren/Oboro/Fujimaru/Kagari)

Last week, [personal profile] scytale commented in passing about how clingy these four are, which honestly is just a factual statement at this point, yet the universe immediately beamed a ficlet into my brain just based on that because this is what I am now.


Clingy | K-9 | Ren/Oboro/Fujimaru/Kagari | <850 words | rated M

Summary: This was all Fujimaru's fault. And Kagari's too. Maybe a little bit Yuushirou's, but he wasn't admitting to anything. Ren-san was perfect as always.

Yuushirou gets a boner during movie night.

Read it on Dreamwidth or AO3.
sholio: Woman sitting on a 1930s detective's desk (Noir woman on desk)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2026-02-04 10:47 pm

There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm (SCP Foundation)

This book is hard to tag - it's basically cosmic horror, or horror scifi. It is also one of the creepiest and trippiest things I've read in a long time and maybe ever.

I kinda vaguely knew about SCP as a collaborative wiki project from the 2000s, with user-submitted descriptions of imaginary (and frequently extradimensional) objects. This book is based on it. It's about a group of characters who work for the Antimemetics Division of the SCP Foundation, a department most people don't know about (because it's impossible to remember it for more than a few minutes after finding out about it) that handles "antimemes," which are the opposite of memes - if memes are catchy and transmissible, antimemes are intentionally unmemorable, to an extent where you need to use extraordinary measures, such as memory-enhancing drugs, just to recognize that they exist at all. It's information that functions as anti-information. And it turns out there are living creatures with antimemetic properties, as well as weapons that use it ...

Lots and lots of spoilers )
Pivot to AI ([syndicated profile] pivot_to_ai_feed) wrote2026-02-04 10:32 pm

Microsoft walks back AI in Windows 11! Yeah, right

Posted by David Gerard

Microsoft hasn’t been having the greatest month or two.

In November, Pavan Davuluri,President of Windows and Devices, proclaimed Microsoft’s Agentic Operating System future! Users told him nobody wanted this, and what they wanted was a Windows that worked properly. Davaluri disabled replies on the tweet. [Twitter, archive]

Davuluri tweeted a few days later: “We know we have work to do.” Sure do, mate. [Twitter, archive]

Windows 11 had a teensy problem in January where you’d do a system update and your PC wouldn’t even boot any more. Microsoft released, not one, but two out-of-band patches which they hoped would fixed the problem. Eventually they figured the booting problem happened if the December update hadn’t installed properly. [Bleeping Computer; Bleeping Computer]

Then the Microsoft stock price crashed last week after they issued quarterly numbers full of AI squirrels and confetti.

Time for a new Microsoft marketing perception initiative! Davaluri vibe-marketed a press release into the Verge: [Verge]

Microsoft is redirecting engineers to urgently fix Windows 11’s performance and reliability issues, aiming to halt the operating system’s death by a thousand cuts.

Even better — they’re talking about winding back on the AI spam! [Windows Central]

Copilot integrations like those found in Notepad and Paint are under review.

Probably because those two in particular are the most ridiculous AI integrations in history.

To be clear, Microsoft’s actual plans are to “streamline” the AI experience — not remove it. They don’t really want to do a single thing differently. This is only about perception.

All of this is a reaction to the user backlash, the fact that gamers are even talking about Linux, and the stock price going down. I would believe any of what Microsoft’s babbling as and when I see it. And not one moment before.

One actual change to AI in Windows is that Windows 11 now has an option to remove Copilot in the group policy editor! It’s only for Pro, Enterprise or Education versions. They started rolling this out to the beta channel in January and it looks like it’s live now. So there you go, a tiny bit of change we can believe in. [Bleeping Computer; Bluesky]

The problem, though, is that Windows 11 doesn’t … work. I’m no fan of Windows, but I’ve used Windows 10 and it basically works? If you need a Windows, 10 is fine. Windows 11 is buggy trash.

We don’t know that Windows 11 was vibe coded. There were a lot of headlines last year that 30% of Microsoft code was AI now! Based on something the CEO, Satya Nadella, said in a podcast. But of course, what he actually said was a carefully hedged claim in CEO speak: [YouTube, 45:00-45:08]

maybe 20 to 30 percent of the code that is inside of our repos today in some of our projects are probably all written by software.

“Maybe 20 to 30 percent”? In “some projects”? “Probably?” I think that means not really.

So we don’t have smoking gun evidence that Windows 11 is broken trash literally because of vibe coding. But Windows 11 feels like the most vibe coded thing ever. Nobody cared about Windows 11 working. Microsoft, where quality is job number 55 or so!

vriddy: K-9 Volume 1 Cover (k-9)
Vriddy ([personal profile] vriddy) wrote2026-02-05 05:46 am
Entry tags:

Yuu and Satsuki from K-9, aka Leopard and Treeguy

Two more little guys from K-9 are really capturing my imagination at the moment. Look at 'em:

Satsuki from K-9 embracing Yuu from the back and keeping Yuu quiet with a hand on his mouth

You can't just show me two characters that comfortably handsy with each other and not expect me to go "Oh 👀"?! For anyone familiar with Wind Breaker, their vibes are massively similar to Togame and Chouji, especially early on. They're scratching my "murderous protectiveness" itch in just the right way.

Yuu, the blond chibi, can transform into a cute sort of hybrid leopard and loves to fight.

Yuu from K-9, jumping backwards in hybrid human-leopard form

Meanwhile Satsuki can create and control huge branches. He may appear calmer and more reasonable, but that mostly means his expression won't change as he threatens to crush you between branches or tear your limbs apart. That kinda guy.

Satsuki from K-9 creating huge thick branches to attack with

Obviously, I love them. For many reasons, too. But also aren't their abilities kind of ridiculous?! This is a world in which only criminals get a superpower, one related to the crime they committed!! What kind of crime do you commit that you can transform into a leopard?!

And thus, having thought about it way too much, I'm writing what will apparently become my first K-9 multi-chapter fic. With zero members of my beloved OT4 showing up XD This series is just ridiculous. I love it. The author is clearly having a ton of fun, and I love that for them.
semperfiona: (Default)
semperfiona ([personal profile] semperfiona) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-04 11:20 pm
Entry tags:

Day 4 - Podfic - MDZS - Jiang Yanli/Wen Qing

Title/Link: [Podfic] Doctor, I'm Burning Up
Fandom: Mo Dao Zu Shi
Character(s): Jiang Yanli/Wen Qing
Rating: Explicit
Prompt: Needs
Summary: Wen Qing privately “checks Jiang Yanli’s health”.
Emilie Nicolas - Le Devoir ([syndicated profile] emilienicolas_devoir_feed) wrote2026-02-05 12:00 am

Déclassement

C’est un «ordre des choses» sous attaque qui alimente le mouvement MAGA, pas l’économie.
vriddy: Dreamwidth sheep with a red wing (dreamsheep)
Vriddy ([personal profile] vriddy) wrote2026-02-05 04:47 am

Community Thursday

Community Thursday challenge: every Thursday, try to make an effort to engage with a community on Dreamwidth, whether that's posting, commenting, promoting, etc.


Over the last week...

Posted and commented on [community profile] bnha_fans.

Commented on [community profile] booknook.

Commented on [community profile] getyourwordsout.

Signal boosts:

lovelytomeetyou: (Default)
lovelytomeetyou ([personal profile] lovelytomeetyou) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-05 01:43 am
Entry tags:

DAY 4 - FIC - DANGANRONPA - IRUMA MIU - NEEDS

Day 4 - Needs  

Title: Only way out 
Fandom: Danganronpa v3
Characters: Iruma Miu focused, with her relationships with Ouma and K1-B0
Rating: M 
Summary: Maybe she could trust someone here. Just maybe. But the outside world needed her genius, her inventions... or that's what she needs to tell herself. Or why Miu decided to kill Kokichi.

Story in ao3
microbie: (Default)
microbie ([personal profile] microbie) wrote2026-02-04 11:00 pm

past the post

I am not a sophisticated reader or news consumer, but I did become an adult at a time when people advised subscribing to the local paper as a way to settle into a new city. I had a Sunday NY Times subscription when I was in grad school, and I bought a Sunday Washington Post subscription once I had a steady income here. I kept that subscription for decades, even as the Sunday edition shrank to almost nothing. I didn't go digital-only until the Post stopped including Parade magazine a few years ago. 

I never read the OpEd section of any paper, so the immediate changes after Bezos bought the Post didn't bother me that much. The parts that justified the subscription were the Food section and a couple of columnists in the Business section (Michelle Singletary (personal finance), Karla Miller (workplace advice), Geoffrey Fowler (personal tech), and Andrew Van Dam (Department of Data)). In December, I got an email that the cost of a digital subscription was going up by almost 50%. That convinced me it was time to pull the plug. 

I already subscribe to The 51st State (a local news outlet), Defector (mostly sports), Discourse (mostly politics), and Flaming Hydra (everything from journalism to poetry). Note that this doesn't mean that I actually read all (or any) of their content. Nevertheless, I'd like to send my former Post subscription money somewhere. Wired, Pro Publica, Associated Press, and Texas Observer are at the top of the list, but I haven't made up my mind. 
mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)
mistressofmuses ([personal profile] mistressofmuses) wrote2026-02-04 08:23 pm
Entry tags:

RIP Mark. I'm going to miss you.

I woke up around 4:00 this morning and couldn't get back to sleep, so went for a social media scroll. I got some absolutely tragic and painful news.

A friend of mine, Mark, died yesterday. I'm still struggling to wrap my head around it.

Alex and I met Mark back in, I think, 2011 (possibly 2010). His band Synapse was opening for Faderhead. We really liked them as the openers, and then ended up chatting with him and the other members of the band for a while after the show.

After that, we made it a point to try and see Synapse as often as we could. One time we even drove all the way up to Steamboat Springs and back to be moral support for a night, because they were booked for a show in a venue that didn't seem like the right type of place, ha.


Here's Alex, Mark, and me. We were wearing our Synapse shirts.

We also hung out frequently at the various goth nights, back in our clubbing days. Eventually we hung out at his house a few times, sometimes as part of a larger party, sometimes just us.

A few years later Synapse broke up, and Mark started up a new project: Voicecoil. We've been to a lot of Voicecoil shows. He also had a side project, Gravity Corps, though we never saw him perform as that project. (I know that he had a previous project as well, Machinegun Symphony, though that project was over by the time we met.)

We were excited to see him as part of an upcoming festival in May, and he seemed excited, too. I'm beyond gutted that it simply... won't happen. We're not going to see him. As many, many times as we went out to see him perform, and as many times as we hung out outside of that... I wish we got to do it again.

Mark was always kind to us, and to so many others on the scene. He was well-known and popular, but he always made us feel like he wanted to spend time with us. He always asked about how we were doing, remembered the things we specifically cared about. Even on show nights, when he was often in high demand, he made time to sit and chat with us, often for long stretches of time. Even at his album release party in 2022, he spent nearly an hour with us. The last time we saw him in person was last May, when he opened for Beborn Beton. It was a great show, and catching up with him beforehand was one of the best parts of the night.


Alex, Mark, and me again. This was either a late Synapse show or an early Voicecoil one.

Today, his Facebook is full of other people saying the same things that I remember most. That he always made so much time to talk to and spend time with so many people, to make sure they were doing all right, taking a genuine interest in them. He mentored our friend Jake in his music. He was always, always so encouraging to other artists.

He had a rough several years. Recently, I know he felt very betrayed by someone... He refused to name names, but someone he'd thought was a friend that he trusted turned out to be saying some extremely cruel and awful things to and about him. Mark was almost completely blind (could see things from one eye within about an inch of his face, and otherwise just faint light and dark, as I understand it.) Apparently this person was being absolutely awful about his disability, and it very clearly bothered him in a way that he was rarely willing to express.

His very long-term partner and he broke up a couple years ago.

Most significantly, a few years ago he lost a different partner to a sudden accidental death. He absolutely never got over that loss. Her birthday would have been on Monday, which was the last thing he posted about, and I think that may be what led to him leaving us.

I'm heartbroken, and still struggling to feel adjusted to him not being here anymore.
settiai: (Critical Role -- settiai)
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2026-02-04 11:00 pm

Critical Role

I'm starting to think that I'm never going to get caught up with Critical Role. 🙃

This is why I have to stay up until 2-3am on Thursday nights, no matter how much I need sleep. If I miss an episode, it sets me back for months. Every time. I should know this by now, because it happens every time I skip an episode.

I'm currently three episodes behind, although it will be four episodes by tomorrow because there's no physical way possible for me to catch up before then since three episodes + three Cooldown is about eleven hours. I really need to find the time to catch up. It's just so hard since I can't do anything else while I'm watching, since it's not possible for me to multitask while watching something new-to-me. I have to pay attention and constantly read the subtitles, or I miss what's going on.

It's one thing to set aside four(ish) hours late on a Thrusday night when I'm already tired and don't have the spoons to do much of anything already. It's something else entirely to find four hours to set aside when I have so many other things that I need to get done.
Quomodocumque ([syndicated profile] quomodocumque_feed) wrote2026-02-05 02:48 am

George Birkhoff, faces made of lines

Posted by JSE

Look at this cutie! This is from a 1940 paper by George Birkhoff. It concerns the question of what pictures can be drawn on a sheet of notebook paper if you can only put straight lines on the page. Alternatively — the nonnegative span of the delta functions of lines form some kind of subspace of the nonnegative functions on the plane, and you can ask which functions are in there . This, which Birkhoff credits to “Mr. David Middleton, a student at Harvard University,” is one of them. The David Middleton in question must surely be this guy, who did a whole oral history interview and never mentioned that he drew faces with straight lines for Birkhoff.

I think it would be hard to publish a paper like this in Jour. Math. Pur. Appl. now. But this is fun! Maybe we’re taking math too seriously and should draw more faces.

vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
Vass ([personal profile] vass) wrote2026-02-05 02:01 pm
Entry tags:

Things

Books
Finished reading Victoria Goddard's Plum Duff. I am extremely baffled by the theological worldbuilding choices she's making. What is she doing? Is it on purpose? Where's she going with this? Does she realise the implications of what she's doing? i.e. that this is a fantasy-Anglican religion which somehow managed to replace original sin with something worse?

Read Victoria Goddard's Stone Speaks To Stone, a rollicking boy's own adventure from Jemis' father's soldier days. I get that it was necessary to show the mindset of an imperial subject who "well believed in its civilising mission". I do understand that it was necessary. I just. Ugh. I'm still waiting for the ironic twist to that refrain "he was a loyal son of the Empire." One day Jack's going to learn better, right? Or else Jemis, who fancies himself a revolutionary, will have to contend with his beloved father's role in imperial expansionist wars.

Reading Ursula Whitcher's North Continent Ribbon, long after everyone else. It's time. (I still have some leftover guilt and anxiety about the roleplaying game during which [personal profile] ursula conceived this setting, and it's been getting in my way.)

Tech
*whimpering*

Garden
More tomatoes!
suzume: Sasarai as a little child, having a fun time (Default)
Suzume ([personal profile] suzume) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-04 06:54 pm
Entry tags:

Day 4 - Fic - Suikoden III - Iku/Franz

Title: The Most Readable Eyebrows in the World
Fandom: Suikoden III
Characters: Iku/Franz
Rating: G
Summary: You know that worried expression Iku gets sometimes in the game? Yeah, that's what I was thinking of here.

Iku is a worrier. )