lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
lightreads ([personal profile] lightreads) wrote2026-02-14 01:45 pm

Of Monsters and Mainframes by Barbara Truelove

Of Monsters and Mainframes

3.5/5. The one about the ship AI and medical AI who are frenemies but stuck on the same ship together, and how they and a werewolf and a mummy and a vampire and a bunch of spider drones go on a revenge mission against Dracula.

If that sounds wacky zany and like a whole bunch of things got thrown in a blender, correct.

I enjoyed this, even including the sometimes odd mix of humor and horror. (This book doesn’t really have humans, except as occasional set dressing, generally as corpses). The AI POV here is particularly good. The ship AI has vastly more processing power than the medical AI but no “human interaction protocols,” so yeah, that’s how that goes. I actually laughed out loud, which is rare for me.

Marking down only for the structure, which is simultaneously messy and repetitive. Quite the trick. I was willing to roll along with it for a lot of this book, because I was enjoying myself, but at a certain point I could have used a tad less spaghetti on the wall, you know?

Content notes: Mass death by vampire, werewolf, etc. AI equivalent of mind control.
candyheartsex: pink and white flowers (Default)
candyheartsex ([personal profile] candyheartsex) wrote2026-02-14 10:57 am

Collection Opening Soon!

All assignments have been submitted! Thank you to our hard-working pinch hitters!

The collection will open at 8:00 PM EST on 2/14.

Here's a countdown.
mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-14 10:12 pm

Feb 6: new Fujisawa home / Feb 10: ebike / Feb 12: Sushiro

In my current procrastination regarding actually leaving Japan, I found an attractive place nearby: the upper level of a house, 100 square meters! Japanese and Western style rooms, choices of futon and beds! Figured I had to try it. Was only available for a week. A bit pricey, but pretty cheap for the space -- not that I need all that space, but after an accumulated month in a 20 m2 place, I looked forward to stretching out.

You pay in another way, though: where my first places had been a 15 minute walk from the main station, then a 5-8 minute walk, this was a 7 minute walk to a minor station, two stops away from Fujisawa, on a line with 14 minute headways. (The Enoden line is mostly single tracked, so probably not much choice there.)

Read more... )

mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-14 09:46 pm

Feb 4, Fuji and Enoshima

Guess I'm doing these out of order... Album

Took the train to Katase-Enoshima, to test my post-Odawara hypothesis of "see snow on Fuji if you get out early enough." Success!

IMG20260204123951

(Yeah, so this happened before my Fuji-Ofuna entry, oops.)

After that I decided to walk to Enoshima island for the second time and see if I'd missed stuff. (Yes.) Read more... )

mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-14 09:28 pm

Feb 9, good Fuji photos and Ofuna

Album

At last, a really good view of Mount Fuji:

IMG20260209123730

It really does help to get up earlier in the day. View taken from the rooftop terrace of Shounan-Enoshima Monorail station.

Later photo, taken from the monorail station, which I like for the mountain-over-plain feeling:

IMG20260209131244

Read more... )

mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-14 09:03 pm

small Japan entries

Quick entries: Read more... )

proustbot: (everybody's crazy about a sharp-dressed)
proustbot ([personal profile] proustbot) wrote2026-02-14 12:01 am
Entry tags:

April 1805. Napoleon has looksmaxxed Europe.

Had to do a Professional Thing the other night, which meant I spent the day at work wearing a black blazer, black trousers, and a button-up shirt. Every time I encountered a colleague, they did a double-take and hissed, Are you wearing a suit?!?

I mean. Sure. In the loosest possible definition of "suit." Sure. Every article of clothing I am wearing cost $20 or less and was purchased separately, but sure, a suit, sure.

And I was initially annoyed at their obvious surprise at my attire, and then I remembered that they had all seen me last week at our official division meeting wearing jeans and a T-shirt with a skeleton explaining IF IT SUCKS...HIT DA BRICKS, and I thought, ah, okay, fine.

In other news, I have a series of accelerating work deadlines for the next four weeks, and I'm very grumpy about them. But then! Mid-March! A blissful reprieve! Just gotta hold on until mid-March!
candyheartsex: pink and white flowers (Default)
candyheartsex ([personal profile] candyheartsex) wrote2026-02-14 12:14 am
Entry tags:

Remaining Pinch Hit + Countdown Timer

We have two pinch hits that will come in tomorrow afternoon, but it looks like we're still on track to open on time at 8:00 PM EST on 2/14!

Here's a countdown.

There is one remaining pinch hit! It does not need to be filled for the collection to open, so it will not delay reveals, but if you can create a gift for it, please let me know in the comments (they will be screened) or by emailing me at candyheartsex at gmail dot com. Make sure to include your AO3 name.

In the meantime, consider checking out the treatless spreadsheet! The collection will remain opening for treating throughout the anon period.

CLAIMED - PH 81 - The Queen's Thief - Megan Whalen Turner, The Queen's Thief - Megan Whalen Turner, The Queen's Thief - Megan Whalen Turner )

flwyd: Ham radio on cliffs overlooking Keauhou Bay, Hawai'i (ham radio hawaii parks on the air)
flwyd ([personal profile] flwyd) wrote2026-02-13 06:29 pm

Communication Without Central Coordination

The radio frequency spectrum is organized in bands (ranges of frequencies), with each band dedicated to one or more radio services (purposes and licensing systems). For example, U.S. broadcast radio is in two bands: the AM broadcast band is from 535 kHz to 1.705 MHz and the FM broadcast band is from 88 MHz to 108 MHz. (Here's a nice chart.) In many radio services, each frequency is assigned to a specific station in a specific area. For example, KOA in Denver is the only station allowed to transmit on 850 kHz with significant power at night in the continental US, and in the daytime in most of the western US.

The amateur radio service (ham radio) doesn't assign frequencies to specific stations. Amateur bands are open to anyone with an appropriate license, and it's up to amateur operators to avoid operating on a frequency that's already in use. This is normally fairly straightforward: listen first, then ask if anyone's using the frequency, then you can call CQ (ask people to call you). High frequency radio waves have a limited range though, and also a short-range "skip zone" where they can't be heard. So sometimes two people are calling CQ on the same frequency, but can't hear each other. I occasionally run into this situation with single sideband: one station in Florida and one station in Georgia might both be seeking contacts. If their timing is such that I can make out which is which by the sound of their voice, I can sometimes work both stations and tell them that another station is on the same frequency.

I've been practicing Morse code lately, and while some operators have a distinct "fist" (keying rhythm), often the only way to tell the dits and dahs of two transmissions apart is by the signal strength, if that. Today in the weekly K1USN SST slow speed contest I was listening to several rounds until I worked out the operator's callsign before calling them. An exchange is information given by the two parties in a contact. If K1USN is calling CQ and W1AW contacts them, the full sequence would be something like
CQ SST DE K1USN
W1AW
W1AW GA WATSON MA
TU WATSON HIRAM CT
TU HIRAM ES 73
with DE short for from, ES for and, GA for good afternoon, TU for thank you, MA/CT are state abbreviations, and 73 stands for kind regards, end of conversation. After a few passes, I'd written down W6RIF, called him, and got his exchange as WARREN IL (Warren in Illinois). I said TU WARREN TREVOR CO and moved on. I typed up my log file at home and ran it through a script I wrote to double check callsigns and states against the FCC database. I was surprised to discover that W6RIF is named Reed and lives in Virginia; neither the names nor the states sound similar in Morse code. I was pretty sure I'd copied the callsign correctly, and I relied on my phone to pick up the name. I searched QRZ for several variants with wildcards in various places, none of which turned up a more promising operator. I tried searching QRZ for just warren but in a hobby dominated by old white guys, there are a few thousand. I recalled finding a text file of SST operators and their exchanges, only one of whom is Warren from Illinois: KC9IL. I could confuse IF for IL (L and F both have three dits and a dah, with the dah one position different), but it's implausible that I misheard KC9 as W6R; none of those letters sound like the other. I had the insight to check the Reverse Beacon Network where people run software to automatically spot (announce that they heard) stations calling CQ in CW (Morse code) or digital modes. I looked up both callsigns, and saw they were both calling CQ on the same frequency in the same time range. It's possible that both of them responded to me at the same time, but I only picked up Warren's exchange. Maybe I ended up in both of their logs. I'm surprised they didn't notice each other on the same frequency: Virginia Beach and Chicago are far apart to be well out of the skip zone on 20 meters, but close enough to have a clear signal.

High frequency and medium frequency amateur radio is a curious hobby. In an era where you can place a phone call or send a short message to almost anyone on the planet for cheap, hams have to concentrate to pull out callsigns, names, and other details in the spaces between simultaneous transmissions, over atmospheric noise and static from thunderstorms, and signals fading in and out. Before I got my General class license, I was curious why someone would do this. The answer: it's fun in part because it's hard to communicate. It's a bit like a game of chance, strongly influenced by skill and appropriate use of technology.
skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (cosmia)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2026-02-13 05:50 pm

(no subject)

Syr Hayati Beker's What A Fish Looks Like is perhaps the weirdest/coolest/most interesting thing I've read so far this year -- an apocalyptic collage novel(la), told in letters, posters, angry breakup notes, and a series of strange fairy tale riffs about breakups and loss and change and transformation on both the personal and the planetary level.

In the frame story for What A Fish Looks Like, a queer radical collective in a city living through massive climate collapse has gotten its hands on 100 tickets for the last big trip off-planet. It's T minus ten days: who's going? Who's staying? Who heard the gossip about Jay and Seb making out on the dance floor, even though they had a really messy breakup and Jay has a ticket out and Seb has no interest in leaving, and who wants to use the Saga of Jay and Seb to distract themselves from the fact that the oceans are rising and the skies are red and this year's bad fire season never ended?

In the interstitials, a community outlined in personal letters and party invites and notes on the bathroom door of a favorite bar counts down to the point of decision. In the stories themselves, a person has a bad break-up and and takes on some polar bear DNA about it; a closeted teacher loses a student to a big wave in the new and frightening ocean, and meets a mermaid about it; a stage manager forges ahead with a production of Antigone in a burning city and turns into a spider about it. The people who appear in the stories also appear in the interstitials, part of the community; the book is slippery about to what degree the stories are meant to be read literally as an accounting of events and to what degree they're metaphors, wishes, retellings. The interstitials make it clear that there is certainly a theater and a fire. Probably nobody actually turned into a spider about it, but who could say. The world is getting weirder, and who knows what's possible or plausible anymore?

I'm including a screenshot of one of my favorite pages of the book -- most of the stories are text but a lot of the interstitials are in images like this one -- which I think gives a good sense of the kind of community portraiture that makes What A Fish Look Like stand out so much to me.



Highly recommend checking this one out: you might be confused, you might be depressed, you might be inspired, you absolutely won't be bored.
hamsterwoman: (Sherlock -- blanket)
hamsterwoman ([personal profile] hamsterwoman) wrote2026-02-13 12:33 pm

Reading and watching roundup, and Stuff I Love: non-SFF series

2. Elis James and John Robins, The Holy Vible – so this is the book Elis & John wrote together in ~2017 and toured in 2018. I actually bought it and started reading it really early in my Elis & John journey – May 2024 – because I thought it would be a “concentrated” way to get a feel for them as a duo. And it kind of works in that regard, but only to a point – some stuff is more reliant on already knowing the inside jokes, and most of it is enhanced by being able to hear certain key phrases in their voices (they recorded the audio book version, which I do think would be fun, especially for certain chapters, but I don’t think this is something I need to experience twice). Anyway, I started reading it back in May 2024, while I was still trying to figure out/decide how to catch up on the back catalogue, and fairly quickly decided this was not the best way. But I’ve now listened back to before this book was published, and that seemed like a very good time to go back to the rest of it, especially when I wanted something undemanding and light. More, with… spoilers of sorts, I suppose? )

This was definitely a better time at which to read this book, and I’m glad I can say I have done so now :) Probably audiobook would’ve been the better way to go from the start, but on the other hand, I already have hundreds of hours of audio content, and being able to change it up with the written word was probably good :)

*

Speaking of addenda to other media I’m consuming, after I watched The Goes Wrong Show, YouTube helpfully popped up the BBC broadcast version of the play Peter Pan Goes Wrong, and I watched it too. It was interesting to see this bunch / this humour at much longer form – the TV episodes are <30 min and the play was over an hour, so it was a slightly different vibe. More, with SPOILERS )

I then also watched A Christmas Carol Goes Wrong, which was shorter and felt closer to the show, but I still like the show more. More, with spoilers )

*

stuff i love

Week 2 of Stuff I Love: Top 10 Edition (hosted by [personal profile] dreamersdare here) is Series. For week 1’s “Standalones”, I’d chosen to focus on SFF stories because I tend to favor SFF series. So I’m thinking of doing basically the opposite, for the same reason, for this week – usually if I read/watch a series, it’s almost certainly going to be a SFF series because it’s a chance to spend time in a constructed world, get to know magic rules or alien races, maybe even learn a bit of an invented language. So it’s much rarer for me to have a series I love that isn’t SFF – and that’s what I decided to go with here (partly because, y’all already know what my favorite SFF series are, it’s basically all my tags :)

Again, not trying to rank these:

Top 10 NON-SFF series I love )
althea_valara: An icon of Aphmau from Final Fantasy XI. She's got blond hair up in a braid around her head, and is wearing orange Eastern-inspired clothing. (aphmau)
Althea Valara ([personal profile] althea_valara) wrote in [community profile] finalfantasy2026-02-13 09:48 am
Entry tags:

Final Fantasy Kiss Battle is back for 2026!

FINAL FANTASY KISS BATTLE 2026
FINAL FANTASY KISS BATTLE 2026
FINAL FANTASY KISS BATTLE 2026


Yes, that's right, the Kiss Battle is back! The premise is simple: folks leave a prompt, others fill those prompts. The fill MUST include a kiss of some kind - your interpretation of what that means is open! And this is not just for fanfic - fan art is welcome, too!

COME PLAY WITH US!

FINAL FANTASY KISS BATTLE 2026
FINAL FANTASY KISS BATTLE 2026
FINAL FANTASY KISS BATTLE 2026
rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2026-02-13 12:23 pm

There's Too Many Badgers In Here.

After seeing Christmas Carol Goes Wrong at the Apollo Theatre on 14 January, I wrote a post outlining some differences between the official published script and the actual performance I saw. I crossposted it to Tumblr, and a couple of people thanked me for sharing details you wouldn't get from reading the script, so I thought I should see if I could dig up anything else!

Now that I've read through the script in full, here are some more differences I've picked up on between the script and the staged version. Some of these are outright changes from the script; some of them are just performance details (e.g. interesting moments of body language) that aren't included in the stage directions. As this was originally written for a Tumblr audience, there's a bit of overlap with things I've already mentioned on Dreamwidth (specifically in the post I made straight after seeing the play).


More differences between the script and the actual staged version of Christmas Carol Goes Wrong. )


Getting into a theatre fandom is so strange! It feels like there's simultaneously not enough canon and an infinite quantity of canon, because it's impossible to see every performance. I'm glad The Goes Wrong Show means that at least some parts of Goes Wrong canon exist in a concrete, tangible, rewatchable way.
lebateleur: Ukiyo-e image of Japanese woman reading (TWIB)
Trismegistus ([personal profile] lebateleur) wrote2026-02-12 07:23 pm
Entry tags:

What Am I Reading Wednesday - February 11

Posted on the following Thursday, for reasons.

What I Finished Reading This Week

The Dog Stars – Peter Heller
This book did not agree with me and I HAD THOUGHTS. Strap in. )


What I Am Currently Reading

Lake of Souls - Ann Leckie
I'll have this wrapped up by next Wednesday for sure.

The Goddess and the Tree - Ellen Cannon Reed
I read the prologue.

The Laws of Brainjo – Josh Turknett
A reread; first completed in 2023.


What I’m Reading Next

This week I acquired Danielle Jensen's A Fate Inked in Blood, 김미정의 한나랑 떠나는 신나는 성경여행, and 한재홍의 콩쥐 팥쥐.


これで以上です。
kradeelav: Dr. Kiriko (amused)
krad ([personal profile] kradeelav) wrote2026-02-12 06:14 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

lowkey considering commissioning a low-poly silver cobra headed cane for myself just to complete the 'haxxor with a pimp stick' aesthetiq i got going right now.

... i'm either going to immediately regret this or be inseparable from it lmao

rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2026-02-12 04:46 pm

Fanfiction: Sleep Well (The Goes Wrong Show, Robert/Chris)

Another Goes Wrong fic that grew out of a fill for the Three-Sentence Ficathon! I haven't posted the fill in question to this journal, but it was for the prompt 'goodnight kiss'.

'Riona, why would you name a fic Sleep Well if you already have a fic called Sleep Tight in a different fandom?' - look, leave me alone, titles are hard.


Title: Sleep Well
Fandom: The Goes Wrong Show
Rating: PG
Pairing: Robert/Chris, slight everyone/everyone
Wordcount: 1,600
Summary: On account of a booking mishap, the Cornley Drama Society are forced to share a single hotel room. The consequences are confusing.

Sleep Well )
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2026-02-12 07:44 am

(no subject)

I went into Lessons in Magic and Disaster somewhat trepidatiously due to the degree to which her YA novel Victories Greater Than Death did not work for me. The good news: I do think Lessons in Magic and Disaster is MUCH better than Victories Greater Than Death and actually does some things remarkably well. The bad news: other elements did continue to drive me up a wall ....

Lessons in Magic and Disaster centers on the relationship between Jamie, a trans PhD student struggling to finish her dissertation on 18th-century women writers at a [fictional] small Boston college, and her mother Serena, an abrasive lesbian lawyer who has been sunk deep in depression since her partner died a few years back and her career simultaneously blew up completely.

Jamie does small-scale lower-m magic -- little rituals to make things go a little better in her life, that usually seem to work, as long as she doesn't think about them too hard -- and the book starts when she takes the unprecedented-for-her step of telling her mother about the magic as a sort of mother-daughter bonding ritual to see if her mother can use it to help herself get less depressed! Unfortunately Serena is not looking for a little gentle self-help woo-woo; she would like to UNFUCK her life AND the world in SIGNIFICANT ways that go way beyond what Jamie has ever done with magic and also start blowing back on Jamie in ways that eventually threaten not only Jamie and Serena's relationship but also Jamie's marriage, Jamie's career, and Serena's life.

Serena is an extremely specific, well-observed character, and Serena and Jamie's relationship feels real and messy and complicated in ways that even the book's tendency towards therapy-speak couldn't actually ruin for me, because yeah, okay, I do think Jamie would sometimes talk like an annoying tumblr post, that's just part of the characterization and it doesn't actually fix everything and sometimes even hurts. But the book's strengths -- that it's grounded very much in a world and a community and a type of people that Charlie Jane Anders clearly knows really well and can paint extremely vividly -- are also its weaknesses, in that it's also constantly slipping into ... I guess I'd call it a kind of lazy-progressive writing? The book is full of these sharp, vivid, messy moments whenever it's focused on this particular relationship and Serena in specific, and without that flashpoint, the messiness vanishes. Jamie goes into her grad school classroom and thinks about how the white men are always so annoying but the queer and bipoc students Always pick up what she's putting down. Jamie's partner Ro sets down boundaries in their marriage after a magic incident goes wrong and they are Always right and Jamie is Always humble and respectful about it, because respecting boundaries is Always the Correct thing to do. (Ro is the sort of person who says things like "this is bringing back a lot of trauma for me" while Jamie's mother is actively, in that moment, on the verge of death. I'm all for honesty in relationships but maybe you could give it a minute?)

I don't know. I think there is quite a good book in here, but I also think that good book is kind of fighting its way a little bit to get out from under the conviction that We Progressive Right-Thinking People In The Year 2025 Know What Righteous Behavior Looks Like. You know. But sometimes it does indeed succeed!

I did really enjoy the book's hyper-local Cambridge setting. Yeah, I see you name-checking those favorite restaurants, and yes, I have been to them and they are pretty good. Also, as a b-plot, Jamie is uncovering some lesbian literary drama in her dissertation that gives Charlie Jane Anders a chance to play around with 18thc pastiche and write RPF about Sarah Fielding, Jane Collier, and Charlotte Clarke and sure, fine, I didn't know very much about any of those people and she has very successfully made me want to know more! There were a bunch of times she'd drop something int he book and I'd be like "that's SO unsubtle as pastiche" and then I'd look it up and it was just a real thing that had happened or been published, so point again to Charlie Jane Anders.