Update [me, health, Patreon]

Dec. 12th, 2025 06:49 am
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[personal profile] siderea
So, I, uh, got my RSI/ergonomics debugged!* I then promptly lost two days to bad sleep due to another new mechanical failure of the balky meat mecha and also a medical appointment in re two previous malfunctions. But I seem back in business now. The new keyboard is great.

Patrons, I've got three Siderea Posts out so far this month and it's only the 12th. I have two more Posts I am hoping to get out in the next three days. Also about health insurance. We'll see if it actually happens, but it's not impossible. I have written a lot of words. (I really like my new keyboard.)

Anyways, if you weren't planning on sponsoring five posts (or – who knows? – even more) this month, adjust your pledge limits accordingly.

* It was my bra strap. It was doing something funky to how my shoulder blade moved or something. It is both surprising to me that so little pressure made so much ergonomic difference, and not surprising because previously an even lighter pressure on my kneecap from wearing long underwear made my knee malfunction spectacularly. Apparently this is how my body mechanics just are.
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[personal profile] siderea
Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1890494.html


0.

Hey Americans (and other people stuck in the American healthcare system)! Shopping for a health plan on your state marketplace? Boy, do I have some information for you that you should have and probably don't. There's been an important legal change affecting your choices that has gotten almost no press.

Effective with plan year 2026 all bronze level and catastrophic plans are statutorily now HDHPs and thus HSA compatible. You may get and self-fund an HSA if you have any bronze or catastrophic plan, as well as any plan of any level designated a HDHP.

2025 Dec 9: IRS.gov: "Treasury, IRS provide guidance on new tax benefits for health savings account participants under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill"
Bronze and Catastrophic Plans Treated as HDHPs: As of Jan. 1, 2026, bronze and catastrophic plans available through an Exchange are considered HSA-compatible, regardless of whether the plans satisfy the general definition of an HDHP. This expands the ability of people enrolled in these plans to contribute to HSAs, which they generally have not been able to do in the past. Notice 2026-05 clarifies that bronze and catastrophic plans do not have to be purchased through an Exchange to qualify for the new relief.

If you are shopping plans right now (or thought you were done), you should probably be aware of this. Especially if you are planning on getting a bronze plan, a catastrophic plan, or any plan with the acronym "HSA" in the name or otherwise designated "HSA compatible".

The Trump administration doing this is tacit admission that all bronze plans have become such bad deals that they're the economic equivalent of what used to be considered a HDHP back when that concept was invented, and so should come with legal permission to protect yourself from them with an HSA.

Effective immediately, you should consider a bronze plan half an insurance plan.

Read more [3,340 words] )

This post brought to you by the 221 readers who funded my writing it – thank you all so much! You can see who they are at my Patreon page. If you're not one of them, and would be willing to chip in so I can write more things like this, please do so there.

Please leave comments on the Comment Catcher comment, instead of the main body of the post – unless you are commenting to get a copy of the post sent to you in email through the notification system, then go ahead and comment on it directly. Thanks!

Fuchizawa Noe (1850-1936)

Dec. 12th, 2025 08:06 pm
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[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] senzenwomen
Fuchizawa Noe was born in 1850 in Iwate, where her father was a farmer and teacher. Unlucky enough to be born the same year as a major fire, along with ongoing poor harvests, she was fostered out as a baby; her foster parents, the Hamadas, were affectionate, but her foster father died when she was six, after which her foster mother Karu raised her alone, having her educated to the extent possible in the village. At thirteen Noe was indentured to a local shoe store, remaining there until her marriage to the owner’s son at twenty-three. It went badly and she was soon divorced, returning to her birth family to live with a brother. Like Sono Teruko, she took up reading Fukuzawa Yukichi’s work and discovered an urge to study in America.

In 1879, her chance came by way of working as a maid with the family of the engineer Gervaise Purcell, who was returning to America. She spent a year with the Purcells and then went to live with the Prince family in San Francisco, studying English while she worked. She was baptized in 1882.

In the same year, she gave in to her foster mother’s pleas to return to Japan; at thirty-two, she entered Doshisha Girls’ School, leaving three years later when she could no longer afford the fees. She became a teacher first at Toyo Eiwa Girls’ School and then at Hitotsubashi Higher Girls’ School, interpreting for her former employer Miss Prince. After teaching at a series of girls’ schools in the south, building lifelong connections with some of her students, she kept a stationery store for some time in Tokyo, until 1904 when her foster mother Karu died.

In 1905, Noe visited Korea at the invitation of Viscount Okabe Nagamoto and his wife Okako, whom she had met on the boat home from America. She was appalled by the situation of Korean women, whom she found to be shut up inside their homes and required to submit blindly to their menfolk. Making a decision to devote the rest of her life to Korean girls’ education, she founded the Japan-Korea Women’s Association in early 1906, with the support of various eminent Koreans. In May she opened Meishin Girls’ School (later Sookmyung Girls’ School). Lee Jeong-sook, its first principal, thus became the first woman principal in Korea, while Noe served as dean (they were said to rely on each other to the point of telepathy). The school started out unpromisingly with five students, thanks to its stringent rule of taking only the purest of noble blood and to general disinterest in girls’ education. Subjects included Japanese, morals, sewing, and arithmetic among others. They resorted to a student dormitory because girls of high birth couldn’t be seen walking in the streets, requiring a carriage or a veil; when the school eventually outgrew the dormitory, they settled for confusing the eyes of passersby by having the students wear uniform. The language gap was a struggle. However, by 1936 the student body was to have grown to over 500.

Carefully selected and educated as they were, the Sookmyong students were by no means resigned to their colonial suzerains, taking part in the March First liberation movement of 1919 and holding a four-month strike against Japanese teachers and Japanizing education in 1927. Although she did not sympathize with the students’ views, Noe did her best to protect them according to her own lights, juggling connections with the Korean Governor-General and the local churches and women’s associations, having arrested students released on her own recognizance and allowing them to graduate without a stain on their records. She was dedicated to the peaceful “merging” of Japan and Korea, representing at best the “benevolent” side of colonialism while still committed to doing what she saw as the right thing, and in her own way contributing to women’s education in Korea.

Noe met in 1921 with Yajima Kajiko and Kubushiro Ochimi upon their visit to Korea to found a Korean branch of the WCTU, of which she promptly became chair. Known in her old age for spending the winters wearing hats knitted by her students, she died in 1936 at the age of eighty-six. Her funeral was held at her school and she was buried in Seoul (although after the Korean War her remains were moved to a temple in her Iwate home town). Sookmyung Women’s University remains a thriving concern in South Korea; its website names Lee Jeong-sook and the Korean royal family as participants in its founding, but does not refer by name to Noe.

Sources
https://nagoyawsrg.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/essays2008.pdf (English) Essay going into more detail about Japan’s colonial history in Korea as it relates to Noe.

Advent calendar 12

Dec. 12th, 2025 10:24 am
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[personal profile] antisoppist
It was the last afternoon and the Christmas party was in full swing. Lemonade glasses were empty, paper hats askew, and the children's faces flushed with excitement. They sat at their disordered tables, which were their workaday desks, pushed up together in fours and camouflaged with Christmas tablecloths. Their eyes were fixed on the Christmas tree in the centre of the room, glittering and sparkling with frosted baubles and tinsel.

Miss Clare had insisted on dressing it on her own, and had spent all the previous evening in the shadowy schoolroom alone with the tree and her thoughts. The pink and blue parcels dangled temptingly and a cheer went up as the vicar advanced with the school cutting-out scissors.
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Lana DeGaetano

The furrigid temperatures are coming in hot (irony intended), and it's important to remember that there are other ways to keep warm without racing up your gas bill this winter! You can drink hot cocoa, look at some heartwarming cat memes, and bring your favorite feline as close as hoomanly pawssible to share in their toasty warmth.

If you're not a winter purrson, this season might be a little challenging for you. The winter lovers, on the other hand, especially those who are cat parents, are living for the cold weather. You can stay inside guilt-free, you don't have to walk your catto in the crisp cold air of a winter's morning, and most of all… your cat will be equally, if not more, lazy than you! Nothing is better than having a feline sidekick who makes you feel more purrductive than you actually are.

So, cat meowthers and pawthers, remember to bundle up, snuggle up, and warm yourself a toasty cup of hot cocoa this winter season. We're not even in winter yet. This means that the coldest is yet to come, and the best we can do is hunker down inside with a smile as our fuzzy felines give us the nice, warm hug we've been needing.

(no subject)

Dec. 12th, 2025 09:37 am
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[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] avendya, [personal profile] cesy, [personal profile] tazlet and [personal profile] trude!

Friday's comic

Dec. 12th, 2025 01:03 am
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[personal profile] murgatroyd_666 posting in [community profile] girlgenius_lair
https://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20251212

The best rebuttal to criticism is demonstration of competence and correctness.
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/196: The Naughty List Manager — Remy Fable
"...Go see what this young man is really like. Then come back and tell me if he truly deserves coal in his stocking."
It was absolutely against protocol. It was wildly inefficient. It was a complete deviation from two centuries of procedure.
"I could leave tomorrow," Noel heard himself say.[loc. 61]

Short sweet Christmas m/m romance novella: Noel Frost, an elf, has been managing the Naughty List Department for over two hundred years. For the last decade, he's pulled the file of Ezra Vince, street artist and befriender of stray cats, who's been on the Naughty List for the last ten years. Noel is something of a stickler for the rules, but Mrs Claus sends him to investigate whether Ezra is actually Naughty or ... the other thing.

I was suffering from a surfeit of pre-Christmas crowds and hecticity: this was the perfect antidote. Nicely written, sweet, humorous and fun. There are more in the 'Claus Encounters' series...

[syndicated profile] cks_techblog_feed

Posted by cks

In a recent entry, I said in passing that the venerable logger utility had some amount of annoyances associated with it. In order to explain those annoyances, I need to first talk about what goes into a well-formed, useful Unix syslog entry in a traditional Unix syslog environment.

(This is 'well-formed' in a social sense, not in a technical sense of simply conforming to the syslog message format. There are a lot of ways to produce technically 'correct' syslog messages that are neither well formed nor useful.)

A well-formed syslog entry is made up from a number of pieces:

  • A timestamp, the one thing that you don't have to worry about because your syslog environment should automatically generate it for you.

    (Your syslog environment will also assign a hostname, which you also don't worry about.)

  • An appropriate syslog facility, chosen from the assorted options that you generally find listed in your local syslog(3) (the available facilities vary from Unix to Unix). Your program may need to log to multiple different facilities depending on what the messages are about; for example, a network daemon that does authentication should probably send authentication related messages to 'auth' or 'authpriv' and general things to 'daemon'.

    (I know I've said to throw every syslog facility together in one place, but having a correct facility still matters.)

  • An appropriate syslog level (aka priority), where you need to at least distinguish between informational reports ('info'), things only of interest during debugging problems ('debug', and probably normally not logged), and active errors that need attention ('error'). Using more levels is useful if they make sense in your program.

    (This doesn't work out in practice but I'm describing how things should be.)

  • A meaningful and unique identifier ('tag' in logger) that identifies your program as the source of the syslog entry and groups all of its syslog entries together. This is normally expected to be the name of your program or perhaps your system. All syslog entries from your program should have this identifier.

  • Your process ID (PID), to uniquely identify this instance of your program. Your syslog entries should include a PID even if only one instance of your program is ever running at a time, because that lets system administrators match your syslog messages up with other PID-based information and also tell if and when your program was restarted.

    (Under normal circumstances, all messages logged by a single instance of your program should use the same PID, because that's how people match up messages to get all of the ones this particular instance generated.)

  • A meaningful message that is more or less readable plain text. Plain text is not a great format for logs, but syslog message text that people can read without too much effort is the Unix tradition, even if it means not including a certain amount of available metadata (structured log formats are not 'plain text').

The text and importance of your message text should match the syslog level of the syslog entry; if your text says 'ERROR' but you logged at level 'info', this isn't really a well-formed syslog entry. This goes double if you're using a semi-structured message text format, so that you actually logged 'level=error ...' at level 'info' (or the other way around).

All of this is in service to letting people find your program's syslog entries, pick out the important ones, understand them, and categorize both your syslog entries and syslog entries from other programs. If a busy sysadmin wants to see an overview of all authentication activity, they should be able to look at where they're sending 'auth' logs. If they want to look for problems, they can look for 'error' or higher priority logs. And the syslog facility your program uses should be sensible in general, although there aren't many options these days (and you should probably allow the local system administrators to pick what facility you normally use, so they can assign you a unique local one to collect just your logs somewhere).

A good library or tool for making syslog entries should make it as easy as possible to create well-formed, useful syslog entries. I will note in passing that the traditional syslog(3) API is not ideal for this, because it assumes that your program will log all entries in a single facility, which is not necessarily true for programs that do authentication and something else.

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Lana DeGaetano

How is it pawssible that the winter is nearly here? If the frigid tempurratures and toasty hot chocolate wasn't enough for you, then you are probably aware that we're closing in on Christmas. Yup, that means Santa Claws will be swooping down our chimneys when we least expect it, and our cats are going to have a meltdown once they realize Santa has them on the naughty list this year. Why, you might ask. Well, why not? They climb our Christmas trees like they're an olympian, they slap us awake if we're two minutes late on breakfast, and they have a way about them akin to a cartoon supervillain…

But, sweet hoomans, you are on the nice list this year. You've spent the entire 12 months catering toward your fluffy fellas every desire and need, and now, you're humble help has paid off. You can finally kick back, relax, and watch some cheesy Christmas comedy movies and curl up under a blanket you won during a workplace White Elephant last year. Sounds like heaven, right? Except, one thing is missing: feline funnies and another catto in the flesh. Grab your precious pet, and lock in. The feel-good funnies aren't going to scroll through themselves!

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[personal profile] escapade_team posting in [community profile] escapade_con
 Hey Escapaders!
 
If you love bouncing ideas off of other folks do we have the party for you! Please join us for a special afternoon of fun, brainstorming, and frivolity. Our final panel suggestion party is this Saturday the 13th from 1pm-4pm PST on Discord, in the atrium voice and chat channel. 
 
To check out what’s already been nominated go the Panel Nominations page then click View Panel Nominations
https://escapadecon.net/panels/panel-nomination/
 
If you want to participate and aren’t on Discord (yet), email info@escapadecon.net for an invitation. We hope to see you this Saturday! 
 
-Con Com
 
[syndicated profile] daily_illuminator_feed
According to an article on SFGATE, scientists are getting closer to figuring out the language of whales.

It's a fun read on its own . . . and the ideas and methodology might give more realistic space-faring RPG games ideas for how sci-fi scientists communicate with unusual life forms. (How long before we get a Whale Langauge Edition of GURPS Lite?)

Steven Marsh

Warehouse 23 News: The City Never Sleeps Because Of All The Action

There are a million stories in the city, and they're all exciting! GURPS Action 9: The City shows how you can add GURPS City Stats to your GURPS Action campaigns. It also features six sample cities to use with your own action-packed adventures. Download it today from Warehouse 23!
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[personal profile] labingi
This is an [community profile] ownhands update, but it has enough cool links I'm crossposting here so more people can see: some great alternative economy, digital commons stuff!

Thanks to PDX Time Bank (see Hourworld.org for more info), I’ve been fortunate to meet two amazing collaborators on the Own Hands Story Search tool: Rob Bednark and Matt McNamara. Rob has jumpstarted serious work on this project, and Matt put together an impressive prototype, integrated with a wealth of information from OpenLibrary, something I would never have thought of.

A quick plug: If you use the research-organization tool, Zotero, you may also be interested in Matt’s Zotero extension for Firefox, Webtero, optimized for web-based research.

Also through the time bank, I’m doing beta reading of Sara Bednark’s (Rob’s wife) novel, Delia, a very well-written tale of isolation and connection in the pandemic. I look forward to seeing this work published and will keep you posted on DW.
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Bar Mor Hazut

When winter comes, we all have to find creative ways to stay warm during extremely cold days. 

There are several different approaches one may try when fighting the cold. First, the clothes. While we would all love to stay in our PJs all day long and never leave our bed, most people actually have to leave their home, which means they have to wrap themselves in the warmest clothes possible. A cosy sweater, a big pair of boots, a fussy hat, and a coat are a must during the coldest days of the year, and they can ensure you arrive where you were headed in one piece.

Then, one can also indulge in a nice, warm beverage. It can be coffee, tea, or even hot chocolate, as long as it has steam coming out of the top, and it makes your throat and belly warm. You can even go as far as taking soup with you if it helps you weather the storm.

While the cat memes below don't exactly help us physically fight the cold, they do warm our hearts a great deal, so we consider that a win. If you agree, go ahead and scroll down to enjoy this heartwarming collection. Then, check out even more of these hisstercial cat memes.

The Mighty Nein 1x06

Dec. 11th, 2025 10:08 pm
settiai: (Mighty Nein -- settiai)
[personal profile] settiai
Continuing on my previously posted thoughts about episode 1x05, I just finished watching episode 1x06.

Spoilers under the cut. )

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