michifugu: Stego's eye closed (Uma Musume - Stay Gold)
[personal profile] michifugu
It’s been a while since I've written on this site. How's everyone doing? I'm somewhere between fine and not (LMAO). Well, don't worry, I will write about what I've been doing and what's happened to me these last few months.

At first, I wanted to make this a Murmur, but I think it's too long for that tag, since Murmurs are mostly just for short yapping. This is closer to a diary or journal entry, so I'll just write it as a "Journaling" post—a long-form piece about my personal life (mostly).

Anyway, I haven't really been feeling healthy this month but don't worry, it's nothing serious! Just a seasonal flu, especially with the awful weather lately (it's been pouring rain where I live, welp). I'm already getting better now, so yeah, I haven't done many thanks to my sickness, wwww.

Read more... )

late in time behold him come

Dec. 9th, 2025 02:04 pm
wychwood: Rodney was very nearly impressed (SGA - Rodney impressed)
[personal profile] wychwood
I made an automation flow that actually works!! I did realise afterwards that I need to add more error handling into it, but I am fully into celebrating the initial success right now.

Particularly because work is otherwise not as rich in successes as I would like. My inbox is a disaster area (everything in there requires action; I aim to keep it under 100 items and right now I'm running at 125 on a good day), the last report I actually completed in full was for July and I have a cumulative 2800 items to review in case they need moving, 900 duplicate records that need cleaning up, three test plans to write, an entire component that is supposed to go live before Christmas but which isn't with me for testing yet... and none of those things are even on the action tracker Boss Lady and I go through in my weekly 121.

But I did cross off one of my ten KANBAN items this morning and deleted two or three to-do list items. I'm hoping that tonight I will sleep instead of going for a series of one-hour naps all night, and maybe tomorrow I'll have the energy to tackle Power Automate...

Brr, it's cold out.

Dec. 13th, 2025 07:47 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
You'd think we'd get snow, but no. Tomorrow's forecast thus far calls for a "wintery mix". The only wintery mix I want is cocoa and marshmallows, not whatever the hell happens to fall from the sky like soggy doom confetti.

19F, jesus. At least it'll be warmer tomorrow. Warm enough to get a fucking wintery mix instead of snow, which is what we really want.

********************


Read more... )

(no subject)

Dec. 9th, 2025 12:56 pm
azdak: (Default)
[personal profile] azdak
Happy birthday, Nineveh-UK!

Revealing our dark pasts

Dec. 9th, 2025 10:28 am
lokifan: El from White Collar giggling (Giggly El)
[personal profile] lokifan
I went to a bi speed-friending thing on Sunday (it was great) and one of the conversations I had there reminded me of this weird, hilarious moment of fandom-meets-normal-people I had a while ago.

So there were six of us sitting at a round table in a restaurant, having just done a fun activity for [profile] sodsta’s birthday. Me, [profile] sodsta, [personal profile] januarium, Januarium’s husband A, and our friends L and F. Importantly, L is a uni friend of A’s, and F is her partner. We’re definitely all big nerds together but I’m not sure even L knew that Januarium, Sodsta and I all met through Harry Potter fandom.

We did, though. And we’re part of a group of 11 friends who all have a lightning bolt tattoo - mostly about two inches long, on the inside of our wrists. They were drawn for us originally by [personal profile] lizardspots, because she wasn’t gonna get a tattoo herself but she was part of the group. None of us, I think - including the 4 or so of the group who are trans - regret the tattoos, because they’re a symbol of friendship rather than Potter in itself.

Sooooo like two years ago, we’re sitting around having dinner and F starts excitedly talking about how she’s reading HP for the first time, and really enjoying them. She’s very offline and you can tell from how she’s talking that she has no idea about JKR’s fall off the deep end - and her girlfriend L, who 100% knows, is trans. So she’s happily talking, and L is looking at us in desperation, clearly hoping we’re not about to burst F’s bubble with any information about JKR’s transphobic activism. And I think we all silently decide that if L doesn’t wanna have that conversation, we won’t inflict it. But we’re all kinda like ‘hmm, interesting’ lol, not really engaging about HP, more drawing the conversation towards like reading in general. You’d have no idea any of us had even read those books.

And then F goes something like ‘and the red dragon, the - I can’t remember, the - ’

Januarium: the Norwegian Ridgeback?

F: ???

Sodsta: the Chinese Fireball, wasn’t it?

Me, joining in for the fun of it: or the Welsh Green?

F: …wait…

Januarium, sodsta and I: :look at each other, then slowly slide our wrists onto the table and pull back our sleeves to reveal our tattoos as one:



So we basically did a big reveal that we’d secretly been in a cult the whole time, lmao.
trailer_spot: (Default)
[personal profile] trailer_spot
A Private Life - Vie privée     HD1080p 22MB
Slyly comic psychological thriller in which an American psychoanalyst (Jodie Foster) in Paris, is devastated to learn that her client Paula (Virginie Efira) has taken her own life. Or has she? Visits from Paula's furious widower Simon (Mathieu Amalric) and taciturn daughter Valérie (Luàna Bajrami), along with the discovery that files have been stolen from her office, suggest that Paula may have fallen victim to foul play. Assisted by her ex-husband Gabriel (Daniel Auteuil), she undertakes some amateur sleuthing.

Pillion     HD1080p 26MB
A bit of an unusual British "rom-com" about a timid man (Harry Melling) who is swept off his feet when an enigmatic, impossibly handsome biker (Alexander Skarsgård) takes him on as his submissive.
Festival reviews are very favourable. If you would like to watch the trailer without German subtitles. And an earlier teaser trailer: HD720p 18MB.

The Magic Faraway Tree     HD1080p 39MB
Family movie based on Enid Blyton's novel about Polly (Claire Foy), Tim (Andrew Garfield) and their three children - a modern family forced to relocate to the remote English countryside. As they adapt to their new lives, the children discover a magical tree and its extraordinary and eccentric residents including treasured characters Moonface (Nonso Anozie), Silky (Nicola Coughlan), Dame Washalot (Jessica Gunning) and Saucepan Man (Dustin Demri-Burns). Rebecca Ferguson and Jennifer Saunders are also part of the cast.

The Chronology of Water     HD1080p 51MB
Intense, autobiographical drama about Lidia (Imogen Poots) who only feels whole when she’s in the water. Kicking through lap after lap, she can temporarily float free of the cold, rageful father who sexually abused her and her older sister (Thora Birch) while their apathetic mother turned away. Out of the pool, she flounders, ruining her college swimming scholarship with booze, drugs and reckless sex and lashing out contemptuously at anyone who shows her kindness. But when she joins a collaborative creative writing class led by "One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest" author and countercultural hero Ken Kesey (Jim Belushi), Lidia finds the same fluid escape in writing.
Marks the directorial debut of Kristen Stewart that was very well received this year in Cannes.

Shelter     HD720p 29MB
Action thriller about a reclusive man (Jason Statham) who rescues a young girl from a deadly storm on a remote coastal island, drawing them both into danger. Forced out of isolation, he must confront his turbulent past while protecting her, sending them on a tense journey of survival and redemption. Bill Nighy, Naomi Ackie, Harriet Walter and Daniel Mays are also part of the cast.
Doesn't look any different than about a dozen films Statham has starred in (who can keep them apart?). But it's been a while since I posted a trailer for one of his action vehicles, so I thought for a change I'll include it.

Economics

Dec. 9th, 2025 03:55 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
The 50-Year Mortgage Was Always Coming.

When homes are priced beyond what local incomes can sustain, the system stretches the debt instead of fixing the root problem.


In most cases, a 50-year mortgage is outright fraud.

Read more... )

Finished a relisten to Wolf 359

Dec. 12th, 2025 10:25 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
So much awful stuff happens to the protagonists in the last third of the show that I often don't make it all the way through. It's worth it, though - my favorite character suddenly gets enough growth to become my favorite character, and the villain dies in a very satisfying way, allowing me to say Read more... )

******************************


Read more... )

Famous by Naomi Shihab Nye

Dec. 11th, 2025 04:14 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
The river is famous to the fish.

The loud voice is famous to silence,
which knew it would inherit the earth
before anybody said so.

The cat sleeping on the fence is famous to the birds
watching him from the birdhouse.

The tear is famous, briefly, to the cheek.

The idea you carry close to your bosom
is famous to your bosom.

The boot is famous to the earth,
more famous than the dress shoe,
which is famous only to floors.

The bent photograph is famous to the one who carries it
and not at all famous to the one who is pictured.

I want to be famous to shuffling men
who smile while crossing streets,
sticky children in grocery lines,
famous as the one who smiled back.

I want to be famous in the way a pulley is famous,
or a buttonhole, not because it did anything spectacular,
but because it never forgot what it could do.


*********


Link
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/193: The Darkness Outside Us — Eliot Schrefer
Nowhere is truly empty. The thought makes me feel lavishly alone. Somehow, space is so deeply melancholy that it’s not at all sad, like a note so low it ceases to sound. Even my sorrow about my insignificance feels insignificant. [loc. 161]

Ambrose Cusk wakes up on a spaceship, the Coordinated Endeavor. The ship's operating system (OS) informs him, in his mother's voice, that the ship is well on its way towards his sister's distress beacon, on Saturn's moon Titan. Ambrose has been in a coma for two weeks, says OS, and has fallen behind on important maintenance tasks. Ambrose, who feels dreadful, can't remember anything about the launch.

But as he regains mobility and memory, he realises that OS is not being completely honest and open. Read more... )

ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This is the second part of the Tuscola Winter Window Walk. Begin with Part 1.

Walk with me ... )
[syndicated profile] cks_techblog_feed

Posted by cks

In response to yesterday's entry on using systemd (service) units for easy capturing of log output, a commentator drew my attention to systemd-run and systemd-cat. I spent a bit of time poking at both of them and so I've wound up with some things to remember and some opinions.

(The short summary is that you probably want to use systemd-run with a specific unit name that you pick.)

Systemd-cat is very roughly the systemd equivalent of logger. As you'd expect, things that it puts in the systemd journal flow through to anywhere that regular journal entries would, including things that directly get fed from the journal and syslog (including remote syslog destinations). The most convenient way to use systemd-cat is to just have it run a command, at which point it will capture all of the output from the command and put it in the journal. However, there is a little issue with using just 'systemd-cat /some/command', which is that the journal log identifiers that systemd-cat generates in this case will be the direct name of whatever program produced the output. If /some/command is a script that runs a variety of programs that produce output (perhaps it echos some status information itself then runs a program, which produces output on its own), you'll get a mixture of identifier names in the resulting log:

your-script[...]: >>> Frobulating the thing
some-prog[...]: Frobulation results: 23 processed, 0 errors

Journal logs written by systemd-cat also inherit whatever unit it was in (a session unit, cron.service, etc), and the combination can make it hard to clearly see all of the logs from running your script. To do better you need to give systemd-cat an explicit identifier, 'systemd-cat -t <something> /some/command', which point everything is logged with that name, but still in whatever systemd unit systemd-cat ran in.

Generally you want your script to report all its logs under a single unit name, so you can find them and sort them out from all of the other things your system is logging. To do this you need to use systemd-run with an explicit unit name:

systemd-run -u myscript --quiet --wait -G /some/script

I believe you can then hook this into any systemd service unit infrastructure you want, such as sending email if the unit fails (if you do, you probably want to add '--service-type=oneshot'). Using systemd-run this way gets you the best of both systemd-cat worlds; all of the output from /some/script will be directly labeled with what program produced it, but you can find it all using the unit name.

Systemd-run will refuse to activate a unit with a name that duplicates an existing unit, including existing systemd-run units. In many cases this is a feature for script use, since you basically get 'run only one copy' locking for free (although the error message is noisy, so you may want to do your own quiet locking). If you want to always run your program even if another instance is running, you'll have to generate non-constant unit names (or let systemd-run do it for you).

Systemd-cat has some features that systemd-run doesn't offer, such as setting the priority of messages (and setting a different priority for standard error output). If these features are important to you, I'd suggest nesting systemd-cat (with no '-t' argument) inside systemd-run, so you get both the searchable unit name and the systemd-cat features. If you're already in an environment with a useful unit name and you just need to divert log messages from wherever else the environment wants to send them into the system journal, bare systemd-cat will do the job.

(Arguably this is the case for things run from cron, if you're content to look for all of them under cron.service (or crond.service, depending on your Linux distribution). Running things under systemd-cat puts their output in the journal instead of having them send you email, which may be good enough and saves you having to invent and then remember a bunch of unit names.)

ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Monday we visited Tuscola so I could take pictures of the holiday window paintings. These were done by Libby Neathery of Libby Jo Art Studio and there are 22 in this year's batch. I did not find quite all of them but I came close. Despite changing the camera batteries right before we left home, I barely got through the two sides of the block with Flesor's Candy Kitchen before the batteries died, so we had to stop and get new ones. I did manage to finish photographing the rest of the windows we found.  I love seeing local artists do things like this, because it encourages people to get out and look for them. A little slice of Terramagne! (Continue with Part 2.)

Walk with me ... )

No Safety or Surprise, the End

Dec. 9th, 2025 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

My brother had some startling news. My old boss, at the New Jersey company I worked remotely for for a decade-plus, has died. My brother didn't have word on a cause of death or anything, although given that the guy was someone who'd had multiple freak scuba-diving accidents, I suppose it comes down to hard living. We didn't think he was much older than us, but we didn't really have a clear idea of how old he was.

I have a good bit to be grateful to him for, of course. First for giving me a job when I was fresh back from Singapore and completely unable to find anything. And for giving me just shy of a decade of remote working from Michigan, on a salary adequate to needs and accompanied by so few specific expectations that it was almost the ideal of just working whenever I felt like and taking off on a weeklong roller coaster trip when I felt like. There's few people who'd do that, especially for a programmer as within-normal-boundaries as I am.

I do remember asking him, right after he announced he was selling the company, if he was well, and he insisted he was. Still, I had suspicions then, and I guess it doesn't matter now. Do wonder about the exact circumstances, though.


On to photos. Most of Tuesday was a travel day, so there's only a couple pictures of interest, and many of them are from a supermarket in Rennes where we got some dinner.

P1080876.jpeg

The track for Bar-sur-Aube, the direction facing away from Paris (and Rennes). I could not get over how much this could have passed for, like, the Matawan station.


P1080880.jpeg

In comparison here's Paris's Gare du ... Somewhere ... and the mall that spits out trains on one end of things.


P1080882.jpeg

In Rennes! We had the same hotel as a decade ago and they had the same crest over this stairway mirror that we couldn't quite figure out. Parsing the words was okay, but the meaning eluded us.


P1080885.jpeg

The supermarket had this self-service bread-cutter that fascinated me. We didn't see anyone using it.


P1080886.jpeg

When FurAffinity happens in real life!


P1080887.jpeg

And what we ended up getting, a veggie bacon sandwich called Le British for some reason and crunchy ghost snacks.


Trivia: Thomas Fortune Ryan, who organized the Royal Typewriter Company, had previously formed American Tobacco and the Southern Railway out of mergers of smaller companies. Source: The Wonderful Writing Machine, Bruce Bliven Jr.

Currently Reading: Sabrina the Teenage Witch: 60 Magical Stories, Editor Mike Pellerito.

jacey: (Default)
[personal profile] jacey

Re-read via Audible. Audiobook Narrated by Zara Ramm

Hugely enjoyable revisit via audible recounting the origins of Smallhope and Pennyroyal, recovery agents extraordinaire. Beautifully read by Zara Ramm.

Original review of the Kindle version: This is the origin story of Lady Amelia Smallhope and Pennyroyal, butler of many talents. When Millie Smallhope's brother George marries a fortune hunter and her family falls apart, she's shuffled off to a finishing school. Trying to get her diamonds back from her sister-in-law, she comes nose to nose with a burglar who turns out to be much better at thievery than she is, and she ends up throwing her lot in with him - Pennyroyal - who just happens to have a time-travelling pod, and be a product of Butler school, though Millie suspects he learned all he knows in the nick. The two embark on a career as bounty hunters - err - recovery agents - and we follow their exploits, including where their story intersects with the St Mary's crew of disaster-magnet historians, and the Time Police, especially Team Weird. This is very engaging, and I stayed up far too late into the night because I couldn't put it down. Shades of Modesty Blaise and Willie Garvin with a time pod.


jacey: (Default)
[personal profile] jacey

Audiobook Narrated by Ryan Kennard Burke

I should have been pickier before buying this, but it was part of an Audible Twofer deal. Clueless Drake decides to become a farmer without knowing anything about farming. I gave up at Chapter five. By that time he’d bought lettuce and cucumber seeds for planting (so it’s spring?) and picked ripe blackberries – an autumn fruit. And not much else had happened.


Today's Adventures

Dec. 8th, 2025 08:32 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today we visited Tuscola and Champaign for holiday activities.

Read more... )

[#282 | Catharsis] Voting Post

Dec. 8th, 2025 11:24 pm
fanweeklymod: (Default)
[personal profile] fanweeklymod posting in [community profile] fandomweekly
Here are the entries for this challenge:

List of entries )

Please Note: Because we only have 3 entries this week, there is only a First Place and Runner Up to vote for!

In order to vote, please reply to this post using the form provided. All comments are screened, and entries are listed in the order they were submitted. For your vote to qualify, you must fill out your entire voting card (both spots) in order to be counted. Winner votes are worth 2 points, Runner Up votes are worth 1 point. Meeting the bonus goal on an entry gets an extra point for that submission.

When voting, please copy/paste the ENTRY NUMBER and the FIC TITLE from the list above into the spot you're voting for (this prevents accidentally mis-numbering a vote and casting it for the wrong entry). It should look like this:

First Place: 61. Fic Title Here
Runner Up: 88. Another Fic Title

Please note that you cannot vote for your own entry, and that votes cannot be made anonymously. You do not have to be a member of the community in order to vote, nor have submitted an entry for this week; everyone is welcome to participate in the voting. IP addresses are logged to prevent duplicate voting.



Voting closes Wednesday, December 10 at 9:00PM EST.

Profile

vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
vivdunstan

December 2025

S M T W T F S
  123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 9th, 2025 05:31 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios