[syndicated profile] jwz_blog_feed

Posted by jwz

FEMA's Gregg Phillips says he has experienced multiple "scary" episodes of sudden teleportation:

Phillips spoke "on multiple podcasts" about being teleported against his will, which he has described as "evil." As director of the Office of Response and Recovery, Phillips oversees billions in funds, and is deeply involved in rapid response efforts in the aftermath of disasters.

"Teleporting is no fun," Phillips said last year. "It's no fun because you don't really know what you're doing. You don't really understand it, it's scary, but yet so real. And you know it's happening but you can't do anything about it, and so you just go, you just go with the ride. And wow, what just an incredible adventure it all was."

Phillips in the same interview described "teleporting" to a Waffle House 50 miles away. "I was with my boys one time and I was telling them I was gonna go to Waffle House and get Waffle House," he said. "And I ended up at a Waffle House -- this was in Georgia and I end up at a Waffle House like 50 miles away from where I was."

Now, do not mistake Phillips description for something like a medical episode or a black out of some form. He insisted that he was traveling from location to location without experiencing the passage of time. When his friends asked him where he was, he replied that he was at the "'Waffle House in Rome, Georgia.' And they said, 'That's not possible, you just left here a moment ago.' But it was possible. It was real."

Phillips also claimed that he had once felt his car "lifted up" and teleported forty miles to a ditch near a church. [...]

At FEMA, Phillips, who lacks any sort of professional experience related to disaster response, has been successful in the sense that his lack of qualifications fall in line with the Trump administration's apparent goal of kneecaping the agency.

Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.

rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


This spooky ghost story has a central pairing that I feel like I may have requested as an original work: Widow/Female Fake Psychic/Ghost of a Female Bog Body.

My Darling Dreadful Thing is set in the Netherlands in the 1950s, which is a selling point all by itself as I love unusual settings. Roos is a young woman whose abusive fake psychic mother forces her to participate in her fake seances. But though Roos does not communicate with the spirits sought by the desperate, grieving customers, she actually does have a spirit companion, a bog body whom Roos has bound to her and named Ruth.

Roos is delighted when Agnes, a biracial (Indonesian/Dutch) widow, takes her as a companion and spirits her away to her neglected Gothic mansion in the middle of nowhere. The mansion is otherwise occupied only by Agnes's sister-in-law, Willamine, who is dying of tuberculosis, and has a marvellously bizarre Gothic history. Roos falls hard in love with Agnes, with whom she has a surprising amount in common.

But this whole story is being told in retrospect, as a series of interviews Roos is having with a psychiatrist who is trying to determine whether she's mentally fit to stand trial for murder. Something very bad happened at the mansion...

Read more... )

Very enjoyable, very gothic, very atmospheric. I'm excited to read van Veen's other two books. I looked her up to see if she's actually from the Netherlands (yes) and learned that she's one of a set of non-identical triplet sisters! I don't think I've ever read a book by a triplet before.
[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
Nudibranchs are often referred to as the butterflies of the sea. Nudibranchs live worldwide, primarily in warm, shallow marine regions, and stand out for their flamboyant colors and diverse shapes. A team from the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces in Potsdam and the University of Cambridge has now discovered how they create their colorful patterns. According to their findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the color is produced by nanostructures, each of which creates a specific color impression.
[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Robert Pearlman

NASA has taken a step forward to moving an undetermined spacecraft of a various size on an indefinite date to a yet-to-be-decided location.

Or to put it another way: NASA is seeking to learn more about what it would take to remove the space shuttle Discovery from the Smithsonian in Virginia and relocate it to Houston, as compared to transporting a smaller space capsule from anywhere in the country.

The space agency on Thursday (March 19) released a draft request for proposal (DRFP) for the "NASA Flown Space Vehicle Multimodal Transportation Multiple Award Contract," seeking to learn how contractors would approach transporting both "large aerospace vehicles and smaller spacecraft capsules."

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[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Jon Brodkin

The Federal Communications Commission yesterday approved Nexstar Media Group's $6.2 billion purchase of Tegna, granting a waiver that lets the broadcast giant go way past the national limit on station ownership.

Nexstar said it closed the acquisition late in the day yesterday, immediately after receiving the FCC approval. The deal was also approved by the US Department of Justice, but a group of state attorneys general are challenging the merger in court in an attempt to unwind it.

Opponents say the FCC lacks authority to grant the waiver and that only Congress can change the 39 percent ownership limit. While the FCC says Nexstar will own fewer than 15 percent of TV stations, the cap in the FCC's National Television Ownership Rule is calculated by the percentage of US households reached by a single entity's stations. The Nexstar/Tegna combination will reach 80 percent of TV households in the US, or 54.5 percent when applying what's known as the "UHF discount."

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teaotter: (Default)
[personal profile] teaotter posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: cycle
Fandom: War of the Worlds 2005 (mods, you can use the generic movie tag)
Challenge: Plant

Summary: Life goes on.


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[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

Hey, everyone! You may remember my post from 2024 over my friend Jon R. Mohr’s album he released that summer, Bioluminescent Soundwaves. Well, I’m happy to report that Jon has come out with a brand new song, Death is a Beautiful Cobalt Blue.

This eleven-minute composure featuring the vocals of Julie Elven is a piece that comes from deep within Mohr’s very soul, as it is the result of years of stress and existential crises. He mentions that this work is inspired by T. J. Lea’s story, “I Bought My Wife a Life Extension Plan,” which he listened to the audio drama of in January 2025.

According to Mohr, the story really spoke to him and was practically a mirror to him and his wife, who was diagnosed with POTS back in 2023.

Following the diagnosis, her job let her go, and each following job failed to accommodate her medical needs appropriately. Between the medical stress, job insecurity, financial complications, and facing the physical struggles of POTS, the couple experienced their fair share of breakdowns and emotional turmoil.

Within this story, Mohr says it entailed the most beautiful depiction of death he’d ever heard, and it brought him comfort. He decided then and there that he’d believe in this version of the afterlife, even if it made no sense, because all that mattered was that it brought him comfort, and that works for him.

Things are much better now, with Mohr’s wife having a great remote job and a better handle on her physical symptoms, plus the two of them are closer than ever. The journey through all of this made Mohr truly appreciate friends, family, and the simple things in life.

In Mohr’s own words:

Death Is a Beautiful Cobalt Blue is the result of all of that. It’s an exaltation of life, loss, beauty, and grief. It doesn’t shame or try to hide pain or the negative aspects of life. It welcomes all of it, because I feel so lucky to be able to experience all these things and truly know what makes life worth living. I also consider myself very lucky to both know what intense happiness and intense pain feel like. Because all of it is life. THIS, now, is all I can guarantee to be true and real.”

So, there you have it. A baring of a composer’s soul and struggles, as well as his joys and comforts. I hope you enjoy it, it really is quite beautiful.

Don’t forget to follow Jon on Instagram, and have a great day!

-AMS

World Sparrow Day

20 Mar 2026 02:49 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
Today is World Sparrow Day. Here are some ways to celebrate it.


Bird Houses -- Backyard Bird Center

How to Attract Sparrows to your Garden

List of New World sparrow species

Old World Sparrows

Simple Sparrow Birdhouse -- Mother Earth News
Condo-style birdhouse for species that like nesting in groups.

Song Sparrow -- 70birds That Nest in Birdhouses
Plans for a platform that will suit many small platform-nesting species.

Sparrow Bird House -- Bird Watching Academy

Sparrow Identification Primer -- Chicago Bird Alliance

Sparrows: Browse by Shape -- All About Birds


Color perception tests

20 Mar 2026 04:30 pm
librarygeek: cute cartoon fox with nose in book (Default)
[personal profile] librarygeek
I've known for years, that even artists don't agree with me on the blue to green color line. What is turquoise or teal to me, seems different than what others say.

So here's a couple of tests:

ismy.blue

xrite.com/hue-test

After a few more people post their own results, I'll add mine.

20 Mar 2026 09:43 pm
marina: (burn shit down)
[personal profile] marina
Have things gotten better? They have not.

the good and the bad )

*

Somehow, in the middle of this madness, [personal profile] roga and I have managed to take a trip. We were originally supposed to go on an organized trip that got canceled because missiles, but we already had a day off from work and we ended up booking a hotel by the sea for 1 night.

The hotel is in a region that gets far fewer missiles (less of a strategic target), and though I can't say I got much sleep on this trip it was still amazing to just... not be in my house? Not have to do endless dishes and laundry? Just wake up by the sea and have breakfast by the sea.

We drove 10 mins to a nearby picturesque town and went around the few shops that were open (making sure we know where the nearest bomb shelter is at all times of course). We went to a little museum by the hotel that randomly had a bunch of military equipment Napoleon dumped into the sea after the failed siege of Acre.

I posted some photos on Bluesky.

It was just 1 day off work, and just 1 night away, and almost the entire time it was raining and cold. We were woken up by a missile alert (the kind that SCREAMS at you from your phone using those natural disaster overrides, but only means there COULD be a missile headed your way, not to be confused with a siren) at 2am, and when roga didn't answer a text or a call I put on my warmest coat and boots and ran over to knock on her door, just to make sure she was awake if there WAS a srein and we suddenly needed to run to the hotel bomb shelter in less than 90 seconds.

I was on my period and taking painkillers basically the whole time.

And still it was so nice to do that. It helped so much. Just one small breath of fresh air.
[syndicated profile] milesent_feed

Posted by milesent

It does seem that all my friends say that they were the last person picked when they were picking teams in grade school gym class. On reflection; being picked last IS traumatic, so it’s possible that if it even only happened once, it sticks in the child’s memory. And my therapist pointed out that most of my friends fall into the sphere of geeks and nerds so yeah… probably a higher percentage were picked last in gym class than in the standard population, heh.

Kids are cruel. You should’ve been picked first. I’m just saying.

Anyway, it was impressed on me at an early age that I am NOT athletic. (Being emaciated and starved as a child may have helped with that, thanks Mom.) But it’s long made me take a step back whenever the option for physical activity comes up. Which is sad, because this stuff is FUN. I love fencing and archery and climbing stuff and dancing. (seriously… play grounds are awesome.)

This little voice saying “you’re no good at this” lives in the back of my mind… and as I learn more and more about fencing and archery… I need to ignore that voice. Being picked last in gym class had more to do with social dynamics than my physical ability. And training works; I am a better fencer and archer than I used to be. It’s okay to acknowledge that growth.

[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
A research team from the Center for Applied Space Technology and Microgravity (ZARM), the Department of Environmental Process Engineering (UVT) at the University of Bremen and the German Aerospace Center (DLR) has made significant progress toward a self-sufficient Mars mission: a fertilizer, which can be produced solely with Martian resources, has been successfully used to grow edible biomass.
[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
A new study has for the first time elucidated the gut-liver immune regulatory axis jointly maintained by intestinal commensal bacteria and the intestinal endocrine system, and uncovered the fundamental mechanism underlying the body's nonspecific clearance of drug delivery carriers. It provides a universal solution to the core problem plaguing the delivery field for decades, significantly improves the delivery efficiency and therapeutic effect of tumor-targeted therapy, mRNA therapy, gene editing and other treatments, and blazes a new trail for the clinical translation of biomedical delivery technologies.

multifandom icons.

20 Mar 2026 10:16 pm
wickedgame: (Bess | Nancy Drew | Green)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] fandom_icons
Fandoms: 9-1-1, Bridgerton, Elite, Fallout, Heated Rivalry, Kuhnya, Made in Heaven, Mako Mermaids, Mr. Robot, Roswell New Mexico, The Last Kingdom, The Tudors, Vikings, Yellowstone, Young Royals

  
the rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 
 

weekend stream plans

20 Mar 2026 03:11 pm
althea_valara: A screenshot of my main Final Fantasy XI character. It's a close up, and she's wearing the Teal Saio robe set which features a golden circlet. The character herself has black hair in a ponytail and brown eyes. (ffxi)
[personal profile] althea_valara
Okay folks! I'm still catching up on sleep and am otherwise not up to doing anything strenuous, but I *would* like to stream this weekend to get back into it as it's been a few weeks!

Final Fantasy XI stream! (tonight)



Therefore, tonight's Final Fantasy XI will be a "Chill & Chat" stream! I plan to just grind levels on one of my non-main jobs tonight. What job? WELL, THAT'S UP TO YOU!

Feel free to vote on the poll even if you don't intend to watch the stream. Wanna watch? I'm at https://twitch.tv/altheavalara

Poll #34390 FFXI Job to Level?
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 0


What Job Should I Level in FFXI?

View Answers

Warrior (Currently level 1)
0 (0.0%)

Red Mage (Currently level 55)
0 (0.0%)

Ninja (Currently level 37)
0 (0.0%)

Dancer (Currently level 40)
0 (0.0%)

Monk (Currently level 1)
0 (0.0%)

Black Mage (Currently level 50)
0 (0.0%)

Thief (Currently level 53)
0 (0.0%)

Scholar (Currently level 52)
0 (0.0%)

What other job(s) should I unlock tonight?

View Answers

Paladin
0 (0.0%)

Dark Knight
0 (0.0%)

Beastmaster
0 (0.0%)

Bard
0 (0.0%)

Ranger
0 (0.0%)

Samurai
0 (0.0%)

Dragoon
0 (0.0%)

Blue Mage
0 (0.0%)

Corsair
0 (0.0%)

Puppetmaster
0 (0.0%)



You can read about the different jobs here: https://www.bg-wiki.com/ffxi/Category:Jobs

Final Fantasy XIV Stream! (tomorrow)



Tomorrow, I also plan to take it easy. We'll be doing the latest Hildibrand, then clearing out more open quests from my journal. I also might just keep an eye on the discords and hop around to FATEs or hunt trains. Whatever looks interesting and chill.

Start time is 7:30pm for both streams -- or later. Lately, we haven't even started dinner until 6:50pm (much to my displeasure, but can't be helped). I'm also not sure how long I'll stream, but I figure it will be at least 60-90 minutes?

Thursday, March 18: Routine

20 Mar 2026 03:53 pm
rowyn: (Default)
[personal profile] rowyn

Thursday, March 18

I woke at 8AM and went whyyyyyyyy.

I got up anyway and did some gaming for two hours. At 10AM, I finally went downstairs to get breakfast (I had half of the leftover honey puff pancake). Chatted briefly with Nathan and Dad. Dad would have a sip of water if we asked, but he wasn't drinking that much unprompted.

Around 11:30, I went back to bed to nap, and slept until almost 2PM. But! I no longer felt like sleeping! Progress. I got up and went downstairs to reheat the rest of the honey puff pancake. It looked like Dad had eaten lunch, but I asked if he wanted anything.

"I could eat," Dad said. Okay then.

I checked the refrigerator and pantry. "It looks like your choices are soup, pork bao, or sandwiches."

Dad picked soup. I ate a few baby carrots while I waited for it to heat. M had picked up a giant bag of them for Alltoseek, which she'd been unable to finish. I've been eating several each day. Baby carrots are all right, but they take forever to chew. Maybe I should try making glazed carrots out of them. They'll be significantly less healthy but glazed carrots are delicious. :9

Back upstairs, I played more games and chatted on Discord with the Jokka community. The long thread about 'how/should we cap clan sizes' had mutated into 'how can we make things better for giant clans'. XD I think the game is just gonna stick with giant clans, though Maggie will probably implement a hard cap at some Very Large size, like 1500 or 2000.

I caught up on yesterday's entry, then wrote up today. I checked on Dad around 4PM and verified that poker started at 6:30 and we should leave for it at 6PM. I also made a Coke float. 

Well, I said I'd drop to one Coke float a day, not zero. Let's not get crazy here. 

When I ordered groceries last night, I'd checked on what ice milk/other low fat frozen desserts Walmart had, but I didn't pick anything up. First, the recommendation was "less sugar and saturated fat", so low fat is not a big help. Second, I already had a gallon of ice cream in the freezer and I'd be eating it anyway.

The sad part is that my favorite ice cream, for many years, was Edy's Slow Churned Double-Fudge Brownie. Which is reduced fat! But tastes as good to me as any full-fat ice cream I've had, so it's perfect. Except that I haven't seen it in stores for several years. I don't know what happened with it. I hunted down Edy's website. The flavor still exists, and they claim the brand is sold by a bunch of stores in my area. Including Walmart. Walmart's website disputes this claim. -_- I checked the websites for two other chains that supposedly sold it. The first was also "never heard of them", but Publix actually had some Edy's Slow Churned on their website. Not the flavor I actually want! But at least they'd heard of the brand. (Edy's has a sister brand, Dreyer's, but no hits on the first two sites for that, either.) Maybe I'll find somewhere I can get it eventually.

At 6PM, I took Dad to poker. When I got back, I was thinking, "I already have my sneakers on, so I should exercise now." The moment I got through the door, I took my sneakers off and put them on the shoe rack. Force of habit is Powerful. 

I forgot to write about this one at the time, but since I've started wearing slippers when going downstairs, the Correct Place for my slippers is now either the top of the stairs, because I don't wear them when I'm sitting down and I want to remember to put them back on before I go downstairs), or the bottom step (again, so I remember to put them on before going upstairs). A few days ago, I couldn't remember what I'd done with my slippers. So I checked the shoe rack by the garage door, and yep, there they were. I have trained myself so well to use the shoe rack that now I have to untrain myself. Alas, a mini-shoe rack for the bottom step would not be helpful.

Anyway, I put my sneakers back on (at least I hadn't gotten my socks off) and hopped on the exercise bike for 35 minutes. I watched an episode and a half of "The Dragon Prince". The latest episode is titled "The Red Wedding." I looked at the title card and said aloud, "Seriously? Seriously?!"

When I finished, I showered and returned upstairs. Instead of catching up on the day, I worked on the editing list for A Game to You. I figured I was more likely to do game-playing and journaling during Ong's stream, so better to put those off. I still have to divide up some too-complicated items, but I'm very close to being able to estimate how much work I've done and how much is left. EXCITING.

I ate a premade spinach salad as a late dinner around 8:30. Dad got home a little after 9, so I went downstairs to say good night to him. He came out of the bathroom to give me a good night hug, then returned to his bedtime routine. While I was downstairs anyway, I put away some laundry that'd been sitting on top of the laundry machines for a few days. 

When I got back upstairs, I started a 4thewords battle to catch up on the day. Before I could finish the battle, Ong's stream started at like 9:33 -- basically on time, woo! Watching the stream distracted me from doing anything useful. I wrote a bit more about the day and played some Time Princess. 

I worked on Kingslayer notes for about an hour while listening, completely losing track of time. I hurried to finish Time Princess things before reset, and then got ready for bed. I lay down around 1:30 and fell asleep at about 2AM.


[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
Scientists at the University of Warwick and University of Exeter have developed a fully fiber-coupled terahertz (THz) imaging system that significantly improves the speed, resolution, and clinical practicality of terahertz imaging. The study, published in Nature Communications, demonstrates a high-throughput, compact platform that overcomes key barriers limiting current THz systems—bringing real-time, non-invasive tissue imaging closer to routine clinical use.

20 Mar 2026 12:37 pm
cupcake_goth: (sparklefang)
[personal profile] cupcake_goth

Work yesterday left me incredibly frustrated. The ducks that are nibbling me to death have mutated to giant size and with razor-sharp beaks. Because I was so frustrated, I decided I needed to reread one of the most disturbing sets of Hannibal AU fics I've ever encountered: A Gifted Student and A Letter to My Abuser. They're gorgeously, awfully written. (If you decide to read them, pay close attention to the tags oh god pay close attention to them.)

A Letter to My Abuser is, in some ways, the harder read for me, because when I first read it I tried to figure out why I identified so hard with a side character; Ollie, so giddy to meet his literary idol, but forcibly warned/ran off by this AU version of Will Graham. When I read it last night, my brain went "ohhhhh, yeah, Neil Gaiman", and then I had to read some fluffy fic to scrub my brain. 

I hope his victims get closure. And that they win the legal actions against him, because they deserve the money they're suing for. 

---

EDITED TO ADD: I used to subscribe to FKAHerSweetness' Ko-Fi, as she left Ao3 and only posted her fic behind a paywall. I eventually ended my subscription because as time went on, I didn't enjoy how she wrote Will. She writes AUs only, and more power to her, but they became something I didn't want to read.
[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
New observations by a team of US astronomers have cast fresh doubt on whether the lunar surface could host abundant water ice. Publishing their results in Science Advances, a team led by Shuai Li at the University of Hawaii at Manoa has shown that relatively pure ice (making up more than about 20–30% of the surface material) is likely absent from the moon's permanently shadowed regions.
[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
Tiny pieces of plastic, called microplastics, are showing up everywhere, even in the water in clouds, rain, and snow—and they may be affecting our weather and temperatures. A study published in Environmental Science & Technology and led by Hosein Foroutan, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, found that microbes living on microplastics dramatically boost their ability to trigger ice formation in clouds.

40 Multi-fandom icons

20 Mar 2026 11:52 am
thesleepingbeauty: funny girl &hearts; please credit <user site=livejournal.com user name=littlemermaid> @ <user site=livejournal.com user name=dream_fairytale> if using on livejournal (disney princess | belle)
[personal profile] thesleepingbeauty posting in [community profile] icons


All icons are HERE at [community profile] little_mermaid. ♥️

Note: This post will only be open for a few weeks … after that it will be locked to members only, so please feel free to join/subscribe if you like my work. Thank you.

40 Multi-fandom icons

20 Mar 2026 11:52 am
thesleepingbeauty: comeback &hearts; please credit <user site=livejournal.com user name=littlemermaid> @ <user site=livejournal.com user name=dream_fairytale> if you use on livejournal (ladies | ariel)
[personal profile] thesleepingbeauty posting in [community profile] fandom_icons


All icons are HERE at [community profile] little_mermaid. ♥️

Note: This post will only be open for a few weeks … after that it will be locked to members only, so please feel free to join/subscribe if you like my work. Thank you.
[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Beth Mole

A member of an influential federal vaccine advisory panel made a dramatic claim Thursday afternoon that the panel had been disbanded following a temporary block by a federal judge and would be entirely reconstituted—again. But, just hours later, he retracted the claim, saying that it was merely a possibility.

The claim immediately caused a stir online. Public health experts began to cheer the news, given that most of the current members hold anti-vaccine views and have little to no qualifications for being on the panel—which is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). Current members were hand-selected by anti-vaccine health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who had summarily fired all 17 experts previously on ACIP. Kennedy's new ACIP members have since held several chaotic meetings in which they voted to roll-back CDC's evidence-based vaccine guidance.

On Monday, Federal Judge Brian Murphy issued a temporary injunction blocking Kennedy's ACIP members and their votes after finding that they were improperly appointed and vaccine recommendations were changed without procedural requirements. The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit brought by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and other medical groups, who challenged Kennedy's anti-vaccine efforts.

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Check-In Post - March 20th 2026

20 Mar 2026 07:14 pm
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What is a craft that you tried but abandoned?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



20 Mar 2026 02:00 pm
gremdark: Barbara Gordon as Batgirl from Gotham Adventures. She's thinking hard, and looks frustrated. (Barbara thinking)
[personal profile] gremdark
Well, I've locked myself out of my phone. I have snacks, music, my laptop, and a list of things to do to make the house nicer to be in. Let's see what I can get done. 

Progress! The cat boxes are clean, there's a nice fire built up and ready to light for when our friends come over later this week, and I did a round of dishes before dinner.

Instead of writing, I rewarded myself with a nice sunny lie in the front yard, where I witnessed a minor car accident. Two drivers tried to go at a four-way stop simultaneously. Luckily the damage to both cars was minor and the drivers, from what I overheard, were civil about it.

Now that we've eaten and tidied, I'm going to take a crack at my Rare Kink Buffet fills. Knowing myself, I probably have 2-3 productive hours left until I get too sleepy. It's spring break, so free time isn't in short supply. I'll go to bed fairly early and be glad of the rest.

What? It's Friday?

20 Mar 2026 01:16 pm
lydamorehouse: (MN fist)
[personal profile] lydamorehouse
 Once again, I have failed to post anything beyond once a week.  Ugh, I suck. Sorry, everyone!

To be fair to me, Ramadan has only just ended (happy Eid to those of you celebrating today). Ramadan has meant several late nights for me, as I've been doing anti-ICE patrols--though one of my groups actually had people patroling in the wee hours of the morning--like, 3:00 am! I wish I were the sort of person who could have done that? I bet the Dispatch calls were fascinating. And, maybe it would have inspired a vampire story or two, who knows?

Part of me will miss this. In particular, I will miss the Night Owls.

The Night Owls (which actually start at the fully normal hour of 8 pm) are an interesting group. It's a group resistance Signal call for anyone up and about until dawn, no matter where they are located. So, I've had people on with me that were coming in from exo-suburbs and even nearby small towns.

The culture of a lot of the Signal calls is that commuters and stationary/foot/bicycle patrolers say pretty quiet and only turn their mics on to do a plate check. This varies from community to community, of course, with some dispatchers encouraging more back and forth or doing round-robin check-ins. It really depends on who your "Guy/Gal/Enby in a Chair" is.  There's things specific to specific groups too?  My hyper-local community always signs-off with "Have a great night, Fuck ICE" in the same sort of casual tone you might tell a partner "Love ya!" before hanging up. I joke that I can always tell people from my area when they show up on the larger calls because they still do this even when its not the culture of the call? Other dispatchers sound a little thrown to hear folks from my neck of the woods just casually signing off with a happy little swear. There are also cool acronyms that I'm not fully privvy to, like some folks from the other side of the river apparently say: SSFI for Stay Safe, Fuck ICE.  I tried to say that today since there are lot of little ears around the mosque during Eid, but my dyslexia was like... UH GO SLOW... so totally outed myself as NOT one of the cool kids, after all. :-)

But the Night Owls are their own special crew. Their chat is actually vetted, but the call is open to anyone commuting, etc., late night. Once daylight savings time hit, my stationary patrols started at 8:30 pm so I joined the Night Owls. The Night Owl folks are just chattier? Largely, I think because it is often the same crew--people who do the late shift UberEats or whatever other driving gigs they might have.... people who are just up all night. They will talk about their favorite energy drinks or talk about the usefulness of jumper cables or sometimes even awkwardly attempt to flirt over Signal voice chat. Ocassionaly, someone will break in with a startled, "Y'all, I just saw the world's biggest rat run across west 7th! And I used to live in Mumbai!" There was a whole discussion that spanned several nights about the ICE agents on Grindr (a gay dating app).   

I got invested, you know?

These people became some Real Life version of my own personal soap opera. I am going to admit that I have clearly formed some parasocial relationships with certain code names. 

That being said, they were really there for me when I needed it. There was an incident that I haven't blogged about a couple of Wednesdays back where my plate check came back hot, or shall we say VERY COLD, possibly even icy if you get my drift. I was stationary (on foot), alone, and dispatch very kindly asked me if I wanted a drive-by from one of the other commuters in the area. This icy vehicle was also stationary? We had clocked each other? Like, they were parked and the three of us had made eye contact. So, my voice jumped an octave higer than I intended and I was like, "Uh, yeah, I would not hate that, dispatch. Thank you!"

Y'all, within MINUTES rescue arrived. 

Rescue was a gender fluid person on bicycle patrol. This fully bearded, beautiful human being rolled up in 10 F/ -12 C degree weather in a skirt and Wicked Witch of the West striped tights. They had a high-powered telephoto lens camera with them and, I kid you not, the sight me--this tiny, fat lesbian on a phone--and  this amazing person arriving on a bicycle caused my icy van to decide THE THREAT WAS TOO BIG (which, honestly, was the most ICE-like move they made). They fled. I reported that my sus van was on the move to dispatch and I could hear commuters everywhere leaping into action. I am sure my sus van had a tail before they turned on to the next biggest throughfare. 

When I had to sign out, I heard the Night Owls making sure someone would continue to swing by to keep an eye on the mosque. I was so thrown by this experience that I didn't remember to text our contact inside the mosque until I got home, but I only live minutes away, so they got the word out for people to be extra careful that evening, too. I don't know, of course, for sure the folks we chased off were who we were afraid they might be, but I'm just as happy to have freaked out any other potential bad actors, you know? I swear that right now, in the Twin Cities, you do not want to be a "local, independent pharmaceutical entrepreneur" because some commuter has eyes on your business!  

So, I think this is why I feel kind of connected. Like, these are my comrades in arms (or by phone, as in the case of the Minnesota Resistance). 

Happy Eid, but good-bye my dear Night Owls! SSFI*!


====
I'll still be doing rapid-response work, but probably no longer at night.
gremdark: Tamaki from Ouran High School Host Club, sobbing in a fancy suit. (sobbing Tamaki)
[personal profile] gremdark
The local school districts are starting spring break today, so there's little substitute teaching work to be had. What little there is gets snapped up seconds after the listings go live. So I'm giving myself the gift of sun, writing, and light chores.

When I want to force myself to do non-phone things instead of doomscrolling, I like to lock myself out of my phone with a focus app. Usually I set up a long music queue before I do. Today, I forgot. I stared sadly at the two hour countdown on my phone screen, knowing I'd be so much more productive if only I could listen to something. Then I looked across the room at my record player and felt a bit silly. 

In my defense, the record player has bluetooth, so I use it as a giant bluetooth speaker a lot of the time. I'm still embarrassed. At any rate, I'm listening to a Simon and Garfunkel record right now.

Chuck Norris gets got

20 Mar 2026 01:58 pm
newredshoes: illustration, pangolin (<3 | what's a pangolin)
[personal profile] newredshoes
Things about this month, just for context:
  • One week on three different work schedules
  • One week on a hellish 5:30-1:30 morning newsletter schedule that actively makes me ill and wrecked my ability to either do anything or recover
  • Finishing up my big vintage Coach feature, which I'm so excited about and want to devote deep-work time to, but!!!!
  • Closing + packing + arranging contractors (yesterday: floor refinishers; today: guy who checks out the heater; tomorrow: painting?!!! with friends, though, yay!)
  • Dog care as Gingko gets increasingly anxious about the apartment being taken apart
  • Election coverage at work!!!!! Mega projects, late af night on Tuesday!!
  • WTF is happening with bsky blowing up finally spotting antisemitism and still not handling it well at all
  • Oh gosh, right, my formerly dislocated left elbow hurts more
  • My period is coming and I am always hungry and exhausted.

    I can't tell if I'm farther along in packing than I should be or way, way behind. But the rooms are getting less full, the boxes are filling up, the things I'm listing on the Buy Nothing group are being claimed, and if I swing this, I won't have to move again until I damn well choose it. (This move, while welcome in many ways, is because the guy who owns this condo told me a year ago that he wanted to sell this spring, so.)

    I'm sure there was more to say. I have to donate my books somewhere that will give me cash and not just store credit, because wow, dangerous. I have to set some timers to just get things in boxes, because we're running out of time to thoughtfully sort things. I have to start work in two minutes. I cannot wait for life to be routine and boring again!
  • [syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
    Every time we do a load of laundry, tiny fibers of polyester escape from our clothes and slip down the drain. These microfibers, so small they can be invisible to the naked eye, are among the most common forms of microplastic in the ocean. Yet, new research published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans shows that most of them may not make it that far.
    jlumen: Black girl as Kiki from Kiki's delivery (Default)
    [personal profile] jlumen

    As I was telling my dietician just yesterday, ADHD medicine can help you focus but not necessarily on the right things.

     I wasn't expecting to obtain a knitting machine so soon and thought I'd fill the time learning Python. To be fair, it still works out because knitting machines are quite long and I only have one place (my work desk) where I can use it for now. So the Python is something I'm trying to learn instead of doomscrolling reddit when my brain gets "bleh" from work.

    I'm about halfway through the first Python course on Codex.io. So far it's been pretty cool and interesting. I did sign up for the subscription and I'm hoping I won't need it for long, get through the python and intermediate course and then unsubscribe and start doing some things on my own.

    I have a few list of ideas of some things to keep my brain going.


    it's true that Python isn't that hard once you get the hang of it. And using Visual code as  atext editor really helps with my trouble on indents and syntax. I thought it would feel like a cheat but in reality it's helping me renforce some good coding hygheine? is that a phrase? Maybe I just made that up.


    Overall I've been feeling a little overwhelmed lately, I think I just need some sleep and some time to clear out my house. I love being a mom and part of that is accepting that I have to time manage better. Still haven't gotten the hang of it. 

     

    [syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
    Like the males of many animal species, male Drosophila melanogaster fruit flies, a commonly studied lab animal, are aggressive toward one another and even fight when competing for resources such as food and females. Researchers in the lab of David Anderson have been studying aggression in these insects for decades, elucidating the neural basis for heightened aggression in males, among other discoveries.
    [syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
    For millennia, sling bullets served as a hand-thrown projectile that could be used to fend off enemies. At Hippos, 70 sling bullets made of lead have been recovered over the course of fieldwork and excavation. However, while many are bare or depict scorpions and thunderbolts, one recently recovered sling bullet is the first inscribed example ever recovered at Hippos and the only known sling bullet ever inscribed with the letters ΜΑΘΟΥ meaning "Learn your lesson!"
    tinny: Lin Yiyang and Yin Guo looking at each other, about to kiss, in soft yellow-orange colors (cdrama_snowstorm_kiss)
    [personal profile] tinny
    The current round at [community profile] fandom10in30 is Hearts and Flowers. Since I already made 20 heart-themed icons for the ships20in20 round, I concentrated on flowers this time.

    Enjoy!


    8 Wu Lei-related, 2 other cdrama )

    Comments are love - and concrit, too. <3 Take and use as many icons as you like, credit is appreciated. Texture and brush makers: here in my resource post.

    Previous icon posts:

    Birdfeeding

    20 Mar 2026 01:05 pm
    ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
    [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
    Today is mostly sunny and quite warm. It's already 78°F outside. 0_o

    I fed the birds. I've only seen a few sparrows and house finches, but lots of birds are singing all around the yard. I suspect they're more interested in foraging.

    I put out water for the birds.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I sowed 3 troughs with 'Sugar Ann' snap peas and 3 with 'Avalanche' snow peas. I put 2 peas in each end of a trough, leaving the middle open to plant other things. That makes 24 pea plants. These are bush types and did well last year.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I sowed one trough with 'Lovely Lettuce Mesclun Blend' and one with 'Thumbelina Baby Ball' carrots. I plan to sow more of those 2 weeks later.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I trimmed a few spray bits of brush in the parking lot, and followed up with weed spray. My partner Doug is trying to find someone to come install a load of gravel.

    A large flock of several dozen blackbirds has gathered high in the trees.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I watered the six troughs on the benches of the new picnic table garden.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I used the last partial bag of compost & manure to spread a little over the eight big pots atop the new picnic table garden. So I'm out of that and nearly out of the American Countryside potting mix.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I put topsoil in four of the big pots atop the new picnic table. They're not completely full yet; there's room to add a bit of potting soil.

    EDIT 3/20/26 -- I put topsoil in the other four of the big pots. I still have a partial bag left.

    I am done for the night.

    nursery rhyme

    20 Mar 2026 01:56 pm
    myveryown_nemesis: (Default)
    [personal profile] myveryown_nemesis
     Horror Writing Prompt no. 2130: preacher man
    #horrorprompt

    nursery rhyme

    preacher man, preacher man
    follows me home
    my house is on fire
    together we burn

    03-20-2026

    (my apologies to the ladybug nursery rhyme...it's the only thing my brain could hear when I saw the prompt)
    [syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
    When bacteria cells replicate, they do so a little differently than human cells do. They don't undergo mitosis, a splitting that involves construction of spindles to carefully separate the DNA after replication. Instead, they use a process called binary fission, which is faster and allows them to separate their circular chromosomes as they are replicated. But the end result is the same: One cell turns into two cells, each with its own copy of the DNA chromosomes.
    [syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

    Posted by Jacek Krywko

    When NASA’s Perseverance rover landed in Jezero Crater in 2021, its primary mission was to scour the remnants of a dried-up Martian lakebed for signs of ancient life. Scientists have been focused on the crater's spectacular Western Delta, a fan-shaped geologic feature deposited by a river flowing into the basin billions of years ago. But now Perseverance’s ground-penetrating radar (called RIMFAX) detected what is likely another, even older river delta buried tens of meters beneath it.

    “I think it’s a promising place to look for signs of biosignatures at depth,” says Emily L. Cardarelli. “Microbial life could have potentially developed in those types of environments.” Cardarelli, an astrobiologist at the University of California Los Angeles, led the team interpreting RIMFAX imagery.

    Peeking underground

    Perseverance’s RIMFAX, the Radar Imager for Mars Subsurface Experiment, continuously fires radar waves into the ground, acquiring soundings each time the rover traveled 10 centimeters. When these radio waves hit boundaries between different types of rock, ice, or sediment layers, some of the signal bounces back. The timing and intensity of these reflections allow scientists to construct a two-dimensional, vertical slice of the subsurface, much like a sonogram of the Martian crust.

    Read full article

    Comments

    [syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

    Posted by Stephen Clark

    For more than 60 years, nearly every large rocket used some combination of the same liquid and solid propellants. Refined kerosene was favored for its easy handling and non-toxicity, hydrazine for its storability and simplicity, hydrogen for its efficiency, and solid fuels for their long shelf life and rapid launch capability.

    About 15 years ago, rocket companies started serious development of large methane-fueled engines. SpaceX and Blue Origin now build the most powerful of these new engines—the Raptor and BE-4—each capable of generating more than half a million pounds of thrust. SpaceX's Starship rocket and its enormous booster are powered by 39 Raptors, while Blue Origin's New Glenn and United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rockets use a smaller number of BE-4s on their booster stages.

    Burning methane in combination with liquid oxygen, these "methalox" engines have several advantages. Methane is better suited for reusable engines because they leave less behind sooty residue than kerosene, which SpaceX uses on the Falcon 9 rocket. Methane is easier to handle than liquid hydrogen, which is prone to leaks and must be stored at staggeringly cold temperatures of around minus 423 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 253 degrees Celsius). Methane is also a cryogenic liquid, but it has a warmer temperature closer to that of liquid oxygen, between minus 260 and minus 297 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 162 to minus 183 degrees Celsius).

    Read full article

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    [syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

    Posted by Scharon Harding

    Amazon is developing a new smartphone over a decade after discontinuing the Fire Phone, Reuters reported today, citing four anonymous “people familiar with the matter.”

    Reuters said the phone is codenamed Transformer but couldn’t confirm what it might cost, how much Amazon has invested into development thus far, or how much Amazon expects to make off the device. Like any product reportedly under development, it’s possible that Amazon will never release the phone. Reuters’ sources noted that Transformer could be cancelled over finances or a change in strategy.

    When reached for comment by Ars Technica, an Amazon spokesperson declined to comment on Reuters’ report.

    Read full article

    Comments

    2026 Photo #6

    20 Mar 2026 05:31 pm
    smallhobbit: (dragon)
    [personal profile] smallhobbit
    Early in the week we visited Aberglasney Gardens in Wales.  In the Ninfarium the Bird of Paradise plant was flowering.


    [syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
    In a new study, scientists from the universities of Portsmouth and Manchester report that a specially engineered enzyme can significantly speed up the breakdown of PET—the plastic used in water bottles, food packaging and polyester clothing—when it is processed at high concentrations similar to those used in industry. The findings are published in the journal Bioresource Technology.

    Profile

    firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
    firecat (attention machine in need of calibration)

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