Profile

ree: photo of a woman with long blonde hair and glasses (Default)
Ree đź’š

Subscription Filters

Page Summary

[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by John Scalzi

Me (peering at the painting on my dentist’s waiting room wall): This painting is new since the last time I was here.

Dentist: Probably.

Me: And done by the star of the Terminator films!

Dentist: What?

Me (points to the signature in the corner of the painting): Linda Hamilton.

Dentist: Dude, shut up.

For the record: Probably indeed not that Linda Hamilton. Probably also not the two Linda Hamiltons I found online who are primarily artists. One of them does “flower art” while the other does more abstract paintings. Her signature doesn’t match this one here. But in my deepest of hearts I will believe that my dentist has a painting of ducks and ponds done by the celebrated actress. Because life is more fun that way.

— JS

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


This all-new Human Gorilla Heists Bundle presents .PDF ebooks from Human Gorilla Creations that help you create tabletop fantasy roleplaying adventures of thieves and thievery.

Bundle of Holding: Human Gorilla Heists
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Aisha's unique senses could help the empire escape the ecological crisis the empire has inadvertently engineered. Too bad dynastic security requires her death.

The Girl from the West (Kokun, volume 1) by Nahoko Uehashi (Translated by Cathy Hirano)
github: shadowy octopus with the head of a robot, emblazoned with the Dreamwidth swirl (Default)
[personal profile] github posting in [site community profile] changelog

Branch: refs/heads/main Home: https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth Commit: 30ad62a36b99f0c922fe1790a40d9547d254a77c https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/commit/30ad62a36b99f0c922fe1790a40d9547d254a77c Author: Mark Smith mark@dreamwidth.org Date: 2026-02-03 (Tue, 03 Feb 2026)

Changed paths: A .github/workflows/tasks/worker-send-email-ses-service.json R .github/workflows/tasks/worker-service.tt R .github/workflows/update-workflows.pl R .github/workflows/worker-deploy.tt M .github/workflows/worker-deploy.yml M .gitignore A bin/ecs-shell A config/update-workflows.py A config/workers.json A terraform/cluster.tf A terraform/iam.tf A terraform/load-balancing.tf A terraform/locals.tf A terraform/providers.tf A terraform/proxy.tf A terraform/security-groups.tf A terraform/web.tf A terraform/workers.tf

Log Message:


Add Terraform for ECS infrastructure with single source of truth for workers

  • Add terraform/ directory managing ECS cluster, services, task definitions, load balancers, security groups, and IAM roles
  • Create config/workers.json as single source of truth for worker definitions, shared by Terraform (via jsondecode) and GitHub Actions workflow generator
  • Replace Perl Template Toolkit workflow generator with pure Python script (config/update-workflows.py) - no external dependencies needed
  • Add bin/ecs-shell helper script for listing services and connecting to tasks
  • Add send-email-ses worker that was missing from workflow definitions
  • Update .gitignore to exclude Terraform state files and lock file

The workers.json file defines all worker properties (cpu, memory, category, spot, min/max counts) in one place. To add a new worker: 1. Add entry to config/workers.json 2. Run: terraform apply 3. Run: python3 config/update-workflows.py

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 noreply@anthropic.com

To unsubscribe from these emails, change your notification settings at https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/settings/notifications

mark: A photo of Mark kneeling on top of the Taal Volcano in the Philippines. It was a long hike. (Default)
[staff profile] mark posting in [site community profile] dw_maintenance

Hi all!

I'm doing some minor operational work tonight. It should be transparent, but there's always a chance that something goes wrong. The main thing I'm touching is testing a replacement for Apache2 (our web server software) in one area of the site.

Thank you!

diaphanous

2026-02-04 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 4, 2026 is:

diaphanous • \dye-AF-uh-nus\  • adjective

Diaphanous is a formal word used to describe fabric of a texture so fine that one can see through it. Diaphanous is also sometimes used figuratively to describe something characterized by extreme delicacy of form.

// The bride looked radiant in her floor-length gown and diaphanous veil.

See the entry >

Examples:

"With a bright pattern set on flaming crimson and a diaphanous petticoat underneath, the dress fits her perfectly." — David Wingrave, Harpers Magazine, 24 Oct. 2025

Did you know?

What do the words diaphanous, epiphany, fancy, phenomenon, sycophant, emphasis, and phase all have in common? The Greek word phaínein shows more clearly in some of these words than in others, but it underlies all of them. The groundwork for diaphanous was laid when phaínein (meaning "to bring to light, cause to appear") was combined with the prefix dia- (meaning "through"). From that pairing came the Greek diaphanḗs ("transparent"), parent of the Medieval Latin diaphanus, which is the direct ancestor of the English word.



Psalm 18:1-2

2026-02-04 12:00 pm
[syndicated profile] votd_feed
“[Psalm 18] For the director of music. Of David the servant of the LORD. He sang to the LORD the words of this song when the LORD delivered him from the hand of all his enemies and from the hand of Saul. He said: I love you, LORD, my strength. The LORD is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.”

Brought to you by BibleGateway.com. Copyright (C) . All Rights Reserved.

Fig (2011 - 2026)

2026-02-03 11:45 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


I just got email from Fig's owner that Fig (who I owned from 2012 to 2017) passed away this evening. Cause unknown. My impression is Fig just didn't wake up.

Seen on the Watsfic Discord

2026-02-03 02:40 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll



QWP


Hey everyone,

**This year marks WATSFIC's 50th Anniversary!** To commemorate this we are releasing a new issue of our club fanzine Starsongs.

If you would like to become an officially published author, we are opening up submissions right now! Send us your **short stories, opinion pieces, open letters** [to systems, games, concepts, authors, or WATSFIC itself], **reviews of Sci-Fi/Fantasy** games, books, or other media, **your best drawings or paintings**, or whatever else you'd like to share with WATSFIC and the greater UW Community. We will endeavour to accept and print as many submissions as possible as long as they are club appropriate. If you're unsure if your idea is right for Starsongs, please don't hesitate to contact an exec and we'd be more than happy to discuss it and/or workshop it with you!

If you are looking for inspiration, you can find the 1970s releases of Starsongs on the University of Waterloo's Digital Library.

**We will be accepting submissions until the end of March, if you would like to contribute** please fill out this form here.

-# Submissions after March 31st may still be accepted, but we cannot promise anything, so please try to get any and all submission in before this deadline to ensure your work can be considered.

D&D scenario

2026-02-03 11:54 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Decades after the PCs' last adventure, an old epic foe reappears, still bent on conquest.

Time to get the band back together!

Alas, the band isn't just dispersed. All but one member is long dead.

Happily, the last surviving member is a necromancer.
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by John Scalzi

HOLY FUCKING SHIT I AM IN THE FUCKING EPSTEIN FILESSpecifically, my essay "Straight White Male: The Lowest Difficulty Setting" is referenced in a 2013 Rachel Sklar article about Muriel Siebert. Why is it in the Epstein files at all? You got me. What a wild fucking discovery. I am literally agog.

John Scalzi (@scalzi.com) 2026-02-03T07:06:50.335Z

To be clear, I did not expect to find myself in the Epstein Files, inasmuch as I have neither ever met nor have ever communicated with Jeffrey Epstein, nor do I hang out with the sort of people who find themselves on the private planes or islands of known sexual traffickers of children — a fact I’m deeply relieved about, if you want the truth of it.

Nevertheless when I learned that the database of the files is searchable, I put “Scalzi” in it to see what would pop up. I expected — and thus was not surprised by — several references to that name, because a banker with that last name handled some of Trump’s accounts at Deutsche Bank several years ago (no relation, as far as I know). But one of the references is indeed to me: Writer Rachel Sklar referenced me in an article she wrote in 2013, which is in the files for some reason, I assume because someone forwarded it to someone else in an email.

And, look: If one must have the appalling fortune to be in the Epstein Files, a one-sentence reference to an essay one wrote, located within another essay, neither about a topic that has anything to do with the exploitation of children, is almost certainly the best-case scenario. But it doesn’t mean I didn’t look at the reference when it popped up and say “oh, fuck” to myself. What a wild, unsettling and unhappy context in which to find one’s self.

So why mention it at all? One, because when people inevitably come across that reference to me in the files and email me about it, I can point them to this as a way to say “Yup, seen it, what a weird fucking thing that is” without having to type it out every single time. Two, I have enough detractors out there that one or more of them will loudly proclaim to their little pals that I am in the Epstein Files, and then slide past the actual context of being referred to tangentially, rather than being an actual participant in atrocities. Pointing this out before they do gives me “first mover” advantage, and the ability to point out what my appearance is actually about. This won’t stop some of them from misrepresenting my appearance, but that’s because they’re sad little weenies. Here’s the actual file I’m in. You can see it for yourself.

Nevertheless, a declaration:

For the absolute avoidance of doubt: Never once ever had anything to do with Jeffrey Epstein or any of his band of heinous child rapists up to and including the current president of the United States. Put them all into prison. Every single one of them. Never let them out.

John Scalzi (@scalzi.com) 2026-02-03T07:06:50.336Z

I trust that will make my position on Epstein and his party pals clear enough.

What a strange and unpleasant time we are living through, nor are we out of it. And once again I have cause to marvel at the weirdness of my own life, that I should show up, even as an aside, as part of one of most horrible political scandals in US history. I would have just as soon sat this one out. But since I can’t, at least I can tell you how I got there.

— JS

hornswoggle

2026-02-03 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 3, 2026 is:

hornswoggle • \HORN-swah-gul\  • verb

To hornswoggle someone is to trick or deceive them.

// I think we were hornswoggled by that magician.

See the entry >

Examples:

"Netflix users have been warned to look out for an insidious, AI-powered email scam that looks nearly indistinguishable from the real deal. ... If you have been already hornswoggled by such a scheme, Netflix advises changing your password and reaching out to your bank." — Ben Cost, The New York Post, 3 Mar. 2025

Did you know?

Hornswoggle is a slang word of some considerable mystery, at least where its etymology is concerned. The word appears to have originated in the southern United States in the early 19th century. The earliest known written record comes from an 1829 issue of The Virginia Literary Magazine in its glossary of Americanisms. The magazine states that hornswoggle comes from Kentucky, and that its oddness matches nicely with other 19th-century Americanisms, such as sockdolager, absquatulate, callithump, slumgullion, and skedaddle. While the exact point at which hornswoggle entered our language, and the way in which it was formed, may remain unknown, it is a charming addition to our language, joining bamboozle and honeyfuggle as colorful ways to say "to deceive."



Psalm 59:16

2026-02-03 12:00 pm
[syndicated profile] votd_feed
“But I will sing of your strength, in the morning I will sing of your love; for you are my fortress, my refuge in times of trouble.”

Brought to you by BibleGateway.com. Copyright (C) . All Rights Reserved.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
"In 1947 and 1948, Agee wrote an untitled screenplay for Charlie Chaplin, in which the Tramp survives a nuclear holocaust; posthumously titled The Tramp's New World, the text was published in 2005."
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

A shot of my hand holding one of the individual bars so y'all can see the cross section.

Last week, I was having a serious craving for some fresh baked chocolate chip cookies. Between the weather and the world, I really felt like a cookie would help improve my morale.

So, I decided to try out Half Baked Harvest’s recipe for what she calls “Really Good Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies.” Let’s get right into the process of making them and how they turned out!

Looking at the ingredients list, it’s pretty clear that these are definitely pretty standard cookies made with just everyday household items. Sugar (white and brown), flour, eggs, butter, some vanilla, chocolate, it’s all the usual suspects. Thankfully I didn’t have to go out and buy anything, I could just get right into baking.

The first thing to do was to brown the butter. I was surprised by this step because usually if browning butter is required in a recipe, the food blogger will include such information in the title of the recipe. Like, if I make Binging With Babish’s brown butter chocolate chunk cookies with flaky sea salt, I make a point to mention allll of that.

Anyways, I browned the butter and let it cool off for just a bit while I mixed together the sugars, eggs, and vanilla. Normally I use a stand mixer, but the recipe says that all you need is a bowl and a whisk, and really don’t need an electric mixer. I decided to follow in the spirit of the recipe and keep things simple. Simple ingredients, simple equipment.

After adding the butter (which was still melted but not hot so I didn’t cook the eggs), it was finally time to add the dry ingredients. The recipe calls for 2 cups of flour, and pretty much the second I put in the two cups, I could tell that it was too much flour.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking I packed the measuring cups too full of flour, resulting in extra unaccounted for flour in the mix. I’ll have you know I am a pro, and I spoon all the flour into the measuring cup, resulting in a nice, loose cup of flour rather than a tightly packed one. So it wasn’t my fault (this time, anyway).

The dough immediately became very dry and crumbly, and wouldn’t hold any type of ball shape. It would crumble apart so easily that the dough wasn’t even retaining any of the chocolate chips, they would just fall out.

I knew there was only one thing to do (besides cry and throw the bowl of cookie dough off a cliff). I was going to have to press all the dough into a 9×13 and make cookie bars.

I wasn’t sure how to adjust the cooking time for that, but I figured the initial temperature of 350 would be okay, so I put them in and basically eyeballed them until they were done, which took less than twenty minutes, I think. Here’s what they looked like:

A baking pan full of freshly sliced chocolate chip cookie bars with flaky sea salt sprinkled on top.

Honestly, they didn’t look too bad! They were pretty okay right out of the oven, but as they cooled they quickly got harder and harder, until eventually all I had was a pan full of chocolate chip bricks. I can only assume it’s from how dry the dough was due to all the flour, but these were definitely more like biscotti. Certainly no “chewy chocolate chip cookie” in sight.

I was definitely a little disappointed, but at least they tasted pretty good and could be slightly softened in the microwave, then washed down with a nice, cold glass of milk.

Do you like cookie bars? Is chocolate chip your favorite type of cookie? Let me know in the comments, and have a great day!

-AMS

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Eight death-metal miniatures games from OptimisticNL inspired by, and compatible with, the artpunk tabletop roleplaying game Mörk Borg.

Bundle of Holding: Forbidden Psalm
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by Athena Scalzi

Author Veronica G. Henry has come up with a library that truly has all the answers, thanks to its ever-evolving AI. Take a tour through The People’s Library in Henry’s Big Idea, and don’t forget to pay your late fees.

VERONICA G. HENRY:

The first time I realized that the past, present, and future can be contained in one essence was when I discovered the library. For in the absence of a more suitable reality, stories can provide a transformative diversion. In quiet moments, when I reflect on seasons of births and deaths and that middle part we call life, I also think of libraries.

I don’t know the when, but I know the where. It was in my hometown of Brooklyn, N.Y. that I first wandered into a library. The details are fuzzy, so I’ll flex a little creative muscle. I was an infant, already curious, definitely precocious. Determined even then to pursue the quest for more. Baby me was swathed tight against the winter cold, nestled protectively in my father’s determined arms. He marched through those painted oak double doors and introduced me to a new world and an obsession that persists to this day.

That’s how I like to remember it, anyway.

Though my career initially steered me towards a decidedly more left-brained path, the love of the written word and fate prevailed. I also became an author, one who alternates drafting my novels between home, the occasional coffee shop and yes, libraries. So it was inevitable that someday, I’d pen a story in the magical setting that planted that literary seed so long ago.

Inspiration struck as it occasionally does for me, in the form of an article. The feature extolled a library in Denmark where you could borrow a person instead of a book. Each had a title: unemployed, refugee, bipolar, etc., and in this mutually beneficial exchange, “readers” learned through conversations that challenge you to confront your own prejudice. Was it true? I didn’t much care. Because there, my friends, was my Big Idea.

The People’s Library was in large part, inspired by that article. If that was the kindling, the technical part of my brain supplied the spark. Though familiar to me, artificial intelligence (AI) was still a relatively new concept for the masses when I began writing. That changed faster than anticipated. Much of what we see today is specialized, task-focused systems that mimic human intelligence. However, its evolution, artificial general intelligence (AGI), is the promise of autonomous learning, thinking, and adapting. Think of AI as a really smart single-focus tool and AGI as analogous to the exponentially more complex functionality of a human mind.

This technology became the backbone of my future library. Only there would be no need to borrow a real person, but instead, an AGI replica of some of history’s most fascinating figures. The virtual personage, or virtus as I call them, were born. There was and still is a part of me that is as intrigued as I am terrified by this idea. I didn’t want to write it. That meant without a shadow of a doubt that I had to write it.

As the core idea solidified, I turned my attention to characters. Was there any doubt that my protagonist would be a librarian? Not for a second. She’d be forced to work in this futuristic library that is in direct opposition to everything she believes in. Echo London, anti-tech synesthete became my curator of The People’s Library. To say that she accepted the role with little grace, is an understatement. I drew inspiration from every librarian I’ve ever met and even Regina Anderson Andrews, the first African American woman to lead a NYPL.

As for the rest of the characters, I had to stop myself from thinking about all the fascinating historical figures I’d welcome the opportunity to chat it up with and focus on those who would best serve the narrative. One of the central questions that Echo wrestles with is human consciousness. What defines it, where it originates, how it exists before it finds its way into a human body. I needed a cast of deep thinkers with specialized skillsets to help her along that journey. So as not to introduce any spoilers, I think it’s best to let you discover the rest of the team organically. They were a ton of fun to research and write.

I’ll close with this food for thought. If you were to visit a future library where you could borrow a living, thinking, seemingly exact replica of a historical figure, would you? And if you did, whose consciousness do you wish you could converse with today?


The People’s Library: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powells|Sistah Sci-fi Signed Copy

Author Socials: Website|Bluesky|Instagram

github: shadowy octopus with the head of a robot, emblazoned with the Dreamwidth swirl (Default)
[personal profile] github posting in [site community profile] changelog

Branch: refs/heads/main Home: https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth Commit: e2b3b0b6ee48b93944c0ae60508a57f9df2be34d https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/commit/e2b3b0b6ee48b93944c0ae60508a57f9df2be34d Author: Mark Smith mark@dreamwidth.org Date: 2026-02-01 (Sun, 01 Feb 2026)

Changed paths: M app.psgi A cgi-bin/DW/Controller/PalImg.pm A cgi-bin/DW/Controller/VGift.pm A cgi-bin/Plack/Middleware/DW/SecurityHeaders.pm M cgi-bin/Plack/Middleware/DW/SubdomainFunction.pm A t/plack-media.t M t/plack-subdomain.t

Log Message:


Close high-priority Plack gaps: security headers, media controllers, journal subdomains

Add SecurityHeaders middleware (X-Content-Type-Options, HSTS), extract userpic/vgift/palimg serving into DW::Controller modules, add journal subdomain routing and RPC URI handling to app.psgi, and expand subdomain middleware to cover all SUBDOMAIN_FUNCTION types. Includes 48 new/updated integration tests.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 noreply@anthropic.com

To unsubscribe from these emails, change your notification settings at https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/settings/notifications

1 Corinthians 2:9

2026-02-02 12:00 pm
[syndicated profile] votd_feed
“However, as it is written: “What no eye has seen, what no ear has heard, and what no human mind has conceived”— the things God has prepared for those who love him—”

Brought to you by BibleGateway.com. Copyright (C) . All Rights Reserved.

prescience

2026-02-02 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 2, 2026 is:

prescience • \PRESH-ee-unss\  • noun

Prescience is a formal word used to refer to the ability to see or anticipate what will or might happen in the future.

// He predicted the public's response to the proposed legislation with remarkable prescience.

See the entry >

Examples:

"... novelists have always faced technological and social upheaval. They have mostly addressed it in one of two ways. The first is to imagine an altered future with the prescience of science fiction; Mary Shelley's warning that humans are not always in control of their creations is, if anything, even more resonant today than when Frankenstein was first published in 1818." — Jessi Jezewska Stevens, The Dial, 2 Dec. 2025

Did you know?

If you know the origin of science you already know half the story of prescience. Science comes from the Latin verb sciō, scīre, "to know," also source of such words as conscience, conscious, and omniscience. Prescience has as its ancestor a word that attached prae-, a predecessor of pre-, to this root to make praescire, meaning "to know beforehand."



Style Credit

December 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 2023

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
Page generated 2026-02-14 08:40 pm