Birdfeeding

Mar. 20th, 2024 04:23 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
Today is sunny and cool.

I fed the birds.  I've seen several sparrows, several house finches, two robins, two starlings, a male cardinal, and a mourning dove.

I dug the hole to plant the 'Fall Gold' yellow raspberry.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I planted the yellow raspberry.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- We moved the 2 bags of cypress mulch from the trunk of the car, one to the Colorado blue spruce tree and one to the picnic table.

I've heard crows and red-winged blackbirds in the yard.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I spread compost around the yellow raspberry, then added the jug and the label.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I put the groundcloth around the spruce tree.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I spread a bag of cypress mulch around the spruce tree.

As it is now dark, I am done for the night.

  

Birdfeeding

Mar. 20th, 2024 04:22 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is sunny and cool.

I fed the birds.  I've seen several sparrows, several house finches, two robins, two starlings, a male cardinal, and a mourning dove.

I dug the hole to plant the 'Fall Gold' yellow raspberry.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I planted the yellow raspberry.
 
EDIT 3/20/24 -- We moved the 2 bags of cypress mulch from the trunk of the car, one to the Colorado blue spruce tree and one to the picnic table.

I've heard crows and red-winged blackbirds in the yard.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I spread compost around the yellow raspberry, then added the jug and the label.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I put the groundcloth around the spruce tree.

EDIT 3/20/24 -- I spread a bag of cypress mulch around the spruce tree.

As it is now dark, I am done for the night.
[syndicated profile] snopes_feed

Posted by Alex Kasprak

With the exception of one popular Facebook satire page, nobody appeared to be making this claim.

Zeta

Mar. 20th, 2024 03:27 pm
billroper: (Default)
[personal profile] billroper
Did I mention that I'm a fan of Adam Strange?

Not the vast majority of the deconstructionist Adam Strange stories that have been written since Alan Moore passed by the character, to be sure. I want Adam to be a hero. And I have come up with a framework that allows him to be one, which I was sharing with my friend, Sam, over the weekend.

My theory is that the civilization on Rann (which is the planet of Alpha Centauri that Adam Strange travels to in best ERB-like fashion) is old. And static. And virtually everyone on the planet is completely lacking in problem solving skills, because the great machines that their ancestors built supply their every need and are self-repairing.

Except after some untold number of generations, the machines are breaking down. Oops. The things that the machines defended the planet from, whether natural disaster or critter from outer space, are breaking through. This is a bad thing for the people of Rann.

The last scientist on the planet (because, really, why would you need scientists in this utopia?) invented the Zeta beam and aimed it at Earth, hoping to establish communications with the more primitive people just one star system away. But he didn't account for the effects of cosmic radiation on the beam, which converted it from a communication beam to a teleportation beam. Surprise!

Enter Adam Strange, archeologist, who is picked up by the beam and taken to Rann. There he meets the lovely daughter of the last scientist. And unlike everyone else on the planet, Adam Strange has actual problem solving skills. (The scientist and the daughter are trainable. Everyone else is hopeless.)

You may not think of problem-solving skills as a super-power. I invite you to think of some of your co-workers and reconsider that.

And this is why Adam Strange becomes the champion of Rann.

At least, that's *my* take on it.

And I am now visualizing this as a movie starring Paul Rudd. Because it would be a *good* movie.

Anyway, given all that, I wrote a song about it.

And I now have an entry in my personal songbook with a title starting with the letter Z.

I hope you like it!
Lyrics inside... )
oursin: Photograph of small impressionistic metal figurine seated reading a book (Reader)
[personal profile] oursin

What I read

Finished Silver Nitrate, about which I was a bit meh: as an archivist I already have a good deal of HORROR around nitrate film, which is a very unstable and evanescent medium, but it doesn't just degrade, it is liable to explode, and having it in one's stores without proper precautions can void the insurance, just saying. So don't tell me about creepy occultists, in what I thought was perhaps a little too slow-burn of a narrative. Just me?

Re-read of DB Borton, Seventh Deadly Sin and Eight Miles High.

Shirley Jackson, The Haunting of Hill House (1959), as we saw the movie The Haunting at the weekend, and although I'd read the book it was a long time ago, so I thought I would re-read, and this is so how you do it, really. And I am not really a great horror reader.

The latest Literary Review

On the go

Christopher Fowler, Full Dark House: Bryant & May: Peculiar Crimes Unit #1 (2003) - had a feeling I had heard well of this series, and this was a deal on Kobo, so I am giving it a whirl.

Up next

Dunno.

hunningham: Beautiful colourful pears (Default)
[personal profile] hunningham
I saw Dune 2.

Missed Dune 1 in cinema but watched it on TV last week, and saw Dune 2 on big cinema screen on Monday.

Inspired to give it a go by this newsletter from Marie le Conte. Completely enjoyed & very pleased to have seen it.

Networks???? I got 'em

Mar. 20th, 2024 12:39 pm
susandennis: (Default)
[personal profile] susandennis
So the teensy weensy little router arrived. It is small. I got it set up. My plan was to use the same SSID/password and hope all the devices 'bought' it. But, nope.

The app that works it is a little fiddly - lots of 'connecting...' blue circle situations. So on a whim, while I was waiting, I unplugged my Eero from the modem and then plugged it into the LAN port of the little bitty router and BOOM!! Eero was as happy as he could be. My old SSHQ network was back in operation and functioning fine.

So now I have the Timber Ridge network, my little bitty router network and my Eero network. The speed test results are not impressive but the function is fine and dandy.

I've had a serious jones for some fried chicken. So I bought four fried chicken thighs at Safeway and just ate one and it did the job just fine, thank you. I might have another.

Unofficial Ducktales Songs Collection

Mar. 20th, 2024 06:05 pm
[syndicated profile] ao3_ducktales2017_feed

Posted by theskiesarepink

by

What the title says. I realized nothing was stopping me from writing lyrics for songs I wish we got in the show, and this is the result!

Words: 788, Chapters: 2/?, Language: English

[syndicated profile] snopes_feed

Posted by Jordan Liles

"Aldi's customers: If you shop at Aldi you need to know that store brand bacon is not from pig it's from a growing CELL," users claimed on Facebook.
[syndicated profile] thistlelj_feed


Chase by Linwood Barclay.

Quick synopsis: A secret government agency is making spy dogs -- dogs full of high tech cybernetic gear.

Brief opinion: This middle grade book would insult the intelligence of any middle grader who read it.

Plot: Set in the real world and current time, a super secret evil government agency is taking dogs, stuffing them full of high tech gear, and using them to spy.

One hyper-intelligent dog, Chipper, is a failure and escapes the lab before they can put him down.

The head of this super secret evil government agency forces the scientist who was outsmarted by Chipper to swallow a dog tranquilizer while showing him that as soon as he passes out, she's going to put him down the same way one would a dog. She literally murders her employees for making a mistake. This is apparently a common thing at the super secret evil government agency.

Once Chipper is free, chapters alternate between the dog, the main character boy (Jeff) who lives with his Aunt Flo (gods above, the author is an older man, but did not one person who read this story before it was published tell him what Aunt Flo is a euphemism for?), and the super secret evil government agents who are trying to recapture Chipper.

Aunt Flo, like every other adult in this book, is useless, mean, and oftentimes just evil for evil's sake. Among other things, she forced the 12 year old Jeff to drive a pickup truck on a regular basis, bullying him when he said he shouldn't or didn't want to.

Most of the book was just the super evil bad guys chasing Jeff and Chipper. The book concluded with the head of the super evil bad guys deciding she now wanted to experiment on human children as well as dogs.

Writing/editing: The technical writing/editing was fine. The plot writing was painfully bad. Awful. I feel like I lost IQ points because I read this book. I was angry when I finished it; how did this book get published when so many better ones don't! And the poor trees that died to make paper to print this god awful book!

What I Liked/What I Didn’t Like: The positive first, and the only reason I didn't DNF the book: I liked the early Chipper chapters, when he was in the lab and had just escaped.

But everything else in this book was awful and stupid. There was zero logic. Nothing made sense.

For example, so this evil agency was trying to make spy dogs to send into other countries because "no one notices dogs". Why would they pick Chipper? A border collie with "unique markings" (black around one eye, white around the other). Would you not want a dog to blend in? Something that looks like a mutt or a street dog? Border collies are striking!

Chipper flunked out of the program because he was too distractible, he couldn't override his instincts. Again, why on earth would you pick a border collie if you wanted a dog that could override its instincts!

Rating: 1-Hated / 2-Disliked / 3-Okay / 4-Liked / 5-Loved: A quarter star. It's my blog and I can rate it under 1 if I want to, though on Goodreads I'll have to round up to 1. It would be a zero star if not for the few chapters I liked.

------

DNF #16: The Dry Lands (A Tribal Song – Tales of the Koriba Book 1) by Simon J. Townley. Set in prehistoric times, the main character is a boy with a crippled foot. (Why is that so common in these books? I've read countless prehistoric stories where the male main character has a crippled or missing foot.)

Anyway, this self-published* book had a number of logic/plot issues and the editing wasn't very good (misspellings, issues with punctuation, etc). (*It has a "publisher" that has only ever published Townley's books...) I made it about a third of the way through the book before DNFing it.
siria: (tog - andy strut)
[personal profile] siria
Long time, no post! I am once more on the western side of the Atlantic Ocean, after three months at home. It was great to see my family and especially to hang out with my nieces, who are sprouting up so fast, and to get to travel a bit (some in Ireland, some in Hungary). I drank a lot of tea and generally just tried to let my brain... exist as much as possible. Once back in the U.S., I spent a few days visiting [personal profile] sheafrotherdon, which was lovely, with lots of cake and artisanal jam and also flatpack furniture assembly. (We triumphed in the end!) I'm now heading back to my own little apartment, and I'm looking forward to having my own space again and not living out of a suitcase.

Some travel pics )

Death and Other Details )

Irish Wish )

Pride )

(no subject)

Mar. 20th, 2024 01:59 pm
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
Ugh, we're barely into spring and already we've got little ants invading our house. It doesn't seem to matter how vigilant we are about keeping the kitchen counters clean, there's always something attracting a few ants.

It's very spring-like today after a fairly cold start; the sun is out and the temperature is into the 60s/high teens although there is a cold breeze. I did some grocery shopping very early this morning (to get it over and done with before I started my day), leaving here around 6:15 am. It took me longer than I wanted to get it done, because I had to spend time looking for things we don't normally buy, but I was home again before 7:30 am.

When I came out of the supermarket there were dark clouds massed over most of the sky so I thought it might rain, but later in the morning the sun came out and I went for a good long walk. (I couldn't see the clouds when I went out at 6:15 as it was still dark.)

Come and Fight Your Corner...

Mar. 20th, 2024 11:07 am
house_wren: glass birdie (Default)
[personal profile] house_wren
It's sunny. I saw a field full of robins. It being March, tomorrow the field will be filled with snow.

The oldest member of the family has died. This person had endured a difficult childhood and a great disappointment as a young adult. I think the disappointment never left. Still, there were some happier times and the death was quick and safe and with little suffering.

I'm not sure this person ever got to the point of "Things didn't turn out as I had hoped and I am okay anyway." Does anyone's life turn out as they had hoped? Perhaps?

Now that I am old and unwell I spend time doing nothing at all. Plenty of time to ruminate on how my life turned out, which was, of course, not as I had hoped it would. I have a lot of grief, a lot of uncomfortable feelings. When I try to discuss this with anyone, people try to talk me out of what I feel.

I don't feel heard. I think I need to meet someone old and ill who might be able to relate to me.

I spent a lot of time learning to 'behave,' to be polite, to fit in, to hide. It allowed me to pass for normal, but evidently it didn't work as well as I thought it did. What I thought was acceptance was often just being tolerated. I wish I had been able to be weirder, to be myself, to protect myself without having to focus on pleasing others so much. Now that I've moved to this country of impairment by illness, I want to find a way to be okay with myself and my situation. I want to be in reality. I want to not be distracted by people who don't actually care about me.

I finally saw an oral surgeon. He told me exactly what my dentist and the endodontist told me: there was a possibility I would need a procedure or that I would need my tooth removed. He saw no reason to do either at this point. If pain increases, I should return.

I won't be returning to his office though. Most of the staff seemed lifeless and unfriendly. The vibe of the office was alienating . . . deadening. My medical history was reviewed and I discussed being immunocompromised, but still I had to ask the assistant to wear the mask that she had in her hand. The dentist wore a mask - a loosely fitting surgical mask that he pulled off every time he spoke. What a ****.

It's exhausting to be ill and it's exhausting to have to constantly explain the vulnerabilities of illness and to have to request that people do the well known and simple actions that provide some protection.

I watched CAMPING VIBES on Viki and laughed again and again.

Today's perfume: Ambre Superfluide from the sample set by Les Eaux Primoriales. There are nine samples and only one that I dislike. (Couleur Primaire which smells exactly like laundry detergent.)
[syndicated profile] snopes_feed

Posted by Nick Hardinges

A supposedly shirtless photo of the Ukrainian leader was recirculating online alongside the claim.

Comment Bingo Round 5: Card

Mar. 20th, 2024 01:36 pm
spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I finally got around to requesting a table this morning and had it by noon-ish. Quick turn around!


blue background with text message bubble and other symbols


Table back here )

366 Questions 2024

Mar. 20th, 2024 01:24 pm
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] maju
19. What Hobbies Have Been Passed Down in Your Family? My mother taught me to both sew and knit, but she didn't really do them as hobbies, more as necessities for creating clothes when we didn't have money to buy them. She also instilled a love of reading in me.

20. How Comfortable Are You With Lying? Depends on the kind of lie. There are "social" lies - little white lies we tell (or tell by omission) to be tactful or not hurt someone's feelings, and I feel okay about telling those. Then there are the kinds of lies which hurt someone in some way or that you might use to try to protect yourself when you know you're in the wrong, and I'm not comfortable with those.

Excalibur #33

Mar. 20th, 2024 05:21 pm
iamrman: (Default)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Kitty sees a classmate sneak out during the night and decides to follow.

Read more... )

[syndicated profile] danah_boyd_feed

Posted by zephoria

New research on census, youth, mental health; a recent talk and an upcoming one

tl;dr: 

1. New paper with Janet Vertesi: “The Resource Bind: System Failure and Legitimacy Threats in Sociotechnical Organizations”

2. “Techno-legal Solutionism: Regulating Children’s Online Safety in the United States” (my paper with María Angel) was officially published as part of the ACM CS+Law symposium. 

3. Crisis Text Line’s report on what youth need to be more resilient is haunting but important

4. Watch Tressie McMillan Cottom, Janet Vertesi, and I riff on tech & society issues

5. Come hear me speak in DC on April 10!

We’ve come a long way to get back to trodden terrain…

Ten years ago – on March 17, 2014 to be precise – Data & Society hosted its first event: The Social, Cultural & Ethical Dimensions of “Big Tech.”  At that event, we brought together people from academia, civil society, government, industry, and others to start grappling with emergent challenges in a data-soaked world. It’s utterly surreal to realize that was 10 years ago. I went back and read the primers we created for that event and just smiled. The debates we elevated then are still with us today.  I also can’t thank all of those who helped make that event possible – in effect, they helped write Data & Society into being. 

(Side note: Data & Society is going to have many 10-year celebrations this year. Make sure to stay tuned to everything folks there are planning. And if you have the means to donate, that would be mighty nice. I continue to be in aw of all that D&S is doing!)

I’ve been thinking a lot about how far we’ve come in those ten years – and how many steps backwards we’ve also taken. On one hand, folks are much more willing to see the complexities and nuances of technology’s interactions with society. On the other, the techlash tends to be just as deterministic as the tech sector itself. And then there’s the tendency for policymakers to engage in techno-legal-solutionism which just makes me want to facepalm. (Congratulations to my co-author María Angel for an awesome presentation of our paper at the ACM CS+Law Conference last week!)

More and more, what’s going through my mind these days has to do with degradation. What happens when sociotechnical systems – and the organizational arrangements that rely on them – start to crumble? Not simply break or meltdown in a fatal sense. But, rather, just become shittier and shittier. Cory Doctorow has a term to describe this phenomenon in the context of technology platforms: enshittification (which, you have to admit, is just a damn good term). But the degradation and shittiness goes so far beyond platforms. For example, so many workers’ lives are becoming so much crappier. And this isn’t simply a story of AI. It’s a story of greed and oppression. Technology and law are just the tools to help aid and abet this configuration. 

What’s worse is that degradation is sometimes the goal. Janet Vertesi and I just published a comparative ethnography paper this week in a fabulous Sociologica special issue on failure. Throughout the organizational sociology literature, there are case studies of how technical failures lead to legitimacy crises. And that’s for sure true. But in examining how resources (e.g., time and money) are constrained in public-sector organizations like NASA and the Census Bureau, we noticed something else going on. We started to see how a resource bind can be manufactured to help trigger legitimacy crisis which can push sociotechnical projects to the brink of survival. To get at this, we examined how money was contorted inside NASA alongside the political dramas of manipulating time during the 2020 census. So check out our paper: “The Resource Bind: System Failure and Legitimacy Threats in Sociotechnical Organizations.”

(Also, if you’re reading this and you don’t know who Janet Vertesi is, you should. In addition to being an amazing ethnographer of NASA, she’s constantly engaging in opt-out experiments, which are kinda like breaching experiments to protect privacy in a surveillance society. Hell, you should see what efforts she went to in an effort to evade Disney’s data collection regime.  And yes, I was the friend who was convinced she’d hate Disney. Challenge accepted, right?)

Of course, it’s not just sociotechnical systems that are degrading. So too is our collective social fabric. And, with it, the mental health of young people. Last month, Crisis Text Line published some of its latest data about depression and suicide alongside what CTL is hearing from young people about what they need to thrive. (Hint: banning technology is not their top priority.) Young people are literally dying due to a lack of opportunities for social connection. This should break your heart. Teens are feeling isolated and alone. (My research consistently showed that this is why they turn to technology in the first place.) It’s also scary to see the lack of access to community resources. Communities are degrading. And there’s no quick technical fix. 

These issues were all on my mind when Tressie McMillan Cottom, Janet Vertesi, and I sat down for a “fireside chat” at the Knight Foundation’s Informed conference.  We kinda evaded the instructions we were given and, instead, decided to draw on the collective knowledge of our disciplines to offer theoretical insights that can help people think more holistically about tech and society. Along the way, we talked about how systems are degrading, how the technical fixes are harmful, and how we owe it to the future to address social issues in a more ecological fashion. 

If you happen to be in DC on Wednesday, April 10th, I will be offering up a new lecture that connects some of these issues to the public conversations we’re having about AI. This will be part of Georgetown’s Tech and Society week. (I’m the distinguished lecture with details forthcoming on the schedule.)  I hope you can join me there!

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