How odd

Mar. 3rd, 2026 11:02 pm
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
It seems comments of mine quoted on Wikipedia has angered someone.


This bit caught my eye: " I only paid attention to this page after looking up those for several authors whose works I'd enjoyed, only to be surprised by how Nicoll's opinions had been added to criticisms of their works. Looking at the edit history, it showed they had all been added by the same person - Nicoll."

Except I didn't and looking at the Simmons entry, which I did suspect is what set this off, I don't see why anyone would think I had.

Random things make a post

Mar. 3rd, 2026 05:45 pm
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[personal profile] brithistorian
  1. In one of the books I'm reading right now, they frequently make references to another researcher by the name of "Fruhstuck." On a hunch, I looked it up and saw that her name is actually "Frühstück," with umlauts over the u's, which is German for "breakfast." I suppose this is an occupational surname that you wind up with if your ancestors worked at Waffle Haus.
  2. In the past I've mentioned Cherry Bullet's "Hands Up", which uses "Für Elise" as part of the song. Today I discovered Twice Dahyun's "Chess," which uses the same song even more directly. Enjoy!
  3. The fact that I didn't get this posted during the Olympics shows how off-task I've been recently, but I've been doing better for the past couple of days, so you get the post now. This year's Games featured an odd intersection of two of my interests: The Olympics and intellectual property law. Several figure skaters had trouble getting clearance to use the music they wanted for their routines. Intellectual property law is a mess anyway, but once you're crossing pretty much every border on earth and involving major international organizations like the IOC and numerous of the world's largest broadcasters and on top of that there's a lot of money on the line, things just get even more bonkers.

Hope you're all doing well!

[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read How To Deter Gents (And Other Customers)

Me: "Is the non-bio liquid in the sales?"

Sales Lady: "It is, but we've sold out of it."
Me: "Oh, that's a shame. Do you know if you're getting anymore in?"
Sales Lady: "We are next week, but today's the last day of the sale."

Read How To Deter Gents (And Other Customers)

Winter Is Coming: The College Years

Mar. 3rd, 2026 01:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwayslearning_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Winter Is Coming: The College Years

It was late August and over 80 °F (27 °C), so I asked where he was from and if he had a winter coat. Turned out he was from Jamaica, and he proudly showed off a light windbreaker.

Read Winter Is Coming: The College Years

Save A Penny, Lose A Person

Mar. 3rd, 2026 11:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Save A Penny, Lose A Person

While I was working for this company, we sometimes had to file papers in person at municipalities. If they were close enough to our office, someone from the office would go; if they were further away, we would ask engineers in a good relationship with us to do it for us and invoice us for the time.

Read Save A Penny, Lose A Person

Nuclear Car-ma

Mar. 3rd, 2026 09:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Nuclear Car-ma

This story happened in September 2022. I was woken up by something that sounded like an explosion. I looked at the clock; it was four o'clock in the morning. I was pondering about it for a while, then fell asleep again (I am definitely not a morning person).

Read Nuclear Car-ma

Need more Internet memes

Mar. 3rd, 2026 02:32 pm
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[personal profile] dreamshark
My darling daughter gave me one of those "memoir in a box" gifts for Christmas (the digital kind). Answer a question a day and it will generate and print a book of your life to leave to your family. You get 50 questions clearly generated by AI, ranging from obvious ("Can you tell us about your parents and what they were like when you were growing up?") to inane ("If your life were a book what would the title be?") Although they imply that there are human editors involved it is obvious that the entire thing is done by AI, and not very good AI at that. But since Amber paid for it already I am doing my best to generate something that the family might enjoy before the initial 90 day "subscription" rolls over to auto-renew and charges itself to her credit card again. 

You can't add your own topics or even edit the cringey AI-generated chapter titles, but I am trying to work with what's available to produce something that might interest Amber and the kids. It turns out that Lena isn't much interested in my actual life history but likes the more inane questions ("Describe your life in 3 words"). So I decided to cram a bunch more of meme-type questions into one chapter with a generic title. 

Google AI found me a few that I don't mind answering, although they are not particularly compelling
  • "What's the furthest that you have ever been from another human being?"
  • "What is a specific type of weather that triggers a memory you can't quite place?"
  • "What non-essential item would you bring to a deserted island?"
  • Who is a complete stranger you met once for less than five minutes but still think about years later?
  • What's the dumbest thing you believed as a child?  
Can you suggest more? Aren't there whole lists of them that circulate as popular Internet memes every couple of years? Typically called something like, "10 things you don't know about me."  



Hiding Way Down There

Mar. 3rd, 2026 01:58 pm
[syndicated profile] in_the_pipeline_feed

Quick preface: For those who have asked, my in-laws in Iran are (so far) all OK, but we are all of course in an extremely dangerous, stupid, and random situation right now. So yes, it does feel a bit odd to be writing about science and medical topics when there are so many other things going on (and going off) in the world. But this is one way I keep my own equilibrium, and I hope that that word of new discoveries and things that actually seem to be working out for the future can perhaps do the same for you. 

I’ve written here a number of times about chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cells a number of times here, going back to the first startling reports of their clinical efficacy. What’s been apparent for years now is the difficulty of getting them to work against solid tumors - that is, ones that are not based on circulating populations of aberrant blood cells. There are a number of reasons for this, and surely more that we haven’t worked out yet, but a big one has been the lack of “clean targets” for the T cells. Ideally you want a surface antigen protein that is expressed primarily by tumor cells and not by normal tissue, and you want a given tumor to express it all the way through.

Remember, most solid tumors are heterogeneous mixtures of mutated cancer cells, all fighting it out with each other for resources and room to grow, with new mutations appearing all the time. Single-cell sequencing techniques have made this vividly clear over the years, and this also helps explain why anticancer therapy is so difficult: you may come up with a method to kill off 70, 80, 95% of the cells in a tumor, but you will leave behind a resistant remnant that now is free to expand, its competition having been conveniently removed. And so the tumor recurs some weeks or months later, and this time in an even harder-to-treat form.

The surface protein CD70 is apparently not present in the great majority of adult tissues (except for some differentiating immune cell lines), but it does show up in tumors - to a degree. There are cells in many tumor types that are positive for CD70, but they also contain plenty of cells that appear not to be expressing that it at all. This new paper explores the hypothesis that these supposedly negative cells may in fact still be expressing CD70, but at a level too low for the usual methods of detection - and that means at a level too low for conventional CAR-T cells to recognize them, too. The authors find that the CD70 expression is epigenetically silenced by the methylase enzyme EZH2, which trimethylates lysine residues on histone H3 in the chromatin of these cells. That shuts expression down almost completely, but not quite. When compared to actual CD70 knockout cell lines under stringent detection conditions, they still show some low levels.

The team then went on to try out one of the higher-sensitivity CAR-T platforms, the “HLA-independent T cell” (HIT) receptor design, aimed at CD70 with the hopes that these could go on to eliminate these low-expression cells. They prepared xenografts in animals taken from extremely resistant human tumors, and treatment with the CD70-HIT T cells showed very strong activity against pancreatic and ovarian tumors, and they propose a chromatin-accessibility assay to determine if a given tumor could be sensitive to this sort of CD70 attack. The authors note that at least 20 solid tumor types have been found to express the protein heterogeneously, and suggest that many (perhaps all) of these are in fact still expressing very low levels of CD70 and could be candidates for such treatment.

This could be very good news indeed, and it also opens up a hunt for more such hidden targets that we have been missing. The combination of these and new methods to produce more active T cells is something we should keep an eye out for in clinical trials, and I look forward to following what happens!

It could be worse

Mar. 3rd, 2026 02:45 pm
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Benford and Bear in the Epstein files



As far as I can tell, they weren't involved in Epstein's sex trafficking. Just there as big name authors. Bear at least is reported as unimpressed.

Oddly, the third Killer B doesn't seem to have been invited.

bad news about @minoanmiss

Mar. 3rd, 2026 01:05 pm
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[personal profile] redbird
[Ny is gravely ill, unconscious, and unlikely to recover:]

Update: Ny is gone. As of a couple of hours ago, she no longer has brain function, and will be moved off life support after evaluation for organ transplant, and allowed to die peacefully, not necessarily immediately.

[my earlier info was via princessofgeeks, who linked to [personal profile] goss's post]

A Bat-tered Workspace

Mar. 3rd, 2026 05:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read A Bat-tered Workspace

Me: "Uh, good morning [Manager]?"
My manager jumps and whirls around, exhaling in relief when he sees me.
Manager: "Oh, it's just you. Sorry. Uh, yeah, uh, I actually meant to call you and say you might want to work from home today. We've, um, got a bit of a situation here."

Read A Bat-tered Workspace

2026.03.03

Mar. 3rd, 2026 09:53 am
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[personal profile] lsanderson
Minnesota launches investigation that could bring charges against US immigration officers
US county attorney is ‘confident’ her office will be able to pursue charges in cases which led to criticisms of use-of-force policies
Associated Press
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/03/minnesota-investigation-us-immigration-officers

GOP lawmakers introduce impeachment articles against Walz, Ellison
By Howard Thompson
https://www.fox9.com/news/gop-lawmakers-introduce-impeachment-articles-against-walz-ellison Read more... )
[syndicated profile] notalwaysrelated_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read We Should Totally Just Stab Caesar! (Salad), Part 3

The problem: the doctors and nurses insisted on doing their jobs, which involved seeing their other patients. My grandmother seriously expected them to wait around on her hand and foot like they were servants. My uncle went to the nurses' station to warn them that she was in a mood, but she had already been labeled as “difficult” in their system.

Read We Should Totally Just Stab Caesar! (Salad), Part 3

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Stories about nuclear war don't usually feature popular, pre-existing characters...

Four Times Familiar Characters Faced Nuclear Armageddon
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


A rescue places two space miners in the cross-hairs of a ruthless corporation.

Heavy Time (Devil to the Belt, volume 1) by C J Cherryh

Reading Past to Present

Mar. 3rd, 2026 01:11 pm
[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

Tuesday. Sunny and cold. I should get the trash and recycling to the curb — and I will! But right now it’s too cold for your friendly neighborhood author to move. Also the driveway is a sheet of ice, so I’ll have to put the ice grippers on my shoes.

Right now, I’m talking to you and drinking chocolate chai tea with half-and-half.

Early question from last night’s post! “Haven’t those guys ever read anything but SF?”

SHORT ANSWER: Dunno, but — it’s possible.

LONG ANSWER: I’ve talked about this before, and I’ll preface the following iteration by saying that I’m not trying to police anyone’s reading habits. Reading fiction is a relaxation. I’m not gonna tell you what beer to drink, either.

That said, and recalling that Local Custom, Scout’s Progress, and Mouse and Dragon file under SF — back when I was an eggling, It. Was. Not. Possible. to only read SF. Even someone who reads slower than I do had to read in a variety of genres, and while that doesn’t mean that people not so inclined had to read romance books (which, BTW, did not exist in today’s form), they did have to stretch their minds somewhat to encompass the protocols demanded by other genres. Maybe not by much, if they stuck to SF, and SF’s first cousin, pornography; action novels, war stories — but still broader than some people read today.

Because today, it is not only possible to only read SF, it’s also possible to only read the teensy, tiny subgenre that you prefer above all others. You never have to read fiction that makes you even the smallest bit uncomfortable, or offers you the opportunity to think a New Thought, or to practice a confusing scenario that that you might well face in RL.

Back in The Day, we were also taught to read. That is, we weren’t just taught the words and cut loose. We read out loud in school and answered questions. Now, I learned to read in a Catholic School, (an inaccuracy of its kind, but bear with me) and our primers chronicled the adventures of … Ann and David, I believe. They were teaching stories and had rather heavy-handed morals. And after we read each little adventure, Sister would ask us — Why did Ann do That Thing? Why was David worried? What did Mother say that you should all remember?

And I very much fear that the kind of reading lesson where children are taught to engage with the text, with the characters, and think about what the words mean, is a thing of the past, as well.

So! My tea’s gone. I think I’ll go rustle up some oatmeal.

Everybody have a good day.

Victory in Virginia!!

Mar. 3rd, 2026 08:17 am
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)
[staff profile] denise posting in [site community profile] dw_advocacy
On Friday, the judge hearing our VA case issued a preliminary injunction preventing the state from enforcing Virginia's SB 854 against any Netchoice member (which means us!) while the lawsuit proceeds. Judge Giles's ruling is a little technical in places and covers a number of legal issues that I keep meaning to get around to explaining someday so folks can have a better grasp on the kind of things they'll see argued in cases like these, like strict scrutiny and associational standing, but the end result is still pretty clear, I think: the judge agrees Netchoice has made a strong enough showing right from the start that the law is unconstitutional to block the state from doing anything to enforce it until the full case can be heard.

This is only the beginning of that particular fight and we still have a ways to go, but it's great news for us, for all our users from Virginia, and for the internet as a whole. Three cheers for the Netchoice team and the outside litigation counsel, who are Clement & Murphy for this one! The full docket in RECAP: NetChoice v. Jason S. Miyares, 1:25-cv-02067, (E.D. Va.).

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