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[personal profile] brithistorian

About a month ago, NMIXX came out with their latest sing, "Blue Valentine."

I loved it — I've listened to it so many times! One part of it really confused me, though: From the start of the prechorus (at 0:40) until the beginning of the chorus (at 0:56), the tempo suddenly drops, then has an accelerando until the chorus begins. But I was really confused, though, because the line "You'll always be my blue valentine" in the chorus took the same amount of the time as when the same line was sung at the beginning of the song, but it felt faster. Fortunately, when React to the K (a YouTube channel that feature classical and jazz music students reacting to K-pop songs) did their video reacting to this song, they had an entire section where Liam (a classical percussionist) explains what's happening rhythmically during the prechorus — it took him almost 2 minutes to explain what happened in that 16 seconds of the song, but to me, it was worth it — I'd listened to that part of the song over and over so many times trying to figure out what was happening there, so it was great to finally understand.

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Posted by Not Always Right

Read Okay, But Where Is The Line In The Guideline?

Me: "Hey, [Manager], today I have to leave at my scheduled time because I have a doctor's appointment."
Manager: *Sucks air through teeth.* "Hmm, I can't guarantee that because the schedule is basically just a guideline. It's not set in stone."

Read Okay, But Where Is The Line In The Guideline?

Chinatown indoor masking

Nov. 24th, 2025 08:02 pm
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[personal profile] mindstalk

New exercise on my talk today: ignore people outside, and try to count mask rates visible within shops and offices. Or by people just leaving or entering.

Simple results: 12 out of 106 people total (this is 12 out of, not the X to Y of my PAX counts.)

Read more... )

There are stars in the southern sky

Nov. 24th, 2025 10:57 pm
[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

Monday. Bright and cold.

Breakfast was two eggs scrambled with leftover cauliflower and broccoli, with sausage, and a piece of whole wheat toast. A Big breakfast, but it’s a biggish morning.

Trash and recycling are in the garage, preparing themselves for tomorrow’s journey to the curb. Dishwasher is doing its thing. Cats suspect that Something Is Up.

I’ll be getting on the road to the cancer center and my chat with the Survivalist as soon as I finish my second mug of tea. I’ll be early, but I don’t have Steve’s genius for split-second timing, so better early than late.

I’m having a lot of fun with the Thursday Murder Club, and having never seen the show, only read complaints about how it “did not live up” to the books, despite the excellent cast — I have Some Thoughts About that.

The voice of the book — aka “the narrator” — is hysterical and unless the show (again, never seen it) has a voice over telling you what, oh, Ian’s thinking, and how he’s thinking it, viewers are missing an important facet of the story, and expecting the actors to carry the whole weight themselves isn’t really fair.

. . . and that’s my second mug empty, so I’m off.

I hope everyone’s having a good morning. I’ll see you on the flip side.

Back, having gone the long way home — through Bar Harbor. I had somehow expected the town to be open. I mean, people live on the island. To be fair, some things were open, for instance the Village Green Cafe, where I got my lunch (grilled ham and cheddar on multigrain with blueberry ice tea), but I hadn’t expected the relative emptiness.

Also, I had not come dressed for ocean-side chill, so my window shopping was limited. However, I’m glad I did not just go Straight Home like a Good Do-Bee. And, besides, I need to keep in practice with driving longish distances (that was, eh, 220 miles on the day). She said virtuously.

The Survivalist is a dream. We have a yearly check-in plan in place, as well as an agreement that I may call upon her for various things, and reassurance that I had NOT screwed up by wearing my compression gloves when my hands hurt. And I got points for asking a good question.

I believe I have all my Stuff for Thursday in-house (well, except flowers. I forgot flowers. Oh, well.), so that’s good. I haven’t gotten a wreath, either, because I just can’t make myself buy a wreath before Thanksgiving. It’s just … wrong.

The cats inform me that I missed three — or possibly four — check-ins today and that they are not disposed to be lenient. I was immediately tasked with rubbing Tali’s ears, and scrubbling Rook’s belly, and picking up Firefly for an All-Grown-Up Hug. I draw the line, however, at moving Happy Hour up by an hour and a half.

What did y’all do today?

Today’s blog post title comes from The Eagles, “Seven Bridges Road,” which I can never resist singing along with the acapella parts, though I really ought to always resist singing.

Sync And You Shall Find

Nov. 24th, 2025 11:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Sync And You Shall Find

IT Guy: "This chart represents, by email, how much time I've spent on each person's issues. You see all these emails?"
Me: "I mean, I see a giant clump of them... and then like two-thirds of it is me. Oh, God, I'm so sorry, am I putting in too many tickets?"

Read Sync And You Shall Find

rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Monday. Bright and cold.

Breakfast was two eggs scrambled with leftover cauliflower and broccoli, with sausage, and a piece of whole wheat toast. A Big breakfast, but it's a biggish morning.

Trash and recycling are in the garage, preparing themselves for tomorrow's journey to the curb. Dishwasher is doing its thing. Cats suspect that Something Is Up.

I'll be getting on the road to the cancer center and my chat with the Survivalist as soon as I finish my second mug of tea. I'll be early, but I don't have Steve's genius for split-second timing, so better early than late.

I'm having a lot of fun with the Thursday Murder Club, and having never seen the show, only read complaints about how it "did not live up" to the books, despite the excellent cast -- I have Some Thoughts About that.

The voice of the book -- aka "the narrator" -- is hysterical and unless the show (again, never seen it) has a voice over telling you what, oh, Ian's thinking, and how he's thinking it, viewers are missing an important facet of the story, and expecting the actors to carry the whole weight themselves isn't really fair.

. . . and that's my second mug empty, so I'm off.

I hope everyone's having a good morning. I'll see you on the flip side.



Back, having gone the long way home -- through Bar Harbor. I had somehow expected the town to be open. I mean, people live on the island. To be fair, some things were open, for instance the Village Green Cafe, where I got my lunch (grilled ham and cheddar on multigrain with blueberry ice tea), but I hadn't expected the relative emptiness.

Also, I had not come dressed for ocean-side chill, so my window shopping was limited. However, I'm glad I did not just go Straight Home like a Good Do-Bee. And, besides, I need to keep in practice with driving longish distances (that was, eh, 220 miles on the day). She said virtuously.

The Survivalist is a dream. We have a yearly check-in plan in place, as well as an agreement that I may call upon her for various things, and reassurance that I had NOT screwed up by wearing my compression gloves when my hands hurt. And I got points for asking a good question.

I believe I have all my Stuff for Thursday in-house (well, except flowers. I forgot flowers. Oh, well.), so that's good. I haven't gotten a wreath, either, because I just can't make myself buy a wreath before Thanksgiving. It's just ... wrong.

The cats inform me that I missed three -- or possibly four -- check-ins today and that they are not disposed to be lenient. I was immediately tasked with rubbing Tali's ears, and scrubbling Rook's belly, and picking up Firefly for an All-Grown-Up Hug. I draw the line, however, at moving Happy Hour up by an hour and a half.

What did y'all do today?

Today's blog post title comes from The Eagles, "Seven Bridges Road," which I can never resist singing along with the acapella parts, though I really ought to always resist singing.


2025.11.24-2

Nov. 24th, 2025 04:31 pm
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Udo Kier, German Actor Who Appeared in ‘My Own Private Idaho,’ ‘Andy Warhol’s Frankenstein,’ Dies at 81
By Jack Dunn
https://variety.com/2025/film/news/udo-kier-dead-own-private-idaho-andy-warhol-frankenstein-1236590259/

Jill Freud, Love Actually actor and inspiration for Lucy in Narnia books, dies aged 98
The actor ran her own theatre company and was described by her daughter Emma as ‘feisty, outrageous, kind, loving and mischievous’
Catherine Shoard
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/nov/24/jill-freud-love-actually-actor-cs-lewis-inspiration-narnia-dies-aged-98

Bollywood's 'He-Man' Dharmendra dies at 89
Geeta Pandey
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cg66lv566kyo

Michelin-starred Australian chef Skye Gyngell dies aged 62
Lana Lam
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy840l75gx3o

Reggae legend Jimmy Cliff dies, aged 81
Mark Savage
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj4qdren425o
[syndicated profile] seaofstarsrpg_feed

Posted by seaofstarsrpg

Wind PowerWhat does the future hold? Abundance? Scarcity? New ways of looking at things? Different things? Perhaps so of the articles below will give some insight into those questions. Or maybe not, predicting the future is a mug’s game.

But in the articles linked below there is quite a bit about energy production, both wind and solar, about roads that charge vehicles as they drive them, of course, some drone and drone related news -because it would not be a dark future without drones-, foods of the future from various sources, and some cultural insight, perhaps.

Where will the massive amounts of power needed for the world of tomorrow come from? Offshore windfarms are part of the solution such as this megaproject being built off the English coast. Wind power is producing quite a bit of the UJK’s power, especially on very windy days.

What about solar energy, beamed from space where the Sun is always shining? Star Catcher intends to do just that and a proof of concept satellite has successfully beamed power back to the Earth!

With that new electricity, you can electrify the very roadway so that vehicles can charge as they drive!  France is testing out that concept right now. Here is an article on what are the benefits of a electric road. Interesting ideas will they become a new reality?

For more personal mobility, Toyota has designed a walking chair that can traverse uneven terrain and even stairs! Yet it can folc around itself for easy transport. So, is a walking chair part of the future of mobility?

Now, with all of these electrically powered devices, we are going to need lots of batteries. Once place to get such mineral is from the sea beds. Some Chinese companies have been testing deep-sea mining robots. This potentially opens up a great source of needed materials . . . yet it also seems like the opening sequence of a horror movie.

And because we need to have some drones in every segment (right?), the Spanish company Voltrac has a heavy-duty drone that is designed for farming uses but can also be repurposed into mine clearance and security use. The system, called Thor, can haul four metric tons, it is a big boy, and can be driven remotely or allowed to operate autonomously.

For anti-drone defense, the US Army is looking at multiple projectile ammunition in 5.56mm (NATO standard) which could be easily used by troops in the field. No need for new kit, just swap clips.

A Chinese group at Jiangnan University has improved on an existing mycoprotein to make it both easier to eat and faster growing which makes it a very useful potential food! Fungus-burger anyone?

In other food news, invasive species!  If you can’t beat em, eat ’em!  It will not solve the problem but it is a step in the right direction and a new source of food! And invasive species are going to be an ongoing problem, so start eating them now.

You can never tell where culture -and sports?- will go. Who would have predicted that competitive stein-holding would be a thing?

Image from the Dogger Bank Wind Farm and used without permission.

Return to a different Dark Future.  See what lies in the next future.

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Posted by seaofstarsrpg

Pippa and KaeContinuing the diary of Ellikae “Kae” Sugarfoot, soon to be a famous hero and musician (she hopes), with annotations by her younger twin sister, Pippiana (known as Pippa).  [This will serve as my repository for campaign notes and observations and will be, of necessity, incomplete as it is restricted to what the characters know.  I may add clarifying information as needed and feel free to ask questions.]

—–

We took the frogs’ legs and stuffed their bodies back into the water. Clove used some druid tricks to draw plants around them. Hopefully, that will keep the least damaged one safe until we can return to harvest their organs for Burney.

Then arriving, at last, at the moat house, so-called from the diverted stream that forms a moat around it. The drawbridge is down but in poor shape, the chains that once allowed it to be closed have corroded to uselessness. Pippa makes sure the bridge is safe for our more substantial members.

We cross over the bridge, one at a time, and through the damaged gates. The courtyard is abandoned and overgrown, some of the walls have started to tumble down.

The drawbridge is down and is not coming back up, the chains to do so having rusted and fallen. The drawbridge is not in much better shape, the iron-bound wood having started to rot. Brave Pippa when over first, making sure the bridge would hold the heavier members of our party, especially Billy and Hellor. Judging it secure, she scouted to the inner gate, one of which had fallen the other seemed intact. While she scouted ahead, we crossed over, one by one. Hellor went first in case there were threats. But, none appeared yet as we moved into the courtyard. It is overgrown and cluttered with rubble, but there are some indications that people have been moving through.

-0Several of the external walls have begun their slow collapse. The tower still stands but the main hall has lost its upper floors. Hellor announces that he spots some coins on the floor of the tower and before we can say anything, he steps in. Only to have a giant spider pounce upon him.

I am afraid that I was so shocked by the sudden appearance of the spider that I did not move to help Hellor as quickly as he deserved. I am glad he was not hurt, I would have felt terrible if my inaction had caused him to be hurt. But I did apologize, next time I will do better.[1]

Quickly, we dispatch the spider between magic and force of arms. While the others gathered coins, Pippa bravely headed up and found a clutch of eggs which she cast down to the floor of the tower to be destroyed. Beyond the coins, there was an inadvertently hidden box, which turned out to be made of ivory. We packed all of that away in Billi’s saddlebags, which we hid away.  We ground tethered Billi so he could run away if attacked.

I may have been showing off going up the tower. I felt I needed to do something brave after my failure to attack the spider.

Treasure hidden away, we move into the main building. It was once quite grand, with the remnants of tattered tapestries on the walls.the broken remnants of furniture, rubble, quite a mess! But worst of all, a giant tick fell on me! I hate, hate, hate bloodsuckers even when they are small! It was smashed and smashed again but not before it had bitten both Lia and Clove! I cleaned their wound carefully and Hellor healed their wounds with a mere touch of his hand. Quite impressive.

There were two corridor choices, we worked our way down one. Finding a rioned trophy room. Then someone’s quarters, perhaps the commander? Since we found the barracks next?

Whoever’s room it was, we found a nice chunk of silver in it!

The barracks were partly collapsed and we found

Or did it find us?

A giant lizard! Which was quickly dispatched by our teamwork. But its nesting place revealaed a chest,

For which we followed the proper procedure, checking for traps and all.

Inside was a suit of scale armor, sized for humans of course, a crossbow without string and a box of twenty bolts, and some coins. We took the coins and left the armaments for later recovery. Lastly, on this corridor, and most tragically, a kitchen abandoned, sometime ago, seemingly mid-meal preparation and allowed to fester. There was rot and mold everywhere. And, worst of all, another giant tick! This one bit Hellor before being brutally dispatched.

So, down the other wing. Nothing much of use, one wall having slid into the moat, another having become the home for a bat colony. A stairway up to the collapsed upper levels seemed like a good metaphor for this wing. Though a diligent search did find a concealed long sword of exceptional make which we put into Lysia’s hands, much to her delight. Unfortunately, Lia stumbled on a giant adder which promptly attacked but was soon dispatched.

Burney’s curiosity about giant animals will be well rewarded from our visit here. We will have frog, snake, lizard, and spider bits for him to examine.

There was a stairway down and one door off the entrance hall left to finish off the ground floor. We decided to finish our exploration of the ground floor and then head back into town so that the giant animal bits would not spoil too much.

Of course, it would not be that simple.

Hellor opened the door and from within, there was a shout of “Get em!”

Notes: Ending the session on a cliffhanger! We are now off for two weeks, what with Thanksgiving and all.

[1] That was a roleplaying choice informed by a die role, while halflings (in D&D) are by definition brave, this was more shocking than frightening and made sense. Luckily, Hellor came to no harm.

Flip back to the Previous Diary Entry. Turn the page to the next Chapter.

Image upper art of Pippa and Kae from the artist V, who is taking commissions, lower also from pxhere and in the Public Domain.

Feel The Churn

Nov. 24th, 2025 09:00 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

Read Feel The Churn

Customer: "You're still going way too fast! What's the hurry! It's not like they fire you for going too slow!"
Me: *Still scanning.* "Actually, they can. They literally keep track of scans per hour. We are graded and given a rating. If we have a lower rating, we are given a review, too many reviews is a termination, regardless of the reason, so, yes, we can be fired."

Read Feel The Churn

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This paper advances a metabolic hypothesis that I certainly didn’t see coming. One of the great mysteries about alcoholism/alcohol use disorder is its underlying biochemical drivers. There’s obviously a behavioral and psychological component, but there are physical and metabolic ones too, and trying to untangle those has been an effort of many decades.

The authors here note a long-running series of observations about alcohol and sugar consumption. For one thing, laboratory rats that are given access to alcohol will in turn consume more sugar, and those that are more dependent on sugar will in turn consume more alcohol. This may not just be a laboratory curiosity: there have been several reports over the years that humans with alcohol use disorder have a greater preference for sucrose, although this finding has been complicated by differences in rating “pleasure” versus “intensity” of the sucrose effects, and a more recent study says that the reported preferences did not reproduce in their hands (although the idea does not seem to be going away). But you can produce entire lineages of high-alcohol-drinking rodent models, and these seem to show quite substantial preferences for sweetness compared to controls.

The reasons behind all this have been unclear, and as you’d expect there have been ideas about some sort of hedonic phenotype with a disrupted risk/reward system underlying these behaviors. The paper linked in the first line of this post is an attempt to pull known metabolic pathways into the discussion, as well as the idea that there may be some pathways in common. They’ve uncovered evidence that alcohol consumption may (at least in part) be driven by fructose metabolism. Ketohexokinase is the enzyme that processes fructose to fructose-1-phosphate (the first step in fructose metabolism), and animals that have had this enzyme knocked out systemically (or who have been treated with a known inhibitor of it) consume less alcohol under free-choice conditions. And they also consume significantly less sugar under such conditions as well.

One reason for that could be that fructose metabolism in the liver stimulates the production of the alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme, and if this enzyme is not upregulated, drinking becomes a much less pleasant experience. The experience of some Asian populations where ALDH levels are low serve as an example (consumption of alcohol causes skin flushing and headaches, among other symptoms, due to increased amounts of acetaldehyde being formed). But it’s not a simple story: as the authors show (and have shown in earlier work), tissue-specific knockouts of ketohexokinase can produce very different effects. KO in hepatocytes only lowers alcohol consumption to a degree, and these animal retain a strong preference for sugar. But KHK knockout in the gut tissue decreases alcohol use much more robustly, quite possibly through a mechanism involving GLP-1 (which is of course a hot topic of its own in gut/CNS mechanisms!) Those gut-knockout KHK animals also consume markedly less sugar when given a choice. 

There also appears to be a connection with alcohol-associated liver damage. Remarkably, the hepatocyte KHK knockout animals did not develop such disease, even while consuming amounts of alcohol (and for amounts of time) that should have led to histopathological changes. (Previous work has shown that administering sugar and alcohol at the same time to rodent models increases markers of liver damage more than either one on its own). The authors also have a theory involving aldose reductase levels being modulated by the osmolarity of the hepatic portal vein, as well as another involving FGFR1 signaling - both of these tie into the above, but I won’t go into them here.

But the take-home messages, if this work holds up, would be these: (1) people who are concerned about their alcohol intake should also try to cut down on their sugar intake, and vice versa, since it appears that the metabolic pathways (and metabolic sequelae) for these two are thoroughly entangled. It also suggests (2) that ketohexokinase inhibitors (such as one designated CRP427 that was generated by this research group) might be useful therapies for people with alcohol use disorder. This might reduce the consumption of alcohol while at the same time showing protective effects in the liver. 

This paper has drawn a good amount of attention in the field, and I very much look forward to seeing where these ideas go. Overconsumption of alcohol is a plague on individuals, their families, and society in general, and it would be very good news to have a new route to dealing with it!

Massaging The Books

Nov. 24th, 2025 06:55 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

Read Massaging The Books

Guest: "Do you guys take insurance?"
Desk Coordinator: "Absolutely! Do you have your plan card with you?"
Guest: "Yeah. But I'm going to need you to bill it as something else because I've reached my limit on massages under my plan."
My jaw hit the floor.

Read Massaging The Books

Bundle of Holding: Cornucopia 2025

Nov. 24th, 2025 01:59 pm
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Bundle of Holding's 13th annual feast of top-quality tabletop roleplaying game ebooks.

Bundle of Holding: Cornucopia 2025

this time for sure

Nov. 24th, 2025 01:18 pm
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[personal profile] redbird
I think I have arranged to transfer the inherited IRA money from my mother's account at BNY to a new account in my name at Fidelity. It's at Fidelity because they were willing and able to do this, rather than telling me that I would have to go somewhere else to get a medallion signature.

A couple of weeks ago Adrian's advisor at Fidelity said that they could provide the medallion signature, and would do it for free because she has an account there. When she called this morning to make an appointment, they told her that they couldn't do that for her partner, but if I created an account today to transfer the money into, I could go there tomorrow and get the medallion signature. So, I called Fidelity to set up the account.

That went more smoothly than I expected. Someone walked me through the process of creating the new account, and setting up the transfer. He said the Fidelity back office people will take care of moving the money, and he didn't think I would need the medallion signature, meaning I don't need to go to their office. The website said the "estimated completion date" was Dec. 16, and the man I was talking to said it would probably be sooner than that.

I want this to be done before the end of the year, so I can take the 2025 required minimum distribution.

I am hopeful that this will work, even if they call me and tell ne to come in and get the medallion signature guarantee.

What’s Latin For ‘Ironic’?

Nov. 24th, 2025 05:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read What’s Latin For ‘Ironic’?

Coworker: "Did anyone see the trailer for that new show coming out? Pluribus."
Me: "Yeah, I did, it looks interesting."
Coworker: "What does pluribus mean, anyway?"

Read What’s Latin For ‘Ironic’?

2025.11.24

Nov. 24th, 2025 09:39 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
There’s a creek flowing beneath downtown Minneapolis
Starting in 1992, the creek known as Ȟaȟá Wakpádaŋ in Dakota and Bassett Creek in English began flowing under downtown Minneapolis, discharging into the Mississippi River.
By Crystal Boyd, MNopedia
https://www.minnpost.com/mnopedia/2025/11/theres-a-creek-flowing-beneath-downtown-minneapolis/

It’s been a mild first three weeks to November, but that’s about to change. The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm watch for the northern portion of Minnesota ahead of “heavy snow” on Tuesday and Wednesday, according to Bring Me The News. Current estimates forecast 3-7 inches of snow, “though some higher appoints may be possible in parts of northern Minnesota.”  Via MinnPost
https://bringmethenews.com/minnesota-weather/winter-storm-watch-issued-in-minnesota-ahead-of-heavy-snow-tuesday-wednesday

PUBLIC SAFETY
‘It feels like we’re living a prison’: Frustrations rise along fenced-in Franklin Avenue in Minneapolis
Fencing installed by state officials along the busy corridor to deter homeless encampments is still in place years later. It’s forcing pedestrians to make dangerous choices and hindering efforts to establish a cultural district, Native leaders say.
by Shubhanjana Das
https://sahanjournal.com/public-safety/minneapolis-franklin-avenue-fencing-homelessness/

Lava spews out from Hawaii's Kilauea as volcano erupts again
One of the world's most active volcanoes has erupted again in Hawaii.
Timelapse footage from Mount Kilauea shows lava flowing down the volcano, as ash and smoke spew into the air.
According to the United States Geological Survey, this is the 37th eruption episode since December 2024.
https://bbc.com/news/videos/c8e9lx2gx4eo

Ethiopian volcano erupts for first time in 12,000 years
Ash clouds from Hayli Gubbi volcano sent drifting across the Red Sea toward Yemen and Oman
Guardian staff and agencies in Addis Ababa
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/24/ethiopian-volcano-hayli-gubbi-erupts-first-time-12000-years

How rolling sand dunes are creeping up on last remaining oases on edge of Sahara
In western Chad, villagers are desperately trying to hold back the sand as the climate crisis wreaks havoc on one of the hottest countries in the world
By Julie Bourdin. Photographs by Tommy Trenchard
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2025/nov/24/chad-desert-oases-wadi-water-gold-climate-crisis

‘We used a beachball as an alien!’ John Carpenter on his gloriously shonky sci-fi comedy Dark Star
‘The control room buttons were upside-down ice-cube trays, one space suit had a dish-drying rack on it – and the special effects guy wrote the theme tune lyrics’
Interviews by Chris Broughton
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/nov/24/john-carpenter-brian-narelle-interview-dark-star-alien-sci-fi-comedy

An inner duty’: the 35-year quest to bring Bach’s lost organ works to light
Musicologist Peter Wollny chanced upon the manuscripts in 1992 and authenticating them took half of his lifetime
Philip Oltermann European culture editor
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2025/nov/24/an-inner-duty-the-35-year-quest-to-bring-bachs-lost-organ-works-to-light

The Indigenous tribes reclaiming travel
Brandon Withrow
https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20230828-the-indigenous-tribes-reclaiming-travel

Snack And Field

Nov. 24th, 2025 02:30 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

Read Snack And Field

A guy comes jogging past the bench and stops in front of the woman, jogging on the spot.
Jogger: *Breathless.* "You're doing great! So healthy!"
Woman: *Thrusting an oversized pile of chips in her mouth.* "Thanks, I’ve been training for this bag all week!"

Read Snack And Field

Long overdue update

Nov. 24th, 2025 09:11 am
johnridley: (Default)
[personal profile] johnridley
Since my early October post:

I've been getting up to speed working as (very) part time IT and website support for Lyndon Township. It's interesting and pretty straightforward. I did need to call their paid support a couple of times to get the admin rights on their domain that I'm supposed to have. I had a couple of things I didn't do correctly, but I think I'm on track now.

I'm working on a pretty large project for the choir I'm in; scanning the entire music library. J.S. is working on this as well. I've dragged out an old Epson Workforce printer that only really works as a scanner, and have been using that - it's a lot faster than my old flatbed.

I've got probably something like 40 to 60 hours of scanning in by now and am just over half done. I am probably underestimating that time, I'm putting in 4+ hours a day and have been for weeks.

I've been going a bit overboard on the astronomy front. First I bought a mount for the Maksutov that I've had for years. It shipped on a little table-top mount, I wanted something a bit nicer. I found this mount for $300, which is a heck of a deal. It connects via wifi to a tablet and not only tracks but does full go-to.
fK6dHAX.jpg

The Makustov optical tube is very sharp. I had it out last night, again the seeing was terrible, but it was getting stars to pin sharp focus, and Jupiter was sharp as well. Little maks are known for good stellar/planetary views.

Windycon 2025 marked the 50th anniversary of the accepted "formation" of General Technics. I spent the weeks leading up to it prepping a couple of decor items for the GT room. First, the beach ball monster/pet from Dark Star, which hung out on the bed in the suite:
fK6HDv9.jpg

And secondly, a cake topper. It has all the circuitry for 24 LEDs on a circuit board that spins around at about 10 to 15 times per second and displays the GT logo, the phrase "50 YEARS!" and a graphic of a ray gun, rendered in glorious 96x24 resolution. It's also nearly impossible to take a good photo of. But a whole lot of people tried, so I call that a success.
fK6dzNe.jpg

On the 12th I found a first-generation Meade 8 inch LX200 telescope over in Grand Rapids for a reasonable price. Generally the guidance on this is to not pay more for the whole telescope than you would for just the optical tube, since the mounts are at this point 30+ years old electronics and are not known for super reliability. I got it for just about the right price I think. About 20% of what they sold for new and that's not accounting for inflation.
fKsYPjt.jpg
I've gotten it out once and though the seeing was terrible that night (turbulent atmosphere) I was pretty pleased with the view of the Orion nebula that I got. The optics, at least, are good and the electronics seem to work well. All I really did to it was to replace the capacitors in the hand controller (a known failure point) and buy some stuff - a new diagonal and a dew shield - and made a way to power it off a USB power bank.

Finally, just a few days ago, I caved on a telescope that's been on marketplace for weeks. I've been watching it for 6 weeks. It's the telescope that I was thinking of building. But this scope went for less than I'd have to pay for just the mirror. An 18" f/4.2 mirror is in the $6000 range. I paid less than that for this whole scope.
The mirror does show signs of being 15 years old - lots of little pinholes in the coatings. I can get it recoated, but honestly I don't think the coatings are bad enough to merit that for now. Probably in a year or so.
It looks a bit manky in this photo, but that's because I just pulled it out of the truck when I got home and tossed it together enough to roll it into the garage.
fK6dWiv.jpg

It needs some cleaning up. It's got some accessories that I'm not sure I really want. There's a wifi box that allows it to connect to a phone for navigation. It's got every dew heater known to science. I'm starting by pretty much removing all that stuff; when I had my 15" I had a navigation box, and I honestly never used it.

One thing that's clear to me having gotten most of these scopes out, is that I need to refamiliarize myself with the sky. I have a heck of a time finding alignment stars for these. Particularly the LX200, it has a VERY small number of alignment stars.

Also I need to get a better optical finder on the LX200, the stock one is pretty bad. And I need to get a red dot on there as well.

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sraun

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