[syndicated profile] naomikritzer_feed

Posted by naomikritzer

Starting with this one because there is just not a whole lot to say. Here’s who’s running:

Linea Palmisano (incumbent, DFL-endorsed)
Bob “Again” Carney, Jr. (“Climate Revolution Elephant”)

Linea Palmisano is one of the centrists on the Minneapolis City Council, and a staunch ally of Jacob Frey; I am not a fan.

Bob “Again” Carney is a perennial candidate whose hobby is running for stuff. He’s run for governor, mayor, US Senate, US House (though maybe not Ilhan’s seat, I think he ran in a special in some other district), I can’t even remember how many times. When he ran in 2023 for this same City Council seat, he had a website. I commented at the time, “All you really need to know about BobAgain is that his website still says he’s running for governor, and when he participated in the Ward 13 LWV forum he said that if he won the election, he would refuse to take office, thus (according to his theories) allowing Linea to stay in office.” He no longer even has a website that I could find (presumably he let the “votebobagain” registration expire).

I don’t want either of these people and Linea is in absolutely no danger of losing to Bob Again. I would abstain from this race in the hopes that seeing unenthusiastic turnout for Linea would inspire someone decent to run four years from now.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps. This is a ton of work and 2025 is a dumpster fire.)

Criminally Stupid Assumptions

Sep. 3rd, 2025 04:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Criminally Stupid Assumptions

Employee: *Walking into boss’s office, looking grave.* "I need to report two coworkers for… illegal activity."
Boss: *Concerned.* "Illegal activity? What kind of activity?"
Employee: "They were talking about… doing crimes!"

Read Criminally Stupid Assumptions

QOTD: On the 1950s

Sep. 3rd, 2025 10:56 am
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[personal profile] brithistorian

"Much of the Fifties existed in order to edit out of history the freedoms of wartime: a renewed McCarthyite puritanism drove homosexuality further underground with the inevitable psychic consequences. By the mid-to-late Sixties, there were all sorts of exposé! books, but not then: just a few coded, discreet novels (like James Barr's Quatrefoil), which would usually end in suicide or death."

Jon Savage (quoted in Loaded, by Dylan Jones)

Good news

Sep. 3rd, 2025 10:23 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Both of Premee's cats have been found and returned.

Quiet, normal day

Sep. 3rd, 2025 09:40 am
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[personal profile] rolanni

What went before ONE: Waiting for the vet to call back.

Yanno what? I think I won't be going to needlework tonight. I think I'll just sit here and work on entering corrections into my chapbook, which is both comforting and cerebral.

Trooper is in the box on the corner of my desk, where he can get the sun and the breeze from the open window. Tali is on the cedar chest, where ditto. Firefly is on her towel on top of the dresser in the bedroom, where she can look out the front window, and also take the breeze, and Rookie is napping in the box on the corner of Steve's desk.

What went before TWO: Only need to amend the back matter in the chapbook, then I can do a test layout, scream in horror, fall on my sword, and go back to the drawing board.

Trooper will be going to the vet on Thursday morning. He did yell for Happy Hour this evening, but gooshy food is too tough to chew, and the gravy is boring.

It's time.

I think I ate ... something for lunch, though I can't tell you what. Oh, wait. Rice. I'd made a fresh pot of rice. I'll have to do better about the evening meal, but I think I'll get the About the Authors fixed up, first, so I can move right on with being horrified by the compilation, tomorrow morning.

Everybody stay safe; I'll see you tomorrow.

Wednesday. Was foggy when I got up. Now cloudy and sullen. Windows are open, though it's still a bit chilly. Lawn guys are next door, doing their thing.

Didn't sleep well last night, but that wasn't exactly unexpected.

Trooper had breakfast in three parts and did manage to work his way through almost an entire 3-ounce can of Fancy Feast pate, with a little end-of-plate help from Firefly.

My breakfast was cottage cheese mixed in with the tiny bit of leftover macaroni salad, which was surprisingly tasty, and black grapes. Second cup of tea brewing. I'll probably succumb to the siren call of the last cookie pretty soon.

On today's to-do: one's daily duty to the cats, and smol walk. Call the hospital, which sent me an "electronic bill" on 8/27, which I forthwith paid electronically. Yesterday in the mail, comes a paper bill for the same amount, and the same services. Ahem. O! MaineGeneral, I, too, would like to be paid twice, thrice, yea! four times, for the same work, but that so rarely happens*. I feel your ambition, MaineGeneral, and I understand it. But try it on somebody else, hey?

Otherwise, I intend to work on the chapbook -- front matter! almost forgot! Blurb! eek! -- and Trooper is signalling his readiness to get down to cases, by climbing into his box and going to sleep. So, business as usual. That's good.

I bought a tween-weather coat, courtesy of Land's End's sale. It arrived yesterday, and it's the weirdest thing I've ever seen. I mean -- it fits. It has outside pockets of sufficient depth for such things as car keys, and cold hands, but it also has . . . what seem to be meant to be inside pockets -- quite large pockets; my tablet would fit comfortably -- but. While there's stitching along the bottom of the panel, it's not attached to the coat -- by which I mean, if you put something into these pockets, it will fall out the bottom. So, yeah, I'm thinking I'll be getting out some thread, and maybe some fabric tape, for belt-and-suspenders, and just make those things usable. Probably not today, but who doesn't need projects for the future?

Ah. You can see the inside pockets, here

I think that's all I've got this morning.

How's your day shaping up?

_______
*Actually, that's a bit of a cheat. As a writer, I do occasionally get paid for the same work multiple times. I can't, however, think of one occasion when that happened at a day-job.


Quiet normal day

Sep. 3rd, 2025 01:33 pm
[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

What went before ONE: Waiting for the vet to call back.

Yanno what? I think I won’t be going to needlework tonight. I think I’ll just sit here and work on entering corrections into my chapbook, which is both comforting and cerebral.

Trooper is in the box on the corner of my desk, where he can get the sun and the breeze from the open window. Tali is on the cedar chest, where ditto. Firefly is on her towel on top of the dresser in the bedroom, where she can look out the front window, and also take the breeze, and Rookie is napping in the box on the corner of Steve’s desk.

What went before TWO: Only need to amend the back matter in the chapbook, then I can do a test layout, scream in horror, fall on my sword, and go back to the drawing board.

Trooper will be going to the vet on Thursday morning. He did yell for Happy Hour this evening, but gooshy food is too tough to chew, and the gravy is boring.

It’s time.

I think I ate … something for lunch, though I can’t tell you what. Oh, wait. Rice. I’d made a fresh pot of rice. I’ll have to do better about the evening meal, but I think I’ll get the About the Authors fixed up, first, so I can move right on with being horrified by the compilation, tomorrow morning.

Everybody stay safe; I’ll see you tomorrow.

Wednesday. Was foggy when I got up. Now cloudy and sullen. Windows are open, though it’s still a bit chilly. Lawn guys are next door, doing their thing.

Didn’t sleep well last night, but that wasn’t exactly unexpected.

Trooper had breakfast in three parts and did manage to work his way through almost an entire 3-ounce can of Fancy Feast pate, with a little end-of-plate help from Firefly.

My breakfast was cottage cheese mixed in with the tiny bit of leftover macaroni salad, which was surprisingly tasty, and black grapes. Second cup of tea brewing. I’ll probably succumb to the siren call of the last cookie pretty soon.

On today’s to-do: one’s daily duty to the cats, and smol walk. Call the hospital, which sent me an “electronic bill” on 8/27, which I forthwith paid electronically. Yesterday in the mail, comes a paper bill for the same amount, and the same services. Ahem. O! MaineGeneral, I, too, would like to be paid twice, thrice, yea! four times, for the same work, but that so rarely happens*. I feel your ambition, MaineGeneral, and I understand it. But try it on somebody else, hey?

Otherwise, I intend to work on the chapbook — front matter! almost forgot! Blurb! eek! — and Trooper is signalling his readiness to get down to cases, by climbing into his box and going to sleep. So, business as usual. That’s good.

I bought a tween-weather coat, courtesy of Land’s End’s sale. It arrived yesterday, and it’s the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen. I mean — it fits. It has outside pockets of sufficient depth for such things as car keys, and cold hands, but it also has . . . what seem to be meant to be inside pockets — quite large pockets; my tablet would fit comfortably — but. While there’s stitching along the bottom of the panel, it’s not attached to the coat — by which I mean, if you put something into these pockets, it will fall out the bottom. So, yeah, I’m thinking I’ll be getting out some thread, and maybe some fabric tape, for belt-and-suspenders, and just make those things usable. Probably not today, but who doesn’t need projects for the future?

Ah. You can see the inside pockets, here

I think that’s all I’ve got this morning.

How’s your day shaping up?

_______
*Actually, that’s a bit of a cheat. As a writer, I do occasionally get paid for the same work multiple times. I can’t, however, think of one occasion when that happened at a day-job.

Books read, September 2025

Sep. 3rd, 2025 08:13 am
brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian
  • 3 September
    • Komi Can't Communicate, vol. 26 (Tomohito Oda)

Sick Buckets Of Dedication

Sep. 3rd, 2025 12:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwayslearning_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Sick Buckets Of Dedication

I'm a functioning workaholic in a college class. We're doing small group discussions, and I'm talking to the guy next to me, who had to miss the previous class. In the middle of the conversation, our professor walks up and interrupts.
Professor: *To the guy.* "See? You should be more like her. She never misses class."

Read Sick Buckets Of Dedication

[syndicated profile] mpr_daily_download_feed

Franz Liszt - Paganini Etude No. 3 “La Campanella”


Goran Filipec, piano


More info about today’s track: Naxos 8.573458


Courtesy of Naxos of America Inc.



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Cubs Win!

Sep. 2nd, 2025 11:22 pm
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[personal profile] billroper
And the Cubs won tonight's game over the Braves by a final of 4-3.

When I stopped to use the toilet on the way out of the park, I left my open scorecard sitting on the shelf above the trough. The fellow next to me commented that it was an ugly scorecard in the sense that the Cubs had scored four runs in one inning and done essentially no hitting during the rest of the game. I allowed as to how this was true, but a win is a win. He agreed.

Disgruntlement

Sep. 2nd, 2025 09:45 pm
brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

I received an email tonight saying I had a comment on one of my fics, which is a rare enough event that I got extremely excited. Then I read the comment. The first sentence sent my heart soaring:

The way you write is cinematic.

Then I read the remainder of the comment:

I only do paid comic work, and I think we could create something amazing. Let’s chat on Insta: [REDACTED]

So I reported them to AO3 (this sort of commercial solicitation violates the site's TOS) and I'm going back to writing.

(Also, just out of curiosity, I went to their Instagram. Even if I was interested in hiring someone to make a comic based on my fic, it wouldn't be them — their work was sub-mediocre at best!) ^^

[syndicated profile] seaofstarsrpg_feed

Posted by seaofstarsrpg

Voddick watched as the wizard took the corroded sword blade, heavy with rust and age.  As he worked his gloved hands over the blade, the rust receded, becoming steel and then a gleaming blade.  After some time, it was restored as though it had been newly forged.

Gollaon returned with mugs of tea all around.  “Well, that is impressive.”

The wizard tried to hide their exhaustion.  “It was simply restoring the metal to what it was meant to be,” he said offhandedly.

“No small feat of magic, all the same,” said Voddick.

“Perhaps,” said the wizard.  “But one I was glad to perform.  SUch a work of art should never have been left to suffer so.”

Gloves of Transmuting

These tools of wizards are challenging to construct.  One of the two is made from metals, all of them, set with chips of stone and gems.  While the other is made of carved woods, leathers, and woven-work both rigid (reeds and such) and cloth.  They are designed to be harmonious in shape and end up being massively contrasting in color and texture.  Their design is to channel the magics of shaping and warping.  The gloves, one put on and given time to adjust to their new wearer become like a second skin, they do not impede the wearer’s movement, fine control, or tactile sense.

The wearer can use mending at will, repairing items of up to twenty-five pounds in weight.

When using any spell of the transmutation school, the wearer may take an extra ten minutes to cast the spell to increase the area or amount of material affected by half again.

Once per day, the wearer may fabricate any material that they have five or more ranks in the appropriate Craft skill.

Aura strong transmutation; CL 15th
Slot hands; Price 25,500; Weight 1 lb
Construction Requirements
Craft Wondrous Items, mending, fabricate, creator must have the Empower Spell metamagic feat; Cost 12,750

For D&D 5E:

Wondrous item (gloves), rare (require attunement)

First paragraph as above.

The wearer can use mending at will, repairing breaks or tears up to fifteen inches in any dimension.

When using any spell of the transmutation school, the wearer may take an extra ten minutes to cast the spell to increase the area or amount of material affected by half again.

Once per day, the wearer may fabricate any material that they have an appropriate tool proficiency for.

Notes: Potentially useful for anyone but especially useful for transmuters.

Image alchemical image found on Wikimedia Commons and is in the Public Domain.

BMW R1200RT - New fuel level sensor

Sep. 2nd, 2025 09:47 pm
[syndicated profile] fornogoodreason_feed

Posted by John Ridley

A known persistent problem with some older BMW R1200s is that they use a solid state fuel sensor strip to tell the fuel level, and it was trouble-prone. Some people have had the sensor replaced 4 or 5 times, sometimes the sensor only lasts a few weeks.

When I bought my 2007 R1200RT, the sensor was dead and the service records indicated that it had already been replaced by BMW twice.

I found when watching the Superbike Surgery channel that a person in Spain has engineered a new sensor that connects and acts the same way but uses a different tech to do the sensing. Reports are that these are not failing.

The source for this is FuelSensorTech. They're in Spain. Currently (September 2025) they may not be able to ship to the US because of the tariff situation. I got in just under the wire.

I ordered one up, it took a couple of weeks to arrive.

I followed the procedure on the Superbike Surgery channel, used MotoScan to recalibrate the sensor and soon had a working fuel gauge. Fingers crossed it doesn't fail again.

The installation was really easy.  Upper tupperware off on the left, pull the fuel pump, reach in and clip out the old sensor (elbow in to reach it). The Fuel Sensor Tech sensor comes with wire stubs and has to be soldered on. I used adhesive lined heat shrink to seal the solder joint. Then put it into the original plastic, hook it up and run the calibration, then reach in and clip it in.

Clip in is very tricky when going through the fuel pump hole. The clip and bail design was clearly intended to be installed from the top, then when it's swung into the tank the clip locks it. You have to bend the clips a fair amount to get it to clip without taking the filler neck off. It took 30 seconds to get the old one out but about 5 minutes of fiddling to get it back in again. I might take the filler cap off if I did it again, just because I'd be a little worried about breaking the clips.

When reinstalling the fuel pump, remove and clean the seal, then I put a bit of silicone grease on the inside where the pump meets it. Put the seal into the tank first then slide the pump into it. I don't think it's possible to start with the seal on the pump and get it in.

The new sensor

 
The new sensor soldered to the old wires and installed in the plastic strip

The new fuel sensor installed inside the tank



A working fuel gauge!


Galumph!

Sep. 2nd, 2025 05:24 pm
azurelunatic: Computer with a wind-up key captioned "Which version of STUPID are you running?" (stupid)
[personal profile] azurelunatic
It turns out that there is a timeout to the "let's test your equipment" for the browser-based telehealth appointments with my therapist. That timeout is 5 minutes. I had to switch to my phone, which is always vexatious for me.

Recently, Belovedest hauled Dad's old machine (dubbed Galumph, after the imaginary draft horse stallion Dad always talked about as his preferred riding beast) out to test it and see if it would run. (The massive monitor that came with it did not run, but I have found a suitably crusty-looking TV and other screen based appliance repair shop to attempt a repair.) Galumph ran. Belovedest looked at the specs. "That's a freaking RACK SERVER masquerading as a desktop!!!" they said, or words to that general effect.

So after we returned from the Michigan trip, I told Belovedest that it was time to take them up on their offer to rebox my poor old suffering machine.

I accidentally gave them the wrong figures for my C: and D: drives, so there was a bit of a flurry at first, but after they switched them, they were able to get to a login screen. I opened my Chrome / User Data / Default / Sessions folder, copied the most recent Tabs_* and Session_* files to a subfolder that I've named "Explicit Distrust" and launched my browser.

All 1,5XX tabs opened.

I've been trying to decrease them a little bit ever since, starting with my Main window, where the tabs tend to proliferate with abandon. (Trying to do this on the old hardware took forever, in addition to me getting distracted by shiny things.)

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