james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-18 09:57 am

The Queen Bee by Randall Garrett



Castaways are trapped in a terrible Randall Garrett story!

The Queen Bee by Randall Garrett
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-18 09:42 am

I know my site is down

Along with a lot of the interwebs...
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-17 10:54 pm

No election

Not over this budget, anyway.

It boggles me that Canada had to endure 13 days of ambiguity about the budget vote. What next, an election cycle that lasts five whole weeks? The suspense would be palpable.
mellowtigger: (artificial intelligence)
mellowtigger ([personal profile] mellowtigger) wrote2025-11-17 07:07 pm
Entry tags:

unreality

I don't know how to trust anything I read or see online any more.

Just a few days ago, I started reading an article talking about archive.org and how it stopped doing some sort of widespread page collection in 2024 around the time of their DDOS attack. The article also mentioned Google stopping its "cached page" collection as a related event, leaving us now without any easy and trustworthy reference to past online experiences. Actual published information can now simply be made to disappear... gaslighting anyone who thought they remembered it.

I think the article intended to tie this chain of thinking to our current control by a few plutocrats over our broadcast and online media, providing them ample opportunity to manipulate our societies and politics for their economic benefit. It was a very long article, and I stopped reading it halfway through, intending to come back to it later. Today, I can't even remember which website it was at. It was an important article, but I've lost it in the aether. I really need a convenient replacement for Pocket, which is what I used for a long time to store webpages into categories for easy recall.

With AI videos, audio, and images all being so realistic, I just don't know how anyone can know anything beyond what they see with their own eyes. And our brain's memory is itself famously faulty. There are important political events happening on the world stage, and it's difficult to know for sure where to direct one's attention.

The only option that I can see is for everybody to record everything around them at all times. Then any disputed event can be compared against multiple data sources for corroboration. But I see people online freaking out about any recording of anything because you didn't ask permission of everyone in field of view. I'm so tired of this obligate ownership of everything everywhere. Can we stop thinking in capitalist terms?

I'm not sure where I'm going with this train of thought. I know that somehow this topic is related to technological telepathy, in this dystopian world where we suffer the manipulation of reality by forced control over recording and recall of events. Once again, I advocate total freedom instead of compartmentalized "ownership" of any experience, perspective, or opinion. The one thing I argue against is lies... the presentation of one thing as something else that it is not.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-17 03:43 pm
Entry tags:

Bundle of Holding: Salvage Union



Scrappy scavengers in scrap-metal mech robots

Bundle of Holding: Salvage Union
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-17 10:19 am
Entry tags:

Clarke Award Finalists 2022

2022: The British are heartened by Partygate revelations that the Tories celebrated in trust the gatherings barred to the rabble during Covid, the UK teaches the world a thing or two about political stability by going through three Prime Ministers in less than two months, and Queen Elizabeth II escapes the prospect of discovering how exactly the UK would continue its downward political arc.

Poll #33843 Clarke Award Finalists 2022
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 29


Which 2022 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?

View Answers

Deep Wheel Orcadia by Harry Josephine Giles
0 (0.0%)

A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine
28 (96.6%)

A River Called Time by Courttia Newland
0 (0.0%)

Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
3 (10.3%)

Skyward Inn by Aliya Whiteley
1 (3.4%)

Wergen: The Alien Love War by Mercurio D. Rivera
0 (0.0%)



Bold for have read, italic for intend to read, underline for never heard of it.

Which 2022 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?
Deep Wheel Orcadia by Harry Josephine Giles
A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine
A River Called Time by Courttia Newland
Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
Skyward Inn by Aliya Whiteley
Wergen: The Alien Love War by Mercurio D. Rivera

If I say I did not hear of something, it means that it is new to me. Did I not at least glance at the Clarkes in 2022?
dewline: Text: I am a Rider fan and I cannot remain calm (saskatchewan-2)
On the DEWLine 2.0: Dwight Williams ([personal profile] dewline) wrote2025-11-16 02:57 pm

Grey Cup Day 2025

Fair warning: I may be somewhat Distracted tonight, given that we have a Grey Cup game day with Saskatchewan vs. Montréal.

Yeah, I'm looking forward to the Grey Cup Game tonight.

May the players all remain concussion-free, and may Rider Nation prevail. In that order of priority.
andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2025-11-16 12:13 pm
Entry tags:

Photo cross-post


After several hours of hammering and some excellent assistance from Sophia, we have constructed a child-stacking device.

(Side-pieces to be constructed tomorrow)
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-16 09:08 am

A Sweet Sweet Summer by Jane Gaskell



Alien invasion and the local Nazis complicate Pelham "Rat" Garfield's simple dream of being a successful pimp.

A Sweet Sweet Summer by Jane Gaskell
mellowtigger: (penguin coder)
mellowtigger ([personal profile] mellowtigger) wrote2025-11-16 09:02 am
Entry tags:

HTML tags: PRE, KBD, and DETAILS

For easier searching later, I decided to make a brief post today just about some HTML tags that I use.

For pre-formatted text, I discovered in yesterday's post that long lines of powershell code were not wrapping to new lines. I eventually got it working as intended by formatting the HTML tags like this:

<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Text goes here. blah blah blah.</pre>

I wonder, though, if I should switch to monospace font for computer code? In the past, there was the TT (teletype) tag, but apparently that's another technology that has been deprecated. Here's an example of the new KBD (keyboard) code instead. I don't know. It looks exactly the same to me, except for the change in vertical spacing. I'll stick with PRE instead, I guess. I could use KBD inline within a paragraph if needed.
<kbd>this is a test. blah blah blah.</kbd>

Far more frequently, however, I use the HTML tag to display a little sideways-arrow which users need to click to "open up" a section of text. Using this tag liberally helps keep long posts from flooding other peoples' blog feeds. Readers can choose whether or not to read the long diatribes (or see the large pictures) in the main part of the blog post. Here is the code I use to accomplish that feat:

<details>
<summary>Click the arrow to read the blah blah blah...</summary>
All of the usual blog content goes here.
</details>

There. Now I can find these tag details again when I click the HTML tag on my blog. Bread crumbs to help a failing memory.

mellowtigger: (penguin coder)
mellowtigger ([personal profile] mellowtigger) wrote2025-11-15 07:37 pm
Entry tags:

RIP Get-EventLog

Today at work, I wanted/needed a faster way to collect particular events in the Microsoft Windows event logs. I had the obvious way to collect them from the gui, but I needed something better. I decided to try powershell.

Click to read the powershell code and follow the small adventure...

I had no idea beforehand that the log source name in the gui is different from the one accessed by powershell. It took some googling to figure out the right mix of parameters and clauses, but it worked. Sort of. Here's the code I came up with:

Get-EventLog -LogName System -Source Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-General -After (Get-Date).AddDays(-10) | Where-Object { $_.EventID -eq 1 -and $_.CategoryNumber -eq 5 } | Out-GridView

It definitely found the appropriate events from the log. It did not, however, provide the appropriate message about the reason for the log entry. Instead of the rational reason that the gui showed me, this script was telling me:

Possible detection of CVE: 2025-11-15T20:31:07.5402125Z
This Event is generated when an attempt to exploit a known vulnerability (2025-11-15T20:31:07.5402125Z) is detected.

Whoa. That sounds bad/dangerous. After digging into other properties of the software object I was given, I finally noticed the purple note in the official Microsoft documentation that this command has been deprecated! Argh! I was probably getting CVE-similarity notices because I was still using this deprecated 32-bit command. I am old, and what I formerly knew is now contraindicated. *laugh*

I switched to the new powershell command, and it again took me a while and several consultations with Google to hammer out the new (and actually better) command:

Get-WinEvent -FilterHashTable @{ProviderName='Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-General'; Id=1; StartTime=(Get-Date).AddDays(-10)} | Where-Object { $_.Message -match 'Change Reason:.*time zone.*' } | Select-Object TimeCreated, Message | Out-GridView

Finally! This new powershell command shows the correct reason for the log entry and the directory path to the program that produced it. That's exactly what I needed. Yay, although I'm clearly out of practice with powershell. After collecting data, I opened a ticket to have our next tier of IT take a look at my computer and find why this particular event keeps showing up. Something is changing my timezone (to the wrong timezone) throughout the day, even after I manually change it back to the correct timezone.

cmcmck: (Default)
cmcmck ([personal profile] cmcmck) wrote2025-11-15 09:54 am

More Ludlow castle pics

Another old and battered gatehouse:



More pics! )
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-11-14 08:30 pm

Outgunned Math Question

Outgunned's task resolution system involves rolling six-sided dice and looking for sets.

Some explanation behind a cut.

Read more... )
cmcmck: (Default)
cmcmck ([personal profile] cmcmck) wrote2025-11-14 08:48 pm

Ludlow castle

One of the many castles in the Welsh Marches and an impressive one!

Making our way in:



More pics! )
mellowtigger: (food)
mellowtigger ([personal profile] mellowtigger) wrote2025-11-14 09:50 am
Entry tags:

done!

It is done. Yay!

They found one large polyp. I'm not worried, because all previous intestinal polyps tested fine afterward. I've been doing GI exams since my 30s, thanks to a decade of diarrhea back then. That long problem was cured thanks to a last-minute choice from a doctor to give me metronidazole before another GI exam. I still celebrate metronidazole day occasionally: 2024, 2022, 2013, and the original prescription date of 2012.

I'm back home thanks to a former landlord (I don't think he's on Dreamwidth?) picking me up at the hospital entrance to drive me home. I've already started eating my usual first post-exam meal of Greek yogurt with dry oats. If that sits well for the next hour or two, then I'll expand to the usual range of stuff. :)

I got about 2 hours of sleep last night, having taken the magnesium citrate at 12:30am for the 6:30am arrival time. Food first, I think, then sleep.