ysabetwordsmith: Artwork of the wordsmith typing. (typing)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-10-06 03:02 pm
Entry tags:

Monday Update 10-6-25

These are some posts from the later part of last week in case you missed them:
Esbat
Shopping
Birdfeeding
Space Exploration
Today's Adventures
Birdfeeding
Philosophical Questions: Money
Today's Cooking
Gaming
Friday Five
Birdfeeding
Activism
Follow Friday 10-3-25: Japan / Japanese
Gender Studies
Birdfeeding
Hobbies: Seatweaving
Fall Festival Bingo Card 10-1-25
Moment of Silence: Jane Goodall
Birdfeeding
Cuddle Party

Food has 51 comments. Affordable Housing has 51 comments. Robotics has 73 comments.


There will be a Poetry Fishbowl on Tuesday, October 7 with a theme of "Witches and Wizards."


"An Inkling of Things to Come" belongs to Polychrome: Shiv and needs $200 to be complete. Shiv attends the first session of his Worldbuilding class.


The weather has been sweltering again, but today is slightly cooler. Seen at the birdfeeders this week: a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches, a wren (possibly a Bewick's wren or Carolina wren), and a fox squirrel. I heard a blue jay screaming but didn't see it. The migration is heavily impacted -- we drove past the lake recently and there was no sign of waterbirds, whereas normally this time of year there would ducks, pelicans, etc. in fairly large flocks. I saw a huge corn devil in the field across from us that was harvested recently. Currently blooming: dandelions, marigolds, petunias, red salvia, verbena, lantana, sweet alyssum, zinnias, snapdragons, blue lobelia, perennial pinks, oxalis, moss rose, firecracker plant, tomatoes, tomatillos, yellow squash, zucchini, morning glory, chicory, Queen Anne's lace, sunflowers, cup plant, cypress vine, sunchokes, sedum, violas. Tomatoes, ball carrots, and groundcherries are ripe. Fields are about half harvested.
unicornduke: (Default)
unicornduke ([personal profile] unicornduke) wrote2025-10-06 05:24 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

Hey all, if you'd like to join the crafting hangout, it is tonight from 6-8pm ET!
 
Video encouraged but not required!
 
Topic: Crafting Hangout
Time: Mondays 6:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
 
Join Zoom Meeting
 
Meeting ID: 973 2674 2763

zenigotchas: (sam burke the catboy)
Mint Chocolate Chip ([personal profile] zenigotchas) wrote in [community profile] unclutter2025-10-06 05:05 pm

The cave unfucketh

I'm slowly doing a big clean up of my present cave. Then I have to pack but that's future Mint's trouble.

I have been following 2 rules so far:
1. UnfuckYourHabitat.com's 20 minute unfucking span. You pick up trash, wash dishes and then clean surfaces. I can consistently remember to at least throw things away.

2. I have begun incorporating doing the dishes into my nightly bedtime routine. It is surprisingly relaxing.

3. To combat having lots of dirty dishes and NO dishwasher, I am resolving to eat only out of 1 dish and keep that washed while not using the rest of my dishware or silverware. I'm also making dishes that do NOT require several pots, pans, bowls, etc. to make.

Progress so far: The living room is looking A LOT better. Like, almost ready for me to be able to go back to lifting and doing other exercises at home!

I'm slowly but surely washing everything up and it really cuts back on the amount of time I spend cleaning up before and after meals. Which only helps me with the amount of time I need to take out the trash (I have so much to throw away).

Most of my fridge has been cleaned out. Just needs a wiping down.

(idk if I'm allowed to give myself my own tag yet or not but hi! Been here for a while and this is my very first post! Seeing if this helps me accountable and measure my progress)
sparklecat: (mangle)
sparklecat ([personal profile] sparklecat) wrote2025-10-06 12:42 pm

still sick.....

 called into work today, does anyone have any tricks for getting over colds?

tw more family venting.. )
going to make myself soup (tomato, the best kind), and then go to sleep early. maybe journal or read, but no more tiktoks!! (i say, to myself. i have a habit of getting stuck in bedddd rot.) i wish i could keep my phone OUT of my bedroom entirely....

spiffikins 365 question meme
( picked some random questions,,, whoops)
16. Which wild animal would you adopt as a pet and why?
a raccoon or a fox??? both because they are so cute! if i had to pick like a SUPER wild animal, a tiger....
17. When was the last time you tried something new?
uhmmm probably a while ago? i started making my own coffee instead of buying it.....it doesnt taste as good, so i dunno how to move forward there.
18. What is your favorite room in your home and why?
i really like the living room since it feels like it has so much life in it! me and my housemates often have like, alot  of people over. i always feel really good having all my loved ones in one places
19. If TV and the internet didn’t exist, what would you do with your time?
THAT IS THE QUESTION, aha, aha, aha. crochet more, READ more. probably write. definetly read more, since most of what i do on HERE already is reading. 
20. What are some major inventions that happened during your lifetime?
smart phone? probably smart phone. oh wait 3-d printing!!! 
greghousesgf: (Horse)
greghousesgf ([personal profile] greghousesgf) wrote2025-10-06 12:29 pm

(no subject)

Had some Ahmad English Tea No.1. I had fun at the Castro Street Fair but I fell down in the stupid Bart train so my leg really fucking hurts and I don't feel up to going to get groceries even though I should, I'm running low on or out of a lot of things, plus I did laundry after I got home from the fair yesterday and I had to go all over the bldg to do it because the machines on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th floor were all either busted or somebody else was using them.
ysabetwordsmith: Cats playing with goldfish (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-10-06 02:05 pm
Entry tags:

Food

Fruit might be the surprising key to healthier lungs

Eating more fruit could help protect lungs from air pollution damage, particularly in women. Researchers point to antioxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds in fruit as possible defenses against harmful airborne particles.


Fruit also includes many valuable nutrients such as vitamin C.

Of course, it would be better to avoid putting pollution into the air in the first place, or failing that, to live somewhere with lower pollution and more trees to filter the air -- and hey, you could make them fruit trees!

ysabetwordsmith: Cats playing with goldfish (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-10-06 01:49 pm

Birdfeeding

Today is mostly sunny and hot.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a few sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I did a bit of work around the yard.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I watered the septic garden and the new picnic table garden.

I picked a few groundcherries.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I watered the irises and the patio plants.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I watered the new picnic table, telephone pole garden, and savanna seedlings.

EDIT 10/6/25 --  I did a bit of work around the yard.

I bagged up the last of the Ginger Gold apple seeds to cold-stratify in the fridge.

As it is almost suppertime, I am done for the night.
wickedgame: (Sexy Guildford | My Lady Jane)
wickedgame ([personal profile] wickedgame) wrote in [community profile] icons2025-10-06 09:11 pm

multifandom icons.

 Fandoms: Beauty & The Beast, Chicago Fire, Country Comfort, Daredevil: Born Again, Dead Boy Detectives, DOC - Nelle Tue Mani, Good Trouble, Gotham Knights, Hawkeye, How To Get Away With Murder, Kevin Can F*** Himself, Nancy Drew, The Sandman, SkyMed, Warrior Nun, XO, Kitty, Young Royals

nancydrew-1x04a.png gothamknights-1x10harper.png hawkeye-1x01.png
rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 
 
YOU'RE ALL JUST JEALOUS OF MY JETPACK ([syndicated profile] myjetpack_feed) wrote2025-10-06 04:38 pm
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
yhlee ([personal profile] yhlee) wrote2025-10-06 10:48 am

PSA

I'm now aware that Imgur images are broken for people with UK IP addresses; will repair those image links eventually by hosting own my own space but I have a bunch of work/school to deal with so it'll be slow.
profiterole_reads: (Nobuta wo Produce - Shuji to Akira)
profiterole_reads ([personal profile] profiterole_reads) wrote2025-10-06 05:31 pm

Mantis

Netflix's k-movie Mantis was a lot of fun! It's a spin-off of Kill Bok-soon and focuses on other hired killers originally from the same agency.

I think this one has more humour and more found family feels, but it's also very violent, of course.
unicornduke: (Default)
unicornduke ([personal profile] unicornduke) wrote2025-10-06 08:48 am
Entry tags:

Two weekends down, four to go

Another good busy weekend, excellent practice for the employees. I was very cranky Friday night but pretty sure I hadn't eaten enough lunch or dinner. Much better feeling Saturday, but I also got the chance to drive a tractor at night which was lovely and nice. I was tired again yesterday but that's because it was so hot. 

We picked 24 tall bins of pumpkins this week and 8 short bins of various things. This isn't even half of what we have planted. I'm spending today, tomorrow and wed picking weird stuff because we have definite frost coming wednesday/thursday (predicted 36 and 34F so we'll be lower) and the weird stuff is often frost sensitive. Face pumpkins usually aren't to a light frost. Also rain coming tomorrow night, thank goodness because I haven't irrigated anything arg. Then thurs/fri picking big pumpkins. Plus all the group outings during the weekdays

Did find gluten free fig newtons at the store which is delightful. not as good as my homemade ones, but as good as OG fig newtons so I'm happy. 

Sleep has been hard to find, I get so keyed up with farm stuff by the time I get up to the house, eat dinner and do all the things i need to do, it's 9pm and I'm not quite tired, so I read for a bit. Plus calls and emails and reservations. it is go time. thankfully mom has been feeding me, I know my temper varies entirely by how hungry I am. 

Did enjoy browsing this collection of spindle whorls on the internet archive housed in the cleveland museum of art

much to do this week. at least I will have 2 hours of crafting tonight

disneydream06: (Disney Birthday)
disneydream06 ([personal profile] disneydream06) wrote2025-10-06 09:56 am

(no subject)

Today I get to send out...

*~*~*~*~*GREAT BIG HAPPY BIRTHDAY WISHES*~*~*~*~*

To my friend, [personal profile] sistrmoon.

I hope you are having a terrific day. :)


Disney 5
disneydream06: (Disney Music)
disneydream06 ([personal profile] disneydream06) wrote2025-10-06 09:02 am

Songs From The Movies.....

This week's song was used in several movies, including "The Rugrats Movie".

It's Blondie's "One Way Or Another".


disneydream06: (Disney Movies)
disneydream06 ([personal profile] disneydream06) wrote2025-10-06 08:53 am

Monday At The Movies.....

This Week's Movie Quote...

C. J.: [J. sticks his gun in the B. C. face] One. Close the door. Two. Open the safe. Three. On the floor.
C. J.: [the B. C. closes the door, and then gets on the floor. J. leans down and taps the B. C. on the shoulder with the gun] You forgot Number two.
B. C.: Oh no I didn't! I did that when you stuck that gun in my face!


Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 3


Which Movie Does This Quote Come From?

View Answers

Blazing Saddles
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How The West Was Won
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The Villain
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I Don't Have A Clue...
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Last Week's Movie Quote...

James Bond: Moneypenny, what would I do without you?
Moneypenny: My problem is that you never do anything with me.

It comes from the one time Bond, George Lazenby, in the 1969, "On Her Majesty's Secret Service".



Those Who Knew or Guessed Correctly...
[personal profile] thoughtsbykat
[profile] sidhe_uaine42
[personal profile] sunshine_two
[personal profile] man_of_snows
[profile] christalin80
[personal profile] adminbear
[personal profile] chaquir
[personal profile] pigshitpoet
disneydream06: (Disney Funny)
disneydream06 ([personal profile] disneydream06) wrote2025-10-06 08:36 am
jacey: (Default)
jacey ([personal profile] jacey) wrote2025-10-06 02:18 pm

Booklog 64/2025: Nick Jones: The Shadows of London - Joseph Bridgeman #2 - Audiobook

I started listening to this second book in the series, only to realise part way through that I also had the first one in my library, so I listened to this without any foreknowledge of the first book, except what was dripfed in as backstory. Despite that, I caught up pretty quickly. Joe Bridgeman is a time traveller who managed to go back in time in the first book and save his baby sister, Amy. Arriving back in the present he discovers that ,due to the fact Amy is still alive and well, his whole life has changed. He's still the same, but he's not the Joe Bridgeman from this timeline. Somehow he has planted himself into a different Joe Bridgeman's life, the life that his would have been. This means the Joe Bridgeman who lived the new life has suddenly popped out of existence, which is worrying, and now this Joe has to pick up the threads of a life he might have lived, but didn't. A bike accident and amnesia is the excuse he uses, though Amy knows (and helps) and he has to confess to his best friend, who takes it remarkably well. Unfortunately, the same can't be said of the woman he loves, as in this life they seem to be at loggerheads. He's kind of getting to grips with it all when suddenly he's whisked back to London, 1963, in his pyjamas, where he witnesses, and is arrested for, a shocking murder. Time pops him back home after an uncomfortable night in a police cell, but a mysterious stranger (Bill Brown) shows up and tells him there is a time-travel society, and since Joe owes time a debt for the life of his sister, he has to travel again and rescue the murdered woman. If he doesn't Amy's timeline will be re-set. Not having read the first book yet, I'm not sure whether Joe is supposed to be British or American. His antique shop is in Cheltenham, and his sister and parents are in the UK, but Ray Porter reads it in his usual American accent. Sounding pretty much like he does in Dennis E Taylor's Bobiverse books. It still works. The narration helps move the story along, however. Ind I enjoyed this enough to immediately go to the first book in the series. Recommended.
YOU'RE ALL JUST JEALOUS OF MY JETPACK ([syndicated profile] myjetpack_feed) wrote2025-10-06 12:01 pm

A riddle for Guardian Books.

Title: One door leads to freedom, the others to certain death. You may ask one question. Image: Three guards with shields and speard stand in front of three doors. One guard sits at a folding table working at a typewriter, his shield and spear leaning against the wall.Caption: One guard always tells the truth, one always tells lies, and the third always tells an entrancing story that blends reportage with imagination in an attempt to reach a deeper authenticity by moving beyond the narrow categories of fact and fiction.ALT

A riddle for Guardian Books.

p.s. My new book ‘Physics for Cats’ is out this week in bookshops and online. Details at www.tomgauld.com

Schneier on Security ([syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed) wrote2025-10-06 11:06 am

AI in the 2026 Midterm Elections

Posted by Bruce Schneier

We are nearly one year out from the 2026 midterm elections, and it’s far too early to predict the outcomes. But it’s a safe bet that artificial intelligence technologies will once again be a major storyline.

The widespread fear that AI would be used to manipulate the 2024 U.S. election seems rather quaint in a year where the president posts AI-generated images of himself as the pope on official White House accounts. But AI is a lot more than an information manipulator. It’s also emerging as a politicized issue. Political first-movers are adopting the technology, and that’s opening a gap across party lines.

We expect this gap to widen, resulting in AI being predominantly used by one political side in the 2026 elections. To the extent that AI’s promise to automate and improve the effectiveness of political tasks like personalized messaging, persuasion, and campaign strategy is even partially realized, this could generate a systematic advantage.

Right now, Republicans look poised to exploit the technology in the 2026 midterms. The Trump White House has aggressively adopted AI-generated memes in its online messaging strategy. The administration has also used executive orders and federal buying power to influence the development and encoded values of AI technologies away from “woke” ideology. Going further, Trump ally Elon Musk has shaped his own AI company’s Grok models in his own ideological image. These actions appear to be part of a larger, ongoing Big Tech industry realignment towards the political will, and perhaps also the values, of the Republican party.

Democrats, as the party out of power, are in a largely reactive posture on AI. A large bloc of Congressional Democrats responded to Trump administration actions in April by arguing against their adoption of AI in government. Their letter to the Trump administration’s Office of Management and Budget provided detailed criticisms and questions about DOGE’s behaviors and called for a halt to DOGE’s use of AI, but also said that they “support implementation of AI technologies in a manner that complies with existing” laws. It was a perfectly reasonable, if nuanced, position, and illustrates how the actions of one party can dictate the political positioning of the opposing party.

These shifts are driven more by political dynamics than by ideology. Big Tech CEOs’ deference to the Trump administration seems largely an effort to curry favor, while Silicon Valley continues to be represented by tech-forward Democrat Ro Khanna. And a June Pew Research poll shows nearly identical levels of concern by Democrats and Republicans about the increasing use of AI in America.

There are, arguably, natural positions each party would be expected to take on AI. An April House subcommittee hearing on AI trends in innovation and competition revealed much about that equilibrium. Following the lead of the Trump administration, Republicans cast doubt on any regulation of the AI industry. Democrats, meanwhile, emphasized consumer protection and resisting a concentration of corporate power. Notwithstanding the fluctuating dominance of the corporate wing of the Democratic party and the volatile populism of Trump, this reflects the parties’ historical positions on technology.

While Republicans focus on cozying up to tech plutocrats and removing the barriers around their business models, Democrats could revive the 2020 messaging of candidates like Andrew Yang and Elizabeth Warren. They could paint an alternative vision of the future where Big Tech companies’ profits and billionaires’ wealth are taxed and redistributed to young people facing an affordability crisis for housing, healthcare, and other essentials.

Moreover, Democrats could use the technology to demonstrably show a commitment to participatory democracy. They could use AI-driven collaborative policymaking tools like Decidim, Pol.Is, and Go Vocal to collect voter input on a massive scale and align their platform to the public interest.

It’s surprising how little these kinds of sensemaking tools are being adopted by candidates and parties today. Instead of using AI to capture and learn from constituent input, candidates more often seem to think of AI as just another broadcast technology—good only for getting their likeness and message in front of people. A case in point: British Member of Parliament Mark Sewards, presumably acting in good faith, recently attracted scorn after releasing a vacuous AI avatar of himself to his constituents.

Where the political polarization of AI goes next will probably depend on unpredictable future events and how partisans opportunistically seize on them. A recent European political controversy over AI illustrates how this can happen.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, a member of the country’s Moderate party, acknowledged in an August interview that he uses AI tools to get a “second opinion” on policy issues. The attacks from political opponents were scathing. Kristersson had earlier this year advocated for the EU to pause its trailblazing new law regulating AI and pulled an AI tool from his campaign website after it was abused to generate images of him appearing to solicit an endorsement from Hitler. Although arguably much more consequential, neither of those stories grabbed global headlines in the way the Prime Minister’s admission that he himself uses tools like ChatGPT did.

Age dynamics may govern how AI’s impacts on the midterms unfold. One of the prevailing trends that swung the 2024 election to Trump seems to have been the rightward migration of young voters, particularly white men. So far, YouGov’s political tracking poll does not suggest a huge shift in young voters’ Congressional voting intent since the 2022 midterms.

Embracing—or distancing themselves from—AI might be one way the parties seek to wrest control of this young voting bloc. While the Pew poll revealed that large fractions of Americans of all ages are generally concerned about AI, younger Americans are much more likely to say they regularly interact with, and hear a lot about, AI, and are comfortable with the level of control they have over AI in their lives. A Democratic party desperate to regain relevance for and approval from young voters might turn to AI as both a tool and a topic for engaging them.

Voters and politicians alike should recognize that AI is no longer just an outside influence on elections. It’s not an uncontrollable natural disaster raining deepfakes down on a sheltering electorate. It’s more like a fire: a force that political actors can harness and manipulate for both mechanical and symbolic purposes.

A party willing to intervene in the world of corporate AI and shape the future of the technology should recognize the legitimate fears and opportunities it presents, and offer solutions that both address and leverage AI.

This essay was written with Nathan E. Sanders, and originally appeared in Time.

yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
yhlee ([personal profile] yhlee) wrote2025-10-06 05:58 am
Entry tags:

emotional support spinning

This fiber colorway is from a monthly subscription (Feral Scene in Texas, so semi-local to me) - usually wool-based blends to push me out of my comfort zone. (I find wool to be the second-most difficult fiber to spin. First is cotton, which is more "normal" for a beginning spinner.)



I think of this as Pumpkin Spice yarn! It'll be going to [personal profile] ursula.

The current emotional support spinning WIP is cotton, widely regarded as hard mode for treadle wheel spinning. It only took six months of dedicated practice to skill up...



Shout-out to Mohairandmore [Etsy], which sells superlatively prepared fiber; the combed top for ramie and cotton are exquisite. They're also in Texas, so also semi-local to me, although I think most of their non-mohair fiber (they raise angora goats) is from other suppliers. I've got to budget for some of their merino blends at some point because I bet they're amazing to spin.

I wanted to learn to spin cotton because

(a) It's less wildly expensive than mulberry, eri, muga silk (my faves). You can get 4 oz. cotton fiber for ~$6 USD (not including shipping or tax). Silk fiber (unless it's "sari silk" loom waste) usually costs three times as much if not more.

(b) I'm in the US South. This is about as local as you get for fiber production! There's a little silk fiber production in the USA but not a lot of it, and again, whatever the source of the fiber, it's an inherently spendier fiber.

I went all-in on spinning because

(a) It's weirdly difficult to doomscroll on the internet while spinning. :p It's much better for my mental health; that alone would make it worthwhile.

(b) For my own use, I'm personally most interested in thread for needle lace, embroidery, cross stitch, hand-sewing, weaving. But I don't do any of those things very fast so I don't need very much for myself, and I'm narrowly interested in cotton or ramie or silk. I don't knit or crochet, but I have friends who do, and who can make use of yarns spun from Those Other Fibers! (I have functionally zero use for wool ever.) So anything I spin for my own learning/pleasure can go to a good home.

(c) I have wrecked ankle tendons (medical), and treadling on a spinning wheel is surprisingly good sneak physical therapy.

(d) I have neuropathy in my hands and feet, prognosis unknown. I don't want to wait five or ten years to pursue physical crafts further. My favorite thing is working with my hands (obviously, this isn't especially visible online). I regret I was never able to take a shop class because my high school didn't offer one. I don't know that I'm going to have sufficient use of my hands/feet in five to ten years (assuming the world hasn't imploded, a big assumption). So I might as well get some enjoyment out of hand/physical crafts now.