Round 37 Roundup

Apr. 18th, 2026 02:37 pm
tinny: Something Else holding up its colorful drawing - "be different" (Default)
[personal profile] tinny posting in [community profile] retro_icontest



37



Thank you all for participating! Six makers participated, and made a total of 66 icons! \o/

You can see a selection of 28 icons by all makers here )

Depending on how the rest of my day goes, the new challenge will come today or tomorrow! <3
hungryghosts: A creature composed of many masks upon one shadowy body draped in a red fabric. (Default)
[personal profile] hungryghosts

(Crossposted from Tumblr)

[Phosphor] There's two particular chestnuts of misinformation (among others) that come up from time to time in the plural community. The first is that plural people are intellectually disadvantaged in some way because we have too many "processes" "competing for" "resources." The second is that plural people are intellectually superior in some way because our higher number of "processes" mean we can do more with our brains thanks to more efficient use of "resources" or Neuroplasticity(tm) or whatever.

Both of these ideas are actual cowshit, and I try to slap them down whenever they show up. The fundamental reason is the same - as popular as it is to compare brains to computers, brains are not literally computers. In general, brains are not well-understood, certainly not enough to make unfounded claims about the innate superiority or inferiority of a particular group's brains.

Read more... )

(no subject)

Apr. 18th, 2026 09:38 am
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
[personal profile] beccaelizabeth
The front door to the building lets you dial a flat number to call a flat to be let in.
Simples.
Yet:
There are people who will get the 'you have dialled an incorrect number' message
and phone someone to say the door isn't working
rather than imagine
they are dialling
the wrong building.

There is an entire street, go try the other stairs, they have their numbers written on them, why is this conceptually difficult so often???
alchemicink: (Default)
[personal profile] alchemicink posting in [community profile] anime_manga
*if you live in certain countries.

I just wanted to spread the word! (Because I don't know anyone else watching the series) It's currently available to watch in North and Latin America, and I recently saw that it's now available in Australia and New Zealand too.

I think it's also available on Netflix worldwide without the region-locking, but since I don't have Netflix, I appreciate this free alternative to watch.

The official YouTube channel is here. There are different playlists for different language subtitles.

I really enjoyed the first two episodes! I knew nothing about the series beforehand other than it's about rakugo (a kind of comedic storytelling). But I think Akane is a delightful character, the voice acting is top notch, and the animation is lovely so far. (I have a review for the first episode on my journal in this post)

Has anyone here read the manga? Did you enjoy it?

I'll wrap up by linking this ANN article from back in February that mentions the YouTube streaming and includes a trailer for the show.

Infection from birdshot?

Apr. 17th, 2026 10:16 pm
subversivegrrl: (Default)
[personal profile] subversivegrrl posting in [community profile] little_details
So, my character gets shot running away and catches several pellets of birdshot in his calf. Post-apocalyse setting, he doesn't have a chance to tend to it right away - can anyone give me a rough estimate of how long it would take before he would develop an infection that could disable him? (Fever, altered mental state.)

Thanks in advance for any feedback. I may need to revamp my idea about what kind of injury is going to put him out of commission for several days (he will have access to someone who can remove the pellets and provide reasonable, situation-appropriate medical care.)
cmk418: (Arya)
[personal profile] cmk418 posting in [community profile] sweetandshort
Title: Hunting
Fandom: Game of Thrones
Character: Arya Stark
Rating: Teen
Word Count: 100
Prompt: Arrow
Summary: She feels apologetic when the bird falls

Hunting )

I get the message ...

Apr. 16th, 2026 04:29 pm
cupcake_goth: (Default)
[personal profile] cupcake_goth
But I don't know if I'll actually follow through. You see, for the past week and a bit, no matter what tarot or oracle deck I pull a card from, they all have the same essential message: REST, GODDAMMIT. You know, that thing I'm terrible at, even tho' I encourage other people to do it. 

---

I wish the Stroppy One was more interested in wandering through thrift stores and antique malls. I always explain to him that it's not about buying things, it's about window shopping and finding really weird things. But no, he's not interested. Drat. (Tho' I do need to look into taking the occasional Tuesday or Tuesday early evening off, because that's the day of "senior discount" at the local Discovery Shop and Value Village, and hell yes I want to take advantage of that.   
witchpoetdreamer: (Default)
[personal profile] witchpoetdreamer
I've been writing a lot this week. Like, a LOT a lot! I've written 6 pages for my Terra/Cinderella fanfic at a coffee shop with a friend. I've written multiple post/essays on Obsidian. And I've written many pages in my journal. And somehow, because none of these have been seen by other people's eyes (as of now), it doesn't feel like I've been writing at all.

When has writing become something that only exists through other people's eyes? Who's the asshole who said something along the lines of "art doesn't exist if nobody sees it"? I'd like to have a word with them... with my fists to their face most likely. Don't care if they're dead already. I'll spit on their grave.

Because it truly is such a devastating thing to hear, and even more so to internalize it to the point that anything you do has no value at all until seen by others.

This week, just to have something familiar to listen to in the background, I looked up videos on overconsumption in hobbies (I already have my own opinion on the subject, it just tickles my brain right when other people agree with me on that, like it most likely does for a lot of people). As I was looking at my long form video options, scrolling past the few shorts left me... unsettled to say the least. "Manly hobbies to have", "Hobbies to appear elegant", "Hobbies to look cute", "Hobbies to increase your skills at work", etc. I gave up on the search for the videos I was interested in, disgusted and seething. How? When? What?!!-- When has hobbies become something for others to see? A performance for other people's benefits??? The hobbies to appear elegant? Exactly what you would expect a regency lady to know in order to snatch a rich man: play a classical instrument, ride a horse, paint, play chess (and it goes beyond saying that you also need to be at a certain level of income in order to even practice said hobbies). I didn't even look at the hobbies for work skills (it's called taking a class for work) or the manly hobbies. Just seeing the titles was enough for me to imagine what kind of "hobbies" these were supposed to be.

It's one thing that people's hobbies are displayed for the world to see, sharing increasingly expensive collections that they'll likely never see the end of it in their lifetimes. I watch them to remind myself not to get swayed by the new shiny things in my own hobbies (and I do get swayed, goddamn I do). But to display hobbies that are not only for video consumption but to get a rich man? Or to get a girly girl? Or to get a better job? In other words, to appear attractive to other people and prove you are worthy of their time and money?! Pardon my french mais quelle connerie!

How are we supposed to exist as people when all that is on our mind is how we are perceived by others? I've grown up with parents constantly toeing the line between "what will other people think?" and "I do what I want!", and I can see how fucked up it made them (and me, by extension, prior to addressing it in therapy and simply cutting ties with them). And it's always "what will other people think?" when it's something you do for absolute joy in your life: drawing with chalk on the sidewalk well past adulthood without a kid in sight, living in an apartment with roomates, dressing up in clothes that are unfashionable but loved, finding love of with someone who happens to be the same sex as you. But when it's "I do what I want", it's: yelling at someone who got in the way for half a second, taking up all the space on the bus going home, stomping all over the place without a care for the person living in the unit under you, listening to music at unbearable levels late at night to really early in the morning. Why is "what will other people think?" harmless to others, but "I do what I want" absolutely harming others to the benefit of one person? I have never and will never understand that.

When I write (or draw) things nobody else will ever see (or might, but is not something I think about in the moment), I am not hurting anybody. Bonus, it's really pleasing to me to do the actual writing, to feel the clickity-clack of the keyboard under my fingers or to hear the scratching of my pen on paper as words appear, shaping my thoughts into reality. But I am supposed to think none of them exists unless others have seen it?? Absolutely not!

So let this be a reminder (a prayer for myself, and for you if you need it) that whatever you do exists whether it is seen by others or not. And that what is unseen most likely has better value for yourself than what is out there in the open. Remind yourself that creation is an act of love, and love should never be for profit (social or monetary). Remind yourself that creation for a sense of identity *is* social profit. Do your hobbies, whatever they may be, because the sole benefit they bring is benefits to you: joy, peace, health, hope. Remind yourself that, unlike some people made you believe, you are not selfish for keeping your art to yourself. And that, if ever you do share it, it's because it's part of the process of said piece, because it brings you joy to do so, a sense of completion.

Let leisure be leisure.

The Measure, by Nikki Erlick

Apr. 17th, 2026 10:05 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


One day every adult on Earth gets a box that contains a string that measures out the length of their life.

This premise seems designed in a lab to create a book to be read for book clubs, where everyone gets to discuss whether or not they'd open their box and how they'd react to a long or short string. It worked, too. And it is absolutely about the premise. Unfortunately, the book is bad: flat, dull, sappy, American in the worst possible way, and emotionally manipulative.

It follows multiple characters, all American, most New Yorkers, and all middle or upper class. Some get long strings. Some get short strings. The ones with short strings agonize over their short strings. The ones with long strings who are in relationships with people with short strings agonize over that.

One of them is black, a fact mentioned exactly once in the entire book, and one has a Hispanic name. One set is an old right-wing politician and his wife. But all of them have identical-sounding narrative voices. Other than the Hispanic-named dude, who is mostly concerned about job discrimination, and the politician, who just wants to exploit the issue, everyone is worried about having a relationship and children with someone who will die young/worried that they'll get dumped and not be able to have children because they'll die young.

Ultimately, isn't everything really about baaaaaabies? Shouldn't everyone have baaaaaaabies no matter what?

The book is so bland and flat. The strings are a metaphor for discrimination, as short stringers are discriminated against. It explores some other social issues, all extremely American like health insurance discrimination and mass shootings, but only peeks outside America for brief and stereotypical moments: North Korea mandates not opening the boxes, China mandates opening them, and in Italy hardly anyone opens their box because they already know what really matters: family. BARF FOREVER.

It was obvious going in that the origin of the boxes would never be explained, but no one even seemed curious about that. Once all adults have received them, they appear on your doorstep the night you turn 22. Video of this is fuzzy. No one parks themselves on the doorstep to see if they teleport in or what. No one has a paradigm-upending crisis over this absolute proof of God/aliens/time travel/magic/etc that the boxes represent. No one comes up with inventive ways to take advantage of the situation a la Death Note. No one is concerned that this proves predestination. No one wonders why they appeared now and what the motive of whoever put them there is.

The point that life is precious regardless of length is hammered in with a thousand sledgehammers, to the point where it felt like a bad self-help book in the form of a novel. The romances are flat and sappy. In the truly vomitous climax, someone pedals around on a bicycle with the stereo playing "Que Sera Sera" and it quotes the entire song.

It's only April but this will be hard to top as the worst book I read all year.

(no subject)

Apr. 17th, 2026 05:50 pm
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
[personal profile] beccaelizabeth
Today I spent all day sitting in the living room
waiting on a delivery
which turned out to arrive tidily in the predicted time slot
but once Waiting Mode is activated it does not go away easily.

I have many Books now :-D

But in preparation for one of the many books I started rereading Wayward Children from the beginning, so I will be a couple more days before I get to the new one...


the reading is why it has been a quiet week here
lots of rereading, no pressing need to re review, so I was quiet.


I still want to start doing an output sort of a thing, a story or something, but still pondering that.

... I keep getting stuck on practicalities, like, there is a Mysterious Castle and a team of people from half a dozen canons are now Shut In The Castle...
... how much Mysterious Loo Roll do they need and how can we get it in the Castle without the mist eating it...

and there is a time and a place for that but I feel it is just turning a plot bunny into a shopping list
which really gets in the way of the porn.


bunnies will return eventually.

... *sigh* ...


👋🖖🌞
pauraque: drawing of a wolf reading a book with a coffee cup (customer service wolf)
[personal profile] pauraque
While collecting the necessary materials for my Le Guin reading project, I found she had a story which appeared only in the 1973 anthology Clarion III. This was a product of the 1972 Clarion Workshop, an annual six-week course for aspiring speculative fiction writers, taught by a rotating slate of guest instructors. Le Guin was a Clarion instructor that year, and while most of the instructors contributed essays on writing or on the workshop itself, she instead wrote a story.

Since I'd bothered to acquire the book, I figured I'd read the whole thing. But I took my time about it since Le Guin's story didn't seem important to the general arc of her career, though obviously it's significant that her stature had grown to the point where she was invited to teach. So although my reading of her work has progressed in the meantime to 1979 (and will continue from there if the person who currently has The Language of the Night checked out ever returns it to the library!!) we're going to take a short trip back to 1973 here.

Le Guin's story "The Ursula Major Construct; or, A Far Greater Horror Loomed" is a fictionalized version of an exercise she gave the students, using them as the characters and reimagining the whole thing as a SF experiment. I guess in reality she built a mobile out of found objects (the titular construct) and told the class to write about it. I'm sure her story was amusing to the people who were there, but out of context I found it impenetrable. (And hold that thought, because I'm gonna circle back to it.)

As for the student stories, I liked a handful of them, but most were either not to my taste, or seemed underdeveloped in some way, or were so steeped in 1970s gender politics and/or sophomoric "dirty joke" humor that the generation gap was too wide for me to cross. To be fair, these are student stories, but none of them sent me running to look for the authors' later work.

discussion of selected works )

full list of included works )

(no subject)

Apr. 17th, 2026 09:44 am
malymin: A wide-eyed tabby catz peeking out of a circle. (Default)
[personal profile] malymin

Been using a new Stardew Planner tool that's got better interior design options than the old one.

My current Switch save is on the Beach Farm map, and I want to lean into the furniture that the Beach Farm's farmhouse starts with:

The "Artist Bookcase" uses the exact same pink-cream color scheme as the "Birch" furniture, so that's effectively a total of... 4-5 pieces of Birch furniture. Here's the other pieces of furniture with the "birch" palette:

I've already bought a Birch Dresser from the Traveling Cart and a Birch Double Bed from the Desert Trader. I plan to use a Birch End Table or Birch Lamp End Table as a nightstand for the bed. I honestly am not sure ho to incorporate the tea table or breakfast chair into anything... but I have a cat, so of course I will have a cat tree.

Challenge 202 - Voting

Apr. 16th, 2026 10:59 pm
luminousdaze: Legion. Oliver Bird, Astral Plane rap battle scene (Legion | Astral Plane sparkles)
[personal profile] luminousdaze posting in [community profile] iconthat
There were over seventy spectacular icons entered! Thank you very much to all fifteen participants!
Voter Guide
Anyone is welcome to vote.
Please choose your top favorite SIX (6) icons for the main placements and one each for the categories Best Color (Coloring), Best Image Crop & Best Composition.
Please don't vote for your own icons or ask others to vote for your icons.
Please try to vote for the best quality icons, not only for the fandoms or creators.
Important:
Please vote for a different icon for each of the categories (Color, Crop, Composition).
There is a checkbox & text answer combo poll, to change your votes, click the poll link.
Voting will be open for one week.
Thank you for voting!
If Imgur content is not available in your region, please try using Rimgo to view the icons. Sorry, I cannot make a screenshot of the icon table because there is a dim light on one side of my screen that may effect it.

🗳️ Voting 🗳️ )

Shades of the same.

Apr. 16th, 2026 08:54 pm
hannah: (Jack Aubrey - katie8787)
[personal profile] hannah
It got sticky enough today to warrant the tower fan for cooling purposes. It's not even May. The day wasn't helped by the very little sleep I got last night, so between the fallout nausea and the heat, very little got done.

But, on the plus side, the home transcription gig's been given the go-ahead to more or less be a temporary full-time job, so I may take that as the smallest possible win.

(no subject)

Apr. 16th, 2026 07:59 pm
skygiants: Mary Lennox from the Secret Garden opening the garden door (garden)
[personal profile] skygiants
As I mentioned on my last Pern post, Dragonsdawn was always the most memorable Pern book for me -- for my sins, and sins indeed they are. That said, having reread it, I can understand exactly why I found this so compelling. This was the book that sold me on the fantasy of planetary exploration and colonization as a delightful and desirable experience! You could go to a beautiful new world and discover baby dragons and have random islands named after you! You could build a new Utopian society! Is Anne McCaffrey's vision of a Utopian society uncomfortably libertarian? Sure, but I was ten, I didn't know what libertarians were, I just understood that Sorka was having a very cool time as a happily free-range child exploring the Pernese landscape. I don't think it was until I read Mary Roach's Packing for Mars as an adult that I fully came to terms with the fact that going to space actually sounded like a deeply unpleasant time, logistically speaking, and let the faint wisps of the Dragonsdawn dream of First Feet Down on a beautiful new planet that's functionally just like Earth with bonus charming telepathic fauna dissipate into the ether.

I mean, it is sort of an open question though: early Pernese culture, potential paradise or libertarian cult? I do think McCaffrey knows that the colonist's blissful vision of If Everyone Has Enough Land For Themselves We Can All Just Be Chill And Not Actually Bother Society-Building is doomed to some degree of failure on account of bad actors, even before it's interrupted by Thread. She could have just made it a book about dealing with Thread and developing dragons about it, and it would probably be a better book if she did, but she's so grimly determined to put some bad actors in just to demonstrate she knows they exist. This at least is my theory of how we got Evil Sexy Avril Bitra, perpetrator of history's most inexplicable heist. "If I go on this fifty-year mission, I can steal some diamonds, steal an escape pod, launch myself back out into space, and get picked up back in a society that's moved on a hundred years from the one I left! Probably they'll still want diamonds and I'll re-adapt just fine!"

So, I can understand, I guess, why Avril Bitra. I don't understand and don't think I will ever understand why Avril Bitra's narrative foil is a would-be tradwife who nonconsensually aphrodisiaced her way into marriage with a man who has never shown any romantic interest in anything except cave systems and then spent the next eight years making a shocked Pikachu face about the fact that he continued to not be all that into her. Why is Sallah Telgar's plot in this book? What is it doing here? Why is Avril Bitra evilly torturing Sallah on the spaceship given so much page space and weird psychosexual intensity when literally nothing about this plot actually impacts the colony's situation IN ANY ACTUAL WAY? I thought a reread would leave me less confused about all this than I was when I was ten and in fact I think it did the opposite. Anne, please ... you must have had some thoughts about this, thematically, structurally ... I'm coming to you, hat in hand, asking for answers.

I do think it's very funny that in the years between 1968 and 1989 Anne McCaffrey decided that it was a bit embarrassing that she'd built biological differences into her dragons such that the queens don't breathe fire, and decided to blame it on the fact that the dragons were genetically designed by an Extremely Traditional Chinese Grandma instead. Is it also racist? Yes, extremely. But if we start talking about all the unfortunate well-meaning racism in Dragonsdawn we'll be here all day and I don't have that much day left. Racism aside I did find myself unexpectedly somewhat moved by the subplot I did not remember at all in which Kenjo Fusaiyuki, a guy who has made a Profound Mistake in moving to an isolated colony planet that's dedicated itself to being low-tech and abandoning spaceflight, desperately hoards fuel for as long as possible to put off the time when he will have to at last give up for good and all the thing he loves most and is best at in all the world.

And you know who could've saved Kenjo Fusaiyuki's life, if she had stopped to help the two guys Avril Bitra clonked on the head instead of uselessly pursuing her into space? YES, IT'S ANOTHER SALLAH TELGAR CRIME. Sallah Telgar, you have so much to answer for.
petra: Barbara Gordon smiling knowingly (Default)
[personal profile] petra
[personal profile] teland tagged me in a Tumblr meme, which I completed here for legibility/copy-paste-ability.

Here are my present thoughts about the first story I wrote in each of 30 fandoms, selected because those are the ones in which I have written more than 3 works longer than a drabble, with the occasional guest star of "All right, I mostly wrote drabbles in this fandom, but I really want to list it."

If that sounds like a meme you want to do, consider yourself tagged! The original meme was just "First story you wrote in each fandom" but I'd be here for a month if I did all of them.

The list of fandoms where stories appear is: Ashes to Ashes, Aubrey-Maturin - O'Brian, Battlestar Galactica (2003), Dark is Rising - Cooper, DCU (Comics), DCU Animated - Timmverse, Discworld - Pratchett, Doctrine of Labyrinths, due South, Falsettos - Finn & Lapine, Generation Kill (TV), Good Omens - Gaiman & Pratchett, Jeeves & Wooster, Les Misérables - Hugo, Life on Mars (UK), The Magicians (TV), Marvel Cinematic Universe, then known as Avengers (2012), Men's Ice Hockey RPF, Promethean Age - Bear, Singin' in the Rain (1952), Slings & Arrows:, Star Wars - All Media Types, Star Wars Original Trilogy, Star Wars Prequel Trilogy, Star Wars RPF, Supreme Power, Tales of the City - Maupin, Twitch City, Vorkosigan Saga - Bujold, and White Collar.

I am not monofannish )

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hushpiper: tell her that's young / and shuns to have her graces spied / that hadst thou sprung / in deserts where no men abide (Default)
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