December 5, 2025: Leslie Fish

Dec. 5th, 2025 06:48 am
[syndicated profile] daily_illuminator_feed
Leslie Fish, multiple-award-winning singer, songwriter, author, and gadfly, passed away last week.

Leslie and I were friends from conventions decades ago. In more recent years we both traveled less and somewhat fell out of touch, but it was always great when our paths crossed again. When she was talking, I listened and argued; that was fun. When she was singing, I shut up and just listened.

I hardly know which of her talents to praise first. As a performer, she was equally comfortable in front of a big audience and in a small filk circle – and either way, she gave her all. As a composer and lyricist, her range went from the raunchy lyrics and catchy hook of "Banned on Argo" to the soaring "Hope's Eyrie." It could be argued that she invented filksinging. If she didn't invent it, she gave it wings.

Leslie was a libertarian in the old small-L sense (on the few days, that is, when she wasn't a flat-out anarchist). She was a card-carrying member of the Industrial Workers of the World and a Second Amendment absolutist. She read Kipling and set his poems to music. She bred her cats for intelligence – which probably made her a danger to humanity, but I digress. She wrote fiction on original themes, she wrote mock-scholarly articles, and she wrote Trekfic (including one of the first K/S stories published). She did LARPs and SCA. There was no one box big enough to contain all Leslie Fish's passions, talents, and beliefs.

Oh, and she was also a Car Wars fan, which would have endeared her to me even if she couldn't sing a note.

Gonna miss her.

Steve Jackson

PS – Much of Leslie's music is out of print. However, Prometheus Music offers several of her albums, and the sample tracks on their site will let you hear her voice.

Warehouse 23 News: The City Never Sleeps Because Of All The Action

There are a million stories in the city, and they're all exciting! GURPS Action 9: The City shows how you can add GURPS City Stats to your GURPS Action campaigns. It also features six sample cities to use with your own action-packed adventures. Download it today from Warehouse 23!

Photos: House Yard

Dec. 4th, 2025 11:39 pm
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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today I took pictures of icicles and snow, mostly in the house yard, some down the driveway.

Walk with me ... )

El Goonish Shive - falsekings-077

Dec. 5th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] egs_comic_feed

New comic!

Today's News:

- Each coin (universe) has two sides. The explanation is actually simple if one gets the general concept, but it remains awkward to explain because you have to differentiate it from simply being a parallel universe.

- Magic blocking itself from Uryuoms

- Grace getting access to magic (indicating that uryuoms could use it again)

- All that stuff about projections (referenced in previous commentary, too)

- Ellen having special insights about greater projections (ditto). Tedd is, apparently, trying not to reveal his source (or that there even is a source).

- "There's magic on them, but they're not enchanted?"

Is panel three why I brought up Ellen's second life earlier? Mmmaybe.

Perception and Memory

How people perceive reality can be tricky, and it makes us pretty bad witnesses when something sudden and exciting happens. Hope would be a much better witness on average than us humans, but she could still make mistakes and perceive things in some flawed way.

Put another way, her memory of what she perceived might be perfect, but what she perceived might not have been completely accurate. Another point for the magic mirror.

Like that battle chess thing in Star Wars!

Figuring out panel two was tricky for me, but I was determined to clearly show that the memory as being half-sized and above the table. Projection Po looked pretty big on the previous page, but that was a trick of perspective (and tricksy me wanting to fill the panel).

--

- Thursday EGSNP

Today's Adventures

Dec. 4th, 2025 10:11 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today we went to Mattoon.

Read more... )
[syndicated profile] gws_feed

New comic!

Today's News:

Somehow Darren was spared meeting Candy this whole time! I forgot that was canon.

Here's the old post, and the chaser post!

Final reminder that the GWS compendiums will only be on sale til the end of the day today!! Go get one if you want it for $20 off! And almost all of the rest of the store is 50% off for just today, too! Enjoy!

Activism

Dec. 4th, 2025 05:49 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Four countries announce Eurovision 2026 boycott after Israel allowed to compete

Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain have all said they won't be taking part in next year's contest.


You can play along at home by skipping Eurovision 2026 to purchase songs from countries who have taken a stand against genocide -- or buy Palestinian music.

Thankful Thursday

Dec. 4th, 2025 10:32 pm
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[personal profile] mdlbear

Today I am thankful for...

  • Getting an appointment scheduled to discuss BP meds.
  • Finding a good Chinese/Indnesian restaurant that delivers. That delivers rijsttafel! Which I last had when I was in Amsterdam with my parents half a century ago. Not as good as the place we went to back then -- Dad was extremely good at finding the best restaurants and hotels -- but good enough, and closer.
  • Leftovers. See above.
  • More generally, having a huge variety of places to order from.
  • Garlic, blue cheese, chili crisp, and other tasty things. (I have a tendency to graze.)

Art

Dec. 4th, 2025 03:25 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
A new book of Edward Gorey’s drawings shows what’s lost when the artist’s sexuality is glossed over

As for his personal life, Gorey may have been what today we’d call asexual; Gorey himself used the term “undersexed,” but he also acknowledged, when asked directly about his sexuality, that he “supposed” he was gay.

Mark Dery’s 2018 Gorey biography, “Born to be Posthumous: The Eccentric Life and Mysterious Genius of Edward Gorey,” documents the artist’s participation in postwar gay life. The book details a handful of crushes Gorey had on various men, at least one of which – a brief affair with a man named Victor – involved some physical intimacy.

To whatever extent Gorey entertained sex or romance, it was with men. As Dery points out, however, this fact largely goes unaddressed in discussions of the artist’s work.

Rapunzel Syndrome

Dec. 4th, 2025 10:14 pm
[syndicated profile] unspeakablevault_feed
Rapunzel Syndrome
Weird strip, about true medical conditions (don't google). And Metal. Lovecraft and Metal music, a long and strange lovestory.

Birdfeeding

Dec. 4th, 2025 02:19 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is sunny and cold.  Icicles are forming along the eaves.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches, a male cardinal, and a mourning dove.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 12/3/25 -- I took some pictures around the yard.

EDIT 12/3/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

I've seen several more mourning doves roosting in the trees, puffed up like little beige softballs.  :D

EDIT 12/3/25 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 12/3/25 -- I did more work around the patio.

As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.

Wildlife

Dec. 4th, 2025 01:17 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Raccoon goes on drunken rampage in Virginia liquor store and passes out on bathroom floor

The masked burglar broke into the closed Virginia liquor store early on Saturday and hit the bottom shelf, where the scotch and whisky were stored. The bandit was something of a nocturnal menace: bottles were smashed, a ceiling tile collapsed and alcohol pooled on the floor.

The suspect acted like an animal because, in fact, he’s a raccoon.

On Saturday morning, an employee at the Ashland, Virginia-area liquor store found the trash panda passed out on the bathroom floor at the end of his drunken escapade.


Read more... )

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[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Cold Comforts
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 2 of 2, complete
Word count (story only): 1615
[Early December 2016]


:: On a cold, sleeting day, Shiv wants to spend part of his time off at Flights of Fancy. The problem is that he finds the door iced shut. He and Fancy get to work, and later get to relax together. Part of the Shiv an Omaha story threads in the Polychrome Heroics universe; this story was written for the December prompt events, from an idea suggested by [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith, with my warmest thanks! ::


Back to part one
:: Thanks for reading! ::




Shiv’s nose wrinkled. “Microwaved muffins are horrible,” he deferred. He sniffed, surprised to find a strong aroma of apple, cinnamon, orange, nutmeg, and… was that lavender?

“Wanna see my newest toy?” she countered, her grin widening.
Read more... )
[syndicated profile] grrlpowercomic_feed

Posted by DaveB

I may have mentioned this before, but for some reason, jokes about things being load-bearing always land with me. Probably because the only ones I’ve heard are absurdist. I think Brooklyn 99 did one about a balloon arch being load-bearing. Knees are, evolutionarily speaking, load-bearing. All bones are, really. Maybe not the skull, or the lower mandible. I suppose that depends on how you define “load.” But knees are inarguably load-bearing, so my little joke meets my own standard for being absurdist, therefore, I made myself laugh with this one.

Also, not to keep patting myself on the back, but “the most structurally reinforced of women’s knees” (which is an awkward sentence, but I think it’s grammatically correct?) also makes me laugh, because, yes, of course, there are such things as knee braces and in the advanced galaxy, powered armor, but the first thing my mind conjures is something like a woman wearing 6 pairs of pantyhose, or some kind of stocking and garter and flying buttress affair.

In some settings, dragon fire would be just some napalm-ish goo stored in a gland and it’s lit by the dragon clicking their teeth together when they have some flint stuck between their molars. That sort of biological dragon can account for the acid and chlorine breathers, but doesn’t allow for the kind that breath lightning or “cold.” In magical dragon settings, there’s probably more to the breath weapons than some goo in a gland. So dragons would probably have a name for it that sounds cool. Soulfire was the best I could come up with. Which probably happened at a Dragon council meeting, and the Red and Gold and Magma dragons were like “I guess “SoulFire” is the best we can come up with.” And all the other dragons who breathe cold or tornadoes or avalanches or starlight or whatever were all “No! It must be inclusive! EnergyForge!” “What are we? Dwarves?” “How about DragonCore!” “Ug, that sounds like an exercise trend for douchey nobles and High Elves.” “Okay, fine, SoulFire it is, but must we do intercaps?” “The Time Dragon says it will be easier to Duck Duck Go, whatever that means.”


Kobold Sydney vote incentive! Is finally done!

So… you know, check it out. Oh, and as usual, Patreon has a scales only version.

 

 

 


Double res version will be posted over at Patreon. Feel free to contribute as much as you like.

[syndicated profile] the_daily_wtf_feed

Posted by Remy Porter

It feels like ages ago, when document databases like Mongo were all the rage. That isn't to say that they haven't stuck around and don't deliver value, but gone is the faddish "RDBMSes are dead, bro." The "advantage" they offer is that they turn data management problems into serialization problems.

And that's where today's anonymous submission takes us. Our submitter has a long list of bugs around managing lists of usernames. These bugs largely exist because the contract developer who wrote the code didn't write anything, and instead "vibe coded too close to the sun", according to our submitter.

Here's the offending C# code:

   [JsonPropertyName("invitedTraders")]
   [BsonElement("invitedTraders")]
   [BsonIgnoreIfNull]
   public InvitedTradersV2? InvitedTraders { get; set; }

   [JsonPropertyName("invitedTradersV2")]
   [BsonElement("invitedTradersV2")]
   [BsonIgnoreIfNull]
   public List<string>? InvitedTradersV2 { get; set; }

Let's start with the type InvitedTradersV2. This type contains a list of strings which represent usernames. The field InvitedTradersV2 is a list of strings which represent usernames. Half of our submitter's bugs exist simply because these two lists get out of sync- they should contain the same data, but without someone enforcing that correctly, problems accrue.

This is made more frustrating by the MongoDB attribute, BsonIgnoreIfNull, which simply means that the serialized object won't contain the key if the value is null. But that means the consuming application doesn't know which key it should check.

For the final bonus fun, note the use of JsonPropertyName. This comes from the built-in class library, which tells .NET how to serialize the object to JSON. The problem here is that this application doesn't use the built-in serializer, and instead uses Newtonsoft.JSON, a popular third-party library for solving the problem. While Newtonsoft does recognize some built-in attributes for serialization, JsonPropertyName is not among them. This means that property does nothing in this example, aside from add some confusion to the code base.

I suspect the developer responsible, if they even read this code, decided that the duplicated data was okay, because isn't that just a normal consequence of denormalization? And document databases are all about denormalization. It makes your queries faster, bro. Just one more shard, bro.

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[syndicated profile] daily_illuminator_feed
Industry luminary, former Pyramid contributor, and general all-around cool guy Owen K.C. Stephens reposted something from his BlueSky account a while back that I'm delighted to share.

BlueSky user Oregon has shared a thread on 200+ historical artifacts that are particularly interesting for RPG campaigns. The list includes a knife that's a gun and a calendar, guillotine earrings, a bracelet worn by a woman who died at Pompeii, and hundreds of other items . . .

. . . most of which will probably not be available at Warehouse 23 (unless you count GURPS Fantasy-Tech 1: The Edge of Reality).

Steven Marsh

Warehouse 23 News: Why Is The Darkness Blinking?

They're trapped between the realm of the living and the dead . . . and they're not too pleased about it. The Book of Unlife adds 44 unliving monsters to your The Fantasy Trip campaigns, along with a complete adventure setting. Live like there's too many tomorrows thanks to Warehouse 23!

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