muccamukk: The underwater wreck of a sunken tall ship. (Misc: Wrecked)
[personal profile] muccamukk
(I was fucking around on my phone for the last few hours, while Kaylee slept on her blanket. The second I got my laptop out, Kaylee came over and started to purr aggressively next to me. You can't be on my lap right now, baby.)

These are probably going to be brief, as my memory isn't that strong six months later.


Searching for Serafim: The Life and Legacy of Serafim "Joe" Fortes by Ruby Smith Díaz
(Local author, read before she gave a talk for Black History Month.)

Short biography and a poem about a Caribbean Black man working as a lifeguard in Vancouver, BC, in the early 20th century. The records of Serafim Fortes are pretty slight, and almost all from the perspective of white people—who treated him as a sort of mascot, and talked about how great he was despite his race—so Smith Díaz is mostly reading against the grain of the historical record, and speculating lot. I normally do not like history books that include this much speculation, however, Smith Díaz is very clear about when and why she's filling in ideas, and I think it works in this context. It introduced me to Marie-Claire Graham's concept of "speculative archiving" as a way of dealing with gaps in the record created by historical violence, which this book is more or less an example of. I appreciated that Smith Díaz did not shy away from or excuse records of Fortes behaving poorly. Very much worth a read as a local history, and as an example of navigating a fragmented and racist archive.


Rainbow heart sticker Everything Is Fine Here by Iryn Tushabe, narrated by Nneka Okoye
(Canada Reads Longlist, which I wish had been on the shortlist.)

A coming of age novel about a young woman in western Uganda, who discovers that her beloved older sister is a lesbian. One's reaction to that premise might be, "Oh no!" but this novel was not a tragedy about queer bashing, though the setting and my knowledge of Ugandan politics made it a tense read.

(I also felt that my ((at this point rather hazy)) knowledge of Ugandan geography, culture and food helped me a lot, including having been in the same places described in the book. There's a lot of cultural detail and non-English terms dropped in without explanation, so remembering what most things were saved me a lot of looking stuff up.)

But most of the novel is about a teenager trying to figure out both the world and herself, in a family with a lot of internal conflict and pressures. There's a few cases of sixteen-year-olds making poor choices, but for the most part the novel offers its characters a lot of grace. It's about discovering the world can be a lot bigger than you're told it is, and offering and receiving second chances. Really loved this one.


Rainbow heart sticker Witch King by Martha Wells, narrated by Eric Mok
(Reread before getting into the new one.)

I'm really glad I reread this, as I initially rushed through it to find out what happened, and as a result didn't remember several key plot points, which turned out to be essential to the second novel. There are a lot of moving parts!

Basically still love everyone in this band, and appreciate getting a novel about decentralising power, rather than building empires.


Rainbow heart sticker Queen Demon by Martha Wells, narrated by Eric Mok
Really enjoyed this one, also, though it ends in a more obvious cliffhanger than the first one, which stands more or less on its own.

Mostly just like the characters and enjoy spending time with them. It's again nice to see people struggling with the work of consensus building, interspersed with battle scenes, lol. I like Kai slowly coming out of his shell in the first timeline, and how much the characters have changed over the centuries between the flashbacks and present day. It really nicely both shows the long-range consequences, and builds up tension as the plots weave towards each other. Bit bummed out by some of the casualties along the way.

I hope we get the next one soon!

Three Links Make a List?

Jul. 6th, 2026 03:44 pm
muccamukk: Faiza and Jac drink lemonade and watch cricket. (Marvel: Watching Sports)
[personal profile] muccamukk
Reconciliation Theatre: Women of the Fur Trade.
I caught this recently and loved it. Wonderful local cast, fast paced and funny. I think it'll be in Victoria in the fall, if people aren't around for the list of tiny smol towns it's hitting this month.

Keep Android Open: Your phone is about to stop being yours.
Starting September 2026, a silent update, nonconsensually pushed by Google, will block every Android app whose developer hasn't registered with Google, signed their contract, paid up, and handed over government ID. Every app and every device, worldwide, with no opt-out.

tulipathy on BlueSky: Thread About GenAI in Heated Rivalry fanfic [ETA: Need to be logged in to read, very brief summary in comments].
I'd been hearing rumblings about this for a while, but I guess it's broken open now. How depressing for the fans.

not really my fandom, but...

Jul. 4th, 2026 10:14 am
muccamukk: Bayeux Tapestry figure of an archer. Text: I charge thee yeet thee fast oute of my syghte. (KA: Yeet)
[personal profile] muccamukk
I'm annoyed that Taylor Swift and/or Travis Kelce invited notorious abuser Brad Pitt to their wedding.

Guess this is not the year we get to yeet that man from polite society, like his kids keep yeeting his last name.
muccamukk: Elyanna singing, surrounded by emanata and hearts. (Music: Elyanna Hearts)
[personal profile] muccamukk
Fun Fandom Stuff! (for varying definitions of "fandom")
Smart Podcast, Trashy Books: Exploring Platform Decay with Martha Wells (Audio: 1 hour).
Really fun interview with [personal profile] marthawells, full of spoilers for the most recent Murderbot book, and including some lil bits of news on the TV show. There's a transcript, also.

[instagram.com profile] lilnasx: wellll HELLLO! (Video: couple minutes, hardcoded subs).
Our boy is back! I'm so happy he seems to be doing better! Hooray! I've been so worried about him.

[youtube.com profile] ophie-dokie: Is "Love, Simon" for straight people? [ft. Becky Albertalli] (Video: 1.75 hours).
Great colab with [youtube.com profile] SavyWritesBooks and long interview with Albertalli about maybe not being dicks to other queer people online.

[personal profile] kanadka: Stargate SG-1 Rewatch.
Kanadka's doing a rewatch start to finish, including the stinkers, and has some great episode thoughts so far. Everyone's welcome to chime in, and it'd be lovely to have some more SG-1 chat going on.


Thoughts on AI (but sadly not yaoi)
The Tyee: AI Isn’t Replacing Lawyers. But It’s Supercharging Institutions.
Canadians receiving insurance denials, eviction notices and collection demands need solutions to address a worsening disadvantage.

New Jersey Global: Nearly 400 local newspapers sue OpenAI, Microsoft over alleged copyright theft.
Coalition represented by former New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin’s law firm alleges AI companies used copyrighted local news reporting to train ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot without permission or compensation.

Minas Karamanis: The machines are fine. I'm worried about us.
An astrophysicist's thoughts on AI and pedagogy: The real threat is a slow, comfortable drift toward not understanding what you're doing. Not a dramatic collapse. Not Skynet. Just a generation of researchers who can produce results but can't produce understanding.
(The second essay on that blog about gender in the hard sciences also looks really good, but I haven't finished it yet.)

404 Media: Companies Are Making Claude and Codex Talk Like Cavemen to Stop AI's Soaring Costs.
Their podcast covers the same ground: The AI Tokenpocalypse Is Here (video: 40 minutes).
They had another one about token overspend a bit ago, and I'm getting SUCH a good laugh out of this. They told all these people they HAD to use AI or they'd get fired, and now they're like, shit, why are we spending so much on AI? Amazing.


Some Politics: (U.S. and Canada)
Rebecca Solnit: In the Dark Times Will There Also Be Singing?.
About art, communal spaces, and hope.

APTN: Innu Nation rejects apology from N.L. government that doesn’t mention 300-year history cap.
Some fuckery appears to be happening back east.

New Austen Movie?

Jun. 30th, 2026 10:16 pm
muccamukk: Harriet and Emma sharing a window seat, looking into each others eyes, postures mirrored, knees touching. (Emma.: In the Window)
[personal profile] muccamukk
Saw this trailer for Sense & Sensibility in front of Supergirl.

The less said about the hair the better, but I'm otherwise I'm actually stoked for this! The cast looks really fun, and we haven't had an S&S for a while, I think because it's the weakest of the books? The guy playing Edmond is Peter Pan from like twenty five years ago, having grown into his face.

Supergirl (2026)

Jun. 30th, 2026 02:11 pm
muccamukk: Supergirl determinedly flying forward. Text: "Here we go again!" (DC: Here We Go Again)
[personal profile] muccamukk
We rewatched Superman (2025) a couple nights ago, then went to Supergirl yesterday afternoon. The subtitle machine worked the entire time!

Overall I enjoyed it. I thought it was a good movie for the character of Supergirl, and maybe a little shaky as like... a movie?

Spoilers for both films )

Shaboozey Tiny Desk!

Jun. 26th, 2026 12:08 pm
muccamukk: Orville Peck in a red Nudie suit, singing and playing guitar, while a pink and white musical score swirl behind him. (Music: Orville Peck)
[personal profile] muccamukk

Mostly newer music! Stoked about the new album, which is soooooooon.

(no subject)

Jun. 25th, 2026 11:36 pm
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)
[staff profile] denise posting in [site community profile] dw_maintenance
Folks may have noticed that the site has been slow for logged-out users over the last while. This is partly because we separate traffic by logged-in, "logged out but have visited the site before", and "logged out, never visited the site before" and assign the fewest resources to the last category (because we're pretty confident the overwhelming majority of it is bot and scraper traffic, even if it's often impossible to say for sure). The flood of garbage traffic is a plague and a scourge the entire internet is dealing with, and it's hitting small sites the hardest as operators get better and better at cloaking their requests to look like real, authentic use. We long ago hit the point where adding more resources is a possible solution (because they just eat them up as soon as we do), and splitting traffic lets us keep the site usable for our actual users without wasting too much server power on garbage.

We've now, lucky us, reached the point where the "logged out, have never visited the site before" path is just flooded all the time, and the "logged out but have visited the site before" path is suffering some of the overflow. We've made some changes to the routing to try to improve things for logged out users who have visited the site before and keep it at "it may be a little bit slow, but at least it works" instead of "it keeps timing out", and we've seen some improvements, but if you're accustomed to browsing the site while logged out, I'm really sorry but it may continue to be a little miserable.

You will get the fastest page loads and the best performance by browsing the site logged in. If you are having trouble loading the front page to log in, bookmark the direct login page. We can't route the front page to the "more power" server pool, because it's a common target for garbage traffic, but we've switched /login over to "more power" and we'll try to keep it there as long as we can unless it starts getting slammed, too.