Midyear Reels

Jul. 7th, 2026 07:00 pm
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

Here we are in the middle of 2026, which is as good a marker as any to see where my movie watching is at. Thanks, Letterboxd, for enabling my OCD! All stats are as of June 30th.


I watched 197 movies in the first half of the year. I have a not totally serious goal of 500 this year, which is a number I hit in 2023 after which I decided to stop being quite so obsessive. You don’t need to make the number go up every year, so I pulled back for the sake of my sanity. Now, however, I have more free time. The math says… maybe, particularly since I’m gonna see like 75 movies at Fantasia. (I do count shorts in this.)



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/07/07/midyear-reels/

solarbird: our bike hill girl standing back to the camera facing her bike, which spans the image (biking)
[personal profile] solarbird

Greater Northshore Bike Connector Map 2.1.4 and MEGAMAP 2.1.4 – both 3 July 2026 – are now available on github.

If you’re on a pre-2.1 map: Release 2.1.0 was massive, filling in large swaths in the south end. You absolutely want this update to catch up.

Full list of changes with this release:

  • EXTENDED: 228th Ave SW bike lanes in Esperance extended west to 80th Ave W. (Both maps)
  • ADDED: 80th Ave W sharerow markings between 220th SW and 228th SW in Experance. The combination of this and the above add improve connections to Mountlake Terrace Light Rail Station. (Both maps)
  • ADDED: The Bike/Ped multi-use path (plus bridge-only buffered bike lanes) on 145th from Shoreline South light rail station west to Corliss Ave in Shoreline has officially opened and joins the map. (Both maps)
  • CORRECTED: 5th Ave NE bike lanes in Shoreline on the east side extend two-thirds of a block further than previously indicated. This has been adjusted. (Both maps)
  • CORRECTED: When adding the bike lane extension on 124th Ave NE north of 116th in Kirkland, I just extended the existing lines up rather than marking them as barrier-separated lanes, which they are. (They’re up on the sidewalk level.) Thanks to to @amberhu-uw for the heads-up! (Both maps)
  • WARNING ADDED: Construction is underway on upgrading bike lanes and sidewalks on 80th Ave NE in Kenmore, so a construction warning has been added. (Both maps)

All permalinks continue to work.

If you enjoy these maps and feel like throwing some change at the tip jar, here’s my patreon, and here’s Angela’s Kofi. (I’m her wife, so it gets to me.) Patreon supporters get bonus map variants, like pre-sliced printables of the Greater Northshore and 0% compression versions of the MEGAMAP. Plus, I can be open to requests for special edits.

Enjoy biking!

Posted via Solarbird{y|z|yz}, Collected.

On Attaching Files to Email

Jul. 3rd, 2026 10:30 pm
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

This is a Scott McNealy story. Kids these days may not remember Scott; he was the long-term CEO and co-founder of Sun Microsystems. He was legendary for being outspoken, opinionated, and a maverick. He wasn’t a technical guy at heart, leaning way more towards the business side. Nevertheless, he was pretty smart about which way the technical winds were blowing.


Sun Microsystems was built on the idea that a computer which wasn’t attached to a network – preferably the Internet – was less useful. I’ll loop back and talk about the first two jobs I had at Sun at some point. Right now, we’re gonna talk about the last job I had at Sun, which was working on the internal Javastation deployment program. Javastations were perhaps the pinnacle of Scott’s network-oriented philosophy, so this was pretty important stuff.



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/07/03/attaching-files-to-email/

Teamster Rebellion

Jul. 1st, 2026 05:45 pm
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

In my inevitable quest to learn more about the history of our new home in the Twin Cities, I recently read Teamster Rebellion by Farrell Dobbs as a primary source on the Minneapolis general strike of 1934. That strike was a significant moment in US labor history, beginning a shift towards industrial unionism – the idea that all workers in a given industry should be part of the same union, rather than organizing unions by trade. It also, not coincidentally, triggered real growth for the Teamsters and was one of the turning points leading American Trotskyists to split from the Stalinist Communist Party USA.



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/07/01/teamster-rebellion/

Arriving at Netcom

Jun. 26th, 2026 06:09 pm
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

My friend Sarah Gould keeps telling me I should write an autobiography because I love telling stories. I cannot deny the premise of the argument, and I know I want to redevelop my writing skills; thus, I’m going to start capturing some of those tales of how I got from there to here. Like all good stories, I’m going to start in the middle. Don’t expect any of this to be linear.



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/06/26/arriving-at-netcom/

(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.

June Moving Check-In

Jun. 24th, 2026 04:15 pm
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

I’m sitting on the Coho Ferry on the way to Victoria; I’ve got one last Ingress key drop to make before we leave the area. Admittedly this is also serving the purpose of checking off one more ferry we hadn’t tried in the past. There’s something kind of romantic about driving to a small city on the edge of America to take a small ferry to a city that always feels like a lost outpost of the British Empire. Naming their big luxury hotel the Empress probably has something to do with that feeling.



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/06/24/june-moving-checkin/

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kodi

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