That went well!

Jun. 8th, 2026 12:45 pm
avivasedai: (Default)
[personal profile] avivasedai
Hebrew school shabbat was this past weekend. Due to my poor journalling habits I'm sure I haven't written anything about it - I'd been working on it for way too long.

I love a good LJ-cut. )Shabbat comes - I'm also the Zoom person so I arrive at 9:15 to set it up and get a few other things ready. I'm the first to arrive after the security guard, who doesn't have a key to the building but was *told* someone else's security code for the alarm, but doesn't know how to actually punch it in to the system. I'm immediately followed by two random congregants, then a few others, and by 9:25 there are a quorum of people outside the building, none of whom have a key. We call my friend the admin, who arrives 5 minutes later, and opens the door for us and disarms the alarm. We get started about 8 minutes late. *deep breath*

Everything else went smoothly! All the kids who were expected were there with their families. Every leader did their thing well; Benito agreed to lead his part by himself (reluctantly), and he did great! The youngest class participated and were heard as part of the kids' choir. The teen speaker talked not about the Torah portion but about her journey through Hebrew school and then after, finding a meaningful connection through USY activities, and how she's grown as a person. It was really lovely, and totally appropriate for the day. My speeches went well, and the kitchen person said there were about 100 people in the room, which is a lot more than usual.

One thing to note for next year: have a registration page (free event) so we know how many people to expect and can set up the lunch accordingly.

Book Review

Jun. 8th, 2026 09:23 am
kenjari: (Me again)
[personal profile] kenjari
A Daring Pursuit
by Kate Bateman

This historical romance concerns Carys Davies, a young woman who is mildly scandalous for her daring outfits and bold ways. She is, however, hiding a more scandalous incident in her past, one that could be ruinous. Because of this, she has been avoiding marriage. Tristan Montgomery is Carys' neighbor and childhood friend. They have been sparring and sniping at each other their whole lives. When he accepts her mocking challenge to show her what she is missing by avoiding marriage, Tristan and Carys discover that their feelings for each other are much more passionate and deeper than they had realized.
This one was fun and fairly light on the conflict. The sparring and banter was fun. There's a bit of an intrigue plot in place of a third act break-up that brought tension and crisis to the plot without being too emotionally wrenching.

sennashi_dorei?

Jun. 8th, 2026 12:22 am
vvalkyri: (Default)
[personal profile] vvalkyri
Otherwise Tall Sonya?
I realized at the end of balticon that I hadn't seen her and would have expected to, and looked and she hadn't posted since May 9th. There were a couple other people around who had contact info. I left a comment. She still hasn't posted since May 9th.

Is anybody in touch?

Field Trip

Jun. 8th, 2026 12:45 am
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

So here we are in sunny Minneapolis/St. Paul.


I’m writing up some notes as we go, and will post the whole thing on our return to Seattle. Right now — Wednesday morning — we’re sitting in the Lost Fox coffee shop in Lowertown, St. Paul. This would very likely be our neighborhood coffee shop if we wound up living in St. Paul for the first year. There are power strips at each table and it’s roomy, plus the lattes are good.



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/06/07/field-trip/

Book Review

Jun. 5th, 2026 09:06 pm
kenjari: (illumination)
[personal profile] kenjari
Sovereign
by C.J. Sansom

This is the third Matthew Shardlake mystery, set during the later days of Henry VIII's reign. Shardlake is sent along on the king's great Progress in the north of England. The King is there to gain the submission of a formerly rebellious region of his realm. Shardlake is there at Archbishop Cranmer's behest to ensure the prisoner Broderick, a member of a conspiracy against the king, is kept in good enough health to be transported to London for questioning by the torturers of the Tower. When a glazier in York fall to his death, Shardlake finds himself a target of a dangerous and murderous conspiracy.
This mystery was very intricate and clever. There were multiple threads to it, and more than one culprit. It's also more than just a murder mystery, it has aspects of a thriller based around a deep conspiracy. I liked the way the story explored the intricacies of Tudor politics and court life as well as the machinations of power, status, and lineage. Shardlake is such a relatable character. He's very smart and observant, but also kind of grumpy and touchy and sometimes difficult.

new sandals

Jun. 2nd, 2026 07:50 pm
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird

I went to REI this afternoon to buy sandals, and I found a pair that suits me. They're Tevas, and if I'm satisfied after wearing them a few times, I'm going to order another pair in a different color (these are basic black).

I tried on several other shoes, which ranged from not quite right to just weird (a pair of Birkenstocks that had their arch supports in a really weird place relative to my feet).

Having found a pair that I thought fit, I walked down and then up a flight of stairs, as a test, and they were fine. I try not to climb a lot of stairs, but some are unavoidable, and it seemed like a useful test.

I'd been a little worried that there wouldn't be anything left in my size, since we're well into the time of year when a lot of people are wearing sandals, but REI clearly thinks it's still sandal season, along with hiking and running shoe season.

(no subject)

Jun. 1st, 2026 10:56 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
Quick note that post-by-email and comment-by-email is (sometimes?) failing silently without actually posting right now! I'm pretty sure this is related to last night's shenanigans and will be fixed once Mark can finish the full fix for it, which he's working on, but if you've posted or replied by email in the last 24 hours, fish it out of your sent folder to check if it posted!

EDIT: This should be fixed as of around 7AM EDT! We *believe* everything that was stuck in the plumbing has been sent along to your journal or the comment thread it was meant for; it's definitely not where it was stuck anymore, at least.

recent(ish) reading

May. 31st, 2026 11:02 pm
redbird: full bookshelves and table in a library (books)
[personal profile] redbird

Books finished:

Ada Palmer, Inventing the Renaissance. the book covers a lot, with a focus on Machiavelli and on Florence--The idea of a Renaissance, as a goal, was invented in Florence, and tourism has been important to the economy of Florence for centuries. Recommended.

T. Kingfisher, Paladin's Faith. A reread of a romance set in the Temple of the White Rat universe.

Celia Lake, Claiming the Tower. Another romance set in her Albion fantasy history, this takes place during the Crimean War, and the relationship arc is a slowly-developing friendship and then romance between two wonen.

Jenn Lyons, The Sky on Fire. A fantasy novel, set in a world with dragons. The main viewpoint character wanted to be a dragon rider, and instead found herself living on the barely-habitable surface, after what was intended to be been a fatal fall. Politics on multiple levels, as well as relationships. I enjoyed this and am not sure what to say about it. Lyons does a good job of world-building, with a lot of what Jo Walton calls including to avoid the "as you know, Bob" problem of telling the reader things that the characters take for granted. This seems to be a stand-alone book, and I have another of Lyons's books on hold at the library.

Susan Kaye Quinn, editor, Bright Green Futures. An anthology of solarpunk stories. These are mostly near-future stories about living in a climate-changed future, and adapting to aspects of that.

I liked most of the stories. Serena Ulibarri’s “What Kind of Bat Is This?” is about people working on studying and restoring a bit of desert. Danielle Arostegui’s “A Merger in Corn Country” is about farming and finding community as the climate changes and people have to decide whether to relocate. Brightflame’s "Ancestors, Descendants,” is weird and interesting, depicting a few people finding a way to live within a fungally-linked network of plant life at the northeastern edge of the continent (I think North America). “Centipede Station” by T K Rex is set much further in the future, somewhere a long way from Earth. It's anti two people whose starship has crash-landed on some kind of space station. Recommended, though I apparently tried and gave up on one of the author's novels a few years ago.

Celia Lake, Distilling Sunlight. Another Albion book, a romance between a widower with two children, and a woman who has never married, because she never met anyone she wanted to marry, and because she thinks her distractability and tendency to lose track of time would interfere with any serious relationship.

Holly Day, Squirrel Circus. A romance between two "shifters," one a wolf shifter (with a lot more control over the transformation than the typical werewolf, and a squirrel shifter. The two men can smell that they are each other's destined mates, and both think it would be a very bad idea, because wolves tend to kill and eat squirrels. I enjoyed this, but have no immediate impulse to seek out more of Day's work. We never see the titular squirrel circus, but it's a minor plot point. (This book, the Celia Lake romances, and the Courtney Milan book discussed below all contain explicit sex, but this one has an "adults only" warning at the beginning.)

Lois McMaster Bujold, Knot of Shadows. Another Penric and Desdemona novella.

Courtney Milan, A Compendium of Ever-Increasing Mayhem. Romance, and I'm not sure I entirely believe the characters getting together after the man ruined the woman socially years earlier, largely to amuse himself and his friends. (He has changed, but she has trouble believing that.)

Current reading:

I am reading what seems to be the new Penric and Desdemona story, Darklight Dare, on the kindle.

Our current read-aloud book is Alexandre Dumas's The Three Musketeers, translated by someone who liked the book enough that he learned French in order to translate it. (We compared this to another translation, and agreed that we preferred this one.)

(no subject)

May. 31st, 2026 10:00 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

Robby has managed to put in a temporary fix for the site errors and things failing to refresh or not showing up where they should! The permanent fix is going to need Mark's experience, and unfortunately -- seriously, this literally never fails -- Mark has been on an international flight all day, because of course he has. (Never. Fails. He and I are not allowed to both take vacation at once.)

The site will work just fine with the temporary fix in place, things just might be a little slow here and there. We'll keep you updated.

(no subject)

May. 31st, 2026 08:59 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
We're aware of site traffic issues and are working to fix them for the people who are having problems! (The tactics the damn bot traffic uses are endlessly shifting, and they're really good at looking like real traffic, sigh.)

Book Review

May. 30th, 2026 10:40 pm
kenjari: (Me again)
[personal profile] kenjari
Making Up
by Lucy Parker

This is the third book in the London Celebrities romance series set in the London theatre scene. Trix is an actress and acrobat about to take over the lead role in the Cirque du Soleil style show she's in. Leo is a makeup artist who's just been hired for the show. He and Trix knew each other when they were in school and had a fraught relationship. They've spent the last ten years sniping at each other during their fleeting encounters. Now their sniping turns into sparks and those sparks explode into passion.
I really liked this one. There's a lot of great banter between Trix and Leo, and I loved the way their connection grows. I also really liked that they talked about things, albeit imperfectly. They didn't wait until the end to reveal important things about their pasts and how it affected them. There's no third act break-up, just an emotional hurdle to overcome, which Trix and Leo do in a mature and affecting way.

Closeted

May. 31st, 2026 12:30 am
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

To celebrate my retirement (which is a retrofitted justification; I’d have done this anyhow), S. and I woke up at 5 AM Friday, left the house at 5:30, and drove down to Portland for the Criterion Mobile Closet. We didn’t get back home until 10 PM. This… is our story.


Seattle to Portland chews up about 80-90% of our ID.4’s battery, depending on weather. Usually we pause for a 30 minute charge somewhere north of Portland, so we have more flexibility coming home. This time we knew we had to get there early in order to secure a spot in line, so we just pushed through, arriving with around 60 miles of range left. Plenty.



Full post: https://popone.innocence.com/archives/2026/05/30/closeted/

I finished ANOTHER thing!

May. 30th, 2026 09:49 am
dianec42: Cross stitch face (DecoLady)
[personal profile] dianec42
I finally finished Upon A Star, by PigeonCoop Designs, from the book Cross Stitch In The Forest. It took me a little over a year; I work on many projects at once, so this is pretty fast for me. The confetti stitches were SUCH a pain! I used a sharp embroidery needle so I could weave the tails through the weave of the Aida fabric.

Finished cross stitch of wolf, trees, moon, and stars

Bostonish. Specifically Newton

May. 30th, 2026 03:22 am
vvalkyri: (Default)
[personal profile] vvalkyri
Up Bostonish. Must be up in 5 hrs to walk to shul with family for barmitzva.
Uncle tells me they don't use umbrellas on Shabbat because it's like pitching a tent.
It'll be under 50 degrees.
I thought Shabbat was supposed to be joyful?


Today was good
Foot new bruising. Huh? Doesn't hurt. I bought cane cushions but really I only use the seat cane to sit or prop my feet.

Oh, I think we're talking union square noonish Sunday.

Balticon was also good. More on that eventually.
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
It's been a while since we've done a full code push rather than just hotfixes for bugs, so we are well overdue! Depending on availability, we're aiming to do one sometime soon; we'll let you know specifics once we've worked out good timing for everyone who needs to be available.

However! The reason it's been so long is we kept trying to get some of the stuff that's pending to "really finished" instead of just "mostly finished", and then we once again looked around and went "oh no, this is a really big code push with a lot of changes". Those make us nervous, because while we do a lot of testing ourselves, y'all are really creative in how you use the site and we inevitably find a bunch of edge cases when we let you loose on new code with your real-world data!

So, if folks have some spare time in the next few days, it would be a huge help if you could spend half an hour or so using the site the same way you normally do but with the "Site-Wide Canary" beta features flag turned on. Canary mode is a sort of "live testing" mode: it's your real data, but running the most up-to-date code.

Canary mode always does have a few glitches -- there may be missing text strings or errors about missing database properties, which is a limitation of how we run it. We don't need to know about those, but anything else weird that you run into, leave a comment with what you were trying to do and the error message you got.

I'll repeat that the "here be dragons" caution that's on the beta features page: some things may be broken, so don't use it for when you're doing something important. But a few more eyeballs on it before the push will help the push go more smoothly for everyone.

For folks who want to concentrate on what's changing, we haven't finished the second code tour of what's going to be in this push, but the ffirst one has a good chunk of what's going to be going live. (We'll get the second half done ASAP!)

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