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Where to start reading — or rereading — Varley's many series and stories.

Looking Back at the Work of John Varley, 1947-2025

open thread – December 12, 2025

Dec. 12th, 2025 04:00 pm
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Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s the Friday open thread!

The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on any work-related questions that you want to talk about (that includes school). If you want an answer from me, emailing me is still your best bet*, but this is a chance to take your questions to other readers.

* If you submitted a question to me recently, please do not repost it here, as it may be in my queue to answer.

The post open thread – December 12, 2025 appeared first on Ask a Manager.

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Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s the final round of the Worst Boss of 2025 voting. We’ve narrowed the pool from eight nominees to two (see results from the first round and second round). The two finalists go head-to-head below.

A Frightful Face-Off – The Nominees:

If the voting isn’t showing up for you, you can also vote directly here.

The post vote for the worst boss of 2025: the finals appeared first on Ask a Manager.

HIT IT WITH THE ROCK

Dec. 12th, 2025 02:00 pm
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Posted by john (the hubby of Jen)

 
 
 

Thanks to Steven C., Elizabeth E., and Jennifer S. for remembering that it could always be worse.

*****

And from my other blog, Epbot:

The Wayfinder by Adam Johnson

Dec. 12th, 2025 09:03 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


The visitors might be Bird Island's salvation or simply the next step in its doom.


The Wayfinder by Adam Johnson

Update [me, health, Patreon]

Dec. 12th, 2025 06:49 am
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[personal profile] siderea
So, I, uh, got my RSI/ergonomics debugged!* I then promptly lost two days to bad sleep due to another new mechanical failure of the balky meat mecha and also a medical appointment in re two previous malfunctions. But I seem back in business now. The new keyboard is great.

Patrons, I've got three Siderea Posts out so far this month and it's only the 12th. I have two more Posts I am hoping to get out in the next three days. Also about health insurance. We'll see if it actually happens, but it's not impossible. I have written a lot of words. (I really like my new keyboard.)

Anyways, if you weren't planning on sponsoring five posts (or – who knows? – even more) this month, adjust your pledge limits accordingly.

* It was my bra strap. It was doing something funky to how my shoulder blade moved or something. It is both surprising to me that so little pressure made so much ergonomic difference, and not surprising because previously an even lighter pressure on my kneecap from wearing long underwear made my knee malfunction spectacularly. Apparently this is how my body mechanics just are.
siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1890494.html


0.

Hey Americans (and other people stuck in the American healthcare system)! Shopping for a health plan on your state marketplace? Boy, do I have some information for you that you should have and probably don't. There's been an important legal change affecting your choices that has gotten almost no press.

Effective with plan year 2026 all bronze level and catastrophic plans are statutorily now HDHPs and thus HSA compatible. You may get and self-fund an HSA if you have any bronze or catastrophic plan, as well as any plan of any level designated a HDHP.

2025 Dec 9: IRS.gov: "Treasury, IRS provide guidance on new tax benefits for health savings account participants under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill"
Bronze and Catastrophic Plans Treated as HDHPs: As of Jan. 1, 2026, bronze and catastrophic plans available through an Exchange are considered HSA-compatible, regardless of whether the plans satisfy the general definition of an HDHP. This expands the ability of people enrolled in these plans to contribute to HSAs, which they generally have not been able to do in the past. Notice 2026-05 clarifies that bronze and catastrophic plans do not have to be purchased through an Exchange to qualify for the new relief.

If you are shopping plans right now (or thought you were done), you should probably be aware of this. Especially if you are planning on getting a bronze plan, a catastrophic plan, or any plan with the acronym "HSA" in the name or otherwise designated "HSA compatible".

The Trump administration doing this is tacit admission that all bronze plans have become such bad deals that they're the economic equivalent of what used to be considered a HDHP back when that concept was invented, and so should come with legal permission to protect yourself from them with an HSA.

Effective immediately, you should consider a bronze plan half an insurance plan.

Read more [3,340 words] )

This post brought to you by the 221 readers who funded my writing it – thank you all so much! You can see who they are at my Patreon page. If you're not one of them, and would be willing to chip in so I can write more things like this, please do so there.

Please leave comments on the Comment Catcher comment, instead of the main body of the post – unless you are commenting to get a copy of the post sent to you in email through the notification system, then go ahead and comment on it directly. Thanks!

more on visual culture in science

Dec. 12th, 2025 11:04 am
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[personal profile] kaberett

This morning I am watching the lecture I linked to on Tuesday!

At 6:53:

Here is an example of how the Hubble telescope image of the Omega nebula, or Messier 17, was created, by adding colours -- which seem to have been chosen quite arbitrarily -- and adjusting composition.

The slide is figure 13 (on page 10) from an Introduction to Image Processing (PDF) on the ESA Hubble website; I'm baffled at the idea that the colours were chosen "arbitrarily" given that the same PDF contains (starting on page 8) §1.4 Assigning colours to different filter exposures. It's not a super clear explanation -- I think the WonderDome explainer is distinctly more readable -- but the explanation does exist and is there.

Obviously I immediately had to stop and look all of this up.

(Rest of the talk was interesting! But that point in particular about modern illustration as I say made me go HOLD ON A SEC--)

Meeting my younger self

Dec. 12th, 2025 10:30 am
[syndicated profile] alexwlchandotnet_feed

Posted by Alex Chan

I’ve been building a scrapbook of social media, a place where I can save posts and conversations that I want to remember. It has a nice web-based interface for browsing, and a carefully-designed data model that should scale as I add more platforms and more years of my life. As I see new things I want to remember, it’s easy to save them in my scrapbook.

But what about everything I’d saved before?

Across various disks, I’d accumulated over 150,000 posts from Twitter, Tumblr, and other platforms. These sites were important to me and I didn’t want to lose those memories, so I kept trying to back them up – but those snapshots had more enthusiasm than organisation. They were chaotic, devoid of context, and difficult to search – but the data was there.

After so many failed attempts, my scrapbook finally feels sustainable. It has a robust data model and a simple tech stack that I hope will last a long time. I wanted to bring in my older backups, but importing everything wholesale would just reproduce the problems of the past. I’d be polluting a clean space with a decade of disordered history. It was finally time to do some curation.

I went through each post, one-by-one, and asked: Is this worth keeping? Do I want this in the story of my life? Is this best left in the past?

That’s why I started looking back over fifteen years of a life lived online, which became an unexpectedly emotional meeting with my younger self.

The Internet as a teacher

One thing I’d forgotten is how much I learnt from being online, especially in fannish spaces. My timeline taught me about feminism and consent; about disability and the barriers of the built world; about racism in a way that went far deeper than anything I’d encountered before. I could learn about issues directly from the people who faced them, not filtered through a journalist’s lens. Today I take that social awareness for granted, but the Internet is where it started.

Social media was a crash course in humanity – broader, richer, and more diverse than anything I got from formal education.

Once I learned to shut up and just listen, Twitter let me follow conversations between people whose lives were nothing like mine. I got the answers to so many questions I’d never even known to ask, and I miss that. I stopped using Twitter after it was bought by Elon Musk, and I have yet to find another platform that replicates that passive, ambient learning.

Questioning and queer

More than anything else I saw online, queer culture has shaped my life. I’m queer, my partner is queer, and so are most of my friends. There are so many people I’d never have met if social media hadn’t introduced me to this world.

When I was realising I was queer, it all felt very difficult and angsty. Looking back, I can see myself following a classic path – talking to queer people, being a loud and enthusiastic ally, then starting to realise there might be a reason I cared so much. I went through it once when I realised I wasn’t straight, and again a few years later when I realised I wasn’t cis.

My younger self was oblivious, but it’s all so obvious in hindsight. I cringe at some of those older posts, but they helped me become who I am today, and I want to keep them.

I was annoying and rude, but I grew up

There are other posts I look back on with less fondness. I’m embarrassed by how annoying I was when I was younger. I spent too much time on self-indulgent moralising and pointless arguments, often with people I probably agreed with on almost everything else. I wanted to be right more than I wanted to listen, and that got in the way of useful conversations.

Those arguments were worthless then and they’re worthless now. Deleting them was a relief.

Among my less admirable behaviour was the performative outrage toward the “main character” of the day – the unlucky person whose viral tweet had summoned thousands of replies explaining why they were a terrible person. Looking back, it was a symptom of misplaced familiarity. I was reading a stranger’s posts as if I knew them, projecting motives from scraps of context, and joining dogpiles to fit in with the crowd.

Despite ruffling a lot of feathers, I was only the main character once, and in a small corner of the tech community. It was still an unpleasant weekend, and I got off lightly compared to some of my friends – but I’ve never forgotten how quickly online attention can turn to anger and hostility.

Learning about parasocial relationships helped me behave better. I realised how often my reactions were shaped by a false sense of intimacy, and how easy it was to be cruel when I forgot there was a person behind the avatar. I shifted my attention towards friends rather than strangers, and when I did talk to people I didn’t know, I tried to be constructive instead of showing off.

When I joined Twitter, I admired by people who were smart. Today, I look up to people who are kind. I’ve come to value generosity and empathy far more than cleverness and nitpicking.

The ghosts in the posts

Looking through old conversations, I see the ghosts of friendships and relationships I’ve since lost. Some of those could be recovered if either of us reached out; others are gone for good. A few people have even passed away. I don’t know where most of those friends ended up, but I hope life has been kind to them.

I’ve passed through so many spaces: the PyCon UK community; fandoms like the Marmfish and the Creampuffs; the trans elders who supported me during my transition; the small, loyal group of blog readers who always left thoughtful comments. Some I lost touch with while I was still on Twitter; others I left behind when I left Twitter altogether.

As my interests changed and I moved from one space to another, I often did a poor job of keeping up the friendships I already had. I’d pour my energy into chasing new connections in the spaces I’d just discovered, neglecting the people who had been there all along. That neglect is stark when I look at it over a decade-long span. It was sobering to realise how many more friends I might have today if I hadn’t taken so many past connections for granted.

I’ve tried to keep lingering traces of those friendships by saving my mentions as well as my own tweets. Here’s one I found that made me cry: “One of the things I miss the most from my pre-pandemic Twitter timeline is seeing @alexwlchan traveling on trains and taking train selfies”. I miss that culture too – selfies were such a source of joy and affirmation, especially in queer and trans spaces. I miss seeing pretty pictures of my friends, and sharing mine in return.

When Elon Musk bought Twitter, a lot of my remaining connections there were broken. Some friends went to other platforms; others left social media entirely. I was one of them! I still write here, but it’s a more professional, broadcast space – it’s not a back-and-forth conversation.

I miss the friendships I had, and the ones that might have been.

What I choose to remember

I started with 150,000 fragments, which I reduced to 4,000 conversations. A lot of it I was glad to forget, but there are gems I want to remember. I’m glad I’ve done this, and it reinforces my belief that social media is an important part of my life that I should preserve properly.

Curating these memories has made them feel smaller and more manageable. The mess of JSON files scattered across disks has been replaced by a meaningful, well-organised collection I can look back on with a smile.

What comes next?

My use of Tumblr fell away gradually, and I stopped tweeting when Elon Musk bought Twitter. I didn’t jump to another platform immediately, because I wanted to pause and reflect on what I wanted from social media. Currently, my social media usage is limited to linking to blog posts.

Looking back over my old posts has helped with those reflections. I’d like to think I’ve grown up a bit in the interim, and that I’d use it better if I made it a bigger part of my life again. A lot of good things started as conversations on social media, and I often wonder if I’m missing out. But I don’t miss the time sunk in pointless arguments, the performative anger, or the abuse from strangers.

I still don’t know what my future with social media will look like, but this project has me wondering. Until I decide, my scrapbook lets me see the best of what’s already been – the friendships, the joy, and the moments that mattered.

[If the formatting of this post looks odd in your feed reader, visit the original article]

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ctimenefic:

Seasonal Affective Disorder is just emotional scurvy, all my core wounds are reopening and they won’t be fixed until the big lemon in the sky comes back

(no subject)

Dec. 12th, 2025 09:37 am
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[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] avendya, [personal profile] cesy, [personal profile] tazlet and [personal profile] trude!

Just One Thing (12 December 2025)

Dec. 12th, 2025 08:09 am
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[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

December Days 02025 #11: Geocities

Dec. 11th, 2025 11:38 pm
silveradept: A head shot of a  librarian in a floral print shirt wearing goggles with text squiggles on them, holding a pencil. (Librarian Goggles)
[personal profile] silveradept
It's December Days time again. This year, I have decided that I'm going to talk about skills and applications thereof, if for no other reason than because I am prone to both the fixed mindset and the downplaying of any skills that I might have obtained as not "real" skills because they do not fit some form of ideal.

11: Geocities

I made my first website on Geocities, and that probably tells you more than you wanted to know about how old I am.

The concept of Geocities was pretty genius, though. Less so the conceptualization of Geocities as divided into various neighborhoods, loosely based on what the person signing up for Geocities might make their website about, as it turns out that we didn't really need to map physical space onto virtual space. But the idea, basically, of offering someone a few megabytes of space to build whatever they wanted to, so long as they could provide the code (and so long as they ran Geocities' ads on all of their pages, because ad revenue is still the way that a lot of places think is the best way to get money - that, or venture capital.) There was no need for buying your own domain, or for learning how to administer a Linux system, or any of the other highly technical obstacles that would prevent most people from showing their own pages to the world. This was before blog software replaced the idea of having a personal page, and before content management software replaced them both. And so, people went off in every direction they could, bounded only by the restrictions on what the code could do and what things were permitted by the host. Things past what the sandbox of Geocities provided would be the kind of thing that you would get your own domain and hosting for, and therefore you'd learn all those things you weren't learning immediately by using Geocities.

The Web was not quite corporatized, and was not quite in the place where slick Javascript and CSS were considered standard parts of the Web experience. What you received, essentially, was an entire hodgepodge of material, based on how much the person creating the page wanted to learn the coding and how much the person making the page just wanted to get the content out. It was a time of great personality in pages, even if it also sometimes meant choices from the CGA era for text or backgrounds, or that you had to work with someone who didn't believe much in the paragraph tag, or the idea that a web page was designed for a specific resolution and wouldn't look right on any other resolution. Or that it was meant specifically for one browser over another, because it used tags that the one would recognize and others would not. It was a time of guestbooks and webrings and, I strongly suspect, an awful lot of fic archives. If I had been the kind of person who wrote and put their fic online at the time, it might very well have been a windfall to have 100MB of space to put all of my formatted HTML onto so that my epics would be readable, and possibly, I might collect the fic of others, too. It is also the era where search engines actually crawl and search, rather than some other purpose, and they would obey the instructions given to them in files like robots.txt. Discovery was still tough, of course, but people found ways of doing it all the same, through hypertext.

At that time, though, I used the space I had on Geocities as a sandbox to learn all kinds of things about HTML, and how to make links, and show images, and make images into links. I may have picked up a little CSS along the way, so as to make things more easy to control globally, and as well as to do things like use image files as my background for the page. Mostly, it was there as a personal page, constructed haphazardly, with plenty of animated GIFs, pictures from the Internet, and links to other places that I thought were interesting. A professional web designer's nightmare, in a phrase. But mostly it was articulating to myself what I wanted to do, and then looking on the Internet to see if someone else had done it, or if there was a keyword to zero in on, then consulting a reference work to find the appropriate tags and the appropriate place to put them, and then tweaking it until the rendered page actually looked and functioned the way I wanted it to. As I learned more, I put more of that learning into the pages that were there, sometimes adding new things, but often, refining what was there so that it was more specification-compliant and easier to handle later on. Even on the site that I have been neglectful of maintaining that holds my professional CV and as much of the presentation slides and commentary as I have stuffed into it, most of what I'm doing there is following my own template after having figured out the thing I wanted to do. At this point, I believe I've reintroduced frames to the site, because I don't want to have to recode the entire navigation into each page. It's likely the best solution I have for navigation involves Javascript in some way, but I am also the kind of person who wants their site to function properly without Javascript, and therefore I would have to learn how to encode a proper fallback from it.

This approach, "figure out what I want to do, then consult the reference works to figure out how it's done, then see if it actually does what I want, then refine it until it does" is probably much, much close to the actual process of people who code for a profession or a major hobby do, rather than the idea that I might have in my head of someone who, when presented with a programming problem, simply magicks the thing up out of the ether in a flurry of code and it works. (Well, hopefuly there's a test suite in there, too, but…) In the same way that I have a persistent belief that "real cooking" is not "following recipe" but instead "making delicious dishes from a basket of ingredients and your own knowledge", I have bought into some of the belief that "real coding" does not involve following recipe or template, unless you've developed the template yourself, too. That particular belief always gets mugged every time I start trying to get Home Assistant to do something new, or I decide that automation is the best way to do text string manipulation, because I can see how to do it in an automated manner, or when I need to push a change to a great number of records in a work system so that nobody has to do it by hand. (I tested that one on small batches first, because nobody wants to intentionally wreck production.) Or when I'm making changes to my professional website pages. Or the project that I built in one of my graduate school classes to pass a foundations course. The UI was terrible, but UI wasn't something I needed to think too hard about over functionality, and it was something I built for me (as well as an assignment).

For as much as I think of myself as a user, rather than a coder, if you start asking me what I mean by that, or start pushing on my self-imposed boundaries about where "real coding" starts and stops, you'll find all kinds of interesting treasures surface up as I start telling stories or start trying to justify how this thing that I did isn't really the thing it is, because it's someone else's code, tweaked to do the thing that I want it to do. Or because it's not elegant, polished, and efficient code like someone who knows what they're doing would turn out. I have ten thousand excuses to avoid taking credit for anything, or to admit that I might be practiced at or knowledgeable about something. The experiences of my childhood, and the mockery that accompanied when the supposedly perfect child made a mistake, has me perpetually looking out for the scythe and the reaper wielding it, the one ready to cut the tall plant for daring to peek its head above the others. I would say quiet competence is my sweet spot, except I also want to be recognized for the quality work that I do on a regular basis and not have it just be the expectation of me, unworthy of further comment other than "meets standards."

The older I've gotten, the more I realize that an excellent way of getting me to approach a problem or try to figure out how to make something work better is to present it to me as a sandbox, a puzzle, or some other thing where there's no pressure for the thing itself to be perfect or that it needs to be turned around in a short time. Something that is being solved for its own sake, and not because you have to provide the solution to a sudoku puzzle to your past self so that they can get out of the predicament they're in and survive long enough so they can become you and give the solution to themselves and generate a stable time loop. The less stakes there are in the situation, the more I feel like I can bring myself to bear on it, and not to get caught up in the twin weasels of "must be perfect to be seen by others" and "anything that fails will be viciously mocked." I realize this is maladaptive, and most other people do not suffer from these fears in their own lives, but it works, and therefore I do my best to make things as non-important in my head as I can, simply so that I can function in the moment.

I demonstrated that at work today, actually. There was a monitor at one of my locations that was rotating too easily in its housing, and so I tried to figure out what the problem was with it. Checked the screws and the like, and they were holding, and eventually, I concluded that, once I'd gotten the monitor off the clip that was holding it in place, that the bit that attached to the monitor and the clip was too loose, since I could spin it with my handss. There was a pair of pliers in the tool chest at the work site, so I tightened things up, and when we re-clipped the monitor on, it stopped wobbling so easy.

Thanks, Pops. Not just for the whole "can use hand tools" part, but for the bit where you encouraged me to think systematically about problems, to work methodically through possibilities, and to come to conclusions and test them to see if they're correct. You did exactly the thing you were supposed to do to help me achieve not only answers, but processes and analysis. Even though I really just wanted answers at the time, rather than to be led through a process of figuring out where my mistake was, or where I had overlooked something, or whether an assumption I was making was actually correct. It serves me well, just so long as I keep thinking of it as a puzzle rather than something of importance.

But also, if you are interested in the same sort of spirit, try Neocities, and maybe you can start building your own personal page or interest page or another fic archive.

Follow Friday 12-12-25

Dec. 12th, 2025 01:06 am
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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] followfriday
Got any Follow Friday-related posts to share this week? Comment here with the link(s).

Here's the plan: every Friday, let's recommend some people and/or communities to follow on Dreamwidth. That's it. No complicated rules, no "pass this on to 7.328 friends or your cat will die".

[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

overnightshipping:

purpleisdebeste:

purpleisdebeste:

purpleisdebeste:

I’m sorry Orpheus i was too harsh on you…

i was in the physics lab today and we were working with lasers, so the Lab Freaks (legal name) were being very careful to stress that we Do Not Turn Around or Look Behind Us because we’ll get extremely blinded by the power of high strength lasers

and i’m not gonna lie it was actually extremely hard to resist turning around. i misjudged orpheus it turns out this isnt extremely easy actually

okay i’ll be honest i 100% looked back at the lasers. actually multiple separate lasers multiple different times. they were pretty

and i didnt get blinded. so clearly lab safety isnt real and you should always risk it cus taking risks is awesome #gambling

but uh. my ass is NOT making it out of the underworld 🔥🔥🔥

[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

Please give me updates on how the cats react to the bag balm.

Mochi tries to eat my bag balm, but he also licks the earwax right out of the dog's ears so maybe he just has bad taste.

Story! To Speak in Silence

Dec. 11th, 2025 10:41 pm
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[personal profile] sonia
To Speak in Silence by Mary Robinette Kowal.
On the pump organ in the formal parlor sat two chickens carved in clay in the place in which, were this another home, one might find candles. The one on the right had a rooster’s comb and was shiny with red atop and a dark black bottom, as if he had been dipped in ink, which—of course—was the case.


A lovely atmospheric story. Part of the joy is discovering how it unfolds, so I won’t say more.

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