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πšπ™΄π™Άπ™Άπ™Έπ™΄ ([personal profile] reggiekray) wrote in [community profile] addme2026-04-23 04:37 pm

re-doing this...

Name: reggie/reg

Age: 36

I mostly post about: stranger things, billy hargrove, dacre montgomery, joe keery, joseph quinn, fred hechinger, anime/manga, video games.

My hobbies are: drawing, writing, movies, spellwork/tarot/witchcraft.

My fandoms are: stranger things, gladiator ii, fantastic four, x-men, venom, anime/manga, the kray twins.

Before adding me, you should know: i am very gay and very trans, and will not tolerate any form of homophobia and transphobia. i'm also very witchy/pagan, and work with spiritual energy. if that bothers you, i understand! feel free to follow and/or unfollow at your leisure.

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πšπ™΄π™Άπ™Άπ™Έπ™΄ ([personal profile] reggiekray) wrote in [community profile] addme_fandom2026-04-23 04:33 pm

re-doing this...

Name: reggie/reg

Age: 36

I mostly post about: stranger things, billy hargrove, dacre montgomery, joe keery, joseph quinn, fred hechinger, the kray twins.

My hobbies are: drawing, writing, movies, spellwork/tarot/witchcraft.

My fandoms are: stranger things, gladiator ii, the eagle, fantastic four, x-men, anime/manga, rpf.

Before adding me, you should know: i am very gay and very trans, and will not tolerate any form of homophobia and transphobia. i'm also very witchy/pagan, and work with spiritual energy. if that bothers you, i understand! feel free to follow and/or unfollow at your leisure.
zesty_pinto: (Default)
zesty_pinto ([personal profile] zesty_pinto) wrote2026-04-23 02:18 pm

Call me TNT

-because I am where you go if you want drama!

From work changes to missing a company event because the plumbers left a gravel pile in front of our garage to controlling people trying to get themselves too into my life to yet another house ish that continues to pop up to pushing every kind of muscle in my body trying to get things out the door to even preparing food the wrong way and essentially NoDozed myself to a 48 hour awake cycle, this entire week has seen to it that I am the Crazy Eddie of every kind of tumult I can think of and-not going to lie-it's been a lot but the more that was resolved the more clean my life feels to have one less inconvenience after another sorted and categorized and kept out of my hair. I didn't want to Marie Kondo everything, but when it ends up trying to swallow you, what else can you do?

I've got a lot cleared through and even the brain fog of work which has been interfering with my work goals has been better.

Packing is reaching the point where it starts getting harder, not because there's so much left as much as because you've got the really complicated stuff or the things you need to King Solomon into storing it into a place where it will be forgotten or taken with you to be used immediately.

There is a Catholic church that is going to be full of expensive shirts I was gifted and never wore because I don't think I can pull it off (tbf I also live like a modern day Diogenes (aka dirtbag)), and a fire dept that has boxed appliances and studio equipment and a few computer component boxes. Best Buy's e-waste section is overloaded with AC adapters and lithium batteries, my trash is full of cords, and my room is still attempting to reestablish chaos as I give it fewer messes to entropize--is that even a word?

Ironically, 48 hours awake made sleeping easy again, it's like I hit a reset in my circadian and the nausea that came with it allowed my stomach to shrink a little more.

I started working on work goals and the progress I felt was immediate. I think I can do this and the fewer distractions I get, the better, so I think I'll cut it here. I didn't think I would type this up here either, but it's been a crazy time and I'm starting to see real progress. I think I might even be seeing less of the plumbers now (though they promised there's another pipe issue that's now going to be in the center of the street). Even my lungs finally cleared up of mucus, so I can go harder on the cardio.

The music collection is also a future fix goal: I recovered a lot, but the drive's broken nature meant more of the music files are damaged than I initially thought, so need to sort through but this also gives me a shopping list of old bands that I forgot about from my concert shooter days that I want to check back in on.

Here's to moving forward; I celebrate by going back to work and listening to more Dan Carlin. Salut!
mark: A photo of Mark kneeling on top of the Taal Volcano in the Philippines. It was a long hike. (Default)
Mark Smith ([staff profile] mark) wrote in [site community profile] dw_maintenance2026-04-22 09:19 am

Search maintenance

Happy Wednesday!

I'm taking search offline sometime today to upgrade the server to a new instance type. It should be down for a day or so -- sorry for the inconvenience. If you're curious, the existing search machine is over 10 years old and was starting to accumulate a decade of cruft...!

Also, apparently these older machines cost more than twice what the newer ones cost, on top of being slower. Trying to save a bit of maintenance and cost, and hopefully a Wednesday is okay!

Edited: The other cool thing is that this also means that the search index will be effectively realtime afterwards... no more waiting a few minutes for the indexer to catch new content.

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all of us are poets at heart. ([personal profile] existence101) wrote in [community profile] addme2026-04-22 04:56 am

I would like to have all of the rest of the world disappear and live with you here.

Name: Simone

Age:

Closer to 40 than 30.

I mostly post about:

I've only just started this journal, though I've used Dreamwidth sporadically before. I plan to mainly write about my writing progress, my writing projects, thoughts on writing, authors/poets I'm reading (English) and similar.

My hobbies are:

Poetry, roleplaying, writing, ballet, art, icon making (sporadically and mostly RP-related) and scrapbooking/collage-making.

My fandoms are:

I'm not active in any fandoms rn, though in the past I've been active in the Takarazuka Revue fandom and the Danish ballet fandom. I am, however, running the poetry prompt challenge community, [community profile] 25poemsamonth, if that counts as a fandom.

I'm looking to meet people who:

Like to write, will share their writing with me, their writing progress, ups-downs, writing journal, research, thoughts. Just writing, ok.

My posting schedule tends to be:

Honestly, probably sporadic, but as I'm beginning to work on an English-language verse novel soon, I hope to be a little more active than just once a month.

When I add people, my dealbreakers are:

No gen AI. No queerphobia, transphobia, racism, etc.

Before adding me, you should know:

Can't really think of anything. I live in Denmark, so might post at weird times compared to the many American folks here.
kitewithfish: (mary poppins suffragettes)
kitewithfish ([personal profile] kitewithfish) wrote2026-04-22 10:28 am
Entry tags:

Wednesday Reading Meme for April 22, 2026

General life of a reader update: I have finally purchased an e-reader outside the Amazon environment, just in time for Amazon to stop supporting my oldest living Kindle. (RIP, first Kindle, we hardly knew ye.) So, I get to try out the wonderful world of Kindle jailbreaking (so far, so good) and then I get to try to put KOReader on it! I have two Paperwhites currently – only one is getting nuked in Amazon’s upcoming changes – But if the process works on the older one, I might do the second. What a luxurious thought, to have multiple functional e-readers at once!

Also a great update for e-reader users: Jo Walton has a fun article about using her e-reader to keep up with her insanely prolific reading habits. https://reactormag.com/how-to-read-sixteen-books-at-once-at-all-times/

And I also found this very pleasant discussion from 2014 about how her e-reader changed her reading habits overall. - https://reactormag.com/how-having-an-e-reader-has-changed-my-reading-habits/


What I’ve Read
Chalice by Robin McKinley – This reads like the literary version of a fairy tale that I had just never heard of. But it’s entirely original and I think this is the pure distilled form of McKinley’s charm – a thoughtful and intelligent woman who becomes powerful thru her devotion to others, and a magically untouchable man who is worth her devotion, made touchable. This is a pure example of the trope of “the virtue of the king is the virtue of the land” except, you know, made a bit more modern and it’s more focused on women. It’s honestly great.

The Fabric of Civilization: How Textiles Made the World by Virginia Postrel – This is a great book for just about anyone – I read it knowing a fair bit about certain kinds of textiles (both from a New England elementary education and because of Elizabeth Gaskill) and that got expanded on and refined. I adored the discussions about how trade in textiles shaped so much of global commerce. Postrel does not shy away from how awful that can be (chattel slavery and cotton go hand in hand for a reason), nor does she allow it to dehumanize the people engaged in it. It’s honestly a great work that covers a vast span of time and culture – I would be glad to read more from her.

The Invasion (Animorphs #1) by KA Applegate – I picked this up after one more Tumblr post talking about the book series’ respect for the reader and attention to the cost of war. It turns out to be just as good as I remembered, and written simply enough for the age I was when I first read them. (I picked up the first book at the Scholastic Book Fair because it has a lizard on it. On such small wheels our destinies turn.) This book has to do a fair bit of the scifi heavy lifting, introducing the human cast, the aliens, setting the stakes of the intergalactic espionage that is the main conflict, and establishing how the key technology (morphing an animal based on a DNA sample) works. The writing is clear and respects the audience – when people die, they die, but the characters also feel the age of the middle schoolers they are. I’m planning on doing a re-read/read thru and finishing the whole series, which I had bored of as a child as I grew out of the age group. I think that I’d like to see if the resolution is as interesting as the Tumblr Animorphs fans make it out to be.

Cultural Exchange and Comparative Semiotics (Xenoethnography #1 & #2) by Therrae (Dasha_mte) A re-read. Anthropologist works with Transformers, lovely.

Concubine by Kaasknot – Technically an MCU fic, in that it’s an AU of the version of Thor and Loki from those movies, but mostly unrelated and pulls more from the Poetic Edda. Arranged marriage between Loki, who grew up a runt prince on Jotunheim, and Thor, the spoiled prince of Asgard who has no love for his new concubine, leads to Loki isolated as the unofficial ambassador to Asgard. I wanted to like this more than I did. In short, this is doing court intrigue and politics and war, but like, in a boring way that makes Loki look dumb. Things work out in his favor when it would be more interesting to see them blow up in his face. The balance of self-indulgence v. complexity wavers too wildly for me to have sunk my emotional investment into either pole. Bah. 140K words and I kept waiting for it to get really good, and since I waited like ten years to actually read this, I feel a bit meh about it. 

What I’m Reading
The Stars are Legion – Kameron Hurley. Picked up an audiobook based on a Tumblr post where someone had pointed our that it was amazing that this book’s reputation had managed to avoid controversy, given that it has zero male characters. Which, given that its about space wars and technology based on biological ships with squishy organs and vehicles that are also animals, I am so here for.

The Visitor (Animorphs #2) KA Applegate – This book’s got a Rachel POV and she’s not as confident as she seems. The book is also doing the kind of fatphobia of the 90s where they don’t even notice the fatphobia, but, well, I lived thru it once – it can hardly do more damage now.

What I’ll Read Next
My book clubs are on books I have not read! (Amazing work, y’all.)

SciFi/Fantasy Book Club
Sunshine Robin McKinley
Tomb of Dragons Katherine Addison

Necromancy Book Club
The Everlasting Alix E. Harrow
The Isle in the Silver Sea Tasha Suri
Platform Decay (murderbot 8) Martha Wells
Ancillary Justice Ann Leckie

I mentally still have a pin in my planned read thru of LeGuin's Earthsea books, and a friend was interested in doing a read thru of the Baru Cormorant Trilogy.... 

springsodas: (Default)
Soda ([personal profile] springsodas) wrote in [community profile] addme2026-04-21 11:28 am

New AddMe for Spring 2026!

Name: Soda (she/her)

 

Age: Late 20s

I mostly post about: Artwork, writing, character design and development, whatever shows and/or games I'm currently invested in, the various happenings in my life, any thoughts, feelings, and other ramblings that come to mind

My hobbies are: Illustration, writing, gaming, streaming, collecting comics, merchandise, plushies (I have too many), and stationary

My fandoms are: Main is Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003, IDW, and Splintered Fate), casual enjoyer of Pokemon and Sonic the Hedgehog; I also enjoy a number of various anime, cartoons, comics/manga, and video games that I may mention from time to time.

I'm looking to meet people who: While no specific person comes to mind, as long you're kind and considerate, I'm happy to chat even if our interests don't line up.

My posting schedule tends to be: A bit sporadic, but I usually manage to get one or two posts in a week

When I add people, my dealbreakers are: I prefer to interact with users who are at least 20 or older and will avoid interacting with minors. Not tolerant of bigotry in any form (racism, homophobia, transphobia, ableism, etc.) I do, unfortunately, have quite a few major squicks on the fannish front, so if you're posting things like adult/minor pairings and/or incest, I'm going to politely keep my distance.

Before adding me, you should know: I prefer to keep my journal SFW out of personal preference. Neurodivergent (autistic), highly anxious to the point I sometimes delete posts for whatever reason, although I'm trying to be braver about posting my opinions even if they lean more towards the negative and come off as a bit whiny/complainy.

ripplestitch: a close up of a white tealight holder made to look like a rabbit carved out of wood (it's actually made of resin.) the rabbit is holding the candle so it's face is underlit with a warm yellow glow. in the background there are pine needles on the desk. (Default)
ripplestitch ([personal profile] ripplestitch) wrote in [community profile] addme2026-04-20 08:43 pm

Hi!!

I made this account in 2022 but abandoned it for a while. I feel very new to this! It took me five minutes just to work out how to join and post here πŸ™ƒ


Name: June, they/them

Age: 30s!

I mostly post about: My knitting and other craft pursuits, my health (it’s kind of bad, guys) in terms of life updates usually, and my solo rpg games, so far. If I talk about food I’ll make it filterable when I work out… how.

I hope I’ll expand as I get a wider social circle. It’s weird to blog at myself.

My hobbies are: Knitting, writing, solo RPG games, cross-stitch, birdwatching (sort of, I most sit by a window while chilling and watch the birds fight over the bird feeder) paper flowers. I’m currently largely housebound, my hobbies are Indoors Things at the moment. When I AM outside in The Beast (my powerchair) I’ll probably spam pictures of the sky and urban pigeons.

My fandoms are: Star Trek (though I’m SO behind on everything new. I watched half of discovery and nothing else since), Dragon Age, Mass Effect. Flight Rising! Terry Pratchett, The Foreigner Series. I don’t spend a huge amount of time posting about those, these days, though.

I’m looking to meet people who are: Kind, open-minded.

When I add people, my dealbreakers are: Racism, LGBTQ+phobia, Islamophobia, ableism, fatphobia—you get the gist, I hope. If you consider yourself to be ‘a Conservative’ we will probably not get along, let’s save ourselves the bother.

No under 18s, please!
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eddie ([personal profile] fredhechinger) wrote in [community profile] addme2026-04-20 02:52 pm

Hello, it's me.

Name: Eddie

Age: 35

I mostly post about: My life, my cat, Fred Hechinger, Joseph Quinn and different movies/TV. I also write fic/poetry.

My hobbies are: writing, drawing, witchcraft/magick, listening to music, watching TV, and watching movies. Travel, if I had that money.

My fandoms are: Fred Hechinger, Joseph Quinn, Stranger Things, and whatever things are on the back burner. I'm very multifandom.

I'm looking to meet people who: are super cool and chill. Somebody who I can talk to and laugh with, and exchange journal comments with.

My posting schedule tends to be: daily/weekly/monthly/sporadic/etc

When I add people, my dealbreakers are: Close-mindedness. Rudeness.

Before adding me, you should know: I ship "problematic" things. I'm of a time where it was 'ship and let ship' and all was for fun. If you've got an issue with it, please don't add me.

No minors, please. I'm in my thirties, and I post about adult things.
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zesty_pinto ([personal profile] zesty_pinto) wrote2026-04-20 12:19 pm

Clearing, Birthdays, and the Lazarus Drive

Not a lot to talk about here. Been super tired.

In the time since I last posted, we have been sorting and clearing out our closets for stuff to donate/save/toss. Finally dumped a few boxes of e-waste that was sitting around our house for almost a year. Cleared out half my wardrobe because I don't really use much in the way of shirts and pants (I am incredibly simple) which are now probably getting sorted with all the other college donations at a catholic charity sorting center somewhere.

Our working process right now is to clear the small stuff; anything we save is either stored here or in the storage space we have. It'll make some of the larger things we have easier to deal with. It's been relentless but productive; donation one day, storage next day, dump another day; In a week and a half I think we're about a quarter through.

Last few days were me sorting through old drives.

I want to say you should NEVER get multiple hard drive enclosures unless you get the same type by the way.

Why? Because almost all of them have different AC adapter formats, meaning you are going to have ten to twenty adapters in your house and you have to figure out which one is for which and even if it fits, it might not have enough power or too much power for your unit which makes your drive not operate properly.

I had to get a new dock device as a result of all this. Every single drive that I thought was dead? Only one was actually a goner. This included a 2TB drive that I visibly fried the interface circuit from because of a poor fitting connection (I replaced the board but it refused to initialize on my enclosures and I figured it was a lost cause, so finding out replacing the board really fixed it is a big W on my end).

This is a big win because I managed to harvest gigs of old things that I thought I lost. I had like 2k mp3s from artists I completely forgot about or rebought several times because I lost this data and now it's back. I have a semester of writer's workshop projects I couldn't access now in my main drive. I also found some of the oldest photos from my archives, like stuff I took back in 2006 as well as all this old MST3K and Rifftrax stuff. It's amazing.


The photos are shit, but they're there, I have them.

All the drives are going to be donated or scrapped. I left them in enclosures. Debating if they're worth either? IDE is so old that the only thing it's good for is backups anyway and the storage space feels small (biggest one is half a terabyte) lol

I guess I should just scrap them. At least I wiped all of them properly so no personal info can be pulled from them (I hope).

I do wish I cleaned this place more, but this pretty much recovered a ton for me, so I count this as a big win. I'll try to make up for it tonight by hopefully clearing out my cabinet and all the closet stuff in my room. Might be a lofty goal but it'll be good if I can do it.

Michelle's grandmother had a 90th birthday and they made a big thing out of it for obvious reasons but we set up a backdrop made by her sister, took photos, did the usual necessities. It made me realize that I had photos from her 80th as well so I put that up too since I was on a roll with finding old images.

Speaking of which, back to work.
glowingfish: (Default)
glowingfish ([personal profile] glowingfish) wrote in [community profile] addme2026-04-17 06:03 pm

I have been on here for over a year, so time to add more friends!

 I made a post in this community at the beginning of 2025, and now, we are getting close to the middle of 2026, so maybe I should post again. 

I don't see a specific reason to use the template, as this will be quick...

46, Male, United States, I post once or twice a week on average. I don't have any contentious beliefs or opinions, and my journal is mostly personal notes, with a few thoughts maybe about the world and culture. I am not heavily into any of the "fandoms", but might make a comment or two on related things. 

I don't really have any specific "types" I am looking to follow on here, although journals that are too contentious and difficult might not be what I am looking for. Adult content is okay, as long as it is not totally pornographic, and also behind a cut. I am looking to build up a community in general. 

delphi: A carton of fresh blueberries. (blueberries)
Delphi (they/them) ([personal profile] delphi) wrote2026-04-17 03:34 pm

Post and Jam: Patio Lanterns by Kim Mitchell [1986]

Fandom 50 #10

When I was putting together this list of Canadian songs I love from the last fifty years, some years had a clear favourite jump out at me while others had too many bangers to choose between. (Seriously, 1993 turned out to be the keystone year whose ultimate selection affected everything from 1987 to 2001.) But 1986 was the first stumper.

I don't think it's the case that 1986 was a mid year for Canadian music. It's more likely that it's just the first year I was properly conscious of music, with the releases getting replayed throughout my early childhood until they became background noise. These are third-favourite albums from artists whose later eras hit stronger for me, songs I slept through during my first concert as a toddler, and snippets from radio bumpers that earworm me to this day.

So, without a stronger personal preference, the clear choice was the Canadian song of 1986. The one that everyone loved and then became so inescapable that everyone hated it, and which is probably on schedule for a revival soon if it gets used in the right commercial or CBC show. However you feel about it, it's hard to find something more Canadian than this.

Patio Lanterns by Kim Mitchell
kitewithfish: (crowley supernatural symbol)
kitewithfish ([personal profile] kitewithfish) wrote2026-04-15 10:04 pm
Entry tags:

Wednesday Reading Meme for April 15, 2026

What I’ve Read
The Wimsey Papers by Dorothy L. Sayers – A great look at Sayers’s wartime thoughts in 1935. It’s a loose collection of “letters” between Wimsey relatives that give the impression being Sayers’s soapbox. It’s honestly fairly touching but I’m biased.

Fire on the Mountain by Terry Bisson – Fascinating alternate history novel, told in several timelines. The older timeline is an alternate history of John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry, where it actually went off as planned with Harriet Tubman’s help. The younger timeline is about the survivors of a dead astronaut coping with the new Mars mission. It’s great and weird and hopeful and antiracist in a wrathful and constructive way.

Earthlings by Sayaka Murata – Mixed bag. The first section is from the perspective of an abused and neglected child with a single friend – she’s so alienated from humanity she grows to actually believe she’s an alien. It depicts the abuse and violence with the character disassociating thru it all in a very convincing and harrowing way. She thinks of herself and society as The Factory – they make babies and enforce that role on everyone around them – she’ll grow up into the role eventually. The second half of the book didn’t work for me so well – we meet up with the same character in a much calmer time of her life, but the forces of The Factory are more distant until they are radically not. The second half of the book feels ... like a parody of alienation? She’s not feeling her own emotions anymore and so the more shocking actions of the later book didn’t land as closely. It’s an interesting attempt, but I think that Tender is the Flesh did the “cannibalism as dehumanization” thread more justice.

Sunshine by Robin McKinley – Re-Read. A strange and inconsistent creature – McKinley’s one urban fantasy experiment did not actually land the logistics and plot of an urban fantasy, but the vibes are dreamy and weird and I love that.

What I’m Reading
Fabric of Civilization – no movement

Chalice by Robin McKinley – Sunshine made me crave more.

What I’ll Read Next
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins (eventually)
Animorphs – I enjoyed these books and recently tumblr has tempted me into finishing the series.



raptureofthemoon: a crow standing on a stack of books holding a book in its claw and reading (book crow)
ilcuoreardendo (Lins) ([personal profile] raptureofthemoon) wrote2026-04-14 09:27 am
Entry tags:

April Media Post

Reading

Finished

The Gales of November: The Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald by John Bacon. Overall, a beautifully penned memorial to the crew and a bit of a love letter to Great Lakes Shipping, I think. I saw some comments on Good Reads where people were expecting Bacon to cover more about the theories about what caused the wreck itself, but I think they missed the opening strains of the book: it was meant to be about the men and their families. Bacon did cover the various theories but he didn't deep dive. 

Ongoing

Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix - I'm liking it overall. I think I'm about halfway through. I'm getting a bit of AHS: Coven vibes, but not sure if it's going to go the way I think it is.

I'm pondering what book to pick up next. I've been trying to keep a couple ongoing to improve my reading endurance... On Goodreads, I have a list for 2026 and I'm torn between starting Alan Duff's Once Were Warriors (which I've stopped and started after a few pages a couple of times now), Clive Barker's Coldheart Canyon: A Hollywood Ghost Story, Ami McKay's The Witches of New York or one of the young adult books (of which there are a handful) for a quicker read. 

I'm glad to be back in a place where I'm excited about books and reading. 


Watching

DS9 and other rewatches are paused, just because Matt and I got into other ventures. Skating season for him started back up last Monday, so two nights a week he's out late. And I've gone back to more reading/writing. 

Mostly, I've just been watching YouTube, bouncing between gamers, Minecrafters and socio-political commentary, as fits my mood. 

I guess I've been watching a bit of Bob Ross too. I leave playlists of him on YouTube playing on the TV upstairs for Mithril (and Silver too, but that's mostly when we're gone because she's downstairs with me most of the day through the week). Their emotional comfort artist. 


Listening

Nothing new on the listening front. 

Playing

I think this is where I've been sinking my time lately. For my birthday, I bought myself Creature Kitchen, a game where you start off feeding forest critters and gradually move into feeding the cryptids and other creatures that live in the area. 

I also played a demo for While We Wait Here, another horror/creepy work-ish sim. I might go ahead and buy it. Reviews are generally positive and I'm always on the lookout for work sims with a horror element. 

And, as is my pattern, I've been in and out of Minecraft (doing more building on the server) and Cyberpunk 2077 (mostly just exploring the city and ruminating on ideas for fic). 

delphi: A carton of fresh blueberries. (blueberries)
Delphi (they/them) ([personal profile] delphi) wrote2026-04-13 06:37 pm

Post and Jam: Map of the World, Pt. II by Jane Siberry [1985]

Fandom 50 #9

For my 1985 pick, it feels like a good day for five minutes of surreal geography-themed art pop.

Map of the World, Pt. II by Jane Siberry
zesty_pinto: (Default)
zesty_pinto ([personal profile] zesty_pinto) wrote2026-04-09 08:46 am

Digging a Hole, Getting Out of It

The leak situation continues to be something that looks worse and worse each time I look at it. Initially, the hole in front of our property was something, now it expended several times over. They dug into our neighbor's driveway to get at a pipe. They dug into their neighbor's driveway to get at that pipe. This has been going on for about three weeks now. The plumbers are stressed out about this and they're using power from our unit to make this happen while parking their equipment in our driveway without any form of advanced warning. It's miserable.

My boss is aware of the situation here and was told I can work from home until this is done after I took a second day off in annoyance at how impossible it is to go to work while they're parked in front of our garage, so there's that.

So based on this, does it mean that they're done? Nope. They're still outside as I type this.

Since this problem has been happening since November, we discussed it more and how things keep breaking down and at this rate they are probably creating a sinkhole, so out of curiosity I looked around for another rental and we found one. Better unit, outdoor porch, only 30-40 less square feet and 50 more in an area with a stronger HOA so is better maintained (I probably will regret it but still).

So we're moving. Signed the lease, starting to go in May. We'll do the slow transition in a monthly overlap.

This year is going to stay a busy one for us. We didn't even have time to do much in the way of outdoor activities. Michelle's grandmother did have her 90th birthday though so both me and Michelle were taking photos through it. 1200 shots. Took care of it all yesterday.

We need to work on clearing stuff we don't need, storing things we like, and then crating things that will be part of our first move which is honestly not going to be hard early on. It's literally three blocks away, so doing this by ourselves early one is not going to be difficult. After that, we also need to plan to clean up and fix the home.

Need to point out after this we're going to also be dealing a bachelorette party for Michelle's friend, a few birthdays, a bridal shower, and of course the trip to Iceland.

Busy months to come.
delphi: An illustrated crow kicks a little ball of snow with a contemplative expression. (Default)
Delphi (they/them) ([personal profile] delphi) wrote2026-04-11 09:58 pm

What's Making Me Happy Today: Dimension 20 City Council of Darkness

The first episode of the newest Dimension 20 campaign premiered on Wednesday, and I am so on board for this one.

City Council of Darkness is in the world of Vampire: The Masquerade, the tabletop roleplaying game most commonly set in the modern day, where vampires belonging to various clans and bloodlines engage politically in their home cities while trying to manage their own bestial urges, avoid the vampire hunters of the Second Inquisition, and above all keep the existence of vampires secret from humanity at large. City Council of Darkness is about what happens when a group of ambitious San Francisco vampires' bid for attention from the vampiric elite goes comically wrong, resulting in them being banished to the town of Purpee, Oregon, and forbidden to leave until they establish vampiric dominion there.

So far, it's been supremely silly in the best of ways, well-paced and plotted, full of mayhem, with characters and relationships that I'm looking forward to learning more about and an important reminder that the real monsters of San Francisco are Silicon Valley billionaires. I especially can't wait to see more of the friendship between Ventrue finance hustlers LaVonte Worthy and H.J. Wingstreet (joining Kingston Brown & Pete Conlan and Montgomery LaMontgommery & Olethra MacLeod as characters played by Lou Wilson and Ally Beardsley whose dynamic immediately grabbed me) and whatever the deal is between chaotic '80s(?) Brujah childe Zaeth Bondana and his respectable sire Koschei Severov.



The series as a whole is exclusive to Dropout.tv or through Youtube membership, but I'm pretty sure that in the tradition of Dimension 20, the first episode of the campaign will go up for free on the Youtube channel's Season Premieres playlist.
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)
Denise ([staff profile] denise) wrote in [site community profile] dw_maintenance2026-04-11 11:58 pm

The case of the missing notifications

I keep forgetting to post about this: we've been troubleshooting the "missing notifications" problem for the past few days. (Well, I say "we", really I mean Mark and Robby; I'm just the amanuensis.) It's been one of those annoying loops of "find a logical explanation for what could be causing the problem, fix that thing, observe that the problem gets better for some people but doesn't go away completely, go back to step one and start again", sigh.

Mark is hauling out the heavy debugging ordinance to try to find the root cause. Once he's done building all the extra logging tools he needs, he'll comment to this entry. After he does, if you find a comment that should have gone to your inbox and sent an email notification but didn't, leave him a link to the comment that should have sent the notification, as long as the comment itself was made after Mark says he's collecting them. (I'd wait and post this after he gets the debug code in but I need to go to sleep and he's not sure how long it will take!)

We're sorry about the hassle! Irregular/sporadic issues like this are really hard to troubleshoot because it's impossible to know if they're fixed or if they're just not happening while you're looking. With luck, this will give us enough information to figure out the root cause for real this time.