senmut: A simple Geometric Decepticon logo in purple, red and white on gray. (Transformers: Con Logo)
[personal profile] senmut posting in [community profile] no_true_pair
Title: Leech
Fandom: Transformers [Bay Movies]
Pairing/Characters: Starscream & Scion [OC]
Content Notes: Starscream?
Prompt: September Seventeen - 2 & 7 - energy




"Leech."

The ghostly presence laughed with a keen edge to it that tortured only the mechling the ghost had bound itself to.

"You have no idea, Scion, just how much I will take from you, in energy and existence," Starscream crooned once he stopped laughing.

"I will not let you. I will find a way to defeat you, you glitch." Scion brought himself up to his full height, slight as it was compared to a final-framed Seeker.

"You will find, scrapling, that when I set my processors to a goal, I get my way," Starscream said, threateningly.

"Not. This. Time."

Trick or Treat 2025

Sep. 17th, 2025 06:00 pm
desertvixen: (Default)
[personal profile] desertvixen
placeholder letter

第四年第二百五十二天

Sep. 18th, 2025 07:35 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
土 part 1 tǔ
土, earth; 圣, holy; 在, to exist pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=32

语法
Using 对 and 跟
https://www.chineseboost.com/grammar/dui4-gen1-prepositions/

词汇
乐队, band (pinyin in tags)
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-3-word-list/

Guardian:
从这个土质和骨头的成色来看,起码是百年以上的产物, based on the soil quality here and the bone discoloration, it's from at least one hundred years ago
你是他们的女儿和妹妹,他们当然对你好, you're their daughter and sister, of course they're good to you
[no bands in Guardian]

Me:
我跟你说,你得对她再好一点。
我想去听他们的乐队的live。

Multi fandom icons

Sep. 18th, 2025 08:36 am
mulhollands: (Default)
[personal profile] mulhollands posting in [community profile] icons

Sherlock (mostly of Moriarty), Fleabag, Andrew Scott in Hamlet, Andrew Scott, Winona Ryder, Gillian Anderson, Little Mermaid, Moonstruck, Alice in Wonderland.

here
peaceful_sands: butterfly (Default)
[personal profile] peaceful_sands posting in [community profile] bitesizedcleaning
Another week has passed us by and some of us might still be stampeding, some of us might be stepping more cautiously or even hobbling along struggling (like me) trying to balance out other commitments and squeeze in a few blasts of time to catch up.

If you've been using the table and tackling something each day, feel free to tell us all about it this week. If not here's the table and pick up with today's (or any other day that suits) and tell us about it when you can - use this post until I manage to get up to speed enough to make another one.

Wishing you well for the next week ahead and remember the aim of the month's challenges is that most can be adapted to fit what you need so if it says a 'flat surface', any type of flat surface will do - desks, worktops, floors, tables and so on. Similarly a vertical surface could be a window, a tiled wall, mirror or door. Part of the challenge is deciding how to apply the daily challenge (ha ha!).

This is supposed to be a low-stress challenge - if you miss a day, it doesn't matter, if the day's challenge doesn't suit, repeat the day before or start on the next day's. With the exception of two days, the challenges should take about 10 minutes, if you want to spend longer that's great, judge by your personal available time and energy.

To make it easier to take part and not be held up by time differences and days when I'm not able to post, all challenges will be posted in the table below the cut to aid both those taking part and the daily poster.

My biggest request for the month is that, whenever you can, you join in the chat - even if you haven't done the day's challenge come and cheer for others. We're here for the ups and downs this month so you can tell us when you're struggling as well as celebrate your successes.

Daily Challenge Table shown below the cut )

And so today's challenge is, depending on where/when you are reading this (but I'll go with the 17th/18th) to either spend 10 minutes on a flat surface or on a vertical one.

Good luck and enjoy what's left of your September.

[ SECRET POST #6830 ]

Sep. 17th, 2025 05:55 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6830 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 12 secrets from Secret Submission Post #975.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

Hello!

Sep. 17th, 2025 05:27 pm
priscilla_king: black cat from morguefile (Default)
[personal profile] priscilla_king posting in [community profile] get_knitted
Hi, I'm Priscilla, aka Auntie Pris, and I've been knitting since 1989.

I found this community by following a link at Ysabetwordsmith's blog, which I've been following since 2011.

Currently I'm making the winter's supply of hats.

I don't have a good digital camera, and don't often post to Dreamwidth; this could change. Meanwhile it's always nice to see what others are knitting.

Critical Role

Sep. 17th, 2025 05:30 pm
settiai: (Critical Role -- settiai)
[personal profile] settiai
Two fandom-related posts in a row? Really? I can't even remember the last time that happened.

Critical Role has its fourth campaign starting in just over two weeks, and they posted the first artwork of the new characters earlier this week. They haven't released any other details like classes and such, but I'm very, very, very curious about several of them. Especially since they posted a video earlier today about character vibes, some of which sound kinda amazing.

The fandom is definitely ramping up again, which is helping with forcing my brain to get through watching as many of the specials that I've missed as I can before CR4 starts. I've missed having a proper weekly fandom, and I really want to try to get back in the habit of napping after work on Thursdays so that I can stay up late watching the new episodes live.

💔📚👩‍❤️‍💋‍👩

Sep. 17th, 2025 04:13 pm
bluedreaming: (mortgraphics - napeflower)
[personal profile] bluedreaming
I wrote a random drabble today for [community profile] fan_flashworks and when I popped over to Ao3 to see what the book fandom is called there, I was SHOCKED (read this with full hyperbole) to discover that there are way more Anne/Gilbert fanworks than Anne/Diana. Gilbert! That whatever-you-call-a-love-interest-insert! That wet blanket! Puddleglum has him beat!

Gilbert may or may not have hidden depths and great character or whatever but the books (which I probably read over three times all through) did not really demonstrate that at all. I remember reading a great essay on Anne as well as the Emily of New Moon trilogy about how the interesting (male) love interests inevitably get shelved, and the MC ends up with the cardboard cutout. Wish I knew where that was; I’d like to read it again.

Anyway, I refuse to read the books anymore because they killed off my best beloved Walter, so maybe there are secret hidden depths that older-me could decipher. Whatever.
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairière, an Elezen Warrior of Light with light skin, green eyes, and dark blonde hair. (ffxiv ariane departure)
[personal profile] anneapocalypse

With Harsh Light at 81,318 words, and Gentle Dark at 91,740, I have two complete drafts in front of me.

I've been working on these two FFXIV fics for... something like a year and a half, I guess? Because all of my fic for Ariane (my player character) lives in one scrivener project and I've had that going basically since I created her, I don't have a file creation date to go on. I was going through an old journal recently and thought I found the page where I first jotted down the concept for this fic project, but that was only a little over a year ago and the word count spreadsheet I keep doesn't check out with that. Digging up some tumblr posts tells me I was probably first digging into it seriously in April 2024, and for that I think the word count from my spreadsheets checks out. Old dreamwidth entries tells me I had the concept in mind least as far back as December 2023 and was probably already jotting down some snippets as they came to me. April 2024 was also when I finished Endwalker, so it tracks that that's when I'd start working seriously on longfic.

Safe to say, I have been working on this for a lot of the past two years.

There is revising and editing and beta reading and more editing still to do, but it's WRITTEN! It's written!

Sad though they may be, I've enjoyed writing these so much. I'm really excited to share them when they're ready.

my projects

NSFW Sep. 17th, 2025 09:38 pm

New Pinch Hit + Art Treats Welcome

Sep. 17th, 2025 02:16 pm
classicfilmex: (Default)
[personal profile] classicfilmex
We have one new pinch hit, due September 21.

If you want to claim it, please email the mods at classicfilmexchange@gmail.com with your AO3 username or comment here (comments are screened).

Unrelated, we had a question about the possibility of art being allowed for treats, despite the exchange itself being fic-only, and we've decided to open up the option of art, but only for treats, not for assignments. As with fic, please make sure your work doesn't violate any of your recipients DNWs.

Finally, don't forget the treats for pinch-hitters post! If you pick up a pinch hit and aren't participating in the exchange, leave prompts there and, if you've got a hankering to do a little treating, please check there to see if you're familiar with any of the fandoms being requested.
 

 
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7 posting in [community profile] books
Last night I finished Becky Chambers' The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, a sci-fi book about a motley crew of spacefarers who "drill" wormholes to enable rapid travel across space for the diverse galactic alliance known as the GC. At the start of the book, they are offered a bid on a particularly difficult, lucrative job, and can't resist taking the bait.

This should be (another) lesson to me in not going all-in on a creator because I've enjoyed one of their works. I loved Chambers' To Be Taught, if Fortunate, and I've heard plenty of internet praise for The Long Way, so when I saw it at the bookstore recently, I dropped $20 on it readily. If I hadn't, I probably wouldn't have bothered finishing it.

First - if you picked up this book looking for the femslash, it's barely there, and it's a lot more friends-with-benefits than romance. The other two romances in the book get a lot more attention. This isn't a complaint from me, but if what you really want is F/F romance, it's not really here.

This is a character-driven book with barely a plot, which wouldn't be a problem if the characters were interesting. As it is, they are functionally interchangeable: a crew of people who are all optimistic, friendly, emotionally open, painstakingly polite, and obsessively well-intentioned (except for the one guy who's a Jerk, who exists to be a jerk whenever the scene calls for someone who needs to be less-than-fanatically-polite or there's a chance for Chambers to squeeze in another instance of his being a jerk, even when he's technically right). There is no character growth to speak of; none of these characters changes at all between the start of the book and the end. There's no complexity to anyone.

Read more... )






[syndicated profile] eff_feed

Posted by Andrew Crocker

This posted was drafted by EFF legal intern Alexandra Halbeck

The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which covers California and most of the Western U.S., just delivered good news for digital privacy: abandoning a phone doesn’t abandon your Fourth Amendment rights in the phone’s contents. In United States v. Hunt, the court made clear that no longer having control of a device is not the same thing as surrendering the privacy of the information it contains. As a result, courts must separately analyze whether someone intended to abandon a physical phone and whether they intended to abandon the data stored within it. Given how much personal information our phones contain, it will be unlikely for courts to find that someone truly intended to give up their privacy rights in that data.

This approach mirrors what EFF urged in the amicus brief we filed in Hunt, joined by the ACLU, ACLU of Oregon, EPIC, and NACDL. We argued that a person may be separated from—or even discard—a device, yet still retain a robust privacy interest in the information it holds. Treating phones like wallets or backpacks ignores the reality of technology. Smartphones are comprehensive archives of our lives, containing years of messages, photos, location history, health data, browsing habits, and countless other intimate details. As the Supreme Court recognized in Riley v. California, our phones hold “the privacies of life,” and accessing those digital contents generally requires a warrant. This is an issue EFF has worked on across the country, and it is gratifying to see such an unambiguous ruling from an influential appellate court.

The facts of Hunt underscore why the court’s distinction between a device and its contents matters. In 2017, Dontae Hunt was shot multiple times and dropped an iPhone while fleeing for medical help. Police collected the phone from the crime scene and kept it as evidence. Nearly three years later—during an unrelated drug investigation—federal agents obtained a warrant and searched the phone’s contents. Hunt challenged both the warrantless seizure and the later search, arguing he never intended to abandon either the device or its data.

The court rejected the government’s sweeping abandonment theory and drew a crucial line for the digital age: even if police have legal possession of hardware, they do not have green light to rummage through its contents. The panel emphasized that courts must treat the device and the data as separate questions under a Fourth Amendment analysis.

In this specific case, because the government ultimately obtained a warrant before searching the device, that aspect of the case survived constitutional scrutiny—but crucially, only on that basis. The court also found that police acted reasonably in initially seizing the phone during the shooting investigation and keeping it as unclaimed property until a warrant could be obtained to search it.

Under Hunt, if officers find a phone that’s been misplaced, dropped during an emergency, or otherwise separated from its owner, they cannot leap from custody of the glass-and-metal shell to unfettered access to the comprehensive digital record inside. This decision ensures that constitutional protections don’t evaporate just because someone abandons their device, and that warrants still matter in the digital age. Our constitutional rights should follow our digital lives—no matter where our devices may end up.

Nominations are closed

Sep. 17th, 2025 07:49 pm
paranoidangel: Pink Dalek (Pink Dalek)
[personal profile] paranoidangel posting in [community profile] tardis_festivities
Nominations are now closed. You can see the tag set at https://archiveofourown.org/tag_sets/17014. We have 426 characters/relationships in 23 fandoms, with Classic Who narrowly edging out New Who with 113 characters/relationships to 109

If there are any problems with it (eg typos, duplicates) then comment here. Also if you want to nominate but have missed the deadline, you can also comment here and I will add it, as long as it's before sign ups open.

Sign ups open on Sunday at 12pm UTC.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird
I am happy to see that "should receive" the covid vaccine or booster includes infants; children and adolescents who haven't already been vaccinated; anyone with a medical condition that puts them at higher risk of severe covid; and all household contacts of anyone at higher risk.

Everyone aged 65 or older should receive two doses, six months apart.

All healthcare workers "should" receive the vaccine, as should anyone who is pregnant, contemplating pregnancy, or has recently been pregnant, and a few other groups.

Everyone else "may receive" it.

https://www.mass.gov/doc/massachusetts-2025-2026-respiratory-illness-season-covid-19-vaccine-recommendations/download

What I saw is Massachusetts-specific, but it says it is aligned with the recommendations of the new Northeast Public Health Collaborative, which includes New England except for New Hampshire, plus New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware.

Water Update

Sep. 17th, 2025 09:33 am
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
This morning the tanks were half full, which is respectable for this time of year.  However, the water at the house was still trickling out of the faucet indicating there was virtually no pressure.  I opened the faucet at the base of Tank Hill, which is about 40 vertical feet below the tanks.  The water ran out with a distinct lack of enthusiasm. Water flow was even more anemic at the faucet on the hillside.  The faucet at the garden, which is lower than the one at the base of Tank Hill, ran reasonably freely, but not the way it should have.  I got out the new hatchet and hammered open the valve for the 2 inch Fire Hose pipe.  A LOT of water poured out. The flow from the garden faucet increased.   After a minute or so I hammered closed the 2 inch valve, closed all the faucets, got a bale of hay from the Iris Barn and came back to the house.  Low and behold water comes flowing easily out of the faucets.  I'm still not entirely happy with the pressure, but further "blowing out" of the water pipes can wait till the tanks are full and the garden is watered.  For now I can at least take a shower!  My guess is that dirt has accumulated in the bottom of tank 1 and partially blocked the flow of water down the hill. This is a real problem because there is no effective AND safe way to clean the tanks.  It is possible to climb into the tanks and bucket out dirt (dirty water) but doing that requires a supplied air source.  No one installed a "cleanout" valve for the tanks so there isn't any way to drain them and clean them.  On top of all of that there is no way to isolate one tank from the others so cleaning can be done without draining everything. If I drain everything there will be no water for a couple of days while the tanks refill.  So it has been about 20 years since the tanks were cleaned last. Plenty of dirt and tiny stones get washed down from the springs despite my best efforts.   As soon as I've finished paying for the new stove I'll hire someone to help re-plumb the tanks and fix this issue.  Maybe next spring when the springs are running fast and the tanks aren't doubling as  a source for water in case of a fire. 
landingtree: Small person examining bottlecap (Default)
[personal profile] landingtree
From Hell, by Alan Moore.

I wonder what this would’ve been like in black and white. This is a book about Jack the Ripper’s killings, and it was interesting to see when this edition’s colourist chose to use black instead of red for blood. I read it because a media podcast I listen to, Shelved by Genre, is doing a run of Alan Moore. I am more interested in the podcast than I was in this book. I want them to tell me about Jack the Ripper scholarship, and British comics takes on Jack the Ripper (supernatural elements thereof) and this book in its context. I think the book is good and I didn’t need to read it, I got to the end and went ‘okay, I could’ve stopped in the middle, but I guess I needed to read to the end to discover that.’

(Also, why would you call this book The Master Edition? Maybe I am too attuned by Le Guin’s thoughts about the word Mastery. Maybe they thought it through, maybe they thought it was apt for this book full of the deliberate symbolic weight of men doing violence against women and Man doing violence against Woman.)

Tripoint, by C J Cherryh.

Which is also among the kinds of violence this book involves. The first of them, anyway: actually the second not so much. I do not recommend this as a place to start Cherryh because the emotional dynamics of the start of it made me put it down and go read various other things I’ve just posted about. It makes me think that I found Merchanter’s Luck so palatable in contrast to other Cherryh because its main characters start out in positions of deep control and competence. Do they stay there? Are the places they start in healthy ones? Not necessarily! But there is a comfort to it. Which this book does not have at all, the protagonist has very little to hold onto in life except a bad relationship with his mother. Also, Cherryh does not miss the opportunity to invent a kind of hyperspace travel that involves physical discomfort and sedative-hazed dreams about incest that might drive you insane. There’s one Diana Wynne Jones story in which a writer uses the sensory experience of being tiredly slumped over a keyboard drinking coffee and trying to finish a draft novel to write umpteen heroic captains at the controls of spaceships battling through physical discomfort, and I want to reread it to see if I think Jones read Cherryh directly before writing it.

Anyway! Do the emotional dynamics of this book get less fucked-up by the end? …arguably they get more so, but in a more bearable-to-me-personally way.
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