oh, january's going fast, ok!

Jan. 13th, 2026 12:56 am
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[personal profile] 0dense
and it'll feel even faster, I'm sure, because I'm going on a trip soon!! I'm so excited, it's going to be great to see C again :)) I have a lowkey outfit for the main event we have planned, but not much because I'm only going carry-on about it. 

I'm also looking forward to breakfast/brunch with some of the squad coming up, before everyone's gone past the winter break again. (I'm also a little nervy about the slosh tomorrow; I've kinda been talking with someone but like when in a text convo does one casually mention the probably-maybe-aro thing.....)

I've been particularly jazzed about going out of town, and this and that, so I haven't hit hard launch on a comm yet but it's on my whiteboard :) not forgotten! [link redacted, moved to login-locked post]

I've also been keeping up the writing!! my first work of 2026 is already one of my longest pieces in a while, and it's for a kink flash fest :') eyes closed head first can't lose!! actually, interestingly, I had to pull up and restart from scratch this past weekend because, while I really liked my first draft, it ended up being a story about isolation vs intimacy during COVID lockdown, of all things. And I think I was on to something! but I also don't quite think it's what a stranger might want as a kink meme gift. like, I'm a FIRM believer in writing from the heart, but also, don't be a dick to the target audience, right? So I'm putting a pin in that, and all its worldbuilding. I'm not mad at my final piece, but I can feel the rush on it lol. well, it was a flash-exchange after all; the whirlwind is part of the experience!

Writing is so fun, though. I haven't done relatively much with OCs, but they're such an adventure to get to know through the page in real-time. it's different from writing fanfic, for sure! 

on the flipside, now I'm out a writing project! probably not that I could do much wordcount in the nearer future, out traveling, but it's important to keep the momentum going. hmmm. shoutout to the [community profile] fandomcalendar though; I love hearing what people are up to! I'll poke around for a sense of deadlines, and see what to aim myself at next...

Artificial Intelligence

Jan. 13th, 2026 03:18 am
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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Researchers poison stolen data to make AI systems return wrong results

Researchers affiliated with universities in China and Singapore have devised a technique to make stolen knowledge graph data useless if incorporated into a GraphRAG AI system without consent.


I'm reminded of how alchemists would leave out a critical detail, or make a substitution, so that nobody could steal and reproduce their work.

Ciliegia

Jan. 13th, 2026 07:39 am
[syndicated profile] ao3_conclave_feed

Posted by SafiNicht99

by

He was well aware that knotting the same Omega several times tuned the senses of the Alpha to track and mate said Omega, but he never expected to get so… needy.

Words: 1962, Chapters: 2/5, Language: English

Snowflake Challenge: day 6

Jan. 13th, 2026 07:43 am
shewhostaples: View from above of a set of 'scissor' railway points (railway)
[personal profile] shewhostaples
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Top 10 challenge

I'm onna train, so here are 10 railway stations I like. In no particular order, and for various different reasons.

1. Frankfurt Hbf. This was where my international rail travels began. Standing on the concourse, looking at the departure boards (getting slightly earwormed by Stuttgart and Fulda), realising that I could get pretty much anywhere from here...

2. London St Pancras. It's beautiful. It's not actually a terribly pleasant experience getting a train from here (maybe the East Midlands and South Eastern platforms are better) but from the outside it's a fairy tale castle.

3. Stockholm. Rolling in, bleary eyed, off the sleeper from Malta, through dingy orange lights, and then suddenly you're in this marble palace. (I got chugged in Stockholm station. I don't know what I was doing to look like a Swede with disposable income rather than a discombobulated tourist, but there we go.)

4. London King's Cross. Never mind all that wizard nonsense, it has a fully functional platform zero. Also the toilets are free these days.

5. Liège Guillemins. Just glorious.

6. Ryde Pier Head. When it's operational and when you don't just miss the train because the catamaran was thirty seconds late. But there's still something fun about a station in the sea.

7. Dawlish. Train to beach in under a minute (your mileage may vary, as may mine considering I haven't been there in about a decade).

8. York. Never mind a pub in the station, it has one on the platform. Lovely stained glass, too.

9. Norwich. Light, gracious, makes you glad you've arrived.

10. Luxembourg. Stained glass again - and just time for an ice cream before the train.
vriddy: Washing Machine Hero Wash (Wash)
[personal profile] vriddy

Where am I at with all the projects? Definitely nowhere I thought I'd be in early December. Let's have a look at the "vague current plan" back then:

  • Let [the Cursed Witch] Rest - I've sure been doing that! Though not the "not too long" bit.

...Actually that's it I did nothing else on that list, and half the rest will have to change. In fairness, I knew all the sequel-related stuff would have to be temporarily shelved about a week later: I was deep in the kn8 edits, and could tell it would take longer than anticipated. I wanted the time away from the witch so my subconscious could ✨ work its magic ✨ about the remaining problems, but once most of the story left my "active" memory, outlining or planning a sequel felt nearly impossible.

Then K-9 happened. Lol. I mean, this was and continues to be fun, and I'm surfing that delightful fandom wave for as long as I can. 🏄 Did I mention our fandom tag was canonised? Teeheehee.

I'm writing a lot of short fics in too many fandoms and I think that's doing me good for now. Mostly because I want to keep myself distracted away from *waves wildly*. It means I'm rereading manga chapters here and there, rewatching episodes bits. I'm still reading a lot of new manga at the moment, and unfortunately feeling fannish about more and more of the tiniest, non-existent fandoms. It's just!! There's so much awesome polyship potential everywhere!!!! They just huh write themselves, or should!!!!! Or I wish someone else did so I could just read it... XD At least, a few of them have English translations out there so maybe some readers will have the same vision and eventually find the fic, but there's also a BL horror manga (the true monster isn't really the creature...) that doesn't, despite calling my name and whispering OT3 into my head louder and louder....... Ah well. Fan does as fan must.

But anyway! Writing short is doing me good, I think, and writing varied too. But I still have plans for the big original projects:

  • I want/must do the pacing check for the cursed witch in January. At the very, very least, do the full re-read and take notes on where to break down the new chapters. But ideally I'd like to do that work itself, too, because...
  • ...I signed up for an editing course/workshop/cheeralong in February and I plan to begin again the structural edits for the soul thief then. I'm hoping the peer support/challenge will help me get past the "blergh I already did 2/3 of this before but stopped at an awkward point." It's been a year now, so hopefully the reset will work out ok...

But I'd really like to have this round of Cursed Witch edits feel like they're a better shape, with chapters properly broken down and cliffhangerised. Also I hope to keep writing ficlets as a pressure valve for launching myself into yet another MASSIVE EDITING/BIG LENGTH round.

That's the current plan! Let's see in a month how it totally didn't work out that way!! XD

sovay: (Sydney Carton)
[personal profile] sovay
Running this many days without sleep, I find it hard to tell whether I had an insight about creativity this weekend or just reinvented a 101-level objection to LLMs and so-called generative AI, but it ocurred to me that such technologies are not capable of allusions. Their algorithms are not freighted with the same three-dimensional architecture of associations which accrete around information stored in the human cold porridge, all the emotional colors and sensory overtones and contextual echoes which attend the classic example of a word like tree when you throw it out across the incommensurable void between one human mind and another to be plugged into their own idiosyncratically plastic linkage of bias and experience whose least incompatibility may be the difference between a bristlecone and a birch and Wittgenstein has to lie down with a headache, but all of these entanglements form as much of the texture of a writer's style—of any human communication—as the word cloud of their vocabulary or their most commonly diagrammed sentences. It has always interested me to be able to detect the half-rhymes or skeletons of familiarity in the work of other writers; I have always assumed I am reciprocally legible if not transparent from space. I've seen arguments against the creativity of LLMs based on intentionality, but the unintended encrustrations seem just as important to me. By way of illustration, this thought was partly sparked by this classic and glorious mashup.

I was delighted to find on checking the news this morning that a new Roman villa just dropped. Given the Iron Age hillforts, the twelfth-century abbey, the Georgian country house, and the CH station, Margam Country Park clearly needed a Roman find to complete the set. I have since been informed of the discovery of a similarly well-preserved and impressive carnyx. Goes shatteringly with a villa, the Iceni tell me.

I joke about this rock I spend most of my time under, but how can I never have heard of Marlow Moss? The Bryher vibes alone. The Constructivism. And a real short king, judging by that jaunty photo c. 1937 with Netty Nijhoff. Pursuing further details, I fell over Anton Prinner and have been demoralized about my comprehension of art history ever since.

Last night I read David Copperfield (1850) for the third time in my life. It has the terrible feel of a teachable moment. In high school I bounced almost completely off it. About ten years later, I enjoyed the dual-layered narration and was otherwise mostly engaged by the language. Now it appears I just like the novel, which I have to consider may be a factor of middle age. Or I had just read the necessary bunch more of Dickens in the interval, speaking of traceable reflections, recurring figures; my favorite character has not changed since eleventh grade, but I can see now the constellation he's part of. It seems improbable that I was always reading the novel while waiting for chorus to start, but I did get through Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) in the down time of a couple of rehearsals that year. I was not taking either of the standard literature classes, but I had friends who left their assigned reading lying around.

I have to be at three different doctors' offices tomorrow. I could be over this viral mishegos any second now.

Hi

Jan. 12th, 2026 10:32 pm
ciacconne: (Default)
[personal profile] ciacconne posting in [community profile] addme_fandom
 Name:  Ciacconne 

Age: Mid 30s. 


I mostly post about: My life, health, and fandom. 


My hobbies are: Writing, reading, gaming, and art. 


My fandoms are: HP, FF16, FF7, Frieren, Slayers, Gintama, Kekkai Sensen, YGO. 


I'm looking to meet people who: wanna talk about life and fandom stuff. 


My posting schedule tends to be: Daily. 
 

When I add people, my dealbreakers are: Antis. 


Before adding me, you should know: I post about my health, be it mental or physical, 

Communities

Jan. 12th, 2026 10:47 pm
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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
[community profile] pluralquestions  -- Discussing plural existence

Welcome to the Plural Questions community! A lot of existing plural communities on Dreamwidth are inactive. We all have a lot to gain from talking to each other, so Plural Questions was created to encourage community discussion around plural experiences. Interactions are encouraged- please comment, post to the community, etc! Get your voice out there! Discussion questions will be posted every now and then, but please feel free to add your own questions or post about your lived experiences.


If you've been following [personal profile] lb_lee and [community profile] pluralstories then you might like this new community.
enchanted_jae: (Default)
[personal profile] enchanted_jae posting in [community profile] ficlet_zone
Title: Do In the Clowns
Author: [personal profile] enchanted_jae
Fandom: Cal Leandros
Author's note: In a perfect world, we would all treat one another with kindness and respect, our pets would live as long as we do, and Niko would never have cut that glorious long blond fall of his hair.
Characters: Cal
Rating: PG13
Warning(s): Language, first person pov (Cal's)
Word count: 185
Disclaimer: Characters are the property of Rob Thurman, et al. This drabble/fic was written for fun, not for profit.
Written for: [community profile] ficlet_zone Prompt No. 93 – Mariah Carey song titles. I chose: After Tonight, Close My Eyes, Clown.
Summary: Even monsters have nightmares.

Do In the Clowns
bluapapilio: Senkuu, Gen & Kohaku from Dr. STONE (drs sengen)
[personal profile] bluapapilio
Spoilers if you're watching the anime ↘


Chapter 206:




Aww Suika and the boar and doggyyy---wait what is Tsukasa doing 🤣🤣🤣

The American team is revived! Ukyou's cute little face aw.

Yuzuriha and Taiju reunion!!

Chapter 207: Sai trying to get out of going with them, understandable with a brother like Ryuusui though;; I mean, he went to India to get away from him in the first place. X'D

...Sometimes Chelsea's blunt and rude manner is the best method to get information after all. 🤣

Wait were Ryuusui and Sai born from a mistress?? And they're not allowed in family photos. Daamn. Sai was forced to study math and Ryuusui couldn't be controlled. "Ryuusui only thought about how to exploit other people" I get the feeling Ryuusui was just trying to connect with Sai. Poor Ryuusui when he realized Sai ran away... Gen pointing out the truth ahhh. Ryuusui putting his hand over Sai's and saying he'd be lonely on the sea without him. My heart. 😭 I can't wait to see this animated.


Chapter 208:
It was pretty interesting learning how they were going to make a computer from the ground up. A LOT goes into it no matter what level you're on. They also made a bank and I love how there was even candy on the teller desk. xD

Chapter 209: 'Basket weave Excalibur' Gennn.

Ukyou stop being cute for one minute challenge failed.

I forgot there are people who haven't seen that Suika's older now!!

They don't have time to make a return vessel, so whoever gets on the rocket is signing up for a suicide mission... OH I see now, the team would petrify themselves on the Moon and wait for rescue, however long it took. 😱

Chapter 210: Love how Senkuu combined Chrome and Gen's speech quirks to make 'crazy baad asty nay'. 😂

Chapter 211:



Cuuute.

Everyone crying over the rice, Senkuu thinking of Byakuya... 🤧


Chapter 212:



Japan group revived again! Lmao at Ruri swinging Kohaku around and everyone's reaction. Guess Ruri's sickness was the only thing holding her back from being a gorilla too.

Chrome said 'we're the same age now' to Ruri, was there an age gap? I know in Japan the slightest age gap can switch dynamics around.

OMG the dog and boar are alive and are still there!! Apparently their names are Chalk and Sagara.

Gen said only humans are affected by the petrification but then why did the birds get petrified? Unless the birds were a test and the beam was adjusted for humans after.

Oh my gosh Chalk and Sagara have a family now...but where did Chalk find another dog, aren't they more rare than boars?

The image of everyone flying into a drooling madness over sushi is so scary ahaha.

Chapter 213: The first TV system was made in Japan apparently.

Aw, Sai made the first game and he looks so happy. :')

The problem with introducing games is that there will be those with certain traits who won't want to stop playing them (speaking from experience). It's a great tool as a stress reliever though considering how much work they have to do in this stone world.

I literally said WTF when You and Gen got blown up. 😱 I can only imagine how magazine readers must've felt waiting for the next chapter.

Chapter 214: Lol Kaseki is always excited to help make something new even if he doesn't know what it is. They're making a satellite to find where Whyman is on the Moon so that when they go there, they won't have to find a needle in a haystack.

sigh

Jan. 12th, 2026 10:27 pm
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
One character in my Outgunned game gets a laptop as part of his starting gear. Game is set in 1977 so I told the university age player he could have a programmable calculator or a slide rule.

"What's a slide rule?"

Magpie Monday

Jan. 12th, 2026 09:22 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer is hosting Magpie Monday today with a theme of "Loose Threads." Leave prompts, get ficlets!

Read more... )

Amber in the east

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:20 am
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

Well, now, for all those doubting Thomases who insist that there was no contact between western Eurasia, Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia in antiquity:

"The Amber Trade along the Southwestern Silk Road from 600 BCE-220 CE." Lü, Jing et al. Palaeoentomology 8, no. 6 (December 29, 2025): 679-682. https://www.mapress.com/pe/article/view/palaeoentomology.8.6.10.

An ant inside Baltic amber
Unpolished amber stones

Abstract

Amber holds significant historical importance in China, symbolizing not only the glory of ancient Chinese art and culture but also reflecting the development of cross-regional trade in antiquity. Evidence shows that Burmese and Baltic amber became widely popular during the Han dynasty (202 BCE–220 CE) and could be imported through various routes (Liu et al., 2023a, b; Zhao et al., 2023; Li et al., 2025). During this period, the Euro-Asia Steppe Trade Road was predominantly used for the import of Baltic amber, while the Maritime Silk Route might also facilitate the amber trade (Li et al., 2025). Additionally, the Southwestern Silk Route is regarded as a crucial pathway for amber trade in ancient Southern China. This overland route stretched from Central China through the mountainous regions of Sichuan, Guizhou, and Yunnan, extending to Myanmar and other Southeast Asian countries (Elias, 2024). The ancient Ailao Regional States, serving as a key node along the Southwestern Silk Road, encompassed southwestern Yunnan (China), northern Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and eastern Assam (India) (Sun, 2016). Notably, the territory of Ailao Regional States included the Burmese amber deposits in the northern Myanmar, which was also recorded in the Han historical records as the amber origin (Fan, 1965). In addition, several amber artifacts from the same period have been discovered in the Dian Kingdom, which is primarily located in Yunnan and borders the Ailao Regional States (Zhao, 2016). While there is considerable evidence suggesting that the Southwestern Silk Route played a significant role in the amber trade, there is a lack of empirical evidence detailing its specific functions in the transportation of amber.

 

Etymology

From Middle English ambre, aumbre, from Old French aumbre, ambre, from Arabic عَنْبَر (ʕanbar, ambergris), from Middle Persian (ʾnbl /⁠ambar⁠/, ambergris). Compare English lamber, ambergris. Displaced Middle English smulting (from Old English smelting (amber)), Old English eolhsand (amber), Old English glær (amber), and Old English sāp (amber, resin, pomade).

    • The nucleotide sequence "UAG" is named "amber" for the first person to isolate the amber mutation, California Institute of Technology graduate student Harris Bernstein, whose last name ("Bernstein") is the German word for the resin "amber".

(Wiktionary)

The English word amber derives from Arabic ʿanbar عنبر from Middle Persian (ʾnbl /ambar⁠/, "ambergris") via Middle Latin ambar and Middle French ambre. The word referred to what is now known as ambergris (ambre gris or "gray amber"), a solid waxy substance derived from the sperm whale. The word, in its sense of "ambergris", was adopted in Middle English in the 14th century.

In the Romance languages, the sense of the word was extended to Baltic amber (fossil resin) from as early as the late 13th century. At first called white or yellow amber (ambre jaune), this meaning was adopted in English by the early 15th century. As the use of ambergris waned, this became the main sense of the word.

The two substances ("yellow amber" and "gray amber") conceivably became associated or confused because they both were found washed up on beaches. Ambergris is less dense than water and floats, whereas amber is denser and floats only in concentrated saline, or strong salty seawater though less dense than stone.

The classical names for amber, Ancient Greek ἤλεκτρον (ēlektron) and one of its Latin names, electrum, are connected to a term ἠλέκτωρ (ēlektōr) meaning "beaming Sun". According to myth, when Phaëton, son of Helios (the Sun), was killed his mourning sisters became poplar trees, and their tears became elektron, amber. The word elektron gave rise to the words electric, electricity, and their relatives because of amber's ability to bear a charge of static electricity.

(Wikipedia)

Electrifying!

Warms the cockles of your heart.

 

Selected readings

  • "China Babel" (3/26/24) — with numerous important references
  • "Celto-Sinica" (12/30/25)
  • Correspondences between Old Chinese and Proto-Celtic Words”, by Julie Lee Wei, Sino-Platonic Papers, 373 (December, 2025), 1-85.
  • "Volts before Volta" (1/3/26)
  • The Baghdad Battery: Experimental Verification of a 2,000-Year-Old Device Capable of Driving Visible and Useful Electrochemical Reactions at over 1.4 Volts", by Alexander Bazes, Sino-Platonic Papers, 377 (January, 2026), 1-20.
  • "Battery-Powered Prayers" (1/8/26)
  • "The Trans-Eurasian Exchange: The Prehistory of Chinese Relations with the West", by Andrew Sherratt, published posthumously in Victor H. Mair, ed., Contact and Exchange in the Ancient World (Honolulu:  University of Hawaii Press, 2006), pp. 30-61.
  • Joyce C. White and Elizabeth G. Hamilton,The transmission of early bronze technology to Thailand: new perspectives”, Journal of World Prehistory 22 (2009), 357–97 (Google Scholar)
  • Hajni Elias, H, "The Southwest Silk Road: artistic exchange and transmission in early China," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 87 (2024), 319–344. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0041977X24000120
  • "The Wool Road of Northern Eurasia" (4/12/21) — comment:
  • Annie Gottlieb reminds me that there was also an Amber Road. I had written about that in various places, and was fascinated by the fact that there is clear evidence for flourishing trade along this route from the Baltic to the Mediterranean already during Neolithic times (although recent scholarship emphasizes the last three thousand years). 
  • — traceable right over the Alps.
  • That further reminded me of this lecture that was given in my department on July 13, 2017: "Wine Road before the Silk Road: Hypotheses on the Origins of Chinese and Eurasian Drinking Culture". It was delivered by Peter Kupfer, Professor, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany.
  • Liu, Q., Zhang, Y.H.., Li, X.P., Qin, X. & Li, Q.H. (2023b) Some amber artifacts excavated from tombs of the Han Dynasty in Hunan Province. Journal of Gems and Gemmology, 25, 146–157. https://doi.org/10.15964/j.cnki.027jgg.2023.04.013
  • Luo, E.H. (2000) Chinese “Southwestern Silk Road” in the Han and Jin Dynasties. Journal of Sichuan University (Philosophy and Social Sciences Edition), 1, 84–105. [In Chinese]
  • Na, X.X. (2020) The research of the gemmological characteristics and colour grading of Burmese amber. Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming, 34–40. [In Chinese]
  • Shi, Z.T., Xin, C.X. & Wang, Y.M. (2023) Spectral characteristics of unique species of Burmese amber. Minerals, 13, 151. https://doi.org/10.3390/min13020151
  • Sun, J. (2016) The spatio-temporal patterns and geographical imagination of ethnic groups in the Southwest of China, among Qin and Han Dynasties. China Social Sciences Press, Beijing, 530 pp. [In Chinese]
  • The Archaeological Team of Guizhou Provincial Museum (1979) The tombs of the Han Dynasty in Xingyi and Xingren, Guizhou Province. Cult Relics, 5, 20–33. [In Chinese]
  • Zhao, D. (2016). Exotic beads and pendants in Ancient China: From Western Zhou to Eastern Jin Dynasty. Science Press, Beijing, pp. 103–107. [In Chinese]
  • Zhao, T., Peng, M.H., Yang, M.X., Lu, R., Wang, Y.M. & Li, Y. (2023) Effects of weathering on FTIR spectra and origin traceability of archaeological amber: The case of the Han Tomb of Haihun Marquis, China. Journal of Archaeological Science, 153, 105753. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2023.105753
  • "Of a Persian spymaster and Viking Rus' in medieval East Asia: Scythia Koreana and Japanese Waqwaq" (6/1/25) — from Scandinavia to Korea and Japan; strikingly illustrated
  • Victor H. Mair, "Language and Script:  Biology, Archaeology, and (Pre)history", International Review of Chinese Linguistics, 1.1 (1996), 31-41 (large format, twin columns) — hard to get hold of, but well worth the effort

    plus hundreds of Language Log posts documenting east-west contact in ancient times by Lucas Christopoulos, Brian Pellar, Sara de Rose, and others.

[Thanks to Ted McClure]

ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
These poems are spillover from the January 6, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl. They were inspired and sponsored by Anthony Barrette. They also fill the "Up the River" square in my 1-1-26 card for the Public Domain Day Bingo fest. These poems are the first batch in the collection Haiku for Natural Monuments of Japan.

Read more... )

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