our times are in your hand
Apr. 13th, 2026 11:01 amToday is my birthday, and next week an out of state friend (not on DW) I've never met in analog space is coming to visit. Even in death, we are in the midst of life.
The Best Film Trivia Quiz Questions to Test Your Knowledge
Apr. 13th, 2026 06:00 pmDelkin Warranty Support
Apr. 13th, 2026 10:52 amIt turns out the card sticking problem is a known issue and is documented in Delkin’s Product Help. Of course, I found this help online after I’d already forcibly pulled the card from the slot – which the article says NOT to do.
Outside of that, I followed the instructions and called phone support. The support rep, Denzel, opened a support ticket and informed me of the next steps. Denzel mailed me a replacement memory card and a self-addressed stamped envelope for returning the defective card. Included was a nice letter hand-signed by the Product Support Manager – and three large stickers. (They’re huge. I guess Delkin wants you to put them on the hard cases holding your photography gear.)
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Anyway, the rapid response was much appreciated. Support for the Black Memory Cards is quite impressive, and includes a 48-hour replacement guarantee. I’ll definitely be buying Delkin Black memory cards going forward.
Dancing on the Danube
Apr. 13th, 2026 06:50 pmPeople on the subway high fived each other as they passed on the escalators (third video in the carousel) and were pouring out glasses of champagne to strangers, and it was so crowded with people trying to get across the river to the victory celebrations that they couldn't fit into the subway carriages.
If it must be necessary, my favourite (sadly universal) experience of democracy is witnessing voters take to the streets to dance in relief and joy at having voted out corrupt, autocratic governments. Inject this straight into my veins, forever.
Apparently the partying in Budapest went on until 5am, and then everyone just floated deliriously into work on Monday morning, awash in the sense of their own political agency.
Bialya With Seeds in the Center: JLE #30, JLA #55 (JLI 82)
Apr. 13th, 2026 11:23 am
JLE Giffen-Jones-Robertson, JLA Giffen-DeMatteis-Wozniak.
Storytelling is as much about what you don’t include as what you do. Giffen and company were often inspired in terms of what they left out or minimized. This appealed to a smart audience who could fill in the blanks.
But sometimes you leave too many blanks. Sometimes you cross the line between making your reader an enthusiastic participant in the storyline and making them wonder why they’re doing all your work for you.
___ ______ ________ ______ _______, and that’s why this final Queen Bee of Bialya storyline leaves too many blanks. ( ____________ __ __ ____ _____ ____ ___ _____ _______ __ ____ ___ __, ___ ______ ___ _______ ____ _____ ________ __ ____ ____ ____ ___ __ _________, _______ __ _ _____ ________ ___ _____ ____ __ ___ ______! ___ _________ ___ _____ ___ ____ ______… )
Gail Simone presents April 'Pool's Day
Apr. 13th, 2026 06:30 pm
( Read more... )
On Anthropic’s Mythos Preview and Project Glasswing
Apr. 13th, 2026 04:52 pmThe cybersecurity industry is obsessing over Anthropic’s new model, Claude Mythos Preview, and its effects on cybersecurity. Anthropic said that it is not releasing it to the general public because of its cyberattack capabilities, and has launched Project Glasswing to run the model against a whole slew of public domain and proprietary software, with the aim of finding and patching all the vulnerabilities before hackers get their hands on the model and exploit them.
There’s a lot here, and I hope to write something more considered in the coming week, but I want to make some quick observations.
One: This is very much a PR play by Anthropic—and it worked. Lots of reporters are breathlessly repeating Anthropic’s talking points, without engaging with them critically. OpenAI, presumably pissed that Anthropic’s new model has gotten so much positive press and wanting to grab some of the spotlight for itself, announced its model is just as scary, and won’t be released to the general public, either.
Two: These models do demonstrate an increased sophistication in their cyberattack capabilities. They write effective exploits—taking the vulnerabilities they find and operationalizing them—without human involvement. They can find more complex vulnerabilities: chaining together several memory corruption bugs, for example. And they can do more with one-shot prompting, without requiring orchestration and agent configuration infrastructure.
Three: Anthropic might have a good PR team, but the problem isn’t with Mythos Preview. The security company Aisle was able to replicate the vulnerabilities that Anthropic found, using older, cheaper, public models. But there is a difference between finding a vulnerability and turning it into an attack. This points to a current advantage to the defender. Finding for the purposes of fixing is easier for an AI than finding plus exploiting. This advantage is likely to shrink, as ever more powerful models become available to the general public.
Four: Everyone who is panicking about the ramifications of this is correct about the problem, even if we can’t predict the exact timeline. Maybe the sea change just happened, with the new models from Anthropic and OpenAI. Maybe it happened six months ago. Maybe it’ll happen in six months. It will happen—I have no doubt about it—and sooner than we are ready for. We can’t predict how much more these models will improve in general, but software seems to be a specialized language that is optimal for AIs.
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about security in what I called “the age of instant software,” where AIs are superhumanly good at finding, exploiting, and patching vulnerabilities. I stand by everything I wrote there. The urgency is now greater than ever.
I was also part of a large team that wrote a “what to do now” report. The guidance is largely correct: We need to prepare for a world where zero-day exploits are dime-a-dozen, and lots of attackers suddenly have offensive capabilities that far outstrip their skills.
(no subject)
Apr. 13th, 2026 01:22 pmDucks in a Row: Final 24 Hours!
Apr. 13th, 2026 12:31 pmA huge, HUGE thank you to everyone yesterday who helped spread the word about our campaign to fund publishing our next two anthologies: Ducks in a Row: A Curated Collection of Stories and Duxxx in a Row: A Curated Collection of Explicit Stories. With your help (and of course the awesome support of the people who decided to buy one or more of the books!) we’ve reached our base funding goal!
Our campaign will officially end, successfully, tomorrow at 10 a.m. Eastern time, but we’ll be open for late pledges for at least a couple weeks, so even if you miss the deadline, you won’t miss the books!
Check out our Kickstarter to get two anthologies with over 40 stories, and some fun merch too!

Monday
Apr. 13th, 2026 08:57 amNo swimming today. My skin needs a day off. I've got weird little patches of itchy dry flaky - one at my eye, one behind my ear, one on my hand, one around one corner of my mouth and my whole back. I need no water on any of it for at least a day. Probably a week would be way better but a day will be fine.
And I need to get out in the elbow and work on the puzzle and catch up on neighbor news.
I spent a long time this morning researching color laser printers. There is nothing really wrong with my current desk jet except the colors are too muted, it is often quite fiddly to connect up and actually print. But, it does scan and fits nicely in my space. And I can't find a laser printer that has high enough reviews to satisfy me and is small enough for my space. The front desk has a giant printer that does excellent work and they turn around stuff pretty fast. So when I want pretty colors... maybe I'll use theirs. At least, the buy decision is not punted for today.
It's now nearly mid morning and I haven't even made the bed yet.

6 Songs You Might Not Know Were Written By Bruce Springsteen
Apr. 13th, 2026 04:00 pmIt's my birthday!
Apr. 13th, 2026 12:27 pm(For the Homestucks out there: yes, I share my birthday with John Egbert!)
I'm 42 today and therefore contractually obligated to make a joke about this being the year I discover the meaning of life.
Overall, it's shaping up to be a nice quiet, cozy day. I had physical therapy this morning, which has been really positive for me. My therapist is great, and I think the exercises are making a difference, slowly but surely. I treated myself to a bagel sandwich, since I was already out, but pulled myself a doubleshot of espresso at home (bought from my favorite local coffee shop, which roasts their own fair trade coffee and it's truly in a league of its own).
I don't tend to make Big Plans for my birthday these days, but I am taking it as a rest and relax day, and Mr. Apocalypse and I plan on going out for a nice dinner. Later this evening I have my FFXIV deep dungeon group, which is always a fun time.
Somewhat in honor of the occasion, and also just because I've really been meaning to make some more FFXIV icons, I made a new one for Ariane and her bluebird companion, as well as one for Urianger. (Will I go back and update the icon on all old Gentle Dark chapters... maybe. We'll see. 😆)
Hope you're all having a great today too. 💜
Jo Graham: The Autarch's Heir
Apr. 13th, 2026 06:20 pmOn to fictional joy. I've read The Autarch's Heir, the fourth volume of Jo Graham's space opera saga The Calpurnian Wars (No.3 was reviewed by me here, and it is as compulsively readable as the previous entries. Though I have to admit I was half-wrong about the previous entry presenting us with the Space!Egypt to the Space!Rome that is the expansion-hungry Calpurnia), in that while the previous location definitely had Egyptian elements, so does Lono, the location of The Autarch's Heir. As before, while there are some characters from the previous cast around - in this case, sisters Aurore and Dian Melian - , we get new central characters to go with the new location, to wit, one Bel Alan, con man, and the drunk and depressed Calpurnian Commander Antisia, formerly the Faithful Lieutenant of murdered Autarch Julus, who has her own problems, such as one Thurinia gunning to be next Autarch, aided by her commander Vipsani. (I must admit that fond of ancient history as I am, I continue to get a kick out of the Roman paralles. In this case: what's not to love about Mark Antony as a Lesbian in space?) It's the first novel to give us something more about the Calpurnians than their expansionism, not just through Antisia's pov, and now I'll have to call them Space!Sparta as well because the way they're raised is definitely more in line with Sparta, transported into a sci fi frame, than with Rome. Anyway: the plot kicks off when Bel Alan, our main character, is contacted by the Lono resistance to steal the priceless Solaste Crown by pretending to be the natural son of the late Julus. At which point, and here I have to go for a spoiler cut, I did think: ( Spoilers made an assumption based on history. ) And yes indeed, it was. Bel makes for an engaging hero because he really isn't into either revenge scenarios or monarchy. He's also, a first for a main character in this series, not a believer. (I find this refreshing within this universe, not because I dislike the various numinous connections the other main characters in previous novels had, but in terms of world building we were due one atheistic sympathetic main character.) I also continue to love the way this series treats compassion and kindness and redeemability as important. Dian, one of the Melian sisters who in the previous novel was in what was probably my favourite scene in which Caralys, the heroine of said novel, was kind to her despite Dian having been hostile towards Caralys the entire novel. And now we see Dian more fleshed out and in a scenario where she in turn is able to show charm, wit and compassion - without negating the earlier issues. Not only is her sibling relationship with Aurore fun, but her hook up with Antisia is a great take on the "relationship started for utiliarian motives becomes meaningful" trope. (Btw, and speaking of Antisia: ( Here it gets spoilery again. ))
The one caveat I have is that while this novel tells its own story, I wouldn't start the series with it but start at the beginning if you're a new reader. (None of the novels are very long, so this doesn't mean years of your reading life, don't worry.) By now, I just think knowing the previous goings-on adds a lot of satisfying texture to what is already a very enjoyable story.
Film post: Beetlejuice (1988)
Apr. 13th, 2026 04:59 pm
Comedy-drama | Letterboxd 3.7/5 | IMDb 7.4/10 | BBFC 15
Tim Burton's film about a couple who can't come to grips with being dead is pretty darn unhinged. Michael Keaton in the title role improvised some of his dialogue, and perhaps unsurprisingly not all the lines hit – but quite a few do, and he has so much energy. Winona Ryder is great as goth teen Lydia, though a few of the other characters have dated badly. It takes a bit too long to see Beetlejuice himself, but the sensible running time keeps things rattling along thereafter. Some amusing special effects, too. Not a stupendous classic, but good fun. ★★★½
The Most Sleep-Deprived U.S. Cities, Mapped
Apr. 13th, 2026 02:00 pmföhn / foehn
Apr. 13th, 2026 07:38 amföhn or foehn (FAYN, FÖN) - n., a warm dry wind blowing down the lee side of mountains.
Originally and often specifically down the north slopes of the Alps. It's caused when moist air on the windward side of the mountains is pushed upward, cooling it and thus causing the moisture to precipitate out, then when it descends on the other side, it undergoes adiabatic warming:

Thanks, WikiMedia!
In many places, foehn winds have local names, such as Santa Anas in southern California and chinooks in the Rocky Mountains. As you might expect, given the spelling, we got the word from German Föhn, where it also means hair drier (!), but the wind sense was originally from Swiss German and/or Middle High German fœnne, from Old High German phonno/phōno, from (possibly via Romansh favuogn/fuogn) Vulgar Latin *faōnius, from Latin favōnius, west wind, (the Roman counterpart of Greek zephyr) which was traditionally supposed to be a mild weather and harbinger of spring -- and in Switzerland foehn are indeed associated with late winter thaws.
---L.

