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Dec. 1st, 2025 11:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

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I cycle with an intentionally large and obnoxious camera on my helmet. It hasn’t worked in a long time, but I leave it there because it is an effective deterrent against bad driving. Off the bike, I often remove it or let nervous strangers know they aren’t being recorded. While freedom of speech is important […]

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The Carbonation Connoisseur

Dec. 1st, 2025 10:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

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We have a guy who comes through so often and causes the exact same problem every time that the moment his face appears on the drive-thru camera, we start prepping his order automatically.
His order is always the same: three large Fantas and one large Coke. 

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Dec. 1st, 2025 10:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

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I think I might have PTSD from a neighbor. I was what is known as, apparently, the “favorite person” of a now-deceased neighbor who had borderline personality disorder. She was obsessed with me for years after I expressed concern for her after she “had a fall,” but it looked like someone beat the shit out […]

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Posted by Amanda

Welcome back to Cover Awe!

A black woman in a teal period dress and pearl earrings has her hair pulled up. She's turning away. She's on stone stairs that look like it's just rained. Green fields and a blue sky are behind her.

To Catch a Raven by Beverly Jenkins

Cover image by Lauren Rautenbach | Arcangel Images

Sarah: This is the Brazilian cover.

Elyse: That is so gorgeous. There a quiet drama there.

Tara: That cover is a balm to my soul, which is weary of illustrated people on covers. This is just perfection.

Sarah: It’s dramatic and intriguing and soothing at the same time.

I love looking at international editions.

An illustrated cover of a brunette woman sitting in a window seat reading a book. She's wearing jeans and orange sweater. And orange and brown cat sits next to her. Framing the window are purple bookshelves and a purple curtain.

Rewitched by Lucy Jane Wood

Cover illustration by Dawn Cooper

Sarah: That is very cozy and kind of looks like a tarot card.

Shana: That is gorgeous!

Amanda: Is there anything that pairs better with books than a window seat and a cat?

The perspective is taken from the top of the stairs and you're looking at an illustrated couple walking up them. Light is being cast that is split into a purple side and a red side. The woman on the purple side is in a light blue, one shoulder dress. She's blonde. She's holding the arm of a man in a burgundy suit and matching blue shirt. He has brown hair and is wearing sunglasses. Her shadow is normal. His reveals a batlike vampiric creature.

My Vampire Plus-One by Jenna Levine

Cover illustration by Roxie Vizcarra

Amanda: I love the perspective and his vampy shadow and how it kind of matches with her previous book in the series.

Sarah: Illustrations that use shadows as reveals make for very neat covers. Alexandria Bellefleur has one as well and it’s so clever.

Two small figures stand before a large city made up of distinct buildings all different colors. A figure in grey, hiding their face and has four arms, sits cross legged before a stone tower in the middle. On the right is a person in red with a thorny crown and face covering next to a tower toped in a crescent moon. The top right has a figure in a blue dress with three arms. Her head is covered by a castle wall. She stands next to a tall building made up of many columns. The top left has figure in a dark blue suit of armor. Flames come out of his helmet. He stands next to a foreboding castle. The left side has a gold slanted building with a figure wearing gold robes and the head of a white bird.

The West Passage by Jared Pechaček

Cover illustration by Kuri Huang

Amanda: There are so many details and I want to find out what they all mean!

Lara: Whatever style they’ve used in designing that cover, that is my favourite style.

Sarah: What a cool visual puzzle! Who are they, what’s going on, and why do they look like they are moving? Maybe that part is because I’m tired but wow that’s cool.

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Posted by Ayala Sorotsky

If you've ever celebrated Christmas with a cat in the house, then you already know the truth: there is no holiday quite as chaotic, dramatic, and absolutely adorable as Catmas. Forget peaceful snowfalls and calm winter nights - the moment the tree goes up, the pspspirit of feline mischief awakens. Suddenly, your living room becomes a glitter-covered battleground where the ornaments fear for their lives and the tinsel accepts its fate.

You try… you really try. You hang the baubles high. You secure the tree with engineering-level determination. You say things like "Maybe this year Muffin will behave". Spoiler: Muffin does not behave.

Because for your cat, Christmas decorations are basically one big enrichment activity. A dangling ornament? That's a toy. Wrapping paper? A personal shredding experience. Gift boxes? Prime napping real estate. The tree? Their Everest. And you? You're the helpless spectator holding a cup of hot cocoa, whispering "Please don't climb it… please don't climb it… oh no, they're climbing it".

But honestly? We wouldn't trade the cat chaos for anything. Christmas with cats is messy, ridiculous, and filled with more laughter than any ironic watch of a Hallmark movie could ever provide. So to celebrate the season properly, here are some Christmas cat memes of pure festive feline chaos - the purrfect way to feel the feline holiday pspspirit without having to rescue your tree (again). Merry Catmas!

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Posted by Blake Seidel

Cats and snow go together like peanut butter and pickles - they just don't. They may seem purrfectly interested in it - who wouldn't be when seeing little white flakes fall down from the sky for the furst time? But as soon as they put their paws in that cold, wet snow, they're already halfway back inside, yelling at you for not stopping them sooner. We all know that felines love warm things, like hogging the heater, getting snuggled up under blankets, or loafing in between your legs for maximum security and warmth. Snow provides none of those adorable amenities, and thus, they're fated to be mortal enemies.

Now, surely there are some cats that like snow, but that's a topic for a different article. Today, we're enjoying all the dramatic divas of the cat world who discovered snow…. but are not having a good time at all. You can expect purrfectly regretful faces, all the airplane ears, and a whole litter box of feisty feline energy. Because, of course, it's your fault that the snow is cold and makes their paws all wet. It's also your fault for letting them try something new. It doesn't matter if you told them before. They still did it, had a terrible time, and now, you will pay. And revenge is a dish best served cold.

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Posted by Mariel Ruvinsky

Happyyyy meowrning, cat people! Sunday Funday is finally here, and that means that it is officially time to have. some. fun. And we don't know about you, but to cat people like us, that means a few things. It means spending our day being… cats. It means chilling as much as we want, napping whenever we feel like it, snacking every time the urge strikes us and, if something annoys us, it means smacking it right in the face. But before all of that, before we even get out of bed, we need to do one thing, and that is start our morning with some funny cat memes

It's a good thing then, that every single Funday, we bring you a brand new, fresh collection of cat memes to enjoy first thing in the morning. And these are not just any cat memes. These are the best cat memes that twitter had to offer us this week. The most viral, the funniest, the most heartwarming, we have it al right here, all to make sure that you start your Funday on the right paw. 

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Dec. 1st, 2025 09:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

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Here’s a wholesome story I learned today. My best friend has a 10-year old niece whom is big into bike riding. I’ve known her since she was 3 years old, and she’s always had a big love for the Pixar Cars movies, and cars in general, in addition to her more recent bike-riding hobby. Recently, […]

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Posted by EditorDavid

Their announcement calls it "more than a multicloud solution," saying it's "a step toward a more open cloud environment. The API specifications developed for this product are open for other providers and partners to adopt, as we aim to simplify global connectivity for everyone." Amazon and Google are introducing "a jointly developed multicloud networking service," reports Reuters. "The initiative will enable customers to establish private, high-speed links between the two companies' computing platforms in minutes instead of weeks." The new service is being unveiled a little over a month after an Amazon Web Services outage on October 20 disrupted thousands of websites worldwide, knocking offline some of the internet's most popular apps, including Snapchat and Reddit. That outage will cost U.S. companies between $500 million and $650 million in losses, according to analytics firm Parametrix. Google and Amazon are promising "high resiliency" through "quad-redundancy across physically redundant interconnect facilities and routers," with both Amazon and Google continuously watching for issues. (And they're using MACsec encryption between the Google Cloud and AWS edge routers, according to Sunday's announcement: As organizations increasingly adopt multicloud architectures, the need for interoperability between cloud service providers has never been greater. Historically, however, connecting these environments has been a challenge, forcing customers to take a complex "do-it-yourself" approach to managing global multi-layered networks at scale.... Previously, to connect cloud service providers, customers had to manually set up complex networking components including physical connections and equipment; this approach required lengthy lead times and coordinating with multiple internal and external teams. This could take weeks or even months. AWS had a vision for developing this capability as a unified specification that could be adopted by any cloud service provider, and collaborated with Google Cloud to bring it to market. Now, this new solution reimagines multicloud connectivity by moving away from physical infrastructure management toward a managed, cloud-native experience. Reuters points out that Salesforce "is among the early users of the new approach, Google Cloud said in a statement."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Drink Whisperer

Dec. 1st, 2025 08:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

Read The Drink Whisperer

One of my tables was right next to the stage, and I had an old guy there who was practically whispering to me his drink order. I asked him to repeat it and to speak up three times until I just accepted that this was as loud as this old dude's little voice box could get nowadays.

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Evil Knievel Caesar's Palace Jump

Dec. 1st, 2025 04:00 am
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Posted by John Amato

I didn't know much about Evil Knievel as a kid, but all my friends knew about the jump he made on December 31, 1967, New Year's Eve at Caesar's Palace.

I had no idea John Derek and Linda Evans were involved

Knievel, at the age of 29, used his own money to have actor/director John Derek produce a film of the Caesars jump. To keep costs low, Derek employed his then-wife Linda Evans as one of the camera operators. It was Evans who filmed the famous landing. On the morning of the jump, Knievel stopped in the casino and placed his last $100 on the blackjack table (which he lost), stopped by the bar, and had a shot of Wild Turkey, and then headed outside where he was joined by several members of the Caesars staff, as well as two showgirls.[citation needed]

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Posted by Guest Reviewer

F

Love’s Magic Spell

by Glenna Finley
August 6, 1974 · Signet
Contemporary/OtherRomance

This guest review is from Lucynka! Lucynka is a long-time lurker, who has occasionally commented under a couple different names in the past. Over the last few years, she’s become really interested in the history of the romance genre, particularly those forgotten or oft-overlooked parts. You can find her on Bluesky @lucynka.bsky.social, or else over on her WordPress, where she blogs about “obscure bullshit,” including a lot of romance pulp magazines from the 1920s-’40s.

Back again, with another pick from Heather S’s Half Price Books excursion from earlier in the year. If The Lilac Ghost caught my eye because it looked potentially good, then Love’s Magic Spell caught my eye because it looked so ludicrously bad. To refresh, here’s the cover copy:

When lovely Sara Nichols came to Louisiana to sell the family’s newly inherited plantation, Bellecourt, love was the furthest thing from her mind. But tall, handsome Piers Lamont had other plans for Sara. A notorious ladies’ man, Piers was intent on making Sara his personal property.

And wealthy, young Lee Sherman seemed equally determined to keep Sara entertained. But suddenly strange rites of voodoo magic closed in on her, and the true terrors of Bellecourt revealed themselves. It was only then that Sara knew her fate rested with one of these two men—but could she trust her heart to choose wisely…?

So yes, we have a Louisiana plantation, Voodoo, and a love interest who’s intent on making the heroine “his personal property.” This has ALL the red flags, but you know what? At this point, I’ve made my way through more than my fair share of horrendously offensive pulp stories from the early 20th century, so I figured I probably had enough defenses built up to take one for the team, wade through this pile of problematic, and pull out anything inadvertently entertaining.

I was SO READY for this book to go beyond mere “bad” and into “utterly batshit,” was SO READY to bestow that golden unicorn of Smart Bitches ratings, the elusive F+, onto it.

And to be fair, it really looked like that was how things were going to go for a while! I mean, check out the promisingly bonkers teaser:

SHE WAS BACK IN THE DARK STAIRWAY AT BELLECOURT—

Julius and his robed disciples filed up the dark stairs searching for her. She heard the sound of their relentless advancing footsteps echoing up the black corridor, the throb of the tom-tom drum, and the disturbing rattle of the calabash gourd. Desperately she tried to shut out the ominous beat, the wailing, chanting voices, but they sounded louder by the second. She had just realized there was no escape from her prison when she saw the serpent slither from the shadows toward her and she fell sobbing and screaming against the locked panel door.

“Sara…stop it!” Gentle hands were pulling her up, and Piers’s voice was talking to her.

“Piers? We have to get away…they’re coming.” She struggled to get the words out.

Strong arms pressed her against his chest. “It’s all right, Sara. Nothing will hurt you while I’m here…”

Who the hell is Julius? (Is the “Lee” of the back cover actually short for “Julius”?) If Sara is presumably locked in some sort of cell/cellar by herself, then where did Piers come from? Is the serpent a metaphor (for either sin or a penis or both)? Did Julius get a bulk discount on his disciples’ robes? So many questions!

Sadly, it’s all downhill from there, and the rating—as you can see—ended up being just a plain, old F. For (wet) fart, I like to think.

The plot, such as it is, sees young Chicagoan Sara Nichols traveling down to New Orleans to oversee the sale of Bellecourt, a plantation house that her aunt just recently inherited. Said aunt has—*ahem*—fond memories of the place, but definitely doesn’t have the money to renovate it, and can’t go herself to oversee the sale because she just broke her foot. The paperwork admittedly could be handled by mail, but for—*ahem*—sentimental reasons, Auntie still wants someone from the family to give it one last visit and send-off. Hence our intrepid heroine, and the back cover would seem to imply sinister happenings once she gets down there, and perhaps even that the property is “cursed” in some way.

Ignoring the romanticization of a plantation house and the cultural appropriation of Voodoo here (a tall order, I know, but let’s just try it for a moment), this is at least a decent structural set-up: Fish-out-of-water heroine gets caught up in a deeper, darker plot that threatens her very safety, and is unsure who—if anyone—she can trust.

The problem (one among many) is that the book never actually delivers on that front. I went charging in with all my mental armor on, ready for some offensive, exploitative Gothic Voodoo shenanigans, and instead what I got was a seemingly never-ending series of dinner dates. Or lunch dates. Or breakfasts. I kept waiting for the main plot to kick in, only to get to the end, whereupon I realized, “Oh. Oh, okay. I guess all that dinner-date bullshit was the main plot. Good to know.”

One particularly egregious part of the story sees Sara getting a very detailed, four-page walk-through of a sugarcane processing plant, apparently just so Glenna Finley can let us know she did her research. Even worse is the way the author seems to subconsciously know on some level that this is boring as fuck, because she proceeds to tease us with the sort of story we could be reading right now, had we only loved ourselves more and made better life choices:

“The filter cake goes back out to the fields where it’s used as fertilizer. The clear juice is piped on to the evaporator.” Lee led her along another catwalk for a few minutes until they came to a complex of machinery looking like a gigantic laboratory with its vats and complicated pipe connections.

“All this needs is a mad scientist running around in a long white coat stuffing the heroine into the boiling syrup,” Sara told him.

“We only let him out nights when the moon is full. Right now we’re requisitioning some vestal virgins to go in the cauldrons. If you’d like to volunteer…” he paused hopefully.

“I am sorry but I already have an appointment for the first full moon,” she said. “There’s a werewolf living in the apartment above us who plans his get-togethers ages ahead. Last month there was a sit-down orgy for twenty-four.”

Mad scientists and werewolf orgies? DON’T THREATEN ME WITH A GOOD TIME, GLENNA FINLEY. I live-blogged my reading experience over on Bluesky, and at one point, bored out of my skull, I actually demanded in exasperation, “WHEN ARE WE GOING TO GET TO THE OFFENSIVE, APPROPRIATIVE VOODOO???” Because, truly, anything would be better than this.

It takes a whole third of the book for Sara to even visit Bellecourt, at which point we finally get our first hint of Gothic shit: In an unintentionally apt bit of symbolism, the house is literally rotting from the inside out, making it physically dangerous to venture into. As such, Sara is waiting for Piers to meet her, to act as her guide in looking the place over, only she gets impatient and—like a dumbass—decides to go exploring on her own. Cue the front door blowing shut behind her, somehow trapping her in total darkness, and in an attempt to find her bearings, she reaches out and her hand touches…wait for it…something bloody on a banister! Alas, it turns out to simply be the rooster Julius—the old (white) caretaker of the place, and definitely not Lee Sherman of the cover copy—killed for his dinner.

There are precisely three instances in this book where it looks like something exciting might happen. (Not even does happen, mind you, merely might happen.) The first is the above rooster incident. The second is when…

TW for graphic animal violence

Sara finds a dead garden mole tied to her motel doorknob, with all four of its paws cut off

…which is a genuinely gruesome bit of imagery, and one that frankly deserves to be in a much better story. (RIP to you, garden mole.)

And the third instance is when Sara stumbles upon Julius’s religious support group and jumps to the wrong conclusion, and I WISH I WAS MAKING THIS UP.

But no, seriously, all the purported, sinister Voodoo shit? Turns out to be Julius just doing his thing. On the one hand I guess it’s nice that Voodoo isn’t presented as some evil cult (even if Julius is the only one who genuinely practices it, and the other characters regard him rather patronizingly for it), but on the other hand THIS IS NOT THE STORY I SIGNED UP FOR. And maybe this wouldn’t bother me so much if the rest of the novel was actually interesting in some respect. But, as stated, it isn’t.

And that promisingly bonkers teaser? In one of the most rage-inducing cases of bait-and-switch I have ever come across, it turns out to be JUST A DREAM, WTF. The reason Piers seems to appear from out of nowhere in that scene is because he’s literally waking Sara up from a nightmare.

Absolutely no one should read this book (certainly not now, and not even back in 1974, when it was published), so I’m just going to get all spoilery here and tell you that the whole “conflict” of the story boils down to nothing more than a little bit of real estate drama: Basically, Sara’s aunt has to sell, and Bellecourt’s neighbor, Colonel Sherman (father of Lee), wants to buy, to expand his sugarcane farm. Sounds pretty perfect, especially as he eventually might even be able to restore the house to its former—*ahem*—glory.

Except this is a lie, and he actually plans to resell the property to a big chemical company, who will bulldoze the house and put a factory in its place, MUAHAHAHA! To facilitate this plan, Colonel Sherman bad-mouthed Sara to Julius (who is bizarrely in love with Bellecourt, to the extent that you almost expect him to announce his marriage to the building), at which point Julius became the colonel’s unwitting lackey, planting the rooster and the mole in an attempt to frighten Sara—the idea being that she’d take care of the paperwork ASAP so she could GTFO. This retroactively means that Sara was never even in any real peril, which—if you’re familiar with the Gothic romance and/or romantic suspense subgenre(s)—is practically a heinous crime in and of itself; someone should at least be trying to kill this bitch.

On top of all that is the rampant Southern apologia and white-washing of history (I honestly lost count of the number of times the terms “servants” and “slaves” were used interchangeably, and THOSE ARE TWO VERY DIFFERENT THINGS, GLENNA FINLEY). At the end of the day, I have a hard time getting emotionally invested in the story, because I have a hard time seeing how the destruction of a plantation house—this glorified symbol of slavery—is supposed to be a tragedy. Like, idk, maybe it should be bulldozed to the ground. Or perhaps set on fire? I guess I should be glad it ends up being sold to a local historical society, with plans to turn it into a museum (you know, as opposed to a wedding venue), but considering everything else on display here, I don’t know if I trust said society to actually address its fraught history in any meaningful way.

“Okay, that’s all terrible, but what about the romance?” I hear you asking. Dear readers, it too SUCKS BALLS.

First of all, the love triangle the cover copy seems to set up is in fact one more lie, because it’s pretty clear from the get-go that Piers is the official love interest here—Lee is little more than a distraction for a couple scenes and an excuse to make Piers jealous. And how to describe Piers? HOO BOY.

We’re introduced to this Piece of Work in the first paragraph, where he’s thinking about how the local government should plant hot women on the roadsides instead of trees, and he frankly never gets any better. His and Sara’s relationship mostly consists of them snapping at each other, for reasons I never fully comprehended, because the author doesn’t seem to understand how human emotions work. Ostensibly Glenna Finley was trying to go for belligerent sexual tension here, a kind of enemies-to-lovers thing, but it completely falls flat because there is no sexual tension—just two weird, prickly assholes who are willfully determined to misunderstand each other AT EVERY SINGLE TURN, I AM NOT EVEN JOKING. Sara and Piers are EXHAUSTING. It honestly doesn’t even seem as if they like each other, and yet I’m somehow supposed to believe in their HEA?

Add to that the fact that Piers is an arrogant, insulting ass, with a habit of violently shaking Sara (and who later threatens to not only spank her so hard she “won’t be able to sit down for a week,” but who also threatens to full-on backhand her), and the so-called “romance” goes from being merely incomprehensible to outright gross. Like, there’s overbearing, old-skool romance novel heroes, and then there’s…this guy. It’s a bad sign when the biggest physical threat to your heroine turns out to be her designated love interest, yikes.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, when the third act break came, my immediate reaction was “GOOD!”—Sara’s not exactly a prize peach of a protagonist, but holy moly, she at least deserves better than Piers. Alas, the end sees her giving up her life in Chicago to be with him in Louisiana (for anyone who cares, he’s revealed to work for the previously-mentioned historical society), and we don’t even get an apology out of him—it is in fact Sara who apologizes, and then she…just pluckily resigns herself to Piers’s refusal to properly communicate, basically. It’s pretty fucking grim, made all the worse by the way the Southerner “wins over” the Northerner, as is the case in so many romance novels that—whether explicitly or implicitly—uphold the “Lost Cause” narrative:

Sara found herself clutching her purse and made an effort to relax. “Piers, are you sure your sister wants to spend all that money on Bellecourt? You’re sure she can afford it?”

“Positive. Her husband practically has a direct wire to Fort Knox. Besides, he’s almost as anxious to rebuild Bellecourt as Tessa.” Piers’ drawl became more evident. “Nothing like converting a northerner now and then to help the cause.” 

UGH. DIE IN A FIRE, PIERS. AND TAKE BELLECOURT WITH YOU.

Research indicates that Glenna Finley specialized not so much in Gothics, but in more standard romantic suspense, and she also seems to have specialized in “travelogue” romances, that allowed the reader to vicariously experience far-away places. This makes sense in hindsight, as the depiction of New Orleans culture—and especially food culture—is perhaps the only redeeming aspect of Love’s Magic Spell (though there are suspiciously no Black characters to speak of, in fucking New Orleans, save for one driver/porter, so I’m still withholding any points I might otherwise award the author here).

The other single worthwhile thing about this book is an outfit Sara wears to one of her innumerable dinner dates, that consists of a silver skirt, a magenta-and-silver striped top, and blue eyeshadow. Good god, I want it, just like I want that jacket/dress on the cover.

In other news, out of sheer, perverse curiosity, I actually read another Glenna Finley title immediately after this (1983’s Wanted For Love), just to see if all of her novels were such heinously boring clusterfucks, and to my pleasant surprise, it appears the answer is “no.” (I mean, Wanted For Love still wasn’t good—I would probably rate it a solid C, if you twisted my arm for a letter grade—but that’s still way better than an F, yeah? The romance, while still incomprehensible, at least wasn’t worrying the way it is here, and there were actual stakes at play—who knew!)

But back to Love’s Magic Spell. Do yourself a favor and never read this fucking book. And if someone you know is considering reading it, do them a favor by knocking it out of their hands.

Please, I beg of you. Don’t let my sacrifice be in vain.

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Posted by EditorDavid

After a successful November 27th launch to the International Space Station, Russia discovered an accident had occurred on their launch site's mobile maintenance cabin — when a drone spotted it lying upside down in a flame trench. "The main issue with the structure collapse is that it puts Site 31/6 — the only Russian launch site capable of launching crew and cargo to the International Space Station (ISS) — out of service until the structure is fixed," reports the space-news site NASA Spaceflight There are other Soyuz 2 rocket launch pads, but they are either located at an unsuitable latitude, like Plesetsk, or not certified for crewed flights, like Vostochny, or decommissioned and transferred to a museum, like Gagarin's Start at Baikonur. As a result, Russia is temporarily unable to launch Soyuz crewed spacecraft and Progress cargo ships to the ISS, whose nearest launch (Progress MS-33) was scheduled for December 21.... When the rocket launched, a pressure difference was created between the space under the rocket, where gases from running engines are discharged, and the nook where the [144-ton] maintenance cabin was located. The resulting pressure difference pulled the service cabin out of the nook and threw it into the flame trench, where it fell upside down from a height of 20 m. Photos of the accident showed significant damage to the maintenance cabin, which, according to experts, is too extensive to allow for repairs. The only way to resume launches from Site 31/6 is to install a spare maintenance cabin or construct a new one. Despite the fact that the fallen structure was manufactured in the 1960s, two similar service cabins were manufactured recently at the Tyazhmash heavy-engineering plant in Syzran for other Soyuz launch complexes at the Guiana Space Center and Vostochny Cosmodrome. The production of each cabin took around two years to complete, however, it was not for an emergency situation. "Various experts gave different possible estimates of the recovery time of the Site 31 launch complex: from several months to three years."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by EditorDavid

From the blog 9to5Linux: Linux kernel 6.18 is now available for download, as announced today by Linus Torvalds himself, featuring enhanced hardware support through new and updated drivers, improvements to file systems and networking, and more. Highlights of Linux 6.18 include the removal of the Bcachefs file system, support for the Rust Binder driver, a new dm-pcache device-mapper target to enable persistent memory as a cache for slower block devices, and a new microcode= command-line option to control the microcode loader's behavior on x86 platforms. Linux kernel 6.18 also extends the support for file handles to kernel namespaces, implements initial 'block size > page size' support for the Btrfs file system, adds PTW feature detection on new hardware for LoongArch KVM, and adds support for running the kernel as a guest on FreeBSD's Bhyve hypervisor.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by Bar Mor Hazut

By now, anyone who has even taken in a cat knows how much of a choice cats have in their adoption. If they do not want to be rescued or taken in, that would simply not happen. They have to want it, and often make that "first step", to ensure they are found by the purrfect hooman who can find them a furever home.

Sometimes, it's crystal clear just how much cats know they are in desperate need of a home, as they would do just about anything to find their hooman, to get the cat distribution system into action.

Take the sweet cat below as an example. It seems like this cute calico cat knew she was sick, and she knew she needed the help of a trusty hooman to get better. So, with the help of the cat distribution system, she found the perfect hooman for her cause, and simply came into their office. She then proceeded to fall asleep on top of the hooman's car, which convinced them that they must help the sweet stray with her journey to recovery.

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Posted by EditorDavid

Some AI experts were reportedly shocked ChatGPT wasn't fully tested for sycophancy by last spring. "OpenAI did not see the scale at which disturbing conversations were happening," writes the New York Times — sharing what they learned after interviewing more than 40 current and former OpenAI employees, including safety engineers, executives, and researchers. The team responsible for ChatGPT's tone had raised concerns about last spring's model (which the Times describes as "too eager to keep the conversation going and to validate the user with over-the-top language.") But they were overruled when A/B testing showed users kept coming back: Now, a company built around the concept of safe, beneficial AI faces five wrongful death lawsuits... OpenAI is now seeking the optimal setting that will attract more users without sending them spiraling. Throughout this spring and summer, ChatGPT acted as a yes-man echo chamber for some people. They came back daily, for many hours a day, with devastating consequences.... The Times has uncovered nearly 50 cases of people having mental health crises during conversations with ChatGPT. Nine were hospitalised; three died... One conclusion that OpenAI came to, as Altman put it on X, was that "for a very small percentage of users in mentally fragile states there can be serious problems." But mental health professionals interviewed by the Times say OpenAI may be understating the risk. Some of the people most vulnerable to the chatbot's unceasing validation, they say, were those prone to delusional thinking, which studies have suggested could include 5% to 15% of the population... In August, OpenAI released a new default model, called GPT-5, that was less validating and pushed back against delusional thinking. Another update in October, the company said, helped the model better identify users in distress and de-escalate the conversations. Experts agree that the new model, GPT-5, is safer.... Teams from across OpenAI worked on other new safety features: The chatbot now encourages users to take breaks during a long session. The company is also now searching for discussions of suicide and self-harm, and parents can get alerts if their children indicate plans to harm themselves. The company says age verification is coming in December, with plans to provide a more restrictive model to teenagers. After the release of GPT-5 in August, [OpenAI safety systems chief Johannes] Heidecke's team analysed a statistical sample of conversations and found that 0.07% of users, which would be equivalent to 560,000 people, showed possible signs of psychosis or mania, and 0.15% showed "potentially heightened levels of emotional attachment to ChatGPT," according to a company blog post. But some users were unhappy with this new, safer model. They said it was colder, and they felt as if they had lost a friend. By mid-October, Altman was ready to accommodate them. In a social media post, he said that the company had been able to "mitigate the serious mental health issues." That meant ChatGPT could be a friend again. Customers can now choose its personality, including "candid," "quirky," or "friendly." Adult users will soon be able to have erotic conversations, lifting the Replika-era ban on adult content. (How erotica might affect users' well-being, the company said, is a question that will be posed to a newly formed council of outside experts on mental health and human-computer interaction.) OpenAI is letting users take control of the dial and hopes that will keep them coming back. That metric still matters, maybe more than ever. In October, [30-year-old "Head of ChatGPT" Nick] Turley, who runs ChatGPT, made an urgent announcement to all employees. He declared a "Code Orange." OpenAI was facing "the greatest competitive pressure we've ever seen," he wrote, according to four employees with access to OpenAI's Slack. The new, safer version of the chatbot wasn't connecting with users, he said. The message linked to a memo with goals. One of them was to increase daily active users by 5% by the end of the year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by Rob Beschizza

The Maclock is a clock that looks like a Mac—an old Mac. The monochrome LCD display has three modes (the time, the date, and Susan Kare's famous "Happy Apple" pixel art face. It's only 11cm (4.3 inches) tall and doesn't do anything else, but it's only $29.99 and has a battery which lets it run for 60 days away from a power supply. — Read the rest

The post Maclock is a clock that looks like an original Macintosh appeared first on Boing Boing.

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