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Posted by SB Sarah

It’s time for another edition of Stuff We Like, and our 2025 Holiday Gift Guides!

This week: gifts for all the book-loving folks in your life, and also possibly for you.

Take a look:

Stuff We Like: Gifts for Bookish Folks. - with a picture of a book club ornament surrounded by tiny books, fountain pen nib earrings, and coasters that look like library cards

Want to see? Just click that image above or click right here, and come shop with us!

Remember, if you have requests for your holiday shopping, please let us know! 

And if you’d like to browse some more, we have a complete Stuff We Like archive, including past Gift Guides and other posts of our favorite items.

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Posted by Elna McHilderson

Meow, meow, meow, don't mess with us cat people, we are in cozy cuddly cat mode until spring time. That's right, winter is for rest and us cat people take that very seriously. Why? Because our feline friends sleep over 16 hours a day and they take that very seriously, so we do also. Plus, it is really cold out and our furry little friend is very warm and soft. So, along with a big cozy blanket, maybe a nice scented candle burning, and a feel-good movie on the TV, it's time to cuddle up with your cat and have the most elite season ever. 

 

Did you know that some cats can see your phone screen and they enjoy to watch videos of birds on it. You should probably follow some bird watcher accounts or donate to the Audubon Society for your cats sake. That way you can scroll while also giving your cat a good brainrot hour or two. You can go back and forth between the memes below and some cute tweety bird in the wild giving your cat a run for the money or whatever PURRency it is they use… Ha! See what I did there? Funny stuff, let's keep the laughs going with your feline pet. 

Randy Rainbow Takes On RFK Jr!

Dec. 3rd, 2025 04:00 am
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Posted by Frances Langum

[Editor's Note: Video above starts with a sponsorship ad, the music starts at the 2:42 mark.]

Randy Rainbow is back, this time with a take-off on the most popular musical number from "Cabaret."

AND it's all about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. In the video, Rainbow makes fun of Kennedy's claim that taking Tylenol while pregnant can cause autism.

In the video, Rainbow dresses up like a nightclub host and sings his own version of the famous "Cabaret" song:

What good is listening to logic and proof?
Throw all those facts away.
Science and safety are just a hoax.
Listen to RFK!

Open thread below...

read more

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Posted by Jesse Kessenheimer

Cats are the purrfect peanut gallery. Whether they're on their hooman's life decisions or begging for a 3rd round of dinner, their incessant mewing is more than just a mere vocalization, but a heroic hooman summoning technique. 

Kitty meows are like music to our ears, and we can't deny it. 

A gamer was deep into a campaign of an online game, and as many gamers know, there's no pausing an online game. However, the blue-eyed white kitten outside insisted otherwise. "Take a paws!" he called from the backyard, hoping the gamer would notice. And after a few noisy meowments, the kitten was spotted. 

From that moment on, the man knew his life was furever changed, because while his team was decimated in an online game and curses were hurled in the lobby, a cuddly kitten purred on his lap and that was more valuable than any loot, any jackpot, or any high score a gaming cat lover could ever hope to win. Alas, despite losing his video game, he won the Cat Distribution System grand prize, an adorable kitten devoted to meowing, whisker kisses, and a lifetime of head nudges. 

(no subject)

Dec. 3rd, 2025 05:29 am
[syndicated profile] apod_feed

What's happening in the center of nearby spiral galaxy M77? What's happening in the center of nearby spiral galaxy M77?


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Posted by BeauHD

Anthropic has made its first acquisition by buying Bun, the engine behind its fast-growing Claude Code agent. The move strengthens Anthropic's push into enterprise developer tooling as it scales Claude Code with major backers like Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, and Google. Adweek reports: Claude Code is a coding agent that lets developers write, debug and interpret code through natural-language instructions. Claude Code had already hit $1 billion in revenue six months since its public debut in May, according to a LinkedIn post from Anthropic's chief product officer, Mike Krieger. The coding agent continues to barrel toward scale with customers like Netflix, Spotify, and Salesforce. Further reading: Meet Bun, a Speedy New JavaScript Runtime

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Formula For Kindness

Dec. 3rd, 2025 04:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

Read The Formula For Kindness

We have a few coupons because my son needed to be on some specialized formula, which was expensive, so any money we could save would help. It had been a long week, and this particular day was a day when it felt like nothing was going right.

Read The Formula For Kindness

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Posted by BeauHD

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: The San Francisco city attorney filed on Tuesday the nation's first government lawsuit against food manufacturers over ultraprocessed fare (source may be paywalled; alternative source), arguing that cities and counties have been burdened with the costs of treating diseases that stem from the companies' products. David Chiu, the city attorney, sued 10 corporations that make some of the country's most popular food and drinks. Ultraprocessed products now comprise 70 percent of the American food supply and fill grocery store shelves with a kaleidoscope of colorful packages. Think Slim Jim meat sticks and Cool Ranch Doritos. But also aisles of breads, sauces and granola bars marketed as natural or healthy. It is a rare issue on which the liberal leaders in San Francisco City Hall are fully aligned with the Trump administration, which has targeted ultraprocessed foods as part of its Make America Healthy Again mantra. Mr. Chiu's lawsuit, which was filed in San Francisco Superior Court on behalf of the State of California, seeks unspecified damages for the costs that local governments bear for treating residents whose health has been harmed by ultraprocessed food. The city accuses the companies of "unfair and deceptive acts" in how they market and sell their foods, arguing that such practices violate the state's Unfair Competition Law and public nuisance statute. The city also argues the companies knew that their food made people sick but sold it anyway.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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How do you win an election, yet still lose the night? 

While votes are still being counted, Republicans have held on to their House seat in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District by a ridiculously slim margin—single digits. This is a district Donald Trump carried 60–38 in 2024. 

FILE - This combination image shows Aftyn Behn, left, Nov. 13, 2025, Nashville, Tenn. and Matt Van Epps, Nov. 12, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV, file)
Democrat Aftyn Behn and Republican Matt Van Epps on the campaign trail ahead of the Dec. 2 special election in Tennessee.

The result isn’t just surprising. It’s ominous.

This race was never about flipping the seat. That remained the longest of long shots. What mattered was the margin. Republicans needed a comfortable win to project strength and momentum heading into next year’s midterms. A mid-teens result would’ve been a flashing yellow light. A Democratic victory would’ve signaled an outright political cataclysm. That didn’t happen, but a single-digit result is something far more threatening. It’s full-throttle DANGER DANGER Will Robinson territory.

While the final tally isn’t yet locked in, Democrats appear to have outperformed Trump’s 2024 margin by roughly 15 points. A swing of that magnitude puts a bullseye on dozens of Republican seats long considered safe in any normal political climate.

But these aren’t normal times.

A shift this large doesn’t just jeopardize the Republican House majority. It puts the U.S. Senate back in play and casts serious doubt on any remaining GOP redistricting ambitions in states like Indiana and Florida. No Republican incumbent—no matter how safe—will want to dilute their partisan advantage with numbers like these hanging overhead. Texas Republicans should be praying that the Supreme Court steps in and tosses out their maps for them.


Related | Trump rushes to rescue GOP in surprisingly tight special election


There’s no sugarcoating what this means. Vulnerable Republican incumbents have already been tiptoeing away from Trump, and that instinct will only intensify. It’s no coincidence he didn’t physically campaign in this district. Polling showed him underwater—47–49%—in a place that should be a fortress of red support.

Buckle up. 

The next few months are going to get very interesting, especially if angry and demoralized Republicans start heading for the exits early, as one anonymous senior House Republican recently predicted would happen.

The Pub at the End of the University

Dec. 3rd, 2025 02:46 am
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Posted by Hannah Forsyth

I heard a rumour that London IT professionals have selected the pub where they will meet when the internet goes down.

It is apocalyptic thinking, perhaps, but it also feels plausible. Though the internet feels permanent, stable and sufficiently distributed to seem impervious to target, this infrastructure that underpins our daily work and life is strikingly vulnerable. Undersea cables get damaged; phone and cable systems go down; and software is frequently corrupted or hacked.

A backup plan is sensible. It matters because they might be the only ones who know how to rebuild the internet – and they need a way to contact one another.

Perhaps we also need a pub at the end of the university?

Image: I asked ChatGPT to create a picture of scholars in a pub during the apocalypse. I see chatty didn’t think there would be any women.

The End of the University?

I don’t seriously believe that the university will end any time soon. Though I do think that they have been very seriously weakened and are not presently up to the tasks that confront higher education now, which might almost amount the same thing.

Coming home to roost in universities around the world are the consequences of unbearable austerity, especially in relation to teaching, matched only by unforgivable profligacy by (and for the benefit of) a managerial class. Under their watch, and following two decades of unprecedented and exponential enrolment growth, some universities are at risk of bankruptcy, while others are cutting staff at a rate that bears no resemblance to any decline in the importance of university teaching or research. I hear that 15,000 academics have lost their jobs in the UK, just this year.

Things in universities are not great in other ways, either. Study is burdensome rather than enlivening. Teaching is performed under conditions that make it impossible. Research is measured in ways that interfere with its direction and undermine its pleasures. Management, sometimes but not only in response to governments trying to ensure management are doing what they were paid for, in turn impose so many compliance and performance measures on teachers, researchers and professional staff that it is getting hard to get much done at all.

Sustained attacks from the far right, who fear places where young people might be exposed to ideas that threaten their narrow, nasty world view, have destabilised the possibilities for a tertiary system that seeks a more equal, more inclusive world. Their alignment with powerful capitalist interests is obvious in 2025: and so too is university management’s, every time they relinquish ground.

This means that at the very moment that environmental catastrophe, energy transitions, and threats to the discernment of truth (via multiple vectors: AI, geopolitical, social media-radicalism, conspiracy-theory populism, incel and cooker self-promotion) let alone massive industry demands for the skills universities produce (yes in HASS too), these glorious and flawed institutions are sadly crippled.

The Work is Amazing

And yet, amazing work is still being produced. You really see it working for government. Lots of applied and theoretical work on nearly every issue emanates from universities. It is incredibly useful. Want to know about the economics or logistics issues related to the housing crisis? The cost of living crisis? Want to understand the teaching shortage? Need a philosophical framework for men performing care work? Want to consider the value of emotional labour? Concerned about the current state of democracy? Need ideas for reforming…pretty much anything, really? It is all there, though the system is clearly teetering, students may not be learning – or worse, having any fun – and the best intellectual talent is being pushed out. 15,000+, good lord.

Universities provide the fundamental infrastructure for decision-making in industry and government. And they provide the tools for bolstering democracy – indeed, this was what the systems we have inherited from the post-war moment were largely for. They are precious and amazing places, and being able to do that work is a gift – if you can get it done under excessive managerial surveillance, which fundamentally inhibits creativity.

It is great to do this in a university because good thinking, like most good work, is best done with other people. It is all very well for me to read, take notes, listen to podcasts and write my ideas. But those ideas are so much better when I also talk about them over drinks, in seminars and conferences, or in the corridor. This is also why for decades universities kept class sizes small enough to ensure all these new and emerging thinkers had opportunity to talk, listen, debate and (re)consider what they thought they knew. It is just not possible for all 30 (or 60!) members of a tutorial to speak, so we know that few get that experience any more.

It is a particularly tragic loss when academic staff are pushed out of the spaces where this work happens. Every one of the approximately 15,000 lost academics in the UK was producing work, teaching students, and engaging with the industries and communities that inspired or will use their work. But now they are not. We mourn their loss.

The message as always is that it is not your fault. It was (mis)management. And management has to go, not the academic and professional staff doing the work.

We don’t need them. But we do need you.

Academia and Identity

 

This is a problem for those whose identities are fundamentally entangled with higher education. Many academics feel singularly unequipped for any other job (I don’t believe this is true, but it certainly feels that way for many). More, they trained so hard, for so long, sacrificed so many things and loved their work so deeply that the grief associated with losing a place in the academy seems unbearable.

This was partly why management and their metrics can wield fear like a sniper on the roof. Fear inhibits good work, but it also increases managerial power. I can hardly express how wonderful it is to shed it.

It was much harder, however, to relinquish my identity as an academic. That is still a work in progress, truthfully.

It is hard to leave a cult.

But also. Academia is a cult

A thousand subliminal messages tell us that good scholarship and hierarchical academic esteem are co-dependent. RF Kuang’s Katabasis captures it well. The main characters are prepared to relinquish half of the days they have left to live for a shot at academia. They regularly say they would ‘rather die’ than leave the university. Being and feeling included in the ‘life of the mind’, she has her characters observe, requires an academic job (IRL conversations people in my world just refer to it as ‘a job’ as if it is the only kind).

“Oh, he took a job in industry”, they would say, as if “industry” here was a euphemism like a farm for old sick dogs. And they said it with a kind, patronizing lilt that betrayed what they truly meant: alt academia meant failure.

Image from RF Kuang’s Katabasis including above quote.

To be frank, this is bullshit.

An upside is that fewer people ask you to complete the worst of the academic chores.4

I hope in time that scholars in and out of the system see that good scholars and intellectuals – 15,000+ in the UK alone – may work outside of the university, but are still colleagues in every other sense.5

Indeed, given the state of the world, it might actually be transformative to have such high quality, well-trained thinkers becoming embedded in a wider range of workplaces and communities – without losing engagement with their scholarly colleagues and disciplinary organisations (unless they choose that ofc). And that work will in turn inform and transform scholarship in valuable ways.

We should fix universities, of course. To do that we mostly need the managerial class to get out of the way. They are not keen on losing this power and some are even talking about taking a pay cut so they can stay in control.6

The pub at the end of the university

More importantly, the weakened state of the universities surely compels us to consider what might be our ‘pub’ where we meet to rebuild intellectual life as the university goes down.

Even though the university won’t exactly ‘go down’ in the way the internet might, it just may not be in a good position to face the challenges this emerging phase of f*cking capitalism looks likely to throw at us.

At the pub at the end of the university, away from managerial surveillance and control, we might really start to build something that is democratic in purpose and structure – actively inclusive, boldly truthful and protective of democratic systems, engaged with people, communities and workplaces in ways that are creative and enlivening. Transforming and rebuilding the world with ideas.

 

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Posted by BeauHD

A Waymo robotaxi struck a small unleashed dog in San Francisco -- just weeks after another Waymo killed a beloved neighborhood cat. The dog's condition is unknown. The Los Angeles Times reports: The incident occurred near the intersection of Scott and Eddy streets and drew a small crowd, according to social media posts. A person claiming to be one of the passengers posted about the accident on Reddit. "Our Waymo just ran over a dog," the passenger wrote. "Kids saw the whole thing." The passenger described the dog as between 20 and 30 pounds and wrote that their family was traveling back home after a holiday tree lighting event. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has recorded Waymo taxis as being involved in at least 14 animal collisions since 2021. "Unfortunately, a Waymo vehicle made contact with a small, unleashed dog in the roadway," a company spokesperson said. "We are dedicated to learning from this situation and how we show up for our community as we continue improving road safety in the cities we serve." The spokesperson added that Waymo vehicles have a much lower rate of injury-causing collisions than human drivers. Human drivers run into millions of animals while driving each year. "I'm not sure a human driver would have avoided the dog either, though I do know that a human would have responded differently to a 'bump' followed by a car full of screaming people," the Waymo passenger wrote on Reddit. One person who commented on the discussion said that Waymo vehicles should be held to a higher standard than human drivers, because the autonomous taxis are supposed to improve road safety. "The whole point of this is because Waymo isn't supposed to make those mistakes," the person wrote on Reddit.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by Sarah Brown

Snow days turn many cats into tiny winter adventurers. The moment they step outside, the whole yard becomes a playground covered in soft, fluffy white. Some cats immediately start pouncing through the snow like it's a giant blanket made just for them. Others hop around in funny little jumps, leaving scattered pawprints that look like a secret trail. A few even try to chase falling flakes, batting at the air as if they're catching sparkles.

The boldest cats dive right in, burying their faces in snow piles or rolling onto their backs as if testing out a brand-new kind of bed. Even the more cautious ones end up trotting around with wide eyes, tails up, clearly impressed with how different everything looks. Their whiskers dusted with snow, their fur sprinkled with little flakes, they look like they're starring in their own winter movie.

After all the outdoor excitement, most cats head back inside for warmth, shaking off snowy paws before settling somewhere cozy. A snow day ends just the way a cat would want it: a little adventure, a lot of play, and then a well-earned nap by the window while the world outside stays frosty

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Posted by Mark Frauenfelder

arda savasciogullari/shutterstock.com

Noah Smith, an economist-turned-blogger who writes the Noahpinion newsletter, wrote an essay titled, "I love AI. Why doesn't everyone?"

Fast forward a few decades, and I actually have that little robot friend I always dreamed of. It's not exactly like any of the AI portrayals from sci-fi, but it's recognizably similar.

Read the rest

The post People get mad at writer who "loves AI" appeared first on Boing Boing.

Putting The ‘Fun’ Into Refund

Dec. 3rd, 2025 02:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

Read Putting The ‘Fun’ Into Refund

Customer: "I'm NOT moving until you refund it."
Clerk: "Very well, I get paid by the hour, and unless you plan to stand here longer than—" *Checks clock.* "—five hours, I don't really mind. Actually, it would mean I have to stay here and can't work somewhere else so... thank you?"

Read Putting The ‘Fun’ Into Refund

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Posted by BeauHD

During last month's KubeCon North America in Atlanta, Kubernetes maintainers announced the upcoming retirement of Ingress NGINX. "Best-effort maintenance will continue until March 2026," noted the Kubernetes SIG Network and the Security Response Committee. "Afterward, there will be no further releases, no bugfixes, and no updates to resolve any security vulnerabilities that may be discovered." In a recent op-ed for The Register, Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols reflects on the decision and speculates about what might have prevented this outcome: Ingress NGINX, for those who don't know it, is an ingress controller in Kubernetes clusters that manages and routes external HTTP and HTTPS traffic to the cluster's internal services based on configurable Ingress rules. It acts as a reverse proxy, ensuring that requests from clients outside the cluster are forwarded to the correct backend services within the cluster according to path, domain, and TLS configuration. As such, it's vital for network traffic management and load balancing. You know, the important stuff. Now this longstanding project, once celebrated for its flexibility and breadth of features, will soon be "abandonware." So what? After all, it won't be the first time a once-popular program shuffled off the stage. Off the top of my head, dBase, Lotus 1-2-3, and VisiCalc spring to my mind. What's different is that there are still thousands of Ingress NGINX controllers in use. Why is it being put down, then, if it's so popular? Well, there is a good reason. As Tabitha Sable, a staff engineer at Datadog who is also co-chair of the Kubernetes special interest group for security, pointed out: "Ingress NGINX has always struggled with insufficient or barely sufficient maintainership. For years, the project has had only one or two people doing development work, on their own time, after work hours, and on weekends. Last year, the Ingress NGINX maintainers announced their plans to wind down Ingress NGINX and develop a replacement controller together with the Gateway API community. Unfortunately, even that announcement failed to generate additional interest in helping maintain Ingress NGINX or develop InGate to replace it." [...] The final nail in the coffin was when security company Wix found a killer Ingress NGINX security hole. How bad was it? Wix declared: "Exploiting this flaw allows an attacker to execute arbitrary code and access all cluster secrets across namespaces, which could lead to complete cluster takeover." [...] You see, the real problem isn't that Ingress NGINX has a major security problem. Heck, hardly a month goes by without another stop-the-presses Windows bug being uncovered. No, the real issue is that here we have yet another example of a mission-critical open source program no one pays to support...

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by Boing Boing's Shop

Headway Premium

TL;DR: Grab a lifetime Headway subscription for just $39.99 with code SUMMARY20.

Nothing beats sitting down with a real book for some good ol' brain nourishment — but between work, life, and trying to figure out why your phone battery drops 20% every other scroll, finishing full books isn't always happening. — Read the rest

The post Get smarter in 15 minutes a day with this $39.99 Headway deal appeared first on Boing Boing.

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Posted by Boing Boing's Shop

Drime Secure Cloud Storage

TL;DR: Get 2TB of lifetime Drime Secure Cloud Storage for $149.99, complete with AES-256 encryption, real-time syncing, advanced sharing tools, and access across all devices.

It's one thing to tolerate a messy desktop or a graveyard of random folders — but it's another to live without backups. — Read the rest

The post Back up everything forever for less than $150 appeared first on Boing Boing.

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