Early Humans

Jan. 4th, 2026 03:03 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This ancient fossil could rewrite the story of human origins

A seven-million-year-old fossil may rewrite human origins, showing our ancestors were walking upright far earlier than anyone expected.

Scientists may have cracked the case of whether a seven-million-year-old fossil could walk upright. A new study found strong anatomical evidence that Sahelanthropus tchadensis was bipedal, including a ligament attachment seen only in human ancestors. Despite its ape-like appearance and small brain, its leg and hip structure suggest it moved confidently on two legs. The finding places bipedalism near the very root of the human family tree
.


This makes sense given how many primates are capable of walking on two legs and do so whenever it offers them an advantage. With the potential already there, all it would take is an environment where bipedalism worked better than other methods -- like Africa's growing savannas.

Birdfeeding

Jan. 4th, 2026 02:32 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is mostly cloudy and cool.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a large flock of sparrows and a starling.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 1/4/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 1/4/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 1/4/26 -- We did a round of fridge-cleaning.

EDIT 1/4/26 -- I started raking around the firepit, and got about a quarter of the way around.  The plastic leaf rake does slightly better with leaves than in the parking lot with leaves and sticks, but still not as good as a metal rake.

EDIT 1/4/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 1/4/26 -- I spotted the tail end of a very pretty sunset, so I grabbed my camera and shot a few pictures.  :D  It is 4:58 now and nearly dark.

I am done for the night.

A Short Comment About Generative AI

Jan. 4th, 2026 07:36 pm
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by SB Sarah

In today’s Get Rec’d post, we featured Stars Die by Jenny Schwartz, which is part of a series that many readers, including folks in our community, enjoyed very much.

Unfortunately, we were alerted in the comments that the cover is AI-generated.

I downloaded the cover and ran it through several different scanners. The result: +98% likely it was AI-generated. The cover art is credited to Canva, which offers generative AI to users.

I really dislike generative AI. It stole from me: I’m part of the Anthropic settlement. I also know that gen-AI has scraped the entire website and used it for training. I will receive no compensation for that theft of twenty years of my work. I hate that the Google AI at the top of a search will used the scraped content as a summary, and prevent users from clicking through to discover more, thereby harming my ability to stay in business.

I hate that generative AI harms writers and artists. I hate that it pollutes entire neighborhoods, disproportionately affecting Black communities.

I hate that it destroys our water supply, and sucks up energy and the elements we need to survive in order to provide sub-standard information and images.

I’ve already written about the proliferation of AI-narrators and allegedly AI-written books and the number of titles bought unknowingly by librarians, many of whom would much rather spend their limited budgets on titles written by humans. And I know that more works generated by AI are coming. There is very, very little I can do about it.

Except I can do this: going forward, upon confirmation of AI-generated content, I will remove the buy links and copy copy for any AI-generated book in our database. I will replace AI-generated cover art in our database with an alert that the cover was AI-generated, and that image will accompany the book listing.

I will also replace the cover copy with the following:

The cover copy and buy links for this title have been removed due to the cover being AI-generated art. We do not knowingly promote generative AI material, written or visual, because of the loss of jobs for artists and writers, the toll on local communities and the environment we share, and the predatory theft of copyright materials to fuel and train generative AI models.

We are also humans, and sometimes we don’t catch when something is AI. Thank you for alerting us; this notice will remain to inform others who also want to avoid generative AI books and art.

Here is what that looks like in practice: 

A screenshot of our Book Info pages that has an image of the cover with a NO AI icon over top of it. The text reads Stars Die SBTB's Genres for this Title: Mystery/Thriller, Science Fiction/Fantasy Stars Die is an AI Generated image of a building and atop is a red NO sign with AI in the middle Summary: The cover copy and buy links for this title have been removed due to the cover being AI-generated art. We do not knowingly promote generative AI material, written or visual, because of the loss of jobs for artists and writers, the toll on local communities and the environment we share, and the predatory theft of copyright materials to fuel and train generative AI models. We are also humans, and sometimes we don’t catch when something is AI. Thank you for alerting us; this notice will remain to inform others who also want to avoid generative AI books and art. Stars Die by Jenny Schwartz is available from: As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. We also may use affiliate links in our posts, as well. Thanks! Stars Die SBTB's Genres for this Title: Mystery/Thriller, Science Fiction/Fantasy Stars Die is an AI Generated image of a building and atop is a red NO sign with AI in the middle Summary: The cover copy and buy links for this title have been removed due to the cover being AI-generated art. We do not knowingly promote generative AI material, written or visual, because of the loss of jobs for artists and writers, the toll on local communities and the environment we share, and the predatory theft of copyright materials to fuel and train generative AI models. We are also humans, and sometimes we don’t catch when something is AI. Thank you for alerting us; this notice will remain to inform others who also want to avoid generative AI books and art. Stars Die by Jenny Schwartz is available from: As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. We also may use affiliate links in our posts, as well. Thanks! Summary: The cover copy and buy links for this title have been removed due to the cover being AI-generated art. We do not knowingly promote generative AI material, written or visual, because of the loss of jobs for artists and writers, the toll on local communities and the environment we share, and the predatory theft of copyright materials to fuel and train generative AI models. We are also humans, and sometimes we don’t catch when something is AI. Thank you for alerting us; this notice will remain to inform others who also want to avoid generative AI books and art.

That new listing for the book will also appear on the original post, such as in today’s Get Rec’d.

This isn’t fun. I don’t enjoy this, to be clear. This sucks in at least six different ways. As I mentioned, members of the community have enjoyed the series! And we’re literally actually factually in the business of helping people find books they will like.

And I don’t know much about this book except that the cover is 98% likely to be generative AI. Is the book itself generative-AI-written? I have no idea. Can I determine that? Probably I can, but I’m not interested in buying and scanning the book and using my time in that manner.

If the cover is generative AI, that is all I need to know. I don’t want to promote or profit from any work with generative AI on the front or inside.

And, yes, because we’re humans (really truly humans! ask me about my anxiety!) we don’t always catch the gen-AI materials. I’m not great at it; I’m better than I used to be, but I’m not as skilled as other people are.

This is our stance and our response to works produced by generative AI. And this is what we’re going to do going forward here in this little corner of vintage internet run by humans (hi!).

 

(no subject)

Jan. 4th, 2026 11:35 am
greghousesgf: (pic#17096873)
[personal profile] greghousesgf
Yesterday a couple of unexpected things happened. I saw a giant rainbow outside my window in the afternoon and a friend showed up at my place without calling first in the evening so we went out for drinks and dinner at the bar across the street.
neonvincent: Spider Jerusalem blogging on a taxi hood with a dagger in his mouth. (Spider Jerusalem)
[personal profile] neonvincent
Crazy Eddie's Motie News earned 141,204 page views and 6 comments on 31 posts during the 31 days of December 2025, the fifth most during the history of the blog.

Most read, commented on/replied to, shared, and liked/reacted to posts of last month behind the cut. )

(no subject)

Jan. 4th, 2026 01:08 pm
stonepicnicking_okapi: namjin (namjin)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi posting in [community profile] sweetandshort
Title: Just ramen
Rating: Gen
Fandom: BTS
Characters/Pairing: RM/Jin
Prompt: loser
Notes: also for [community profile] emotion100 prompt 47: adoration.
Summary: Jin applies first aid.

Read more... )

475: Biggles: Gen

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:47 pm
stonepicnicking_okapi: bookshelf (bookshelf)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi posting in [community profile] 100words
Title: Just like threading a needle
Fandom: Biggles - WE Johns
Rating: Gen
Notes: Biggles & Algy have a close call.

Read more... )

[10 out of 20] BTS: OMG: Gen

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:30 pm
stonepicnicking_okapi: namjin (namjin)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi posting in [community profile] sweetandshort
Title: Hot Snow-coa
Fandom: BTS
Pairing: RM/Jin
Notes: Air B&B AU, meet-cute, inspired by snowman PEEPS
Prompt: OMG
Length: 300
Summary: Air B&B host Jin thinks his new guest RM has cancelled without notice because of a snowstorm.

Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: Sherlock Holmes (holmes)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi posting in [community profile] sweetandshort
Title: A forever home for Remy
Fandom: Sherlock Holmes (ACD) - Retirement - Sussex AU
Rating: Gen
Length: 200
Characters: Holmes & Watson
Prompt: alone
Summary: A solved case leads to an unexpected prospect.

Paging one_raido

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:00 pm
mrs_sweetpeach: (Default)
[personal profile] mrs_sweetpeach
Click here )

Apple Weather

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:48 pm
soemand: (Default)
[personal profile] soemand
I really like Apple Weather's information display — it doesn't speak of "records" but the normal variation of the variable at hand.

Temperature graph showing the normal range of temperatures, and todays temperature being below that.

For example, the temperature graph above shows the current conditions are lower than the expected temperatures for today. I can testify it is cold out there — and the information is presented in such a way to be actionable. Aka, its colder than you probably are expecting.

For Your Health

Jan. 4th, 2026 11:21 am
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I have some health-related goals for 2026, which include walking more and eating better, and so I thought, what better way to start down that path than by reviving my health-related community, [community profile] for_your_health?!!

If you're already a member, please come back and join me!! If you'd like to become a member, please let me know.

Sunday Sweets For Roy G. Biv

Jan. 4th, 2026 02:00 pm
[syndicated profile] cakewrecks_feed

Posted by Jen

I don't know if you've noticed lately, but the sun is kind of awesome.

(By The Cupcake Lady)

 

It gives off all this bright, pure light - but refract that light though a prism, like a crystal...

(By Ron Ben-Israel Cakes)

 

...and you get magic.

(By Yuma Couture Cakes)

That's right, it's our old friend, Roy G. Biv!

 

Red like rubies:

(By Antonella Di Maria Torte & Design)

 

Orange like... um... oranges:

(By CakeCentral member Nunuk)

 

The always cheerful Yellow:

(By Wild Orchid Baking Company)

 

And a Green to make you green with envy:

(By Couture Cakes by Rose)

 

With Sweets like this, you could never be Blue

(By Sweet Disposition Cakes)

 

Even if you never hear much about Indigo these days:

(By Elizabeth Hodes

 

Because here on Sunday Sweets, even a blushing Violet can steal the show:

(By Ruelo Patisserie)

 

So here's to the sun, for giving us rainbows:

(By Zucchero Magie)

 

And here's to rainbows, for making our lives just a little more magical: 

(By Design Cakes)

Happy Sunday and Happy New Year!!!

*****

I used this 84-pc set to make a rainbow butterfly wreath for John's room, and I know you crafters are gonna love them:

(3D Butterfly Wall Magnet Set)

They're double-sided and come with both magnets and stickers. Definitely browse the projects in the reviews, there are so many pretty ideas!

******

And from my other blog, Epbot:

The frost roads

Jan. 4th, 2026 02:39 pm
dolorosa_12: (winter pine branches)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
It's Sunday afternoon, and I've got one more day of holiday tomorrow before heading back to work on Tuesday. It's been a good, restful, and much-needed break, and I'm hopeful that the aftereffects will remain for some time once everyday life resumes. (I'm resolutely trying to redirect my mind every time it contemplates global politics, because the panic spirals are intense.)

This weekend has in many ways been one in which I gradually reset myself to standard weekend routines: two hours at the gym yesterday (after a month without attending either of my classes due to illness and then Christmas holiday closures; my legs hurt), trundling around the market with Matthias to get the week's fruit, vegetables, and other groceries, 1km in the pool this morning. I've kept up swimming and daily yoga pretty much throughout the entire holiday, so apart from the absolute arctic temperatures when walking to and from the pool, that wasn't too much of a shock to the system.

Last night Matthias and I watched our first film of the year, Wake Up Dead Man, the latest Benoit Blanc mystery. As with the previous two, this one is tropey good fun, stealing gleefully from just about every famous locked room mystery, and involving the murder of a truly unpleasant Catholic priest in a small American town. If anything, the skewering of contemporary US politics is even more blunt than in previous films in the series, but given — with the mystery solved, and everything revealed — the various unpleasant avatars of the far-right malaise get their well-deserved comeuppance, I was quite happy for this element to be front and centre. I felt as if Daniel Craig wasn't quite as invested in this third outing, so I wonder if it might be the last, but still found it enjoyable enough.

This year's reading is off to a good start. I deliberately saved Murder in the Trembling Lands, the twenty-first (!) book in Barbara Hambly's Benjamin January series of historical mysteries so that it would be the first book of the new year, and I'm glad that I did so. If you've not picked up this series by now (or lost interest at an earlier stage), there's not much here that will convince you to change your mind, but if you love it as much as I do, you'll find all the familiar elements present and correct: the great sense of place in Hambly's evocation of 1840s New Orleans, the complex network of relationships in Ben's family both by blood and by choice, the tenacity with which Ben and his besieged community of free Black residents of the city try to build and preserve and sustain their lives of fragile safety in the face of all the individual and systemic pressures trying to overwhelm them, a mystery that takes us back into buried secrets of Ben's, and other characters' pasts that refuse to remain buried and threaten to bubble up to destroy them, etc. In other words, a solid contribution to what is now a sprawling series — but one to which I am always happy to return.

I followed that up with a slender little book, The Wax Child (Olga Ravn, translated from the Danish by Martin Aitken), which is a lush, lyrical, almost dreamlike account of a horrific series of witch trials in Denmark in the seventeenth century. The writing is powerful and lush, interweaving the unfolding catastrophe rushing towards the accused women with excerpts from contemporary Danish books of witchcraft.

That's it in terms of reading and viewing for now (except to say that if you have access to the BBC, I highly recommend David Attenborough's latest documentary, which is a single, hour-long episode focused on the urban life of animals in London — with some surprising creatures and moments!). I've filled a few prompts for [community profile] fandomtrees, I've caught up on both Dreamwidth and AO3 Yuletide comments, and I'm going to try to keep the remaining day-and-a-half of holidays slow and gentle. We're getting takeaway tonight, and will spend the evening vegetating in front of the TV. Tomorrow, I might wander into town to visit the public library, and then take the Christmas decorations down, and then the year will start to rush on, unfolding in front of me.

Et in Arcadia ego

Jan. 4th, 2026 09:13 am
troisoiseaux: (reading 2)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Read Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, which I've always vaguely intended to get around to reading and finally decided it was time, for obvious reasons, at the end of November, although clearly other people had the same idea, so it was on hold until now. Split between the early 1800s and the "present day" (circa 1993) at the same Derbyshire country manor, it's all tennis-volley wit and sly double meanings and then the narrative pieces start to click together and I was like, ah, this is a play about the way the past can be reconstructed, or misconstrued, from its surviving details - ... ) - and it is about that, but also, ultimately, it is an extremely compelling play about math. I love Stoppard's stage directions, which have such an eye for detail, sometimes ones that the audience won't even see (e.g., describing the inside of a book that there's really no practical way for an audience to see), and/or somehow both specific and open-ended that it's evocative of a given vibe that, as a reader, I can picture so clearly—
Gus doesn't speak. He never speaks. Perhaps he cannot speak. He has no composure, and faced with a stranger, he caves in and leaves again. A moment later the other door opens again and Valentine crosses the room, not exactly ignoring Bernard and yet ignoring him.
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I did not go downtown today. Instead I went back to bed after Pip left and I got the dogs in, and slept until almost 8:30am! o_O That’s pretty late for me.

I did two loads of laundry, hand-washed dishes, emptied the dishwasher, went for several walks with Pip and the dogs, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, and scooped kitty litter. We had leftover pulled pork for supper. We also finished the spinach dip. I’m glad I made it again to assuage my feelings of really missing it, but I don’t think I’ll make it again because of the garlic. I can only think that my sensitivity to garlic has increased as I got older. *sad face*

I tried the Christmas Spice tea today. I was curious about it, so I looked it up. The wonderful natural flavors of cinnamon, clove, nutmeg and orange are blended with a rich, black tea to create a delicious holiday tea. I figured there’d be cinnamon, but I wasn’t sure what else. It’s pretty good.

I added ~900 words to my [community profile] smallfandomfest fic!! I finished one of my books and read some fanfic. I watched an HGTV program and more Secrets of the Zoo.

I have been remiss in thanking two more people for their Christmas cards. [personal profile] pattrose and [personal profile] turps, thank you so much!!

Temps started out at 18.3(F) and reached 30.9. There was some wind again today, which made walking unpleasant, but also some sun, to give you false hope. *g*


Mom Update:

Mom sounded okay when I spoke to her. Sister A visited, and my brother called to say he’d be out to visit tomorrow (now today, Sunday). She didn’t throw up anything, but food sat heavy in her stomach today, which made her feel off. I should know better than to think that healing is a straight line, but I had hoped she’d continue showing improvements without back-sliding.

Arne in January

Jan. 4th, 2026 01:54 pm
puddleshark: (Default)
[personal profile] puddleshark
Arne in January 1

Met up with C. and her terrier for a walk by the harbour at Arne in the January sunshine. The water silver, still as glass. Cormorants and grebes performing vanishing tricks through a mirror.

I didn't get any good photos, but the light was gorgeous - you cannot take light for granted in January - and the harbour was very quiet, just the calling of the wading birds, or the splash of a rower passing by. Afterwards, coffee and cake at the café, sitting outside, the terrier curled in C.s lap, half-dozing in the sun, waking just enough to grumble halfheartedly at other dogs passing by.

Read more... )

Another bridge closed

Jan. 4th, 2026 08:21 am
soemand: (Default)
[personal profile] soemand
Covered bridges may be charming, but they’re outdated and impractical. Built for light, slow traffic, they can’t handle modern vehicle loads or safety standards. Their timber frames rot, deteriorate, and demand constant costly repairs. Their value no longer lies in preserving them, though this doesn’t ignore their place in our history. We should celebrate them while moving on.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/atlantic/new-brunswick/article/another-covered-bridge-closure-in-nb/
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