The People's Republic of Fub |
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| Jan. 4th, 2026 @ 08:03 pm (no subject) | |||
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Current Mood:
restlessI saw a post on the Dreamwidth maintenance account, partly in Russian, that imports could be slow because of the massive influx of new accounts that want to import their LJ-based blog to DW. So of course something is going on -- turns out that in order to post, users have to identify themselves. This is because a law in Russia, another way for the authorities to crack down on dissent. And because LJ is owned by a Russian company, it has to comply. Elsewhere, someone linked to this thread on Bluesky by one of the owners of DW on what that might mean for the non-Russian users of LJ. And maybe it's alarmist, but I agree it doesn't look good. It can't be bad to be prepared. I have migrated my blog to a Wordpress instance on my own domain, but I still had entries that included images hosted on LJ -- because I have a permanent account there, I had some image hosting space and I used to it upload photos and pictures to use in my posts. When I migrated the posts, the images were left where they were, and the Wordpress entries simply linked to the images on LJ. So I located all of those, downloaded them from LJ and uploaded them to the Wordpress instance and replaced every image. So even if LJ goes down outside of Russia, I still have those photos in my entries. |
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| Mar. 18th, 2022 @ 01:34 pm LiveJournal is still here, but how do we go forward? | |||
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Current Mood:
pensiveThere were rumours of a total disconnect of the Russian part of the internet. LiveJournal, which is owned by a Russian company and is hosted in Russia, would therefore also be unreachable. There was some panic and many people moved their journals to Dreamwidth. I was not that worried, as I blog on my own WordPress instance and only cross-post to LJ — though almost all of the interaction I have with others is through LJ. And the answer is that I do not want to do that. I fully support the widest possible range of economic sanctions. In the case of LJ, I don’t want to/can’t leave completely, but I do want to minimize my engagement on LJ. Concretely, this means the following:
It will take some time for me to switch the cross-posting over to DW, as there is some code involved and I need to get that done and tested. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Mar. 17th, 2022 @ 02:27 pm (no subject) | |||
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Happy birthday, |
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| Mar. 1st, 2022 @ 08:50 pm Cookie Colleague | |||
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Current Mood:
fullA few months ago, I was in a chat conversation with a colleague from support. I had helped her with a question, and then she closed off with the message that I should take a break because I worked so hard, and maybe have a snack. I thought that was a sweet thing to say. So we started chatting about snacks, which should not come as a surprise to anyone who knows me. We both like sweets (her favourite is tiramisu). But we devised a plan: I would do some of it in a container, put her name on it, and put it in the fridge at the reception. Officially, that fridge is for soft drinks to serve as refreshments to waiting visitors, not for stuff employees bring in. But when I asked the receptionist, they always let me put my little box with cookies in the fridge. So that turned into our ‘cookie dead drop’. I’d take pictures of what I had made and send them to her through chat. Then, when she was next in the office (a few days later), she would retrieve the container. All of my baking was well received! The building with the fridge is now being renovated, so we don’t have our cookie exchange space anymore. But for last Friday we arranged to both be at the office: for her it’s her team day, and I had a meeting in the afternoon that I preferred to do face-to-face anyway. Rather than tell the whole story, I just said that Support was, of course, my favourite department! I’m not sure they believed me, but they did enjoy the cookies. Which is exactly the point! Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Feb. 27th, 2022 @ 09:02 pm RPGs as moral support | |||
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Current Mood:
distressedI don’t have much contact with former colleagues, but I do still play tabletop RPGs with the group we started back in early 2020. I’m currently running the Tales from Wilderland campaign for The One Ring for them, using first edition rules. We have players in the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark and Russia. Friday, we had another session. Of course, the topic of the war in Ukraine came up. The player in Russia was born in Russia, and has the Russian nationality. But their father is Ukrainian. Their home-town is 40km from the Russian/Ukrainian border. They have extended family on both sides of the border, an absolute nightmare scenario. Understandably, they were in tears about what is happening. We talked about sanctions. Someone mentioned the potential of Russia being kicked out of SWIFT (that hadn’t been decided then yet), which would mean that it could get impossible for them to get their salary paid, as they are working for an international company after all. They didn’t care about that. They’d rather have put as much pressure on Putin to make him stop. If that meant not getting paid for some time, then that was a sacrifice they were willing to make. We expressed our grief and our support, and it felt weird to start the game after that. I feel so powerless. But being able to offer moral support and distraction for a few hours is something I could do, and I think it worked. |
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| Feb. 13th, 2022 @ 09:40 pm Sunday Five | |||
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Current Mood:
sleepy1. What’s your favorite candle scent? 2. Do you have an artistic or crafty hobby? What is it? 3. What’s one weird way you save money on food? 4. Do you collect anything weird or unusual? 5. Do you fear the deep ocean, or does its unknown depths excite you? |
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| Feb. 13th, 2022 @ 09:28 pm Cross-posting still works for me | |||
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Current Mood:
curiousI’ve seen reports that cross-posting from Dreamwidth to LiveJournal did not work anymore. My blog runs on WordPress on my own site, but I cross-post everything to my LiveJournal. I had not written an entry since I’ve seen those reports, so I did not know whether it would still work — but the entries still go up. So it’s not the API itself that was disabled — perhaps this was specifically targeted towards DW users? |
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| Feb. 13th, 2022 @ 09:22 pm Finished Books: Gouden Jaren & Het Goede Leven | |||
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Current Mood:
jealousI borrowed these books from my father, and finished reading them some time ago: Gouden Jaren (“Golden Years”) and Het Goede Leven (“The Good Life”) by Annegreet van Bergen. Though it is not a subject of the book, it is also an interesting look into the lives of the baby-boomers. We know boomers to be self-absorbed and unwilling to share. How did they get this way? Well, these books tell you about their formative years, and how they established themselves socially and economically during this period. It must be completely natural for them that every decade has a much higher standard of living than the decade before — they simply haven’t experienced anything else. By the time the big economic crises hit, they were already largely insulated from the worst. I found it easy to read, written in a conversational tone. But the books made me half-envious: envious of seeing your daily life improve so much, but on the other hand I grew up with most of those improvements already in place. My teeth are much better than my parents’, because dental care really took off when I was a little kid. I profited from having all kinds of telecommunications available, etcetera. The only thing to lament is that, because of the social and economic structures in place, not everyone can profit from these things. If you have an interest in recent Dutch history, then I certainly recommend these two books. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Jan. 28th, 2022 @ 09:09 pm (no subject) | |||
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Happy birthday, |
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| Jan. 16th, 2022 @ 03:34 pm Finished book: Shinto from an international perspective | |||
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Current Mood:
okayDuring our most recent trip to Japan, in 2019, we visited the Kanda shrine — it was on our way to the sake association’s tasting center 😉 If you’re interested in the subject, then it’s a very good starting point. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Jan. 16th, 2022 @ 03:06 pm Desk space rationalisation | |||
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Current Mood:
nerdySo I ended up with three computers on my desk: my old desktop, the new Raspberry Pi 4 machine, and my work laptop. I had a little KVM switch that allowed me to switch a VGA and two USB devices (keyboard and mouse, obviously) with two machines. Which meant that if I wanted to use the third machine, I had to re-configure the whole cable mess on my desk. Not ideal if I want to switch quickly. And I use two monitors, so even if I had a KVM switch that did three machines, I’d have to get one that supports three machines too. Those do exist, but they are frightfully expensive! I also replaced my two-way KVM switch with a four-way USB switch with four ports, the Aten US424. It acts as a USB hub, and it has (just like the KVM switch, which was also by Aten) a small button that allows you to switch between the four connected computers. At first I used it un-powered so it was powered by the USB port of the machine it was connected to. This turned out to be a problem when using my USB headset and the webcam: those just shut down after a bit. So that meant I had to connect those directly to the machine, which meant that I had to re-plug the headset and webcam every time I switched from work laptop to personal desktop for a video call, for example for an online RPG session. It works, but it’s not ideal. But this all meant that my desk was quite full: two monitors on their stand, a work laptop with its docking station and various bits and bobs. And the monitors were not high enough to be fully ergonomic. I had been looking at monitor desk-mounts for a bit — we have ’em at the office, and it’s really convenient to be able to set the right position. However, they can get pricey too, especially for two monitors and a full range of motion. But this week, I saw one that got reasonably good reviews that was on sale — only twenty euros, and even if it wouldn’t fit my situation, that wouldn’t break the bank. So I ordered it and yesterday I set to reconfiguring my desk.
I’m not sure for how long it will stay this empty — but there is much more space for cats to sit, which is definitely a big plus! I used this setup to play an online RPG session, and it worked quite nicely. I’m thinking of adding a little ring light or something like that next to the webcam, so that I’m a bit better visible during video calls. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Jan. 1st, 2022 @ 04:30 pm Dark Souls tabletop RPG | |||
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Current Mood:
mellowMy interest in the Dark Souls video game franchise is well documented on this blog — I once even was interviewed for a leading Dutch newspaper about it. So of course I have an interest in replicating that kind of feel in a tabletop RPG. When I wrote an RPG in 24 hours, I produced Miasma, a Japanese-themed take on the concept of undead traveling through the ruins of a corrupted capital in order to fulfill their destiny. There are more games with the express goal to emulate the video game. Jason Tocci has created a few, based on various (rules-lite) RPG systems. I GM’ed two sessions of Exhumed, but that fell flat because of a lack of narrative thrust on my part and the underlying system. Most RPG systems regard monsters as bags of hitpoints, and it becomes a series of dice rolls to see who is victorious — and that’s just not what Dark Souls feels like to me. Now, there is an official Dark Souls tabletop RPG in preparation — whether it is an original work or a translation of the Japanese official tabletop RPG is unknown at this time. But the discussion came up on Twitter about what systems or games would be suited to run a ‘Souls-like’ game in. And someone pointed out a setting book for Dungeon World, which is a D&D-like fantasy game using the Apocalypse World Engine. Normally Dungeon World would emulate dungeon-crawling high fantasy games, but of course you can change some of the Moves and add other details to the character options to change its tone completely. Which they did. Not like I needed inspiration for another RPG writing project, but it’s an interesting thought. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Dec. 31st, 2021 @ 10:12 pm NYE dinner | |||
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Current Mood:
fullAfter our experiences with the Christmas dinners, we thought it would be fun to get some kind of culinary take-away for today as well. There is a local Facebook group that collects information about restaurants doing delivery or take-out, and I trawled through that in order to find something suitable. One poster advertised a ‘Tunisian box’ with all kinds of Tunisian dishes to nibble on, and that seemed like a fun thing to eat. But the food was very good — and there was a lot! Certainly very tasty, and it was more than enough for us two — we had gotten oliebollen, but we’re too full to eat any. But I’m not sure I’ll ever order from him again, because the apparent lack of planning doesn’t inspire me with confidence… Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Dec. 31st, 2021 @ 09:36 pm Last Friday Five of 2021 | |||
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Current Mood:
contemplative1) What was the biggest thing that happened to you in 2021? 2) Where was the most exciting place you went? 3) Who helped you the most this year? 4) What’s your favorite new thing you bought? 5) What was your most memorable entry? |
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| Dec. 26th, 2021 @ 09:48 pm Christmas dinners | |||
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Current Mood:
fullThe Netherlands has been slowly closing again, after everything was opened too early and, predictably, cases rose again. The complete mismanagement of the pandemic by the Dutch government is breathtaking, in a bad way. But that’s not what this entry is about — it is about what happened as a result. With restaurants now closed in the week leading up to Christmas, it’s a heavy hit for a sector that has already had more than its fair share of problems these past two years. Some restaurants had already prepared for an ‘at home Christmas menu’, and others were able to pivot towards that, so not all was lost. On Christmas Day, we visited Klik’s mother (her sister was there too) and had dinner there. We might look for something similar for New Year’s Eve, because we really enjoy having a restaurant dinner at home. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Dec. 8th, 2021 @ 09:30 pm 90’s anime: Crest of the Stars | |||
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Current Mood:
pensiveI’ve been watching Crest of the Stars, a series from 1999 — 22 years old. Back then, the infrastructure for fansubs was a lot less developed than now (bittorrent was only invented in 2001), and so you had to really hunt for stuff. I never got around to collecting and watching the series. In the series, mankind has settled all across space. Half have been conquered by the Abh Humankind Empire. The Abh are an offshoot of humanity — basically a group of bioroids who were optimised for space exploration who overthrew their masters and decided that the best way to ensure peace was to make sure nobody but them could own spaceships. They organised themselves along feudal lines. I found this review very interesting, because it calls out the colonialist attitudes of the series. The reviewer has a point, but also misses several, I think. There are some important differences: for instance, the Abh do not come down to the planets they conquer (when Jinto and Lafiel crash-land, it is actually Lafiel’s first time on a planet!), and they do not seem to be overly concerned with the day-to-day dealing of the planets they hold. Most terrans never see an Abh in their entire life, which does not suggest to me that the Abh had a large part to play in planetary politics. I also don’t see evidence of their conquests being motivated by a desire to extract a specific resource — the mere fact that a planet is inhabited by humans means that they want to conquer it, not because there’s oil or something that they need. There are absolutely colonialist themes in the series, but I don’t think it’s colonialist propaganda like the review states. Rather, it emphasizes how the Abh are detached from the every-day life of their subjects, and how that detachment makes them incapable of empathy with their terran subjects. Crossposted from my blog. Comment here or at the original post. |
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| Nov. 28th, 2021 @ 03:52 pm Finished game: Nelke etc etc etc | |||
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Current Mood:
exhaustedI don’t recall who wrote it, but a quote I read on Twitter said that every game is like a spreadsheet: there’s numbers and relationships between those numbers. And the goal of any game is to get certain numbers high (score, HPs, XPs) while keeping other numbers low (damage, etc). To do this, you have a few number cells you can manipulate that then influence all the other numbers in complex ways. You play as the titular Nelke, a young aristocrat who came to the hamlet of Westwald to search for a legendary alchemy artefact, the Granzweit tree. And for some reason, all kinds of alchemists from all kinds of different worlds are drawn to Westwald, and they end up helping you. So basically it’s an excuse to assemble all of the characters of all the Atelier games in some kind of mash-up. And instead of the usual Atelier gameplay, it’s a pretty hardcore town management sim. The aforementioned spreadsheet is part of the interface: you can get an overview of all the items/ingredients in the game, how much of it you get each turn (gathering, growing or alchemical synthesis) and how much you consume (through sales or alchemical synthesis). You obviously want to balance this sheet for a smooth running of your town! On my third try, I completed the game. Unfortunately, I did not get the ‘best ending’, because I had not expected that to hinge on a single combat encounter — all of your careful town management doesn’t really factor in there, which felt bad. So for now I’m done with the game — I might pick it up again later, but by the end I was really looking forward to seeing the ending and play something else for a while. |
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| Nov. 20th, 2021 @ 09:57 pm Musings on Movies | |||
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Current Mood:
okayI had heard good things about the new Dune movie, but I didn’t think I’d have the stamina to sit through a movie that’s almost three hours! But earlier this month, my father turned 81, and he wanted to go see the new James Bond movie — which is of comparable length. My mom asked me to take him, because she is not a Bond fan at all. I agreed: it would be fun to do something one-on-one with my dad, and it would get him out of the house. The movie itself was (very) long, but there was a break in between so I could go to the toilet and get a drink refill. And I wasn’t bored a single second — it didn’t feel like three hours! I’m not going to spoil anything about the movie, other than wonder who will be the main person in the next Bond movie. It was a very satisfying end. So emboldened by my success with the Bond movie, I proposed to Klik to go see the new Dune movie. Which we did last Sunday, in an afternoon showing. |
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| Oct. 31st, 2021 @ 09:16 pm New desktop machine | |||
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Current Mood:
mellowMy desktop machine, which I (used to) run 24/7, is powered by an Intel i5 CPU and has several harddisks. The power supply is rated for 300W — obviously the machine is mostly idle, but there is a constant power draw, even when idling. I was wondering if I could do something about that, and perhaps downsize. After all, all I’m doing on that machine is a bit of browsing and writing, nothing that requires the power of an i5. It took me a while to set it up, because I kept trying to do something that turned out to not work. In the end, I used this guide from Ubuntu to put Ubuntu on the machine (because it’s what I use on all my machines, so I’m used to its particular quirks). Everything went smoothly, but I just could not get the system on the SD card (which you set up at first run) transferred to the SSD so that the Pi could boot into an Ubuntu instance that had already been set up. I followed a few different guides, but it just didn’t work out. The machine is kind of underpowered: if you visit heavy websites, it takes a while for the page to load, and multitasking is not that fast. But writing this post is fine: it’s just me typing into a web form, after all — and that’s not a heavy draw on computing power. I now have a full desktop machine (with two screens!) running on under 17W — that’s pretty good. The case itself gets toasty, as it acts as a heatsink, but it’s not that bad. |
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| Oct. 10th, 2021 @ 02:35 pm Update | |||
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Current Mood:
okayWow, what with one thing and another, I haven’t posted on here in a month! Time to give a short update on what’s been happening. – Vacation. We had our annual trip to Texel just at the end of September. A bit earlier in the year than we previously went, but the weather was noticeably better. More tourists too, so it was busier, but that didn’t really affect us that much. We walked a lot, it was lovely to explore the National Park ‘The Dunes of Texel’, either by revisiting old favourites or finding new spots. |
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