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@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-07-07 15:34:10

Series B, Episode 09 - Countdown
AVON: Approximately six million. It was colonized in the last century of the Old Calendar. At first they resisted political affiliation, but then they joined the Federation, and they have remained unswervingly loyal.
VILA: Then they're not likely to welcome us with open arms.

Claude Sonnet 4.0 describes the image as: "I can see two actors in what appears to be a futuristic spacecraft interior setting. The scene shows them in conversation, with one wearing earth-toned clothing and the other in a distinctive red leather outfit. The background features sleek, metallic surfaces with horizontal lines typical of science fiction set design from the late 1970s. The lighting and production values are characteristic of British television from that era. The actors appear to be…
@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-28 13:06:20

How popular media gets love wrong
Now a bit of background about why I have this "engineered" model of love:
First, I'm a white straight cis man. I've got a few traits that might work against my relationship chances (e.g., neurodivergence; I generally fit pretty well into the "weird geek" stereotype), but as I was recently reminded, it's possible my experience derives more from luck than other factors, and since things are tilted more in my favor than most people on the planet, my advice could be worse than useless if it leads people towards strategies that would only have worked for someone like me. I don't *think* that's the case, but it's worth mentioning explicitly.
When I first started dating my now-wife, we were both in graduate school. I was 26, and had exactly zero dating/romantic experience though that point in my life. In other words, a pretty stereotypical "incel" although I definitely didn't subscribe to incel ideology at all. I felt lonely, and vaguely wanted a romantic relationship (I'm neither aromantic nor asexual), but had never felt socially comfortable enough to pursue one before. I don't drink and dislike most social gatherings like parties or bars; I mostly hung around the fringes of the few college parties I attended, and although I had a reasonable college social life in terms of friends, I didn't really do anything to pursue romance, feeling too awkward to know where to start. I had the beginnings of crushes in both high school and college, but never developed a really strong crush, probably correlated with not putting myself in many social situations outside of close all-male friend gatherings. I never felt remotely comfortable enough to act on any of the proto-crushes I did have. I did watch porn and masturbate, so one motivation for pursuing a relationship was physical intimacy, but loneliness was as much of a motivating factor, and of course the social pressure to date was a factor too, even though I'm quite contrarian.
When I first started dating my now-wife, we were both in graduate school. I was 26, and had exactly zero dating/romantic experience though that point in my life. In other words, a pretty stereotypical "incel" although I definitely didn't subscribe to incel ideology at all. I felt lonely, and vaguely wanted a romantic relationship (I'm neither aromantic nor asexual), but had never felt socially comfortable enough to pursue one before. I don't drink and dislike most social gatherings like parties or bars; I mostly hung around the fringes of the few college parties I attended, and although I had a reasonable college social life in terms of friends, I didn't really do anything to pursue romance, feeling too awkward to know where to start. I had the beginnings of crushes in both high school and college, but never developed a really strong crush, probably correlated with not putting myself in many social situations outside of close all-male friend gatherings. I never felt remotely comfortable enough to act on any of the proto-crushes I did have. I did watch porn and masturbate, so one motivation for pursuing a relationship was physical intimacy, but loneliness was as much of a motivating factor, and of course the social pressure to date was a factor too, even though I'm quite contrarian.
I'm lucky in that I had some mixed-gender social circles already like intramural soccer and a graduate-student housing potluck. Graduate school makes a *lot* more of these social spaces accessible, so I recognize that those not in school of some sort have a harder time of things, especially if like me they don't feel like they fit in in typical adult social spaces like bars.
However, at one point I just decided that my desire for a relationship would need action on my part and so I'd try to build a relationship and see what happened. I worked up my courage and asked one of the people in my potluck if she'd like to go for a hike (pretty much clearly a date but not explicitly one; in retrospect not the best first-date modality in a lot of ways, but it made a little more sense in our setting where we could go for a hike from our front door). To emphasize this point: I was not in love with (or even infatuated with) my now-wife at that point. I made a decision to be open to building a relationship, but didn't follow the typical romance story formula beyond that. Now of course, in real life as opposed to popular media, this isn't anything special. People ask each other out all the time just because they're lonely, and some of those relationships turn out fine (although many do not).
I was lucky in that some aspects of who I am and what I do happened to be naturally comforting to my wife (natural advantage in the "appeal" model of love) but of course there are some aspects of me that annoy my wife, and we negotiate that. In the other direction, there's some things I instantly liked about my wife, and other things that still annoy me. We've figured out how to accept a little, change a little, and overall be happy with each other (though we do still have arguments; it's not like the operation/construction/maintenance of the "love mechanism" is always perfectly smooth). In particular though, I approached the relationship with the attitude of "I want to try to build a relationship with this person," at first just because of my own desires for *any* relationship, and then gradually more and more through my desire to build *this specific* relationship as I enjoyed the rewards of companionship.
So for example, while I think my wife is objectively beautiful, she's also *subjectively* very beautiful *to me* because having decided to build a relationship with her, I actively tried to see her as beautiful, rather than trying to judge whether I wanted a relationship with her based on her beauty. In other words, our relationship is more causative of her beauty-to-me than her beauty-to-me is causative of our relationship. This is the biggest way I think the "engineered" model of love differs from the "fire" and "appeal" models: you can just decide to build love independent of factors we typically think of as engendering love (NOT independent of your partner's willingness to participate, of course), and then all of those things like "thinking your partner is beautiful" can be a result of the relationship you're building. For sure those factors might affect who is willing to try building a relationship with you in the first place, but if more people were willing to jump into relationship building (not necessarily with full commitment from the start) without worrying about those other factors, they might find that those factors can come out of the relationship instead of being prerequisites for it. I think this is the biggest failure of the "appeal" model in particular: yes you *do* need to do things that appeal to your partner, but it's not just "make myself lovable" it's also: is your partner putting in the effort to see the ways that you are beautiful/lovable/etc., or are they just expecting you to become exactly some perfect person they've imagined (and/or been told to desire by society)? The former is perfectly possible, and no less satisfying than the latter.
To cut off my rambling a bit here, I'll just add that in our progress from dating through marriage through staying-married, my wife and I have both talked at times explicitly about commitment, and especially when deciding to get married, I told her that I knew I couldn't live up to the perfect model of a husband that I'd want to be, but that if she wanted to deepen our commitment, I was happy to do that, and so we did. I also rearranged my priorities at that point, deciding that I knew I wanted to prioritize this relationship above things like my career or my research interests, and while I've not always been perfect at that in my little decisions, I've been good at holding to that in my big decisions at least. In the end, *once we had built a somewhat-committed relationship*, we had something that we both recognized was worth more than most other things in life, and that let us commit even more, thus getting even more out of it in the long term. Obviously you can't start the first date with an expectation of life-long commitment, and you need to synchronize your increasing commitment to a relationship so that it doesn't become lopsided, which is hard. But if you take the commitment as an active decision and as the *precursor* to things like infatuation, attraction, etc., you can build up to something that's incredibly strong and rewarding.
I'll follow this up with one more post trying to distill some advice from my ramblings.
#relationships #love

@jonippolito@digipres.club
2025-08-04 12:46:31

AI is flooding libraries with generated content just as budgets and staff are at their most precarious. This Thursday at 10am EDT my ASIS&T webinar asks if we need to ban it, label it, absorb it—or rethink the library itself.
asist.org/meetings-events/webi

A screenshot from the ASIS&T web site with this text:

Webinar: Who Even Wrote This? Welcome to the Post-AI LibrarySponsored by: NEASIS&T ChapterLibraries and other digital collections are beginning to see a surge in AI-generated submissions—sometimes dozens from the same author. This growing strain is colliding in the US with an increasing threat to staff and budgets due to the administration's aim of dismantling the Institute of Museum and Library Services. This webinar will open by framing g…
@davidaugust@mastodon.online
2025-08-04 20:23:52

trump asked russia, in public, to get involved in 2016 election on his behalf.
We all saw it.
So miss me with this nonsense Obama made up trump colluding with russia: we can see him ask them for help.
youtu.be/OsvWg2FBnts
And, trump, your name is all over the Epstein files, rig…

@leftsidestory@mstdn.social
2025-08-21 00:30:01

Uneven Lives 👁️
不工整人生 👁️
📷 Minolta Hi-Matic AF
🎞️ERA 100, expired 1994
buy me ☕️ ?/请我喝杯☕️?
#filmphotography

English Alt Text:
A dramatic black and white image showing the shadow of a leafy plant cast sharply onto a light surface, creating a striking silhouette.

中文替代文字:
一张黑白照片,展示一株植物的叶子在明亮表面上投下清晰的阴影,形成鲜明的剪影效果。
English Alt Text:
A black and white photo of a windowsill with an open window. A small container with long, thin sticks sits inside a shallow dish on the sill, above a radiator.

中文替代文字:
一张黑白照片,展示一个窗台和打开的窗户。窗台上放着一个浅盘,盘中有一个小容器,插着几根细长的枝条,下方是一个暖气片。
English Alt Text:
A black and white photo of a quiet urban street. A person wearing a hat and light clothing sits on a bicycle parked near a tree on the sidewalk. Another bicycle is nearby. Trees line the left side of the street, while cars and buildings fill the background, creating a calm and reflective atmosphere.

中文替代文字:
一张黑白照片,描绘一条宁静的城市街道。一位戴帽子、穿浅色衣服的人坐在人行道树旁停放的自行车上,旁边还有另一辆自行车。街道左侧种有树木,背景中有汽车和建筑,营造出平静而富有思考感的氛围。
English Alt Text:
A busy parking lot with several cars and two pedestrians, set against a backdrop of a building with Chinese signage reading “北京金豆豆物语” and “华宇云商 乐地生活家”. Trees line the background, and the image has a double exposure effect with vertical lines and partial silhouettes.

中文替代文字:
一个繁忙的停车场,停着多辆汽车,两位行人正在行走。背景是一栋建筑,标有“北京金豆豆物语”和“华宇云商 乐地生活家”的中文招牌。后方有树木,画面呈现出双重曝光效果,带有垂直线条和部分剪影。
@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-07-05 06:17:56

#Blakes7 Series B, Episode 09 - Countdown
CAUDER: But it's four thousand miles away. It can't be done.
AVON: It can if we use the teleport.
BLAKE: We can teleport right down to the location.
AVON: We'll need special equipment, thermal clothing.

Claude Sonnet 4.0 describes the image as: "This image shows a character in what appears to be a futuristic setting, wearing a distinctive burgundy or maroon leather-style jacket with a high black collar. The costume design reflects the science fiction aesthetic typical of late 1970s British television production. The lighting and image quality suggest this is from a studio-based television production of that era. The character appears to be in a dramatic scene, with the camera capturing them in…
@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-06-13 19:59:11
Content warning: Spiders and Titanic: The Oddest Pairing You Didn’t See Coming

Warning for anyone scared of spiders or the Titanic wreck!
Spiders used to terrify me so much I couldn’t even sleep. I overcame it by doing what they call exposure therapy, just googling spiders and looking at pictures until it felt less scary. Now, I actually want to own a tarantula as a pet, which is kind of funny.
Something I’m even more scared of is the Titanic wreckage. It’s a oddly specific weird fear, but I think it’s a specific kind of Submechanophobia, where the fear is …

Close-up macro photo of a jumping spider on a bright green leaf. The spider’s body is covered in fine light-brown and grey hairs, giving it a fuzzy look. Its large, iridescent purple and red jaws stand out, facing forward. Two big, bright green eyes add an almost alien appearance. The spider’s thick, hairy legs have dark tips. The background is softly blurred green and blue, focusing attention on the spider’s detailed features. The image shows the spider’s beauty up close without being threaten…
The photograph shows a section of the wrecked RMS Titanic on the ocean floor, focusing on rusted and corroded railings and deck structures. Marine growth like sea anemones, sponges, and small white invertebrates cover the metal, creating a textured surface in rusty orange, brown, and grey-white tones. The railing is twisted and broken, with a dark sea fan-like organism attached.

The scene is dark and somber, surrounded by deep ocean gloom. It evokes a strong sense of decay, time passing, and n…
@cosmos4u@scicomm.xyz
2025-07-17 03:28:46

50 years ago today, at 16:09 UTC on 17 July 1975, the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project culminated in the first docking of the spacecraft - but afterwards an interesting experiment took place: after they separated again Apollo (the final one; no number) occulted the Sun from the point of view of Soyuz 19. Images obtained show mostly outgassing from Apollo forward-scattering light from the hidden Sun but allegedly there is also some outer corona in the images of which #eclipse experiment was described in the mission press kit nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/st on PDF pages 37-39 and the outcome is discussed in the didactical NASA brochure ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/19 on PDF pages 20-27; there is apparently also a more technical paper in a mission science report but I couldn't find that one online.

@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-06-27 18:14:22

Series D, Episode 10 - Gold
SOOLIN: This is a pleasure cruiser. It's got no armour.
KEILLER: I told you, it's incognito. Listen, every so often they send up a highly armed ship with security written all over it, bristling with guards. And every so often someone attacks it and gets killed. Which is crazy. Because that ship's carrying fruit. We carry gold with hardly any guards.

Claude Sonnet 4.0 describes the image as: "I can see this is a scene from a science fiction television series featuring a woman with styled blonde hair and what appears to be futuristic or military-style clothing with metallic elements. The setting appears to be indoors, possibly on a spacecraft or in a futuristic facility, with dramatic lighting typical of 1970s-80s sci-fi productions. The character appears to be in a serious or contemplative moment, and the costume design and production value…
@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-08-05 12:21:10

Series C, Episode 12 - Death-Watch
SERVALAN: But I don't think of YOU as an enemy, Avon. I think of YOU as a future friend.
AVON: [Puts his arm about Servalan and pulls her against him] Your plan had better be fireproof, Servalan, or I'll see you burn with it. [Kisses her. While continuing to hold Servalan he activates com in bracelet behind her back.] Cally?

Claude Sonnet 4.0 describes the image as: "I can see this appears to be from a science fiction television series, showing two characters in what looks like an intimate or tense dramatic moment. One person is wearing a black outfit while the other is dressed in dark clothing with decorative metallic studing or armor-like details. The setting appears to be an interior space with curtains or draping visible in the background, lit with purple/pink lighting that creates a dramatic atmosphere. The sc…