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@datascience@genomic.social
2025-12-13 11:00:01

Enrich your ggplots with extra panels along the x and y axis: #ggplot #dataviz <…

@arXiv_csCV_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-14 13:48:08

CodePlot-CoT: Mathematical Visual Reasoning by Thinking with Code-Driven Images
Chengqi Duan, Kaiyue Sun, Rongyao Fang, Manyuan Zhang, Yan Feng, Ying Luo, Yufang Liu, Ke Wang, Peng Pei, Xunliang Cai, Hongsheng Li, Yi Ma, Xihui Liu
arxiv.org/abs/2510.11718

@servelan@newsie.social
2025-10-10 17:18:52

Trump Unveils Plan for Tacky Giant Golden Addition to D.C.
yahoo.com/news/articles/trump-

@NFL@darktundra.xyz
2025-12-03 12:34:36

Steelers 'plotting a course to move forward' with Ravens up next espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/471829

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-13 06:57:46

Day 19 (a bit late): Alice Oseman
As I said I've got 14 authors to fit into two days. Probably just going to extend to 30? But Oseman gets this spot as an absolute legend of queer fiction in both novel & graphic novel form, and an excellent example of the many truths queer writers have to share with non-queer people that can make everyone's lives better. Her writing is very kind, despite in many instances dealing with some dark stuff.
I started out on Heartstopper, which is just so lovely and fun to read, and then made my way through several of her novels. The one I'll highlight here which I think it's her greatest triumph is "Loveless", which is semi-autobiographical and was at least my first (but no longer only) experience with the "platonic romance" sub-genre. It not only helped me work through some crufty internal doubts about aro/ace identities that I'd never really examined, but in the process helped improve my understanding of friendship, period. Heck, it's probably a nice novel for anyone questioning any sort of identity or dealing with loneliness, and it's just super-enjoyable as a story regardless of the philosophical value.
To cheat a bit more here on my author count, I recently read "Dear Wendy" by Ann Zhao, which shouts out "Loveless" and offers a more expository exploration of aro/ace identities, but "Loveless" is a book with more heart and better writing overall, including the neat plotting and great pacing. I think there are also parallels with Becky Albertalli's work, though I think I like Oseman slightly more. Certainly both excel at writing queer romance (and romance-adjacent) stuff with happy endings (#OwnVoices wins again with all three authors).
In any case, Oseman is excellent and if you're not up for reading a novel, Heartstopper is a graphic novel series that's easy to jump into and very kind to its adorable main characters.
I think I've now decided to continue to 30, which is a relief, so I'm tagging this (and the next post that rounds out 20) two ways.
#20AuthorsNoMen
#30AuthorsNoMen

@cowboys@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-27 14:27:45

Former Dallas Cowboys head coach plotting for NFL return si.com/nfl/cowboys/news/former

@NFL@darktundra.xyz
2025-10-04 16:56:41

Justin Tucker plotting NFL comeback: Several reportedly interested in signing former All-Pro kicker

cbssports.com/nfl/news/justin-

@chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.ca
2025-10-28 03:01:32

What do you think? Did Venezuela just “thwart” a false flag?
“Venezuela says it has thwarted what it calls a CIA-linked plot to attack a US warship anchored in Trinidad.
It claims the US would have blamed Venezuela for the attack on the USS Gravely, a guided-missile destroyer, to justify aggression against it.”
Australia Broadcasting reporting: #usa #venezuela #war
Yup. Trump wants a confrontation.
No. Venezuela likely faking the false flag.

@mszll@datasci.social
2025-10-03 09:49:37

🤩 Fantastic new network plotting package available in Python by Fabio Zanini. The package supports both #networkx :networkx: and #igraph :igraph: networks, and has a wide variety of styling options.

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-13 06:16:23

Just finished "Beasts Made of Night" by Tochi Onyebuchi...
Indirect CW for fantasy police state violence.
So I very much enjoyed Onyebuchi's "Riot Baby," and when I grabbed this at the library, I was certain it would be excellent. But having finished it, I'm not sure I like it that much overall?
The first maybe third is excellent, including the world-building, which is fascinating. I feel like Onyebuchi must have played "Shadow of the Colossus" at some point. Onyebuchi certainly does know how to make me care for his characters.
Some spoilers from here on out...
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I felt like it stumbles towards the middle, with Bo's reactions neither making sense in the immediate context, nor in retrospect by the end when we've learned more. Things are a bit floaty in the middle with an unclear picture of what exactly is going on politics-wise and what the motivations are. Here I think there were some nuances that didn't make it to the page, or perhaps I'm just a bit thick and not getting stuff I should be? More is of course revealed by the end, but I still wasn't satisfied with the explanations of things. For example, (spoilers) I don't feel I understand clearly what kind of power the army of aki was supposed to represent within the city? Perhaps necessary to wield the threat of offensive inisisia use? In that case, a single scene somewhere of Izu's faction deploying that tactic would have been helpful I think.
Then towards the end, for me things really started to jumble, with unclear motivations, revelations that didn't feel well-paced or -structured, and a finale where both the action & collapsing concerns felt stilted and disjointed. Particularly the mechanics/ethics of the most important death that set the finale in motion bothered me, and the unexplained mechanism by which that led to what came next? I can read a couple of possible interesting morals into the whole denouement, but didn't feel that any of them were sufficiently explored. Especially if we're supposed to see some personal failing in the protagonist's actions, I don't think it's made clear enough what that is, since I feel his reasons to reject each faction are pretty solid, and if we're meant to either pity or abjure his indecision, I don't think the message lands clearly enough.
There *is* a sequel, which honestly I wasn't sure of after the last page, and which I now very interested in. Beasts is Onyebuchi's debut, which maybe makes sense of me feeling that Riot Baby didn't have the same plotting issues. It also maybe means that Onyebuchi couldn't be sure a sequel would make it to publication in terms of setting up the ending.
Overall I really enjoyed at least 80% of this, but was expecting even better (especially politically) given Onyebuchi's other work, and I didn't feel like I found it.
#AmReading

@davidaugust@mastodon.online
2025-10-31 17:31:46

Wait, do we really think Marmalade Mussolini and his merry band of incompetent chuckleheads would do this?!
Yes, yes we do. Totally plausible.
"Interior minister Diosdado Cabello said that a cell ‘financed by the CIA’ planned to attack the USS Gravely and pin the blame on Caracas [Venezuela], after the missile destroyer docked in Trinidad and Tobago on Sunday to conduct joint exercises with Trinidad's navy."

@arXiv_astrophIM_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-02 09:36:11

ADARI: Visualizing the quality of VLT data
C. E. Garc\'ia-Dab\'o, P. Beirao, Z. Kostrzewa, A. Gabasch, B. Wolff, M. White, M. Deshpande, B. Miszalski, P. Corcho-Caballero, C. Onken, A. Heng, M. Gonz\'alez
arxiv.org/abs/2510.00147

@memeorandum@universeodon.com
2025-11-25 19:55:52

Jair Bolsonaro ordered to start 27-year prison term for plotting Brazil coup (Tom Phillips/The Guardian)
theguardian.com/world/2025/nov
memeorandum.com/251125/p93#a25

Brazil’s federal police on Saturday arrested former president Jair Bolsonaro over suspicion he was plotting to escape and avoid starting a 27-year prison sentence for leading a coup attempt.
The decision laid bare some of the country’s divisions, with many uncorking Champagne outside the far-right leader’s prison to celebrate as his supporters prepared a religious act in his favor.
In a dramatic and unexpected twist in the final stage of a long and divisive criminal trial, feder…

@markhburton@mstdn.social
2025-10-22 11:53:17

"Unless the Starmer government is plotting to reopen the fight with residents of Orkney, who already beat back efforts in the mid-1970s to mine uranium there, there is nothing “homegrown” about nuclear energy."
The “Golden Age of Nuclear” is all a veneer | Beyond Nuclear International

@qurlyjoe@mstdn.social
2025-10-18 01:03:35

#caturday boredpanda.com/cute-funny-cats

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-11-07 01:26:59

Just finished "Hunger's Bite" by Taylor Robin. A pretty great graphic novel bringing paranormal horror elements to a Titanic-era transatlantic voyage. I loved the characters and I had quite good plotting, which is not always a strength of graphic novels...
I think one of my favorite threads was how the villain's heteronormative assumptions became a small part of their downfall.
#AmReading #ReadingNow

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-03 00:41:40

Just finished "Thief of the Heights" written by Son M. and illustrated by Robin Yao. It's a very cool graphic novel about the illusions of meritocracy and loyalty to one's roots, with an interesting setting and better politics than most stuff out there, even if the plotting is a little rough and perhaps a bit too straightforward. The neat ending and reliance on heroism are themes I don't love in these kinds of tales, but I'm grateful for more stories in this category to exist in the first place, so I can't complain too much.
It's got disability, queer, and POC representation and some of that is #OwnVoices, which is cool, although those dimensions of the work aren't its focus.
#AmReading

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-12-01 08:49:30

Just finished "Juliet Takes a Breath" by Gabby Rivera. A truly amazing novel about queer Latina feminist self-discovery which shows off a vibrant range of feminisms and their contradictions. Reminded me of "Does my Body Offend You?" in terms of how it uses fictional but realistic situations to really grapple deeply with feminist and queer theory while making everything very accessible and direct.
The plotting, pacing, and characters are great, and Juliet serves as a vibrant and active main character rather than just a lens through which to explore theory.
#AmReading #ReadingNow

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-30 14:09:45

Finished "Espada - The Will of the Blade" by Anabel Cozalo.
The art is lovely, but I found the plotting/story to be a bit weak. Perhaps more pointedly, I felt like the plot setup was great but the landing was a bit off, and the telling of the story didn't nicely convey all the nuances I expect the author had in mind. Felt like a lot was left in the gutters.
#AmReading #ReadingNow