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Sebastian ([personal profile] wildeabandon) wrote2026-02-06 03:38 pm

Exam results.

I got my exam results yesterday, and they were slightly disappointing, in the "virtually anyone would be fucking delighted, but they were all on the low end of what I was expecting" sense of the word disappointing. I got 15/20 in Catechetics, 16/20 in Anthropology, 17/20 in Psalms & Prophets, and 18/20 in Hebrew II and Ugaritic. The first two are entirely understandable - I wasn't particularly keen on either course, and whilst by no means neglecting them completely, I didn't put in a particularly high level of effort. I'm happy enough with the 18s. They were both challenging courses, and 18 is a bloody good mark.

The one that's bugging me is the Psalms though. I thought I understood the material well, and that I'd had some interesting and insightful things to say. I know that I got 18/20 in the paper that makes up half the mark, which means that I only got 15-16/20 in the exam. Hardly the end of the world, but it's the only one where I don't understand why I didn't do better. I've emailed the prof to ask for feedback, so with luck I'll get something useful. (ETA: Apparently marks get rounded down, not up - I got 8/10 and 9/10 in the two exam questions, and the 8 was because he had to prompt me a couple of times, and since at least one of those time he prompted me for the thing I was about to say anyway I am now feeling a lot less bothered by the overall mark.)

One result though which is positive in a sense is that my overall grade is now almost guaranteed. My average is currently 87%. The top grade boundary is an average of 90%, which had seemed in reach before these results, but would now require me to get 20/20 in all but one of my remaining courses (and 19/20 in that), which isn't really plausible. The grade boundary below is an average of 85%, and whilst the fact that there are just more numbers between 0 and 87 than between 87 and 100 means that there's more scope for my grade to be dragged down than up, I would have to do quite a bit worse than I have been for that to happen. Anyway, the sense that there's not a lot that I can do to change my overall grade means that I can concentrate more on learning for the sake of learning, which in the long term is almost certainly better than chasing grades.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-06 10:02 am

Fate's Bane by C. L. Clark



Can true love overcome clan rivalry and dark magic?

Fate's Bane by C. L. Clark
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-05 08:52 am

Golden Sunlands by Christopher Rowley



Federal Ranger Cracka Buckshore's efforts to keep irate parents from lynching handsome Fodo Bathin are complicated when Cracka, Fodo, and everyone else on the planet are kidnapped and taken to an artificial universe.

Golden Sunlands by Christopher Rowley
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-04 02:25 pm
Entry tags:

Bundle of Holding: Human Gorilla Heists



This all-new Human Gorilla Heists Bundle presents .PDF ebooks from Human Gorilla Creations that help you create tabletop fantasy roleplaying adventures of thieves and thievery.

Bundle of Holding: Human Gorilla Heists
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-04 08:54 am

The Girl from the West (Kokun, volume 1) by Nahoko Uehashi (Translated by Cathy Hirano)



Aisha's unique senses could help the empire escape the ecological crisis the empire has inadvertently engineered. Too bad dynastic security requires her death.

The Girl from the West (Kokun, volume 1) by Nahoko Uehashi (Translated by Cathy Hirano)
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Liam_on_Linux ([personal profile] liam_on_linux) wrote2026-02-04 10:26 am

My review of the Tadpole-RDI Ultra Book lli from 25 years ago this month

I came across my name in a scan of the February 2001 Personal Computer World.

Tadpole-RDI Ultra Book lli

 

This transportable SPARC workstation is more than just a toy for wealthy geeks

 

Today, thex86 PC architecture scales from PDAs to enterprise servers, and it's difficult to point to a line that separates PCs from RISC workstations and servers. Traditional delimiters - lots of storage, high-speed buses, fast processors and multi-user operating systems - are increasingly blurred. Still, differences remain in scalability and reliability.

 

High-end Unix systems support dozens of processors and hundreds of gigabytes of memory, and multiple machines can be clustered together to share the load. As the hardware and software are closely controlled, unlike the thousands of independent vendors of PC components, these systems can offer 99.999 per cent availability. This means downtimes of a few minutes per year and the ability to remove and replace hardware and software components while the system is in use.

 

This is why companies such as IBM, Hewlett-Packard, and SGI still sell these sophisticated and expensive computers. Arguably the dominant supplier is Sun, whose SPARC processor-powered systems, running Sun's Unix variant, Solaris, are popular in educational, scientific and financial markets, and run many lnternet and ecommerce servers.

 

The UltraBook lli is a laptop-sized transportable Sun compatible SPARC workstation with an internal battery that is claimed to last for one hour. Normally, though, you'd wire it to a network and the mains.

 

The base specification is impressive: 400 MHz UltraSPARC lli processor, 256 MB of RAM, integrated 10/100Base-T Ethernet, UltraWide SCSI and a 14.1 inch, 1024 x 768 TFT LCD display driven by an ATi Mach64 graphics adaptor capable of both 8-bit and 24-bit operation. There are three device bays, two of which hold a 12GB EIDE hard disk and a battery as standard. Supported options include one battery and two disk drives, or three drives and mains-only operation. Our machine had the maximum 1GB of RAM and a second 12GB drive.

 

There are also two CardBus slots for two Type ll or one Type III device, although Tadpole only supports certain LAN and 56K modem cards. External floppy and CD drives are available as optional extras, as is a Sun Creator3D graphics module that occupies the left rear bay. With either display, the machine supports simultaneous use of LCD and external Sun monitors - or SVGA with a supplied converter cable. Another cable provides one parallel and two serial ports.

 

Despite offering a choice of OpenWindows or CDE/Motif GUIs, Solaris feels distinctly clunky and old-fashioned compared to Linux, and we would have liked to see tools such as Perl and Samba supplied as standard. More recent versions of Solaris should fix this, and Sun plans to offer the GNOME desktop as an option in the future. The machine should also run Linux (or xBSD) happily, and this is likely to offer better peripheral support and more personal productivity applications.

 

This isn't a personal computer; its target market is engineers and salespeople who need to take substantial Solaris applications, from large databases to network management packages, into the field.

 

Compared to a conventional Sun UltralO workstation of equivalent specification, the UItra Book is about twice the price. However, Tadpole estimates that if it were carried on-site three times a month, against the cost of shipping a conventional workstation to a customer's site, an UltraBook would pay for itself in just over a year.

 

For such users, the UItraBook is unbeatable -- and it's also a desirable toy with serious pose factor for wealthy geeks.

 

At 326 x 296 x 58 mm (W x D x H), the unit is nearly 1.5 times as big as an average notebook PC. This leaves room for an excellent 97-key US-layout keyboard, although the layout is idiosyncratic, with the cursor keys above and to the right of the main block. There's a three-button touchpad and a single Sun mouse/keyboard port for external devices.

 

The components are good, but build quality is disappointing, with flimsy plastic protective flaps and external labelling in blurry white paint. This may be RDI's influence -- early Tadpole systems exuded quality, but this one feels more like an economy clone notebook than a £16,000 top-of-the-range machine.

 

There's no meaningful way to compare its performance with a PC's, though in workstation terms it has a SPECint95 score of 16.1 and SPECfp95 of 20.4. The MHz rating belies the power of the RISC processor - by comparison, a 500M Hz Pentium III returns around 20.5 and 14.2 respectively. Although Tadpole also offers Solaris 2.51 and 2.6, our machine came preloaded with Solaris 7, plus Star Office 5.2 and the HotJava browser, with Netscape 4.51 on CD. Tadpole also preloads some useful accessories for power management, suspend/ resume and hot-switchable network configuration.

 

 

DETAILS

 

★★★★

 

PRICE $24,640 (approx. £16,993)

 

CONTACT Tadpole-RDI 01223 428 200

 

www.tadpolerdi.com

 

PROS: Workstation-class power in a laptop; versatile expansion options

 

CONS: Large; heavy; fragile external parts; cheap feel

 

OVERALL: Alone in its class for enterprise computing on the move, although the experience doesn't quite live up to the price 
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Mark Smith ([staff profile] mark) wrote in [site community profile] dw_maintenance2026-02-03 10:25 pm

Minor operations; testing new serving path

Hi all!

I'm doing some minor operational work tonight. It should be transparent, but there's always a chance that something goes wrong. The main thing I'm touching is testing a replacement for Apache2 (our web server software) in one area of the site.

Thank you!

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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-03 11:45 pm
Entry tags:

Fig (2011 - 2026)



I just got email from Fig's owner that Fig (who I owned from 2012 to 2017) passed away this evening. Cause unknown. My impression is Fig just didn't wake up.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-03 02:40 pm
Entry tags:

Seen on the Watsfic Discord




QWP


Hey everyone,

**This year marks WATSFIC's 50th Anniversary!** To commemorate this we are releasing a new issue of our club fanzine Starsongs.

If you would like to become an officially published author, we are opening up submissions right now! Send us your **short stories, opinion pieces, open letters** [to systems, games, concepts, authors, or WATSFIC itself], **reviews of Sci-Fi/Fantasy** games, books, or other media, **your best drawings or paintings**, or whatever else you'd like to share with WATSFIC and the greater UW Community. We will endeavour to accept and print as many submissions as possible as long as they are club appropriate. If you're unsure if your idea is right for Starsongs, please don't hesitate to contact an exec and we'd be more than happy to discuss it and/or workshop it with you!

If you are looking for inspiration, you can find the 1970s releases of Starsongs on the University of Waterloo's Digital Library.

**We will be accepting submissions until the end of March, if you would like to contribute** please fill out this form here.

-# Submissions after March 31st may still be accepted, but we cannot promise anything, so please try to get any and all submission in before this deadline to ensure your work can be considered.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-03 11:54 am

D&D scenario

Decades after the PCs' last adventure, an old epic foe reappears, still bent on conquest.

Time to get the band back together!

Alas, the band isn't just dispersed. All but one member is long dead.

Happily, the last surviving member is a necromancer.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-03 08:49 am
Entry tags:
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-02 05:42 pm

A sentence I did not expect to encounter

"In 1947 and 1948, Agee wrote an untitled screenplay for Charlie Chaplin, in which the Tramp survives a nuclear holocaust; posthumously titled The Tramp's New World, the text was published in 2005."
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-02 02:13 pm
Entry tags:

Bundle of Holding: Forbidden Psalm



Eight death-metal miniatures games from OptimisticNL inspired by, and compatible with, the artpunk tabletop roleplaying game Mörk Borg.

Bundle of Holding: Forbidden Psalm
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-01 09:18 am

The Puppet Masters by Robert A. Heinlein



Can the world, and more importantly, AMERICA! (patriotic song here) fend off a subversive attack from space?

The Puppet Masters by Robert A. Heinlein
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-01-31 11:01 am
Entry tags:

January 2026 in Review



Another year begins! I have a new In Review banner image!

The first new project this year is Homeward By Starlight, which will review twelve of Poul Anderson’s most notable short works.

January 2026 in Review
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-01-31 09:20 am
Entry tags:

Books Received, January 24 — January 30



Ten books new to me. Five are fantasy, one non-fiction, two horror, one magazine, and I am not sure how to categorize the Tingle. Three are definitely fantasy.

Books Received, January 24 — January 30



Poll #34150 Books Received, January 24 — January 30
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 38


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

The Wolf Queen’s Curse by Kaylee Archer (September 2026)
4 (10.5%)

Knight of the God King by Lauren Blackwood (October 2026)
5 (13.2%)

A Plagued Sea by Kim Bo-Young (August 2026)
14 (36.8%)

FIYAH Literary Magazine Issue # 37 published by FIYAH Literary Magazine LLC (January 2026)
16 (42.1%)

Among the Thorns by Jennifer K. Lambert (July 2026)
2 (5.3%)

Anne’s Cradle: The Life and Works of Hanako Muraoka, Japanese Translator of Anne of Green Gables by Eri Muraoka & Cathy Hirano (May 2021)
12 (31.6%)

To Vex & to Hex by Neena Noon (November 2026)
2 (5.3%)

Fear Farm by Vincent Ralph (September 2026)
0 (0.0%)

Fabulous Bodies by Chuck Tingle (July 2026)
15 (39.5%)

Kokun: The Girl from the West by Nahoko Uehashi & Cathy Hirano (January 2026)
13 (34.2%)

Some other option (see comments)
0 (0.0%)

Cats!
30 (78.9%)

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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-01-30 11:06 am

Huh

A detail about the 2017 Hugo nomination long list I've never noticed before:



I checked and I did notice at the time James Nicoll Reviews was treated as different from me, but I seem to have failed to correct the typo for a decade.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-01-29 09:00 am