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Futuristic caveman Flint stands in the way of Andromeda's plot to steal the Milky Way's energy!

Cluster (Cluster, volume 1) by Piers Anthony

Journal Whole Page Width Issue

Apr. 14th, 2025 05:39 pm
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[personal profile] sireesanwar posting in [community profile] style_system
 Okay I've been working on Transmogrified as other themes I had some major frustrations with. I think I've figure most things out but suddenly I realized there is a horizontal scrollbar when there shouldn't be.


You can see it at [personal profile] sireesanwar . I can not figure out why my journal is like 150% wide. Anyone see what I'm not?

Bundle of Holding: Defiant

Apr. 14th, 2025 02:23 pm
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Be the master of your Domain with this new Defiant Bundle featuring Defiant, the Game Machinery tabletop roleplaying game of supernatural aristocrats ruling modern-day Holdings.

Bundle of Holding: Defiant

Nested divs in a post header

Apr. 14th, 2025 11:49 am
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[personal profile] jali posting in [community profile] style_system
How can I modify the HTML side of my layout to achieve this result? I am using Practicality as my base theme.

Clarke Award Finalists 1993

Apr. 14th, 2025 09:34 am
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1993: Durham Coalfield closes, ending seven centuries of mining coal there, the Chunnel is traversed by its first high speed train, and the Labour Party begins the arduous task of becoming the Conservative Party.

Poll #32979 Clarke Award Finalists 1993
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 63


Which 1993 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?

View Answers

Body of Glass (variant of He, She and It) by Marge Piercy
7 (11.1%)

Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson
35 (55.6%)

Correspondence by Sue Thomas
0 (0.0%)

Destroying Angel by Richard Paul Russo
2 (3.2%)

Doomsday Book by Connie Willis
47 (74.6%)

Hearts, Hands and Voices by Ian McDonald
4 (6.3%)

Lost Futures by Lisa Tuttle
2 (3.2%)

Stations of the Tide by Michael Swanwick
25 (39.7%)



Bold for have read, italic for intend to read, underline for never heard of it.

Which 1993 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?
Body of Glass (variant of He, She and It) by Marge Piercy
Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson

Correspondence by Sue Thomas
Destroying Angel by Richard Paul Russo
Doomsday Book by Connie Willis
Hearts, Hands and Voices by Ian McDonald
Lost Futures by Lisa Tuttle
Stations of the Tide by Michael Swanwick
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Poll #32972 Books Received, April 5 — April 11
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 58


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

Brigands & Breadknives by Travis Baldree (November 2025)
31 (53.4%)

Woven From Clay by Jennifer Birch (August 2025)
15 (25.9%)

Thief of Night by Holly Black (September 2025)
10 (17.2%)

Pluto by Ben Bova & Les Johnson (November 2025)
9 (15.5%)

This Story Might Save Your Life by Tiffany Crum (March 2026)
10 (17.2%)

Three Stories of Forgetting by Djaimilia Pereira de Almeida (December 2025)
10 (17.2%)

The Works of Vermin by Hiron Ennes (October 2025)
7 (12.1%)

The Autumn Springs Retirement Home Massacre by Philip Fracassi (September 2025)
9 (15.5%)

The Definitions by Matt Greene (December 2025)
2 (3.4%)

Honeyeater by Kathleen Jennings (September 2025)
6 (10.3%)

When They Burned the Butterfly by Wen-Yi Lee (October 2025)
14 (24.1%)

Red City by Marie Lu (October 2025)
8 (13.8%)

The Maiden and Her Monster by Maddie Martinez (September 2025)
10 (17.2%)

Silver and Lead by Seanan McGuire (September 2025)
13 (22.4%)

The Emergency by George Packer (November 2025)
2 (3.4%)

Making History by K. J. Parker (September 2025)
22 (37.9%)

The Last Wish of Bristol Keats by Mary E. Pearson (November 2025)
4 (6.9%)

The Heist of Hollow London by Eddie Robson (September 2025)
10 (17.2%)

The Red Winter by Cameron Sullivan (February 2026)
8 (13.8%)

Daedalus Is Dead by Seamus Sullivan (September 2025)
8 (13.8%)

Kill the Beast by Serra Swift (October 2025)
6 (10.3%)

Greenwild: The Forest in the Sky by Pari Thomson (June 2025)
5 (8.6%)

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

Cats!
41 (70.7%)

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22 works new to me: 15 fantasy, 2 mystery, 1 mainstream, 4 science fiction. I think. In some cases, genre was not clear. Only four are labelled as series, which seems very low.

Books Received, April 5 — April 11



I can see the poll html but it did not work. Cut and pasting to another post seems to be the solution.
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[personal profile] sireesanwar posting in [community profile] style_system
Okay I have several issues here. I'm trying to customize Transmogified from my LJ FlexiSquares and Expressive layouts. But a couple things.

1.  How do I code them to provide my custom tiny icon? I figured out currents or metadata and tags and user and community but not Sticky, Private, Locked etc. DONE

2.  Why are my "access filter" icons (provided by DW) showing up in the post? See images below... if you need me to friend you so you can see the "friends locked" post... let me know. The sticky one appears to be working except it disappears upon clicking a tag on the post or going into the post and I don't know if that is normal... you can see it live at my journal but a friends lock one will have to friend you.

Images )
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[personal profile] tcpip
So this is a political entry. Starting on the global level, the announcement of radical changes in import tariffs by the United States of America has exposed the instability in global markets and the amount of fictitious capital but is founded on the bizarre calculation from debt. As one commentator put it: "The notion that taxing Lesotho gemstones is necessary for the U.S. to add steel jobs in Ohio is so absurd that I briefly lost consciousness in the middle of writing this sentence". Now, the administration has paused the imposition as global markets tumbled (except China, which has stood up and probably has the edge when it comes to economic resilience). The announcement of the pause seems to have been subject to insider-training.

The international effect of the US administration is influential in the current Australian political climate, with LNP leaders openly aligning themselves to the Trump administration. Policy-wise, they've followed the same playbook as their US counterparts: disastrous economic policies, wrecking public health, stripping the public service, "reforming" labour laws, and, as always, in the pocket of the wealthiest elite of the minerals and energy sector. Even their slogan, "Back on Track" means the track of Abbott, Morrison, and, the worst of them all, Dutton. High inflation, reduced real wages, higher taxes, and higher budget deficits. Weakening public health, education, and, as always, welfare. This 'is The Track' they want us to get back on, with the extra pain of Trump's chaos.

The LNP policies are so terrible they have to abandon them in days after announcing them. With an utter lack of economic literacy and an astounding inability to read the room, they are persisting with their plans for nuclear energy. Their campaign is a mess, with candidates being questioned and even stood down for extremist positions. They are led by a potato. Which we know in the Australian vernacular means a person of remarkable incompetence, the personality of a dullard, and is possibly poisonous. After leading in polls for months as a carping opposition, when actually put on the national stage and asked why they are a viable alternative, they have managed how unready they are. They are definitely not worth the risk; hence their sudden collapse in the polls.

Finally, on a personal note, a number of us met at the Union bar in Fitzroy this week for a small celebration of Tristan Ewins' life, who I wrote about recently. Led by Sarah H., the gathering was mainly made up of comrades from his Young Labor days (I was a bit of an outlier in this regard). All had stories to share (they far more than me), along with loving recognition of his personality traits, his conciliatory and balanced assessment from facts, his equally steadfast and passionate commitment to the underprivileged and working people, and the seriousness he took the public policy. The world is a lessened place by his absence, but we have his writing. I am quite prepared to go out on a limb and suggest that Tristan's writings be read and referred to for some time because he was always thinking about practical implementations and the long-run effects of policy, seriously and long-sighted.
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Convicted and executed for an unspeakable crime, Eron Osa must now determine what he will do with the rest of his life.

Psychohistorical Crisis by Donald Kingsbury

NYC reading

Apr. 9th, 2025 04:34 pm
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[personal profile] ursula
If any of you are looking for a last-minute thing to do in NYC, I'm reading at the KGB bar tonight!

Bundle of Holding: Between Clouds

Apr. 9th, 2025 02:02 pm
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Between Clouds, the Year Zero biopunk tabletop roleplaying game about a found Family of misfits navigating the open skies atop their beloved flying beast.

Bundle of Holding: Between Clouds
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In which two young women delight in how nature has rebounded after the collapse of human civilization.

Touring After the Apocalypse, volume 2 by Sakae Saito

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