thewayne: (Default)
[personal profile] thewayne
Wegmans is a chain dating back a century, based in the NY/New England area. Currently the technology is in then NYC stores. It was deployed with no notice, and customers are given no ability to opt out, short of not shopping in the stores.

They claim that it was installed for 'customer and employee safety'. I think that Madison Entertainment made a similar claim regarding the technology used to keep attorneys out of the Rockettes shows at Madison Square Gardens if their firms are representing companies involved in litigation against them.

I'm glad that I came across this information as one of the states that they operate in is Connecticut, which is a very high probability that we'll be moving there next year. While the technology is apparently not in use outside of NYC, once it's in place in one store, it's pretty easy to install in other stores.

https://www.aol.com/articles/popular-grocery-store-chain-uses-130056099.html

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/01/the-wegmans-supermarket-chain-is-probably-using-facial-recognition.html

https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/01/06/2231258/nyc-wegmans-is-storing-biometric-data-on-shoppers-eyes-voices-and-faces

Isn't It Punny.....

Jan. 7th, 2026 08:16 am
disneydream06: (Disney Funny)
[personal profile] disneydream06
Jan. 7th...

Two Cannibals Are Eating A
Clown. One Cannibal Turns
To The Other And Asks,
"This Taste Funny To You?"

Film post: The Day Time Ended (1980)

Jan. 7th, 2026 01:40 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

The Day Time Ended (1980) film poster
The Day Time Ended (1980)

A family move to a new, state-of-the-art (and weird-looking) home in the desert, but after a "triple supernova" is reported, strange things start happening. These involve weird pyramid thingies that glow green, UFOs in the sky, tiny and possibly malevolent aliens and – the highlight of the film – sub-Ray Harryhausen monstrous but somehow endearing stop-motion creatures of a vaguely reptilian shape. There are a couple of horses, which on the whole act better than the humans. Very little of this makes any sense, including the ending, though that is actually more interesting than the previous hour-plus. Director John "Bud" Cardos apparently considered this his worst film. He may have had a point. Half a star extra for the stop motion. ★½

Reading Wednesday

Jan. 7th, 2026 07:10 am
sabotabby: (books!)
[personal profile] sabotabby
 Just finished: The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann. Did you know that the edition I have ends with an afterword from the author asking people to read his 1200-page book twice? Anyway I am very proud of myself as I managed to finish it around 30 minutes before the hold was due back at the library.

So, is it good? Yes. Do I totally get it? Not totally, though yes, more than I would have if I'd read it when I was 16. Definitely the time stuff, the illness stuff, the characters who are thinly veiled stand-ins for pre-WWI European political debates, yes. But of course, it's a very different world now—there is no longer the temptation to embrace illness as freedom, the idea that you can just convalesce for years in what amounts to a different reality, the fairy-tale world of the sanatorium. Which is why the ending hits so brutally hard. Structurally, the first half of the book is Hans Castorp's first three weeks on the mountain, and then it goes blurry, and the next seven years pass in a dreamlike state, with the changing of the seasons and the coming and going (through death and otherwise) of the patients being the only sense that time exists at all. And then there's essentially a massacre of half the cast in various ways, culminating in the arrival of WWI, and Hans disappearing into a viscerally described battlefield; time and history do exist after all, and it collides with the dream.

Reading it in 2026, of course, I am struck by the debates between Settembrini, representing humanism, and Naphta, representing totalitarianism (Catholicism/communism/fascism, but look, Mann was very much working out his political ideas in this book), but something I didn't talk about last week is Mynheer Pieter Peeperkorn (yes this is a character name) who pops up late in the book as Clavdia Chauchat's sugar daddy. He's a larger-than-life figure who gets described as kingly and charismatic despite being far too old for her, distracting Hans from the aforementioned philosophical debate with revels, partying, and a hella Freudian love triangle. I'm particularly struck by his speech patterns. Look, the guy is basically Trump; he is charismatic because the other characters (except Settembrini, who winds up being the only character who comes off well by the end) read meaning into his rambling words that isn't there. This book feels so incredibly apropos for our present day despite being over a century old.

Anyway, I finished The Magic Mountain, ask me anything lol.

Currently reading: Invisible Line by Su J. Sokol. You know, something light and fun after reading all that. Ahahaha. This is hopepunk but I'm assuming that the hope part comes in more towards the end. It was first published in 2012 and the first 50 pages were such that I had to text the author and ask if xe had like, rewritten it for the current edition to update it or something? Xe had not. I suppose the direction was obvious in 2012 where the political climate was moving but it's nonetheless one of those unsettling dystopian books, set in a crumbling fascist US rife with surveillance and police brutality.

Laek, a history teacher, Janie, his activist lawyer partner, and their two kids, Siri and Simon, are doing their best to live a normal life in New York, but Laek was a bit more of a spicy activist when he was a teenager, and his fake ID is no longer cutting it. So they make the decision to flee by bike to Montreal, which has declared itself a sanctuary city in tension with the Canadian government. It's basically too relatable, with a bunch of moments where the characters wonder if it's too much, if they should stay and fight the small battles they can or GTFO while it's still a possibility. There's a scene early on of a teachers' union meeting where a new policy means that the teachers must report their children to immigration, and it's the most accurate depiction of this kind of scenario I've run across in fiction, and yeah. If your feelings about living under fascism, or next door to fascism, are escapism, this book is going to be too real; if however, like me, you need to just read more about living under fascism, you'll be into it.

Bohemian Rhapsody - isiZulu style!

Jan. 6th, 2026 10:32 pm
thewayne: (Default)
[personal profile] thewayne


Presented by the Ndlovu Youth Choir.

This is from an August 30, 2025 NPR Weekend Edition article. The remaining members of Queen, along with the Mercury Phoenix Trust, authorized this - the only translation of the iconic Queen song. Freddy was born Farrokh Bulsara in Zanzibar, his family moved to England when he was young.

https://www.npr.org/2025/08/30/nx-s1-5521906/queens-bohemianrhapsody-zulu-ndlovu-voice-choir

Another corner of Bewdley

Jan. 6th, 2026 10:30 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public


Today was a pretty unexciting one, with just a little more snow but nothing of any real consequence. I had beans on toast for lunch, which isn't unexciting in itself – I like beans on toast – but it's hardly the most thrilling of meals! Nearing the end of my 365 now. Yes, there'll still be photos in future, just not every day. These houses were built to this design before the River Severn flood barriers were installed, so that the garage would get flooded if the river broke its banks but the living areas would not.

Colonoscopy

Jan. 6th, 2026 05:03 pm
[personal profile] ndrosen
I’m back after undergoing a colonoscopy. The gastroenterologist found and removed one small polyp, which is good — not that I had it, but that he removed it. I’m feeling well, and plan to treat myself to some soy yogurt.

About Library Branches in Orléans

Jan. 6th, 2026 04:46 pm
dewline: Doctor Who quote: Books. Best Weapons in the World (Books)
[personal profile] dewline
This went live today:

https://theneworleans.ca/2026/01/06/orleans-needs-more-public-libraries/

Isn't It Punny.....

Jan. 5th, 2026 07:13 pm
disneydream06: (Disney Funny)
[personal profile] disneydream06
Monday, Jan. 5th...

Whiteboards are Remarkable.

Does anybody have old magazines?

Jan. 8th, 2026 07:23 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
I’ll pay shipping costs. They just have to be picture heavy.

Hm. Maybe I should see if a local dentist or doctor was planning to weed soon….

A cold but bright day

Jan. 5th, 2026 09:09 pm
loganberrybunny: Gritter in the snow (Gritter)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public


339/365: Winter scene, Wyre Forest
Click for a larger, sharper image

It's been very cold today by local standards. We had a thin covering of snow this morning, and it's lingered all day despite bright sunshine. When I had some time I went for a reasonably long walk out to Coppice Gate on the edge of the Wyre Forest. There was some farm machinery making a racket nearby, so it wasn't as calm as I'd been hoping, but it looked lovely and there was hardly a soul about. The ground was hard enough to walk on without getting muddy, too! It's down to -5 °C again as I type, though tonight seems more likely to stay dry.

I also didn’t expect

Jan. 7th, 2026 04:34 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Such an open and bald admission that this is about the oil.

Oh

Jan. 5th, 2026 06:55 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

For what it's worth, I live in the Western Hemisphere. About 2 °W. So either the Preposterous Kumquat and his cronies are too stupid to understand what a hemisphere actually is, or we can expect American troops to invade any moment. I mean, could be either. Possibly both. I hear East Anglia is nice.
spiralsheep: Sheep wearing an eyepatch (Default)
[personal profile] spiralsheep
- Bibliomancy, you know the drill: nearest book, page 126, sentence 6 predicts the year ahead. I have two equidistant books, fiction and non-fiction.
Fiction: "Did you say backpacking?" [Yes?]
Non-fiction: Grows attached to rock [can confirm],
usually below low water [well, that's a matter of opinion, buddy!],
sometimes in pools on lower shore [trufax].

- Happy Gregorian rollover to y'all! As is traditional, mine was spent at an all-night party with much dancing. I met up with my three most reliable once-a-year dance partners, all of whom remain able to whirl me around the floor. One lifts my feet off the floor like dancing with a human chair-o-plane, wheeee, despite our combined ages being well north of a century, lol. In other news, the international Olympic musical chairs committee have issued several lifetime bans due to shocking behaviour on the playing floor. Hilariously, the overly-competitive men of a certain age knocked each other out of competition in the early rounds so the grand final was between two somewhat vague older women who, when the music stopped playing, turned to look at each other and said "Oh!" in unison before one of them decorously sat in the remaining chair. A well-earned victory! :D

- Lexicophilia part 1: I recently saw a large sign on a closed gate stating "GATE CLOSED", and I'm still wondering about the circumstances which led to the placing of this sign because... why...?!

- Lexicophilia part 2: I regret to inform you there's a shop trading as Souled Out Holistic Centre, which is now second in my terrible retail puns list after Damsel In This Dress.

- Social media: I'm unlikely to post much on Dreamwidth for the foreseeable future, but I hope to be around in comments for my nearest and dearest. Apologies, either for my absence or presence, whichever you prefer. ;-)

Film post: Pocahontas (1995)

Jan. 5th, 2026 01:27 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

Pocahontas (1995) film poster
Pocahontas (1995)

This is a frustrating film. It looks absolutely gorgeous, with stupendous colour work, and there's a perfectly decent message in here of the standard Disney "love conquers all" kind. The problem, of course, is that Pocahontas was a real person, and that her story here is sanitised to hell. For example, "Savages" is a very good song as a song (better than "Colors of the Wind", yes) but as a message it's terrible in the way it equates invader and invaded. The real John Smith was almost twenty years older than Pocahontas. And so on; I'm writing a review here, not a history lesson, but it's all pretty embarrassing.

The film itself isn't amazing, either, and sandwiched between the superior The Lion King and The Hunchback of Notre Dame that really shows. Pocahontas's romance is rushed and lacking in real chemistry, the cutesy raccoon and hummingbird are largely irritating, and main villain Ratcliffe is absurdly one-dimensional. If only this had been about imaginary people in an imaginary setting, it could still have worked quite well. But taking real history and basically fictionalising everything to make it seem nicer than it really was is... yeah. ★★

2026 PRediction Meme

Jan. 5th, 2026 07:13 am
moxie_man: (Default)
[personal profile] moxie_man
New Year Book Meme, via [personal profile] brithistorian who got it from [profile] trobador, who probably got it from somewhere else...

Grab the nearest book.
Turn to page 126
The 6th full sentence is your life in 2026.

The book: Otherworldly Maine, a collection of short-stories of aliens, cryptoids, etc. Page 126 lands on A Vision of Bangor in the Twentieth Century by Edward Kent.

The 6th full sentence on page 126: " "That's true again," said I. "

Very cryptic.

2026 Book Log

Jan. 5th, 2026 06:57 am
sabotabby: (books!)
[personal profile] sabotabby
Fiction

1.The Magic Mountain, Thomas Mann

Monday At The Movies.....

Jan. 5th, 2026 03:31 am
disneydream06: (Disney Movies)
[personal profile] disneydream06
This Week's Movie Quote...

G.: And please keep your clothes on, too. There aren't many more sickening sights in this world than you with a few drinks in you and your skirt up over your head. Or "your heads", I should say.

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 5


Which Movie Does This Quote Come From?

View Answers

Butterfield 8
0 (0.0%)

Suddenly, Last Summer
0 (0.0%)

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
3 (60.0%)

I Don't Have A Clue...
2 (40.0%)




Last Week's Movie Quote...

Scarlett: Have you got a boyfriend?
Young Bridesmaid: Yes.
Scarlett: What's his name?
Young Bridesmaid: Dolph. He's good at table tennis. What about you?
Scarlett: No. Afraid not.
Young Bridesmaid: Why not?
Scarlett: Don't know. Because most of the blokes I fancy think l'm stupid and pointless - and, so, they just bonk me and then leave me. And the kind of blokes that do fancy me, I think are drips. I can't even be bothered to bonk them. Which does sort of leave me a bit nowhere.
Young Bridesmaid: What's bonking?
Scarlett: Well, it's kind of like table tennis, only with slightly smaller balls.

It's all about the weddings and funerals.
Yes, it's from "Four Weddings and a Funeral" released in 1994.
It starred, and made a star out of, Hugh Grant, Andie MacDowell, Kristin Scott Thomas, John Hannah, Rowan Atkinson, Charlotte Coleman, and many others......



Those Who Knew or Guessed Correctly...

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