ot AndroxGh0st Malware Integrates Mozi Botnet to Target IoT and Cloud Services By thehackernews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 19:32:00 +0530 The threat actors behind the AndroxGh0st malware are now exploiting a broader set of security flaws impacting various internet-facing applications, while also deploying the Mozi botnet malware. "This botnet utilizes remote code execution and credential-stealing methods to maintain persistent access, leveraging unpatched vulnerabilities to infiltrate critical infrastructures," CloudSEK said in a Full Article
ot Palo Alto Advises Securing PAN-OS Interface Amid Potential RCE Threat Concerns By thehackernews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 11:42:00 +0530 Palo Alto Networks on Friday issued an informational advisory urging customers to ensure that access to the PAN-OS management interface is secured because of a potential remote code execution vulnerability. "Palo Alto Networks is aware of a claim of a remote code execution vulnerability via the PAN-OS management interface," the company said. "At this time, we do not know the specifics of the Full Article
ot New GootLoader Campaign Targets Users Searching for Bengal Cat Laws in Australia By thehackernews.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 17:25:00 +0530 In an unusually specific campaign, users searching about the legality of Bengal Cats in Australia are being targeted with the GootLoader malware. "In this case, we found the GootLoader actors using search results for information about a particular cat and a particular geography being used to deliver the payload: 'Are Bengal Cats legal in Australia?,'" Sophos researchers Trang Tang, Hikaru Koike, Full Article
ot Iranian Hackers Use "Dream Job" Lures to Deploy SnailResin Malware in Aerospace Attacks By thehackernews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:44:00 +0530 The Iranian threat actor known as TA455 has been observed taking a leaf out of a North Korean hacking group's playbook to orchestrate its own version of the Dream Job campaign targeting the aerospace industry by offering fake jobs since at least September 2023. "The campaign distributed the SnailResin malware, which activates the SlugResin backdoor," Israeli cybersecurity company ClearSky said Full Article
ot ANOTHER GREAT GUN GUY PASSES By www.backwoodshome.com Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2024 13:00:00 +0000 I was saddened to be told of the recent death of my old friend Ed Lovette. He had a long and distinguished career in military, law enforcement, and the CIA. Ed was a thinking man’s instructor. We took each other’s classes. He went through my LFI-I course back in the day , and about thirty […] Full Article Uncategorized
ot THE LAW AND THE FACTS ARE ON OUR SIDE, BUT WE SHOULD BE USING EMOTION, TOO By www.backwoodshome.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 14:00:00 +0000 Historically, both law and facts are on the gun owners’ side of the “gun control” debate, and the Other Side had relied largely on emotion. I respectfully submit that emotion is something our side should play to, as well. I made that point recently at the 2024 Gun Rights Policy Conference in San Diego last […] Full Article Uncategorized
ot Weeknotes wk0 By www.aquarionics.com Published On :: Sat, 02 Jan 2021 13:20:27 +0000 Another year, another attempt at keeping track of what I’m doing. The weird thing about this site is… Full Article WRPL
ot Hot takes on an 11 year old game: Mass Effect 2 By www.aquarionics.com Published On :: Sun, 06 Jun 2021 13:12:36 +0000 I completed Mass Effect 2 a couple of days ago for the first time. This article contains spoilers… Full Article Computer Games Mass Effect
ot Typo in Trump’s Name on Ballot Review Screen Is Not ‘Election Fraud’ By www.factcheck.org Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 20:36:57 +0000 A misspelling of former President Donald Trump's name occurred on an optional ballot review screen in Virginia, prompting an unfounded claim on social media of "election fraud." The error was a typo that appeared only on the ballot review screen, not on actual ballots, and would not affect any votes, election officials said. The post Typo in Trump’s Name on Ballot Review Screen Is Not ‘Election Fraud’ appeared first on FactCheck.org. Full Article Debunking Viral Claims FactCheck Posts 2024 elections Presidential Election 2024
ot Google’s ‘Where to Vote’ Search Result Reflects Quirk of Candidate Surname, Not Bias By www.factcheck.org Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 21:56:25 +0000 Social media users alleged bias against former President Donald Trump when a Google search on Election Day for “where to vote” returned an interactive map to find a person’s polling station when including the word “Harris” but not “Trump.” The reason is because “Harris” is a county in Texas, whereas “Trump” is not a location. The post Google’s ‘Where to Vote’ Search Result Reflects Quirk of Candidate Surname, Not Bias appeared first on FactCheck.org. Full Article Debunking Viral Claims FactCheck Posts 2024 elections Presidential Election 2024
ot 2024 Week 36 Notes: Planners Gotta Plan By www.cygnoir.net Published On :: Sun, 08 Sep 2024 18:12:44 -0800 The new 2024-25 COVID vaccines are available, so FunkyPlaid and I got ours on Friday. Because we went to a pharmacy, my health insurance didn’t cover them, so I had to use funds from my HRA. (We could have waited until our medical provider had appointments, but that would have been late September or early October — and with travel coming up soon, I was unwilling to wait.) It is bizarre and enraging to see how agencies supposedly dedicated to public health are flailing in this moment. I’m extremely fortunate to have a job that provides health insurance, an HRA, and sick leave, and I can afford KN95 masks and rapid antigen tests. What about people who are uninsured or underinsured? I know it’s a bummer to read this, but it’s a bigger bummer to try to survive during yet another COVID surge. Let’s take care of our health, for ourselves and for our communities. Concentrating on This time of year is Planner Season, when the 2025 planners are released and people like me (and maybe you too) gobble them up and then spend the rest of this year hoping that next year we have lives exciting enough to plan. Ever the optimist, my planner line-up for 2025 is: For my personal planner, daily log, habit tracker, reading journal, and commonplace book, I’ll be trying the Sterling Ink Common Planner in their new N1 size, which fits inside a Traveler’s Notebook. I’m currently using a Hobonichi Weeks, which is 95mm x 186mm; the N1 size is 110mm x 210mm. For my work planner, the Wonderland 222 A5 Weekly Planner has been working well for me this year, so I’ll try it again in 2025. Cultivating ✍???? Drafting two stories, one for performance (I hope ????????) and one for a collection. ???? Still knitting that gift for someone. ???? Food I made that was yummy: Peperonata with peppers from a coworker’s CSA box, plus peppers from our own CSA box. CSA boxes are great! Gluten-free vegan apple crisp. I am not a huge fan of apples in their primary form; I prefer them as a cinnamon delivery device. So this recipe from Minimalist Baker, apples chopped up and baked with oats and sugar? That works. Sliced heirloom tomatoes on toast spread thinly with mayonnaise. Truffle salt if you’re feeling fancy. (I was.) ???????? Learning Italian with Duolingo. ???? The workweek was short because of the holiday on Monday, but also long because of everything. I’m still trying to create better boundaries around that. Consuming ????️ One of my planner pals shared a sample of Bungukan Kobayashi’s Yagentoshiro Reflex Violet, a dusky blue with iridescent purple shimmer. ???? “girlfriend” by Hemlocke Springs is on repeat on my brain radio. ???? You don’t need to be a Rolling Stones fan to enjoy the “I Can’t Get No Legal Action” episode of the Judge John Hodgman podcast. ???? Still working my way through the crossword puzzle books I’ve hoarded and enjoying the daily Cross|word on Puzzmo. Also, Minute Cryptic is quite humbling. ???? One last episode of “Fargo” to go, then we’ll start the latest season of “Slow Horses”. ???? What I’m reading and quoting: “The Mountain in the Sea” by Ray Nayler: “The great and terrible thing about humankind is simply this: we will always do what we are capable of.” Some links From “What would an adequate COVID response look like?” by Julia Doubleday: Right now, state representatives are deliberately avoiding mention of COVID, while propagandizing the safety of infection and/or the end of the pandemic by refusing to mask. It is hard to imagine how successful a pandemic response might be if public officials were actually trying to end the pandemic. We quite literally have public health and political and media figures working to hide three pieces of critical information: public knowledge of the virus, public knowledge of mitigation measures that would reduce viral spread, and public knowledge of the severity of the virus (which would motivate desire to reduce viral spread). Other links: NaNoWriMo Shits The Bed On Artificial Intelligence (Chuck Wendig) Why Goblin Mode Is the New Self-Care Routine (Cleveland Clinic) 2024 Winners of the 17th Annual iPhone Photography Awards One more thing Today I’m journaling about this quote from Seneca: “Life, if well lived, is long enough.” Full Article
ot 2024 Week 37 Notes: R&R By www.cygnoir.net Published On :: Sun, 15 Sep 2024 19:52:00 -0800 Look at this absolutely good girl: my canine sister, Willa. Concentrating on Rest, relaxation, and quality time with loved ones! We’re visiting family in Pennsylvania this week and attending a wedding in Kentucky on Friday. When packing, I restricted myself to three notebooks and three pens because I tend to overpack and then immediately regret as I am schlepping around a stationery store in my backpack. Cultivating ✍???? Drafting two (very different) stories. I’m looking forward to time off work to let my creative writing brain percolate. ???? Food I made that was yummy: Pork chops in garlic mushroom sauce, with mashed potatoes and salad on the side. I am not a huge fan of pork chops, but I got them in our CSA box, so I looked for a recipe that incorporated other things I am a huge fan of, like garlic and mushrooms. ???????? When my brain is full of Italian, I switch over to music lessons in Duolingo. It’s fun! ???? No. Consuming ????️ Only three pens means only three inks: De Atramentis Charles Dickens, Sailor Manyo Hinoki, and Robert Oster Sydney Lavender. ???? I heard “White Gloves” by Khruangbin for the first time in a while and forgot how much I enjoy their music. ???? Recently FunkyPlaid and I tried to watch the show “Kaos” and lasted about ten minutes. I had listened to the Pop Culture Happy Hour episode on the show and thought I might enjoy it. ???? No time for games this week. I’m looking forward to some Puzzmo! ???? We started watching “My Brilliant Friend”, the adaptation of Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan quartet, which I read last year and loved. ???? What I’m reading and quoting: “The Mountain in the Sea” by Ray Nayler: “How we see the world matters — but knowing how the world sees us also matters.” Some links I love Tracy Durnell’s latest weeknotes post. I’m not even mad at how it makes me feel like I’ve done absolutely nothing in comparison. ???? Neither Elon Musk Nor Anybody Else Will Ever Colonize Mars (Albert Burneko) Firefly Atlas: I’m eager to see fireflies while I’m here, so I’m doing some research. One more thing I was a bit anxious to travel during a COVID surge, so in addition to getting the new vaccine as soon as I could, I invested in a Flo Mask Pro to wear in airports, planes, and any other crowded spaces. I’m so glad I did; it was very comfortable to wear all day, once I got used to how it felt. My glasses didn’t fog up at all, which is a minor miracle. I did get some looks (you know the kind) but that was a small price to pay for a greater chance of avoiding Covid and/or Long Covid. I only saw a handful of other people masked. Full Article
ot Quote of the Day By fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Oct 2024 00:24:00 +0000 Brother Diaz had no words. Honestly, he was finding it difficult to breathe down here. He was feeling dizzy. As if the ground might suddenly fall away. He struggled to loosen his collar once again. All he'd wanted was a comfortable living, somewhere sunny. To be taken seriously by the frivolous, regarded as wise by the unwise, and considered important by the unimportant. Instead, for reasons he couldn't comprehend, he found himself called on to consort with scarred knights and part-time painter's models, to face unspecified perils dire enough to threaten creation, all while not getting too close to the cages in which his congregation were kept. - JOE ABERCROMBIE, The Devils For more info about this title, follow this Amazon Associate link. Oh, this is going to be good!!! Full Article
ot Quote of the Day By fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 15:27:00 +0000 Balthazar delivered a weighty sigh, but nobody noticed. His current predicament gave him a great deal to sigh about: the ghastly mattress, the dreadful food, the frigid damp and unspeakable odour of his lodgings, the outrageous denial of clothing, the abominable absence of intelligent conversation, the heart-rending loss of his beautiful, beautiful books. But after long reflection he had come to the conclusion that the very worst thing about being forced to join the Chapel of the Holy Expediency . . . was the mortifying embarrassment. That he, Balthazar Sham Ivam Draxi, learned adept of the nine circles, suzerain of the secret keys, conjurer of unearthly powers, the man they dubbed the Terror of Damietta--or at least had dubbed himself the Terror of Damietta in the hope that it would stick--one of the top three necromancers in Europe, mark you--possibly four, depending on your opinion of Sukastra of Bivort, who he personally considered an absolute hack--should have been apprehended by buffoons, tried and condemned by dullards, then pressed into humiliating servitude alongside such abject morons as these. He glanced sideways with an expression eloquently communicating his utter disgust, but nobody was looking. The ancient vampire, presumably rendered decrepit by being starved of blood, slumped in a chair looking as fashionably bored as a wisp-haired skeleton could. The elf stood, thin as a length of pale wire, face obscured by a shag of unnaturally ashen hair, motionless but for a constant and deeply irritating nervous twitching of her long right forefinger. Their chief jailer, Jakob of Thorn, looked on from the corner with arms tightly folded: a war-worn old knight who appeared to have spent a sizeable portion of his life being crushed in a mangle, an experience that had clearly squeezed all sense of humour out of the man. Then there was the supposed spiritual shepherd of this congregation of the disappointing: Brother Diaz, a perpetually panicked young idiot from a little-known and less-regarded monastic order, who wore the expression of a man who cannot swim on the deck of a rapidly foundering ship. An ineffectual priest, an enervated knight, a misanthropic elf, and an antique vampire. It sounded like the start of a bad joke to which the tragic punchline was yet to be revealed. One might at least have hoped for an awe-inspiring venue: some sculpture-crusted sanctum whose marble floor was inset with the ideograms of saints and angels. Instead, they got a draughty little box in the guts of the Celestial Palace, whose one window had a view of a nearby wall sporting a muddle of leaky drainpipes. The choice of Balthazar's farce of a trial had been atonement for his trespasses through service to Her Holiness or burning at the stake. At the time it had seemed a no-brainer, but he was beginning to suspect that, in the long run, immolation might prove to have been the less painful option. - JOE ABERCROMBIE, The Devils For more info about this title, follow this Amazon Associate link. Balthazar's POV is by far my favorite thus far. He's the most entertaining necromancer in speculative fiction since Steven Erikson's Bauchelain and Korbal Broach! Full Article
ot Nobody wants Copilot Pro AI for Office365, so Microsoft will force-bundle it and raise the price? By catless.ncl.ac.uk Published On :: Full Article
ot FBI says hackers are sending fraudulent police data requests ot tech giants to steal people's private information By catless.ncl.ac.uk Published On :: Full Article
ot Election Officials Are Prepared for a Lot More Than You Might Think By catless.ncl.ac.uk Published On :: Full Article
ot How my son got into Duke By blog.penelopetrunk.com Published On :: Mon, 01 Apr 2024 06:30:30 +0000 The worst criticism I’ve ever received from an editor is “it sounds like ChatGPT wrote this.” But as soon as Melissa told me that I thought: she’s right. Unfortunately, she said this about the post I wrote about my son getting into Duke. So I’m trying again because I need to tell you that he […] The post How my son got into Duke appeared first on Penelope Trunk Careers. Full Article College & grad school
ot WNBA is totally annoying, here’s how to fix it for Caitlin Clark’s arrival By blog.penelopetrunk.com Published On :: Sun, 14 Apr 2024 00:29:32 +0000 Professional women’s basketball is a cesspool of mediocrity full of women gatekeeping so the sport can’t change. Fortunately, incoming rookie Caitlin Clark is worth more than the entire WNBA due to her sponsorships. This means that unlike other players, Clark doesn’t work for the WNBA she works for her sponsors and her fans. Also, Clark […] The post WNBA is totally annoying, here’s how to fix it for Caitlin Clark’s arrival appeared first on Penelope Trunk Careers. Full Article Managing up
ot My Jewish college kid is protesting the war in Gaza. And I’m proud. By blog.penelopetrunk.com Published On :: Sun, 28 Apr 2024 19:35:13 +0000 In the last 48 hours many of Y’s friends have been arrested for being part of an anti-war encampment at their college. I am shocked by the large number of college encampments across the US, but I knew this was coming because Y (who goes by they) has been discussing it for months. We are […] The post My Jewish college kid is protesting the war in Gaza. And I’m proud. appeared first on Penelope Trunk Careers. Full Article Diversity
ot Russian Penitentiary System of the 90s: Two Photo Projects From Foreign Authors By englishrussia.com Published On :: Thu, 13 Jan 2022 07:40:24 +0000 The post Russian Penitentiary System of the 90s: Two Photo Projects From Foreign Authors appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Law Photos Society 90s law prison
ot Beauties of the Russian Empire on the Colorized Old Photos By englishrussia.com Published On :: Tue, 18 Jan 2022 04:02:35 +0000 The post Beauties of the Russian Empire on the Colorized Old Photos appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Art Culture History Photos Society colorized photography russian empire women
ot Russian Grandmothers Who Break the Social Norms By englishrussia.com Published On :: Fri, 21 Jan 2022 10:12:11 +0000 The post Russian Grandmothers Who Break the Social Norms appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Photos Society photography women
ot The Best Works of Sergey Maksimishin: Prominent Russian Photographer By englishrussia.com Published On :: Sun, 13 Feb 2022 08:00:15 +0000 The post The Best Works of Sergey Maksimishin: Prominent Russian Photographer appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Art Photos photography
ot Expectation: Photo Project of Yana Romanova By englishrussia.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Feb 2022 13:39:22 +0000 The post Expectation: Photo Project of Yana Romanova appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Photos Society cool photography
ot The Most Beautiful Country Photography Contest By englishrussia.com Published On :: Sun, 13 Mar 2022 03:39:50 +0000 The post The Most Beautiful Country Photography Contest appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Photos Russian Nature nature photography
ot Ukrainian Politician Has Got His Own Gilded Railway Car By englishrussia.com Published On :: Wed, 23 Mar 2022 13:19:11 +0000 The post Ukrainian Politician Has Got His Own Gilded Railway Car appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Photos Society crazy
ot Soviet Life on the Photos of Vladimir Bogdanov By englishrussia.com Published On :: Thu, 24 Mar 2022 13:54:22 +0000 The post Soviet Life on the Photos of Vladimir Bogdanov appeared first on English Russia. Full Article History Photos Society photography
ot Abandoned Bus Depot in Bishkek By englishrussia.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Mar 2022 13:13:32 +0000 The post Abandoned Bus Depot in Bishkek appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Automotive Society abandoned transport
ot Russian Spring in Photos By englishrussia.com Published On :: Mon, 28 Mar 2022 02:04:51 +0000 The post Russian Spring in Photos appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Photos Russian Nature
ot Pretty Motor Mechanic Nastya By englishrussia.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Apr 2022 14:26:10 +0000 The post Pretty Motor Mechanic Nastya appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Photos Russian People girls women
ot A Fragile Thing 7" By craigjparker.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 18:37:00 +0000 The Cure - A Fragile Thing 7"MexicoFrance Universal ItalyUniversal Spain Universal Germany Universal JapanCapitol Records UK Shop"For this limited edition release comes two new mixes both remixed by Robert Smith Tracklist: Side A - A Fragile Thing (RS24 Mix) Side B - A Fragile Thing (RS24 Remix) Limited to 4 units per fan." Full Article
ot Adarsh Shah on "Continuous Delivery for Machine Learning" (September NYCDEVOPS Meetup) By everythingsysadmin.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Sep 2020 19:03:41 -0500 Come one, come all! nycdevops does its first virtual meetup! All are invited! Speaker: Adarsh Shah Topic: "Continuous Delivery for Machine Learning" Time: Thursday, September 17, 2020, 5-630 PM Link: https://www.meetup.com/nycdevops/events/272914068/ Hope to see you there! Full Article NYCDevOps Meetup
ot Oct 15 NYC DevOps Meetup: "Introduction to Site Reliability Engineering" by Nathen Harvey By everythingsysadmin.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Oct 2020 15:17:59 -0500 This month's nycdevops meetup speaker is Nathen Harvey of Google, who will give a talk titled "Introduction to Site Reliability Engineering". The talk starts at 5pm sharp! (NY is in US/Eastern) Please RSVP! See you there! https://www.meetup.com/nycdevops/events/272956481/ (This is a virtual meetup. Everyone around the world is invited!) Full Article NYCDevOps Meetup
ot Thu, Nov 19 NYCDEVOPS meetup: John Allspaw on "Learning From Incidents" By everythingsysadmin.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Oct 2020 15:23:39 -0500 November's nycdevops meetup speaker is John Allspaw, who will give a talk titled "Findings From the Field: 2 Years of Learning From Incidents". The talk starts at 5pm sharp! (NY is in US/Eastern) Please RSVP! See you there! https://www.meetup.com/nycdevops/events/273826675/ (This is a virtual meetup. Everyone in the world is invited!) Full Article NYCDevOps Meetup
ot Thu, Nov 19 NYCDEVOPS meetup: John Allspaw on "Learning From Incidents" By everythingsysadmin.com Published On :: Mon, 16 Nov 2020 15:25:39 -0500 Don't forget! November's nycdevops meetup speaker is John Allspaw, who will give a talk titled "Findings From the Field: 2 Years of Learning From Incidents". The talk starts at 5pm sharp! (NY is in US/Eastern) Please RSVP! See you there! https://www.meetup.com/nycdevops/events/273826675/ (This is a virtual meetup. Everyone in the world is invited!) Full Article NYCDevOps Meetup
ot Article: "Split Your Overwhelmed Teams" By everythingsysadmin.com Published On :: Sat, 12 Nov 2022 12:12:29 -0500 After a 2-year break, my column in ACM Queue magazine returns! It has a new name "Operations and Life". For many years I wrote a column in ACM Queue Magazine. It was called "Everything Sysadmin" and covered devops, IT, and basically anything I felt like. I stopped writing in 2020 due to the pandemic and a general lack of motivation. My last column was published Nov 2020. Two years later I finally feel like writing again. The new column is called "Operations and Life". I'm going to write about the intersection of devops and personal life. I believe that most techniques we use at work can apply in our personal life and vice-versa. These columns will be shorter and more to the point. While my old column would often be 10 or more pages long, my goal now is to keep things to about 2000-3000 words. This will make them easier to read and digest. This format is more web-friendly. The first article in this new format is out! Read it here: Split Your Overwhelmed Teams: Two teams of five is not the same as one team of ten Full Article
ot X-Bots und US-Wahlkampf, Schunkeln für Millionen, Hollywoodfilme diverser By bildblog.de Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 07:54:26 +0000 1. Automatisierte Bots auf X greifen in den US-Wahlkampf ein (zeit.de, Eva Wolfangel) “Die Sorge, dass das Internet von Bots zersetzt wird, gibt es schon lange. Jetzt gibt es erstmals klare Belege für solche KI-Accounts – manche machen Stimmung für Trump.” Eva Wolfangel gibt einen Einblick in die derzeitige Forschung zu Bot-Netzwerken. Weiterer Lesetipp: Elon […] Full Article 6 vor 9
ot Proteste gegen Strunz, Medienwende nach Mauerfall, Freiheit der Herzen By bildblog.de Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 07:54:01 +0000 1. Euronews-Redaktionen protestieren gegen ihren neuen Chef Claus Strunz (uebermedien.de, Stefan Niggemeier) Stefan Niggemeier fasst die Diskussionen um den neuen Euronews-Chef Claus Strunz, Ex-Mitglied der “Bild”-Chefredaktion, zusammen. Mitarbeiterinnen, Mitarbeiter und Gewerkschaften in Lyon und Brüssel würfen Strunz vor, die Prinzipien der Neutralität und Unparteilichkeit zu verletzen, insbesondere durch öffentliche Pro-Trump-Äußerungen und politische Eingriffe in die […] Full Article 6 vor 9
ot Princeton researchers find a path toward Hep E treatment by disentangling its knotty structure By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Tue, 28 Feb 2023 14:04:00 -0500 The hepatitis E virus protein ORF1 contains a region that scientists have struggled to characterize, making the structure and function of this region the subject of much debate. Now, Princeton scientists show that this region of the protein does not behave as a protease, as has been previously suggested, but instead serves as a molecular scaffold to stabilize the rest of the ORF1 protein. Full Article
ot 'I shot her a follow on Twitter,' and soon this Princeton senior was doing research alongside his econ idol By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Wed, 07 Jun 2023 10:07:00 -0400 Amichai Feit had known Seema Jayachandran as a Twitter-famous development economist. She became Feit’s senior thesis advisor for a policy-analysis project that included economic field research in India. Full Article
ot Princeton geneticists are rewriting the narrative of Neanderthals and other ancient humans By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 12 Jul 2024 10:52:00 -0400 Modern humans and Neanderthals interacted over a 200,000-year period, says geneticist Joshua Akey. Full Article
ot Election 2024: How Princeton's Vote100 encourages students to register, vote and be more civically engaged By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 11:01:00 -0500 Voting registration rates among Princeton undergraduate and graduate students have more than doubled largely thanks to the program. Full Article
ot Celebrate Princeton Innovation spotlights researchers who are patenting discoveries, creating start-ups and exploring other ventures By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 10:51:00 -0500 Full Article
ot Finished "Chicks" Quilt (Sue Spargo Wool Applique) By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Tue, 12 May 2015 22:30:00 +0000 A week of finishing!!! Oh my, it feels good to finish things, doesn't it?! Last October, I started the applique process, stitching chick bodies and wings cut from felled wool onto the wool background fabric. Seven months later, 16 chicks, embroidered with threads and beads, run free! Please click the picture to enlarge it, so you can enjoy the fanciful details. If you are new to this process, you can see the various steps and pictures of the chicks on these posts. Of course, they are inspired by Sue Spargo's exhibit at the La Conner Quilt Museum, by her book, Creative Stitching, and by taking a one-day class from her to get me going. Along the way, other books, embroideries, and drawings also inspired me. As you might guess, most of the chicks have at least a few beads. Here is one with the main motif embroidered with beads. And, here is one with just a few beads, the center of the "flowers," and one with no beads at all. Also note that I've quilted the piece with Danish Flower Thread in a shade which closely matches the background color. At first, I thought it would be pleasing to embellish the areas between the chicks with flowers, vines, and leaves using three close shades of the background color. Here is an example. It looks OK when you look at just four chicks with the flower/vine motif in the center. But when I had finished 6 of the areas (sorry no photo), some of them with larger spaces and larger vines/leaves, it looked too busy. It took away from the chicks. I couldn't tell if I was supposed to look at the chicks or the flowers. So I picked out the vines and leaves, leaving just the flowers, which weren't such a distraction. After sewing on the binding, the chicks seemed to need a little warming around them. So I added a line of stem stitch in variegated pearl-cotton in a magenta color. It pleases me! Oh, and one more thing... This is a quilt, designed to hang on the wall, with lots of details to enjoy as you view it up close. But what happens to wool felt when it is out in the open? MOTH DAMAGE and DUST are the enemies. My solution? Find, buy, or have somebody make a wall-mounted display case, with a hinged door. Hang the quilt inside the case, which remains closed except when somebody wants to take a closer look. The above, found on the internet, is close to what I have in mind, with a white background of course. What's next in chick-land? Well, my dear niece just got married... Here is the start of her wedding gift... I'll post a finished photo soon. Full Article applique art quilts Bead Embroidery display hand quilting Quilting Sue Spargo thread embroidery wool
ot "Square Dancers" - Shimmer Quilt By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Sat, 16 May 2015 08:10:00 +0000 Kitty Sorgen, quilter extraordinaire, and Jenny Bowker, the pattern developer, are to blame for this madness! Shimmering Triangles Jenny calls it, and shimmer it does. In fact, it can be over done to the point where it's difficult to look at. But not Kitty's... Kitty, a member of our local guild and the best colorist I know, brought her shimmer quilt to Wednesday night quilting a few months ago, and WHAMMMO! I fell in love, bonkers, totally in love with her quilt. This isn't a great photo, but here it is, Kitty's shimmer quilt... It's so complex, at first I couldn't even figure out what was a block, squares looking like diamonds, color everywhere, blending in some places, shimmering in others. That day, on the spot, enough of us signed up and paid, filling a one-day class instantly. The class was on Feb. 21, 2015. Most of the students got a block finished in class, some even finished two blocks. Each block is 16" square (finished), and has 69 pieces. Below is one block, showing the construction of it. Me? Nope. I didn't sew a stitch. Long after the other students had finished arranging their fabrics on the design wall, I was still struggling with the concept, of how to get shimmer, but not too much shimmer, still arranging my fabrics (photo below). It was really difficult to imagine what would shimmer, what might be too contrasty and shimmer too much (for my taste), and what would have too little contrast and thus not shimmer at all. At home, I laid it all out on my work tables again, rearranging and rearranging the fabrics over and over again. The trick, in my opinion, is to work the diagonals. I began with a layout of focal fabrics, in my case "painterly floral prints," leaving space between them for the companion fabrics. Then choose companion "read as solid prints," placing them at the corners of the focals. Like Kitty, I decided to repeat the companions diagonally between two focals. I don't know if this even makes sense, but maybe you can see it in the layout above. Silly me, I thought sewing it, once I got all the fabrics placed, would be a piece of cake. NOT! Well, technically speaking, sewing it is OK. Although it does take some time and attention to detail to get all the half-square triangles square, and the points nice and pointy. But cutting the triangles is another matter. To make the colors and shapes flow, it's important to blur the line of the focal square by blending the design/color outward through the half-square triangles. Above is an example of one that worked pretty well, because you can only barely discern the square of focal fabric in the center of the block. And here is some fabric I turned into Swiss cheese trying to get triangles that would bring the focal fabric design outward, tricking they eye, making it look like a diamond rather than a square. (Sorry, I didn't take a picture of that particular finished block.) I make the half square triangles using paper piecing, with a free, downloaded template printed on 16 pound copy paper. Paper piecing has a learning curve, yes, but it does make for very accurate piecing, such that I didn't have to trim any of the finished blocks at all! Here is a picture of four finished blocks. You can see the way the companion fabrics repeat diagonally to form a 4-patch block between the focal fabrics. These two fabrics need to be close in value and color. If there is too much contrast, it draws the eye away from the focal fabrics and shimmering triangles. In the case above, I think the orange and pink contrast a little too much. Also on the left the lighter and darker green is also a bit too contrasty. Fabric choices are difficult and important... Any one companion fabric has to work with two focal fabrics and the adjacent companion fabric, which in turn has to work with it's two adjacent focal fabrics. Sound complicated and challenging? It is! It took many days (lost count) to finish the first half of the blocks (10 of 20)... and many more to finish the last 10 blocks... a bit character building. Many times, I told promised myself I would never do paper piecing or make another shimmer quilt again in my whole life! Here I've finished all 20 blocks. I've moved all the furniture out of the studio, and put it on the floor to "audition" border fabrics. Most of the shimmer quilts I've seen do not have borders, but I wanted to make it a bit bigger so it could be used for a bed quilt. This is how it looks all finished, before quilting it, 90 x 74 inches. Since the throat of my old machine is much too narrow to free-motion quilt a piece this size, I decided to get a professional to quilt it. But first I agonized some about how to do it. At first I thought it would be good to fussy quilt, making flowers in the companion fabric areas and vertical vines with leaves over the focal fabrics. This was my sketch for the idea. But then I saw a few quilts done like that, and the fussy quilting looked too busy, competing too much with the shimmer. So finally, I decided on using a double-leaf, free-motion edge-to-edge design. I named my quilt Square Dancers, because of the colorful costumes, movement, and squares. Now that it's finished, guess what? I started gathering fabrics for my second shimmer quilt. I want a spring-summer quilt for my bed in softer, lighter colors. It needs to be bigger than the first one, at least 36 blocks, to work on a queen size bed. Here are some of the fabrics I've found so far: These are mostly designs by Philip Jacobs, one of the Kaffe Fassett Collective designers. I love his colors and designs! I will use other fabrics in my stash, but more than half of the 36 focals will be like these. It will be fun to try this again, to apply what I've learned on the first one, to try to improve my fabric choices, always with the goal of some shimmer (but not too much) and good flow throughout the quilt. I'll also try to pick up my speed a bit, without sacrificing accuracy in the piecing. Expect a post about #2 shimmer quilt in a couple of months. Right now, I'm still gathering fabrics. Full Article design paper piecing Quilting shimmer
ot What! Again? Another Hexie Quilt Started?! By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 28 Sep 2015 20:54:00 +0000 If you're a Beadlust reader, you know I worked for three years (more than 1,300 hours) to hand piece, hand embroider, and hand quilt Mama's Garden, with 4,700 3/4-inch hexies, a true labor of love. A big push this spring got it finished in time to enter into the International Quilt Festival in La Conner, WA. Hooray, hooray, the judges accepted it into the show!!!! This coming weekend, October 2-4, all you quilting enthusiasts will find it rewarding to make the effort and get to La Conner (WA) for the Festival, where you will see an excellent selection of quilts and fiber arts, plus a variety of interesting vendors! Here is the information. Head first for Maple Hall, a huge 2-story building, filled with quilts, at the corner of 1st Street (the main drag) and Douglas Street! Bring your camera, because photos are allowed (at least in the past they were). What do you think? After all those hours, would it be crazy to even THINK about making another hexie quilt, another one with 3/4-inch hexies? Well, then I guess I'm crazy, because the irresistible call of the hexie hooked me again. And why not re-use the same paper pieces? This one will not be traditional, and will definitely NOT be hand quilted. It will be hand pieced, using small left-over fabrics (I refuse to call them scraps), cotton prints (but not batiks). I have no idea how I will arrange them, how big it will be, or anything else about how this new project will develop. The first step was to cut out sets of 2" x 2" squares (6 per set) to make flower petals. So far, I've cut about 130 sets. Here are 80 of them, ready to baste onto the 3/4" paper hexie pieces. From very small pieces, I cut single 2" x 2" squares to make flower centers. These I've already basted to the paper hexie pieces. After basting some of the petals and centers, I started choosing centers for the petal sets. This part is fun! I enjoy "auditioning" various centers until one of them seems right. I'm avoiding high value contrast between petals and centers, because I might want to do a color study with them (no borders). When the urge gets really strong, I allow myself to start stitching the hexies together to make flowers. This quilt will probably have about 650 flowers! I've cut 130 so far, each different. I cut flower petals from all of my small pieces, every one. My preference is to have all 650 flowers different. Sooooooo, if YOU have some small fabric pieces you'd be willing to donate, I'd love to have part of you in my quilt. This is what I need: For petals - 2" x 12" strip, or 4" x 6" piece For centers - 2" square (only one per fabric design) Quilting weight cotton prints only, no batiks. One petal set per fabric design (no duplicates). Prefer small to medium scale prints. Mail to: Robin Atkins 1785 Douglas Road #4 Friday Harbor WA 98250 THANK YOU!!!!! Full Article exhibition grandmothers flower garden hand quilting hexagon quilt hexies La Conner Quilt Museum paper piecing quilt festival Quilt Museum thread embroidery
ot Brother & Sister: Both Quilters & Beaders By beadlust.blogspot.com Published On :: Sat, 14 Nov 2015 05:39:00 +0000 My brother, Thom Atkins, is a very talented quilt and bead artist! He's written a popular book about how to make beaded quilts. Recently he sent me a wonderful birthday present - a box of his scraps to use for making hexie flowers for my in-progress, hand-pieced, hexie quilt. Forty-nine different fabrics makes quite a stack of flowers. Here they are again, this time arranged on a flat surface (click photo to enlarge for details). It's way fun to play with the flowers, re-arranging them in different ways, re-stacking them, and then spreading them out again. All the while I was cutting, basting, and stitching these flowers I was thinking about Thom, about our history and our mutual love of stitching. I recognized most of the fabrics. One was in a quilt we made 19 years ago for our mom's 80th birthday. Some were from blouses, dresses, shirts he made for himself and his wife. Some were from pillows and other home decor he made for their home. Some were from his early quilts. Most of them brought up a ton of memories for me! I always like (and sometimes love) things that Thom makes, and yet I've also noticed when we are in a fabric store together, we do not gravitate toward the same fabrics. I wouldn't have guessed that I would use almost every one of the fabric scraps he sent. There were a few that were too glitzy, had a stronger metallic look than I like. But 90% or more could have come from my own stash. That's how much I like them.... leaving me to conclude that we are more alike than I thought. Here we are as kids... book ends. Me 16 months older than him. What's it like when brother and sister, close in age, are both quilters and beaders, both of us entering our quilts in shows, both of us teaching workshops and writing books? Are we competitive? A little, but not very much in my opinion. I admit to being a little "nervous" when he took up bead embroidery a few years after I make it the focus of both my art and my career. In artistic matters, he has a quicker learning curve than I do, rapidly achieving excellence in any medium he tries. The fact that he likes bling and representational, while I like matte and symbolic, makes our work look different, which helps. We're also very different in our approach to quilt designing. While I am heavily influenced by traditional quilts, his quilts are all "art quilts." Most of his are heavily beaded, while mine are mostly not. Right from the start, he usually has a complete "picture" in his mind of what his quilt will look like when finished; whereas I rarely have a clue what mine will be like until I'm nearly finished with it. Nor have we had issues with our teaching. I mostly teach beaders, emphasizing bead embroidery techniques rather than projects. He mostly teaches quilters, concentrating on methods for sewing beads onto quilts. There are enough teaching opportunities for both of us to accept as many gigs as we can handle. What's the best thing about our mutual passions for beading and quilting? Well, we talk on the phone for hours at a time about our current projects. Our conversations would bore everybody else in our families to death, but for us it's exciting to share our ideas, challenges, and victories. We do it often! It seems each of us has always respected the artistic sensibility and skills of the other. It's great to have somebody you can count on to say, "That's really wonderful," when you show them your latest work. We also share information about photography, opportunities for showing our quilts, inspirations, promotion of our books, and countless other related things. We help each other to solve problems and to grow artistically. It seems pretty ideal; was it always like that? If you've read my first book, One Bead at a Time, available here as a free download, you know that Thom grew up favored to be the artist in the family, showing his talents at a very early age. My bend was more academic, although I had no clear pathway. After majoring in art in college, Thom rapidly became established as an artist. After majoring in English and psychology, I muddled around in a couple of careers for many years. I didn't discover my passion for beading or start to think of myself as an artist until I was 46 years old. Until then I always admired Thom's art, but didn't relate directly to him about it. I'm glad it is different now; glad we are both talented and creative... together! Full Article art quilts Bead Embroidery beaded quilts hexagon quilt hexie quilt One Bead at a Time Thom Atkins