github: shadowy octopus with the head of a robot, emblazoned with the Dreamwidth swirl (Default)
github ([personal profile] github) wrote in [site community profile] changelog2026-01-31 10:28 pm

[dreamwidth/dreamwidth] 8f455b: Move POST-only logic inside did_post guard in Logi...

Branch: refs/heads/main Home: https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth Commit: 8f455b757a8b81e68e696b54c0c33d61b8cf5b35 https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/commit/8f455b757a8b81e68e696b54c0c33d61b8cf5b35 Author: Mark Smith mark@dreamwidth.org Date: 2026-01-31 (Sat, 31 Jan 2026)

Changed paths: M cgi-bin/DW/Controller/Login.pm

Log Message:


Move POST-only logic inside did_post guard in Login controller (#3511)

The username suffix parsing, credential extraction, and form auth check were running unconditionally on every request, causing uninitialized value warnings on GET. Move them inside the existing did_post block where they belong.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 noreply@anthropic.com

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github: shadowy octopus with the head of a robot, emblazoned with the Dreamwidth swirl (Default)
github ([personal profile] github) wrote in [site community profile] changelog2026-01-31 08:50 pm

[dreamwidth/dreamwidth] f3ad4a: Slight fixes to devcontainer setup, and basic CLAU...

Branch: refs/heads/main Home: https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth Commit: f3ad4a9b098ca50b87ff6b78a739fa7b6b7d8145 https://github.com/dreamwidth/dreamwidth/commit/f3ad4a9b098ca50b87ff6b78a739fa7b6b7d8145 Author: Mark Smith mark@qq.is Date: 2026-01-31 (Sat, 31 Jan 2026)

Changed paths: M .devcontainer/devcontainer.json M .devcontainer/start.sh R .travis.yml A CLAUDE.md A package-lock.json A package.json

Log Message:


Slight fixes to devcontainer setup, and basic CLAUDE instructions

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ursamajor: people on the beach watching the ocean (Default)
she of the remarkable biochemical capabilities! ([personal profile] ursamajor) wrote2026-01-31 12:56 am

the snow is coming down on our new england town

Our choir director, giving us pronunciation notes in rehearsal this week: "We don't want to say 'NIEW-born child,' it's too nasal for our character. NOO-born child. Like, 'ooh, a baby!'"
Me, filters obliterated: "Well, of course, you don't say 'ew, a baby!'"
A: *overhears me, cracks up, can't stop laughing for like the next three minutes*

*

H, upon arrival in Albuquerque: "... why is there snow in New Mexico?!"
Me: "It's a mile above sea level! It's like Denver!"
H: "I thought it was going to be like the Bay Area, or Phoenix."
Me: "I did tell you to bring a jacket."
H: "Isn't like how you always tell me to bring a jacket and I'm usually fine without?"
Me: "Do you wanna build a snowman?"
H: "NO."

*

Weather reports out of Boston are crowing over the second major snowstorm incoming this week, bombogenesis over the Atlantic, and many of my friends there are freaking out about how this is happening on such a similar schedule to Snowpocalypse 2015. Though the current bet is that it'll probably remain out at sea and miss the New England coast for anything but a few more sprinkles.

While I am actually a bit envious of all of the pictures of the deep, freshly-fallen snow people have been posting, I'm also really, really glad that I don't have to shovel snow anymore. That I don't have to penguin-walk everywhere trying not to slip on black ice. That when I bike home at night, my fingers may complain (I was wearing gloves!), but 25 years in New England taught me to layer a wool sweater and a puffer vest. That I'm plucking lemons off the tree from our front porch - in January - and incorporating them into lemon chicken for dinner and wild rice pancakes for breakfast. (Said wild rice pancakes: I took Molly Yeh's recipe and accidentally doubled the wild rice, added cardamom and lemon zest, and grabbed a jar of cloudberry compote for ease of portability/topping; brought them to a breakfast picnic with bike friends this morning instead of our usual coffee because of the general strike.)

In related news, boston dot com posted a list of Boston's top 11 biggest snowstorms by accumulation since they started keeping track, and I was there for most of them, ahahaha.

1. February 17-18, 2003 - 27.6". This was right after Andrew and I had broken up, and I was absolutely blaming the giant snowstorm on him, hahaha. 😁 I lived in an apartment in the Fenway at this point, so thankfully I didn't have to shovel, and aside from having to go to work, mostly got to sit in my apartment and mope dreamily out the window, like the heroine in a romance novel at the nadir.

4. March 31-April 1, 1997 - 25.4". I'd gone to Boston for the weekend with college friends and escaped back to the Pioneer Valley just as the snow started falling. College dorm living sitch, so I didn't have to shovel, but whatever they used to keep the paths vaguely clear smelled like rotting bananas and soy sauce, and this was the kind of thing I got to learn about in my first New England winter, hahaha.

5. Blizzard of 2005 - January 22-24 - 25.4". I'd moved to an apartment in Porter, didn't have to shovel, but we had prime views out our window of people stumbling to the White Hen. I would, however, move into a place with a private patio later that year, which would require me to begin shoveling myself out in order to take the trash out. At least I also began dating a guy who had to shovel himself out, and we could commiserate together!

6. February 8-9, 2013 - 24.9" . Our final winter in Roxbury, where most of our shoveling was stairs, but a loooot of them.
https://www.instagram.com/p/VkNcd8iRrS/?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==
https://www.instagram.com/p/VkMsdvCRqB/?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==
https://www.instagram.com/p/VhsUnoCRlF/?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==

7. January 26-28, 2015 - 24.6".

9. February 7-9, 2015 - 23.1". These last two were part of Snowpocalypse 2015, and if you used one particular entrance to the Minuteman Trail to get to Alewife that winter, THANK ME AND [personal profile] hyounpark FOR SHOVELING, because the snowplow drivers kept dumping all the neighborhood snow in the culdesac at the foot of our street and blocking path access! (As is, we couldn't get our car out of the driveway until like May.) And no, we did not have a snowblower, no place to store one. I had buff-ass biceps that winter. :P

And now the word "shoveling" sounds like technobabble since I've used it so much this post.
kareila: drawing of a cute red house (house)
kareila ([personal profile] kareila) wrote2026-01-30 11:30 am
Entry tags:

inching forward

Got a pre-listing inspection done on the old house this morning. Haven't received the full report yet, but 3 outlets that are supposed to be GFI (Ground Fault Interrupt) didn't trip when they were tested. Robby is going to do some further troubleshooting on that before deciding if we need to call in an electrician. We'll also have to add smoke detectors in all the bedrooms, since having the nearest one be just outside the bedroom door doesn't meet the current requirements.

Next week I need to call someone about the minor roof leak that has developed near the front door of the new house.
ursamajor: people on the beach watching the ocean (Default)
she of the remarkable biochemical capabilities! ([personal profile] ursamajor) wrote2026-01-25 12:30 pm

let her dismantle your distance

Grateful for every update I see from Minnesota friends right now, affirming that they're ... okay isn't the right word; infuriated and joining with their neighbors and friends to stand up against evil in whatever ways they can is probably more accurate. Marching, recording, feeding people, sharing information. The rest of us, doing what we can from the outside, preparing for ourselves to be next. Sending love to you all.

And once that's done, I turn back to cooking. )

finally succumbing to ebooks )

Speaking of scifi, we dropped Paramount after the latest season of Strange New Worlds, partly because of CBS's actions, partly because too many subscriptions and we're trying to cut back, partly because Amazing Race was yet another season of known-quantity reality stars instead of reasonably-believable normies. But we did get to watch the first episode of Starfleet Academy because they made it available on YouTube. And yeah, while I agree the preview made it look like "Star Trek: Dawson's Creek," as [personal profile] hyounpark put it, I really needed to see a Starfleet captain stand up for justice; I needed to see people reaching across cultures from different backgrounds. I worry that the current environment is going to shift broadcastable storylines by next season; S1 was filmed mostly before Biden left office, while S2 is filming now, after CBS bent the knee. But I still found it promising enough to want to watch more; I just don't know how to watch it in a way that balances the scales for me.
azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)
Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 ([personal profile] azurelunatic) wrote2026-01-19 09:54 pm

Ow

Two canes can be better than one.

I have a battery of tests aimed at me for the leg weakness, in case it's neurological.

And my primary care is leaving (again) within a few months. They said last time that I would be assigned to someone in the same practice. That was inaccurate. They're saying it again this time, so I will prepare for battle.

Cats are nice and warm, and extraordinarily heavy on the knees.