With Beautiful Reluctance

warp6:

“I trust your Garden was willing to die…I do not think that mine was—it perished with beautiful reluctance, like an evening star—”

—Letter written by Emily Dickinson, 1880 

tumblr_inline_onejbbd3jx1tgagzo_540

They do not know who they are or where they come from. They do not know how they came to be here, in this overgrown garden with its crumbling observatory. They do not even know their own name. But a series of alarming discoveries–a child’s abandoned toys, a woman’s frantic recording, a smoking ruin–sends them on a desperate quest to unravel the mystery of what happened here, the fate of these vanished people, and the truth of their own identity.

Read on AO3 (In Progress):

Chapter 1: The Observatory
Chapter 2: The Ruin
Chapter 3: The Forest

Gen / Kathryn Janeway, Other(s)
/ Mystery, Character Study, Unreality, Suspense, Found Family

 

warp6:

Chapter 4: The Green
Chapter 5: The Desert

 

warp6:

Chapter 6: The City
Chapter 7: The Train

 

warp6:

Chapter 8: The Cove
Chapter 9: The Ring

 

warp6:

Chapter 10: The Theatre
Chapter 11: The Starship

 

warp6:

Chapter 12: The Inferno

 

warp6:

Chapter 13: The Grey
Chapter 14: The End
Chapter 15: The Stars
Epilogue

Added tags: Action/Adventure, Injury, Psychological Trauma, Hurt/Comfort, relationships, Introspection, Angst with a Happy Ending

 

cosmic-llin:

Folks, I’m not kidding when I say this is one of the best fics I’ve ever read. I can’t even explain why it’s so amazing without spoiling it because discovering what it’s about as you go is one of its many joys, but please take my word for it that it’s just REALLY GOOD and if you love Kathryn Janeway then you should read it. (Note the content warnings as you go, though.)


Tags:

#Star Trek #Voyager #fanfic #recs #amnesia cw #I read this recently #it was amazing #and it felt…extremely Voyager #like if it weren’t for how logistically difficult it would be #to do something that spends this much time inside a character’s head in video format #I could absolutely see this as an episode

how arthur weasley got hired

accio-shitpost:

head of the misuse of muggle artefacts office: oh shit i gotta do an interview now? i don’t even know what we do here! we misuse some muggle shit? sounds right. sure. hey, kid, what’s your name

arthur: arthur weasley, sir

head: you misused any muggle shit recently?

arthur: today i enchanted these toasters to make them sentient, and also angry

head: holy shit can you start right now


Tags:

#Harry Potter #anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog

{{previous post in sequence}}


While I’m on the subject of alternate education methods having fewer obstacles than you might think, here is an example of how a homeschooler goes on field trips:

Mom: *looking at local teacher resources on the Internet*

Resources: Try taking your class for a tour at the nearby widget factory! They do tours for Grades 5 – 12, with a minimum class size of 10, and it’s only $5/student!

Mom: Hey kids, you want to tour a widget factory?

Me: Yeah!

Brother: Sure.

Mom, emailing the field-trip-coordination mailing list: Hey guys, if I can get at least 10 kids aged 10 and up together, I’ll call the widget factory and schedule a tour. Preliminary date is the second Thursday of next month. Cost is $5/kid, paid to me when you get there so I can pay for the group. I’ve already got two signed up. Who’s with me?

Parent: I’ve got three kids for the list!

Other parent: My 12-year-old’s not interested, but the 14-year-old will go.

[etc]

[second Thursday of next month]

Tour guide: Okay kids, time to settle down and at least pretend to listen to the spiel–wait. You’re already settled down, and you appear to be *actually* listening to the spiel. Huh. It’s almost like you wanted to be here.

Kids who wanted to be here: :D

Kids who didn’t want to be here: *at home, reading biology textbook*


Tags:

#seriously we got so many comments from tour guides surprised that the kids actually gave a shit about the tour #oh look an original post #homeschool #my childhood #there are *occasional* places that won’t deal with anyone but an Official School #but most places that do stuff for schools are open to homeschool groups as long as you designate one parent as the liaison #I went to a lot of tours and art workshops and cooking classes #almost every week sometimes #(the parents generally tried to spread things out so that there weren’t *multiple* trips for the same age in the same week) #the more you know

theopjones:

collapsedsquid:

Peterson may be an academic, but he’s dispensing with the academy’s constraints. His university salary is around $128,000; that now looks modest beside the $1m a year he receives in crowdfunding via the site Patreon, in return for YouTube Q&As. Traditional universities charge “unforgivable” fees, and “haven’t got a hope of surviving in their present form”, he says. He has hired three people to work on a proposal for a new online university — “user-funded at the lowest possible cost, but also crowdsourced in terms of its operation”. He is in touch with Peter Thiel, the venture capitalist who urges undergraduates to drop out. There’s a blurred line between the thinker and the salesman, and Peterson has crossed it.

Goddamn it Peter Thiel

It’s totally poisoned because Peterson is tied to it.

But the online university thing might not be a bad idea. You could probably replace quite a bit of the operation of a modern university for lecture-based subjects with a mix of pre-recorded videos, and decentralized discussion with other students, and “crowdsourced”  operation that relies on offloading some tasks to students. 

Probably the biggest issues would be to sell it as something that people consider reputable (a number of purely online universities exist and have lower costs, but they have issues building a reputation), and dealing with things like arranging for securely proctored tests. 

When you say that test proctoring would be a big issue, do you mean you think it would be a big issue for online universities *in general*, or specifically a problem for online universities who are aiming to destroy the old tertiary-education system (rather than just adding more options to it)?

My university technically has a corporeal campus, but I’ve never been there and neither have the vast majority of the other students. They have standing arrangements with a bunch of universities, community colleges, and…*looks at list*…huh, libraries too, maybe you *could* make this system work even if you’re trying to end all corporeal campuses (and so don’t want a system dependent on them continuing to exist). Anyway, they have standing arrangements with a bunch of places across the country to host the exams of the local students. My local community college charges the student a $30/exam hosting fee (to compensate for increasing their proctor’s workload and such), but other than that it’s really a non-issue.

(The computerised exams also have an option to have somebody watch you over a webcam, but I’ve never tried that.)

(now if only my university would join the reciprocal college Internet system, because as it stands I’m not allowed to use the Wi-Fi at *my own exam centre*, and it makes coordinating with my ride a lot trickier. but that’s another matter.)

I see people sometimes who think that exam proctoring is some massive obstacle that online universities will soon face and probably fail to overcome, and it’s like…

One time I read an article about how self-driving cars on public roads would be a disaster, because–not being able to make eye contact with the driver–pedestrians would have no way of knowing whether the car had noticed them and would stop for them, and the car and pedestrian would get into standoffs where neither was willing to risk moving forward (or, worse, *both* of them gave up waiting for the other at the same time). The writer appeared to think that this was insurmountable and would destroy all public goodwill towards self-driving cars.

A few months previously, I’d seen a news clip about a self-driving-car prototype with a smiley-face-shaped light on the front, which it lights up while stopping for a pedestrian in order to let the pedestrian know they’ve been noticed.

The way I felt reading that self-driving-car article is how I feel when people say online-university exam proctoring is a huge issue. The doom they are just now getting around to foretelling has already been noticed and averted, and without anywhere near as much difficulty as they think it’s going to take.


Tags:

#reply via reblog #adventures in University Land #proud citizen of The Future


{{next post in sequence}}

{{previous post in sequence}}


cosmic-llin:

OK, this is seventeen different kinds of adorable.


Tags:

#so I was looking through my archives #and this is still hilarious #so I thought I’d bring it back #Star Trek #Voyager #anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog #(not a duplicate because my first reblog predates the use of that tag)

fuckyeahfluiddynamics:

Blocking blood vessels by creating embolisms is, under most circumstances, very bad. But researchers are exploring ways to fight cancer by intentionally and strategically creating these blockages. In gas embolotherapy, researchers inject fluid droplets, which can carry chemotherapy drugs, into the bloodstream. Once they circulate into a cancerous tumor, they use ultrasound to vaporize the droplet and create a gas bubble. Those bubbles lodge inside the capillaries of the tumor, starving it of fresh blood and trapping the chemotherapy drugs inside. It’s a one-two punch to the cancer. Without blood flow, the cancer cells die, and, since the cancer-killing drugs get mostly trapped inside the tumor, patients may require lower dosages and endure fewer side effects. The technique is currently in animal testing, but hopefully it will be a valuable therapy for human patients in the future. (Image credit: Chemical & Engineering News; research credit: Y. Feng et al.; via AIP)


Tags:

#cancer #the power of science #I agree with Anomaly #(”nifty if it pans out”)