erinptah: Cat in christmas lights (christmas)

Shifting books at the library the other day, I found a used condom (not a fresh one, either) stashed behind a shelf of J.D. Salinger, so that’s how my week is going!

(Honestly disappointed. If it had been a few bays earlier it would’ve been with the Ayn Rand, which would make a much better joke.)

(This is all in service of a big shifting/condensing project I’m doing with a bunch of 20th century authors. Books on 21st-century authors have been crammed into just one aisle, it keeps filling up and needing to be pared down — all the while there’s space on the aisles downwind, where nobody feels pressured to weed those, even though we definitely don’t need to still have 3 copies of a Salinger biography from 1992.)

*

Nobly resisting the urge to download + start wasting time with a new stupid phone game.

Not sure if I’ve written about this before — my laundry place has an app, and the app has Sponsor Tie-In Offers, where if you reach (let’s say) levels 20, 50, and 100 of Ball Sort Puzzle, you get 5 cents, 13 cents, and 32 cents of credit in your laundry account. I haven’t added IRL cash to the account since this program started.

All this wouldn’t be worth doing if the games were a chore, but they’re engineered to be tiny little dopamine factories. You get a never-ending succession of Tasks, complicated enough to keep your attention, short enough that you’re getting steady hits to the Task Completed! part of your brain. The whole laundry tie-in is really useful for me, because “there is no more laundry credit to be earned from this game” is a built-in threshold for “okay, time to stop playing and delete the app now.”

So I’m currently between games, and missing those dopamine hits. But I know from experience that “oh, I’ll just play five levels, then go back to focusing on comics for a few hours” is a no-go. Like Odysseus needing to be tied to the mast to keep himself from following the Sirens, I need to not have a game app installed to keep myself from opening it.

You gotta set yourself up for success.

*

Had to bail on Yuletide this year. I gave myself too many end-of-year deadlines to hit, something had to go. (The others are mostly Leif & Thorn stuff — today’s goal is to knock out another round of Volume 7 editing + bonus art.)

At least I did it at the start of the month, instead of denying the problem until the last minute, so my recip won’t be stuck with “a pinch hit that somebody only had a week to write”!

I do have the prompt set open in another tab, in the hopes that I’ll have time/energy to write somebody a quick treat before the collection goes live. It…does not seem likely. But, again, setting up for success, just in case.

erinptah: A map. (books)

Check it out, Cleveland Public Library just released a time-lapse video of the new-shelf-building project that’s been happening on the upper floors for the past several months.

For fun, guess how much new length (in linear feet) this added to our shelf-space capacity…then open the video description and see how close you got.





erinptah: A map. (books)

normal brain: Tom Clancy books

big brain: books by different authors licensed to use the Tom Clancy brand name

galaxy brain: books by all the headmates in the Tom Clancy system

Gallery of Tom Clancy branded novels by 12 different authors
erinptah: A map. (books)
So I’ve been working at a big library for several years now…pulling and shelving books en masse, hundreds in a row…and yesterday was legit the first time I’ve seen someone check out a Dilbert book.

We have a whole shelf of them! All the other newspaper comics in the same section do numbers! The almost total dearth of Dilbert interest is kind of amazing.

Hands-down winner is Baby Blues, btw. It’s the rare day I don’t interact with a Baby Blues collection.

Other biggest recurring hits: Doonesbury, For Better Or For Worse, Foxtrot, Garfield, Little Orphan Annie

Not in such high rotation, but still going around: The Boondocks, Calvin and Hobbes, Cathy, Dick Tracy, Krazy Kat, Little Nemo in Slumberland, Nancy, Peanuts, Pearls Before Swine, The Phantom, Prince Valiant, our one single Sally Forth collection, Terry and the Pirates, Zippy, Zits
erinptah: Madoka and Homura (madoka)
This CBS New York article lays out some specific criteria for Governor Cuomo starting to lift New York's lockdowns and relax its stay-at-home orders. In short:

  • Hospitalizations have been on the decline for 14 days

  • At least 30% of hospital beds and ICU beds available

  • Ready to do contact tracing, with 30 tracers per 100,000 people

  • Positive tests are on the decline even when a lot of testing (it doesn't say exactly how much) is being done

  • Each individual business that wants to reopen must present a plan to keep its workers safe, and industries with lower contact risks will reopen first


Different parts of the country are in all different places pandemic-wise, so you'd have to hold each state or city up to that list individually and see how it compares. Take this article about Texas' plans to enter the first stage of reopening on May 1:

  • Hospitalizations have "held steady" (for 17 days? It isn't clear)

  • Hospitals aren't filled to capacity (doesn't say how close they are)

  • Ready to do contact tracing, but even with the number of tracers they plan to add, it's only about 7 tracers per 100,000 people

  • Infection rate "has been on the decline for the past 17 days" (doesn't say how much testing there is)

  • First stage of reopening includes "restaurants, retail stores, movie theaters...museums and libraries", apparently all of them, limited to 25% capacity. State-licensed healthcare professionals, too, "can reopen offices with precautions." Childcare and summer camps are still closed; next phase of reopening can only begin after "two weeks of data to confirm no flare-up of Covid-19."


So...not as reckless as they could be, but not as cautious and well-prepared as you might hope for, either?

And the order of business reopening seems...odd. For another comparison, Ohio is doing non-urgent medical services first, followed quickly by manufacturing and construction; consumer retail will be held off for 2 weeks, presumably more if infections flare back up; and restaurants are being saved for even later. Libraries in particular are designing their own reopening timeline, where the first stage involves staff providing limited on-site services (e.g. reference calls, interlibrary loan, shelving returns from the drop box) without being open to the public at all.

Ugh. I really hope we can thread this needle, but it's not going to be easy.

Anyway, have some links. (I pulled out the good-for-the-soul ones and saved them for the end.)

[caption id="attachment_5350" align="aligncenter" width="714"]Officials on the Council to Reopen Crystal Tokyo Officials on the Council to Reopen Crystal Tokyo[/caption]

so I stopped buying the shampoo for itchy scalp and dandruff and can you guess I have now? Can you predict what currently afflicts me? )

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