Tumgik
#Hugo 02
nanadoesart · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
OC sketches
7 notes · View notes
stromuprisahat · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Catherine: "Hugo?"
Hugo: "Shit, sorry."
Catherine: "You're crying."
Hugo: "It's very unmanly." *sigh* "It's just news from Sweden. Fucking massacres. Democracy gone mad. You need to impose sanctions."
Catherine: "I can't, Hugo."
Hugo: "Saw the American here. Fuck me, the world burns."
Catherine: "What an exciting man and idea. You shared this love and ideal once."
Hugo: "Yeah. I've been down that road. Protect yourself. Side with the British or you'll be crying in a foreign hallway. And missing the cheeses. Terrified you'll never see Stockholm again. I'm sorry."
Catherine: "Why did you lose?"
Hugo: "What? Honestly?"
Catherine: "Yes. Forget the fake tears for a second and honestly."
Hugo: "Well played. Honestly, honesty. That's what fucked me up."
Tumblr media
"I believed in everyone's goodness…" *laughs* "… thought they'd be grateful for the agency I was giving them over their lives. I didn't control it, didn't play it clever. I just believed in the fucking people. Embarrassing when you say it out loud."
Catherine: "Not embarrassing. Meant you had a good heart. Too good, perhaps."
Tumblr media
Catherine: *clicks tongue* "Oh, now they're real."
12 notes · View notes
wingedballoonpeace · 1 month
Text
What will it be like if Digimon Adventure 02 had a "Neverland" arc?
Tumblr media
If that was the case, we see a crossover with Digimon and Peter Pan. Plus, if Digimon paid tribute to classic literature, poetry, and drama, the arc would've featured original texts and dialogues from these great authors of all time.
William Shakespeare
Tumblr media
Hans Christian Andersen
Tumblr media
The Brothers Grimm
Tumblr media
Rudyard Kipling
Tumblr media
Victor Hugo
Tumblr media
Jules Verne
Tumblr media
Arthur Conan Doyle
Tumblr media
Edgar Allen Poe
Tumblr media
Robert Louis Stevenson
Tumblr media
Charles Dickens
Tumblr media
H.G. Wells
Tumblr media
A.A. Milne
Tumblr media
L. Frank Baum
Tumblr media
Lewis Carroll
Tumblr media
J.M. Barrie
Tumblr media
Imagine the astonishing adventures the DigiDestined and their friends will have if they encounter Peter Pan and travelled to Never Never Land. I figure it would've been amazing to introduce kids to the world of literature through the stories and characters created by these brilliant writers.
4 notes · View notes
docpiplup · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Los Herederos de la tierra - 1X02, Penitencia (Penance) II 1X07, Veneno (Poison)
@asongofstarkandtargaryen
2 notes · View notes
lecoque · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
******* INFO LITERAIR *******
******* BERBERPHONÉC *******
******* DROIT AU BUT *******
--------- CAMEL PHILIP MORRIS -----------
3 notes · View notes
lorenzospurio · 2 months
Text
N.E. 02/2024 - "Geografie della sete" di Luca Pizzolitto, recensione di Annalisa Ciampalini
In questo testo scrivo a proposito dell’ultima pubblicazione di Luca Pizzolitto[1], Getsemani, uscita nell’agosto 2023 per peQuod con prefazione di Roberto Deidier. Si tratta di un libro importante e incisivo che fin dal titolo ci rende prossimi ai sentimenti di attesa, abbandono e angoscia caratterizzanti il culmine della passione di Cristo, quel tempo di alta sofferenza che precede l’evento…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
blushdrunksa · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
It was one of her days off and Daria woke her up early, demanding she make her flapjacks with silly faces on them. She also asked if Louise could call Hugo and invite him for breakfast, so Louise did just that. She was in the middle of mixing the flapjack batter when Hugo showed up and she smiled over at him with a little wrinkle of her nose, "She asked for food and abandoned the whole ordeal. She was helping me and decided it was too boring for her," She laughed and ran her fingers through her hair before she grabbed the pan and put it on the stove.
Louise turned some music on and started twirling around and swaying to it before she stood at the stove. "Do you want some eggs and bacon, too?" She asked him, looking over her shoulder at Hugo with a little smile on her lips. His was as much a part of the family as anyone else and she felt at ease with him around, even when they weren't having sex. He just fit the way someone should and she enjoyed his presence more than anything. Daria came rushing in when she heard Hugo's voice and threw herself into his arms. "I told you that you were going to miss him coming in, you little menace!" Louise laughed and turned back to pouring the batter into the pan. / @midnightsaboteur
1 note · View note
hugoalexandrecruz · 1 year
Video
Rampas do Edifício II do Iscte by Iscte - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa Via Flickr: Rampas do edifício II do Iscte. Fevereiro de 2023. Fotografia de Hugo Alexandre Cruz
0 notes
Text
The majority of censorship is self-censorship
Tumblr media
I'm on tour with my new novel The Bezzle! Catch me TONIGHT in SAN DIEGO (Feb 22, Mysterious Galaxy). After that, it's LA (Saturday night, with Adam Conover), Seattle (Monday, with Neal Stephenson), then Portland, Phoenix and more!
Tumblr media
I know a lot of polymaths, but Ada Palmer takes the cake: brilliant science fiction writer, brilliant historian, brilliant librettist, brilliant singer, and then some:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/10/monopoly-begets-monopoly/#terra-ignota
Palmer is a friend and a colleague. In 2018, she, Adrian Johns and I collaborated on "Censorship, Information Control, & Information Revolutions from Printing Press to Internet," a series of grad seminars at the U Chicago History department (where Ada is a tenured prof, specializing in the Inquisition and Renaissance forbidden knowledge):
https://ifk.uchicago.edu/research/faculty-fellow-projects/censorship-information-control-information-revolutions-from-printing-press/
The project had its origins in a party game that Ada and I used to play at SF conventions: Ada would describe a way that the Inquisitions' censors attacked the printing press, and I'd find an extremely parallel maneuver from governments, the entertainment industry or other entities from the much more recent history of internet censorship battles.
With the seminars, we took it to the next level. Each 3h long session featured a roster of speakers from many disciplines, explaining everything from how encryption works to how white nationalists who were radicalized in Vietnam formed an armored-car robbery gang to finance modems and Apple ][+s to link up neo-Nazis across the USA.
We borrowed the structure of these sessions from science fiction conventions, home to a very specific kind of panel that doesn't always work, but when it does, it's fantastic. It was a natural choice: after all, Ada and I know each other through science fiction.
Even if you're not an sf person, you've probably heard of the Hugo Awards, the most prestigious awards in the field, voted on each year by attendees of the annual World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon). And even if you're not an sf fan, you might have heard about a scandal involving the Hugo Awards, which were held last year in China, a first:
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/science-fiction-authors-excluded-hugo-awards-china-rcna139134
A little background: each year's Worldcon is run by a committee of volunteers. These volunteers put together bids to host the Worldcon, and canvass Worldcon attendees to vote in favor of their bid. For many years, a group of Chinese fans attempted to field a successful bid to host a Worldcon, and, eventually, they won.
At the time, there were many concerns: about traveling to a country with a poor human rights record and a reputation for censorship, and about the logistics of customary Worldcon attendees getting visas. During this debate, many international fans pointed to the poor human rights record in the USA (which has hosted the vast majority of Worldcons since their inception), and the absolute ghastly rigmarole the US government subjects many foreign visitors to when they seek visas to come to the US for conventions.
Whatever side of this debate you came down on, it couldn't be denied that the Chinese Worldcon rang a lot of alarm-bells. Communications were spotty, and then the con was unceremoniously rescheduled for months after the original scheduled date, without any good explanation. Rumors swirled of Chinese petty officials muscling their way into the con's administration.
But the real alarm bells started clanging after the Hugo Award ceremony. Normally, after the Hugos are given out, attendees are given paper handouts tallying the nominations and votes, and those numbers are also simultaneously published online. Technically, the Hugo committee has a grace period of some weeks before this data must be published, but at every Worldcon I've attended over the past 30+ years, I left the Hugos with a data-sheet in my hand.
Then, in early December, at the very last moment, the Hugo committee released its data – and all hell broke loose. Numerous, acclaimed works had been unilaterally "disqualified" from the ballot. Many of these were written by writers from the Chinese diaspora, but some works – like an episode of Neil Gaiman's Sandman – were seemingly unconnected to any national considerations.
Readers and writers erupted in outrage, demanding to know what had happened. The Hugo administrators – Americans and Canadians who'd volunteered in those roles for many years and were widely viewed as being members in good standing of the community – were either silent or responded with rude and insulting remarks. One thing they didn't do was explain themselves.
The absence of facts left a void that rumors and speculation rushed in to fill. Stories of Chinese official censorship swirled online, and along with them, a kind of I-told-you-so: China should never have been home to a Worldcon, the country's authoritarian national politics are fundamentally incompatible with a literary festival.
As the outrage mounted and the scandal breached from the confines of science fiction fans and writers to the wider world, more details kept emerging. A damning set of internal leaks revealed that it was those long-serving American and Canadian volunteers who decided to censor the ballot. They did so out of a vague sense that the Chinese state would visit some unspecified sanction on the con if politically unpalatable works appeared on the Hugo ballot. Incredibly, they even compiled clumsy dossiers on nominees, disqualifying one nominee out of a mistaken belief that he had once visited Tibet (it was actually Nepal).
There's no evidence that the Chinese state asked these people to do this. Likewise, it wasn't pressure from the Chinese state that caused them to throw out hundreds of ballots cast by Chinese fans, whom they believed were voting for a "slate" of works (it's not clear if this is the case, but slate voting is permitted under Hugo rules).
All this has raised many questions about the future of the Hugo Awards, and the status of the awards that were given in China. There's widespread concern that Chinese fans involved with the con may face state retaliation due to the negative press that these shenanigans stirred up.
But there's also a lot of questions about censorship, and the nature of both state and private censorship, and the relationship between the two. These are questions that Ada is extremely well-poised to answer; indeed, they're the subject of her book-in-progress, entitled Why We Censor: from the Inquisition to the Internet.
In a magisterial essay for Reactor, Palmer stakes out her central thesis: "The majority of censorship is self-censorship, but the majority of self-censorship is intentionally cultivated by an outside power":
https://reactormag.com/tools-for-thinking-about-censorship/
States – even very powerful states – that wish to censor lack the resources to accomplish totalizing censorship of the sort depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four. They can't go from house to house, searching every nook and cranny for copies of forbidden literature. The only way to kill an idea is to stop people from expressing it in the first place. Convincing people to censor themselves is, "dollar for dollar and man-hour for man-hour, much cheaper and more impactful than anything else a censorious regime can do."
Ada invokes examples modern and ancient, including from her own area of specialty, the Inquisition and its treatment of Gailileo. The Inquistions didn't set out to silence Galileo. If that had been its objective, it could have just assassinated him. This was cheap, easy and reliable! Instead, the Inquisition persecuted Galileo, in a very high-profile manner, making him and his ideas far more famous.
But this isn't some early example of Inquisitorial Streisand Effect. The point of persecuting Galileo was to convince Descartes to self-censor, which he did. He took his manuscript back from the publisher and cut the sections the Inquisition was likely to find offensive. It wasn't just Descartes: "thousands of other major thinkers of the time wrote differently, spoke differently, chose different projects, and passed different ideas on to the next century because they self-censored after the Galileo trial."
This is direct self-censorship, where people are frightened into silencing themselves. But there's another form of censorship, which Ada calls "middlemen censorship." That's when someone other than the government censors a work because they fear what the government would do if they didn't. Think of Scholastic's cowardly decision to pull inclusive, LGBTQ books out of its book fair selections even though no one had ordered them to do so:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/06/books/scholastic-book-racism-maggie-tokuda-hall.html
This is a form of censorship outsourcing, and it "multiplies the manpower of a censorship system by the number of individuals within its power." The censoring body doesn't need to hire people to search everyone's houses for offensive books – it can frighten editors, publishers, distributors, booksellers and librarians into suppressing the books in the first place.
This outsourcing blurs the line between state and private surveillance. Think about comics. After a series of high-profile Congressional hearings about the supposed danger of comics to impressionable young minds, the comics industry undertook a regime of self-censorship, through which the private Comics Code Authority would vet comings for "dangerous" content before allowing its seal of approval to appear on the comics' covers. Distributors and retailers refused to carry books without a CCA stamp, so publishers refused to publish books unless they could get a CCA stamp.
The CCA was unaccountable, capricious – and racist. By the 60s and 70s, it became clear that comic about Black characters were subjected to much tighter scrutiny than comics featuring white heroes. The CCA would reject "a drop of sweat on the forehead of a Black astronaut as 'too graphic' since it 'could be mistaken for blood.'" Every comic that got sent back by the CCA meant long, brutal reworkings by writers and illustrators to get them past the censors.
The US government never censored heroes like Black Panther, but the chain of events that created the CCA "middleman censors" made sure that Black Panther appeared in far fewer comics starring Marvel's most prominent Black character. An analysis of censorship that tries to draw a line between private and public censorship would say that the government played no role in Black Panther's banishment to obscurity – but without Congressional action, Black Panther would never have faced censorship.
This is why attempts to cleanly divide public and private censorship always break down. Many people will tell you that when Twitter or Facebook blocks content they disagree with, that's not censorship, since censorship is government action, and these are private actors. What they mean is that Twitter and Facebook censorship doesn't violate the First Amendment, but it's perfectly possible to infringe on free speech without violating the US Constitution. What's more, if the government fails to prevent monopolization of our speech forums – like social media – and also declines to offer its own public speech forums that are bound to respect the First Amendment, we can end up with government choices that produce an environment in which some ideas are suppressed wherever they might find an audience – all without violating the Constitution:
https://locusmag.com/2020/01/cory-doctorow-inaction-is-a-form-of-action/
The great censorious regimes of the past – the USSR, the Inquisition – left behind vast troves of bureaucratic records, and these records are full of complaints about the censors' lack of resources. They didn't have the manpower, the office space, the money or the power to erase the ideas they were ordered to suppress. As Ada notes, "In the period that Spain’s Inquisition was wildly out of Rome’s control, the Roman Inquisition even printed manuals to guide its Inquisitors on how to bluff their way through pretending they were on top of what Spain was doing!"
Censors have always done – and still do – their work not by wielding power, but by projecting it. Even the most powerful state actors are not powerful enough to truly censor, in the sense of confiscating every work expressing an idea and punishing everyone who creates such a work. Instead, when they rely on self-censorship, both by individuals and by intermediaries. When censors act to block one work and not another, or when they punish one transgressor while another is free to speak, it's tempting to think that they are following some arcane ruleset that defines when enforcement is strict and when it's weak. But the truth is, they censor erratically because they are too weak to censor comprehensively.
Spectacular acts of censorship and punishment are a performance, "to change the way people act and think." Censors "seek out actions that can cause the maximum number of people to notice and feel their presence, with a minimum of expense and manpower."
The censor can only succeed by convincing us to do their work for them. That's why drawing a line between state censorship and private censorship is such a misleading exercise. Censorship is, and always has been, a public-private partnership.
Tumblr media
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/22/self-censorship/#hugos
2K notes · View notes
a-beautiful-fool · 8 months
Text
♡hi! i’m lou ♡
╰┈➤ [BASIC INFO] my name is lou but i also loooove nicknames, she/they, i’m a minor (15+), a middle child, bisexual mess, certified ADHD haver, infjt, bilingual, scorpio, swiftie, marauders lover (NOT HP!!), book nerd, true crime junkie, im horrible at tagging things, im obsessed with renee rapp, snoopy is life, im constantly listening to music, and more below the cut <3
Tumblr media
~~hobbies~~
⭑ playing guitar ⭑ writing music ⭑ reading ⭑ swimming ⭑ journaling ⭑ skateboarding ⭑ binging true crime ⭑ drawing ⭑ listening to music ⭑
~~music~~
⭑ taylor swift ⭑ gracie abrams ⭑ maisie peters ⭑ sabrina carpenter ⭑ conan gray ⭑ billie eilish ⭑ the backseat lovers ⭑ renee rapp⭑ boygenius ⭑ olivia rodrigo ⭑ noah kahan ⭑ claire rosinkranz ⭑ harry styles ⭑ chappell roan ⭑ 5sos ⭑ tate mcrae ⭑ artic monkeys ⭑ cigarettes after sex ⭑ girl in red ⭑ and so many more ⭑
~~shows~~
⭑ heatstopper ⭑ criminal minds ⭑ brooklyn 99 ⭑ the good place ⭑ parks & rec ⭑ never have i ever ⭑ ghost files ⭑ pjo ⭑ superstore ⭑ modern family ⭑
~~movies~~
⭑ legally blonde ⭑ clueless ⭑ 10 thing i hate about you ⭑ miss americana ⭑ knives out 1 & 2 ⭑ the princess bride ⭑ mean girls ⭑ little women ⭑
~~books~~
⭑ percy jackson ⭑ the book thief ⭑ the outsiders ⭑ the 7 husbands of evelyn hugo ⭑ heartstopper graphic novels ⭑ the fault in our stars ⭑ sherlock holmes ⭑ better than the movies ⭑ harry potter (f**k jkr!!) ⭑ the inheritance games ⭑ little women ⭑ nancy drew ⭑ agggtm ⭑ a series of unfortunate events ⭑
~~links~~
⭑ moodboard masterlist ⭑ my spotify account ⭑ my snoopy sideblog ⭑
🤍my inbox is always open!! however i am horrible about responding in a timely manner i am so sorry!!🤍
Tumblr media
𝗡𝗼𝘄 𝗽𝗹𝗮𝘆𝗶𝗻𝗴:
"Mess It Up- Gracie Abrams”
01:26 ━━━━●───── 02:48
↺ |◁ II ▷| ♡
174 notes · View notes
gentlebeardsbarngrill · 4 months
Text
02/07/2024 Daily OFMD Recap
TLDR; Cast & Crew Sightings; More Rhys Cameos; Damien Gerard; Hugo PIerre Martin; More Samba BTS Feat. David Fane; Cosplay Day; Feb 8 Events: #WeLoveSamson; Upcoming Watchparties; UK Fan Effors: Radio!; YouGov Tutorial; Stats; Schadenfreude; More Clowning; Morale; Love Notes; Daily Darby/Tonight's Taika.
= Cast & Crew Sightings =
Another Rhys Video on Cameo! This one in particular had a lot of folks clowning today. You can watch the video on cameo-- it's the newest one 3:51 seconds long with him in the hat and the red shirt. I tried to download it and upload it, and tumblr literally lost all my drafts because of it, I have no idea what happened so I'm not doing that again lol. Instead, here's the short video of what triggered the clowning.
"Thank you so much for all your support on Our Flag Means Death, they'll be more stuff happening in the future, keep listening and watching, and uh, yeah, peace out, Rhys Out, Don't let that Octopus out! BuhByeeee!"
Thank you @Jodegg for sharing this video with us!!!
== Damien Gerard! ==
Damien Gerard gave us a new BTS photo for #WearFineThingsWell
Tumblr media
== Hugo Pierre Martin ==
Hugo, aka our friend the french doorman from The Best Revenge is Dressing Well poked his head out! We'd love to have you doing venues sir!
Tumblr media
==More BTS from Samba!==
It's a David Fane themed day! Wanna see the videos too? Head on over to Samba's IG!
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
==Cosplay Day!==
Today was cosplay day and lots of folks shared their awesome costumes from today or over the past couple years! These are just a few highlights! Please feel free to hop over to IG or Twitter for more!
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
== Events for Feb 8! ==
Tomorrow is #WeLoveSamson Day! Let's show Samson Kayo some love for all his hard work and various characters! Feel free to reach out across platforms to send him some love! Pic Src: Samson's IG
Tumblr media
Twitter / Instagram / Facebook
=Watch Party Reminders=
No watch party for Feb 8, but Feb 9 we've got:  Love Birds Watch Party on Feb 9th - 9 pm GMT, 4 pm EST, 1pm PST.
Tumblr media
Watch Party Hashtags:
#AdoptOurLoveBirds
#AdoptOurCrew
#SaveOFMD
== UK Fan Efforts ==
Fans are reaching out to radio stations in the UK! Very cool guide put together by @TeeHeeSeason3 on Twitter for contacting BBC radio stations in the UK regarding what to place to help support the OFMD Renewal.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
== Focus Groups ==
Remember the focus group/surveys we mentioned yesterday on yougov.com? Well some folks have been trying to sign up and been having some issues finding OFMD, so our lovely, sweet, amazing @libbyroseitm was kind enough to make a tutorial for everyone! Twitter Thread. YouGov rating tutorial! Make an account first, then follow these steps. If you'd like to see what kinds of questions it asks for you to sign up, visit here. Step 1: On your Account page, scroll down until you see a link for "View All Ratings", and click that
Tumblr media
Step 2: You'll be taken to a screen that says "Rate Everything", click on the link for "Not What you're looking for?" and it will pop up a model that gives you a button to click that says "Previous Version" Click that.
Tumblr media
Step 3: Once in the new version, type the name of the show (or actor, writer, etc) you'd like to rate
Tumblr media
Step 4: Select your show when it pops up, and then rate it and add an opinion if you'd like!
Tumblr media
Special Notes:
People probably aught to be careful to keep personal information to themselves.
You can search for actors and other films and tv shows related to OFMD, not just the show itself.
Vote on things other than OFMD so they don't get suspicious.
= STATS STATS STATS =
As always, special thanks to our dear friend @meowzawowza_ over on twitter for their constant stats updates
Tumblr media Tumblr media
== Schadenfreude ==
Awww, looks like WB Discovery Inc is still trending downwards. How sad. Thank you @btweenhisteeth for keeping us up to date on these sad sad times for WB!
Tumblr media
== More Clowning ==
So today I learned of this "Honk Weather Control Center" account on twitter (@HonkForecast) and I have to say it's pretty great. So far for several days they've had "clown" forecasts for how much we should be clowning. Love it.
Tumblr media
== Morale ==
Definitely head on over to Rhys' New Cameo video if you haven't already because as always his sunshine is a big ol dose of Vitamin Darby right to the soul and there's nothing that can replace that feeling!
== Love Notes ==
Done with your Rhys love? Great! But now you have to endure my unconditional love as well! *Maniacal laughter*
Are you aware that you are so very loved, my dear?
But also, did you know you're worthy of love?
All the love--- Like every kind you want (platonic, romantic, parental, agape, etc)
You are not difficult to love. Not at all.
You are not too much, or too little,
you're exactly the right amount,
and you are worthy of love just the way you are.
I've probably said it before, but I want you to know just how imperfectly perfect you all are, and every moment of every day you deserve love and happiness and everything you want in life.
The world is such a better place with you in it and all of your crewmates want you to know that. We care for you deeply my friends.
You matter, don't ever forget that.
= Daily Darby / Tonight's Taika =
So I just got done watching a bunch of Radiradirah on youtube (which is goofy AF btw, like New Zealand Monty Python style fun) and I can't get over Space Waltz, so tonight that's the theme. Look at these two stinking goofballs and their faces.
Tumblr media
Night lovelies <3
PS: I never say it but thank you for all the lovely comments in the tags! They always make me smile, yall are the best!
101 notes · View notes
theroyalsandi · 1 year
Text
CORONATION PORTRAIT
Elizabeth II | June 02, 1953 by Cecil Beaton
Tumblr media
Charles III | May 06, 2023 by Hugo Burnand
Tumblr media
220 notes · View notes
menitrust · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
We're super excited to announce new Mexico City and Guadalajara dates next year. tix: https://menitrust.tumblr.com/
03/31/24 Tecate Pal Norte, MX 04/02/24 Mexico City, MX 04/04/24 Guadalajara, MX
Poster by Hugo Bernier
56 notes · View notes
Text
hey did you know excel will mistake some gene names for dates and autoconvert them
In response to these issues, the HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee (HGNC) has made changes to some gene names prone to errors. This includes converting the SEPT-1 gene to SEPTIN1 and the MARCH1 gene to MARCHF1.
We also found some novel errors. Some were connected to the local language setting. For example, the AGO2 gene was converted to Aug-02, perhaps due to “Ago” being short for “August” in Spanish. Similarly, MEI1 was switched to May-01 (“Mei” is “May” in Dutch), and TAMM41 to Jan-41 (“Tammikuu” is “January” in Finnish).
91 notes · View notes
taurusmoonchild · 4 months
Text
next-gen bday and house hcs
I'm getting back into my next gen phase... someone stop me fr
💛Teddy - 14/04/1998 (aries) ❤️Victoire - 02/05/2000 (taurus) 💙Dominique - 28/05/2002 (gemini) ❤️Freddie - 02/04/2004 (aries) ❤️James - 13/06/2004 (gemini) ❤️Roxanne - 05/06/2005 (gemini) ❤️Rose - 16/11/2005 (scorpio) 💚Albus - 28/11/2005 (sagittarius) 💛Louis - 10/12/2005 (sagittarius) 💙Molly II - 07/01/2007 (capricorn) 💙Lucy - 07/01/2007 (capricorn) 💛Hugo - 15/10/2007 (libra) ❤️Lily - 13/02/2008 (aquarius)
37 notes · View notes
lecoque · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes