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  1. New Ways Ministry - Blog, , more info

    Disrupting the “In Group”
    Today’s reflection is from Bondings 2.0 Contributor, Angela Howard McParland. Today’s liturgical readings for the 4th Sunday of Ordinary Time can be found here. Pope Francis recently said that he hoped hell was empty. “It’s difficult to imagine it,” the pope said. “What I would say is not a dogma of faith, but my personal thought: I like to think hell is empty; I hope it is.” In so much …
    By Angela Howard-McParland, 533 words
  2. the urban prehistorian, , more info

    Arctic henge
    Thanks to the diligent and hard work of Clonehenge, we have a really good understanding of Stonehenge replicas and pastiches from across the world. There are a surprisingly large number of these, over 100 (!!), from complete and partial replications of the original monument itself, to installations and structures inspired by those (in)famous trilithons in a range of different materials. “Clonehenge covers replicas and models of Stonehenge from the sublime …
    By balfarg, 2,141 words
  3. Throne of Salt, , more info

    Further Short Reviews of Delta Green Actual Plays
    Following up from the previous installment. Redacted Reports (Amended)Apparently the end of Season 6 was one of the scripted bits, which is very disappointing: I think it was a really lame way to end a certain character's arc, and knowing it was entirely avoidable is a major let down. I was correct in predicting a move to King in Yellow content, but Season 7 is not Impossible Landscapes, and after …
    By Dan, 743 words
  4. a man and his hoe, , more info

    Winter Hopped By
    January’s warm spell came to an abrupt end with a week of sub freezing weather. Then it started to snow Tuesday evening, January 16. By Wednesday morning we were blanketed with snow. So this winter will not be a snowless winter after all. An alien seeing a rabbit footprint in the snow is liable to go looking for a three legged creature. You could almost say that rabbits draw pictures …
    By theMan, 264 words
  5. Going back to electronic after a 20 years break, , more info

    lnBMP : CH32V3xx support
    It is painful, but it is beginning to work :On the picture a RP2040-pico zero running lnBMP and happily debugging a ch32v307 Riscv chip(of course it can still debug Arm chips)Perigoso did a lot of work there, only the communication protocol /implementation was missing.It is still a bit slow though :(
    By meanX, 55 words
  6. upside down in cloud, , more info

    the Aldermaston Wharf Tea Rooms
    Aldermaston Wharf is a lively spot on the Kennet and Avon Canal in Berkshire; ABC hireboats operate from there, and these rather fine tea rooms, that I've just done this picture of. There's prints of it over in my Etsy shop, and it's one of six postcards in my latest set.
    By Dru Marland, 56 words
  7. Jonathan Griffin, , more info

    Ron Nagle
    To mark the occasion of his double-bill exhibition at both the Bury Street and Helmet Row galleries of Modern Art in London, Ron Nagle had his nails done. Specifically, just his thumbnails: black on his right, pale pink on his left. Nagle, who is 84, could not travel to London for the opening, so on […]
    By Jonathan Griffin, 58 words
  8. Clagnut by Richard Rutter, , more info

    Responsive typography and its role in design systems
    Later this year I’ll be talking at Patterns Day. Jeremy asked me to weave responsive typography into his narrative of the day. How do I explain something as all-encompassing as typography within something so potentially granular as a design system? Read more.
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  9. The Analog Antiquarian, , more info

    Epilogue: The Counter-Reformation
    Paul III was the last pope to seriously imagine that the second great schism in the history of Christianity could be healed, that a peaceful way could be found to bring Protestants back home to the Catholic Church. In 1536, as Michelangelo was beginning the painting of the Sistine Chapel’s altar wall in Rome and Henry VIII was executing his second wife in London in order to make space for …
    By Jimmy Maher, 4,912 words
  10. KnowWhere - GIScussions, , more info

    Geomob London – a Cracking Night of Maps
    I must have said this before but I will say it again, if you live anywhere near to London and you are into geotech, maps or location influenced applications then you should give Geomob a try. I’d offer you a money back guarantee but as it’s free that isn’t necesary but more on that later. On Wednesday night (24th Jan 2024) we had nearly a hundred people attending what truly …
    By Steven, 442 words
  11. Monster Zone, , more info

    Sputnik (2020)
    The alien is an interesting design Starring Oksana Akinshina, Fedor Bondarchuk, Pyotr Fyodorov and Anton Vasilev. Written by Oleg Malovichko and Andrey Zolotarev. Directed by Egor Abramenko. That’s a rather bloody helmet In 1980s Russia an independently-minded doctor, Tatyana Klimova (Akinshina), is taken to a military base to help with research focusing on a cosmonaut, Konstantin Veshnyakov (Fyodorov), who has formed a symbiotic bond with a cortisol-consuming alien creature living …
    By Ken Miller, 265 words
  12. Bonkers about Perfume, , more info

    From "Dead man in garage" to "Rather odd boyfriend": tantalising snippets from my mother's book book
    Today is the 25th anniversary of my mother's death. This isn't going to be a tribute post as such - I have already written one of those, on the occasion of the 11th anniversary. It is true, however, that an item belonging to my mother has inspired this post...to wit, her book log / book diary? / book book?!. This is a small hardbacked notebook in which she used to …
    By Vanessa, 92 words
  13. Bonfire, , more info

    Safer social networking - Bonfire's recent experiment with Prosocial Design Patterns
    Introduction # As we gear up for the release of Bonfire Classic 1.0 – which includes not just the software but also extensive documentation and tutorials for people to customise and extend functionality in-depth – we're testing the framework's modularity. Our goal is to understand the workflow involved in planning, designing, implementing, and shipping a Bonfire extension from scratch. Our first experiment involved implementing a design pattern from the Prosocial …
    919 words
  14. a sibilant intake of breath, , more info

    Sagan on self-skepticism
    Perhaps the sharpest distinction between science and pseudoscience is that science has a far keener appreciation of human imperfections and fallibility than does pseudoscience (or “inerrant” revelation). If we resolutely refuse to acknowledge where we are liable to fall into error, then we can confidently expect that error—even serious error, profound mistakes—will be our companion forever. But if we are capable of a little courageous self-assessment, whatever rueful reflections they …
    By Milan, 96 words
  15. D4D, , more info

    Key Information
    When I got the new (to me) car it only had one key – although it had two fobs, it was just that the actual keyblade on one of them was missing. (Which is quite an achievement in the first place!) I like having two working keys for the car – it means, among other things, that I can leave it with people (valets, MoT/Servicing etc.) without leaving my full …
    By Lyle, 247 words