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  1. Uneasy Money, , more info

    T. C. Koopmans Demolishes the Phillips Curve as a Guide to Policy
    Nobel Laureate T. C. Koopmans wrote one of the most famous economics articles of the twentieth century, “Measurement Without Theory,” a devastating review of an important, and in many ways useful and meritorious, study of business cycles by two of the fathers of empirical business-cycles research, Arthur F. Burns and Wesley C. Mitchell, Measuring Business Cycles. Burns was then the head of the National Bureau of Economic Research, which had …
    By David Glasner, 1,136 words
  2. zmh, , more info

    Moving to zmh.org
    As a birthday present, I purchased and migrated to a new personal domain name. To mark the occasion, I put together a gallery from archive.org of my personal site throughout the years, from zacharyhamed.com to zhamed.com to zmh.org. July 2001 June 2004 September 2004 February 2012 April 2012 May 2013 October 2014 September 2015 Today I’m particularly excited to be moving to a .org domain. When I thought about it …
    123 words
  3. The Ideophone, , more info

    Scholarly blogging, now with DOIs
    I have been blogging at The Ideophone since 2007, and not all of it has been as ephemeral as my PhD promotor once feared. My short post documenting the etymology of Zotero is apparently the only scientific documentation of where Zotero’s name comes from; it has served as a source in Wikipedia for ages and has received over 15 scholarly citations. It was also a blog post on here that …
    By Mark Dingemanse, 1,190 words
  4. Alex Wilson - Home, , more info

    Weeknotes: Jar, Bowl, Lantern — Week 5, 2024
    Our mark, let's call her “E”, doesn't know that this is a surprise birthday dinner. Cake is in play. We keep the conversation light in wait of the music. One problem - the card is still blank! So begins the great birthday card heist of '24. This was a Tanzwüste kinda week. Melodic and cheerful. Wednesday evening was a real highlight. I can only gush about how delightful it was …
    By alex, 198 words
  5. Blue Labyrinths, , more info

    Parasites, Symbiotes and Decoys: Remembering Baudrillard’s Contaminated Discourse
    The parasite serves as a useful simulacrum for post-modernism. Post-modernity engages us with a kind of viral discourse, which seeks to comprehend an object without subsuming it under a system of concepts; without, that is, deploying a regime of truth (Lorenzini, 2015) that dominates and forces the object into a conceptual grinder. Instead, it does something much worse. It attempts to open up a line of interactivity, where the object …
    By Giorgi Vachnadze, 3,623 words
  6. Kate Macdonald, , more info

    Sheila Gear, Foula. Island West of the Sun
    Sheila Gear’s Foula. Island West of the Sun (originally published in 1983) is a new edition of a timeless memoir of life on a croft on Foula, an island 20 miles or four hours’ rowing to the west of Shetland. For all that the author was writing about crofting and the island in the 1970s and 1980s, … Continue reading Sheila Gear, Foula. Island West of the Sun →
    By Kate, 76 words
  7. Breaking The Fourth Wall, , more info

    The Lesson, Theatre503 – Review
    The teaching profession is one of the most important vocations in terms of its impact on future generations. Yet at the same time, teachers are undervalued and in each decade, they have to tackle particular ‘problems’ and ‘mindsets’ that are unique to each generation. Invariably, the present generation is viewed by society as the ‘most misbehaved’. The only thing that is consistent is that schools are underresourced and ‘problem pupils’ …
    By Michael Davis, 764 words
  8. Hometowns to Hollywood, , more info

    Harry Spear
    Harry Spear was born Harry Sherman Bonner on December 16, 1921, in Los Angeles, California, to Joseph Bonner and Louise Spear. He was born at French Hospital in Los Angeles and initially resided at 5619 Fernwood Ave., Hollywood, California. His father served in the Navy, and his mother was a homemaker. After his parents divorced, his last name was typically listed as Spear. Spear worked as a child actor and …
    By Annette Bochenek, 512 words
  9. SOCKS, , more info

    Alain Biltereyst: Traces of Abstraction in the Urban Environment
    Contemporary Belgian artist Alain Biltereyst works on abstract paintings characterized by bold patterns and colors. Most of the time, the shapes he depicts are not purely the result of chosen arrangements but act as a sort of “found art”: they are extracted from existing signs, advertisements, commercial signage, graphic decorations on trucks, billboards, and streets. These shapes silently inhabit our urban environment, possessing inherent graphical qualities, yet often going unnoticed …
    By Mariabruna Fabrizi, 153 words
  10. Medieval Manuscripts Provenance, , more info

    She's still at it
    Some people may think that Carla Rossi has done the sensible thing and slipped quietly into well-deserved obscurity, hoping that memories are short and people will forget that she was exposed as serial plagiarist by several independent newspapers, other organisations, and many individual scholars from at least six different countries.Perhaps encouraged by the fact that for several months I have not bothered to respond to, or refute, her tediously repetitive …
    By Peter Kidd, 150 words
  11. Secret Desi History, , more info

    Hindus, Muslims, Persians, and Arabs in Gold Rush San Francisco
    An 1851 San Francisco paper described a city of immigrants… I found a lovely line in an 1851 San Francisco newspaper that celebrates the diversity of Gold Rush San Francisco—a boom town whose residents included “Hindoos” (South Asians), “Mussulmans” (Muslims), and people “from the fairy lands of Persia and Arabia”: “In our streets, the fair European jostles with the swarthy Kanaka or the darker Hindoo; the pious Mussulman says his …
    By Anirvan Chatterjee, 212 words
  12. Jerry Ng's blog, , more info

    How to Manage and Update Python Version
    We’ve all been there — there comes a time when we must update our Python version to meet a different Python version yet, be it at work or when working on personal projects.Just a quick search about “update python version” and we will be bombarded with suggestions to run python --version followed by brew upgrade python3 or sudo apt-get update.Okay cool. Problem solved right?Not really. Probably 9/10 times an upgrade …
    By Jerry Ng, 849 words
  13. Other Strangeness, , more info

    Larry
    It takes a certain kind of temperament to be a bus driver. My uncle told me that. He drove city buses for forty years and during that time he saw some crazy shit. Women going into labor, couples getting into explosive arguments, people pulling knives on each other, the full spectrum of human experience crammed into 30,000 pounds of steel on wheels. You have to have an even keel, he …
    By merritt k, 1,297 words
  14. ordinaryangler, , more info

    01/02/2024 - A scrappy Soar session
    Fancied dusting off the pike rods, so when I saw that the wind was due to ease on Thursday, accompanied by relatively mild temperatures, I booked the morning off and made the necessary preparations. Was up nice and early and made the short trip down the motorway, the moon setting to my right and the first glimmers of orange appearing to my left.Bumped my way down the track to find …
    By Toodle, 1,003 words
  15. Reviews – The travels of Mary Loosemore, , more info

    Snow Country – Sebastian Faulks
    Snow Country – Sebastian Faulks The intertwined stories of Lena and Anton. Set in Austria in the first few decades of the 20th Century. Slow and thoughtful, it left me feeling quite sad at the end. Author page: Snow Country – Sebastian Faulks
    By Mary, 48 words