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How Ubisoft Got Machiavelli Wrong in Assassin’s Creed About the author: Iván Goldman is a political scientist from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. He is a Researcher at the Meridiano Foundation and the Argentinean Foreign Policy Research Group (GIPEA) of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires, where he also is a Teaching Assistant at the Argentinean Foreign Policy Seminar. Niccolò Machiavelli was arguably one of the most important political thinkers of Western …
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Bloom | "Late" According to Whom?, , more info
An Excerpt from Tyler C. Gore’s debut essay collection, My Life of Crime Containing multitudes, Tyler C. Gore’s debut, My Life of Crime: Essays and Other Entertainments (Sagging Meniscus Press), is testimony to the weirdness of growing up Generation X, an homage to New York City, a cry against conformity, and a droll appraisal of the institutions and mores underpinning American society. Laugh out loud funny as well as poignant and thought-provoking, this unconventional collection includes a book-length essay, “Appendix,” from which the …
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A History of the BBC in 100 Blog Posts: 1990 Welcome back. To ease us into this final series, let's have another schedule survey, sticking with the main channel this time. It's February 1990 and I'm in my fourth year at school (Year 10 in new money), navigating my GCSEs, nursing a few deeply unrequited teenage crushes and rushing home each night in time for Neighbours and whatever cult shows are on BBC Two (assuming there wasn't sport). February 5th …
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077 / Deezer With Joe Ling, Creative Director at Koto; and Maria Garrido, Chief Marketing Officer at Deezer. The original post for the project can be found at https://bit.ly/bnpodcast077
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Simon Collison | Home, , more info
Back to life I thought I’d lost my old iPod, but found it in the cellar and got it working again. It’s a delight to find a lovely old playlist on it, currently playing through the Scarlett into Ableton and my ears via my desk speakers. I thought ~2005 might’ve been the last time I’d used it, but the playlist is called AAA NACONF, so I must’ve dug it out and loaded it …
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The Research Whisperer, , more info
Getting started Photo by note thanun on Unsplash My job is to help people get funding. I occasionally get requests from friends and family to help them with a funding application. I love these requests – I get to show them what I do, and help them with something that they need. It reminds me that different types of funding need different approaches, but that there are also some things that stay …
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Strategic Choices and Operational Imperatives ↬ Roger Martin: The latter meet my definition of a Strategic Choice. Since the opposite isn’t stupid, it represents a real choice to do something meaningfully different than some or all competitors/peers. The former don’t meet the definition. Does that mean they are unimportant and shouldn’t be mentioned in a strategy document? No. This is what I have come to call an Operating Imperative. Because it is smart and there is …
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“Wherever you get your podcasts” is a radical statement You've heard the call to action at the end of nearly every podcast you've ever listened to: "Listen to us on your favorite podcast app", or in the phrasing of podcaster extraordinare Roman Mars, "...wherever you find podcasts". (By the way, you should be radicalized by the recent 99 Percent Invisible episode on how "cooking with gas" is mostly a conspiracy, and inspired by the absolutely incredible Power Broker book …
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Tolkien and Fantasy, , more info
Tolkien on Max Beerbohm Oscar Wilde by MaxThe New York Public Library recently hosted an exhibition on Max Beerbohm: The Price of Celebrity from October 20, 2023--January 28, 2024. A small book (around one hundred pages), with text by Margaret D. Stetz, with Mark Samuels Lasner, describes many of the items showcased in the exhibition. Max Beerbohm (1872-1956) is perhaps best remembered as a caricaturist (he
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Garage Hangover | The site for '60s garage bands since 2004, , more info
The Sunday Funnies “Sunny Covington Avenue” / “It Won’t Happen to You” on Skoop Photo card included with some copies of the Sunday Funnies 45 on Skoop. From left: John Rice, Luke Pride, Gary MacShara and Tom Sheffer. The Sunday Funnies 45 on Skoop 1070 has two excellent original songs, “Sunny Covington Avenue” an uptempo rocker, and “It Won’t Happen to You”. The labels list Gary McShara (actually Gary MacShara) as the song writer on the labels, with publishing by Buna Music. I don’t …
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What is Caturra Coffee? Learn About This Bourbon Varietal As a long-time barista turned professional coffee blogger, I'm often asked about the different types of coffee beans. One variety that generates both interest and confusion is caturra coffee. Where does this coffee come from? What sets it apart from other varietals? In this beginner-friendly guide, I'll answer all your questions about caturra. I'll cover everything from how it's grown and produced to the characteristics of the caturra bean and …
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Fishing & stuff ..., , more info
Respect the classics man It might be hard to believe for some younger anglers but for many of us the only way we could indulge in our daft pastime at home was through words and pictures, magazines and books. The only worthwhile filmed fishing was John Wilson, there were very few videos, no Discovery channel and certainly no Youtube. So most of us scratched the itch by reading and found information and inspiration whilst …
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Nana An Unsung Masterpiece Rediscovered: Viewing NotesAdapted from Émile Zola's novel, this definitive movie version of Nana [Jean Renoir, 1926] is a masterpiece, the longest Renoir film, and restores one of the master's earliest successes to a length of 2 hours 49 minutes. What follows are some viewing notes from my recent revisitation of the film, -The lines of suitors, but with hierarchy.-The hair on the comb-bristles.-To liken one film to …
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Open Source Musings, , more info
Using Linux on a Chromebook Chances are, you’ve heard of a class of computers called Chromebooks. They’ve been around since 2011 and, in spite of the scorn heaped upon them during that time, Chromebooks have become rather popular devices. Chromebooks run an operating system called chromeOS which, no matter what some people say, is more than just the Chrome web browser. You can even argue that chromeOS is Linux, at least under the hood. That …
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SLIME MOLD TIME MOLD, , more info
Philosophical Transactions: Adam Mastroianni says “please squirt lemon juice on my brain” Previous Philosophical Transactions: JP Callaghan on Lithium Pharmacokinetics Lithium in Scottish Drinking Water with Al Hatfield M’s Experience with Potatoes-by-Default Jon on One Year Post-Potato-Diet Neoncube on The Meat and Veggies Diet Hi SMTM, I’ve now had the pleasure of watching many people encounter A Chemical Hunger for the first time. Some of them get wide-eyed with wonder, and some of them make the same expression that babies make when …