Skip to content

Recently updated blogs

Or see recently added blogs

  1. Quomodocumque, , more info

    Alphabetical Diaries
    Enough of this. Enough. Equivocal or vague principles, as a rule, will make your life an uninspired, undirected, and meaningless act. This is taken from Alphabetical Diaries, a remarkable book I am reading by Sheila Heti, composed of many thousands of sentences drawn from her decades of diaries and presented in alphabetical order. It starts like this: A book about how difficult it is to change, why we don’t want …
    By JSE, 325 words
  2. David Ralph Lewis, , more info

    Ego Death on the M4
    I am driving home at night hands gripping the wheel empty tarmac surrounding me fertiliser stinging my nostrils The engine shaking all the space between my scattered atoms as white lines converge scattered atoms of steel shake in engine vibrations fertiliser drifts from nearby fields the empty tarmac sighs someone else’s hands grip a steering wheel as a car drives on, into darkness.
    By David Ralph Lewis, 68 words
  3. Anurag's Math Blog, , more info

    A new upper bound on the trifference problem
    In a recent preprint, Siddharth Bhandari and Abhishek Khetan have improved the decades old upper bound on the trifference problem by using a clever combinatorial argument involving extremal graph theory. As discussed in my previous posts a trifferent code of length is a subset of with the property that for any three distinct elements of , there exists a coordinate position at which these codewords have distinct values, that is, …
    By Anurag Bishnoi, 445 words
  4. The Arts of (Slow) Cinema, , more info

    The Zone of Interest – Jonathan Glazer (2023)
    I often wonder: when did we stop? When did we stop caring, when did we stop being human? When did we stop seeing in the other a human being? I have always had those questions in my head, maybe because I grew up with this heavy guilt of coming from a country that killed six […]
    By Nadin Mai, 64 words
  5. TokyoDev | Articles, , more info

    How I obtained a J-FIND visa in Japan
    The J-Find Visa enables recent graduates to engage in activities such as job hunting, business startup, and other income-generating endeavors within Japan — opportunities that were previously inaccessible to do so. I was one of the first recipients of this visa, which provided me with the legal foundation to reside in Japan for the initial year, allowing me to make pivotal connections, lay the groundwork for starting a business, open …
    By Oguzhan Karagözoglu, 2,554 words
  6. Sibylla Bostoniensis, , more info

    "Overview of Psycchphamanogolognial Drug Action" [pshrinkery, AI, humor]
    Compliments of u/ceech8, who "uploaded a PDF of [Stahl's Essential Psychopharmacology] chapter 3 and asked [chatgpt4] to make an outline of key concepts" and then "make a helpful diagram summarizing those concepts for a graduate level audience", then posted the result to r/psychiatry: comments
    52 words
  7. Persiflage, , more info

    Midlife crisis
    Plein Air is certainly the best cafe in Hyde Park. (Arguably Build Coffee is fine as well, but they are only open about 5 hours a week.) But it is also true to say that Plein Air is (at best) … Continue reading →
    By Persiflage, 46 words
  8. Lynn Haraldson, , more info

    To: Taylor. From: a DV survivor. Re: Your boyfriend
    But you don't lean into your coach and yell at him! That's a BIG NO.
    By Lynn Haraldson, 24 words
  9. Sci-fi interfaces | Stop watching sci-fi. Start using it., , more info

    Lessons in instrument design from Star Trek
    by S. Astrid Bin Editor’s Note: Longtime fans of this site may be familiar with its “tag line,” “Stop watching sci-fi. Start using it.” So I was thrilled when a friend told me they had seen Astrid present how she had made an instrument from a Star Trek episode real! Please welcome Astrid as she tells us about the journey and lessons learned from making something from a favorite sci-fi …
    By Christopher Noessel, 1,961 words
  10. Little Cotton Rabbits, , more info

    A little lull
    There's currently a lull in our planning for Toby and a temporary reprieve from paperwork, so I'm enjoying decompressing a little with regular walks out in the woods. Although winter still has the countryside in it's grip, there are signs that a change is coming, and the first flower of the year is now in bloom, the glorious snowdrop. I never feel right picking wildflowers to bring home, they all …
    By Julie (little cotton rabbits), 289 words
  11. Doc Pop's Blog, , more info

    #SidewalkFriends: Cone Head
    I like to keep an eye out for cool shapes during my walks and use them as inspiration for my #SidewalkFriends drawings. It’s like my version of hunting for Pokémon. I did a double take when I first saw this orange traffic cone on 29th street. I could have sworn it winked at me. So I grabbed a quick photo and used it as inspiration for today’s Sidewalk Friends sketch. …
    By doc, 164 words
  12. PIPELINE COMICS, , more info

    The Problem with a European Comic Book Collection
    I have a bookcase problem. IKEA Billy and BD Albums don't mix perfectly. Is there a fix? The post The Problem with a European Comic Book Collection appeared first on PIPELINE COMICS.
    By Augie De Blieck Jr., 40 words
  13. Particulations, , more info

    The Problem With...KITSCH!
    This zine is for anyone interested in kitsch from an everyday or academic perspective. The author provides her own kitsch objects, alongside some well-known ones, in order to explore and critique kitsch throughout its history. The zine is A5 size and includes text and black and white images (highly illustrated). The cover is coloured card (colour not specified). The contents includes, among other subjects: kitsch from the 19C, sixties kitsch …
    By Particulations, 122 words
  14. Retail Insider, , more info

    Grabbing an ever bigger chunk of the market
    Asda is adding 110 more convenience stores this month alone that will enable it to make further inroads into the grab-and-go food category and it is not alone as all the major supermarkets and symbol groups like Spar are experimenting with their food-to-go models. They recognise that we are now in an era that is much more powered by grab-and-go and delivery-only propositions. This poses a big question for foodservice …
    By Glynn Davis, 785 words
  15. Forgotten Television Drama, , more info

    Armchair Theatre: The End of the Line (1970)
    Written by John le Carré, produced by John Kershaw and directed by Alan Cooke. Broadcast on ITV at 8.30pm on 29 June 1970. By Joseph Oldham Readers of the recently published book A Private Spy: The Letters of John le Carré (2023) may have been intrigued by a brief reference to a letter that the acclaimed spy novelist wrote to John Margetson, a former colleague from the Secret Intelligence Service …
    By john hill, 3,871 words