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  1. everything changes, , more info

    Look to your neighbors
    LAST SUMMER, Bill McKibben wrote about a question he often hears from people worried about climate change: where should I live? McKibben acknowledges the privilege that accompanies such a query—a great many people have no ability to choose where to live, and must face whatever the climate throws at them wherever they happen to be. But it’s also not an unreasonable thing to consider. For those of us with the …
    By Mandy Brown, 830 words
  2. Cogito, Ergo Sumana | Home, , more info

    Glimpses of 2023
    I started on a more systematic 2023 retrospective post, and found that a pretty significant amount of my 2023 centered on stuff I don't want to talk about on my blog. Feel free to ask …
    39 words
  3. Uses This, , more info

    Anthony Agius
    Who are you, and what do you do? My name is Anthony, but most people probably know me as decryption, the online handle I've used for almost 3 decades now. I write about computers for a living! While I do a bit of freelance writing here and there, my main job is The Sizzle, a daily newsletter that goes out to 1,350 people daily who pay me to tell them …
    848 words
  4. LondonJazzCollector, , more info

    Michael Gibbs: Michael Gibbs (1970) Deram
    Selection: And On The Third Day https://londonjazzcollector.files.wordpress.com/2023/07/michael-gibbs_and-on-the-third-day_mchael-gibbs_deram_sml1063_1970_ljc.mp3 . . . Track List: A1. Family Joy, Oh Boy!A2. Some Echoes, Some ShadowsA3. LiturgyA4. Feelings And Things B1. Sweet RainB2. NowhereB3. ThrobB4. And On The Third Day Artists Chris Spedding, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass guitar; Brian Odges, Jack Bruce, bass guitar; Ken Goldy, Maurice Gee, Ray Premru, bass trombone; Alan Ford, Fred Alexander, cello; John Marshall, Tony Oxley, drums; Ray Russell, …
    By LondonJazzCollector, 810 words
  5. The Digital Antiquarian, , more info

    The Rise of POMG, Part 3: Competition and Conflict
    While the broth of Ultima Online was slowly thickening, not one but two other publishers beat EA and Origin Systems to the punch by releasing graphical persistent virtual worlds of their own. We owe it to them and to ourselves to have a look at these other POMG pioneers before we return to the more widely lauded one that was being built down in Texas. They were known as Meridian …
    By Jimmy Maher, 7,619 words
  6. Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives /// Darren Cullen, , more info

    NEWSNIGHT
    https://video.wixstatic.com/video/5897e0_fd46ef20406c4575b9cd464b8f6ab5be/1080p/mp4/file.mp4This is amazing. A photo of the "Vote for Genocide - Vote Labour" poster I designed was featured in the BBC Newsnight intro last night, right after a shot of Starmer getting into an SUV. Makes it look like an official Labour campaign lol. Delighted with that.
    By Darren Cullen, 48 words
  7. The Map Room, , more info

    One Map to Rule Them All: Fantasy Map Design Elements in ArcGIS Pro
    John Nelson’s One Style to Rule Them All is an ArcGIS Pro map style that applies fantasy map design elements to real-world geographic data. It does something similar to his earlier (2018) map style, My Precious (described here) only differently and with fewer assets (and 1/60th the download size). John has examples and links to a four-part video tutorial at this ArcGIS Blog post. Previously: Maps Middle-earth Style: By Hand …
    By Jonathan Crowe, 86 words
  8. DRMacIver's Notebook, , more info

    Silently losing critical life infrastructure
    Silently losing critical life infrastructure Published 2024-02-16 I’ve been having a pretty bad time recently. I don’t intend to talk about the details, but suffice it to say I’ve been extremely stressed, depressed, and anxious, and my appetite and sleep have completely fallen apart. This isn’t about that, not directly. It’s about some interesting things that this has revealed about my personal infrastructure for supporting my mental health. One piece …
    1,508 words
  9. Rachel the Gardener, , more info

    “What do you gardeners do, in winter?”
    This always makes me laugh, and it's one of those questions which just never stops appearing: just yesterday, someone said to me “I suppose you're off work now, until spring.” They must have realised, from the Look which I gave them, that they'd said the wrong thing, but they ploughed on, regardless: “I mean,” they said “there's nothing to do in the garden now, right?”Wrong.Oh, so wrong! To see the …
    By Rachel the Gardener, 84 words
  10. Bill Fortney, , more info

    It’s All About the Light!
    As I prevued images I shot in the past, it always works out that 90% of the time the ones that jump out at me are the ones with great light! Very often I go out in great light and look for subjects! I found these four recently when looking at a trip to Portland’s Japanese Garden’s work. Study the light and how they added to the texture and shapes …
    97 words
  11. Dr Alun Withey, , more info

    The Troublesome Gibbet of John Haines, the ‘Wounded Highwayman’ of Hounslow.
    For this post, I am going to wander into the world of crime in the late eighteenth century, and the grisly fate that befell many who committed the heinous crime of highway robbery. (Full disclosure: I’m not an historian of crime, gibbets or highwaymen…perhaps the case I’m about to discuss is very well known. But he’s new to me, and I love a good story, so he makes it into …
    By Dr Alun Withey, 988 words
  12. 333SOUND, , more info

    Three Tips for Submitting Your Proposal
    Sitting down to write your proposal for the 33 1/3 open call? Will Hagle, the author behind Madvillain’s Madvillainy, offers his advice for would-be authors keen to be part of the series. Here are his top three tips for writing your proposal. Hello,My name is Will Hagle and I am here on the 33 ⅓ blog to present three tips for submitting a proposal for Bloomsbury’s open call. Before I …
    By 33 1.3 Admin, 1,650 words
  13. Jennifer Mills News, , more info

    2024-02-16 12:34
  14. CST Online | Television Studies Blog, , more info

    THE CRISIS IN UK TV AND WHAT IT MEANS FOR CULTURE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE by Mhairi Brennan and Jack Newsinger
    2024 has started with a bang for TV. Shows like The Traitors (BBC1) and Mr Bates vs The Post Office (ITV) have had around 10 million people tuning in to each episode, reminding us of the social relevance and transformative power of the medium. As television scholar, Amy Holdsworth, notes, TV acts as a ‘point of collective identification’ (2011:145), not just between the viewer and what they see on… Source
    By CSTonline, 90 words
  15. Hiew's Boardgame Blog, , more info

    Why gamers are lousy game makers
    Let's start by clarifying the definition of a game maker in the context of this discussion. What I mean by game maker is someone who creates games in a financially sustainable manner. The games are being released to the public, and the whole process is profitable. Not necessarily profitable enough to sustain a livelihood. We know that is extremely rare. Just something that gives you a small side
    By Hiew Chok Sien 邱卓成, 74 words