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  1. audio.out, , more info

    The Lonely Traveller
    Back when I started this, the Internet was a lot more promising. You could assume that your words would be indelibly etched forever into the conciousness of humanity. I’ve seen the future, I can’t afford it Turns out, that’s not quite the truth. Corporate greed has overtaken the thirst for knowledge, one could write up a detailed passage of a certain Rock Group’s album developments or release dates, but for …
    By stx, 702 words
  2. The New Aesthetic, , more info

    Interference patterns from LED street lighting creates pixelated shadows.
    Interference patterns from LED street lighting creates pixelated shadows.
    18 words
  3. Travel Writing World, , more info

    Announcing CREATIVE JOURNEYS
    Hello everyone, this is a short housekeeping update episode. I wanted to point your attention to a new podcast project I've started. It's called CREATIVE JOURNEYS, and it's not so dissimilar to Travel Writing World. However, instead of focusing on travel literature, I'll be talking about creativity more broadly and interviewing different types of creative individuals from historians to photographers to artists and authors. We'll talk about process and practice …
    By Jeremy Bassetti, 194 words
  4. Inframethodology, , more info

    Quick Links
    for students | for scholars | for pleasure This blog is no longer being updated regularly with fresh content. Here are some self-study resources (including text and video) for those who would like to improve their academic skills, whether they are students or scholars (or dilletantes like me). For Students I have written a short paper that explains my approach here: “How to Write at University” (PDF). It is also …
    By Thomas Basbøll, 626 words
  5. somethingaboutmaps, , more info

    Automated Hachuring in QGIS
    I seem to have accidentally come up with a method for duplicating a centuries-old terrain representation technique. From a 30m DEM of Churfirsten, Switzerland. If you’ve looked at old maps, you’ve probably seen hachures: lines that run up and down along the slope of terrain features. There were a wide variety of approaches to doing hachuring, with different rules. But, in all cases, they attempted to give a reader a …
    By Daniel Huffman, 1,757 words
  6. Trail Running for Life, , more info

    Racing around the Gateway to Wales (PIGUM)
    The PIGUM (which is an acronym for Porth I’r Gymru Ultra Marathon) is a 30 mile race with around 1700m (5500ft) elevation gain/loss, starting in the market town of Abergavenny, Wales. Porth I’r Gymru translates to “Gateway to Wales”. The PIGUM, 2024 route profile Last year I deferred this race due to scheduling issues, and this year I wasn’t originally going to do it either, as I had booked the …
    By Sean, 1,794 words
  7. Matt Edgar writes here, , more info

    Weeknote: 1 to 5 July 2024
    Back to weeknoting after the election period. I write these notes for my own benefit, to reflect on what went on in my working week. I share my weeknotes online because I reflect more deeply, and write more thoughtfully when anyone could be reading. Monday A meeting of the new NHS England’s Product & Platforms leadership team, of which I’m a member, with the senior leadership of the Primary Care …
    By mattedgar, 481 words
  8. BLDGBLOG, , more info

    Institute for Controlled Speleogenesis
    Recently, I’ve been looking back at a collaborative project with John Becker of WROT Studio. The “Institute for Controlled Speleogenesis” (2014) was a fictional design project we originally set in the vast limestone province of Australia’s Nullarbor Plain. [Image: A rock-acid drip-irrigation hub for the “Institute for Controlled Speleogenesis,” a collaboration between BLDGBLOG and WROT Studio; all images in this post are by John Becker of WROT Studio.] The Nullarbor …
    By Geoff Manaugh, 800 words
  9. Maggie Appleton, , more info

    Leaving Elicit
    Reflections on two years of working at Elicit and why it's time to leave
    16 words
  10. Pottendorf, , more info

    A journey from here to there
    A personal philosophy In order to be a modeller of railways there needs to be a model railway. It doesn't matter if it is a loft or an Ikea box, there has to be a railway, otherwise we are mere collectors of things in boxes.Occasionally, a thought begins to become a concern, why build a model railway and why choose a particular subject? My obsession, for it is an obsession, …
    457 words
  11. My Writing – Pete Ashton's website, , more info

    Pete's newsletter for the start of July
    Hello all, Status updateSo.Mid-June saw me catch Covid again, which was a distinct lack of fun. I was wiped out for a good 10 days and am still feeling the its effect on my energy levels and mood three weeks later. As I approach the second anniversary of my Long-Covid it's put a bit of a damper on any sense of recovery I was feeling recently. Interestingly when Fiona inevitably …
    By Pete Ashton, 2,625 words
  12. The Privacy Perspective, , more info

    Top 10 Defamation Cases of 2023: a selection – Suneet Sharma
    Inforrm reported on a large number of defamation cases from around the world in 2023. Following a now established tradition, with my widely read posts on 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 defamation cases, I present my personal selection of the most legally and factually interesting cases from England, Australia, Canada and New Zealand from the past year – with three “bonus” cases from the US. After a haitus …
    By The Privacy Perspective, 1,343 words
  13. The Arcade Blogger, , more info

    The TDE Podcast Ep 35: Atari Inc Coin-Op Engineer Jeff Bell
    Episode 35 of the Ted Dabney Experience podcast is available now for your listening pleasure! If you enjoy reading ArcadeBlogger.com, you’ll love the other project I’m involved with: The Ted Dabney Experience Episode 35: Click to listen in Jeff Bell was a hardware engineer in Atari Inc’s coin-op division and officially the longest serving employee of the company; literally the last person to switch off the lights in 2004. Jeff …
    By Tony, 192 words
  14. Lucy Bellwood – Blog, , more info

    The Switch
    It’s happening again, the thing that happens when I get back to drawing after a slump. The transition was abrupt. I woke up two weeks ago, went to the studio, queued up Neil Gaiman’s live reading of The Graveyard Book (my habitual comfort food of many years), cranked out four pages, rode my stationary bike for a half hour, and then took it upon myself to begin eating a whole …
    By Lucy Bellwood, 342 words
  15. Quelle Movies, , more info

    Kinds of Kindness
    Few are bold enough, or capable enough, to excel in making the kind of film that is genuinely weird but still manages to have widespread appeal. Yorgos Lanthimos is one of those filmmakers. He continues his reign as the master of the twisted fable with his new movie Kinds of Kindness. This trio of Ovidian-like fables puts various characters in scenarios in which their social interactions are viewed through an …
    By Raquel Stecher, 604 words