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  1. Pylon of the Month, , more info

    Pylon of the Month - August 2024
    August's pylon comes from France and was sent by a fan of the blog. who tells me it is to be found near Gargilesse Dampierre. A bit of research tells me that Gargilesse Dampierre is officially one of the most beautiful villages in France so that promotes this pylon to near the top of my 'must visit' list especially as it is also quite close to the Eguzon dam and …
    By Kevin Mosedale, 319 words
  2. NetNewsWire, , more info

    Conditional GET Issues
    On his blog, Brent writes about NetNewsWire and Conditional GET issues.
    14 words
  3. /dev/lawyer, , more info

    Negotiating Bastardry
  4. upside down in cloud, , more info

    new tea towels of the Wiltshire White Horses and the Kennet and Avon Canal map
    I've just picked up the new tea towels. There's this one of the Wiltshire white horses, and a map of the Kennet and Avon canal, like this I'm very pleased with the quality of the printing; all the fine details are there, clear as you like. (The images here are low-res, because I'm out in the wilds of the Vale of Pewsey at the moment, and the internet is rubbish.)They're …
    By Dru Marland, 98 words
  5. inessential: weblog, , more info

    NetNewsWire and Conditional GET Issues
    I had thought that NetNewsWire’s conditional GET support was rock-solid — and so my first reaction was to be very surprised to learn that it’s not! My second reaction was to be appreciative — Rachel’s work here on setting up a test server and reporting on the results is really great. My goal has always been to make NetNewsWire a model net citizen, and learning where it’s not is super …
    945 words
  6. The Ranty Highwayman, , more info

    A Tale Of Two Roundabouts
    This post comes from London where two roundabouts have been redesigned to add protected cycling space.The first is the Old Street junction which is right on the border of the boroughs of Hackney and Islington, but part of the Transport for London Road Network (TLRN) and is so a strategic road for motor traffic.The overall design for the roundabout was "peninsularisation" whereby one of the areas between two of the …
    By The Ranty Highwayman, 1,358 words
  7. The Lithole, , more info

    Hits from the Zettlekasten/”Tampa”
    I wrote a bit about the war of the zettlekasten as my last entry, and have been keeping two separate ones; one is a set of notes on Philosophy, thus far really just notes and nodes as I read Bertrand Russell, and another which is for… life stuff, the novel I am perpetually not writing, and so forth, It’s new, and filled with strange observations, one chapter from the novel, …
    By toddbert, 902 words
  8. Yellowed Perils, , more info

    PulpFest 2024: Saturday
    I’m running a bit behind getting this post written and uploaded this morning. It’s the last full day of PulpFest 2024. I didn’t make it to the Doc Savage gathering this morning at 7:30, but I did make it to the informal meeting of members of PEAPS, the Pulp Era Amateur Press Society. I will […]
    By William, 59 words
  9. Kate Macdonald, , more info

    Susannah Walker, The Hard Way
    If ever there was a case of nominative determinism, this book has it. Susannah Walker writes about walking the Ridgeway and the Harrow Way, two ancient routes that snake across southern England and cross each other near the Wiltshire-Somerset border. She walks these routes on her own as an act of conscious resistance. The premise … Continue reading Susannah Walker, The Hard Way →
    By Kate, 68 words
  10. Cathy Dutton, , more info

    Designing whole services part 4 - Taking Action
    Where we started The first Government project I worked on was a licensing service, as part of the project, licence numbers were updated. That change stopped users from being able to log into a related service where they recorded their activity. In summary, our ‘service’ had broken someone else’s ‘service’. I’ve seen loads of examples of similar issues over the years. Usually the result of only designing parts of services …
    2,274 words
  11. Strong Language, , more info

    “Couch-fucker”
    To be fair, the original joke, published on X (formerly Twitter) on July 15, 2024, did not label U.S. Senator and vice-presidential candidate JD Vance, Republican of Ohio, a “couch-fucker.” That came later. The joke, posted by user @rickrudescalves and later hidden, merely posited that Vance “might be the first vp pick to have admitted in a ny times bestseller to fucking an inside-out latex glove shoved between two couch …
    By Nancy Friedman, 1,365 words
  12. Historical Ragbag, , more info

    Dylan of the wave
    This is a slight departure for Historical Ragbag, as I’ll be looking at a mythical figure. But it still involves research and a good story so I decided it still fit. In researching for my novel, it’s contemporary and with merpeople but based on Welsh history and mythology, I came across a figure who gets one tantalising mention in the Mabinogion. Dylan of the Wave. The Mabinogion is a series …
    By historicalragbag, 1,766 words
  13. Matt Keeter // blog, , more info

    Panic! At the Async Runtime Shutdown
    By Matt Keeter
  14. gralefrit - Home, , more info

    BE FUNNY OR DIE
    My book about how comedy works, and why it matters, is available from good bookshops and truly exceptional coal merchants...Deeply analytical and utterly joyous.Robin Ince Joel Morris has finally invented ‘being funny whilst talking about being funny.Caitlin Moran It's made me a better writer. It's probably made me a better human too.Daisy Buchanan Joel knows what he’s talking about. And he’s sickeningly funny. Stop reading this sentence and buy this …
    82 words
  15. Beauty of Mathematics, , more info

    The Annotated Numberphile #4: Third Anniversary
    The fourth in the series about every year of Numberphile. Videos about Klein bottles, infinity, and coin flips.
    24 words