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  1. Throne of Salt, , more info

    MOSH: Environmental Scenario Design Framework
    Via NASAPlanet generation is a topic I keep coming back to, trying to develop the perfect formula. This post has been percolating for well over a year at this point, long enough that I had actually forgotten the contents of my prior attempts (see here, here, here and here)I have been fiddling around with this idea for a very long while now (I think this is a year+ draft?), and …
    By Dan, 1,240 words
  2. Jonathan Crowe, , more info

    Everest by Drone
    This time-lapse drone video following the climbing route up Mount Everest does more to make clear the sheer scale of Everest, and in greater detail, than the eponymous 1998 documentary I first saw in an IMAX theatre—which wasn’t exactly a slouch. This video, however, uses a commercially available drone that starts at around C$2,750 (and it’s no coincidence that it was posted by the drone manufacturer, because oh lord does …
    By Jonathan Crowe, 81 words
  3. erock's blog, , more info

    Why structured concurrency?
    With brevity, my operational view on structured concurrency is the management of a tree structure of tasks. It doesn't matter what color the function is, this task tree can be fully controlled by a parent, child interface. You can cancel children tasks, bubble exceptions up to the root task, catch them from raising exceptions, or even restart them when they fail. While this might sound a little abstract, I wanted …
    615 words
  4. PlanB – Powered by tea, , more info

    Poking holes in reality with prototypes
    Here’s the text and images from my talk at Wuthering Bytes 2024. Credits / links are here. This isn’t exactly what I said, I was distracted by a talking robot at one point for one thing I had a really lovely time and met lots of interesting people. Thanks for asking me to speak Andrew. I had a big fight with WordPress over the formatting here and it still looks …
    By libbymiller, 2,913 words
  5. heavenali, , more info

    A summer recess – reading, not blogging.
    Hello! I am dipping my toe back in the water – just to see how it feels. My last post on Heavenali was in mid June, and at the beginning of July I stopped reading other blog posts and announced on social media that I would be taking a break. Although I didn’t put a time scale on it – I had the vague idea of coming back at the …
    By heavenali, 1,168 words
  6. Jane Stuart - Writer, , more info

    Clitheroe v Chasetown
    First game of the season! My options were thus: a 1730 kick off at Crawley for the Blackpool match; or Chase away at Clitheroe, which coincided with a food festival and the launch of a real ale trail. I briefly considered incorporating a trip to Brighton into the Crawley weekender but decided the cost would be ridiculous – and news of the food fest and real ale trail in Clitheroe …
    By blackpooljane, 2,376 words
  7. Blogccasion, , more info

    My response to the UK Competition and Markets Authority
    The Open Web Advocacy (OWA) initiative in their recent blog post Apple adopts 6 of OWA's Choice Architecture Recommendations highlighted the six recommendations that Apple has adopted from the group's recommendations to comply with the EU's Digital Markets Act in relation to browser defaults and choice screens. In parallel, the UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched a Market Investigation Reference into mobile browsers and cloud gaming and have recently …
    447 words
  8. Danny O'Brien's Oblomovka, , more info

    Pavel Durov and the BlackBerry Ratchet
    Why do governments go after companies and executives of services of more weakly encrypted tools? It’s very hard, this early, to pierce through what’s going on with the French authorities’ arrest of Pavel Durov, the CEO of Telegram — but that doesn’t stop people from having pet theories. Was it retaliation from the US and the FBI for not backdooring Telegram? Was it a favor to Durov so he could …
    By Danny O'Brien, 1,768 words
  9. Your Heart Out, , more info

    Lookin' For ... A Coda
    You know that thing where your memory starts playing tricks on you? Yeah? Well, recently I was playing a 2CD compilation, Northern Soul Underground. It’s a great set, with the focus on the early ‘soul’ years, and I love the fact that the cover proclaims that the ’50 Soulful Rarities’ include The Profiles, Squires, Drapers and Laddins. I bet that got people rushing to the shops. Anyway, the second CD …
    3,279 words
  10. Fritinancy, , more info

    Recent writing
    It’s been a minute, as they say. Here’s a sampling of what I’ve published on other platforms: Does Anyone Still Write Letters? (Other Than Me, That Is.) (Medium gift link) What I Like About American English (An Open Letter to Our Friends Across the Pond) (Medium gift link) And speaking of American vs. British English, here’s Bamboozled by Bits and Bobs (Substack) * What you need to know about some …
    By Nancy Friedman, 128 words
  11. Goat-O-Rama, , more info

    Goat Fiddle Party | Aug 25, 2024
    By Phil, 7 words
  12. Breaking More Waves, , more info

    Song of the Week - Geordie Greep - Holy, Holy
    Is Steely Dan cool these days? Or is it the case that they’re deeply unfashionable? Either way, every person should make it their mission in life to listen to The Nightfly by Donald Fagen (the lead singer of Steely Dan). If I was writing one of those ‘100 Albums You Must Listened To Before You Die’ lists it would definitely feature.The reason I mention this record is that there is …
    By Breaking More Waves Blog, 247 words
  13. Picturegoing, , more info

    Seeing Stars
    Source: Alan Bennett, extract from ‘Seeing Stars’, London Review of Books, vol. 24 no. 1, 3 January 2002, pp. 12-16, reproduced with slight emendations in Untold Stories (London: Faber and Faber, 2005), pp. 160-173 Text: In the 1940s within a mile or so of where we lived in Armley in Leeds there were at least half a dozen cinemas. Nearest was the Picturedrome on Wortley Road but others were just …
    By Luke McKernan, 1,603 words
  14. Wyrd Britain, , more info

    The Department of Midnight
    "Dark matter makes up 85% of the universe. Recent scientific theory suggests dark matter is information—a fifth form of matter—and that we can wake it up. But waking it up can let dark things out.James Callis is Dr. John Carnack. Five years ago, his dark matter experiments led to tragedy. His redemption is working for the Department of Midnight, investigating dangerous dark matter experiments, trying to prevent further disasters. But …
    By ian holloway, 571 words
  15. The Toy Box Philosopher, , more info

    Tea with Lena: Barbieland Miniatures and Zuru Mini Brands Create
    I was going through the blog archive the other day and noticed that it's coming up on three years since I started reviewing again. Three years! The time has flown by for me. I also noticed that I'm posting way less often than I used to, which is a little depressing. At this point I have an enormous backlog of dolls that I'm dying to look at! I always set …
    83 words