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  1. David Darnes, , more info

    A Desk of Stickers
    I've been collecting the stickers since the beginning of my career, from events such as Gavin Strange's Droplet launch 💧, the Future Of Web Design conference, Netlify's Jamstack Conf, plus all the companies and people I've had the privilege to work with.However, the tabletop itself is from my first flat after moving out of my mum's house… actually, I lied. It was in my first flat, alongside an inflatable bed, …
    By David Darnes, 177 words
  2. Andy Bell | Blog, , more info

    Just use fucking paper, man
    I’ve tried Notion, Obsidian, Things, Apple Reminders, Apple Notes, Jotter and endless other tools to keep me organised and sure, Notion has stuck around the most because we use it for client stuff, but for todo lists, all of the above are way too complicated. I’ve given up this week and gone back to paper and a pencil and I feel unbelievably organised and flexible, day-to-day. It’s because it’s simple. …
    116 words
  3. Hermitary – hermit's thatch, , more info

    Zen snippets
    Here are a few favorite random snippets from Zen resources: from Iron Flute. 14. Pai-Yun’s poem: Where others dwell, I do not dwell. Where others go, I do not go. This does not mean to refuse association with others; I only want to make black and white distinct. ***** from Gateless Gate. 19. “Everyday Life is the Path.” Joshu asked Nansen: “What is the path?'” Nansen said: “Everyday life is …
    534 words
  4. Mathspp Blog, , more info

    mutability and random.shuffle
    The function random.shuffle relies on the mutability of the argument and mutability is a pain in the arse, so we propose an alternative. Mutability and random.shuffle The function random.shuffle shuffles its argument in place, which means it relies on the mutability of the argument. This can introduce bugs if care is not taken. Consider the snippet of code that follows: def generate_maze(base_width, base_height): width = 2 * base_width + 1 …
    497 words
  5. The Circus Diaries, , more info

    A Visit to Letni Letna Festival
    Right now, as these very words are being published, Letna Park in the Czech Republic’s capital city Prague is playing[…] The post A Visit to Letni Letna Festival appeared first on The Circus Diaries.
    By Stav Meishar, 40 words
  6. Airminded, , more info

    What I did in my holidays (research/sightseeing)
    There aren't a great many sites of memory left to evoke the first bombing war, so during my recent UK trip I thought I'd make the effort to track a couple of them down. (One, Cleopatra's Needle, I did see on my first UK trip, but have never managed to make it back.) The first is a very sad place, yet a peaceful one, as is often the way with …
    By Brett Holman, 298 words
  7. Recurring Bafflement, , more info

    On Doris Piserchia’s I, Zombie
    1. The more science fiction and fantasy you read the easier it is to guess where any given premise will go. When a book upends your predictions you feel like you’ve got something special. Doris Piserchia—like Margaret St. Clair, another neglected SF writer—has a talent for dodging the predictable narrative. Take the first Piserchia novel I read, I, Zombie (originally published under the name Curt Selby). A company uses remote-controlled …
    By Wesley, 1,747 words
  8. From Earth to the Stars, , more info

    Why “In the Dark” Didn’t Go As Planned
    by James Patrick Kelly James Patrick Kelly discusses the dramatic beginnings of his latest Asimov’s novelette “In the Dark,” now available in our [September/October issue, on sale now!] Credit: Bill Clemente There’s an annual conference that I like to attend called the International Conference on the Fantastic (ICFA). It takes place in March in Orlando, Florida. While it started as an academic conference, over time the organizers began to welcome …
    By fromearthtothestars, 1,129 words
  9. Bloom | "Late" According to Whom?, , more info

    Bloom Creative Writing: Redemption By Fire: The Remains of a Same-Gender Love by Anthony Domenick
    With this work by Anthony Domenick, we continue to highlight original fiction, creative non-fiction, and poetry from writers who either published their first book at 40 or after, or who have yet to publish a book. Writers interested in submitting work should see our guidelines. (For Gina Marie Smith, whose capacity for empathy embraced the possibility of enduring the unendurable) Strong Son of God, immortal Love Whom we, that have …
    By Alice Stephens, 2,834 words
  10. ELECTRONIC ORGY, , more info

    CONRAD SCHNITZLER - CONTEMPORA CON-TINUOUS SERIES - 00 576 - Mix Solos 1-35 (80+115+155+201) (STEEL VEHICLE) (2008) (FLAC)
    00:0002:1903:5706:0608:1909:5912:3613:5915:1216:4318:1820:4022:3724:1926:0928:2030:0032:0033:5735:1436:4237:5839:1240:2541:3243:0844:1546:3948:4350:1151:5654:1555:5958:0359:15DOWNLOAD
    By JMSOLER1967, 19 words
  11. IMPOSSIBLE ® | Push Your Limits™, , more info

    IMPOSSIBLE 30 Challenge
    In September I’m trialing a new challenge. I’m calling it the IMPOSSIBLE 30. It’s actually not that IMPOSSIBLE. It’s a simple baseline. So here’s the challenge: 30 Days Oh, and sometime during the month – knock one thing off your impossible. That’s all. Free to join. It starts this Sunday (on the 1st). Just click... continue reading >
    By Joel Runyon, 60 words
  12. 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
  13. 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
  14. 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
  15. 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