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  1. Just One Week, , more info

    Highland Heaven - Inver and Kirkaig
    Lower Inver morning view upstream from the Scrambles Over the years I have been privileged to fish in many beautiful places, but nowhere else moved me as much as these two small Highland rivers. As I walked up the Lower Inver on the Monday morning of our week, I found myself humming the song "Dancing Cheek to Cheek" from the 1930s musical Top Hat, produced and directed to showcase the …
    By MCXFisher, 2,432 words
  2. A Luthier's Blog, , more info

    Two Mandolins: update 4
    By Gary Nava, Luthier, 5 words
  3. Flashing Palely in the Margins, , more info

    First day of school
    School started this week, and I haven’t been this nervous or excited in decades. I don’t remember my absolute first day of school ever—it was sometime when we lived in New York and the memory of those years are getting fainter and fainter as I age—but I do remember my first day of school in Canada. It was partway through the school year (we had immigrated in the cold of …
    By 2024-09-05 - First Day of School.txt, 2,351 words
  4. Joho the Blog, , more info

    Do LLM’s store what they’re trained on? A reason to think not.
    If you ask chatGPT to give you the first paragraph of Moby-Dick, it gets it exactly right. This and other such examples are sometimes taken as evidence that it has kept a copy of that book in memory, a potential copyright violation. The makers of these Large Language Models say they don’t, or at least […]
    By davidw, 68 words
  5. macwright.com, , more info

    Recently
    Reading Since last time, I read a few books: Sea of Tranquility, a book club book, Doppelganger, the new Naomi Klein, and Manywhere, a collection of short stories. Sea of Tranquility was very digestible sci-fi. I haven’t read that much sci-fi overall, so it’s probably inaccurate to say that it’s spiritually similar to Ted Chiang, but that’s the closest reference I know of. In the end, I think it’s a …
    By Tom MacWright, 591 words
  6. The Black Narcissus, , more info

    my firefly
    By ginzaintherain, 2 words
  7. Synthpop Fanatic, , more info

    Interview: Beborn Beton discuss their return to the U.S.
    Beborn Beton's North American tour begins on October 3. The post Interview: Beborn Beton discuss their return to the U.S. appeared first on Synthpop Fanatic.
    By Chris Brandon, 34 words
  8. Silent-ology, , more info

    Obscure Films: “Pete Roleum And His Cousins” (1939)
    It’s one of the strangest pieces of vintage animation you’ll ever stumble across–the cheeky, puppet-starring infomercial-of-sorts Pete Roleum and His Cousins (1939). Played many decades ago in the auditorium of a long-gone building created solely for the 1939 World’s Fair, … Continue reading →
    By Lea S., 52 words
  9. Iron_Geek, , more info

    Full Pint 08-2024
    The Full Pint monthly link pour.
    9 words
  10. remy sharp's b:log, , more info

    Ted Chaing on AI and art [link]
    I can't stop thinking about this quote from Ted Chiang (originally snipped by Simon Willison). Art is notoriously hard to define, and so are the differences between good art and bad art. But let me offer a generalization: art is something that results from making a lot of choices. […] to oversimplify, we can imagine that a ten-thousand-word short story requires something on the order of ten thousand choices. When …
    211 words
  11. lives; running, , more info

    Simon Mullings – a tribute
    Simon Mullings – “Spike” – died at the weekend while on holiday in Scotland. Most people reading this would have known him, I guess, as the bass player for 80s indie band The Snapdragons whose songs included Dole Boys on Futons We were closest between 2020 and 2022. By then, we’d both been working for […]
    By lives; running, 61 words
  12. The Waving Cat – Blog, , more info

    Virality vs popularity, and the demise of reliable stats
    From the Garbage Day newsletter, some reflections on the connection between virality and popularity (highlights mine): The conclusion I’ve come to this summer — one I’m still not totally sure I fully believe yet — is that what’s really happening here is that virality is decoupling from popularity. And I think you could even argue that the very idea that mass appeal had to be accurately reflected back at us …
    By Peter Bihr, 680 words
  13. Gallimore Railroading, , more info

    Two Words - Train Master
    A Trainmaster is a person in charge of the movement of trains in a division or subdivision of a railroad. A Train Master is a diesel locomotive, designated H24-66, built by the Fairbanks-Morse company. Two Words. Train Master.This story began decades ago, long before The Shifter. Facing the big Five-Oh soon I decided to revisit some old projects. This quickly rose to the top of the list. Look for more …
    By Galen Gallimore, 86 words
  14. Wanderingspace, , more info

    Mars Express is Still Making Great Images 20 Years Later
    Mars Express was launched by the European Space Agency in 2003, and is ESA’s first Mars mission. In one shot, you can see Mars as a half-lit disk, with Phobos, its tiny moon, hovering above. Right below Phobos is Olympus Mons, the solar system's largest volcano, towering 22 km high and 600 km across—or as the Bad Astronomer says, “about the size of Colorado”.Posted by Andrea Luck, by way of …
    By Thomas Romer, 82 words
  15. Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog, , more info

    Did Sandia use a thermonuclear secondary in a product logo?
    I happened to look at a slide deck from Sandia National Laboratories from 2007 that someone had posted on Reddit late last night (you know, as one does, instead of sleeping), and one particular slide jumped out at me: It’s a little graphic advertising the different kinds of modeling software that are part of something called the SIERRA framework, as part of a pretty standard “overview” presentation on computer modeling …
    By Alex Wellerstein, 3,233 words