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  1. Sean of the South, , more info

    Sean of the South–Carrollton, Georgia
    A multi-instrumentalist, he started playing mandolin when he was seven, guitar at age eight, and piano in church at age nine. Having lived through enough heartache, joy, embarrassment, love, and renewal for several lifetimes, Sean condenses our human failures and triumphs into stories that make the Southern heart resound. His wildly popular blog and musical podcast, Sean of the South, is suited for anyone with red clay on their car …
    By Jamie Dietrich, 243 words
  2. HeydonWorks: Latest Writing, , more info

    The audio element
    The ability to embed images in web pages has been officially supported since 1995. Whereas, the <audio> element was not added until 2015. For 20 years, people were looking at naked people on the web. But, for the same 20 years, there was no officially sanctioned and standardized way of hearing a naked person. And if it's not sanctioned and standardized, it's just not sexy. In the absence of a …
    688 words
  3. everything changes, , more info

    All on the table
    Liz Lopatto once memorably wrote that Wall Street is “what happens when you mix money with feelings.” I want to build on that and posit that perhaps money is what happens when you mix money with feelings. That the shame and fear, hopes and dreams, rage and worry that accompany any discussion of money are at least as meaningful a framework for understanding it as the numbers on a balance …
    By Mandy Brown, 1,260 words
  4. Miriam Eric Suzanne, , more info

    A web component for CodePen embeds?
    It’s not essential, but it took me down a path… David Darnes already made a <code-pen> web component. It’s great. It takes code, and creates a pen from that code. But I don’t want to create a pen, I want to embed one. The default CodePen embed is pretty good already. So right from the start, this whole project is unnecessary. The code looks like this: <p class="codepen" data-slug-hash="BEvjbm" data-height="600"> …
    347 words
  5. Alison Wilder | Blog, , more info

    Annual Studio Revamp: 2024 Edition
    In a fit of personal nostalgia, I’ve been looking back at previous posts, journals, and spreadsheets recently. One pattern that has emerged: once every year in the early summer, I make major changes to my studio in an attempt to fix things that have been driving me crazy. But I’ve had this one finished for a couple of months, and there is Nothing. Driving. Me. Crazy. Which, honestly, is a …
    By Alison Wilder, 106 words
  6. Petafloptimism, , more info

    Gooey-Prickles or Prickly-Goo
    John De La Parra, a food scientist from the Rockerfeller Foundation spoke on the first day of The Conference, after a pretty esoteric (to me) presentation that asked us to participate in a guided meditation, listen to plants and submit our dreams to an experimental app. It was pretty far from my comfort zone. He acknowledges the segue from artist practice into his more science-based work by quoting Alan Watts …
    By moleitau, 266 words
  7. FogBlog, , more info

    Nice Surprises With Film
    Morning folks - I hope everyone is well and not too depressed by my previous posts . . it is just stuff you have to think about. Anyway, without further ado, it is back to normality (or whatever it is called these days).This post is a just about a couple of images that surprised me as soon as I took the negatives out of the tank.And that to me is …
    By Herman Sheephouse, 1,467 words
  8. BRAPA | Blog, , more info

    BRAPA in .... ZIP ME UP BEFORE YOU GO-GO, HAMPSTEAD BEER PRICES ARE A NO-NO
    Saturday 31st August 2024 Having escaped the Sunderland fans bound for Pompey with their 8am cans and tinny Oasis singalong, we took a tube north to Hampstead where I had an amazing FOUR ticks to be done. The 'we' included Daddy BRAPA and Oscar T. Owl. Day one of a new round of LNER train strikes, and we'd escaped unscathed. In fact, I'm now reading that the strikes have now …
    By Si Everitt, 1,990 words
  9. Spooky Geology, , more info

    Fishy images of a glowing red sea
    There is a phenomenon that stumped people when it first appeared, including the pilots who documented it – bright red lighted spots in the sea. Puzzling at first, the explanation was eventually discovered, and solidly confirmed. But this week, I noticed a less diligent weather commentator in Greece is getting attention for reposting images from several years ago, with a slightly different context, but without the explanation. This has led …
    By Sharon A. Hill, 949 words
  10. Josh W Comeau, , more info

    The Undeniable Utility Of CSS :has
    Of all the latest and greatest CSS features, the “:has” pseudo-class wasn’t exactly at the top of my wishlist. Once I started using it, however, I kept discovering incredible things I could do with it. It’s now become a core part of my toolkit! In this blog post, I'll show you some practical real-world problems I solved using “:has”, as well as some wild experiments that blew my mind! Keep …
    By Josh W. Comeau, 77 words
  11. Becks and Brown Trout, Bamboo too, , more info

    Summers drawing to an end
    Well as far as fishing summers go I think that to use a racing term 2024 is one to put down as an also ran. It was slow to get going due to last years biblical rainfall. Then being followed by a very dry couple of months .High summer never seemed to get going . I had some brilliant early days up in the upland stream that I joined this …
    By Becks and Brown Trout, 489 words
  12. interfluidity, , more info

    China has much to teach us. John Roberts does not.
    So, I don’t really write here any more. I write at drafts.interfluidity.com instead. Please follow that feed or subscribe by e-mail. I do still offer periodic roundups here of what I’ve been up to! And it’s been a busy few months. Without further ado. Unless it is remedied soon, the Supreme Court has rendered an end to liberal democracy in the United States nearly inevitable by their decision in Trump …
    By Steve Randy Waldman, 835 words
  13. Cloud Four – Articles, , more info

    Video: GIFs Are Forever, Let’s Make Them Better!
    In June of 2024, a gaggle of front-end developers descended on Seattle’s Town Hall for two days of talks and workshops. I took the stage Day One to talk about the untapped potential of the humble GIF: Everyone loves animated GIFs, right? Not if you have finite bandwidth, a shaky network connection or motion sensitivity! But fear not: Thanks to newly supported media formats, shiny new web standards and the …
    By Tyler Sticka, 4,106 words
  14. Time's Flow Stemmed, , more info

    From Softness to Plumes
    The residua of reading. Prince Palador in John Ford’s The Lover’s Melancholy, inspired by Burton’s Anatomy, always a skimmer away. Now, unearthly Cato, among the saved despite suicide and paganism, warden of Purgatory, un veglio solo (an old man alone)—a metaphor for the journey from fallen condition, from old man to pristine restoration, to prelapsarian innocence prior to entering Eden. Cato, watchdog to the purgatorial isle, delayed until Judgment Day—his …
    By Anthony, 142 words
  15. Hugo Book Club Blog, , more info

    Aliette de Bodard is Overdue for a Hugo Award Win
    Aliette de Bodard at the 2024Hugo Awards.(Photo by Olav Rokne)There are only 27 authors whose works have appeared on the prose-fiction Hugo Award ballot at least 10 times. It’s a list of some of the most recognizable and prolific names in the history of the genre: Heinlein, le Guin, Simak, Ellison, Bujold, Chiang.It’s an achievement to pen even a single work of fiction that speaks to the Hugo voting public …
    819 words