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  1. THE PECKHAM PECULIAR, , more info

    Many local people and businesses helped to crowdfund SE London BookFest, a new literary festival. We…
    Many local people and businesses helped to crowdfund SE London BookFest, a new literary festival. We would like to say a massive thank you to the following:Heather MacFarlane, Yvette Rawle, Mark Baxter, Sue Walker, Tristan West, Damion Viney & all at Co-Accounting, Dominic Walker, HTW, Tuts, Ellie Wood, Julia Mlambo, Guy Ware, Anne Coates.Sanjit Chudha, Jill Cuthbert, Kim Smith, Julian Kenny, Rosemary Chapman, Guy Haslam, Hayley Farrant, Rebeka Russell & …
    180 words
  2. Read the Tea Leaves, , more info

    Improving rendering performance with CSS content-visibility
    Recently I got an interesting performance bug on emoji-picker-element: I’m on a fedi instance with 19k custom emojis […] and when I open the emoji picker […], the page freezes for like a full second at least and overall performance stutters for a while after that. If you’re not familiar with Mastodon or the Fediverse, different servers can have their own custom emoji, similar to Slack, Discord, etc. Having 19k …
    By Nolan Lawson, 1,221 words
  3. Hypertexthero, , more info

    Can we make a computer screen light in color when turned off?
    Or is the only alternative to keep displays on all the time?
    24 words
  4. Mind the blog, , more info

    Why Am I So Single?
    As a title, Why Am I So Single? has the potential to elicit one of two responses: some people will be like a moth to a flame, and others will run a mile in the opposite direction. But hold on and don’t judge a book by its cover (or a musical by its title), as this new Marlow & Moss production is ultimately the story of two friends who discover …
    By Debbie, 765 words
  5. The Renaissance Mathematicus, , more info

    A gentleman of Kent
    With Robert Recorde (c. 1510–1558) and John Dee (1527–c. 1608), we have already looked at two mathematical practitioners, who were among the first to publish mathematical texts in the vernacular in sixteenth century England. A third member of this group was Leonard Digges (c.1515–c. 1559) who was a friend of Dee’s. Usually, if Leonard is known at all, it is as the father of Thomas Digges (c. 1546–1595) a much …
    By thonyc, 2,481 words
  6. Reviews – The travels of Mary Loosemore, , more info

    The Janus Stone – Elly Griffiths
    The Janus Stone – Elly Griffiths Another investigation with Dr Ruth Galloway and DCI ‘Baby Daddy’ Harry Nelson, this time in Norwich where an old children’s home is being demolished to make way for flats…. and a child’s body is unearthed. Delighted to find Cathbad is still around and in a slightly more positive and hopefully permanent role. I’d reserved the next in the series from the library but I’m …
    By Mary, 104 words
  7. Reinout van Rees' personal website, , more info

    PyUtrecht: Teaching yourself how to code - Joris Hoendervangers
    (One of my summaries of the Dutch PyUtrecht meetup in Utrecht, NL). Joris started out as a bond trader, with his MSc in financial management. So definitively no programmer by education. Bond trading meant shouting on the stock market's floor, something that was in risk of being automated. So he moved on. In his case to Reuters, one of the two big financial information suppliers. Later he started using python …
    By Reinout van Rees, 261 words
  8. New Critique, , more info

    [Poetry] — Marc Frazier
    "A microsecond passes, / I’m in memory’s territory— / a glazed light over alien shapes, / the land always speaking to me"
    By New Critique, 26 words
  9. Playing D&D With Porn Stars, , more info

    Three Kinds of Mystery
    Ok, there are three kinds of mystery in stories--Classic 'What's Gonna Happen?' Mystery (diegetic mystery)This is a mystery to both the audience and the main characters in the story: They are wondering how events will play out (or, in the case of a Sherlock-Holmes-style-mystery have played out). What will happen to Jack, Wendy, and Danny in the Overlook Hotel is a 'What's Gonna Happen?" Mystery, as is who framed Roger …
    By Zak Sabbath, 803 words
  10. Waxy.org - Andy Baio lives here, , more info

    The data on extreme human ageing is flawed
    most "blue zones," concentrated areas of supercentenarians, can be attributed to pension fraud or bad record-keeping #
    By Andy Baio, 25 words
  11. Flamed Fury, , more info

    Wellington Brick Show 2024
    What’s up, Internet? In the continued efforts to keep our young family entertained on the weekends we decended upon the Wellington Brick Show 2024 put on by the Wellington Lego User Group. If you think that all we do is attend Lego shows and exhibits, well, we don’t… There’s just a few of them on around the country at the moment 😛 We all really enjoyed the show. There was …
    412 words
  12. Nutfield Genealogy, , more info

    The Merchant Exchange Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for Weathervane Wednesday
    This weathervane was photographed from our hotel room window in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.This was our view from our hotel window, the Marriott Renaissance, located between Independence Hall and the Museum of the American Revolution. It was a beautiful, gilded weathervane, and it took a long time on Google Maps and the internet to figure out which historic building had this weathervane. Finally we discovered it was atop the Merchant Exchange Building. …
    By Heather Wilkinson Rojo, 255 words
  13. Adactio: Links, , more info

    Living In A Lucid Dream
    I love the way that Claire L. Evans writes. adactio.com/links/21423
    15 words
  14. Preserved Traction, , more info

    The Auto-Railer
    It's rare for me to even mention anything with an internal combustion engine in relationship with PNAERC, but on occasion, something pops up that's cool enough that even I can't manage to find it uninteresting. And so, courtesy of some timely photos and information from our friend Bill Wall, I present the Evans Auto-Railer.Back in the 1930s, there was a small market for rail buses, with many of the examples …
    By Frank Hicks, 385 words
  15. blog7t, , more info

    Hampstead Heath parkrun
    The settlement of Hampstead sits within the London Borough of Camden, in north London, and is one of the capital city's most exclusive and expensive places to live. In fact Hampstead village has the highest concentration of millionaires in the country. The geology of the area meant that natural springs were present. Hampstead had its own Chalybeate spring (meaning the water had a high iron content), and this was regarded …
    By copy7t, 2,939 words