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  1. Cincinnati Curiosities, , more info

    Cincinnati’s High Society Was Dominated By Madame Devereux And Her Blue Book
    Before Madame Clara Anna Rich Devereux stuck her nose into things around 1880, Cincinnati’s polite society was an embarrassment of disorganization. A half-century earlier, Frances “Fanny” Trollope had lambasted the local gentry in her scandalous 1832 book, “Domestic Manners of the Americans,” in which she states:“All animal wants are supplied profusely at Cincinnati, and at a very easy rate; but, alas! these go but a little way in the history …
    1,131 words
  2. GearsRealm.com, , more info

    Peglin (Pachinko Roguelike Game): Review
    Peglin is like if Peggle and Slay the Spire had an unpredictable child. The pachinko-inspired mechanics reminded me of Peggle’s bouncy, chaotic fun, while the roguelike progression echoed the strategic depth of Slay the Spire. Add a bit of Hades-style satisfaction from finding perfect combos, and you get a game that’s hard to put down. Peglin takes elements from these popular titles and spins them into something fresh, creating an …
    By Tom Henry, 553 words
  3. Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews | University of Notre Dame, , more info

    Belief, Inference, and the Self-Conscious Mind
    Stanley Cavell once remarked that “Kant depsychologized epistemology, Frege depsychologized logic, and Wittgenstein depsychologized psychology.” Eric Marcus’s Belief, Inference, and the Self-Conscious Mind, in opposition to a large amount of empirically oriented work in recent philosophy of mind, can be seen as aiming to develop the groundwork for a “depsychologized” conception of human mindedness, articulating core psychological notions such as belief and inference as essentially rational acts of the mind. …
    By 9.8 Simonelli - Markus, 1,976 words
  4. Polytechnic — Blog, , more info

    Weeknotes 22nd September 2024
    Weird pigeon That heron was back, doing its worst pigeon impression.In "Garrett prepares to hunker down for autumn" news, I added some new purchases to the bookshelves. This is what 7kg of books looks like Doctor Aphra is one of my favourite characters in the Star Wars universe, but I never had the chance to read the complete run, so I’m looking forward to diving in.I can’t remember how I …
    By Garrett Coakley, 109 words
  5. The Millions - Essays Archives, , more info

    Adam Ehrlich Sachs’s Fables of Inheritance
    Difficult relationships between fathers and sons have been fodder for writers for millennia. Sometimes these relationships are simply power struggles, as in so many Greek myths, such as the conflicts first between Uranus and his son Cronus and later Cronus and his son Zeus. Or their conflicts are representative of social strife, as in Ivan Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons. And other times, like in many of Franz Kafka’s most famous …
    By Matthew James Seidel, 1,367 words
  6. Breck Yunits' Scroll, , more info

    Microprogramming: A New Way to Program
  7. Cloudberry Cake Proselytism, , more info

    :: The Jade
    Thanks so much to Joe Allen for the interview! I had written about The Jade, a fantastic Bristol band from the heyday of indiepop that for some reason only put out two demo tapes, no proper releases. After discovering them, I was wondering how come the band didn’t put out any records, their songs were really great! Happy to know to learn more details about the band, and also super …
    By Roque, 2,544 words
  8. Newspaper Club - Blog, , more info

    Hot off the press! 10 inspiring newspapers to kickstart your design process
  9. Far Outliers, , more info

    Berlin, 1878: Prelude to Versailles, 1919
    From From Peoples into Nations: A History of Eastern Europe, by John Connelly (Princeton University Press, 2020), Kindle pp. 210-212, 238-240: In 1878, representatives of Europe’s major powers convened in the capital of the new German nation-state for negotiations that bear all the hallmarks of the more famous effort in decolonization and democratization that transpired at Paris after World War I. At Berlin in 1878, statesmen determined the boundaries, constitutions, …
    By Joel, 1,189 words
  10. Glorious Noise, , more info

    New Lizzy McAlpine: Pushing It Down and Praying
    Video: Lizzy McAlpine – “Pushing It Down and Praying” From the deluxe Older (and Wiser), out October 4 on RCA/Sony. I got into Lizzy McAlpine this summer after reading Amanda Petrusich’s New Yorker profile. Her album Older is great and now she’s releasing an expanded version with five new songs. The “deluxe reissue six months after the original release” game is a racket, of course, but that’s the music business …
    By Jake Brown, 190 words
  11. wood•life•studio | Blog, , more info

    🌸 Noire Henro-san: Sunday in Kochi City
    Local heros: Three men of Kochi. A Little Trip To Kochi City On Sunday, that same Sunday I met a man and his mother, I continued on the bus to Kochi City. I got off in front of … 🐞 Read more about it ➞ ➞ ➞
    By Shirley J, 54 words
  12. Laughing Squid, , more info

    Why Hats Fell Out of Favor With the General Public in the Middle of the 20th Century
    warmbru curiosity explored why, after centuries of wearing hats, the trend fell out of favor in the middle of the 20th century. He explained that while both men and women wore hats for practical reasons, such as to keep the elements at bay, hats were also indicative of society and class. Why did hats suddenly almost die out? Not completely but to a large extent. Let’s first consider why people …
    By Lori Dorn, 314 words
  13. Grand Old Movies, , more info

    Purplish Musings At Noon
    I love the title Purple Noon. It’s the name for the 1960 French film adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s novel The Talented Mr. Ripley; and while Highsmith’s title explains, with cold-blooded cheek, the character of her murderously desiring protagonist who wants everything, Purple Noon tells you what he desires: A world of summer heat and sun and, especially, luxury, as exemplified by that color Purple—the shade of royalty, the aristocrat’s hue, …
    By Grand Old Movies, 1,620 words
  14. Southeast Asia construction, transport, and infrastructure, , more info

    Myths and realities of the Singapore-Kunming Rail Link
    Why there won’t be a high-speed railway from Singapore to China, and how Thailand and Malaysia have set back a truly unified system by years. The Singapore-Kunming Rail Link (SKRL) is a planned network of railways to create a unified line from Kunming to Singapore. This is part of the Pan-Asian Railway, which envisions three routes connecting Kunming to Southeast Asia: – Western route via Myanmar – Central route via …
    By James Clark, 1,510 words
  15. Stratechery by Ben Thompson, , more info

    Enterprise Philosophy and The First Wave of AI
    The popular history of technology usually starts with the personal computer, and for good reason: that was the first high tech device that most people ever used. The only thing more impressive than the sheer audacity of “A computer on every desk and in every home” as a corporate goal, is the fact that Microsoft accomplished it, with help from its longtime competitor Apple. In fact, though, the personal computer …
    By Ben Thompson, 5,172 words