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  1. Sibylla Bostoniensis, , more info

    Update [me, health, tech, banking]
    Things are being a bit too eventful in the Bostoniensis household.But first: I'm ambulatory again. Starting about starting about two weeks ago my pain finally started ebbing – a mere five weeks after my epidural – and by about a week ago I was better enough to start doing some things for myself again and also wash my hair.I'm not actually certain how much of this benefit is from the …
    1,667 words
  2. Nutfield Genealogy, , more info

    Carpenters Hall, Philadelphia, for Weathervane Wednesday
    This weathervane was photographed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.A view of Carpenters Court, in frontof Carpenters' HallCarpenters' Hall is a historic landmark in Philadelphia, about a block away from Independence Hall. It was the site of the First Continental Congress in 1774, and also it was where Franklin installed his Library Company. It is open to the public and FREE since 1857 when it was the first private US building open as …
    By Heather Wilkinson Rojo, 318 words
  3. The Woks of Life, , more info

    Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls
    These pumpkin cinnamon rolls are the ultimate fall treat. This recipe is a variation on our Fluffy Cinnamon Rolls, which many of you have deemed the best cinnamon rolls you’ve ever had! (Check out the comments to see how many folks who have long hunted for the perfect soft cinnamon roll love this recipe!) These ... View Post
    By Kaitlin, 61 words
  4. Learn Lead Grow, , more info

    Describing UDL Through a Desk and Chair Analogy
    Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a key component of Tier 1 instruction; however, it’s essential to understand that UDL is a framework or lens, not a checklist. It may be helpful to conceptualize UDL through a desk and chair example. Imagine our goal is to help all students use this piece of furniture for learning. Read the following post or watch my video below for more details! AccessibleOne question …
    By Matt Bergman, 447 words
  5. grammaticus, , more info

    Free ebook: “An Alpine Divorce” by Robert Barr
    I’m happy to present the eighth title in the Grammaticus Free Library series: “An Alpine Divorce”, an exciting crime story written by the Scottish-Canadian writer Robert Barr (1849–1912). It’s about a husband and wife who grew to hate each other with passion. While on holidays in the Swiss Alps, their marriage comes to its tragic and final end.
    By Waldmann, 66 words
  6. Bitter Tea and Mystery, , more info

    Short Story Wednesday: Fantasy and Science Fiction
    At the Planned Parenthood Book Sale last year, I found two groups of science fiction and fantasy magazines tied together, for sale for a few dollars per bundle. This week I pulled out one of those and read some stories from it.These stories come from the October/November 2000 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. "Dreamseed" by Carolyn Ives GilmanThis is a novelette about the discovery of a …
    By TracyK, 488 words
  7. ars ludi, , more info

    Retrofitting, Mechanical GMs, and the Two Tribes of GMless Games
    GMless games are a weird niche. Tabletop role-playing started with Game Masters, all the way back in Braunstein. Decades later, that is still how the vast majority play. The percentage of us exploring role-playing games without a GM is a tiny, tiny slice of that culture. But guess what? It’s not even one weird niche: it’s two separate niches. There are a million possible ways to make GMless games, but …
    By Ben Robbins, 740 words
  8. Fishing & stuff ..., , more info

    So we go on
    So we go on. Back to the unpredictable east coast, one last go for a big Bass, a creature we haven’t been able to track down with any consistency and tonight we’d opted to fish the most awkward beach we know. So we set up at the ‘cauldron’ both of us with a bass rig each baited with ragworm and a ‘big bait’ rig, squid in my case. The evening …
    1,816 words
  9. a sibilant intake of breath, , more info

    September rain
    Today was unusually draining. I rode in through the rain, skipping breakfast to give myself more time to sleep / cycle a little slower; then didn’t feel the allure of BBQ food so skipped lunch; then got caught up in a too-long task which became overly too long because of the hunger and tiredness. I also keep seeing event notifications for ghost rides for newly slain cyclists — sometimes with …
    By Milan, 121 words
  10. Follow Me Here…, , more info

    This 1998 Octavia Butler novel predicted a Christofacist United States with the slogan “Make America Great Again”
    ‘Parable of the Talents, a novel by Octavia E. Butler, published in 1998, portrays a dystopian United States under the control of Christian fundamentalists. The group, known as “Christian America,” is led by President Andrew Steele Jarret, whose slogan is “Make America Great Again.”…’ — via Boing Boing
    By FmH, 65 words
  11. Silent-ology, , more info

    Repost: “The Comique Shorts: Roscoe Arbuckle’s Masterpieces”
    How is it late September already?! Weren’t we just getting used to it being September? Between a late summer camping trip and having two essays due for two different publications at the same time, I’m surprised I can remember what … Continue reading →
    By Lea S., 51 words
  12. working by hand, , more info

    If you are buying tools, opt for the best you can afford
    We live in a very disposable age. Every product has a lifespan, and in ones deemed disposable, this lifespan is often quite short. This is aptly illustrated in the world of appliances. There are people that still have fridges from the 1950s, and they still work – sure they can guzzle juice, but that’s not the point, after 70 years they are still keeping things cool. These days, many things …
    By spqr, 817 words
  13. Ben Crowder — Blog, , more info

    Links #129
    Robin on AI. “I want real things by real people.” Yes, exactly. Anastasia Bizyayeva on how every online map of China is wrong, in the sense that the satellite images don’t line up with the street map vectors. Fascinating. Marco Giancotti suggests you don’t have time to read books that won’t change your life. A high bar, but quality clearly matters far more than quantity, and perhaps there’s something to …
    By Ben Crowder, 194 words
  14. Josh W Comeau, , more info

    How I Built My Blog
    I recently launched a brand new version of this blog, and in this post, I share how it’s built! We’ll examine the tech stack and see how all of the pieces fit together, as well as dig into some of the details to see how they work. Keep reading.
    By Josh W. Comeau, 54 words
  15. Reading 1900-1950, , more info

    The Three Sisters (1914) by May Sinclair
    Book Review by Alice :This is the story of three sisters and their pastor father who relocate to the tiny, isolated rural parish of Garth in Garthsdale. ‘A handful of grey houses, old and small and humble’; note Sinclair’s typical style – the triple adjective description of scenes and settings. In many ways not much happens in The Three Sisters. It is more a forensic laying bare of the lives, …
    By George Simmers, 729 words