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  1. The Art of Doing Stuff, , more info

    A Beet & Carrot Update + Fall Harvest
    Today's post features a moderately adequate representation of a bad photo with bad kitchen lighting and a very nice fall garden harvest. :) Allow me to introduce you to this afternoon's random late season garden haul. I took Philip to the soccer field by my community vegetable garden to try a Chuck it with him...Read More
    By Karen, 64 words
  2. Journeyman's Journal, , more info

    Its a new forum
    Neil from Ebeaut has launched a new forum named “Renovate Forums” dedicated to all things renovation. This platform features multiple category forums covering various aspects of renovations, along with a marketplace where you can buy, sell, or trade goods. Get ready for great deals and professional and amatuer insights! Please be aware that ensuring security is challenging, as there are individuals actively seeking to exploit others for financial gain and …
    By The Lost Scrolls of Handwork, 111 words
  3. Trail Running for Life, , more info

    Yr Wyddfa Ultra 100 Mile Race
    I booked in to the Yr Wyddfa Ultra 100 Mile race on a bit of a whim after failing to fully complete the Swiss Alps 100 mile race in Summer. I was still yearning to fully complete the 100 mile distance on a tough course this year. (The last time I had run 100 miles+ in one go was last year when I ran the Wild Horse 200). Mindset Learning …
    By Sean, 4,092 words
  4. Paleofuture, , more info

    The 'Vaguely Ominous' Coffee Robot of 1967 That Was Going to Take Your Job
    The Unimate robot pouring a coffee at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles on October 3, 1967 (Photo by Frank Q. Brown for the Los Angeles Times via the UCLA Department of Special Collections) When the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles featured a new “coffee robot” in October 1967, the newspapers covering it sounded both excited and terrified. “Experts contend that, as a group, robots are actually harmless enough,” the …
    By Matt Novak, 186 words
  5. Science Fiction and Other Suspect Ruminations, , more info

    What pre-1985 science fiction are you reading? + Update No. XVI
    A selection of read books from my shelves What pre-1985 science fiction are you reading or planning to read this month? Here’s the August installment of this column. I often think back to how I got hooked on science fiction. As I have mentioned many times before, I primarily read fantasy–in particular every bloated Tolkein ripoff I could get my hands on–before I moved to science fiction in my late …
    By Joachim Boaz, 1,077 words
  6. leonie wise, , more info

    the (previous) weekend that was
    nice cold swim after our chores were donedisembarking the ferry at the whitianga wharfhahei, as seen from hereheretaura pāhahei beachthe view towards lonely bay and whanganui-o-heiloading the borrowed car with groceries, suitcases and laughter + a holiday house full of bodies, moving lazily around our environment as the days trundled by + the symmetry of the spring equinox + learning the inherent language of the terrain we were temporarily enfolded …
    By Leonie Wise, 203 words
  7. Gameblog, , more info

    1825 with all Units
    Setting up an 1825 game with all the Units has been an arduous task. I hoped to make it a yearly tradition in 2019, but then Covid-19 happened. After that, every attempt has failed somehow. Today, one of our players got stranded in Berlin, but as we had four players present, we made it. This time, we used 18xx.games as a moderator. This speeded up the game greatly. With the …
    By Mikko, 348 words
  8. Azimuth, , more info

    Ceres
    In 1596, Kepler claimed that the planetary orbits would only follow “God’s design” if there were two more planets: one between Mars and Jupiter and one between Mercury and Venus. Later folks came up with the Titius–Bode law. This says that for each n there should be a planet whose distance from the Sun is 0.4 + 0.3 × 2ⁿ times the distance between the Earth and Sun. • For …
    By John Baez, 587 words
  9. onfocus by Paul Bausch, , more info

    Josh Collinsworth on WordPress drama
    If WordPress is to survive, Matt Mullenweg must be removed Let’s not leave unspoken the irony that the guy who basically is WordPress.com, and WordPress.org, and the WordPress Foundation, wants you to think the name “WP Engine” is confusing. Curious about the WordPress vs. WP Engine drama? This is a good rundown of the situation.
    60 words
  10. Crest, Cliff & Canyon, , more info

    North Canyon
    Perhaps the best reason to raft the Grand Canyon is to hike its side canyons, and our trip hit most of the classics. They’re classic for reasons, a major one being that they’re the ones you can hike in summer without dying of heatstroke (we also did one that did not quite meet this qualification, but that’s for a future post). Fortunately, the qualities which make them hikeable also make …
    By Jackson, 243 words
  11. ReynoldsRetro, , more info

    19th Century DIY versus 20th Century DIY: cylinder home recordings, pirate radio tapes + adverts
    Luke Owen of Death Is Not The End just recently put out a really interesting release: Making Records: Home Recordings c. 1890​-​1920 - a collection of DIY home recordings, transferred from blank and repurposed brown and black wax cylinders, dating back to the early years of widespread phonographic technology, from the late 1890s and first couple of decades of 20th Century. In the words of David Giovannoni, whose collection is …
    By SIMON REYNOLDS, 4,515 words
  12. Winnie Lim, , more info

    random scenes from busan
    I tend to forget about my photos once too much time had passed, so today I deliberately dug into the archive from my korea trip a couple months ago. It is an interesting experience: trying to curate a set of photos – what is the criteria for my selection? I don’t have a concrete idea myself. Perhaps it is some intuitive algorithm of interestingness that exists in my mind. I …
    By Winnie, 181 words
  13. Ken Shirriff's blog, , more info

    Reverse-engineering a three-axis attitude indicator from the F-4 fighter plane
    We recently received an attitude indicator for the F-4 fighter plane, an instrument that uses a rotating ball to show the aircraft's orientation and direction. In a normal aircraft, the artificial horizon shows the orientation in two axes (pitch and roll), but the F-4 indicator uses a rotating ball to show the orientation in three axes, adding azimuth (yaw).1 It wasn't obvious to me how the ball could rotate in …
    By Ken Shirriff, 3,796 words
  14. Cinematic Catharsis, , more info

    The Phantom Carriage
    (1921) Directed by Victor Sjöström; Written by Victor Sjöström; Based on the novel by Selma Lagerlöf; Starring: Victor Sjöström, Hilda Borgström, Tore Svennberg, Astrid Holm and Concordia Selander; Available on Blu ray and DVD Rating: ****½ stars “No living soul rides in that carriage. By the time I arrive, it’s too late for a doctor. You know full well that I am no longer among the living. But worst of …
    By Barry P., 1,252 words
  15. Caltrain HSR Compatibility Blog, , more info

    Cars on the Tracks
    Cars turning off from a grade crossing onto the tracks are a perennial problem for Caltrain, often resulting in multi-hour cascading delays or worse, dangerous collisions. The statistics are shocking: from 2020 through 2023, there were 183 recorded incidents of "vehicle track incursions," of which more than half occurred at just five crossings as shown in the Caltrain bar chart at right.Caltrain has tried mightily to take measures against this …
    By Clem, 695 words