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  1. The Enlightened Economist, , more info

    The welcome application of good sense to AI hype
    Summer over in a flash, autumn wind and rain outside – perhaps cosy evenings will speed up both my reading and review-posting. I just finished AI Snake Oil by Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor, having long been a fan of the blog of the same name. The book is a really useful guide through the current hype. It distinguishes 3 kinds of AI: generative, predictive and content moderation AI – …
    By Diane Coyle, 405 words
  2. Shoegazing.com, , more info

    News – Wildsmith’s third rebirth
    Wildsmith was one of the classic British quality men’s shoe brands, started already in 1847, but it was a long time since it had a prime. The original company was liquidated in the early 2000’s, and after two unsuccessful resurrections it’s now time for the third attempt. Wildsmith is a brand that was highly recognised in the first half of the 1900’s, and made really nice bespoke and RTW shoes. …
    By Jesper Ingevaldsson, 550 words
  3. working by hand, , more info

    The origin of the Boston block planes
    Thanks to help from a few people, the origin of these planes has been clarified, although perhaps not the name. The manufacturer can clearly be identified from the label of the box a No.2A came in. They were manufactured by The Thomas Machine Co. Ltd., in South Wales. They were then distributed by Welsh Industries (Bridgend) Ltd. in Glamorgan, also in South Wales. The markings on a plane box An …
    By spqr, 579 words
  4. Jane Stuart - Writer, , more info

    A Football Tourist’s Guide to Grimsby
    I fell in love with Grimsby and Cleethorpes back in 2018 when I visited for Chasetown’s match at Clee Town – and I have returned every year since. The people, the chippy, the bottle shop, the brewery, the live music venues…what’s not to love? That said, I was concerned that my visits were becoming a bit samey – so this time I made it my mission to explore a bit …
    By blackpooljane, 5,091 words
  5. Damien Mannion, , more info

    Python disrememberings
  6. Tecznts, , more info

    Via https://www.tumblr.com/virtual-hades/758596370979536896
    Via https://www.tumblr.com/virtual-hades/758596370979536896
    4 words
  7. 70s Sci-Fi Art, , more info

    A preliminary study for a paperback cover by Jack Gaughan for Ace, c. 1960s-70s.
    ALTA preliminary study for a paperback cover by Jack Gaughan for Ace, c. 1960s-70s.
    28 words
  8. Movies Silently, , more info

    Carl Alstrup’s Love Limited (1915) A Silent Film Review
    When a starving student falls in love with an heiress, her social climbing father is quick to object and send him packing. Undeterred, the student decides that the matter will be solved in the modern way: form a company to underwrite his marriage. Home Media Availability: Stream courtesy of the Danish Film Institute. The Business […]
    By Movies Silently, 65 words
  9. idiot king, , more info

    The Murder of June Knightly
    This is some positively amazing reporting from an organization called Forensic Architecture: In 2020, a 60-year old woman named June Knightly was shot with five other female traffic safety volunteers by a right-wing extremist. They were preparing to protect a peaceful protest march in Portland, which was happening blocks away, when the man approached them and began a confrontation. The events leading up to the shooting, her death, and the …
    By idiotking, 220 words
  10. Shock and Awe 2, , more info

    Metal Jacket Guru
    I have this sort of pop primal scene to do with seeing T. Rex on T. Vee. A personal creation-myth based on Marc Bolan's audio-visual impact on my fragile eggshell child-mind. I first referred to this memory scar as early as the introduction to Blissed Out - where it is described as an early encounter with the Pop Sublime, a sensation that scared and spooked me as much as astonished …
    By SIMON REYNOLDS, 1,240 words
  11. Multo (Ghost), , more info

    Austin Philips’ A Dead Letter
    I’ve put up a new Austin Philips story over on Dark Tales Sleuth: “A Dead Letter” is a ghost story about a moaning ghost—and a ghost envelope! On the way, the reader learns a little British Post Office history, too. It’s also set on Christmas Eve, so this story may make a return at Winter Tales season. But in the meantime, enjoy!
    By Nina Zumel, 67 words
  12. The Scholar's Stage, , more info

    Dionysus Against the Daoists
    IN WESTERN PHILOSOPHY AND AESTHETICS a contrast is sometimes made between the Dionysian and the Apollonian. Made famous by Nietzsche, this schema was first used to describe the thought and art of Ancient Greece. On the Apollonian end we have all that is rational, intentional, structured, abstract, or well ordered; on the Dionysian side we find all that is passionate, instinctual, chaotic, sensual or protean. The Apollonian strain of western …
    By T. Greer, 134 words
  13. Daniel Mangum · Posts, , more info

    The Taxonomy of Hardware Security Mechanisms
    Isolating sensitive data and operations is a fundamental issue in computing. Ideally, we want to minimize the possibility of a software defect compromising the security of a device. However, in order for the software we write to be useful, it typically needs to interact with that sensitive data in some form or fashion. So how do we interact with sensitive data without being able to access it? The answer is …
    106 words
  14. Bright Lights Film Journal, , more info

    Revolutionary Women in Two Iranian Films: On The Hidden Half (2001) and The House Is Black (1963)
    Fereshteh: Sometimes I want to put on make-up, or wear beautiful dresses, or fall in love. I don’t know why, but I feel like I’m living in a small can,[...] The post Revolutionary Women in Two Iranian Films: On <em>The Hidden Half</em> (2001) and <em>The House Is Black</em> (1963) appeared first on Bright Lights Film Journal.
    By Allison Wigen, 73 words
  15. Uncle Rod's Astro Blog, , more info

    Issue 608: Project BCH Lives
    What’s up this month, muchachos? What’s goin’ down at Chaos Manor South? Well, I thought I’d get out and “do” one of the late-summer chapters from The Urban Astronomer’s Guide, maybe one of my favorites, “The Friendly Stars.” Yeah…no. I’ve revisited that one more than once in the years since the book was published. What then? Howsabout a chapter from somebody else’s observing book? One far more famous than my …
    By Rod Mollise, 2,310 words