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  1. Adam Keys is typing, , more info

    Six one-liners on meetings
    Make a better meeting when you can, and the best of a meeting when you can’t. The choice to avoid holding a meeting may snowball into problems that require even more meetings. Ensure every meeting worth the person-time, assuming organizational dynamics allow for it. Recurring meetings have to earn their continued existence. Steer meetings away from sidebars, confusions, digressions, and distractions. Meeting are an opportunity to go deeper than documents …
    82 words
  2. Simon Willison: TIL, , more info

    Compiling and running sqlite3-rsync
    Today I heard about the sqlite3-rsync command, currently available in a branch in the SQLite code repository. It provides a mechanism for efficiently creating or updating a copy of a SQLite database that is running in WAL mode, either locally or via SSH to another server. Update: Thanks to gary_0 on Hacker News here's a MUCH simpler recipe: git clone https://github.com/sqlite/sqlite.git cd sqlite ./configure make sqlite3-rsync So it looks like …
    By Simon Willison, 404 words
  3. Undina's Looking Glass, , more info

    Saturday Question: Which Perfumes Would You Take If You Had To Evacuate?
    Last week, in the Perfume Chat Room at the Serenity Now blog, rickyrebarco told about having to evacuate because of Hurricane Helene and shared which perfumes she took with her. I commented that I was recently thinking about how hard it would have been to make such a choice. And Old Herbaceous suggested that it […]
    By Undina, 68 words
  4. The lost outpost – technology, photography, society, and life, , more info

    Get Involved at OggCamp 2024: bring a talk or demo
    As I write this, OggCamp 2024 (which I have subtitled The Return in my head’s inner monologue) is a little over a week away. You can still get a ticket and join us! A few of us have done a little bit of promotion of the event that you may not have seen, heard, or read, so feel free to explore these: I was on Tom’s Hardware PiCast Dan wrote …
    By Andy Piper, 1,262 words
  5. Frog in a Well, , more info

    Testing to the teach
    Below is the mid-term for my Modern Japan class. You can see the syllabus here. I wanted to think about this a bit, because I am trying to do several things with it, and I am not sure how well it will work. First a bit of background. I have usually liked take-home tests, since asking students to analyze history without looking at any sources is….1 less than ideal. I …
    By Alan Baumler, 626 words
  6. Way Too Damn Lazy To Write A Blog, , more info

    Celebrity Cigarette Commercials
    Continuing a thread about vintage TV ads we last did on September 8, today's post delves into 1950's and 1960's Commercial Land, specifically cigarettes.To get in the mood, it's time for a cuppa joe from Conquistador Coffee!Since the September 8 post started with animated ads, here are some very good ones plugging Lucky "LSMFT" Strikes.While I don't know offhand who produced the stylish "It's Light Up Time" ads, they are …
    By Paul F. Etcheverry, 378 words
  7. Brad Frost | Blog, , more info

    Why every UX/UI designer should attend a masterclass with Brad Frost | by Zoi
    Well this is just a really nice piece of flattery, and a nice breakdown of my design system masterclass I delivered at HATCH Conference in Berlin last year. I truly enjoy teaching masterclasses, running workshops, and working with teams to help people understand important concepts, provide resources, and share my own experience working with dozens of teams on design system efforts. Thanks Zoi!
    By Brad Frost, 77 words
  8. Pixel Envy, , more info

    ⌥ Mark Zuckerberg’s Political Zag
    The New York Times recently ran a one–two punch of stories about the ostensibly softening political involvement of Mark Zuckerberg and Meta — where by “punch”, I mean “gentle caress”. Sheera Frenkel and Mike Isaac on Meta “distanc[ing] itself from politics”: On Facebook, Instagram and Threads, political content is less heavily featured. App settings have been automatically set to de-emphasize the posts that users see about campaigns and candidates. And …
    By Nick Heer, 1,077 words
  9. Gurney Journey, , more info

    Penovác's Cats
    Endre Penovác (Serbia, b. 1956) paints cats using a unique wet-into-wet technique. He uses a wet-in-wet technique, which involves applying wet paint to a pre-wetted surface. This approach allows the pigments to blend and spread organically, creating soft, ethereal effects.More about how he paints these cats on my Substack post
    By James Gurney, 52 words
  10. Not One-Off Britishisms, , more info

    “Pap” h/t Nancy Friedman
    Nancy Friedman is one of my favorite writers on language, so I was over the moon to read her write-up of my book Gobsmacked! I can’t imagine a better appreciation of what I’ve tried to do with the blog and the book. Her piece also reminded me that, some months back, Nancy had suggested I write about “pap”–a noun for paparazzi photographers, and a verb for what they do, as …
    By Ben Yagoda, 407 words
  11. Trailspotting, , more info

    Mt Israel, Squam Lake NH
    • 4-star hikes • 4 mile out-and-back • Medium difficulty | Gain 1,750 feet • Sandwich, NH | White Mountains . Looking towards the White Mountains from the summit. Standing at 2,636 feet of elevation and located just four miles north of Squam Lake, Mount Israel's trails lead panoramic viewpoints in all directions. From up here you can enjoy sights that include Squam Lake and the ragged Sandwich mountain range …
    By Stuart Green, 595 words
  12. Jim Caroll - Blog, , more info

    Daily Inspiration: Innovation & Corporate Culture – “Committees are an infrastructure designed to race you to the bottom of opportunity!”
    “Committees are an infrastructure designed to race you to the bottom of opportunity!” – Futurist Jim Carroll Committees kill ideas. Committees kill all initiative. Committees kill the idea of innovation. Committees are the destroyer of all things. Did I mention I think committees are a bad idea? “Let me check with the committee.” “We’ve got a committee looking into that.” “There’s a committee involved with the decision.” “We’ll send that …
    By JimCarroll, 769 words
  13. Hermitary – hermit's thatch, , more info

    Solitude – a pre-history
    In searching for a prototype modern hermit, one is confronted by the reality that after the Middle Ages, hermits in modernity were destined by authorities to disappear. In order to survive, eremitism transformed into solitude, and hermits transformed into solitaries. Unlike historical hermits, however, who seem so similar regardless of geography, culture, or era, solitaries present more variable phenomena. Life styles of modern solitaries depend more on circumstance and personality. …
    707 words
  14. CST Online | Television Studies Blog, , more info

    “FINDING YOUR FIT” WITHIN THE CONFERENCE CONTINUUM by Christopher Pullen
    In this blog, I offer an autoethnographical account of what it means for TV scholars to take part in the conference continuum, which I argue is both familiar and strange in every iteration. Whether you are an ardent follower of certain large-scale conferences, or a serial “dipper in” to a plethora of small-scale events, you might not realise how to “find your fit” – when you turn up… Source
    By CSTonline, 79 words
  15. THE ANOMALIST, , more info

    New Paper on Chemical Classification of IM1 Spherules Published in Chemical Geology The Galileo Project/Harvard University
    The Galileo Project's Papua New Guinea expedition "has culminated in the publication of a major new paper by Professor Avi Loeb and his team in the prestigious Elsevier journal Chemical Geology. Thus Harvard's announcement, which also details some "key findings" from the 1.5M dollar effort. The announcement retains the claim the meteor was "interstellar," with admission that some spherules were "potentially of terrestrial origin," and, while stressing the "BeLaU" subset …
    241 words