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  1. Killed By A Pixel, , more info

    Astronomic Comics in Austin People’s Gallery
    A print from my generative series Astronomic Comics has been chosen to be in the Austin People’s Gallery! It is on display at City Hall until April of next year! I am honored have my work shown at a prestigious event like this. You can read more about The People’s Gallery here.
    By Frank, 58 words
  2. cadence's weblog (personal blog), , more info

    "Created by a human" badges
    It is becoming harder and harder to tell whether information on the internet is created by humans or by computers. As more money and time is funnelled into new generative AI models, their output becomes better at blending in.Some words I associate with human works are: create, imagine, think, dream, inspire, connect, heart, brain, soul, love.I believe that computers cannot do or have any of those things. Computers are the …
    544 words
  3. Vintage Kids' Books My Kid Loves, , more info

    Looking at Picture Books
    Two of my favorite children's book authors have started a Substack called, aptly enough, Looking at Picture Books. Jon Klassen and Mac Barnett will be exploring how picture books work. This is a total dream collab for anyone interested in kids books. Fangirling hard on this one. Their first study is on Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are. Subscribe and do not miss! (You can follow me over there, too. …
    By Burgin Streetman, 100 words
  4. PC Gazer, , more info

    The FTC Strikes Out at Adobe Over Hidden Termination Fees
    The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed a federal court complaint against Adobe and two of its executives. The complaint alleges violations of the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act. These accusations stem from Adobe’s “annual paid monthly” subscription plan. The FTC argues Adobe traps customers with hidden fees and a difficult cancellation process. “Adobe trapped customers into year-long subscriptions through hidden early termination fees and many cancellation hurdles,” said Samuel Levine, …
    By Ryan Matthew Pierson, 258 words
  5. Pages of Perfiction, , more info

    Dear World: Entry Two
    i leaped, feeling the rush of wind against my bare back as i slid cleanly into the pool. another perfect dive. i let my head gently ease above the water, resting for a moment. then, suddenly, the water gripped my leg and yanked me down. i thrashed in the water, opening my eyes. all i could see was choppy waves and unrelentless ocean, pushing me with its full force. my …
    By Paige C., 595 words
  6. Inky Fool, , more info

    A Riddle for a King
    I've a written a new book. It's a children's book and it's called A Riddle for a King. It's suitable for those aged between about eight and twelve, although it has been rigorously tested on children from six to thirteen (I test all my products on children and animals). The six-year-old had to have it read to him, but he loved it. The story is about a boy called Philo, …
    By M.H. Forsyth, 358 words
  7. Articulated Bus Error, , more info

    A New Kind of Map for Transit Access
    “King County Metro Route 8 | NFI XDE60 | Madison St @ MLK Jr Way” by Han Zheng is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0. Transit access is frequently depicted with isochrone maps. Given a starting point, time of day, and time budget, determine all the places that can be reached within that budget using transit and walking. These maps are not a new concept, with examples dating to the late …
    By Matt Laquidara, 136 words
  8. Sean Boots, , more info

    Published in Canadian Public Administration: “Breaking All the Rules: Information Technology Procurement in the Government of Canada”
    I’m really thrilled that our research article on government IT procurement was recently published in Canadian Public Administration. It’s a bit over two years since Prof. Amanda Clarke and I began this research project, and this article being published is in some ways the final milestone of that work. The article is open access, and you can read it online (or download the PDF version). Here’s the upshot: We reveal …
    534 words
  9. Art of the Title, , more info

    An Update from the Editor in Chief
    Dear readers,It is a rare thing for Art of the Title to publish an editor’s note but the time has come to provide an update. Many of you are likely unaware that, since 2018, Art of the Title has been a one-person operation managed by myself, Editor-in-Chief Lola Landekic. It has been my honour to be a member of the small Art of the Title team since 2011 when I …
    224 words
  10. Asaf Karagila | Blog Archive, , more info

    The Lighthouse Problem
    This is a piece of advice that I found myself giving to many early career researchers, students, and colleagues supervising and advising those as well. For years, actually. A mathematician, the joke says, is a blind man, in a dark room, searching for a black cat that isn't there. I don't know about that, but I think we can still agree that a researcher, in most fields, is sailing a …
    85 words
  11. First Known When Lost, , more info

    Journey
    The swallows have departed. The tall, dry meadow grass rustles in the nearly empty air. Now and then a sparrow suddenly flutters up from beside the path, then flies off toward the trees surrounding the field. Ghostly white tufts of thistle seed float past, rising and falling. Swallows FlownWhence comes that small continuous silence Haunting the livelong day?This void, where a sweetness, so seldom heeded, Once ravished my heart away?As …
    By Stephen Pentz, 1,141 words
  12. CaiusTheory - Latest, , more info

    Set Up Rails Activestorage With Azure Securely
    Ruby on Rails has built-in support for managing uploaded files with ActiveStorage, which both cleans up your application code and acts as an abstraction over different storage backends. Azure Storage is one of the supported backends, but configuring it securely can take a little figuring out. The most sensible way I’ve found to have it configured is with files stored having no public access, but allowing temporary access via signed …
    897 words
  13. iliana.fyi, , more info

    Experimenting with GitHub merge queues; could you send me a PR?
    I’m evaluating the usability of GitHub merge queues under a set of conditions that makes merge queues hard: pull requests have a high probability of failing CI when merged together despite passing on their own. (Plus, GitHub’s implementation has like 11 different knobs, and the documentation is somewhat limited.) I could make a bunch of PRs on my own, but that’s boring, and I’m not good at finding edge cases …
    By iliana etaoin, 217 words
  14. Breakfast and Travel Updates, , more info

    Day 7: Te Whanganui-a-Tara
    WelcomeYesterday we played a show in the Great Hall of the Dominion Museum in Whanganui a Tara. I returned for the second day to Akin for breakfast, the café with a name that I still couldn’t think of a pun for but an establishment that I now trusted to provide me with the nutrition to get me through a day of travelling and performing. Moving into the savoury section of …
    By Benjamin Sinclair, 960 words
  15. GeePawHill.org – Weekly Posts, , more info

    Basic Concepts of the “Making App”
    Let’s talk about the basic concept of the "making app". I’ve written about this before, and demoed it in some of my public project walk-throughs, but there’s no single straightforward explanation out there, so let’s take a swing. What is a "making app", and why might one want to roll one for a project? In […]
    By Brian Kimble, 62 words