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  1. The Movie Crash Course, , more info

    Little Big Man (1970)
    The word that kept coming to mind when I thought about this was “Dickensian”. And I realize that’s a weird way to describe a 1970s revisionist Western but it still fits. Dustin Hoffman stars as “Jack Crabb”, a white man who was adopted into the Cheyenne tribe when he was orphaned at age ten, and spends the next few decades getting pulled back and forth between Cheyenne and Causasian society. …
    By KWadsworth, 707 words
  2. Shapers of the 80s, , more info

    2024 ➤ Original outlaws celebrate their blasts from the past
    ❚ HERE’S A REVIEW OF THE NEW OUTLAWS SHOW, written by Franceska Luther King at Facebook yesterday… << Fabulous night at the private view of Outlaws: Fashion Renegades of 80s London at the Fashion and Textile Museum on Thursday evening. … Continue reading →
    By OTL, 54 words
  3. Reclaiming Paradise, , more info

    Tomato joys
    The tomatoes at the allotment this year have been a classic case of one step forward, two steps back. First of all the supposedly blight resistant ‘crimson crush’ seeds refused to germinate. Then a couple of them did so I took the two precious crimson crush plants to the allotment, reckoning that they were needed there more than in the garden. They got off to a reasonably good start and …
    By Reclaiming Paradise, 417 words
  4. Memex 1.1, , more info

    Monday 7 October, 2024
    Roll out the barrel Rooting around in my vast photo archive what should I find but this? Taken on Boxing Day (December 26) 2008 when a large number of ostensibly sane male residents of Grantchester, a nice village near Cambridge, decided that they would compete to see which of them could roll a barrel fastest along a stretch of village road, watched by many hundreds of their dependents, spouses, neighbours …
    By jjn1, 1,498 words
  5. Oatmeal, , more info

    📸 Photo
    Dinosaur golf before it shuts for the season.
    10 words
  6. If I Had My Own Blue Box, , more info

    Agricultural Society Fair
    I did two entries for the fair this year. My year has been focused on other things. I think the last time I entered only 2 was in Kindergarten. Maybe next year I will make up for it. The Bergère hat was inspired by an original in the MET collection (pictured.) This was my personal […]
    By Anna Worden Bauersmith, 59 words
  7. Cartoon Brew, , more info

    Foundation Media Sets First Look Deal For Film & TV Projects With Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing
    The books will adapted as animated or live-action properties for both film and television.
    By Tara Bennett, 31 words
  8. 11011110, , more info

    A half-flipped binary tiling
    In this tiling of the hyperbolic plane, all of the tiles are the same shape and size (despite their varied appearance), they are not square, and they are not polygons. The right side of the illustration depicts a binary tiling, in one of its conventional views using the Poincaré half plane model of hyperbolic geometry. The vertical sides of the tiles lie on hyperbolic lines, but their horizontal sides are …
    By David Eppstein, 841 words
  9. Renga in Blue, , more info

    Raspion Adventure: The Secret Treasures of Syl
    I’ve finished the game; this is continued from my last post. Via the Centre of Computing History. ftb on Discord pointed me to one of these mega-shareware discs having a copy of Raspion, but compiled for DOS. First off, RavenWorks cleared something up for me: that SLIT message was referring to the acronym that goes with the “say Lymbar in tomb” in the book; I hadn’t been paying attention to …
    By Jason Dyer, 902 words
  10. Computational Complexity, , more info

    Emil Post Anticipated (more than anticipated) Godel and Turing
    (Thanks to James De Santis for pointing the article that inspired this post on Post. The article is pointed to in this post.) What is Emil Post known for? I know of him for the following: a) Post's Problem: Show that there is an r.e. set A that is strictly in between Decidable and Halt using Turing Reductions. He posed the problem in 1944. It was solved in 1956 by …
    By gasarch, 584 words
  11. James Stanley, , more info

    Bare minds
    Back in the Stone Age, humanity was just scraping by with not much more than our bare hands. Working with AI has showed me that, all this time: we've just been scraping by with our bare minds. If computers were meant to be bicycles for the mind, then AI is jetpacks for the mind. I've been using Cursor for programming recently, and it has changed my life. I wouldn't go …
    535 words
  12. David Revoy, , more info

    Configuring the XpPen ACK05 Remote with only FLOSS on GNU/Linux: my investigation and workarounds.
    Here is my research on how to use and configure the XPPen ACK05 Remote using only Free Libre and Open Source drivers and software under GNU/Linux. As you'll see, it's quite limited and some features just don't work. This guide will be updated as soon as I have new information on how to improve it, or as soon as new development improves support for this device. Terminology: ACK05 → The …
    By David REVOY, 1,652 words
  13. The Map Room, , more info

    Satellite Imagery Before Landsat
    Speaking of historical satellite imagery, Bill Morris went digging for satellite imagery of what preceded Manicouagan Reservoir before it was created in the 1960s by Quebec’s massive hydro dam projects. But since Landsat first launched in 1973, after the dam was completed, what imagery was there? Answer: CIA spy satellite imagery from 1965—when satellites took pictures on film that was then sent back to Earth—that was declassified in 1996. Read …
    By Jonathan Crowe, 75 words
  14. PANTHEON, , more info

    Mick Farren - The Stooges
    Not sure which publication this was in - probably International Times - but this could be the start of a sporadic series: reviews in which critics don't perceive the significance of something at the time of its release. Interesting, though, that the one track Farren digs and praises is "We Will Fall" - the track that most Stooges fans find tedious and interminable.Contradicting his own point, it also the one …
    By SIMON REYNOLDS, 215 words
  15. Tom Stuart, , more info

    Weeknotes 248: Both ends
    At the risk of becoming a bit repetitive: how can it be October already? It’s definitely getting darker outside. I’ve eaten several baked potatoes. I already have one (1) pumpkin. 🎃 MORE ON BEEPS: when I mentioned the melodious beep of my new washer dryer, Denise expressed… disappointment? surprise? relief? — to characterise it in any way would be projection really — …that I hadn’t provided audio of the beeps …
    507 words