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  1. Dan Mall’s Posts, , more info

    Applications Are Open: Hiring a Designer Who Can Ship!
    Last week, I posted about wanting to hire a designer who can ship. As of today, applications are officially open! ⭐ 👉🏽 APPLY HERE 👈🏽 ⭐ A word of caution: please read my tips! It’s important to me to work with someone thoughtful and considerate who pays attention, and ignoring my guidelines is a great way to show me that we’re already not a good fit to work together. For …
    By Dan Mall, 159 words
  2. same stuff, different day, , more info

    Interesting links of the week 2024-41
    Here are the best and most interesting articles, blog posts, videos, podcasts, and GitHub repositories I’ve run into over the last week (September 30, 2024 - October 6, 2024). Enjoy! Microsoft / Dotnet / Azure - Other Software Dev - Tech and Science - Leadership - Project Management / Agile - Social Media - Non-Tech / Random - Videos - GitHub Repos Here are some posts I’ve written in the …
    By Michael Eaton, 439 words
  3. Crooked Timber, , more info

    Philosophy & Public Affairs is not dead yet
    One of the most interesting developments in the little world of political theory / philosophy in recent years has been the mass resignation of the editorial teams of both Philosophy & Public Affairs, and Journal of Political Philosophy. Public statements from both groups suggested they were disturbed by their existing publishers’ injunctions to publish in higher quantities, perhaps at the cost of academic quality. Both ultimately moved en masse to …
    By Chris Armstrong, 302 words
  4. Ephemeral New York, , more info

    A midcentury painter’s rich, reflective portrait of a Manhattan tenement hallway
    Most New Yorkers probably don’t think too much about their apartment hallway. It’s a typically narrow, empty space closed off by shut doors that we only pass through to get to the elevator or stairwell. Artist Charles L. Goeller decided to use a hallway as the inspiration of this undated painting. “Tenement Hallway,” as Goeller titled it, may seem flat and one-dimensional at first glance. But the more you look …
    By ephemeralnewyork, 267 words
  5. The Unconventional Gardener – Blog, , more info

    The amazing flowers growing in pavement cracks and why you shouldn’t pass them by
    Wildflowers are multitaskers. They are a source of food for your friendly neighbourhood insects but also benefit the soil.
    By guest, 33 words
  6. The Week in Women | an AWFJ blog, , more info

    After Sundance premiere, Caroline Lindy’s ‘Your Monster’ getting spooky season theatrical release
    After bowing in the eclectic Sundance Midnight program in January in Utah, "Your Monster" won the 2024 Audience Favourite Award in June at the Sundance Film Festival: London.
    By Brandy McDonnell, 40 words
  7. Southern Fried Science, , more info

    6 Ways to Support the America the Beautiful for All Coalition
    The membership of the America the Beautiful for All coalition stretches from the Marianas to Maine, Alaska to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. We are the largest, most diverse coalition of its kind to ever exist in the United States. Last week, 170+ conservation, climate change, and community leaders from across the United States ... Read More "6 Ways to Support the America the Beautiful for All Coalition" »
    By Angelo Villagomez, 81 words
  8. MPorcius Fiction Log, , more info

    Barry N. Malzberg: "September 1958," "Into the Breach," "Thirty-Six Views of His Dead Majesty," "The Trials of Sigmund" and "The Man Who Loved the Midnight Lady"
    For like a year we've been sporadically reading the 1980 Barry Malzberg collection The Man Who Loved the Midnight Lady. Today let's finish it up with the final five pieces of fiction in the book, all of them from the period 1977-1980. But first, links to my blog posts on the previous 23 stories in the volume. “On the Air”“Here, for Just a While”“In the Stocks”“The Man Who Married a …
    By MPorcius, 3,676 words
  9. The Adventurers Guild, , more info

    Death in the Caribbean - How Long, How Long to the Point of No Return?
    Written by MichaelWell, this post won’t be as long. I’ve given up on this session after reaching what was almost definitely a dead end. And that’s after beating the darn ghost!This will be less of a blow-by-blow of the steps I’ve taken, and more of just a list of failures and frustrations.First, going back to the grave to dig up stuff that was stolen from me results in death, from …
    By Michael, 1,121 words
  10. ordinaryangler, , more info

    06/04/2024 - Ilfracombe part II (a plethora of pouting and a pleasant surprise!)
    Got back from Ilfracombe just in time for a quick shower and a bite to eat before we all set off for a walk over the hill to The Rock at Georgham. Was sat in the sun drinking a perfect pint of Butty Bach when I got an email from Joel Squires saying that unfortunately he wasn't going to be able to meet up for a bass session this weekend, …
    By Toodle, 766 words
  11. Fishing Through Life, , more info

    Some Fall Top Water Action
    There is nothing like landing bass on top during October, especially if you are fishing with your son. Jason is home for a couple of weeks. We launched at Duncan Bridge on Smith Lake this past Tuesday morning and fished the main channel north of the Duncan bridge. We were blessed to witness one of the most scenic early morning sunrises ever on Smith Lake. Of course, that is our …
    By Bill Trussell, 356 words
  12. Mills Field | Weblog, , more info

    Small focused tools for visualizing geographic data
    This is a blog post about a series of small, purpose-fit web applications that can be run from your local desktop (or a remote server, if necessary) to visualize geographic data in a map. The first application lets you visualize GeoJSON files, the second SQLite databases containing MBTiles data and the third GeoParquet files. These are tools which were written to address specific use cases for SFO Museum but are …
    100 words
  13. 3:AM Magazine, , more info

    Delicates
    By Fida TK. The worst part was that he had asked me, easy, without any sort of pressure or anything like that. He said, can I take it all with me, and I said yes, a little stupidly maybe, and so he got my toes and my spleen and my soul in his arms and walked out of my room, and there I was on the bed, a rough-cut blob …
    By Daniel Davis Wood, 1,144 words
  14. Critic After Dark, , more info

    Megalopolis (Francis Ford Coppola, 2024)
    MegalomaniaCame out of Megalopolis feeling a lot of things but what I did not feel was disappointed-- not a bad thing but not necessarily a good thing either. I run hot and cold on Francis Ford Coppola. Thought his first two Godfather films were classically well-written if visually conventional, too-carefully curated portraits of a corrupt American family, thought Apocalypse Now was a vividly directed Vietnam war movie that had little …
    By Noel Vera, 1,822 words
  15. Smashing Magazine, , more info

    Build A Static RSS Reader To Fight Your Inner FOMO
    In a fast-paced industry like tech, it can be hard to deal with the fear of missing out on important news. But, as many of us know, there’s an absolutely huge amount of information coming in daily, and finding the right time and balance to keep up can be difficult, if not stressful. A classic piece of technology like an RSS feed is a delightful way of taking back ownership …
    By Karin Hendrikse, 1,963 words