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  1. Monster Zone, , more info

    The Cyan Dragon (2020)
    This movie features a many-headed monstrosity! Starring Cui Erkang, Zhang Ruiyao, Su Suxia, Cheng Qi, Zhang Ying and Yin Shaosheng. Written by Liu Jiahong and Wang Runz. Directed by Ji Zhizhong and Tony Wei. Tencent Penguin Pictures One of the hydra-creature’s toothy heads A dying general transfers the power of the Cyan Dragon into the body of Xiang, a lowly footsoldier, who must learn to harness the energy to defeat …
    By Ken Miller, 740 words
  2. Olu Online | Blog, , more info

    Knowledge
    Calling something knowledge can be a political act, even a radical one 1. — Thenjiwe Nkosi I recently learned more about the Library of Alexandria; more than you do while scrolling through Tumblr at random 2 anyway. It turns out that it survived the famous fire! The library as an institution at least, whether you believe it was primarily a warehouse under their control that burned aside. Other libraries superseded …
    By hidden (oluonline), 1,010 words
  3. Picturegoing, , more info

    Little Wilson and Big God
    Source: Anthony Burgess, Little Wilson and Big God (London: Heinemann, 1987), p. 55 Text: Still, social mobility is built into women and may be an aspect of their biology. Madge remained refined, though ill-informed, and she dressed elegantly in the bosomless style of the day, going off to her stenography in a cloche hat and with exposed pretty knees. She was well informed only about the cinema, in which she …
    By Luke McKernan, 398 words
  4. A Pilgrim in Narnia, , more info

    My Unblurbed Blurb of Charlie Starr’s The Lion Country
    As I am between steps in the publication of a book about C.S. Lewis’s thought, I find myself coming back to my bookshelf with a bit of mental space. I have been following Charlie W. Starr’s work for almost as … Continue reading → The post My Unblurbed Blurb of Charlie Starr’s The Lion Country first appeared on A Pilgrim in Narnia.
    By Brenton Dickieson, 71 words
  5. grammaticus, , more info

    Listening tips: Coffee
    Some time ago, I presented a few listening tips on the subject of my favourite drink—tea—and tea culture. And in this blog post, I’m going to offer a few suggestions on the topic of the world’s second most popular drink: coffee. From the history of coffee to its health benefits and tips on how to make the perfect cup of coffee… Here you’ll find everything you need to know, and …
    By Waldmann, 76 words
  6. Synesthesia, , more info

    Transcribing meeting recordings with OpenAI
    The other day I was sent an audio recording of a meeting I had been part of, but no textual transcript was available. With a relatively small amount of hacking it is now very easy to use the OpenAI Whisper model via the transcriptions endpoint to generate high quality text from such a file. This example uses Python, it’s a great language for these sort of ad-hoc tools. Process The …
    805 words
  7. Quote Investigator® – Tracing Quotations, , more info

    Quote Origin: There Are Only Two Ways of Telling the Complete Truth — Anonymously and Posthumously
    Susan Ohanian? Thomas Sowell? Anonymous? Tombstone engraved with the word “Unknown” Question for Quote Investigator: Social media is rife with conflict. Comments about sensitive topics produce incendiary responses. I am reminded of this mordant insight: There are only two ways of telling the complete truth—anonymously and posthumously. U.S. economist Thomas Sowell and U.S. teacher Susan Ohanian have received credit for this remark. Would you please help me to find a …
    By quoteresearch, 606 words
  8. The CRPG Addict, , more info

    Betrayal at Krondor: Para Bellum
    Prince Arutha strategizes to counter the Moredhel threat. This is the first game I've played with "Chapters." It apparently isn't the first in the RPG genre, although unless some console game did it first, it seems to be the first with a western release. In any event, I can't imagine that the authors of Krondor played Dragon Slayer: The Legend of Heroes in Japanese, so I suspect that to them …
    By CRPG Addict, 2,176 words
  9. Junk Charts, , more info

    Visualizing extremes
    The New York Times published this chart to illustrate the extreme ocean heat driving the formation of hurricane Milton (link): The chart expertly shows layers of details. The red line tracks the current year's data on ocean heat content up to yesterday. Meaning is added through the gray line that shows the average trajectory of the past decade. With the addition of this average line, we can readily see how …
    By junkcharts, 210 words
  10. The Dusty Bookcase, , more info

    Pearl White is The White Moll!
    The Moving Picture World2 October 1920A follow-up to last week's post on Frank L. Packard's The White Moll.TheWhite Moll was the fifth Frank L. Packard book to be adapted by Hollywood. It followed Tinseltown's take on his 1914 novel The Miracle Man by a matter of months. The Miracle Man is considered one of the great lost silent films. I first wrote about it thirteen years ago, sharing the two …
    By Brian Busby, 867 words
  11. The Enlightened Economist, , more info

    The narrow path from votes of despair
    I read Sam Freedman’s Failed State: Why Nothing Works and How We Fix It with a mixture of nods of recognition and gasps of disbelief. It’s all too apparent that – as the subtitle puts it – nothing works in aspects of life in the UK dependent in some way on the successful design and implementation of government policy (which is most aspects tbh). Those of us who have engaged …
    By Diane Coyle, 510 words
  12. The Renaissance Mathematicus, , more info

    From τὰ φυσικά (ta physika) to physics – XXXI
    In the last episode of this series, we looked at two popular sixteenth century texts on statics, the oft published and widely read pseudo-Aristotelian Questiones Mechanicae, and Guidobaldo dal Monte’s highly influential Mechanicorum liber. Today we are going to leave Italy and travel to The Netherlands to look at the work on statics of the Flemish polymath, Simon Stevin (c. 1548–1620). Source: Wikimedia Commons Stevin is usually referred to as …
    By thonyc, 1,477 words
  13. Old mans thoughts and tales, , more info

    Dog Poo!!
    You can tell the nights are getting darker. Dog poo is back on the pavements I found some on my trainer that I brought into my wee house, it was the last thing I needed. As soon as the weather gets better I will be out with the poo bags to clean up. Dog Poo Comments welcome.
    By heavywhalley.MBE, 59 words
  14. Real Ale, Real Music, , more info

    Celebrating Great British Beer....
    A new location has just been announced for the Great British Beer Festival for 2025 which takes it away from London for the first time for many year, and whilst we are now in the midst of the festival season here's a look back at the history of large scale beer events....So the Great British Beer Festival is to leave its longstanding home at Olympia in London, and is moving …
    By Chris Dyson, 1,871 words
  15. Mind the blog, , more info

    Shakespeare’s Borrowed Feathers: How Early Modern Playwrights Shaped the World’s Greatest Writer
    “He was not of an age, but for all time.” Ben Jonson’s description of William Shakespeare certainly holds true, with a variety of productions of his plays showing in theatres of all kinds across the globe – as well as countless film, TV & audio versions, not to mention spin-off ideas inspired by certain characters or locations. But these original plays didn’t appear in a vacuum; the early modern theatre …
    By Debbie, 875 words