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  1. Oilpressure, , more info

    Oilpressure Goes in for a Rebuild
    One of the (many) problems with old age is that things that were once considered an annoyance, eventually become big enough problems that they need to be fixed. Such a malady has finally caught up with me. For years I boasted that I have never had surgery. I reached the age of 66 back in […]
    By Oilpressure, 62 words
  2. Mike Sterling's Progressive Ruin, , more info

    “Wedding? I didn’t see no swamp priest there.”
    So comics artist Ron Randall spoke a bit about working with Alan Moore on Saga of Swamp Thing #33 from the mid-1980s. So if you click on the pic above, or on this link right here, you’ll be whisked away to a thread of posts on Bluesky where Mr. Randall has nothing but good things to say about the experience. Issue #33 is, of course, this one: …in which they …
    By Mikester, 362 words
  3. Based On A True Story..., , more info

    Sightings
    I was familiar with the sightings in both Hudson Valley, NY in the '80s and those in Belgium (2:10-19:30) in the '90s. What I didn't know was that there were hundreds of sightings at each over the years. In Hudson Valley, entire towns (and their respective police forces) witnessed a variety of giant boomerang shaped UFO's on a regular basis; a decade later, civilians, police, radar and even F-16's repeatedly …
    By Stan B., 263 words
  4. Open Culture, , more info

    How Ancient Romans Traveled Without Maps
    In an age when many of us could hardly make our way to an unfamiliar grocery store without relying on a GPS navigation system, we might well wonder how the Romans could establish and sustain their mighty empire without so much as a proper map. That’s the question addressed by the Historia Militum video above, “How Did Ancient People Travel Without Maps?” Or more to the point, how did they …
    By Colin Marshall, 429 words
  5. The Vivienne Files, , more info

    A Navy & Grey Lover? Start Packing with The Common Wardrobe
    November 22, 2024 It’s snowing like the end of the world here in Chicago – I’m very happy! Of course, it will last an hour, and then melt… sigh… More heroines than you might expect are committed to wearing navy, grey, and accent colors that vary with the seasons. I hear from you often, and I can entirely agree that your choice is an elegant and pretty foolproof way to …
    By Janice, 683 words
  6. It's Psychedelic Baby Magazine, , more info

    ‘Chasing Sunsets’ by FAUX PRIX | New Album, ‘From Metric To Imperial’
    FAUX PRIX, the new indie rock project from Bradley Hanan Carter (NO, 5 Billion in Diamonds), drops their latest track ‘Chasing Sunsets,’ a haunting reflection on resilience and staying true to your dreams. With a thrift store Casiotone drone setting the mood, Carter channels a blend of nostalgic indie rock vibes and anthemic energy. He describes the song as a journey through personal struggle, urging listeners to hold on to …
    By Klemen Breznikar, 244 words
  7. Rachel the Gardener, , more info

    Tree Peony: Autumn pruning
    This is one of those topics which is just soooo much easier to demonstrate than to describe... but I've have five people ask me about Tree Peonies in the past few days, so - as I still haven't managed to get a Go-Pro sorted out - you will have to bear with my descriptions, instead of a quick five-minute video. Sorry about that!Right, Tree Peonies: these are actually small shrubs, …
    By Rachel the Gardener, 183 words
  8. FlowingData, , more info

    Movie runtimes framed by life expectancy
    Memento Movi, a mini-app by Michael Condouris, is what you get when you use movies as a progress bar for life expectancy. Enter your birthdate and expected lifespan. Then select a movie from the list. The percentage of your life that you’ve lived is translated to the percentage through the movie you would be, which gives you the frame in the movie. I swear this was made just for me. …
    By Nathan Yau, 83 words
  9. Long Now - Ideas, , more info

    Stephen Heintz & Kim Stanley Robinson
    Stephen Heintz and Kim Stanley Robinson will discuss our polycrisis, and the swift and holistic reform of global governance institutions that is needed to respond to these urgent transnational and planetary challenges we are facing.We are living in an age of exceptional complexity and turbulence. What distinguishes this period in human history is the confluence of forces— political, geo-strategic, economic, social, technological, and environmental, as well as the interactions amongst …
    By The Long Now Foundation, 180 words
  10. Bonkers about Perfume, , more info

    Fleetingly floofy: Color Wow Dream Cocktail Carb-Infused Leave-in Treatment review
    It's been a long time since I last wrote about a hair care product on Bonkers, but my recent quest to find something to give my fine, limp hair a bit of a lift in the crown may be of interest to any other seekers of volume, oomph, or anything vaguely resembling an artfully tousled look.In recent years my hair had been steadily growing, and I rather liked it long. …
    By Vanessa, 86 words
  11. Special Needs Jungle, , more info

    Commons committee lets the Department for Education off the hook—so we’ll do the scrutiny instead
    New article from Special Needs Jungle: Call me weird, but I was quite looking forward to this hearing of the Commons Public Accounts Committee this week. The National Audit Office report was so damning, I was … The post Commons committee lets the Department for Education off the hook—so we’ll do the scrutiny instead appeared first on Special Needs Jungle. Rachel Filmer ⓒ Special Needs Jungle 2008-2023 All Rights reserved
    By Rachel Filmer, 85 words
  12. MUBI | Notebook, , more info

    Related Images | “Witches”
    Related Images invites readers behind the scenes and into the sketchbooks of working filmmakers to learn more about their creative processes.Elizabeth Sankey’s Witches is now showing exclusively on MUBI.Witches (Elizabeth Sankey, 2024).Title cards are an underappreciated art and a powerful tool for every director. They can punctuate a moment, make it more comic, shocking, or beautiful. They can hold your hand and lead you sweetly down the garden path of …
    By Elizabeth Sankey, 655 words
  13. The Overspill: when there's more that I want to say, , more info

    Start Up No.2339: Google pushes big sites out of “reviews”, a personal AI Jesus, building a better drone, bird flu redux, and more
    The spork’s continued existence, in the liminal place between useless and annoying, remains baffling. CC-licensed photo by Karl Baron on Flickr. You can sign up to receive each day’s Start Up post by email. You’ll need to click a confirmation link, so no spam. It’s Friday, so there’s another post due at the Social Warming Substack at about 0845 UK time. A selection of 9 links for you. Cutting edge. …
    By charlesarthur, 3,328 words
  14. Maurits Diephuis, , more info

    Yaowarat (Chinatown)
    Yaowarat (Chinatown)
    4 words
  15. Sympolymathesy, by Chris Krycho—Journal, , more info

    [journal] Read the Manual: id
    When you need to know a bit more about how the system identifies a given user. Assumed audience: People interested in learning how the command lines tools on their computer work.This week’s Read the Manual is about id: a tool I only learned the existence of while researching last week’s entry on lsof! It gives you users’ user names, group names, and numeric IDs for a given user. This is …
    By Chris Krycho, 323 words