Skip to content

Recently updated blogs

Or see recently added blogs

  1. Streets.mn, , more info

    The Colorful Rock Garden of Kindness on Cumberland Street
    Editor’s note: This article first appeared in Wolfie Browender’s blog, Saint Paul By Bike — Every Block of Every Street. All images are by the author, except where noted. July 9, 2024 Macalester-Groveland, Midway, Summit-University, Frogtown, North End 23 miles Little Free Libraries are plentiful throughout St. Paul. They come in abundant designs, colors and sizes. Occasionally a library is void of books, but never before have I spotted a …
    By Wolfie Browender, 2,524 words
  2. CSS-Tricks, , more info

    Solved by CSS: Donuts Scopes
    Imagine you have a web component that can show lots of different content. It will likely have a slot somewhere where other components can be injected. The parent component also has its own styles unrelated to the styles of the content components it may hold. This makes a challenging situation: how can we prevent the parent component styles from leaking inwards? This isn’t a new problem — Nicole Sullivan described …
    By Juan Diego Rodríguez, 1,340 words
  3. The TTABlog®, , more info

    TTAB Affirms Refusal of ENDURELITE in view of ENDUROLETE for Supplements, Rejecting Strategic Partners Argument
    The Board affirmed a refusal to register the mark ENDURELITE, finding confusion likely with the registered mark ENDUROLETE, both for dietary and nutritional supplements. The marks are "extremely similar," the goods identical in-part, and the channels of trade and classes of consumers for those goods are presumably identical. Applicant argued that, under Strategic Partners, its ownership of a registration for the mark ENDURELITE FUELING FAST & Design (shown immediately below) …
    399 words
  4. Leiden Medievalists Blog, , more info

    The Measure of Things: on the Size of a Loaf or the Length of a Poniard
    Although easily overlooked, the facades of many churches and public buildings show up iron rods or studs, carved shapes like the contours of feet or daggers, and even representations of bricks and floor tiles. These signs hark back to a time when standard measures differed from place to place.
    65 words
  5. Tim Harford | Articles, , more info

    Cautionary Questions – RoboPod and the Perpetual Money Machine
    Thanks for your questions – fielded this time with the able assistance of Jacob Goldstein, the author of Money: The True Story of a Made Up Thing.
    By Tim Harford, 36 words
  6. Aeon | a world of ideas, , more info

    Compassionate time
    On his final journey through Asia, Thomas Merton found some peace in the dialectic between refusing the world and loving it - by Drew Calvert Read at Aeon
    By Drew Calvert, 30 words
  7. The Beer Nut, , more info

    Mutually fruity
    Bit of an unusual move from me today. Collaboration beers aren't exactly rare on this blog, but I tend to group things together by the production brewery. Today's are centred around one of my locals, Rascals, but are all beers they've made with other breweries, and all share the Rascals fondness for whacking in the fruit purée.We start at HQ, and Pash 'N Fruit. A note of appreciation goes to …
    By The Beer Nut, 800 words
  8. Sinclair Trails, , more info

    Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park
    We visited Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park in Santa Clarita, California, about 25 miles from downtown Los Angeles. (Wikipedia info.) Being so close to Hollywood, it has long been a popular filming spot; you may recognize it from TV and films such as Star Trek and many more (see the Wikipedia page for a list). Visitor center: Star Trek diorama: Snakes: Map: Some movie usage: Vasquez Rocks: Distinctive.
    By David, 73 words
  9. Electric Literature - Home, , more info

    In “The Substance,” the Real Horror Is the Pursuit of Youth
    Like many during the pandemic, I let my shit go. I cut my own bangs. I did not pay attention to the softening of my jawline as I enjoyed a more sedentary lifestyle, and I welcomed the incoming silver streaks above my ears. I wore loose linen, I made a lot of bread and witchy soups, and every night to ease my anxiety I listened to a guided meditation that …
    By Katie Kopajtic, 2,338 words
  10. DIGICULT | Digital Art, Design and Culture, , more info

    Dipl.-Ing. Arsitek: An Indonesian-German Architectural History
    Drawing from the diploma theses of the Berlin graduates, archived at the TU Berlin Architecture Museum, Dipl.-Ing. Arsitek: An Indonesian-German Architectural History provides insight into this little-known aspect of German-Indonesian relations, for the first time in Germany. The post Dipl.-Ing. Arsitek: An Indonesian-German Architectural History appeared first on Digicult | Digital Art, Design and Culture.
    By Redazione Digicult, 61 words
  11. The Aperiodical, , more info

    Mathematical Objects: Borges’ Library of Babel
    A conversation about infinity inspired by The Library of Babel by Jorge Luis Borges. Presented by Katie Steckles and Peter Rowlett.
    By Katie Steckles and Peter Rowlett, 27 words
  12. Guitar Pedal X - News, , more info

    Land Devices delivers the beautifully textured Moonbow dual resonant filter with control strip style Overdrive
    You can count on Land Devices to harness the very best studio / audio grade components to generate superior tones and textures. And this Moonbow combines dual hi-fidelity resonant filters across a cutoff frequency range of 20Hz to 5kHz. You can further use a CV input to control the cutoff frequency more dynamically. And finally you have an Overdrive circuit based on the Land Devices control strip with a 33dB …
    By Stefan Karlsson, 233 words
  13. Niklas's blog, , more info

    A quote from Richard Flanagan's 'Question 7'
    I recently started reading Richard Flanagan's so-far radiant book Question 7. I read the following passage at lunch today and it should be shared, so here it is: Chekhov believed that the role of literature was not to provide answers but only to ask the necessary questions. One of Chekhov’s earliest stories was a parody of mental arithmetic questions asked of schoolchildren, of which Chekhov’s question 7 is typical: Wednesday, …
    386 words
  14. Nancy's Baby Names – Blog, , more info

    Babies named for Fletcher’s Castoria
    Castoria newspaper ad (1915) In yesterday’s post about the name Castara I mentioned a medicine called Castoria, which was a senna-based laxative made for children. Castoria was developed in the mid-19th century by Massachusetts doctor Samuel Pitcher, who patented the medicine in 1868 and sold it as “Pitcher’s Castoria.” Three years later, the formula was purchased by the Centaur Company (headed by Charles H. Fletcher) and renamed “Fletcher’s Castoria.” Advertising …
    By Nancy Man, 614 words
  15. Kaggsy's Bookish Ramblings, , more info

    “… a vast machinery of officialdom…” #GermanLitMonth #kafka #walterbenjamin
    To round off German Lit Month’s Kafka week, I though I would swerve off in a different direction from the actual writings of the man himself by writing about another author translated from the German – Walter Benjamin. I was browsing through his works and realised that he had actually written essays about Kafka, and I have two in a collection on the TBR – “Illuminations” (translated by Harry Zohn). …
    By kaggsysbookishramblings, 628 words