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  1. Publishing Perspectives, , more info

    Bloomsbury Opens an Audiobook Distribution Agreement With Spotify
    Bloomsbury titles are to go to the Spotify 'Audiobooks in Premium' offering, and to a-la-carte availability for those without subscriptions. The post Bloomsbury Opens an Audiobook Distribution Agreement With Spotify appeared first on Publishing Perspectives.
    By Porter Anderson, 43 words
  2. Salt Water New England, , more info

    Reader Question: Places to Visit?
    A reader question:Dear Muffy,May I ask a question pleaseMy wife and I are well travelled globally including several visits to the U.S.A. (we're British) however for all sorts of reasons (not least because we're getting older) our travelling days have come to an end. Somebody did ask me recently though if there was somewhere I wish we had visited but hadn't and my immediate response was "New England" (hence a …
    By Salt Water New England, 109 words
  3. The Online Photographer, , more info

    Film Friday: Inkjet Prints of Kodachrome at the Nathan Benn Show
    The Nathan Benn show at our local Rockwell Museum in Corning, New York, was a treat. I had only one complaint: there wasn't enough of it. It was well lit and impeccably presented in the classic manner, with a well-designed and well-sequenced array of prints of mostly medium size, but it consisted of only a single, medium-sized room. There were 19 prints in total. I would have been up for …
    By Michael Johnston, 1,218 words
  4. Michael Tsai - Blog, , more info

    The App Store Era Must End
    Jason Snell (tweet, Macworld, podcast): To a kid growing up in the 1980s, the idea that the maker of your computer would actively stop you from using software it didn’t approve of would have seemed beyond the pale. It certainly would’ve been a deal-breaker. And yet so many of today’s computing devices are locked down—for some good reasons, but also a lot of bad ones. What do we want the …
    By Michael Tsai, 1,199 words
  5. Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice, , more info

    Will AI Transform Teaching and Learning?
    Recently, I was invited to be part of a five member panel at Google to discuss the impact that AI will have on teaching and learning in schools. My fellow panelists were drawn from the technology sector. As a historian of schooling and veteran high school teacher, I was expected to offer a brief perspective about previous technological innovations that had entered classrooms. Here is what I said to the …
    By larrycuban, 559 words
  6. Places Journal, , more info

    Places to Co-Host 2024 Fitch Colloquium
    Places is collaborating with Columbia’s Historic Preservation Program to co-host the annual Fitch Colloquium. This year’s theme is “Repairing Architecture Schools.” Read on Places Journal
    By Places Editors, 31 words
  7. Wanderingspace, , more info

    Uranus is not as boring as we thought
    “An animation of three near-infrared images of Uranus captured by the JWST Space Telescope with assigned representative colors. During processing, I aligned the rings separately to reduce the bubbling effect caused by different inclinations, making the planet appear to rotate on an almost flat plane.” —Andrea Luck
    By Thomas Romer, 55 words
  8. PIPELINE COMICS, , more info

    “Asterix the Gaul”: Collector Volume
    Papercutz is producing a new line of "Collector Volume" versions of Asterix. The first one is out now. The good is very good, and the bad is madly annoying to me. The post “Asterix the Gaul”: Collector Volume appeared first on PIPELINE COMICS.
    By Augie De Blieck Jr., 48 words
  9. a memory less ephemeral, , more info

    retired
    As of yesterday, I am officially retired, and now Professor Emerita at York. The "Emerita" status grants me facilities that will help me continue to do research more readily: I keep my IT account (email, cloud storage, Overleaf, PaperPile, ...), library access, and a form of affiliation with the University. In exchange, they get to claim any publications of mine as associated with them.So what did I do on my …
    By Susan Stepney, 159 words
  10. Editors’ Vox - Eos, , more info

    Martian Meteorite Points to Ancient Hydrothermal Activity
    Black Beauty is a Martian meteorite. Credit: NASA In 2011, a striking black rock about the size of an apple was discovered in the Sahara desert. Its unusual appearance tipped off its finder, and it soon passed into the hands of a meteorite dealer in Morocco. An American collector ended up buying the stone, but pieces of it have since been parceled out to various scientists. And that meteorite, which …
    By Katherine Kornei, 901 words
  11. Austin Town Hall, , more info

    Stream Cistern’s New Standard EP
    Over the last month or so, I’ve definitely been on board the Cistern hype train, perhaps even throwing the wood on the fire. Today, you can stream the entirety of New Standard, and in doing so, you’ll be filled with this angular punk energy that should carry some enthusiasm into your afternoon. The catchy enthusiasm of “Pendulum” reminds me of
    By nathan.lankford, 65 words
  12. Free-Range Kids, , more info

    Free-Range Kids, Brittany Patterson, and Arresting Moms Whose Kids Take a Walk
    My thoughts on the Brittany Patterson case, which I was the first to report. (I’ve been having trouble with my FRK blog distribution lately. Sorry for the delay in getting you this!) Brittany Patterson had to take one of her four children to a medical appointment, and her youngest son, 10-year-old Soren, was going to come with them. This was a few weeks ago on a Wednesday afternoon. But at …
    By lskenazy, 1,229 words
  13. Cup of Jo, , more info

    Have a Delicious Weekend.
    What are you up to this weekend? Tonight I’m excited to see Oh, Mary!, the dark-comedy play about Mary Todd Lincoln. It’s supposed to be hilarious, and I can’t wait to see Cole Escola perform in real life.… Read more The post Have a Delicious Weekend. appeared first on Cup of Jo.
    By Joanna Goddard, 56 words
  14. FUJI X WEEKLY | Blog, , more info

    Philadelphia in Aerochrome — Infrared Photography in the City of Brotherly Love
    A Fall Day in Philly – Philadelphia, PA – Fujifilm X-T4 ES – Aerochrome v2I had a great time in Philadelphia this last weekend with Allan Ali at Unique Photo as a part of their two day Camera Show. Allan and I led a photowalk through the Old City. There were about 70 in attendance, which was amazing—it just edged out Denver as the largest photowalk that I’ve hosted. It …
    By Ritchie Roesch, 599 words
  15. 4 gravitons, , more info

    The Nowhere String
    Space and time seem as fundamental as anything can get. Philosophers like Immanuel Kant thought that they were inescapable, that we could not conceive of the world without space and time. But increasingly, physicists suspect that space and time are not as fundamental as they appear. When they try to construct a theory of quantum gravity, physicists find puzzles, paradoxes that suggest that space and time may just be approximations …
    By 4gravitons, 966 words