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  1. Trinketization, , more info

    An Indian rhino – from a Classical Greek description
    “[45] In India there are wild asses as large as horses, or even larger. Their body is white, their head dark red, their eyes bluish, and they have a horn in their forehead about a cubit in length. The lower part of the horn, for about two palms distance from the forehead, is quite white, the middle is black, the upper part, which terminates in a point, is a very …
    By john hutnyk, 374 words
  2. RonJeffries.com, , more info

    Test Forward
    Having abandoned the decorator thread for now, I propose to test-drive a forwarding mechanism based on descriptors. It goes quite nicely.
    23 words
  3. Sabine Hossenfelder: Backreaction, , more info

    We are unlikely to be in this universe, new study finds. Multiverse falsified?
    According to the multiverse theory, we are likely to find ourselves in a universe particularly suited to the emergence of life. According to a new paper, though, that’s not the case given how it’s expanded over time. But does that mean the multiverse theory has also been invalidated? Let’s take a look.
    By Sabine Hossenfelder, 65 words
  4. Northern Reader, , more info

    Murder While You Work by Susan Scarlett – a 1944 novel by Noel Streatfield republished by Furrowed Middlebrow at Dean Street Press
    Murder While You Work by Susan Scarlett aka Noel Streatfield This book is one of twelve written under the Susan Scarlett pseudonym and in some ways it is a romance, but certainly not of the delicate sort. It combines a murder mystery with elements of a domestic thriller, as well as observations of conditions in the Second World War. Bombs do not rain down on this English village, but there …
    By joulesbarham, 664 words
  5. The Second Disc, , more info

    The Weekend Stream: November 23, 2024
    Welcome to another edition of The Weekend Stream, The Second Disc's review of notable catalogue titles (and some new ones, too!) making digital debuts. We've got Beach Boys covers with some fascinating history related to the band, a tribute to one of the greatest musical icons we lost this year, a new single from a […]
    By Mike Duquette, 62 words
  6. Alexander S. Kunz Photography – Weblog, , more info

    Point Lobos, Again
    Third time’s a charm? Not for me when it comes to Point Lobos, the iconic State Natural Reserve just south of Carmel and Monterey. I’ve been there twice in 2013, and didn’t feel like I really got anything substantial from ... Read moreThanks for following Alexander S. Kunz Photography via RSS & keeping independent websites alive. Buy me a coffee? Support @ $3/month. Visit My Print Store. Browse My Photo …
    By Alexander S. Kunz, 74 words
  7. It's About TV, , more info

    This week in TV Guide: November 21, 1964
    Sunday is the first anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and television remembers with a number of somber tributes that lend a grim backdrop to the beginning of the holiday week. The day begins with the CBS special Four Dark Days (10:30 a.m. CT), an hour-long retrospective of the events one year ago, including the assassination, the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald, and the President's lying in …
    By Mitchell Hadley, 2,815 words
  8. Sky River Dolls, , more info

    Washout list, rest of 2024 edition.
    6 words
  9. The Reinvigorated Programmer, , more info

    Playing electric guitar, then and now
    Regular readers might just remember that nine years ago, I posted a brief history of Anne Heap of Frogs, the hard rock band I was guitarist for in 1988. (Astonishing to think it’s nine years since I posted that!) Here once more is the photo of twenty-year-old me, on the left with the white strat; on the right is Andy Charles on bass. And here I am in 2024, playing …
    By Mike Taylor, 734 words
  10. Kate Macdonald, , more info

    Did Not Finish
    A ‘Why am I reading this?’ post, because this is why I haven’t posted many reviews lately: I keep giving up on books I have nothing much to say about. Benjamin Myers, Cuddy Winner of prizes, lauded indie publisher’s saviour, the subject is a favourite (early medieval English religion and history), and wow was I … Continue reading Did Not Finish →
    By Kate, 65 words
  11. Clothes In Books, , more info

    Twelve Horses and the Hangman’s Noose by Gladys Mitchell
    Twelve Horses and the Hangman’s Noose by Gladys Mitchell published 1956 This Gladys Mitchell book is very unusual indeed – because in terms of plot you could imagine a number of crime authors having written it. The major point of most Mitchell books is that no-one else in or out of their right minds would have tried to build a book round her imaginings. And certainly some readers (me: I …
    By Clothes In Books, 627 words
  12. Everyday Commentary, , more info

    Bringing Down the Beast—Ending the FSA
    Editor’s Note: Since I started providing legal advice to AKTI, I have loosened my no politics rule a bit to provide insights and commentary on legal issues related to knives. This is one of those articles. As with everything I write both for AKTI and here, this is all my opinion. It is not legal advice, which requires knowledge of specific facts. If you need a lawyer for a criminal …
    By Anthony Sculimbrene, 1,743 words
  13. Jane's London, , more info

    Mapping the Tube 1863-2023 – A chronology of Harry Beck's (and others') London Underground maps at The Map House, 54 Beauchamp Place
    One for fellow map nerds and London Transport fans. There is an excellent exhibition at The Map House showing the evolution of the tube map, the like of which I am not sure has been seen before. In the gallery room at the rear of the shop there is an arrangement of framed pocket maps that clearly shows how the tube map has been adapted as new routes and stations …
    By Jane, 261 words
  14. Thinkige Kru 2, , more info

    2024-11-22 22:43
    The pinnacle of that view of freedom, of course, is avant-garde jazz, which I find by and large a dead loss. It operates on the assumption that if you remove all constraints from people, they will behave in some especially inspired manner. This doesn’t seem to me to be true in any sense at all — not socially, and certainly not artistically. The point is that the typical jazz or …
    By SIMON REYNOLDS, 127 words
  15. Olu Online | Blog, , more info

    Weeknotes #24
    wassup? i've been gone cos i accidentally accrued extra time on beeminder, the website/app i use to cajole myself into regularly writing weeknotes. today is the final day before I owe them $5 so write i must. usually i have been sitting down to write these and been full of beans and pep and thoughts! the last time I did, I think shortly before my talk, i thought "nope!!!!" before …
    By hidden (oluonline), 413 words