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  1. Technovia, , more info

    Ten Blue Links “I’m late, I’m late, for a very important date” Edition
    1. Who rules us? Google changed its rules on what kind of behaviour it regards as “spam” and, of course, the impact on some companies will be pretty negative. The behaviour it is targeting is so-called “parasite SEO”, where a publisher allows a third party to create content for part of its website in return for a large amount of money. Typically, this might be a subdomain or subsection which …
    By Ian Betteridge, 1,025 words
  2. Steve Does Comics, , more info

    November 1984 - Marvel UK monthlies, 40 years ago this month.
    Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon. ***If you ventured into your local recording studio, this month in 1984, you may have encountered history being made.At least, you might if your local recording studio was in Notting Hill.That's because it was the month in which thirty-five of Britain and Ireland's mightiest pop stars - and Marilyn - got together …
    By Steve W., 617 words
  3. Noisy Decent Graphics, , more info

    Black Friday Week
    LOL. Login to your My Account etc. (This is Amazon, obvs.)
    By Ben, 14 words
  4. Quote Investigator® – Tracing Quotations, , more info

    Quote Origin: Life Is Too Short To Learn German
    Mark Twain? Oscar Wilde? Thomas Love Peacock? Algernon Falconer? Richard Porson? An open book with three roses from Pixabay Question for Quote Investigator: The complexities of the German language inspired the following comical statement: Life is too short to learn German. This statement has been attributed to U.S. humorist Mark Twain, Irish playwright Oscar Wilde, English satirist Thomas Love Peacock, and English classical scholar Richard Porson. Would you please explore …
    By quoteresearch, 1,664 words
  5. Peter Cameron's Blog, , more info

    St Bernard on collaboration
    I found the answer to the annoying bureaucrats who ask what percentage of the work on a publication was done by each of its authors, in the writings of St Bernard. He said, Grace is necessary to salvation, free will equally so—but grace in order to give salvation, free will in order to receive it. Therefore we should not attribute part of the good work to grace and part to …
    By Peter Cameron, 105 words
  6. The Visual Science Lab / Kirk, , more info

    Revisiting a post from a recent blog at a different address: "Old dogs gotta learn new tricks if they want to do business in a fast evolving economy. Can't rest on old laurels...."
    It's human nature to find a way to do a job, have some success, and then doggedly try to do things the same way; over and over again. Some of us seem to be highly resistant to change -- no matter what that intransigence costs us. I remember, during my 40 year career, the transition from shooting everything on 4x5 film to shooting almost everything on medium format film, and …
    By Kirk, Photographer/Writer, 1,728 words
  7. VolcanoCafe, , more info

    The 1607 Bristol tsunami
    Some events can cast long shadows. The UK is still talking about the storm of 1987 (‘the worst night since the Blitz’), the winter of 1963, the storm floods of 1953, the London smog of 1952, the Great Storm of 26 November 1703. Other countries have their own stories. But one event in particular still…
    By Albert, 59 words
  8. SOLARPUNKS, , more info

    2024-11-24 18:48
    the-lemonaut:ALTNew Solarpunk illustration, yay! The full thing was made for a thing, but also each half was also drawn for the Solarpunk (writing) Prompts podcast.This one features a maker/hackerspace. It’s a thing that has existed for a while but that few people seem to know about? I myself learned about the idea from a friend relatively recently. While I’ve never been to one myself, plenty of references were provided and …
    137 words
  9. Scott Boms | Documenting, , more info

    Combining Processes
    A new print design: one part Riso, two parts screen printing. An experimental alternative version of the prints I shared recently. Normally this would be something I’d produce using a single process but I had a pile of red paper on hand and thought that might work if I printed one layer on the Riso (black) and screenprinted the other two (blue, white). I say this is experimental mostly because …
    148 words
  10. Stitches on the Run, , more info

    Sashiko Pattern Bishamonkikkō
    The sashiko pattern bishamonkikkō 毘沙門亀甲 means “Bishamonten tortoiseshell.” | Sashiko Pattern
    By Janette Haruguchi, 14 words
  11. Tom Stuart, , more info

    Weeknotes 255: Eight bits
    Hello. It’s cold and it snowed on Tuesday. Heating’s on. I remain incredibly busy, sort of stretched, like non-dairy spread that has been scraped over too much sourdough. Next week is Thanksgiving in the US which hopefully means it’ll be a slightly easier one. On Thursday I met Chris for beers near Old Street. The proper pubs were heaving so we hid away in an unloved sports bar instead. While …
    663 words
  12. Fishing & stuff ..., , more info

    Unfamiliar
    I was up and about fairly early, out in the half light and had to scrape the windscreen for the first time this year. Then Monday morning A road hell, not one but two major hold ups saw me arrive at the river an hour later than planned, the morning mist had almost burned away and a bright day was in prospect. The stretch was still unfamiliar so I took …
    1,017 words
  13. Pat in the World, , more info

    Good News Letters II
    Section of SS Good News plans from the archives. Reading this week: Travels in West Africa by Mary Kingsley (abridged Folio Society edition) In the last post, we discussed how I transcribed some documents from the SOAS LMS archives relating to the SS Good News, my favorite steamship. These included the original purchase contract and then a letter from Mr. Roxburgh celebrating the launch of the boat. But now we …
    By patintheworld, 4,840 words
  14. jwz, , more info

    Progress
    How to write a progress indicator, pro-style: (It has been a few years, so tried out Kodi again. It is still trash.) Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.
    By jwz, 30 words
  15. cultural snow, , more info

    About bespoke
    I got into a polite exchange of views a couple of days back over an otherwise unexceptional story about, of all things, expensive mince pies. Or, more specifically, over the language used by the good citizens of Orford, in Suffolk, where the Pump Street Bakery makes delicacies that are supposedly the priciest mince pies going. When one of the locals described them as “bespoke”, I was confused, because there had …
    By Tim F, 673 words