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  1. Dirty Feed, , more info

    Duck, Everyone
    Recently, I asked people to send me anonymous questions again, which is always good fun until someone sends you something unpleasant. Anonymity and nasty messages, what are the odds? Anyway, I particularly enjoyed this one, as it gives me an excuse to link to one of my favourite things ever. “Favourite audience reaction in a sitcom? I know it’s difficult to choose. The reaction at the end of Seinfeld’s The …
    By John J. Hoare, 538 words
  2. The British Newspaper Archive Blog, , more info

    30 Moving Letters from the Front Line, 1914-1918
    Sent to the front lines, soldiers in the First World War could only communicate home through letters. Although censored, these letters provided comfort to both those at home and those fighting in the trenches, and they were often reproduced by local newspapers. A British soldier writes home in a loft over a cow shed, ‘somewhere near the front’ | Illustrated War News | 30 December 1914 In this special blog, …
    By Rose Staveley-Wadham, 7,365 words
  3. BikePortland, , more info

    Special guests and free raffle at Bike Happy Hour this Wednesday
    Kate, Bill, Kiel, Eva, Gil, Joe, Ruben, Abe, Ted, Aaron, good food menu, house-made beer, and more! Yes I know it’s a holiday week and lots of folks aren’t on their regular routines. But if there’s one thing I want people to know about Bike Happy Hour, it’s that it never takes a week off. We are definitely getting together this Wednesday from 3:00 to 6:00 pm at our new …
    By Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor), 448 words
  4. Pulp Covers, , more info

    Horns of Ecstasy
    A Novel In The Grand Manner… Unmasking The Tawdriness Of The Bullring… Probing The Soul Of An American Girl Aroused To Strange Emotions Each Time She Faced Death In The Arena More shocking that Blasco Ibáñez’ Blood and Sand More fascinating that Tom Lea’s The Brave Bulls More candid than Hemingway’s Death in the Afternoon via
    By Pulp Covers, 59 words
  5. Idle/Random/whatever Thoughts of a Demented/Idle/Whatever Mind, , more info

    [24th November 2024] Interesting Things I Learnt This Week
    1. AI Makes Tech Debt More Expensive - The core argument is that generative AI significantly widens the gap between codebases with low and high tech debt. Companies with clean code can leverage generative AI to write code much faster, while companies with messy legacy codebases struggle to adopt these new tools. This widens the gap between the two codebases, making tech debt even more expensive for companies with outdated …
    By 100rabh™, 635 words
  6. Critic After Dark, , more info

    Gladiator ll (Ridley Scott, 2024)
    Gladiator, Jr.(WARNING: plot of Gladiator 2 discussed in close and explicit detail!)Coming out of the multiplex after a screening of Gladiator ll: A: What do you think?N: Wasn't a fan of the first Gladiator. Not a fan of anything Scott since Blade Runner.A: That's over forty years ago. N: I'm trying to figure out why Scott's films look so ugly now. His first film The Duellists seem inspired by Hogarth …
    By Noel Vera, 963 words
  7. Melbourne on Transit, , more info

    TT 196: The one time that Melbourne had good night time PT
    Griping about after 7pm public transport is a very Melbourne thing. We have the population of a big city but provincial-style train timetables that concentrate service in peak times with 30 minute gaps following after dark. Sydney has around twice our evening service levels while taking public transport at night is less mainstream amongst the residents of our less populous capitals. But there was one brief time nearly two decades …
    By Peter Parker, 1,447 words
  8. The Pasta Project – Authentic Pasta Recipes, , more info

    Strangolapreti (spinach and bread gnocchi)
    Strangolapreti are delicious Italian spinach and bread gnocchi (dumplings) traditional in Eastern Lombardy and Trentino-Alto Adige. Made with bread, spinach, eggs and cheese or flour, strangolapreti are usually served in a simple sage and butter sauce. So tasty and comforting, these dumplings are a super way to use up leftover stale bread and even cooked spinach.... The post Strangolapreti (spinach and bread gnocchi) appeared first on The Pasta Project.
    By Jacqui, 74 words
  9. The Week in Women | an AWFJ blog, , more info

    Focus Features to release Chloe Zhao’s film adaptation of ‘Hamnet’ in the U.S.
    The film is adapted from Irish writer Maggie O'Farrell's 2020 New York Times bestselling novel of the same name, which won a National Book Critics Circle Award and the Women’s Prize for Fiction. "Hamnet" has sold 2 million copies in the U.K. and U.S. and has been translated in to 40 languages.
    By Brandy McDonnell, 65 words
  10. 512 Pixels, , more info

    Follow 512 Pixels Across the Fractured Social Media Landscape
    I’ve finally gotten around to getting accounts set up across a range of social media networks beyond Mastodon. Here’s the complete set of links: Follow me: on Bluesky on Mastodon on Threads Follow the blog: on Bluesky on Mastodon on Threads I’m trying not to cross-post much outside of work announcements on my personal accounts, but I honestly don’t know these things all fit together, and I’m not sure all …
    By Stephen Hackett, 114 words
  11. MUBI | Notebook, , more info

    A Real Pain Between the Temples
    Between the Temples (Nathan Silver, 2024).On a cold day in Rhinebeck, New York, Ben Gottlieb, the cantor of the local synagogue, walks into a Catholic church. Anxious, and recently widowed, Ben has come to talk about the afterlife. “Yeah, we don’t have Heaven or Hell,” he explains to the priest, pausing sheepishly, “we just have, you know, Upstate New York.” Ben is wondering whether, if he starts believing in heaven, …
    By Madeleine Wulfahrt, 2,218 words
  12. STML, , more info

    To be a botanist today is to choose your words carefully. In her new book, The Light Eaters, Zoe…
    To be a botanist today is to choose your words carefully. In her new book, The Light Eaters, Zoe Schlanger details the caution with which botanists ascribe intelligence to plants. Some only dare say plants can “sense”—they are like machines receiving stimuli and outputting an appropriate response. Other botanists take a small risk in the eyes of their peers to ascribe plants with “behavior.” There are fewer still who are …
    240 words
  13. BrettTerpstra.com, , more info

    Web Excursions for November 25th, 2024
    Web excursions brought to you in partnership with CleanShot X, the absolute, hands-down best app for Mac screenshots. Get one of my all-time favorite apps here. fermyon/spin Spin is the open source developer tool for building and running serverless applications powered by WebAssembly Once again, the only way forward is the Mac The App Store era must end and the solution is already here. Mints: a multifunction utility Mints is …
    265 words
  14. Reading 1900-1950, , more info

    Pirates at Play (1950) by Violet Trefusis
    Review by Frances S: Violet Trefusis, (1894-1972), was the daughter of Alice Keppel, wife of George Keppel, a son of the 7th Earl of Albemarle. When Violet was four years old, her mother became the favourite mistress of the then Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII). Violet grew up as a cosmopolitan socialite and became a writer, part of the notoriously avant-garde ‘Bloomsbury Set’. She was fluent in French …
    By George Simmers, 1,012 words
  15. same stuff, different day, , more info

    Interesting links of the week 2024-48
    Here are the best and most interesting articles, blog posts, videos, podcasts, and GitHub repositories I’ve run into over the last week (November 18, 2024 - November 25, 2024). Enjoy! Microsoft / Dotnet / Azure - Other Software Dev - Tech and Science - Leadership - Project Management / Agile - Social Media - Non-Tech / Random - Videos - GitHub Repos Here are some posts I’ve written in the …
    By Michael Eaton, 542 words