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  1. Nicky Makes Words Sometimes, , more info

    Signal Boosts for Nov 2024
    (⏱️ ~10 min read) Another month, another collection of shiny objects (stuff I found in the the past month that were valuable/inspiring). See also, previous Signal Boosts for Oct/Sep, Aug/July, June, May 🩸 Kurzgesagt gets to the bottom of a science myth ↪ 😭 Paper: AI poems are now "more human than human" ↪ 🇺🇸 U.S. Election-related analysis ↪ 👄 The Substance ↪ 🩸 Kurzgesagt gets to the bottom of …
    1,806 words
  2. Long story; short pier, , more info

    How it’s going
    I’m trying not to borrow grief from the future, as the saying advises, but the terms are so damn attractive.
    By kip, 23 words
  3. The Pudding, , more info

    Sitters and Standers
    The American worker divide: Those who sit, and those who stand.
    14 words
  4. East of Elveden, , more info

    The Road to Dirē Dawa
    The road to Dirē Dawa is a long one: an eight-hour drive from Addis Ababa, or so we are told. We left Addis Ababa at dawn, our bus rattling through empty streets shadowed by new-build office blocks. As with almost everywhere currently in Ethiopia, the pavements were piled with concrete rubble, the result of Prime … Continue reading "The Road to Dirē Dawa"
    By East of Elveden, 67 words
  5. Typewolf, , more info

    Julia Loyd Mohr
    Fonts: Editorial Old, Apercu Mono
    8 words
  6. Science fiction comics | Bad Space, , more info

    Scour
    By imscottbase, 1 word
  7. Archive Television Musings, , more info

    Book review – Reaching A Verdict: Reviewing The Bill 1993-1994
    The third book in Edward Kellett’s series, we’ve now reached 1993 and 1994 – a period of change for The Bill as a third weekly episode was added to the schedule. As with the previous volumes, each of the two sections (dedicated to 1993 and 1994) begin by highlighting a number of key episodes (which are ideal picks for anyone keen to sample the programme, but who might balk at …
    By archivetvmusings, 814 words
  8. Benjamin Studebaker, , more info

    December London Tour Dates
    I’ll be in London this December to launch the new book, Legitimacy in Liberal Democracies, and to discuss some of my other work. There will be multiple in-person events in London. If you’re in the UK and you’d like to attend, here are the dates and, where applicable, sign-up instructions: Everyday Analysis Event on the … Continue reading December London Tour Dates →
    By Benjamin Studebaker, 66 words
  9. Stitches on the Run, , more info

    Sashiko Pattern Yabane
    The sashiko pattern yabane 矢羽根 or 矢羽 represents arrow feathers, which is also the literal translation of yabane.矢 ya means “arrow” and 羽 or 羽根 hane means “feather” or “wing.” When put together, the は ha sound becomes soft and turns into ば ba. Thus it is pronounced yabane, not yahane.The yabane sashiko pattern is one of the most popular traditional patterns. Probably not only because of its good looks, …
    By Janette Haruguchi, 412 words
  10. GrilloPress, , more info

    Service design is not mostly convincing other people to do service design
    It’s catchy. And many people feel that’s what they do. And you’ll be doing it a bit I don’t doubt. If you’ve talked to a service designer over the last few years (or been one) you’ve probably heard some variation on that theme. That the job is mostly convincing other people to let them do their job. It’s a good ear worm but it’s a bad brain worm. Telling people …
    By Andrew Duckworth, 505 words
  11. Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives /// Darren Cullen, , more info

    ARTIFICIAL AI
    The Mechanical Turk was a machine built in 1770, at the start of the Industrial Revolution, that supposedly beat Napoleon and Benjamin Franklin at chess. It toured for 84 years before being destroyed in a fire and, although many suspected it was a scam, it was only revealed to have been a hoax as late as 1834. It seems obvious now, but it was essentially a box with a person …
    By Darren Cullen, 330 words
  12. The Play's The Thing UK, , more info

    Death and the Cat, Drayton Arms Theatre
    by Diana Miranda Death and The Cat, directed by Penny Gkritzapi, explores life’s ultimate and inevitable outcome – death – wrapped with absurdist humour and a surprising amount of heart. Robert Emlyn Slater’s debut play gives life (ironically) to Death. What starts as a comedy full of quirky characters slowly reveals itself as a deeper reflection on questions about what infinity means, and how the power of connection may ground …
    By laurakressly, 530 words
  13. The New Aesthetic, , more info

    2024-11-28 19:13
    Satellite images of a horse, pomegranates, and a camel, created from Solar Panel installations in China and Mongolia.Via @[email protected] Horse image was created in association with Huawei, in a project that also includes agrivoltaics (growing crops between and underneath solar panels):In the Kubuqi Desert of Inner Mongolia, the State Power Investment Corporation used Huawei’s smart PV solution to build a 300 MW solar power station. The power station located in …
    250 words
  14. Die, Workwear!, , more info

    Ten Of The Best Black Friday Sales
    Even when it’s online, and you can shop from the comfort of your home, Black Friday always feels like a mad dash to find the best days. To simplify the landscape, I round up the best menswear-related promotions every year and post them here, along with a selection of notable picks at each store. These [...] Read More... The post Ten Of The Best Black Friday Sales appeared first on …
    By divert-brew-diagonal, 79 words
  15. Happiness Machines | Entries, , more info

    Entropic Reduction Solver
    Today (2024), generative artificial intelligence allows us to generate infinite solutions, but the problem is that we cannot prove that these solutions are related to a particular real output. We can, correlate them and approximate the solution as a function of a given distance in a latent space, but we cannot prove this as a fact. To me, this is a problem whenever we want to apply this to deterministic …
    By Ignacio Brasca, 205 words