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  1. Ruth's Coastal Walk (UK), , more info

    519pm Wick to Whaligoe
    Countless geos, mysterious statues, and a leap of death - quite a day! Continue reading →
    By Ruth Livingstone, 20 words
  2. PMags.com, , more info

    Gear over the years – A look back, Part 1
    The first in a series of some quick looks at some gear or gear-adjacent items we still use over the years. Read More ... Continue reading Gear over the years – A look back, Part 1 at PMags.com.
    By Paul Mags, 48 words
  3. Slatians hideout on the Web | slatecave.net, , more info

    xdg-settings: Setting a default browser isn't that simple
    What is xdg-settings? xdg-settings is part of the xdg-utils and according to its manpage it can query, check for and set different properties of an XDG-desktop. Running xdg-settings --list reveals that it only ever got implementations for setting the default web browser and for setting URL-scheme handlers (which is the more generic case of setting a default web browser). The reason I started looking into this is because someone opened …
    By Slatian, 1,092 words
  4. Roblog, the blog of Rob Miller, , more info

    How to solve the £100m bat tunnel problem (→ samdumitriu.com)
    The UK has been attempting to build a high-speed railway line called HS2 for years. Its development has been dogged by all sorts of problems, but perhaps the most farcical was the revelation that it had spent £100m on a 1km long tunnel for bats, in an area that was home to around 300 bats – an insane £300k per bat. In this great post, Sam Dumitriu talks about why …
    210 words
  5. Holy Mountain: A Blog about Our Common Life, , more info

    Walking audits
    Students exit the city bus, catty-corner from Washington High SchoolA walking audit is a good way to assess walkability in a specific area. Walking enables anyone to see how easy or difficult it is to walk there, not only for yourself, but also for others who may not be as experienced or able-bodied. Daniel Herriges of Strong Towns argues: You see how your neighbors go about their needs, how they …
    By Bruce Nesmith, 1,217 words
  6. Riccardo Mori, , more info

    Do principles always have to lose when it comes to tech?
    In Principles vs Pragmatism, Pete Moore writes: It’s a mistake to judge others for their software choices, while still making exceptions for ourselves. Our hands aren’t exactly always clean. It would be akin to me blasting someone who is using HEY or Kagi, while disregarding my use of Apple products or occasionally ordering from Amazon. Case in point: I’ve seen discourse and uproar about Tim Cook donating $1M to Trump’s …
    By Riccardo Mori, 1,673 words
  7. Flashing Palely in the Margins, , more info

    Re-entering
    The holidays ended and everything sped up. We got home on Sunday afternoon and spent the evening unpacking, doing laundry, packing lunches, preparing for the week ahead. Nighttime crept up on us: we were busy doing all the things that needed to be done and had to put it all down in order to get to sleep in time to wake up for school and work the next day. On …
    By 2025-01-09 - Re-entering.txt, 1,296 words
  8. Adam Keys is typing, , more info

    Six easy pieces on Shape Up
    In short: like any method of working that is copied from one organization and pasted into another, very different organization, there are chutes and ladders. Habits and practices that will help you move faster or skip ahead outright. Anti-patterns and missteps that will set you back days and weeks. Herein, some things I learned whilst using Shape Up over the course of a few years across teams of varied experience …
    733 words
  9. Donald Clark Plan B, , more info

    UDL is is an ideologicaly-driven sham
    Universal Design for Learning (UDL) claims to be revolutionary but it is an ideologically-driven sham. It does far more harm than good. Folding in some of the worst learning theory into one 'my way or the highway' approach, it literally makes no sense. It is a barely disguised expansion of discredited Learning Styles theory, with costly and ineffective prescriptions.They claim its framework promises inclusivity, adaptability, and improved access for all …
    By Donald Clark, 508 words
  10. SoftRobotCritics, , more info

    Jean Tinguely Centennial
    1925-2025.100 Years Jean Tinguely | Museum TinguelyTinguely100 – Follow the artist’s centenary activities around the worldOn 22 May 2025, the Swiss Artist Jean Tinguely (1925-1991) would have celebrated his 100th birthday. To mark this occasion, his innovative, playful and still topical oeuvre will be honoured across Europe with a range of exhibitions and a multitude of events and activities.Here you can find a selection of activities not to be missed …
    108 words
  11. St. John's Wort, , more info

    Rule #1: Beer Is Almost Never About Beer
    (Ed. Note: I’ve been writing about beer for 15 years now, and I feel as though it’s time to see if we can’t condense this knowledge down into useful information that might help explain how we got to this point. We’ve been through a boom, we’re going through some pretty serious consolidation. Did we learn anything, and if so, what? To this end, I’ve come up with a short list …
    1,466 words
  12. English Buildings, , more info

    Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire
    Bardsploitation?On my many visits to Stratford-upon-Avon, I’d not paid much attention to the sign of the Hathaway Tea Rooms. It’s in a street I don’t often walk along, and if we want tea or coffee in the town, the Resident Wise Woman and I have places where we regularly go. If I noticed it at all, I probably silently condemned it as another arbitrary connection with the Shakespearian reputation (for …
    By Philip Wilkinson, 344 words
  13. 20011, , more info

    David Lodge, RIP
    Last week, the New York Times carried an obituary of David Lodge, who died on New Years at the age of 89. Going through Wikipedia's list of his works, I find that I have read four of his novels, including his most recent, Deaf Sentence, which appeared in 2006. Alvin Kernan's memoir In Plato's Cave states that Stanley Fish cheerfully acknowledged that Lodge had modeled the character Morris Zapp (Changing …
    By George, 111 words
  14. The Shape of Everything, , more info

    Some Retrobatch Droplet Tips
    Dr. Drang and Allison Sheridan have some great tips for adding Retrobatch droplets to the Finder toolbar: Allison Sheridan: My main use of Retrobatch is to make featured images for blog posts that match what most if not all of the social media services will recognize. That droplet thing is money. I keep mine in the toolbar of Finder though since I always have a Finder window open when I’ve …
    353 words
  15. Jon's Place, , more info

    At the Match: Bexhill United v Eastbourne United AFC
    There are days when you think: why, exactly, am I here? If that question is on your mind at half time at a football match then you know it’s probably not going exactly the way you want it to go. One of those I shook hands with prior to the game was on his way […]
    By jonsmalldon, 65 words