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  1. theBrickBlogger.com, , more info

    New LEGO Instagram Channel to Connect LEGO Fans
    I don’t know how many of you are active on Instagram, but today, the LEGO Group launched a brand-new Instagram page called @LEGOBuilds. This new channel is set to be the ultimate go-to Instagram destination for LEGO fans—a channel made by builders, for builders, with exclusive content, highlights, rewards, and more. There is already a […]
    By Thita (admin), 64 words
  2. Timeless | Stories from the Library of Congress, , more info

    George Washington: Land Surveyor
    This story also appears in the January-February issue of the Library of Congress Magazine. George Washington was 11 when his father, a prominent landowner, died. The future founder of the country inherited several things – an imposing physical frame, a sense of civic duty, several parcels of land, 11 enslaved people and an endless, entrepreneurial interest in acquiring ever more land. Augustine Washington also left behind some surveying tools, which …
    By Neely Tucker, 431 words
  3. American Age Fashion, , more info

    Big Hair, Early 1960s
    Found Photo Is it perhaps a big hair competition between a younger and an older woman? If so, the younger woman won with the biggest beehive. As perhaps suits their ages, though, the older woman’s smooth updo looks refined compared the other’s concoction, with its fluffy high curls. According the blog Glamour Daze, the beehive hairdo was first featured in a hair style magazine in early 1960. For many, it …
    By Lynn, 209 words
  4. Will Hawkes — Blog, , more info

    December: The Sekforde Saga, Brewdog at Lord's & The Blight of House-Badged Bitter
    A Nice Quiet Local On a bright November morning, Sekforde Street is London as Richard Curtis imagines it. A steady stream of City University students amble northwards, past the Georgian terraces of Sekforde Street and under the boughs of a slim silver birch that grows at the triangle-shaped intersection with Woodbridge Street.
    By Will Hawkes, 65 words
  5. Lowering the Bar, , more info

    Assorted Stupidity #166
    In December, the California Supreme Court declined to review a decision by the Commission on Judicial Performance to remove a judge for misconduct that took the CJP 114 pages to explain. This might be worth a full article, but right now I can only give you the lowlights. While the judge was being investigated for asking parties about their “churchgoing habits” (already not good), he ran a counter-investigation to find …
    By Kevin, 680 words
  6. Ask the Agent, , more info

    When it comes to receiving offers from editors, who says the money number first? Editor or agent? Like could an agent say “we are looking for an offer around $20k”
    I would never want to say a number first -- what if they had a much larger number in mind?!If it is an odd situation -- like, say, it's a smaller/niche publisher and we know they don't have a huge budget (and they KNOW we know they don't have a huge budget), they might ASK first, just to set expectations. "What kind of offer are you looking for" or "what …
    304 words
  7. Overcoming Bias, , more info

    Toward More Direct Signals
    As I’ve attributed a large fraction of human behaviors to signaling incentives, I feel I should address a key signaling question, about which I was recently reminded.All else equal, we prefer others to think that we are smarter, healthier, and richer. And we take many concrete actions to promote such impressions. But most all of these actions only indirectly signal such desirable features. Which tends to induce wasteful signaling efforts, …
    By Robin Hanson, 416 words
  8. The Architect’s Newspaper, , more info

    U.S. Pavilion co-commissioners announce jury that will evaluate submissions for the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia
    The jurors who will evaluate submissions from architects interested in exhibiting their work in the U.S. Pavilion at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia have been The post U.S. Pavilion co-commissioners announce jury that will evaluate submissions for the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia appeared first on The Architect’s Newspaper.
    By Daniel Jonas Roche, 78 words
  9. Everyday Carry - What are your EDC essentials?, , more info

    Exceed Designs’ New RAMPANT Is the Future of the Flashlight Interface
    Flashlight NameExceed Designs RAMPANTEmitterNichia 519A 5K LED or Luminus SFT-40Max OutputUp to 1,300 lumensBattery14500 (R4) or 18650 (R8)MaterialsTitanium or aluminum, multiple finishesMSRP$115+ buy on exceeddesigns.com ($115+) Exceed Designs’ newly released RAMPANT EDC signals the arrival of the future of flashlight interfaces. After nearly three years of research and development, this flashlight stands out with its sleek titanium or aluminum construction in a spread of finishes and coatings and the ability …
    By Destinee, 314 words
  10. Greg Alder's Yard Posts, , more info

    2025 Scion Exchanges (of the California Rare Fruit Growers)
    Is this the year that you learn to graft? Would you like to grow a new variety of fig, peach, dragon fruit, avocado, plum, mulberry, or cherry? Then these events are for you. Winter is the season for the California Rare Fruit Growers “scion exchanges,” where growers cut sticks (scions) off their backyard trees and […] The post 2025 Scion Exchanges (of the California Rare Fruit Growers) appeared first on …
    By Greg Alder, 87 words
  11. Lucas da Silva - Blog, , more info

    (Re)learning ZBrush
    Since ZBrush for iPad release last year, I was willing to dig into ZBrush again. I learned some basic ZBrush back in 2022/23 but never actually take it seriously. Until now.So, over the past week or two, I've been learning ZBrush via Rafa Souza course.I still have a long journey ahead, but I just finished the first project, that was to sculpt an alien character based on a concept from …
    By Lucas da Silva, 276 words
  12. Cennydd Bowles · Writing, , more info

    Working with the RSPCA
    One of my more innovative new year pledges is to actually talk about the work I do. So here goes.I’m working with the RSPCA at the moment, kickstarting a responsible AI initiative. I’ve been reviewing a new AI-driven project for ethical risks and opportunities, and helping define the artefacts and mentalities the organisation needs to adopt to embed responsibility in its future tech work. As part of this, we ran …
    By Cennydd Bowles, 203 words
  13. optional.is, , more info

    Week #723-#726
    Happy New Year! We’re heading into 02025. Week #726 was our first full week back at the office, but that doesn’t mean the last 4 weeks weren’t busy! Publishing Schedule At the end of 02024, we decided to pause the ⪮ Good Morning Newsletter in 02025 and instead focus on writing here. We’ll see how things go, maybe the pendulum will swing back. Our ◍ Quarter notes newsletter is still …
    By optional Bot, 692 words
  14. The Splintered Mind, , more info

    A Robot Lover's Sociological Argument for Robot Consciousness
    Allow me to revisit an anecdote I published in a piece for Time magazine last year. "Do you think people will ever fall in love with machines?" I asked the 12-year-old son of one of my friends. "Yes!" he said, instantly and with conviction. He and his sister had recently visited the Las Vegas Sphere and its newly installed Aura robot -- an AI system with an expressive face, advanced …
    By Eric Schwitzgebel, 1,212 words
  15. Chris Coyier, , more info

    Short Life of Trouble
    My fiddle player friend Darin sent me this documentary about GB Grayson, which I enjoyed: The documentary talks about how very few people even recognize the name despite all of recorded tunes essentially becoming standards in today’s folk/bluegrass/old-time world and having been covered by extraordinarily huge artists. That’s true for me! I absolutely had never heard of him before this. Gilliam Banmon Grayson (1887-1930) was a blind fiddler from one …
    By Chris Coyier, 191 words