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  1. The Second Disc, , more info

    The Weekend Stream: January 11, 2025
    Welcome to 2025's first edition of The Weekend Stream, The Second Disc's review of notable catalogue titles (and some new ones, too!) making digital debuts! We're catching up on some of our favorite artists adding albums to stream and download, plus country soul and remixes aplenty - as well as a list of resources to […]
    By Mike Duquette, 62 words
  2. Stumbling and Mumbling, , more info

    The two agendas
    Why are UK infrastructure projects so expensive, and what can be done about this? To what extent is the rise of the far-right the result of economic stagnation? How can we raise economic growth given that we're close to full employment and so ordinary deficit financing would be inflationary? How do we divert labour towards construction, social care and public services without accelerating pub closures and high street decline, both …
    By chris, 1,080 words
  3. Disquiet, , more info

    Scratch Pad: LA, I Ching, Earthquake
    At the end of each week, I usually collate a lightly edited collection of recent comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. I find knowing I’ll revisit my posts to be a positive and mellowing influence on my social media activity. I mostly hang out on Mastodon (at post.lurk.org/@disquiet), and I’m also trying out a few others. And I generally take weekends …
    By Marc Weidenbaum, 578 words
  4. Initial Charge, , more info

    Time to Move on From Bootable Backups, Whether You Like It or Not
    A great piece by Riccardo Mori on the walls slowly closing in on bootable backups on macOS. When I started using Linux full-time for my personal computing last year, one of the things I’ve missed most was the ability to easily backup my system. Time Machine is such an incredible feature and there really isn’t anything like it on other operating systems. But just as important to me as Time …
    By Mike Rockwell, 224 words
  5. Adactio: Journal, , more info

    25, 20, 15, 10, 5
    I have a feeling that 2025 is going to be a year of reflection for me. It’s such a nice round number, 25. One quarter of a century. That’s also how long myself and Jessica have been married. Our wedding anniversary was last week. Top tip: if you get married in year ending with 00, you’ll always know how long ago it was. Just lop off the first 2000 years …
    321 words
  6. Marcel, , more info

    Happy New Year 2025!
    I thought I’d drop in quickly to wish you a Happy New Year before it’s not new anymore and it gets too weird. I’ve been focused on working on Unhinged over the last couple of weeks, but new posts will be coming shortly.
    47 words
  7. Asymptotia, , more info

    93 minutes
    Thanks to everyone who made all those kind remarks in various places last month after my mother died. I've not responded individually (I did not have the strength) but I did read them all and they were deeply appreciated. Yesterday would’ve been mum‘s 93rd birthday. A little side-note occurred to me the other day: Since she left us a month ago, she was just short of having seen two perfect …
    By Clifford, 170 words
  8. Whatever, , more info

    Attending Salar’s January Wine Dinner
    Last April, I posted about my favorite restaurant, Salar, and covered one of their monthly wine dinners. As much as I love their monthly wine dinners, I wasn’t able to make it to any others in 2024. Thankfully I managed to kick 2025 off with their January wine dinner. If you didn’t catch my previous post, Salar is an elevated Peruvian restaurant in the Oregon district of Dayton. It offers …
    By Athena Scalzi, 1,669 words
  9. Glasgow Theatre Blog, , more info

    Pitlochry Festival Theatre announce highlights for the year
    The theatre in the hills, Pitlochry Festival has announced a vibrant season of theatrical highlights. Beginning with a new play: 9-17 May STUDIO Presented by Byre Theatre and Pitlochry Festival Theatre WATER COLOUR by Milly Sweeney Winner of the St Andrews Playwriting Award Esme is at an all-time low, struggling with her studies and her art. She finds herself standing on the railing of one of the bridges that crosses …
    By glasgowtheatreblog, 1,777 words
  10. Piscatorial Quagswagging, , more info

    The Tiny River Alne - Madmen and Maderization
    In sports such as athletics and football there is need for a high degree of physical fitness. This fitness is very important, for it affects not only strength and stamina, but the athlete's skill and ability also.Angling, though seemingly less demanding, still requires a reasonable degree of fitness, and although, at first glance, it gives the impression that 'know-how' is the only factor controlling success, this is not so. To …
    By Piscatorial Quagswagging, 976 words
  11. Walknotes, , more info

    6 – 10 January 2025
    An odd tension, getting on with life when the world is in chaos, isn’t it? But here we are. “Fire season in Southern California is generally thought to stretch from May to October. But as California Governor Gavin Newsom put it in a press conference on Tuesday, blazes are now a perennial issue. “There’s no fire season,” he said. “It’s fire year.”” Via the BBC’s live reporting of the wildfires …
    By DW, 750 words
  12. Mappiman's Real Ale Walks, , more info

    10/01/25 - Honeybourne to Moreton-in-Marsh Rail Trail
    Minus 3 all the way to the Prancing PonyThe cold snap offers unexpected advantages to the year-round rambler. The usually treacherous mud in the horse fields is frozen firm, sparing one from the threat of trench foot. On the frost-hardened ground, the ice holds the weight of a 14.5-stone man with just the faintest suggestion of splintering.But you've got to keep moving.Officially, I have finished the Rail Trails on the …
    By Mappiman, 341 words
  13. Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice, , more info

    “We Are All Reformers” (Part 4)
    Since 1939 when I entered first grade in a Pittsburgh elementary school until becoming a nonagenarian last year, three national movements swept across American public schools: the Progressive Era (1890s-1940s); Civil Rights movement (1950s-1970s), and business-inspired standards, testing, and accountability reforms (1970s-present). As a student (1939-1951) I was the object of Progressive education reforms. As a teacher and administrator in Cleveland (OH) and Washington, D.C. (1950s-1970s) I designed and implemented …
    By larrycuban, 2,098 words
  14. It's About TV, , more info

    This week in TV Guide: January 12, 1974
    Looking back through the years, I have, more than once, used the terms "Super Bore" or "Stupor Bowl" to refer to the Super Bowl. The game is only a small part of what has grown to encompass special commercials made for the occasion, pregame and halftime concerts featuring superstar artists, and marathon analysis both before and after the game. (It doesn't hurt that there have actually been some pretty good …
    By Mitchell Hadley, 2,911 words
  15. Julian Hoffman, , more info

    Lifelines: new book announcement!
    I’m extremely delighted to announce that I have a new book on the way, which will be published in the UK on May 15th and in a North American edition in Spring 2026. Regular readers of my blog posts here will know that I live above the Prespa lakes, and it’s this place that sits … Continue reading Lifelines: new book announcement!
    By julianhoffman, 65 words