Skip to content

Recently updated blogs

Or see recently added blogs

  1. Gurney Journey, , more info

    What Should Art Schools Teach?
    R. Ives Gammell, one of the keepers of the academic flames, makes an interesting point about art teaching:“A painter’s training does not consist primarily in instruction as to the handling of his materials. Such knowledge is extremely important, of course, but it is not the main thing. The essential purpose of a painter’s training should be to equip him with the means of solving any problem suggested to him by …
    By James Gurney, 102 words
  2. TokyoDev | Articles, , more info

    TokyoDev’s 2024 Recap: Challenges, Milestones, and the Road Ahead
    In 2023, I scaled TokyoDev from a one-man operation to a team. The idea was to get some tasks off my plate, but while I’ve succeeded at passing off responsibilities to others, I somehow didn’t gain any more free time. This is because working with new people also created new ideas and opportunities, which I haven’t been able to pass up. In 2024, we saw the first fruits of this …
    By Paul McMahon, 1,257 words
  3. Chris Nevard Model Railways Blog, , more info

    Drinking Water
    Here we are at Catcott Crossing again, for back in olden times very few of the level crossing cottages had running water. So to avoid drinking water from puddles, catching rain, drinking bog water or simply drinking, cooking and washing in cider, fresh water was regularly delivered in milk churns and delivered by passing engine crews. Pete and Dud wait for arthritic Arthur to swap an empty churn for a …
    By Chris Nevard Model Railways & Photography, 204 words
  4. Time's Flow Stemmed, , more info

    Sunday/January
    Random reading brought me to Salammbo. It’s possibly not a book I would have chosen for myself, but chance has its way. LibraryThing’s Folly feature then lived up to its promise, pulling from just two shelves of my alphabetically arranged library: a Bernhard, a Beckett, and a Belben. I reread fifty pages of Molloy before putting it aside, wanting something new. The Belben and Bernhard, both minor, didn’t hold my …
    By Anthony, 205 words
  5. roytang.net, , more info

    Weeknotes 2025-01-12
    This week managed to be a bit better than the last one, though I am still going to the hospital on a daily basis (still 100% attendance so far for 2025). The situation has stabilized for a bit, and I even have someone taking turns with me spending the night, so I don't have to sleep there all the time. It's not ideal, and we're still not sure how long …
    335 words
  6. flowerville, , more info

    myself
    stumbling over my own feelings, without meaning to.but not actually that much stumbling. just a little. it's maybe more about the extent, or range of my feelings. and my not always, or - my just - really leaving them be. space. on account of the world being big enough.also i don't have that many feelings. or rather, not directed at many things. *this is night i am writing this at …
    By *, 71 words
  7. The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century, , more info

    Sunday picdump for January 12, 2024
    It’s Sunday, which means it’s time for another “picdump!” Here are 113 memes, pictures, and cartoons floating around the internet that I found interesting or relevant this week. Share and enjoy! The post Sunday picdump for January 12, 2024 appeared first on The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century.
    By Joey deVilla, 57 words
  8. Hermitary – hermits around the web, , more info

    Nietzsche on becoming who you are
    Psyche presents a reflection on Nietzsche and the shaping of the self in an essay titled “When Nietzsche said ‘become who you are’, this is what he meant.” As the author of the piece notes: “Contrary to popular belief, Nietzsche was not a nihilist set on destroying human values. In fact, the unifying purpose behind … Continue reading "Nietzsche on becoming who you are"
    70 words
  9. Crooked Timber, , more info

    Sunday photoblogging: Sion Road (house reflections)
    By Chris Bertram, 6 words
  10. Combinatorics and more, , more info

    Jiaoyang Huang, Theo Mckenzie, Horng-Tzer Yau: Ramanujan Property and Edge Universality of Random Regular Graphs
    A central problem in combinatorics, probability theory, and analysis is to understand the spectrum of random d-regular graphs G with vertices. The following paper marks a huge leap in our understanding of this problem. Ramanujan Property and Edge Universality of Random Regular Graphs, by Jiaoyang Huang, Theo Mckenzie, and Horng-Tzer Yau. Abstract: We consider the normalized adjacency matrix of a random -regular graph on vertices with any fixed degree and …
    By Gil Kalai, 1,192 words
  11. PostSecret, , more info

    Sunday Secrets
    The post Sunday Secrets appeared first on PostSecret.
    By Frank, 10 words
  12. Transpontine, , more info

    Herring Gull Camouflage SE1
    Herring Gull next to the Thames by HMS Belfast this week
    15 words
  13. Undina's Looking Glass, , more info

    Saturday Question: Have You Ever Experienced a Chimera Scent?
    Occasionally, I try a perfume for the first time and feel an immediate rush of excitement. It smells so wonderful, so perfect, that I think I’ve discovered a new favorite. But then, on subsequent tries, I can never recreate that initial feeling. The magic seems to vanish, leaving me wondering if I imagined it all. […]
    By Undina, 65 words
  14. Fossil Huntress, , more info

    OH MEDUSA
    Mesmerizing, delicate and seemingly impossible — this lovely luminescent denizen of the sea has been living in our oceans for more than half a billion years. Jellyfish are found all over the world, from surface waters to our deepest seas — and they are old. They are some of the oldest animals in the fossil record.Jellyfish are not fish at all. These gossamer wonders evolved millions of years
    By FossilHuntress, 70 words
  15. Conscience Round, , more info

    Memory of the memory of the memory of the memory
    In the land of my father, as I recall, there was a pink Ganesha Scotch-taped to the back of the door. I pushed the door open, one hand parallel to the face of the idol, into the twisted light of a blue winter morning and saw him waiting for me there, on the stone steps. He did not have the comic humility of a playful divinity; he did not doff …
    By Emma, 585 words