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  1. The website of Alice Bartlett, , more info

    Week 332: Fifth metatarsal
    Evening all. This week I’ve been making a lot of things for the upcoming 7th birthday of E. She’s inviting over 7 friends and we’re going to decorate canvas bags, and assemble “bag charms” which are basically key-rings of knick-knacks that attach to a bag. The knick-knacks are all small plastic toys I’ve found in charity shops on London Road in Brighton. For example, seven cherubs, eight small My Little …
    427 words
  2. Phil Gyford’s website – Writing, , more info

    w/e 2025-01-12
    Hello, to-doers. A productive week, as it should be after all the blogging about productivity apps etc. I assigned tasks to days. I only left tasks sitting in “Today” if I was going to continue working on them the next day. I ended the week with nothing urgent hanging over the weekend. I did get a bit sidetracked when my monthly review of my various sites/projects involved me being unable …
    By Phil Gyford, 806 words
  3. Ken Shirriff's blog, , more info

    The origin of the cargo cult metaphor
    The cargo cult metaphor is commonly used by programmers. This metaphor was popularized by Richard Feynman's "cargo cult science" talk with a vivid description of South Seas cargo cults. However, this metaphor has three major problems. First, the pop-culture depiction of cargo cults is inaccurate and fictionalized, as I'll show. Second, the metaphor is overused and has contradictory meanings making it a lazy insult. Finally, cargo cults are portrayed as …
    By Ken Shirriff, 9,579 words
  4. Scrivener's Error, , more info

    No, Sir — That Is Incorrect
    Saying that too often definitely impairs one's career prospects. Saying it at all far enough up the chain of command/supervision makes that consequence rather more… immediate. As I have precisely no career prospects in the present or incoming administrations, I'll do it, remembering that speaking truth (or advocating alternative viewpoints when "truth" is indeterminate) is not a declaration
    By CEP, 64 words
  5. This Way Up, , more info

    The Rig season two
    The first season of The Rig was a curious series that ended up a long way from what you might expect with an ecological thread and ambitious staging far exceeding expectations. When you think of recent series cancelled by streamers, despite creating a big buzz and seeming popular, it seems odd that The Rig has sneaked though to a sophomore year. I liked the first season but I hadn’t realised …
    By John Connors, 3,034 words
  6. The Incredible Inman, , more info

    "Silver Streak," or Train Man
    The star of the 1934 film "The Silver Streak" isn't first-billed Sally Blane, or even male lead Charles Starrett.It's the future.Specifically, it's the future in the form of the Pioneer Zephyr, a streamlined diesel train here called the Silver Streak. But incidental roles in the movie are played by the Century of Progress International Exposition, also known as the 1933-34 Chicago World's Fair; by Boulder Dam (now known as Hoover …
    By David, 682 words
  7. The Solar Pool - Blog, , more info

    Revisitation 173: Crowning Achievement.
    This week, Prowl keeps trying to drop a Bombshell without anyone noticing, and the Decepticon Rep Theatre put on their latest masterwork, all as Omega Supreme finds out what happens when you sit on the fence politically.All as I look at Robots in Disguise issue 11!
    50 words
  8. thejaymo - Blog, , more info

    Discipline Doesn’t Arrive On Its Own
    The cord hangs heavyDiscipline crouches,A presence felt, not held,Time moves, but nothing stirs,Unfinished work. The spark waits, patient as stone Discipline Doesn’t Arrive On Its Own On The Blog: Photo 365 The Ministry Of My Own Labour Terminal Access Dipping the Stacks Reading Music Remember Kids:Discipline Doesn’t Arrive On Its OwnI am really struggling to get 2025 started. I’ve been pulling the starter cord over and over, but nothing is …
    By Jay Springett, 1,555 words
  9. FreakyTrigger, , more info

    Omargeddon #49: Woman Gives Birth to Tomato!
    Friends, this year is going to be a doozy, one which will require mental fortitude on par with the strength of Hercules combined with the flexibility of Gumby. And yet there’s only much loin-girding a person can reasonably do, so instead I’m determined to keep a hyper-focus on the shit that keeps me sane: music, fiction, poetry, TV, and gassing on about them. I intend to support this endeavour with …
    By Bec, 701 words
  10. Matthew Sheret – is someone who types things, , more info

    Week 106: Delightful challenge
    It’s so cold. It’s SO cold. Kick-off week. The work at M&S is broken in quarterly chunks, so this is the start of Phase 6. Amazing to see the team grow. Really nice energy from the teams I’m working directly with too. An auspicious start. Kick-off meetings took up the bulk of the working week. Next week is workshop planning and watching some teams test new ways of working. Got …
    By Matt Sheret, 219 words
  11. Tom Stuart, , more info

    Weeknotes 262: Sudden lull
    Hello. Everything’s going to be great. It’s been −4 °C this weekend. I record this to remind Summer Me that even though putting the heating on seems unthinkable in the sweltering hell of July, it’s essential in January. Likewise the prospect of opening the window at the moment is ridiculous but I know I’ll be doing it at every opportunity later in the year. Hopefully this will get it through …
    580 words
  12. Partially Obstructed View, , more info

    Theatre review: Oliver!
    After a 2024 full of shows with punctuation in the title, the West End gets the OG musical hit in 2025 with the transferring Chichester Festival Theatre production of Lionel Bart's Oliver Exclamation Mark. Charles Dickens' (Chickens to his friends) story of child trafficking, wifebeating, murder, grooming gangs, antisemitism, alcoholism and a quadruple revolve sees Oliver Twist's (Cian Eagle-Service, alternating with Raphael Korniets, Jack Philpott and Odo Rowntree-Bailly) mother die …
    By nick730, 761 words
  13. Maggie Appleton, , more info

    Common Misconceptions in AI
    Common Misconceptions About the Complexity in Robotics vs AI A roboticist breaks down common misconceptions about what's hard and easy in robotics. A response to everyone asking “can't we just stick a large language model into its brain to make it more capable?” Contrary to the assumptions of many people, making robots perceive and move in the world in the way humans can turns out to be an extraordinarily hard …
    212 words
  14. Lim Chee Aun – Blog, , more info

    2024 in review
    This is pretty late, but really, no hurry. This would probably feel like a repeat of my 2023 review.January 😔 Got disappointed by recent events. 📢 Made a statement that it’s impossible for an app to make everyone happy. February 😮 Gathered quite a lot of attention from an experimental UI that I did for catching up on posts on Mastodon. 🤩 My web app got mentioned on The Verge …
    1,674 words
  15. Velcro City Tourist Board, , more info

    adversarial customer service
    Just spent two hours (!) booking trains and intermediary hotels for a work trip to the UK in March. For some reason, the usually reliable Deutsche Bahn were unwilling to sell me any tickets for the journeys required, which usually means they’re waiting to release them due to e.g. track maintenance or timetable adjustments. However SNCB (the Belgian railways, basically) were happy to sell me tickets and reservations for everything …
    By PGR, 262 words