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  1. THR Web Features | Web Features | The Hedgehog Review, , more info

    From Machiavelli’s Study to Joe Rogan’s Studio
    The unlikely connection between podcast studios, Renaissance libraries and man-caves.
    By Andrew Hui, 17 words
  2. The History of Parliament, , more info

    Lord Saye and Sele and the Battle for Oxford
    In our first ‘Revolutionary Stuart Parliaments‘ article of 2025, Editor of the 1640-60 House of Lords section, Dr David Scott, considers the leading parliamentarian peer, Viscount Saye and Sele, and his relationship with the archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud. ‘The Warre was begun in our streets before the King or Parliament had any Armies’ concluded the renowned church leader Richard Baxter about the outbreak of the English Civil War in …
    By David Scott, 1,288 words
  3. Flaming Pablum, , more info

    Back to Leo London’s Lower East Side
    I’ve invoked the Flickr photos of Leo London a few times here. I don’t know the guy. I just happened upon his pics, at one point, and found several that spoke to my own NYC experience, and I’ve been raiding his collection ever since. Apropos of nothing, I was looking at them again and thought I’d re-circulate them. Both the one up top and the one below are Leo's. Presumably …
    By Alex in NYC, 186 words
  4. magCulture — Journal, , more info

    Oliviero Toscani, RIP
    The death of photographer Oliviero Toscani was announced yesterday. To mark this news, we’re publishing a column I wrote for Creative Review in 2011, as the magazine he helped found, Colors, celebrated its 20th anniversary. Colors was an extraordinary piece of magazine publishing, bankrolled by Italian knitwear company Benetton and devised by Toscani, an Italian photographer/art director best known for his advertising work (in addition to Colors he also produced …
    By Jeremy Leslie, 1,347 words
  5. Quote Investigator® – Tracing Quotations, , more info

    Quote Origin: At Long Last, We Have Created the Torment Nexus from Classic Sci-Fi Novel: Don’t Create The Torment Nexus
    Alex Blechman? Ray Bradbury? Neal Stephenson? Mark Zuckerberg? Abe Murray? Anonymous? Depiction of a mysterious crystal sphere from Unsplash. Question for Quote Investigator: Science fiction is filled with cautionary fables and dystopian visions such as the murderous HAL 9000 computer of the movie “2001”, the relentless T-800 robot of the movie “The Terminator”, the disorienting cyberspace of the short story “Burning Chrome” by William Gibson, and the frenetic metaverse of …
    By quoteresearch, 950 words
  6. The Pasta Project – Authentic Pasta Recipes, , more info

    Italian teardrop dumplings (chnèfflènè)
    Also known as gnocchetti dalla Valle D’Aosta, these teardrop dumplings (chnèfflènè) are a wonderful example of Italian mountain fare. They are made with a thick batter similar to spaetzle cooked in boiling salted water and dressed with onions sautéed in butter, wine and a little broth. A simple vegetarian recipe that takes little time to... The post Italian teardrop dumplings (chnèfflènè) appeared first on The Pasta Project.
    By Jacqui, 71 words
  7. Dull Tool Dim Bulb, , more info

    Young Woman's drawings in a practice notebook c. 1877 Schoolgirl Art of impressive skill
    Some highlights from a practice notebook of a schoolgirl. I use “delightful” sparingly but it is appropriate here. Some are full pages, two cropped. The notes indicate the booklet is for “History Maps, Agricultural Figures and Physiology Figures…and mind you, this wasn’t even handed in. They were produced from 1876-1877 by a young woman. A prize, and humbling. Note the map is likely not included, not required and not shown …
    By Dull Tool Dim Bulb, 99 words
  8. Conversable Economist, , more info

    Will AI Bring an “Intention Economy”?
    Back in the 1971, Herbert Simon (Nobel ’78) published an essay on the “attention economy.” It famously noted that “a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention.” He offered insights about how economic organizations (and people) needed mechanisms to receive and process large amounts of information, and then pass only the relevant portion of that information. (Simon won the Nobel prize “for his pioneering research into the decision-making process …
    By conversableeconomist, 961 words
  9. Phil Nash | Blog, , more info

    Troubles with multipart form data and fetch in Node.js
    This is one of those cathartic blog posts. One in which I spent several frustrating hours trying to debug something that really should have just worked. Once I had finally found out what was going on I felt that I had to write it all down just in case someone else is out there dealing with the same issue. So if you have found yourself in a situation where using …
    1,231 words
  10. Swizec Teller, , more info

    What I learned from Accelerate
    Accelerate is the empirical research behind books such as The Phoenix/Unicorn Project and (parts of) Software Engineering at Google. I loved it.
    27 words
  11. RonJeffries.com, , more info

    Why Does This Work Q&A
    A followup to yesterday's article 'Why does this work?', with questions and answers and some references to folks from whom I have learned.
    28 words
  12. Actuaries in government, , more info

    Navigating the future of pensions administration
    Introduction As we look back on 2024 and forward to 2025, it’s clear that the pensions administration industry is facing significant changes and challenges. With those, come opportunities. New year, fresh challenges. Credit: Kelly Sikkema, Unsplash Each scheme and administration provider faces a unique set of circumstances, yet certain overarching trends are shaping the industry. Understanding these trends is crucial for staying ahead of the curve. Here, we reflect on …
    By Jemma Byrne - Senior Pensions Consultant, 1,096 words
  13. paulregan.studio – From the studio, , more info

    W3 Spring term: Bacon
    I’m currently putting together some drawing and painting activities for classes next week, inspired by the Francis Bacon triptych portraits currently on show at the National Portrait Gallery (ends 19/1/25). I’ve included some photographs from the exhibition, above and below, but first, here are a few links to Bacon and Soho things I’ve enjoyed watching in the past few days: A good, honest conversation with Bacon on the Southbank Show. …
    By Paul Regan, 167 words
  14. FXRant, , more info

    "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" Mini-Oner
    Much has been said about Steven Spielberg’s uncanny ability to tell a story within a frame and set up geography, and usually folks use his long oners as examples of this talent. In fact, we break down a "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981) oner on the Lighter Darker: The ILM Podcast, in Episode 3 (starting around 27:35).But here’s a relatively innocuous, non-flashy 26-second-long shot from “Indiana Jones and the …
    By Todd Vaziri, 329 words
  15. Radar – O’Reilly, , more info

    Technology Trends for 2025
    Welcome to our annual report on the usage of the O’Reilly learning platform. It’s been an exciting year, dominated by a constant stream of breakthroughs and announcements in AI, and complicated by industry-wide layoffs. Generative AI gets better and better—but that trend may be at an end. Now the ball is in the application developers’ court: Where, when, and how will AI be integrated into the applications we build and …
    By Mike Loukides, 8,932 words