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  1. Chaplin-Keaton-Lloyd film locations (and more), , more info

    Charlie Chaplin’s One A.M. Mystery SOLVED!!
    Charlie Chaplin’s 1916 film One A.M. begins with him portraying a wealthy drunk struggling to exit a taxicab. Filmed on location, this setting has been a mystery for over a century, until Sarah Lagrillière, a brilliant film preservationist and avid visual historian from Finland (!), solved the puzzle. Incredibly, the scene was staged along Hollywood Blvd, almost due north from where Chaplin would later build his studio across a lemon …
    By John Bengtson, 1,238 words
  2. The Public Domain Review, , more info

    Designing the Sublime: Boullée and Ledoux’s Architectural Revolution
    As dissatisfaction with the old regime fermented into revolutionary upheaval in late-eighteenth century France, two architects cast off the decorative excesses of the Baroque and Rococo styles and sought out bold, new geometries. Hugh Aldersey-Williams tours the sublime and mostly unrealized designs of Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux, discovering utopian ideals crafted in cubes, spheres, and pyramids.
    65 words
  3. Bram.us, , more info

    Move elements around the DOM while preserving their state with moveBefore
    ~ New in Chrome 133 (which goes stable on Feb 4) is a new method to move an element around the DOM: Node.prototype.moveBefore. While small in size, this method is a very big deal because it preserves the element’s state when moving them around! For example: Iframes remain loaded Active element remains focus Popovers, fullscreen, modal dialogs remain open CSS transitions and animations carry on … ~ The classic way …
    By Bramus!, 368 words
  4. Alexander S. Kunz Photography – Weblog, , more info

    January 2015 Throwback
    With regards to my photographic activities, alternating between the coast and the desert, January 2015 was a rather typical month. Here’s my monthly throwback to ten years ago, with some photos that have passed the test of time. The reason ... Read moreThanks for following Alexander S. Kunz Photography via RSS & keeping independent websites alive. Buy me a coffee? Support @ $3/month. Visit My Print Store. Browse My Photo …
    By Alexander S. Kunz, 74 words
  5. Bits about Money, , more info

    Bits about Money yearly recap and plans
    Happy New Year! I have a housekeeping message (which you will see immediately below, if you’re reading this via email), a review on 2024, and then some updates about Bits about Money as a publication. Spoiler: BAM is not going anywhere; I’d be obliged if readers supported it with money.Reminder to supportersAre you reading this in a web browser? Supporters of Bits about Money who got this in an inbox …
    By Patrick McKenzie (patio11), 1,593 words
  6. Brendan Dawes, , more info

    Congrats to my “Eno” collaborator @brendandawes for winning the Cinema Eye Honors Award for Outstanding Achievement in Visual Design
    Congrats to my “Eno” collaborator @brendandawes for winning the Cinema Eye Honors Award for Outstanding Achievement in Visual Design for the Brain One generative system we created for the film. This project does not exist without Brendan’s creativity and resilience over the past six years since we began working together. Cheers Bren! Brian Eno was also recognized in the “Unforgettables” category as one of this year’s most notable and significant …
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  7. Strong Towns, , more info

    The Bottom-Up Revolution Is…Making City Budgeting More Participatory
    Matt Harder is the founder of Civic Trust, a participatory budgeting company that provides technology infrastructure, communications and process methodology to help citizens participate in their governments’ budgeting process.In this episode of The Bottom-Up Revolution, Harder joins host Tiffany Owens Reed to discuss participatory budgeting, a method of getting resident input on how a city’s budget is spent. They talk about the three phases of participatory budgeting, the benefits and …
    By Strong Towns, 9,849 words
  8. Georgia Before People, , more info

    Everglades Mink (Neogale vison evergladensis) Scat Attracts Other Species
    The American mink is not endangered and lives all across North America in wetlands with the exception of the American Southwest, but the subspecies that occurs in the Everglades is considered threatened. Mink are weasels well adapted to living in freshwater marshes where they prey upon rabbits, rodents, fish, frogs, tadpoles, birds, turtles, snakes, and insects. They often kill more than they can eat because their primitive brains don’t shut …
    By markgelbart, 576 words
  9. 853, , more info

    Woolwich ‘will be a student town again’ after developments approved
    Plans for hundreds of student rooms in Woolwich town centre have been approved by Greenwich Council – and hundreds more could be on their way. Former council offices at Riverside House that are currently being used as artists’ studios will be redeveloped and turned into 332 student rooms along with a 265-room hotel, with part […] The post Woolwich ‘will be a student town again’ after developments approved appeared first …
    By Darryl Chamberlain, 84 words
  10. A Year In The Country, , more info

    Belbury Poly’s New Ways Out and Tizer-Fuelled 70s Youth Club Discos With Side-Rooms for Ouija Boards: Wyrd Edits 02
    Ghost Box Records work and releases often have a very playful element which intertwines with the more parallel world or occult side of things. This is particularly present on the Belbury Poly album New Ways Out from 2016, which was described in Electric Sound magazine as: “…transporting you to those especially daft places only Belbury Poly can – Tizer-fuelled 70s youth club discos with side-rooms for Ouija boards…” That quote …
    By stephenprince, 1,009 words
  11. She Reads Novels, , more info

    Absolutely and Forever by Rose Tremain
    I’ve had mixed experiences with Rose Tremain’s books, enjoying some and struggling with others. Absolutely and Forever was shortlisted for last year’s Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction and as it’s a personal project of mine to try to read all of the shortlisted titles, I decided to read this one despite it not sounding particularly appealing to me. It’s a short book (under 200 pages), so at least it …
    By Helen (She Reads Novels), 681 words
  12. Jane Friedman | Blog, , more info

    How Deliberate Practice Can Develop Your Writing Skills and Talent
    Saint Jerome in His Study by Domenico Ghirlandaio (1480) Today’s post is excerpted from Deliberate Practice for Creative Writers by Jules Horne. Do you believe excellence is in someone’s nature—an innate golden gift they were born with? Or does it come from nurture—learning, effort, passion and commitment? Of course, nature versus nurture is a false dichotomy. Born talent and learned talent—in any skill—can’t be separated. They reinforce and inspire each …
    By Jules Horne, 1,497 words
  13. Fup Duck Photography, , more info

    The Photax III camera
    This is an Art Deco styled bakelite medium format camera made in France. Mine is a series III model made from 1947 to around 1956. This one is the deluxe or blindé version, meaning that it has a push-on bakelite lens cap (blindé means armoured). This camera is about as simple as you can get for roll film, and bears comparison with the Ilford Sporti I borrowed. The Photax cameras …
    By fupduckphoto, 1,260 words
  14. Tony's Reading List, , more info

    ‘First Love’ by Rio Shimamoto (Review)
    After spending some time with a bunch of rogues earlier this week, my #JanuaryInJapan thriller week continues today with another trip to Tokyo. This time around, the crime has long been done and detected, meaning the focus is far less on the what than the why. Let’s head off to prison, then, where we’ll be making the acquaintance of a young woman, and putting together the pieces of a story …
    By Tony, 1,015 words
  15. the next wave, , more info

    Understanding the so-called obesity ‘wonder drugs’
    Over the holiday break Exponential View republished a piece by Azeen Azhar it had run earlier in the year on GLP-1 drugs. (In other words, drugs like Ozempic.) First time around, I’d noticed the headline, but not had time to get into the detail. But seeing it during the holiday meant I was able to give it more consideration. The Exponential View headline story is this: I reckon that they …
    By thenextwavefutures, 1,222 words