Skip to content

Recently updated blogs

Or see recently added blogs

  1. The Candybox Blog, , more info

    Playable essay “individualism in the dead-internet age” is an IGF Nuovo Award finalist!
    I'm beyond honored to say that my playable essay, "individualism in the dead-internet age" is a nominee for this year's Nuovo award at IGF. This means I will be showcasing at GDC!
    By alienmelon, 45 words
  2. Rachel the Gardener, , more info

    Climate Change Predictions: True or False?
    Back in 2020, while sorting out some old papers, I found an article in a gardening magazine from 2010, listing the three major changes we should expect in our gardens for the following decade or so - that is, pretty much, now.They warned us to expect long, hot, dry summers, mild winters, and prolonged periods of flooding, which would mean three major changes to how we garden, here in the …
    By Rachel the Gardener, 99 words
  3. The Cheapskate's Guide to Computers and the Internet, , more info

    I Miss Building Computers.
    With the technology, economics, and markets for computers having changed so drastically over the last quarter century, individuals now have very few reasons for building their own computers. Will that ever change?
    36 words
  4. Timeless | Stories from the Library of Congress, , more info

    Kelsey Corlett-Rivera, Librarian of Congress Award Winner
    Kelsey Corlett-Rivera, an international language librarian for the National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled, received a 2024 Librarian of Congress Award for expanding acquisition and discoverability of accessible books. Tell us about your background. I grew up on a ranch outside a small town in western Montana. I moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, for college, where I completed my undergraduate studies at Harvard University, majoring in Spanish and …
    By Neely Tucker, 548 words
  5. [S][J][P], , more info

    Morning light through frosted glass
    By Neil Gorman, 5 words
  6. Knowledge and resources | Open Innovations, , more info

    The power of local
    By: Paul Connell, Thomas Forth, Luke StrangeLocal Government is the OG "Test & Learn" Delivery Organisation Open Innovations has always been a massive fan of fiercely independent, capable places that are connected by data. Connections allow us to get things done. We are also big fans of doing things locally so that the people doing stuff care about the outcomes. We believe in sharing work openly and widely so that …
    304 words
  7. The VPME | New Music From The Von Pip Musical Express, , more info

    Tracks Of The Week 17/01/25
    This Week’s Tracks Of The Week: Social Media Dilemmas, Sims Visualisers, and Shit Haircuts From biting social commentary to men with a mullet going mad with a mallet in Millets, here’s what’s caught our ears this week: HotWax – “One More Reason” The ferocious grunge trio HotWax unleashed “One More Reason,” a fiery single that captures their raucous live energy. It’s a track they worked on with Warpaint’s Stella Mozgawa. …
    By Andy Von Pip, 262 words
  8. Rock and Null, , more info

    Glimpse of Google: Readability
    Welcome to Glimpse of Google, a blog series written by a former Google software engineer, offering a firsthand look into the inner workings of one of the most transformative companies of our time. This series will uncover how Google operates from an engineering standpoint and explore the broader company culture, guiding principles, and unique approaches that make it a powerhouse in technology. Whether you're an engineer, a tech enthusiast, or …
    By Mike Yerou, 541 words
  9. Drawing Matter, , more info

    Protected: Richard Neutra at Drawing Matter
    This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below: Password:
    By Jesper Authen, 20 words
  10. Flamed Fury, , more info

    Blog Question Challenge 2025
    What’s going on, Internet? The Blog Question Challenge has been an exciting meta blog challenge that’s been doing the rounds the past couple weeks. As far as I can tell it started over on Ava’s blog as the Bear Blog Question Challenge but has evolved as everyone outside of the Bear Blog and across the Fediverse and Indie Web community. Nobody tagged me, but I’m going to jump in anyway. …
    988 words
  11. Chicago Skirmish Wargames, , more info

    Photo Gallery: November 11th, Big Mech Attack!
    What do you do when you've got a big 4x8 table of urban terrain setup after a mini-convention? You play Mech Attack on it, which four of us did recently. We usually play Mech Attack at the club using 10mm Scale rebased Mechwarrior Clix miniatures. However, we do have a stock for 28mm mechs for convention games... They are made from a variety of model kits, toys, and wargame models: …
    By Karl Paulsen, 206 words
  12. Condensed concepts, , more info

    Quantifying the obscurity of academic writing
    Occasionally The Economist publishes nice graphs capturing social and economic trends. Here is one.It is part of a nice articleAcademic writing is getting harder to read—the humanities most of allThe downward trend in the humanities and social sciences is dramatic and perhaps not surprising.I was surprised that in the natural sciences the trend wasn't worse. The Flesch reading ease score goes from about 26 around 1960 to about 18 today. …
    By Ross H. McKenzie, 112 words
  13. Failure Tolerated, , more info

    Writing rooms in pairs
    When you’re working on a key for a dungeon or other location, it can be difficult to come up with all the concepts you need to round the place out. One trick I’ve learned to cut this in half is to write rooms in pairs. So the idea is that you maybe have a shitty or boring list of rooms like so: 1d6 goblins. Treasure chest with some gold. Empty …
    By Writing rooms in pairs.txt, 323 words
  14. Roblog, the blog of Rob Miller, , more info

    We don't need more cynics. We need more builders. (→ joanwestenberg.com)
    I wrote recently about the “vibe shift” that’s currently underway, and how we might build out way out of it. Joan Westenberg hits on a similar theme, and makes a powerful call for “pragmatic meliorism” – that is, neither deluded optimism nor destructive cynicism, but rather a pragmatic belief that “things are broken, AND they can be fixed; people are flawed AND capable of growth; systems are complex AND can …
    174 words
  15. Mr. Money Mustache, , more info

    Retired Man Tries to Spend More Money, Mostly Fails
    – A couple of years ago, Mr. Money Mustache lost some credibility among the faithful when he wrote this blog post about actually trying to spend a bit more money, while buying a Tesla as the first step in that program. “Look at me!”, I thought to myself at the time, “I’m such an enlightened middle-aged Badass, adjusting habits and realigning myself at the snap of my fingers. Onward to …
    By Mr. Money Mustache, 1,608 words