Frontier spaces
-
0 ▲
-
Actually another slow week! My partner and I have picked up running again, and hopefully are making it a recurring thing again. I did 3km @ 6:55 pace - I'm soooo washed, but it did feel good to get out of the house and get moving again. My shoulders and calves are all fucked up, but otherwise it felt great! Nothing a few stretches can't fix! Otherwise, super low-key. I bought a puzzle and started working on it with my partner, and we played our first game of MTG together. Both are super low…
0 ▲ -
Talked to **** about different types of friendships and emotional baggage and obsession and gossip and bullying and we both shared anecdotes re: bullying before concluding that neither of us knew how to talk to people back then/acknowledged our part of The Problem but I'm angry and resentful thinking about it now because,,, 1.) are bullies introspective are they having these conversations with their bully friends 2.) could I be a bully in denial? I think there should be bully support groups,…
0 ▲ -
Found this image on Instagram, it describes exactly how I feel at 51.
0 ▲ -
We're no strangers to the glory of the Icelandic black scene, which has always aimed for production of music with ever-present ferocity, and continental significance. Most of the bands active during the previous decade dominated my playlists of favorites, some of which I still consider recordings or such magnitude that elevates the whole genre. One could argue that one of the perpetrators of the movement was Svartidauði with their earliest demos in the mid 00s, then continued by numerous…
0 ▲ -
Everyone knows they should invest more in themselves. Exercise. Learning. Meditation. The creative project that has nothing to do with work and everything to do with who they actually are.Everyone also knows exactly what happened to those things. They slid off the calendar one week at a time, replaced by things that felt more urgent and less personal. Not dramatically. Gradually. Until you struggle to answer the question "what do you do for fun?" The cost is a gradual flattening. A narrowing of…
0 ▲ -
Hope you had blessed Sunday! ✝️🙏 Time for another Catholic Meme Monday. That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog. P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic. The post Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 232 first appeared on The Simple Catholic. The post Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 232 appeared first on The Simple…
0 ▲ -
Leonora Carrington. CONNECTED: i left my soul in bed: 10feb26 morning computer pluriverse 27jan24 Yuji Agematsu. Love the little SCHWA alien. morning computer: some useful things first thing in the day. My free weekly newsletter is at https://orbitaloperations.beehiiv.com/
0 ▲ -
Nearly forty years ago I drove to Beaversprite, a nature reserve near Dolgeville in upstate New York, in the foothills of the Adirondacks, to interview the caretaker. The founder, known for taming beavers and permitting some to live in her house, had recently died and the fate of the sanctuary was uncertain. I spent much of the day speaking with the caretaker and tramping around the grounds, and late in the afternoon started the drive back to Albany. On the way, at a deep dip in the road, I…
0 ▲ -
I run a website for my local town called Discover Dursley. One of the platform sections is the local What’s On, and I’m always on the hunt for local events to add into the weekly roundup. So I follow hundred’s of local facebook pages which produces a handy stream I can quickly scan for event posters. Of course, over the last year or so, the rise of the AI poster has been relentless. You know the ones I mean. They’re kinda hard to define, but a bit like life itself, you know it when you see it.…
0 ▲ -
Nebraska, 2013: Scottsbluff was the starting point for a nice drive across Nebraska, not the interstate but as an entry to Nebraska 2, which took us east to Farwell, which was also interesting.
0 ▲ -
Saturday morning, Becca’s at work, so it’s just me and Jack. He’s requested a morning in the house, he’s had a busy week so always happy to let him listen to his own body and mind and make these decisions. I’ll cut the grass later but mostly just hang out with my son. Yay! Thanks for reading and keeping RSS alive. Visit my site for more.
1 ▲ -
Deeper understanding of the code and software systems we work on, is not only pragmatic and practical but highly enjoyable as well ... But, if it is both joyful and powerful, why are we so often prone to skip the struggle to understand and take shortcuts, accepting copy-pasted/generated solutions and generic answers, not analyzed?
0 ▲ -
Caltrain is working on their level boarding roadmap. If their recent work on grade separations is anything to go by, the capture of the agency by the layers of consultants belonging to the transit industrial complex is likely to result in a gold-plated mega-project approach to delivering level boarding in the late 2030s, where each station platform must be reconstructed from the ground up at a system-wide cost easily topping $2 billion.We don’t need to let them turn level boarding into another…
0 ▲ -
Nau mai,Yesterday we played at Green River Festival, in Greenfields, Massachusetts. In today’s blog I hit the correct spelling of Massachusetts on the second attempt, I’m proud to announce. We had another day in paradise. Snowpiercer was parked behind our festival stage when we woke up, and she was looking decidedly more handsome than the other two coaches she was parked next to. It was another compact festival and we were only a stone’s throw from all the important facilities that would get us…
0 ▲ -
First thing firstly: I went to OB this morning. It was uneventful. Chilly. Wonderful after several days of not being in the ocean. I was in Northern Virginia / Washington D.C. Instagram used to be where I’d post trip photos. As the platform has worsened, I do it less. That obliges me to post here more. Or somewhere at least. It was a family trip. It was great. I’ll post more later. In the meantime, have a great week. Sign my Guestbook | Contact Me | Book office hours | Share
0 ▲ -
City Council Leadership Seeks To Further Weaponise Its Standards Regime With The Introduction Of Confidential Reporting Of Low-Level Behavioural Issues (RECLAIM EC1)
Since it was created 9 years ago, this blog has been reporting on the way the City of London council leadership weaponises standards. For the entire time we’ve been covering our local authority’s standards regime establishment supporters have been free to flout the rules, and those who oppose that establishment have been persecuted for alleged standards violations despite adhering to the rules. Indeed the vigilantism of the City council’s old Standards Committee was so extreme that it had to be…
0 ▲ -
Review Originally Published March 13th, 2002 Most of the buzz around Mystic Eye Games which has come my way has focused on their Nightmares & books or the The Hunt: Rise of Evil campaign setting. Not very much attention, it seems, has turned to their modules – such as The Pit of Loch-Durnan, an adventure for characters of 2nd to 4th level. And maybe there’s a good reason for: The Pit of Loch-Durnan has a lot of problems. But we’ll come back to that. First, let’s take a quick peek at the plot.…
0 ▲ -
So, awhile back, I decided to start self hosting my music collection. I’m sure I’ve at least mentioned it somewhere here on the blog. I re-downloaded my entire collection and more beyond that. Nearly 5TB of new music was stored on my various hard drives. It took months. And by the end, I was pretty damn proud of it. I’ve been using that system now for months, and I’ve realized that I miss streaming services like Tidal and Spotify. It makes me feel a little dirty writing it, but it’s true. Why?…
0 ▲ -
Two quotes, apropos of nothing: A lot of software developers are seduced by the old “80/20” rule. It seems to make a lot of sense: 80% of the people use 20% of the features. So you convince yourself that you only need to implement 20% of the features, and you can still sell 80% as many copies. Unfortunately, it’s never the same 20%. Everybody uses a different set of features. — Joel Spolsky, Strategy Letter IV: Bloatware and the 80/20 Myth Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the…
0 ▲ -
You won't be surprised that I managed to swap a fiver on the Bring'n'Buy stall for some stuff I probably don't need, although this time I managed to find items that might just be useful. Vinyl letters are always useful. They are now in the drawer with transfers. These are larger than anything I own, I think, so a quid well spent. Possibly less useful is a roll of blue and white check vinyl, but if I did another RC car, I could use that on the wings. Obviously, I don't need another model boat…
0 ▲ -
hey there We have long needed to replace the flooring in our kitchen for a couple of years. The last owners left it all in pretty poor shape, and over time, it has gotten progressively worse. We were going to have the whole thing sanded down and reused, but when they came out, they found it was a very low-quality ‘builders grade’ floor that they had used, warped, and unable to be sanded. Great. When they were pulling it up, they mentioned it looked like the previous owners’ dogs just were…
0 ▲ -
Got himself a Lambo…
0 ▲ -
Technology has given us a lot of cool things. I'm a fan of vaccines and ibuprofen. You can now talk to your friends and family basically anywhere. The Norwegians invented kveik beer yeast. Thanks to the internet, a solid chunk of human knowledge is just sitting there basically for free. They've even started making mildly sycophantic mentats to predigest it for you. And we have dating apps. Doesn't everyone love dating apps? But, this is surely a fraction of what could be. There are many…
0 ▲ -
Finished reading: Lick by Kylie Scott 📚
0 ▲ -
Finished reading: His Last Bow by A. Conan Doyle 📚
0 ▲ -
It’s been a few years since 2023, when I last wrote about the use of AI. Today we have ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Claude Code, and many other tools, with new models and capabilities appearing constantly. At this point, it’s becoming less about which AI tool you choose and more about the agents, integrations, and skills those tools can leverage. Personally, I don’t mind the use of AI in the workplace. Many teams actively evaluate these tools and work to ensure they’re being used appropriately and…
0 ▲ -
Getting a little more organized in my workshop. My pwin poi t was boxes if nails or screws falling off shelves. I took a lesson from Minecrafters and put an instance of what was inside the box on the front id the box.
0 ▲