1. Sunday should be great and they are (In-The-Moment)

    I wanted to drive up north for a run, but drumcircle is at 10 now, so I don’t a chance to drive there, do a run, then chill out and read my book for a bit. So, I just ended up doing a run in the hood! Here's me in actual tears at the end of 3.1. My time was so slow, it was hot, my hoodie was drenched and sweat and tears of frustration. So, headed to my favorite coffee shop, Xtreme Bean to finish off my one minute little dittie that I absolutely love. Your browser does not support the audio…

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  2. The Stationery Shop by Marjan Kamali (2019) (Justin Cox)

    AuthorMarjan KamaliOverview"A novel set in 1953 Tehran, against the backdrop of the Iranian Coup, about a young couple in love who are separated on the eve of their marriage, and who are reunited sixty years later, after having moved on to live independent lives in America, to discover the truth about what happened on that fateful day in the town square"--1953, Tehran. Amidst the political upheaval of the time, Roya finds an oasis in kindly Mr. Fakhri's book and stationery shop. When he…

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  3. Not-HeroQuest 1989 – Monstrous Encounters Classic Goblin (Azazel's Bitz Box.)

    At the end of May we stopped past a little hobby store a few suburbs away that a co-worker had told me about. The place is called Miniature Horde and they sell a bit of GW, some paints including Citadel Colour, Two Thin Coats, some other hobby supplies, etc – but mostly they’re big into 3D printing, with a wide variety of bases, basing bits and several licenced ranges including Avatars of War, Print Minis, OPR and Monstrous Encounters among others. The owner there, a bloke called Irish, also…

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  4. Aeonic Nebular Character Generator (Zarf Updates)

    Last month I saw a reference to the "You Cannot Play This TTRPG Jam": This is a game jam for games that do not exist. They won't ever exist. They will never be playable. They will suggest a game, create a space in which it seems like a game could exist, but where there is none. It might make someone wish that it were an actual, real, game, and may even inspire them to create one, but will never itself be a game. -- Jam overview, Michelle Jones That sounds like fun! I thought. So I put together…

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  5. Movies: The Firm (1993) (andrei.xyz)

    A law school graduate uncovers a sinister secret about the Memphis firm that made him an offer he couldn’t refuse. Another great thriller set in the legal world based on a novel by John Grisham, this time starring Tom Cruise, Jeanne Tripplehorn and Gene Hackman (among others) that will keep you glued to the screen. It seems I have a new favourite writer and this movie is a very good start in the world of Grisham. Six popcorns and goes into the Movie Vault. To see all 15 photos, visit the…

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  6. From Awareness to Agency: What to Know About AI and Algorithmic Safety (Matt Simpson :// Blog)

    I recently gave a talk to a university and health care audience on an important topic to me: AI and algorithmic awareness and safety. And in the weeks since, barely one has gone by without something new crossing my desk that tells me this topic is only becoming more relevant. So I thought I would take the essence of what I thought and distill it into a blog post. Let me say up front what this is not. This post is not anti-AI. It’s also not a plea to avoid AI, delete your accounts, or move to a…

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  7. #SilentSunday #Butterfly (John's World Wide Wall Display)

    #SilentSunday #Butterfly

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  8. First Oscar Predictions: The Actors, Lead and Supporting (Blog)

    by Nathaniel R Can John Turturro hold on to his Sundance buzz for "The Only Living Pickpocket in New York" © Sony Pictures Classics Whoops. Lost some momentum there to finish the first round of Oscar predictions. Let's take on Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor...

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  9. Saucer Separation and Amazon Wishlist (Michael W Lucas)

    Just because things connect doesn’t mean they work. The small standing desk supports the two monitors and the CPU. Unplug four cables, and I can move it anywhere in the apartment. But if I actually start writing on the attached keyboard, the whole thing shakes horribly. The little standing desk isn’t robust enough to support all that equipment. Having the extra desk space is great, though, and I ache for some mobility. The obvious solution is to build a sturdier standing desk. A smaller set of…

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  10. Looks Unfamiliar: Mark Thompson – It’s Great For Your Gel Pen Needs (Tim Worthington)

    Looks Unfamiliar with Mark Thompson talking to Tim Worthington about Lenny Henry's Square Crisps adverts, Allied Lyons - A Great British Company, The Quiet Earth, Illuminati, The Optimist, Father's Day and more...!

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  11. Week in Review (The Bryant Review)

    We had an enormous week with nine articles in the last seven days and 10 since our last newsletter! We're going to cover them all here! So get excited!And make sure you check out the end of this article where we drop some sneak previews of upcoming posts and break down this week's analytics! DAILY SUMS Daily Sums is a game here on the The Bryant Review that provides a new puzzle every day! Play Now Articlese1000 InterviewLet's start with last week where dash interviewed hardware hacker e1000.…

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  12. Bright and cool for the solstice. A Carolina wren calls from the vicinity of the springhouse. In my front garden, yel... (The Morning Porch)

    Bright and cool for the solstice. A Carolina wren calls from the vicinity of the springhouse. In my front garden, yellow rays of Rudbeckia continue to unfurl.

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  13. Wait it out (Andy Bell)
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  14. Be the Good Guy You Want in the World (Nikhil's Blog)

    Having decent manners can change your life. This is not hyperbole. People remember how you treat them. They remember that you showed empathy. They remember that you saw their existence and not their status. People remember how you make them feel. And once you start treating people well, you can get away with anything. The goal isn't to get away with unspeakable things. It isn't about manipulation. It's about how much slack people will cut you once they know you're a reliable person. Be…

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  15. Infrequent Printers (Happily Imperfect)

    tldr; there is no such thing. I recently bemoaned the fact that having not used my printer for several months, when I did need to use it, it was nothing but a pain. Admittedly this is my own fault but it’s a frustration none the less. Whilst articles like this exist, the fact is that […]

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  16. b.log 2026/06/21 - Summer Solstice (Litha), Medical panic, Medical records, And... (Rick's b.log)

    Summer Solstice (Litha), Medical panic, Medical records, And...

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  17. new working spot (tugba's blog)

    istanbul is a very crowded city, and it is also expensive. there are many unattractive buildings, and people can sometimes be rude on public transport. however, there are many beautiful things to discover too if you intentionally look for them. you could even say they are endless, especially if you explore its historical side. as a freelancer, i like finding places where i can work in peace. i found this one last week: it is a pier. it has a view of the bosphorus, and tea is only 15 turkish…

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  18. Nothing holding him back (Down the Road)

    My older son drove away from my house early this morning, headed for a distant city where he’s going to build a new life. He’s wanted this adventure for a long time, and finally he’s setting out on it. He spent a couple of days with me before he left, partly because it was Father’s Day weekend and partly because neither of us knows when we’ll see each other again. Since college he’s lived in Bloomington, an easy drive away. It was a gift to be able to decide on a whim to visit, or to have him…

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  19. What can wonky APIs tell us about the web? (alexwlchan)

    A few days ago, Misty posted something that caught my eye: Misty @misty@digipres.club Finding myself asking if there's ever been a wonkier official browser API than canPlayType 18 Jun 2026 at 17:52 The HTMLMediaElement.canPlayType API tells you how likely it is that a browser can play media with a given MIME type, but the response is unusual. The word “likely” is important here, because it’s not a simple yes/no answer. The possible responses are: "" – no, the browser can’t play the media…

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  20. notes from david lynch's catching the big fish (tugba's blog)

    ideas are like fish. if you want to catch little fish, you can stay in the shallow water. but if you want to catch the big fish, you've got to go deeper. the world is as you are. fifty years ago, people were saying, "everything's speeding up." twenty years ago, they were still saying "everything's speeding up." it always seems that way. and it seems even more so now. it's crazy. when you watch a lot of tv and read a lot of magazines, it can seem like the whole world is passing you by. when you…

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  21. Briefly (21 June 2026) (The Stop Button)

    Movies Fall Guy (1947) D: Reginald Le Borg. S: Leo Penn, Robert Armstrong, Teala Loring, Elisha Cook Jr., John Harmon. Mildly engaging B picture has vet Penn waking up covered in blood, a dead girl nearby, and no memory of it. If only he hadn’t supplemented his binge drinking with “narcotic” (cocaine), that infamous hallucinogenic depressant. Half the movie is Penn piecing it together with cop uncle Armstrong (who’s great). The other half is moralizing and a disappointing finish. Grand Exit…

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  22. My Top 30 Songs for June 21-27, 2026 (ECLECTIC MUSIC LOVER)

    Press photo of The Strokes “Going Shopping” by American rock band The Strokes ascends to #1 on this week’s Top 30. Formed in New York City in 1998, The Strokes consist of singer Julian Casablancas, guitarists Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr., bassist Nikolai Fraiture and drummer Fabrizio Moretti. Backed by a lighthearted, bouncy groove, Casablancas muses about materialism, growing older, societal alienation and the never-ending push and pull of city vs. country living. The song is from their…

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  23. Flying over Bay Area Suburbia (Nate Shivar)

    Read the full post at - Flying over Bay Area Suburbia One of my favorite parts of flying is getting a true birds-eye view of the pattern of a large metro area. I found Northern California’s land use to be absolutely fascinating. The City of San Francisco is famously dense. But I was taken aback by how Sunbelt-level suburban the Bay Area is. I was also surprised at how un-buildable so much land appears to be. It truly is a situation where all the buildable land was filled up by the 1970s…and…

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  24. The Secret History of The Castle Automatic (Rise Up Comus)

    When Sean McCoy proposed the Dungeon23 project, I couldn't help but join in. I wrote two dungeons--one for His Majesty the Worm and one for Under Hill, By Water. This effort eventually went on to become the 100+ room, Metroidvania-inspired dungeon...The Castle AutomaticThe premise of The Castle Automatic is that there is a mechanical castle with a self-contained sun, moon, and seasons. It was once ruled by a cruel giant emperor, but has since fallen into ruin and become haunted by vampires and…

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  25. The Mount Herbert Loop (ruk.ca - Peter Rukavina's Weblog)

    We started Sunday with an almost-20 km cycle over to Stratford, through Fullerton’s Marsh, Mount Herbert, and back home via Bunbury.It was exposure, yet again, of the Town of Stratford’s committment to active transportation: from getting on the cycle path on Water Street near HMCS Queen Charlotte, we were on a separated pathway all the way to the Mount Herbert Road intersection with the Fullerton’s Marsh Trail, 10 km later.Once we got to Mount Herbert things got (mildly) hilly; a gentle rain…

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  26. Costco is like taking the trash out but in reverse. You hate to do it, but it feels satisfying once done. (Khaled Abou Alfa)

    Costco is like taking the trash out but in reverse. You hate to do it, but it feels satisfying once done.

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  27. I am dreading our LLM-written incident report future (Elezea)

    Lorin Hochstein writes about generative AI in the context of incident reports, but the points are more broadly applicable. I have seen a big wave of “don’t let AI do your thinking for you” posts recently[^1], so I think lots of folks are pulling back a little bit on the “just let AI do everything” rhetoric (a good thing in my opinion!). As to why Lorin isn’t a fan: In my view, LLM-generated incident write-ups are more dangerous than using LLM for coding or for AI SRE style tasks. For coding…

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  28. Sundry Sunday: A Handmade Crank Organ Plays Mario 64’s Ending, and That Other Thing (Set Side B)

    Sundry Sunday is our weekly feature of fun gaming culture finds and videos, from across the years and even decades. Two items this week. One is this simple yet charming video of someone who made a crank organ (festooned with plush parrots and a decorative octopus) and configured it to play the ending music, titled simply “Staff Roll,” to Super Mario 64. It’s very nice to listen to, and it’s only about three minutes long. Please enjoy! The other thing? Oh, the final episode of The Amazing…

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  29. Paris and Épernay (Simon Collison | Journal)

    Photos from a few days in Paris and a short stay in Épernay: great food and fine fizz, record shop cats, showcase sumo, la Coupe du monde on the TV, and stifling heat. I didn’t put much effort into taking photos on this trip, but I’ve recently dusted off my old Canon Ixus 105 and enjoyed bouncing between it and my tired iPhone 13. The Ixus is obviously digital, but in the right situations it gives me far more control than the phone and offers a film-like feeling. I love the depth of shadow and…

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  30. Notes are miniblog (Happily Imperfect)

    A long time ago I used to maintain a miniblog alongside the longer pieces. I’ve been toying with starting it up again and, well here it is. Shorter reactions, commentary etc, which may or may not end up being longer pieces. Let’s see how long this notion lasts!

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