December 2

This is not a MetaFilter post, this is a ...

Not a snowflake. Not a camera. Not an umbrella. Not an apartment. Not a water drop. [more inside]
posted by jacquilynne at 3:44 PM - 2 comments

Happy Eid il-Burbara: trick or treat!

The Feast of St. Barbara You have some time to prepare your costume for the Feast of St. Barbara, celebrated by Middle Eastern Christians on December 4th. Go house to house for local tasty treats as you participate in a tradition that pre-dates the pumpkins and ghouls of US Halloween. [more inside]
posted by supermedusa at 2:43 PM - 1 comment

風の電話

"The wind phone is an unconnected telephone booth in Ōtsuchi, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, where visitors can hold one-way conversations with deceased loved ones." "In Japan, there is a frontier between life and death, and it’s perched on the steep slopes of a mountain called Kujira-yama, the Mountain of the Whale. That’s where we’re going..." 'How Japan’s Wind Phone Became a Bridge Between Life and Death.'
posted by clavdivs at 2:38 PM - 2 comments

Charging (Both Forward And Backward)

Over a year ago, automotive YouTuber Robert Dunn ran a video showing the stark difference between the experience of charging an electric vehicle on the Supercharger network and the varied CCS charging platforms out in the wild. With a year marked with the opening of the Supercharger network to non-Tesla EVs and improvements to both NACS and CCS infrastructure, Dunn has revisited that assessment. [more inside]
posted by NoxAeternum at 2:38 PM - 1 comment

Iiiiiiiiiit's bean--

Hey, Evan & Katelyn, what have you been up to? "Oh, you know, we made a bean phone case"
posted by cortex at 2:05 PM - 3 comments

A small, strange corner of the music business

Though uncertainty around royalties abounds, the ringtone itself remains alive and well. While that life has not been nurtured by the world’s most prominent music companies, it’s been adopted by a slew of app developers and freelance producers. [Sherwood]
posted by chavenet at 12:05 PM - 10 comments

The arena lights dim, an air horn sounds, and then...

What would your walk-up/intro music be? What should be playing as Team MetaFilter takes the court? Here are the 1997 Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the NBA Finals, a classic of the genre. How about a newer classic? Timmy Trumpet plays a live intro for Mets' relief pitcher Edwin Diaz. Get hype, MeFites: it's your weekly #freethread.
posted by DirtyOldTown at 11:58 AM - 24 comments

Gender-Affirming Care for Trans Youth Is Neither New nor Experimental

Julia Serrano compiles over two decades of academic research on gender affirming care for trans youth and summarizes it into a brief, compelling fifteen minute essay with pages and pages of sources. For those who don't know her, Julia Serrano is a transgender woman, the author of Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity and activist for LGBTQ causes.
posted by SansPoint at 11:21 AM - 15 comments

Ocean fish and seaweed to be farmed hundreds of kilometres inland

Ocean fish and seaweed to be farmed hundreds of kilometres inland using salt water from deep underground. An Adelaide-based aquaculture company hopes to use saline groundwater to grow the products at a landlocked site in South Australia's Riverland.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 8:27 AM - 7 comments

Want to raise a kid in Canada? That'll be $293K...and climbing

A child isn’t a luxury, but in 2024, the ability to provide that care, without significant material worry, can feel like one. Should we feel good about that? [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 8:00 AM - 81 comments

63 Chinese Cuisines: The Complete Guide

A survey of all the cuisines in China, probably undercounted. Chinese Cooking Demystified attempts to catalog every single regional cuisine in China, complete with explanations, maps, and of course, the food.
posted by toastyk at 7:34 AM - 9 comments

40 years of pipe organ music

Pipedreams.org has aired 1-2 hours of pipe organ music a week for since 1982. And it's all online for anyone to listen to. (Note: The latest episode is always a one-minute preview. But all of the other episodes make the full, hours-long audio available.) [more inside]
posted by ignignokt at 7:23 AM - 4 comments

Doctor saved your life? A friend dragged you out of a burning car?

The Continue and Persist Letter. A official-looking legal letter that encourages and uplifts people, one that tells people to keep doing what they’re doing! Surprise someone you appreciate by sending them a Continue and Persist Letter.
posted by Stark at 6:52 AM - 4 comments

Artist Spotlight: Colleen Barry

"Many of the figure compositions look like clusters or bundles of flesh, encompassing a feeling of tightness, bonding, holding. I feel the need to keep the bodies close together. I think that’s the protection instinct.” [NSFW] [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 5:37 AM - 1 comment

The coin

President Biden pardons his son Hunter Biden [more inside]
posted by Mitheral at 4:44 AM - 184 comments

Not an exact science

Linguists argue that style is almost impossible to hide because many of the choices we make are unconscious. Someone may decide to spell a word wrong, but forget to modify less noticeable details, such as their use of punctuation. “People say a lot about themselves when they’re trying to hide their writing,” said Roten. “For us it’s just more information.” from Can a Comma Solve a Crime? [The Dial]
posted by chavenet at 12:25 AM - 18 comments

santiago moreno - one man band

warming up ... Intimités... Tentáculos... Le Faux-Orchestre... ?
posted by LURK at 12:17 AM - 4 comments

December 1

(LOVE) (HATE)

A short essay by Daniel Lavery (previously (previouslier)), written during a COVID lockdown, about a monk's discipline over his own self, a movie about an abusive imposter's discipline over a family, and Daniel's discipline over his memories of his father. [more inside]
posted by otherchaz at 10:32 PM - 2 comments

Could wipe away nearly one third of the fatbergs in our sewers

A new invention could wipe away nearly one third of the fatbergs in our sewers. A group of engineers have invented a protective coating for concrete pipes that could help drastically reduce the presence of fatbergs — congealed masses of oils, grease and sanitary items – that block the sewer system.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 9:25 PM - 10 comments

The passion of the Mormon feminist religion

For 50 years, Exponent II has made the LDS Church squirm. It has no plans to stop. (High Country News, archive)
posted by ShooBoo at 8:40 PM - 10 comments

"and simply taping the fire button down until the capital ship explodes"

A retrospective (YT, 10 minutes) by Brian McIntosh on Descent: FreeSpace - The Great War (WP), plus an extended ode (YT, 1 hour) to FreeSpace 2 (WP) by Llaren Sagan.
posted by polytope subirb enby-of-piano-dice at 3:59 PM - 8 comments

run

Muse. 'The 2nd Law: Isolated system' (slyt. 4:59)
posted by clavdivs at 3:23 PM - 6 comments

Letters are beautiful

From specimens of chromatic woodtype to the groovy letter people and 16th Century writing templates typography and calligraphy turn visual language into something beautiful. Beginning in the early 20th Century, the Ludlow Typograph Company (1906 to late 1980s) gave its sales staff specimen books to advertise fonts and ornaments that could be printed on its Ludlow Typograph, a hot metal typesetting system used in letterpress printing for large-type material such as newspaper headlines or posters. from The Beautiful Ludlow Typography Specimen Books c. 1958 [Flashbak]
posted by chavenet at 1:09 PM - 5 comments

ZoRaK's PaGE of RAISIN' HECK!!!

The time is around 1998, when Cartoon Network had a much much better web presence than they do now (these days it's just a subsite of Max). Then, the Space Ghost Coast 2 Coast people, long before "Adult Swim" or "Williams Street," kept up a web presence for each of the members of the "Council of Doom" league of supervillains. Those sites are long gone now, but a fairly decent backup of them exists on the Internet Archive! So jump into a time machine and catch up retroactively with the affably evil blogs of Zorak, Brak, Moltar, Black Widow, Metallus, Lokar (hisssss) and Tansut. These should be the last versions of these pages that were up; the bottom of each page has links to past entries. [more inside]
posted by JHarris at 12:06 PM - 8 comments

Digging Into PlantStudio, a Bit Late

The calm, serene life associated with gardening pairs suspiciously well with rose-tinted wistfulness for a simpler time in computing. I’m happy to be wrong though, because software doesn’t get more real than PlantStudio. Written by Kurtz-Fernhout Software, PlantStudio is a surprisingly deep botany simulator for creating and arranging 3D models of herbaceous plants based on how real plants grow, change, fruit, and flower, over their life cycles. The last release of the app was in 2002, and it was for Windows 95/98/2000/NT4, but a little bit of work gets it running on macOS.
posted by AlSweigart at 9:29 AM - 7 comments

More nutritious than 25 days of chocolate

And we're off and running with the 2024 edition of Advent of Code, December's greatest nightly programming puzzle adventure game. Make friends with a new programming language you want to learn (but keep the old) and head on over to day 1 to collect stars and save Christmas! No CS degree or fancy computer necessary. [more inside]
posted by flabdablet at 9:11 AM - 16 comments

'Tis the Season to be Linkin'

LinkMe, December '24: Come across an interesting link recently that you'd like to share, but don't want to work it up into a full post? Share it here for our perusal, nbd. And if you'd like to post something but need some inspiration, check out the links here to see what other members have found interesting and would like to read more about! Just tag the resulting post "LinkMe" and include a nod back to the original suggestion. No self-linking and usual site rules apply, but otherwise feel free to post whatever you like! Holiday links encouraged but not required. Look inside for a round-up from last month! [more inside]
posted by Rhaomi at 7:25 AM - 18 comments

Funnybooks: Video Game-to-Comics Adaptations Edition

The 10 Best Comics That Are Based On Video Games. 10 Comic Books Based On Hit Video Games Worth Reading. Short on time? Try The 8 Best Comic Books Based On Video Games. Decide you do have time? Try the 10 Video Game-Based Comics That Are Actually Worth Reading. Really have quite a bit of time? Check out Wikipedia's List Of Comics Based On Video Games (which has a lot of comic-book-character-adapted-to-a-video-game-and-then-made-back-into-a-comic book). [more inside]
posted by cupcakeninja at 6:02 AM - 5 comments

Advent calendar

The Ashmolean museum in Oxford has an online Advent calendar of objects in their collection.
posted by paduasoy at 4:31 AM - 5 comments

They soon realised the problem: sports bras.

There are no shops in town really that sell bras or underwear but we wanted to provide resources for all the students.
posted by jacquilynne at 3:47 AM - 9 comments

A certain danger lurks there

It doesn’t seem far-fetched that Medicare or private insurance companies might eventually turn to AI therapy tools as an even cheaper way of ostensibly expanding access. Woebot’s website cites studies that show early intervention via outpatient care can lead to a reduction in mental health emergency room visits and inpatient hospitalizations. But the concern isn’t coming from a place of compassion for the seriously ill; rather, the point is to imply that widespread adoption of Woebot could yield “potential healthcare cost savings of up to $1,377 per patient, per year.” Just as mental health awareness campaigns eventually became a way for governments to justify prioritizing cheaper primary care interventions over crisis care, AI therapy may be the next step in a long tradition of cutting back care for the people who need it the most. from The Therapist in the Machine [The Baffler; ungated] [more inside]
posted by chavenet at 2:08 AM - 24 comments

November 30

LED lighting on surfboards may deter great white sharks from attacking

LED lighting on surfboards may deter great white sharks from attacking surfers. Researchers believe their work could mean a revolution in surfboard design.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 11:25 PM - 4 comments

Read Palestine Week 2024

Join Read Palestine Week - download free ebooks, participate, and take action.
posted by toastyk at 7:49 PM - 7 comments

fafo

Prolific hacker arrested after threatening woman online. The guy allegedly behind the massive Ticketmaster and AT&T data breaches this year was unmasked after picking a fight with Allison Nixon, the chief research officer at a cybersecurity firm. [more inside]
posted by spork at 2:57 PM - 28 comments

Thunderstruck on a Street Organ (SLYT)

Does what it says on the tin [more inside]
posted by Gorgik at 12:39 PM - 9 comments

Knives are out; use the forks, Luke

If someone asked you to define the "Star Wars" aesthetic, how would you respond? The movies, live-action shows, and animated series all possess a specific look and feel, but can you boil it down to a sentence or two? Perhaps you could say it's a mixture of junk and sleek, but that's too general. There's something essential missing. And that essential element may be an ineffable quality. Maybe you just know "Star Wars" when you see it, and that's that! Or maybe you could describe that singular aesthetic by what "Star Wars" doesn't have. from Star Wars Movies Are Secretly Forbidden From Showing These Five Objects
posted by chavenet at 11:55 AM - 62 comments

Images up for Wildlife Photographer of the Year People's Choice Award

Check out the top 25 images up for the Wildlife Photographer of the Year People's Choice Award. Judges have already awarded the winners of a bunch of different categories in the prestigious competition. But now it's the public's turn to have a say.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:10 AM - 15 comments

Why was it so bad?

Many folks have wondered why the devastation of Hurricane Helene was so bad in Western North Carolina, after the hurricane had already moved 500 miles over land. A couple of good, science-filled explanations: Why did Swannanoa become Helene’s ‘ground zero’? Deadly combination of topography, development and a ‘tidal wave’ of water and The Struggle To Restore Drinking Water After Hurricane Helene
posted by hydropsyche at 5:15 AM - 12 comments

“doing a Sontag but without the severity”

A Portrait of the Artist as an Amazon Reviewer is an essay [archive link] by Oscar Schwartz about Kevin Killian, poet, fiction writer, and incredibly prolific Amazon reviewer. A selection of his reviews has been published as a book. Amazon has an extensive sample. His Amazon user profile has only a small selection of reviews, but here’s a handful if you want to see what the fuss is about: MacKenzies Smelling Salts, Devotion (Why I Write) by Patti Smith, and Advil. If you want to read more of his two thousand plus reviews, you can go digging with the Wayback Machine or buy the book.
posted by Kattullus at 3:52 AM - 8 comments

S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2

Shooting enemies in a virtual Ukrainian landscape may seem like a surprising way for soldiers to relax, but “I always clearly understand where the game is and where it is not,” said Ihor.
posted by Fiasco da Gama at 3:18 AM - 4 comments

Gävlebocken 2025 - Tufty, Yet Birdless

As the seasons turn and winter once again dusts Scandinavia with her snowy kiss, from the security of its bunker comes the shambling, tufty beast that is the Gävlebocken (Live Feed). Firm favourite of arsonists and jackdaws alike, will the Goat make it through to New Year, or will it be be set ablaze, pecked apart, or subject to even more esoteric destruction? [more inside]
posted by Jilder at 2:56 AM - 22 comments

Why don’t we have a Matt Levine for every industry?

You have a filter with many layers: you need areas which fulfill a stringent set of conditions for such an educational newsletter, and you need a very unusual sort of individual, someone who is expert in the area and has preferably gotten their hands dirty, who is good enough to work professionally in it, but who also is capable of explaining it well, at a beginner level, many times, endlessly without burning out or getting bored, because of their intense interest in the area (but again, not quite intense enough to make them go do it instead of write about it).Each step here filters out most candidates, and by the end, there’s just not that much left. from Why So Few Matt Levines? [Gwern Branwen]
posted by chavenet at 12:55 AM - 17 comments

November 29

Footprints of two types of ancient human relatives

Footprints suggest two types of ancient human relatives walked side by side 1.5 million years ago. Newly discovered fossil footprints indicate two different ancient human relatives walked upright around a muddy lake in Kenya.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 7:59 PM - 3 comments

A machine for inducing nostalgia for a brief period not too long ago.

IMG_0001: "Between 2009 and 2012, iPhones had a built-in "Send to YouTube" button in the Photos app. Many of these uploads kept their default IMG_XXXX filenames, creating a time capsule of raw, unedited moments from random lives. [...] I made a bot that crawled YouTube and found 5 million of these videos! Watch them below, ordered randomly." [more inside]
posted by nobody at 4:39 PM - 23 comments

Is the internet becoming an infinite − and useless − library?

An 83-year-old short story by Borges portends a bleak future for the internet? A July 2024 paper published in Nature explored the consequences of training AI models on recursively generated data. It showed that “irreversible defects” can lead to “model collapse”. So how bad might this get? Fiction writers have explored some possibilities (via The Conversation)
posted by thecincinnatikid at 3:47 PM - 24 comments

Art But Make It Sports

I turn Art into Sports (and vice versa) | NO AI USED [BlueSky, also on Instagram and Substack]
posted by chavenet at 11:54 AM - 8 comments

Black Friday & Holiday deals for small press books

A roundup of deals on small press book deals, like Haymarket Books' 40% off sale on all titles and 5 for $55 Book Bundles on stuff like freeing Palestine, fighting fascism, border politics, prison abolition, and reproductive justice. Many more under the fold. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 11:53 AM - 6 comments

Mysterious Death of an Arctic Explorer

The Murder Mystery Linking a Bird Specimen at the National Museum of Natural History to the Mysterious Death of an Arctic Explorer. In 1871, a naturalist aboard the U.S.S. Polaris collected scientific specimens — and possibly poisoned the ship’s captain. (Smithsonian Magazine.)
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 6:39 AM - 6 comments

"There was some kind of entrapment lingering in the conversation"

"How to Bury a Gentile" is a "short vaguely historical vaguely spooky ghost story about Jews and burial rites". "There is absolutely something in the Talmud about this and I’ve just forgotten it, because I’m an idiot and I’m half asleep and there is a goy on my doorstep asking me to go out to the cemetery with him at midnight to bury a man whose name he won’t tell me." It's a bit sad and a bit funny and a bit sweet.
posted by brainwane at 6:30 AM - 12 comments

Not a game for nervous, excitable children

More elaborately-staged murder parties without published rulesets preceded it, but "Murder in the Dark" was a parlor game where three or four players took on the roles of victim, murderer, and detective(s) while the remaining players were generally just themselves as they all acted out a pretend murder--usually in the dark, and sometimes with an "Assassin"-like procedure--followed by an investigation in which the detective(s) asked questions and made accusations with the goal of discovering which player among them was the murderer (or in some variants, who among them will have been the murderer retrospectively). from Murder in the Dark: light roleplaying and social deduction from the 1930s to the 1980s [via MeFi Projects]
posted by chavenet at 12:42 AM - 9 comments

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