Feb. 11th, 2018

rfmcdonald: (photo)
Yesterday evening, I was standing on Queen just west of Dufferin, waiting for the 501 bus, when I looked to my northeast. I remember when there were no substantial condo tower there, way back when I used to lie in Parkdale behind the Drake.

Parkdale towers over Dufferin #toronto #evening #blue #parkdale #dufferinstreet #queenstreetwest
rfmcdonald: (photo)
I am pretty sure this is a globe of the Earth in a recent Ice Age. The continental outlines are familiar as contemporary, as are the continental shelfs revealed by the retreat of water from the shallow seas to polar ice.

Globe of the Ice Age Earth #newyorkcity #newyork #manhattan #earth #globe #map #iceage #history #latergram
rfmcdonald: (Default)

  • The Buzz, over at the Toronto Public Library, recommends some audiobooks, here.

  • Centauri Dreams features an essay, by Kostas Konstantindis, exploring how near-future technology could be used to explore the oceans of Europa and Enceladus for life.

  • Far Outliers takes a look at the many languages used in Persia circa 500 BCE.

  • Hornet Stories notes that Fox News has retracted a bizarrely homophobic op-ed on the Olympics by one of its executives.

  • JSTOR Daily explores what is really involved in the rumours of J. Edgar Hoover and cross-dressing.

  • Language Hat, in exploring Zadie Smith, happens upon the lovely word "cernuous".

  • Lawyers, Guns and Money links to an article, and starts a discussion, regarding the possibility of a North Korean victory early in the Korean War. What would have happened next?

  • The NYR Daily notes that Donald Trump is helping golf get a horrible reputation.

  • Supernova Condensate examines the science-fiction trope of artificial intelligence being dangerous, and does not find much substance behind the myth. If anything, the direction of the fear should lie in the other direction.

  • Understanding Society's Daniel Little looks at two books which consider the origins of the Cold War from an international relations perspective. What were the actors trying to achieve?

  • Window on Eurasia makes the argument that the powerful clan structures of post-Soviet Dagestan are not primordial in origin, but rather represent attempts to cope with state failure in that Russian republic.

  • Yorkshire Ranter Alex Harrowell looks at the existential problems facing Capita from a Coasian perspective. How is its business model fundamentally broken?

  • Arnold Zwicky, in taking apart an overcorrection, explains the differences between "prone" and "supine."

Page generated May. 22nd, 2026 07:38 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios