Entry tags:
2019-06-10
Entry tags:
- asteroids,
- astronomy,
- blogs,
- central asia,
- demographics,
- economics,
- facebook,
- family,
- former soviet union,
- globalization,
- history,
- imperialism,
- in memoriam,
- india,
- japan,
- journalism,
- language,
- links,
- mass media,
- migration,
- military,
- oddities,
- physics,
- politics,
- social networking,
- south asia,
- space science,
- space travel,
- turkey,
- uzbekistan
[BLOG] Some Monday links
- Centauri Dreams considers the recent study of near-Earth asteroid 1999 KW4, looking at it from the perspective of defending the Earth and building a civilization in space.
- Ingrid Robeyns at Crooked Timber continues a debate on universal basic income.
- The Dragon's Tales considers if India does need its own military space force.
- JSTOR Daily looks at how foster care in the United States (Canada, too, I'd add) was also synonymous with sending children off as unpaid farm labourers.
- Erik Loomis at Lawyers, Guns and Money shares a proposal, linking immigration to high-income countries to the idea of immigration as reparation for colonialism.
- The LRB Blog considers the ever-growing presence of the dead on networks like Facebook.
- Muhammad Idrees Ahmad at the NYR Daily looks at how Bellingcat and other online agencies have transformed investigative journalism.
- The Russian Demographics Blog shares a speech by the head of the Bank of Japan talking about the interactions of demographic change and economic growth.
- Starts With A Bang's Ethan Siegel notes the mystery behind the great mass of early black hole J1342+0928.
- Strange Company looks at the unsolved Christmas 1928 disappearance of young Melvin Horst from Orrville, Ohio. What happened?
- Window on Eurasia notes that Uzbekistan is moving the Latin script for Uzbek into closer conformity with its Turkish model.
Entry tags:
[URBAN NOTE] Five Toronto links: Artscape, PoP Shoppe, Funhouse,
- Tanya Mok at blogTO looks at Artscape Weston Common.
- Jamie Bradburn looks at the heyday of the PoP Shoppe, a late 1970s chain specializing in different kids of soda drinks.
- Toronto Life reports on the Funhouse experience created inside an old Buddhist temple off Queen Street West.
- blogTO notes that, at least so far as absolute numbers are concerned, Toronto is the fastest-growing city in the United States and Canada.
- Toronto Life reports on a home in the Annex that was sold a decade and a half ago at three hundred thousand and just now went for 1.5 million.
[URBAN NOTE] Five city links: Montréal, New York City, London, Ljubljana, Tokyo
- CTV News reports that affordable rentals in Montréal are starting to disappear.
- New York City's High Line Park has celebrated its 10th anniversary. Has this beautiful park driven gentrification? Global News reports.
- Guardian Cities reports on a recent London exhibition that profiles that city's buried rivers and streams.
- Guardian Cities looks at how Ljubljana managed to radically reduce its waste.
- Guardian Cities wonders if this year will be the year that the metropolis of Tokyo opens up and internationalizes.
[ISL] Five #PEI links: Airbnb, Charlottetown Mall, Crapaud, Région Évangéline, seaweed pie
- CBC Prince Edward Island notes the proportionally extreme impact of Airbnb on the very tight housing market in Charlottetown.
- The Guardian notes the redevelopment of the Charlottetown Mall will see new stores and several hundred new housing units.
- Peter Rukavina reports on his successful electronic mapping of every building in the community of Crapaud.
- CBC Prince Edward Island notes that a move to amalgamate the predominantly Francophone and Acadian west-end Région Évangéline into a single municipality has halted.
- Atlas Obscura reports on the PEI dish of seaweed pie, made from Irish moss, once in the community of Miminegash and now available at the Canadian Potato Museum in O'Leary.