Activity from doctornemo

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A president's words. A supervillain's mouth.

Behold the Red Skull-Donald Trump mashup. D.M. Higgins replaces a classic Marvel villain's dialogue with choice president Trump quotes.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:29 PM on February 17, 2017 (19 comments)

No criminology suspected

Who was Sergei Krivov? And how did he really die? Ali Watkins looks into a death in the New York Russian consulate.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:05 AM on February 15, 2017 (1 comment)

Cowbird to enter archive-only mode

"We know this news will feel sad to many of you, especially our regular authors." On March 1st digital storytelling site Cowbird will become a read-only archive.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 2:55 PM on February 8, 2017 (5 comments)

Taking the atomic elixir

Dan Carlin dives into the Cold War. The latest Hardcore History podcast explores the Atomic Age and what became the balance of terror. Dan Carlin (previously) starts with Hiroshima and ends with the Cuban Missile Crisis. Nearly six hours of nuclear war audio history. (SLgiantpodcast)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:27 PM on January 29, 2017 (27 comments)

"So long, Old Bill."

William Peter Blatty, dead at 89. Author and moviemaker, best known for writing The Exorcist (1971).

Tweeted by William Friedkin and Stephen King.

The Exorcist, read by Blatty.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:11 AM on January 14, 2017 (29 comments)

We failed to overcome the chicken-and-egg issue

App.net to end. Would-be Twitter competitor App.net is closing up shop and open-sourcing its code. The project launched in 2012 through crowdfunding, and tried to make the pay-for-play model work in social media. It also wanted to be very friendly to developers, especially when Twitter wasn't. Other services appeared alongside the microbloggery, like a push notification tool and a crowdfunding function. (via HN)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:32 AM on January 13, 2017 (47 comments)

I miss "meh"

Charlie Brooker Newswipes 2016 Black Mirror's creator takes a whack at a shitmungous year, accompanied by Philomena Cunk and Alt-Git Barry Shitpeas. The 2016 wipe features Pokemon Gove, an epic if brief puddle, horse pleasuring, Brexit breakfast, Yorkshire-bashing, the pocalypse, and an epic Trump mashup. Don't miss the Wendy Carlos soundtrack and a new fake news channel. (SLYT)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:35 AM on January 1, 2017 (29 comments)

Merry Christmas from six letters

"Holidays 2016 (Day 3) Warm Climates" is today's Google Doodle. Created by Gerben Steenks.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:38 AM on December 25, 2016 (8 comments)

They did not pass.

100 years ago the battle of Verdun came to an end. On December 18/19, 1916, the German assault on Verdun is completely defeated after 300 days of some of the most horrendous fighting in World War I. French forces triumphantly led by commanders soon to become notorious (Nivelle and Pétain) regained all the land that the enemy had taken. 11,000 demoralized German soldiers surrendered. "France had won her most brilliant victory since the Marne." (Horne)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 1:48 PM on December 20, 2016 (21 comments)

Ride the tides of Titan!

"Saturn's largest moon might be the only place beyond Earth where humans could live" Charles Wohlforth and Amanda R. Hendrix urge some of us to consider becoming Titanians. (via)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 5:55 AM on November 27, 2016 (44 comments)

Why video games bore some people.

"my friends want not to be repulsed, to recognize their own tastes, and to find depth." In a reflection/manifesto Brie Code explores non-game-playing audiences and how to design games for them.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:17 AM on November 7, 2016 (130 comments)

"the sole internationalism—if it existed—had been that of deserters"

The ghouls of No Man's Land James Deutsch explores an urban legend from the First World War, and its decades-long afterlife. (SLSmithsonian)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:48 PM on October 30, 2016 (22 comments)

Bill Bowen, R.I.P.

A major figure in higher education has passed. William G. Bowen was president of Princeton, head of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and helped launch a variety of projects, including JSTOR, Artstor, and Ithaka Harbors. 2012 winner of the National Medal of Arts and National Humanities Medal, Bowen also found time to write nineteen books, many influential, often on higher education.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 4:28 PM on October 21, 2016 (11 comments)

Leo Baranek, RIP

"a sought-after acoustics genius" One third of Bolt, Beranek and Newman, which helped build ARPANET, Beranek was an important acoustical engineer. Died at 102.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 5:49 AM on October 18, 2016 (17 comments)

his unblinking stare

Portrait of a would-be world-changer Who is Sam Altman, the new head of Y Combinator? What does he want to do/for all of us? New Yorker portrait by Tad Friend.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 3:30 AM on October 3, 2016 (45 comments)

“a rancid, corrupt way to report about science”

"Without the ability to contact independent sources, 'journalists become stenographers'". Scientific American accuses the FDA of manipulating and deceiving the press, the close-hold embargo being a major method, despite the FDA's disavowing the practice in 2011.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 11:55 AM on September 25, 2016 (18 comments)

Attacks continued to become more frequent, persistent, and complex

Who is trying to see what it would take to shatter the internet's backbone? "Someone is extensively testing the core defensive capabilities of the companies that provide critical Internet services... [T]his is happening. And people should know. " (SLSchneier)
Previously.
Other Schneier on the blue in the past.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 1:17 PM on September 15, 2016 (68 comments)

The desired academy, nine years hence

“What change would you like to see in universities or in your academic field by 2025?” That's the question Heterodox Academy members answer, in honor of their initiative's first year anniversary.
(Previously)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:35 AM on September 12, 2016 (36 comments)

Stone making _Snowden_

He didn’t recall pretending to strangle Poitras. How Oliver Stone's Edward Snowden movie came about, a shambling story of egos, deception, and geopolitics. (SLNYT)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:15 PM on September 5, 2016 (14 comments)

“It looks like a war zone,” he said. Because it is.

Bill McKibben asks us for a WWII-scale climate change mobilization. Maybe it's time to think of climate change as a war, argues Bill McKibben (founder of 350.org).
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:11 AM on August 16, 2016 (42 comments)

Ah, Mister Garibaldi!

R.I.P. Jerry Doyle. He was a star of epic science fiction tv series Babylon-5, then host of talk radio. Dead at 60. B-5 Great Maker J. Michael Straczynski confirmed this on Twitter and also wrote an obituary.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 2:51 PM on July 28, 2016 (104 comments)

Humanity has always embraced household gods

“Pray for Kumamoto & Kumamon" What is cute? Specifically, what is kawaii? A long read exploration, ranging from earthquakes to mayonnaise and Satan.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 4:55 AM on July 20, 2016 (15 comments)

"I define an arbitrary measure of 'Metalness'"

Heavy Metal and Natural Language Processing - Part 1 Consider the lyrics of metal music as a dataset. What can we learn?

Behold a word cloud of an awful lot of metal lyrics, swear words plotted against readability, and a denogram of metal bands' comparative lyrical groupings. Brood upon lists of most and least metal words. Wonder at the term frequency -Inverse document frequency of "Orgasmatron." And don't miss the lurking haikus. (via)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:31 AM on July 3, 2016 (24 comments)

"All human knowledge is there—so why can’t everybody access it?"

Will we ever realize the dream of everyone having access to all of human knowledge? Glyn Moody summarizes the open access movement.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 8:01 AM on June 11, 2016 (23 comments)

"Russia has not yet reached the zenith of her power."

One hundred years ago today, an enormous Russian offensive begins. The attack surprised nearly everyone, including enemies and the rest of the Russian command.

The massive assault on Austro-Hungarian forces was intended to aid already or soon-to-be hard-pressed Russian allies France, Italy, and Britain, while also hoping to knock an enemy empire out of the war.


posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:50 AM on June 4, 2016 (14 comments)

The new wave of student activism: the case of Oberlin

"On or about December, 2014, student character changed” The New Yorker looks at millennial politics. Nathan Heller talks to many students.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 4:55 AM on May 24, 2016 (96 comments)

“This was the day, of course, when we learned we were wrong.”

30 years ago today, a fire started near Pripyat. "The time was 1:23 a.m. The world had changed. But those sleeping just downwind had no idea." The Chernobyl disaster began on April 26th, 1986.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:01 AM on April 26, 2016 (52 comments)

He also heard the Hum

From Zug Island to Bristol to British Columbia, interest in a mysterious humming sound continues. Colin Dickey investigates The World Hum Map and Database Project, its creator, and some recent experiments, including the first Deming box. Stops along the way include TACAMO, tin foil hats, school shootings, Jesse Ventura's tv show, and noise-abatement laws.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 2:34 PM on April 13, 2016 (34 comments)

Why it's getting harder to prosecute white collar crime.

"They also don’t really have the will. They’re really nervous about it, very trepidatious." Jesse Eisinger outlines why we're seeing fewer successful actions against corporate and white collar misdoings in the United States.
Highlighted is the Thompson memo of 2003.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:44 AM on March 24, 2016 (27 comments)

100 years ago today, the beginning of the end on WWI's eastern front

"It was an affair that summed up all that was most wrong with the [Russian] army." Largely forgotten by the west, the Battle of Lake Naroch (March-April 1916; Wikipedia) broke the Russian army's will to fight Germans. Eager to help their western allies being slaughtered at Verdun, the tsar's forces attacked a weak spot in the German lines in Belarus. Although the Russian army began with massively greater troop superiority, the offense was a spectacular failure, due to gross strategic and tactical incompetence. The results: awful casualties and no terrain gained.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 3:40 PM on March 18, 2016 (15 comments)

A crash course in the history of black science fiction.

42 black science fiction works that are important to your understanding of its history. Nisi Shawl has assembled a rich syllabus of novels and story collections, from 1859 to 2015. Some fantasy and horror along with the strictly science fictional.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 4:08 AM on March 10, 2016 (36 comments)

The fabulous ruins of NASA

Remnants of the American space race, photographed from Florida to California. "There is a spiritual quality to Launch Complex 34. The launch pedestal with its large round opening to the sky gives it the look of some ancient astronomical archaeological ruin, something like Stonehenge."
From a new book.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:41 AM on March 4, 2016 (19 comments)

Reading and rereading Frank Miller, 30 years after Dark Knight Returns

It's hard to imagine Frank Miller anticipating that his story, with that introduction, would ever fall into the hands of an 11-year-old, mixed-race girl. Susana Polo (Twitter) begins with reading Batman: Year One at 11, then follows Miller's output, and her career and life, from there.
(SLPolygon)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:20 AM on March 2, 2016 (97 comments)

"Aristocrat of Science Fiction"

"That's what Life Magazine calls GALAXY!" The Internet Archive presents the complete run of classic sf magazine Galaxy, from 1950 to 1980.

Previously on MetaFilter. (via HackerNews)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:39 AM on February 28, 2016 (10 comments)

Melissa Click has been fired.

Controversial prof booted by University of Missouri Board of Curators. Communication faculty member Click rose to fame and notoriety for her role in recent protests against Missouri's administration, where she called for two journalists, one a student, to be blocked or removed from a protest site. Images and video of her circulated widely.

Recently Click was suspended by Mizzou, and also charged with assault by local prosecutors. She ended her appointment with the university's journalism department. A group of state legislators wanted her gone. A similarly-sized group of faculty publicly supported Click.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:05 AM on February 26, 2016 (155 comments)

Is heavy metal the new form of world music?

Metal's appeal has gone global, and is deepening. Leading nations emitting potent metal sounds now include some in southeast Asia, South America, and the Middle East. (SLWSJ)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:43 AM on February 24, 2016 (43 comments)

In praise of those we've lost to the literary wilderness.

Lithub commends twenty undeservedly neglected writers to our attention. Stephen Sparks offers two lists: Ten Great Writers Nobody Reads and 10 More Writers Nobody Reads. The authors, men and women, of various races, come from all over: Brazil, France, Britain, Honduras, the United States, the Maghreb, Italy, Germany, and Zimbabwe.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:30 AM on February 23, 2016 (33 comments)

They shall not pass.

One hundred years ago today began the terrible battle of Verdun. The German strategy called not so much for territorial conquest as for simply killing as many Frenchmen as possible, to "bleed France white". The name of the plan was Operation Gericht, as in judgement or, grimmer still, the place of execution. Up to nearly one million casualties resulted.

The battle was the most bloody and destructive of World War One up until that point. It would last for the rest of 1916, continuous fighting lasting for more than 300 days.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 5:56 AM on February 21, 2016 (48 comments)

"No wonder that bloke's hiding out on the moon."

Charlie Brooker versus 2015 The creator of Black Mirror and some friends look back at 2015. (SLY)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:38 AM on February 11, 2016 (21 comments)

The operation's greatest success was the evacuation.

One hundred years ago, the last Allied day at Gallipoli. "The evacuation had been carried out brilliantly, of that there can be no doubt." (Peter Hart) After months of agonized fighting between forces from multiple nations, the Allies withdrew from Gallipoli, ending one of WWI's most remembered and discussed campaigns. One hundred years ago today the last British soldiers left the peninsula, leaving behind booby traps, animals dead and alive, material destroyed and as booty, and the victorious Turks.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 5:54 PM on January 9, 2016 (15 comments)

The age of uncle books

Why do male authors and subjects dominate history books? Digging into bestselling history books in the United States. (SLS)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:30 AM on January 6, 2016 (30 comments)

The dawn of the Taft Test

The Website Obesity Crisis Maciej Cegłowski calls for downsizing web pages. And "I shouldn't need sled dogs and pemmican to navigate your visual design." (previously)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:46 AM on January 1, 2016 (71 comments)

Star Trek IP owners sue Star Trek fan production

When lawyers attack The fan-made Star Trek movie project Axanar (previously) raised over $1 million. Despite the producers vowing to never make money off of it, Paramount and CBS raised shields and launched lawyers this week.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:35 AM on December 30, 2015 (137 comments)

"We need to take one last look back at the hideous reality of 2015."

Dave Barry, enjoyed and reviled by MeFites, considers the year that was.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 8:02 AM on December 24, 2015 (46 comments)

vers le bas avec Tor!

The French government mulls laws to block Tor and public WiFi. Is this what happens when police ask Santa for presents ("liste au Père Noël", according to Le Monde)?. (via)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:40 AM on December 7, 2015 (30 comments)

Divides over Free Speech and Free Press

A new Pew survey looks at attitudes towards free speech from around the world. It explores how different nations think about free speech and government, the press, religion, minorities, the internet. Also in the report: attitudes towards democracy, religion, and gender. (SLP)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 10:26 AM on December 1, 2015 (56 comments)

"Patriotism is not enough."

On this day one hundred years ago, the German army executed Edith Cavell. She was a British nurse who had worked in Belgium before the First World War, and then helped Belgian, French, and British men escape the country during the German occupation. A military court found her guilty of actively aiding the enemy in wartime, and ordered her execution.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:01 AM on October 12, 2015 (26 comments)

"the trade agreement almost certainly will encounter stiff opposition"

Multinational agreement reached on the Trans-Pacific Partnership treaty. Representatives of a dozen nations agreed on the TPP, a wide-ranging trade agreement for the Pacific region, excluding China. Years of discussion and months of intensive negotiating led to this consensus. Opposition continues, based on a wide range of issues.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 9:35 AM on October 5, 2015 (79 comments)

How does bullying work?

"We should imagine instead a three-way relation of aggressor, victim, and witness" : ruminations on bullying and victimhood from David Graeber.
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 8:54 AM on September 11, 2015 (29 comments)

The creative apocalypse that didn't happen

Steven Johnson looks into concerns that the internet would destroy creators. He finds that while some bad things happened, "economic trends suggest that the benefits are outweighing the costs."
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 7:23 AM on August 20, 2015 (28 comments)

Books that shaped America

From A Curious Hieroglyphick Bible to Our Bodies, Ourselves. In 2012 the United States Library of Congress held an exhibition on what it saw as the most influential books in American history. (via)
posted to MetaFilter by doctornemo at 6:58 AM on August 13, 2015 (7 comments)

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