Art and science
15 March, 2024I open a lot of tabs. A lot. Maybe as many as you.
Every now and then I have to plough through them and close down stuff I’ve either dealt with, bookmarked, or just forgotten why I opened it in the first place. I’ve given up doing this on my phone where my Firefox tab count is permanently ∞ (literally).
So here are some interesting tabs I’ve had open this week:
- Who were the people of Stonehenge? Curators’ Tour of The World of Stonehenge – a video by The British Museum (you can also get the accompanying coffee table book)
- This Is Not a Vermeer – a multi-part series about Vermeer, authenticity and the meaning of art
- Resetting digital government in Computer Weekly – sample quote “Adopt systems thinking to improve policy outcomes”
- The section from The Domesday Book which is probably closest to where I live in Bath (just 12 people in the households in the year 1086, about 350-400 in 2024)
- A blog post about tweet archival. I really need to get on this – I’ve done several exports over the years in the hopes of doing….something with it. Hopefully switching to static site publishing will give me a nice easy-to-use home for those exported tweets?
- The US Department of Defense Guide to Detecting Agile Bullshit
Also lots and lots of things about OPML, which chimes nicely with some recent thinking I’ve been having about managing blogrolls. More on that in another post I think.