A four-hour system interruption in September at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri has been attributed to a cat jumping on a technician's keyboard. https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/05/hospital_cat_incident/
Text to speech that's displayed inside the glasses: https://www.xander.tech/xanderglasses
Shaking my fist in the air: “To be considered for this position, in addition to your resume, please create a 3-5 minute Loom video introducing yourself and showcasing your experience. I’d recommend - if possible - doing a screen share and showing some of your work as you talk about your experience. Send them to (email ID).”
Sorry, honey, not on the first date.
PEN America has released a new report on the recent surge of state educational bills targeting librarians, teachers and other school officials. https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/libraries/article/93022-new-pen-america-report-documents-surge-in-educational-intimidation-bills.html
Daktilo: Turn Your Keyboard into a Typewriter. It's a small command-line program that plays typewriter sounds every time you press a key. https://github.com/orhun/daktilo
Many maps of the ocean floor are decades old. The race is on to properly chart them by 2030 – and crowdsourcing could be part of the answer. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20230929-can-a-map-of-the-ocean-floor-be-crowdsourced
A FOIA junkie and a bluegrass band walk into a comedy club — literally. On Tuesday, Oct. 24, FOIA Love will be performing a FOIA-inspired comedy and bluegrass set at the SoHo Playhouse, in New York City. The show takes documents from FOIA requests and uses them as inspiration for jokes, sketches and even songs. Then, a bluegrass band plays songs based on the topics of the requests. If nothing else, it's fun with #FOIA. https://www.foialove.com
How good are your circle drawing skills? Mine suck. https://neal.fun/perfect-circle/
Here's some of what went down last week at the Grace Hopper conference. It was... not the usual thing. https://www.wired.com/story/grace-hopper-celebration-career-fair-men/
It's October 3rd.
Fans of “Mean Girls” have long since celebrated Oct. 3 by rewatching the classic 2004 comedy on TV, and then on streaming services.
This year, viewers can binge-scroll through the entire movie on TikTok.
Paramount Pictures uploaded the film onto the app Tuesday after launching its official “Mean Girls” TikTok account last month. It’s split into 23 parts, including the film's end credits.
This interactive article explains how a mechanical watch works. https://ciechanow.ski/mechanical-watch
Now THIS is how you quit a job.
>> Instead the woman who had bounced from department to department, with no tenure prospects and never earning over $60,000 a year, said with total confidence: “In the future, this lab will be a museum. Don’t touch it.”
https://www.glamour.com/story/katalin-kariko-biontech-women-of-year-2021
Once upon a time, microcomputers weren't all-in-one devices, I wrote in 2015. They were put together from standalone components, each with its technical merits -- and we had to know all about every one of them.
https://www.informationweek.com/it-leadership/11-things-computer-users-will-never-experience-again
Librarians and teachers in elementary schools treat science fiction as a genre that works best for certain cases, like reluctant readers or kids who like what they called “weird,” “freaky” or “funky” books. https://theconversation.com/sci-fi-books-are-rare-in-school-even-though-they-help-kids-better-understand-science-213436
Join Future Tense and the Center for Science and the Imagination for a lighthearted conversation about how to prepare for dire eventualities. The event on October 23 is free and open to everyone https://events.newamerica.org/whatzombiescanteachus
A fast-paced startup simulation game where you play the founder of a tech startup.
https://sillycovalley.com/
Nature enthusiast captures video of a snake eating another snake on safari
https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2023/10/02/africa-snake-eating-snake-alive/3281696254700/
MegaGladys is a collection of utilities for finding information about people who are listed in Wikipedia, via @researchbuzz. https://searchgizmos.com/megagladys/
Writer. Editor. Baseball. Cats. Chocolate. Not necessarily in that order.