Thursday, June 27, 2019

POTD: Assumption Cathedral and Eternal Flame

From 2018 08 18 Yaroslavl
Today's photo-of-the-day is from Yaroslavl, Russia, one of the Golden Ring cities northeast of Moscow. In the background is Assumption Cathedral, rebuilt in 2010 after the original was destroyed by the Bolsheviks in 1937. But it's the eternal flame in the foreground that strikes me most. Russia suffered unimaginable losses during World War II. Estimates of the dead, military and civilian, are 20 million people, or even higher.

Bonus photos after the jump.

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Frisco's 2,500-acre Fields Development

According to Steve Brown of The Dallas Morning News, "Frisco officials have gotten a first look at plans for the city's biggest pending development, the more than 2,500-acre Fields development on the Dallas North Tollway...The massive development will have more than 10,000 homes and up to 18 million square feet of commercial space."

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Late Night (2019)

Rotten Tomatoes
Late Night (2019): Dramedy packed with workplace topics, maybe too many: diversity hiring, being the new hire, sexism, growing old, #MeToo, all centered on a talk show's writers' room. Mindy Kaling brings her deft touch to a straightforward story. Emma Thompson is great. B-




Monday, June 24, 2019

POTD: Yaroslavl Market

From 2018 08 18 Yaroslavl

Today's photo-of-the-day is of one of the stalls in the old Yaroslavl market in the heart of Yaroslavl, Russia. Food looked appetizing, samples were delicious, and vendors were all friendly.

Bonus photos after the jump.

Friday, June 21, 2019

Review: Exhalation: Stories

Exhalation: Stories
Amazon
From Exhalation: Stories, by Ted Chiang:

Open quote 
Past and future are the same, and we cannot change either, only know them more fully. My journey to the past had changed nothing, but what I had learned had changed everything, and I understood that it could not have been otherwise. If our lives are tales that Allah tells, then we are the audience as well as the players, and it is by living these tales that we receive their lessons."

Nine science fiction stories of all kinds: time travel, entropy, artificial intelligence, alternate universes, free will, robotic childcare, total recall, SETI, and creationism. Most of the stories have been published elsewhere, but they are new to me — the stories anyway, not the ideas. The ideas aren't fresh, but I suppose the value of sci-fi is telling stories to make hard-to-grasp scientific concepts accessible to the non-scientist.