Posts in five things
Five Things #200

This week’s Five Things…

  1. Very cool: "A circle of deep shafts has been discovered near the world heritage site of Stonehenge, to the astonishment of archaeologists, who have described it as the largest prehistoric structure ever found in Britain."

  2. Basecamp has just launched a new privacy focused email service, HEY.com. It reimagines email in pretty much every way. So if you email me at some point, you might just get a response from my new @hey.com address!

  3. Dave Grohl has picked up his pen to write another piece for The Atlantic. He's also started writing regularly on Medium.

  4. Miniature synths by artist Dan McPharlin.

  5. Hadn't listened to this in a while, Marks To Prove It by The Maccabees. Great album!

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Five Things #199

This week’s Five Things…

  1. The art and science of advanced bubble making

  2. Alex Hern (The Guardian's UK technology editor) writes one of my favourite newsletters. His recent post on statues and history is a good read: “Statues don't create history, and they barely represent it.”

  3. A great episode of Talking Politics on US policing and the practicalities of defunding the police. Talking Politics is consistently excellent.

  4. Ever wondered what a scallop looks like when it swims? Wonder no more.

  5. A fun collection of hand-cranked machines by LA-based artist Federico Tobon.

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Five Things #198

This week’s Five Things…

  1. Where's Wally? in the age of social distancing

  2. I very much agree with this graph and Tim Urban's follow up tweet: "every day I've become more knowledgeable, more aware of my previous misconceptions and biases, and less opinionated as the true complexity of all this is revealed."

  3. An amazing collection of photos of Lake Baikal: "as ferocious winds and cycles of melting and refreezing build and sculpt works of structural beauty—stones supported on wind-worn pedestals, undulating surface ice, encrusted beaches, crazy icicles, frozen methane bubbles, and more"

  4. Following on from Five Things #196 I have another episode of the Reasons to be Cheerful podcast to recommend. This one is about building a digital society that works for everyone.

  5. Musical genres ordered by overall positivity or negativity. There are some entirely predictable rankings but also a good number of surprises!

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Five Things #197

This week’s Five Things…

  1. "A bloody rocket, landing itself, on a moving ship in the middle of the bloody ocean! Insane." That was my reaction too — Space X rocket landing

  2. An interesting episode of the Exponential View podcast on building better cities — Building Better Cities After Covid-19

  3. The best Rube Goldberg Machine you'll ever see — The Swish Machine: 70 Step Basketball Trickshot

  4. Who'd have thought penguins were such big art fans? — https://www.insider.com/penguins-visit-art-museum-for-the-day-2020-5

  5. A handy iOS app for musicians and anyone learning an instrument. Perfect Tempo allows you to change the tempo or loop sections of any song in Apple Music. — Perfect Tempo

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Five Things #196

This week’s Five Things…

  1. I've just got back into listening to Ed Miliband and Geoff Lloyd's podcast Reasons To Be Cheerful. I particularly enjoyed these two recent episodes — People Are Good / A Mission For Sortition

  2. Who'd have thought a 25 minute video of someone solving a seemingly unsolvable sudoku would be this entertaining (I thoroughly enjoyed writing that sentence) — Solving the “The Miracle Sudoku”

  3. I did not know this was a thing: "A calendar house is a house that symbolically contains architectural elements in quantities that represent the respective numbers of days in a year, weeks in a year, months in a year and days in a week." — Calendar house wikipedia entry / Twitter thread of calendar buildings

  4. We watched two great films this week. I recommend them both — The Two Popes / I, Tonya

  5. I've shared this before. One of my favourite albums of 2019 — Miss Universe by Nilüfer Yanya

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