@tchambers Hi Tim! I hope you are well. @skry showed me your journalist list, but when I tried to follow the link in the spreadsheet to request being added, it says "Dynamic Link Not Found." Can you help me with this? Thank you very much!
Awe. This is such an enjoyable read by @dwb
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/11/28/journey-to-the-doomsday-glacier
About his journey as science aid on icebreaker Aaron to the #doomsday #glacier #Thwaites in #Antarctica .
Reminds me of how I used to love #Longread journalism on all sorts of topics, like in the New Yorker for instance, or in German media.
But since I became climate-aware in 2018, I just didn't find my time well spent anymore on non-climate-related, or worse, non-climate-aware journalism. The latter is of course ALL journalism, except for 0.0001%. And the former, the non-climate-related journalism is factually non-existent as all topics have a big climate angle. 99.9999% of the journalists just don't know about the climate angle or blatantly refuse to cover it.
So since 2018, what I allow my time to be spent mainly on is scientific papers. And altho it satisfies my curiosity, and kindles even more curiosity, the reading experience is ofc simply not comparable to well-honed story-telling skills like Brown's voice.
Hello #mastodon and #fediverse! I am a newly arrived migrant to these alien lands, but I have been enjoying myself greatly so far. My new friend @voron suggested I write an introductory post.
My name is David. I am an #author and #journalist whose work appears regularly in The New Yorker (including a #climatechange feature later this month that I think you will love), the New York Times, Scientific American, and elsewhere. I generally cover #space and #climate issues, though I also dabble in #wine writing.
My latest book, The Mission, is the definitive (and critically-acclaimed, I am proud to say) account of the incredible true story of a team of scientists and bureaucrats who convinced #NASA to explore #Europa, the moon of #Jupiter. My next book is about the exploration of #Antarctica, including my expeditions there. #bookstodon might find it of interest.
I have been a full-time #writer for 15 years now, and have been very successful. I say this only because I am a credible source in this space, and I would like to help other #writers and #author achieve their dreams and goals as well. It is a hard business being a #journalist or book author, but not an impossible one.
Already, I have been blown away by the kindness of community members who have taken me under their wing here, and I hope to be a positive force and good community member in turn.
In real life, I live in #NewOrleans, #Louisiana, the greatest city in #America. Anyway, thank you all again for the very warm welcome. I feel very happy to be part of this #community.
(That's a lot of #hashtags so far, but I hear that's how we roll here.)
Astroporn
To continue #SexyFuckingSaturnday, the glorious and delicious #Titan.
13 years to collage these pics together. The Titan in the center is covered with it's thick atmosphere. In the others, astronomers used infrared to strip away the thick plushy clouds and reveal the contours and canyons and exquisite naked texture that begs to be fondled by appreciative and aroused fingers.
Fuck me.
In the 1980s, I used to run video arcades for a living, along with repairing the games.
I never knew that the original Street Fighter came out with pneumatic controls!
You might remember the six buttons, three each for punch and kick, with three strength levels. For the pneumatic version, there was one big soft button for each. The harder you hit it, the stronger your attack.
Sadly, player injuries led to this being pulled. This guy's on a quest to recreate them.
Dungeons and Dragons was, to my utter astonishment, a delightful, clever film, and the most fun I’ve had at the movies in the last ten years. The writers obviously respected the source material, and reveled in the rich lore available for plunder. This film rolls a natural 20. #movies #dnd #dungeonsanddragons #fantasy #cinema #film #adventure #review
There’s Something Off About LED Bulbs https://nymag.com/strategist/article/led-light-bulbs-investigation.html
Beautiful QGIS labeling trick from
@newgeographer2:
"Use this make_circle hack in #qgis to create a curved title"
https://twitter.com/newgeographer2/status/1641044984525733889
This year is going to see my journal/log’s 10th anniversary and 100th notebook. I read the whole article and took a lot of notes which inspired me to think about how I can consolidate my capture (logging) habit a bit more into one place, but still keep multiple capture tools. After finishing this essay, it feels like Dave accidentally invented GTD for himself in a different form based on a stream of captured ideas that are moved up in the chain to have projects and next actions. The part at the end where he writes about weekly, monthly, and yearly recaps feels very GTD-esque. I actually tracked my time in a notebook like this before. I had a timestamp of when I started and when I ended a session of work. I have a long history of working in sessions, as I used to do a lot of freelance work, which requires time tracking (a session means that I focus on one task for a more extended period of time). My only question is how Dave transcribes his notebook entries into his digital system? I did it by hand, and it was awful. Anyway, this is an excellent write-up of a fantastic system that I’m going to use as inspiration.
I have three words to say to the White House and all the journalists who’ve said they won’t pay for blue checkmarks.
“Come to Mastodon”
https://www.axios.com/2023/03/31/twitter-verification-white-house-biden-check-mark
Author of THE MISSION (Custom House, 2021). Next book: THE OUTSIDE CATS 🇦🇶 (Mariner Books, 202?). Words in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Scientific American, &c. The wilderness must be explored!
📍 New Orleans, LA