The Internet Archive survived major copyright losses. What’s next?
"We survived, but it wiped out the library," Internet Archive's founder says.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/11/the-internet-archive-survived-major-copyright-losses-whats-next/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social
Top open source graphics apps, in no particular order. Replace your Windows apps with these!
1. Gimp (raster manip)
2. Inkscape (vectors)
3. Krita (painting)
4. Blender (3D)
5. Scribus (DTP)
6. Darktable (raw editing)
7. Natron (compositor)
8. Kdenlive (video editing)
9. FreeCAD 3D
10. Friction (AE-like anim)
11. Synfig (vector anim)
12. QCad/CAM 2D
13. Pencil2D (anim)
14. Pixelorama (pixel art)
15. Handbrake (video transcoder)
16. Cura or Orca (3D printing)
"As rain and snow fall on landfills, water seeps through waste, including dumped electronics, and picks up pollutants, forming what’s known as landfill leachate. This can contain heavy metals used in old computers and other gadgets and impact everything they come into contact with, from soil, our groundwater, oceans and rivers, and wildlife. Heavy metal exposure can affect some animals’ growth, body condition, and immune system, making them more susceptible to disease."
https://www.earthday.org/gadgets-and-gizmos-and-the-internets-trash-problem/
@loke I’m forever press Windows-D to minimise all windows to see the background
#WritersCoffeeClub 30Oct—Do you tend to include epilogues?
A piece of fiction needs to deliver *closure* at the end—to answer the questions it raises, emotional as well as plot-related ("did they live happily ever after" vs. "did the good guys win"). Needing an epilogue often implies poor planning by the author, because the natural end of the story failed to deliver this pay-off. (Rarely: the epilogue is there to settle a question that wasn't explicit in the story but implied, adding depth.)
Uploaded another Roddenberry Archive interior to my website, the USS Enterprise-D bridge from ST: Generations.
I'm particularly proud of this one as a ton of research went into it. Plus I got to design some of the LCARS that were never seen on screen, with the approval of Mike Okuda.
You can see many more renders at https://tadeodoria.com/projects/AZeR3W?album_id=8654111
And you can walk around this set on The Roddenberry Archive website: https://roddenberry.x.io/2371-uss-enterprise-ncc-1701-d-GEN/?view=Main
In an obscure corner of Kazakhstan, the remains of an ocean millions of years old have created probably the most surreal landscape on earth -- as captured by photographer Daniel Kordan
https://mymodernmet.com/daniel-kordan-kazakhstan-photography/