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Dave's back and in particularly jovial spirits after celebrating his birthday this week (and his football team winning promotion), so let's get this party started shall we? Broadcasting via the magical medium of linked computers, this is Radio Therapy! Tracklist.. 1. Notre Dame ‘My Soul' [Kitsuné] 2. Adriatique x JAiMES x Samm ‘Back To Life' [X Recordings] 3. Tee Mango ‘Moonshots' [Kompakt] 4. Radeckt ‘Otun' [Human By Default] 5. Ivory ‘Hypno Dance' [Exit Strategy] 6. Fat Cosmoe & My Flower ‘Wanna More' [Habitat] 7. Impérieux ‘Still Minus' [Keller] 8. Chemo ‘Glock 43' [Marginalia] 9. Sasha & Joseph Ashworth ‘HiFiHi' [Last Night On Earth] 10. AIKON ‘Ngoma' [Monaberry] 11. Mind Against ‘Babylon' [Habitat] 12. Tim Engelhardt & Solique ‘Symmetry' [Habitat] 13. Danny Howells ‘Thrunk' [Rekids] 14. Tommy Gustav ‘Nobody Else' [Deepalma] This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration
Dave's back and in particularly jovial spirits after celebrating his birthday this week (and his football team winning promotion), so let's get this party started shall we? Broadcasting via the magical medium of linked computers, this is Radio Therapy! Tracklist.. 1. Notre Dame ‘My Soul' [Kitsuné] 2. Adriatique x JAiMES x Samm ‘Back To Life' [X Recordings] 3. Tee Mango ‘Moonshots' [Kompakt] 4. Radeckt ‘Otun' [Human By Default] 5. Ivory ‘Hypno Dance' [Exit Strategy] 6. Fat Cosmoe & My Flower ‘Wanna More' [Habitat] 7. Impérieux ‘Still Minus' [Keller] 8. Chemo ‘Glock 43' [Marginalia] 9. Sasha & Joseph Ashworth ‘HiFiHi' [Last Night On Earth] 10. AIKON ‘Ngoma' [Monaberry] 11. Mind Against ‘Babylon' [Habitat] 12. Tim Engelhardt & Solique ‘Symmetry' [Habitat] 13. Danny Howells ‘Thrunk' [Rekids] 14. Tommy Gustav ‘Nobody Else' [Deepalma] This podcast is hosted by Syndicast.
Hello friends, we are back with another episode of our monthly musical journey. Expect to hear beautiful tunes by Liminal MX debuting on Marginalia, Marc DePause, Liz Cass & Tommy Farrow, Notre Dame, and two tracks on Early Morning, which is quickly becoming my favorite label at the moment. Also Lost Desert is back on All Day I Dream with an amazing 4-Track EP, and of course, you will also hear one of those tracks in this episode. The classic comes from one of the most iconic House Music labels, Subliminal Records. Hope you enjoy this month's show. Cheers. YO -- Join us every 2nd Friday of the Month on DI.FM Deep House Channel or on YouTube. 12:00 EST | 18:00 CET | 17:00 GMT -- If you like the show, consider leaving a Rating & Review on Apple Podcast. View the tracklist here. More Info: ohtm.show
Marginalia Episode is a collaboration between the Stanford Psychology Podcast and Marginalia Science. Marginalia Science is a community committed to promoting work of scholars who are traditionally underrepresented in academia. Their mission really resonated with our values at the Stanford Psychology Podcast.In each Marginalia Episode, we feature a guest who has been featured in the Marginalia Science Monthly Newsletter. In this episode, Enna chats with Professor Erica Bailey at UC Berkeley Haas School of Business. Erica broadly studies the construct of authenticity, asking questions like, how do we know who we are? When do we feel the most like ourselves? Why do we often fail, despite our best efforts, to share our inner world with others? In this episode, we discuss her recent paper on how self-perceptions influence subjective authenticity. To learn more about Erica, you can read the Marginalia Science Newsletter below.Episode on Marginalia Science: https://www.stanfordpsychologypodcast.com/episodes/episode/7927b876/104-special-episode-marginalia-scienceMarginalia Newsletter featuring Erica: https://substack.com/home/post/p-153969383 Erica's Paper: https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/9tc27 Erica's Website: https://sites.google.com/view/ericarbailey Erica's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/erica-bailey-ph-d-22038172/ Erica's Twitter: @ericarbaileyEnna's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ennayuxuanchen/ Enna's Twitter: @EnnaYuxuanChenPodcast Twitter: @StanfordPsyPodPodcast Substack: https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/ Podcast Contact: stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com
Viktor Löfgren alias marginalia_nu besöker Kompilator och berättar om hur han bygger en egen sökmotor, från scratch! Det diskuteras även gammelwebb, bloggande och YouTube-krabbor.Marginalia.nuViktors sökmotorCharlatans spreading misleading beginner advice are the evolutionary crabs of youtube content creatorsHostingen av Kompilator sponsras av Dekalfabriken
Episode: 1279 Two Newtons, an old mechanics text, and the fight against slavery. Today, a moving bit of marginalia.
Kaitlin shares her recent experience of a fast and deep dive into community activism to protect her children's public elementary school, Sutro Elementary, from potential closure. Only weeks ago, Sutro was among 13 schools in the San Francisco Unified School District identified for possible closure due to budget constraints. Kaitlin helped lead a community-wide campaign to keep Sutro open, which culminated in a 600-person protest, a town hall with the district superintendent, and ultimately, a halt to the closure process.This experience led Kaitlin to reflect on the essential role of Public schools as community pillars that provide stability and belonging, especially for low-income, immigrant populations like the students and families at Sutro Elementary—and broader, nationwide implications of school closures. A few Resources Mentioned:Wanting What's Best by Sarah Jaffe: A book exploring public vs. private education in the United StatesThe Problem of Private Schools Current Affairs article by Sparky Abraham (2020): What We Lose When a Neighborhood School Goes Away (WGBH News, 2015): Discusses the impact of school closures and cites work by sociologist Eve Ewing on school closures in Chicago.We invite you to share your own experiences with local activism and to consider how public education affects their communities. Connect with us on Instagram @postpartumproductionpodcast, and visit our Website and Substack, linked below. Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Subscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
Today, I'm talking about something I don't do well in my reading life, but I want to: adding annotation and marginalia to the books I read. I'm quite comfortable with my sticky note and book dart practices, but something is calling me to explore more methods to leave tracks of my thinking in the books I read. Come listen as I explore the how and why behind annotation, marginalia and what I like to call ‘bookish notes to self'. We'll discuss why it matters and I'll offer 5 ways you could bring the practice to your own reading life…which means you're more able to make changes in your actual life, too. What do YOU think about annotation, marginalia and bookish notes to self? I'd love to hear more about your practices in the comments so I can give them a try, too! You'll find the show notes for the episode with links to all of the books and resources mentioned right here: https://www.alitlife.com/2024/10/22/annotation-marginalia-bookish-notes-to-self/ Love this podcast and want more? Consider this your invitation to join my Get Lit(erate) Patreon community! Each month, we take a deep dive into one bookish theme and work to bring it to life in our own lives. You'll get bonus episodes, book calendars, live book club and notebook sessions, special events and much more. Learn more at www.getliterate.co. Get your own Get Lit(erate). notebook to take notes on the books you want to read and notebook ideas you want to try: https://amzn.to/44wELKN If you'd like to support the podcast, consider purchasing some Get Lit(erate). merchandise from my Zazzle store: https://www.zazzle.com/store/alitlife All earnings are funneled right back into the podcast expenses and maintenance fees. Thanks for your support! Follow Stephanie: Website: http://www.alitlife.com/ Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AffinitoLit Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/AffinitoLit Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/AffinitoLit
"The Transition of Juan Romero" is a short story by H. P. Lovecraft, first published in Marginalia, a 1944 Arkham House collection.
Tracklist: 1. Natascha Polké - Poison Of Choice (Nico Morano Remix) [PIAS] 2. RÜFÜS DU SOL - Lately (Adam Ten & Mita Gami Remix) [Rose Avenue] 3. Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano x Inner City 'Good Life' [Armada Music] 4. JPA feat Kate Watts - Fierce [VISIONS] 5. Franz Matthews - Symmetric Dance [HIFI/LOFI] 6. Emanuel Satie, Maga, Rosbeh - Hino [Scenarios] 7. Deckert & Sascha Home – Think Before You Speak [Monaberry] 8. Latteo, D'aria - Easy To Please feat. D'aria [Marginalia] 9. Bodies - Bodies (Ivory (IT) Remix)[Suanda Furniture] 10. Dizharmonia - Osanna (incl. Sezer Uysal Remix) [Deep Tales] 11. Harry Diamond, Cristoph - Hold Me Close (Extended Mix)[Consequence of Society] 12. Rebūke - Along Came Polly (Konstantin Sibold, ZAC & CARMEE Remix)
Tracklist: 1. Natascha Polké - Poison Of Choice (Nico Morano Remix) [PIAS] 2. RÜFÜS DU SOL - Lately (Adam Ten & Mita Gami Remix) [Rose Avenue] 3. Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano x Inner City 'Good Life' [Armada Music] 4. JPA feat Kate Watts - Fierce [VISIONS] 5. Franz Matthews - Symmetric Dance [HIFI/LOFI] 6. Emanuel Satie, Maga, Rosbeh - Hino [Scenarios] 7. Deckert & Sascha Home – Think Before You Speak [Monaberry] 8. Latteo, D'aria - Easy To Please feat. D'aria [Marginalia] 9. Bodies - Bodies (Ivory (IT) Remix)[Suanda Furniture] 10. Dizharmonia - Osanna (incl. Sezer Uysal Remix) [Deep Tales] 11. Harry Diamond, Cristoph - Hold Me Close (Extended Mix)[Consequence of Society] 12. Rebūke - Along Came Polly (Konstantin Sibold, ZAC & CARMEE Remix)
Maria Popova was born in communist Bulgaria and emigrated to the U.S. six days after her 19th birthday back in 2003. She studied at the University of Pennsylvania after “being sold on the liberal arts promise of being taught how to live.” Did it work? Well, yes and no. She spent her family's life savings in the first few weeks on textbooks and, despite attending an American high school in Bulgaria, found herself in a bit of culture shock. “I mean, fitted sheets? Brunch?” She worked hard, a defining Popova characteristic, sometimes eating store brand canned tuna and oatmeal three times a day to get by. “I figured it was the most nutritious combo for the cheapest amount.” At one of her jobs in 2006 a senior leader started sending out a Friday email of miscellany to provoke innovation and then Maria took the project on herself—weaving together write-ups on seemingly unrelated topics. One day was Danish pod homes, another the century-long evolution of the Pepsi logo, another on the design of a non-profit's new campaign to fight malaria. It was becoming clear: You never knew what you were going to get from Maria. And in an era of homogenization that was so ever-delightful. Maria's emails got popular and then she taught herself programming to put it all online on a site called BrainPickings.org. I was blogging on 1000 Awesome Things every night in that internet paleolithic. I still remember so many times I'd be researching for some arcane bit of wisdom or trivia and Google would wisely fire me over to BrainPickings.org. I came to love the site which had a top-of-the-page tagline back then that read: “A scan of the mind-boggling, the revolutionary, and the idiosyncratic.” And like my own blog's 'About' page, this one didn't reveal the author's name, face, or identity. Was the internet just a bit more chat-room-anonymous back then? Or was this just before social media had been invented or figured out they needed our real names to maximize their ad revenues? Either way, Maria and I never got to know each other then … but, thankfully, a full 18 (!) years later the endlessly curious, cool, and erudite Maria Popova is ... still going. George Saunders, our guest in Chapter 75, says Maria Popova manifests "abundant wit, intelligence, and compassion in all of her writings." Seth Godin, our guest in Chapter 3 says Maria "is indefatigable in her pursuits of knowledge and dignity. She does her work without ever dumbing down the work." And Krista Tippett, host of On Being, calls Maria a "cartographer of meaning in a digital age." Perhaps no surprise the Library of Congress has included her project, The Marginalian (once called Brain Pickings), in their permanent web archive of culturally valuable materials I agree with the accolades and find Maria, her blog, and her wonderful books (‘Figuring,' ‘The Snail With the Right Heart,' 'The Universe in Verse,' and ‘A Velocity of Being') truly exquisite and much-needed reflections of everything that makes life beautiful. Like 3 Books, her site The Marginalian has remained free and ad-free over the years. Maria has no staff, no interns, no assistant, and The Marginalian is, in her words, “a thoroughly solitary labor of love that is also my life and my livelihood.” The world can feel heavy, intense, and overwhelming—media, politics, and news pulls us away from those harder-to-measure things that make life wondrous. Love, connection, trust, kindness, passions, memories. The invisible but much-more-important guideposts that emerge as we look back on our lives from the end of it. That's where Maria and The Marginalian rescue us—to point our attention towards the turn of phrase in a poem, a forgotten piece of advice from Ralph Waldo Emerson on trusting ourselves, or to provide a close reading with some stunning artwork from a 100-year-old picture book that helps illuminates one of those impossible-to-articulate emotions that we all share and feel… I loved this conversation with the much-requested Maria Popova on a wonderfully wide-ranging set of topics including, of course, her 3 most formative books…
NB: Yes, I realize that my statement “Nobody ever speaks in rhyme and meter” is in fact a line of iambic pentameter.My book Midlife now exists. Buy it here, or leave it a rating here or hereFor more SLEERICKETS, check out the SECRET SHOW and join the group chatLeave the show a rating here (actually, just do it on your phone, it's easier). Thanks!Wear SLEERICKETS t-shirts and hoodies. They look good!Some of the topics mentioned in this episode:– The Penguin Book of Greek and Latin Lyric Verse, trans. Christopher Childers– The Eight Stages of Translation by Robert Bly– Robert Frost's letter to John Bartlett regarding sentence sound (couldn't find a great copy online)– Sonnets to Orpheus No. 21 by Rainer Maria Rilke (see also Chris's translation below)– Horace i.11– Orchard Trees, January by Richard Wilbur– Heraclitus trans. William Johnson Cory– Diffugere Nives/Horace iv.7, trans. A. E. Housman– J. Kates– The Mysteries of Caesar by Anthony Hecht– An addendum from Chris:I emailed XJ Kennedy and asked him if this epigram is about Bly's essay & this specific Rilke poem. He denied it, but come on, it fits too well:TO A TRANSLATOR You've done it: Rilke talks American Thanks to your perseverance, at the costOf music, rhyme and rhythm, stanza plan--Indeed, in your translation all is lost.This maybe more just for curiosity--my own attempt at the sonnet, just based on Bly's essay, though your point about the oddness of the central conceit is well taken. (We missed, or maybe didn't say as obvious, that earth as a school child who is reciting the poem of spring perhaps makes a bit more sense in Sonnets to Orpheus; and the idea of song after long silence is particularly appropriate to Rilke, at least from what I remember of the story of the composition of the Duino Elegies.)Sonnet to Orpheus 1.21Rilke It's spring again, and the Earth lookslike a child who's worked to memorizehundreds of poems. She lived with booksa long time, and now, she takes the prize. A difficult teacher, that old man whosebeard we liked for its shaggy white.We're asking her the names of the bluesand greens, and she–she gets them right! O lucky Earth on recess, play!You're It, and we–we're in pursuitof your smiles. Joy is the winner's wings. See?–all she learned in her teacher's sway,and everything printed on each deep rootand laborious stalk–she sings, she sings!Frequently mentioned names:– Joshua Mehigan– Shane McCrae– A. E. Stallings– Ryan Wilson– Morri Creech– Austin Allen– Jonathan Farmer– Zara Raab– Amit Majmudar– Ethan McGuire– Coleman Glenn– Alexis Sears– JP Gritton– Alex Pepple– Ernie Hilbert– Joanna PearsonOther Ratbag Poetry Pods:Poetry Says by Alice AllanI Hate Matt Wall by Matt WallVersecraft by Elijah BlumovRatbag Poetics By David Jalal MotamedAlice: Poetry SaysBrian: @BPlatzerCameron: CameronWTC [at] hotmail [dot] comMatthew: sleerickets [at] gmail [dot] comMusic by ETRNLArt by Daniel Alexander Smith
In this episode of Books & Whatnot, book reviewer Suzanne Perez and Marginalia host Beth Golay discuss their recent reads... and a lot of whatnot.
This week we read Ex Marginalia, a collection of essays edited by Chinelo Onwualu that focuses on the experiences of marginalized creators writing speculative fiction. In addition to talking about our favorite essays, we discuss everything from Sofia Tolstoy to Sarah's complicated relationship with her own identity, the joys and pitfalls of masculinity in the media and our own experiences with publishing. Sadly, our multiple digressions talking about how cute our cat was being had to be cut for time. We apologize for what is no doubt a devastating emotional blow. Support the show
Marginalia by Tina Fitzpatrick. With Gary Murphy, Norma Sheahan, Roger Gregg and by Irene Kelleher. Marginalia by Tina Fitzpatrick is directed by Aidan Stanley.
Today's poem takes the peripheral and makes it the primary. Happy reading! Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe
This week we discussed What Feasts at Night, book 2 is the Sworn Soldier series, written by T. Kingfisher and narrated by Avi Roque. We also shared some of our recent 2024 short fiction listens in our Short Fiction Spotlight. What Feasts at Night [Libro.fm] / [Overdrive/Libby] / [Audible] What Moves the Dead [Libro.fm] / [Overdrive/Libby] / [Audible] Short Fiction Spotlight: ”What Becomes of Curious Minds” written by Wen-Yi Lee, narrated by Stefan Rudnicki [Lightspeed] - Issue 165 ”Mom and Dad At the Home Front” written by Sherwood Smith, narrated by Kaitlyn Zivanovich [PodCastle 827]/p> ”Uncle Eddie's Grave” written and narrated by Jendayi Brooks-Flemister [Many Worlds] - Jan 15 ”Marginalia” written by Mary Robinette Kowal, narrated by Erika Ensign [Uncanny Magazine - 56A] ”Nothing of Value” written by Aimee Ogden, narrated by Kate Baker [Clarkesworld] - Issue 208: January 2024 ”The Library” written by N.B. Andersen, narrated by Dani Cutler [Escape Pod 929]
Hello, dear listener, and welcome back to Postpartum Production! We are thrilled to begin Season 3 of the podcast, and to be in community with you once again. Before we kick off Season 3, Kaitlin checks in to provide an update on the podcast, a peek into what we'll be exploring together this season (more on that in a moment!), and some heartfelt reflections on the never-ending challenges of balancing creative work, caregiving, and commerce. How can we create art while paying the bills? How do we play the long game of sustainability, while also living in the present? How does one do it “all” and, as importantly, when? These are questions caregivers, creatives, and those of us just trying to make it work in a capitalist society wrestle with daily. While answers may not be simple, we at Postpartum Production hope to provide you with the tools, inspiration, and support you need as we continue this ongoing pursuit of meaning, impact, and value together as a community. So, what's in store for Season 3? Get ready for fascinating, powerful conversations as we speak with artists across genres and mediums- painters, poets, comics, and creatives of all kinds- about the intersection of Birth and Creativity. We delve into the profound connection between the body, the birthing process and the artistic journey, exploring how the transformative experiences of birth inspire and shape creative expression. We can't wait to share these conversations with you.Lastly, we would love to hear from you: the questions you're struggling to answer, the tough topics you feel deserve discussion and debate, or just simply what you are experiencing in this moment. Reach out to us any time via our Website, Instagram, or Substack. We appreciate your support and look forward to continuing our journey together this season.Referenced in today's episode:An interview with Rick Rubin: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/jan/10/the-creative-act-a-way-of-being-by-rick-rubin-review-thoughts-of-the-bearded-beat-masterNew Yorker Article on mentorship and Early/Late blooming artists: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2008/10/20/late-bloomers-malcolm-gladwellFor regular updates:Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcast Subscribe to our newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com
This is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on February 25th, 2024.This podcast was generated by wondercraft.ai(00:38): Hallucination is inevitable: An innate limitation of large language modelsOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39499207&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(02:32): Osquery: An sqlite3 virtual table exposing operating system data to SQLOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39501281&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(03:53): Marginalia: 3 YearsOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39501061&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(05:44): Earth just experienced its hottest 12 months in recorded historyOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39498345&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(07:35): Coroutines in C (2000)Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39502276&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(09:01): Inside North Korea's Forced Labor ProgramOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39504981&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(11:05): Mamba Explained: The State Space Model Taking On TransformersOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39501982&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(12:56): TSMC is having more luck building in Japan than in AmericaOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39498863&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(14:40): You almost never see a clock at the mallOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39500263&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(15:55): Microsoft Is Driving Users AwayOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39504703&utm_source=wondercraft_aiThis is a third-party project, independent from HN and YC. Text and audio generated using AI, by wondercraft.ai. Create your own studio quality podcast with text as the only input in seconds at app.wondercraft.ai. Issues or feedback? We'd love to hear from you: team@wondercraft.ai
I've been writing an adaptation! (Frame Narrative and it's on March 8-30, 2024 at The Old Fitz in Sydney.) Working with source material has changed some parts of my writing process. So I thought it could be useful to share what's been helpful along the way.I speak about:- The many kinds of adaptations: retellings, reimaginings, cover songs, fan fiction, prequels, sequels etc. - Bridging the gap between the source material and the liveness of theatre (or whatever form you write in.)- The relationship between form and content.- Using research to broaden your access points to the material and find new ideas and inspiration. - Imagine filtering a story through your voice and aesthetic like it's a cover song. How does this particular story sound in your voice? - Marginalia and the long history of readers writing in the margins of books.- Working with the expectations audiences bring to a work when they know it's an adaptation. Can you deliver on the expectations that open up possibilities, and subvert the ones that don't.I reference:- G Flip's cover of Cruel Summer by Taylor Swift on triple j Like A Version - 'Like A Version and the art of making a cover song' by Madi Chwasta on ABCSee Monument at Red Stitch Actors' Theatre!By Emily Sheehan and directed by Ella CaldwellFebruary 20 - March 10, 2024Book now: https://www.redstitch.net/monument-2024See Frame Narrative at The Old Fitz Theatre!By Emily Sheehan and directed by Lucy ClementsMarch 8-30, 2024Book now: https://www.oldfitztheatre.com.au/frame-narrative
Marginalia Episode is a collaboration between Stanford Psychology Podcast and Marginalia Science, a community committed to including, integrating, advocating for, and promoting members who are not typically promoted by the status quo in academia. In each Marginalia Episode, we feature a guest who has been featured in the Marginalia Science Monthly Newsletter. In this episode, Anjie chats with Dr. Cristina Salvador, an Assistant Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Duke University. Cristina examines how culture interfaces with biology to influence our thinking, feeling, and behavior. She analyzes the influence of culture at multiple levels, including the brain, everyday language use, implicit measures, and big data. In this episode, we start our conversation on her recent paper titled “Emotionally expressive interdependence in Latin America: Triangulating through a comparison of three cultural zones.”. To learn more about Cristina, you can read the Marginalia Science Newsletter attached below. Episode on Marginalia Science: https://www.stanfordpsychologypodcast.com/episodes/episode/7927b876/104-special-episode-marginalia-scienceMarginalia Newsletter featuring Cristina:https://marginaliascience.substack.com/p/newsletter-september-2023Cristina's paper; https://psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/2024-15733-001.pdfCristina's lab website:https://sites.duke.edu/culturelab/ Crstina's twitter: @cris_esalvadorAnjie's: website: anjiecao.github.ioAnjie's Twitter @anjie_caoPodcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPodPodcast Substack https://stanfordpsypod.substack.com/Let us know what you thought of this episode, or of the podcast! :) stanfordpsychpodcast@gmail.com
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: AI #45: To Be Determined, published by Zvi on January 5, 2024 on LessWrong. The first half of the week was filled with continued talk about the New York Times lawsuit against OpenAI, which I covered in its own post. Then that talk seemed to mostly die down,, and things were relatively quiet. We got a bunch of predictions for 2024, and I experimented with prediction markets for many of them. Note that if you want to help contribute in a fun, free and low-key, participating in my prediction markets on Manifold is a way to do that. Each new participant in each market, even if small, adds intelligence, adds liquidity and provides me a tiny bonus. Also, of course, it is great to help get the word out to those who would be interested. Paid subscriptions and contributions to Balsa are of course also welcome. I will hopefully be doing both a review of my 2023 predictions (mostly not about AI) once grading is complete, and also a post of 2024 predictions some time in January. I am taking suggestions for things to make additional predictions on in the comments. Table of Contents Copyright Confrontation #1 covered the New York Times lawsuit. AI Impacts did an updated survey for 2023. Link goes to the survey. I plan to do a post summarizing the key results, once I have fully processed them, so I can refer back to it in the future. Introduction. Table of Contents. Language Models Offer Mundane Utility. Google providing less every year? Language Models Don't Offer Mundane Utility. Left-libertarian or bust. GPT-4 Real This Time. It's not getting stupider, the world is changing. Fun With Image Generation. The fun is all with MidJourney 6.0 these days. Deepfaketown and Botpocalypse Soon. Confirm you are buying a real book. They Took Our Jobs. Plans to compensate losers are not realistic. Get Involved. Support Dwarkesh Patel, apply for Emergent Ventures. Introducing. DPO methods? 'On benchmarks' is the new 'in mice.' In Other AI News. Square Enix say they're going in on generative AI. Doom? As many estimates of p(doom) went up in 2023 as went down. Why? Quiet Speculations. Some other predictions. The Week in Audio. Eric Jang on AI girlfriend empowerment. Rhetorical Innovation. Machines and people, very different of course. Politico Problems. Some sort of ongoing slanderous crusade. Cup of Coffee. Just like advanced AI, it proves that you don't love me. Aligning a Smarter Than Human Intelligence is Difficult. What's The Plan? People Are Worried About AI Killing Everyone. Daniel Dennett, Cory Booker. The Lighter Side. Oh, we are doing this. Language Models Offer Mundane Utility Remember that one line from that book about the guy with the thing. Dan Luu tries to get answers, comparing ChatGPT, Google and other options. Columns are queries, rows are sources. Marginalia appears to be a tiny DIY search engine focusing on non-commercial content that I'd never hear of before, that specializes in finding small, old and obscure websites about particular topics. Cool thing to have in one's toolbelt, I will be trying it out over time. Not every cool new toy needs to be AI. While ChatGPT did hallucinate, Dan notes that at this point the major search engines also effectively hallucinate all the time due to recency bias, SEO spam and scam websites. He also notes how much ads now look like real search results on Google and Bing. I have mostly learned to avoid this, but not with 100% accuracy, and a lot of people doubtless fall for it. Find out how many prime numbers under one billion have digits that sum to nine, via having code check one by one. I mean, sure, why not? There is an easier way if you already know what it is, but should the right algorithm know to look for it? Language Models Don't Offer Mundane Utility All LLMs tested continue to cluster in the left-libertarian quadrant. Eliezer Yudkow...
Dave's back with another transmission from the mothership. Another delivery of top tuneage of the colossal variety. Just add volume and enjoy, this is Radio Therapy! Tracklist.. 1. Charles Webster x Ursula Rucker ‘Begin Anew' [Selador] 2. Tim Engelhardt & Maga ‘Reiki' [Scenarios] 3. Super Flu 'Tool Time' [Didschn] 4. Nicolas Masseyeff ‘Double Visage' (Oxia) [Systematic] 5. Ninetoes ‘Prove it' [Head To Toe] 6. Althoff & Elif ‘Run Wild' [Marginalia] 7. EdOne ‘Oh Men' [Surrealism] 8. Einmusik & Diana Miro ‘Let Me Out' [Embassy One] 9. Dave Seaman ‘Inflammable Contraband' [Selador] 10. Yet More ‘Y'all Feel That' [Siamese] 11. Frankey & Sandrino ‘Comportamento' [Sum Over Histories] 12. Henri Bergmann & Hardt Antoine ‘Can't Escape' [Automatik] 13. James Harcourt ‘Awakening' [ICONYC] This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration
Dave's back with another transmission from the mothership. Another delivery of top tuneage of the colossal variety. Just add volume and enjoy, this is Radio Therapy! Tracklist.. 1. Charles Webster x Ursula Rucker ‘Begin Anew' [Selador] 2. Tim Engelhardt & Maga ‘Reiki' [Scenarios] 3. Super Flu 'Tool Time' [Didschn] 4. Nicolas Masseyeff ‘Double Visage' (Oxia) [Systematic] 5. Ninetoes ‘Prove it' [Head To Toe] 6. Althoff & Elif ‘Run Wild' [Marginalia] 7. EdOne ‘Oh Men' [Surrealism] 8. Einmusik & Diana Miro ‘Let Me Out' [Embassy One] 9. Dave Seaman ‘Inflammable Contraband' [Selador] 10. Yet More ‘Y'all Feel That' [Siamese] 11. Frankey & Sandrino ‘Comportamento' [Sum Over Histories] 12. Henri Bergmann & Hardt Antoine ‘Can't Escape' [Automatik] 13. James Harcourt ‘Awakening' [ICONYC] This podcast is hosted by Syndicast.
This week, a Best OF episode revisiting our conversation with Maria Popova, the creator and writer behind The Marginalian (formerly known as Brain Pickings). For the past 16 years, The Marginalia has been a daily—perhaps even hourly—exploration of wonder in our world as seen through the lenses of how we as humans express ourselves in our own creativity, our intellectual curiosity, our sadnesses and griefs, and in our greatest loves and joys. Gardening and gardeners are recurrently among the human endeavors Maria has explored these many years. This is a light of a conversation in the best spirit of quantum gardening as we tend toward the fullness of Autumn's splendor. Join us! Cultivating Place now has a donate button! We thank you so much for listening over the years and we hope you'll support Cultivating Place. We can't thank you enough for making it possible for this young program to grow even more of these types of conversations. The show is available as a podcast on SoundCloud, iTunes, and Google Podcast. To read more and for many more photos, please visit www.cultivatingplace.com.
Hailed a “stirring voice” by the New York Times, Roopa Mahadevan is a leading second-generation Indian classical and crossover vocalist in the American diaspora known for her collaborative spirit. She leads the crossover ensemble Roopa in Flux, where she works with musicians in jazz, soul/R&B, and various global traditions, directs the innovative choir Navatman Music Collective, and sings for leading Bharathanatyam and modern dancers around the world. She has performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, MET Museum, Kennedy Millenium Stage and is a soloist on Christopher Tin's Grammy Award-winning Calling All Dawns.She and Emma discuss how to find your ‘flow' in improv, the influence of her gurus and why Bulgarian choir is the perfect match with classical Indian music!Roopa's websiteRoopa's Album, Roopa in Six YardsThe three questions:Was there a piece of art that changed everything for you?A class by artist and activist Daniel Valdez collegeIs there a piece of art that you respect, but don't like necessarily?"Confessional art"Give us a recommendation!Maria Popova's The Marginalia website/newsletter (formerly known as Brain Pickings)
Natalie Grueninger speaks with Professor Micheline White about her work on Katherine Parr's gift books and her discovery of some previously overlooked marginalia written by Henry VIII. Read Professor White's article: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/renaissance-quarterly/article/katherine-parrs-giftbooks-henry-viiis-marginalia-and-the-display-of-royal-power-and-piety/8402F8B9E7F8369B47F8C8F7A965BF16 Find out more about your host at https://www.nataliegrueninger.com Buy Talking Tudors merchandise at https://talkingtudors.threadless.com/ Support Talking Tudors on Patreon Join 365 Days with the Tudor Queens!
In this special episode, Anjie chats with Jordan Wylie and Eliana Hadjiandreou, who make up ½ of the incoming leadership of Marginalia Science. Marginalia science is a place to promote and learn about the work of social scientists who are women, gender non-conforming, BIPOC, LGBTQI, disabled, and/or in any other way not promoted by the status quo in academia. They send out monthly newsletters on their Substack highlighting the awesome work of their community, and they also hold events to create space for community members to gather. Links:Subscribe to Marginalia Science's newsletter via Substack!Marginalia science website: https://www.marginaliascience.com/Marginalia science's twitter: @marginalia_sciCheck out Marginalia Science's 2019 academic paper in Nature Human Behavior hereGet in touch with Marginalia science: marginaliascience@gmail.comAnjie's: website: anjiecao.github.ioAnjie's Twitter @anjie_cao Podcast Twitter @StanfordPsyPod
Host Patrick Breen sits down with ella jane, a rising star in the indie pop world, to discuss her sophomore album 'Marginalia,' her latest musical influences, and her upcoming performance at this year's GovBall. The Pop Culture Nerd podcast is available on Spotify, Apple, and Google podcasts and is edited, produced, and hosted by @patrick_breen. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/patrick-breen5/support
Episode: 2625 Strange inhabitants of Amy Darlington Sharpless's Natural Philosophy book. Today, Amy's Book.
Everett is a curator, organizer, and adventure cyclist currently based in the coastal mountains of a region now known as Santa Cruz, CA. For over a decade they've been using bicycle travel as a way of exploring their relationship to the worlds within and without. As a trans and genderqueer adventure cyclist they find themself seeking out the in between places, finding trails and unpaved roads to connect the dots between people, places and ideas. After working for several years as a tours specialist and cycling guide, they left the full time bike life and returned to the world of arts nonprofits where they now work to organize collaborative exhibitions that help dismantle social norms and share underrepresented stories. You can find their essays on art and cycling in Adventure Cyclist Magazine and The Bikepacking Journal. We talk about, connecting with nature as a way of connecting with self, about healing and recovery, about route-creation as art-making, artistic inspirations freedom and play and so much more. They also went into depth about upcoming work in Iceland supported by their affiliation with the non-profit We Got Next. Links for Everett EpisodeCheck out Everett on Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/grandpaeverett/ We Got NextWeGotNext amplifies individual stories of adventure and activism from communities that have been underrepresented in outdoor and environmental spaces.https://www.we-got-next.org/ Robert Smithson, Spiral JettyGreat Salt Lake, Utahhttps://www.diaart.org/visit/visit-our-locations-sites/robert-smithson-spiral-jetty Nancy Holt (American, 1938–2014), Sun Tunnels, 1973–76, Great Basin Desert, Utahhttps://umfa.utah.edu/land-art/sun-tunnels Radical Adventure Ridershttps://radicaladventureriders.com/ The Golden SpikeNational Park: https://www.nps.gov/gosp/index.htm Andy Goldsworthy: Storm King Wall 1997 – 1998 Significant Works – Sue Hubbardhttps://artlyst.com/features/andy-goldsworthy-storm-king-wall-1997-1998-significant-works-sue-hubbard/ The Library of WaterStykkishólmur, IcelandBy Roni Hornhttps://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-library-of-water-stykkisholmur-iceland
Hola, José Arias Almánzar. Soy periodista y escritor. Provengo de una familia de periodistas, escritores y maestros. He trabajado en la mayoría de los medios de prensa de la República Dominicana. También laboré como asesor de prensa de la Cámara de Diputados y consultor de organismos nacionales e internacionales. Actualmente laboro en el Departamento de Comunicación y Relaciones Públicas del Ministerio de Economía, Planificación y Desarrollo (MEPyD). En abril del año 2022, hace ya un año (cómo pasa el tiempo…) publiqué mi primer libro de minificción, Marginalia. Si la suerte me acompaña, la salud y las divinidades, publicaré más libros. Entre ellos, una novela en ciernes sobre historia sobre inmigración “en los paise”. ¡Ah! Me olvidaba… publicó cada domingo en el digital Acento una columna “Crónicas de la Bohemia”. ¡¡¡No dejen de leerla…!!!
You might know him as a Tony Award–winner, a playwright, or perhaps as the singer/songwriter "Escape"... better known as the "piña colada" song. But as we discover in this episode of Marginalia, Rupert Holmes is also an author, and his new fictional world is so intricate, it's been 12 years in the making.
Patreon backer Jeppe brings you this special episode all about the weird little creatures from the edges of medieval manuscripts! If you're enjoying the show, why not consider supporting it on Patreon? You'll get access to lots of new bonus content, including my other podcast, Patron Deities! Thanks to Ray Otus for our thumbnail image. The intro music is a clip from "Solve the Damn Mystery" by Jesse Spillane, used under a Creative Commons Attribution License.
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 25, 2023 is: marginalia mahr-juh-NAY-lee-uh noun Marginalia is a plural noun that refers to notes or other marks written in the margins of a text, and to nonessential matters or items. // The students loved flipping through their literature textbooks to find the marginalia left behind by former students. // She found the book's treatment of not only the major events but also the marginalia of Scandinavian history fascinating. See the entry > Examples: “The last time I wrote about culling books—six years ago—nostalgia was my biggest obstacle. Just about every book I opened contained some sort of ephemera that stopped me: a bookmark from a long-gone bookstore, a scribble from a mostly-forgotten college class, an old photograph or letter, or, most nostalgic of all, my late father's signature and marginalia.” — Laurie Hertzel, The Star Tribune (Minneapolis, Minnesota), 14 Aug. 2020 Did you know? In the introduction to his essay titled “Marginalia,” Edgar Allan Poe wrote: “In getting my books, I have always been solicitous of an ample margin; this not so much through any love of the thing in itself, however agreeable, as for the facility it affords me of penciling suggested thoughts, agreements and differences of opinion, or brief critical comments in general.” At the time “Marginalia” was first published in 1844, marginalia was only a few decades old despite describing something—notes in the margin of a text—that had existed for centuries. An older word, apostille (or apostil), refers to a single annotation made in a margin, but that word is rarely used today. Even if you are not, like Poe, simply ravenous for scribbling in your own books, you likely know marginalia as a telltale sign that someone has read a particular volume before you.
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 25, 2023 is: marginalia mahr-juh-NAY-lee-uh noun Marginalia is a plural noun that refers to notes or other marks written in the margins of a text, and to nonessential matters or items. // The students loved flipping through their literature textbooks to find the marginalia left behind by former students. // She found the book's treatment of not only the major events but also the marginalia of Scandinavian history fascinating. See the entry > Examples: “The last time I wrote about culling books—six years ago—nostalgia was my biggest obstacle. Just about every book I opened contained some sort of ephemera that stopped me: a bookmark from a long-gone bookstore, a scribble from a mostly-forgotten college class, an old photograph or letter, or, most nostalgic of all, my late father's signature and marginalia.” — Laurie Hertzel, The Star Tribune (Minneapolis, Minnesota), 14 Aug. 2020 Did you know? In the introduction to his essay titled “Marginalia,” Edgar Allan Poe wrote: “In getting my books, I have always been solicitous of an ample margin; this not so much through any love of the thing in itself, however agreeable, as for the facility it affords me of penciling suggested thoughts, agreements and differences of opinion, or brief critical comments in general.” At the time “Marginalia” was first published in 1844, marginalia was only a few decades old despite describing something—notes in the margin of a text—that had existed for centuries. An older word, apostille (or apostil), refers to a single annotation made in a margin, but that word is rarely used today. Even if you are not, like Poe, simply ravenous for scribbling in your own books, you likely know marginalia as a telltale sign that someone has read a particular volume before you.
A deep dive on marginalia. What is it, why should you do it, and how does it reveal the more joyful side of history's most famous sadboy, Edgar Allan Poe? All that and more in this extended love letter to writing in books.Sponsor:ZocDoc, zocdoc.com/coolstuffLinks:Edgar Allan Poe on the Joy of Marginalia and What Handwriting Reveals about Character (The Marginalian) Marginalia by Edgar Allan Poe How to Read a Book by Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren Meaning in the Margins: On the Literary Value of Annotation (Literary Hub)Historical Figures who'd be outrageous online? (r/AskHistory) Drool over the personal bookplates of 18 famous writers. (Literary Hub)How Leaning into Marginalia Helped Me Accept the Loss of Control That Comes with Publication (Literary Hub)Please Report Your Bug Here by Josh Riedel Ryan Holiday's 3-Step System for Reading Like a Pro (Ryan Holiday, YouTube) Edgar Allan Poe Watches Too Much Tiktok (McSweeney's)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this episode of Marginalia, KMUW's Beth Golay with De'Shawn Charles Winslow about the fictional town, some of the surprises he found when writing Decent People, and how readers might recognize some of their own biases.
In this episode of Marginalia, KMUW's Beth Golay speaks with author Oindrila Mukherjee about her debut novel, The Dream Builders, and its diverse cast of characters.
On this episode of Marginalia, KMUW's Beth Golay talks to Sonali Dev about breaking stereotypes at every age, how Bollywood films influenced her, and how she crafted some laugh-out-loud moments.
On this episode of Marginalia, playwright Julia May Jonas explains how the pandemic forced a pivot from writing for the stage to prose, resulting in her debut novel, "Vladimir."
On this episode of Marginalia, Beth Golay talks with author Michelle Huneven about her novel, "Search," which follows a church search committee's year-long quest to find a new minister.
On this episode of Marginalia, KMUW's Beth Golay visits with a teacher who wants his book to leave a lasting impact.
In this episode we dig into Marginalia! After a brief revision of our episodes on Print Culture and Fan Studies, we take a look at the it's long histoy using Heather Jackson's book, Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books (2001). Marcelle begrudgingly leads us through the contribution of the Romantics (specifically Samuel Taylor Coleridge) and we ultimately get to take a long hard look at Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Not just the book! We actually get to think through Harry Potter and his relationship to the Half-Blood Prince! How can the history and study of marginalia help us think through young Snape's notes? Why are the annotations in Harry's Potions textbook so enticing? For access to our transcripts, visit ohwitchplease.ca. To become a Patreon supporter head to Patreon.com/ohwitchplease. To stay in touch, follow us everywhere @ohwitchplease. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.