shadowkat: (Contemplative - Warrior)
[personal profile] shadowkat
1. Patent Racism via NPR.

" During the 30-year period after slavery was abolished, when Black Americans owned property and held public office, they filed for patents in numbers equal with white and native inventors -- inventing everything from engines to telephone systems to elevators. But after the segregationist ruling of Plessy v. Ferguson in 1900, Black patenting fell sharply, with many Black inventors being denied access to schools, libraries, fired from jobs in commercial districts, and excluded from communication with other inventors. And after the 1921 massacre of the Black Wall Street -- the Green-Wood community in Tulsa -- patent filings all across the country dropped precipitously again. This event proved that all systems of justice would not provide even the most basic protections to Black Americans -- not for their lives, not for their property.

The economic impact of the more than 1,000 lost patents would have been equivalent to a medium-sized European nation."

2. NYC Mayor once again tries to determine when NYC Schools will re-open, when the Governor states, eh, sorry, I still decided that not you, you idiot. (Sigh. I dislike the Mayor. It's rare that I like the NYC Mayor.)

3. Inside the Coronavirus

"In the graphics that follow, Scientific American presents detailed explanations, current as of mid-June, into how SARS-CoV-2 sneaks inside human cells, makes copies of itself and bursts out to infiltrate many more cells, widening infection. We show how the immune system would normally attempt to neutralize virus particles and how CoV-2 can block that effort. We explain some of the virus's surprising abilities, such as its capacity to proofread new virus copies as they are being made to prevent mutations that could destroy them. And we show how drugs and vaccines might still be able to overcome the intruders. As virologists learn more, we will update these graphics on our Web site (www.scientificamerican.com)."

4. Archaeologists Have a Lot of Dates Wrong for North American Indigenous History But They are Using New Techniques to Get it Right

5. How Wrinkle in Time Changed Sci-Fi Forever

6. 19 Things You're Kitchen Doesn't Really Need ?

Date: 2020-07-03 04:36 am (UTC)
atpo_onm: (mad_skilz)
From: [personal profile] atpo_onm
While in all probability it was on of the Jules Verne or H.G. Wells novels that might have introduced me to the science fiction genre, the fact that I don't remember which of them it was tells you something, in that I clearly remember when I first read A Wrinkle In Time.

Fifth Grade, and the school library had recently started a special section for "advanced readers", which meant kids who were reading at least one grade level above where they were currently. (Because of my chronic illness when I was extremely young, my mother kept me entertained by reading to me. After a while, I asked her to teach me, and she did. I was about 3, maybe 4. By the time I was in kindergarten, I was reading at better than First Grade level. My mother was highly perturbed when the KG teacher complained to her about this. Story for another time!)

I began going through the books they had set aside. Most were interesting or entertaining, but one of them stuck with me like none of the ones before it.

Guess what that one was?

Reading through that link you provided is just more evidence of something I've become quite convinced of as I've gotten older-- your art is your art. If it works for you, brings you joy, or at least satisfaction, what others think is irrelevant. Yes, recognition is great, certainly if your art is how you try to make your living. But at its core, it lives for you, defines and expands the way you interact with existence, for better or worse, often both, sometimes simultaneously.

Date: 2020-07-05 05:41 am (UTC)
atpo_onm: (Default)
From: [personal profile] atpo_onm
Although if writing something, it helps to have a good editor.

And not just with writing-- a few weeks ago, there was a promo clip for a new streaming service that in maybe 60 seconds of simply stunning edits made me desperately want to subscribe to it. (Not in the financial cards, sadly, but-- whomever did that work was insanely gifted. And many great films / TV shows over the years owed their critical and popular success to not just the writer, director, or even the cinematographer, but the editor.

Some directors can do all three, and do them all well. That's the exception. Same with music-- The Beatles were more brilliant as a group than individually, although all were talented in different ways. A while ago I posted about greatly enjoying a DVD documentary about Linda Ronstadt. Here's someone who almost never performed a work of her own, but could take someone else's often perfectly respectable effort... and blow you away with her rendering of it. And do that over and over again, even with widely varying musical genres.

So, yay, editors! You are way too often underappreciated in many fields of artistic endeavor.

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