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I'm a bit of an eclectic mess 🙂 I've been a programmer, journalist, editor, TV producer, and a few other things.

I'm currently working on my second novel which is complete, but is in the edit stage. I wrote my first novel over 20 years ago but then didn't write much till now.

I post about #Coding, #Flutter, #Writing, #Movies and #TV. I'll also talk about #Technology, #Gadgets, #MachineLearning, #DeepLearning and a few other things as the fancy strikes ...

Lived in: 🇱🇰🇸🇦🇺🇸🇳🇿🇸🇬🇲🇾🇦🇪🇫🇷🇪🇸🇵🇹🇶🇦🇨🇦
@greysemanticist I’m curious, is this something you learnt online (where there might be a link perhaps?) Or, something that you discovered on your own?
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From 1974 to 2003, the head of the Catholic Church in the Philippines was Cardinal Sin. When he had visitors, he greeted them with the words ‘Welcome to the house of sin’.

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Hopped off the shuttle at Yaki point for sunset.

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sometimes I come home with leaves and petals in my hair. maybe spiders. I like spring.

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Judge Wyndham's Oak is well documented to be 1000 years old and it's still putting out new leaves and buds

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We have a couple of daffodils in our yard. I'm not sure how they got here. So pretty. @plants

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Laurie Ashton Farook

Cave Sunset

2023-02-24/25 day 252/253 of doing art every day for a year (mostly – I took sick days off). 

I followed a Joel Create tutorial.

For more info, follow this link: https://lmashton.com/cave-sunset/

#ArtMatters #AYearForArt #Procreate #DigitalArt #WomensArt #ArtistsOnMastodon
A digital painting. Viewed from…
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Laurie Ashton Farook

Pink Tree

2023-02-22/23 day 250/251 of doing art every day for a year (mostly – I took sick days off). 

This was a Joel Create tutorial. If you watch the timelapse, you will see that I change my mind a fair bit and redo things. I change the leaves entirely at least three times until I was happy. I’m sure there are faster, more efficient ways to get things done, but I am not there yet. 😀

For more info, follow this link: https://lmashton.com/pink-tree/

#ArtMatters #AYearForArt #Procreate #DigitalArt #WomensArt #ArtistsOnMastodon
A digital painting of a tree wi…
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A striking visualisation of : the date of Kyoto cherry blossoms' reaching full bloom, plotted over the past 1000 years.

Thanks to the cultural significance of cherry blossoms in Japan, we have data on the specific day of the year when a very particular species of cherry blossom (P. jamasakura) reached "full-flowering" (満開) in a specific area on the outskirts of Kyoto (Arashiyama), all the way back to 800 AD.

The trend of the past 50 years is hard to miss…

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Happy to share the early online version of our new study (): https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/acc81a

We use to detect the emergence of distinguishable climate patterns in a new model experiment simulating stratospheric aerosol injection relative to a moderate future emissions scenario.

I have a summary of the paper at https://zacklabe.com/climate-signals-and-explainable-ai/. More on this all soon!

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Various Cladonia lichen and moss landscape among rocks

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Google employees are known as ‘Googlers’. New employees are ‘Nooglers’ and dogs that come to work with their owners are ‘Dooglers.

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@AngelaPreston The wife and I both loved, “The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild” on the Switch 🙂 The great thing about the Switch for us was that we could take the game with us anywhere and play anywhere. But as we get older and eye-sight becomes weaker, the handhelds just don’t work for us 😛

Similarly, we loved the Xbox back in the day when the Kinect was there because we could do active gaming without controllers — like play tennis or bowling. But sadly, they discontinued the Kinect and so it isn’t as compelling to us now.

The other thing that we love about the PlayStation, that I forgot to mention, is that it seems to have more couch co-op games. Sure, couch co-op doesn’t seem to be that popular generally, but we love it since that allows us to play together with two controllers and on the same TV screen and that’s a huge draw for us 🙂
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@AngelaPreston I’m fairly certain that switching to a controller would help you too (and definitely not advocating for switching over to consoles) 🙂 Perhaps you can get a controller from Amazon so that you can try it out and if it isn’t to your liking, you can return it?

I believe what helps the most (at least for me) is that I have something solid to hold on to which gives my palm support and not have my fingers arched over the keyboard. But of course, YMMV.

As far as consoles go, I think my favourite is the PlayStation but that’s mostly historical since that is the first console that I really loved. I have owned/used all three of the current main consoles — Xbox, Nintendo Switch, and PlayStation and I keep coming back to the PlayStation. But that’s also partially due to it having some of my favourite games like the “Horizon” series and the “Uncharted” series ….
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@AngelaPreston I started playing PC games over 30 years ago and using the keyboard always felt very cramped and difficult to me, especially when it came to doing various combos.

When I started using a controller and playing console games (about 20 years ago possibly), I realized that the controller was so much easier to use and my fingers didn’t feel so cramped.

Unfortunately, I’ve never used a controller for PC games since I switched to mostly console-only game play once I got into console gaming. Sure, I’d occasionally play a PC game but most of these were very much mouse-clicking type of games. So other than sharing the fact that I felt a controller was easier than the keyboard, I’m afraid that I don’t have anything much to offer 🙂
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In the 1800s, some people tried to disguise toilets as stacks of books (Image: FrDr; CC BY-SA).

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Mathematically, I'm most interested in (years ago did some research related to ). I love the numbers , , and , and the various days celebrating them! I enjoy and recreationally too. CS/engineering-wise, I'm most interested in and , and , , , , and more!

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Edited 2 years ago

Andy Weir's The Martian astronaut (supposedly a botanist), played by Matt Damon, almost starved due to a misunderstanding of . He waited for his 's first crop to make tubers before starting the next generation when, instead, he could have taken stem cuttings, or even leaf cuttings, and made hundreds of new plants.
Of course that would have killed the dramatic tension.
Learn plant propagation. It can save lives, AND it's not f*cking rocket science. /end rant

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