home.social

Search

1000 results for “thisstage”

  1. I'd forgotten how good this stage was! Squee!

    [#2023MAMA] SEVENTEEN (세븐틴) MAMA PERFORMANCE COMPILATION (2023 MAMA 수상자 역대 마마 무대 모아보기)
    youtube.com/watch?v=VZWw00ELQK

    #Seventeen #Mama2023

  2. Update 22 May

    Big news this week is the start of the Impossible Futures (IF) Backing Phase. We’re delighted to reveal the 12 apps that have made it to this stage. Congratulations to Autonomi Browser Extension, Autonomi Community Token, AutVid, Colony, Friends, IMIM, Mutant, Pirate Radio, Queeni AI Assistant, REGRU, Ryyn and SOMA and huge thanks to all the other contenders too.

    forum.autonomi.community/t/upd

    #decentralization #decentralized #decentralisation #maidsafe #autonomi

  3. Falling Apart…

    I’m writing this from a hotel room in Ilulissat, rather than Qaanaaq where I had intended to be arriving shortly, because our plane has been cancelled due to bad weather (at time of writing the airport was measuring gusts of 14 m/s, so I’m actually quite glad it was cancelled).

    Weather and flight cancellations are an eternal hazard when doing fieldwork in Greenland, but in this case it also means an impact on our planned fieldwork, because the sea ice is falling apart. And rather earlier than usual (though we have not yet done a systematic review to prove this). In fact, part of the reason for coming here in May (instead of my usual March trip) was to investigate an interesting event that happened earlier this spring. In the animation of satellite pictures below you can see the sea ice rather dramatically falling apart in mid-April and then again at the end of April.

    The March to May sea ice season from Sentinel 2 in NW Greenland

    To understand what is happening and why it’s unusual, first a bit of background. As I have written before, my DMI colleagues have been working up in NW Greenland for about 15 years on a programme of ocean measurements in the fjord (see map below). I joined about 5 years ago, working in the melange zone of the glaciers at the head of Inglefield Bredning (PSA: a paper we recently submitted about this programme will hopefully be online soon). We use the sea ice as highway and stable platform for observations, so it’s pretty important for us and came to the conclusion it wa squite important for some parts of the glaciers too. The local community, with whom we work closely use it also for travelling, hunting and fishing from. It’s extremely important for them.

    The region of North West Greenland we’re talking about

    Normally there’s pretty thick (~1m) sea ice covering the whole of Inglefield Bredning (Gulf of Inglefield, also known as Kangerlussuaq, but not that one) out to the islands of Qeqertarsuaq and Kiatak. You can seen an example of what this looks like normally in the satellite animation from 2020, which happens to be when my first trip out on to the sea ice in Qaanaaq took place at the end of May and beginning of June. We were actually very lucky, we had great weather, got very close to the ice edge and watched narwhals swimming out in the North Water polynya. (Yes, sometimes I wonder how I managed to get this job too). The animation below is Sentinel-2 images as cloud free as I could find them from that first field season. As you can see, the sea ice already in March was much much more extensive than this year at the same time. And perhaps that is part of the answer.

    It’s probably worth pointing out at this stage that although there were some pretty warm (unusually so) spikes in March and April, the sea ice breakup in April was probably largely driven by ocean swell, and perhaps some winds which were strong, though not excessively so as far as we can see in the observations. The latest break-up seems to be driven also by high winds.

    Back to our current field season. We had in fact planned a brief trip up here already – I am currently setting up a project looking at snow processes with the team and we had planned to install and test some new instruments and protocol that we hope to use in Antarctica later this year (more on all of that later hopefully). However, as the soon to be published preprint shows, I and the team have developed pretty extensive sea ice interests recently, so this unusual behaviour rather piqued our curiosity.

    We have a lot of questions:

    Why did it happen this year? Is it really the earliest in the satellite record? What makes the ice vulnerable? Composition, thickness, temperature? Is the ocean driving it or the atmosphere or both (it’s usually both), and what makes this year so unusual? Further down the line, can we model it and use those simulations to understand if this is a single aberration or likely to be more common in the future? And what impact will the earlier breakups have on the ecosystem, the adjacent glaciers and the local community?

    Or fieldtrip thus appeared an excellent opportunity to grab some real data on all of these points. Our colleague Henriette Skourup at DTU-Space was kind enough to lend us one of her instruments, which we shipped up last minute to allow us to do an add-on. It is all currently sitting there waiting for us.

    Unfortunately the sea ice is not waiting for us, if the photos from my colleague in Qaanaaq, Aksel are anything to go by.

    A large and widening crack in the sea ice in front of Qaanaaq. The small objects on the sea ice (fishing gear?) suggest we were not the only ones surprised). Credit: Aksel Ascanius, DMI

    The high winds which grounded our plane have also been busy on the sea ice, which is falling apart in the bay with surprising speed as far as I can see. We are still waiting for today’s optical imagery but the quick look from radar based Sentinel-1 suggests cracks widening rapidly as the photo above confirms.

    Temperature observations from Qaanaaq airport

    With a bit of luck we will get to Qaanaaq on Thursday (immaqa) to see if our sea ice research plan can go ahead. At this stage I rather doubt it. But it will very much depend on the next few hours. The wind speeds are quite high still but the temperature which was well above freezing has now dropped down to just below.

    Wind observations from Qaanaaq airport

    We are fortunate that we work with local hunters on the sea ice who are immensely experienced. The first rule is always safety first. We do have *a lot* of other work to do and rather fewer days to do it all in, so either way we’ll be busy. Ffor now, it’s keep checking in with the weather, the satellite images and our friends in Qaanaaq and use the time in Ilulissat wisely – in our case, it’s time to write some papers. And one of them is all about sea ice.

    To be continued…

    All satellite imagery on this page is from the European Space Agency Sentinel-2 mission, processed on the Copernicus EO Browser – a FREE!! and easy to use entry point to use ESA data. Weather observations are from Qaanaaq airport, operated by Mittarfeqarfiit A/S – Grønlands Lufthavne (Greenland Airports) and processed by DMI. It’s actually pretty nice how much high quality data we have access to these days…

    This fieldwork is undertaken as part of the PRECISE (Predicting Ice Sheets on Earth) project funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and by the ESA Climate Change Initiative for Sea Ice and the Climate Modelling Research Group

    #Arctic #fieldwork #Greenland #Qaanaaq #satelliteData #Science #SeaIce

  4. Falling Apart…

    I’m writing this from a hotel room in Ilulissat, rather than Qaanaaq where I had intended to be arriving shortly, because our plane has been cancelled due to bad weather (at time of writing the airport was measuring gusts of 14 m/s, so I’m actually quite glad it was cancelled).

    Weather and flight cancellations are an eternal hazard when doing fieldwork in Greenland, but in this case it also means an impact on our planned fieldwork, because the sea ice is falling apart. And rather earlier than usual (though we have not yet done a systematic review to prove this). In fact, part of the reason for coming here in May (instead of my usual March trip) was to investigate an interesting event that happened earlier this spring. In the animation of satellite pictures below you can see the sea ice rather dramatically falling apart in mid-April and then again at the end of April.

    The March to May sea ice season from Sentinel 2 in NW Greenland

    To understand what is happening and why it’s unusual, first a bit of background. As I have written before, my DMI colleagues have been working up in NW Greenland for about 15 years on a programme of ocean measurements in the fjord (see map below). I joined about 5 years ago, working in the melange zone of the glaciers at the head of Inglefield Bredning (PSA: a paper we recently submitted about this programme will hopefully be online soon). We use the sea ice as highway and stable platform for observations, so it’s pretty important for us and came to the conclusion it wa squite important for some parts of the glaciers too. The local community, with whom we work closely use it also for travelling, hunting and fishing from. It’s extremely important for them.

    The region of North West Greenland we’re talking about

    Normally there’s pretty thick (~1m) sea ice covering the whole of Inglefield Bredning (Gulf of Inglefield, also known as Kangerlussuaq, but not that one) out to the islands of Qeqertarsuaq and Kiatak. You can seen an example of what this looks like normally in the satellite animation from 2020, which happens to be when my first trip out on to the sea ice in Qaanaaq took place at the end of May and beginning of June. We were actually very lucky, we had great weather, got very close to the ice edge and watched narwhals swimming out in the North Water polynya. (Yes, sometimes I wonder how I managed to get this job too). The animation below is Sentinel-2 images as cloud free as I could find them from that first field season. As you can see, the sea ice already in March was much much more extensive than this year at the same time. And perhaps that is part of the answer.

    It’s probably worth pointing out at this stage that although there were some pretty warm (unusually so) spikes in March and April, the sea ice breakup in April was probably largely driven by ocean swell, and perhaps some winds which were strong, though not excessively so as far as we can see in the observations. The latest break-up seems to be driven also by high winds.

    Back to our current field season. We had in fact planned a brief trip up here already – I am currently setting up a project looking at snow processes with the team and we had planned to install and test some new instruments and protocol that we hope to use in Antarctica later this year (more on all of that later hopefully). However, as the soon to be published preprint shows, I and the team have developed pretty extensive sea ice interests recently, so this unusual behaviour rather piqued our curiosity.

    We have a lot of questions:

    Why did it happen this year? Is it really the earliest in the satellite record? What makes the ice vulnerable? Composition, thickness, temperature? Is the ocean driving it or the atmosphere or both (it’s usually both), and what makes this year so unusual? Further down the line, can we model it and use those simulations to understand if this is a single aberration or likely to be more common in the future? And what impact will the earlier breakups have on the ecosystem, the adjacent glaciers and the local community?

    Or fieldtrip thus appeared an excellent opportunity to grab some real data on all of these points. Our colleague Henriette Skourup at DTU-Space was kind enough to lend us one of her instruments, which we shipped up last minute to allow us to do an add-on. It is all currently sitting there waiting for us.

    Unfortunately the sea ice is not waiting for us, if the photos from my colleague in Qaanaaq, Aksel are anything to go by.

    A large and widening crack in the sea ice in front of Qaanaaq. The small objects on the sea ice (fishing gear?) suggest we were not the only ones surprised). Credit: Aksel Ascanius, DMI

    The high winds which grounded our plane have also been busy on the sea ice, which is falling apart in the bay with surprising speed as far as I can see. We are still waiting for today’s optical imagery but the quick look from radar based Sentinel-1 suggests cracks widening rapidly as the photo above confirms.

    Temperature observations from Qaanaaq airport

    With a bit of luck we will get to Qaanaaq on Thursday (immaqa) to see if our sea ice research plan can go ahead. At this stage I rather doubt it. But it will very much depend on the next few hours. The wind speeds are quite high still but the temperature which was well above freezing has now dropped down to just below.

    Wind observations from Qaanaaq airport

    We are fortunate that we work with local hunters on the sea ice who are immensely experienced. The first rule is always safety first. We do have *a lot* of other work to do and rather fewer days to do it all in, so either way we’ll be busy. Ffor now, it’s keep checking in with the weather, the satellite images and our friends in Qaanaaq and use the time in Ilulissat wisely – in our case, it’s time to write some papers. And one of them is all about sea ice.

    To be continued…

    All satellite imagery on this page is from the European Space Agency Sentinel-2 mission, processed on the Copernicus EO Browser – a FREE!! and easy to use entry point to use ESA data. Weather observations are from Qaanaaq airport, operated by Mittarfeqarfiit A/S – Grønlands Lufthavne (Greenland Airports) and processed by DMI. It’s actually pretty nice how much high quality data we have access to these days…

    This fieldwork is undertaken as part of the PRECISE (Predicting Ice Sheets on Earth) project funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and by the ESA Climate Change Initiative for Sea Ice and the Climate Modelling Research Group

    #Arctic #fieldwork #Greenland #Qaanaaq #satelliteData #Science #SeaIce

  5. Falling Apart…

    I’m writing this from a hotel room in Ilulissat, rather than Qaanaaq where I had intended to be arriving shortly, because our plane has been cancelled due to bad weather (at time of writing the airport was measuring gusts of 14 m/s, so I’m actually quite glad it was cancelled).

    Weather and flight cancellations are an eternal hazard when doing fieldwork in Greenland, but in this case it also means an impact on our planned fieldwork, because the sea ice is falling apart. And rather earlier than usual (though we have not yet done a systematic review to prove this). In fact, part of the reason for coming here in May (instead of my usual March trip) was to investigate an interesting event that happened earlier this spring. In the animation of satellite pictures below you can see the sea ice rather dramatically falling apart in mid-April and then again at the end of April.

    The March to May sea ice season from Sentinel 2 in NW Greenland

    To understand what is happening and why it’s unusual, first a bit of background. As I have written before, my DMI colleagues have been working up in NW Greenland for about 15 years on a programme of ocean measurements in the fjord (see map below). I joined about 5 years ago, working in the melange zone of the glaciers at the head of Inglefield Bredning (PSA: a paper we recently submitted about this programme will hopefully be online soon). We use the sea ice as highway and stable platform for observations, so it’s pretty important for us and came to the conclusion it wa squite important for some parts of the glaciers too. The local community, with whom we work closely use it also for travelling, hunting and fishing from. It’s extremely important for them.

    The region of North West Greenland we’re talking about

    Normally there’s pretty thick (~1m) sea ice covering the whole of Inglefield Bredning (Gulf of Inglefield, also known as Kangerlussuaq, but not that one) out to the islands of Qeqertarsuaq and Kiatak. You can seen an example of what this looks like normally in the satellite animation from 2020, which happens to be when my first trip out on to the sea ice in Qaanaaq took place at the end of May and beginning of June. We were actually very lucky, we had great weather, got very close to the ice edge and watched narwhals swimming out in the North Water polynya. (Yes, sometimes I wonder how I managed to get this job too). The animation below is Sentinel-2 images as cloud free as I could find them from that first field season. As you can see, the sea ice already in March was much much more extensive than this year at the same time. And perhaps that is part of the answer.

    It’s probably worth pointing out at this stage that although there were some pretty warm (unusually so) spikes in March and April, the sea ice breakup in April was probably largely driven by ocean swell, and perhaps some winds which were strong, though not excessively so as far as we can see in the observations. The latest break-up seems to be driven also by high winds.

    Back to our current field season. We had in fact planned a brief trip up here already – I am currently setting up a project looking at snow processes with the team and we had planned to install and test some new instruments and protocol that we hope to use in Antarctica later this year (more on all of that later hopefully). However, as the soon to be published preprint shows, I and the team have developed pretty extensive sea ice interests recently, so this unusual behaviour rather piqued our curiosity.

    We have a lot of questions:

    Why did it happen this year? Is it really the earliest in the satellite record? What makes the ice vulnerable? Composition, thickness, temperature? Is the ocean driving it or the atmosphere or both (it’s usually both), and what makes this year so unusual? Further down the line, can we model it and use those simulations to understand if this is a single aberration or likely to be more common in the future? And what impact will the earlier breakups have on the ecosystem, the adjacent glaciers and the local community?

    Or fieldtrip thus appeared an excellent opportunity to grab some real data on all of these points. Our colleague Henriette Skourup at DTU-Space was kind enough to lend us one of her instruments, which we shipped up last minute to allow us to do an add-on. It is all currently sitting there waiting for us.

    Unfortunately the sea ice is not waiting for us, if the photos from my colleague in Qaanaaq, Aksel are anything to go by.

    A large and widening crack in the sea ice in front of Qaanaaq. The small objects on the sea ice (fishing gear?) suggest we were not the only ones surprised). Credit: Aksel Ascanius, DMI

    The high winds which grounded our plane have also been busy on the sea ice, which is falling apart in the bay with surprising speed as far as I can see. We are still waiting for today’s optical imagery but the quick look from radar based Sentinel-1 suggests cracks widening rapidly as the photo above confirms.

    Temperature observations from Qaanaaq airport

    With a bit of luck we will get to Qaanaaq on Thursday (immaqa) to see if our sea ice research plan can go ahead. At this stage I rather doubt it. But it will very much depend on the next few hours. The wind speeds are quite high still but the temperature which was well above freezing has now dropped down to just below.

    Wind observations from Qaanaaq airport

    We are fortunate that we work with local hunters on the sea ice who are immensely experienced. The first rule is always safety first. We do have *a lot* of other work to do and rather fewer days to do it all in, so either way we’ll be busy. Ffor now, it’s keep checking in with the weather, the satellite images and our friends in Qaanaaq and use the time in Ilulissat wisely – in our case, it’s time to write some papers. And one of them is all about sea ice.

    To be continued…

    All satellite imagery on this page is from the European Space Agency Sentinel-2 mission, processed on the Copernicus EO Browser – a FREE!! and easy to use entry point to use ESA data. Weather observations are from Qaanaaq airport, operated by Mittarfeqarfiit A/S – Grønlands Lufthavne (Greenland Airports) and processed by DMI. It’s actually pretty nice how much high quality data we have access to these days…

    This fieldwork is undertaken as part of the PRECISE (Predicting Ice Sheets on Earth) project funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and by the ESA Climate Change Initiative for Sea Ice and the Climate Modelling Research Group

    #Arctic #fieldwork #Greenland #Qaanaaq #satelliteData #Science #SeaIce

  6. 🚨🔵 Christopher #Nkunku will leave Chelsea this summer – the decision has been made, as previously reported. #CFC

    A permanent transfer is planned, not a loan.

    FC Bayern are still monitoring his situation and remain in contact with his management. However, nothing is advanced at this stage. Other top clubs are also interested in Nkunku.

    @[email protected] 🇫🇷

  7. What is going to happen this Spring with the blossom buds on our fruit trees? This is a Williams pear. At this stage of March last year, the weather turned arctic as the flowers opened, there were no insects to cross-fertilise, and consequently we had very few pears later. Now we’re wondering if there will be a repeat in 2025 as we enter another arctic-cold few days. Fingers crossed by the time the blossom is fully open, the air will be warmer and we will see bees and wasps visiting us.
    #GayGardener #GayGarden
    #fruit #blossom #growYour Own #GrowYourOwnFood #spring #today

  8. The Music of Hans Zimmer 2025

    This year has certainly got off to a cracking concert start. It’s early February and I’m already up to my third film score concert of the year!

    Back in the ancient days of June 2023 I attended The Music of Hans Zimmer presented by Art of the Score. Well, they’re back!

    Andrew Pogson and Dan Golding

    My previous review mostly still stands, but there are a few notable differences this time.

    Firstly, the venue. Instead of the Sydney Opera House, this time it is at the ICC Sydney Theatre, which can host maybe 2,500 more attendees. Again,  I find the acoustics a bit harsh, the differences highlighted by the previous two concerts. At least I got one of the best seats in the house, right in the middle, nine rows back.

    Conductor and Art of the Score member Nicholas Buc is currently off in the US conducting Singing in the Rain. Another Australian conductor, Jessica Gethin, replaces him. I saw Jessica conduct An Evening of John Williams at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne in February 2022. She is a dynamic and passionate conductor and it really shows tonight.

    Jessica Gethin

    The second personnel change is a lot sadder. Previous soloist singer Jaqueline Dark passed away not too long after the first concert. I’m glad I had the opportunity to see Jaqueline perform live. Tonight she is replaced by Cassandra Seidemann, who is given a very challenging role, that of performing music from Dune.

    The concert is anchored, as before, by Andrew Pogson and Professor Dan Golding from The Art of the Score. Lots of terrible dad jokes which I appreciate because, like them, I’m also a dad.

    The track listing remains mostly the same, except The Holiday and The Da Vinci Code are out and Paul’s Dream from Dune has its very first Australian symphonic performance.

    Again, what I really enjoy is that the live performance highlights different elements and instruments in Zimmer’s music, compared to his frequently over-processed recordings.

    My favourite of the night is Journey to the Line from The Thin Red Line. After that first performance, I knew to listen to the mesmerisingly repetitive flute and tapping that begins the piece and continues through most of it. That component gets lost in the original recording.

    The electric guitar work from Clive Lendich was also a focus during the Inception Suite. I must say it was a little jarring to see an older bloke in a black suit playing the electric guides and another the rock drum kit, but that’s orchestras for you!

    Simon Cobcroft did a fine job of simulating the ehru on the cello for Kung Fu Panda. I do wish that orchestras could properly procure “ethnic” instruments though.

    Hornpipe was the word I was looking for about the ship dances without a partner that inspired the music for Pirates of the Caribbean. That was a huge amount of fun to listen to again, as was the Interstellar Suite that took me back to the movie and watching it on a flight last year.

    It was pleasing to hear the music of Dune incorporated into the program. Although it wasn’t my new Zimmer favourite of Beginnings Are Such Delicate Times, Paul’s Dream is a great choice and very vocally challenging. In an interview Zimmer intimated that the screaming probably isn’t great for the vocal cords!

    The lighting was fantastic

    The concert ends with a suite from Gladiator, including Now We Are Free, sung well by Seidemann. Well, guess what the next concert is (at this stage)?

    Gladiator Live in Concert with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra!

    The only negative for the night was the announcement that Art of the Score and the orchestra would be performing a Joe Hisaishi concert in Sydney in September after I had already bought tickets to see it in Melbourne in November!

    If you get a chance to see one of these Hans Zimmer concerts or any others with Art of the Score, go for it!

    #ArtOfTheScore #HansZimmer #SydneySymphonyOrchestra

  9. A post on Reddit reminded me that this wonderful song is now just over ten years old. I still love it!

    I also like the styling for this stage, although I recognize that it will not be to everybody's taste.

    #Kpop #Apink #LUV #KpopStyling

    youtu.be/bimvaKz3Q3U?si=mbxa7a

  10. I've been sitting on this news for a couple of weeks now, and I'm excited to finally share it with everyone.

    I just signed the contract today for my forthcoming book, "All Thy Sons Command: Childhood and the Canadian Far Right" (working title). It's going to be a while because I have a dissertation to finish first, but I'm really thrilled to have this opportunity at this stage in my academic life.

    #PhDchat #AcademicBooks #UAlberta #ChildhoodStudies #AcademicPublishing #Writing #PhDlife

  11. How did they even let them start this stage??? This fog is absolutely bonkers.

    #RallyChile #WRC #SS14

  12. It is also productive at this stage to discuss how we or our representatives have done wrong in the past *only* towards solutions & avoiding the same mistakes.

    It is NOT productive (purity politics) to interrupt momentum on a different topic (say fundraising, volunteering) to bring up past mistakes of OTHER, DIFFERENT Dem representatives for no other reason than to dunk on how shit past Dems have been.

    I know this behavior has won a lot of social clout for folks in the past, look at me, look how much further left I am than you, but FFS it’s divisive & detracts from actually moving the world left. We all know how shit past Dems have been. It’s all we’ve talked about the past decade. How well has that worked out for us?

    In the words of the late great Bob Newhart, “Stop it!”

    If we want to move the world left, now is our chance. Pick up some tools and do what you feel is right, but do not derail someone else’s efforts unless they’re actively causing harm.

    🧵

    #AnswerTheCall2024 #USPol

  13. I think we can confirm at this stage that Ireland isn't sending any far right candidate to the EU parliament, it only took 4 days of counting.

    No, not finished counting yet, only 5/14 seats are assigned, but we know there's no fash with possibilities anymore

    #mastodaine #eu2024

  14. I think we can confirm at this stage that Ireland isn't sending any far right candidate to the EU parliament, it only took 4 days of counting.

    No, not finished counting yet, only 5/14 seats are assigned, but we know there's no fash with possibilities anymore

    #mastodaine #eu2024

  15. I think we can confirm at this stage that Ireland isn't sending any far right candidate to the EU parliament, it only took 4 days of counting.

    No, not finished counting yet, only 5/14 seats are assigned, but we know there's no fash with possibilities anymore

    #mastodaine #eu2024

  16. I think we can confirm at this stage that Ireland isn't sending any far right candidate to the EU parliament, it only took 4 days of counting.

    No, not finished counting yet, only 5/14 seats are assigned, but we know there's no fash with possibilities anymore

    #mastodaine #eu2024

  17. Upgrading production projects to Unity 6 at this stage and expecting smooth development is irresponsible at best. You can upgrade your project to Unity 6 for testing, but expect non-backwards compatible asset and API upgrades, broken elements, bugs, etc. The best you can do is isolate the issues and report bugs to help Unity devs, but don't expect everything to just work for production.

    #Unity3D #Unity6 #IndieDev #GameDev #GameDevelopment

  18. I have now completed five mixes for this year’s RPM Challenge. Five songs down and anywhere from five to 15 still to go.

    When I get to this stage in an album-in-a-month project I start sorting the finished songs into three buckets. A-list, B-list, and Dropped. A-list songs are good enough to make the final album. B-list songs are on the fence. Dropped songs are too awful to use. Right now, with five songs finished, I have two in the A-list bucket, and three in the B-list. I suspect most of the remaining 15 songs will end up in the B-list or the Dropped list. I think this one is on the A-list.

    Dynamics, right?

    https://robertjames1971.blog/2024/02/25/five-songs-down/

    #Guitar #Music #Recording #RpmChallenge #rpm2024 #SongWriting

  19. ❌ News Fotis #Ioannidis: At this stage his move to Eintracht Frankfurt is close to be off!

    ➡️ #SGE bosses are informed that @[email protected] doesn‘t want to let him go in winter
    ➡️ Eintracht, ready to pay €7-8m + add-ons but Athen wants more.

    Ioannids, elected Footballer of the Year in Greece this week. This season: 22 matches/ 9 ⚽️/ 4 🅰️. @[email protected] 🇬🇷

  20. @EU_Commission The real solution is at this stage, sadly, #StratosphericAerosolInjection which we need besides decreasing emissions
    Heres my blog describing how SAI can cool the earth in 2 years and keep temperature steady even if CO2 keeps rising.
    Risks are many times smaller than impact #climatechange and manageable

    Please read the blog before you disagree
    And sorry, its very long and thorough

    econrevolt.com/posts/2023/10/s

  21. It looks so messy at this stage but we have some colour 😁 This piece and a very special crochet piece will be up for grabs in the Artists Raising Money For Wildlife art auction on Facebook for the South Essex Wildlife Hospital 😁 #art #woodworking #handmade #handmadechristmas #pyro #burn #craft #bees

  22. Regulating cannabis is a no-brainer at this stage. We know it's going to happen. Better to have Ireland participate in leading this change rather than lagging and let others dictate the agenda. #CannabisReformIreland

  23. @andrewmarkbaker @thanetric @KeirStarmer

    Well I think at this stage there is more danger in reopening barely stitched #brexit wounds. It is an uncomfortable fact a fair proportion - over 20% - of #labourVoters chose #leave in 2016. So prior to a #GE there is danger in talk of #rejoin or #FoM - I suspect #starmer would prefer to say nothing at all about the #EU
    Once in #10, then policy develops..... but big changes must be in a #manifesto - so IMO that would be #2018GE at the earliest

  24. @andrewmarkbaker @thanetric @KeirStarmer

    Well I think at this stage there is more danger in reopening barely stitched #brexit wounds. It is an uncomfortable fact a fair proportion - over 20% - of #labourVoters chose #leave in 2016. So prior to a #GE there is danger in talk of #rejoin or #FoM - I suspect #starmer would prefer to say nothing at all about the #EU
    Once in #10, then policy develops..... but big changes must be in a #manifesto - so IMO that would be #2018GE at the earliest

  25. @andrewmarkbaker @thanetric @KeirStarmer

    Well I think at this stage there is more danger in reopening barely stitched #brexit wounds. It is an uncomfortable fact a fair proportion - over 20% - of #labourVoters chose #leave in 2016. So prior to a #GE there is danger in talk of #rejoin or #FoM - I suspect #starmer would prefer to say nothing at all about the #EU
    Once in #10, then policy develops..... but big changes must be in a #manifesto - so IMO that would be #2018GE at the earliest

  26. @andrewmarkbaker @thanetric @KeirStarmer

    Well I think at this stage there is more danger in reopening barely stitched #brexit wounds. It is an uncomfortable fact a fair proportion - over 20% - of #labourVoters chose #leave in 2016. So prior to a #GE there is danger in talk of #rejoin or #FoM - I suspect #starmer would prefer to say nothing at all about the #EU
    Once in #10, then policy develops..... but big changes must be in a #manifesto - so IMO that would be #2018GE at the earliest

  27. @gemelliz

    Appeals to authorities at this stage are in vain. #Masking at work, avoiding crowded places, air filters at home: I keep taking these measures because they protect me and my family.

    Those around me are unlikely to join me now. But my actions serve as quiet public reminder of the reality of #covid.

    The discourse of denial will break eventually, we cannot control how and when. This is not the time to convince others. We speak up to keep the flame alive.

    #KindnessWillPrevail