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#hamnet — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #hamnet, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Der #HamNet Wiederaufbau bei #DB0FC in #Braunschweig macht Fortschritte.

    Die Antennen auf dem Mast sind wieder vollständig aufgebaut, allerdings noch nicht feinjustiert.
    Dazu war es einfach zu windig und wer mich kennt weiss, was ich davon halte, in 65 m über Grund auch noch auf eine Bockleiter zu steigen 🙈

    Aber ich finde, die Kabelführung verdient ein besonderes Lob 🥰

  2. Der #HamNet Wiederaufbau bei #DB0FC in #Braunschweig macht Fortschritte.

    Die Antennen auf dem Mast sind wieder vollständig aufgebaut, allerdings noch nicht feinjustiert.
    Dazu war es einfach zu windig und wer mich kennt weiss, was ich davon halte, in 65 m über Grund auch noch auf eine Bockleiter zu steigen 🙈

    Aber ich finde, die Kabelführung verdient ein besonderes Lob 🥰

  3. Der #HamNet Wiederaufbau bei #DB0FC in #Braunschweig macht Fortschritte.

    Die Antennen auf dem Mast sind wieder vollständig aufgebaut, allerdings noch nicht feinjustiert.
    Dazu war es einfach zu windig und wer mich kennt weiss, was ich davon halte, in 65 m über Grund auch noch auf eine Bockleiter zu steigen 🙈

    Aber ich finde, die Kabelführung verdient ein besonderes Lob 🥰

  4. Der #HamNet Wiederaufbau bei #DB0FC in #Braunschweig macht Fortschritte.

    Die Antennen auf dem Mast sind wieder vollständig aufgebaut, allerdings noch nicht feinjustiert.
    Dazu war es einfach zu windig und wer mich kennt weiss, was ich davon halte, in 65 m über Grund auch noch auf eine Bockleiter zu steigen 🙈

    Aber ich finde, die Kabelführung verdient ein besonderes Lob 🥰

  5. Der #HamNet Wiederaufbau bei #DB0FC in #Braunschweig macht Fortschritte.

    Die Antennen auf dem Mast sind wieder vollständig aufgebaut, allerdings noch nicht feinjustiert.
    Dazu war es einfach zu windig und wer mich kennt weiss, was ich davon halte, in 65 m über Grund auch noch auf eine Bockleiter zu steigen 🙈

    Aber ich finde, die Kabelführung verdient ein besonderes Lob 🥰

  6. Nachdem die Dachsanierung am #HamNet Standort #DB0FC abgeschlossen ist, können wir endlich wieder aufbauen.

    Es ist noch viel zu tun, aber so ganz langsam sieht es wieder nach einem Antennenstandort aus....

  7. Nachdem die Dachsanierung am #HamNet Standort #DB0FC abgeschlossen ist, können wir endlich wieder aufbauen.

    Es ist noch viel zu tun, aber so ganz langsam sieht es wieder nach einem Antennenstandort aus....

  8. Nachdem die Dachsanierung am #HamNet Standort #DB0FC abgeschlossen ist, können wir endlich wieder aufbauen.

    Es ist noch viel zu tun, aber so ganz langsam sieht es wieder nach einem Antennenstandort aus....

  9. Heute noch mal auf dem Dach gewesen die #hamnet Antenne tauschen und neu ausrichten. Macht auch gesichert nicht so super viel Spaß auf dem First zu stehen, auf Zehenspitzen, eine Hand am Antennenmast und eine Hand an der Antenne. Ich brauch so ein Alupodest. Nächstes Projekt... #Amateurfunk

  10. Heute noch mal auf dem Dach gewesen die #hamnet Antenne tauschen und neu ausrichten. Macht auch gesichert nicht so super viel Spaß auf dem First zu stehen, auf Zehenspitzen, eine Hand am Antennenmast und eine Hand an der Antenne. Ich brauch so ein Alupodest. Nächstes Projekt... #Amateurfunk

  11. Heute noch mal auf dem Dach gewesen die #hamnet Antenne tauschen und neu ausrichten. Macht auch gesichert nicht so super viel Spaß auf dem First zu stehen, auf Zehenspitzen, eine Hand am Antennenmast und eine Hand an der Antenne. Ich brauch so ein Alupodest. Nächstes Projekt... #Amateurfunk

  12. Dejo de ver #Hamnet Si se me pasa el cabreo escribo la crítica. Definitivamente soy un señor mayor ya.

  13. Dejo de ver #Hamnet Si se me pasa el cabreo escribo la crítica. Definitivamente soy un señor mayor ya.

  14. PAUL MESCAL & JESSIE BUCKLEY
    HAMNET (2025)
    dir. Chloé Zhao
    #hamnet

  15. @RunalongWomble Hi womble, nice to see you over here. I’m reading (biography) @rivalehrer #GolemGirl and (short story) @georgesaunders #liberationday and just finished @chrismcgeorge cheeky cosy crime #MurderatTheCastle. Looking for a new audio book - any recommendations? Loved #Piranesi #Hamnet

  16. @RunalongWomble Hi womble, nice to see you over here. I’m reading (biography) @rivalehrer #GolemGirl and (short story) @georgesaunders #liberationday and just finished @chrismcgeorge cheeky cosy crime #MurderatTheCastle. Looking for a new audio book - any recommendations? Loved #Piranesi #Hamnet

  17. Sunday Morning Reading

    Another Sunday. More snow overnight. More shoveling later. The holidays creep closer or perhaps they’re already here, given that grandpa mode has kicked into high gear. Started writing a new play out of the blue yesterday. I have no idea why, but it just tumbled out of my brain on to the screen via the keyboard. Time to share some Sunday Morning Reading. Read as you will, even if it’s on a smart toilet.

    I often save the softer pieces for later in this column, but I’ll lead today with David Todd McCarty’s Christmas Means Comfort. Tell that to the rooster.

    The world lost a treasure this week with the passing of architect Frank Gehry. Lee Bray writes a nice obituary and tribute. Check out Architect Frank Gehry Who Designed Millennium Park’s Pritzker Pavillion and Foot Bridge Dies at 96.

    Samuel Beckett’s Hands is a terrific piece by Rob Tomlinson about, well it’s about Samuel Beckett’s hands and how Dupuytren’s contracture may have influenced not just how, but what he wrote, given that Beckett always begin his writing with pen and paper.

    While I’m sharing stories about playwrights, the movie Hamnet is garnering lots of attention and accolades. (I haven’t seen it yet.) Based on Maggie O’Farrell’s excellent novel of the same name, Hamnet mostly follows accepted scholarship that William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet while grieving the death of his son, Hamnet. (At the time, the two names were practically interchangeable.) As with most things Shakespeare, there’s generally accepted knowledge and there are always those who challenge it. James Shapiro takes a look at The Long History of the Hamnet Myth.

    And while I’m sharing stories about movies, take a look at Susan Morrison’s piece on How Noah Baumbach Fell (Back) In Love With The Movies.

    I linked earlier this week to a piece by Phillip Bump called There Are Limits to the Hitler-Trump Comparison. Just Ask These Historians. I don’t disagree with the thesis. I just think it stops short in the way most history usually does.

    Rory Rowan and Tristan Sturm write that Peter Thiel’s Apocalyptic Worldview Is A Dangerous Fantasy. Here’s hoping this first draft of our current history proves lasting.

    There’s been much talk about all things military recently given how the current administration is tossing away most of what we believe the military stands for as easy as my grandson tosses away toy soldiers. Carrie Lee says The Soldier In The Illiberal State Is A Professional Dead End. I concur. Sadly.

    In the wake of the cataclysm that was Twitter, social media is essentially a messy muddle these days with users continuing to migrate from one platform to another seeking some sort of place that feels comfortable enough to share and often discomfort others. Ian Dunt writes what he calls a love letter to one platform with Thank God for Bluesky.

    Smart toilets were in the news this week. I actually got to see and use one at a Christmas party last night. All I could think about while doing my business was this piece by Victoria Song called Welcome To The Wellness Surveillance State. 

    And to conclude this week, Amogh Dimri informs us that the Oxford University Press has chosen Rage Bait as 2025’s Word of the Year. Dimiri thinks it’s a brilliant choice. I guess it begs the question, if we’re angry enough to rage, is it really baiting?

    If you’re interested in just what the heck Sunday Morning Reading is all about you can read more about the origins of Sunday Morning Reading here. If you’d like more click on the Sunday Morning Reading link in the category column to check out what’s been shared on Sunday’s past. You can also find more of my writings on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome.

    #ai #chicago #culture #hamnet #history #inspiration #military #peterThiel #phillipBump #poetry #politics #religion #samuelBeckett #smartToilets #sundayMorningReading #tech #wellness #williamShakespeare2 #writing

  18. Sunday Morning Reading

    Another Sunday. More snow overnight. More shoveling later. The holidays creep closer or perhaps they’re already here, given that grandpa mode has kicked into high gear. Started writing a new play out of the blue yesterday. I have no idea why, but it just tumbled out of my brain on to the screen via the keyboard. Time to share some Sunday Morning Reading. Read as you will, even if it’s on a smart toilet.

    I often save the softer pieces for later in this column, but I’ll lead today with David Todd McCarty’s Christmas Means Comfort. Tell that to the rooster.

    The world lost a treasure this week with the passing of architect Frank Gehry. Lee Bray writes a nice obituary and tribute. Check out Architect Frank Gehry Who Designed Millennium Park’s Pritzker Pavillion and Foot Bridge Dies at 96.

    Samuel Beckett’s Hands is a terrific piece by Rob Tomlinson about, well it’s about Samuel Beckett’s hands and how Dupuytren’s contracture may have influenced not just how, but what he wrote, given that Beckett always begin his writing with pen and paper.

    While I’m sharing stories about playwrights, the movie Hamnet is garnering lots of attention and accolades. (I haven’t seen it yet.) Based on Maggie O’Farrell’s excellent novel of the same name, Hamnet mostly follows accepted scholarship that William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet while grieving the death of his son, Hamnet. (At the time, the two names were practically interchangeable.) As with most things Shakespeare, there’s generally accepted knowledge and there are always those who challenge it. James Shapiro takes a look at The Long History of the Hamnet Myth.

    And while I’m sharing stories about movies, take a look at Susan Morrison’s piece on How Noah Baumbach Fell (Back) In Love With The Movies.

    I linked earlier this week to a piece by Phillip Bump called There Are Limits to the Hitler-Trump Comparison. Just Ask These Historians. I don’t disagree with the thesis. I just think it stops short in the way most history usually does.

    Rory Rowan and Tristan Sturm write that Peter Thiel’s Apocalyptic Worldview Is A Dangerous Fantasy. Here’s hoping this first draft of our current history proves lasting.

    There’s been much talk about all things military recently given how the current administration is tossing away most of what we believe the military stands for as easy as my grandson tosses away toy soldiers. Carrie Lee says The Soldier In The Illiberal State Is A Professional Dead End. I concur. Sadly.

    In the wake of the cataclysm that was Twitter, social media is essentially a messy muddle these days with users continuing to migrate from one platform to another seeking some sort of place that feels comfortable enough to share and often discomfort others. Ian Dunt writes what he calls a love letter to one platform with Thank God for Bluesky.

    Smart toilets were in the news this week. I actually got to see and use one at a Christmas party last night. All I could think about while doing my business was this piece by Victoria Song called Welcome To The Wellness Surveillance State. 

    And to conclude this week, Amogh Dimri informs us that the Oxford University Press has chosen Rage Bait as 2025’s Word of the Year. Dimiri thinks it’s a brilliant choice. I guess it begs the question, if we’re angry enough to rage, is it really baiting?

    If you’re interested in just what the heck Sunday Morning Reading is all about you can read more about the origins of Sunday Morning Reading here. If you’d like more click on the Sunday Morning Reading link in the category column to check out what’s been shared on Sunday’s past. You can also find more of my writings on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome.

    #ai #chicago #culture #hamnet #history #inspiration #military #peterThiel #phillipBump #poetry #politics #religion #samuelBeckett #smartToilets #sundayMorningReading #tech #wellness #williamShakespeare2 #writing

  19. Sunday Morning Reading

    Another Sunday. More snow overnight. More shoveling later. The holidays creep closer or perhaps they’re already here, given that grandpa mode has kicked into high gear. Started writing a new play out of the blue yesterday. I have no idea why, but it just tumbled out of my brain on to the screen via the keyboard. Time to share some Sunday Morning Reading. Read as you will, even if it’s on a smart toilet.

    I often save the softer pieces for later in this column, but I’ll lead today with David Todd McCarty’s Christmas Means Comfort. Tell that to the rooster.

    The world lost a treasure this week with the passing of architect Frank Gehry. Lee Bray writes a nice obituary and tribute. Check out Architect Frank Gehry Who Designed Millennium Park’s Pritzker Pavillion and Foot Bridge Dies at 96.

    Samuel Beckett’s Hands is a terrific piece by Rob Tomlinson about, well it’s about Samuel Beckett’s hands and how Dupuytren’s contracture may have influenced not just how, but what he wrote, given that Beckett always begin his writing with pen and paper.

    While I’m sharing stories about playwrights, the movie Hamnet is garnering lots of attention and accolades. (I haven’t seen it yet.) Based on Maggie O’Farrell’s excellent novel of the same name, Hamnet mostly follows accepted scholarship that William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet while grieving the death of his son, Hamnet. (At the time, the two names were practically interchangeable.) As with most things Shakespeare, there’s generally accepted knowledge and there are always those who challenge it. James Shapiro takes a look at The Long History of the Hamnet Myth.

    And while I’m sharing stories about movies, take a look at Susan Morrison’s piece on How Noah Baumbach Fell (Back) In Love With The Movies.

    I linked earlier this week to a piece by Phillip Bump called There Are Limits to the Hitler-Trump Comparison. Just Ask These Historians. I don’t disagree with the thesis. I just think it stops short in the way most history usually does.

    Rory Rowan and Tristan Sturm write that Peter Thiel’s Apocalyptic Worldview Is A Dangerous Fantasy. Here’s hoping this first draft of our current history proves lasting.

    There’s been much talk about all things military recently given how the current administration is tossing away most of what we believe the military stands for as easy as my grandson tosses away toy soldiers. Carrie Lee says The Soldier In The Illiberal State Is A Professional Dead End. I concur. Sadly.

    In the wake of the cataclysm that was Twitter, social media is essentially a messy muddle these days with users continuing to migrate from one platform to another seeking some sort of place that feels comfortable enough to share and often discomfort others. Ian Dunt writes what he calls a love letter to one platform with Thank God for Bluesky.

    Smart toilets were in the news this week. I actually got to see and use one at a Christmas party last night. All I could think about while doing my business was this piece by Victoria Song called Welcome To The Wellness Surveillance State. 

    And to conclude this week, Amogh Dimri informs us that the Oxford University Press has chosen Rage Bait as 2025’s Word of the Year. Dimiri thinks it’s a brilliant choice. I guess it begs the question, if we’re angry enough to rage, is it really baiting?

    If you’re interested in just what the heck Sunday Morning Reading is all about you can read more about the origins of Sunday Morning Reading here. If you’d like more click on the Sunday Morning Reading link in the category column to check out what’s been shared on Sunday’s past. You can also find more of my writings on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome.

    #ai #chicago #culture #hamnet #history #inspiration #military #peterThiel #phillipBump #poetry #politics #religion #samuelBeckett #smartToilets #sundayMorningReading #tech #wellness #williamShakespeare2 #writing

  20. Sunday Morning Reading

    Another Sunday. More snow overnight. More shoveling later. The holidays creep closer or perhaps they’re already here, given that grandpa mode has kicked into high gear. Started writing a new play out of the blue yesterday. I have no idea why, but it just tumbled out of my brain on to the screen via the keyboard. Time to share some Sunday Morning Reading. Read as you will, even if it’s on a smart toilet.

    I often save the softer pieces for later in this column, but I’ll lead today with David Todd McCarty’s Christmas Means Comfort. Tell that to the rooster.

    The world lost a treasure this week with the passing of architect Frank Gehry. Lee Bray writes a nice obituary and tribute. Check out Architect Frank Gehry Who Designed Millennium Park’s Pritzker Pavillion and Foot Bridge Dies at 96.

    Samuel Beckett’s Hands is a terrific piece by Rob Tomlinson about, well it’s about Samuel Beckett’s hands and how Dupuytren’s contracture may have influenced not just how, but what he wrote, given that Beckett always begin his writing with pen and paper.

    While I’m sharing stories about playwrights, the movie Hamnet is garnering lots of attention and accolades. (I haven’t seen it yet.) Based on Maggie O’Farrell’s excellent novel of the same name, Hamnet mostly follows accepted scholarship that William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet while grieving the death of his son, Hamnet. (At the time, the two names were practically interchangeable.) As with most things Shakespeare, there’s generally accepted knowledge and there are always those who challenge it. James Shapiro takes a look at The Long History of the Hamnet Myth.

    And while I’m sharing stories about movies, take a look at Susan Morrison’s piece on How Noah Baumbach Fell (Back) In Love With The Movies.

    I linked earlier this week to a piece by Phillip Bump called There Are Limits to the Hitler-Trump Comparison. Just Ask These Historians. I don’t disagree with the thesis. I just think it stops short in the way most history usually does.

    Rory Rowan and Tristan Sturm write that Peter Thiel’s Apocalyptic Worldview Is A Dangerous Fantasy. Here’s hoping this first draft of our current history proves lasting.

    There’s been much talk about all things military recently given how the current administration is tossing away most of what we believe the military stands for as easy as my grandson tosses away toy soldiers. Carrie Lee says The Soldier In The Illiberal State Is A Professional Dead End. I concur. Sadly.

    In the wake of the cataclysm that was Twitter, social media is essentially a messy muddle these days with users continuing to migrate from one platform to another seeking some sort of place that feels comfortable enough to share and often discomfort others. Ian Dunt writes what he calls a love letter to one platform with Thank God for Bluesky.

    Smart toilets were in the news this week. I actually got to see and use one at a Christmas party last night. All I could think about while doing my business was this piece by Victoria Song called Welcome To The Wellness Surveillance State. 

    And to conclude this week, Amogh Dimri informs us that the Oxford University Press has chosen Rage Bait as 2025’s Word of the Year. Dimiri thinks it’s a brilliant choice. I guess it begs the question, if we’re angry enough to rage, is it really baiting?

    If you’re interested in just what the heck Sunday Morning Reading is all about you can read more about the origins of Sunday Morning Reading here. If you’d like more click on the Sunday Morning Reading link in the category column to check out what’s been shared on Sunday’s past. You can also find more of my writings on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome.

    #ai #chicago #culture #hamnet #history #inspiration #military #peterThiel #phillipBump #poetry #politics #religion #samuelBeckett #smartToilets #sundayMorningReading #tech #wellness #williamShakespeare2 #writing

  21. Sunday Morning Reading

    Another Sunday. More snow overnight. More shoveling later. The holidays creep closer or perhaps they’re already here, given that grandpa mode has kicked into high gear. Started writing a new play out of the blue yesterday. I have no idea why, but it just tumbled out of my brain on to the screen via the keyboard. Time to share some Sunday Morning Reading. Read as you will, even if it’s on a smart toilet.

    I often save the softer pieces for later in this column, but I’ll lead today with David Todd McCarty’s Christmas Means Comfort. Tell that to the rooster.

    The world lost a treasure this week with the passing of architect Frank Gehry. Lee Bray writes a nice obituary and tribute. Check out Architect Frank Gehry Who Designed Millennium Park’s Pritzker Pavillion and Foot Bridge Dies at 96.

    Samuel Beckett’s Hands is a terrific piece by Rob Tomlinson about, well it’s about Samuel Beckett’s hands and how Dupuytren’s contracture may have influenced not just how, but what he wrote, given that Beckett always begin his writing with pen and paper.

    While I’m sharing stories about playwrights, the movie Hamnet is garnering lots of attention and accolades. (I haven’t seen it yet.) Based on Maggie O’Farrell’s excellent novel of the same name, Hamnet mostly follows accepted scholarship that William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet while grieving the death of his son, Hamnet. (At the time, the two names were practically interchangeable.) As with most things Shakespeare, there’s generally accepted knowledge and there are always those who challenge it. James Shapiro takes a look at The Long History of the Hamnet Myth.

    And while I’m sharing stories about movies, take a look at Susan Morrison’s piece on How Noah Baumbach Fell (Back) In Love With The Movies.

    I linked earlier this week to a piece by Phillip Bump called There Are Limits to the Hitler-Trump Comparison. Just Ask These Historians. I don’t disagree with the thesis. I just think it stops short in the way most history usually does.

    Rory Rowan and Tristan Sturm write that Peter Thiel’s Apocalyptic Worldview Is A Dangerous Fantasy. Here’s hoping this first draft of our current history proves lasting.

    There’s been much talk about all things military recently given how the current administration is tossing away most of what we believe the military stands for as easy as my grandson tosses away toy soldiers. Carrie Lee says The Soldier In The Illiberal State Is A Professional Dead End. I concur. Sadly.

    In the wake of the cataclysm that was Twitter, social media is essentially a messy muddle these days with users continuing to migrate from one platform to another seeking some sort of place that feels comfortable enough to share and often discomfort others. Ian Dunt writes what he calls a love letter to one platform with Thank God for Bluesky.

    Smart toilets were in the news this week. I actually got to see and use one at a Christmas party last night. All I could think about while doing my business was this piece by Victoria Song called Welcome To The Wellness Surveillance State. 

    And to conclude this week, Amogh Dimri informs us that the Oxford University Press has chosen Rage Bait as 2025’s Word of the Year. Dimiri thinks it’s a brilliant choice. I guess it begs the question, if we’re angry enough to rage, is it really baiting?

    If you’re interested in just what the heck Sunday Morning Reading is all about you can read more about the origins of Sunday Morning Reading here. If you’d like more click on the Sunday Morning Reading link in the category column to check out what’s been shared on Sunday’s past. You can also find more of my writings on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome.

    #ai #chicago #culture #hamnet #history #inspiration #military #peterThiel #phillipBump #poetry #politics #religion #samuelBeckett #smartToilets #sundayMorningReading #tech #wellness #williamShakespeare2 #writing

  22. #Hamnet

    🎬 #ChloéZhao #JessieBuckley #PaulMescal #MaggieOFarrell

    🎵 #MaxRichter

    La buena música y el buen cine se han reencontrado, y eso me produce una inmensa alegría.

    Great music and great cinema have reunited, and that brings me immense joy.

    #WilliamShakespeare #Cine #Movies #Música #Music #BandasSonoras #Soundtracks #Teatro #Theater

  23. Kudos to Danielle Brooks and her nepo-baby co-host for announcing this year's Oscar nominees.

    *polite applause*

    *quiet woooo*

    #Oscars #MastoDaoine #film #Hamnet #DanielleBrooks

  24. #LetterboxdFriday:
    Ich habe mich vor kurzem aufgemacht, die Oscarfavoriten möglichst noch vor der Preisverleihung zu schauen.

    Drei habe ich schon geschafft – und außerdem endlich den Monk-Film nachgeholt, den ich schon ewig sehen wollte.

    #LastFourWatched #oscars2026 #OscarsNominations #Hamnet #MartySupreme #OneBattleAfterAnother #Monk