home.social

#revitalization — Public Fediverse posts

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

  1. Toronto’s Exhibition Place may be headed for a massive makeover — here’s what it could look like

    Following a meeting on Thursday to outline a possible plan for the space, Exhibition Place may soon be…
    #NewsBeep #News #Toronto #CA #Canada #ExhibitionPlace #Festival #Revitalization #STUDIOtla #toronto
    newsbeep.com/ca/614966/

  2. This week on The Creatives Talk Podcast, we talk to Nettie Oliverio and Doug Wiele of the Oddie District.
    We talked about the revitalization of the Oddie District and how it will impact the Reno Arts Community and the surrounding community.
    Be sure to take a listen to find out the exciting details.
    #artpodcast #Revitalization #creativecommunity
    open.spotify.com/episode/08dpR

  3. My article on Strong Towns "Strong Towns: Auto-dependent city design produces “liabilities” " was published and is available at:
    chicosol.org/2026/01/27/strong.
    My article summarizes a presentation by Norm Van Eeden Petersman, membership director at Strong Towns,.

    strongtowns.org/

    #StrongTowns #resilience #revitalization #safestreets #downtown #bicycle #ebike #pedestrian #street

  4. New publication!

    The Tatar Language in Finland: Sociolinguistic Perspectives and Audiovisual Archival Resources

    Authors: Ainur Elmgren and Orsolya Sild

    Journal of Finnish Studies (2025) 28 (1): 8–31.

    The Author Link provides free access to the article for three months after it is posted online.

    #tatarlanguage #revitalization #minoritylanguages #languagerevitalization #minoritiesinthearchives

    scholarlypublishingcollective.

  5. New publication!

    The Tatar Language in Finland: Sociolinguistic Perspectives and Audiovisual Archival Resources

    Authors: Ainur Elmgren and Orsolya Sild

    Journal of Finnish Studies (2025) 28 (1): 8–31.

    The Author Link provides free access to the article for three months after it is posted online.

    #tatarlanguage #revitalization #minoritylanguages #languagerevitalization #minoritiesinthearchives

    scholarlypublishingcollective.

  6. A quotation from Ray Bradbury

    So while our art cannot, as we wish it could, save us from wars, privation, envy, greed, old age, or death, it can revitalize us amidst it all.

    Ray Bradbury (1920-2012) American writer, futurist, fabulist
    Zen in the Art of Writing, Preface (1994)

    More info about this quote: wist.info/bradbury-ray/79865/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #raybradbury #art #artist #composing #creation #creativity #music #revitalization #selfactualization #selfaffirmation #selfcare #selfexpression #selfpreservation #writing

  7. A quotation from Ray Bradbury

    So while our art cannot, as we wish it could, save us from wars, privation, envy, greed, old age, or death, it can revitalize us amidst it all.

    Ray Bradbury (1920-2012) American writer, futurist, fabulist
    Zen in the Art of Writing, Preface (1994)

    More info about this quote: wist.info/bradbury-ray/79865/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #raybradbury #art #artist #composing #creation #creativity #music #revitalization #selfactualization #selfaffirmation #selfcare #selfexpression #selfpreservation #writing

  8. A quotation from Ray Bradbury

    So while our art cannot, as we wish it could, save us from wars, privation, envy, greed, old age, or death, it can revitalize us amidst it all.

    Ray Bradbury (1920-2012) American writer, futurist, fabulist
    Zen in the Art of Writing, Preface (1994)

    More info about this quote: wist.info/bradbury-ray/79865/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #raybradbury #art #artist #composing #creation #creativity #music #revitalization #selfactualization #selfaffirmation #selfcare #selfexpression #selfpreservation #writing

  9. A quotation from Ray Bradbury

    So while our art cannot, as we wish it could, save us from wars, privation, envy, greed, old age, or death, it can revitalize us amidst it all.

    Ray Bradbury (1920-2012) American writer, futurist, fabulist
    Zen in the Art of Writing, Preface (1994)

    More info about this quote: wist.info/bradbury-ray/79865/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #raybradbury #art #artist #composing #creation #creativity #music #revitalization #selfactualization #selfaffirmation #selfcare #selfexpression #selfpreservation #writing

  10. An alleyway of hope towards community healing

    Sadly in the United States, racism and bigotry are hardly a new thing. No matter how much we want to deny it, this country was largely born of racism and far too many of our fellow citizens continue to practice it on a daily basis.

    Alley before – Source: patronicity.com Ohki Alley now Source: patronicity.com

    That’s why it was so refreshing and rewarding to recently stumble upon a revitalized alleyway in small Indiana town that is attempting to right a terrible past wrong, while also adding walkable placemaking feature for the community.

    Source: indianahistory.org

    The Ohki Alley in downtown Columbia City, Indiana is located directly across from the Whitley County Courthouse. This narrow alley honors Shinzo Ohki, a Japanese immigrant to the area who built a thriving soy sauce business (Show-You Sauce), but who also felt the sting of bigotry during World War II (see below).

    “A Kind and Gentle Man”

    “I first met Shinzo Ohki in the early summer of 1942. My family had moved to 203 Brownwood Avenue in Columbia City and the Ohki’s were neighbors. I was about 9 years old at the time.

    My brother, Harrison, and I developed a neighborhood business of mowing lawns, doing yard work and general odd jobs as needed. We had a good summer business of about eight or nine customers for walk and driveway snow shoveling, plus stacking wood. In those days, many home owners burned wood in the dwelling heating system. The truck from Morsches Lumber Company would dump a load of wood at the curb and it was the property owners responsibility to handle it. Our job was to toss the wood, one piece at a time, in the basement window and then stack it neatly near the furnace. It was hard work but also steady work and good exercise.

    As I became better acquainted with Mr. Ohki, I also got to know his wife and daughter. They were all soft spoken and gentle people. They also were very interested in you and your welfare.

    Mr. Ohki’s daughter, Grace, was in college at the time and a talented musician and world-class clarinet player. I remember her as Paid Advertisement
    a beautiful young lady who was always asking me about school and any plans I had.

    Here we must remember the time frame. It was the early 1940s and World War II was just getting going.

    My brother and I were very much enjoying our relationship with the Ohki family. Shinzo always talked with us and always overpaid us.

    One summer day, after we had finished our work, Mr. Ohki came and paid us $10.00 each the usual amount for the weekly job was about $1.00 a piece. He was very soft-spoken, as usual, but not so cheerful that day. He said “You boys won’t be able to work for me anymore. It will be bad for you and your family if you do. I want you to tell your mother and dad everything I say and they will explain it.” He turned and quietly and quickly left. I think he was crying.

    We started to cry as we walked home, thinking we had been fired from our job. We did as Shinzo had asked and told our folks everything he had said. They explained that others in our small town might bring grief to us for associating with a Japanese family a mystery to me at the time but well understood in later years.

    True to his nature, Mr. Ohki was more concerned for our welfare than for his own.

    My memory of him has not changed or dimmed over these past almost eighty years. He was indeed a kind and gentle man.”

    Source: https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=228160

    The alley is adorned with tables and chairs, flowers, lighting, murals, and several historic markers about Mr. Ohki’s life. There is even a tiny ice cream shop (Alley Scoops) tucked into a doorway pocket along the corridor. The alley revitalization project was completed in 2020.

    In today’s cantankerous environment, this little alleyway of hope is a charming breath of fresh air, both as a symbol of how to heal past sins, but also as a method for knitting the community back together physically with a wonderful placemaking featuring in the heart of downtown. And whenever you can successfully achieve two goals with a single project, that’s certainly a win-win situation. Kudos to a job well done, Columbia City.

    Peace!

    p.s. On this 80 anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan (today), this post about healing seems particularly appropriate. May humanity find lasting peace so that such brutal consequences of war never happen again.

    #alley #cities #ColumbiaCity #food #fun #history #iceCream #Indiana #Japan #landUse #OhkiAlley #planning #preservation #revitalization #ThirdPlaces #tourism #travel

  11. An alleyway of hope towards community healing

    Sadly in the United States, racism and bigotry are hardly a new thing. No matter how much we want to deny it, this country was largely born of racism and far too many of our fellow citizens continue to practice it on a daily basis.

    Alley before – Source: patronicity.com Ohki Alley now Source: patronicity.com

    That’s why it was so refreshing and rewarding to recently stumble upon a revitalized alleyway in small Indiana town that is attempting to right a terrible past wrong, while also adding walkable placemaking feature for the community.

    Source: indianahistory.org

    The Ohki Alley in downtown Columbia City, Indiana is located directly across from the Whitley County Courthouse. This narrow alley honors Shinzo Ohki, a Japanese immigrant to the area who built a thriving soy sauce business (Show-You Sauce), but who also felt the sting of bigotry during World War II (see below).

    “A Kind and Gentle Man”

    “I first met Shinzo Ohki in the early summer of 1942. My family had moved to 203 Brownwood Avenue in Columbia City and the Ohki’s were neighbors. I was about 9 years old at the time.

    My brother, Harrison, and I developed a neighborhood business of mowing lawns, doing yard work and general odd jobs as needed. We had a good summer business of about eight or nine customers for walk and driveway snow shoveling, plus stacking wood. In those days, many home owners burned wood in the dwelling heating system. The truck from Morsches Lumber Company would dump a load of wood at the curb and it was the property owners responsibility to handle it. Our job was to toss the wood, one piece at a time, in the basement window and then stack it neatly near the furnace. It was hard work but also steady work and good exercise.

    As I became better acquainted with Mr. Ohki, I also got to know his wife and daughter. They were all soft spoken and gentle people. They also were very interested in you and your welfare.

    Mr. Ohki’s daughter, Grace, was in college at the time and a talented musician and world-class clarinet player. I remember her as Paid Advertisement
    a beautiful young lady who was always asking me about school and any plans I had.

    Here we must remember the time frame. It was the early 1940s and World War II was just getting going.

    My brother and I were very much enjoying our relationship with the Ohki family. Shinzo always talked with us and always overpaid us.

    One summer day, after we had finished our work, Mr. Ohki came and paid us $10.00 each the usual amount for the weekly job was about $1.00 a piece. He was very soft-spoken, as usual, but not so cheerful that day. He said “You boys won’t be able to work for me anymore. It will be bad for you and your family if you do. I want you to tell your mother and dad everything I say and they will explain it.” He turned and quietly and quickly left. I think he was crying.

    We started to cry as we walked home, thinking we had been fired from our job. We did as Shinzo had asked and told our folks everything he had said. They explained that others in our small town might bring grief to us for associating with a Japanese family a mystery to me at the time but well understood in later years.

    True to his nature, Mr. Ohki was more concerned for our welfare than for his own.

    My memory of him has not changed or dimmed over these past almost eighty years. He was indeed a kind and gentle man.”

    Source: https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=228160

    The alley is adorned with tables and chairs, flowers, lighting, murals, and several historic markers about Mr. Ohki’s life. There is even a tiny ice cream shop (Alley Scoops) tucked into a doorway pocket along the corridor. The alley revitalization project was completed in 2020.

    In today’s cantankerous environment, this little alleyway of hope is a charming breath of fresh air, both as a symbol of how to heal past sins, but also as a method for knitting the community back together physically with a wonderful placemaking featuring in the heart of downtown. And whenever you can successfully achieve two goals with a single project, that’s certainly a win-win situation. Kudos to a job well done, Columbia City.

    Peace!

    p.s. On this 80 anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan (today), this post about healing seems particularly appropriate. May humanity find lasting peace so that such brutal consequences of war never happen again.

    #alley #cities #ColumbiaCity #food #fun #history #iceCream #Indiana #Japan #landUse #OhkiAlley #planning #preservation #revitalization #ThirdPlaces #tourism #travel

  12. An alleyway of hope towards community healing

    Sadly in the United States, racism and bigotry are hardly a new thing. No matter how much we want to deny it, this country was largely born of racism and far too many of our fellow citizens continue to practice it on a daily basis.

    Alley before – Source: patronicity.com Ohki Alley now Source: patronicity.com

    That’s why it was so refreshing and rewarding to recently stumble upon a revitalized alleyway in small Indiana town that is attempting to right a terrible past wrong, while also adding walkable placemaking feature for the community.

    Source: indianahistory.org

    The Ohki Alley in downtown Columbia City, Indiana is located directly across from the Whitley County Courthouse. This narrow alley honors Shinzo Ohki, a Japanese immigrant to the area who built a thriving soy sauce business (Show-You Sauce), but who also felt the sting of bigotry during World War II (see below).

    “A Kind and Gentle Man”

    “I first met Shinzo Ohki in the early summer of 1942. My family had moved to 203 Brownwood Avenue in Columbia City and the Ohki’s were neighbors. I was about 9 years old at the time.

    My brother, Harrison, and I developed a neighborhood business of mowing lawns, doing yard work and general odd jobs as needed. We had a good summer business of about eight or nine customers for walk and driveway snow shoveling, plus stacking wood. In those days, many home owners burned wood in the dwelling heating system. The truck from Morsches Lumber Company would dump a load of wood at the curb and it was the property owners responsibility to handle it. Our job was to toss the wood, one piece at a time, in the basement window and then stack it neatly near the furnace. It was hard work but also steady work and good exercise.

    As I became better acquainted with Mr. Ohki, I also got to know his wife and daughter. They were all soft spoken and gentle people. They also were very interested in you and your welfare.

    Mr. Ohki’s daughter, Grace, was in college at the time and a talented musician and world-class clarinet player. I remember her as Paid Advertisement
    a beautiful young lady who was always asking me about school and any plans I had.

    Here we must remember the time frame. It was the early 1940s and World War II was just getting going.

    My brother and I were very much enjoying our relationship with the Ohki family. Shinzo always talked with us and always overpaid us.

    One summer day, after we had finished our work, Mr. Ohki came and paid us $10.00 each the usual amount for the weekly job was about $1.00 a piece. He was very soft-spoken, as usual, but not so cheerful that day. He said “You boys won’t be able to work for me anymore. It will be bad for you and your family if you do. I want you to tell your mother and dad everything I say and they will explain it.” He turned and quietly and quickly left. I think he was crying.

    We started to cry as we walked home, thinking we had been fired from our job. We did as Shinzo had asked and told our folks everything he had said. They explained that others in our small town might bring grief to us for associating with a Japanese family a mystery to me at the time but well understood in later years.

    True to his nature, Mr. Ohki was more concerned for our welfare than for his own.

    My memory of him has not changed or dimmed over these past almost eighty years. He was indeed a kind and gentle man.”

    Source: https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=228160

    The alley is adorned with tables and chairs, flowers, lighting, murals, and several historic markers about Mr. Ohki’s life. There is even a tiny ice cream shop (Alley Scoops) tucked into a doorway pocket along the corridor. The alley revitalization project was completed in 2020.

    In today’s cantankerous environment, this little alleyway of hope is a charming breath of fresh air, both as a symbol of how to heal past sins, but also as a method for knitting the community back together physically with a wonderful placemaking featuring in the heart of downtown. And whenever you can successfully achieve two goals with a single project, that’s certainly a win-win situation. Kudos to a job well done, Columbia City.

    Peace!

    p.s. On this 80 anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan (today), this post about healing seems particularly appropriate. May humanity find lasting peace so that such brutal consequences of war never happen again.

    #alley #cities #ColumbiaCity #food #fun #history #iceCream #Indiana #Japan #landUse #OhkiAlley #planning #preservation #revitalization #ThirdPlaces #tourism #travel

  13. An alleyway of hope towards community healing

    Sadly in the United States, racism and bigotry are hardly a new thing. No matter how much we want to deny it, this country was largely born of racism and far too many of our fellow citizens continue to practice it on a daily basis.

    Alley before – Source: patronicity.com Ohki Alley now Source: patronicity.com

    That’s why it was so refreshing and rewarding to recently stumble upon a revitalized alleyway in small Indiana town that is attempting to right a terrible past wrong, while also adding walkable placemaking feature for the community.

    Source: indianahistory.org

    The Ohki Alley in downtown Columbia City, Indiana is located directly across from the Whitley County Courthouse. This narrow alley honors Shinzo Ohki, a Japanese immigrant to the area who built a thriving soy sauce business (Show-You Sauce), but who also felt the sting of bigotry during World War II (see below).

    “A Kind and Gentle Man”

    “I first met Shinzo Ohki in the early summer of 1942. My family had moved to 203 Brownwood Avenue in Columbia City and the Ohki’s were neighbors. I was about 9 years old at the time.

    My brother, Harrison, and I developed a neighborhood business of mowing lawns, doing yard work and general odd jobs as needed. We had a good summer business of about eight or nine customers for walk and driveway snow shoveling, plus stacking wood. In those days, many home owners burned wood in the dwelling heating system. The truck from Morsches Lumber Company would dump a load of wood at the curb and it was the property owners responsibility to handle it. Our job was to toss the wood, one piece at a time, in the basement window and then stack it neatly near the furnace. It was hard work but also steady work and good exercise.

    As I became better acquainted with Mr. Ohki, I also got to know his wife and daughter. They were all soft spoken and gentle people. They also were very interested in you and your welfare.

    Mr. Ohki’s daughter, Grace, was in college at the time and a talented musician and world-class clarinet player. I remember her as Paid Advertisement
    a beautiful young lady who was always asking me about school and any plans I had.

    Here we must remember the time frame. It was the early 1940s and World War II was just getting going.

    My brother and I were very much enjoying our relationship with the Ohki family. Shinzo always talked with us and always overpaid us.

    One summer day, after we had finished our work, Mr. Ohki came and paid us $10.00 each the usual amount for the weekly job was about $1.00 a piece. He was very soft-spoken, as usual, but not so cheerful that day. He said “You boys won’t be able to work for me anymore. It will be bad for you and your family if you do. I want you to tell your mother and dad everything I say and they will explain it.” He turned and quietly and quickly left. I think he was crying.

    We started to cry as we walked home, thinking we had been fired from our job. We did as Shinzo had asked and told our folks everything he had said. They explained that others in our small town might bring grief to us for associating with a Japanese family a mystery to me at the time but well understood in later years.

    True to his nature, Mr. Ohki was more concerned for our welfare than for his own.

    My memory of him has not changed or dimmed over these past almost eighty years. He was indeed a kind and gentle man.”

    Source: https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=228160

    The alley is adorned with tables and chairs, flowers, lighting, murals, and several historic markers about Mr. Ohki’s life. There is even a tiny ice cream shop (Alley Scoops) tucked into a doorway pocket along the corridor. The alley revitalization project was completed in 2020.

    In today’s cantankerous environment, this little alleyway of hope is a charming breath of fresh air, both as a symbol of how to heal past sins, but also as a method for knitting the community back together physically with a wonderful placemaking featuring in the heart of downtown. And whenever you can successfully achieve two goals with a single project, that’s certainly a win-win situation. Kudos to a job well done, Columbia City.

    Peace!

    p.s. On this 80 anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan (today), this post about healing seems particularly appropriate. May humanity find lasting peace so that such brutal consequences of war never happen again.

    #alley #cities #ColumbiaCity #food #fun #history #iceCream #Indiana #Japan #landUse #OhkiAlley #planning #preservation #revitalization #ThirdPlaces #tourism #travel

  14. An alleyway of hope towards community healing

    Sadly in the United States, racism and bigotry are hardly a new thing. No matter how much we want to deny it, this country was largely born of racism and far too many of our fellow citizens continue to practice it on a daily basis.

    Alley before – Source: patronicity.com Ohki Alley now Source: patronicity.com

    That’s why it was so refreshing and rewarding to recently stumble upon a revitalized alleyway in small Indiana town that is attempting to right a terrible past wrong, while also adding walkable placemaking feature for the community.

    Source: indianahistory.org

    The Ohki Alley in downtown Columbia City, Indiana is located directly across from the Whitley County Courthouse. This narrow alley honors Shinzo Ohki, a Japanese immigrant to the area who built a thriving soy sauce business (Show-You Sauce), but who also felt the sting of bigotry during World War II (see below).

    “A Kind and Gentle Man”

    “I first met Shinzo Ohki in the early summer of 1942. My family had moved to 203 Brownwood Avenue in Columbia City and the Ohki’s were neighbors. I was about 9 years old at the time.

    My brother, Harrison, and I developed a neighborhood business of mowing lawns, doing yard work and general odd jobs as needed. We had a good summer business of about eight or nine customers for walk and driveway snow shoveling, plus stacking wood. In those days, many home owners burned wood in the dwelling heating system. The truck from Morsches Lumber Company would dump a load of wood at the curb and it was the property owners responsibility to handle it. Our job was to toss the wood, one piece at a time, in the basement window and then stack it neatly near the furnace. It was hard work but also steady work and good exercise.

    As I became better acquainted with Mr. Ohki, I also got to know his wife and daughter. They were all soft spoken and gentle people. They also were very interested in you and your welfare.

    Mr. Ohki’s daughter, Grace, was in college at the time and a talented musician and world-class clarinet player. I remember her as Paid Advertisement
    a beautiful young lady who was always asking me about school and any plans I had.

    Here we must remember the time frame. It was the early 1940s and World War II was just getting going.

    My brother and I were very much enjoying our relationship with the Ohki family. Shinzo always talked with us and always overpaid us.

    One summer day, after we had finished our work, Mr. Ohki came and paid us $10.00 each the usual amount for the weekly job was about $1.00 a piece. He was very soft-spoken, as usual, but not so cheerful that day. He said “You boys won’t be able to work for me anymore. It will be bad for you and your family if you do. I want you to tell your mother and dad everything I say and they will explain it.” He turned and quietly and quickly left. I think he was crying.

    We started to cry as we walked home, thinking we had been fired from our job. We did as Shinzo had asked and told our folks everything he had said. They explained that others in our small town might bring grief to us for associating with a Japanese family a mystery to me at the time but well understood in later years.

    True to his nature, Mr. Ohki was more concerned for our welfare than for his own.

    My memory of him has not changed or dimmed over these past almost eighty years. He was indeed a kind and gentle man.”

    Source: https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=228160

    The alley is adorned with tables and chairs, flowers, lighting, murals, and several historic markers about Mr. Ohki’s life. There is even a tiny ice cream shop (Alley Scoops) tucked into a doorway pocket along the corridor. The alley revitalization project was completed in 2020.

    In today’s cantankerous environment, this little alleyway of hope is a charming breath of fresh air, both as a symbol of how to heal past sins, but also as a method for knitting the community back together physically with a wonderful placemaking featuring in the heart of downtown. And whenever you can successfully achieve two goals with a single project, that’s certainly a win-win situation. Kudos to a job well done, Columbia City.

    Peace!

    p.s. On this 80 anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan (today), this post about healing seems particularly appropriate. May humanity find lasting peace so that such brutal consequences of war never happen again.

    #alley #cities #ColumbiaCity #food #fun #history #iceCream #Indiana #Japan #landUse #OhkiAlley #planning #preservation #revitalization #ThirdPlaces #tourism #travel

  15. CfP 16–17 October 2025, Lund University

    Lund University and The Institute for Language and Folklore (Isof) welcome everyone interested in language and culture to a conference that looks at revitalization – not just as a theory, but as something people do, share, and shape together through lived experience and knowledge:
    isof.se/nationella-minoritetss

    #CfP #MinorityLanguages #Revitalization
    #Yiddish #Suomi #Meänkieli #RomaniChib #SvensktTeckenspråk
    #ISOF #LundUniversity #Lund

  16. 🚗💻 HP's brave new world: a #CarFax for computers! 🚫 Just what everyone needs—an error-laden 403 #saga to accompany their used laptop purchase. 🙄 Because nothing screams "revitalization" like a #cache server #meltdown. 🔥
    spectrum.ieee.org/carmax-used- #HP #Computers #Error #Revitalization #HackerNews #ngated

  17. 🚗💻 HP's brave new world: a #CarFax for computers! 🚫 Just what everyone needs—an error-laden 403 #saga to accompany their used laptop purchase. 🙄 Because nothing screams "revitalization" like a #cache server #meltdown. 🔥
    spectrum.ieee.org/carmax-used- #HP #Computers #Error #Revitalization #HackerNews #ngated

  18. 🚗💻 HP's brave new world: a #CarFax for computers! 🚫 Just what everyone needs—an error-laden 403 #saga to accompany their used laptop purchase. 🙄 Because nothing screams "revitalization" like a #cache server #meltdown. 🔥
    spectrum.ieee.org/carmax-used- #HP #Computers #Error #Revitalization #HackerNews #ngated

  19. 🚗💻 HP's brave new world: a #CarFax for computers! 🚫 Just what everyone needs—an error-laden 403 #saga to accompany their used laptop purchase. 🙄 Because nothing screams "revitalization" like a #cache server #meltdown. 🔥
    spectrum.ieee.org/carmax-used- #HP #Computers #Error #Revitalization #HackerNews #ngated

  20. 🔓 An inter-pandemic project that has *finally* appeared! We propose a community-based model of digital #language #revitalization for #Francoprovençal that can be applied to other minoritized contexts. #edusky #langsky muse-jhu-edu.uow.idm.oclc.org/pub/24/artic... @languageonthemove.bsky.social R/T!

  21. 🔓 An inter-pandemic project that has *finally* appeared! We propose a community-based model of digital #language #revitalization for #Francoprovençal that can be applied to other minoritized contexts. #edusky #langsky muse-jhu-edu.uow.idm.oclc.org/pub/24/artic... @languageonthemove.bsky.social R/T!

  22. 🔓 An inter-pandemic project that has *finally* appeared! We propose a community-based model of digital #language #revitalization for #Francoprovençal that can be applied to other minoritized contexts. #edusky #langsky muse-jhu-edu.uow.idm.oclc.org/pub/24/artic... @languageonthemove.bsky.social R/T!

  23. 🔓 An inter-pandemic project that has *finally* appeared! We propose a community-based model of digital #language #revitalization for #Francoprovençal that can be applied to other minoritized contexts. #edusky #langsky muse-jhu-edu.uow.idm.oclc.org/pub/24/artic... @languageonthemove.bsky.social R/T!

  24. The RSD13 presentation of Symphony of the Everyday - Sunset Sonata is now available online. -- Experience a small courtyard inhabited by four families in Haiyan village, Kunming, China and the objects and materials that make a village household’s everyday tangible in its aesthetic dimension.

    rsdsymposium.org/symphony-of-t

    #publicart #interactive #art #systemicdesign #China #rural #revitalization

  25. The RSD13 presentation of Symphony of the Everyday - Sunset Sonata is now available online. -- Experience a small courtyard inhabited by four families in Haiyan village, Kunming, China and the objects and materials that make a village household’s everyday tangible in its aesthetic dimension.

    rsdsymposium.org/symphony-of-t

    #publicart #interactive #art #systemicdesign #China #rural #revitalization

  26. The RSD13 presentation of Symphony of the Everyday - Sunset Sonata is now available online. -- Experience a small courtyard inhabited by four families in Haiyan village, Kunming, China and the objects and materials that make a village household’s everyday tangible in its aesthetic dimension.

    rsdsymposium.org/symphony-of-t

    #publicart #interactive #art #systemicdesign #China #rural #revitalization

  27. The RSD13 presentation of Symphony of the Everyday - Sunset Sonata is now available online. -- Experience a small courtyard inhabited by four families in Haiyan village, Kunming, China and the objects and materials that make a village household’s everyday tangible in its aesthetic dimension.

    rsdsymposium.org/symphony-of-t

    #publicart #interactive #art #systemicdesign #China #rural #revitalization