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Posts Tagged ‘#365Ways2024’

It’s the beginning of the week and I’m cranking away at the day job while fielding texts from my father about the TV show Fallout (it’s based on a game, for those who don’t know). What do those two things have to do with each other? Not much, I’d say, except that I just ran across this article.

‘Fallout but in Excel’ Lets You Visit the Wasteland While Your Boss Thinks You’re Working

If you thought that Excel spreadsheets were just for mind-numbing office work, think again. A gaming hobbyist has created an Excel-based RPG game that he based on the popular post-apocalyptic game Fallout. 

There are so many ways to be creative. Find yours where you can, and have fun.

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Photo by Artem Beliaikin on Unsplash

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“The Guide says there is an art to flying”, said Ford, “or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”

― Douglas Adams

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Photo by Nareeta Martin on Unsplash

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May the 4th be with you!

Star Wars Day- May the 4th Be With You | StarWars.com

Includes info, news and, most importantly, recipes like Blue Milk PuddingTauntaun Cookies and Ewok Sushi 🙂

Enjoy!

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Original Photo by Victor Serban on Unsplash

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“It’s like everyone tells a story about themselves inside their own head. Always. All the time. That story makes you what you are. We build ourselves out of that story.”

― Patrick Rothfuss

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Photo by Jonathan Kemper on Unsplash

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You may remember that I’ve talked about NaNoWriMo, where intrepid writers challenge themselves to write a 50,000-word novel in a month. Professional writers often do much more than this (Dean Wesley Smith is a poster author for it), but I wouldn’t say it’s common. At all.

Now that AI is a thing, however, it’s easy to put many words in a line very fast. Not good words, mind you, but words. 

I just ran across a reference to an author who has decided to embark on a writing challenge, pitting herself against AI.

Alberta author Alison McBain decided to do an “Author Vs AI” challenge. The goal? A well-written book a week for a total of two million words in 365 days. Dang.

She started a week or so ago and is posting daily word counts as she goes. 

Here she is ramping up for the starting line: Three Days before Launch… Tips & Tricks to Writing Quickly

Here’s she is, taking off: TODAY Starts 2 MILLION+ Words in 365 days!

Of course, we aren’t really comparing apples to apples here. We’re comparing one person’s ability to convert their history, emotions and expertise into a coherent recipe for another person to experience, versus a predictive extrapolation of the collective yet selective distillation of humanity known as the internet, produced through many (many) hours of training and often poorly-paid drudgery. 

(Trying to resist the obvious joke about it not being so different from writing after all, but also obviously failing. Even so.)

Writers write because they have something to say. They’re unable to shut up. They have a point of view. They put themselves through an emotional wringer to get it across, and sometimes lightning strikes and their work resonates with other people. — Ilona Andrews

I love that this writer has given herself a fun challenge, and frankly, she had me at “well-written.” 

Color me impressed.

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Photo by KS KYUNG on Unsplash

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Artistic masterpieces and upper class architecture can tell us a lot about what a society put on a pedestal at any particular time, but those items tend not to touch the lived experience of the 99% (that’s you and me).

Another way of peering into the past is to learn about the everyday, from what people ate and drank to (checks notes) what they named their dogs.

All Manner of Hounds

In the 15th century, Edward, Duke of York wrote a list of 1,065 names suitable for a dog.

Find the perfect name for your medieval mutt.

— for more background, check out 100 Weird and Wonderful Medieval Dog Names

If you click through the main link above, you’ll find yourself on an oddly addictive site that does nothing but generate dog names from the Duke of York’s original list.

No Snuggles or Cutiepie for them, but lots of creative medieval spellings like Misavisid, Fyndewell, Sergeaunt, Dere-ybowgt, Argument, Romwlus and of course, Boye.

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Photo by Jamie Street on Unsplash

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“If the sight of the blue skies fills you with joy, if a blade of grass springing up in the fields has power to move you, if the simple things of nature have a message that you understand, rejoice, for your soul is alive.”

— Eleonora Duse

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Photo by Karl Fredrickson on Unsplash

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This one’s for all the consumer product manufacturers out there, who have apparently never had the experience of reaching for a tube of (fill in the blank) and having it scratch the bejeezus out of their hand.

Yes, we long-suffering consumers could do this ourselves (and I often do), but we shouldn’t have to. Pre-rounded corners would be awesome!

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Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

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“If you can’t do it with feeling—don’t.”

— Patsy Cline

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Photo by Allen Taylor on Unsplash

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Thank you for your response. ✨

What if one story one vase one photograph one ring or one whatever it is you do when you do art, were guaranteed to make it into the historical record? Sadly, you do not know which one thing that will be.

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Photo by Marcel Eberle on Unsplash

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