Some fun weekend reading for you from my soon-to-be-defunct Revue newsletter.


Metal cover of the A-Team theme.

Perfect Friday fodder for those of us of a certain age.


Twitter’s API appears to be down, breaking any third party client access to the service.

And now we wait to find out if this is intentional, or just a cock-up.


What do you think the chances of the Revue integration on people’s Twitter profiles just frictionlessly disappearing when they shut down the newsletter service next week, as opposed to breaking in new and exciting ways?


Looks like Hasbro is learning that you can create a community, play host to a community, but never, ever own a community.

The D&D community is on the warpath.


Nice to see more EV charging infrastructure going in just around the corner.

A sign warning of roadworks for EV charging infrastructure.

The courage and talent of Laura Price, whom I had the privilege of teaching a few years ago, continues to inspire me, as she prepares to launch the paperback edition of her novel from her post-cancer surgery hospital bed.


D&D’s OGL was a corporate con job

Cory Doctorow on the Hasbo D&D OGL rugpull:

If you’re a game designer who was pissed off because the OGL was getting ganked – and if you’re even more pissed off now that you’ve discovered that the OGL was a piece of shit all along – there’s a lesson there. The OGL tricked a generation of designers into thinking they were building on a commons. They weren’t – but they could.

Source: Pluralistic: John Deere’s repair fake-out; Good riddance to the Open Gaming License (12 Jan 2023)


There’s a guy down the river collecting old boats. He seems to be working on them. It annoys some locals, but I rather like it. It’s a great reminder of the Tonks maritime past.


This looks worryingly like the Royal Mail has been hit by a ransomware attack.


The science of stupidity

Stupidity is a very specific cognitive failing. Crudely put, it occurs when you don’t have the right conceptual tools for the job. The result is an inability to make sense of what is happening and a resulting tendency to force phenomena into crude, distorting pigeonholes.

Source: Why some of the smartest people can be so very stupid - Psyche Ideas


It’s interesting how many publications do “predictions for the year ahead” posts - and how few of them go back and assess how good their post the year before was…


The sea is bringing in some big bits of jetsam right now.


The sea was putting on an impressive show earlier.


Walkers and shingle shifters on the beach this afternoon.

A dog walker and a convoy of trucks on Shoreham Beach.

Up on the Downs this morning.

Sheep grazing in a field near Lancing College.

Nice wooden boat coming ashore on the slipway.

A wooden boat being taken off the Adur at the Emerald Quay slipway.

I love it when a book randomly mentions where I live:

”I was also looking forward to experiencing my first aid station, laid on at regular intervals to help runners stay fuelled and hydrated on their journey south to Shoreham on the West Sussex coast.”

— from Failure is an Option by Matt Whyman 📚


Back into the “7.30am swimming lesson for my eldest” routine for Sundays.

As ever, a flask of great coffee and a good book makes it tolerable - and even enjoyable.

A book and an enamal mug of coffee by a swimming pool.

From the library towards the church.

Two girls on the ramp down from the library with a view kf the church, looking towards the library.