10 interesting stories served every morning and every evening.
OpenAI is now internally testing ‘ads’ inside ChatGPT that could redefine the web economy.
Up until now, the ChatGPT experience has been completely free.
While there are premium plans and models, you don’t see GPT sell you products or show ads. On the other hand, Google Search has ads that influence your buying behaviour.
As spotted by Tibor on X, ChatGPT Android app 1.2025.329 beta includes new references to an “ads feature” with “bazaar content”, “search ad” and “search ads carousel.”
This move could disrupt the web economy, as what most people don’t understand is that GPT likely knows more about users than Google.
For example, OpenAI could create personalised ads on ChatGPT that promote products that you really want to buy. It might also sneak in ads in the search ads, similar to Google Search ads.
The leak suggests that ads will initially be limited to the search experience only, but this may change in the future.
ChatGPT has roughly 800 million people using it every week, up from 100 million weekly users in November 2023 and about 300 million weekly users in late 2024.
An OpenAI-backed study estimated 700 million users sending 18 billion messages per week by July 2025, which lines up with this growth, and other analysts now peg traffic at around 5–6 billion visits per month.
GPT handles about 2.5 billion prompts a day, and India has become the single biggest user base, ahead of the US.
ChatGPT has everything it needs for ads to succeed. What do you think?
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Read the original on www.bleepingcomputer.com »
More than a decade ago, when I was applying to graduate school, I went through a period of deep uncertainty. I had tried the previous year and hadn’t gotten in anywhere. I wanted to try again, but I had a lot going against me.
I’d spent most of my undergrad building a student job-portal startup and hadn’t balanced it well with academics. My GPA needed explaining. My GMAT score was just okay. I didn’t come from a big-brand employer. And there was no shortage of people with similar or stronger profiles applying to the same schools.
Even though I had learned a few things from the first round, the second attempt was still difficult. There were multiple points after I submitted applications where I lost hope.
But during that stretch, a friend and colleague kept repeating one line to me:
“All it takes is for one to work out.”
He’d say it every time I spiraled. And as much as it made me smile, a big part of me didn’t fully believe it. Still, it became a little maxim between us. And eventually, he was right — that one did work out. And it changed my life.
I’ve thought about that framing so many times since then.
You don’t need every job to choose you. You just need the one that’s the right fit.
You don’t need every house to accept your offer. You just need the one that feels like home.
You don’t need every person to want to build a life with you. You just need the one.
You don’t need ten universities to say yes. You just need the one that opens the right door.
These processes — college admissions, job searches, home buying, finding a partner — can be emotionally brutal. They can get you down in ways that feel personal. But in those moments, that truth can be grounding.
All it takes is for one to work out.
And that one is all you need.
...
Read the original on alearningaday.blog »
Iceland has taken the rare step of treating a climate-linked ocean threat as a matter of national survival, launching a coordinated government response to one of the most feared potential tipping points in the climate system.
Officials say the shift reflects mounting evidence that a key Atlantic current system could be heading toward dangerous instability.
According to CNN, Iceland’s National Security Council formally labelled the possible collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) a national security risk in September — the first time the country has applied such a designation to a climate impact.
The move followed a government briefing on new research that raised “grave concerns” about the system’s future stability.
Jóhann Páll Jóhannsson, Iceland’s minister for environment, energy and climate, said the risks extend far beyond weather.
“Our climate, economy and security are deeply tied to the stability of the ocean currents around us,” he told CNN.
He later described the threat as “an existential threat,” warning that a breakdown could disrupt transport, damage infrastructure and hit the country’s fishing industry.
The AMOC — often compared to a giant conveyor belt — carries warm water northward before it cools and sinks, helping regulate weather across the Atlantic basin.
CNN reported that scientists increasingly worry that warming temperatures and disrupted salinity levels are slowing the system.
Some studies suggest a tipping point could be reached this century, though the exact timeline remains uncertain.
Stefan Rahmstorf, an oceanographer at Potsdam University, told CNN that a collapse “cannot be considered a low likelihood risk anymore.”
The consequences, he said, would be dramatic: surging sea levels along US and European coasts, major monsoon disruptions across Africa and Asia, and a deep freeze across parts of Europe.
For Iceland, he said, the country “would be close to the center of a serious regional cooling,” with sea ice potentially surrounding the island.
The security designation means Iceland will now pursue a high-level, cross-government effort to analyse the threat and consider how to manage or reduce the consequences. Jóhannsson said the decision
“reflects the seriousness of the issue and ensures that the matter gets the attention it deserves.”
Rahmstorf praised Iceland’s stance, telling CNN that other nations should treat the risk with similar urgency.
Jóhannsson said the country is confronting a stark possibility: “What we do know is that the current climate might change so drastically that it could become impossible for us to adapt… this is not just a scientific concern — it’s a matter of national survival and security.”
...
Read the original on www.dagens.com »
Run Windows applications (including Microsoft 365 and Adobe Creative Cloud) on GNU/Linux with KDE Plasma, GNOME or XFCE, integrated seamlessly as if they were native to the OS.
Creating shortcuts to selected Windows applications on the host GNU/Linux OS.
Using FreeRDP as a backend to seamlessly render Windows applications alongside GNU/Linux applications.
* The GNU/Linux /home directory is accessible within Windows via the \\tsclient\home mount.
* Integration with Nautilus, allowing you to right-click files to open them with specific Windows applications based on the file MIME type.
* The official taskbar widget enables seamless administration of the Windows subsystem and offers an easy way to launch Windows applications.
* Microsoft Office links (e.g. ms-word://) from the host system are automatically opened in the Windows subsystem. (Note: You may need to use a User Agent Switcher browser extension and set the User-Agent to Windows, as the Office webapps typically hide the “Open in Desktop App” option for Linux users.)
WinApps supports ALL Windows applications. Support does not, however, extend to kernel-level anti-cheat systems (e.g. Riot Vanguard).
Scanning Windows for any community tested applications (list below).
Scanning Windows for any other .exe files listed within the Windows Registry.
Community tested applications benefit from high-resolution icons and pre-populated MIME types. This enables file managers to determine which Windows applications should open files based on file extensions. Icons for other detected applications are pulled from .exe files.
Contributing to the list of supported applications is encouraged through submission of pull requests! Please help us grow the WinApps community.
Please note that the provided list of community tested applications is community-driven. As such, some applications may not be tested and verified by the WinApps team.
Both Docker and Podman are recommended backends for running the Windows virtual machine, as they facilitate an automated Windows installation process. WinApps is also compatible with libvirt. While this method requires considerably more manual configuration, it also provides greater virtual machine customisation options. All three methods leverage the KVM hypervisor, ensuring excellent virtual machine performance. Ultimately, the choice of backend depends on your specific use case.
The following guides are available:
If you already have a Windows VM or server you wish to use with WinApps, you will still have to follow the final steps described in the libvirt documentation.
WinApps requires FreeRDP version 3 or later. If not available for your distribution through your package manager, you can install the Flatpak:
flatpak install flathub com.freerdp. FreeRDP
sudo flatpak override –filesystem=home com.freerdp.FreeRDP # To use `+home-drive`
However, if you have weird issues like #233 when running Flatpak, please compile FreeRDP from source according to this guide.
Create a configuration file at ~/.config/winapps/winapps.conf containing the following:
# WINAPPS CONFIGURATION FILE #
# INSTRUCTIONS
# - Leading and trailing whitespace are ignored.
# - Empty lines are ignored.
# - Lines starting with ‘#’ are ignored.
# - All characters following a ‘#’ are ignored.
# [WINDOWS USERNAME]
RDP_USER=“MyWindowsUser”
# [WINDOWS PASSWORD]
# NOTES:
# - If using FreeRDP v3.9.0 or greater, you *have* to set a password
RDP_PASS=“MyWindowsPassword”
# [WINDOWS DOMAIN]
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘’ (BLANK)
RDP_DOMAIN=“”
# [WINDOWS IPV4 ADDRESS]
# NOTES:
# - If using ‘libvirt’, ‘RDP_IP’ will be determined by WinApps at runtime if left unspecified.
# DEFAULT VALUE:
# - ‘docker’: ‘127.0.0.1’
# - ‘podman’: ‘127.0.0.1’
# - ‘libvirt’: ‘’ (BLANK)
RDP_IP=“127.0.0.1”
# [VM NAME]
# NOTES:
# - Only applicable when using ‘libvirt’
# - The libvirt VM name must match so that WinApps can determine VM IP, start the VM, etc.
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘RDPWindows’
VM_NAME=“RDPWindows”
# [WINAPPS BACKEND]
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘docker’
# VALID VALUES:
# - ‘docker’
# - ‘podman’
# - ‘libvirt’
# - ‘manual’
WAFLAVOR=“docker”
# [DISPLAY SCALING FACTOR]
# NOTES:
# - If an unsupported value is specified, a warning will be displayed.
# - If an unsupported value is specified, WinApps will use the closest supported value.
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘100’
# VALID VALUES:
# - ‘100’
# - ‘140’
# - ‘180’
RDP_SCALE=“100”
# [MOUNTING REMOVABLE PATHS FOR FILES]
# NOTES:
# - By default, `udisks` (which you most likely have installed) uses /run/media for mounting removable devices.
# This improves compatibility with most desktop environments (DEs).
# ATTENTION: The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS) recommends /media instead. Verify your system’s configuration.
# - To manually mount devices, you may optionally use /mnt.
# REFERENCE: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Udisks#Mount_to_/media
REMOVABLE_MEDIA=“/run/media”
# [ADDITIONAL FREERDP FLAGS & ARGUMENTS]
# NOTES:
# - You can try adding /network:lan to these flags in order to increase performance, however, some users have faced issues with this.
# If this does not work or if it does not work without the flag, you can try adding /nsc and /gfx.
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘/cert:tofu /sound /microphone +home-drive’
# VALID VALUES: See https://github.com/awakecoding/FreeRDP-Manuals/blob/master/User/FreeRDP-User-Manual.markdown
RDP_FLAGS=“/cert:tofu /sound /microphone +home-drive”
# [DEBUG WINAPPS]
# NOTES:
# - Creates and appends to ~/.local/share/winapps/winapps.log when running WinApps.
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘true’
# VALID VALUES:
# - ‘true’
# - ‘false’
DEBUG=“true”
# [AUTOMATICALLY PAUSE WINDOWS]
# NOTES:
# - This is currently INCOMPATIBLE with ‘manual’.
# DEFAULT VALUE: ‘off’
# VALID VALUES:
# - ‘on’
# - ‘off’
AUTOPAUSE=“off”
# [AUTOMATICALLY PAUSE WINDOWS TIMEOUT]
...
Read the original on github.com »
Above all, thank you to everyone that made this possible. But I wanted to emphasize and give special thanks to
Rairii for engineering all these ROMs,
Mac84 for archiving and sharing all the CHRP discs
, ELN for engineering all the Mac mini G4 ROM compatibility scripts and creating all the ROM and other Mac OS tooling, and to the Mac community at large everywhere that assisted in all of this into becoming reality. There’s honestly many, many people to thank we owe over this one way or another, both in small and big ways.
...
Read the original on macos9lives.com »
Let’s rip the Band-Aid off immediately: If your underlying business process is a mess, sprinkling “AI dust” on it won’t turn it into gold. It will just speed up the rate at which you generate garbage. In the world of Business IT, we get seduced by the shiny new toy. Right now, that toy is Artificial Intelligence. Boardrooms are buzzing with buzzwords like LLMs, agentic workflows, and generative reasoning. Executives are frantically asking, “What is our AI strategy?“Like every major technological shift before it—from the steam engine to the spreadsheet—AI does not inherently make an organization smarter. AI, like any other tool, only makes faster.If you automate a stupid decision, you just make stupid decisions at light speed. If you apply an agentic AI workflow to a bureaucratic nightmare of an approval chain, you haven’t fixed the bureaucracy; you’ve just built a robot that hates its job as much as your employees do.For decades, traditional software demanded structure. Rows, columns, booleans, and fixed fields. If data didn’t fit the box, the computer couldn’t read it.Because computers couldn’t handle the mess, humans handled it (before AI). And humans don’t always follow a flow chart. These processes—like “handling a complex customer complaint” or “brainstorming a marketing campaign”—are often ad-hoc, intuitive, and completely undocumented. They live in the heads of your senior staff, not in your SOPs.If you want to use AI to process unstructured data, you must first bring structure to the workflow itself. You need to improve your process design to account for the ambiguity that AI handles.What is the transformation? (What exactly is the human—or now the AI—supposed to extract or deduce from that mess?)The Old Way: An analyst reads 50 contracts (unstructured), highlights risks based on gut feeling (unstructured process), and summarizes them in 3 days.The AI Way: An AI scans 50 contracts and extracts specific risk clauses based on defined parameters in 3 minutes.The process (Review Contracts -> Identify Risk -> Summarize) hasn’t changed, but it had to be rigorously defined for the AI to work. The intelligence (knowing what a “risk” actually means) still requires human governance. What has changed is the velocity.Go back to the whiteboard. Map out your value chain—especially the messy, human-centric parts involving unstructured data that you previously ignored. Find the bottlenecks. Identify the waste.Technology changes.
The rules of business efficiency do not.
It’s always the process, stupid!
And that’s where actual AI Tools are missing that point, because they weren’t build for that
Von der Idee zur App ohne eine Zeile Code zu schreiben
Vom Datengrab zur Goldmine - KI Einsatz mit schnellem ROI (Promptcast)
Wie man KI am schnellsten gewinnbringend einsetzen kann (Diesmal nur als Prompcast)
Vom Datengrab zur Goldmine - KI Einsatz mit schnellem ROI0:00/894.6184131×
Live long and prosper 😉🖖
Silicon Valleys KI-Burggraben hat ein Leck — es heißt Open Source
Der Mythos der uneinnehmbaren Festung
In den Strategie-Etagen des Silicon Valley erzählt man sich gerne die Geschichte von den uneinnehmbaren Burggräben. Der KI-Wettlauf, so die Legende, sei ein Spiel für Giganten mit Budgets so groß wie Kleinstaaten. Nur eine Handvoll US Tech-Konzerne könne hier mitspielen, der Rest der Welt schaut
Was, wenn der lauteste Teilnehmer im Raum nicht zwangsläufig der führende ist?
...
Read the original on its.promp.td »
From a physicist point of view I want to mention this trick and its generalization for operators:
“Two commuting matrices are simultaneously diagonalizable”
(for physicists all matrices are diagonalizable). Of course the idea is that if you know the eigenvectors of one matrix/operator then diagonalizing the other one is much easier. Here are some applications.
1)The system is translation invariant : Because the eigenvectors of the translation operator are $e^{ik.x}$, then one should use the Fourier transform. It solves all the wave equations for light, acoustics, of free quantum electrons or the heat equation in homogeneous media.
2)The system has a discrete translation symmetry: The typical system is the atoms in a solid state that form a crystal. We have a discrete translation operator $T_a\phi(x)=\phi(x+a)$ with $a$ the size of the lattice and then we should try $\phi_k(x+a)=e^{ik.a}\phi_k(x)$ as it is an eigenvector of $T_a$. This gives the Bloch-Floquet theory where the spectrum is divided into band structure. It is one of the most famous model of condensed matter as it explains the different between conductors or insulators.
3)The system is rotational invariant: One should then use and diagonalize the rotation operator first. This will allow us to find the eigenvalue/eigenvectors of the Hydrogen atom. By the way we notice the eigenspace of the Hydrogen are stable by rotation and are therefore finite dimension representations of $SO(3)$. The irreducible representations of $SO(3)$ have dimension 1,3,5,… and they appears, considering also the spin of the electron, as the columns of the periodic table of the elements (2,6,10,14,…).
4)$SU(3)$ symmetry: Particle physics is extremely complicated. However physicists have discovered that there is an underlying $SU(3)$ symmetry. Then considering the representations of $SU(3)$ the zoology of particles seems much more organized (A, B).
...
Read the original on mathoverflow.net »
Anthony Bourdain published about 30 lists on the defunct li.st web site around 2015. This page presents a partial archive of those, recovered from the Internet Archive.
Lists for which the content could not be found are listed below. If you know where to find them, email me. Thanks to RB for the spark.
CNN asked me to provide some favorite 80’s songs, and I assumed they weren’t expecting Duran Duran . I of course, prefer the X version of Johnny Hit and Run..
This Is Not A Love Song - Public Image Ltd.
You Dropped A Bomb On Me - The Gap Band
Fight For Your Right - Beastie Boys
Give It To Me Baby - Rick James
More Than This - Roxy Music
C’Mon! Everybody can play! I’ll go first!
The candidate struggles to deliver a Yen Shee Baby. Come on Donald! Bear down! You can do it, bro’!
The Brioche Hamburger Bun: The hamburger bun is designed to ABSORB grease, not add greasiness to the experience. A proper hamburger bun should retain its structural integrity, playing its role as delivery vehicle for the meat patty until the last bite. The brioche bun, woefully unsuitable for this role, crumbles. God is against the brioche bun
The Third Slice Of Bread on a Club Sandwich: You know who invented the middle slice? Enemies of freedom. Their mission? Sap our will to live by ruining our sandwich experiences through “tectonic slide”.
The Half-Assed Muffin on an Eggs Benedict: You know it. The lazy cook toasts it under the broiler for a few seconds on one side, leaving the outer surface gummy and raw tasting and lacking the textural note your poached egg and Canadian bacon and sauce desperately need.
Slurry of Soy Sauce and Wasabi: If you immediately plop a big wad of wasabi into your dish of soy sauce, mix it around with your chopsticks? Your sushi chef loses all respect for you. Dip your nigiri into it rice side down? He hates you now. You may as well spit in his face. Seven years learning rice and you just shat in it.
Chicken Caesar: Why? They’re going to cook the chicken to shit anyway.
“Kobe Meatballs” (ditto “Kobe Burger”): if you order either of these utterly fraudulent items at a restaurant or popular gathering spot for bro’s, all I can say is I’m truly sorry about your penis.
Dishes from my travels that I want, badly, for my eventual market in NYC. These are the dishes, as prepared by the original vendors, that we need and deserve.
Usually, they fuck it up. But these films got either the business of cooking–or the sheer joy of it–absolutely right:
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN
just about perfect comedy/drama about a family only able to communicate through food. The food prep scenes–particularly the breathtaking extended opening sequence — are absolutely unrivaled.
TAMPOPO
There is no more “foodie” a film, though it predates the term, anticipating a kind of insane fetishism that no longer seems that unlikely.
LA GRANDE BOUFFE
Four aging bachelors decide to eat, drink and screw themselves to death. This film was said to have caused random projectile vomiting at Cannes and created a major scandal.
MOSTLY MARTHA
For the spaghetti scene. Pretend the dismal remake never happened.
BABETTE’S FEAST
All it takes is one, amazing meal to get a joyless group of sexless creeping Jesuses to start boning like its 1999!
RATATOUILLE
Pretty much the only film to ever get professional cooking right.
CHEF
was, I thought, quite good–though as much of a fable as Ratatouille. The cooking scenes were dead right. Underrated.
BIG NIGHT
Yes! BIG NIGHT was wonderful. The “risotto incident” particularly on target.
If I had one. And could play a musical instrument. Or sing. Or anything.
Every song great. Impossible to improve on . I’ll start :
Clowns: I’m sure I’m not alone here. Were clowns ever funny? No. Of course not. They were always sinister figures, disguising their homicidal intentions under thick make-up, all the while their crawl spaces and chest freezers were brimming with Cub Scout parts .
Mimes: like cats, when entering a space, they gravitate towards the one person who fears them . Their purposes are always to embarrass, to draw attention to the shy, the troubled, the hungover. Pure evil.
Switzerland: I think I must have experienced some awful childhood trauma in view of a mural of snow capped peaks and Lake Geneva. I live with a persistent dread of alpine vistas, chalet architecture, Tyrolean hats, even cheese with holes in it. You will notice I have never been there. That’s because Switzerland frightens me.
Karaoke: singing in public in general . Korean karaoke is an exception. Like anything shameful, I prefer to do it in private. And after enough soju, anything is possible. Karaoke should only be performed with people who have already seen your genitals.
Rats: Fuck snakes. I eat them. Spiders? No problem! But rats. Rats! Maybe it’s my years in the restaurant business , but the appearance of a rat was always the beginning of the end. An augur of doom. A poisoned rat once crawled out of a wall and flopped limply onto my foot to die. They had to scrape me off the ceiling.
Also: Polka music, ukeleles, neckbeards with banjos, golf clothes—in fact golfers in general, The Real Housewives of Anywhere ( their glassy gazes, surgical addictions and single minded hunger for attention are a clear and present danger to anyone in their trajectories), pressure cookers, and Nashville Hot Chicken ( the extra hot version).
SEQUELS THAT MIGHT (ARGUABLY) BE BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL
SIX TRUE THINGS ABOUT DINNER WITH OBAMA
Bun Cha is a typical Hanoi dish, decidedly everyday, and much loved by locals . To the consternation, no doubt, of the Secret Service (who were very cool about it) I was recently joined for dinner by the leader of the free world in a working class joint near the old quarter of town for an upcoming episode of Parts Unknown .
The President is very comfortable with chopsticks. He handled the sticky, hard to separate noodles that accompany the pork and the broth components of Bun Cha skillfully. He even went in for seconds.
The President is an Asiaphile. He spoke wistfully of his time in Indonesia and his memories of the smells and flavors of street food there.
He clearly enjoyed sitting on a low plastic stool eating bun Cha . It felt to me like his night off. Even with Secret Service lurking nearby .
The reaction among regular people in Hanoi to the fact that the US President chose to eat Bun Cha was beyond all imagining. The effect was unbelievable. People were actually crying the next day, describing to me their shock and their pride, the reactions of their neighbors, to this completely unexpected choice of meal—and the venue.
He was among the very few guests on my show who ever asked the camera crew if they got to eat too.And he made a point of taking a picture with all of them when we were done.
I believe he enjoyed that beer.
SOME FILMS FROM THE CRITERION COLLECTION
MAMMA ROMA
Pasolini’s pioneering, brilliant, merciless and merciful story of a mother’s love, class war, and rough trade–persistent obsessions in his later work, came together in perfect balance in this early masterpiece. Magnani is, of course, riveting in the lead role, but the largely untrained non-actor cast bring a harsh authenticity to as unromantic a depiction of Rome as has ever been filmed.
PANDORA’S BOX
Two words. Louise Brooks. Never has a more beautiful, intelligent, quirky, sexy, uniquely commanding character graced the screen.
UNDER THE VOLCANO
Some books are unfilmable. Malcom Lowry’s dense, symbolism loaded masterwork took him his whole life to write and it stood to reason that there was no way that a two hour film could ever contain its sprawling, portentous, narrative, it’s linguistic pyrotechnics.
But John Huston did a VERY creditable job here–and Albert Finney pretty much puts his stamp on the role of the Consul forever. If you go back and read the book, you will always picture Finney. It’s a terrific labor of love, doomed to failure..yet it manages to squeak out a remarkable if necessarily compressed success.
IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES
It’s porn. People having sex. Real sex. On camera –and its perhaps the one time in the history of cinema where that’s interesting. Based on a true story of obsessive love, Oshima’s transgressive classic is beautiful without prettifying anything, graphic without being particularly prurient, romantic without illusion, and at all times deeply political.
RIDE WITH THE DEVIL
is a terrific adaptation of the as-terrific Daniel Woodrell Civil War novel about guerillas war in Missouri and its aftermath. It’s also among Ang Lee’s best films, a criminally neglected classic, and a great performance by Toby Maguire. Hell, EVERYBODY is great in it. Beautiful writing and dialogue delivered flawlessly.
THIEF
Michael Mann’s cold, shiny early work with James Caan as a just out of jail master safecracker and an as wonderful Tuesday Weld in one of cinema’s great dysfunctional relationships. Watching Caan try and steal and buy and kill his way to the “normal” life he dreamed of in prison is both chilling and heartbreaking.
THE GREAT BEAUTY
No film in recent memory was the sensory punch in the gut that this one was. When I saw it the first time, I was devastated by its audaciousness, it’s lush, lush, gorgeousness–it’s yes–great beauty. What film has ever managed to be an “homage” to a classic Fellini film and manage ( arguably) to surpass the original? I think it’s the greatest film I’ve seen in a decade. Few film’s cinematography alone can make you cry. This one does.
THE AMERICAN FRIEND
This quirky Wim Wenders film is, to my mind, the best adaptation from Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley series and the only one to capture both the charm and humor as well as the darkness of its deeply sociopathic central character. Dennis Hopper is the amiably murderous Ripley–and Bruno Ganz his instrument.
CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT
One of Orson Welles’ finest works, a wildly influential adaptation of Shakeseare made for about ten dollars over the span of many years. This is filmmaking at its purest and best. The battle scenes alone are a master class in independent filmmaking on a budget.
THE SHOOTING / RIDE THE WHIRLWIND
two curiosities from Monte Hellman , two vaguely psychedelic Westerns with Jack Nicholsen well worth seeing for their sheer strangeness and as a reflection of interesting times. It’s worth remembering that the Psych Western was briefly something of a genre back in the day. These are two of the best.
DR. STRANGELOVE
My father loved this film so much, he couldn’t wait for me to grow old enough to watch it. I think I was 8 or 9 when he first showed it to me and it shaped my life. he message was clear: we are all going to die. It will be funny. Also: life is filled with the absurd and hypocritical and that too can be funny.
Peter Sellers, Sterling Hayden and Slim Pickens were highly regarded in my house. Their names were guarantees of quality as far as my Dad was concerned. But Kubrik was a God. Truly one of the great films–certainly the greatest satire. With so many epic, memorizable moments…..”Purity of Essence” !
SOME WEBSITES YOU SHOULD VISIT
BRUCE ELLIOTT : GERIATRIC GENIUS. The daily doings large and small at Chicago’s OLD TOWN ALE HOUSE lovingly chronicled by its roguish proprietor .
CINEPHILIA & BEYOND : Pure crack for film nerds. Great articles, amazing links to unbelievable rare footage, entire original screenplays
DANGEROUS MINDS : A grab bag of ever changing, unpredictable awesomeness, from new wave films, politics , transgressive lit , to old school punk.
ROADS & KINGDOMS : Because it’s the best long form, deep dive ‘travel’ writing on the web. Because it transcends travel writing. And because I’m a partner in the company and believe deeply in it.
Want to go where everybody else is NOT going? Discover things for yourself? Have an adventure? Eat well? No high fiving bros, oligarchs in Speedos, binge drinking soccer fans, tour buses filled with ugly ass leisure wear? These spots, in my experience, offer hope:
URUGUAY.
Montevideo is beautiful and uncrowded. The coast–once you get away from the resort areas, is wild and magnificent. The food is generally superb–though not exactly vegetarian friendly. I recommend the excellent morcilla sausages cooked on a “parilla”.
MARSEILLE.
The French may be ambivalent about their second largest city, but I am not. Eat bouillabaise, Corsican charcuterie, cous-cous, swim in the sea, take a day trip through Provence, drink a whole lot of Pastis. It’s laid back, spicy, mixed up, multi-ethnic, attitude free, working class and wildly under appreciated.
LAOS.
Okay, Luang Prebang and Vientiane are not exactly parts unknown any more, but take a road trip through the mountains around the PLAIN OF JARS and step back into another century. You want to get lost? Do it here. Absolutely gorgeous, tons of history that you are probably unfamiliar with, amazing food traditions.
SARDINIA.
NOT the coast! That’s where Italian soccer stars go to pose in the surf with their “Velena” girlfriends of the moment. The interior is another planet. A tasty, tasty planet. Malloredus, roasted baby goat, incredible hams, lobster “Catalan”, fantastic cheeses and spaghetti a la bottarga.
BEIRUT.
Don’t be afraid. Beirut is a magical, magical place. It may suffer from all the world’s problems simultaneously, but it’s also got everything you want and expect of the one time “Paris of the Orient”: it’s a quick education on how complicated the world can be. It’s beautiful, maddening, heartbreaking, exciting, confusing…the food is fantastic and diverse. To go there is usually a joy and an education. Go. The more people who do–who go and see first hand? The better the world will be.
Things I No Longer Have Time or Patience For
If I Were Trapped on a Desert Island With Only Three TV Series
The Film Nobody Ever Made
Four Spy Novels by Real Spies and One Not by a Spy
5 Photos on My Phone, Chosen at Random
People I’d Like to Be for a Day
I’m Hungry and Would Be Very Happy to Eat Any of This Right Now
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Read the original on bourdain.greg.technology »
Fed up with trillion-dollar companies exploiting your data? Forced to use their services? Your data held for ransom? Your data used to train their AI models? Opt-outs for data collection instead of opt-ins?
Join the movement to make companies more like Clippy. Set your profile picture to Clippy, make your voice heard.
Below is a video that explains the Be Like Clippy movement. It’s a call to action for developers, companies, and users alike to embrace a more open, transparent, and user-friendly approach to technology.
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Read the original on be-clippy.com »
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Read the original on neberej.github.io »
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