Real Life
Devon had a little adventure at Meow Wolf, which, as expected, was a wild, surreal ride. Also, finally got around to fixing the fence—fingers crossed it actually stays fixed this time.
Over in office world, the TV is officially on the wall, the SNES emulator is up and running, and Devon has entered the inevitable “but how does it work?” phase. This led to Ben patiently explaining BIOS, which, if you’re curious, has a whole Wikipedia page that is both informative and an excellent cure for insomnia. Meanwhile, Devon has also started reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance because, apparently, philosophy is the next rabbit hole.
Steven, on the other hand, has nothing new to report. Just wrangling the circus as usual.
Ben is saying a fond farewell to Windows 10 and Skype—pour one out for the relics of the past. In more exciting news, he checked out the demo for Wheel World, and it’s super cool. If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s worth a look on Steam. Also, he’s officially made the jump to Linux, currently rocking Kubuntu and going full customization mode. Speaking of Linux, SteamOS is doing some interesting things, which you can check out here.
Future or Now
Devon got a bit of a scare with the whole “asteroid might hit Earth” thing, but turns out, the European Southern Observatory has pretty much ruled out a 2024 YR4 impact. So, we’re good—for now. Still, it brings up the whole Sweet Meteor of Death (SMOD) meme, because wouldn’t it just be the most on-brand way for things to go? If you haven’t seen Don’t Look Up, now’s a great time. Also, AES Andes is doing some interesting environmental work, which you can read about here.
Ben actually has some good news for once! Engineers have created the first flat telescope lens that can capture color while detecting light from faraway stars. Science is officially magic. If you’re curious, Phys.org has all the details.
Steven? Still nothing. Just vibes.
“Book Club”
Next week, we’re diving into To Be Taught, If Fortunate the Mirabilis chapter by Becky Chambers, so if you want to read along, now’s your chance.
This week, we covered To Be Taught, If Fortunate: Please Read This, and Aecor (and Earth)—all Becky Chambers, all the time. We got into some fun (and mildly unsettling) topics, like torpor—aka space hibernation, but with an existential twist. Sleeping without dreaming, aging super slowly—would you do it? And then there’s somaforming, where instead of terraforming planets, you change humans to survive in space. Also, radiation-resistant food, glitter face (yes, really), and the idea of “crowd-funded” space travel—would that actually work? Lots to love about these stories so far, and we’ll keep the discussion going next time.
See you next week!
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