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Yes it looks like it is felted afterwards


You can even get (tobacco) smoking pipes decorated using urushi. It's made me wonder about the temperature stability, as a pipe can (but ideally shouldn't) get fairly hot.

Tsuge is a good brand to search for if you want to see exanples. Cost-wise such pipes start around the two hundred US mark.


And vivianite can sometimes be found together with another phosphate and iron mineral called childrenite... named after a John George Children.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childrenite


Was about to leave a similar comment. A lot of this was pretty neutral, some of it heart-warming, and there isn't a lot of evidence of negativity here. And I loved the little illustrations, all in all it felt like someone who took effort to make their environment prettier.


I was going to say, too! This seems absolutely joyful in comparison to my dreary (online) work calendar which just contains the same weekly recurring status meetings with the same people week after week, color coded by project.

It would be cool to have interoperability between calendar software and illustrative art software so modern office workers could create something like this during downtime/boredom!


Mine aren't even color coded - imagine, yours but monochrome :|


I color code mine. Yellow if I’m listed as an optional participant, blue if I’m required.

I don’t attend the yellow ones.


We didn't have space for an orchard, but we did have space for a single combination tree.

A combination tree is rootstock with multiple apple varieties grafted on to it, often designed so that the different varieties can pollinate each other. Our specific tree has Chehalis, Honeycrisp, Beni Shogun Fuji and Jonagold varieties on it.

Other ways to grow apples in a limited space are columnar apples (they grow fruit close to the trunk and are nearly vertical) and dwarf rootstock.

Scarlet Sentinel, Golden Sentinel, and Urban Tasty are popular columnar varieties.

For rootstock their are specialized rootstock nurseries - and rootstock determines the size of the final tree more than the grafted variety does.

M27 (Super Dwarf) is an extremely compact rootstock that can be used to grow apples in containers, as the tree will max out around 2m. Bud 9 and B10 dwarf are also small, but will grow to around 3.5m.

If you want rootstock that will live around a century, you probably need Antonovka Standard, which will grow to about 7m.


I got told multiple times that such a combination tree is a shit idea. Firstly that genes get "diluted" and the resulting fruits aren't good. Then that the earliest variety will consume the most of available resources and any later fruit will not get a chance to grow. How good are your apples?


They are admittedly not super, but for the space we have they provide a good amount of joy.


Your grafts - do they ever come to be as strong as untouched "native" branches ? Or are the graft points always a weak spot ?


Afaik after a few years growing together it's bonded solid.


Canoo the car company, not Canoo the welcome-to-Canada app.

In case you are confused by the headline, as I was


Logo might be inspired by Marcel Duchamp's _Bicycle Wheel_

see https://www.moma.org/collection/works/81631


Part of this is a problem of quantification and immediacy.

Extra time spent doing the work well is easier to quantify as a cost than some issues down the line.

Low quality costs money, but only in time, and it's hard to pin down an exact cost. How much of an outage was caused by a quality shortcut? What percentage of our morale issues are caused by working with bad code? And how much, exactly, do those issues cost us? Was some specific quality compromise one of the straws that help break the camel's back?

Much harder questions, and the causes are often not clearly linked to their effects. Combine that with the human predilection for shortsightedness and our dislike of delayed gratification and you have a system that is stacked against quality.


Or even Counterpart?


Interesting, never heard of that. Or maybe I did, but as it's presumably worse than 1983 and Dark I skipped it. Edit: It's actually mentioned in my files, so I had heard of it.


The Nichia 519A is a one of the favourite LEDs in the enthusiast flashlight world.

It's a high CRI quite bright LED, and I have to shamefully admit that I specifically specced a light in the past with this LED.

Before I knew about this, that is.

Example write-up to see what flashlight nerds talk about: https://budgetlightforum.com/t/nichia-519a/64360/43


I always knew there was a reason I preferred the LH351D


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