synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit (with synchronopticæ) plus lethonomia
thirteen years ago: WWII week: Berlin
fourteen years ago: counterfeit experiences
sixteen years ago: diplomas mills
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit (with synchronopticæ) plus lethonomia
thirteen years ago: WWII week: Berlin
fourteen years ago: counterfeit experiences
sixteen years ago: diplomas mills
synchronoptica
one year ago: the Philadelphia experiment (with synchronopticæ)
thirteen years ago: WWII week: Norway
fourteen years ago: creeping portmanteaux and other unwelcome Americanisms
fifteen years ago: plugging leaks
The island settlement central to Slavic paganism up until the twelfth century and the forced conversions of the Wendish and Polabian crusades—hence the dominant Cistercian cloister facing from the mainland (once a retreat for noble women, the former abbey and nunnery is now an organ museum—see also), Malchow straddles the Müritz and the Plauer See with Altstadt connected to a spit of land by a unique draw bridge that swings out hourly to accommodate boat and canoe traffic.
We took a nice stroll through the town, and like other urban areas here, bicycles and pedestrians are very much privileged over cars. During World War II, it was the location of a dynamite factory of Alfred Nobel Company (the major industry beforehand was towel making) and forced labour was drawn from the nearby concentration camp at Ravensbrücksynchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting (with synchronopticæ) plus the invention of hip-hop
twelve years ago: the Prelinger map collection, more flea market finds plus introducing tolls to German roads
thirteen years ago: tending orchids, parishes of trees plus the EU is not the United States of Europe
fourteen years ago: a hotel room in a drainage tube plus the devolution of democracy
fifteen years ago: wildfires in Russia plus geocaching with vintage photos
Arriving in the town—not so ancient as its first documented mention suggests by geographer Ptolemy as Virunium, Slavic for the place of crows, the lake‘s name comes from the Wendish meaning German sea, as it was leveled and rebuilt during a succession of wars and revolutions and takes its present form preserving some of the Altstadt after public outcry during DDR times when the city was partially demolished as part of a modernisation effort as one of the four Soviet ballistic theatre nuclear depots in East Germany, Темп-С short range missiles banned under treaties that outlawed intermediate range warheads.
The successful protest to conserve a part of the historic character of Waren (as framed from the marina between the churches of Saint George and Mary)—prior to reunification—was considered a landmark achievement and had lasting repercussions into the future with other preservation and reconstruction programmes, the city’s uneasy balancing act between industry and nature eventually resolved and the place restored as a wellness resort (Kurort) and gateway to the lake district (Mecklenburgerisch Seenplatte). We found a nice pitch at the entrance of the national park in the forest on the shore of lake Müritz, named after the quarter Ecktannen on the outskirts of town.synchronoptica
one year ago: social media platform formerly known as Twitter suing advertisers for leaving (with synchronopticæ), assorted links worth the revisit plus more isometric renderings
thirteen years ago: buying banking data, werewolf crossing plus bespoke luggage labels
fourteen years ago: a visit to Dresden
fifteen years ago: corporate bail-outs
sixteen years ago: agents of the apocalypse
For the first leg of our return camping trip after many, many years to the Mecklinbergischer Seeplatte, we took another campsite on the Leipziger Neuseenland–this time in Auerhain on the southwest coast.
like the other lakes of this resort region, it is a flooded lignite mining operation and was developed for Leipzig‘s bid for 2012 Olympics–around the time that potential venues were realising the onus of hosting the games which had become more of a showcase and prestige project for despots and authoritarians, ultimately awarded to London. Built to specifications as a whitewater and slalom standards, like Germany‘s first for the 1972 Games, the facility now boasts a marina for canoeing enthusiasts as well as professional training for the national team with attendant obstacle course as well as standing waves for surfing practise.synchronoptica
one year ago: more on teletext pages (with synchropoticæ) plus US vice presidents’ day
twelve years ago: August holidays and observances
fifteen years ago: visa requirements for travel
sixteen years ago: more flea-market finds
levi strauss waltz: fledging Jefferson Airplane’s commercials for blue jeans
moral high-ground: despite what justice we might entrust to AI, ethics remain a human responsibility
keygen.exe: the soundtrack of internet piracy
si te fata ferunt, fer fata, ferere: the inscribed joists of Montaigne’ tower of his favourite classical aphorisms
the cube: Jim Henson’s experimental 1969 teleplay for NBC
Released on this day in 1964, the novelty single by The Young World Singers amid the race between the LBJ-Barry Goldwater-George Wallace (previously) urged people to vote for Ringo Starr for US president. Charting on Billboard’s Top 100 during the Republican convention with a concerted write-in campaign for the potential fourth spoiler candidate (Starr ineligible by dent of his being a British subject), it is unclear if their well-organised contingent had any political impact, most fans and supporters of the Beatles’ drummer “who didn’t talk about war” being under the age of twenty-one and not yet able to vote. Perhaps however it did in a small part influence the decision to lower the voting age to that of conscription and Johnson’s later decision not to seek the Democrat nomination for the 1968 election and a second term.
synchronoptica
one year ago: Laverne and Shirley billing (with synchronopticæ)
thirteen years ago: the search for past life on Mars plus budgetary woes
practically perfect people never permit sentiment to muddle their thinking: the Art Room Plant presents multiple vignettes on author PL Travers and her most famous character, Mary Poppins
savage garden: this year’s Edward Gorey envelope art competition has a sinister botanic theme—see previously—via Web Curios
catsup and fries: potatoes evolved from tomatoes
🌀: a two-part episode on tempestology—the study of hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones
drowned in sound: reflections on the current state of music discovery and serendipity in general
liberation day: Trump’s tariffs go into effect—see more hapax: a project tracking every unique English word uttered on Bluesky, including those yet to be used—via Waxy
society for the protection of underground networks: SPUN has created a subterranean global atlas to map the mycorrhizal connections (previously) under our feet that support the ecosystem above
傘: the spiritual underpinnings of the umbrella in Japanese society