Also learned:
- the quartz crystal market in Brazil was kind of a mess during WWII because you had both the federal government and private commodity traders from the US buying up supply so tracing sourcing starts to get fuzzy, but I have scans of monthly purchases by the USG and private vendors 1944-45 so I can at least track names and volume??
things learned on this national archives trip:
- the biggest German fused quartz concern prewar (Heraeus) definitely sourced from Brazil
- the colonial government of Belgian Congo was actively involved in developing tantalite sources for the United States (which is a big deal bc Belgian Congo mining prewar is mostly governed by private concession holders)
- most of the archives of the stuff happening in Congo are in Belgium and in French I'm fucked lol
@Wolven samesies, was the only reason I was still paying lol
So psyched to have been interviewed for this Wired Magazine article about the benefits of solar power canopies in parking lots. Definitely feels like a career milestone to be mentioned in Wired... Its always funny to see what parts of a long interview end up being included in a story, but overall I'm happy with the quotes they used. #solar #energy #climate #energytransition #der https://www.wired.com/story/france-solar-panels-parking-lots/
Please join me in donating to the UW Libraries strike fund - solidarity with library workers anywhere fighting for their rights, their cause benefits us all regardless of where we work https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-striking-workers-at-uw-libraries
Realizing that supply chain research is actually a skill set useful to the Federal Reserve I briefly looked at research jobs there but I think my tendency to call economics "cute when it pretends to be science" would be a hindrance
this week in sentences: a continuous skeleton, regrettable habits, our constant enemy, Icarus' pivot, the requirements of art, a bag of words https://buttondown.email/perfectsentences/archive/perfect-sentences-04/