https://www.britannica.com/video/185632/formation-sand-quartz-role-processes-weathering-grains highlights of this weird video on how quartz becomes sand:
- the "everyday examples" of using sand are making sand castles (sure), keeping time with an hourglass (I guess if you're literally Jafar), and fracking (???)
- comparing quartz chemical bonds (strong) to orthoclase and olivine (weaker): "kind of like how a relationship forged in the heat of passion might not be as stable as deep bond developed over time" did...did something happen to this narrator?
https://buttondown.email/perfectsentences/archive/perfect-sentences-24/ this week in sentences: uncanny allure, the big news, expectations, not insane, all that math, phosphorescent steel
https://crookedtimber.org/2023/06/08/disinformation-and-the-intercept/ Fixing fuck-ups like this is Journalism Ethics 101.
https://ripcorp.biz/episodes/the-story-of-this-town-is-failure-fairchild-semiconductor-and-its-children new RIP Corp and it's a doozy IMO! we took on the history of Fairchild Semiconductor, which is usually told as one of triumph and innovation---which is part of it, but only like the first decade of the company. We get into the everything else of its 59-year history.
feel like there's gotta be people in my network who would be perfect for this? there are lots of other open jobs at Internet Archive too https://app.trinethire.com/companies/32967-internet-archive/jobs/78121-program-officer-archiving-and-data-services
I have read @debcha’s book and it is remarkably researched, clear-eyed, and passionate about how infrastructure can function as care at scale. A long-needed history and future of the systems we build and the systems that shape us. You should preorder it today. https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/612711/how-infrastructure-works-by-deb-chachra/