19 themes/skins available for your browsing pleasure. A variety of looks, 6 AC2 exclusives - Featuring SMACX, Civ6 Firaxis, and two CivII themes.[new Theme Select Box, bottom right sidebar - works for lurkers, too]
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I know I've mentioned it here before, but for crying out loud, read ACOUP: https://acoup.blogMilitary history prof from one of the Carolinas, specializing in Rome but with good general knowledge. Does in-depth analysis of fantasy battles--he has some excellent breakdowns of Helm's Deep and the Pelennor Fields from LOTR--detailed descriptions of historical craftsmanship including ironworking and cloth manufacture (did you know that almost every pre-industrial woman from a settled/agricultural society, rich or poor, would have spent most of her waking hours spinning?), analyses of armor kit, reviews of various military subjects ... right now he's partway through a series on fortifications.
He's in the Good Carolina; it's not a trivial distinction.
I know I've mentioned it here before, but for crying out loud, read ACOUP: https://acoup.blog
I am not currently reading, but-Quote from: Buster's Uncle on September 12, 2019, 06:25:59 pmI find myself thinking about reading Cheaper By the Dozen as a kid as I work through a set of pages - the sheer volume and repetition of my workflow really rewards efficiency, and Frank and Lilian Gilbreth, the parents, were pioneers in Motion Studies. She's still cited in business texts, and she did all her publishing over 100 years ago. I've discovered that the aggravation of dealing with Secret Project pages I renamed with the project name -which means the numbered addresses in the originals that scroll to next in line are useless- is ameliorated considerably by dealing with the scrollbar and page title stuff 10 or so at a time, THEN going back and correcting all the crosslinks and pic addresses one at a time. I don't have to change what's in the paste buffer nearly as often, and with this many little pages, it adds up.Read the book, is my point of quoting this. It's good.
I find myself thinking about reading Cheaper By the Dozen as a kid as I work through a set of pages - the sheer volume and repetition of my workflow really rewards efficiency, and Frank and Lilian Gilbreth, the parents, were pioneers in Motion Studies. She's still cited in business texts, and she did all her publishing over 100 years ago. I've discovered that the aggravation of dealing with Secret Project pages I renamed with the project name -which means the numbered addresses in the originals that scroll to next in line are useless- is ameliorated considerably by dealing with the scrollbar and page title stuff 10 or so at a time, THEN going back and correcting all the crosslinks and pic addresses one at a time. I don't have to change what's in the paste buffer nearly as often, and with this many little pages, it adds up.
Quote from: Buster's Uncle on September 12, 2019, 06:36:31 pmI am not currently reading, but-Quote from: Buster's Uncle on September 12, 2019, 06:25:59 pmI find myself thinking about reading Cheaper By the Dozen as a kid as I work through a set of pages - the sheer volume and repetition of my workflow really rewards efficiency, and Frank and Lilian Gilbreth, the parents, were pioneers in Motion Studies. She's still cited in business texts, and she did all her publishing over 100 years ago. I've discovered that the aggravation of dealing with Secret Project pages I renamed with the project name -which means the numbered addresses in the originals that scroll to next in line are useless- is ameliorated considerably by dealing with the scrollbar and page title stuff 10 or so at a time, THEN going back and correcting all the crosslinks and pic addresses one at a time. I don't have to change what's in the paste buffer nearly as often, and with this many little pages, it adds up.Read the book, is my point of quoting this. It's good.I should have mentioned back then - Cheaper By the Dozen changed my life. Not merely in how I approach drudgery like the fixing up of the Firaxis Alpha Centauri site rescue I was talking about in my original quote, but, like, every necessary task; the first thing I do every. single. day., making coffee is carefully arranged for efficiency, with an inflexible order the supplies are laid out in the cabinet lining up with the inflexible order the ingredients are added -I wake up stupid and slowly, and the faster I can get to what I wake up wanting to do (DRINK coffee, not MAKE coffee) the better.That Frank Gilbreth was a pioneer in motion studies is not what Cheaper By the Dozen is about is both true and profoundly untrue - it informs almost everything about the childhoods of his (actually 11; Mary died real young) children, to the extent that I'm spoiling the end significantly. But just exposure to the concept of motion studies/working efficiently young has informed a lot of my life in both the hard work I could not get out of and the hard work I want to do, witness that AC site again. It also interacts in a way that's difficult to articulate with the example of my own father, who lined up his shoes when he went to bed, but frankly, had little/no concept of working smart instead of hard.-All that being as it may, Cheaper By the Dozen is a charming yarn, comes highly recommended - and Elok, it's family-friendly, too.