Full story here.
[via the sui generis Clive Thompson's Linkfest]
The penny dropped earlier today as I was listening to some of my favorite songs on my wonderful Marshall portable speaker (above, mission control for boj).
Since forever I've had the speaker near my laptop where it's helped pump up the volume when my MacBook Pro's [not all that bad] internal speakers aren't enough.
Anyhoo, I was about to put it on the right side of my computer where I always site it since the hearing in my right ear is much better than that in my left, a fact I was finally able to document objectively using Apple's AirPods Pro hearing test.
I mean, I've known for many, many years — since I was a kid — that if it was noisy for whatever reason when and where I wanted to go to sleep, I needed to put my right side down into the pillow with my left up uncovered.
But my brain suddenly jumped the usual rails and switched: I thought to myself, "If the hearing in my right ear is better, I should put the speaker on the left side of the computer because my right ear will perceive it as plenty loud while my diminished left ear gets the full blast.
Fantastic: much better sound this way, it's like I got an additional speaker and I'm listening in stereo.
Bottom line: you can teach a geriatric near-brain-dead retired anesthesiologist who breathed far too much unscavenged waste gas during his 38 years in the O.R. new tricks.
Wrote Clive Thompson:
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I didn’t realize how often DC artists had tweaked the logo for Batman. Here’s a poster by Breen that tracks all the changes.
The early evolution is slower than you'd expect. From 1939 to the early 1960s, the bat-symbol changed mostly in proportion — wings got wider, then narrower, then wider again. The head appeared, disappeared, grew prominent, shrank back. Artists tweaked wing points from five to seven to nine without much consistency. Printing technology was crude enough that fine details often vanished on the page anyway.
Then 1964 changed everything. The bat landed inside a bright yellow ellipse, and suddenly the logo had presence. The version refined in 1966 — with the wings curving outward to fill the oval — became the definitive Batman emblem for an entire generation. It held that position for over three decades.
There are some super weird ones!
DC's alternate universes — Elseworlds, the Dark Multiverse, one-shot specials — are where the bat-symbol gets truly strange. Batman: Holy Terror reimagines Bruce Wayne as a priest, and the emblem reflects it. Batman: Digital Justice #4, the first fully digital comic book ever made, carries its own distinct symbol. The 2017 Dark Nights: Metal event spawned an entire gallery of corrupted Batman variants — the Dawnbreaker, the Drowned, the Merciless, the Devastator — each with an emblem designed to feel wrong, like a bat-symbol from a universe where Batman lost.
[The title page of the first edition of "Middlemarch" (1871-1872), named the best novel of all time]
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The Guardian asked authors, critics, and academics to help compile a list of the best 100 novels of all time.
Selecting a book will show you who voted for it; then click on the voter's name to see their other choices.
I've read 59 of them in their entirety.
I started but failed to finish 7 of the remaining 41 titles, most notably the seven volumes of "In Search of Lost Time," the first volume of which, "Swann's Way," I've begun at least five times, never coming close to its conclusion.
Perhaps I'll give it another try.
Sinlaku was the strongest tropical cyclone in the Northern Hemisphere since 2021 and the strongest storm overall so far this year.
The Mariana Islands, Guam, and Micronesia all suffered widespread damage and the storm has so far claimed 17 lives.
This web page shows how much data your browser collects that websites can use to "fingerprint" your device — even without cookies.
It identifies your device with enough specificity to distinguish it from most others on the internet.
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
I happened on this slick trick in a comment on Hacker News.
Instead of https://x.com/bookofjoe, use https://xcancel.com/bookofjoe
Above left, what you'll see.
Very cool!
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Note added 4:50 p.m. today, Monday, June 8, 2026: I just checked to make sure it still works and it does.
Be patient: It takes a couple seconds to do whatever internet voodoo is necessary to take you to the "dark side."
The classic, the pioneer of microwave noodles remains atop the heap.
I've had a zillion varieties but Nissin still takes the top prize because:
1. They're the fastest
2. They taste great
3. They're cheap
4. The container never leaks
VANTA concurs, as you can clearly see in the video up top.
... do you, Mr. joe?
That's the only possible conclusion I can draw from the fact that I found the highly acclaimed/awarded films "One Battle After Another," "Marty Supreme," and "Project Hail Mary" all horrible.
"One Battle After Another" received widespread critical acclaim and won Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Director, among several others. It took all I had to watch until the end — 2 hours and 42 minutes!
"Marty Supreme" received great reviews and was a box office success, but proved too much for me to endure and I quit watching well before the end, which occurred 2 hours and 30 minutes after its start.
"Project Hail Mary," which I had waited patiently for to stream and watched on Vision Pro so as get the best possible (6K!) viewing experience, got highly positive reviews and to date is the second highest grossing film of 2026. I stopped watching after an hour — no way could I bear the boredom of an additional 1 hour and 36 minutes.
What is it with all these 2+hour-long movies, anyway?
90 minutes, like in the old days, oughta be enough to get your message across.
And no, I'm not thinking of a song — as you will have noted, I've already done that.
Here's a terrific 2016 5-part BBC series I happened on recently.
No car chases, no gunfights, no drones.
Very, very different from most spy thrillers in that there's little violence and technology, instead a slow unpeeling of layer after layer of misdirection and subterfuge and one surprise after another.
Thoroughly engrossing and absorbing.
Also an absolutely terrific cast.
Wikipedia has much more if you don't mind knowing before watching, or if you prefer not to/can't watch.
It occurred last week when I noticed that one of them had leaked, such that coffee remained in the air space between the two layers of glass.
I guess I'm getting clumsier as I get older because my rate of cracking these beautiful, delicate mugs has increased from never to every few months in the past year or two.
As you can see in the bookofjoe Premiere Video©®™ up top, the mug that's leaking has a hole in the inner layer of thin glass just below the handle.
When my one remaining intact mug gives up the ghost, that will do it for me.
I'm reverting to my venerable Snow Peak double-wall titanium mugs, now over 40 [sic] years old, veterans of trekking in the Himalayas and hiking in New Zealand that work as well as the day I bought them.
Full disclosure: I'd never heard of Charlie XCX until I happened on this film while looking for something to watch.
No doubt I just lost half my readers, those who have no interest in spending time on the site of someone who's that out of it.
I hear you!
But I digress.
I watched the 2026 film on Prime Video last night and enjoyed it immensely: it's a documentary of sorts, featuring real actors like Rosanna Arquette and Alexander Skarsgård playing members of Charlie XCX's team as it prepares for a concert video.
Very witty, funny, and droll all rolled up together.
Below, Charlie XCX performing "Boom Clap."
470 million views since it was uploaded to YouTube.
I see the term "quantum foam" every now and then in a poem.
Up top, as good a picture as I've ever seen of what it looks like IRL.
Perhaps "unreal life" would be a better locator....
You never forget your very first.
In this case it happened yesterday so one would hardly think such a thing possible absent Korsakoff syndrome.
I happened on the cylindrical wooden container at Whole Foods, browsing as I was in the cheese department.
Never saw cheese from Iceland before so I studied the box.
It was all in Icelandic and I saw that somewhere along the line Reykjavik was involved — that's the only word I could read.
I bought one.
Impossible to tell what's going inside from the outside.
Still cheeses run deep.
There was only one thing for it: enter.
And so I did.
What I saw is what you see below.
You can't see, though, that the cheese was nicely yielding to my knife.
It's a veined cheese somewhat similar in appearance and consistency to Saga Blue, a mild cheese out of Denmark which is closer to Brie than to the more potent veined cheeses of other countries.
Stóri Dímond is creamy with a faint bite, not nearly as intense as that of Cabrales or the classic blue–veined cheeses of France.
Smooth, very silky mouthfeel.
Quite nice and a definite keeper.
I had my Crack Research Team©®™ delve deeper into the subject of Icelandic cheese and learned that about 100 different cheeses are produced in the tiny nation of 400,000 people.
The team also found an Icelandic company that ships a variety of Icelandic cheeses globally.
There is no question that the Icelandic cheese space is worth exploring in more depth.
I do so like the Ice.
Once upon a time, on an internet far, far away, the first thing I'd do every morning is go into my Comments section and delete on average 10-20 spam comments that had come in overnight while I was sleeping.
In those days boj got about 15,000 page views per day and thus had a far greater virtual surface to present than today, when I happily average 500 page views daily.
The thing is, bookofjoe1 (this is bookofjoe2 in case you hadn't noticed it in the URL) was formatted by me in such a way that the names of the 10 most recent commenters were prominently displayed in a column on the home page.
It offended me that longtime sidebar pals were displaced in favor of all manner of junky and stupidly named occupants, so I got them out of there ASAP.
Nowadays I get perhaps one spam comment a month, most recently this past Sunday on this post (top).
The great thing is that with the current layout, commenters aren't identified on the home page and you have to click the Comments link at the bottom of a post to see them.
Thus, I don't bother deleting them because prolly only a couple people on the planet other than the spammers will do so.
Wrote Mark Frauenfelder in Recomendo:
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The Kodak Charmera is a thumb-sized digital camera that clips onto your keychain and shoots gloriously lo-fi 1.6-megapixel photos and video.
My daugher has been taking amazing shots with it — the grainy, slightly washed-out images have a nostalgic, early-2000s digicam vibe that mocks the clinical perfection of phone cameras.
One catch: without a microSD card, it only stores 2 photos, so buy a cheap card to make it truly useful.
Check out the r/toycameras subreddit for lots of photos from the Charmera and its ilk.
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How do you spell "retro?"

Now that all eight episodes are available I've started binging them, the only way I can keep track of what's happened in previous episodes.
Watching as they appear once a week no longer works for me: I can't recall stuff that happened yesterday, much less seven days ago.
Unlike most series which run around 45 minutes/episode, these are around 75 minutes long, more like a movie.
Thus, one a day is optimal for me, unlike my standard 2/day for most series.
But I digress from my main point, which is that I'm finding this season as good or better than the previous two, a very high bar.
Most reviews of Season 3 have been negative, saying it's way too dark, over the top, and jumps the shark into exploitation and its ilk.
Me, I subscribe to the Mae West view: "Too much is never enough."
Bring it!

I DO!
joe, you idiot: you're supposed to turn this over to your readers!
Ok, Ok....
Look at the five (5) photos above taken by my Crack Photography Team©®™.
I chose one to appear in tomorrow's 8 am post.
Let's see if you agree with my selection.
Hold on — isn't it important when making a choice here to know what the context is?
Is it about my beloved calico cat Vanta or instead does it have something to do with the two horizontally placed white connectors?
Answer: the latter.
If enough peeps like this feature, I may make it a regular one.
If enough of you hate it, for sure it will become a frequent flyer in this space!

First I ever heard of this news aggregator was when it appeared in my email inbox Sunday.
Long story short: It costs $29.99/month for all-access from anywhere in the world and brings you up-to-date news as it originally appeared where it was published.
Tell you what, it's more user friendly and has much greater scope internationally than Apple News+ which costs $12.99/month.
Google News, one of my first stops daily, is free and once you get its "For You" feature up and running, fast and informative.
À chacun son goût.
Sure, we all had these when we were kids but since then the Japanese have taken the concept to a whole new level.
I took a flutter on the one pictured above and below and I'm charmed by its whimsical shape and functionality.
Much better than the ones I remember, it's a ballpoint that writes smooth as silk in red/blue/green and black ink (1 color at a time).
Lagniappe: It's also got a mechanical pencil that appears when you click the pocket clip.
Besides the one pictured above with a transparent green barrel, there's also a less flashy white iteration (below).
Pretty impressive for $6.80-$6.99.
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?