This week, Substack launched Notes. You can access it at the Notes tab in your browser or the Substack app. It\u2019s kind of like Twitter except I\u2019ve been enjoying using it a lot more than ye olde dying bird platform over the last week. I\u2019ll be using Notes to share random thoughts, ideas, and interesting pieces of media that I might not be able to cover in the newsletter. I hope you\u2019ll come find me there.
It can\u2019t be an accident that the \u201CAmerican Ivy\u201D podcast came out in the fall, shortly before everyone started going crazy for quiet luxury. How would you say the two connect?
I\u2019m in Utah right now, looking at the outdoor recreation archive. It's actually so cool, it's an archive of thousands of outdoor clothing catalogs starting from the 1800s. Like the earliest Abercrombie & Fitch catalog. It's sort of incredible to really see \u2014 before there was old money, what was there? And they were all literally hunting catalogs, and they\u2019re advertising Bean boots. What is subtly implied in preppy clothes and quiet luxury is: It's about having time.
They really don\u2019t. It\u2019s funny this has been a debate. Back in the day when women had pockets, they were sort of these massive things that pendulously hung from the hips. Housewives would keep their sewing in there and little bits of food and it was just this matronly, fuddy-duddy equipment. And then when the handbag was invented, this little tiny reticule, it was for women who were going out dancing, partying, who didn't have to worry about the cares of the home. That's an incredible luxury, to walk out with only your phone. You have someone to take care of your kid, you're not carrying around baby stuff. You don't have to carry around little granola bars because you don't know when you're going to eat. Just being like, The world opens up to me. And whatever I need, I will arrive at it or it will be given to me. Having a little handbag is all of that.
I saw documents from 1965 that said, \u201CThere are no trends anymore, we're all free.\u201D And obviously if you look back at a photo of the sixties, you can tell that it was taken in the sixties. Surely we'll look back at 2023 and see that there was a style and that we were all sort of following it. But I just don\u2019t think trends are as rigid.
I think the decade defining trend, the thing that's the equivalent of bellbottoms, are tattoos. That's going to be the thing that we look back and think, Oh my god, everyone had a tattoo. That's a powerful reclamation quite literally against clothing, being like, I am the sum total of all of these symbols that I have amassed on my body over time. I think that really changes self-expression because we can wear a lot more things \u2014 there's already some mark of ourselves emblazoned permanently upon us.
Without investigating your project, I can't tell you what's going on in your project, nor can I assume the cause is what you perhaps think it is (it might be on some other track or something, or your MIDI controller might have sent spurious notes before the downbeat, or you brushed your sustain pedal - it could be anything, really.)
There is nothing intrinsic about Ultrabeat (or any other plugin) that creates events before 1 1 1 1. This is most likely user-driven behaviour, not something related to bad plugin behaviour, but as I say, it's impossible to determine what's happening without investigating your project and what you were doing when making it...
Ok great thanks for your help, it seems to happen to every project I make which is odd even if I only make a single Ultrabeat track so there isn't any other tracks to affect with it... should I reset logic? do you believe that would fix it?
But, in the midst of the pain, I have experienced God's Love, Presence, Healing, and Grace so powerfully, unlike ever before. He has always been there, even when I felt like He wasn't. He was working, even if I couldn't always see it. He has been so so good to me as I have asked tough questions, cried out, and brought the broken pieces to Him. He has done a miraculous healing inside and out, but it hasn't happened overnight. I have learned that God does some of His best work in the difficult, valley seasons, but we must keep our eyes on Him and bring our whole hearts to Him. Bring all the pieces. He wants our whole hearts. He isn't afraid to enter into our mess, but we need to invite Him and others into it with us.
I feel like this is perfect timing for the pandemic we are all walking through too. I know it's hard to talk about suffering, so I wanted to write from a place of vulnerability. I have seen God make something more beautiful with the broken pieces. He is faithful in all seasons and is in control even when everything seems to be falling apart. Walking with Jesus is not always a mountaintop experience, but it's worth it and filled with purpose. You are not alone. We all can relate to pain or disappointments in some shape or form. When your experiences don't match your expectations, there often is pain.
In the pain, there is refining. There is strengthening. There is a change of heart. There is a surrender to God that happens each day. There is a joy and peace that emerges. There is a closeness to Jesus that develops.
These passes are for leisure travel-seeing unexpected small lines, areas that you would otherwise not go to, fill seats that would otherwise run around empty and for those who have a little bit of flexibility and time to spare. A FRenchmen should know about the eternal strikes and social movements that pester the trains there. Not things that most pas-newbees here on this forum seem to have-they all want to rush through a few cities that anyone wants to go to and then start complaining about the hassles.
I think they need to be convinced and to be shown that it is necessary to see availability without having a pass. I've already seen a few cases where indeed people cancelled their passes after finding out there was no availability anymore for their intended journeys.
Is there only a small amount of seats allocated for eurail for the Eurostar and other trains? If I find availability on the website directly with Eurostar does that that mean that eurail will work and I can get a seat.
Thanks for the details. When I click on the link it shows availability and takes me to a point where I need to put in my pass number . Does this mean there are seats and I should have confidence when I buy the pass there will be availability?
Seneca Village began in 1825, when landowners in the area, John and Elizabeth Whitehead, subdivided their land and sold it as 200 lots. Andrew Williams, a 25-year-old African-American shoeshiner, bought the first three lots for $125. Epiphany Davis, a store clerk, bought 12 lots for $578, and the AME Zion Church purchased another six lots. From there a community was born. From 1825 to 1832, the Whiteheads sold about half of their land parcels to other African-Americans. By the early 1830s, there were approximately 10 homes in the Village.
One thing that bothers me is that 1Password will lock when there's a Chrome update, so you have to enter your password every time. But it does this before Chrome even shows me there's an update. I don't update chrome until there's an indicator next to my avatar in the top right toolbar. But 1Password becomes really cumbersome to use for about a week when an update becomes available, but the update isn't made visible by Chrome.
I tried your steps just now and will report back on whether it works. But it seems like when there's a chrome update available, 1Password simply doesn't allow fingerprint unlock. The message in 1Password specifically says that I must enter my master password because there's a chrome update, so I don't think it's a connection issue, I think it's intentional.
Here it happened again. I can't even enter my master password now, which is even worse than before. And @cherrydrpepper yes, I hate the interruption to my workflow. There's nothing I want to do less than close 15 browser tabs of things I'm working on or want to get to later in order to update Chrome.
The Secure Fence Act was signed by then-President George W. Bush and the majority of the fencing in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California was built before he left office. The last remnants were completed after President Barack Obama took office in 2009.
Decimating is very good way to reduce vertices count.
The disadvantage of decimating an object is it produces triangles instead of quads. Triangles are bad if you want to subdivide your model. They are also not good for retopo, rigging, animating, game models, etc.
If your final work is to just render the sculpt, then there is no problem in decimating your model.
You'd very commonly hear someone say either "Why don't you come over Sunday?" or "Why don't you come over on Sunday?" But one exception I can think of would be if a specific time were named, you'd need the "on" before the day. This would not sound normal:
Article III, Section 1 of the Constitution establishes the Supreme Court of the United States. Currently, there are nine Justices on the Court. Before taking office, each Justice must be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Justices hold office during good behavior, typically, for life.
By law, the U.S. Supreme Court's term begins on the first Monday in October and goes through the Sunday before the first Monday in October of the following year. The Court is, typically, in recess from late June/early July until the first Monday in October.
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