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Yesterday's Links Today - 221121

I post a lot of links to Mastodon -- basically I use it as a reading list. They are mostly about urbanism, biking, traffic planning, public transportation, equality and climate change. I thought it might be a good idea, to share and archive some of those links here as well. Someone might be interested.

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Where Does Inclusive Design Meet Film? Copenhagen Architecture Festival (CAFx) Launches Film Mosaic: Leave No One Behind

The world’s biggest social challenges are reflected in the way we design our spaces. Privatization of public space, lack of affordable housing, dark design and spatial segregation are just some of the most common causes and manifestations of urban inequality that characterize contemporary cities. While holding the potential to reproduce these inequalities, inscribing them further into space, design can also work to oppose discrimination, propelling equity and inclusion.

Read it on archdaily.com

Ghent to create marks on the road to help cyclists safely cross tram tracks

In the coming months, the ideal bicycle lane across the tracks will be marked on the ground at dangerous crossing points to ensure cyclists cross them sharply enough, which is one of the numerous hazardous features, and can result in them being thrown from their bicycles.

Read it on brusselstimes.com

“Just a bunch of idiots having fun”—a photo history of the LAN party

And yet we're both hopelessly wistful for something else entirely: LAN parties. Merritt K so much so that she's writing, compiling, and crowdfunding a book: LAN Party. It's a collection of original amateur photos—many upscaled through AI—and short essays on a period when multiplayer gaming meant desktop towers, energy drinks, and being physically present in some awkward spaces. It's been in the works for more than a year, but she's been thinking about it much longer.

Read it on arstechnica.com

From Devil's Breath, a documentary about deadly wildfires

FROM DEVIL'S BREATH tells the unlikely story of two remarkable narratives that come crashing together; the extraordinary, inspiring community of survivors of the deadly 2017 wildfires in Portugal, fighting to ensure what they've lived through can never happen again; and a revolutionary, world-changing scientific discovery which could help protect us all from the climate emergency.

Read it on boingboing.net

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If you are interested in topics and reads like the above, check my Mastodon -- link in the footer.

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Comments are welcome -- send them to uptempo07.brines [the usual symbol] icloud.com.

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