EdwardPhilips, to Birds
@EdwardPhilips@toot.community avatar

Morning all. It’s Thursday. The sort of day you might introduce your wall to a reasonably priced limited edition Gannet print. Or not. xx

#birds #prints #art #Gannets #handmade #poster #thursday #walls #nature

Close up of diving gannet print

theappletree, to ireland German
myst, to photography
@myst@swiss.social avatar
thisismyglasgow, to glasgow
@thisismyglasgow@mastodon.scot avatar

They say the walls have ears, but this wall by the Kelvin Walkway in the West End of Glasgow has eyes instead!

SussexGeoff_UK, to photography
@SussexGeoff_UK@pixelfed.social avatar
appassionato, to bookstodon
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

Walled States, Waning Sovereignty

In Walled States, Waning Sovereignty , Wendy Brown reflects on the proliferation of nation-state walls in a time of eroded nation-state sovereignty and intensifying transnational powers unleashed by globalization.

How do walls shore up an imago of sovereign statehood and to what extent do they fortify reactionary national imaginaries? What do the new walls perform symbolically, materially, mentally?

@bookstodon
#walls
#sovereignty
#states
#MIT

ai6yr, to Energy
@ai6yr@m.ai6yr.org avatar

Sigh. This is going to bug me until I fix it. Cold section of a wall in my house (undergoing repair), an opening into an (empty) unconditioned space. The insulation in there was removed due to a plumbing disaster, but because there's nothing else on the other side, the insulation there either was not installed or was already knocked loose when the new drywall went up. I'm just going to cut myself some access panels later, crawl in, and add my own insulation $10 of insulation.

ai6yr,
@ai6yr@m.ai6yr.org avatar

Well, one problem fixed!! See the FLIR difference between the last wall and this wall. (red = cold in the last wall... you'll note this same wall now you can't see any difference in temperature).

cazabon, to Software

@paul_ipv6 posted about managers, fanciful , and his response involving a Magic 8-Ball. It reminded me of a story I've told about one place I worked. I've never told it here.

I was working at a small-to-medium-sized IT/ company that had a few internal products, but mostly did outsourced R&D work for a behemoth company - one of the largest on the planet at the time.

It was classic planning. HugeCo's R&D department would send us a high-level .

1/x

cazabon,

@paul_ipv6

Our and the of would break our company's share of the work into or , those would flow out to individual leads. Teams would break it down into tasks, and then come up with for each . There would be hundreds of tickets overall; projects generally lasted 6 months to a year.

Then the president and VP would go into the with hundreds of these tasks on notes and them all over 3 .

2/x

ZhekaKhaletsky, to photography
@ZhekaKhaletsky@mastodon.social avatar

Spanish Grey
2.X.2023

ZhekaKhaletsky, to photography
@ZhekaKhaletsky@mastodon.social avatar

Slate Gray
1.X.2023

ZhekaKhaletsky, to photography
@ZhekaKhaletsky@mastodon.social avatar

Wall
20.IX.2023

PatriciaPhotos, to photography
TomiRovira, to nature
@TomiRovira@mastodon.social avatar
maartenornstein, to random
@maartenornstein@pixelfed.social avatar

The small village of on the Islands. I visited last year and hopefully will get to go back someday.
Taken with my very humble EOS 1100D and Canon 40mm lens

douglaswelch, to italy

Basalt Lava Rock Construction, Castello Nelson, Bronte, Sicily, Italy

This photo shows the traditional Sicilian building method with Etna’s basalt lava. You will see this everywhere on the east coast of the island. In modern buildings, the basalt is usually cut and finished to a high polish and used as trim for poured-in-place concrete structures with terracotta black inner walls. Our family’s kitchen is fitted with lovely basalt lava counters matched with traditional Sicilian tiles. The muratore (masons), literally translated as wall builders, were skilled craftsmen who could take randomly shaped rock and make beautiful, strong, structures.

Here is a small piece of interesting history about the castle.

“Prior to Italian unification, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the largest of the Italian States, was comprised of the Kingdom of Sicily and the Kingdom of Naples. In 1799, King Ferdinand l, the Bourbon King of the Two Sicilies (aka King Ferdinand IV, King of Naples, aka King Ferdinand III, King of Sicily), in appreciation for the admiral's support in suppressing a French-inspired insurrection in Naples, gave Horatio Nelson a title (Duke of Bronte) and a town (my grandmother's hometown), or, more precisely, "the land and the same town of Bronte, the revenue stamps, the incomes of the vassals, the servitudes, the rents..."

The Castle was a former monastery and, at that time, in total disrepair. Admiral Nelson never had the opportunity to live, let alone visit his property. Nevertheless, from England and with the help of estate managers (who most probably cheated him), Admiral Nelson planned the first of many renovations in the hope that he and Lady Hamilton would retire to Bronte one day and live a peaceful, quiet life away from whispers and gossip. This connection to Bronte was so strong that he had begun to sign his name, Nelson and Bronte.”

cdarwin, to random
@cdarwin@c.im avatar

How cool is this!

These actually use less bricks than a straight wall because they can be made just one brick thin, while a straight wall—without buttresses—would easily topple over.

Wavy walls are also known as serpentine walls, or ribbon walls. The alternate convex and concave curves in the wall provide stability and help it to resist lateral forces.

https://twistedsifter.com/2020/06/how-wavy-crinkle-crankle-walls-use-less-bricks-than-straight-walls/

douglaswelch, to italy

Basalt Lava Rock Construction, Castello Nelson, Bronte, Sicily, Italy

This photo shows the traditional Sicilian building method with Etna’s basalt lava. You will see this everywhere on the east coast of the island. In modern buildings, the basalt is usually cut and finished to a high polish and used as trim for poured-in-place concrete structures with terracotta black inner walls. Our family’s kitchen is fitted with lovely basalt lava counters matched with traditional Sicilian tiles. The muratore (masons), literally translated as wall builders, were skilled craftsmen who could take randomly shaped rock and make beautiful, strong, structures.

Here is a small piece of interesting history about the castle.

“Prior to Italian unification, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the largest of the Italian States, was comprised of the Kingdom of Sicily and the Kingdom of Naples. In 1799, King Ferdinand l, the Bourbon King of the Two Sicilies (aka King Ferdinand IV, King of Naples, aka King Ferdinand III, King of Sicily), in appreciation for the admiral's support in suppressing a French-inspired insurrection in Naples, gave Horatio Nelson a title (Duke of Bronte) and a town (my grandmother's hometown), or, more precisely, "the land and the same town of Bronte, the revenue stamps, the incomes of the vassals, the servitudes, the rents..."

The Castle was a former monastery and, at that time, in total disrepair. Admiral Nelson never had the opportunity to live, let alone visit his property. Nevertheless, from England and with the help of estate managers (who most probably cheated him), Admiral Nelson planned the first of many renovations in the hope that he and Lady Hamilton would retire to Bronte one day and live a peaceful, quiet life away from whispers and gossip. This connection to Bronte was so strong that he had begun to sign his name, Nelson and Bronte.”

cos, to windows
JeffStudleySr, to Red

Blue/Red theme. Having fun with the color-pop theme this week. And Florence, Arizona is a virtual treasure chest of great walls, doors, windows and historical buildings.

JeffStudleySr, to Arizona

Cyan theme - Frames. The old Cuen House and Butcher Shop (1883), and the first telephone exchange in Florence, Arizona (1902). Leased by one of Arizona’s most notable early politicians and judges, Earnest Macfarland, or “Mac”, set up an attorney’s office with partner Tom Fulbright in 1930. After years of disuse and the town of Florence reacquiring the building, it is now home to a small business.

z428, to streetphotography German
FaithfullJohn, to random

Dog-walking in the murk this morning. This drystane wall near Scoor on Mull makes unusual, but excellent use of long thin stones from the surrounding Moine metamorphic rocks. Perhaps one for @Ivor ?

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