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Not that Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture / edited by Roxane Gay

Browsery HD6060.3.N68 2018b




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How to understand your gender: a practical guide for exploring who you are / Alex Iantaffi and Meg-John Barker

Browsery BF692.2.I26 2018




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Black girl baking: wholesome recipes inspired by a soulful upbringing / Jerrelle Guy, founder of Chocolate for Basil

Browsery TX763.G89 2018




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Horizon / Barry Lopez

Browsery PS3562.O67 H67 2019




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Tonic and balm: a novel / Stephanie Allen

Browsery PS3601.L436 T66 2019




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Christopher Kimball's Milk Street: Tuesday nights / Christopher Kimball, J.M. Hirsch, Matthew Card, Michelle Locke, Jennifer Baldino Cox, and the editors and cooks of Milk Street ; photography by Connie Miller

Browsery TX833.5.K55 2018




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Reluctant power: networks, corporations, and the struggle for global governance in the early 20th century / Rita Zájacz

Browsery P95.8.Z267 2019




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Herewith the clues / edited and designed by Boy Vereecken ; short story by Shumon Basar ; text by Laura Herman

Browsery PN3448.D4 H47 2018




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Mind and matter: a life in math and football / John Urschel and Louisa Thomas

Browsery GV939.U78 A3 2019




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Reckoning: the epic battle against sexual abuse and harassment / Linda Hirshman

Browsery HQ1237.5.U6 H57 2019




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Patron saints of nothing / Randy Ribay

Browsery PZ7.1.R5 Pat 2019




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Julep: Southern cocktails refashioned / Alba Huerta & Marah Stets ; photography by Julie Soefer

Browsery TX951.H75 2018




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Basque country: a culinary journey through a food lover's paradise / Marti Buckley ; photographs by Simon Bajada

Browsery TX723.5.B36 B83 2018




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The chicken: a natural history / Joseph Barber with Janet Daly, Catrin Rutland, Mark Hauber & Andy Cawthray

Browsery SF487.B185 2018




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Hanging out, messing around, and geeking out: kids living and learning with new media / Mizuko Ito, Sonja Baumer, Matteo Bittanti, danah boyd, Rachel Cody, Becky Herr-Stephenson, Heather A. Horst, Patricia G. Lange, Dilan Mahendran, Katynka Z. Martín

Browsery HQ799.2.M352 H36 2019




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One life at a time: an American doctor's memoir of AIDS in Botswana / Daniel Baxter

Browsery RC606.55.B38 A3 2018




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Insomniac dreams: experiments with time / by Vladimir Nabokov ; compiled, edited, & with commentaries by Gennady Barabtarlo

Browsery PS3527.A15 Z46 2018




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Linkbait 43

Back from hiatus. I’m starting up serious planning and writing of “CSS for JavaScripters” so this is a CSS-heavy linkbait, mostly filled with reminders to myself.

  • Every-layout.dev is easily the most important CSS resource to be unveiled in recent months. (In fact, it was unveiled at CSS Day, which was a nice touch.) Serious, in-depth, algorithmic discussion of several popular CSS layouts and how to construct them with care.
  • The 2019 State of CSS survey results. Contains several interesting gems. The figure that really surprised me is that 85% of the respondents is male. I thought CSS had a slightly higher ratio of women. Then again, maybe it’s the marketing of the survey that caused the disparity. (I never heard of it until I saw the results.) Or my gender guesstimate is just wrong.
  • The CSS mindset:

    [...] the declarative nature of CSS makes it particularly difficult to grasp, especially if you think about it in terms of a “traditional” programming language.

    Other programming languages often work in controlled environments, like servers. They expect certain conditions to be true at all times [...]

    CSS on the other hand works in a place that can never be fully controlled, so it has to be flexible by default. It’s less about “programming the appearance” and more about translating a design into a set of rules that communicate the intent behind it. Leave enough room, and the browser will do the heavy lifting for you.

    Interesting turn of phrase that echoes my own thoughts on the subject. Expect to find this in The Book.
  • Excellent overview of render blocking in CSS and how to avoid it. It’s simple, really, but there will be countless CSS programmers who need this sort of tutorials. Will also go in The Book.
  • An older article, but Harry Roberts’s Cyclomatic Complexity: Logic in CSS remains one cornerstone of CSS understanding, and teaching. This one is mostly meant to remind myself of its existence; you probably already read it.
  • Facebook lost 20% of its usage (likes, shares, and such) since the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke.
    This sounds great in theory, but what if the people who are harder to dupe are the ones who stop using Facebook, while the more gullible people remain? The average Facebook user would become more stupid, and Facebook would become even better at influencing its users.
  • Also, Facebook should be regulated. Not as a media company, but as a drug.
  • We all know third-party scripts are among the worst offenders when it comes to website performance. But how bad is it actually, and who are the worst culprits? Third-party Web provides useful answers and treeviews.
  • Excellent overview of WebViews, their purpose, their tricky bits, and their diversity. Required reading for all five people who care about the browser market.
  • [In Dutch] List of websites closed on Sundays. In an ultimate meta-move this list is only available on Sundays.
    (And why are these websites closed? Because their proprietors subscribe to the strict Dutch Reformed view that Sundays are not for media enjoyment. See this article about the SGP political party for more background information.)
  • You shouldn’t do thing with tool, you should do other thing
  • Have a tip for the next Linkbait? Or a comment on this one? Let me know (or here or here).




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Linkbait 44

Links in times of chaos.

  • Laura Schenck, whose thoughts on programming CSS are very interesting anyway, discusses a project where she had to battle specificity. Key thought:

    Specificity breeds, much like conditionals breed in imperative languages [...]. Adding specificity is adding conditional logic. Once you start adding that logic, the code-base snowballs and it becomes difficult to understand, and thus difficult to maintain.

    She also asks if anyone who writes CSS should understand specificity to this degree. My answer is a firm Yes, just like you're expected to understand if- and for-loops when programming in any other language.
  • Rachel Andrew ponders the pros and cons of CSS4. She is afraid that people will get confused by “CSS4” because several articles said there will never be a CSS4, and the version number 4 does not align with the version numbers of existing modules. Although both are true, I seriously doubt whether the people that “CSS4” is aimed at (those I call the torso and long tail of the CSS world) are aware or care. To me, this argument is overly legalistic, in the sense that it doesn’t matter in the real world.
    A much more important argument is that the announcement of “CSS4” will make people expect a list of new features that work in all browsers. In itself that’s great, and I think it would be really helpful, but the problem is that someone will have to decide what goes on the list and what does not — and the CSS WG is already stretched thin and cannot spare the time to do this. Maybe we need a community effort to help them? Worth thinking about.
  • Interesting Twitter thread on why CSS is perceived as simultaneously very simple and very complicated.

    Because we think it's a simple language, we don't dive deep into it like we do with "real" programming languages. background: blue; makes the background turn blue, why should we bother diving in?

    But then it's time to build a layout and suddenly the combination of user agent styles and a lack of understanding in the fundamentals of CSS makes things break, or not behave how we expect them to.

    Yup.
  • Mostly for myself: the difference between defer and async on script tags. Or, as Nicholas Zakas puts it:
    • Do it now: <script src>
    • Do it later: <script defer src>
    • I don’t care when you do it, just not now: <script async src>
  • Coil, the web monetization company, offers some interesting but too-much-under-the-radar thoughts on probabilistc revenue sharing. The idea is simple: if A, B, and C cooperate on a to-be-monetized article, and A is allotted 60% of the revenue, B 25% and C 15%, you simply add those probabilities to your payment pointers. Eventually a tool will draw a random and assign a specific payment to a specific author, but for now you can use a script to emulate that behaviour.
  • Google proposes to sunset the User Agent string by freezing its version number and removing device information. The purpose here is to make fingerprinting (combining UA string, IP address, TCP/IP settings, device information and a host of other bits and pieces to accuratenly identify a web user) more difficult.
    The UA string will be replaced by client hints that give web developers some information about the browser, device, and platform. These hints will likely be more generic than the UA string, and thus hamper fingerprinting.
    The second problem with UA strings is the eternal arms race between clueless web developers and browser vendors, where web devs start using a certain badly-written browser detect, which forces browsers who want to end up on the good side of it to adjust their UA string, so that it gathers more and more cruft. (This is the reason every single browser string out there still starts with Mozilla.) I do not see this arms race go away. For instance, if the new Flow browser wants to defeat new browser detects written with client hints by clueless web developers, it will most likely be forced to announce itself as Chrome. Worse: we lose the ability to accurately identify it as Flow. As a result, new browser stats will make it appear as if Chrome is even more dominant than it actually is.
    Maybe we need another field Sec-CH-RealUA or something, where the browser can use its true name. On the other hand, that will be more fodder for clueless web developers and will perpetuate the arms race.
    In any case, to me it seems that more-or-less-accurate browser statistics will be the most important casualty of this switch.

    Related links (mostly for myself): client hints as currently implemented; discussion on a previous Safari attempt to do something similar; Blink intent to ship
  • Mozilla and KaiOS Technologies are going to cooperate on future versions of KaiOS, the operating system for “smart feature phones” (read: cheap phones) that’s based on Firefox OS. Included in the article is a whole list of features Mozilla will work on, but they essentially boil down to keeping KaiOS updated for the ever-evolving web.

    Broadly speaking, these updates will mean many first-time internet users gain access to more of the web’s advanced digital services on devices that are affordable, reliable, and secure.

    Remember: KaiOS is aimed at not-so-rich people from emerging markets. As of May 2019 there were about 100 million devices out there. That’s piss poor compared to iOS and especially Android, but let’s see if their use explodes or not.
  • Have a tip for the next Linkbait? Or a comment on this one? Let me know (or here or here).




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Bharat Biotech to spearhead CSIR-backed Covid-19 therapy efforts

 The Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech International Limited (BBIL) would lead a project to develop human monoclonal antibodies as therapy for Covid-19 i




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Merits of a one-year full time MBA at IIMs

The key benefit offered by the one-year full time MBA at IIM, I believe, is that the course gives you time to discover yourself before you manage others. In Indian society the pressure to rise above the neighbour’s kid is a constant one. The ...




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Encyclopedia of continuum mechanics / edited by Holm Altenbach, Andreas Öchsner

Online Resource




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Mathematical topics on representations of ordered structures and utility theory: essays in honor of Professor Ghanshyam B. Mehta / Gianni Bosi, María J. Campión, Juan C. Candeal, Esteban Indurain, editors

Online Resource




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Singularities of mappings: the local behaviour of smooth and complex analytic mappings / David Mond, Juan J. Nuño-Ballesteros

Online Resource




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A comprehensive introduction to sub-Riemannian geometry: from the Hamiltonian viewpoint / Andrei Agrachev (Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati (SISSA), Trieste), Davide Barilari (Université Paris Diderot, Paris), Ugo Boscain (Centre Nat

Dewey Library - QA671.A47 2020




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Model management and analytics for large scale systems / edited by Bedir Tekinerdogan, Önder Babur, Loek Cleophas, Mark van den Brand, Mehmet Aksit

Online Resource




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Probability theory and statistical inference: empirical modelling with observational data / Aris Spanos

Dewey Library - QA273.S6875 2019




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Probability and statistics for data science: math + R + data / Norman Matloff

Dewey Library - QA273.M38495 2020




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The 3-D global spatial data model: principles and applications / Earl F. Burkholder

Online Resource




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Quaternionic de Branges spaces and characteristic operator function Daniel Alpay, Fabrizio Colombo, Irene Sabadini

Online Resource




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Nonlinear dynamics of structures, systems and devices: proceedings of the First International Nonlinear Dynamics Conference (NODYCON 2019). / Walter Lacarbonara, Balakumar Balachandran, Jun Ma, J. A. Tenreiro Machado, Gabor Stepan, editors

Online Resource




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Decision making theories and methods based on interval-valued intuitionistic fuzzy sets Shuping Wan, Jiuying Dong

Online Resource




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Partial differential equations for mathematical physicists / Bijan Kumar Bagchi

Dewey Library - QC20.7.D5 B34 2020




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Nonlinear dynamics and control: proceedings of the first International Nonlinear Dynamics Conference (NODYCON 2019). / Walter Lacarbonara, Balakumar Balachandran, Jun Ma, J.A. Tenreiro Machado, Gabor Stepan, editors

Online Resource




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Zero-sum discrete-time Markov games with unknown disturbance distribution: discounted and average criteria / J. Adolfo Minjárez-Sosa

Online Resource




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New trends in nonlinear dynamics: proceedings of the first International Nonlinear Dynamics Conference (NODYCON 2019). / Walter Lacarbonara, Balakumar Balachandran, Jun Ma, J.A. Tenreiro Machado, Gabor Stepan, editors

Online Resource




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Bayesian philosophy of science: variations on a theme by the Reverend Thomas Bayes / Jan Sprenger, Stephen Hartmann

Dewey Library - QA279.5.S67 2019




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Numerical solutions of realistic nonlinear phenomena J. A. Tenreiro Machado, Necati Özdemir, Dumitru Baleanu, editors

Online Resource




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Basic analysis / by Jiří Lebl

Rotch Library - QA300.L43 2019




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The psychology of problem solving: the background to successful mathematics thinking / Alfred S. Posamentier (City University of New York, USA) [and three others]

Dewey Library - QA63.P67 2020




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Letter to BS: E-commerce firms to find it tough to bring delivery boys back

The police should not have roughed up or ill-treated delivery boys




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Locals in tribal belt in Gujarat revive barter system for survival

With movement restricted and government aid not sufficient, they have now started exchanging goods




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Letter to BS: Will Delhi follow Mumbai in shutting liquor shops?

As the Delhi Police is already bogged down with its disaster-management duties, the Arvind Kejriwal government should ur­gently review its decision to open liquor shops there




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Kailash Kher enthrals music lovers in Bangalore

Kailash Kher enthrals music lovers in Bangalore




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ATM robbery attempt in Bangalore foiled as brave security guard fights thieves

ATM robbery attempt in Bangalore foiled as brave security guard fights thieves




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Lack of security at military bases alarms Parl committee

Lack of security at military bases alarms Parl committee




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Yes Bank Scam: CBI custody of Wadhawan brothers extended till May 10

Yes Bank Scam: CBI custody of Wadhawan brothers extended till May 10




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North Korea at cusp of finishing ballistic missile facility: Report

North Korea at cusp of finishing ballistic missile facility: Report




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US likely to ban H-1B visas in a bid to counter unemployment

US likely to ban H-1B visas in a bid to counter unemployment




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&#039;I want things to get back to normal, step out of the house&#039;...

'I want things to get back to normal, step out of the house'...