Weekly Notes: November 3–9, 2025
Nov. 9th, 2025 07:14 pm- Work ramped up again a bit this past week, with two afternoons taken up by the DSSC fall meeting. Always good to connect with colleagues across the state, even virtually.
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While we did most of our celebrating last weekend, Monday was my wife’s actual birthday. We both had to work, but had a nice dinner that evening, had some cake, and she opened her birthday presents.
📸 Photos







📝 Writing
- I dug into the new Affinity by Canva app’s support for accessible output.
📺 Watching
Since we were out and about with birthday celebrations last weekend, this weekend was a stay at home and watch movies weekend.
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Alien: Romulus (2024) (I actually watched this one on my own): visually fun, but felt too much like someone just grabbed their favorite scenes and shots from every prior Alien film and strung them together.
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The Family Plan (2023): An amusing “turn off your brain” action-adventure-comedy; perfect for a weekend afternoon.
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Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale (2025): A very satisfying end to the Downton Abbey saga. And since one of the presents I got my wife for her birthday was the full season set, now we can start over from the beginning….
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Death of a Unicorn (2025): This was a really fun mix of comedy, horror, and fantasy. Neat design work for the unicorns, too. Definitely occasionally on the gory side of things, but if you can cope with that, it’s worth checking out.
🔗 Linking
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Te-Ping Chen at The Wall Street Journal: They Tear Down Walls and Hire Architects to Make Room for Their Lego Worlds: I don’t have the disposable income to be able to afford this much LEGO or to devote this much home to storing LEGO, but as one of those “if I won the lottery, I wouldn’t tell anyone, but there would be signs” situations….
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Christine Mi at The Washington Post: A week at sea aboard the last ocean liner: Very much in line with my our experience when we did this a few years ago. Worth doing once to have done it and had the pseudo-historical experience, but neither of us is particularly interested in doing this or any other cruise ship trip again.
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Anil Dash: Turn the volume up.: “Today marked a completely new moment for New York City, and for America. There will be countless attempts at analysis and reflection and what-does-it-all-mean in the days to come, along with an unimaginable number of hateful attacks. But what’s worth reflecting on right now is the fact that we’ve entered a new era, and that, even at the very start, there are some extraordinary things that we can observe.”
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Chirag Vedullapalli at The Seattle Times: This little-known position in WA is a huge democracy booster: “Each precinct is a civic block roughly the size of a neighborhood or two, with generally a few hundred to 1,000 registered voters. There are about 7,500 of these precincts in the state. Each precinct is meant to elect two people, one from the Democratic Party and one from the Republican Party, to the position of precinct committee officer. […] However, most people don’t know this role exists, and most precincts sit empty.”
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Jay Kuo at The Status Kuo: Oh, What a Night!: “By now you know, Dems had a big night. We won the marquee races for governor in Virginia and New Jersey. We walloped the GOP on Prop 50 in California. We won down-ballot races and flipped lots of seats. And NYC has a young, charismatic Muslim mayor-elect—a historic first. ¶ There’s a lot to celebrate, so let’s start wide and work our way down!”
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Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton at The Seattle Times: Barnes & Noble plans to return to downtown Seattle: “Bookworms, rejoice: Barnes & Noble plans to return to downtown Seattle, according to recent city filings.”
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Tim Nudd at AdAge: Apple TV’s colorful new branding was built with glass and captured in-camera: “The five-second version of the new branding, which will run before Apple TV shows, nicely highlights the colored-lights effect. The lush visuals are meant to capture the platform’s cinematic ambitions and remind viewers that Apple TV is where prestige storytelling lives. ¶ Many might assume the visual effects were made digitally, but in fact, it was all done practically using glass and captured in-camera.”
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Rachel Moody at The Daily Tar Heel: Column: “Low skilled” workers are a myth: “I have worked as a restaurant server and hostess. I’ve also worked as a research intern and an office assistant. The most difficult of the two categories? Food service, without a doubt. And yet those jobs were the worst paid.”
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Ashifa Kassam at The Guardian: Europeans recognize Zohran Mamdani’s supposedly radical policies as ‘normal’: ““Normal. That’s the word,” Verbeek wrote in his newsletter, The Planet. ‘Here, taking care of one another through public programs isn’t radical socialism. It’s Tuesday.’ ¶ That view hit on the wide differences in how Mamdani’s promises are seen by many across the Atlantic. ‘Europeans recognize his vision about free public transit and universal childcare. We expect our governments to make these kinds of services accessible to all of us,’ said Verbeek. ‘We pay higher taxes and get civilized societies in return. The debate here isn’t whether to have these programs, but how to improve them.'”
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James Whitbrook at Gizmodo: 20 More Lego ‘Star Trek’ Sets I Want After the ‘Enterprise’-D: “As cool as those massive, pricey replicas can be, Star Trek sets could be so much more than ship models. For almost 60 years across dozens of shows and films, there’s tons of inspiration for sets that could fulfill a multiple range of price points.”
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The Associated Press (no other byline) at NPR: Fedora man unmasked: Meet the teen behind the Louvre mystery photo: “For Pedro, art and imagery were part of everyday life. So when millions projected stories onto a single frame of him in a fedora beside armed police at the Louvre, he recognized the power of an image and let the myth breathe before stepping forward.”
Mirrored from Eclecticism.




