Father Nick Blaha's avatar
Father Nick Blaha
fathernick@nostrplebs.com
npub1paxy...5ky6
Landlocked castaway priest in the Age of Disintegration
Estoy sentado en el suelo de una habitación desocupada, el retrato de una joven no deja de mirarme mientras una vela se consume dando vida a la estancia. Ignoro el tiempo transcurrido, menosprecio el que vendrá. Es fácil sentir cerca la muerte admirando el pábilo doblegado especulando de manera vaga cuando reinará la noche. (Javier Solé, poema “Estancia en penumbra” Del libro de poemas “Las hilanderas”) #español #poesia #poemas #catolico image
On the phone with the police to file a report for theft on the property. Officer ends the call with "Have a better day" I will man, I will.
How to not binge watch a series: Never try to tear yourself away at the END of an episode. They have you on tenterhooks. Roll with it... and then pick some B roll a third of the way through the episode. Way easier to walk away. #lifehack #plebchain #grownostr
I enjoyed listening to Michael Palin’s Erebus, about the polar explorations conducted by the ship of that name, and its companion ship HMS Terror. They were bomb ships created at the end of the Napoleonic era, present at the shelling of Baltimore (?) during the war of 1812. Whatever battle the Star-Spangled Banner commemorates. They were retired from naval service not long after being launched, almost being obsolete as soon as they were built, but their reinforced hulls were ideal for plowing through sea ice. Incredibly, they did so under sail alone. HMS Erebus was discovered in the Arctic in 2016 or so and HMS Terror not long after. Their voyages all sound harrowing but particularly the last, of course. Conrad mentions them in Heart of Darkness. There are all sorts of lively characters and of course the usual preening superiority towards past attitudes and practices. I think one of the favorable qualities of the historical books I most enjoy is that they do not allow a contemporary perspective to intervene and attempt to demonstrate “our” superiority to the people of the past. The author's voice is totally subsumed into the characters’. I find the interjection of authorial voice so irritating as to cause me to stop reading the second I detect it. I tried listening to Erik Larsen’s new book on the start of the civil war but made the mistake of starting with the Introduction and had to return it. A new rule I’m considering putting into place is to never, ever, ever read introductions, and perhaps even avoid books that contain them entirely.
All, a quick request for some feedback: Recently I acquired some classroom desktop computers that are no longer needed, and would never be capable of running Windows 11. They're HP computers, mostly, with 125GB SSDs. They seem ideal for self hosting a personal server, and I have been successful getting #StartOS working on one of them after a RAM upgrade to 16GB, to future-proof it for the bitcoin stack. Obviously a larger SSD would be desirable but that's an easy upgrade if it's wanted. What do you think someone would be willing to pay for such a device?
I live in a pretty run-down, frequently violent, and often cruel and hostile place, but every once in a while... image
It's quite jarring to me NOT to be able to zap the creator of this obscure script meant to solve an even more obscure problem for a tiny portion of the English speaking members of the human race. image