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WARREN ELLIS LTD Posts

fogday: 9mar26

Big fog day. I remember a morning, not long after I started school – probably five years old, maybe six – blanketed in thick fog. Got to school, and my classroom was a couple of floors up. And everyone was at the windows. Because the top of the fogbank was lower than the height we were at, so we could look down on the roof of the fog, and it was like walking around above the clouds. I remember that sense of surreal altitude, and that we were seeing something rare. We just walked upstairs to look down at the tops of clouds.

Can’t remember where I came across this last night, but some guy had his OpenClaw lobster build him a live dashboard for news on the Iranian conflict.

A recent NATO report defined cognitive warfare as the “manipulation of the enemy’s cognition,” involving “the use of all knowledge, strategies, and available tools to impact human behavior…. with the end goal of manipulating and altering decision-making.” Under this definition, the systems associated with technological innovation offer ripe pickings for cognitive-style warfare. Now that humans have fashioned this highly vulnerable domain, defined by the ever-deepening and increasingly structured union of humans and machines, we can no longer ignore the opportunities and threats we have built into it.

Cognitive warfare. “The Innovation System as a Disruptive Battlespace,” sure, great title. But. COGNITIVE WARFARE.

Lu Yang.

(the fog of cognitive war)

OPERATIONS: Dev day
STATUS:


READING: THE BOOK OF COMMENTARY / UNQUIET GARDEN OF THE SOUL, Alexander Kluge (UK) (US+)

I suspect that there are various spirits within me. My sister and my father are two among many. They haunt me on different floors and almost never at the same moment.


LISTENING:

Previously: Philip Jeck


MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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Glass Dinosaur: 8mar26

Grant Garmezy made a full size raptor from glass. Which is a sentence that feels like it contains a lot of things.

Today’s newsletter went out at 10am UK time.

The news continues to feature a depressing volume of video of the US President speaking directly to his base – “I love the poorly educated” – in that specific manner of his, using a restricted vocabulary and giant claims. Obviously, he has midterms on his mind, but in a moment where he has command of the global news cycles, it seems like a poor choice. I have Bloomberg up on the big screen right now, with stories about embassy blasts and the Hormuz Strait being shut. Fuel prices going up isn’t good for him – Jimmy Carter was screwed in part by having the legend “the man who killed cheap gasoline in America” hung around his neck, and the current President’s pivot from domestic-first to foreign-first policy seems less like a choice than a flail. He doesn’t look well.

OPERATIONS: Taking today to reconfigure some stuff.
READING: THE BOOK OF COMMENTARY / UNQUIET GARDEN OF THE SOUL, Alexander Kluge (UK) (US+)
LAST WATCHED: rewatched THE MENU

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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Spring Arise: 7mar26

Julia Dault

Things are sprouting in the garden, WAY ahead of schedule and WAY before I’m ready. The garden’s going to be a bombsite again this year.

I am (momentarily) back in gear and doing All The Things. It will, of course, not last.

TODAY:

OPERATIONS: I have to get seven pages out of the house by 5pm and finish tomorrow’s newsletter
READING: THE BOOK OF COMMENTARY / UNQUIET GARDEN OF THE SOUL, Alexander Kluge (UK) (US+)
LISTENING:

(I saw Julia Brussel play, last week)


LAST WATCHED: RICHARD II, 1971 tv production, Ian McKellen, Timothy West, and I swear that was Stephen Greif. And David Calder!

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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not finished: 6mar26

Shepard Fairey

That’s the main notebook – insert 1 is the daily book, the two behind it are what I run LTD and Orbital Operations off.

It may be meteorological spring, but it’s grey and misty out there, so I’m today using the midwinter beard oil I was gifted by Fires of Freyja.

Low energy slobby day: black Wrangler jeans that are now four inches too big for me, black Wrangler workshirt, surplus Russian submariners base layer which I like for its boat neck, an old grey Calvin Klein jacket, and a grey cashmere scarf because I have reached the age where I must take the scarf.

Two months ago, a key staffer for Sen. Ted Cruz said in a public meeting that she was “begging” NASA to release a document that would kick off the second round of a competition among private companies to develop replacements for the International Space Station.

There has been no movement since then, as NASA has yet to release this “request for proposals.” So this week, Cruz stepped up the pressure on the space agency with a NASA Authorization bill that passed his committee on Wednesday.

Regarding NASA’s support for the development of commercial space stations, the bill mandates the following, within specified periods, of passage of the law:

  • Within 60 days, publicly release the requirements for commercial space stations in low-Earth orbit
  • Within 90 days, release the final “request for proposals” to solicit industry responses
  • Within 180 days, enter into contracts with “two or more” commercial providers for such stations

Cruz is trying to inject urgency into NASA as several private companies—including Axiom Space, Blue Origin, Vast, and Voyager—are finalizing designs for space stations. All have expressed a desire for clarity from NASA on how long the space agency would like its astronauts to stay on board, the types of scientific equipment needed, and much more. These are known as “requirements” in NASA parlance.

When NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced the revamped approach to the Artemis moon program, it was unclear whether the new mobile launcher that has been constructed over the last two years at Kennedy Space Center would ever get used.

A NASA rundown of the reconfigured Artemis launch plans released Tuesday, though, answers that question for the foreseeable future: No.

“The agency is no longer planning to use the Exploration Upper Stage or Mobile Launcher 2, as development of both has faced delays,” according to the agency update.

The universe is overrun with dark matter, outweighing the ordinary stuff that stars and planets are made of five-to-one. But some corners of the cosmos are more dominated by the invisible substance than others.

Using the stalwart Hubble Space Telescope, a team of astronomers have found a galaxy 300 million light away that appears to be made of at least 99.9 percent dark matter — so much that the galaxy is barely visible at all, they report in a new study published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The tenebrous realm, dubbed CDG-2, could be one of the most dark matter heavy galaxies ever found, and a compelling candidate for elusive and yet hypothetical “dark galaxies” that astronomers have been searching for for decades, which are thought to contain vanishingly few, if any, stars.

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brief: 4mar26

Rupy C Tut

Headline of the day: 20 Camels Disqualified from Oman Beauty Contest for Botox Fillers and Plastic Surgery

Here’s an odd thing:

The Miniphone Ultra, or “mpu”, is essentially just a case for the Apple Watch Ultra (versions 1, 2 or 3) that turns it into a miniature, minimalist smartphone. “There’s a guy I’ve been talking to who bought [an mpu] a while back,” says Jelley. “He told me that he’s had his phone shut away in his desk for two weeks. Nowadays, that’s kind of wild.”

OPERATIONS: wiping a bunch of stuff off my boards today
READING: THE BIG THREE: SOCRATES, PLATO, ARISTOTLE, Neel Burton (UK) (US+)

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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quick note: 3mar25

Lots and lots of news, and I lost all of yesterday to keeping up with that while also trying to get moving on a couple of difficult jobs and trying to stay across email, all of which I pretty much failed at. See, I have a family member who’s supposed to be changing planes in Dubai in less than three weeks….! DXB (Dubai International Airport) is currently a shitshow. I was up watching BBC news until 1am.

And I lost the first chunk of the day to trying to e-sign a contract that, it turns out, has been locked by the person who signed it first. So it’s going to be that kind of day, and I’m checking out until tomorrow.

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quick note: 2mar26

Pretty much took the weekend off. Which I shouldn’t have done, but fuck it. Went out for a plate of Weeping Tiger, which was excellent.

Newsletter went out yesterday.

Radioposter Launches Paper-fi: Analog Books with Synchronized Soundtracks:

The Midwest-based startup has built what it calls Paper-fi: physical books with synchronized audio soundtracks that follow readers in real time as they turn each page. No chips embedded in the paper, no QR codes to scan. The system uses patented computer vision and other modes through a smartphone or smart glasses to track your place in the book and play the corresponding audio. Whether music, ambient sound, or narration, the soundtrack moves with you at your own pace.

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Konsztrukting Soundz: 1mar26

ViviLnk

The Kodak Charmera is an objectively awful camera and I love it.

ViviLnk

It’s not so much “point and shoot” as much as it is “spray and pray.”

I was at Konsztrukting Soundz last night – an unusually full house, which means I probably caught a new iteration of the mange, and a really good night. I have a few Bandcamp rabbit holes to go down this – Julia Brussel, who played violin, and Sylvia Hallett, who played violin, bicycle wheel and saw. Hearing someone play a mic’d-up bicycle wheel with violin bow and seashell was quite a thing.

PREVIOUSLY: All my Konsztrukting Soundz notes.

Of course, All The News happened last night while my phone was muted. Khamenei dead, which I presume was an attempt at regime decapitation by people who don’t understand how Iranian government works.

I read about an influencer who identifies as a snake and was found slithering all over the streets of Japan in a snakeskin crop top and matching tail. Its been living rent-free in my head ever since.

https://tishweinstock.substack.com/p/she-also-fed-me-supplements

2 years now in an environment that is snow roughly half of the year, and I have become a penguin. I am one with the ice. The trees are heavy, limbs decorated and hanging low. Layered and thick, holding their breath alongside me. We wait. It is beautiful, the waiting.

https://raindegrey.substack.com/p/cocooned

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sleep warm: 27feb26

Mary Maka

It was 15C yesterday and 17C the day before that. My winter clothes hang unloved. I’m in a thin viscose base layer and a chambray snap-front in grey like it’s May.

TODAY:

New Stephen O’Malley record, not on CD ffs:

PREVIOUSLY:

New Jolanda Moletta record announced, also not on CD ffs:

PREVIOUSLY:

Accessions:

It was on sale for 99p, not certain how current it is but Jacobsen is a good writer.

PHENOMENA: US GOVERNMENT INVESTIGATIONS INTO ESP AND PSYCHOKINESIS, Annie Jacobsen (UK) (US+)

Previously: NUCLEAR WAR: A SCENARIO, Annie Jacobsen

OPERATIONS: scripting, newsletter, processed an option offer
STATUS: Frazzled by schedule but generally pretty good. Really wanted to move the office to the deli today but I have too much typing to do. Printing off visa shit for herself, for the grand trip I’m sending her on for her birthday. Inbox 116.
READING: THE BIG THREE: SOCRATES, PLATO, ARISTOTLE, Neel Burton (UK) (US+) and THE VISIONARIES, Wolfram Eilenberger (UK) (US+)

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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tragic magic: 25feb26

Klaudia SchifferlePoem (For a Song, 2021), 2024, via Something I Saw

Gorgeous day out there, and I’m stuck indoors waiting on several deliveries and trying to get my head around a project whose first-stage parameters shifted last night, while also trying to solve the prose serial project and talking through a possible new and odd thing with an artist acquaintance.

I skimmed the news and decided I couldn’t really be bothered. It’s all the bloody same again. I could ascribe ennui to trying to cut down on the cigarettes again and still having this mange in my system, but it seems today like everyone is reporting on the same five things and I couldn’t give a shit about any of them.

TRAGIC MAGIC by Julianna Barwick & Mary Lattimore arrived in the post yesterday:

“In 2016, there was no way any of us could have charged for a link round-up.”

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