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Port William Surnames

 In one of his Just a Few Acres Farm videos, Pete was repairing a plow and mentioned the coulter. Being a Wendell Berry nerd, I recognized that as one of the surnames in Port William. That led me down a rabbit hole. Let’s be clear: the following is pure speculation based on internet research and could be wrong.

Coulter A blade or disc set ahead of the plowshare that cuts into the soil, resulting in a neater furrrow.

Feltner Appears to be an Americanized version of a surname with roots in the German word feld, meaning “field.” Could have agricultural connections?

Beechum Beech-Nut tobacco was a popular, early chewing tobacco brand. I have my doubts about this connection, though: 1. It’s admittedly a stretch, and 2. Beech-Nut was acquired by the James B. Duke tobacco empire and we all know how uncle Wendell feels about Duke.

Wheeler The draft horse in the position nearest the front wheels of the wagon.

Pettit Possibly derived from an Old French word meaning “small.” This was the last name of the money-obsessed man who married Old Jack’s daughter Clara, who rejected her father’s way of life and cared nothing about what he loved.

Burley Coulter This is a particular character’s full name, not a family name. Burley is the type of tobacco grown in Kentucky and surrounding regions. Burley Coulter is in some ways the heart of the Port William membership. Sometimes wayward, not a traditional family man, he comes to feel the value of the membership keenly. “The difference ain’t in who is a member and who is not, but in who knows it and who don’t.”

jabel

16 Dec 2025 at 11:28

Age-gating the web

 

With the growing trend of countries proposing laws to restrict access to the web based on users’ age, I feel compelled to say two things:

A) No, age-gating social media is not going to kill what’s left of the internet. If you think “the internet” = “social media sites,” then that’s your fault, and you should be ashamed. But don't get it twisted: this doesn't mean that these laws aren't bad, because they are.

B) How about, instead of preventing “the kids” from accessing social media, we go in the opposite direction and keep all the adults out? Wouldn’t that be wonderful? You also get the added benefit of kicking probably billions of people off social media, and that would for sure screw with the finances of Meta and Co.


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Manu's Feed

16 Dec 2025 at 08:35
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Watched: Mushka. Andreas Deja helping keep hand-drawn animation alive, purposefully showing the pencil lines in the age of AI and computer-generated everything. 🍿

Manton Reece

16 Dec 2025 at 03:35

Real people’s lives

 

The Guardian has these two series on their website which I love. One is “The one change that worked” and the other is “How I spend it”. The former interviews writers (not sure why just writers) on the one lifestyle change that has had the most profound impact on their lives, and the latter interviews “real people” and how they have managed the money in their lives and what money means to them. As a naturally nosey person (verging on voyeuristic), these  are very satisfying/interesting for me to read!

Some of my favorites:

The one change that worked: I loathed all forms of exercise – until I moved to a big city and walked miles

The one change that worked: I found an escape from online life by swapping my home office for the library

The one change that worked: I set my phone to ‘do not disturb’ three years ago – and have never looked back

'I used to earn £150,000 but had a disrespect for money'

‘I give away half to three-quarters of my income every year’

'The fear of money vanishing has stayed with me all my life'

Etc. Enjoy!




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rebecca toh's untitled project

16 Dec 2025 at 01:07
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I’m working on a Wendell Berry resources page. So far I have a list of his fiction in publication order plus a map and family tree. This will mainly just be for my own reference but let me know if you have suggested additions.

jabel

16 Dec 2025 at 00:13

15/12/2025

 # Five years ago today, I started journaling properly. I was still using WordPress at the time and reinstalled a private posting plugin I wrote a couple of years earlier but never used.

It took another three months to migrate that to the current site.

In that time I have written an average of 270 entries per year, but with some big gaps in places.

For the past month, I've gotten back in the habit of writing something every day, often just a recap of events, and it feels good to get this down. I've always thought of the blog as an external memory, but the journal is rapidly taking over that function as I blog less frequently.

Since I stopped using The Garden, the public/private duality of /reader has spread to the rest of the site — blog and journal. Different sides of the same coin, operating in similar ways. While it might seem like they have different purposes, they are more aligned than they appear with considerable cross-talk between the two.

The are just intended for different audiences.

Colin Walker – Daily Feed

16 Dec 2025 at 00:00
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Nick Heer on locked Apple accounts:

Given this tight control, the bar for locking a user out of their Apple Account and, to some extent, out of their devices should be unbelievably high.

As an aside, I use iCloud but also (less frequently) copy my photos to Dropbox and Google Photos. Too important to only have one synced copy.

Manton Reece

15 Dec 2025 at 18:30
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Tesla robotaxis in Austin no longer need safety drivers. Worrisome. Elon Musk's insistence that self-driving does not need radar or lidar is just needlessly dangerous. Waymos drive better than human drivers in part because they can see better.

Manton Reece

15 Dec 2025 at 16:14

How winners get lucky

 When I was a kid, one of the most famous Swedes in sports was alpine ski racer Ingemar Stenmark. They even paused class at school and rolled in a TV whenever he competed in a big race. It’s true.

If you were born in Sweden in the 70s, like I was, you’re probably familiar with some of his quotes. One of them was “De ä bar å åk” (“Just race” in his very characteristic dialect). It was his reply when a reporter asked how to become a winner.

Another famous quote of his is:

The more I practice, the luckier I get.

Meaning, of course, that winning isn’t about luck. It’s about practicing, and practicing some more. You keep doing it whether you’re the first or the last to cross the finish line.

There are no shortcuts. There is no secret.

Want to be a good skier? Ski more. Want to be a good writer? Write more.

Simple as that. And so hard.

That’s why only a few become winners.

They don’t give up. They keep doing it. They get lucky because they don’t believe in luck.

Robert Birming

15 Dec 2025 at 15:49
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