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#transitions
What the heck is a #video #mixer? - #CathodeRayDude [ #CRD]
00:00 Intro
03:51 #Premise
11:45 Introducing: The #Device
14:39 Powering up
15:16 How #TV is made
18:30 How TV is actually made
24:48 #Transitions
36:45 #Keyers
40:32 #Complexity
46:40 #Appendix A: #Audio
48:23 Appendix B: All my homies hate A/B #switchers
55:04 Appendix C: Are these useful?
58:31 Outro
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DO4zQM7nzEQ
#broadcoast
Past and Present
That's what I call this photo.
Nicely fitting with that notion, and our era, the Moody Blues addressed "Days of Future Passed"
Lunch Break: Peak Hour
I'd forgotten what fine - classical! - composers and players they were. Here with the London Festive Orchestra!This begins with what I experienced as the energy and brilliance of Gershwin, and proceeded into classic, transcendent, Moody Blues.
Long live the days of normalcy, tradition, and dreams, past & future!
#MyPhoto #MoodyBlues #London #Past #music #musica #musique #Fenfotos #England #UK #transitions
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#Bullshit in the #Sustainability and #Transitions #Literature: a #Provocation
by Julian #Kirchherr
#Research on sustainability and transitions is burgeoning. Some of this research is helping to solve humankind’s most pressing problems. However, as this provocation argues, up to 50% of the articles that are now being published in many interdisciplinary sustainability and transitions journals may be categorized as “scholarly bullshit.” These are articles that typically engage with the latest sustainability and transitions #buzzword (e.g., circular economy), while contributing little to none to the scholarly body of knowledge on the topic. A typology of “scholarly bullshit” is proposed which includes the following archetypes: boring question scholarship, literature review of literature reviews, recycled research, master thesis madness, and activist rants. Since “scholarly bullshit” articles engage with the latest academic buzzwords, they also tend to accumulate significant citations and are thus welcomed by many journal editors. Citations matter most in the metric-driven logic of the academic system, and this type of scholarship, sadly, is thus unlikely to decrease in the coming years.