Home of the Rough Start Guide series. Practical books for readers exploring business, investigation, enforcement, security, finance, and unusual industries.
Welcome to Rhubarb Bridge.
This account is dedicated to practical books for readers who want more than vague advice. We publish titles on enforcement, private investigation, security, treasure hunting, business structure, and specialist industries through the Rough Start Guide
Everyone wants to be the top detectorist.
Very few people want to learn the part that actually matters.
Research. Permissions. Land access. Reading ground properly. Recording finds. Understanding value. Staying legal.
That is the difference between waving a machine about and actually treasure hunting.
The Rough Start Guide to Treasure Hunting: From Metal Detecting to Lost Cities and Hidden Fortunes https://t.co/cgx4JSaYzC
#TreasureHunting #MetalDetecting #Detectorists #Minelab #Prospecting #Archaeology #Fieldcraft #LostTreasure #History #TechEyeSpy
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Drone Racing was written for the beginner standing at the edge of FPV racing, wondering where to start and whether there is a place for them in it.
There is.
Available now on Amazon:
https://t.co/msiDKDcJ0s
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Drone Racing was written for the beginner standing at the edge of FPV racing, wondering where to start and whether there is a place for them in it.
There is.
Available now on Amazon:
https://t.co/msiDKDcJ0s
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Drone Racing was written for the beginner standing at the edge of FPV racing, wondering where to start and whether there is a place for them in it.
There is.
Available now on Amazon:
https://t.co/msiDKDcJ0s
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Drone Racing was written for the beginner standing at the edge of FPV racing, wondering where to start and whether there is a place for them in it.
There is.
Available now on Amazon:
https://t.co/msiDKDcJ0s
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Drone Racing was written for the beginner standing at the edge of FPV racing, wondering where to start and whether there is a place for them in it.
There is.
Available now on Amazon:
https://t.co/msiDKDcJ0s
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Drone Racing was written for the beginner standing at the edge of FPV racing, wondering where to start and whether there is a place for them in it.
There is.
Available now on Amazon:
https://t.co/msiDKDcJ0s
The Rough Start Guide to Space
Launching a Startup in the Orbital Economy – From Garage Dreams to Galactic Goals
You don’t need a launchpad. You need a plan.
Space isn’t just for billionaires and government agencies anymore. #SpaceX#ElonMusk
Elohttps://amzn.eu/d/0ih1X9pw
The Rough Start Guide to Space
Launching a Startup in the Orbital Economy – From Garage Dreams to Galactic Goals
You don’t need a launchpad. You need a plan.
Space isn’t just for billionaires and government agencies anymore. #SpaceX#ElonMusk
Elohttps://amzn.eu/d/0ih1X9pw
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Padel explains how the sport works, how players progress, what the jobs are, and where the money moves through clubs, coaching, events, sponsorship and venues.
Available now: https://t.co/OWzsES8Daj
If Britain covers the country in AI data centres while local people see fewer jobs, higher energy pressure, heavier planning imposition and no visible dividend, companies should not be surprised when the politics turns ugly. History is full of technological rebellions that were later mocked as backward, then quietly understood as rational responses to economic dispossession. The Luddites were not fools frightened by machines; they were skilled workers watching machinery used to crush wages, break bargaining power and strip dignity from labour. The Swing rioters were not confused by threshing machines; they saw a rural economy being reorganised around landowners, capital and cheap labour. Early industrial Britain produced wealth, certainly, but it also produced mills, slums, hunger, broken crafts and a state willing to protect the machine before the household.
AI risks creating the same moral fracture in digital form. A data centre is not a neutral shed with blinking lights. It is a fortress of electricity, water, land, cooling, chips, security contracts, tax arrangements and corporate leverage. If the public concludes that these sites consume local resources while automating away local livelihoods, the cost to companies will go far beyond damaged fencing or broken servers. It will appear in insurance premiums, planning delays, security bills, lost contracts, political inquiries, hostile councils, investor risk models and a permanent legitimacy discount attached to every new site.
The lesson is brutally simple. Technology imposed from above creates resistance from below. If government and Big Tech want AI infrastructure to survive, they need consent, local benefit, binding job guarantees, grid investment, cheaper energy pressure, transparent planning and a credible answer to the worker who asks what this machine is doing for his town. Build AI as a national asset and people may defend it. Build it as an occupying architecture of automation and extraction, and companies will inherit the oldest cost in industrial history: a public that no longer believes the machine is on their side.
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Padel explains how the sport works, how players progress, what the jobs are, and where the money moves through clubs, coaching, events, sponsorship and venues.
Available now: https://t.co/OWzsES8Daj
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Padel explains how the sport works, how players progress, what the jobs are, and where the money moves through clubs, coaching, events, sponsorship and venues.
Available now: https://t.co/OWzsES8Daj
The Pro Sports Guidebook to Padel explains how the sport works, how players progress, what the jobs are, and where the money moves through clubs, coaching, events, sponsorship and venues.
Available now: https://t.co/OWzsES8Daj
Ticks are suddenly getting more attention, and for once the fuss is not completely ridiculous.
One tick-related condition, alpha-gal syndrome, can leave people reacting badly to red meat, dairy or other mammal-derived products after a bite. It is not a virus, but it can be serious, even life-threatening in rare cases.
So yes, if you are walking through long grass, woodland edges, moorland, scrub or deer country, cover your ankles. Ticks do not politely ask permission before climbing aboard.
Gaiters are not magic armour, but they help close the gap between boot and trouser, reduce exposed skin, and make it harder for ticks, mud, wet grass and general countryside nonsense to get where you do not want it.
Cheeky practical option here: https://t.co/2Flle956iU
Check yourself, check the dog, check the kids, remove ticks properly, and do not treat your ankles like an all-you-can-eat buffet.