I think Elon is unhappy that Wikipedia is not for sale. I hope his campaign to defund us results in lots of donations from people who care about the truth. If Elon wanted to help, he'd be encouraging kind and thoughtful intellectual people he agrees with to engage.
https://t.co/RU9YwbvqOI
Big news: in March, I will start the project Corpus Liberatum Linguae Graecae which aims to complement the available work in Perseus and the Patristik Text Arkiv in order to help researcher have free access to Ancient Greek Texts. 2 job openings
#DH#DigiClass#NLP 1/3
How did people describe the brain before computer metaphors? Charles S. Sherrington in 1942 called it "that enchanted loom where millions of flashing shuttles weave a dissolving pattern."
The Old City of Sanaa in Yemen is one of the oldest cities in the world, continuously inhabited for more than 2500 years. Meaning 'fortified palace', the city is a work of art in itself, & remains one of the greatest treasures of Arabia
A thread on the Old City of Sanaa…
@thmggwfu@toriflee The WCC Pre-PhD Paper Presentation goes to Allie Pohler of the University of Cincinnati (@alliemeelyn) for her presentation, "Disperii, perii misera! Listening to Antiphila in Terence’s Heautontimorumenos," at CAMWS!
after a hiatus to get another masters, @theoctopiehole is back to discuss the delightful and dazzling trilogies and tetralogies of Euripides--rarely considered cohesive pieces by scholars--in order to meditate on survival strategies in a perilous future:
https://t.co/xjrDhUuGaW
Happy Birthday, dDAGM! 🙂 📜🎶
To mark the occasion, a new version of the app is now available on @eMousike – dDAGM 2.0!
https://t.co/AsBmfTFpn8
As you will see, the app is much more interactive...
FUN FACT FOR YOUR SATURDAY (best etymology story I have heard in a long time):
In the early 20th century when the prefix "nano-" first appeared, it was spelled "nanno-" because it came from the Greek word for dwarf (which is actually spelled νᾶνος with one ν but...
I’m delighted to see this in print — and very grateful to Tim for including me. If you read my piece (on the music of Sophocles’ Trachiniae), please let me know what you think, since it’s part of an ongoing project.