Lemon-Aid
When a seemingly innocent lemonade stand materializes in a suburban front yard, the once tranquil neighborhood descends into chaos as mysterious and unsettling events unfold.
On this site is shown speeding behaviour data collected from goods vehicles (LGVs and HGVs) in UK cities, across a month in October 2023. This data was collected by Compass IoT, and made available to the Healthy and Sustainable Places Data Service for research purposes. All data is non-identifiable and aggregated, and no personal data is collected as part of this project.
The Healthy and Sustainable Places Data Service is part of the Smart Data Research UK family of data service

A properly fun and relaxing web browser game https://messenger.abeto.co thatis quite amazing given that it runs perfectly in most browsers. Created by Vicente Lucendo.
The aim is to follow your task list and deliver packages.
Track Star asks musicians and New Yorkers music questions.
Fungi are one of the most diverse organisms on Earth and contribute to many aspects of life as we know it. They’re the most populous kingdom on the planet – an estimated 3.8million fungi exist worldwide – and yet, more than 90% of them are currently unknown to science.
A characteristic that places fungi in a different kingdom from plants, bacteria, and some protists is chitin in their cell walls. Fungi, like animals, are heterotrophs, they acquire their food by absorbing dissolved organic molecules, typically by secreting digestive enzymes into their environment. Fungi do not photosynthesize. Growth is their means of mobility, except for spores, which may travel through the air or water. Fungi are the principal decomposers in ecological systems. The video below from “Domain of Science” goes through a lot in short time.
A great article by Ed Zitron explaining the stupidity behind the current push for Genrative AI/LLMs into our everyday lives and organisations:
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-haters-gui/
The main tech companies are sinking tens of billions of dollars on the success of generative AI. But what if it isn’t the next big thing? What if it’s failing in almost every way? AI companies burn obscene amounts of money with little return. How long can that last for? AIs dispense useless and sometimes dangerous advice. A recent study showed that tech companies have run out of new training data to improve their AI models. If AI is really so costly, unreliable, and limited, what happens to the industry that has bet so big on it? And what happens to the economies depending on the stock prices of that industry (and your pension)?
I spent nine days riding the first section of the BTG trail. Starting in Switzerland, crossing into Germany and all the way up to the Czechia border.
Seems to be a bit of a thing going on for groups to be releasing the first video for songs that were released decades ago: