Remember the last hurt you thought you won’t survive. ? #Antoniadis #AntoniadisGarden #Flowers #Flower #Morning #AlexSpot #Alexgram_eg #ThisIsEgypt #AlexandriaStagram #PlacesToVisit #AlexandriaEgypt #Alexandria #Egypt #AlexandriaPhotography #AlexandriaPhotographer #Wualexandrian #Garden #Clouds #BlueSky #Quotes #HometownGlory #AlexandriaGems #Alexgram #Motivation #Motivational #MotivationalQuotes #Motivations #Longing #BlueHeart #TheLittleThings (at Alexandria, Egypt) https://www.instagram.com/p/CgOmzunMQBp/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Demetrio Antoniadis - Afternoon at Villa Diego (1945)
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But thanks.
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Burning by Chipper from the album Self Patrón
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Warrior Nun S02E06 “Isaiah 40:31”
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HiPOD: Dunes of an Unnamed Crater
This scene is located within an unnamed impact crater to the northwest of the larger Antoniadi Crater in the Northern Hemisphere of Mars. We obtained this image to observe possible changes in dune position, and for more coverage of star dunes, which are dunes with arms radiating from a central peak. Star dunes are more common on Mars than on Earth. (Black and white cutout is less than 5 km across; enhanced color is less than 1 km.)
ID: ESP_074717_2065
date: 5 July 2022
altitude: 288 km
NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona
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Carolina Antoniadis - Target floral 1010, 2020
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" For the first time, scientists at the University of Sydney and the University of Basel in Switzerland have demonstrated the ability to manipulate and identify small numbers of interacting photons – packets of light energy – with high correlation.
This unprecedented achievement represents an important landmark in the development of quantum technologies. Details of the research were published on March 20 in the journal Nature Physics.
“Photon bound state dynamics from a single artificial atom” by Natasha Tomm, Sahand Mahmoodian, Nadia O. Antoniadis, Rüdiger Schott, Sascha R. Valentin, Andreas D. Wieck, Arne Ludwig, Alisa Javadi and Richard J. Warburton, 20 March 2023, Nature Physics. "
//© Secrets Of the Cosmos
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"Male Model”, c.1901 by K. Antoniadis. Greek artist.
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dimitris pantazopoulos, themistocle antoniadis
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Even broken forgotten things have beauty. 🍃 #Antoniadis #AntoniadisGarden #Abandoned #AbandonedPlaces #Morning #AlexSpot #Alexgram_eg #ThisIsEgypt #AlexandriaStagram #PlacesToVisit #AlexandriaEgypt #Alexandria #Egypt #AlexandriaPhotography #AlexandriaPhotographer #Wualexandrian #Garden #Clouds #BlueSky #Quotes #HometownGlory #AlexandriaGems #Alexgram #SpringDay #Architecture #AlexandriaArchitecture #Statues #Longing #BlueHeart #TheLittleThings (at Antoniadis) https://www.instagram.com/p/CeYQuspMhp2/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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I'm interested in learning more about the history of Modern Greece (aside from what we were taught school). Can you recommend me any site/link (whether foreign or greek) that is confirmed historical accurate, or even books (scientific or fiction) about that time period?
Sure!
The book that I am happiest I read is "Ιστορία (Κωμικοτραγική) του Νεοελληνικού Κράτους (1830 - 1974)" by Vasilis Rafailidis. Rafailidis is considered a heretic of Modern Greek History studies, even though when I read his book, I realised there was nothing all that heretic about it, mostly common sense. Rafailidis stresses the negatives rather than the positives but, as he claims (and I confirm it judging from what I read in his book), he does it in order to address the mistakes and truly help love Greece in an actual profound way. Rafailidis was a Communist but in his book he accuses multiple times both the right wing and left wing of various incidents. He is not 100% neutral to my understanding but he genuinely tries to be as unbiased as it is possible for him. Keep in mind, that in all history, in all books, about any part of the world, by any historian, 100% neutrality is impossible even when people genuinely try. Two good people might use the exact same sources but the point they will end up making will still differ at least a bit, impacted by the people's originally instilled beliefs and backgrounds, which are very hard to diss in order to achieve the ultimate neutrality. So, the point is whether the book reflects the truth as personally perceived by an author who tries sincerely to be objective, and not consciously to manipulate the audience or use emotional speech to affect others. This is a book that succeeds in that. However, the book also has an appendix with excerpts from books of Yerasimos Kaklamanis. Rafailidis often agrees with him but also keeps a more level headed stance. I personally disagree on a lot of stuff with Kaklamanis because I think he falls many times into the trap of emotional speech deeply influenced by (honestly, wrong) concepts he takes for granted and personal experiences. He even contradicts himself. I am not telling you to not read the appendix, I am just suggesting you keep an eye for patterns that start not making much sense in his very intense essay.
Check the podcast "Διορθωτικά Μαθήματα Ιστορίας" by professor Giorgos Mavrogordatos. He has also written a book of the same nature, correcting historical misconceptions, but I haven't read it. Lots of good stuff and great detail, especially about what was happening in politics behind closed doors, is available in his podcasts. I really recommend it and it's also very interesting to see where Mavrogordatos and Rafailidis coincide in their description of the events, even though I have the feeling they don't share the exact same political beliefs. It's so refreshing to see different ideologies describe the events in a similar enough way.
I also enjoy LIFO podcasts and articles on Greek history. I have used some of them as sources to help me write some history posts here.
Another beautiful book series (of three volumes) is "100 Μεγάλοι Έλληνες", but it also features Greeks from other eras. This one clearly lingers on the positive rather than on the negative but this is the healthy way to do it, if you ask me. You read the negative, you read the positive and then divide by two to reach the middle.
I have another book but I haven't read it yet. It's "Τα 100 γεγονότα που σημάδεψαν την Ελλάδα από το 1821 έως σήμερα" by Antonis Antoniadis. Although I don't have an opinion of my own yet, I checked it and it gets good reviews in Goodreads therefore I am recommending it anyway. I guess it is great for easy and quick absorption of the modern history.
Of course, I must recommend "Η Ζωή εν Τάφω" by Stratis Myrivilis. The problem here is that I never finished the book because of the writing style that was probably too heavy for me at the time. The book however gets very good ratings let alone that it is a classic so I recommend it all the same and intend to go back to it myself. Perhaps I wasn't in the right mindset the first time I attempted reading it. The book is about Greece in WW1, as experienced by a soldier.
I haven't yet read the memoirs of Theodoros Kolokotronis but I have read two small biographical books which were based on them (I suppose). I recommend reading any biography or better the actual memoirs and I intend to do the same. His memoirs is called "Διήγησις συμβάντων της Ελληνικής φυλής από τα 1770 έως τα 1836". Although I've heard it's a tough read. If the speech is too hard or complicated, honestly I still recommend any biography of any sort on Kolokotronis.
I don't have a website I visit regularly. The truth is I have found occasional treasure pages when I was searching for certain topics but I haven't saved anything :(
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GOOGLE // Your Life with Pixel // LENNOX STORY from Stefanie Soho on Vimeo.
Lennox is heartbroken about the fight he had with his best friend, with whom he’s secretly in love. Instead of confessing his love, he pushed her away. Now he’s figuring out how to make it up.
This is the Director’s Cut.
______
Client: Google
Brand Marketing Manager: Alexa Rose
Head of Brand & Creative: Jakob Kriwat
Creative Strategy: Janosch Einck
Associate Product Marketing Manager: Mariya Kvitka
Agency: Anomaly Berlin
Managing Partner: Simon Owen
Managing Director: David Barton
Creative Director: Anna Nowok, Henrik Edelbring
Business Director: Amelie Schad
Project Manager: Kurt Mattich
Creative: Anna Broujean
Creative 2nd Unit: Greg Marangon
Copywriter: Fabiot von Falkenhayn
Senior Producer: Roy Ami
Production Assistant: Aliaa Salaheldin
Production: BWGTBLD GmbH
Managing Partner: Jakob Preischl
Kryptonite-Wrangler: Philipp Ramhofer
Producer: Rayk Hawlitschek, Greta Mueller
Production Coordinator: Johanna Katz
Team: Alex Göke, Leonor Alexandrino, Louise Wachtmeister, Theo Fleury, Prodromos Antoniadis
Production Manager: Steffen Gregorowius
Production Assistant: Sophia Repp
Set Manager: Marc Drobny
Director: Stefanie Soho
DOP: Christophe Colette
2nd Unit Director: Lukas Keuchel
2nd Unit DoP: Moritz Matlik
1st AD: Matthias Nerlich
Script Supervision: Jackie Jansen
2nd Unit AD: Imri Kahn
1st AC: Tom Zylla
2nd AC: Simon Wandelt
Key Grip: Olando Gübel
Gaffer: Albrecht Silberberger
DIT: Frank Hellwig
Sound Recordist: Manuel Vogt
Production Design: Tommy Stark
H&M: Nadin Wagner, Kieu Anh Duong
Styling: Julia Quante
Casting: Vollmar Casting
Cast: Lapo Hans Schleifer & Lillemore Leistenschneider
Post Producer: Johannes Böttge
Edit: Jacob Ipsen
Music: Alexis Troy
Sound Design & Mix: Moritz Staub
Color: Nicke Cantarelli
VFX: NHB Berlin
Online: Marvin Kühner
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Brains on the Railings by Chipper, live at Valve Studio
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End of year reading plans
So!! I am five books behind schedule of my yearly 50 books, which isn’t that big of a deal to be honest but I feel like I still have a chance to catch up. This is my slowest reading year in the past like 5 years, but I don’t mind since my goal was to read slowly and with intention.
HOWEVER, I am in the middle of several books and have a couple I need to read by a certain date (not counting work reading, which is a big reason I’m behind + writing my thesis), so here are some of the books I’d like to get to before the new year:
Finish:
Teleny by Anonymous (some say Oscar Wilde, I say I don’t think so!). Classic queer erotica. I’m halfway through and it’s wild. It’s also very short, so I should’ve been able to finish it ages ago.
Selected Poems by Cavafy. I’ve read all his poetry before, but it’s been fun returning to it. I really enjoy reading this on the subway actually? Too bad I never go anywhere. I have 60 pages left so I can easily finish it this year.
Nätterna på Winterfeldtplatz by Elin Boardy. My current audiobook! Swedish queer historical. It’s really good so far.
All the Conspirators by Christopher Isherwood. Started it last year, can neither finish it nor DNF it for some reason. I need to either just try to finish it since it’s so short or give up on it, because I’m tired of it weighing me down lol. It’s about a family, specifically the relationship between a son and his mother. It’s strangely addicting but also not engaging at the same time?
Den okända Astrid Lindgren by Kjell Bohlund. Non-fiction about Astrid Lindgren’s time as a publisher. It’s so so interesting but for some reason I put it down and never picked it back up. I’d like to at least continue in it, but I won’t put too much pressure on myself to finish it this year.
Start:
Gravel Heart by Abdulrazak Gurnah. My pick for our book club! I have until the beginning of December to finish it, so this one is FOR SURE happening.
Greklands moderna historia by Antonios Antoniadis. Non-fiction focusing on Greece’s modern history. Since my family is from Greece and yet I know nothing about its modern history, I actually reached out to the publisher and got this as a review copy. I’m really excited to learn more, and since I was the one to ask for it I feel like it’s only fair to try to finish it before the end of the year.
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HiPOD 9 Aug 2022: Fascinating Formations
Also visible in a Context Camera image, there might be a fluvial sediment fan or delta at the terminus of a potential “fluvial ridge” (inverted channel) in this observation. Also of note are the fascinating groups of blocks and thin channels that are peppered with small impact craters. These blocks give the terrain an almost scaly appearance. This scene is in Antoniadi Crater.
Black and white cutout is less than 5 km across; enhanced color is less than 1 km.
ID: ESP_071025_2025
date: 20 September 2021
altitude: 279 km
NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona
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