• Start coding
    Probably give Charlie a numeric age.Edit: OP self-vandalized blog post.Original post described a type error crash problem with a minimized example reproducing the behavior. Also of note, it was expressed that the OP's team was consulted, prior to post.
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  • Poker Intel
    Sometimes it feels like Ive played so much poker that Im just tired of it, and I want to shake up my gaming routine by trying out some other types of gambling games. Lately, Ive been looking for crash games like Plinko and Aviator. I havent found them on all platforms and casinos, but Big Boost Mobile App offers these games along with cool bonus and promo offers. By the way, having a mobile app isnt a
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  • WWW.TECHRADAR.COM
    NYT Strands today my hints, answers and spangram for Monday, December 23 (game #295)
    Looking for NYT Strands answers and hints? Here's all you need to know to solve today's game, including the spangram.
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  • WWW.TECHRADAR.COM
    NYT Connections today my hints and answers for Monday, December 23 (game #561)
    Looking for NYT Connections answers and hints? Here's all you need to know to solve today's game, plus my commentary on the puzzles.
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  • BEFORESANDAFTERS.COM
    Yep, Wt FX did it, they turned Robbie Williams into a chimpanzee
    Behind the scenes of Better Man.In Michael Graceys Better Man biopic film, pop singer Robbie Williams is portrayed as a chimpanzee. Wt FX was responsible for the digital character, which ranges in ages and also goes through 250 different costume changes and 50 separate hair styles (and, yes, even sports Williams trademark tattoos).On set, actor Jonno Davies performed the role of Williams through the use of performance capture, largely following the workflow Wt FX has employed on the Apes films and, of course, from its long history of bringing various CG creatures to life.befores & afters got to chat to Wt FX visual effects supervisor Luke Millar and animation supervisor David Clayton to walk through, step-by-step, the making of ambitious project, which includes several dazzling musical numbers and perhaps the most f-bombs by a CG character in the history of film.It started with a huge previs effortThe musical momentswhich include an ever-increasing dance number around Londons Regent Street, a 100,000+ audience-filled Knebworth Park concert, and a performance at Royal Albert Hallwere previsualized by Wt FX before any other visual effects work commenced, and even before the film was fully greenlit.Michael Gracey was very keen to previs the musical numbers, time them all out to the music, and really get the details of all the transitional shots and how the ebb and flow of the visuals and sound would work together, to really chase down that emotional connection, explains Clayton, who oversaw the previs. It was really fun work because we already had the template of the soundtrack. Theyd also story-boarded some moments and used video-vis of others to piece together the sequences. We were then able to layer on more detailed previs and explore camera design compositions and action.Wt FX utilized its own motion capture stage as part of the previs process. Gracey also visited the studio in Wellington during this stage of production, where he was able to help block out action and iterate on the all-important virtual camera and lighting cues. That previs was the first step of showing people what this movie could be, observes Millar. It was definitely a catalyst that helped with getting the movie funded and advancing to shooting and production.The performance capture methodologyArmed with a previs of the key parts of the film, Wt FX then helped Gracey establish how it would be shot. The most important thing for me was to shoot this like a regular picture, says Millar. I said to the team, We shoot it like Jonno is in the movie. We light it like Jonnos in the movie. We frame up like Jonnos in the movie. We pull focus like Jonno is the person who will be in the final picture.Plate footage from the shoot on location in Serbia.Animation pass comparing the digital characters facial and body performance to Robbie Williams from the original Knebworth concert.Animation pass showing the progression from Jonno Davies original performance, through to the final digital character.Final render depicting the iconic Knebworth concert.Davies was captured in an active marker performance capture suit. However, with the handheld camera work in the film, and some close and intimate action that needed to be captured, sometimes decisions were made to rely less on the technology and concentrate on the performance.Theres a scene where it becomes clear that Robbies nan (Betty, played by Alison Steadman) is getting dementia, relates Millar. It was a very powerful scene to watch them shoot. At the end of it, Nan embraces Robbies head and strokes his hair. In the first couple of takes, Jonno was wearing a motion capture helmet with little bobbles on it, and Alison Steadman was trying to figure out what she could and could not touch. You could see her trying to stroke these plastic bobbles and it was killing the moment. In that instance, we said, Lets lose the helmet. We ended up sacrificing the technology in order to make that moment the incredibly touching and intimate moment it is in the movie. Even though it creates more work on the back-end for animators who will obviously have to translate Jonnos facial performance by hand rather than being able to solve it based on a camera rig, we cant fix a performance that doesnt feel convincing in the photography.For Davies performance as Williams on set, the actor referenced countless hours of the singers past performances. He also had the benefit of Williams being on set for the first couple of weeks of the shoot. This included for filming of the finale My Way. We got Robbie rigged up in a mocap suit and he came out and did the performance, shares Millar. The performance was incredible. There was the level of engagement from all the extras. Everyone was just so, so good. But he missed half the lines. He wasnt in the right part of the stage. He wasnt looking iin the right direction when he should be. It was a very clear thing that hes a great entertainer that absolutely shone on the stage, but he is not an actor. He did run through a few scenes and we did get a lot of great reference material to see how he moved.Building chimp RobbieThe CG chimpanzee version of Robbie Williams was crafted to resemble the singer, particularly his notable eyes and brows. Wt FX relied on photogrammetry scans, texture reference shoots and facial poses to build up their model and puppet. When building him, notes Clayton, we wanted him to feel a bit like Robbie and have the charisma and some signature looks of the real Williams, but we didnt want it to be a funny monkey face version of Robbie Williams. So, we respected the line of the eyebrows and the shapes of the eyes, but it needed to feel very much like a chimpanzee first and then the likenesses, we just tried to ease them in there.Animation pass of the facial and body performance.Creature pass highlighting the textures of Robbies outfit, including wig, hat and clothing.Lighting pass.Animation pass compared to reference footage from the child and adult actors.Final render of ape Robbie Williams as a child in a school play.To test the model, Wt FX created some side-by-side performances with real footage of Williams from past interviews, including those where, as Clayton notes, Robbie is being quite genuine and in the moment when responding to questions. When we put that onto our digital Robbie and it really worked, that was a breakthrough moment where its like, Oh, this is going to sell. I mean, it is true that if Robbie were an animal, he would be a monkey. Hes cheeky, hes an entertainer. Hes quite sharp and in the moment and spontaneous.While Wt FX has extensive experience in crafting apes, chimpanzee Robbie Williams was a different kind of challenge to previous projects. In the Planet of the Apes franchise, details Millar, the apes start off as chimps and slowly evolve to become more human. Whereas, in Better Man, were basically representing a human being as a chimp. Everything a human being needs to do, Robbie needs to dosing, be emotional, angry, happy. The full range of human emotions.There was also a huge amount of dialogue, adds Clayton, mentioning the intense swearing required, too. Hes a chatterbox and hes in pretty much every shot of the movie and driving the narrative, so hes talking a lot, and that needed to feel convincing.In terms of animating the character, breathing became a central part of the process. Breathing is a big part of singing and speaking and performing, confirms Clayton. I was always eyes on with the breathing controls to make sure that the inhales were happening, then cascading down through the exhales as hes talking or singing, before another intake of breath, and away you go again. Thats such a big part of making a digital character, getting that convincing breathing pass in there. Nostrils, too. Humans dont really flare their nostrils a whole lot. Here, we could use it as a way to just bring a variety and a contrast to the movement of the face and make him flare his nostrils to reflect certain emotional beats and add a complexity and a nuance to the landscape of his face.With so much reference of Robbie Williams for everyone to pull from, Wt FX artists and Jonno Davies became extremely adept in collaborating to craft the performance of ape Robbie. Clayton details: It is actually fun in that way. We were not inventing this new character, well, we were inventing a new version of the character, but we were are also retelling historical events of something thats happened. Robbies very cavalier. Hes not trying to be famous. Hes not trying to pander to people. Hes just being himself so that genuine charisma is always there. As animators, its one of the first times as weve got try to replicate this reality, this genuine, charming reality. It was very cool.One of the significant aspects of the chimpanzee build was representing Williams real-life hairstyles and tattoos in the character. The digital ape model was made up of 1,356,167 strands of fur, with 225,712 of those strands being shaved to replicate Williams tattoos. Says Millar: We went through and pulled different hairstyles from Robbies life over the years and mapped them to the eras as they appear in the movie. Initially, we just tried to take a human haircut and block it on his head, which looked terrible. It looked like an ape wearing a wig, which is not where we wanted to be so we ended up going back to more the chimpanzee hairline and shaving the hairstyle. The direction I gave to the team was, Imagine a chimp grew out their hair and then went into a barber and said, Make me look like Robbie Williams. What would the barber do?In one particular scene, Williams is shown with bleached blonde hair. The first pass that the groom artist did for that, discusses Millar, was that they bleached his hair and then put this line around the back where a human hair line would end. Well, if youre a chimp, why would you stop there? So we ended up bleaching the whole body.A similar methodology was relied upon for the tattoos, shares Millar. Rather than just placing ink under the skin for a regular tattoo, we ended upbecause you wouldnt see them because of all the furwe ended up shaving them into the fur, like hair art. It was a very challenging groom situation, not one we are usually presented with. Our artists did a fantastic job of replicating all that detail as different lengths of density and lengths of fur.The more than 200 Robbie Williams costume changes in the film required Wt FX to collaborate closely with the costume department. They sourced, made, borrowed, rented every outfit that you see in the movie, advises Millar. We scanned them all. We used them on set for reference, but essentially none of those costumes were ever going to actually be in front of the camera. So we had to make all those unique costumes, and then add in more variations for the fight where Robbie is fighting a whole load of different versions of himself.Rock DJ: crafting the Regent Street onerIn a three minute and 42 second long (5,334 frames) oner, Williams with band Take That are shown having signed their first record deal and bursting out onto Regent Street in London to celebrate. As the Rock DJ dance and musical sequence progresses, they are initially not that well known, so few people around them react. However, as the group transitions into different looks throughout their careers and continue dancing down the street, more and more people are swallowed into the celebration and a flash mob-like dance ensues.Vid-ref acquired by animators under Clayton proved critical for imagining the sequence in previs form. We definitely didnt shy away from embodying the character, lets say, admits Clayton. Especially in the previs, a bunch of us went into some of the musical numbers. We learned the dance moves that were going to be done in Regent Street. I mean, you could just key frame that in a simple way, but it doesnt give you bearings the same as if youve got real motion capture, even if its from computer nerds, such as myself, dancing down Regent Street. We had a great motion capture day where we broke the whole musical number into about 20 parts, and we just captured them.Our lead who played Robbie for the previs was Kate Venables, adds Clayton. Shes a dancer, so she nailed it, but the rest of us were making the best of it. When you put that motion capture into the Lidar scan of Regent Street that we had, all of a sudden it just springs to life. You can check your lenses, you can check your camera moves. Everything just starts to feel infinitely more real.The previs was provided to director of photography Erik A. Wilson. He went down Regent Street with an iPhone trying to map out the path that Dave had come up with, states Millar. There were certain ways that he couldnt quite move the camera as in the previs, so we figured out a physical path that we could actually take down the street. There was then a techvis path after that to further figure out how to move the camera and whether it was going to be crane, human mounted, et cetera, and to figure out the lensing which varied throughout the sections.A four day night shoot in Regent Street followed to film the plates, with Davies performing as Williams and many dancers also on set. To animate the CG Williams over the nearly four-minute sequence, Wt FX split it into multiple parts. We were able to do the regular treatment of overlaying our Robbie ape over the top, says Clayton, but there was a lot of scrutiny from Michael and his team, as there should be. Its one of the high points of the film, a real centerpiece, super ambitious, so it needed to look as perfect as we could make it.We had to pay particular attention to some transitional moments, say when he spins around and does a costume change, continues Clayton. Although here we could have relied on computer graphics cheats to fade things on and off, we didnt want to go that way. We wanted to make it feel like it could have really been done in camera and all the imperfections that go with that. It was the same with the moment he jumps onto a taxi and then on the back of an iconic London double-decker bus. The physicality of that needed to be the priority. We never wanted to venture into superhero looking stuff.A major effort was also involved in stitching together plates and providing for building and set extensions. The action goes inside and outside shops on Regent Street. Interiors were filmed in Melbourne prior to the London shoot, and would need to be married up to the shop fronts on Regent Street. Wt FX added in digital traffic including buses and cars. Combining all the different interior and exterior plates, and CG elements, was a massive task, says Millar. I think its got the record for the most amount of roto-tasks ever created here at Wt FX.The shot also has many period-correct components, adds Millar. We had control over a few of the shopfronts, so they were dressed, and then there were the ones which we werent allowed to touch, so they had to be replaced, including right at the end of Regent Street which is Piccadilly Circus. Back in the 90s, it was a huge advertising board with fluorescent tubes, whereas now its an LED screen. We had to replace that and take it back to its 90s look. There was one building that just happened to be under renovation. It was covered in scaffolding, so we then had to patch that so it was back to looking pristine again. Because were transitioning through time as were going down the street, by the time we get to the end, its Christmas time. That meant we had to put all of the iconic Christmas lights down Regent Street and put Christmas decorations in the windows. There was a lot of augmentation work to tell that story as well.Let me entertain you: The Knebworth Park concertWilliams enormously attended 2003 Knebworth Park concert was re-created in Serbia. This location allowed production to film with around 2,000 extras, while a further 123,000 would be added in as digital crowd members by Wt FX. During the shoot, Millar helped co-ordinate the shooting of small chunks of 50-people sized crowds for close-up shots around the stage. It turned out, he says, with 2,000 extras, we could actually get most of the medium and the close-ups all in camera without needing to go digital. Essentially what we did was put on a gig in Serbia. The stage wasnt really a set, it was rented from an actual stage company that built it for concerts. The same with the lighting. We were on a studio backlot, but it was essentially a music festival that played half a song and nothing else for the entire four days that we were there. All of the band and stage workers are in-camera, and then its the wider extension and the big crowds that became digital extensions after that.Some archival footage from the actual Knebworth Park event was able to be intercut with the Serbia scenes. That gave us a great goal to match to as well, both in terms of what was in the event at the time, but also the quality of the finished image, which essentially was early 2000s digital video, notes Millar. Clayton adds that the original footage informed Wt FX about what they called crowd detritus, objects like inflatable toys, flags and beach balls, that would be included in the scenes. Disposable cameras and film cameras were also elements added .Shes the One: dancing on a yachtAnother musical number occurs on a yacht in Saint-Tropez, where Williams and Nicole Appleton (Raechelle Banno) dance. This, of course, required a close level of interaction between the two characters. Its another centerpiece moment of the film where Robbie falls in love with Nicole, describes Clayton, but its also a beautiful interweaving of transitions and going forward in time, back in time and back to the yacht. The performance was paramount and getting that interaction and that feeling that theyre there together was very important. We match moved really accurately to Nicole Appletons actress, and then it was a lot of careful work to prioritize the feeling that theyre right there, theyre interacting seamlessly.Id say its the hardest work for sure when youve got a real person and a digital person and theyre that intertwined, notes Millar. That was all captured live. Its worth noting that Raechelle, who plays Nicole, did all the dance work herself. Some people have asked us, Did you replace her head?, but we didnt. For Robbie, it was a dance double who wore a very tight-fitting mocap suit with blue fabric all over the top. That let us get the actual mocap data from that shoot.The animation team would then animate chimp Robbie, knowing that additional work would be required to simulate clothing and solve for hands and other close interactions. Once Daves got it as close as he could, explains Millar, it then literally came down to going through frame by frame and saying, Okay, this bit here needs to be smoothed down on this frame, and we need to pull that bit tight and create a hand impression here when she puts her hand there. It just becomes very painstaking detail work, which is the detail that you dont notice when you watch it, it just flies past. But if it wasnt there, it would look weird and fake.Clayton makes a point of mentioning a moment during the yacht dance where Nicole runs her hand through Robbies hair. Because weve got the match move of her hand, we can have his hair simulating and responding to that hand. Here, too, we had to deal with ape Robbies ears, which are quite big. That would come up quite often, more often than you might think, actually. He would touch his own ears and so we had animation controls for them. Other people might brush against them, so we just flopped them out of the way.My Way: At Royal Albert HallFor Williams performance at Royal Albert Hall, production filmed in two halves. First, a replica stage and floor area was built at Docklands Studio in Melbourne. We had a full orchestra and all the extras sitting around the tables in front of the stage were all part of that shoot that took place in Melbourne, details Millar. Robbie then had a concert about 10 months later at the real Royal Albert Hall where it was requested that everyone came wearing black tie, so we shot corresponding plates for everything that we filmed in Melbourne during that concert in the Royal Albert Hall.Plate footage of the performance on set in Melbourne with Jonno Davies.Plate footage of the on set audience at the Royal Albert Hall with the real Robbie Williams (L) and director Michael Gracey (R) centre stage.Lighting pass showing the detail of ape Robbies costume and hair.Final render of ape Robbie Williams closing performance at the Royal Albert Hall.This meant that wider views of the concert generally included the London audience, while Davies performance of Robbie, the audience on the ground, and the orchestra pit all acquired in Melbourne, complete with extras. Wt FX then combined the plates to ultimately produce an audience of 5,500 people.The workflow required a higher level of planning to establish where to place cameras in the Melbourne set that could match the shooting of the real Albert Hall concert months later. We were able to acquire a quick scan of our set and a quick scan of the real Royal Albert Hall and stick them on top of each other to line the two references up, outlines Millar. Then I could say to the DP, Okay, if you stick your camera eight meters up from this point here, then you should end up in box 36. For a lot of these key angles, when we were in that space, we had to make sure that we were in legit places where we could get a camera. Production needed to know this information right away so those seats didnt get sold when the Royal Albert Hall tickets went on sale! After the Melbourne shoot, an edit was done of the performance to help further figure out what real Albert Hall plates needed to be filmed during that concert. I think it was about 30 or 40 shots that we would need to shoot during the live concert, says Millar. The way it worked was, Robbie would come out, do half of his set, then he would disappear off. We would get four minutes to do our take with a series of colored lights on poles, which would be for eyelines because the stages were different heights and shapes. And then there was a voiceover for what the audience had to do, listen and sway or stand up and applause or things like that, which they would, whilst we went through the different lighting scenarios that take place during the musical number.The Royal Albert shoot involved some frantic moments, admits Millar. We only had two nights for this. The first night was a write-off because it was Sunday, and the British public got absolutely blind drunk throughout the whole day, so they didnt look where they were supposed to be looking! It basically left us with one night and one four-minute take to get every single shot that we needed to get for that scene. In the end we did it, but it was by far the most stressful shoot Ive ever been a part of. The beauty of it is, when you watch the scene, you can just tell that we are in the Royal Albert Hall, you can tell that those people are real. Theres a certain physicality about that whole thing, which you only get from when you are actually in that space.An additional challenge to the Royal Albert Hall sequence came in terms of lighting, that is, Wt FX needing to match the real stage lighting with their digital lighting. To help do that, Millar recognized that the stage shots were effectively a controlled environment where lighting was timed to a music time code, and therefore repeatable. So, he says, rather than halt filming to wander out with our balls and charts after every take, we said, well, we could use this. On previous shows, Ive always talked to lighting board operators and said, It would be great if your world and our world could somehow combine. Theyve always given us these files and Ive got back to base, looked at them and cant make head nor tail of what they are. But on this movie, it was absolutely critical that we could, because theres literally gantries with 50 to a hundred lights in them, and trying to replicate that after the fact without actually having that information is really hard.I sat down with the concert lighting board operator and talked through how their world works, continues Millar. Then we extracted all of this data from them, brought it back to Wt FX, and then some very clever people took that data and were able to replicate the lighting of the concert within our world. There were certain things that we couldnt do. Things like the brightness or colors of lights, the worlds just dont align. So for those, we just shot HDRIs of static lights that we could then source and apply it to the moving lights and also the physical space of a light. In real life, you place it somewhere, whereas obviously in the computer, you need to know where that light is. Lidar got us the position, HDRIs got us the color and the intensity of the lights. It was very satisfying to see it come to life for that first time because you see how many lights are in this thing, and suddenly theyre all moving and theyre doing exactly the same thing that they did on the day. We had all the components then to recreate the whole concert in the computer for when Robbies running around on stage, which was really cool.When your VFX supervisor becomes a star of the filmFor several scenes requiring digital extras, Wt FX happened to place visual effects supervisor Millar into, well, a lot of them. In fact, Millar served as a digital extra 767 times in the film. It wasnt for any sort of narcissistic tendencies, he protests. It was literally because we had two distinct needs for digital people. One of them was the underwater fans in Come Undone, and the other one was the paparazzi in Come Undone as well. It just so happened that throughout principal photography, whenever we had paparazzi extras, we were always on location, so we werent able to scan any of them. Wed get back to the studio and go, We need a paparazzi! And the requirement would be someone whos average build male, middle-aged, and a bit of a creep. And I was like, Oh, I can do that.Millar brought into the studio a collection of different clothes, whereupon he was scanned in different outfits. Whilst the intention was to just put me in that one scene, once I existed, I ended up everywhere. Normally Im the security guard or a bus driver or, motorcyclist, or paparazzi. Im in the movie about 700 times.Whats really funny is, adds Clayton, sometimes the extras would be my motion capture, but Lukes digital double body, merged together. Our powers combined!All images: 2024 PARAMOUNT PICTURES. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.The post Yep, Wt FX did it, they turned Robbie Williams into a chimpanzee appeared first on befores & afters.
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  • WWW.YANKODESIGN.COM
    This Little Wooden Cabin On The Swedish Coast Boasts An Unusual Hat-Shaped Metal Roof
    Named the Hee House, this little holiday cabin features a hat-shaped aluminum roof totrigger curiosity, and provide protection from the wild surroundings. The cabin is designed by Studio Ellsinger and is located on Swedens west coast. Since it is situated near the beach at Heestrand, it has been named Hee House. It is designed to be a second home for a young family who were happy to experiment with a home that maximizes the small property it has been placed on.Designer: Studio EllsingerThe cabin occupies around seven meters by seven meters, and it is meant to grow upwards. It is topped with a steep-pitched roof and gables that have been clad with untreated aluminum to offer some protection against the wind and rain. It draws inspiration from the home of the founders of Studio Ellsinger Villa Ellsinger. The villa is clad with aluminum and supported by stilts.Our house aimed to leave the ground and its surroundings as untouched as possible, as well as triggering curiosity, said studio co-founder Mikael Ellsinger. The clients had bought a very rural and wild plot on the west coast of Sweden, and they wanted a similar approach. This resulted in a home with a tiny footprint where the spaces were allowed to grow upwards, making it possible to fit a lot of surprises in a very small building, he concluded.The cabins roof forms a spacious living space, with a loft on one side. This floor includes a childrens sleeping section, a sofa bed, and a workspace that can be separated with a large curtain. While the ground floor holds the living and kitchen areas with large windows offering views of the pines. A massive bookshelf functions as a room divider, and provides support to the loft above. It also frames a custom-built wood-burning stove.The roof is unique and consists of two parts. One has a narrow and high section, while the other has a wide and low section, creating an intriguing hat-like appearance. The cantilevered canopy offers protection from the sun and the rain. One of the challenges was to solve the steep roof construction without any beams that normally stop the outer walls from falling out, said Ellsinger. This was solved with a giant glulam frame that lies on top of the outer walls and that is visible from the outside.The interior showcases a cladding of untreated pine, creating an ambiance that is simple and warm. The wooden atmosphere is contrasted with red tiles on the kitchen floors. The loft windows and the front door have been incorporated with circular prisms, which is an interesting maritime reference.On the old sailing ships, they used glass prisms in the deck to spread light before electricity. The prisms in the door are the same sort that spreads light into the otherwise dark entrance hall, said Ellsinger.The post This Little Wooden Cabin On The Swedish Coast Boasts An Unusual Hat-Shaped Metal Roof first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG
    On this day: December 23
    December 23: Night of the Radishes in Oaxaca City, Mexico; FestivusVincent van Gogh1776 American Revolutionary War: American troops, overwhelmed by British reinforcements, retreated from the Battle of Iron Works Hill.1888 During a bout of mental illness, Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (pictured) severed part of his left ear and gave it to a woman in a brothel in Arles, France.1916 First World War: Allied forces gained a strategic victory at the Battle of Magdhaba on the Sinai Peninsula.1957 Leading the Australia national cricket team, Ian Craig became the youngest-ever Test cricket captain at the time.2008 The Guinean military engineered a coup d'tat, announcing that it planned to rule the country for two years prior to a new presidential election.Carl Gustaf Wrangel (b.1613)Dost Mohammad Khan (b.1792)Carla Bruni (b.1967)Chryssa (d.2013)More anniversaries: December 22December 23December 24ArchiveBy emailList of days of the yearAbout
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  • BUILDINGSOFNEWENGLAND.COM
    Rose Farm Ebenezer Knight Dexter House // 1800
    When Ebenezer Dexter built this country retreat in 1800, it stood at the eastern edge of settlement in Providence, Rhode Island. Several of the citys wealthy residents maintained country seats on the then rural outskirts of the city, but Rose Farm is the only remaining gentlemans farmhouse from the period in this part of the city, surviving over two centuries of development pressure and economic recessions. The house stands out amongst a neighborhood of mid-to-late 19th century residences, for its refined form and simple symmetry. Rose Farm is a wood-frame dwelling with brick end walls and exceptionally tall chimneys at the hipped roof, which once had two levels of a decorative balustrade. Ebenezer Knight Dexter (1773-1824), was a businessman and philanthropist, who left the bulk of this farmland to establish a home for the poor, Dexter Asylum, on land to the north. John Stimson bought the farmhouse and surrounding land in 1837 and the property directly surrounding the farmhouse was later subdivided with large residential lots, with the neighbrohood filling-in by the late 19th century.
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    Todays Wordle #1283 Hints, Clues And Answer For Monday, December 23rd
    How to solve today's Wordle.SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty ImagesLooking for Sundays Wordle hints, clues and answer? You can find them here:Its the night before Christmas Eve and all through the house, not a creature is stirring, not even a mouse.A Visit From St. Nicholasmore commonly known as The Night Before Christmaswas first published in 1823 as Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas, and its authorship remains in contention to this day. Arguably, no other single work of literature has done more to establish our modern conception of Santa Clause.Clement Clarke Moore is often given credit for the poem, but he didnt claim authorship until 1844 (having neither confirmed nor denied that he wrote it earlier). Some say it was actually written by poet Henry Livingston Jr, an argument made by his children and their children and their childrens children over the centuries.The story of the poems true authorship might make for a good television series or film. Moore didnt claim that he wrote it until 9 years after Livingston had died, for one thing, and many more years passed before Livingstons family became aware of Moores claims in 1857. It wasnt until 1899 that the family went public with claims of their own, when Livingstons great-grandson published their version of events in his own Long Island newspaper.The poem was first published on this day, December 23rd, 201 years ago in the Troy Sentinel. Livingstons children claimed that their father read them the poem as early as 1807, many years before it was ever published, but failed to ever provide irrefutable evidence. While the poem was originally published anonymously, it was sent to the publisher by a friend of Moores, and it seems many at the time, including the publisher, believed he was the author. Livingston never made any claims that he was its author.Historians to this day continue to fiercely debate the subject, with some offering textual analysis that Livingston is the likelier author based on his writing style, while others rebut these points, pointing to the wealth of documents in favor of Moores authorship. In all likelihood, we will never know the truth.We will, however, discover the answer to todays Wordle below!How To Solve Todays WordleThe Hint: Steamy.The Clue: This Wordle has more vowels than consonants.Okay, spoilers below!...The Answer:Today's WordleCredit: Erik KainPlay Puzzles & Games on ForbesWordle AnalysisEvery day I check Wordle Bot to help analyze my guessing game. You can check your Wordles with Wordle Bot right here. SABLE was a good opening guess today, leaving me with just 12 possible solutions. With the S and A in green, I immediately tried SANTA but Wordle did not accept that as a wordno proper nouns, unless its SPAIN, it seems. (SPAIN works for reasons that remain inscrutable). So I went with SAINT, as in SAINT NICHOLAS, and that gave me yet another green box. Only one word remained, though it took me a hot minute to come by it: SAUNA for the win!Competitive Wordle ScoreI get 1 point for guessing in three and 0 for tying the Bot.How To Play Competitive WordleGuessing in 1 is worth 3 points; guessing in 2 is worth 2 points; guessing in 3 is worth 1 point; guessing in 4 is worth 0 points; guessing in 5 is -1 points; guessing in 6 is -2 points and missing the Wordle is -3 points.If you beat your opponent you get 1 point. If you tie, you get 0 points. And if you lose to your opponent, you get -1 point. Add it up to get your score. Keep a daily running score or just play for a new score each day.Fridays are 2XP, meaning you double your pointspositive or negative.You can keep a running tally or just play day-by-day. Enjoy!Todays Wordle EtymologyThe word "sauna" comes from Finnish. It traces back to the Proto-Finnic word "sava", meaning "bath" or "bathhouse", with roots possibly linked to words for "steam" or "smoke". Traditionally, saunas were smoke-filled rooms where water was thrown onto heated stones to produce steam. This ancient practice evolved, but the core meaning of "sauna" has remained tied to the idea of a steam bath.Let me know how you fared with your Wordle today on Twitter, Instagram or Facebook. Also be sure to subscribe to my YouTube channel and follow me here on this blog where I write about games, TV shows and movies when Im not writing puzzle guides. Sign up for my newsletter for more reviews and commentary on entertainment and culture.
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