'The Grand or Beautiful Streets'
THE TEN BEST OCEAN POOLS IN SYDNEY The best way to enjoy Sydney's beaches safe from rips and sharks.
The deck is a vintage beauty. It sits on high struts, yellow and blue boards like jolly flags waving in the sunshine. There’s very much something of the old-fashioned pier about it, with the lovely old changing huts and kiosk helping to further transport you back in time.
Wiley Baths Friends
Wiley Beach ๐ Coogee
Dotted all along the Sydney coastline, from Palm Beach in the north to Cronulla in the south, are about 35 ocean pools — but not a single one has been carved out since the 1960s.
This is the beginning of the Millennium Shakespeare edition. (The initial letter T is beautifully illuminated in gold.) :
There comes a time in every man’s life when he feels he has achieved all he can. That moment arrives even for great men, including those who were once mighty kings and rulers of ancient and powerful nations. King Lear was just such a man, with a white beard and a steadfast gaze, the lines of his face counting the years. He was proud and majestic, satisfied with all he had done, and what he wanted most of all was a simple and peaceful end to his reign.King Lear felt that the time had come to cast off the burden of his responsibilities and to pass them on to the next generation. Having devoted his whole life to the affairs of state, it was time to step aside and allow others with more energy and desire to rule his kingdom. It was time to divide up his land so that he could spend his final years on earth in peace.Proud father to three beautiful and worthy daughters, King Lear had decided to bestow his kingdom and fortune upon them. So that they could rule as queens with an equal share, he would give a third to each of his trusted and much-loved daughters. Thus the old King summoned his lords, ladies, courtiers, attendants and followers so that he could make known his intentions. (pp.1-2)
MIT Technology Review – Cash is gradually dying out. Will we ever have a digital alternative that offers the same mix of convenience and freedom? – “This is a feature of physical cash that payment cards and apps do not have: freedom. Called “bearer instruments,” banknotes and coins are presumed to be owned by whoever holds them. We can use them to transact with another person without a third party getting in the way. Companies cannot build advertising profiles or credit ratings out of our data, and governments cannot track our spending or our movements. And while a credit card can be declined and a check mislaid, handing over money works every time, instantly. We shouldn’t take this freedom for granted. Much of our commerce now happens online. It relies on banks and financial technology companies to serve as middlemen. Transactions are going digital in the physical world, too: electronic payment tools, from debit cards to Apple Pay to Alipay, are increasingly replacing cash. While notes and coins remain popular in many countries, including the US, Japan, and Germany, in others they are nearing obsolescence. This trend has civil liberties groups worried. Without cash, there is “no chance for the kind of dignity-preserving privacy that undergirds an open society,” writes Jerry Brito, executive director of Coin Center, a policy advocacy group based in Washington, DC. In a recent report, Brito contends that we must “develop and foster electronic cash” that is as private as physical cash and doesn’t require permission to use…”