Sunday, April 12, 2026

The Puppet Masters and Hidden Hands: 10-Year-Old Nikon D5 DSLR Really Is the Best Camera for Artemis II.

On our two existential and nautical marks

“The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.” ~ Mark Twain aka Samuel Langhorne Clemens quoting Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky


A HIPPIE’S DREAM:  Scientists Gene Hacked a Plant So It Grows Five Types of Psychoactive Drugs at Once


  Scientists Engineer “Tumor-Eating” Bacteria That Devour Cancer From Within


Seizure of 2,000 ants at Nairobi airport highlights the hidden scale of insect trafficking The Conversation


 BACK TO THE FUTURE: The 10-Year-Old Nikon D5 DSLR Really Is the Best Camera for Artemis II.

While much of the discussion surrounding the Artemis II crew’s beautiful photos from their Orion spacecraft has focused on the images themselves, and they are fantastic shots, some of the discussion has surrounded the cameras used to capture the photos. Photographers love chatting gear, after all. While the Nikon D5 DSLR may seem like a puzzling choice as the primary camera on a prestigious space mission in 2026, it’s the best tool for the job.

Although the Artemis II crew successfully campaigned to get Nikon’s current flagship camera, the mirrorless Z9, aboard at the last minute, the crew is using the rigorously tested Nikon D5 DSLR from 2016 as the main camera. Not the Nikon D6, Nikon’s last professional DSLR that was discontinued in 2025, but the 10-year-old D5.

It’s easy to wonder why the Artemis II astronauts, who are part of an Artemis program costing many billions of dollars to operate, are using an old DSLR that, frankly, was not particularly beloved at the time of its release.

It’s all part of a theme with this mission. Unless I’m having a Mandela Effect moment, I seem to recall Ron Howard on the director’s commentary on the DVD of Apollo 13 talking about the irony of making a history movie about a Saturn V-powered moonshotecause of how dated the ’60s-era NASA technology had become by 1995. As Glenn wrote about Artemis a few weeks ago in the New York Post, that retro theme continues on this flight as well:

The Apollo program’s cutting-edge technology, in both the rocket boosters and the spacecraft themselves, advanced the state of the art in astronautics and established the United States as the leader in space exploration, bar none.

Artemis aims to be all these things, but mostly it’s recapturing Apollo’s “very risky” side.

Ironically, that’s not because it uses cutting-edge technology, but because it uses 50-year-oldtechnology.

NASA wasn’t allowed to design the Artemis craft from scratch;  Congress ordered it to use off-the-shelf technology developed for the space shuttle, including the shuttle’s main engines and fuel tanks.

Critics have dubbed the Artemis rocket — the SLS, or Space Launch System — the “Senate Launch System,” since it deliberately preserved existing jobs for existing contractors in important states.

As a jobs program, it’s been a success.

As a moon rocket, much less so.

The Artemis II mission is late because it’s had a series of serious technical problems, including life support system woes and a persistent hydrogen leak that echoed similar difficulties with the uncrewed Artemis I launch in 2022.

You’d think this would have been fixed in the intervening three years, but no.

The astronauts’ issues with Microsoft Outlook, and their numerous unplanned homages to Stanley Kubrick’s “Zero Gravity Toilet” moment in 1968’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, all continue to provide a strangely dated technological feel to this mission.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Arts and Craft - Katka

 "To be prepared is half the victory.

"There's no reward without work, no victory without effort, no battle won without risk." "No victory without suffering." "Every action we take, everything we do, is either a victory or defeat in the struggle to become what we want to be."


Vrbov Fara a rare image of a stork delivering a baby…



Can Food Actually Be Medicine? These Doctors Say Yes




Inside The World Of Family Vlogs


The most successful and lucrative family vlogs are indiscreet almost by definition—and yet the wrong kind of indiscretion can derail the whole gravy train. - The New Yorker

The Market For Non-Fiction Reporting In Books Is Contracting

These developments suggest a rough future for a certain kind of writing: nonfiction that’s based on reportage more than on personal experience or celebrity—a.k.a. long fact, literary nonfiction, or narrative nonfiction. - The New Republic


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The book review flourished in tandem with the Enlightenment. Both are in decline, leaving a great deal at stake. David Bell explains... more »


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April 8, 2026

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When contrarianism becomes its own orthodoxy: The heterodox movement is replicating the groupthink it set out to cure... more »


April 7, 2026

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Great diarists open up the entire folio of their lives. Samuel Pepys was a great diarist. He was also a wretched human being... more »


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The humanities are not a system for the production of positive ‘research results.’ They are a practice of self-cultivation, or they are nothing”... more »


April 6, 2026

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In the 16th century, with telescopes and microscopes emerging, a curious malady emerged: Men believing they were made of glass... more »


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“Hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon.” Marx on a work-free future. His son-in-law had a stranger cause: the right to be lazy... more »


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“At its most idyllic, siblinghood can be a fragile utopia, a protomarriage of equals, a playroom, a shelter from the parents or the world”... more »


April 3, 2026

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The "literacy crisis" is older than the iPhone and AI. Dante faced it, so did Wordsworth. Crisis is writing's natural condition... more »


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Willa Cather’s will prohibited the direct quotation of her letters. The result was a bizarre, confused scholarly morass... more »


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By the mid-1930s Frank Lloyd Wright was seen as a relic of a previous era. Then he created a new kind of American sublime... more »


April 2, 2026

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Jürgen Habermas, “a rationalist when it was unfashionable to be one,” died last month. He was 96... Foreign Policy... Jan-Werner Müller... Matt McManus... Cass Sunstein... Nancy Fraser... Alexander C. Karp...... more »


New Books

Jan Morris correctly predicted that whatever her merits as writer, her obituary would inevitably read "Sex Change Author Dies"... more »


Essays & Opinions

Nobody understands Gertrude Stein. With her, incomprehension was always, at least partly, the point... more »


April 1, 2026

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Danielle Allen is a rare liberal academic who takes conservatism seriously. But she is far more interesting than the label “moderate” might suggest ... more »


New Books

Just 25 literary agents collectively represent half of all authors short-listed for major American literary prizes this century... more »


Essays & Opinions

Drug addict, confidence man, adulterer: The attacks on Freud’s reputation may matter in an academic context, but not in a literary one... more »


March 31, 2026

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In a nightmare year for nonfiction, sales dropped by more than 8 percent and only one of the 10 best sellers was a new book. Any hope in sight?... more »


New Books

Pedants are irritating. They're also essential. The know-it-all is civilization's last line of defense... more »


Essays & Opinions

“Always read the magazine you’re submitting to.” “Don’t resubmit the same day.” And other advice from literary magazine editors... more »


March 30, 2026

Articles of Note

Updike and the Jews: the men grotesque, hairy, hunched; the women dumpy and frizzy... more »


New Books

How to define a color. A seemingly simple task came to require scientific and industrial — as well as aesthetic — expertise... more »


Essays & Opinions

The philosopher and the tsar. Leibniz courted Peter the Great for decades, seeking influence and ducats. The effort resulted in frustration... more »


March 27, 2026

Articles of Note

Oliver Sacks and the art of annotation. His marginalia spanned 10,000 books, the chronicle of a life well read... more »


New Books

Robert Macfarlane is one of the great nature writers of his generation, making him an unusual critic of the genre... more »


Essays & Opinions

An idolatrous, consumerist faith in AI has distorted our thinking about human life and human meaning... more »


March 26, 2026

Articles of Note

Robert Trivers reveled in explaining the contradictions of the human condition, and he himself was a mess of them. Steven Pinker explains... more »


New Books

In the ’60s, Richard Hofstadter identified a “paranoid style.” Today’s version of that impulse, a “woke style,” is similarly inescapable — even on the Right... more »


Essays & Opinions

As Francis Bacon put it in 1597: “Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested”... more »


March 25, 2026

Articles of Note

Long fact, literary nonfiction, narrative nonfiction: The genre is hard to define, essential, and imperiled. Paul Elie explains... more »


New Books

Constantine Cavafy preferred mystery, candlelight, and shadow. His biographers are still squinting... more »


Essays & Opinions

In response to AI, artists and critics are increasingly retreating to a Romantic conception of art, but there are problems with that defense... more »


March 24, 2026

Articles of Note

Marc Andreessen says introspection is a Viennese import from the 1920s. Montaigne, Bacon, and Descartes beg to differ ... more »


New Books

T.S. Eliot on the pressure to be an intelligent correspondent: “If I ever had any small gift for letter writing, it has been ruined years ago”... more »


Essays & Opinions

Thomas De Quincey was famous first for his opium eating, second for his prose style, and in both he pressed to the extremes”... more »


March 23, 2026

Articles of Note

Those books lying all over your house unfinished? They’re not signs not of readerly fickleness, but of a robust indifference to societal norms... more »


New Books

How the guy who got evolution wrong, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, managed to be right about so much else... more »


Essays & Opinions

The em dashsleek, suave, far superior to the measly commamust not be ceded to the large-language models... more »




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