James McConnachie
@jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
1.6K followers 1.2K following 860 posts
Writer. Reviews non-fiction for the Sunday Times, edits The Author magazine. Books about the Kamasutra, Conspiracy Theories, Nepal and, next, a Himalayan mountain. Books, singing, wildlife, languages, running...
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
I wrote this for the launch of Psyche's new memoir strand: "The girl was lying on a stretcher, wrapped in a blanket, and he reached for a medallion hanging around her neck, showing to me the two words embossed on it: Sourde-Muette." psyche.co/stories-of-c...
Girl in the water | Psyche Stories of Change
I’d saved someone from drowning. Had I done the right thing?
psyche.co
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
venerable indeed, nowadays – 75, unless there are other issues. costs just under £100 at Boots – if you can get a slot.
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
Whinnyfold. Magdalen. Alresford.
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
One of the more revealing insights into conspiracism. Explains why it so often goes hand in hand with auto-didacticism aka internet 'research'. The illusion of mastery of a subject.
Reposted by James McConnachie
gailrenard.bsky.social
Worse, it would kill our Creative Industries, which are our nation's soul, and bring £125 billion to the UK every year. Besides, the AI bubble is about to crash. And it's hard to take independent advice from someone who worked for Zuckerberg.
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
I know, right? With Godot's celebrated kick ball change/shimmy/jazz hands entrance
Reposted by James McConnachie
keithwdickinson.bsky.social
Today is a day when arts degrees are worthless, but the product of those degrees is so valuable it would kill an entire industry if they were made to pay for it.
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
'“I just don’t know how you go around, asking everyone first. I just don’t see how that would work,” Clegg said.'

It's called a market.
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
One of the many benefits of my English degree (a degree in language and critical thinking, really) is that I can immediately see how narrow, short-sighted and stupid a policy this is.
eve.gd
This makes me so angry. These people view all life as training for lifelong servitude/work. There's no room for interest, enjoyment, and culture in their bleak vision of education. At least she'll never be in power to see it through. Though Reform are probably worse.
Badenoch: Curb students taking "rip-off" degrees such as English. The performing arts, sociology and anthropology are among the subjects the Conservatives would like to cut
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
I do this. I find most people are delighted - though people who struggle to process speech less keen obvs.
Reposted by James McConnachie
aceottorney.bsky.social
Proud to announce Deviant Legal’s Game Developer’s Guide to Publishing Agreements: a free resource for developers wanting to learn about publishing deals. Publicly accessible, without requiring to provide your data: deviantlegal.com/guide/game-d...
An image about the game developer's guide to publishing agreements feauturing otto the otter
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
wonderful. I love the use of the scores as a kind of vocal soft pedal
Reposted by James McConnachie
iainjclarkart.com
Part of Russell T Davies' speech on being awarded Outstanding Contribution to Television at the Bafta Cymru awards. (via www.instagram.com/baftacymru)
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
oh yeah. and maybe you'd have to pay capital gains tax if you sold
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
would it work differently if you incorporated first? (genuinely don't know)
Reposted by James McConnachie
tomgauld.bsky.social
A riddle for @theguardian.com books page.
p.s. My new book 'Physics for Cats' is out this week in bookshops and online. Details at www.tomgauld.com
Title: One door leads to freedom, the others to certain death. You may ask one question. 

Image: Three guards with shields and speard stand in front of three doors. One guard sits at a folding table working at a typewriter, his shield and spear leaning against the wall.

Caption: One guard always tells the truth, one always tells lies, and the third always tells an entrancing story that blends reportage with imagination in an attempt to reach a deeper authenticity by moving beyond the narrow categories of fact and fiction.
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
excellent - thank you for saying!
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
Ah but AI licensing is not the relevant split, I think. It's the split for 'copyright enforcement'. The Settlement seems to advise checking for that. More news on this when I get it...
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
Please see my article on non-paying publishers in the latest issue of The Author.
Reposted by James McConnachie
rainewilson.bsky.social
Question for folks who understand the Anthropic settlement - for the many of us whose books were in the database but not the claimant list because of lack of US copyright - does Anthropic still have to remove our books from their model? Or are they only deleting the claimant books?
Reposted by James McConnachie
jntod.bsky.social
On National Poetry Day, the greatest poem I have ever read
A printed poem which reads:

I hav for breakfast Weetabix

I hav for lunch some meat

I have for tea 2 sosajis and thats enuf to eat

Peter Hazel, 5
jamesmcconnachie.bsky.social
love the razor-sharp metre especially.