Religious do the same jobs

Religious do the same jobs

People seem to have forgotten that religious were, and often still are, employed in every manner of jobs. Some of the most pre-eminent scientist in history were religious. People such as Augustinian friar Gregory Mendel who is the father of modern genetics. Or Catholic priest Georges Lemaitre, who was regarded as making the first formulation of the Big Bang theory. Or Sister Mary Kenneth Keller who was the first female granted a PhD in Computer Science – and a nun. But there were lots of people like Sister Mary Christina (below video) that did surprisingly interesting everyday jobs – especially in a time period not known for those opportunities being open to women or men.

Religious live their lives in service to the love and care God taught in community – with their lives dedicated to the celibate state so as to focus on what they deem most important. While many scoff at celibacy in a ‘modern’ and ‘liberated’ world, the reality is that even among non-religious, voluntary celibacy is on the rise – especially among younger people. While psychologists are ascribing some of this modern celibacy to fear, the religious person does make celibacy professions out of fear, avoidance, or because of others.

They discern through years of prayer and experienced mentors. By getting to know ourselves through the eyes of God and listening to Him and his teachings of what constitutes true love daily, many learn they would be happier in their vocation in an unmarried state. Others learn that celibacy may not be for them. Both paths are equally good, but which will actually make YOU happier? That’s a question that requires a lot of personal insight and soul searching – something we can only properly do in the light of Truth.

It is a question we could all use some self-reflection on, and make sure of, instead of just falling into one way or the other out of circumstance and regret later.

Transfer Murals with ease

Transfer Murals with ease

Artists used to mark off walls into squares to transfer drawings to walls. It still required a lot of manual eyeballing and skill. Things got a lot easier when people realized they could use digital projectors to simply project the image to the wall and trace it. It still had problems in very bright locations or in narrow areas (like hallways) where you can’t get a single projection. You have to move the projector around and do lots of calibrating of scale to avoid introducing distortions.

Now, people are using VR headsets in AR mode so they can apply images to walls without the projectors. @katdieuxart demonstrates the technique.

Go to the Video Game History library for free

Go to the Video Game History library for free

The Video Game History Foundation (VHGF)’s digital archive of video game research has launched its first round of online early access to it’s library. It’s free to access anywhere in the world and intended for “anyone who wants to study video game history.”

What do they have?

There are some caveats: There are no playable games in the archive due to copyright restrictions and VGHF said it “cannot give express permission” for users to reproduce materials in the library unless explicitly stated otherwise though researchers may be exempt under fair use cases.

End of kernel-level Anticheat

End of kernel-level Anticheat

SteamDeck HQ noticed a recent blog post from John Cable, the vice president of program management for Windows servicing and delivery, that hints Microsoft wants to find ways around drivers and tools using kernel-level access. This is partly due to world-wide embarrassment of Cloudstrike and other kernel-level systems that are beginning to proliferate.

Cable mentions VBS Enclaves featuring a way to provide an isolated environment that don’t require kernel drivers along with Microsoft Azure Attestation’s security advancements.

If this happens, the mechanisms that caused Cloudstrike and kernel-level anti-cheat software would be immediately rendered inoperable – something almost all gamers would applaud.

It’s definitely no guarantee Microsoft will do anything – but stopping the spread of kernel-level direct access would dramatically improve Windows security and stability.

How World War 1 started out

How World War 1 started out

Replace each animal/kid/parent with the name of the country, and this is pretty much how WW1 started…

  1. Austria-Hungarian Archduke Ferdinand is killed by assassin
  2. Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia
  3. Germany declares war on Russia, France, and invades Belgium
  4. Britain declares war on Germany, France and Britian on Austria-Hungary
  5. US enters the war
North Korea makes off with $1.5 billion in cryptocurrency

North Korea makes off with $1.5 billion in cryptocurrency

When North Korea isn’t infiltrating Fortune 500 companies using fake identities, they are making off with the biggest Bitcoin heist in history.

In February 2025, North Korean hackers successfully infiltrated Bybit and walked away with $1.5 billion in cryptocurrencies – the largest theft in history. The group has become notorious – stealing $1.3 billion in 2024 and $660.5 million in 2023.

The Chainalysis report says the theft utilized social engineering attacks and sophisticated laundering methods. North Korea’s has increasingly turned to hackers to fund military and other operations

It was fine until the end…yikes!

It was fine until the end…yikes!

As someone that lives in downtown Portland, I can attest this is not far off what I hear all day – except that last bit about the domestic violence. The comments in the video laughing about how common domestic violence in EU flats is…disturbing.