Archive for Italy
interpretable Bayesian learning for physical and engineering sciences [06-10 July 2026]
Posted in Kids, Mountains, Statistics, Travel, University life with tags ABS26, Applied Bayesian Statistics summer school, Bayesian learning, Como, IMATI CNR, interpretable Bayesian learning, ISBA, ISBA 2026, Italy, Lake Como, Milano, Nagoya, SMAI, summer school on April 22, 2026 by xi'anseminari di scienza statistiche a Padova
Posted in Books, Statistics, Travel, University life with tags Bayesian Adversarial Privacy, Italy, Padova, seminar, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, Università degli studi di Padova, Venezia, visiting position on April 2, 2026 by xi'anDi nuovo a Venezia per un’altra settimana
Posted in pictures, Travel, University life with tags Dorsoduro, Italia, Italy, La Serenessima, Padova, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, Università degli studi di Padova, Venezia, Venice on March 30, 2026 by xi'an
total respect
Posted in Mountains, pictures, Running with tags competition, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Dolomiti, downhill skiing, Italy, Milan Cortina Winter Games, Olympia delle Tofane, ski accident, ski race, Winter Olympics on February 10, 2026 by xi'an
a journal of the imperial centuries
Posted in Books, Kids, Mountains, pictures, Running, Travel, University life, Wines with tags Black Plague, book reviews, butternut, Colosseo, COVID-19, cuisine, Daniel Defoe, fori romani, gumshoe, Italy, Japan, Journal of the Plague Year, metro station, mystery novel, pasta, pissaladière, pulled pork, restaurant, Roma, Rome, science fiction, Tokyo, tonnarelli, transhumanism, twist, whodunnit on February 9, 2026 by xi'an
Over my trip to Rome, I managed to finish Titanium Noir, a science-fiction novel by Nick Harkaway, about an old-school detective trying to solve a murder in a society where a happy fews can become Titans, enhanced humans (aka transhumans) with larger bodies and higher life expectancy, except when they get killed of course. This is a rather enjoyable book, even though the science-fiction part does not play so well, since almost everything sounds like it was the 50’s, the 1950’s! Even the dialogues, which are somewhat outdated (no one uses gumshoe anymore!). But apart from that, the detective work is enough of a page turner and the final twist not completely predictable. Enjoyable maybe not to the point of continuing the series, since the twist cannot happens twice! Also read the very short novella Human Resources by Adrian Tchaikovsky, hugely if shortly disappointing!

Cooked winter standards (at home) like butternut soup and pulled pork. And pissaladière. Had two meals made of tonnarelli pasta, while 25H in Rome, a square variant to the spaghetti. One before strolling to the Fori Romani to watch the most recent excavations. And to admire the new Colosseo-Fori Imperiali metro station (with reconstituted household wells! And exhibits of objects found at their bottom).
Unrelated, but I watched MIU 404, a rather silly police series set in Tokyo, whose main appeals resides in exposing some issues in the modern Japanese society, like stalking or the status of migrants. But don’t expect realistic resolutions of the crime(s) motivating each episode…


