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6 votes
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How China conquered the keyboard
5 votes -
The Internet Is Not What You Think It Is: A history, a philosophy, a warning
9 votes -
Sidewalk robots get legal rights as "pedestrians"
6 votes -
The Billionaire’s Bard: On the rationalist fictions of Neal Stephenson
9 votes -
Netflix will prompt subscribers to pay for users outside their households in new test to address unauthorized password sharing
8 votes -
Six months in, El Salvador’s bitcoin gamble is crumbling
11 votes -
Films made for Netflix look more like TV shows — here’s the technical reason why
12 votes -
Dual use of artificial-intelligence-powered drug discovery
5 votes -
Why dark and light is complicated in photographs
5 votes -
The first ever drum machine you could buy - 1959 Wurlitzer Sideman
4 votes -
Their bionic eyes are now obsolete and unsupported
29 votes -
These 23-year-old Texans made $4 million last year mining bitcoin off flare gas from oil drilling
12 votes -
Rome: Decline and Fall? Part III: Things
6 votes -
Can bitcoin be sustainable? Kryptovault's operation is part of a fightback against criticism of the famously energy-intensive industry
7 votes -
The nuclear industry argues regulators don’t understand new small reactors
9 votes -
Women in tech and business: What was the best advice you got about promoting yourself at work?
...and the follow-up: How did it change your behavior? I'm planning an International Women's Day blog post and would love to include your input.
12 votes -
Alkaline hydrolysis: The misunderstood funeral tech that's illegal in thirty states
10 votes -
A fight over the right to repair cars turns ugly
12 votes -
Tesla recalls 53,822 vehicles running "full self-driving" because they won't stop at stop signs
22 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg’s dream of launching a cryptocurrency is officially over
11 votes -
The first standard to assure a photo’s authenticity has been created
7 votes -
The SAT will go completely digital by 2024
5 votes -
What if phones were actually designed for hands?
9 votes -
Kosovo pulls the plug on its energy-guzzling bitcoin miners
8 votes -
These seed-firing drones can plant 40,000 trees every day
11 votes -
Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes found guilty
26 votes -
Webb telescope successfully unfurls its tennis court-size sunshield in space
26 votes -
Northvolt rolls out Europe's first gigafactory-era car battery – Swedish plant ramps up lithium ion cell production in race to profit from growing electric car demand
7 votes -
(mac)OStalgia: 2021 meets Mac OS 9 (featuring designs for Spotify, Slack, Zoom)
7 votes -
Utrecht wants to be the first city to use its electric car fleet as a giant battery
8 votes -
Climate tech’s newest unicorn makes chemicals from sugar, not fossil fuels
11 votes -
Despite "decentralized" label, an Amazon outage took down this cryptocurrency exchange
11 votes -
Webcams
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous...
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous with “sex show”.
I think around the time I first heard that word, having a webcam usually meant you would use it to do nude shows with.
They weren’t integrated with computers back then (laptops were super expensive and not popular yet, and they weren’t a mainstream laptop accessory until way later). So if you had a webcam, you had to really seek it out and pay quite a bit of money for it. It made little sense for people to buy them just to use them for personal reasons and most jobs didn’t have a utility for them.
… except sex work. Live, paid access cam shows immediately caught on. And people would see those in ads (ads tended to be trashy with zero quality control back then, even automated. Worse than now, I swear), and associate “webcam” with “webcam show”.
There was no reason to otherwise hook up a camera to a computer if not to stream its contents to the web, anyway. The first webcam, that famous coffee pot, was just that: a web-connected camera. Web cam. Wikipedia talks about “Jenni cam” — I wasn’t on the anglosphere’s internet at the time so this escaped me, but it does seem to agree that the concept entered the mainstream not via videoconferencing, but via cam girls.
5 votes -
Researchers shrink camera to the size of a salt grain
6 votes -
Turning buildings into batteries? Concrete battery storage explained.
3 votes -
Real-time alerting system for COVID-19 and other stress events using wearable data
6 votes -
Tidal kites with a five-metre wingspan move underwater in a figure-of-eight pattern, absorbing energy from the running tide to generate electricity
12 votes -
Acquisition of chess knowledge in AlphaZero
6 votes -
A machine that can only draw one line patterns
3 votes -
Early on-demand music streaming required lots of nickels - In the Pacific Northwest 70-plus years ago, a telephone-based jukebox connected callers to their favorite tunes
3 votes -
The ingenious ancient technology concealed in the shallows
7 votes -
High-speed laser writing method could pack 500 terabytes of data into CD-sized glass disc
11 votes -
Human computer: The forgotten women's profession
5 votes -
Financial innovation is actually happening
6 votes -
Electric ice skates that can also be a meat grinder
8 votes -
Nearly 500 Mesoamerican monuments revealed by laser mapping—many for the first time
5 votes -
Could search engines be fostering some Dunning-Kruger?
9 votes -
Vienna museums starts OnlyFans account after its TikTok is banned for posting nudes
17 votes -
Hundreds of banned crypto miners were siphoning power at China’s state firms
3 votes