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6 votes
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Firefox 66.0.4 has been released - fixes disabled extensions/add-ons
16 votes -
Anyone going to Otakuthon?
6 votes -
Ramadan: Three Muslims explain how they combine its spirituality with their busy lives
8 votes -
Seafood without the sea: Will lab-grown fish hook consumers?
10 votes -
The fall of 76
12 votes -
Any large-scale art installations you'd recommend?
Howdy folks. Had a recent interest in large-scale art projects, and I'm not sure where to start looking to find more. Anything that by nature has to exist outside of a museum. I'm looking for big...
Howdy folks.
Had a recent interest in large-scale art projects, and I'm not sure where to start looking to find more.
Anything that by nature has to exist outside of a museum. I'm looking for big displays. Whether it be large scale performance art, buildings erected at the will of an artist, or things like the Dumb Starbucks event that took place out in Los Angeles.
Installments that took any measure of great coordination, investment, or raw personal effort.
I feel like I'm doing a right shit job of describing this - but maybe you get the idea. If anyone has links to news articles, blog posts, or whatever about these kinds of art please drop a comment!
9 votes -
To help children learn braille, Lego will introduce bricks designed for the blind
7 votes -
‘Deep Sleep’: How an amateur porno set off a massive Federal witch hunt
13 votes -
A quick and dirty introduction to Exterior Calculus (Stoke's Theorem)
6 votes -
AIs should have the same ethical protections as animals
12 votes -
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs, JavaScript Adaptation
3 votes -
Conservatives want Catholic bishops to denounce pope as heretic
22 votes -
How Airbnb took over the world
6 votes -
A new approach to multiplication opens the door to better quantum computers
7 votes -
On-U Sound: Pay It All Back vol 7 (2017)
3 votes -
Murder and the missing briefcase: The real story behind Harper Lee’s lost true crime book
5 votes -
Indonesia to sink scores of boats to deter illegal fishing
4 votes -
Centrelink wipes 'robo-debt' at centre of test case
4 votes -
A Few Billion Lines of Code Later: Using Static Analysis to Find Bugs in the Real World
4 votes -
Bear's Den - Broken Parable (2016)
4 votes -
Sea, sand but no sunscreen: Tiny Tuvalu desperate for skin protection
8 votes -
How Game of Thrones ruined its most important episode
20 votes -
Getting diagnosed with ADHD at 25 changed everything
12 votes -
Supergiant Games is now on Itch.io (Except Hades)
9 votes -
How do you organize your bookmarks?
For me, I have a huge collection of bookmarks in Firefox that are super unorganized. I have some semblance of folder system but...it's quite messy. I'm sure many people have a similar problem....
For me, I have a huge collection of bookmarks in Firefox that are super unorganized. I have some semblance of folder system but...it's quite messy. I'm sure many people have a similar problem. Share your ideas on how you keep your bookmarks organized, what's your system?
25 votes -
In the land of hope and grief: An art therapy project in an Alaska Native village helps teens talk about suicide in their community
4 votes -
5G signal could jam satellites that help with weather forecasting
7 votes -
The plot that failed: How Venezuela's 'uprising' fizzled
19 votes -
“We’re drinking now”: The oldest newspaper in New Orleans just fired its entire staff
11 votes -
Meal kits have smaller carbon footprint than grocery shopping, study says
17 votes -
Evolution: How the theory is inspiring a new way of understanding language
5 votes -
Thank You Scientist - FXMLDR (2019)
5 votes -
The story of XBAND - The 16-bit multiplayer network for Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis
7 votes -
Higher Homotopy Groups Are Spooky
6 votes -
Which subscriptions do you consider to be worth their cost?
Aside from this wonderful website, what are things that have enough value to you that you're willing to pay for them not just once, but repeatedly over time?
41 votes -
Review: "Bedroom Music" by Steph Castor
5 votes -
Country House wins the 2019 Kentucky Derby after Maximum Security disqualified
5 votes -
How America’s oldest gun maker went bankrupt: A financial engineering mystery
8 votes -
A new academic field is trying to pinpoint what makes things cute – and why we can’t resist them
8 votes -
The powerful group shaping the rise of Hindu nationalism in India
6 votes -
'Hell no': Caster Semenya will not take testosterone medication
'Hell no': Caster Semenya will not take testosterone medication (This is a follow-up to this previous article: Semenya loses landmark legal case against IAAF over testosterone levels.)
12 votes -
South Africa confronts a legacy of apartheid: Why land reform is a key issue in the upcoming election
7 votes -
How a wooden bench in Zimbabwe is starting a revolution in mental health
6 votes -
How Do You Save a Million People From a Cyclone? Ask a Poor State in India
5 votes -
An afternoon with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Texas Anti-Vaccine Movement
7 votes -
The UK could achieve the most aggressive climate goal in the world
6 votes -
Justine Damond Ruszczyk's family wins record $US20 million payment over wrongful death
6 votes -
Study shows "the risk of HIV transmission through anal sex when HIV viral load is suppressed is effectively zero".
Risk of HIV transmission through condomless sex in serodifferent gay couples with the HIV-positive partner taking suppressive antiretroviral therapy (PARTNER): final results of a multicentre,...
Our results provide a similar level of evidence on viral suppression and HIV transmission risk for gay men to that previously generated for heterosexual couples and suggest that the risk of HIV transmission in gay couples through condomless sex when HIV viral load is suppressed is effectively zero. Our findings support the message of the U=U (undetectable equals untransmittable) campaign, and the benefits of early testing and treatment for HIV.
9 votes -
‘I try to spread the joy’: The trans pastor battling intolerance in the Deep South
11 votes