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6 votes
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Testing Picture-in-Picture for videos in Firefox 69 Beta and Developer Edition
12 votes -
Parts of New Orleans are flooded. Worse is on the way: A brewing storm surge could elevate the Mississippi River to twenty feet above sea level—as high as the levees that protect the city.
10 votes -
Your hummus habit could be good for the earth
6 votes -
Road-tripping with the Amazon nomads - To stock Amazon’s shelves, merchants travel the backroads of America in search of rare soap and coveted toys
8 votes -
Headed on vacation? You're apt to encounter a robot
6 votes -
The Citizenship Question, the Supreme Court, and Who Deserves a Do-Over
3 votes -
It’s never going to be perfect, so just get it done
17 votes -
Decoded: Rogue
7 votes -
Inside Instagram's war on bullying
4 votes -
Swedish football association reported to equality watchdog for suspected wage discrimination
4 votes -
Rivers of blood, black snow — What rich men did to my Russian hometown
13 votes -
Denmark plans regulation of influencers following suicide note
7 votes -
The movable tent cities of the Ottoman Empire
10 votes -
Holding the US Navy accountable for dumping toxic copper into Puget Sound
10 votes -
jizue - P.D.A
4 votes -
Science and sustainability may clash on the Moon: Balancing the mining of lunar ice between colonization and astrobiological research
4 votes -
Google’s 4,000-word privacy policy is a secret history of the internet
7 votes -
For forty years, crashing trains was one of America’s favorite pastimes
6 votes -
Catching use-after-move bugs with Clang's consumed annotations
5 votes -
“I did not die. I did not go to heaven.”: How the controversy around a Christian bestseller engulfed the evangelical publishing industry—and tore a family apart.
10 votes -
A Propaganda Model - Excerpt from Manufacturing Consent
16 votes -
Finland to Estonia undersea rail tunnel project has taken a step forward
12 votes -
Pinboard is ten years old
13 votes -
404 found
6 votes -
Americans shouldn’t have to drive, but the law insists on it
23 votes -
Podcasts should stick to exonerating the innocent
8 votes -
France plans to put an 'ecotax' on nearly all air travel
8 votes -
Using pre-fab datacentres to meet Norway's growing demand for colocation space
4 votes -
Firefox 68 released
32 votes -
Streaming TV is about to get very expensive as Disney, NBC and more companies start launching their own services and pulling their content from others
20 votes -
WarnerMedia names upcoming direct-to-consumer service HBO Max
3 votes -
Danish architecture firm COBE has won an international competition for a new science museum in Lund
5 votes -
Microsoft admitted to private Linux developer security list
13 votes -
More than a dozen people, including children and pregnant women, killed in PNG tribal massacre
8 votes -
Political Juice's thoughts on the current state of America
2 votes -
How To Build An App: Everything You Didn't Know You Needed To Know | Tom Scott
8 votes -
Where does NASA keep the moon rocks?
5 votes -
Data Analysis with Dr Mike Pound | Computerphile
6 votes -
NASA maps surface changes from California quakes
8 votes -
What would you include in a women-in-tech event for students?
Everyone loves the idea of “Yes, let’s teach girls and young women about technology careers!” However, too often I see people put their attention on “What do I want to say?” rather than “What does...
Everyone loves the idea of “Yes, let’s teach girls and young women about technology careers!” However, too often I see people put their attention on “What do I want to say?” rather than “What does it actually help them to hear?"
Let's say you are planning to hold a school event to encourage more girls to get into STEM careers. What, explicitly, would you include on the agenda? How would the agenda differ based on age or grade level? What metrics would you use to judge whether the event was a success?
I’d like to hear from people who have personally been involved in such events, as organizers, sponsors, and attendees. If you attended: What should have been included, that you later wished someone told you?
I’m writing a feature article in which I aim to provide a checklist of “what to include” for those who plan these sort of events. So please let me know how to refer to you in the article.
16 votes -
A photographic immersion in "The Island of the Colorblind"
6 votes -
The Mac client for Zoom (video-conferencing app) allows any site to enable your camera and connect you to a call, and leaves a web server running on your machine even if you uninstall it
29 votes -
Marek Holeček on the first ascent of the northwest face of Chamlang
5 votes -
Assessing the U.S. Climate in June 2019 - Contiguous U.S. surpasses wettest 12-month period on record for third time this year
7 votes -
Dissecting the role of the gut microbiota and diet on visceral fat mass accumulation
4 votes -
Norway reportedly detects radioactive leakage from Soviet submarine ‘Komsomolets’ in Arctic
7 votes -
Creator of "DeepNude" releases it as GPL licensed Open Source Software after previously taking it down
34 votes -
Raspberry Pi Foundation confirms faulty USB-C design on Pi 4, plans to fix it in a future board revision
9 votes -
Netflix announces "The Cuphead Show!", an all-new animated series that will expand on the characters and world of the game
13 votes