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4 votes
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Finland looks to Iceland to encourage youth to swap booze for hobbies
8 votes -
Hasina Shirzad – After leaving Afghanistan I was unprepared for life in a country where tasks are not strictly divided between the sexes
10 votes -
Economics after Neoliberalism
5 votes -
No Man's Sky's Sean Murray says devs should be quiet after a rough launch
11 votes -
Finding the future in radical rural America: It's time to rewrite the narrative of “Trump Country.” Rural places weren't always red, and many are turning increasingly blue.
11 votes -
Watch the Ridgecrest earthquake shatter the desert floor in stunning before-and-after images
12 votes -
Underworld: How the Sinaloa drug cartel digs its tunnels
7 votes -
Boris Johnson will be the UK's new prime minister
38 votes -
What is a good gender-neutral pet name for my daughter?
Shortly after my son was born I started calling him "Buddy." I love it and he answers to it like a name now. My daughter is two and she calls him Buddy, which I think is the most adorable thing...
Shortly after my son was born I started calling him "Buddy." I love it and he answers to it like a name now. My daughter is two and she calls him Buddy, which I think is the most adorable thing ever.
I'd like to do this with my daughter, but I'm not really a fan of things like "honey" or "sweetheart," though I do wind up calling her sweetheart pretty frequently.
Buddy is like friend, which is what I'm going for, but that's taken already. What else could I use?
17 votes -
Forgotten History: Musée des Plans-Reliefs
8 votes -
Tesla’s ‘anemic’ high-margin model sales extends profit struggle
5 votes -
Suggestion when linking to comments from a user's history page
Comments in a person's history page have a "Link" and "Parent" link on them. My suggestion is have just a single link to the comment, but all other comments on the page that are not direct...
Comments in a person's history page have a "Link" and "Parent" link on them.
My suggestion is have just a single link to the comment, but all other comments on the page that are not direct parents/ancestors or children/descendants of the linked to comment should be minimized so we can easily see the relevant discussion, but also view them if we want, and the linked comment itself should be highlighted in some way.
You could probably put a "Hide all but direct family" flag in the querystring
6 votes -
The Crane Wife - Ten days after calling off her engagement, CJ Hauser travels to the Gulf Coast to live among scientists and whooping cranes
10 votes -
2019 Board Game of the Year Goes to "Just One"
8 votes -
A bipartisan call to increase the Newstart allowance was removed from a parliamentary report at the direction of the Morrison government on the eve of the federal election
5 votes -
AMBER Alerts were designed to recover children in the most serious abduction cases, but they might be ineffective at saving lives, and could carry hidden costs.
9 votes -
Duncan Scott joins Mack Horton in podium protest after “you loser” rant from Sun Yang
5 votes -
Craigslist's nerdy founder wants to change the world -- starting with your daily news
11 votes -
Inside Apple factory thefts: Secret tunnels, hidden crawl spaces
11 votes -
From Indian Lakes - No One Else (2019)
3 votes -
What creative projects are you working on? (July 2019 edition)
it's that time of the month again, now hopefully aided by the changes in sort which will give this thread a bit of a longer half-life. here you can share/provide updates on some of the projects...
it's that time of the month again, now hopefully aided by the changes in sort which will give this thread a bit of a longer half-life. here you can share/provide updates on some of the projects that you're working on. they can be of any kind--digital, physical, work related, passion project, whatever. pretty straightforward, i think.
november thread • february thread • march thread • april thread • may thread • june thread
27 votes -
What Shonen Jump was like thirty years ago
4 votes -
Moonlighter - Between Dimensions DLC | Release trailer
3 votes -
What have you been listening to this week?
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as...
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as well, we'd love to see your hauls :)
Feel free to give recs or discuss anything about each others' listening habits.
You can make a chart if you use last.fm:
http://www.tapmusic.net/lastfm/
Remember that linking directly to your image will update with your future listening, make sure to reupload to somewhere like imgur if you'd like it to remain what you have at the time of posting.
13 votes -
Justice Department to open broad, new antitrust review of Big Tech companies such as Google, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple
10 votes -
The insulin racket
8 votes -
The computer gaming statistics technology innovators should know
4 votes -
The Lab
This was written for a themed flash fiction contest (the theme was Technological Dystopia) and ended up losing, but I figured it wouldn't hurt to share it here. It's not my proudest work but, as...
This was written for a themed flash fiction contest (the theme was Technological Dystopia) and ended up losing, but I figured it wouldn't hurt to share it here. It's not my proudest work but, as flash fiction, I think it works well enough. I hope you enjoy!
She was three floors from the bottom of the sunken tower when the crying first reached her. A quick swipe earned her a pair from the rack nearby and she continued her descent.
With the aid of technology this process had been streamlined and systematized such that these checks were only needed once a month, but everyone dreaded them. She had drawn the short straw this time and, though it had been years since last she’d ventured to The Lab, she still remembered her last haunting experience. It wasn’t that she was a dissenter or rebelled against that which needed to be done. This was a necessary evil to save their species, but she was still a human being. Seeing them all like that, all tubes and tapes running from frail flesh, was enough to turn any stomach.
A pair of heavy iron doors sat ominously in her way as she bottomed out. She could see the white, crisp interior of The Lab beyond and pushed forward, swallowing her hesitance as best she could.
Before her lay a large room with clean white tile, walls and harsh, flourescent light. It smelled and looked like a hospital because that’s exactly what it was. 10 rows and columns of small, clear, plastic boxes stretched between her and the far wall. The muffs were doing their job exceedingly well, but she could still hear the awful racket bouncing around her memory. She took a deep breath, steadied herself, and started working.
Her primary duty was to make sure the machines were functioning correctly, mostly the arm that glided to and fro above the boxes, administering medicine or changing bags of various fluids as need be. She would also be checking the tubes for clogs that may have been missed by any old or worn out sensors; this was the part she dreaded the most. She flipped the lid on the nearest box and checked the left, then the right, and lastly the tube running into its belly button, and closed the box quickly.
It couldn’t have taken her more than 5 seconds but that short time was enough for the anguished face to plaster itself onto her mind. Everyone does their part, she reminded herself, from the start to the end. It didn’t serve a purpose to bemoan that which she could not change. She moved on to the next crib, hoping this would go by faster than she expected.
Halfway through her checks she hit a snag. There was a clog in Crib 54. She could register the fault in the system and it would fix it on its next hourly cycle, as were her orders, but it was such a small clog. The tube simply needed to be changed, and as a nurse she was well-versed in the procedure. In that moment it was decided.
The tubes themselves were specially designed to be thin and flexible, but rigid enough to fit the shape of a tear duct. Her first task, after finding a pair of gloves, was to gently remove the tube currently in the eye. She hovered over the crib and gently pulled the tube out of the right tear duct. It came slowly, millimeter by millimeter, each bit covered in more goop and mucus than the last. It wound its way up into the sinuses which meant, by the end of it, she had pulled at least five inches of tubing. This she discarded.
Next she had to insert the new tube (these were kept in abundance in a draw underneath the crib). She grabbed one, snipped it to length with a pair of scissors hanging from the IV stand, and took a moment to recent herself. Inserting the tube while the child was crying would be much more difficult than removing it.
As gently as she could she reached down and, with her index finger and thumb, pried open the eye of the little one. With one came the other, the muscles young and unwilling to work independently, and she found herself staring into a pair of brilliant green pools. Her heart melted and, for the briefest moment, she thought of taking it. She could smuggle it out. The bed being empty would trip the system but she could clear the error and explain it away somehow. But no, that was silly. This wasn’t a decision for her to make; things were done this way because there was no other choice.
She pushed the tip of the tube into the tear duct confidently, shoving the traitorous thoughts from her mind as the child’s cries were renewed with pain. She was here to do a job, cold and emotionless. It wasn’t her place to question the way things were done. The tube went in without a hitch and the child’s eyes snapped closed again once she released them. The little bundle of agony before her squirmed and she saw the tears begin to flow anew. With swift, definite movement she closed and latched the lid.
The rest of her checks went smoothly, but she couldn’t shake the uneasy feeling that now ran rampant in her gut. She hated Lab duty, and she expected that would always be the way. With a heavy heart she signed the documents needed to record her visit, noted the tube change in the work log, and left The Lab through its heavy iron doors. The trip upstairs would be long and tiring, but at least she could try and forget ever having been here.
12 votes -
The man with the golden airline ticket
21 votes -
As authoritarian governments surveil the internet, open source projects decide how to respond
7 votes -
Overwatch - Sigma - Origin story (new hero, coming soon)
8 votes -
What have you been watching / reading this week? (Anime/Manga)
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was...
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of.
If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're talking about and link to its pages on Anilist, MAL, or any other database you use!
7 votes -
Automachef | Launch trailer
3 votes -
French MPs give frosty reception to Swedish climate change activist Greta Thunberg
5 votes -
Rebuilding Jane Austen’s library
6 votes -
For $15K, He’ll Fake Your Exchange Volume – You’ll Get on CoinMarketCap
7 votes -
"I'm proud of who I am, but I'm more than one identity": The fight for transgender voices in 2020
10 votes -
Once nearly dead as the dodo, California condor comeback reaches 1,000 chicks
11 votes -
Borgarhraun eruption – magma speed record set by Icelandic volcano
7 votes -
How Finland is coping with an ageing population – online lunch clubs are the start of a remote care revolution
9 votes -
Researchers in Norway have found a freshwater pond on the seabed outside the country's western coast
7 votes -
The people who develop the long-lost camera films of strangers
9 votes -
Facebook’s Libra and national monetary sovereignty: A tale of two monopolies
4 votes -
Colorado isn’t the desert. A sustainable lawn doesn’t have to be rocks, cacti and ugly
10 votes -
What you should know about the Equifax data breach settlement
7 votes -
Original Apollo 11 landing videotapes sell for $1.8M
8 votes -
The Nintendo Switch’s Joy-Con drift problem, explained
13 votes -
The board game of the alpha nerds. Before Risk, before Dungeons & Dragons, before Magic: The Gathering, there was Diplomacy.
15 votes -
Pateros and North Central Washington continue rebuilding five years after Carlton Complex
4 votes