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7 votes
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Endemol Shine brings back Big Brother in Sweden – the fourth European territory to revive the flagship reality format after a hiatus
5 votes -
The life and work of Lady Hale
4 votes -
About Alexis Kennedy
10 votes -
Proroging UK parliament was unlawful
The UK Supreme Court just ruled that the prorogation of parliament was unlawful, which means it didn't happen. https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/uksc-2019-0193.html...
The UK Supreme Court just ruled that the prorogation of parliament was unlawful, which means it didn't happen.
https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/uksc-2019-0193.html
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-49810261
This is a pretty big deal.
It's hard to see how Johnson can continue as PM.
28 votes -
Norway will pay $150 million to Gabon to battle deforestation and reduce greenhouse gas emissions
11 votes -
Icelandic company Flygildi has been developing a drone in the shape of a bird – which caught the attention of US investors during Mike Pence's recent visit
6 votes -
Study shows Venus may have once enjoyed a temperate climate
8 votes -
Germany’s North Channel Bank has been fined 110 million Danish crowns by a court in Denmark for its involvement in a dividend stripping scheme
5 votes -
Crime and Punishment is an interesting, hard to watch, docu about the UK prison system
Channel 4 describe the programme "Series that captures the work of police, probation, prison, prosecution and parole". Here's a link to the first episode:...
Channel 4 describe the programme "Series that captures the work of police, probation, prison, prosecution and parole".
Here's a link to the first episode: https://www.channel4.com/programmes/crime-and-punishment/on-demand/64655-001
Crime and punishment is a documentary series that looks inside prison to tell the stories of the criminal justice system from the viewpoint of those involved.
The first episode spends some time talking about the unjust "Imprisonment for Public Protection"[1] sentences (these are no longer given by the courts but there are thousands of prisoners still imprisoned on them), how they went wrong, and the awful effect they have upon prisoners. It's a difficult watch. It shows how severely the mental health of prisoners is when they're on this type of sentence, including their serious self harm.
Episode two talks about pressure inside prisons and how that results in "riots", about how prisoners use the only power they have available to them.
I like the programme because it avoids judgmentalism. The prisoners are not reduced to the bad guys; the officers are not simplified to the good guys. You hear a little bit about some of the offences committed by the prisoners
Here's a Twitter thread from someone working in the English NHS. She works in forensic services as a psychologist. https://twitter.com/SarahE_Davidson/status/1173707912981700608
I guess Channel 4 On Demand have geo-blocking. I don't know if it's available on other services, or on torrent.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imprisonment_for_public_protection
7 votes -
YouTube's Database "Procella"
5 votes -
We are all potential victims of the con artist
7 votes -
Kik is shutting down their chat app and firing most of their employees to focus on their Kin cryptocurrency and US Securities and Exchange Commission trial
23 votes -
Scott Aaronson's Quantum Supremacy FAQ
10 votes -
What are the Big Problems?
What are the Big Problems? I'm leaving this open-ended, there's no specific criteria for responses. I'm interested in both your list and the reasons why. Submitting your list before reading...
What are the Big Problems? I'm leaving this open-ended, there's no specific criteria for responses.
I'm interested in both your list and the reasons why. Submitting your list before reading others' contributions would be preferred.
Optionally: who is (or isn't) successfully addressing them. Individuals, organizations, companies, governments, other. How and/or why not?
I've asked this question periodically on several forums (G+, Reddit, HN) for seven years now.
I've written fairly extensively on my own views, reasonably findable if you wish, but my interest here is in gaining fresh input, resetting my own biases, and not colouring the discussion overly myself.
34 votes -
Is the era of the $100+ graphing calculator coming to an end?
19 votes -
Josef Leimberg - Boiler Room Los Angeles Live Set (2017)
3 votes -
Yugo Kanno - Il Vento d'Oro (The Golden Wind) (2018)
3 votes -
Streaming services and the endangered magic of the long-form series
8 votes -
The animation of Hollow Knight
11 votes -
Exploiting the pyramid | Multi-level marketing
9 votes -
Inside the Ethics Committee
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this: Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case....
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this:
Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case.
Each episode is chaired by Bakewell, with a range of different experts (who all sit on hospital ethics committees), talking about the ethical difficulties faced by healthcare professionals (and the organisations they work for) in different real life cases.
Some of it hasn't aged very well - there's an episode about HIV testing an unconscious patient after a needle-stick injury. With advances in treatment and reductions in stigma I think would have made it a very different programme today.
But most of it is pretty good, and explains in detail how some decisions are made.
For example: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0643x61
Ashley is 14 years old when doctors discover a brain tumour. Tests reveal that it's highly treatable; there's a 95% chance of cure if he has a course of radiotherapy.
Ashley begins the treatment but he has to wear a mask which makes him very anxious and the radiotherapy itself makes him sick. He finds it increasingly difficult to bear and he starts to miss his sessions.
Despite patchy treatment Ashley's cancer goes into remission. He and his mother are thrilled but a routine follow-up scan a few months later shows that the cancer has returned.
Ashley is adamant that he will not have the chemotherapy that is recommended this time. He threatens that he will run away if treatment is forced on him. Although Ashley is only 15 he is 6'2" and restraining him would not be easy.
Should the medical team and his mother persuade him to have the chemotherapy? Or should they accept his decision, even though he is only 15?
5 votes -
Introducing Ristretto: A high performance, concurrent, memory-bound Go cache
3 votes -
'Ban kids from loot box gambling in games,' MPs say
11 votes -
How to spread hep A without leaving your house
4 votes -
Introducing Google Play Pass
9 votes -
British travel firm Thomas Cook collapses, stranding hundreds of thousands
16 votes -
If you don't find IMDB reviews useful you may like Cherry Picks instead
Here's the IMDB page for The Souvenir (distributed by A24). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6920356/ IMDB users give the score as 6.6, and the user reviews are stuffed full of people who hate it. The...
Here's the IMDB page for The Souvenir (distributed by A24). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6920356/
IMDB users give the score as 6.6, and the user reviews are stuffed full of people who hate it. The critic reviews are almost entirely positive though.
Here's the Cherry Picks page for The Souvenir. https://www.thecherrypicks.com/films/souvenir
They use reviews from "female-identifying and non-binary film critics", and as a result the film gets good reviews.
I find the reviews surfaced by Cherry Picks to be more thoughtful, more considered, and more useful to me than those surfaced by IMDB or MetaCritic (even though they all pull critic reviews from many of the same sources).
I've found some great films via Cherry Picks.
15 votes -
Raoul Wallenberg is thought to have saved as many as 30,000 Jews but his descendants do not know how, when or why he died
7 votes -
Reinventing home directories
23 votes -
Today marks the 18th anniversary since Swedish-Eritrean journalist Dawit Isaak was arrested and put in an Eritrean prison
8 votes -
Communicating science online increases interest, engagement and access to funds
7 votes -
Coalition of charitable and peace-building organisations in Finland crowdsource for 'forgiveness' emoji
6 votes -
People with learning disability have the right to ask for reasonable adjustments during sight tests
3 votes -
Jukebox The Ghost - Everybody's Lonely (2018)
5 votes -
Climate change: Impacts 'accelerating' as leaders gather for UN talks
10 votes -
Monopoly censors Manneken Pis on Brussels edition box
7 votes -
Twitch's latest crackdowns on 'sexual' content are leaving streamers baffled
13 votes -
Some WeWork board members seek to remove Adam Neumann as CEO
4 votes -
Chechen authorities are carrying out literal witch hunts
10 votes -
The Christian right is helping drive liberals away from religion
18 votes -
Exploring the tech and design of 'Noita'
6 votes -
How do you power your personal site/blog? What should I use?
I currently have a personal "portfolio" site that I haven't updated in close to a year. I'm planning now on revamping it, and I am using this opportunity to reconsider the static site generator I...
I currently have a personal "portfolio" site that I haven't updated in close to a year. I'm planning now on revamping it, and I am using this opportunity to reconsider the static site generator I am using.
I host my site on Github pages, which means that Jekyll was originally very appealing due to its nice integration with Github. However, I have found it difficult to greatly customize the themes I find, and I'm the type of person that likes to get everything "just right". It seems like Hugo might be more extensible in this regard, but I'm not sure if that alone makes it worth the switch from my current setup. Anecdotally, a lot of the blogs I find whose layouts I really like tend to use Hugo.
Pure HTML/CSS is an option but that seems like a big overhead for what I want. I'm no web developer and I don't plan on becoming one.
15 votes -
Decoupling debunked : Green growth is incompatible with environmental sustainability, researchers find
5 votes -
Video showing Chinese police transferring hundreds of blindfolded, shackled Uighur prisoners
16 votes -
Where to report birds tangled in plastic rubbish
4 votes -
Norway's last coal miners fight for survival against climate policy
6 votes -
Preparing for our prefab future
9 votes -
Today is Car-Free Sunday in Brussels
It's car free Sunday here in Belgium and the streets are a treat to navigate. Cycling is actually slower than usual since there are so many people constantly on the streets, many of them...
It's car free Sunday here in Belgium and the streets are a treat to navigate. Cycling is actually slower than usual since there are so many people constantly on the streets, many of them pedestrians or roller skaters.
But it's .. safe. Nice. Breathable. Not that Brussels isn't those things normally but today more than usual.
Some photos here: https://twitter.com/Adys/status/1175756235733438464
15 votes -
How Texas barbecue found a home in rural Sweden
7 votes