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6 votes
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How to estimate distance using just your thumb
7 votes -
48,000 UC graduate student workers go on strike
20 votes -
Murder and loathing in Las Vegas
3 votes -
In accordance with annual tradition, a Norwegian Christmas tree has arrived in Trafalgar Square, London – this year marks the 75th anniversary
4 votes -
The secret skills of US Coast Guard rescue swimmers
1 vote -
Nine hard-earned lessons from 365 days of sobriety
3 votes -
Bed Habits - One insomniac’s descent into the world of sleep research to understand what screens before bed are doing to our brains
4 votes -
Megalopolis: How coastal west Africa will shape the coming century
8 votes -
Who has served the most time? Ex cons rank themselves
5 votes -
"Just take care of ur self" - Interview with the girlfriend of Nika Schakarami
7 votes -
How bullying manifests at work — and how to stop it
4 votes -
John Lewis - The Beginner
5 votes -
India’s ghost weddings: where dead children are married off - Pretha Kalyanam
7 votes -
Lady of the Gobi
4 votes -
The most lawless county in Texas
9 votes -
Top performers include Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands in the European EIGE Gender Equality Index for 2022
4 votes -
Occupied - Secretly recorded account of life in Russian occupied Kherson, Ukraine
15 votes -
That time when my skin changed color: A Spaniard in the USA
10 votes -
This 33-year-old made more than 1,000 Wikipedia bios for unknown women scientists
15 votes -
Why men are hard to help
28 votes -
How to deal with rolling blackouts?
Given how the 2020s have gone so far, I'm feeling some meaningful concern about the news that we might be getting rolling blackouts if European fuel supplies get too low. I'm not at all sure...
Given how the 2020s have gone so far, I'm feeling some meaningful concern about the news that we might be getting rolling blackouts if European fuel supplies get too low. I'm not at all sure whether they're overplaying the risk to prepare people, or dramatically underplaying it as they did with the first COVID lockdowns.
I'd be interested to know what, if anything, people recommend as preparation? I don't want to go overkill on something that may not even happen, but it also seems reasonable to consider the issue before everyone starts panic buying supplies.
I'm in the middle of a city, which has definite advantages in terms of walking access to shops and public buildings, but everything I own (including gas boiler and gas stove) needs electricity to run. It seems like a 500Wh LiFePO battery might be a good middle ground in terms of keeping creature comforts up and running, but they aren't exactly cheap so I'd be interested in any opinions and recommendations there?
More broadly it'd be great to hear what people think about the general risks, good preparations to make, and useful supplies that are easy to overlook?
16 votes -
How I get things done
4 votes -
The backless boy’s suit is here to stay
8 votes -
Temperatures have risen faster in the Arctic region than elsewhere on earth – the impact of climate change is being felt on Greenland's local way of life
6 votes -
‘A profound betrayal of trust’: Why Jackson’s water system is broken
8 votes -
US immigration: Why Indians are fleeing halfway around the world
5 votes -
A ‘Most Outstanding Teacher’ from the Philippines tries to help save a struggling school in rural Arizona
11 votes -
An averted terrorist plot and recent shootings in Reykjavík have put guns in Iceland in the spotlight
5 votes -
Catching up with new Norwegians, twenty-five years on – in 1996, a group of young people living in Norway were interviewed about what it meant to be Norwegian
4 votes -
Metros with the most unoccupied homes in America
9 votes -
Someday aliens will land and all will be fine until we explain our calendar
32 votes -
Looking for advice for starting out as a freelance software engineer
Beginning of next year I am setting out as an independent software engineering consultant. As such I am interested in hearing from others who have already done something similar! I have been...
Beginning of next year I am setting out as an independent software engineering consultant. As such I am interested in hearing from others who have already done something similar! I have been working as a developer and team lead for more than 10 years of which the last 5 have been focused mostly on the .Net stack. Now I want to expand my horizons a bit more, preferably with a new domain or another tech stack.
What are some suggestions/advice you'd give someone just starting down this path? Anything I should avoid doing? Anything I should definitely do? I suppose the specifics will vary a bit by country, but are there some general things I should be thinking about?
Oh, if you happen to have a need for a senior developer/tech lead, give me a ping!
9 votes -
Two powerful unions have come together to fight the right’s attack on higher ed
12 votes -
The art of bidding, or how I survived Federal prison
9 votes -
The super-rich ‘preppers’ planning to save themselves from the apocalypse
17 votes -
Boxed in: Life inside the 'coffin cubicles' of Hong Kong – in pictures
11 votes -
Gallup poll: Approval of labor unions at highest point since 1965
9 votes -
All About Berlin
6 votes -
Death and surrender to power in the clothing of men
6 votes -
Why you are lonely and how to make friends
5 votes -
Poor teeth - If you have a mouthful of teeth shaped by a childhood in poverty, don’t go knocking on the door of American privilege
13 votes -
People don't want to hear about it – how the pandemic shaped Sweden's politics and left many feeling hopeless and disenfranchised
5 votes -
Vegan mom gets life in prison for starvation death of son in Florida
10 votes -
At $249 per day, prison stays leave ex-inmates deep in debt
21 votes -
The rise of the worker productivity score
19 votes -
Failure to cope "under capitalism"
14 votes -
Are you sure you’re not guilty of the ‘Millennial pause’?
11 votes -
Why a gang of Spanish grannies covered an entire street in woolly blankets
4 votes -
The more gender equality, the fewer women in STEM
14 votes