Viewing teamsnapzu's Snapzine
-
1891.
Beeple sold an NFT for $69 million
"I do view this as the next chapter of art history."
Posted in: by darvinhg -
1892.
Write Simply
I try to write using ordinary words and simple sentences. That kind of writing is easier to read, and the easier something is to read, the more deeply readers will engage with it. The less energy they expend on your prose, the more they'll have left for your ideas.
-
1893.
Blaze destroys servers at Europe's largest cloud services firm
A fire destroyed some servers and temporarily shutdown others at OVHcloud on Wednesday, just two days after the French cloud computing firm kicked off plans for an initial public offering.
Posted in: by canuck -
1894.
Clearview AI uses your online photos to instantly ID you. That's a problem, lawsuit says
By scraping the web for photos and extracting unique biometric information, Clearview AI violates privacy and chills protected political speech, a lawsuit says.
Posted in: by aj0690 -
1895.
USB could have killed Thunderbolt, but instead Intel's high-speed port is spreading to more...
Intel's high-speed port should arrive in more than half of PCs in 2022. Thunderbolt, Intel's super-speedy connection technology, isn't widely used. But that may change in the coming year, as more computer makers incorporate the USB competitor into their new models.
-
1896.
B.C. boy with autism who only eats brand of discontinued waffles gets home recipe
The nine-year-old has autism along with extreme oral aversion and complex eating challenges and will eat virtually nothing but Nature's Path Maple Cinnamon waffles.
-
1897.
When a California city gave people a guaranteed income, they worked more — not less
Stockton’s experiment shows what $500 per month in "free money" can do for employment, mental health, and more.
Posted in: by cone -
1898.
SpaceX has nearly 10,000 employees as it ramps up its Starlink rollout, court documents show
Elon Musk says his company SpaceX is the largest satellite operator in the world. It has grown its workforce significantly over the past few years
Posted in: by geoleo -
1899.
A New Motherboard For Amiga, The Platform That Refuses To Die
If you go out and buy a computer right now, how many choices do you really have? Generally speaking, there’s PC or Mac. If we were being generous you could consider Chromebook and perhaps even mobile, but let’s be honest, computing is a two-party system with the ability to dump the OS and run Linux as the obvious third-party disruptor. It wasn’t always like this.
Posted in: by dianep -
1900.
Google’s ‘Privacy-First Web’ Is Really a Google-First Web
Why the search giant can afford to kill the cookie
Posted in: by Chubros -
1901.
Confirmed: FIFA 21 has no handicap; withdraw a claim after providing technical data
Your one-stop shop for all the Games & Anime updates, Cheats, news, reviews, Walkthroughs and many more.
-
1902.
John McAfee indicted for alleged cryptocurrency pump and dump scheme
The eccentric founder of cybersecurity firm McAfee faces up to five years in prison if convicted.
-
1903.
Honda Legend becomes first certified level 3 autonomous car
Honda on Thursday unveiled a partially self-driving Legend sedan in Japan, becoming the world's first carmaker to sell a vehicle equipped with new, certified level 3 automation technology. The launch gives Japan's No.2 automaker bragging rights for being the first to market, but lease sales of the level 3 flagship Legend would be limited to a batch of 100 in Japan, at a retail price of 11 million yen ($102,000).
Posted in: by tukka -
1904.
Why Saudi Arabia Is Building a Linear City
Posted in: by aj0690 -
1905.
Deepfake videos of Tom Cruise went viral. Their creator hopes they boost awareness.
The creator of a series of deepfake Tom Cruise videos that garnered more than 11 million views on TikTok said he never wanted to trick people.
Posted in: by dianep -
1906.
“User Engagement” Is Code for “Addiction”
Social media is a civilization-level problem
Posted in: by spacepopper -
1907.
US-UK trade truce means cheaper whisky for Americans
The United States has agreed to suspend tariffs on UK products including Scotch whisky and cashmere as both sides work to resolve a long-running dispute over Boeing and Airbus subsidies.
Posted in: by grandtheftsoul -
1908.
Doctors Can 3D Print Bones Directly Into Your Body
A recent Australian study outlines how a new type of hybrid material may allow bone replacements to be printed directly inside a patient’s body in a dramatic step toward solving many issues with current bone replacement techniques. This process includes the ability to print bone using live cells and without the use of harsh chemicals, both of which are staples of current methods.
Posted in: by cone -
1909.
Hackers could weaponize satellites
SpaceX and other companies are rushing to put thousands of small, inexpensive satellites in orbit, but pressure to keep costs low and a lack of regulation leave those satellites vulnerable to hackers.
Posted in: by timex -
1910.
Apple’s new Find My feature could let you know if you’re the one being tracked
Find My is expanding, and gaining a potentially helpful privacy feature
-
1911.
Microsoft accuses China over email cyber-attacks
The US tech giant blamed the attacks on Hafnium, a state-sponsored group operating out of China.
-
1912.
The Abandoned Side Project That Quietly Turned Into a $700m/year Revenue Business
The 20-year journey of Ben Chestnut, founder of MailChimp
Posted in: by geoleo -
1913.
100% renewable energy could power the world by 2030, experts say
Experts say the potential for rapid transformation of the world’s energy system has a parallel in the speed with which cars replaced horses in the 1900s.
Posted in: by geoleo -
1914.
Artificial intelligence research continues to grow as China overtakes US in AI journal citations
The artificial intelligence boom isn’t slowing yet, with new figures showing a 34.5 percent increase in the publication of AI research from 2019 to 2020. That’s a higher percentage growth than 2018 to 2019 when the volume of publications increased by 19.6 percent.
Posted in: by spacepopper -
1915.
Aston Martin: The billionaire building 'a British Ferrari'
Lawrence Stroll, executive chairman of Aston Martin, told the BBC he wants to build a firm with a "luxury profile".
Posted in: by bradd -
1916.
Recipeasly: Food website removed after blogger backlash
Copying content without consent could be a breach of copyright, lawyers say.
Posted in: by timex -
1917.
6 Dr. Seuss books won't be published anymore because they portray people in 'hurtful...
Six Dr. Seuss books will no longer be published because they "portray people in ways that are hurtful and wrong," the business that preserves the author's legacy said.
-
1918.
Great. Now Even Your Headphones Can Spy on You
Israeli researchers show that even if you're paranoid enough to remove your computer's microphone, malware can convert your headphones into spy bugs.
-
1919.
The Pandemic of Male Loneliness
We are all suffering from a certain amount of loneliness as a result of social distancing during the pandemic. This post focuses on the particular disadvantages faced by many boys and men. Males in our culture tend to rely on opportunistic socialization—socializing while engaging in a shared activity. For them, feeling the need to actively reach out to others can trigger a shame response about appearing ‘needy.’
Posted in: by socialiguana -
1920.
Is the Western way of raising kids weird?
"Is he in his own room yet?" is a question new parents often field once they emerge from the haze of life with a newborn. But sleeping apart from our babies is a relatively recent development – and not one that extends around the globe. In other cultures sharing a room, and sometimes a bed, with your baby is the norm.
Posted in: by Vandertoolen




















