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The Civil War Convulsion by Andrew Delbanconybooks.com
“The real war will never get in the books.” This may be the most famous sentence ever written about the Civil War, at least by a writer of literary consequence. But what kind of reality did Walt Whitman have in mind when he made that claim more than 13... - bbc.co.uk
- freedom-to-tinker.com
- xaprb.com
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Robert Tinney Graphicstinney.net
Award-winning computer industry illustrator Robert Tinney presents a short portfolio of his work. - bloomberg.com
- rundis.github.io
- projectmosul.itn-dch.net
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Glitched Art: Is Software a Whole New Animal? - Facts So Romantic - Nautilusnautil.us
Cory Arcangel. Super Mario Clouds, 2004. Installation view courtesy of the Whitney, 2004.However, image glitching is just the… -
Meet the King of Kombuchainc.com
Yes, kombucha. The fermented probiotic beverage that GT Dave turned into a $600 million category--one that he still dominates. If only things would stay so simple. -
I was a professor at four universities. I still couldn’t make ends meet.washingtonpost.com
One former adjunct describes a system that's untenable. - yacoset.com
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Who cares about the Apple Watch Edition?beta-blog.archagon.net
Archagon was here... or was he? Yes, he was. This is Alexei Baboulevitch's personal blog webspacehomepage, featuring writing on software development, travel, photography, and more. - blog.teamleada.com
- github.com
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Sizing up Virtual-Reality Headsets: Sony’s Morpheus and HTC’s Viveblogs.wsj.com
I strapped on two new VR headset prototypes at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco this week: the Vive from HTC and Valve, and Project Morpheus from Sony. Virtual reality has never before been so...real. - en.wikipedia.org
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TSA officials warn of credit card knives at airportstampabay.com
TAMPA — They are thin enough to fit inside your wallet. They are sharp enough to slice through cardboard — or to draw blood. And they are apparently popular enough that they're popping up at airports nationwide. - eecs.berkeley.edu
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Did a Human or a Computer Write This?nytimes.com
A shocking amount of what we’re reading is created not by humans, but by computer algorithms. Can you tell the difference? Take the quiz.