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Obnam - backup program
obnam.org
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11 years ago
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Science by democracy doesn’t work
Scientific debate is important for the questions it raises, not the early conclusions it reaches.
medium.com
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11 years ago
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The Snoopers' Charter: Shameful Opportunism
The news that four peers are trying to bring back the Snoopers' Charter - in its last incarnation the Communications Data Bill - is depressingly predictable, but perhaps even more shameful than oth...
paulbernal.wordpress.com
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11 years ago
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Urban Legends In The World of Clinical Trials - Neuroskeptic
Ethnographer Jill A. Fisher offers a fascinating look at the rumors and urban legends that circulate among the volunteers who get paid to take part in medical research: Stopped hearts, amputated toes and NASA Fisher visited six clinical trial facilitie...
blogs.discovermagazine.com
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11 years ago
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Octothorpe
If you want to follow conversation threads relating to this show on social media—whether Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram, Tumblr—you know to look for the hashtag: #99pi. In our current digital age,...
99percentinvisible.org
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11 years ago
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The Nitrous Oxide Philosopher
Do drugs make religious experience possible? They did for James and for other philosopher-mystics of his day. James's experiments with psychoactive drugs raise difficult questions about belief and its conditions
theatlantic.com
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11 years ago
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The Myth Of The Megabyte Bitcoin Block
Are Bitcoin blocks really 1 Mbyte in size?
hashingit.com
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11 years ago
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Technology Notes :: Back to the iPhone 5S
technologynotes.net
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11 years ago
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"Liberating the Smalltalk lurking in C and Unix" by Stephen Kell
youtube.com
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11 years ago
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Innovation Starvation | World Policy Institute
worldpolicy.org
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11 years ago
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Harvard Design Magazine: Built on Sand: Singapore and the New State of Risk
In June 2014, drivers crossing the causeway between Singapore and Johor, Malaysia, began to notice something strange. A slender sandbar, which had long stood...
harvarddesignmagazine.org
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11 years ago
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Avoiding game crashes related to linked lists - Code Of Honor
In this post I’m going to talk about linked lists, a seemingly trivial subject that many programmers — even good ones — seem to get terribly wrong! Then I’m going to share techniques (with source code) to make your game engine code simpler, faster, mor...
codeofhonor.com
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11 years ago
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Back-up brains: The era of digital immortality
How do you want to be remembered? As Simon Parkin discovers, we may eventually be able to preserve our entire minds for generations to come – would you?
bbc.com
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11 years ago
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The man trapped in constant deja vu
bbc.co.uk
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11 years ago
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The Secret Language of Tennis Champions - Issue 6: Secret Codes - Nautilus
It’s a warm summer afternoon in New York City, and Bob and Mike Bryan are hitting the fuzzy covers off tennis balls, their looping…
nautil.us
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11 years ago
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Where I Went Right
Pioneers in tech, science and exploration discuss the formative moments in their lives. Created by The Guardian & sponsored by Rolex Awards for Enterprise
labs.theguardian.com
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11 years ago
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Comparing Message Queue Architectures on AWS
tech.forter.com
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11 years ago
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Requests for Startups
A daily newsletter of ideas that investors, companies, and influencers would like to fund.
requestsforstartups.com
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11 years ago
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This Industry Is Still Completely Ridiculous
Things are getting pretty strange out there. Roughly a year ago I wrote a post entitled "This Industry Is Completely Ridiculous." Since then, as you probably..
techcrunch.com
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11 years ago
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McDouble is 'cheapest and most nutritious food in human history' - Telegraph
Describing the McDonald’s double cheeseburger as “the cheapest, most nutritious, and bountiful food that has ever existed in human history” might seem beyond fanciful, but according to the author of Freakonomics, it is...
telegraph.co.uk
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11 years ago
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