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Contents contributed and discussions participated by tornekm

tornekm

Exxon: An inconvenient truth - BBC News - 0 views

  • erected by environmental campaigners to suggest the company had known about the science of climate change but had failed to act - did not last too long.
  • a company that has fended off efforts to make it toe the line on climate change for a quarter of a century.
  • misled investors and the public about the true state of climate science and will be fined, condemned and buried in the very ground from which it extracts its evil fuels.
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  • Exxon this was opposed by over 60% of investors.
  • needed more global warming not less
  • sell it and buy some solar stock?" the speaker from the floor asked, adding: "But whether you'll then have enough money to pay for the jet fuel that you used to come to visit here..."
  • It has been painted as the uncaring exploiter, sneaky oil seller that has dodged and denied on climate change to suit its pockets.
tornekm

Is the 'gig economy' turning us all into freelancers? - BBC News - 0 views

  • Well, thanks to the rise of on-demand talent marketplaces, the so-called "gig economy" is fast becoming a reality.
  • Cloud-based platforms are making it easier for firms to find the people they need from a global talent pool, and for freelancers to advertise their skills.
  • And in the US, around 54 million people are now freelance, roughly a third of all workers.
tornekm

How 'Everything' Became the Highest Form of Praise - The New York Times - 0 views

  • the profusion of “everything” spins the head. “This tiny pig dancing in the grass is everything.”
  • religiously and philosophically inclined take to Facebook and Tumblr to pronounce their dictums:
  • Everything” is a fudge, a word we apply to the unknowable.
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  • It is also, nearly always, an exaggeration.
  • The “everything” that holds sway online exaggerates the exaggeration, by eliminating any notion of uncertainty, any qualification.
  • The result is rhetorical gold — ideal, in any case, for social-­media banter, which places a premium on pithy hyperbole, on outsize statements delivered with minimal keystrokes.
  • “Everything” is a hawker’s cry, a hard sell. Which makes perfect sense. The Internet is the most dizzying marketplace in human history, a seething bazaar that barrages us relentlessly and from all angles.
tornekm

Does the digital era herald the end of history? - BBC News - 0 views

  • 2013 the world contained about 4.4 zettabytes (4.4 trillion gigabytes) of data. By 2020, it expects this to have risen tenfold.
  • History, in other words, has gone online
  • But anyone who's seen their photo or music collections wiped out, knows how easily digital files can be lost.
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  • A digital version of the fire that nearly destroyed the great Library of Alexandria - and many of its culturally significant books and scrolls - in 48BC, may not be as far-fetched as it sounds
  • MP was "the most significant threat" to the US and its allies.
  • And in an increasingly networked digital world, the same catastrophic result could be achieved by a particularly virulent piece of malware or through state-sponsored cyber-warfare.
  • Many of the earliest floppy disks can no longer be read - the data they contain has been lost forever.
  • Ten years ago storage would have cost about £30 per gigabyte; now it costs pennies.
  • We're likely to see a rise in digital archiving services,"
  • We're only just beginning to understand how important this data is and what the consequences might be if we lost it.
tornekm

DNA 'tape recorder' to trace cell history - BBC News - 0 views

  • The technique is being hailed as a breakthrough in understanding how the trillions of complex cells in a body are descended from a single egg.
  • The human body has around 40 trillion cells, each with a highly specialised function. Yet each can trace its history back to the same starting point - a fertilised egg.
  • The molecular tape recorder developed by Prof Shendure's team at the University of Washington in Seattle, US, is a length of DNA inserted into the genome that contains a series of edit points which can be changed throughout an organism's life.
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  • "Cancers develop by a lineage, too," Alex Schier told the BBC. "Our technique can be used to follow these lineages during cancer formation - to tell us the relationships of cells within a tumour, and between the original tumour and secondary tumours formed by metastasis."
tornekm

Of bairns and brains | The Economist - 0 views

  • especially given the steep price at which it was bought. Humans’ outsized, power-hungry brains suck up around a quarter of their body’s oxygen supplies.
  • . It was simply humanity’s good fortune that those big sexy brains turned out to be useful for lots of other things, from thinking up agriculture to building internal-combustion engines. Another idea is that human cleverness arose out of the mental demands of living in groups whose members are sometimes allies and sometimes rivals.
  • human infants take a year to learn even to walk, and need constant supervision for many years afterwards. That helplessness is thought to be one consequence of intelligence—or, at least, of brain size.
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  • ever-more incompetent infants, requiring ever-brighter parents to ensure they survive childhood.
  • The self-reinforcing nature of the process would explain why intelligence is so strikingly overdeveloped in humans compared even with chimpanzees.
  • developed first in primates, a newish branch of the mammals, a group that is itself relatively young.
  • found that babies born to mothers with higher IQs had a better chance of surviving than those born to low-IQ women, which bolsters the idea that looking after human babies is indeed cognitively taxing.
  • none of this adds up to definitive proof.
  • Any such feedback loop would be a slow process (at least as reckoned by the humans themselves), most of which would have taken place in the distant past.
tornekm

So long, farewell? | The Economist - 0 views

  • Just 31,000 votes averted the election of western Europe’s first far-right head of state since 1945. How had a man who talks of the “Muslim invasion” of Europe come so close?
  • Austria’s failure fully to come to terms with its complicity in the Third Reich.
  • The FPÖ has traded its earlier anti-Semitism for Islamophobia; “Vienna must not become Istanbul” runs one slogan.
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  • The result on May 23rd could easily have gone the other way. Moderates elsewhere should be scared.
tornekm

Coral vs. Coal - The New York Times - 0 views

  • bbott, of the conservative Liberal Party, had no time for such information. Climate change, he argued in his autobiography, was bunk. It had been “happening since the earth’s beginning.” Therefore it made no sense to “impose certain and substantial costs on the economy now in order to avoid unknown and perhaps even benign changes in the future.”
  • sometimes the very survival — of countless people depend on them.
  • ” Global warming, he declared, would lead, if unchecked, to “truly catastrophic consequences.”
tornekm

Inside Student Radicalism - The New York Times - 0 views

  • The general atmosphere embraces feminism, civil rights, egalitarianism and environmentalism, but it is expressed as academic discourse, not as action on the streets.
  • On the spiritual side they hunger for a vehement crusade that will fulfill their moral yearnings and produce social justice.
  • The identity politics the students have produced inverts the values of the meritocracy. The meritocracy is striving toward excellence; identity politics is deeply egalitarian.
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