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More than 100 of The Oldest Color Photos Showing What The World Looked Like 100 Years Ago. Seeing such old images in color still tickles some dissonance deep in my brain.
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Some nice visualizations → Bias, She Wrote: The Gender Balance of The New York Times Best Seller list
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“Facebook doesn’t want your money. It wants your time. ¶ minutiae is a response to our current moment: an anonymous anti-social media app that forces its users to document the in-between moments of life.” I kind of love this app. → minutiae: the anti social media app
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A powerful photo essay → The Apple Pickers of the Yakima Valley
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The Quiet Majesty of America’s Public Libraries :: Pairs with Millennials are the most likely generation of Americans to use public libraries.
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“Whether divining ancient wisdoms or elevating the art of cold reading, tarot is a form of therapy, much like psychoanalysis” → The truth about tarot
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“We analyzed 100,000 drawings to show how culture shapes our instincts” → How Do You Draw a Circle?
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Surprisingly interesting…and it seems so simple in hindsight: why are different eggs shaped the way they are? → Cracking the mystery of egg shape
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The Hyperloop Will Be Only the Latest Innovation That’s Pretty Much a Series of Tubes
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Today in 1876, General George Custer is killed in the Battle of the Little Bighorn. In what would come to be known as “Custer’s Last Stand,” more than 250 U.S. soldiers would be killed in well under an hour by a combined force of Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho led by Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull. Though victorious, the battle was a turning point in a protracted conflict, marking the beginning of the end of the Indian Wars. Custer’s legacy has been, to put it lightly, mixed: for nearly a century Custer was seen as a heroic military figure who gave his life for the cause of his country; in recent decades assessment of his military strategy, not to mention his own conduct, has been greatly diminished.