Selasa, 01 Juli 2014

The Internet's Own Monster

Are The New Android Smartwatches Worth Wearing?, The Internet's Own Monster, Why You Shouldn't Stand Anywhere Near A Demolition Site, Ex-VP Sues Tinder Alleging Coworker Called Her A 'Whore' (And Worse), How America Got Hooked On Legal Meth, The Real Red Line In The Middle East
The Daily Digg
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
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DON'T BE AN EARLY ADOPTER
Are The New Android Smartwatches Worth Wearing?
arstechnica.com
The Samsung Gear Live and LG G Watch aren't as essential as they want to be.
THE STORY OF SLENDERMAN
The Internet's Own Monster
techcrunch.com
Every generation creates its own monsters. Folk tales tell of witches and wyrms in the woods, my TV-infused generation feared Jaws in lakes and Bloody Mary in the mirror. This generation gets its monsters from the Internet.
PRETTY GOOD REFLEXES ACTUALLY
Why You Shouldn't Stand Anywhere Near A Demolition Site
digg.com
There's a reason demolition crews bar the public from being remotely close to demolition sites. This man in the Czech Republic narrowly escaping death by high velocity concrete is why.
NO SWIPE LEFT OPTION ON THIS STORY, SORRY
Ex-VP Sues Tinder Alleging Coworker Called Her A 'Whore' (And Worse)
valleywag.gawker.com
This is definitely worse than your worst Tinder horror story: Whitney Wolfe, Tinder's former VP of marketing is suing the hookup startup after what she describes as a spree of misogyny and sexual harassment at the hands of its CMO Justin Mateen.
THE SPEED OF HYPOCRISY
How America Got Hooked On Legal Meth
motherboard.vice.com
During the five years Heisenberg spent as a blue-meth cook, the nation experienced a nonfictional explosion in the manufacture and sale of sapphire pills and azure capsules containing amphetamine.
FORGET THE CHEMICAL WEAPONS
The Real Red Line In The Middle East
foreignpolicy.com
If ISIS attacks Jordan, neither the United States nor Israel will be able to stay out of the fray.
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IRRIGATION ART
Image: A Nepalese woman walks carrying paddy saplings before replanting them at a rice field in Chunnikhel, Katmandu, Nepal, Monday, June 30, 2014. The beginning of paddy cultivation in this Himalayan nation has been delayed this year due to the late arrival of the monsoon rains.
A Nepalese woman walks carrying paddy saplings before replanting them at a rice field in Chunnikhel, Katmandu, Nepal, Monday, June 30, 2014. The beginning of paddy cultivation in this Himalayan nation has been delayed this year due to the late arrival of the monsoon rains. Credit: AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha
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