A burgeoning cottage industry caters to beleaguered smartphone users desperate to escape their screens. Will Stults spent too much time on his iPhone, doom-scrolling the site formerly known as Twitter and tweeting angrily at Elon Musk as if the billionaire would actually notice. Stults’s partner, Daisy Krigbaum, was addicted to Pinterest and YouTube, bingeing videos on her iPhone before going to s
Fourteen years ago, Kevin Kelly famously proposed that an artist could make a living online with a thousand true fans. Has time proved him correct? Earlier this spring, I made my way to a modest broadcast studio, situated on the second floor of a polished office building in downtown Washington, D.C., to watch a taping of an Internet news program called “Breaking Points.” The show’s producer, a you
“So much of our manufactured environment testifies to carelessness,” Ive says. Things are “developed to be different, not better.”Photograph by Pari Dukovic In recent months, Sir Jonathan Ive, the forty-seven-year-old senior vice-president of design at Apple—who used to play rugby in secondary school, and still has a bench-pressing bulk that he carries a little sheepishly, as if it belonged to som
Real-Estate Shopping for the ApocalypseThirty-nine per cent of Americans believe that we’re living in end times, and there’s a boom in the market for underground hideouts, some with high-tech air-filtration systems, indoor pools, “country club ownership” models, and one with its very own worm room. Patricia Marx went shopping.
The Real Story of Kamala Harris’s Record on ImmigrationRepublicans have attacked the Vice-President as the Biden Administration’s “border czar,” claiming that she was responsible for an unprecedented number of illegal crossings. But, Jonathan Blitzer writes, her remit was always to address the root causes farther south.
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く