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  • Turn On Your iPhone’s Stolen Device Protection Now to Secure Your Money and Photos in iOS 17.3 Update - WSJ — Do it now.

    → 11:41 AM, Jan 23
  • Why white home uniforms — once an NBA mainstay — have disappeared - The Athletic

    → 8:33 AM, Jan 23
  • SimpleLogin | Open source anonymous email service

    → 8:19 AM, Jan 23
  • How many people get the death sentence in America?

    → 10:08 PM, Jan 22
  • Slow Productivity extras — My new book: Slow Productivity - Cal Newport

    → 7:56 PM, Jan 22
  • Test Yourself: Which Faces Were Made by A.I.? - The New York Times

    → 1:21 AM, Jan 21
  • It’s Amazing How Many Americans Think They Live in the Midwest When They Don’t - WSJ

    → 11:15 AM, Jan 20
  • They Created a Test to Identify Star QBs. How Did It Miss C.J. Stroud? - WSJ

    → 11:08 AM, Jan 20
  • Breaking at the Summer Olympics - Wikipedia

    → 8:51 AM, Jan 20
  • Making Apple Vision Pro - YouTube

    → 2:08 AM, Jan 20
  • A Guided Tour of Apple Vision Pro - YouTube

    → 2:07 AM, Jan 20
  • What are the average salaries for four-year college graduates in the US?

    → 1:49 AM, Jan 20
  • Walkthrough of Campfire - YouTube

    → 1:45 AM, Jan 20
  • Tesla Drivers in Chicago Confront a Harsh Foe: Cold Weather - The New York Times

    → 9:23 AM, Jan 18
  • Opinion | The Snickers Bar Is the Economic Indicator We Need - The New York Times

    → 8:37 AM, Jan 18
  • What is the Securities and Exchange Commission and what does it do?

    → 1:48 PM, Jan 17
  • What are the top causes of death for people 65 and older in the US?

    → 1:47 PM, Jan 17
  • Message from Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci: Next steps on the Boeing 737-9 MAX - YouTube – Excellent response by Alaska Airlines. This is not really Alaska Airlines’s fault. It’s more a problem with Boeing’s quality control and use of subcontractors to make important components. I like hearing that Alaska Airlines will start overseeing the Boeing production line. More airlines should do this.

    → 8:11 AM, Jan 17
  • Americans Are Sick for More of Their Lives - WSJ

    → 12:19 AM, Jan 17
  • Launching today!

    My Limited Edition Cornell Notes PDF at Gumroad. Pixels are handcrafted in California. Only 1,000 will ever be made.

    → 6:16 PM, Jan 16
  • How Much Space Do You Get for $1,700 a Month? - The New York Times

    → 9:51 AM, Jan 16
  • The Joy of Tech comic… Additional Vision Pro purchase requirememnts.

    → 2:32 AM, Jan 16
  • Steelers' Mike Tomlin walks off podium amid question about contract - ESPN

    Classic Coach Tomlin.

    → 2:26 AM, Jan 16
  • Aaron Rodgers Is Lighting His Football Legacy on Fire - The Atlantic

    → 8:53 PM, Jan 14
  • Getting In | The New Yorker

    In the wake of the Jewish crisis, Harvard, Yale, and Princeton chose to adopt what might be called the “best graduates” approach to admissions. France’s École Normale Supérieure, Japan’s University of Tokyo, and most of the world’s other élite schools define their task as looking for the best students—that is, the applicants who will have the greatest academic success during their time in college. The Ivy League schools justified their emphasis on character and personality, however, by arguing that they were searching for the students who would have the greatest success after college. They were looking for leaders, and leadership, the officials of the Ivy League believed, was not a simple matter of academic brilliance.

    → 7:38 AM, Jan 13
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