Listen to the issue, with interviews from Laszlo Toth, Nikolai Astrup, and Dr. Suncheol Gweon below:
The strange, and book-filled world of 20 years ago, and a bug that nearly bought the world to a stand still. And then didn't.
Not all that long ago, tech pundits were convinced that by 2020 the personal computer as we know it would be extinct. You can even mark the date and time of the PC's death: January 27, 2010, at 10:00 A.M. Pacific Time, when Steve Jobs stepped onto a San Francisco stage to unveil the iPad.
We were doing better, and then we got worse again, ho hum 😩
An interesting mix of obvious, and not so obvious.
Long before Blockchain there was another incentivised, decentralised, peer-to-peer network. What could it have learned from Bitcoin, Ethereum et al?
It’s the nightmare of travellers sitting near the emergency exit and the inevitable fate of bad guys tussling on a plane with James Bond – the door erupting open mid flight, sucking them into the cold blue and white.
More than 100 years later, how does the iconic board game compare to its original version? Is it any better? Will there be less arguments?
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey has revealed he wants to create an open standard for decentralized social media. And the goal will be to have Twitter conform to that standard.
Boris Johnson would have been denied a majority in parliament if the UK had used the voting system adopted for European parliament polls at the general election, new research shows.
Jesse Aguirre’s workday at Slack starts with a standard engineering meeting—programmers call them “standups”—where he and his co-workers plan the day’s agenda. Around the circle stand graduates from Silicon Valley’s top companies and the nation’s top universities.