Author: robert.adlington
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The brain microbiome: could understanding it help prevent dementia? | Health & wellbeing | The Guardian
It used to be widely assumed that the brain was the last bastion of sterility in the human body – it has a blood-brain barrier, for one, which microbes were thought to be too big to pass through – but it turns out that microbes flourish in the brain. In many – but not all…
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The Contestant review – the cruelty of reality TV on show in one of its earliest manifestations | Film | The Guardian
He was told that on winning a million yen’s worth of goods his mission would be complete; moreover he was allowed to eat and drink whatever edible or drinkable prizes he could get, including dog food. And all the time his ordeal was being broadcast to a huge Japanese TV audience without his realising it.…
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My Conversation with Russ Roberts on Vasily Grossman’s *Life and Fate* – Marginal REVOLUTION
ROBERTS: I wonder how much of it is the fact that it’s really convenient to have a system, gives you something to shove into the box. You’ve got this black box that you take the world’s events and you’ve decided how they should be processed. Then something new comes along, and you know how to deal…
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Why Airlines Investing in Premium Seats Affects All Travelers – Bloomberg
To compete for the same passengers as cheap airlines, Nunes says, you have to give people the opportunity not to pay for certain things, which has the unfortunate effect of making the classic coach flyer aware that they’re being charged for what used to just come in their bundle. That middle-class experience can still be…
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Not quite religion, not quite self-help: welcome to the Jordan Peterson age of nonsense | Martha Gill | The Guardian
But living on social media, seeing the world through its lens, is like returning to a pre-information age. First, because everything is current. Records of previous discussions fade quickly – miss a day and it is almost impossible to catch up. Instead, as with cycles of oral history, memories of the past are collective and…
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Infinite Content
We’re all farm animals that are just being fed, and we’re being fed content. You can just stay home. Just stay home. We’ll just feed it to you. No wonder everyone’s depressed. — Read on kottke.org/24/11/infinite-content
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How do I stay healthy in my 50s? | Well actually | The Guardian
Ageing isn’t something that simply starts after you’ve reached a certain year. It’s a lifelong process, and in midlife your health needs can change — Read on www.theguardian.com/wellness/2024/nov/21/how-to-stay-healthy-in-your-50s-ageing
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Au fait, qu’est-ce qu’une espèce ?
Tout le monde croit pouvoir répondre à cette question. Pourtant, les définitions varient selon les spécialités scientifiques. Les chercheurs naviguent entre les disciplines pour décrire la dynamique du vivant et protéger au mieux une biodiversité menacée. — Read on www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2024/11/19/au-fait-qu-est-ce-qu-une-espece_6403384_1650684.html
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‘Have your bot speak to my bot’: can AI productivity apps turbocharge my life? | Artificial intelligence (AI) | The Guardian
“The concept of the second brain is effectively a way that enables you to have another product that does a lot of the heavy lifting for you, freeing you up for more high-value work,” says Robbie O’Connor at San Francisco-based productivity platform Notion. O’Connor used to work on Google Maps and compares the second brain…
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‘I’m just here for the selfie’: the mirror reflecting Rome’s TikTok visitor boom | Italy | The Guardian
Thousands flock to Chiesa di Sant’Ignazio di Loyola and other former hidden gems just for photo ops — Read on www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/15/selfie-mirror-rome-tiktok-visitor-boom-church