Why are we still doing this to each other? It’s thankfully been a really long time since I’ve been invited to a recurring meeting. But I heard a couple mentions of them last week, and it brought back
Last June, not long after a catastrophic thunderstorm swept throughsouthern Ontario, bringing a month’s worth of rain in just a few hours,a group of seventy-five architects, engineers, and policymaker
Stalin set harvest quotas that farmers couldn’t meet; later, during the Terror, he set execution quotas that officials exceeded. Illustration by Henning Wagenbreth Is there any point to another Stalin
Unfiltered Fervor: The Rush to Get Off the Water Grid Opal Springs Water Company in Culver, Ore., bottles “raw water” — unfiltered, untreated, unsterilized spring water — for the start-up company Live
Oskar Pals, 19, operating a loader by remote control at the New Boliden mine in Sweden. In less than 10 years, he says, “this will then be all automated, but I am not worried — there will always be ot
Chef Gives Up a Star, Reflecting Hardship of ‘the Other France’ The chef Jérôme Brochot, center, at his restaurant in Montceau-les-Mines, France. Credit... Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times MONT
Want to Be Happy? Think Like an Old Person Helen Moses, 93, on her bed. She is followed by Ruth Willig, 94; Jonas Mekas, 95; and Ping Wong, 92. Credit... Photographs by Edu Bayer for The New York Time
Illustration by Tom Bachtell Donald Trump’s promise to end the war on Christmas, which he delivered earlier this year, was of a piece not so much with his other broken promises—to drain the swamp, to
The world’s oceans are set for a long overdue boost in the coming days as the United Nations votes for the first time on a planned treaty to protect and regulate the high seas. The waters outside nati
When Kim Jong-nam was a boy, his father, the dictator of North Korea, sat him on his office chair and said, “When you grow up, this is where you'll sit and give orders.” If the child had fulfilled tha
Over the past few years, Deep Learning (DL) architectures and algorithms have made impressive advances in fields such as image recognition and speech processing . Their application to Natural Language
This is part two of a three-part series entitled “The Real Job of a Manager and Why it’s Easy to be Bad at It”. Part 1 focuses on The Fundamentals of Management , part 2 focuses on Managing the Work a
Up the Estonian coast, a five-lane highway bends with the path of the sea, then breaks inland, leaving cars to follow a thin road toward the houses at the water’s edge. There is a gated community here
21 min read · Nov 6, 2017 -- I’m James Bridle . I’m a writer and artist concerned with technology and culture. I usually write on my own blog, but frankly I don’t want what I’m talking about here anyw
For a few years now, "blockchain" and "cryptocurrency" have gone hand-in-hand. The blockchain concept is complicated, and involves constant-growth record lists linked together and secured through cryp
NEWS FEATURE 13 December 2017 Correction Nature investigates how many papers really end up without a single citation. Richard Van Noorden View author publications You can also search for this author i
Justin Metz for BuzzFeed News This summer, Elon Musk spoke to the National Governors Association and told them that “AI is a fundamental risk to the existence of human civilization.” Doomsayers have b
CSA plastock/Getty Images As the U.S. Congress considers the tax proposal put forward by Republicans, there has been plenty of debate over how it would affect innovation. Proponents argue that lower t
You’ve probably heard versions of each of the following ideas. 1. With computers becoming remarkably adept at driving, understanding speech, and other tasks, more jobs could soon be automated than soc
There is a “hospital-themed restaurant” in Las Vegas called the Heart Attack Grill. Inside, customers are invited to tempt death with food. The waitresses dress as provocative nurses and deliver “pres
It’s the Monday morning following the opening weekend of the movie Blade Runner 2049 , and Eric C. Leuthardt is standing in the center of a floodlit operating room clad in scrubs and a mask, hunched o
When you are asked as a manager “What do I need to get to the next level?” I suggest the quality and completeness of your answer is directly correlated to your effectiveness as a leader. Let’s start w
GitPrime elevates engineering leadership with objective data. In this interview series, Engineering Leaders talk about how to build high performing teams. Naturally, we all want to keep improving our
Economics Economics Indicators Central Banks Jobs Trade Tax & Spend Inflation & Prices Economics US Child Poverty Surges by Most on Record Following Expiration of Benefits Economics Bank of France Say
Step 0 — Hit refresh We started by doing a reset of expectations with the entire company. We wanted to go back to first principles and build shared understanding on what vision is, why we should have
This article got some great commments. Scroll down to read those. I’ve worked on big projects, small projects, in huge teams and by myself, in fossilized federal agencies and cool Silicon Valley compa
Published 11 December 2017 Share page About sharing Image source, Shazam Image caption, London-based Shazam originally required users to dial a number and play a song down a phone line before it becam
Artificial intelligence The artificial-intelligence expert is on a mission to AI-ify manufacturing, starting with partners like Foxconn. By December 14, 2017 Jemal Countess | Getty Images Every day, i
Inside the Opposition to a Net Neutrality Repeal Jessica Kim, 20, joining others in Manhattan on Thursday to protest the Federal Communications Commission’s plan to repeal net neutrality laws. Credit.
Tech Keywords In computing’s early years, when it was considered women’s work, all six programmers of America’s first digital computer, Eniac, were women Dec. 10, 2017 7:00 am ET A programmer, Andrina
When I was very young, before I was on the internet — even before the internet was really a thing you could “go on” — I would dial into BBSs (bulletin board systems). BBSs were kind of like private ,
T ucked away behind York Minster – the grand cathedral adorned with medieval stained-glass windows that dominates the North Yorkshire city’s skyline – is a cobbled street that has become an informal l
One afternoon this August, at the Venezuelan Presidential palace of Miraflores, a crowd waited for President Nicolás Maduro to set out the country’s political future. The palace is in downtown Caracas
The other week, Facebook chose a curious moment to give me a survey. I had just deleted the app from my phone, likely because of some fresh horror about ad targeting, and when I next pulled up the sit
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images It’s well-established that talent is in short supply in the AI industry, but a new report from Chinese tech giant Tencent underscores how great the need might be
They both want control of the voice-enabled internet. More combatants are coming. Photo illustration by Slate . Images by Google, Amazon and Thinkstock. You can’t always tell that a war is starting wh
State of the Art The Hidden Player Spurring a Wave of Cheap Consumer Devices: Amazon Credit... Doug Chayka A few weeks ago, Wyze Labs, a one-year-old start-up in Seattle, sent me its first gadget to t
Once upon a time, long before I began selling my face by the acre for features on VICE dot com, I worked other jobs. There was one in particular that really had an impact on me: writing fake reviews o
Productivity Collaboration Kills Creativity, According to Science It's impossible to think "out of the box" when you're stuck inside a box with a bunch of other people. By Geoffrey James , Contributin
O nce upon a time, a very long time ago – 2009 in fact – there was a brief but interesting controversy about the carbon footprint of a Google search. It was kicked off by a newspaper story reporting a