Wind farms can cause a cascade of ecological effects, but are still needed to provided cleaner energy supplies | Continue reading
A lasting desire to find differences in how male and female brains work serves to affirm gender stereotypes, not explain them, says Dean Burnett | Continue reading
The current state of packaging a Python library (not a Python application). | Continue reading
Scientists at Nagoya Institute of Technology (NITech) and collaborating universities in Japan have gained new insight into the mechanisms behind degradation of a semiconductor material that is used in electronic devices. By highlighting the specific science behind how the materia … | Continue reading
1,016 artists share how they've been able (or unable) to make a living in the art world. | Continue reading
A look at the top 43 most popular programming languages. | Continue reading
It’s much easier to multiply numbers together than to factor them apart. That’s the basics of RSA encryption. | Continue reading
Java is one of the most popular languages in use by AWS customers, and we are committed to supporting Java and keeping it free. Many of our customers have become concerned that they would have to pay for a long-term supported version of Java to run their workloads. As a first ste … | Continue reading
Tamu McPherson writes about the feels she experiences in covering the Grazia UK Luxe Issue with other digital super women and how its release coincides with the tenth anniversary of All the Pretty Birds. | Continue reading
I am, once again, very happy to announce the publication of another edition of Managing Humans. It’s been over four years since the last update to this book, and I’m shocked we’re still talking about it. As with each edition of these books, there are topics of note: I’m three for … | Continue reading
Those emergencies from a year ago (and a month ago), they’re gone. Either they were solved, or they became things to live with. But emergencies don’t last. They fade. Knowing that, know… | Continue reading
Research by: Oded Vanun, Dikla Barda and Roman Zaikin DJI is the world’s leader in the civilian drone and aerial imaging technology industry. Besides from consumers, though, it has also taken a large share of the corporate market, with customers coming from the critical infrastru … | Continue reading
Dal 15 novembre gli incontri dedicati ai bambini e alle famiglie Da giovedì 15 novembre al Centro di Documentazione “Il Guscio della chiocciola”, in via Martiri della Resistenza sarà attivo “Spazio neutro… pomeriggi al centro”, un servizio comunale gratuito che si rivolge ai ba … | Continue reading
When we pit ourselves against machines, the game can only end in tears. It is in our gift to imagine another way | Continue reading
As a child growing up in Mexico, Carlos Santibanez-Lopez feared the scorpions that would often decorate the walls and ceilings of his home in search of a warm place with plenty of food. | Continue reading
I‘ve been thinking about your regret minimization framework for making decisions lately. I don’t recall whether I read about it in an… | Continue reading
A First World War legacy project bringing together data sources such as IWM's Lives of the First World War and Commonwealth War Graves records | Continue reading
On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the death of Gioachino Rossini, restaurant al Pappagallo propose the menu inspired by the recipes of the great composer. A short concert with music by Gioac | Continue reading
How difficult is it to start an open source software company? | Continue reading
Atma Mani, a geospatial engineer for ESRI, imagined shopping for a house with data, maps, and analysis. Basically, a personalized recommendation system: The type of recommendation engine built in t… | Continue reading
The aim of this Porto Covo guesthouse is to emphases the characteristics of the place and it relation with the surroundings. | Continue reading
According to Joseph Campbell (1904 – 1987), the famed U.S. American Professor of Literature who wrote extensively about comparative mythology and religion | Continue reading
Ancient Origins’ readers were recently delighted with the news that Hannibal’s first battlefield, fought on the river Tagus in Spain in 220 BC has finally been found. But for historian Ric | Continue reading
NGI webinar 14.11.2018 – Media & Content Hyper-personalisation The webinar... | Continue reading