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Back to the Future with RSS


What is RSS (Really Simple Syndication)?
Imagine an open version of Twitter or Facebook News Feed, with no psy-op ads, owned by no oligopoly, manipulated by no algorithm, and all under
your full control.
Imagine a version of the newsletter where you don t have to worry about them selling your email to scammers, labyrinth-like unsubscribe pages, or stuffing your inbox with ever more crap.
Now imagine this existed and was extremely popular 15 years ago. Then we got suckered by the shiny walled gardens.
Well, it s time to make like a tree and go
back to the future, baby!
How does RSS work?

Marie-kondo , Patreon-substack , Google , Youtube , Google-plus , Really-simple-syndication , Facebook-news-feed , Quanta-magazine , Whyd-it-die-in-the-first , Google-reader , மேரி-கொண்டோ , கூகிள்

All Stories by Christie Wilcox - The Atlantic

The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine.

Samuel-velasco , Canada-photos , Alamy-stock-photo , Quanta-magazine , The-atlantic , The-atlantic-magazine , Theatlantic-com , Tlantic , News , Pinion , Reaking-news

Ist die Supersymmetrie tot? - scinexx.de

Ist die Supersymmetrie tot? - scinexx.de
scinexx.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scinexx.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United-states , Elodie-resseguie , Jim-fermilab , Lawrence-berkeley-national , Still-looking , Physicist-mikhail , His-view , New-ideas , Northern-illinois-university , Quanta-magazine , Explanations-for , Models-have

Sleep Evolved Before Brains. Hydras Are Living Proof

Some of nature’s simplest animals suggest that sleep evolved long before centralized nervous systems.

Berkeley , California , United-states , Zurich , Züsz , Switzerland , Japan , California-institute-of-technology , South-korea , France , French , Amita-sehgal

Quanta Magazine Wins Webby People's Voice Award for Best Science Website


Quanta Magazine Wins Webby People s Voice Award for Best Science Website
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NEW YORK, May 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/  
Quanta Magazine is the winner of the 2021 Webby People s Voice Award for the best website and mobile site in the science category. The award, presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences and decided by public vote, is one of the most coveted prizes in the digital space.
I m thrilled and deeply touched that my extraordinary staff at
Quanta has been voted a People s Voice winner, says
Quanta Editor-in-Chief Thomas Lin. To receive this level of support and recognition from our valued readers is an honor beyond measure.

Washington , United-states , Thomas-lin , Anastasia-greenebaum , National-magazine , Washington-post , Simons-foundation , International-academy-of-digital-arts , Quanta-magazine , Voice-award , International-academy , Digital-arts

How Maxwell's Demon Continues to Startle Scientists - Facts So Romantic


Magazine’s Abstractions blog.
The thorny thought experiment has been turned into a real experiment one that physicists use to probe the physics of information.Illustration by Samuel Velasco / Quanta Magazine
The universe bets on disorder. Imagine, for example, dropping a thimbleful of red dye into a swimming pool. All of those dye molecules are going to slowly spread throughout the water.
Physicists quantify this tendency to spread by counting the number of possible ways the dye molecules can be arranged. There’s one possible state where the molecules are crowded into the thimble. There’s another where, say, the molecules settle in a tidy clump at the pool’s bottom. But there are uncountable billions of permutations where the molecules spread out in different ways throughout the water. If the universe chooses from all the possible states at random, you can bet that it’s going to end up with one of the vast set of disordered possibilities.

Italy , Tokyo , Japan , Vienna , Wien , Austria , United-states , London , City-of , United-kingdom , American , Delgado-callico

Quanta Magazine

Chiara Marletto is trying to build a master theory a set of ideas so fundamental that all other theories would spring from it. Her first step: Invoke the impossible.

Italy , David-deutsch , Chiara-marletto , Albert-einstein , University-of-oxford , Quanta-magazine , Q-amp-a , Physics , Quantum-physics , Theoretical-physics , Fundamental-physics , Constructor-theory

The Brain 'Rotates' Memories to Save Them From New Sensations


To revist this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories.
During every waking moment, we humans and other animals have to balance on the edge of our awareness of past and present. We must absorb new sensory information about the world around us while holding on to short-term memories of earlier observations or events. Our ability to make sense of our surroundings, to learn, to act, and to think all depend on constant, nimble interactions between perception and memory.
Quanta Magazine, an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research develop­ments and trends in mathe­matics and the physical and life sciences.

Alexandra-libby , Timothy-buschman , Anastasia-kiyonaga , Princeton-university , Nature-neuroscience , Science , Physics-and-math , Quanta-magazine , Neuroscience , Brains-and-behavior , Cognition , Biology

Four Indian American Grad Students Named 2021 Paul & Daisy Soros Fellows

Four Indian American Grad Students Named 2021 Paul & Daisy Soros Fellows
indiawest.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from indiawest.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , Maine , Portland , Oregon , India , Hungary , Cornell-university , Mountain-view , California , San-francisco-state-university , San-francisco-bay

We Just Got Closer to Truly Determining Who Were The World's First Animals


We Just Got Closer to Truly Determining Who Were The World s First Animals
1 APRIL 2021
The tree of animal life had to begin somewhere. Finding that original branch amongst such a tangled canopy is harder than it sounds, though.
A new analysis of genomic data suggests that one phylum in the running for the oldest branch has been deceiving us all along.
 
Since the 19th century, many scientists have presented the sponge - one of the simplest creatures in existence - as the world s first animal. 
Modern genomic studies, however, have pitted this muscle-less, nerve-less and organ-less blob against a far more complex creature.

Ireland , Dublin , Detlev-arendt , Anthony-redmond , Nature-communications , Trinity-college-dublin , Quanta-magazine , Amp-quot , Jellies , Models , Sponges , Comb