Friday, 7. July 12017
p3k dots

A million bottles a minute

World's plastic binge “as dangerous as climate change”.

Annual consumption of plastic bottles is set to top half a trillion by 2021, far outstripping recycling efforts and jeopardising oceans, coastlines and other environments.

Source: i.guim.co.uk

The good old methods still work today.

How to defend your website with ZIP bombs.

Menscheln und Mauscheln.

Über anekdotische Nachrufe auf Helmut Kohl, die Schlammschlacht um den Toten und die schwierige Altkanzler-Nähe eines Verlegers und des Ex-"Bild"-Chefredakteurs Kai Diekmann.

Tuesday, 4. July 12017
p3k dots

di dü!

Thousands of Bird Sounds visualized using machine learning.

Insights and ideas for techies from businesses outside of tech.

Normal people. Normal software.

Normal Software is a website about the software that powers everyday businesses. Discover the software that powers organizations outside of the tech industry, why that software was chosen, and ideas on how it can be improved.

Monday, 3. July 12017
p3k dots

Are Progressive Web Apps the Future of Web Development? – Presentation at WebDevCon 2017 in Berlin.

What’s next for CSS? (via github.com).

CSS Database is a comprehensive list of CSS features and their positions in the process of becoming implemented web standards.

World After Capital (via github.com).

Technological progress has shifted scarcity for humanity. When we were foragers, food was scarce. During the agrarian age, it was land. Following the industrial revolution, capital became scarce. With digital technologies scarcity is shifting once more. We need to figure out how to live in a World After Capital in which the only scarcity is our attention.

Saturday, 1. July 12017
p3k dots

A story about Orcas and Humans.

“If you pen killer whales in a small steel tank, you are imposing an extreme level of sensory deprivation on them,” one longtime researcher says. “Humans who are subjected to those same conditions become mentally disturbed.”

This is the Muslim tradition of sci-fi and speculative fiction.

Western readers often overlook the Muslim world’s speculative fiction. I use the term quite broadly, to capture any story that imagines the implications of real or imagined cultural or scientific advances. Some of the first forays into the genre were the utopias dreamt up during the cultural flowering of the Golden Age. (…) We also have the Muslim world to thank for one of the first works of feminist science fiction. The short story ‘Sultana’s Dream’ (1905) by Rokeya Sakhawat Hussain, a Bengali writer and activist, takes place in the mythical realm of Ladyland.