Im Nazidorf: »Das Problem ist, wenn man sie richtig kennenlernt, kann man sie nicht hassen.«
“Polish painter covers home in aluminum foil, calls it art”. (Neighbors are baffled, people are pissed.)
Top 10 Lifehacker Posts of All Time.
What’s in a Boarding Pass Barcode? A Lot.
You Already Ruined Hanukkah — Just Admit It.
“Your Tesla is powered by the electric grid. If your electric grid runs on coal, then your Tesla runs on coal. Long story short: You should have bought the VW Diesel.”
Bounce, pop, whisper and zoom.
Thomas Fischer: Willkommen in Deutschland.
»(…) so lange der Sprit billig, der ADAC zuverlässig und der Flüchtling nicht vor der Haustür ist. Staatsgrenzen, Systemgrenzen, geographische Grenzen.«
Das ist eine Menge zu lesen. Aber jede Zeile ist es wert. Ich würde am liebsten Flugblätter davon drucken und verteilen. Vielleicht mach ich das…
A wonderful movie about the people and the city of Nairobi – and about HIV: Kulala Ovyo.
Relevance by chance: Soap&Skin sings Homeless (Ladysmith Black Mambazo cover).
This could make publishing interesting again.
“IPFS is a peer-to-peer distributed file system that seeks to connect all computing devices with the same system of files. In some ways, IPFS is similar to the Web, but IPFS could be seen as a single BitTorrent swarm, exchanging objects within one Git repository. In other words, IPFS provides a high throughput content-addressed block storage model, with content-addressed hyperlinks. This forms a generalized Merkle DAG, a data structure upon which one can build versioned file systems, blockchains, and even a Permanent Web. IPFS combines a distributed hashtable, an incentivized block exchange, and a self-certifying namespace. IPFS has no single point of failure, and nodes do not need to trust each other.”