
No wires, no pipelines.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
Pulling Water, Fuel, and Power From Thin Air Is Getting Practical https://suhub.co/2JN9pur

No wires, no pipelines.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
Pulling Water, Fuel, and Power From Thin Air Is Getting Practical https://suhub.co/2JN9pur
A sobering reminder that any form of power can be used for oppression and justified as “protection”.
Via Kymberlyn Reed.
Originally shared by EDD The Midnight Son
Good read!
By my count I’ve read 58 of Amazon’s 100 Science Fiction and Fantasy Books to Read in a Lifetime. Many of them I enjoyed; some I did not.
I’ve started some others and not wanted to continue. I own a couple more and have never got to them because they’re not really my thing. There are others that I know I won’t like, so I’ve never even tried.
I don’t think I noticed any of them that I’d never considered reading.
I think what I’m saying is: it’s OK to have your taste and not like everything that other people consider amazing. And this is pretty much a list of the usual suspects.
That headline, tho.
Originally shared by Arduino
This teenage Bitcoin millionaire designed a fully functional Dr. Octopus exoskeleton for a 10-year-old Marvel fan who suffers from hypermobility.
(via All3DP)
:: Male mice grow ovaries instead of testes if they are missing a small region of DNA that doesn’t contain any genes, finds a new paper published in Science. The study, led by researchers at the Francis Crick Institute, could help explain disorders of sex development in humans, at least half of which have an unknown genetic cause. ::
The most common result of internal conflict “ending” seems to be that the people who had been fighting it switch over to being violent criminals, since that’s what they know. (As I understand it, this is what has happened in Ireland with the remnants of the IRA and the Protestant militias; they’re now criminal gangs, though arguably they always were.)
When violence has impacted the whole of society, it’s very difficult to move on from it.
Notably missing from this analysis is South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission. I know a little about its existence, but nothing about its long-term effects; any South Africans want to comment? Masha du Toit?
Originally shared by Yonatan Zunger
How do you reintegrate people who have participated in mass violence into society? We don’t often think about this, but our past successes, and failures, to do so have defined our world profoundly.
I wrote this as a follow-up to a side comment I made in a tweet thread this morning about ICE’s child seizure policy. (https://twitter.com/yonatanzunger/status/1007296192378597382) I decided to dive more deeply into it, because it’s something most people don’t know much about the history of, and it’s important.
“When a type of person isn’t depicted in a society’s art, that art conveys a worldview in which that type of person is either notably rare, non-existent, or not worth depicting.”
My only experience of being attacked and insulted by an internet rando was over the statement that all fiction is political. His namecalling and hostility did not, oddly enough, convince me otherwise.
Originally shared by Standout Books
All art is political, but not all art is consciously political.
The gradual advance of women has seen many new opportunities and possibilities open up for them, but fewer for men. That’s one of the reasons two of my recent books (Mister Bucket for Assembly and the not-yet-published Illustrated Gnome News) depict men exploring the possibilities of enjoying “women’s work” as well as vice versa.
I was fortunate to grow up with a close friend who’s gay (although I didn’t know this until we were in our late 20s; such were the times). We somehow managed to remain free from some of the more toxic expectations for how our friendship could be and how we performed masculinity.
I’m a middle-aged straight cis white man, but that doesn’t need to make me into a stereotype.
Originally shared by Keith Wilson
While society is chipping away at giving girls broader access to life’s possibilities, it isn’t presenting boys with a full continuum of how they can be in the world. To carve out a masculine identity requires whittling away everything that falls outside the norms of boyhood. At the earliest ages, it’s about external signifiers like favorite colors, TV shows, and clothes. But later, the paring knife cuts away intimate friendships, emotional range, and open communication.
Everyone needs an editor. Even you.
Tim Powers.
Originally shared by Alexander M Zoltai