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Thursday 8 January 2015

Je Suis Charlie

The Danger Of Calling Uber A 'Tech Company', Hair-Raising Knife Throwing Performance Nearly Ends In Death On Live TV, These Are The Amazing 'Free-Form' Displays That Nintendo May Be Using, Kids Learn Where Babies Come From For The First Time, Photos Of New York's Chinatown In The 80s, Has Technology Killed The Jewelry Industry?
The Daily Digg
Thursday, January 8, 2015
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FARE OR FOUL
The Danger Of Calling Uber A 'Tech Company'
buzzfeed.com
"Move fast and break things" doesn't work when the "things" are real people.
TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT
Hair-Raising Knife Throwing Performance Nearly Ends In Death On Live TV
digg.com
Here are the highlights: 1:17 — slightly cuts a finger, 1:30 — almost hits another one, 3:15 — 1-2cm from death, 4:45 — trying to clean blood with shoe.
ONE SIZE PLAYS ALL
These Are The Amazing 'Free-Form' Displays That Nintendo May Be Using
edit.digg.com
Sharp first showed off its unique Free-Form Displays last year, and the technology took on a whole other level of intrigue when it was reported that Nintendo would be the first customer — possibly for a new portable games console, or the company's mysterious sleep-tracking device.
WELCOME TO ADULTHOOD
Kids Learn Where Babies Come From For The First Time
digg.com
Nope, it's not quite like an igloo, but you're onto something there.
FORGET IT JAKE, IT'S...
Photos Of New York's Chinatown In The 80s
theatlantic.com
From 1981 to 1984, photographer Bud Glick worked on a photography project as part of the New York Chinatown History Project, now the Museum of Chinese in America. Now, three decades later, Glick has scanned his Chinatown negatives and made large prints.
YOU SHOULDA PUT AN IPHONE ON IT
Has Technology Killed The Jewelry Industry?
psmag.com
Jewelry sales continue to plummet. Are iPhones and Kindles to blame?
Read more on Digg.com →
JE SUIS CHARLIE
Image: Masked gunmen shouting
Masked gunmen shouting "Allahu akbar!" stormed the Paris offices of a satirical newspaper Wednesday, killing 12 people, including the paper's editor, before escaping in a getaway car. It was France's deadliest terror attack in living memory. Credit: Charlie Hebdo
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