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Friday 30 October 2015

Is Radionics Bullshit?

The Best Troll On The Internet And Other Facts, Every Day I Want To Quit Social Media, See The World, Without Being A Tourist, Is Radionics Bullshit?, WATCH: Someone Animated Old Book Covers And It's Absolutely Mesmerizing, A Selfie Does Not Need To Be Selfish
The Daily Digg
Friday, October 30, 2015
The Best Troll On The Internet And Other Facts
WHAT WE LEARNED THIS WEEK
The Best Troll On The Internet And Other Facts
digg.com
​​Welcome to What We Learned This Week, a digest of the most curiously important facts from the past few days. This week: The Internet's most famous troll, the Internet law you've already broken and the best place to die on Earth.
PUSHING AWAY NOTIFICATIONS
Every Day I Want To Quit Social Media
buzzfeed.com
I am drowning in a sea of anxiety created by Twitter and Facebook.
TRIPS WE DIGG SPONSORED
See The World, Without Being A Tourist
intrepidtravel.com
With Intrepid Travel's trips you'll travel the local way, eat the local way and sleep the local way. In other words, you won't just feel like another tourist. And Digg readers get 10% off their first trip!
JOIN THE DIALOG NOW
Is Radionics Bullshit?
digg.com
Radionics is a way of using a device to take your thoughts and amplify and broadcast them into the ether to affect some kind of change in your own life or the lives of others. It's also bullshit. Andy Wright investigated, and will be here at 12pm EST to talk about it. Join the Dialog now!
YOU CAN JUDGE THESE BY THEIR COVERS
WATCH: Someone Animated Old Book Covers And It's Absolutely Mesmerizing
digg.com
Books. Boring right? WRONG! The covers of these books move and they are awesome.
HOLDING UP A BLACK MIRROR TO OURSELVES
A Selfie Does Not Need To Be Selfish
newyorker.com
Is the selfie merely a genre of informal self-portraiture, or does it crowd out deeper investigation of who we are?
Get more stories on Digg.com
NOTHING BUT NET
Digg Pic Of The Day
In this Wednesday Oct. 28, 2015, photo, fisherman Buck Alexander mends a trawling net used for mid-water fishing, in Portland, Maine. Since the collapse of the cod population, a groundfish, many of New England's fishermen now pursue other species. Portland's Gulf of Maine Research Institute is announcing a major breakthrough in climate and fisheries science.​ Credit: AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty
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