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Thursday, 22 October 2015

What Is Snapchat, Anyways?

What Were People Saying About Snapchat Before It Got Huge?, The Life and Death of an Amazon Warehouse Temp, It Literally Doesn't Get Any Easier To Schedule A Home Project, A Way To Solve Schizophrenia, And More, The Nine Lives Of San Francisco's Presidio Pet Cemetery, The Secret Mass Graves Of The Refugee Crisis
The Daily Digg
Thursday, October 22, 2015
What Were People Saying About Snapchat Before It Got Huge?
BROWSER HISTORY
What Were People Saying About Snapchat Before It Got Huge?
digg.com
Snapchat currently has over 100 million daily users. It's valued at $16 billion. And back when it first exploded onto the scene, it took a long time for people to actually take it seriously.
THE JUNGLE, UPDATED
The Life and Death of an Amazon Warehouse Temp
highline.huffingtonpost.com
What the future of low-wage work really looks like.
HOME PROJECTS WE DIGG SPONSORED
It Literally Doesn't Get Any Easier To Schedule A Home Project
pro.com
Need someone to hang that new flat-panel TV in time for the game this weekend? Or a cleaner? Or a pro to handle any home project? With Pro.com's Text-a-Pro, you get a flat-rate price and an appointment within minutes simply by texting your project to 776-776. And you get $25 off your project by texting DIGG to 776-776 in the next 48 hours.
THE BEST STORIES OF THE WEEK
A Way To Solve Schizophrenia, And More
digg.com
A treatment that can actually control schizophrenia; a controversial case of cerebral palsy and sexual abuse; and one student's epic, harrowing journey out of Syria and through Europe.
FINAL PETTING PLACE
The Nine Lives Of San Francisco's Presidio Pet Cemetery
inverse.com
What is the appeal of a 63-year-old pet cemetery in a historic urban park? Plenty, actually.
OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND
The Secret Mass Graves Of The Refugee Crisis
medium.com
"These corpses are people who have human rights."
Get more stories on Digg.com
SOP O' THE MORNIN' TO YA
Digg Pic Of The Day
​An indigenous woman wades in the waters of the Taguarussu River as the sun rises in Palmas, Brazil, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2015. Palmas is the host city for the first World Indigenous Games, that will showcase traditional sports with the participation of more than 2,000 indigenous athletes from around the world. The event begins Oct. 23 and runs through Nov. 1. Credit: AP Photo/Eraldo Peres
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