kqedscience:

This Photo Uses Every Single Instagram Filter
“How many steps does it take to go from Thomas Kinkade to Mark Rothko?”

→ Is Instagram revolutionizing photography art?

kqedscience:

This Photo Uses Every Single Instagram Filter

How many steps does it take to go from Thomas Kinkade to Mark Rothko?”

→ Is Instagram revolutionizing photography art?

Mark Shields, David Brooks and Hari Sreenivasan:
“Siri, what is ‘The Doubleheader’”
Around the 7:30 mark in this video

Mark Shields, David Brooks and Hari Sreenivasan:

“Siri, what is ‘The Doubleheader’”

Around the 7:30 mark in this video

Half of the internet seems to be broken today, so we’ve found the perfect thing to take up your time!
iphonetrackmaps:

Share your iPhone map with us and tell us a quick story to go along with it. We have some prizes (NewsHour mug, anyone?) for the most interesting maps and stories you’ve got. Submit them here 
Because if they’re tracking you already, why not have some fun with it?

Half of the internet seems to be broken today, so we’ve found the perfect thing to take up your time!

iphonetrackmaps:

Share your iPhone map with us and tell us a quick story to go along with it. We have some prizes (NewsHour mug, anyone?) for the most interesting maps and stories you’ve got. Submit them here 

Because if they’re tracking you already, why not have some fun with it?

Special correspondent Jeffrey Kaye reports from the eastern Chinese city of Suzhou, where some factory workers say they’ve been poisoned by exposure to a toxic chemical while working at an Apple iPhone assembly plant.

Transcript

Tonight on the PBS NewsHour: 

Jim Lehrer interviews Treasury Secretary Geithner about the President’s deficit plan, Paul Solman reports on the market’s reaction to the debt ceiling debate, Libyan rebels call for tougher intervention and health hazards for iPhone factory workers in China.

(Source: newshour.pbs.org)

Workers in China: ‘Your iPhone Cost Us Our Health’

A group of employees of a supplier involved in the production of iPhones say that toxic fumes from the process poisoned them, with ongoing effects. Apple maintains that “all affected workers have been treated successfully.”

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