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Seize the Earth! Can we learn statecraft from Civilization V?
When I first walked into the computer labs at university they were filled with people playing SimCity, textbooks piled about them, feverishly making notes. They had the air of people trying to learn a lesson, not playing a game.
Read more: Seize the Earth! Can we learn statecraft from Civilization V?
From coffee grinders to core dumps: the history of the calculator
You could tell the engineering students with the HP calculators; their shirts pulled out of shape by carrying the bulky device in their top pockets, their tussled appearance from sleeping later and working less, their unruffled appreciation of the higher calculus.
It was a source of envy.
Read more: From coffee grinders to core dumps: the history of the calculator
What happened to the robots?
Karel Čapek, a Czech, invented the concept of robots in his 1921 play Rossum’s Universal Robots. His robots were used in factories as labourers and eventually overthrew and destroyed humanity.
From X-Rays to CT Scans to MRIs and Ultrasounds: medicine will never be the same again
Try and imagine a radical and untested new medical technique based on unexplained scientific principles becoming a mainstream tool mere weeks after being discovered.
Read more: From X-Rays to CT Scans to MRIs and Ultrasounds: medicine will never be the same again
Looking for detente in the currency wars
Top Drawer is one of the largest of the international design fairs that erupt in London, like early autumn mushrooms, in September after Europeans return to work from their summer holidays.
700 exhibitors gather to entice major contracts from the 8,000 buyers and architects who visit the show. This is no retail extravaganza. The exhibition is all business and is not open to the general public.
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