vuvudabi
37 Bookmarks100 Years Of Propaganda: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly - Smashing Magazine
Propaganda is most well known in the form of war posters. But at its core, it is a mode of communication aimed at influencing the attitude of a community toward some cause or position.Pandora, MOG, Apple, and online music’s future : The New Yorker
Online music moves to the cloud.Massimo's Skeptic and Humanist Web - Rationally Speaking
Rationally Speaking is a blog maintained by Prof. Massimo Pigliucci, a philosopher at the City University of New York (editing by Phil Pollack).Is my kids making me not smart? - Salon.com
Stay-at-home fatherhood dulls my intellect to a nub. Excuse me while I ponder the subtext of "Hippos Go Berserk"Day After for United States. - O.K., It’s Time to Win - NYTimes.com
A day after the United States earned a tie against favored England, the mood at the team’s serene camp was upbeat but restrained.Gallery: Digitizing the past and present at the Library of Congress - Boing Boing
The Library of Congress has nearly 150 million items in its collection, including at least 21 million books, 5 million maps, 12.5 million photos and 100,000 posters.love german books - Blog about German literature
Katy Derbyshire is a translator and loves German books.Hayibo - South African Satire
Hayibo bills itself as "South Africa's second best source of satirical news, after the SABC", and has been winning fans across the country and internationally.WikiLeaks and Julian Paul Assange : The New Yorker
Julian Assange’s mission for total transparency.On the Vilification of Helen Thomas | The Nation
The media tirade against Helen Thomas is as illogical as it is hysterical. The few sentences uttered by her were, as she quickly acknowledged, wrong—deeply so, I would add.Unhappy Meals | Mother Jones
Would you like some cadmium with those fries? A slideshow of recalled fast-food toys.Aliens Like Us - In These Times
Anthropologist Scott Littleton believes the truth is out there, somewhere.Conduct an Internet Census - The Atlantic
The greatest divide between denizens of digital and physical worlds is generational: 93 percent of 18-to-32-year-olds use the Internet, while only 38 percent of 65+ Americans are online.

