Why Can’t We Stop Child Abuse? – The New Yorker


Brace yourself, this is certainly a #longread. An important piece from The New Yorker, certainly, this article looks through the history of child abuse and tries to assess why society hasn’t been able to fix it.

Victorian child-savers enlisted public support by telling sensational stories involving the deaths of poor children, especially babies. It became a convention of the dead-baby story to suggest that poor women are not to be trusted with babies, and as a result the public favors rescuing children but not if it means helping women. As a rule, setting the interests of poor children against those of poor women leads to reforms that fail, which leads, a few years later, to another dead-baby story. This next time around, the reform itself is blamed for the death of the baby, and an opposite reform is proposed. It, too, fails. And then the cycle begins again.

Source: Why Can’t We Stop Child Abuse? – The New Yorker

Your Life Is Tetris. Stop Playing It Like Chess.


I’m a sucker for a good metaphor, and this one is potent. Having recently dabbled with chess, I get what the author is saying. Most importantly: setting our own win conditions is how we truly win.

Playing Tetris every day builds my determination, my focus, my will to persevere at things I know have no conclusion. And I don’t play to win — I play to play.

Source: Your Life Is Tetris. Stop Playing It Like Chess. — Life Learning — Medium

The Creator of JavaScript Is Out to Upend the Ad Industry | WIRED

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I’m interested to see if this new company, Brave, can pull it off. People might be interested in downloading a new browser if it has ad-blocking built in.

The big idea is to block advertisements and tracking scripts that pillage your personal data and replace them with ads supplied by the browser—ads that respect your privacy and don’t slow your computer to a crawl

Source: The Creator of JavaScript Is Out to Upend the Ad Industry | WIRED

Harvard wants to de-emphasize test scores and focus on ‘a passion for learning and long-term volunteer projects’

“Escalating achievement pressure is not healthy for our youth. Young people are suffering from higher rates of depression, anxiety and substance abuse as they juggle the demands of their lives,” said Kedra Ishop, an associate vice president for at the University of Michigan, who endorsed the proposal.

Source: Harvard wants to de-emphasize test scores and focus on this one personality trait

Beautiful, Subtle Digital Picture Frame: A Canvas Made of Pixels


A clever hack, finely executed. Great subtle touches here make this amusing (e.g. white balance, light sensors, and a bit of code). I think it would be nice to have something like this one day.

A year ago over the holiday break, I created a large-scale digital “canvas” that can reproduce works of fine art – paintings, photographs, lithographs, etc. – in a way that is nearly indistinguishable from the real thing.

Source: Clay Bavor