Fun stuff, stuff to make you cry, serious stuff, weird stuff. Here, a recap of all the coolest stuff on the interwebs this week.
- More than 60 percent of 1400 Boy Scout leaders voted to lift its longtime ban on openly gay scouts. [The New York Times]
. - A fantastic piece by Carl Zimmer on how studying rare diseases can help mainstream medicine. [The Atlantic]
. - Listen to the only known recording of Virginia Woolf’s voice. [Paris Review]
. - Some cool visualizations of the world’s tallest building, which will be 838 meters tall and in an empty field in China. [Quartz]
. - Dexter Johnson begins a column in which he explores the origins of “seven or never,” a principle in nanotech that says any new technology appears on the market in seven years or not at all. [IEEE Spectrum]
. - From last week, a heart-wrenching story about a man who, hit by a truck when he was 6 and living with brain damage since, finally found peace in running. Tissues required. [Runner’s World]
. - The origins of certain insults. [The Hairpin]
. - Neat photo. The line that divides East and West Berlin is still distinguishable at night — by different lightbulbs. [Imgur]
Comments (2)
Pingback: American Steroids Online