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Our excellent dystopia with Matt Odell by Cyberdeck Users Weekly • A podcast on Anchor
Our excellent dystopia with Matt Odell by Cyberdeck Users Weekly • A podcast on Anchor
Really glad to have Matt Odell as a return guest. Instead of an interview we used this as an opportunity to talk about our wonderful dystopia full of 30 hour battery life, folded proteins, and zero privacy. Enjoy! SHOW NOTES Apple Silicon Mac Mini vs iMac 5K Syncing Bitcoin on M1 Why it's fast Community builds of Visual Studio Code The Verge's MacBook Air review Redox OS with Jeremy Soller (I was trying to remember the word "UEFI") Apple bricks its own hardware Jailbreaking your T2 Mac PopOS PopShop Your Computer Isn't Yours (Matt's right there's no version with 32GB of RAM) @bunniestudios ...
·anchor.fm·
Our excellent dystopia with Matt Odell by Cyberdeck Users Weekly • A podcast on Anchor
Slate is no longer a magazine. It's a podcast company - Simon Owens's Tech and Media Newsletter
Slate is no longer a magazine. It's a podcast company - Simon Owens's Tech and Media Newsletter
Welcome! I'm Simon Owens and this is my media newsletter. If you've received it then you either subscribed or someone forwarded it to you. If you fit into the latter camp and want to subscribe, then you can click on this handy little button: Hey everyone, I have a short newsletter for you today, but before we jump into it I wanted to start with a quick editor’s note.
·simonowens.substack.com·
Slate is no longer a magazine. It's a podcast company - Simon Owens's Tech and Media Newsletter
Why Are American and British English Different? | Word Matters
Why Are American and British English Different? | Word Matters
This week is all about spelling. Some attempts to reform it have succeeded. (You've probably noticed that words are spelled differently in the US than in British English.) Others have failed hilariously. (You'll see.) But we're burying the lede; our first topic is that word itself: 'lede.' How did it find its current form? Then, we'll discuss the godfather of American English himself, Noah Webster. (Yes, that's where we got half our name.)
·art19.com·
Why Are American and British English Different? | Word Matters