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100 People: Statistics
100 People: Statistics
86 would be able to read and write; 14 would not 7 would have a college degree 40 would have an Internet connection 78 people would have a place to shelter them from the wind and the rain, but 22 would not 1 would be dying of starvation 11 would be undernourished 22 would be overweight 91 would have access to safe drinking water 9 people would have no clean, safe water to drink
·100people.org·
100 People: Statistics
Astronaut
Astronaut
Today, you are an Astronaut. You are floating in inner space 100 miles above the surface of Earth. You peer through your window and this is what you see. You are people watching. These are fleeting moments. These videos come from YouTube. They were uploaded in the last week and have titles like DSC 1234 and IMG 4321. They have almost zero previous views. They are unnamed, unedited, and unseen (by anyone but you). Astronaut starts when you press GO. The video switches periodically. Click the button below the video to prevent the video from switching.
·astronaut.io·
Astronaut
Jenny Odell: How to Internet
Jenny Odell: How to Internet
I still believe that there are new forms of connectivity we could forge that aren’t Facebook and aren’t Twitter and that could maybe — maybe — let us see outside of our own filter bubbles. Perhaps we could find or create new kinds of avenues for organizing, or platforms for debate (for those who are level-headed enough to do so). The role of the internet, and of reimagining how we use the internet to talk, is as crucial as ever. But it’s a thorny path. It wasn’t until now that I fully grasped the dangerous varieties of connectivity (like rapid sharing of fake news) and understood there are people who cannot be connected with in the way we would like (the Rooshes of the world). Maybe that just means I’ve grown up. I know less about “how to internet” than I did before. All I can say now is that doing it right will require a great deal of imagination, caution, and fortitude.
·medium.com·
Jenny Odell: How to Internet
Lara Hogan: Feedback Equation
Lara Hogan: Feedback Equation
As I mention in my book Demystifying Public Speaking, humans are mostly bad at giving feedback. We’re also really bad at preparing ourselves to receive feedback. 1. Make observation 2. Explain impact 3. Ask a question or make a request
·larahogan.me·
Lara Hogan: Feedback Equation
Getty Image Collection: Lean In
Getty Image Collection: Lean In
LeanIn.Org and Getty Images have teamed up to create the Lean In Collection—a library of thousands of creative images devoted to the powerful depiction of women and girls, families of all kinds, and men as caretakers as well as earners. These images are updated monthly and can be found both on Getty Images and iStock by Getty Images. The goal is to shift perceptions, overturn clichés, and incorporate authentic images of women and men into media and advertising. Join us to help close the image gender gap—one photo at a time.
·leanin.org·
Getty Image Collection: Lean In
The Gender Spectrum Collection by Broadly
The Gender Spectrum Collection by Broadly
The Gender Spectrum Collection is a stock photo library featuring images of trans and non-binary models that go beyond the clichés. This collection aims to help media better represent members of these communities as people not necessarily defined by their gender identities—people with careers, relationships, talents, passions, and home lives.
·broadlygenderphotos.vice.com·
The Gender Spectrum Collection by Broadly
Michael Finkel: The Strange Tale of the North Pond Hermit (GQ)
Michael Finkel: The Strange Tale of the North Pond Hermit (GQ)
For nearly thirty years, a phantom haunted the woods of Central Maine. Unseen and unknown, he lived in secret, creeping into homes in the dead of night and surviving on what he could steal. To the spooked locals, he became a legend—or maybe a myth. They wondered how he could possibly be real. Until one day last year, the hermit came out of the forest.
·gq.com·
Michael Finkel: The Strange Tale of the North Pond Hermit (GQ)
Facebox
Facebox
50 stock photos of real people for UI design and business presentations. High-res, easy-to-use, royalty-free and rights-cleared! Compared to traditional stock photography, it's a no-brainer.
·facebox.io·
Facebox
The Human Library
The Human Library
‘Structured to mimic real library browsing, participants would search the card catalog, apply for a library card, and then check out one of the 35 books as they became available. The book titles, chosen by the “books” themselves, included “Custodian,” “Evangelical Christian,” “Fat Woman,” “Feminist,” “Iraq War Veteran,” “LDS Missionaries (Mormon),” “Olympic Athlete,” “Orphanage Boy,” “Psychiatrist,” and “Queer,” among others. Readers and books engaged in one-on-one conversations that lasted 30 minutes.’
·humanlibrary.org·
The Human Library
Andrea Dorfman and Tanya Davis: How to Be Alone
Andrea Dorfman and Tanya Davis: How to Be Alone
A video by fiilmaker Andrea Dorfman and poet/singer/songwriter Tanya Davis. "Society is afraid of alonedom, like lonely hearts are wasting away in basements, like people must have problems if, after a while, nobody is dating them. but lonely is a freedom that breaths easy and weightless and lonely is healing if you make it."
·youtube.com·
Andrea Dorfman and Tanya Davis: How to Be Alone
Terra Incognita Films: 'Into the Wild' Debunked
Terra Incognita Films: 'Into the Wild' Debunked
Not so much 'debunked', but this article calls out Krakauer on a number of conclusions and omissions from his book (and the subsequent movie). To summarize: the poison/moldy seeds theory doesn't hold water, and McCandless probably just simply starved to death. McCandless had money and a map with him on his final trek, but the book and movie omit this. Also, one of the final self-portrait photographs might have a clue as to the "injury" alluded to in his final note: one sleeve of his shirt looks armless.
·tifilms.com·
Terra Incognita Films: 'Into the Wild' Debunked
Butterflies and Wheels: Identity is That Which is Given
Butterflies and Wheels: Identity is That Which is Given
Kenan Malik writes that the attempt to preserve "cultural identity and authenticity" is largely an inauthentic act, one steeped in relativism and traditionalism, and more concerned with how individuals "should" act than how they actually do. Thanks to @kemp for the link.
·butterfliesandwheels.com·
Butterflies and Wheels: Identity is That Which is Given