A handy guide to cellphone etiquette around the world
Via Little Brown's Tumblr, this guide from RepairLabs about cellphone etiquette (click on the image for a bigger version):
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Skip to contentVia Little Brown's Tumblr, this guide from RepairLabs about cellphone etiquette (click on the image for a bigger version):
This article from Quartz about smartphone-sensing technology in London is pretty interesting, but one line in particular caught me. Kaveh Memari, CEO of Renew, is talking about how the
From The Guardian: As she approaches the village, Sathi rings her bicycle bell and the children come running to meet her, shouting "Hello, hello". Women emerge from their
Alexis Madrigal has a long, thoughtful piece in The Atlantic about something I've remarked on a couple times: the flow-like, yet addictive, experience that we often have when
The always-awesome Little, Brown art department whipped up a few promotional posters for The Distraction Addiction. Here's the first: We'll be rolling out more in the coming weeks.
Of course there's going to be an electronic version of The Distraction Addiction, and it'll make its way into the great maw of Google Books at some point;
The Swedish startup Memoto-- you might have heard about their super-successful Kickstarter campaign last year-- recently released a video about lifelogging, which is available on Vimeo: Lifeloggers from
Slate contributor Steve Kolowich writes about going through-- and often deleting-- old Facebook posts, likes, and messages: A wall post, comment, or "like" stops being useful once everyone
The one good thing that's come of my paying any attention to Sean Parker's post-wedding social media tempest is that, via New York Magazine, I found out about
Gregg Zachary has a short, Proustian think-piece on the "remembrance of everything past" in IEEE Spectrum: “Information overload” once referred to the difficulty of absorbing intelligently the data