Anime & Manga related, Japan, Popular Culture
- Kadokawa Buys Barefoot Gen's Publisher Choubunsha (ANN)
- Please keep Stan Sakai and his family in your thoughts (The Beat)
- Japan's royal family pose for unusual New Year photo (The Telegraph)
- Top 1000 Graphic Novels in 2013 (ICv2)
- 'Sailor Moon' Reboot (ICv2)
- Tezuka Signs with Cross Media (ICv2)
- 15 Must-have iPad accessories (pictures) (CNET)
- GoodReader for iOS 7 brings a revamped UI, more PDF tools and a new audio player (The Next Web)
- Olloclip Agonized Over Bringing Out An iPad Lens, But Here It Is [CES 2014] (Cult of Mac)
- Why Apple didn't buy Nest (TUAW)
- Neil Gaiman's The Ocean at the End of the Lane named 2013 Book of the Year (BBC)
- Burn Bras, Not Books: The Outdoor Co-ed Topless Pulp Fiction Appreciation Society (Link) [Definitely NSFW!]
- Read to Win the War: 13 Vintage Posters Promoting American Libraries (Gizmodo)
- Authors Guild appeals decision in Google Books copyright suit (CNET)
- Neil Gaiman: Why our future depends on libraries, reading and daydreaming (The Guardian)
- Une bibliothèque en self-service ouverte 24/24 (IDboox)
- Scores Of Books Burned In Lebanese Library Torching (NPR)
- Lebanese Library Torched (Time)
- Library closure plans scrutinised as council cuts bite (BBC)
- Publishers' E-Commerce Site Sold (ICv2)
- Digital Comics Round-Up (ICv2)
- Caresser le minou en bibliothèque: une réalité (ActuaLitté)
- Digital Comics in Libraries: The Next Frontier (ICv2)
- Aki Shimazaki: Connaissez-vous cette écrivaine Japonaise qui vit et enseigne maintenant au Québec? (Wikipedia)
- Piranha Attack Swimmers, Bite Off Girl’s Finger (ABC)
- What Is This “Polar Vortex” That Is Freezing the U.S.? (Scientific American)
- New York Passes "Beard Law" (ColLive) [U.S. going in opposite direction than Quebec?!]
- Twitter storm in Russia over Sochi Olympics twin toilet (BBC)
- Pentagon Relaxes Uniform Rules To Allow Religious Headgear (NPR) [Or is it Quebec going in the opposite direction than U.S.?!]
- The U.S. Has a Social Mobility Problem, But Not the One You Think (The Atlantic)
- Cell-phones' link to health problems debated (SFGate)
- Cholesterol levels linked to early signs of Alzheimer's in brain (NBC)
- Vitamin E Might Help Slow Alzheimer's Early On (NPR)
- Green tea 'can impede nadolol blood pressure medicine' (BBC)
- Biceps Curls And Down Dogs May Help Lower Diabetes Risk (NPR)
- New 15-Minute At-Home Test May Detect Alzheimer's, Goes Viral (Forbes)
- FDA Asks Doctors To Stop Prescribing High-Dose Acetaminophen (NPR)
- Are you a lark or an owl? (BBC)
- Watch Music Bring Back Memories for Alzheimer's Patients (The Atlantic)
- Infiltrations d'eau: peut-on agir au printemps? (La Presse)
- Quand faut-il remplacer son chauffe-eau? (La Presse)
- Que faire avec un tuyau gelé? (La Presse)
- Les jeunes Français «kiffent» le Québec (Métro)
- Le Conseil du statut de la femme se range dans le camp pro-charte (Le Devoir)
- Sale temps pour les syndicats (La Presse/PressDisplay)
- Did you know that Tim Horton, the founder of the coffee shop, was a hockey player? (Wikipedia)
- City councilman epically resigns with a letter written in Klingon (Gizmodo)
- Chinese film mogul Run Run Shaw dies at 106 (LA Times)
- Matthew Macfayden hints at Ripper Street return (BBC)
- Complete list of Oscar nominations (SFGate)
- Et les finalistes sont… (Le Devoir)
- After ABC’s cord-cutting block, pirate downloads shoots up 300% (GigaOM)
- Your Right to Record Movies Off TV Came 30 Years Ago Today (Gizmodo)
- Heavy Metal magazine getting rebooted with a focus on film and TV (The Verge)
- Tarkovsky Films Now Free Online (Open Culture)
- Cat Gif Page !! (Link)
- Evidence For Ancient Peruvian Brain Surgeons Unearthed (Archaeology Magazine)
- Historic Spy Satellite Images Reveal Roman Fortifications (Archaeology Magazine)
- How Corpses Helped Shape the London Underground (Gizmodo)
- Why Strange Lights Sometimes Precede Earthquakes (Popular Science)
- Anglesey beach find could be whale ambergris (BBC)
- The ballad of the Romanian shepherd (BBC)
- Few asteroids are worth mining, suggests Harvard study (BBC)
- Scientists Find Remains of Alfred The Great Or King Edward The Elder (The Daily Beast)
- Animation brings classical paintings to stunning life (CNET)
- Is our Sun falling silent? (BBC)
- Japan WWII soldier who refused to surrender, dies (BBC)
- Lightning struck Rio's Jesus Christ statue and broke off his fingers (Gizmodo)
- Astronomers Get First Glimpse of Cosmic Web (National Geographic)
- Rosetta comet-chaser phones home (BBC)
- What caused a 10-year winter starting in 536? (IO9)
- New Discoveries Bring New Hope for the Possibility of Alien Life (The Wire)
- Byzantine-era church uncovered in Israel (Fox)
- Archaeologists find remains of previously unknown pharaoh in Egypt (The Guardian)
- 4,000-year-old erotica from Mesopotamia (Archaeology News Network)
- Hypnotique: quand les plus belles peintures prennent vie (Nouvel Observateur)
- 10-Year Winter Began in 536 AD, Could It Happen Again? (The Epoch Time)
- How did the Egyptian pharaoh stay undiscovered for so long? (The Guardian)
- Year in digs: How 2013 looked in archaeology (BBC)
- Opportunity rover finds fresh signs that ancient Mars was life-friendly (NBC)
- Genetically-modified purple tomatoes heading for shops (BBC)
- No Black Holes Exist, Says Stephen Hawking; At Least Not Like We Think (National Geographic)
- Scientists find ancient plague DNA in teeth (AP)
- Pebble-Shaped Bluetooth Thermometer Is Happy To Live Outside (Métro)
- Google Glass accessories on the way: Shades, shields, earbuds (CNET)
- Lumen TL800 LED Smart Bulb Bluetooth RGB LED lightbulb review (AppleTell)
- First look at Resound Linx, the world’s first MFi Bluetooth LE hearing aid launching this quarter (9 to 5 Mac)
- Google buys Nest, former Apple exec speaks with the Verge on the purchase (TUAW)
- More than 750,000 spam emails sent from fridges and TVs (The Telegraph)
- Spark.io Hackers Make An Open-Source Nest Thermostat (TechCrunch)
- How smartphones can cut heating bills by a quarter (BBC)
[ Traduire ]
No comments:
Post a Comment