Seguite il link al bot per i voti, sempre se vi va: regaliamoci una gioia almeno all’inizio dell’anno! - https://news.1rj.ru/str/QuanBot?start=poll_319208_466579
Un articolo al confine tra le cose sensate e anzi interessanti della psicologia del comportamento con i suoi influssi sulla nostra biologia, e il delirio americanoide più puro. L’oceano dell’auto-aiuto è popolato da bestie sempre più strane e orrende. O forse sono io che dovrei cominciare a leggere altre cose.
Money quote: “Your personality is not a fixed and intrinsic entity. Rather, your personality and character are fluid and ever-changing, based on the roles you play. Consider the experience of Heath Ledger, whose death many believe was due, at least in part, to his over-attachment to his role as the Joker in The Dark Knight”
https://medium.com/personal-growth/to-re-invent-your-identity-and-hack-your-biology-according-to-a-really-cool-study-ba17d51b755
Money quote: “Your personality is not a fixed and intrinsic entity. Rather, your personality and character are fluid and ever-changing, based on the roles you play. Consider the experience of Heath Ledger, whose death many believe was due, at least in part, to his over-attachment to his role as the Joker in The Dark Knight”
https://medium.com/personal-growth/to-re-invent-your-identity-and-hack-your-biology-according-to-a-really-cool-study-ba17d51b755
Medium
How To Re-Invent Yourself And Hack Your Biology (according to a really cool study)
In 1978, Ellen Langer, a Harvard psychologist, conducted an important study. She gave houseplants to two groups of nursing-home residents…
Tutto quello che possiamo aspettarci da Apple nel 2018 - il mio articolo per Macity
https://www.macitynet.it/quello-possiamo-aspettarci-apple-nel-2018/
https://www.macitynet.it/quello-possiamo-aspettarci-apple-nel-2018/
Macitynet.it
Tutto quello che possiamo aspettarci da Apple nel 2018 - Macitynet.it
Progetto Marzipan, HomePod, l'hub casalingo per lo stile di vita digitale, il nuovo Mac Pro modulare e poi chissà se ci saranno altre sorprese. Ecco quello che possiamo aspettarci da Apple nel 2018.
Non è necessario fare gli scrittori di professione (o per vocazione) per rendersene conto: la confusione, l’eccesso di stimoli, le continue distrazioni non fanno bene alla creatività. Si perde il filo con le troppe voci che si agitano nella nostra mente, provenendo da fuori e stimolando in continuazione quel che c’è dentro, fino a che non diventa un’unica minestra dal sapore drogato per il troppo umame.
Money quote: “Again the door behind us opened and released a gust of sound from the clubhouse, and it struck me—or it strikes me now as I try to conjugate the moment—that that crowded hall is an apt analogy for the public side of the writer’s life, in both its positive and negative aspects. As writers, we sometimes crave company, inclusion—the respect and affection of colleagues, the interest of readers, not to mention the social input and “material” that our fellow human primates supply. But we also need solitude and silence, or something close to it. It’s in seclusion and quiet that we do the actual work.”
https://thewalrus.ca/digital-distraction-is-bad-for-creativity/
Money quote: “Again the door behind us opened and released a gust of sound from the clubhouse, and it struck me—or it strikes me now as I try to conjugate the moment—that that crowded hall is an apt analogy for the public side of the writer’s life, in both its positive and negative aspects. As writers, we sometimes crave company, inclusion—the respect and affection of colleagues, the interest of readers, not to mention the social input and “material” that our fellow human primates supply. But we also need solitude and silence, or something close to it. It’s in seclusion and quiet that we do the actual work.”
https://thewalrus.ca/digital-distraction-is-bad-for-creativity/
The Walrus
Digital Distraction Is Bad for Creativity | The Walrus
What a silent evening with an author I admired taught me about solitude and writing well
Raggi cosmici e altre porcherie che ci colgono alla vigliacca quando andiamo in aereo
Money quote: “When cosmic rays strike the air, they create showers of ionizing radiation - particles that can knock electrons free of atoms and molecules - that can penetrate deep inside our bodies. This potential damage to tissues and DNA poses risks to our health and has been linked to cancer, reproductive issues, and cognition problems in animals”
http://www.businessinsider.com/flying-airplane-cancer-radiation-risk-2017-12
Money quote: “When cosmic rays strike the air, they create showers of ionizing radiation - particles that can knock electrons free of atoms and molecules - that can penetrate deep inside our bodies. This potential damage to tissues and DNA poses risks to our health and has been linked to cancer, reproductive issues, and cognition problems in animals”
http://www.businessinsider.com/flying-airplane-cancer-radiation-risk-2017-12
Business Insider
Flying in airplanes exposes people to more radiation than standing next to a nuclear reactor — here's why
Pilots and flight attendants get pummelled by cosmic rays and solar storms while keeping you safe and serving you drinks.
Migliori copertine di libri in lingua inglese (che comunque sono le migliori) del 2017
Money quote: "I asked 20 of my favorite designers to share their picks for the best book covers of the year. After tallying the results, I can report that the most beloved cover was Owen Egerton’s Hollow, designed by Matt Dorfman, which five designers counted among the best."
http://lithub.com/the-64-best-book-covers-of-2017/
Money quote: "I asked 20 of my favorite designers to share their picks for the best book covers of the year. After tallying the results, I can report that the most beloved cover was Owen Egerton’s Hollow, designed by Matt Dorfman, which five designers counted among the best."
http://lithub.com/the-64-best-book-covers-of-2017/
Literary Hub
The 64 Best Book Covers of 2017
This year may have been terrible in many ways, but as always, there were at least a few bright spots. Many of these spots were books. Many of these books had fantastic covers. (Some of the covers h…
Iniziamo l’anno con un articolo abbastanza importante per spiegare l’evoluzione di internet degli ultimi mesi. Dalla crescente nausea generata dai social media a causa del loro effetto che distorce la nostra percezione della sfera sociale, alla evoluzione di senso oltre che di tecnologia e mediatori della rete attorno a noi. Ci vogliono antenne molto sensibili e un gusto diverso da quello di noi “vecchi” per apprezzare il senso di questa trasformazione “in piccolo”. Articolo abbastanza importante e ricco.
Money quote: “The New Yorker’s Jia Tolentino articulated a pretty good guess as to why spending your time on the web’s massive, news-saturated platforms might feel so bad: “There is no limit to the amount of misfortune a person can take in via the internet,” she says. 2016 couldn’t possibly be the worst year in history, Tolentino decided, but it was the year that convinced her the promise of the social media had been false, and that “the internet would only ever induce the sense of powerlessness that comes when the sphere of what a person can influence remains static, while the sphere of what can influence us seems to expand without limit, allowing no respite at all.””
https://www.theverge.com/2017/12/28/16795090/internet-community-2017-post-mortem-tumblr-amino-drip-tinyletter
Money quote: “The New Yorker’s Jia Tolentino articulated a pretty good guess as to why spending your time on the web’s massive, news-saturated platforms might feel so bad: “There is no limit to the amount of misfortune a person can take in via the internet,” she says. 2016 couldn’t possibly be the worst year in history, Tolentino decided, but it was the year that convinced her the promise of the social media had been false, and that “the internet would only ever induce the sense of powerlessness that comes when the sphere of what a person can influence remains static, while the sphere of what can influence us seems to expand without limit, allowing no respite at all.””
https://www.theverge.com/2017/12/28/16795090/internet-community-2017-post-mortem-tumblr-amino-drip-tinyletter
The Verge
The year we wanted the internet to be smaller
Why tiny, weird online communities made a comeback in 2017
In Giappone ci sono bambini piccoli - molto piccoli (tipo due o tre anni) - che fanno commissioni da soli. Per renderli più autosufficienti? Più che altro per ribadire i legami della struttura sociale attorno a loro.
Money quote 1: "Parents in Japan regularly send their kids out into the world at a very young age. A popular television show called Hajimete no Otsukai, or My First Errand, features children as young as two or three being sent out to do a task for their family. As they tentatively make their way to the greengrocer or bakery, their progress is secretly filmed by a camera crew. The show has been running for more than 25 years."
Money quote 2: "What accounts for this unusual degree of independence? Not self-sufficiency, in fact, but “group reliance,” according to Dwayne Dixon, a cultural anthropologist who wrote his doctoral dissertation on Japanese youth. “[Japanese] kids learn early on that, ideally, any member of the community can be called on to serve or help others,” he says."
https://www.citylab.com/transportation/2015/09/why-are-little-kids-in-japan-so-independent/407590/
Money quote 1: "Parents in Japan regularly send their kids out into the world at a very young age. A popular television show called Hajimete no Otsukai, or My First Errand, features children as young as two or three being sent out to do a task for their family. As they tentatively make their way to the greengrocer or bakery, their progress is secretly filmed by a camera crew. The show has been running for more than 25 years."
Money quote 2: "What accounts for this unusual degree of independence? Not self-sufficiency, in fact, but “group reliance,” according to Dwayne Dixon, a cultural anthropologist who wrote his doctoral dissertation on Japanese youth. “[Japanese] kids learn early on that, ideally, any member of the community can be called on to serve or help others,” he says."
https://www.citylab.com/transportation/2015/09/why-are-little-kids-in-japan-so-independent/407590/
Bloomberg.com
Why Little Kids in Japan Are So Independent
In Japan, small children take the subway and run errands alone, no parent in sight. The reason why has more to do with social trust than self-reliance.
Forwarded from Fumettologica
E anche il 2017, ovvero il nostro quarto anno di attività, è finito. Come già avevamo fatto gli anni scorsi, per lasciarci definitivamente alle spalle il 2017 abbiamo messo insieme un po’ di articoli (40) fra quelli che abbiamo pubblicato nell’arco dell’anno, scelti tra i più letti, discussi, condivisi dai lettori, citati da e tra i collaboratori.
http://www.fumettologica.it/2018/01/migliori-articoli-fumettologica-2017/
http://www.fumettologica.it/2018/01/migliori-articoli-fumettologica-2017/
Fumettologica
Il meglio del 2017 (e i più letti) di Fumettologica - Fumettologica
Per lasciarci definitivamente alle spalle il 2017 abbiamo messo insieme un po’ di articoli (40) fra quelli che abbiamo pubblicato nell’arco dell’anno.
Forwarded from MacchiaChannel via @like
E se Donald Trump non ci stesse tutto con la testa? Sono sempre più preoccupanti i segnali che si ricavano dai suoi ultimi discorsi e, soprattutto, si nota sempre più la regressione nella proprietà di linguaggio dalle interviste degli anni 80 rispetto ai discorsi di oggi. Il problema - riporta The Atlantic - è che, legalmente, non c’è un esperto designato che possa diagnosticare l’inabilità del presidente a fare il presidente.
Link: http://theatln.tc/2lRqsg7
Link: http://theatln.tc/2lRqsg7
The Atlantic
Is Something Neurologically Wrong With Donald Trump?
It is best not to diagnose the president from afar, which is why the federal government needs a system to evaluate him up close.
Se avete voglia di leggere un libro, magari vi ci vorrà un po' ma Cryptonomicon di Neal Stephenson rimane sempre un gran romanzo per nerd amanti del computer
Money quote: "Stephenson's antiquated commitment to narrative, his Dickensian brio, is part of what makes his gargantuan new novel, ''Cryptonomicon,'' distinct from the other outsize slabs of post-modern fiction we've seen recently -- David Foster Wallace's ''Infinite Jest,'' Don DeLillo's ''Underworld,'' Thomas Pynchon's ''Mason & Dixon.'' For all the pleasures scattered throughout those books, they're dry, somewhat forbidding epics that beckon industrious graduate students while checking the riffraff at the door. ''Cryptonomicon,'' on the other hand, is a wet epic -- as eager to please as a young-adult novel, it wants to blow your mind while keeping you well fed and happy. For the most part, it succeeds. It's brain candy for bitheads."
http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/05/23/reviews/990523.23garnert.html
Ne parlava molto bene anche il Guardian
Money quote: "It was that, much more than with Gibson, geeks could look at Stephenson and think, "One of us". He has in the past worked in computer start-ups. He has some knowledge of programming. Recently he put a lengthy essay on GNU/Linux and other operating systems up on the web. Most importantly, his books give the impression that he is as exhilarated as he is spooked by the various new computer technologies he imagines."
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/1999/oct/14/onlinesupplement14
Money quote: "Stephenson's antiquated commitment to narrative, his Dickensian brio, is part of what makes his gargantuan new novel, ''Cryptonomicon,'' distinct from the other outsize slabs of post-modern fiction we've seen recently -- David Foster Wallace's ''Infinite Jest,'' Don DeLillo's ''Underworld,'' Thomas Pynchon's ''Mason & Dixon.'' For all the pleasures scattered throughout those books, they're dry, somewhat forbidding epics that beckon industrious graduate students while checking the riffraff at the door. ''Cryptonomicon,'' on the other hand, is a wet epic -- as eager to please as a young-adult novel, it wants to blow your mind while keeping you well fed and happy. For the most part, it succeeds. It's brain candy for bitheads."
http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/05/23/reviews/990523.23garnert.html
Ne parlava molto bene anche il Guardian
Money quote: "It was that, much more than with Gibson, geeks could look at Stephenson and think, "One of us". He has in the past worked in computer start-ups. He has some knowledge of programming. Recently he put a lengthy essay on GNU/Linux and other operating systems up on the web. Most importantly, his books give the impression that he is as exhilarated as he is spooked by the various new computer technologies he imagines."
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/1999/oct/14/onlinesupplement14
the Guardian
Neal Stephenson's message in code
After Snow Crash's cyberpunk, it's cypherpunk, reports Jim McClellan
Una volta ho conosciuto una ragazza, all'inizio di un lungo viaggio in aereo. Si era portata dietro tre o quattro libri e mi aveva chiarito che lei aveva la passione dela lettura. Le ho chiesto di preferenza cosa leggesse. Mi ha risposto "Tutto". Si va bene, ma in particolare, c'è qualcosa che ti piace di più? "Tutto". Cioè, sì ho capito, ma leggi qualcosa in particolare? Narrativa, saggistica, gialli, rosa, thriller, romanzi storici, biografie? "Tutto". La conversazione è diventata sempre più surreale, mancava solo mi dicesse che poteva leggersi con passione e ardore anche le istruzioni della lavapanni. Non ne è nata una durevole amicizia. E poi, leggere tutto non fa bene.
Money quote: "Some real talk: most writing isn’t worth consuming. That includes cereal boxes and New York Times wedding announcements. More real talk: most people urging you to read widely probably have a hard time ranging outside their comfort zones. There’s no doubt that, in the political realm, we need more connection with those we disagree with. But for the most part, “read widely” belongs to a class of expression that’s good to be heard saying (as in: we need “more dialogue” or we need “to have a national conversation about sheet cake”)."
https://thewalrus.ca/the-case-against-reading-everything/
Money quote: "Some real talk: most writing isn’t worth consuming. That includes cereal boxes and New York Times wedding announcements. More real talk: most people urging you to read widely probably have a hard time ranging outside their comfort zones. There’s no doubt that, in the political realm, we need more connection with those we disagree with. But for the most part, “read widely” belongs to a class of expression that’s good to be heard saying (as in: we need “more dialogue” or we need “to have a national conversation about sheet cake”)."
https://thewalrus.ca/the-case-against-reading-everything/
The Walrus
The Case Against Reading Everything | The Walrus
Writing instructors preach exposure to different voices and styles. They are wrong
Ma ascoltare un audiolibro è la stessa cosa che leggerlo? Dal punto di vista squisitamente cognitivo, cambia qualcosa? Ecco, la risposta a quanto pare c'è. Ed è semplice: no, non cambia niente.
Money quote: "This question — whether or not listening to an audiobook is “cheating” — is one University of Virginia psychologist Daniel Willingham gets fairly often, especially ever since he published a book, in 2015, on the science of reading. (That one was about teaching children to read; he’s got another book out next spring about adults and reading.) He is very tired of this question, and so, recently, he wrote a blog post addressing it. (His opening line: “I’ve been asked this question a lot and I hate it.”) If, he argues, you take the question from the perspective of cognitive psychology — that is, the mental processes involved — there is no real difference between listening to a book and reading it. So, according to that understanding of the question: No, audiobooks are not cheating."
https://www.thecut.com/2016/08/listening-to-a-book-instead-of-reading-isnt-cheating.html
Money quote: "This question — whether or not listening to an audiobook is “cheating” — is one University of Virginia psychologist Daniel Willingham gets fairly often, especially ever since he published a book, in 2015, on the science of reading. (That one was about teaching children to read; he’s got another book out next spring about adults and reading.) He is very tired of this question, and so, recently, he wrote a blog post addressing it. (His opening line: “I’ve been asked this question a lot and I hate it.”) If, he argues, you take the question from the perspective of cognitive psychology — that is, the mental processes involved — there is no real difference between listening to a book and reading it. So, according to that understanding of the question: No, audiobooks are not cheating."
https://www.thecut.com/2016/08/listening-to-a-book-instead-of-reading-isnt-cheating.html
The Cut
To Your Brain, Listening to a Book Is Pretty Much the Same As Reading It
A cognitive psychologist on a question that annoys him.
Nostalgia del Commodore 64, il libro gigante per sfogliare la storia e i giochi - il mio articolo per Macity
https://www.macitynet.it/la-nostalgia-del-commodore-64/
https://www.macitynet.it/la-nostalgia-del-commodore-64/
Macitynet.it
Nostalgia del Commodore 64, il libro gigante per sfogliare la storia e i giochi - Macitynet.it
Un coffee table book “Nostagic Edition” celebra i giochi e il tempo del modello di computer più venduto nella storia. Il mitico Commodore 64 torna sotto forma di un libro ricco di foto a colori di tutti i principali giochi, una chicca per chi ha usato questa…
Forwarded from Social&Positive News - L'informazione che fa bene
📚👫 #Libri #EconomiaSolidale
Poche settimane fa a Firenze è stata inaugurata LiberPop, la prima libreria ad azionariato popolare della città. Un gruppo di cittadini ha preso in mano una libreria che rischiava il fallimento e la gestirà nelle modalità di un'associazione senza scopo di lucro: dunque il 51% degli introiti non proverrà dalla vendita di libri ma dal tesseramento. A mandare avanti la libreria saranno i soci, tali con una quota annua di 50 euro. Insieme decideranno come gestirla ma sono già tante le attività programmate: dai corsi di italiano per immigrati ed ex detenuti a quelli sul diritto d'autore e sul ciclo di produzione editoriale. E poi sarà attivato il meccanismo del reso e dell'usato, con la possibilità di riportare in libreria volumi già letti in cambio di uno sconto del 15%, rivenduti a loro volta con un ribasso del 50. Un modo per salvare dalla chiusura le librerie indipendenti, schiacciate dalla concorrenza delle grandi catene di distribuzione, ecco cosa sono le “librerie popolari”. Le prime esperienze sono state in Lombardia, a Saronno e Busto Arsizio, ma la più famosa è senz’altro la napoletana #Iocisto che, nata nel 2014 grazie ad una mobilitazione su Facebook, oggi conta ben 700 soci.
Poche settimane fa a Firenze è stata inaugurata LiberPop, la prima libreria ad azionariato popolare della città. Un gruppo di cittadini ha preso in mano una libreria che rischiava il fallimento e la gestirà nelle modalità di un'associazione senza scopo di lucro: dunque il 51% degli introiti non proverrà dalla vendita di libri ma dal tesseramento. A mandare avanti la libreria saranno i soci, tali con una quota annua di 50 euro. Insieme decideranno come gestirla ma sono già tante le attività programmate: dai corsi di italiano per immigrati ed ex detenuti a quelli sul diritto d'autore e sul ciclo di produzione editoriale. E poi sarà attivato il meccanismo del reso e dell'usato, con la possibilità di riportare in libreria volumi già letti in cambio di uno sconto del 15%, rivenduti a loro volta con un ribasso del 50. Un modo per salvare dalla chiusura le librerie indipendenti, schiacciate dalla concorrenza delle grandi catene di distribuzione, ecco cosa sono le “librerie popolari”. Le prime esperienze sono state in Lombardia, a Saronno e Busto Arsizio, ma la più famosa è senz’altro la napoletana #Iocisto che, nata nel 2014 grazie ad una mobilitazione su Facebook, oggi conta ben 700 soci.
Repubblica.it
LiberPop, apre la libreria dei cittadini
Sabato 16 l'inaugurazione alle Murate della nuova libreria, nata dalle "ceneri" del bookstore Nardini. E' la prima esperienza di libreria ad
Sull'importanza di scrivere e poi di riscrivere, riscrivere, riscrivere. Perché "some people revise, some people write"...
Money quote: "I’ve read shelves and shelves of novels. Hundreds of reviews. (I’ve written them, too.) Stacks of criticism. Biographies and memoirs of writers. But what matters to the present subject is this: I have immersed myself in the struggles of at least 200 aspiring novelists, many in one-week workshops in summer writing festivals over 20-plus years, and others in semester-long or year-long mentorships. I immerse myself in outlines and drafts. These writers have put themselves out there in a scary, exciting way. It has been my privilege to help them find new insights and fresh resolve. There is among aspiring writers an incredible range of interests, backgrounds, sense of story, and confidence, but there are many things they have in common. They are readers. They are intrigued by human nature. They are dogged."
http://lithub.com/how-important-is-the-first-draft-to-your-novel/
Money quote: "I’ve read shelves and shelves of novels. Hundreds of reviews. (I’ve written them, too.) Stacks of criticism. Biographies and memoirs of writers. But what matters to the present subject is this: I have immersed myself in the struggles of at least 200 aspiring novelists, many in one-week workshops in summer writing festivals over 20-plus years, and others in semester-long or year-long mentorships. I immerse myself in outlines and drafts. These writers have put themselves out there in a scary, exciting way. It has been my privilege to help them find new insights and fresh resolve. There is among aspiring writers an incredible range of interests, backgrounds, sense of story, and confidence, but there are many things they have in common. They are readers. They are intrigued by human nature. They are dogged."
http://lithub.com/how-important-is-the-first-draft-to-your-novel/
Literary Hub
How Important is the First Draft to Your Novel?
We’re an odd lot, novelists. Obsessive. Why else does someone launch a project that consumes so much time and holds out such a wavering promise of reward? I wrote my first three novels in deep nigh…
Chip sotto attacco: come cambia la geografia mondiale del silicio. Samsung supera Intel - il mio articolo per Il Sole 24 Ore
http://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/tecnologie/2018-01-05/samsung-primo-produttore-chip-mondo-come-cambia-geografia-silicio--155524.shtml
http://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/tecnologie/2018-01-05/samsung-primo-produttore-chip-mondo-come-cambia-geografia-silicio--155524.shtml
Il Sole 24 ORE
Chip sotto attacco: come cambia la geografia mondiale del silicio. Samsung supera Intel
La doppia vulnerabilità scoperta nei microprocessori, i cervelli elettronici dei computer, in questi giorni alza anche il velo su una geografia conosciuta soprattutto dagli addetti ai lavori. È il mondo delle CPU, molto più ampio e variegato di quanto non…
Gente morta che scriveva e che nel 2018 va nel pubblico dominio
Money quote: "Pictured above is our top pick of artists and writers whose works will, on 1st January 2018, enter the public domain in many countries around the world. Of the eleven featured, seven will be entering the public domain in countries with a “life plus 70 years” copyright term (e.g. most European Union members, Brazil, Israel, Nigeria, Russia, Turkey, etc.) and four in countries with a “life plus 50 years” copyright term (e.g. Canada, New Zealand, and many countries in Asia and Africa) — those that died in the year 1947 and 1967 respectively. As always it’s a miscellaneous medley assembled for our graduation photo, including one of the chief figures of the Surrealist movement, Gertrude Stein’s lover, the other Winston Churchill, a war poet, and a mystic, magician, and mountaineer once denounced as the “the wickedest man in the world”."
http://publicdomainreview.org/collections/class-of-2018/
Money quote: "Pictured above is our top pick of artists and writers whose works will, on 1st January 2018, enter the public domain in many countries around the world. Of the eleven featured, seven will be entering the public domain in countries with a “life plus 70 years” copyright term (e.g. most European Union members, Brazil, Israel, Nigeria, Russia, Turkey, etc.) and four in countries with a “life plus 50 years” copyright term (e.g. Canada, New Zealand, and many countries in Asia and Africa) — those that died in the year 1947 and 1967 respectively. As always it’s a miscellaneous medley assembled for our graduation photo, including one of the chief figures of the Surrealist movement, Gertrude Stein’s lover, the other Winston Churchill, a war poet, and a mystic, magician, and mountaineer once denounced as the “the wickedest man in the world”."
http://publicdomainreview.org/collections/class-of-2018/
The Public Domain Review
Class of 2018
Top Row (left to right): Aleister Crowley; René Magritte; Siegfried Sassoon Middle Row (left to right): Alice B. Toklas; Pierre Bonnard; Winston Churchill; M. P. Shiel Bottom Row (left to right): Jean Toomer; P. D. Ouspensky; Anna Wickham; Hans Fallada Pictured…
Lenovo presenta la collezione ThinkPad 2018, tutti con USB-C e super autonomia - il mio articolo per Macity
https://www.macitynet.it/lenovo-presenta-la-collezione-thinkpad-2018/
https://www.macitynet.it/lenovo-presenta-la-collezione-thinkpad-2018/
Macitynet.it
Lenovo presenta la collezione ThinkPad 2018, tutti con USB-C e super autonomia - Macitynet.it
Tutte le novità per le serie T, X, ed L della nuova gamma Lenovo ThinkPad 2018. Notebook e convertibili offrono più sicurezza, alimentatori USB-C per tutta la linea e migliorate prestazioni per il riconoscimento del volto con Windows Hello
In prova: la cover IVSO per Kindle Oasis 2017 - il mio articolo per Macity
https://www.macitynet.it/prova-la-cover-ivso-kindle-oasis-2017/
https://www.macitynet.it/prova-la-cover-ivso-kindle-oasis-2017/
Macitynet.it
In prova: la cover IVSO per Kindle Oasis 2017 - Macitynet.it
In attesa della versione ufficiale di Amazon, abbiamo provato una valida alternativa per proteggere il nostro prezioso e reader