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Mostly, I Write
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Storie e pensieri suoi e di altri, raccolti da Antonio Dini http://www.antoniodini.com
Per contatti su Telegram: @antoniodini
Per iscriversi alla newsletter Mostly Weekly: https://tinyletter.com/MostlyIWrite
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Forwarded from Fumettologica
44 fumetti da leggere questa estate, consigliati e commentati dalla redazione e dai collaboratori di Fumettologica che ne hanno scelti due a testa: una novità pubblicata di recente e un recupero dai loro scaffali 👉 https://bit.ly/2JMRi5l.
Il MacBook Retina 12 non c'è (quasi) più: addio a un'ottima idea che poteva essere implementata meglio - il mio articolo per Macity

https://www.macitynet.it/mac-book-12-retina-addio/
Malware, Deep Web, hackers, violazioni. In realtà, se vi ricordate anche nei "Tre giorni del Condor" (sei nel libro) con Robert Redford, il grande gioco delle spie è raccogliere informazioni che sono già pubbliche

Money quote: "he case exemplifies the way insider trading has been quietly revolutionized by the internet. Traders no longer need someone inside a company to obtain inside information. Instead, they can turn to hackers, who can take their pick of security weaknesses: a large corporation or bank may have good in-house security, but the entities it works with — such as financial institutions, law firms, brokerages, smaller investment advisories, or, in this case, newswires — might not."

https://www.theverge.com/2018/8/22/17716622/sec-business-wire-hack-stolen-press-release-fraud-ukraine
Grande Fratello? Facebook? Le telecamere del centro di Londra? I cinesi stanno portando il gioco a un altro livello. E la sua libreria fa paura, in senso letterale, non letterario.

Money quote: "Since becoming general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in 2012, Xi has laid out a raft of ambitious plans for the country, many of them rooted in technology—including a goal to become the world leader in artificial intelligence by 2030. Xi has called for “cyber sovereignty” to enhance censorship and assert full control over the domestic internet. In May, he told a meeting of the Chinese Academy of Sciences that technology was the key to achieving “the great goal of building a socialist and modernized nation.” In January, when he addressed the nation on television, the bookshelves on either side of him contained both classic noscripts such as Das Kapital and a few new additions, including two books about artificial intelligence: Pedro Domingos’s The Master Algorithm and Brett King’s Augmented: Life in the Smart Lane."

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/611815/who-needs-democracy-when-you-have-data/
È un po' come ai dadi: quando te ne viene bene una, probabilmente te ne vengono bene anche altre due o tre. Peccato non se ne sia occupato Malcom Gladwell: con molto meno ci scrive un libro (anche se da un po' pare abbia finito la sua serie buona).

Money quote: "Looking at the career histories of thousands of scientists, artists, and film directors, the team found evidence that hot streaks are both real and ubiquitous, with virtually everyone experiencing one at some point in their career. While the timing of an individual’s greatest successes is indeed random, their top hits are highly likely to appear in close proximity."

https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/career-hot-streaks
Il software per tracciare le persone tramite le email. Una bella lezione di cosa succede nella sfera pubblica se la notizia diventa conosciuta

Money quote: "It is disappointing then that one of the most hyped new email clients, Superhuman, has decided to embed hidden tracking pixels inside of the emails its customers send out. Superhuman calls this feature “Read Receipts” and turns it on by default for its customers, without the consent of its recipients. You’ve heard the term “Read Receipts” before, so you have most likely been conditioned to believe it’s a simple “Read/Unread” status that people can opt out of. With Superhuman, it is not. If I send you an email using Superhuman (no matter what email client you use), and you open it 9 times, this is what I see..."

https://mikeindustries.com/blog/archive/2019/06/superhuman-is-spying-on-you
Come ogni domenica (all'incirca) è uscita Mostly Weekly, la newsletter settimanale di questo canale. Per riceverla ci si iscrive qui: https://tinyletter.com/MostlyIWrite
Cos'è Costco e come funziona. Un pezzetto di storia del retail che da noi (per fortuna) non esiste.

Money quote: "On first impression, Costco makes no sense.

It is a place where you can buy, in the course of one trip, a 27-pound bucket of mac and cheese, a patio table, a wedding dress, a casket, a handle of gin, a tank of gas, a passport photo, a sheepskin rug, a chicken coop, prenoscription medications, life insurance, a $1.50 hotdog, and a $250,000 diamond ring.

Items sit on wooden pallets in dark, unmarked aisles. Brand selection is limited. And you pay a $60 annual membership fee just to get in the door.

The end goal: To cut the “fat” out of traditional retail and pass on the savings to loyal customers and employees."

https://thehustle.co/costco-membership-economics/
Segnatevi questo post: tra un annetto o giù di lì anche a Milano e in qualche altra città storica italiana parleranno di "foreste urbane". Scommettete?

Money quote: "Paris is what’s called an “urban heat island.” When there’s a heatwave, the city is typically much hotter than its suburban surroundings, or the French countryside. The mayor’s plan to plant “isles of coolness” will create natural shade over or around many of Paris’s iconic architectural sites, including the Eiffel Tower."

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/paris-climate-change-urban-forests-landmarks
Missioni impossibili: insegnare ai giornalisti a usare Excel (e poi Big Data e Data Visualization, why not?)

Money quote: "Even with some of the best data and graphics journalists in the business, we identified a challenge: data knowledge wasn’t spread widely among desks in our newsroom and wasn’t filtering into news desks’ daily reporting.
Yet fluency with numbers and data has become more important than ever. While journalists once were fond of joking that they got into the field because of an aversion to math, numbers now comprise the foundation for beats as wide ranging as education, the stock market, the Census and criminal justice. More data is released than ever before — there are nearly 250,000 datasets on data.gov alone — and increasingly, government, politicians and companies try to twist those numbers to back their own agendas."

https://open.nytimes.com/how-we-helped-our-reporters-learn-to-love-spreadsheets-adc43a93b919