Totally WIRED: Diaries of an unbridled digitopian
págs. 6-6
págs. 8-8
Sinister Softness: The human senses never cease detecting things the brain finds a way to dread.
págs. 11-13
The ASMR Cure: Come for the tingly auditory triggers, stay for the existential coping mechanism.
págs. 14-16
Life On The Edge: If you worry about the privacy of smart home devices, there's an AI for you.
págs. 18-19
The Heat Is On: Automated solar arrays could help incinerate global warming.
págs. 20-21
The Parent Trap: The same technology that's made working from home easier than ever has fundamentally changed what “home” means to me.
págs. 30-30
Certified Organic: Humans, not algorithms, determine those ubiquitous Rotten Tomatoes scores. Good ingredients, imperfect recipe.
págs. 32-37
Cloudy With A Chance Of Catastrophe: How Washington went to war against Huawei, and why the runaway conflict could spell the end of a single, Global Internet.
págs. 40-55
The Secret History Of Facial Recognition: Sixty years ago, a Sharecropper's son invented a technology to identify faces. Then the record of his role all but vanished. Who was Woody Bledsoe, and who was he working for?
págs. 56-65
págs. 68-75
The Anatomy Of Desire: To get past misinformation and tribal rancor online, we need to face why people want misinformation and rancor.
págs. 76-81
‘I'm Not Pessimistic About This’: UN secretary-general António Guterres on technology, democracy, and how to keep the world from coming undone.
págs. 82-83
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