3D Printers and Sewing Machines
Slate recently published an article about 3d printing [http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2014/03/solidoodle_4_testing_the_home_3_d_printer.html] in which the author compared it to
I transform code into physical objects | New Initiatives at Amazon | Co Founder at Mixee Labs
Slate recently published an article about 3d printing [http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2014/03/solidoodle_4_testing_the_home_3_d_printer.html] in which the author compared it to
MOOCs (massive open online courses [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massive_open_online_course] are gaining popularity, but do they disrupt education by opening up lectures? I don’t think so. Education, especially
I was reading an article yesterday about a customer who yelled at this cashier. This cashier had Aspergers and the customer thought he moved too slow. The writer clearly thought the customer behaved
“Long time ago, there were a whole lot of cities in Spira. Big cities with machina -machines- to run ‘em. People played all day and let the machina do the work” — Wakka, Final
When I was a freshmen in college, I enrolled in a writing intensive humanities program. We were assigned a paper (almost) every week. When my drafts were poor, my professor would recommend the