Page Headline
Nancy Pelosi Is Resigned to Her Fate With Impeachment
Article Headline
This Is Not Where Nancy Pelosi Wanted to Be
Tweet
Nancy Pelosi never really wanted impeachment. Now she seems resigned to her fate, writes Todd S. Purdum:
Addendum (1/24/2020):
Page Headline
Why Do American Houses Have So Many Bathrooms?
Article Headline
America Is Overrun With Bathrooms
Tweet
"What used to be the smallest room in the house now holds the key to our anxieties about hygiene, cleanliness, consumerism, and the power of a room of one’s own," @DKThomp writes:
Showing posts with label The Atlantic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Atlantic. Show all posts
Saturday, December 7, 2019
Monday, January 6, 2014
In-Depth, First-Person Reflections on Sensitive Subjects Are the Atlantic’s Specialty
1. Caring for Your Introvert, by Jonathan Rauch
The habits and needs of a little-understood group.
2. Hacked!, by James Fallows
As email, documents, and almost every aspect of our professional and personal lives moves onto the “cloud”—remote servers we rely on to store, guard, and make available all of our data whenever and from wherever we want them, all the time and into eternity—a brush with disaster reminds the author and his wife just how vulnerable those data can be. A trip to the inner fortress of Gmail, where Google developers recovered six years’ worth of hacked and deleted e‑mail, provides specific advice on protecting and backing up data now—and gives a picture both consoling and unsettling of the vulnerabilities we can all expect to face in the future.
3. Surviving Anxiety, by Scott Stossel
I’ve tried therapy, drugs, and booze. Here’s how I came to terms with the nation’s most common mental illness.
The habits and needs of a little-understood group.
2. Hacked!, by James Fallows
As email, documents, and almost every aspect of our professional and personal lives moves onto the “cloud”—remote servers we rely on to store, guard, and make available all of our data whenever and from wherever we want them, all the time and into eternity—a brush with disaster reminds the author and his wife just how vulnerable those data can be. A trip to the inner fortress of Gmail, where Google developers recovered six years’ worth of hacked and deleted e‑mail, provides specific advice on protecting and backing up data now—and gives a picture both consoling and unsettling of the vulnerabilities we can all expect to face in the future.
3. Surviving Anxiety, by Scott Stossel
I’ve tried therapy, drugs, and booze. Here’s how I came to terms with the nation’s most common mental illness.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)