I heard of this story years ago, and was very dismayed. (There is no date on this website is this something new?)
however the last 2 years I've experienced kids being taught to read in US public school kindergarten and the curriculum was nothing like was described in this series. They were taught phonics and memorized common non-phonetic words the same way I was taught 30 years ago.
It's likely you got lucky or your state / school district already changed the curriculum.
The podcast goes into how over the past few years, there has been a lot of activism to shift schools from cueing back to phonics. At various levels of government, including state laws.
the page turn animation was probably the main reason i bought the original ipad. it was just so delightful. like some others, i miss the skeuomorphism of the original ios.
facebook basically did nothing to ensure third party apps & developers were not violating its data access and sharing policies. most developers know it has always been pretty easy to harvest data from facebook by tricking users and once you have the data you can do whatever you want with it.
facebook probably didn't do anything illegal, but many people feel they failed to sufficiently protect user data from bad actors.
It the absence of laws or regulations to punish facebook, the only recourse is for users to leave the platform. this probably won't happen b/c most people don't know or don't care. but if we think its in the public good to protect this data we should seek to pass some regulations that require platforms like facebook to meet an acceptable threshold of data protection.
given the effects that harvesting facebook data can have on elections, its probably a good idea for regulators to step in.
> Most people do not want to manage their own health records
How do you know? This isn't a capability right now. I suspect that once people have their record and can plug it in wherever they want, they'll like having it.
I was previously the administrator of a "patient portal" that was connected to our health record system.
we had a hard time getting people interested in using it and signing up. and those who did sign up rarely used it after the first few weeks.
when talking to people, the primary reason seemed to be that they wanted to communicate with a person for most healthcare related needs b/c they had questions or wanted clarification/re-enforcement. They used the online portal so infrequently that they never felt confident they could quickly get what they needed accomplished.
The notable exception is parents managing the records of their children, which I don't think will be a feature of this v1 health records app.
its all about user experience though. i'm hopeful Apple can delivery something that is better than what is available and has come before.
i'm worried b/c I don't see it as a v1 and done feature. It will take consistent interaction and improvement as health record systems change and capabilities increase. hopefully apple is committed to it.
I looked through my newsfeed this week for the first time in several months.
I thought the amount of trash posts and videos (which caused me to leave Facebook) had greatly declined, but wasn’t sure why. If it’s related to this change, it’s a good start.
While I’m skeptical of Facebook, I appreciate their attempt to improve if it’s genuine.
from the article:
“We want to make sure that our products are not just fun, but are good for people,” Mr. Zuckerberg said. “We need to refocus the system.”
genuine for me, is making changes that are good for people, even if they are bad for advertisers.
most of this sounds like good practice for any company that stores large amounts of sensitive data.
perhaps the features were used inappropriately, but I would hope Uber can remote wipe a laptop, log users out of company systems, or centrally enforce encryption policies.
this line is just silly.
--"Later versions of Ripley gave Uber the ability to selectively provide information to government agencies that searched the company’s foreign offices. At the direction of company lawyers, security engineers could select which information to share with officials who had warrants to access Uber’s systems, the people say"
What is the alternative? Giving law enforcement access to all data without any discretion? Querying ride data for 1 person is technically "selectively provide information", but that seems perfectly acceptable.
The majority of people on this site are from countries that work under the rule of the law. I understand that they'd feel uneasy by these subterfuges.
But in places like Russia, China, Belarus, most of Africa and parts of Latin America these resources are more than justified. You should fear the police as much as the bad guys.
Actually, as a non-American, if I were to land on an U.S. airport with a computer or cellphone I'd also take careful measures to avoid abusive searches, even if they're substantiated by law.
The headline of this is that it was implemented in response to a legal police search that resulted in uber getting banned in a country because it was breaking the law. It was then repeatedly used to obstruct justice.
This wouldn't be news if I told you that Intel makes its engineers encrypt their hard disks and require passwords on wake and insist no one leave their computer unlocked.
The news here is that they're using this technology specifically for obstruction of justice.
But locking out all users by office? I can't think of a legitimate use case for that. Locking/wiping devices of people who left the company is standard but why for a whole office? Robbery doesn't really apply, either they do it when no one's in the office (devices locked anyway) or you won't be able to call HQ.
I couldn't figure out how to exit the full screen interactive code view.
The button to delete a todo and "check" a todo are pretty close together, easy to click the wrong one. maybe move the check to the left side of the text?
I upgrade an old 2011/2012 MacBook Pro to high Sierra so I could download the latest Xcode.
there has been a few times since then that the machine will freeze then show a folder with question mark icon.
surprisingly it boots up fine after turning it off and on again, but I'm worried it won't last long.
its a bummer b/c even though the machine is old, I upgraded to 8gb of ram and 500gb ssd and the performance is comprisable to a new MacBook a just got.
however the last 2 years I've experienced kids being taught to read in US public school kindergarten and the curriculum was nothing like was described in this series. They were taught phonics and memorized common non-phonetic words the same way I was taught 30 years ago.