Shared posts

26 Nov 17:00

Moms, Here's How Marketers Are Getting You to Spend Money

by Michelle Woo on Offspring, shared by Michelle Woo to Lifehacker

I’ve hardly purchased any new items for my second baby on the way, but I’ve wanted to—this is evidenced by the smattering of product screenshots I’ve saved. In the middle of the night, when I can’t seem to get my nine-month-pregnant body comfortable in my monster sausage of a maternity pillow, I’ll move to the sofa…

Read more...

26 Nov 13:52

Stop Taking Fake Breaks 

by Michelle Woo

When your brain is warped, the easy thing to do is zone out on social media, checking to see what Chrissy Teigen had for dinner last night or finding out which unpopular Halloween candy you are. You tell yourself, “I need this.” Sure, fine. But know that you’re not really recharging.

Read more...

25 Nov 23:02

Want to Be Happier? Stop Doing These 10 Things Right Now

by Jeff Haden
Click here to read Want to Be Happier? Stop Doing These 10 Things Right Now Happiness—in your business life and your personal life—is often a matter of subtraction, not addition. Consider, for example, what happens when you stop doing the following things. More »
25 Nov 23:00

This Kimchi Pork Roast Will Warm You to Your Bones

by Claire Lower on Skillet, shared by Claire Lower to Lifehacker

Brisk fall weather goes by many names. To some, it’s known as “cuffing season.” To others, it’s “pumpkin spice time.” To me it’s “panic-about-Thanksgiving o’clock,” but it’s also “roast season”—my favorite time of year.

Read more...

25 Nov 22:30

5 Things Everyone Gets Wrong About Independent Music News

by Trap Nerd™
Pexels / Pixabay
25 Nov 22:10

Ohio is the first state to accept bitcoin for paying business taxes

by Jon Fingas
There's a lot of legal uncertainty in the US surrounding cryptocurrency, but Ohio is pressing forward. As of this week, it'll be the first state to accept bitcoin for paying tax bills. The Wall Street Journal notes this will be limited to businesses...
25 Nov 22:09

100 Websites That Shaped the Internet as We Know It

by Gizmodo Staff on Gizmodo, shared by Virginia K. Smith to Lifehacker

The World Wide Web is officially old enough for us judge what it’s produced. That’s right, it’s time for the world to start building a canon of the most significant websites of all time, and the Gizmodo staff has opinions.

Read more...

25 Nov 22:06

These Are the Best Countries for Expats to Work In

by Emily Price

If you’re considering relocating to a different country for work, some destinations are better than others. HSBC recently conducted its annual Expat Explorer survey, a global survey that looks at 22,318 expats across 163 different countries. When comparing countries based on economics, experience, and family life, the…

Read more...

25 Nov 21:50

Learn Web Development for Free With App Academy

by Nick Douglas

Coding school App Academy has opened a free online interactive version of its 12-week curriculum. That’s a pretty good deal, since the Academy’s in-person classes in San Francisco and New York can cost as much as a semester in college. The online version involves less direct human interaction, but it includes online…

Read more...

25 Nov 15:07

How to Get Free Drinks on a Plane 

by Claire Lower on Skillet, shared by Claire Lower to Lifehacker

Air travel is stressful, and one of the easiest ways to alleviate stress is to get slightly blitzed. Plane drinks are, however, a little overpriced: Therefore, we feel okay about offering a few sneaky ways to get free libations while you’re flying.

Read more...

25 Nov 15:05

How to Make People Think of You for Opportunities

by Nick Douglas

If you’ve ever gotten a job or a gig because someone “thought of you,” you’ve benefited from networking. Good networking doesn’t require anything slimy or selfish. It requires that you define yourself. And that means paying more attention to how you act when you meet or catch up with people.

Read more...

25 Nov 01:31

You Can Take These 600 Online Courses for Free

by Alicia Adamczyk

You no longer need to be a Harvard student or Princeton grad to benefit from instruction at these exclusive institutions. You can access some of their most popular classes online via MOOCs.

Read more...

25 Nov 00:04

Make Your Own Custom Emoji Using This Site

by Emily Price

Sometimes the emoji keyboard on your smartphone doesn’t have exactly what you’re looking for.

Read more...

24 Nov 21:26

7 Top Reasons Why Music is So Important

by Mixxwire Writers

Everyone loves music. Music is everywhere, it pervades our world. Everyone knows music has power and importance. But have you ever stopped to consider why? What it is about music that gives it so much power and importance?

Here are seven top reasons:

  1. Music is a universal language. It inspires common human feelings and bridges gaps between cultures that spoken languages cannot. It brings people together and creates universal community.
  2. Music inspires and evokes emotion in a healthy way. It touches our emotional being and evokes moods and feelings that are sometimes difficult to express. It can change a difficult mood and make it happy or excited; it can change a light mood and take it deeper and more profound.
  3. Music enhances learning and makes it more enjoyable. It is scientifically proven that music enhances brain functioning. Playing music uses many brain functions simultaneously: motor control, imagination, hearing, sight, memory, etc.

  4. Music creates ambiance. You can use music in any environment to enhance and augment what is already there. Consider the difference between a party with music and one without, or a sporting event, or a movie, or a romantic restaurant, or driving in your car…
  5. Music is spiritual. Music is of the spirit and inspirational to the spirit. All religions use music to help express spiritual values, and all religions use music to uplift the spirit.
  6. Music sparks the imagination. It invokes mental imagery and inner scenery that opens the mind to amazing insight and spans the distance between the stars.
  7. Music is a simple pleasure. All it takes is your ears and your imagination.

I believe that at the center of the phenomenon of the magic that music creates is the spiritual aspect.

Source by Mark Maxwell

23 Nov 12:56

No Such Thing as Too Much Exercise, Study Finds

by Ed Cara

Too much of a good thing can be definitely bad for us. But a new study published Friday in JAMA Network Open suggests that exercise is a clear exception. It found that any level of cardiovascular fitness—including the kind you’d see from elite athletes—is linked to staying alive longer.

Read more...

23 Nov 12:45

The Main Ingredient in Psychedelic Mushrooms Is Closer to Becoming an FDA-Approved Depression Treatment

by Ed Cara

The active ingredient that makes magic mushrooms so magic—the psychedelic drug psilocybin—is one step closer to becoming a legal treatment for difficult cases of depression. This week, the company Compass Pathways announced that it had received the Food and Drug Administration’s Breakthrough Therapy designation for its…

Read more...

23 Nov 12:44

That Adorable Baby Octopus Is Actually a Pea-Sized Killer

by Catie Keck

An image of a pea-sized cephalopod captured by a team of scientists in Hawaii has been making the rounds this week as the result of how cute this tiny squish appears at first glance. But make no mistake, even a baby octopus can be a cold-hearted killer—and there’s photographic evidence to prove it.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:48

Why a Mission to a Visiting Interstellar Object Could Be Our Best Bet for Finding Aliens

by George Dvorsky

Life may exist elsewhere in the Milky Way galaxy, though try as they might, scientists have yet to detect any sign of it. Part of the problem has to do with the size of space; finding traces of organic substances or the waste signatures of alien megastructures isn’t easy at such cosmic distances. Fortunately, there’s…

Read more...

23 Nov 10:35

New Study Details Toxic Particles Spewed by 3D Printers

by George Dvorsky

Researchers have that found that 3D printers spew tiny particles into the air as they operate, though the quantity and nature of these potentially toxic aerosols are poorly understood. A new study identifies a startling variety of these emissions, and the conditions under which they’re produced.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:34

Juno’s Latest Pic of Clouds on Jupiter Is an Absolute Stunner

by George Dvorsky

The largest planet in our Solar System also happens to be one of the most beautiful, as the Juno spacecraft’s latest image reveals.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:33

New Mucus Study Could Hold the Key to Clearing Your Phlegm

by Ryan F. Mandelbaum

Mucus, you fickle fiend—usually, you’re there keeping us safe from whatever nasties sneak inside of us. But then you turn, becoming a source of discomfort, canceled plans, and overall malaise. How I wish we knew you better.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:32

So What's Going on With That 'Hurricane of Dark Matter?'

by Ryan F. Mandelbaum

It’s the perfect science-fiction device: a hurricane of dark matter. Recent, real-life research has demonstrated that our Sun is currently engulfed in a so-called a stellar stream. Some publications have seized on this ominous-sounding idea, reporting that Earth is about to be walloped by a dark matter storm—but in…

Read more...

23 Nov 10:32

Neanderthals Weren't the Violent Brutes We Thought, New Research Finds

by George Dvorsky

The stereotype of a typical Neanderthal life is that it was extraordinarily difficult, violent, and traumatic. But a comparative analysis of the remains left behind by Neanderthals and contemporaneous humans is finally overturning this unwarranted assumption.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:31

Scientists Spot Tantalizing New Super-Earth Around Nearby Star

by Ryan F. Mandelbaum

Scientists have spotted strong evidence of a super-Earth orbiting the second-closest star system to the Sun, according to new research.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:31

Why Cancer Is Replacing Heart Disease as the Leading Cause of Death in the U.S.

by Ed Cara

Heart disease has long been the number one killer in the United States. But a new study out this week is the latest to suggest that it’s only a matter of time before the second leading cause of death—cancer—becomes more commonly fatal for the average person. On the bright side, though, that’s largely because we’ve…

Read more...

23 Nov 10:28

First Major Rain in Centuries Triggers Wave of Death in Earth's Driest Desert

by George Dvorsky

After not experiencing any meaningful amounts of precipitation for at least 500 years, Chile’s Atacama Desert is finally getting some rain. Quite unexpectedly, however, these rains—instead of fostering life—are doing the exact opposite.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:26

Should You Be Eating a High-Fat, Low-Carb Diet Like Keto? Scientists Weigh In

by Catie Keck

Diet fads often make the lofty claim that adjusting food habits one way or another will produce the dieter’s desired results. More specifically: Eat this, not that, and watch the pounds fall off. But diets are hard to sustain, and it seems like diet debunking is constantly calling into question what and how much we…

Read more...

23 Nov 10:25

Spacecraft Witness Explosion in Earth's Magnetic Field

by Ryan F. Mandelbaum

Magnetic fields around the Earth release strong bursts of energy, accelerating particles and feeding the auroras that glow in the polar skies. On July 11, 2017, four NASA spacecrafts were there to watch one of these explosions happen.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:24

Jennie-O Recalls More Than 91,000 Pounds of Raw Ground Turkey Amid Salmonella Outbreak

by Catie Keck

Jennie-O Turkey recalled more than 91,000 pounds of raw ground turkey this week amid a nationwide Salmonella turkey outbreak. The move marks the first reported recall of non-pet food meat in the outbreak that’s sickened at least 164 people and is linked to one death.

Read more...

23 Nov 10:17

Blockchain Is Especially at Risk for Quantum Attacks, Scientists Warn

by Ryan F. Mandelbaum

Blockchain is meant to be secure—but a new paper from quantum computing scientists warns that quickly advancing quantum technology poses a vulnerability for the much-hyped blockchain.

Read more...