Tackle email, scheduling, news, commutes, and more.
Nowadays, you can get a lot done before you’re even vertical in the morning. Here are a handful of apps to thumb through while you’re shaking off sleep and getting ready to start your day.
Tackle email, scheduling, news, commutes, and more.
Nowadays, you can get a lot done before you’re even vertical in the morning. Here are a handful of apps to thumb through while you’re shaking off sleep and getting ready to start your day.
And guess what? It doesn’t matter if you’re a CEO or a minimum wage worker.
Over the last few years, we’ve heard a lot about how artificial intelligence could put large numbers of people out of work. An often-cited study from Oxford University found that 47% of jobs in America are at “high risk of computerization” in the next 20 years. And more recent research from Forrester predicts a net loss of 9.1 million jobs in the next decade.
The New Yorker editor on how he spends his (precious little) time off.
David Remnick is the editor-in-chief of The New Yorker magazine, as well as host of its newly launched radio show and podcast, The New Yorker Radio Hour. Remnick began his reporting career at the Washington Post in 1982, later becoming the paper’s Moscow bureau chief and penning the Pulitzer Prize-winning book Lenin’s Tomb.
The same things people love about the social media age when they’re young may be increasing a later-life malaise.
It’s not a great time to be a mid-career adult. While youngsters are thriving in the modern world and happier than ever before, people in their thirties are hitting a wall. This is the fault both of the Internet and of our own unrealistic expectations.
The SuperLocal project is trying to prove it’s still possible to make high-quality goods in places that might seem impossible.
Andrea de Chirico’s SuperLocal Hairdryer is made entirely within a 2.8 mile stretch of road in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. From the electric heater elements to the hand-blown glass nozzle to the cork handle, everything was created or assembled within a day, at a total cost of €100 ($110).
Pentagram partner Emily Oberman gets high (design) with Snoop.
Snoop Dogg, aka Snoop Lion, aka Snoop Doggy Dog, doesn’t make any bones about it. He loves pot. The rap icon has just launched Leafs by Snoop, a brand of cannabis-based products including custom flavors of buds, edibles, and concentrates, and he has tapped Pentagram’s Emily Oberman to craft its visual identity.
The American liberal magazine’s readership is skewing younger than ever. That’s why the new design is practically mobile-first.
One hundred and one years old this month, The New Republic is probably America’s oldest liberal political magazine. But its readers are younger than ever. While the vast majority of The New Republic’s print readers have been historically over 55, 60% of TNR‘s online audience is between the ages of 18 and 44, and more than half of them visit the site exclusively on smartphones.
Or after 7 a.m. All the time really.
It’s been an honor to be your Tabs proprietor this week. I’ve been Laura Olin, Rusty has been over at Everything Changes with a dark mime story only he could write, and you all have been lovely.
Apple is encouraging users to migrate to Apple Music, which it touts as a better discovery tool.
Well, Beats Music, it was good knowing you. Apple is formally announcing that Beats Music is shutting down on November 30; the service’s mobile apps will stop working at that time. Users are being encouraged to switch over to Apple’s successor service, Apple Music, via a migration tool.
“Tumblr didn’t start off as a particularly social platform,” says founder David Karp.
Tumblr’s new instant messaging feature, which it launched to a limited pool of users on November 11th, is gaining momentum. Users sent more than 9 million messages in the first two days.