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Get ready for home appliances that track your movements and know what you want before you do. Un article d’Adrienne Lafrance dans The Atlantic
Get ready for home appliances that track your movements and know what you want before you do. Un article d’Adrienne Lafrance dans The Atlantic
Local and organic is a romantic myth – the future of sustainable agriculture is all about smart technology and scaling up Splat goes the theory , by Louise O Fresco, Aeon Magazine
Sue Halpern The New York Review of Books Every day a piece of computer code is sent to me by e-mail from a website to which I subscribe called IFTTT. Those letters stand for the phrase “if this then that,” and the code is in the form of a “recipe” that has the power to…
Le blogue de Michel Dumais
By BRIAN X. CHEN, The New York Times
Marcus Wohlsen Wired (…) Since the beginning, Google has cultivated the idea that its results are—like good journalism—unbiased, complete, and compelling. Nowhere is that message more clearly telegraphed than in the design of Google’s search interface itself. Google isn’t a person. It’s just this little box. Put your search here and the smartest computers in…
Quentin Hardy New York Times The Pew Research Center, one of the better-known think tanks, on Thursday published the third in a series called “Digital Life in 2025.” Even taken as a snapshot of today and not the world to come, the report, titled “Net Threats,” is pretty dark reading.
The New York Times This page is a growing collection of all the mobile app coverage that has appeared in The New York Times, both in print and online. Check back often, as this page will be updated regularly. We will also feature lists of favorite apps from Times writers. Click on any of the…
In a recent survey of workers, 50 percent said they checked email while in bed, and 38 percent “routinely” checked it at the dinner table. New research suggests that asking too much of workers during off hours can seriously backfire. —By Clive Thompson, Mother Jones Illustration: Shout
Par André Bélanger Aujourd’hui, 40 % des acheteurs de voitures estiment que la technologie et les gadgets dans une voiture constituent la première raison de choisir une marque plutôt qu’une autre et un fabricant d’automobile sur quatre estime que la voiture sera un nouveau canal pour le commerce électronique. Comme partout ailleurs, l’industrie automobile est en pleine…