This week, our friends at NPR's Tell Me More turned the spotlight on — a demographic that's underrepresented in the field, as Gene Demby explored when covering . The conversation continues on Twitter through Dec. 20, where tech thinkers will live-tweet their days and answer questions about the field. You can participate by using and follow the progress on .
The Protojournalist's Linton Weeks asked whether is still relevant. Alex Madrigal gave recommendations on what to do with . Also, for those more into small animals than small people, Bill Chappell alerted us to the Christmas Cats TV, a live webcast that wants you to adopt cats (in sweaters) from a shelter.
In our collection on gaming: Steve Mullis featured an called The Swapper, and Thomas Andrew Gustafson found a game that turns players into
The Big Conversation
Amazon made the headlines this week after CEO Jeff Bezos announced that the company is pursuing technology — inciting a short media frenzy and immediate skepticism. Amazon promised that safety would be its , but TechCrunch speculated on why this project as hoped.
The Washington Post released yet another batch of NSA revelations, with an eye-catching on how the NSA is collecting billions of records a day on the location of mobile phones. And NPR tech editor Avie Schneider highlighted another way that cybersecurity could be (uplifting, we know).
Also in the intersection of government and technology, federal officials released what they called an improved version of HealthCare.gov. Politico reported that for health insurance on Sunday and Monday, and NPR health policy correspondent Julie Rovner looked at some of the as well as lingering issues with the signup system. And NPR's Steve Henn looked at , which is being built by tech giant Oracle.
Other Curiosities
BBC News:
The most popular compromised password? 123456. If that's yours, we recommend a change, because one security researcher says it's useful as a "chocolate teapot," which we presume is not very.
Computerworld:
As early as next year, the electric-hybrid Prius may be able to be charged without being plugged in. WiTricity, based in Massachusetts, says wireless charging works just as fast as its conventional alternative.
Reuters:
Smartphones are gaining a foothold around the world, but many people in emerging markets only have regular old cellphones. U2opia Mobile, a Singapore-based startup, will make Twitter's trending topics available on mobile phones that don't have Internet access.
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