Watch Short Doc On The Internet Archive And Their Impossible Task (Video)
May 07, 2013 20:56
The Internet Archive celebrated a massive milestone last year when it reached 10 Petabytes of stored information. That means 10,000,000,000,000,000 bytes accessible to anyone. That's super huge.
Jonathan Minard was on hand at the celebration and made a short documentary where he speaks to the Archive's founders about how it expanded from a project dedicated to cataloging everything ever published online. Talk about super scribes. Check it out after the jump:
Aviator does not behave like an old casino game moved onto a screen. It feels more like something built for the screen from the start. The plane takes off, the multiplier rises, and the player has one decision to make. Cash out now, or wait and risk the round ending before they press the button. That is the basic idea behind crash games. They strip the round down to timing. The game shows the risk in real time instead of hiding it behind a spin or a dealt card. Read more
Walk through any modern wellness expo and you’ll see a striking pattern: people aren’t just buying supplements anymore — they’re buying signals. Red light panels, PEMF mats, vagus nerve stimulators, biofeedback rings, grounding sheets. The wellness aisle has quietly become an electronics aisle. And tucked inside that shift is one of the more unusual comeback stories in alternative health: the return of Rife frequencies. Read more
Finding the right place for weight care can feel kind of personal. You are not just picking a clinic near your home. You are trusting someone with your health, time, money, and hopes. A good center should listen before it talks. Read more