Lycos. AltaVista. Excite. HotBot. AskJeeves. There were plenty of players vying for the crown when our internet experience migrated from directories to search. Then came Google, the monster that overtook the web. It's been a hell of a run and Google is probably bigger and more deeply embedded into our culture than anyone imagined it would be. But, when it comes to search, is Google still the best way to experience the internet? And while we're on the topic, is search the best way to find? Ryan Broderick in The Verge: "For two decades, Google Search was the largely invisible force that determined the ebb and flow of online content. Now, for the first time since Google’s launch, a world without it at the center actually seems possible. We’re clearly at the end of one era and at the threshold of another. But to understand where we’re headed, we have to look back at how it all started." The end of the Googleverse. While we focus a lot on new consumer technologies like ChatGPT, Google has been changing what search means for years. What started as a tool to send you off to the correct destination on the web is now a machine designed to keep users on Google and learn more and more about them until you realize the thing being searched is you. 2That Sucking SoundIn the future, our most urgent searches might be for natural resources. We talk a lot about hitting peak oil. At the rate we're sucking H2O out of the ground, we may have hit peak water. NYT (Gift Article): America Is Using Up Its Groundwater Like There’s No Tomorrow. "Groundwater loss is hurting breadbasket states like Kansas, where the major aquifer beneath 2.6 million acres of land can no longer support industrial-scale agriculture. Corn yields have plummeted. If that decline were to spread, it could threaten America’s status as a food superpower. Fifteen hundred miles to the east, in New York State, overpumping is threatening drinking-water wells on Long Island, birthplace of the modern American suburb and home to working class towns as well as the Hamptons and their beachfront mansions. Around Phoenix, one of America’s fastest growing cities, the crisis is severe enough that the state has said there’s not enough groundwater in parts of the county to build new houses that rely on aquifers." I drink your milkshake (because I ran out of other things to drink...) 3Home School Math Lesson"Farris made the same points he had made in courtrooms since the 1980s. Public schools were indoctrinating children with a secular worldview that amounted to a godless religion, he said. The solution: lawsuits alleging that schools’ teachings about gender identity and race are unconstitutional, leading to a Supreme Court decision that would mandate the right of parents to claim billions of tax dollars for private education or home schooling." If you want to connect the dots when it comes to book bans and the relentless attacks on school boards (and many of our key national political battles), you have to understand this story. WaPo (Gift Article): The Christian home-schooler who made ‘parental rights’ a GOP rallying cry. 4Bean There"Sure, we're talking about a restaurant in a strip mall. But to its regulars, a place like Java Jazz is the most special hole-in-the-wall in the world. And now more than ever, it's a relief to see familiar faces." NPR: This cafe never closed after Lahaina's fires, extending a lifeline of normalcy. 5Extra, ExtraIdalia Update: "Idalia has strengthened into a Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of up to 80 mph and is expected to intensify considerably into a powerful Category 3 hurricane before making landfall in Florida on Wednesday." Here's the latest on what looks to be a major storm. 6Bottom of the News"While we will continue to share as much information as possible as this work progresses, we are not able to share any information that might compromise the investigation." School is back in session at University of Michigan. But the internet is out. Get a copy of my 📕, Please Scream Inside Your Heart, or grab a 👕 in the Store. |
Lisa Kashinsky and Kelly Garrity's must-read rundown of what's up on Beacon Hill and beyond. Jan 09, 2024 View in browser By Kelly Garrity and Lisa Kashinsky MAKING ENDS MEET — Gov. Maura Healey’s plan to slash $375 million from the state budget to help plug a $1 billion revenue hole came as something of a surprise after she initially said she had no plans to scale back spending. But some budget watchers say the move to control costs was inevitable — and that the governor...
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