Better browsers made things worse.
The case for teaching coders to speak French
Word search isn’t just for children anymore.
Four steps for getting over a very bad relationship
4K resolution is a sham.
Airplanes aren’t made for this much luggage
A dispatch from the gypsum dunes of cyberspace
It isn’t DEI.
The mouse is sorely missed.
Emoji, tapbacks, and thumbs-ups were devised to spare your time and attention. Now they’ve become a chore.
Do photos, social posts, and diaries actually help us remember better?
It could help to examine the cosmos.
Claudine Gay was taken down by a politically motivated investigation. Would the same approach work for any academic?
There’s a difference between leisure and laziness.
Sometimes workplace culture requires you to leave the rest of your life at the door. What if there are better ways to structure time?
If time is a luxury, why don’t we flaunt it?
In a culture obsessed with productivity, what would it mean to commit to letting it go?
Co-hosts Becca Rashid and the Atlantic contributing writer Ian Bogost examine our relationship with time and what we can do to reclaim it.
New technologies for making pictures can be prosthetics for your mind.
The pumpkin spice latte has defined fall for 20 years.