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Saturday, July 7, 2018

Why France produces the most World Cup players

This Art Is a Big Deal

Inside The Ultimate Club For Car Enthusiasts

Drive Monster Machines At Construction Equipment Playground

Graham Norton Compares His Show With Stephen's

This is Not New

https://video.salon.com/m/zpqxCgfw/salon-5-on-detainment

Dele Alli's Rise From the Street to the World Cup

The Best Brownies You'll Ever Eat

Don't Worry Be Happy | Playing For Change | Song Around The World

Luther Vandross - Buy me a rose

Tie a yellow ribbon 'round the ole oak tree Lyrics Fixed

How Automated Parking Garages Work

Could You Survive the Stanford Prison Experiment

How This Artist Makes Miniature Designer Shoes

Tour the World - Official Music Video

Friday, July 6, 2018

Saving Us From Ourselves

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

Rebel developers are trying to cure our smartphone addiction — with an app
By William Wan

To understand why it’s so hard to pry yourself free from your phone, Facebook account and Twitter, you need to know about B.F. Skinner’s pigeons.

In the 1950s, Skinner began putting the birds in a box and training them to peck on a piece of plastic whenever they wanted food. Then the Harvard psychology researcher rigged the system so that not every peck would yield a tasty treat. It became random — a reward every three pecks, then five pecks, then two pecks.

The pigeons went crazy and began pecking compulsively for hours on end.

Fast forward six decades. We have become the pigeons pecking at our iPhones, scrolling through news feeds, swiping left/right on Tinder for hours, the uncertainty of what we might find keeping us obsessed by design.

In the modern economy of tablets and apps, our attention has become the most valuable commodity. Tech companies have armies of behavioral researchers whose sole job is to apply principles like Skinner’s variable rewards to grab and hold our focus as often and long as possible.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/rebel-developers-are-trying-to-cure-our-smartphone-addiction--with-an-app/2018/06/17/153e2282-6a81-11e8-bea7-c8eb28bc52b1_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.8fe002b2ec79