the Industrial Revolution
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Why are we still arguing about the industrial revolution?
Historical data does not offer much insight about how our predecessors navigated profound change
Should we ditch the idea of three meals a day?
Our rigid eating habits date to the Industrial Revolution – it’s time to embrace culinary spontaneity‘One of the stupidest things in an earnest but stupid school of culinary thought is that each of the three daily meals should be ‘balanced’.” So argues American food writer MFK Fisher in her 1942 book How to Cook a Wolf. She goes on: “In the first place not all people need or want three meals each day.
Should we ditch the idea of three meals a day?
Our rigid eating habits date to the Industrial Revolution – it’s time to embrace culinary spontaneity‘One of the stupidest things in an earnest but stupid school of culinary thought is that each of the three daily meals should be ‘balanced’.” So argues American food writer MFK Fisher in her 1942 book How to Cook a Wolf. She goes on: “In the first place not all people need or want three meals each day.
Households outshine business in Australia’s rooftop solar revolution, report finds
Australia leads world in residential solar per capita with 22GW installed but commercial and industrial sector has deployed only a quarter of thatGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastAustralia’s revolution in rooftop solar has left behind commercial and industrial buildings where installations have lagged far behind homes, according to new analysis. Australia leads the world in residential solar on per capita terms, with 22GW installed as of last December. But...
Detailed molecular picture of tooth enamel reveals adaptations to diet
Detailed molecular picture of tooth enamel reveals adaptations to diet Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor From chewing to chomping to grinding, teeth suffer from a lifetime of repeated mechanical stress. It makes sense, then, that enamel is one of the hardest natural materials. University of Wisconsin-Madison physics professor Pupa Gilbert and colleagues previously showed that the hydroxyapatite nanocrystals that make up enamel are arranged perfectly parallel to one...
Does JD Vance have to choose between Pope Leo and Peter Thiel?
Pope Leo XIV has chosen a side in the AI battle gripping Washington: He’s Team Anthropic. No, Leo isn’t weighing in on the Trump administration’s ongoing battle with the frontier AI lab and no, he isn’t donating to its super PAC of choice. But on Monday when he unveiled Magnifica Humanitas, his first encyclical letter, on “safeguarding the human person in the time of artificial intelligence,” it was hard to miss that Anthropic co-founder Christopher Olah was there at the...
Anthropic/OpenAI may be spending more than $1000 for every $100 you pay them
For reasons that will remain hidden, we resume writing about Generative AI/LLM after a hiatus of 15 months (that one from October 2025, and the one from June 2025, don’t really count as serious pieces). Today, the first of two articles about “coding with Large ‘Language’ Models”, as coding with LLMs is positioned as the ‘killer app‘ for LLMs. We interrupt this program for a short digression on Anthropic’s recently released blog post When AI builds itself.
Smart pipelines: Can AI protect the world’s energy lifelines?
As ageing pipelines face growing risks, the energy industry is increasingly turning to AI and smart monitoring systems to improve their safety and efficiency. Around 500,000 kilometres of oil and gas pipelines worldwide need to be renovated, rebuilt or upgraded, while leaks, ruptures and incidents already cost the sector more than $7 billion (€6bn) a year — and roughly 40% of failures go undetected in the first 24 hours, according to industry experts speaking at the Baku Energy Forum. The...
A hidden pollutant is changing how the world's forests breathe
A hidden pollutant is changing how the world's forests breathe - Date: - June 2, 2026 - Source: - Aarhus University - Summary: - A massive global analysis found that nitrogen pollution can either speed up or dramatically slow the natural "breathing" of forest soils, depending on the ecosystem's condition. The results reveal hidden tipping points that could affect how forests store carbon and cope with climate change. - Share: For centuries, forests have followed a remarkably consistent rhythm.
Why AI hyperscalers are now the epicenter of a bear case for stocks
If the facts change, then I have to change. I learned that from reading the legendary British economist John Maynard Keynes, and it has never steered me wrong. I was a huge bull on this market because of the terrific things happening in artificial intelligence.