Times Literary Supplement (July 24, 2024): The latest issue features ‘Generation Anxious’ – Jonathan Haidt’s bleak vision of modern childhood; Rebuilding broken Britain; The woman who stalked the world; German Expressionism at Tate Modern and Twisters..
Tag Archives: AI
Finance Preview: Barron’s Magazine – July 22, 2024
BARRON’S MAGAZINE – JULY 22, 2024 ISSUE:
How Trump’s Red Wave Would Reshape the Economy and Markets
Donald Trump’s second presidency would mean more spending and inflation. Investors might like it—at first.
Here Are America’s Top 100 Women Advisors. Their Influence Is Growing.
More women are reaching the upper tiers of the wealth management industry—just in time for a $30 trillion wealth transfer.
Abolish the Federal Reserve? Here’s What Project 2025 Would Do.
The policy statement recommends a revamp of the Fed’s mandate, balance sheet, and response to financial crises.
What the Stock Market’s Wild Week Means for the Next 6 Months
Research Preview: Science Magazine – July 19, 2024

The benefits of GLP-1 drugs beyond obesity
Glucagon-like peptide–1–based medicines have weight loss–independent actions
A hard fruit to swallow
Foraging niches become more specialized toward bird range limits
Scientists at odds over wild plans to slow melting glaciers
Call to study glacial geoengineering stirs up “civil war” among polar scientists
World Archaeology – Aug/Sept 2024 Preview


WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY (July 18, 2024): The latest issude features ‘Pompeii’ – The biggest dig in a generation; AI and Archaeology – Reconstructing ancient landscapes; Creatures of The Nile – What animals did for Ancient Egypt…
Pompeii: Unearthing Insula 10
The biggest dig at Pompeii in a generation is working to expose nearly an entire block of the ancient city. Archaeologists are making astonishing discoveries that shed powerful new light on life and death in the shadow of Vesuvius, as…
Creatures of the Nile: What animals did for ancient Egypt
Ancient Egypt owed many debts to the creatures that lived in and beside the Nile. Both wild and domesticated animals offered an abundance of food, raw materials, and inspiration. But…
Artificial intelligence rethinks the past: How computers are reconstructing Etruscan and Roman landscapes
What can artificial intelligence bring to archaeology? Maurizio Forte introduces recent work dedicated to reconstructing ancient landscapes, and weighs some of the risks and rewards.
Autoarchaeology at Christiansborg Castle: Digging into ancestral connections to the transatlantic slave trade
The discovery of an unsuspected family link to Christiansborg Castle, Ghana, led to a project examining a forgotten aspect of the transatlantic slave trade. Rachel Ama Asaa Engmann introduces us…
The Economist Magazine – July 20, 2024 Preview

The Economist Magazine (July 18, 2024): The latest issue features ‘A TICKET TO WHERE?’ – Where would Donald Trump and J.D. Vance take America?…
Where would Donald Trump and J.D. Vance take America?

The anti-globalist MAGA enthusiast is more consequential than the average veep pick
Euphoric markets are ignoring growing political risks

Investors’ exuberance in the face of political ructions is unlikely to pay off
Inside AI’s black box
Researchers are figuring out how large language models work
Labour’s first week
What does Labour’s win mean for British foreign policy?
Will Biden’s dam break?
Joe Biden is failing to silence calls that he step aside
Ungovernable France
France is desperately searching for a government
Politics: The Guardian Weekly – July 19, 2024

The Guardian Weekly (July 17, 2024) – The new issue features ‘Reset?’ – America reckons with the attempted assassination of Donald Trump…
The image of Donald Trump, his face smeared with blood after a bullet grazed his ear, marked a watershed moment in the already high-stakes 2024 US presidential election campaign. Opening our special report on the Pennsylvania rally shooting, Washington bureau chief David Smith examines how it could fuel Trump’s base and stoke further division in American politics.
Five essential reads in this week’s edition
1
Spotlight | On paw patrol in Sumatra
National Geographic explorer and photographer Danielle Khan Da Silva joins an all-female group of Indigenous rangers who protect a rare Indonesian rainforest ecosystem.
2
Spotlight | Evasive action
The doctors who treat cancer share their expert advice on what simple things we can all do to lessen the risk of getting the disease with Sarah Phillips.
3
Feature | Too hot to handle
As heatwaves become a common occurrence, outdoor workers are particularly vulnerable, explains Samira Shackle, as she documents the death from heat of one French labourer.
4
Opinion | Simon Tisdall on the Nato summit
The 75-year-old alliance was created to counteract Moscow’s power and needs to keep its focus on containing Russian ambition.
5
Culture | Selfies with Cindy Sherman
The US artist whose work changed the way we see women talks image, AI and Instagram to Nadia Khomami.
Research Preview: Nature Magazine – July 18, 2024
‘Nature Magazine – July 17, 2024: The latest issue features ‘Long Reach’ – Salamander-like fossil expands geogrpahical range of early tetrapods…
AI tool can pinpoint dementia’s cause — from stroke to Alzheimer’s
Algorithm that distinguishes among a host of underlying causes of dementia could be used for diagnosis in hospitals and clinics.
Most accurate clock in history made by ‘quieting’ atoms
Strontium-based timepiece gains or loses only one second every 40 billion years.
Storm-chasing seabirds served supper by cyclones
The ocean-going Desertas petrel often follows storms for days over thousands of kilometres.
Wine grapes’ sweetness reveals Europe’s climate history
Records on the quality of the grape harvest sheds light on 600 years of weather.
Arts/Books: Times Literary Supplement – July 19, 2024

Times Literary Supplement (July 17, 2024): The latest issue features ‘World at War’ – Humanity’s appetite for organized violence; Should we have babies; Posture panic; The boy on the burning deck and Wales…
Fast Food & Grocery: An AI And Automation Takeover
CNBC (July 15, 2024): Fully autonomous fast-food chains to smart carts lining grocery store parking lots, the way the food industry looks is changing due to massive investment in AI technology.
Chapters: 0:00 Introduction 2:34 CH 1. Digitizing food retail 5:35 CH 2. The risk and reward from robots 8:30 CH 3. What’s next?
The American consumer is starting to pull back on spending and rising food and labor costs are causing the food industry to invest more into automation to lower labor costs and improve sales, in order to stay competitive and take advantage of shifting consumer taste.
Culture/Politics: Harper’s Magazine – August 2024
HARPER’S MAGAZINE – July 15, 2024: The latest issue features ‘The New Satanic Panic’ – Exorcism in the Age of TikTok; Has Psychology ruined Poetry; America’s Last Granite Carvers; William T. Vollmann reports from Korea’s DMZ, Matthew Karp on the decline of the American left, Jonathan Lethem on museums, Hisham Matar on the dangers of not knowing, Christian Wiman on Seamus Heaney, and more.
The Demon Slayers
The new age of American exorcisms by Sam Kestenbaum
The pastor is pacing back and forth, a cordless microphone in one hand, the other extended before him. He says, “This is the awakening the American church has been waiting on,” and keeps pacing. He has readied himself before taking the elevated stage, donning a paisley shirt, top button undone, and speaks now from the wood pulpit of his revival tent.
Music and Mystery
Seamus Heaney and the end of the poetic career
The Letters of Seamus Heaney, edited by Christopher Reid. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 848 pages. $45.
This buoyant anvil of a book has brought me to the edge of a nervous breakdown. Night after night I’m waking with Seamus Heaney sizzling through—not me, exactly, but the me I was thirty-four years ago when I first read him, in a one-windowed, mold-walled studio in Seattle, when night after night I woke with another current (is it another current?) sizzling through my circuits: ambition. Not ambition to succeed on the world’s terms (though that asserted its own maddening static) but ambition to find forms for the seethe of rage, remembrance, and wild vitality that seemed, unaccountably, like sound inside me, demanding language but prelinguistic, somehow. I felt imprisoned by these vague but stabbing haunt-songs that were, I sensed, my only means of freedom.

