During the week, we consume words in snackable, tweetable bites. But
on the weekends, we have the time to take a dive into the murkier,
lengthier depths of the Internet and expand our attention spans beyond
140 characters. We can brew a cup of coffee and lie back with our iPads,
laptops, smartphones and Kindles.
Since you're bound to miss a few things during the daily grind, we present to you, in our weekly installation of Must Reads, a curated collection of can't-miss stories to read and reflect on.
Since you're bound to miss a few things during the daily grind, we present to you, in our weekly installation of Must Reads, a curated collection of can't-miss stories to read and reflect on.
Did the FBI Lean On Microsoft for Access to Its Encryption Software?
- When Microsoft was about to launch BitLocker, its Windows
software to encrypt and lock hard drives, the FBI may have repeatedly
asked the tech company to put a backdoor in its software to break or
circumvent supposedly secure systems. The head of the engineering team
working on BitLocker at the time revealed to the exchanges he had with various government agents.
Why Everyone F*cking Loves Science — and Elise Andrew
- With 6.8 million followers, Elise Andrew — the founder of the
wildly popular "I Fucking Love Science" Facebook page — wields an
influence over the science and fans-of-science communities. But Andrew,
24, isn't a scientist; she's kind of a fangirl herself. Her F-word
branding is actually kind of perfect for her mostly adult audience.
Dear Brands: Here's How to Avoid Screwing Up on Social Media
- On the 12th anniversary of Sept. 11, brands tried to stay
on-message by posting 9/11-related content to Twitter and Facebook. But
it mostly came off as a cheap trick trying to capitalize on a painful
memory for the country. So brands, take our etiquette guide as a word to
the wise: Sometimes, it's better to just stay quiet.
iPhone 5C Hands On: Your Budget iPhone
- While the new candy-colored iPhone 5C is hardly as innovative as
the iPhone 5, it's the company's first budget smartphone ($99 with a
two-year contract) and is "unapologetically plastic," per Jony Ive.
Here, we take a deep dive into the phone's nuts and bolts — and what the
lower price means for China.
iPhone 5S Hands On: All Change Under the Hood
- The iPhone 5C wasn't the only star of Apple's show. The new
iPhone 5S boasts a slew of (expected) changes, too, including a
fingerprint scanner called Touch ID and a camera "burst mode" that snaps
10 still pictures in one second. And we're pretty excited about the two
new metallic finishes: "space gray" and champagne gold.
Is Apple Still Magical?
- Apple's big day left many feeling unsatisfied — just two
products, one of which is a very smart and colorful re-skinning of a
previous product? Color us surprised.
Don't have time to read them all now? In our Readlist below,
export this week's must reads to your tablet to save for a time you have
no distractions. Simply click the "read later" button alongside each
story or or click "export" to send the entire list of articles to your
preferred device.
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