KrISS feed 8.11
- Un simple et superbe (ou stupide) lecteur de flux. Par
Tontof
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Laura Cumming)
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Carolee Schneemann: Body Politics; Marcus Coates: The Directors – review
Schneemann’s personal life is almost as freely displayed as her genitals in a six-decade retrospective of her fiercely divisive work. Elsewhere, Coates channels the voices inside other people’s headsI cannot imagine a more controversial show than Carolee Schneemann: Body Politics at the Barbican. Reactions to this lifetime survey of the pioneering American feminist ran all the way from fascination to affront, disaffection, awestruck reverence and slavering lust the day I was there. If you are th
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rachel Cooke)
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A Visible Man by Edward Enninful review – inspiring if preening memoir
The editor-in-chief of British Vogue recounts his remarkable journey from fleeing Ghana to head of the venerable fashion magazineIt was the astronomer and mathematician Nicolaus Copernicus who first came up with a model of the universe that placed the sun rather than the Earth at its centre, a formulation published in 1543 to which the rest of us have held fast ever since. But it seems that an alternative point of view may now be abroad. Read the opening pages of A Visible Man, and you’ll find t
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tom Ireland)
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Cloud labs and remote research aren’t the future of science – they’re here
At high-end labs in the US and UK, anybody, anywhere, can conduct experiments by remote control cheaply and efficiently. Is the rise of the robot researcher now inevitable?It’s 1am on the west coast of America, but the Emerald Cloud Lab, just south of San Francisco, is still busy. Here, more than 100 items of high-end bioscience equipment whirr away on workbenches largely unmanned, 24 hours a day and seven days a week, performing experiments for researchers from around the world. I’m “visiting”
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Arifa Akbar)
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Antigone review – a poetic tragedy about modern British Muslim life
Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, LondonInua Ellams updates the Sophoclean drama into a beguiling piece about faith and prejudice, and casts a suspicious eye at politicians who betray their own communitiesInua Ellams’s Antigone is the drama of unjust law and righteous rebellion that we know from Sophocles’s Theban cycle … but refitted for our times. The story of Antigone’s lone stand against the state is updated to the here and now with a British Pakistani Muslim family at its heart, embattled in
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Kate Connolly in Berlin)
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Can Germany’s economy minister keep the lights on this winter?
Memories of postwar squalor revived by Vladimir Putin’s shutting down of Nord Stream 1 pipelineThat Robert Habeck, Germany’s economy minister in his recent, pre-ministerial life, wrote a children’s book in which a girl called Emily experiences “how exciting a night-time power cut can be” may yet come back to haunt him.These days, Habeck is charged with the daunting task of ensuring that the lights do not go out in for real in Europe’s largest economy. And even if Germans have been hoarding candl
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Mee-Lai Stone)
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The Queen’s coffin in Scotland and the King’s proclamations – in pictures
Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin left Balmoral to travel through Scottish towns and villages and on to EdinburghMourning for the Queen – latest updates Continue reading...
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Libby Brooks in Ballater)
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Queen’s coffin leaves Balmoral en route to Edinburgh
Cortege passing through villages of Royal Deeside where many considered monarch a dear neighbourThe Queen has commenced her final journey from her beloved Balmoral estate in Aberdeenshire and is heading down the north-east coast to Edinburgh.The cortege carrying her coffin left Balmoral at about 10am and was making slow progress through the villages of Royal Deeside, allowing the thousands who lined the route to bid a final farewell to the country’s longest-serving monarch and the woman many loc
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Angelique Chrisafis in Paris)
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Energy crisis to cast Eiffel Tower into early darkness
Paris city hall expected to propose cutting back lighting of monument by more than an hour a dayThe Eiffel Tower, whose twinkling lights define the night-time Paris skyline, is to fall dark earlier because of the energy crisis.Paris city hall is expected to propose this week that the monument, which is among the most visited in the world, should go dark more than an hour earlier than usual, as Europe faces spiralling energy costs aggravated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Continue reading...
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (PA Media)
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Graham Potter asks Brighton fans for forgiveness after leaving for Chelsea
Manager pens open letter after new five-year deal in London‘At this stage in my career, I had to grasp a new opportunity’Graham Potter has asked Brighton fans to forgive him for leaving the club to become Chelsea’s new manager. Potter, 47, signed a five-year deal at Stamford Bridge on Thursday to succeed Thomas Tuchel, who was sacked earlier in the week.In an open letter written on Thursday and published on Brighton’s website on Sunday, Potter said he would cherish “three wonderful years” at Bri
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Agence France-Presse in Geneva)
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Switzerland picks site near German border for nuclear waste storage
In ‘project of the century’ country will bury spent nuclear fuel deep underground in claySwiss authorities have selected a site in northern Switzerland, not far from the German border, to host a deep geological storage repository for radioactive waste.After nearly 50 years of searching for the best way to store its radioactive waste, Switzerland is gearing up for its “project of the century”, entailing burying spent nuclear fuel deep underground in clay. Continue reading...