E-paper color explosion
New color e-paper produces up to 4,096 hues and “can be viewed from a full 180 degrees,” so that images “appear crisp, even when the display is bent.” (Thanks, Max.)
New color e-paper produces up to 4,096 hues and “can be viewed from a full 180 degrees,” so that images “appear crisp, even when the display is bent.” (Thanks, Max.)
Only FOX could find something snide to say about a presidential candidate reading Gilead.
“Absalom and Achitophel,” John Dryden’s satirical allegory, disproves the idea that works of political propaganda can never be literature. The year was 1681. England’s King Charles had sired children hither and yon but had no legitimate heir. His Catholic brother, James, stood next in line to the throne. As fear of an alleged “Popish Plot” to kill the king and . . .
It’s no secret that Kafka was fascinated by Berlin, but scholars “haven’t quite done justice to the city’s place in his inner life.”
The brutal reign of the Khmer Rouge, during which at least 1.7 million people died, has been absent from Cambodia’s history books — until now.