March 13, 2026 · View on web
These are the most widely shared links from across Mastodon and the Fediverse today — surfaced by Murmel from thousands of posts in the open social web. This is the Fediverse-wide view. Sign up to get a digest tailored to the people you actually follow.
abc.net.au · 13 people Worth reading
It's true, Australia has always been hot. But digging into temperature data shows the summers we experience today are vastly different from those of our grandparents.
"Fifty years ago, Canberra's summers only reached the typical summertime temperature threshold for 54 days. Today, it goes for 99 days."
— @luciedigitalni · Mar 12
doomsdayscenario.co · 36 people Worth reading
Once his not-even-half-baked plan failed to materialize in Iran, it’s clear that there’s no Plan B.
The hardest thing for the media to wrap its hands around over the last year is that
⭐️Donald Trump has no plan
— for anything, ever.Time and again, national pundits and the White House press corps invent a logical Donald Trump who sets, announces, and later “changes” real “policies” or “plans,”
failing to convey what is clear to anyone who is actually following events closely:
⚠️In each public appearance and social media post, the Mad King Donald Trump spouts a string of words,
devoid of meaning or purpose,
that may or may not represent anything at all.🔥Every single thing he says may, at any given time, be taken as an official hard-line policy of the US government,
the opening gambit to a long flexible negotiation,
-- or a random pronouncement that will be never be mentioned again.It’s impossible to know in real-time which is which — especially so if you’re actually in the US government and in charge of translating his words into actions and plans
— @cdarwin · Mar 12
bloomberg.github.io · 23 people
JavaScript's Date object has been a source of bugs for three decades. Temporal, which just reached Stage 4, is a modern replacement with immutable types, first-class time zone and calendar support, and nanosecond precision. This is the story of how Bloomberg, Igalia, and the TC39 community spent ...
Temporal: The 9-Year Journey to Fix Time in JavaScript
Link:
Comments:
— @lobsters · Mar 11
newrepublic.com · 75 people
They’re saying the quiet part out loud now.
“Palantir CEO Alex Karp thinks his AI technology will lessen the power of ‘highly educated, often female voters, who vote mostly Democrat’ while increasing the power of working-class men.”
— @acdha · Mar 12
samhenri.gold · 87 people
Sam Henri Gold is a product design engineer building playful, useful software.
i really liked this blog post about the macbook neo
— @jacqueline · Mar 12
theguardian.com · 26 people
Cycle lanes, electric cars and other interventions have helped 19 global cities slash levels of pollutants by more than 20%
Es gibt diese Top 20 Listen, an denen Deutschland null Ambition hat.
Außer Berlin ist keine deutsche Stadt in dem Ranking, und auch bei Berlin vermute ich einfach, dass die Luftbelastung SO mies war, dass es einfach schon als "Erfolg" gilt, weniger mies geworden zu sein.Ich fahre viel Fahrrad, ich habe seit/durch Post Covid weniger Lungenvolumen - und ich merke einfach, wie stark mit der Müll in der Luft belastet, den ich nicht verursache.
— @SheDrivesMobility · Mar 12
grist.org · 12 people
Since 2021, global media coverage of climate change has dropped 38 percent. Blame wars, political chaos, and Jeffrey Epstein.
The planet is overheating. Why is the news looking away?
Since 2021, global media coverage of climate change has dropped 38 percent. Blame wars, political chaos, and Jeffrey Epstein.
— @kim_harding · Mar 12
"Practically overnight, we took an ancient vice—long regarded as soul-rotting and civilizationally ruinous—put it on everyone’s phone, and made it as normal and frictionless as checking the weather. What could possibly go wrong?" —McKay Coppins for The Atlantic
#Betting #SportsBetting #Gambling #GamblingAddiction #Journalism
— @longreads · Mar 12
apple.com · 11 people Worth reading
Read a letter from CEO Tim Cook as he reflects on 50 Years of Apple.
on Apple’s 50th anniversary:
"From the first Apple computer to the Mac, from iPod to iPhone, iPad to Apple Watch and AirPods, as well as the services we use every day — the App Store, Apple Music, Apple Pay, iCloud, and Apple TV — we’ve spent five decades rethinking what’s possible and putting powerful tools into people’s hands."
What strikes me about this list is that it’s dominated by products in Apple’s very recent history. All of the products except the Apple and Macintosh were created in the last 25 years. Even the iPod is not quite 25 years old.
— @manton · Mar 12
theverge.com · 7 people Worth reading
Techdirt’s Mike Masnick explains the history of mass surveillance in the digital age, and why Anthropic’s red line with the Pentagon could prove very important for the future of AI.
Anthropic doesn’t trust the Pentagon, and neither should you
— @verge · Mar 12
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