Tags / safety

Tagged with “safety” (11) activity chart

  1. March 6: Downtown safety special

    With Shiftless LL, Brian Kelcey, Robert Galston, Ethan Cabel and James Hope Howard.

    —Huffduffed by winnipeginternetpundits 2 months ago

  2. Massive policy change means the beginning of the fall of Japan

    Buy Gold from the most secure Swiss based service provider of Gold and Silver. GoldSwitzerland offers physical Gold for sale, storage in your own name and controlled by the client.

    http://goldswitzerland.com/massive-policy-change-means-the-beginning-of-the-fall-of-japan/

    —Huffduffed by agileone 4 months ago

  3. 5by5 | Back to Work #85: Schrödinger’s Soap Holder

    TOPIC: How to use a public restroom.

    http://5by5.tv/b2w/85

    —Huffduffed by jmahoney 5 months ago

  4. Some Terms May Not Apply: Learn to Skim a Terms of Service Contract, Pay Less for Apps, and Work Better with White Noise

    This week on the Ask Lifehacker podcast, we’re learning how music affects your ability to work, getting great deals on mobile apps, and protecting your passwords on public Wi-Fi networks. Also, Facebook blows a billion dollars on Instagram, terms of service contracts are no longer the ironclad documents companies wanted them to be, and a whole lot more.

    http://lifehacker.com/5902744/some-terms-may-not-apply-learn-to-skim-a-terms-of-service-contract-pay-less-for-apps-and-work-better-with-white-noise

    —Huffduffed by whittaker007 one year ago

  5. Put On Your Tinfoil Hats: Let’s Talk About Google’s New Privacy Policy, Data Sharing Risks, and Encryption

    On this week’s episode of Ask Lifehacker, we’re getting to know the Windows 8 Consumer Preview and Google’s new singular privacy policy. We’re also sharing our favorite downloads and answering your questions about data protection, jailbreak upgrades, signing PDFs, and more.

    http://lifehacker.com/5890135/put-on-your-tinfoil-hats-lets-talk-about-googles-new-privacy-policy-data-sharing-risks-and-encryption

    —Huffduffed by andtrz one year ago

  6. Caustic Soda - Poison

    Consumption of this podcast may cause increased knowledge, laughing fits, and a mild queasiness. Our topic is poison! Poisonous frogs and mushrooms as well as famous victims of poisoning are featured and much much more!

    —Huffduffed by mgzne 3 years ago

  7. Driving Cars Toward Complexity

    Safety features such as stability control are adding to the complexity of car electronics and the software that controls them. Engineer Ingold Krueger explains how electronics have changed car operation and maintenance, and how, in rare instances, some systems fail.

    —Huffduffed by tobykdotcom 3 years ago

  8. DocArchive: Assignment: Total Recall - The Toyota Story

    Toyota, the world’s biggest car company, is in crisis, accused of putting the public at risk by selling cars that could potentially accelerate out of control. A company respected for years for its core principles, its reputation is now badly damaged. Justin Rowlatt asks how this happened and whether Toyota can recover.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago

  9. Parents don’t act on cyber-safety fears

    Most Australian parents are concerned about the safety of their children online. But new research shows that parents don’t back up their concerns with meaningful actions, and that in any event they might well be concerned about the wrong risks.

    —Huffduffed by drzax 3 years ago

  10. Happiness around the World: the paradox of happy peasants and miserable millionaires

    The determinants of happiness are remarkably similar around the world, in countries as different as Afghanistan, the U.S, and Chile. Income matters to happiness but only so much; friends, freedom, and employment are good for happiness, while crime, poor health, and divorce are bad. Paradoxically, however, people in places like Afghanistan can be as happy as those in much wealthier and safer ones like Chile. One explanation is the remarkable human capacity to adapt to adversity and hardship. While adaptation may be a good thing for individual wellbeing, it can also result in collective tolerance for bad equilibrium which are difficult for societies to escape from.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago

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