Technology
The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine.
The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine.
The Icelandic volcano has been busier than we thought.
The Internet shows its self-correcting powers yet again.
Learning to love спам.
Cloud computing as an answer to the cloud-borne travel shutdown.
Heavyweight championship bout, rhetorical division: are we exaggerating the "cyber-security" threat?
Cloud computing comes to one man's life.
It's not all runway delays and detained smoker-diplomats.
Well, you should be reading more! But here's a place to start.
At least in one area, Google is still working happily with a Chinese team.
Several more ripple effects of Google's decision -- obvious, and otherwise.
"It was all part of the same repressive program, from our point of view."
Why "cyber threat" is not "cyber war," plus a jazz classic about the filibuster.
From New Zealand to the Pentagon to the TSA, interesting new possibilities for flight.
These big, smart computers -- they don't know as much as they think!
Thoughts on roads and rails, from inside a Chinese bus and an American train.
Amtrak catches up with BoltBus in enroute amenities.
A snazzy new smartphone is only so-so as a phone-phone. Who's really to blame?
Thanks to our web team. And if you click on the title bar of this item -- I promise, this is the last time I'll ask -- you'll see a comment I posted on Ta-Nehisi Coates' site trying to explain what has happened to the "personal" pages, and why. That is all.
Thanks for many, many notes saying that RSS and Reader feeds are coming through with no text. Uncle! That's a bug, not a redesign "feature," and is being addressed. New blog page layout is a different kind of bug that is also being addressed. See you back here once that's fixed.
In the item below, I compliment the magazine's tech and business team on most aspects of the Atlantic.com's new design. But I also point out, in a part you wouldn't have seen if you didn't click through, that I consider the new layout of "personal" blog pages to be a serious step backward, since it makes all sites look the same and drains them of personality and visual interest, plus making them much harder to read. I hope, and think, that this part of the design will be re-visited.