In June 2015, David Sims wrote about how Apple and IBM convinced people to buy home computers in the 1970s and '80s.
The year you were born, Adam Smith™ wrote about the economic questions he was left with after traveling to the Middle East with the United States Secretary of the Treasury.
In February 2014, Rebecca J. Rosen wrote about the breadth of social activism for LGBT rights in the 1970s.
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“It was thought that all borders between men had similarly disintegrated, and we were all destined to be free and empowered individuals in a global meeting place,” wrote Robert Kaplan 20 years later.
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Clarissa Explains it All premiered in 1991.
In October 1996, James Fallows wrote an overview of Clinton's presidency on the eve of his reelection.
In November 2010, Alyssa Rosenberg wrote about why it was so difficult for readers who grew up reading the series to say goodbye to Harry Potter.
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People across the world rediscovered the power and peril of revolutions, as Laura Kasinof found in Yemen.
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In November 2015, David Sims reviewed Spotlight.
In December 2015, Robinson Meyer wrote about why scientists had accepted this fact.
The Atlantic is here to help you process it, in stories like these: