Showing results for: aol (page 2)
“Some folks believe blockchain will save the universe”: Inside Alex Winter’s “Trust Machine”
Gary M. Kramer
Salon talks to the filmmaker about "Trust Machine," his latest documentary exploration of transformative technology
A woman’s path to becoming a programmer
Alli Joseph
Ellen Ullman, a programmer in the early days of the industry, has some advice for aspiring women programmers
Slack makes an odd privacy update amid unfolding Facebook privacy scandal
Nicole Karlis
In the new Slack privacy regime, your boss may be able to view your messages without your knowing
Meryl Streep calls out Melania and Ivanka’s silence in face of #MeToo
Rachel Leah
The actor focused on Trump's wife and daughter — but was she right to?
How AOL Instant Messenger saved one girl’s life
Terence Mickey
In honor of AIM's end, here's a story about how it helped forge a friendship that became a lifeline
My so-called online life: Coming of age in the AIM era
JoAnna Novak
Depressed, starving, bookworm, babe — as a teenager on AOL Instant Messenger, I could be all those things, and more
RIP AIM: Famed AOL Instant Messenger shutting down after 20 years
Matthew Sheffield
Once an iconic internet brand, AIM has faded into irrelevance after two decades
What Donald Trump’s tweets reveal about his mental health
John Gartner
From his obsession with "the haters and losers" to his episodes of mania and delusion, it's all there on Twitter
We shouldn’t trust tech industry billionaires to lead the way on immigrants’ rights
JULIANNE TVETEN
The true fight for immigrants’ rights must reject the obsession with evaluating people on market contributions
WATCH: One of Silicon Valley’s biggest risk takers says “no gamble, no future”
Alli Joseph
Jason Calacanis started out broke in Brooklyn, and became one of the most successful investors in tech history
Republicans cynically offer Charlie Gard U.S. citizenship to get the health care they won’t give to others
Matthew Rozsa
Apparently one famous child struggling for his life is more important than the health of millions of obscure ones
Many techies are no-shows at White House’s tech event
Charlie May
Executives from established tech firms met with President Trump, but many venture capitalists decided not to attend
At 20, Radiohead’s “OK Computer” becomes an album for the Trump era
Annie Zaleski
Two decades on, the seminal album offers new readings and new resonances
Marissa Mayer leaves Yahoo following its acquisition by Verizon
Charlie May
The former CEO of Yahoo will leave with a $23 million severance package and a hefty amount of equity holdings
“Trump’s problem child”: Mark Levin, Alex Jones rage against Ivanka after her “uncomfortable embrace of refugees”
Sophia Tesfaye
Right-wing commentators like Alex Jones and Mark Levin are angrily comparing Ivanka Trump to Hillary Clinton
Saying goodbye to Marc Spitz: Author, critic, playwright and true believer in rock ‘n’ roll
Erin Keane
The veteran rock journalist and Salon columnist passed away over the weekend. He was 47
What’s next for Yahoo and Verizon?
Angelo Young
The Verizon deal is still in progress, but shareholders may need to be placated after news of second data breach
Yes, be jealous: This millennial makes more money posting selfies than you do at your 9-to-5 job
Britta Lokting
Claudia Oshry was stuck in a soul-crushing internship. Then she got fired and became a 2.4-million follower hit
Vanilla only: That’s right, no rice, no spice, no chocolate, no curry
Wancy Young Cho
I railed against the casual racism of the gay dating scene and considered myself a victim, then I had a closer look
A thoroughly modern monopoly: AT&T and Time Warner are playing a new game in which content is king
Angelo Young
AT&T's $85.4 billion acquisition of Time Warner could set of flurry of new telecom-media megamergers
My “Ghost World” years: Confessions of a teenage AOL catfisher
Sarah Sweeney
In the mid-'90s, I was 15. Bored and restless, I flirted obsessively in chatrooms with obscure indie rockers
Signing off: CBS is getting out of the radio business — is this finally the end of the medium?
Angelo Young
As CBS looks to unload its radio holdings, it seems streaming technology may do what TV never did: kill radio.
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