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NYT Magazine
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NYT Magazine 1h
This tiny Swiss company makes machines that suck out carbon dioxide from the air. Can it help stop climate change?
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NYT Magazine retweeted
Leah Sottile 2h
My very first piece for the is about Ronnie James Dio which, if you know me, is a dream coming true.
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NYT Magazine 3h
‘‘Direct air capture’’ machines collect carbon dioxide from air. Once trapped, the CO₂ is siphoned into large tanks and trucked to a local Coca-Cola bottler, where it becomes the fizz in a soft drink. Can this technology help slow down climate change?
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NYT Magazine 3h
Two European entrepreneurs built a machine that sucks carbon dioxide from the air. Can it put a dent in climate change?
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NYT Magazine 4h
Carbon dioxide can be removed from the air for commercial purposes, and its removal could have a profound effect on the future of humanity. But it’s almost certainly too soon to say for sure if it can be a profitable way to slow down climate change.
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NYT Magazine 5h
Two European entrepreneurs think they can remove carbon from the air at prices cheap enough to matter. Can their technology put a dent in climate change?
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NYT Magazine 6h
This tiny Swiss company makes machines that suck out carbon dioxide from the air. Can it help stop climate change?
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NYT Magazine 6h
"Colorblindness can be sort of a fun affliction. Sometimes I see my own private colors, and objects lose their prescribed meanings. Someone’s fashionable, Instagram-friendly sand-colored apartment might become, just for me, a garish baby-food green."
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NYT Magazine 8h
"When we speak of “shooting” with a camera, we are acknowledging the kinship of photography and violence."
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NYT Magazine 12h
Éric Zemmour is the right-wing pundit "hashtag-triggering" France:
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NYT Magazine 13h
Without confronting its inherent inequality, this misconstrual of history, photography will continue to describe itself as one thing (a force for liberation) while obdurately remaining another (an obedient appendage of state power).
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NYT Magazine 14h
This week, 's experiments with mango pie involve tales of Indian aunties, Cool Whip, and a recipe passed on from 's mother:
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NYT Magazine 15h
When Denis Voronenkov was gunned down on the streets of Kiev, Ukrainian officials blamed Moscow. The truth was more complicated.
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NYT Magazine 16h
Denis Voronkenov won incredible power and wealth by playing by Russia's rules. But his murder wasn't necessarily what it looked like.
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NYT Magazine 17h
Last summer, Bianca Valenti won the first women’s big-wave event in Latin America, at Puerto Escondido in Mexico, and received $1,750. The male winner received $7,000. She's fighting for gender equality in one of the most dangerous sports in the world:
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NYT Magazine 18h
Denis Voronkenov won incredible power and wealth by playing by Russia's rules. But his murder wasn't necessarily what it looked like.
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NYT Magazine 19h
Photography’s future will be much like its past. It will largely continue to illustrate, without condemning, how the powerful dominate the less powerful.
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NYT Magazine 20h
The fight for gender equality in one of the most dangerous sports in the world. These women want the right to compete in big-wave surfing contests — and get paid as much as men do:
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NYT Magazine 21h
Last summer, Bianca Valenti won the first women’s big-wave event in Latin America, at Puerto Escondido in Mexico, and received $1,750. The male winner received $7,000. She's fighting for gender equality in one of the most dangerous sports in the world:
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NYT Magazine 21h
Photography’s future will be much like its past. It will largely continue to illustrate, without condemning, how the powerful dominate the less powerful.
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