Sundry: Keats on depression, browsing on Amazon, the Korean Gutenbergs
S U N D R Y
The Lucretius problem is kind of a mental limitation where we imagine that the worst possible event that happened in the past is indeed the worst that could ever happen — fs.blog
Shopping on Amazon is great. Browsing is infamously poor. Shira Ovid, tried to buy make-up foundation and found it a complex entreprise. Solving browsing might help them grow fast again — bloomberg.com
Is social media really harming kids? Or does the digital well-being industry need us to think so? Where is the evidence? — theguardian.com
People with allergies are more likely to experience mood disorders. I keep reading more and more things linking these mental health issues to a defective immune system — theatlantic.com
3 high-resolution images of Hokusai's Great Wave — kottke.org
Turns out Gutenberg didn't invent the printing press but Koreans did — lithub.com
Happiness is in presence, according to poet John Keats: “The setting sun will always set me to rights — or if a Sparrow come before my Window I take part in its existence and pick about the Gravel.” — brainpickings.org
This is the Sundry Newsletter. It is made of the best ideas and stories about tech, psychology, business, science, branding, art, etc. Thank you for reading — Ulysse Sabbag.
Add a comment: