Weekly Filet #58: Fukushima Revisited. And more.
Happy to serve you Weekly Filet #58. You can view it in your browser or right below.
This week's top recommendation
With so many things happening around the globe in between, it seems like a distant past, but it is less than one year ago that Japan was fighting a nuclear disaster in Fukushima. PBS Frontline has produced a fine inside documentary, both thrilling and horrifiying, about what really happend in and around the Fukushima nuclear power plant the days after the Tsunami hit Japan's east coast. A must see.
→ Inside Japan's Nuclear Meltdown (PBS Frontline)
Further recommendations
Interesting article on why sleeping for 4 hours, then wake, then 2 hours again might be more natural than the classic 8 hours straight.
→ The myth of the eight-hour sleep (BBC News)
He is one of the fathers of Facebook's new timeline design and the godfather of self-tracking. Nicholas Felton's seventh report is, like all before, fascinating to look at and read.
→ The 2010/2011 Feltron Biennial Report (Nicholas Felton)
The New York Times has launched a Tumblr to showcase some fascinating photographs from its archive.
→ The Lively Morgue (New York Times on Tumblr)
This past week has been, once more, a horrible one for Syria. Le Monde has a thorough timeline of the past 12 months, during which 9000 people have lost their lives.
→ Chronologie: une année de répression en Syrie (Le Monde)
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