#across-the-years

[ follow ]
Digital life
Compression technology enables efficient data storage and transmission by discarding imperceptible information, crucial for platforms like YouTube and Spotify.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Readers reply: What would the world look like if people didn't make mistakes?

Mistakes are almighty: you can't ever guarantee that the next moment will host no manifestation of a mistake. According to evolution theory, the diversity of life on Earth entirely emerges from copying mistakes of DNA polymerase.
Philosophy
Writing
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Can We Claim a Glorious Matriarchal Reality?

Christina Rivera's 'MY OCEANS' expresses deep emotions about Earth's ecosystems and the importance of female creativity in a care-based society.
Travel
fromBig Think
6 days ago

The arc of human history is toward cooperation, not division

Hitchhiking fosters deep connections and insights into diverse lives, revealing personal stories and experiences across different cultures.
#generational-differences
fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago
Health

Older Adults Are Sharing The Common Experiences From The Past That Have Younger People Baffled

fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago
Digital life

Older People Are Sharing The Everyday Experiences From The Past That Are Suuuuuper Rare Now

fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago
Health

Older Adults Are Sharing The Common Experiences From The Past That Have Younger People Baffled

Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

Older People Are Sharing The Everyday Experiences From The Past That Are Suuuuuper Rare Now

Older adults describe everyday experiences from the 1950s-1980s that no longer exist today, including shared phone lines, elevator attendants, accessible firearms in public spaces, and inexpensive concert tickets.
History
fromwww.nytimes.com
3 weeks ago

Humans Had Dogs Before They Had Farming, Ancient DNA Confirms

Dogs were domesticated by hunter-gatherer societies in Europe around 14,000 years ago, predating agriculture.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 week ago

Dice Are 6,000 Years Older Than Previously Believed, Study Says

More than 600 two-sided dice crafted by Native Americans have been identified, dating back over 12,000 years, predating known dice from the Bronze Age.
Parenting
fromTODAY.com
1 week ago

Sociologist Shares the 6 Baby Names That Have Stood the Test of Time

Six names have remained in the Top 50 since 1880, reflecting cultural identity and historical naming trends.
OMG science
fromHarvard Gazette
2 weeks ago

Anthropologist traces split between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals - Harvard Gazette

The transition from multiple human forms to Homo sapiens dominance involved interactions and interbreeding with Neanderthals, not a clear-cut victory.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 weeks ago

22 Still-Popular Things That Older People Thought Would Just Be "Quick Fads"

Certain trends and cultural phenomena have persisted far beyond initial expectations of being mere fads.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

Humans have been gambling since the Ice Age

Madden combed through this sparse record, confirming the oldest-known dice and establishing an unbroken, previously hidden lineage of chance-based games dating back at least 12,000 years, 6,000 before any counterpart in the Old World.
History
fromwww.nature.com
3 weeks ago

Genomic history of early dogs in Europe

Genomic data indicates that early dogs in Europe underwent significant genetic changes as they adapted to diverse environments and human lifestyles, reflecting a complex interplay of domestication and natural selection.
Pets
Parenting
fromSilicon Canals
2 weeks ago

Psychology says the 1960s and 70s accidentally produced one of the most emotionally durable generations in modern history - not through better parenting but through benign neglect that forced children to develop internal regulation instead of waiting for adult intervention - Silicon Canals

Children in the 70s thrived on unstructured play and minimal parental intervention, fostering independence and problem-solving skills.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
3 weeks ago

People Over 50 Are Sharing What Was "Normal" In The '70s, And Gen Z Would Lose Their Minds

The 1970s featured unique cultural norms and practices that seem unbelievable today, from social behaviors to household items.
Roam Research
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Study pinpoints when bow and arrow came to North America

North Americans adopted the bow and arrow about 1,400 years ago, replacing the atlatl and dart, with rapid adoption in the south and gradual replacement in the north.
Education
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

I asked a group of people in their 70s what they'd un-learn if they could and every single one named something they were taught before age 10 - not a fact, not a skill, a belief about themselves that was installed by a specific person in a specific room, and the fact that it's still running 60 years later without their permission is the thing that made half the room go quiet - Silicon Canals

Beliefs installed in childhood by authority figures persist into adulthood, shaping decisions and self-perception for decades without conscious awareness or permission.
#nostalgia
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 month ago

What Defines a Civilization?

Civilization requires a writing system, government, food surplus, labor division, and urbanization, with Mesopotamia recognized as the birthplace of civilization due to its early city construction around 5400 BCE.
Business
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Navigating the ghosts of cultures past

Organizational culture constantly changes; leaders must discern which legacy cultural elements to retain and which to remove while balancing enduring beliefs with adaptive practices.
Running
fromiRunFar
1 month ago

Time, the Great Unifier

Dylan Harris's film 'The Cutoff' explores how time functions as both constraint and possibility in ultramarathon running, revealing triumph and heartbreak among runners pursuing the Cocodona 250 Mile cutoffs.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

The generation that fixed everything, asked for nothing, and held every family together is now being told their values are outdated - psychology says the opposite is true - Silicon Canals

Older generations' values of resilience, duty, and sacrifice correlate with better mental health outcomes than modern avoidance of discomfort, according to psychological research.
fromemptywheel
2 months ago

How Do You Want Your Family to Remember You? - emptywheel

The Stasi, the secret police, were legendary for their data files. Their work was based on instilling fear, and they induced stunningly amazing numbers of East Germans into informing on their neighbors. Something along the lines of 1 in 6 East Germans were informants, whether out of fear or out of approval of what the East German government was doing.
US politics
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: Scientists delve into the smells of history

Researchers recreate historical smells and use imaging, AI, and biomedical advances to probe heritage, ancient human timelines, medical rescue devices, and rare-disease genetics.
Miscellaneous
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

I'm 66 and my grandson asked me what we did before the internet and I started to answer and then stopped - because the honest answer is we were bored in ways that forced us to become interesting, and I don't know how to explain that without sounding like I'm criticizing his entire world - Silicon Canals

Pre-internet boredom forced people to develop practical skills, storytelling abilities, and genuine expertise that shaped their personalities and social value in ways constant digital entertainment prevents today.
UK news
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

I grew up in the 70s and didn't realize these 8 childhood experiences were unusual until I talked to younger generations - Silicon Canals

1970s childhoods involved unsupervised outdoor freedom that fostered independence, problem-solving, and risk assessment, unlike today's highly supervised childhoods.
fromMail Online
2 months ago

The 'perfect' man and woman, according to different generations

'Overall, the research shows that preferences for attractiveness shift from lighter hair in Boomer women to darker hair and more athletic body types in Millennials and Gen Z,' the CREO Clinic explained. 'Men are generally most attractive with inverted triangle or trapezoid shaped builds, while the hourglass figure remains the preferred body type for women. 'Eye colour moves from blue in Boomers to brown in later generations, and wavy hair is typically favoured for men, whereas straight hair is more often preferred for women.'
Fashion & style
fromEmptywheel
2 months ago

How Do You Want Your Family to Remember You?

The Stasi, the secret police, were legendary for their data files. Their work was based on instilling fear, and they induced stunningly amazing numbers of East Germans into informing on their neighbors. Something along the lines of 1 in 6 East Germans were informants, whether out of fear or out of approval of what the East German government was doing.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

If you grew up during the era of "children should be seen and not heard" you probably display these 8 behaviors as an adult - Silicon Canals

Childhood suppression of expression teaches chronic people-pleasing behaviors, like excessive apologizing, that persist into adulthood and undermine self-worth and assertiveness.
Marketing
fromVogue
2 months ago

Generational Breakdown: Gen Alpha

Gen Alpha greatly influences family purchasing decisions and will reshape brand strategies through social-platform-driven preferences and substantial future spending power.
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

8 things boomers swore they'd never become that they've slowly turned into anyway-and their kids see it even if they don't - Silicon Canals

A generation that once embraced change has become resistant to technology and critical of younger generations while repeating the same behaviors they condemned.
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

You know you're getting older when these 10 "boring" activities genuinely excite you now - Silicon Canals

Remember when Friday nights meant figuring out which party to hit first? Now, I get genuinely thrilled about having zero plans and a new documentary queued up. Last week, I actually canceled drinks to stay home and organize my spice drawer, and the weirdest part? I felt zero FOMO! If you've ever caught yourself getting excited about a new vacuum cleaner or spending Saturday night researching the best mattress for back support, congratulations! You're officially entering that phase of life where "boring" isn't boring anymore.
Mindfulness
Books
fromSlate Magazine
2 months ago

Are We Just Recycling Old Stories, Ideas, and Styles?

21st-century culture is abundant and accessible but suffers an innovation deficit, leaving a "blank space" where original cultural creation should emerge.
Remodel
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

8 things people over 60 still consider common sense that younger generations were never taught - Silicon Canals

Basic practical repair and maintenance skills save money, reduce waste, and increase self-sufficiency compared with disposable replacement habits.
Careers
fromBusiness Insider
1 month ago

Rat catchers, powder monkeys, and resurrectionists: 20 jobs that no longer exist

Historical labor markets have repeatedly undergone massive transformations, with entire occupations becoming obsolete due to technological advancement, just as AI threatens modern jobs today.
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

9 things every boomer remembers about weekend mornings that today's kids will never experience - Silicon Canals

If you woke up too early on a Saturday, you'd turn on the TV to find... nothing. Just a test pattern or static. Television stations actually signed off at night and didn't start broadcasting again until morning. Can you imagine explaining this to kids today? That there was literally nothing to watch? No Netflix library, no YouTube, no endless content.
Television
Women
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

3 generations of women in one family show how choices on motherhood have changed

Younger American women have fewer children than prior generations and greater life options, causing many to be uncertain about having children.
Music
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Seeing Ourselves Through Younger Eyes

Feeling younger than one’s chronological age, often triggered by music and dancing, associates with better mental health and predicts improved future physical health.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Psychological Theories Follow Social Trends

Psychiatry and psychology mirror prevailing societal values and historical ideologies, shaping theories, treatments, and research priorities across different eras.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Can't the Generations Be Friends?

Generational stereotypes lack scientific basis and oversimplify diverse individuals into negative labels, yet people can relate across age groups as individuals rather than archetypes.
fromHuffPost
2 months ago

'Inheritourism' Is Shaping Our Vacations. Here's What Experts Want You To Know.

A 2026 travel report from Hilton identified "inheritourism" as a notable trend for the new year ― with 66% of travelers surveyed by the hotel brand saying that their parents have influenced their choice of accommodations, 60% saying they guided their choice of loyalty programs and 73% saying they shaped their general travel style.
Travel
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: Hunter-gatherers in Europe's 'water world' resisted the switch to farming for millennia

Rhine-Meuse delta populations retained substantial hunter-gatherer ancestry for millennia before steppe-related mixing spurred Bell Beaker expansion and large genetic turnovers.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

What We Can Learn From Religion About Values That Do Not Expire

We are living through one of the most disorienting periods in recorded history. The AI race is accelerating toward ever faster, ever more sophisticated automation and optimization. Agentic AI systems are moving from research labs into workplaces, healthcare, and governance. Geopolitical tensions are restructuring alliances faster than institutions can adapt. And planetary systems are signaling, with increasing urgency, that our current trajectory is unsustainable. Amid all this, it is dangerously easy to lose sight of a foundational question: What are we actually optimizing for?
Artificial intelligence
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Expert reveals the least intelligent generation in history

Dr Jared Cooney Horvath, a former teacher-turned-neuroscientist, revealed that the generation born between 1997 and the early 2010s has been cognitively stunted by their over-reliance on digital technology in school. Since records have been kept on cognitive development in the late 1800s, Gen Z is now officially the first group to ever score lower than the generation before them, declining in attention, memory, reading and math skills, problem-solving abilities, and overall IQ.
Education
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

10 quiet things people stop doing in their 60s that their family barely notices - but each one is a small surrender of the life they imagined and by the time anyone realizes what happened the person they used to be has already left the room - Silicon Canals

Aging often means quietly abandoning small habits, hobbies, and casual connections, and those small losses cumulatively change who a person becomes.
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
2 months ago

We Must Teach Young Americans That Associating Black People With Apes Is Racist

U.S. president Donald Trump shared a racist video on his Truth Social account in which former American president and first lady Barack and Michelle Obama were depicted as apes. I was unsurprised, yet nonetheless disgusted. U.S. senator Jon Ossoff also found the video unacceptable. He said during a rally in Atlanta that Donald Trump was "posting about the Obamas like a Klansman."
US politics
Digital life
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

I used to think my parents were behind the times - now I'm in my 60s and I realize they understood things my generation is only starting to figure out - Silicon Canals

Family dinners together create irreplaceable bonds and communication that modern convenience erodes, requiring intentional commitment to preserve family connection.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

The age when happiness quietly bottoms out-and most people don't see it coming - Silicon Canals

Happiness reaches its lowest point around age 47.2 in advanced countries and around 48.2 in developing countries.
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

15 Adults Reveal The Bizarre Family Traditions That Left Other People Completely Stunned

Letting our dogs lick the dishes before we put them in the dishwasher!
Relationships
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Brawn and Engineering-Not Brains-Led to Human Domination

I'm always looking for books that challenge the status quo, and when I learned about Roland Ennos' new book The Powerful Primate: How Controlling Energy Enabled Us to Build Civilization, I couldn't wait to get my eyes on it, and I'm thrilled I did. In this landmark book, Ennos offers "a compelling argument that flips the traditional view of humanity on its head."
Science
History
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

People Are Sharing The Most Interesting Things They've Discovered About Their Ancestors

Descendants discovered ancestors including a Greek-knighted inventor who saved grape crops, writer E.T.A. Hoffman, and bank robber Pretty Boy Floyd.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 months ago

When we turned time into a line, we reimagined past and future | Aeon Essays

Modern linear representation of time originated in the 18th century; earlier cultures predominantly held cyclical, celestial-based conceptions of time.
Parenting
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Parents are ditching traditional names - so, is YOURS dying out?

Parents worldwide increasingly choose unique baby names, causing traditional popular names to decline across multiple countries.
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

If you remember these 8 weekend rituals from childhood, you grew up with stronger family bonds than most people have today - Silicon Canals

I was thinking about this the other day while scrolling through my phone on a Saturday morning, realizing I'd been working for two hours without even noticing. Growing up, my weekends looked nothing like this. There were unspoken rules, traditions that just happened without anyone scheduling them into a calendar app. These weren't grand gestures or expensive activities. They were simple rituals that, looking back now, built something most of us are desperately trying to recreate through therapy apps and self-help books: genuine connection.
Relationships
Science
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Neanderthals seemed to have a thing for modern human women

Neanderthal X chromosomes are largely absent from modern humans while modern human X chromosomes are overrepresented in Neanderthal genomes, suggesting selective mating preferences favoring Neanderthal males with modern human females.
History
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

People who grew up in the 60s and 70s usually have these 10 qualities that younger generations find remarkable - Silicon Canals

Adults raised in the 1960s-70s retain practical repair skills, strong memory, resourcefulness, and work approaches that often impress younger generations.
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
2 months ago

A Genealogy for the End of the World

The Anthropocene frames humanity as a collective geological force reshaping Earth’s climate and biosphere, redefining history through shared catastrophe and human-driven planetary change.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

People Are Pointing Out The Parts Of American Culture That Are Changing Before Our Eyes

Widespread convenience technologies let people avoid leaving home, reducing everyday face-to-face interaction and increasing social isolation, division, and hostility.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 months ago

Clothing Through History: Fashion Across Three Millennia

Clothing across centuries signaled social status, practical needs, and personal identity, varying by materials, colours, and silhouettes across cultures and eras.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

Older Adults Are Sharing The Unique Experiences From The Past That Have Gen Z'ers Dumfounded

Older adults commonly experienced home gardens and meals, operator-connected phone calls, unrestrained car seating (rumble seats/truck beds), and informal store-credit systems.
History
fromMedievalists.net
2 months ago

When were the Middle Ages? - Medievalists.net

The Middle Ages lack a single, natural start or end; appropriate boundaries depend on whether political, religious, economic, or cultural changes are prioritized.
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

50 Historical Photos That Are So Shocking, They're Changing My Perception Of The Entire World

I recently gained a new obsession, and I'm ready to share it with the world: finding and analyzing rare vintage images. A picture speaks a thousand words, and these photographs tell us more about history than a textbook chapter ever could. So even if you think history is boring, I'm well-equipped to change your mind, and give you some delicious food for your brain to chew on today.
History
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

How I Traced My Ancestor's Journey From Slavery to Freedom

The librarian sat me in front of a microfilm reader and brought out roll after roll of film. I stayed there for hours, squinting to decipher the archaic handwriting in the Free Negro Book, which was published annually in South Carolina before the Civil War. The names in each year's edition were alphabetized, but only roughly-all of the surnames starting with A came before all of the surnames starting with B, but Agee might come before Anderson, or it might come after.
History
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
1 month ago

How to Fit 250 Years of American History and Culture Into One Map

Smithsonian magazine celebrates America's 250th birthday with an interactive map featuring 250 notable places across ten categories, while historians contextualize this anniversary amid current domestic challenges.
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Mysterious symbols spanning the globe hint at a lost civilization

His investigation began after identifying recurring giant T-shapes, three-level indents, and step pyramids carved into ancient stones worldwide. 'These specific symbols that are built in different size proportions, and the symbols are found in ancient stones around the world, are not supposed to exist; no cultures are supposed to have any cross-platform,' LaCroix explained. The symbols appear in locations ranging from Turkey's Van region to South America and Cambodia.
History
[ Load more ]