Everyone knows David Bowie as a fashion pioneer and a musical visionary, but the man alternately known as the Thin White Duke/Ziggy Stardust/Jareth the Goblin King was also a tech trailblazer. In 1994, Bowie released a CD ROM alongside his track "Jump, They Say," which let buyers make their own accompanying music video, and he was one of the first major artists to put a new song — 1996's "Telling Lies" — out exclusively on the internet, selling 300,000 copies in the process. He even helped the New York Yankees make its first website, but Bowie didn't stop there.
Signing up for the new Twitter Blue has caused problems for some folks. The Shortcut details the roadblocks you may hit trying to sign up and how to get around them.
Good thing I signed up at launch so people know I'm the real evilcackle
Huge loss for those who don't know where else to spend their surplus $8 a month
study abroad is the chance to find yourself while acquiring a comprehension of an alternate culture. Being in another spot without help from anyone else can overpower on occasion.
Websites are harvesting our data even before we
Regulations are beginning to require users to verify their identification online.
You guys let people link directly to social media here? That's kind of weird. Should've switched the credit and main URL. Credit URL was an actual article.
And who else but David Bowie? The man was a genius. "Exhilarating and terrifying" is probably the most accurate description of the internet I've ever heard.