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Tech | New Adventures in WiFi – A Guinness Record Attempt

Environment | Campaign for Cleaner Oceans

Investigation | Could the Antarctic ice sheet really collapse?

Month: October 2016

Science

Insight | What the ancient carbon dioxide record might mean for future climate change

Wide Orbits/October 31, 2016February 2, 2018

  A team co-led by UCD’s Prof. Jennifer McElwain have shown how deep-time reconstruction demonstrates that tropical forests can deeply…

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Life

Manifesto | Saving the lives of Europe’s stray dogs

Raisa Nissila/October 24, 2016February 2, 2018

In the spring of 2012 a couple of like-minded women and I registered an association called Kyproskoirat ry (Finnish for…

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Arts

Interview | Sir Richard J. Evans talks 19th century Europe

Wide Orbits/October 23, 2016February 2, 2018

Freelance journalist JP O’Malley caught up with British historian,
 Richard J Evans, in Waterstones Picadilly, in London, on Friday October…

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Life

Opinion | Preparing Ireland for climate change mitigation

Michael Keary/October 19, 2016February 2, 2018

There is a debate missing from Irish politics. Despite the now overwhelming scientific consensus about the causes and implications of…

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Science

Concept | Turning the world’s deserts green

Vesela Tanaskovic/October 18, 2016March 16, 2018

The extent to which deforestation is harming global communities is a matter for serious international concern, and immediate positive action….

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Arts

Music | Katie Kim live in Dublin’s Unitarian Church

Conor Purcell/October 18, 2016February 2, 2018

The soft light throws forty foot shadows along the interior church wall. Window glass reflects the orange hue. But otherwise,…

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Arts

Opinion | Dylan’s win reboots the Nobel Prize for Literature

Graham Mooney/October 14, 2016February 2, 2018

Bob Dylan wins the Nobel Prize for Literature. Validation at last for the voice of a generation; another trophy in…

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Science

Scifi | Noise some, Words some

Gerard Lynch/October 10, 2016February 2, 2018

  Intercepted email correspondence, September 8th, 2016: “So I ran an open source speech recognition system on the ambient office…

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Life

Insight | A writer’s take on coping with depression

Peter Boyd/October 10, 2016February 2, 2018

“Something is always born of excess: great art was born of great terrors, great loneliness, great inhibitions, instabilities, and it…

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Arts

Interview | Jonathan Fenby talks modern France

Wide Orbits/October 9, 2016February 2, 2018

Freelance journalist JP O’Malley caught up with British author, Jonathan Fenby in Waterstones Picadilly, in London, on Friday October 7th,…

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Arts

Essay | The healing sound: music and the power of the word

Conor O'Malley/October 6, 2016February 2, 2018

“Music was my refuge. I could crawl into the space between the notes and curl my back to loneliness.” Maya…

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Life

The Lost Brother | Uncovering a family past

Conor Purcell/October 6, 2016February 2, 2018

The long history of Irish emigration to the United States is mixed. In 1928 two of my grandmother’s brothers left…

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Science

Ernest Walton | The Irish nobel laureate who split the atom

Alan Hally/October 5, 2016February 2, 2018

In July 2012, a little over 60 years after the first successful atom smashing, CERN – the European Organization for…

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Science

Idea | How people with sports addiction are like drug addicts

Karin Jongsma/October 4, 2016March 15, 2018

Participation in sports is a highly visible aspect of 21st-century life, with a normative dimension. Sport benefits health, encourages self-discipline,…

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Arts

Poem | Parting Company

JP O'Malley/October 3, 2016February 2, 2018

I remember the last time we made love Feeling nothing – your body impertinently brash. Dressing in darkness, planning our…

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Life

Idea | Why kids can learn more from tales of fantasy than realism

Deena Skolnick Weisberg/October 1, 2016October 5, 2016

Children have a lot of learning to do. Arguably, this is the purpose of childhood: to provide children with protected…

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Top 5 Most Read

  • Opinion | Elite origin of the Irish language revival is hindering learning
  • Ernest Walton | The Irish nobel laureate who split the atom
  • Language | Sorry for your Troubles : Hiberno-English and a history of euphemism.
  • Insight | How the Irish government began its anti-traveller movement
  • Travel : Pictures of Ireland

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