Sunday, October 22, 2023

Can Happiness Be Taught - How to Get Past a Paywall to Read Some Articles for Free

 Can Happiness Be Taught? New Yorker


On the Unwholesomeness of Honest Toil Louise Crowley, The Anarchist Library. From 1966, still germane.


Life and Death and More Life: Leo Tolstoy on Science, Spirituality, and Our Search for MeaningThe Marginalian


Crocodile sex frenzy triggered by Chinook helicopters and thunder in central Queensland ABC Australia

MICROBIOME NEWS:  Deep dive into the gut unlocks new disease treatments.


MICROBIOME NEWS:  In a Huge First, Scientists Transfer Alzheimer’s to Healthy Young Animals. “The study also revealed specific bacteria in the gut are directly linked to cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s patients. This highlights the gut microbiome as a key area of research for Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, and that could lead to new ways to treat the disease.”


Octopus Intelligence Shakes Up Darwin’s TreeMind Matters. I cannot forbear from quoting:

Animals without backbones hid from each other or fell down. Clamasaurs and Oysterettes appeared as appetizers. Then came the sponges which sucked up about ten percent of all life. Hundreds of years later, in the Late Devouring Period, fish became obnoxious. Trailerbites, chiggerbites, and mosquitoes collided aimlessly in the dense gas. Finally, tiny edible plants sprang up in rows giving birth to generations of insecticides and other small dying creatures


How to Get Past a Paywall to Read Some Articles for Free

Lifehacker: “Over the past several years, countless websites have added paywalls: If you want to read their articles, you have to sign up and pay a monthly fee. Some sites have a “metered” paywall—meaning you can read a certain number of articles for free before they ask for money—and others have a hard paywall, where you’ll have to pay to read even one article. 

It’s mostly news websites that have paywalls, largely because relying on advertising income alone just isn’t viable anymore, and news companies are pursuing more direct revenue sources like monthly subscriptions. And, of course, we’re not against paywalls—and you probably aren’t either. If you can afford to pay to read articles, you absolutely should. 

But whether you lost your password, haven’t saved it on your phone, are in a rush, or are just strapped for cash and promise yourself that you’ll subscribe later, there are several ways to bypass paywalls on the internet. You may be able to use some of these methods successfully today, but that could change in the future as websites clamp down on bypass methods.

 I hope that you support the websites that you read by signing up for memberships—especially your friendly local news outlet—but if you can’t right now, here are some of the best ways to bypass paywalls online…”



Yugoslavia’s digital twin
Animal rights
'Decolonization'
Barnes & Noble
Evolution of cuteness
NYRB turns 60
Literary hats
Mystery of dizziness
Katalin Karikó
WSJ revamp
Jon Fosse
Nobel odds
Never ending book club
Climate predictions
Publishers and scholars, unite!
Manet's Olympia
Academic inertia
Joys of bookbinding
Lost and found
Noah Feldman and Julia Allison
Oscars preview
Art of smoking
Radical Wolfe
National Book Awards longlist
Musk's man
Rise of the M.B.A. novelist
Remembering Larry McMurtry
Broken blurbs
Against decluttering
Annie Ernaux
End of the take-home essay
Edith Grossman, R.I.P.
On Christian colleges
Scientists and philosophers
Lars Iyer
CVS music
Daniel Dennett
Dream jobs
Good and bad lit
Drum machine
Howard Becker, R.I.P.
Overhaul academia
Austen's country dance
Unlistenable album
Chris Rufo's book party
Art books
Science meets art
UFO photography
Barbie symposium
Traveling tales
BookTok
History of emo
GPT-4 at Harvard
Rules for reading
Dearth of bears
Summer books
'Mild Vertigo'
Larry Gagosian
Spermageddon
End of neoliberalism
Outrage machine
Where they work
Pedagogy as therapy
Did Harvard discriminate?
Disney World
Poetry and grief
Canadian tuxedo
Drug cartels?
2023 book preview
Race and academia
Publisher to the canceled
Departmental politics
Orwell in Zimbabwe
Paleotempestology
Dishonesty expert
Bookforum reborn
Panda Express postdoc
Old magazines
The Conspiracist Manifesto
Robert Gottlieb, R.I.P.
Eat, pray, pander
Martha Graham moment
Anti-social socialism
Raul Grigera
Binge purge
Indoctrination nation
Ego-histories
History of the window
Literary geography
On charisma
Disappearing van Gogh
Buñuel’s socialites
When cheese is not cheese
Still Mill
Age of adolescence
Martin Amis, R.I.P.
Fake British Accents
The work of the audiobook
Sparks of AGI
New literary kingmaker
Cheating with ChatGPT
How much is a smidgen?
Seavilization
Canceling Russian culture
Training A.I. to speak Jane Austen
On Buzzfeed
Ted Gioia's reading plan
Public conversation
Sad dads
Professors' tech paranoia
On sitting
Long movies
Celebrity trap
Roxane Gay
Spring books
End of the English major?
Are coincidences real?
Tenure in Texas
AI art
Paul Theroux rides the rails