
Maya Cueva
Articles
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1 week ago |
kqed.org | Morgan Sung |Maya Cueva |Chris Egusa |Samantha Cole
Failed to save articlePlease try againTech reporter Samantha Cole holds a SWYPE touchscreen disposable vape in July 2024. She ordered the device after viral posts that summer showed digital vapes with built-in social media apps. In this episode, tech reporter Samatha Cole shares what happened when she tried to “vape the internet” after seeing a viral post about a disposable touchscreen vape with built-in social media.
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2 weeks ago |
kqed.org | Morgan Sung |Maya Cueva |Chris Egusa
Episode TranscriptThis is a computer-generated transcript. While our team has reviewed it, there may be errors. Morgan Sung: Hey guys, this is Close All Tabs. I’m Morgan Sung, tech journalist and your chronically online friend, here to open as many browser tabs as it takes to help you understand how the digital world affects our real lives. Except today, we aren’t opening any tabs. We’re doing something a little different.
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3 weeks ago |
kqed.org | Morgan Sung |Maya Cueva |Chris Egusa
Morgan SungMaya CuevaChris EgusaApr 2Failed to save articlePlease try againA close-up of a human eye on an IBM computer monitor, 1983. (Photo by Alfred Gescheidt/Getty Images The ”broligarchy” didn’t come together in a vacuum — this combination of extreme wealth, right wing leanings, and an anti-establishment point of view has been brewing for decades.
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4 weeks ago |
kqed.org | Morgan Sung |Maya Cueva |Chris Egusa
Episode TranscriptThis is a computer-generated transcript. While our team has reviewed it, there may be errors. Morgan Sung: Guys, I think we need to talk about the broligarchy. News Anchor 1 We’re seeing a rise in what I guess we’ll call the broligarchy. News Anchor 2 The broligarchs really have an explicit political agenda. News Anchor 3 How do you survive the broligarchy?
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1 month ago |
kqed.org | Morgan Sung |Maya Cueva |Chris Egusa
Episode TranscriptThis is a computer-generated transcript. While our team has reviewed it, there may be errors. Morgan Sung: This is The Purge… Of government websites. Since President Trump’s inauguration, federal agency and military websites have been wiped. Some are gone completely, while others have been overhauled to remove any references to so-called woke terminology, all in this effort to comply with an executive order to end diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in the federal government.
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