2018
December
11
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 11, 2018
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The events of 1968 left influences that still linger 50 years later. This week comes a reminder that those legacies include a breaking of barriers in technology and exploration.

Humans circled the moon for the first time in December of that year. That journey and the “Earthrise” photo that resulted will be highlighted at an event tonight in Washington, with one of the original Apollo astronauts involved. You can view it online here.

This week also marks the 50th anniversary of something less known outside tech circles. In California, a Stanford-linked technologist named Douglas Engelbart made a presentation that’s now called the “mother of all demos.” The demonstration featured the first functioning computer mouse, and much more. Videoconferencing. Screen-sharing. Hyperlinks. A graphical interface with the machine. Plans for far-flung networks. Mr. Engelbart didn’t invent all this alone, but basically a straight line runs from his demo to today’s smartphones and internet.

Yet the footage also looks archaic – a reminder of how breakthroughs begin with ideas, dreams, and baby steps. And often with moral purpose. Engelbart’s vision wasn’t just about cool technology as an end in itself. As early as his service in World War II and his marriage proposal in 1950, Engelbart was nurturing a life goal: to help the world become more connected, to advance human progress and the solving of big problems.

Now it’s on to our five stories for today.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Oded Balilty/Reuters
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu chaired a weekly cabinet meeting at his office in Jerusalem Dec. 9. For the past two years Mr. Netanyahu has been the focus of investigations. Yet with legal pressures mounting, the political tactician shows no signs of stepping down.

Perception Gaps

Comparing what’s ‘known’ to what’s true

Understanding war and those who fight it

SOURCE:

Uppsala Conflict Data Program & Peace Research Institute Oslo

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Renee Hickman
Art historian and activist Ievgeniia Moliar stands in front of a mosaic she helped save at the Politekhnichnyi Instytut metro station in Kiev, Ukraine. Rather than destroying the mosaic, authorities simply removed the hammer from the original hammer and sickle design.

The Monitor's View

AP
An art installation depicting migrants is pictured during the UN Migration Conference in Marrakech Morocco.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Evan Vucci/AP
In a testy Oval Office exchange Dec. 11, President Trump and top Democrats sparred over issues in what NPR called ‘an extraordinary show before the cameras and the press.’ On the issue of a government shutdown if funding for a border wall is not forthcoming, Mr. Trump said: ‘I will take the mantle. And I will shut it down for border security.’ From left: House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, Vice President Mike Pence, Trump, and Senate minority leader Charles Schumer.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow, when our education writer will revisit her childhood school district to ask, How do cities that successfully desegregated schools handle a reversal back into segregation? 

More issues

2018
December
11
Tuesday
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