We all got some really bad news last year: it’s totally our fault, and it doesn’t look set to change any time soon, so let’s not beat around the bush – sitting down all day is killing us.
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We all got some really bad news last year: it’s totally our fault, and it doesn’t look set to change any time soon, so let’s not beat around the bush – sitting down all day is killing us.
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So Twitter doesn’t only have the widely recognized usefulness of providing updates on news and revolution, and illuminating links, and many laughs and smirks. It has also brought about a surprising revival of the epigrammatic impulse in a literary culture that otherwise values the merely personal and the super-colloquial as badges of authenticity. “Write as short as you can/ In order/ Of what matters,” John Berryman counseled in a pre-tweet of 44 characters. Favorite that, followers.
More on TWITTER: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=twitter
Via Sakis Koukouvis Delete the scoop?
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