FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “name”

Showing 1 - 10 of 143

Image-Content

OPINION

Just a charade?

Oped, Postbag, Published on 21/02/2024

» Re: "No legal let up for 'sick' Thaksin", (BP, Feb 20).

Image-Content

OPINION

Ditch Google to avoid fake news

News, Published on 15/01/2024

» Searching for information has become instant and effortless -- just go to your nearest device, ask Siri or click a few keys. But are we better informed than we were before Google became a verb?

Image-Content

OPINION

Hazardous waste

Oped, Postbag, Published on 06/06/2023

» Re: "Get tough on plastics", (Editorial, May 24).

Image-Content

LIFE

Harry shows Bangkok some Styles

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 14/03/2023

» The accessory du jour was the fluffy pink boa. The colour scheme was hot pink -- pink pants, pink boots, pink cowboy hats, pink eyeshadow, pink hijabs. Or if not pink, then anything in the tooth-aching shades of the rainbow. It was a lively, joyous sight on Saturday night, a show of hot-hue aesthetics in a defiant contrast to the brutalist concrete skeleton of Rajamangala Stadium. How I wish concrete-mad Bangkok could look like this every day!

Image-Content

OPINION

How tyrants use tech to spy on us all

News, Published on 08/02/2023

» Parmy Olson: You're the co-authors of a new book, Pegasus: How a Spy In Your Pocket Threatens the End of Privacy, Dignity, and Democracy, which tells the story of Pegasus, a powerful spyware developed by the Israeli cybersecurity firm NSO Group. In recent years, a range of governments around the world purchased this technology, allowing them to gain remote-control access to people's mobile phones without their knowledge. In 2020, a secret source leaked a list to your team of investigative journalists in Paris that contained 50,000 phone numbers that NSO Group's clients wanted to spy on. Among the names on the list were French president Emmanuel Macron, the Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi and a raft of journalists, including your own colleagues.

Image-Content

TECH

Is the new Twitter just like the old?

Life, James Hein, Published on 01/02/2023

» The Twitter situation is complex and somewhat confusing. On the one hand, all kinds of people from The Babylon Bee satirical website to former US president Donald Trump have been allowed back on the platform. The stated aim is to allow freedom of speech to be supported by Twitter once again. On the other hand, you can be banned by linking to a public photo of a public person on a public platform. The rule for the latter appears to only be for friends of Elon Musk. A YouTube channel I enjoy watching, The Quartering, did this after someone else had been banned and was also almost instantly banned himself. This is of course wrong in every respect especially given the individual in question, apparently now hypocritically, is always banging on about freedom of speech. Update, the ban is permanent.

Image-Content

OPINION

Telling it like it is

Oped, Postbag, Published on 28/01/2023

» Re: "Thailand's political charade exposed," (Opinion, Jan 27).

Image-Content

OPINION

The tragic misbehaviour of big business

Oped, Published on 07/10/2022

» Are successful businesspeople more like heroes or villains? In fictional accounts, one can find plenty of examples of each, from Charles Dickens's miserly Ebenezer Scrooge to Ayn Rand's rugged individualist entrepreneur John Galt. In F Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, Tom Buchanan represents privileged old money, with its ruthlessness and incapacity for empathy, whereas Jay Gatsby is a self-made millionaire with no shortage of sentimentality and idealism.

Image-Content

LIFE

Movie poster earns complaints

News, Post Reporters, Published on 25/07/2022

» A poster for the movie sequel to the TV series Buppaesannivas (Love Destiny) is upsetting some Cambodian netizens for using the country's national lamduan flower.

Image-Content

OPINION

What's in a (soi) name?

Guru, Pornchai Sereemongkonpol, Published on 24/06/2022

» At the front of practically every soi in Bangkok, you'll notice a pole with a blue sign with white letters at the top proclaiming its name. However, if you look closer you may find many sois in Thailand can brighten your day with their curious names. Here are a few for your entertainment.