Too many things to read this afternoon Thursday, 16 January 2020 12:55:27 CST David-Braverman Chicago, Entertainment, General, Politics, Travel, Work (0) Fortunately, I'm debugging a build process that takes 6 minutes each time, so I may be able to squeeze some of these in: Bruce Schneier reports on a new critical vulnerability in Windows that the NSA told Microsoft about. That's new. The New Yorker's Rebecca Mead takes a thoughtful (and only mildly snarky) look at the Duke and Duchess of Sussex withdrawing from royal life. In the same issue, John Cassidy examines the reasons behind our assassination of Qassem Suleimani. The Washington Post documents the "rare and bizarre ritual" by which the House transmitted the articles of impeachment to the Senate. The Atlantic's Emma Green comments on Elizabeth Warren's new argument on electability. (Note: I have contributed financially to Elizabeth Warren's Senatorial and Presidential campaigns.) Via Heirloom Books in Chicago, the Smithsonian Magazine discusses how archivist Greg Priore smuggled $8m worth of artifacts out of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh over a 25-year period. The Electronic Frontier Foundation discusses the privacy-smashing way the U.S. Government has decided to send emails to people. The New York Times explains how Tiffany & Co. moved 114,000 gems without losing any. The Blommer Chocolate outlet store a few blocks from where I'm sitting will close next month after 30 years in business. The factory will remain open, however, so Chicago will still smell like chocolate every so often. Finally, Viking Cruises will bring a ship to Chicago in 2022. Back to debugging Azure DevOps pipelines...