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valz
0
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BEST ANSWER  chosen by asker   |  valz  |  December 23, 2008 10:04 AM
You seem to be interested in a wide range of topics and materials so I included some specific suggestions and also some resources where you can find further links and searches. Some are free and some are for purchase - once you have found what you like then you can choose to borrow from the library or subscribe or buy etc. for those that cost money.

http://www.themillionsblog.com/ "coverage on books, arts, and culture since 2003"

http://www.mondomagazine.net/ Toronto based arts and culture e-zine

http://epicfu.com/ EpicFu Eclectic Intelligent Arty Internet TV and community

http://www.moreintelligentlife.com/ More intelligent life

http://www.artsjournal.com/ Artsjournal.com

http://www.theartsfuse.com/ "the aim is to bring passionate intensity and intellectual vitality to evaluating all things cultural on the Web."

http://www.cdbaby.com/ Preview thousands of songs from obscure and well known Indie artists before buying.

http://www.jango.com/ Jango free music - internet radio that plays what you want.

http://www.e-book.com.au/freebooks.htm Scroll down for a great annotated listing of free books from around the world. Probably all you will need is here.

http://www.knowledgecenter.unr.edu/ejournals/free.aspx Free Electronic journals links University of Nevada.

http://www.icast.org.in/ejournal/ejournal.php Gateway for free e-journals.

http://www.e-journals.org/ Another free e-journal link resource.

http://www.questia.com An online full text library. Thousands of books and journals full text online - by subscription but can browse and search for free. Contains many academic items and also obscure works such as old classics. Can see sample pages.

http://www.amazon.com A huge online book/media/everything store. Is a great resource for searching books, magazines, multimedia.
You can personalize the search to your own page and it will give you suggestions. There are also suggested lists by people in almost every topic that can be valuable as well as reviews. Even if you don't buy the item the information can help you decide on getting it elsewhere. Often has front cover, index, sample page.

http://books.google.com/ Google books also is a great place to look for books and they now have magazines also.

http://revision3.com/ Free Internet Television - many shows

Creative Commons by Sister72

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valz
valz  |  December 24, 2008 09:43 PM
Here are a couple more:

A weekly blog reviewing Hollywood
http://weblogs.variety.com/thompsononhollywood/

@w00d’s nerdtainment
http://www.sarahatwood.net/
lunarazo
lunarazo  |  December 27, 2008 12:36 AM
Thank you everyone for all the amazing and thorough suggestions!
filmkid
0
Votes
filmkid  |  December 23, 2008 07:50 AM
Wired.com is a great site for being in-the-know technology wise. Hey, it's a start!

http://www.wired.com/
Comment
teff torbe...
1
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teff torbes  |  December 23, 2008 08:29 AM
The Atlantic - Covers politics, current events, has a lot of feature articles about social issues, tremendous variety, and has some of the best writing you'll find. All of their bloggers are good, and run the gamut from libertarian to progressive, to an interesting blog about linguistics - the others focus primarily on politics but are free to and do blog about other stuff. The magazine is a monthly and well worth it.
http://www.theatlantic.com

The Economist - No better non-BBC magazine/website for World news and analysis of all kinds of things from a moderately conservative British point of view. Probably the best weekly news magazine in the world.
http://economist.com

Ars Technica - Computers, technology, science, games, you'll find a very wide variety of topics including, occasionally, moderately editorialized articles on politically related stuff, but almost invariably it has to do with technology directly- technology is what the site is about. You'll get stuff from game reviews, to some of the best in detail analysis of CPU architectures on the internet, to relatively in depth posts about recent scientific studies. Quality ranges from decent to "wow".
http://arstechnica.com

On Point - an NPR radio broadcast. Covers everything under the sun. For listening primarily, but you can stream it from the web.
http://www.onpointradio.org/
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phpcook
0
Votes
phpcook  |  December 23, 2008 12:28 PM
you read most interesting news in

http://www.zdnet.com/
http://www.boston.com/
www.digg.com

these sites are used to read most useful information
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