by Andrea James on (#30KBE)
If an artificial intelligence reviewed your favorite logo, how would that logo fare? now you can find out with Logo Rank, a nifty tool by the guy behind Brandmark. (more…)
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Updated | 2024-11-24 02:01 |
by Carla Sinclair on (#30HVJ)
MSNBC host Katy Tur asks Senator Ted Cruz what he has to say about voting against relief aid for the catastrophic Hurricane Sandy back in 2012, but now asking for Hurricane Harvey relief aid, which happens to be in his own state of Texas. Cruz tries to swat away the question with a lame response: "There's time for political sniping later."But Tur doesn't let it go. "It's not really political sniping, Senator. These are people who needed money and who needed funding after that storm... Many of those people, just like in Houston, lost everything they owned."Cruz then comes up with a whopper, saying he "enthusiastically" supported aid to Sandy. Funny, it sure didn't seem that way. Fortunately the areas affected by Sandy did get the relief aid they needed, just as we should hope and expect that those affected by Harvey will get the relief aid that they need.
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by Jason Weisberger on (#30HQA)
This darling gift kept me chuckling all the way through! Anyone who drinks can use the Fireside Grown-Up Guide to the Hangover!In the vein of an old Golden Book, Fireside Grown-Up Guides are sarcastic, sardonic and just plain good fun. The humor and the art work are spot on perfect!I've known about the actual cure for hangovers for years, but we aren't allowed to have Solpadeine Plus in the US for some reason. Could be the massive problems they had with OTC codeine in the UK. Oh well!The Fireside Grown-Up Guide to the Hangover via Amazon
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by Xeni Jardin on (#30HQC)
Felix Sater, a longtime business associate of Donald Trump with organized crime ties, promised in a 2015 email to “engineer a real estate deal with the aid of the president of Russia, Vladimir V. Putin, that he said would help Mr. Trump win the presidency,†reports the New York Times today. (more…)
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by Carla Sinclair on (#30HPV)
If you're in Kenya, don't be caught with a plastic bag. Starting today, using a plastic bag, whether for groceries, lining a trash can, or anything else you can think of, will cost you the equivalent of a $38,000 fine or land you in jail for up to four years. According to NPR:"It is a toxin that we must get rid of," Judi Wakhungu, the country's Cabinet secretary for the environment, told reporters. "It's affecting our water. It's affecting our livestock and, even worse, we are ingesting this as human beings."But the new law is controversial.The Kenyan Association of Manufacturers, which challenged the ban in court, said nearly 3 percent of all Kenyans are directly employed by the 176 plastic manufacturers in the country. The ban, they argued, will cost cost Kenya tens of thousands of jobs.Then there is the issue of convenience. When I visited Kibera in June to report on the proposed ban, residents overwhelmingly opposed it...Kenneth Okoth, a member of Parliament who represents Kibera, opposed the ban because he said it would affect his poor constituents the most. In Kibera there is little running water, no toilets or outhouses, but the ban will affect the so-called flying toilets — plastic bags residents use to defecate and urinate in."It may look very fashionable in international circles," he said. "But in reality, in a place like Kibera, we still need those plastics."It's only been a day, but so far no one has been busted for using a bag.Image: Trosmisiek
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#30HJ1)
This is the best price I've seen for these 15.5" x 12" microfiber cleaning cloths -- 24 for $8.52. We use them to clean our brush steel refrigerator and kitchen trash can with water only. They leave no streaks.
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#30H9G)
Tuukka Ojala is a blind software developer in Finland. When he works, he keeps his laptop closed (it has an external keyboard attached to it). In this fascinating interview on Vincit, he explains how he works:How do you use the computer?The computer I use is a perfectly normal laptop running Windows 10. It's in the software where the "magic happens". I use a program called a screen reader to access the computer. A screen reader intercepts what's happening on the screen and presents that information via braille (through a separate braille display) or synthetic speech. And it's not the kind of synthetic speech you hear in today's smart assistants. I use a robotic-sounding voice which speaks at around 450 words per minute. For comparison, English is commonly spoken at around 120-150 words per minute. There's one additional quirk in my setup: Since I need to read both Finnish and English regularly I'm reading English with a Finnish speech synthesizer. Back in the old days screen readers weren't smart enough to switch between languages automatically, so this was what I got used to. Here's a sample of this paragraph being read as I would read it:[audio mp3="https://media.boingboing.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/mpsample.mp3"][/audio]And here's the same text spoken by an English speech synthesizer:[audio mp3="https://media.boingboing.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/essample.mp3"][/audio]A mouse is naturally not very useful to me so I work exclusively at the keyboard. The commands I use should be familiar to anyone reading this post: Arrow keys and the tab key move you around inside a window, alt+tab changes between windows etc. Screen readers also have a whole lot of shortcuts of their own, such as reading various parts of the active window or turning some of their features on or off.It's when reading web pages and other formatted documents that things get a little interesting. You see, a screen reader presents its information in chunks. That chunk is most often a line but it may also be a word, a character or any other arbitrary piece of text. For example, if I press the down arrow key on a web page I hear the next line of the page. This type of reading means that I can't just scan the contents of my screen the same way a sighted person would do with their eyes. Instead, I have to read through everything chunk by chunk, or skip over those chunks I don't care about.Speech or braille alone can't paint an accurate representation of how a window is laid out visually. All the information is presented to me in a linear fashion. If you copy a web page and paste it into notepad you get a rough idea of how web pages look to me. It's just a bunch of lines stacked on top of another with most of the formatting stripped out. However, a screen reader can pick up on the semantics used in the HTML of the web page, so that links, headings, form fields etc. are announced to me correctly. That's right: I don't know that a check box is a check box if it's only styled to look like one. However, more on that later; I'll be devoting an entire post to this subject. Just remember that the example I just gave is a crime against humanity.I spend a good deal of my time working at the command line. In fact I rarely use any other graphical applications than a web browser and an editor. I've found that it's often much quicker to do the task at hand on the command line than to use an interface which was primarily designed with mouse users in mind.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30H7S)
They don't come as a set, sadly, but these unicorn-shaped power banks are offered in white and black for $15 each. About three inches wide and one deep, they've got good reviews from buyers, so aren't doomed to become paperweights after the second recharge cycle. White Unicorn USB Power Bank [Amazon]Black Unicorn USB Power Bank [Amazon]
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#30H1W)
As tomatoes move down a conveyor belt and into a hopper, the machine identifies the green tomatoes and actuates a lever to kick them out.Only reds allowed from interestingasfuck
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by Boing Boing's Shop on (#30H1Y)
Macs typically don’t require much maintenance. But system updates and third-party software have been known to create junk, and your OS isn’t always capable of cleaning up after itself. CleanMyMac 3 helps you free up some space on your disk, and you can grab a discounted license from our store for $27.99.This app has a keen eye for superfluous files. It keeps track of the usual places garbage accumulates, and offers a one-click delete for your Trash, downloaded email attachments, and application caches. If your photo library is taking up more space than it should, or you found some mysterious blobs in your system folder and don’t want to lose anything important, CleanMyMac makes painstaking file purges a thing of the past.You can get CleanMyMac 3 here for $27.99.
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by David Pescovitz on (#30H22)
The Atlantic's Marina Koren wrote about the Voyager Golden Record vinyl box set that I co-produced with Tim Daly and Lawrence Azerrad. From Koren's article, titled "Forty Years Later, the Golden Record Goes Vinyl":Even though they had the tapes, Pescovitz and the rest of the team still needed to secure permission to use copyrighted material. Getting the rights to songs from major record labels or images from national publications was easy, since such institutions usually have a process in place. Tracking down the owners of some of the more obscure content, like melodies by indigenous groups, proved more difficult, Pescovitz said. Notes from the time of the record’s original production were sometimes lacking or wrong, and online searches for some of the names listed turned up obituaries instead of contact information. “It came to the point where I was calling Papua New Guinea at 2 o’clock in the morning, and working with amazing ethnomusicologists around the world to try to track down as much information as possible, to find out about who these people were, what the music was, who collected it and when,†Pescovitz said.The owner of one musical piece featuring panpipes was listed as the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation, so Pescovitz called. The staff didn’t know the name of the song or who played it, but a young woman who was at the radio station overheard them talking about it (and told them the music came from her village and her grandfather would know the players. He spoke with the group's leader and the surviving musicians are now working on getting a bank account so Pescovitz and the team can pay them royalties.)The team started shipping the vinyl records to their Kickstarter backers this week, in time for the Voyager mission’s 40th anniversary. The gold-plated versions, meanwhile, are hurtling away from Earth are more than 35,000 miles per hour, looking for an audience. They may go unheard forever. But that doesn’t really matter to Pescovitz.“Yes, the Voyager record is a gift from humanity to the cosmos, but it’s also a gift to humanity,†he said. “It’s a manifestation of what we can accomplish through creativity, passion, and science. It instills a sense of hope and possibility in people.â€"Pre-order the Voyager Golden Record on vinyl and CD" (Ozma Records)
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by David Pescovitz on (#30GV9)
Pioneering horror filmmaker Tobe Hooper, who died on Saturday, on the source of his inspiration for The Texas Chainsaw Massacre:It came to him, he said, in the hardware department of a Sears-like store during a busy Christmas season, with his low tolerance for crowds as a catalyst.“I was kind of freaking, just wanted to get out of there, get out of the crowd,†he said in the documentary. “And so I found myself in front of a chain-saw display in the hardware department, and that’s where the idea came from — ‘Well, if I pick this damn thing up and start it, they’ll part like the Red Sea and I can get out of here.’â€"Tobe Hooper, Director of ‘The Texas Chain Saw Massacre,’ Dies at 74" (New York Times)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30GRM)
Beck's got a new album, Colors, coming out on October 13. Here's the first video, Dear Life. The lyrics are quite timely.You sang your swan song to the dogs'Cause they made mincemeat of the dreams you hung your hopes onSo you cut it out, well your sins costWhile money talks to your conscience, looking like a fool for loveDear life, I'm holding onDear life, I'm holding onHow long must I waitBefore the thrill is goneYou drove your Rolls into the swampYou stole away like a thief, reeling from the sticker shockOf the price they put upon your soulYou buy it back from the burning ashes of the devil you knowDear life, I'm holding onDear life, I'm holding onHow long must I waitBefore the thrill is goneDear life, come and pick me upDear life, I think the button's stuckDear life, I think it's gone too farDear life, please lower the barLower than the starsDear life, I'm holding onDear life, I'm holding onHow long must I waitBefore the thrill is gone
by Rob Beschizza on (#30CKR)
Kikkerland's Magnetic Hourglass is like any other, except that the sand is replaced with iron filings. This results in eyecatching structures and stalagmite-like prominences forming and collapsing upon the magnetic base. Check out this video they posted to YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vErFLDzVFkIt's set for a one-minute countdown, measures six inches tall—a little more with the stand!—and is so lovely I can't even think up one of those weirdly despairing J. Peterman-style catalog descriptions that starts out comically enthusiastic but slowly descends into liminal terror at mankind's savage vicissitude and the imminent failure of the American state and way of life.$18 and you better like maple.Magnetic Hourglass [Amazon]
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30C54)
Great stuff, nice and mellow and melancholy going into the weekend. It's from the a album, Midnight Signals, coming later this fall. (Bandcamp)Previously: Starcadian, HE^RT and Chinatown
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30BNZ)
https://youtu.be/3sEOwMfF7MA?t=1m18sMy favorite air disaster documentarian, Allec Joshua Ibay, recreated last month's SFO taxiway near-miss, complete with real radio traffic. I skipped the scene-setting in the above embed: an inbound pilot mistaking a taxiway, with a bunch of loaded planes on it, for the runway. (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30BGS)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJzL_wyMahUWeird and unsettling UK sitcom League of Gentlemen is to return to our screens as a series of specials, reports the BBC.The three episodes will once again star Reece Shearsmith, Steve Pemberton and Mark Gatiss, who have written the new scripts alongside co-creator Jeremy Dyson. Filming will begin in Manchester and the Peak District next month.The BBC confirms: "After a 15 year absence from television screens, once again the team will be playing dozens of characters, the local denizens of the isolated Northern town of Royston Vasey."Embedded above is a typically horrific example of a scene featuring the incompetent veterinarian Dr. Chinnery. Do not watch if you cannot abide the suffering of tortoises.
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by Andrea James on (#30BGV)
"Two handsome master criminals are trying to pull off a big heist so they're putting together the most incredible heist team that has ever heist teamed before." (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#30BH1)
First dates are often cringey, so a first date with cameras rolling will be next-level cringe. To take it to the next level, ask one date participant wear eye-tracking goggles. Enjoy! (more…)
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by Xeni Jardin on (#30AGM)
President Donald J. Trump today pardoned the lawless racist and former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio. He was found guilty of criminal contempt in a case about racial profiling. Of course he was Trump's first pardon. (more…)
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by Jason Weisberger on (#30ACN)
The racist bigots planning to rally in San Francisco's Crissy Field have cancelled their event, citing fear of violence and the fact that they'd be far out-numbered.Joey Gibson, the rally’s organizer and the founder of the conservative group Patriot Prayer, said that he believed that “tons of extremists†would be coming to his event and that it could become dangerous.“We’re not going to have a rally at Crissy Field,†Gibson said in a Facebook Live broadcast. “It doesn’t seem safe. A lot of people’s lives are going to be in danger tomorrow.â€Another rally in Berkeley on Sunday will go on, Gibson said, citing a conversation he had with Amber Cummings, the organizer of that event. “We’re excited to go into Berkeley. We’re going to put our effort and our resources into Berkeley,†Gibson said.He blamed politicians like House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee for characterizing the San Francisco rally as a white nationalist event, which he said would attract people with extreme views.“After several conversations with the police and understanding the situation of what’s going on, we’ve decided that tomorrow really seems like a setup,†Gibson said. “We decided to go ahead and take the opportunity to not fall into that trap.â€And some protesters could still show up at Crissy Field on Saturday even with the official event called off.The “free speech†rally had attracted a broad backlash from residents and local leaders since deadly violence broke out at a white nationalist protest in Charlottesville, Virginia earlier this month. While organizers with the Portland-based Patriot Prayer insisted they denounced white supremacy, past events organized by the group have attracted neo-Nazis and devolved into violence.The organizers said they would hold a news conference Saturday at 2 p.m. in San Francisco’s Alamo Park and that they wouldn’t talk more about their reasons for canceling the event until then.Via the Mercury NewsGo home, bigots.
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by Xeni Jardin on (#30A9Y)
North Korea has launched what is likely to be multiple short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast into the Sea of Japan, according to South Korea's military. (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30AA0)
I've always wanted one of these, and now I can get one pretty cheap! The KABB Modern Digital Flip Clock is $44, comes with black or white number flaps, and runs off a single D battery. It looks a bit cheap in the photos—I certainly don't think it'll pass for a vintage Bomba—but that hardly matters, as it's just another totem of my anxious and obsessive grasping at nostalgia for a technological age I am too young to have experienced, a timeless jumble of false comfort doomed to be discarded in a convulsion of minimalism that is itself merely another manifestation of the deracinating consumer identities to which we are all measured against and fed to like krill.Nice gift for dad, though!
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by Xeni Jardin on (#30AA2)
Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his team of investigators are looking into whether former Trump cabinet member Mike Flynn may have been part of an effort to get a hold of Hillary Clinton’s emails, hacked by Russia. (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30A5X)
Audio plugins are renowned for their insane efforts to mimic real-life hardware UI, right down to 70s'-style dials and warped burl paneling. If they could smell of sweaty pleather, they would. John Lagomarsino takes us through his favorite ones and tries to figure out why on Earth all this is so.Alone, each plugin is hideous in its own unique way. A panel of 3D knobs here, a pixelated oscilloscope there. But when a project really gets cooking, one can amass eight or ten of these interfaces overlapping each other on the screen at once, and that's when skeuomorph hell really comes into focus. I don't know why audio software has looked like this for the better part of two decades, but I'd like to honor these sins of UI with a tour of some of the most egregious examples.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30A3M)
I am become death, destroyer of worlds.https://twitter.com/PopTartsUS/status/890261476266696704Behold my works! Corinthian Leather: the collected political nightmare photoshops.
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#309TN)
My guest on the Cool Tools Show podcast this week is my friend and former Wired editor, Louis Rossetto. Louis co-founded Wired with his life partner Jane Metcalfe. During his five years directing Wired, it won the National Magazine Awards for General Excellence twice and was Adweek's Hottest Magazine of the Year. Wired also pioneered commercial web media, launching HotWired the first website with original advertising and Fortune 500 advertising. Since Wired, he's pursued different obsessions from real estate to helping start and run the high end chocolate company TCHO, to writing his new novel Change is Good. (more…)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#309N3)
Sixty years ago, North Korea and South Korea were one country. Jacob Laukaitis recently spent a week in each country and made a video of the differences he saw. His guide in South Korea was a man who escaped from North Korea. He told Jacob that only the most privileged North Koreans get to live in the capital of Pyongon. He paid human smugglers $30,000 to take him out of the county. He spent three years working on a farm in China to pay off the debt.
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#309FX)
People prefer products that have faces on the packaging, especially when they are lonely, according to a study published online this month in the European Journal of Social Psychology.From University of Oregon:This finding, published online this month in the European Journal of Social Psychology, is rooted in people’s fundamental need to belong and their desire to form and sustain relationships. When humans lack these social connections, they often attempt to fill the void in other ways, including through their purchasing habits. “Previous research linked our need for social connection with consumer behavior and judgment, but very little was understood about the role that visuals play in social connection and brand likability,†[Prof. Dr. Ulrich] Orth explained. “Our study builds on prior research by demonstrating that seeing a face in a brand visual increases a consumer’s liking of the brand, especially if they feel lonely.â€To be effective, the face on the label does not need to be as obvious as the one smiling back at [University of Oregon professor Bettina] Cornwell from the bag of potato chips in the hotel gift shop. Consumers often imagine humanlike characteristics in nonhuman visuals, a process also known as anthropomorphism. Orth explains that loneliness can enhance people’s tendency to exhibit this kind of “wishful seeing†and is most apparent in the case of faces.“A lack of interpersonal relationships motivates people to actively search for sources of connection,†Cornwell said. “Individuals who are lonely are more likely to find faces in visuals because they so greatly desire this social connection.†Image: Kevin Harber/Flickr
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by Jason Weisberger on (#309FZ)
https://youtu.be/iTPuZYVuGd0Less musically inclined than the average bear?
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#3099S)
A fellow who goes by the handle beaston02 wanted to see how unlimited Amazon's "unlimited" cloud storage plan was, so he uploaded 293 years' worth (2 million gigabytes or 2 petabytes) of PornHub videos to his account. (more…)
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by Rob Beschizza on (#30937)
A Pew Research study found that "younger adults are more likely than their elders to read the news," but there are other ways of seeing the data.Overall, more Americans prefer to watch their news (46%) than to read it (35%) or listen to it (17%), a Pew Research Center survey found earlier this year. But that varies dramatically by age. Those ages 50 and older are far more likely to prefer watching news over any other method: About half (52%) of 50- to 64-year-olds and 58% of those 65 and older would rather watch the news, while roughly three-in-ten (29% and 27%, respectively) prefer to read it. ... our research also reveals that, in the digital realm, [younger adults] often get news at equal or higher rates than older Americans, whether intentionally or not.The most literate and literary people in human history.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#308Q6)
Janelle Shane†trained a neural network on the names and attributes of My Little Ponies, then shared "some of the worst ones."I used a program called a character-level recurrent neural network (char-rnn), which looks at examples of text (Pokemon, or Harry Potter fan fiction, or even guinea pig names) and learns to imitate them. I gave the neural network more than 1,500 names from My Little Pony Friendship is Magic Wiki, and let it start learning.
by Rob Beschizza on (#308Q7)
Half-Life 3 is a running joke (or tragedy) among fans of the series who waited more than a decade for it to exist. With publisher Valve's business shifting to its Steam platform and key writer Marc Laidlaw leaving the company, the writing seemed on the wall. Turns out, though, it's on his blog: Epistle 3 is a lightly-cloaked synopsis (already edited by fans to remove obfuscating elements) of what was, in another world, the greatest game of 201A.a Certain Sinister Figure appeared, in the form of that sneering trickster, G-Man. For once he appeared not to me, but to Alyx Vance. Alyx had not seen the cryptical schoolmaster since childhood, but she recognized him, instantly. "Come along with me now, we've places to be and things to do," said G-Man, and Alyx acquiesced. She followed the strange grey man out of the Borealis, out of our reality. For me, there was no convenient door held open; only a snicker and a sideways glance. I was left alone, riding the weaponized research vessel into the heart of a Combine world. An immense light blazed. I caught a cosmic view of a brilliantly glittering Dyson sphere. The vastness of the Combine's power, the futility of our struggle, blossomed briefly in my awareness. I saw everything. Mainly I saw how the Borealis, our most powerful weapon, would register as less than a fizzling matchhead as it blew itself apart. And what remained of me would be even less than that.Laidlaw describes it as "fanfic":https://twitter.com/marc_laidlaw/status/900960760481726464"Isn't everything you have written about half life technically a fanfic?" a twitter user asks. "Psych!" Laidlaw replies.
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by Xeni Jardin on (#3077Y)
Yes, please! Take my money. (more…)
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by Carla Sinclair on (#306GG)
North Korea must be hard up for cash, as they are now promoting themselves to Russians as a tourist destination. In their promotional pitch, they claim that visiting North Korea is "safer than an evening walk in London." (Sounds like one of those exaggerated claims that Trump would say!) They also state that the guests must be "checked" before the trip and will constantly be monitored for "adequate behaviour of the tourist and guarantee his safety," according to The Telegraph. Furthermore, it's "not recommended" to chat with the locals, and taking photos of military facilities is prohibited. Sounds fun!According to the Telegraph:Nkorean.ru, a Russian company licensed by North Korea's government, offers organised tours for groups of up to 10 people or individuals "to show the travellers the multi-faceted life of this most closed of countries"...The most pricey tour, 15 days "full immersion in the culture of North Korea" costing 118,090 roubles (£1558), includes visits to a farm, a mineral water factory, a Buddhist temple, walks in the mountains and an introduction to national cuisine. Visits to numerous museums to founding leader Kim Il-Sung are also on offer.Other less demanding tours include relaxation on a beach, an aviation show and even a beer festival.Uh, I think I'll take my adventure vacation elsewhere thank you very much.Image: Stefan Krasowski
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by David Pescovitz on (#306DV)
On August 24, 1967, guerilla theater activist Abbie Hoffman and his pals dropped a slew of dollar bills off the balcony of the New York Stock Exchange onto the trading floor below. As Hoffman later said, "“If you don’t like the news, why not go out and make your own?†From Smithsonian:Participant Bruce Dancis recalled, “At first people on the floor were stunned. They didn’t know what was happening. They looked up and when they saw money was being thrown they started to cheer, and there was a big scramble for the dollars.â€The protesters exited the Stock Exchange and were immediately beset by reporters, who wanted to know who they were and what they’d done. Hoffman supplied nonsense answers, calling himself Cardinal Spellman and claiming his group didn’t exist. He then burned a five-dollar bill, solidifying the point of the message. As Bruce Eric France writes, “Abbie believed it was more important to burn money [than] draft cards… To burn a draft card meant one refused to participate in the war. To burn money meant one refused to participate in society.â€For Hoffman himself, the success of the stunt was obvious. “Guerrilla theater is probably the oldest form of political commentary,†he wrote in his autobiography. “Showering money on the Wall Street brokers was the TV-age version of driving the money changers from the temple… Was it a real threat to the Empire? Two weeks after our band of mind-terrorists raided the stock exchange, 20,000 dollars was spent to enclose the gallery with bullet-proof glass.â€"How the New York Stock Exchange Gave Abbie Hoffman His Start in Guerrilla Theater" (Smithsonian)
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#306D9)
Coconut Rice Bear has an important message for the humans, but no one knows what it is.[via Twisted Sifter] A post shared by Coconut Rice Bear (@coconutricebear) on Aug 14, 2017 at 12:36am PDT
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by David Pescovitz on (#30670)
I really dig the ghostly look of these photocopied images transferred into an art journal. The key tool is a blender pen, basically a marker containing glycerin, alcohol, and water. I'm going to try this with my kids! From BLDG25:...Make photocopies of the images you’d like to transfer. This step is very important — simply printing a photo from your computer unfortunately won’t work. Next, decide where you want to transfer your image. Paper seemed to be the easiest for us, but this can also be done on wood, ceramic, and tin.Flip your image face down, and hold in place while you completely cover the back using a blender pen. Keep in mind that your transferred image will appear as the reverse of the original — like a mirror image.Instant Photo Transfers With Blender Pens (BLDG25)Prismacolor Colorless Blender Marker 3533 ($6 on Amazon)(via MAKE:)
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by David Pescovitz on (#3063Q)
Alicia Zeek and Zac Smith of Franklin County, Pennsylvania were surprised and delighted to see Jesus looking at their baby girl in this sonogram image. From Fox43:The expecting parents say while they aren't very religious, they see a man dressed in a robe with a crown of thorns looking on at their baby.Zac says the image made him emotional, "when I seen it, it almost brought tears to my eyes... I was speechless, I just couldn't believe it, I really didn't believe what I was seeing."That image is putting them at ease after Alicia experienced a number of complications with her first two children...The couple posted the photo to Facebook asking people what they see in the sonogram. Regardless of the response, Zac says the image is a sign from above, "the angel or God or Jesus, however you want to propose it, I look at it as my blessing."
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#30600)
Chris Notap is one of the few recreational mousetrap builders that I'm aware of. He shows of his whimsical, no-kill traps on his YouTube channel. Here's his latest, which uses a 3-inch diameter section of PVC pipe.This is one of the best and easiest homemade humane rat/mouse traps! Easy to build, easy to bait, easy to release and best of all, it's humane and there's no springs or levers to wind up or load! The mouse, rat or vole cannot escape or chew his way out of this mouse trap. Mice and rats are not harmed in any way during capture. As a matter of fact, the mouse, rat or vole remains very calm since there is no slamming doors or snapping latches to scare them! Mice can be released calmly and easily without fear of getting bitten even by the most "fearful of mice" person!! Simple operation makes this diy homemade rat mouse trap fun and easy to build (great parent and kid project to learn about balance) and adjust for easy trapping and best of all easy release. Just use a dab of peanut butter to bait the trap. It's the best do it yourself homemade humane live release rat mouse trap you'll find! A 3" PVC pipe and a few other common items is all you'll need. I'll be building a humane squirrel trap next so you can capture and release squirrels easily too so subscribe and don't miss my upcoming "diy humane squirrel trap".
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by Andrea James on (#305K5)
Psst, wanna buy a lighthouse? As more and more are decommissioned thanks to GPS, the market has seen an influx of lighthouses for sale. (more…)
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by Andrea James on (#305AA)
Maybe it's been awhile since that merit badge, or maybe you haven't been out on a boat of late. In any case, here's Andy Tran's great refresher course on 7 essential knots.The knots covered in this video are:Square Knot (Reef Knot)Clove Hitch (Builder's Hitch, Tied in a bight, and at an end)Sheet Bend (And Double Sheet Bend)Bowline (Tied two ways)Figure 8 loop (Tied 3 ways)Round Turn + Two 1/2 HitchesTaut-Line HitchIf you are wondering, the difference between a square knot and a granny knot (or lubber's knot) is that in a square knot, both parts of the line go over or under their respective loop. Here's a comparison from the terrific site ShoeKnots.com• 7 Essential Knots You Need To Know (YouTube / InnerBark Outdoors)
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#3057X)
Here are two great tastes that taste great together: Fast food and furniture. European design firm Studio Job teamed up with Italian home goods and furniture house Seletti to create furniture fashioned after fast food. Designboom writes:at maison et objet 2017 in paris, seletti and studio job are bringing fast food to the fair. a hot dog and hamburger — archetypal images of american pop-culture — are transformed into actual furnishings, giving rise to the ‘UN_LIMITED EDITIONS’ collection. the debut of the series marks the italian brand’s introduction to the world of upholstered furniture, amalgamating studio job’s irreverent attitude and penchant for playfulness, with seletti’s accessible affordability. Yes, I would like fries (lamp? pillow? rug?) with that.images by Loek Blonk via designboom
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3057Z)
AccuWeather's been exposed sending user location data to a third party, even when the app is told not to access it. If you have the app installed, your exact location was shared with a company promising to turn that data into "mobile revenue."Popular weather app AccuWeather has been caught sending geolocation data to a third-party data monetization firm, even when the user has switched off location sharing. AccuWeather is one of the most popular weather apps in Apple's app store, with a near perfect four-star rating and millions of downloads to its name. But what the app doesn't say is that it sends sensitive data to a firm designed to monetize user locations without users' explicit permission.Security researcher Will Strafach intercepted the traffic from an iPhone running the latest version of AccuWeather and its servers and found that even when the app didn't have permission to access the device's precise location, the app would send the Wi-Fi router name and its unique MAC address to the servers of data monetization firm Reveal Mobile every few hours. That data can be correlated with public data to reveal an approximate location of a user's device.Worse, the company issued a bad press release described by John Gruber as "a veritable mountain of horseshit." If the infraction was inadvertent as they claim, they made themselves look guilty as all hell by denying things they weren't accused of and pretending the information they sold was meaningless.Despite stories to the contrary from sources not connected to the actual information, if a user opts out of location tracking on AccuWeather, no GPS coordinates are collected or passed without further opt-in permission from the user.The accusation has nothing to do with “GPS coordinatesâ€. The accusation is that their iOS app is collecting Wi-Fi router names and MAC addresses and sending them to servers that belong to Reveal Mobile, which in turn can easily be used to locate the user. Claiming this is about GPS coordinates is like if they were caught stealing debit cards and they issued a denial that they never stole anyone’s cash.That's the show, but the creepy lawyerspeak about "quickly evolving" privacy standards and becoming "fully compliant with appropriate requirements" is the tell. It's clear from this what the app is for: to get as much information about you as possible and sell it.Shocking. If you have AccuWeather installed on your phone, throw out that trash right now.It's all just aggregated from weather.gov/yourzipcodehere and the NOAA anyway!P.S. Carrot is the fun weather app.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3051B)
Wood signifies tradition, solidity and natural beauty, but these qualities are comically absent from computer peripherals made of it. Oree, a company out of France, set out to do better and have partially succeeded with their handsome keyboard and touchpad set.Up close, the Oree gear looks much nicer than cheapo Amazon wooden keyboards. It's precisely cut, with seamless joins, Bluetooth, and none of the instant tattiness that afflicts bamboo once it gets knocked around. (There's also a matching dial peripheral, but I haven't tried it.)The Oree keyboard comes in maple or walnut, with Windows and MacOS keycap options, and engravings for 22 different languages. Wireless pairing and battery life both met expectations; the keyboard charges via USB and the slab uses two AA batteries. The legends are lasered into the wood, so wont rub off with wear.How does it type? It's fine. It feels like standard rubber-dome switches under thick, distancing materials. For most people who type, it's probably better than the millimeter-travel chiclet keyboards in the newest MacBooks, but not quite as nice as say, a five-year-old MacBook Pro. It feels very similar to an old T- or P-series Lenovo keyboard. Soft and rubbery rather than hard and clicky. It's fine.Given the high price, though, I feel at liberty to complain about details. The keys' sharp (presumably laser-cut) edges mean that my fingers occasionally catch on them when brushing over the faces. It's not a big problem and will presumably go away as they're worn with use, but it's a slight discomfort I've not experienced on a keyboard before.Also, they used a serif typeface (Bodoni?) for the keycap legends. It reaches for class, but it's an inappropriate choice and looks like a mistake.Finally, the trackpad simply doesn't cut it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5R9pwzph8dw&feature=youtu.beIt's as good as a cheapo Windows laptop trackpad, and larger, but if you've ever used an Apple one it'll be plainly impossible to go back to. Mine was uneven, as you can see in the video embedded above, necessitating the addition of rubber feet. It works fine in numpad mode, though, and the engraved hairline legends are very attractive — why wasn't the same style used for the keyboard?Conclusion: Oree's desktop peripherals are the best wooden computer peripherals I've seen, but you're paying a substantial premium to get it and they're otherwise no better than the basics.
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3045D)
Sadly, the Republican Party has already deleted its article titled What Do The Legend of Zelda and the American Tax Code Have In Common? and any corresponding twetes. But it lives on at Google Cache, at least for now.Tragically, having equated the adventures of a mute yet heroic elf with the clawing economic deprivations of progressive taxation, the article barely touches upon why beyond simply noting a few coincidental dates. It's the very dumbest boilerplate. Sad!https://twitter.com/Beschizza/status/900516331522535429
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by Rob Beschizza on (#3042H)
Here's McSweeney's Ziyad Gower, cannily stealing the voice of Scottish actress Louise Linton, the wife of Trump treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin and mocker of the poor.Greetings #peasants, it’s me, Louise Linton, in a beautiful #hermesscarf and #tomford sunnies. You may know my husband, Steve Mnuchin, America’s Secretary of Treasure. Or you may be familiar with my work as a film star, from my turn as Samantha in Crew 2 Crew to 2013’s The Power of Few, where I played the role of “Cory’s Mother†#crew2crew #corysmom. I am also #rich, and probably paid more taxes on my #farragamo pants than you have in your entire worthless life.It's funny, but this scathing aristocratic exaggeration is only a short hop from the real Linton. Crazy times.
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