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Updated 2024-11-24 05:31
User interface from Tron Legacy boardroom scene recreated in HTML
https://vimeo.com/22362676You may now enjoy the Tron Legacy Encom user interface in HTML. The original, as depicted in the movie, was designed by Bradley Munkowitz; the recreation defaults to github feeds, but has all sorts of possibilities to fool around with, such as Wikipedia (pictured) and the weather. README .TXT END. PROGRAM Hello User. This is a reproduction of the graphics in the boardroom scene in Tron: Legacy. If you have not seen that movie, check out this background material on the making of that scene before proceeding. To make this a bit more fun, the boardroom is configured to visualize live updates from Github and Wikipedia, with more streams to come. Click on a stream in the window to the right to continue. The boardroom visualization requires the use of WebGL and Event Source. The test below indicates the availability of these features on your system. This was created by @arscan as a learning exercise. It is not affiliated with Disney, Tron: Legacy, Encom, Wikipedia or Github in any way. The source is available on Github. The typeface is Inconsolata, of course.
This guy is the world's first emoji translator
After seeing a news article, emoji expert Keith Broni of Dublin, Ireland answered a job posting by London-based language firm Today Translations searching for the world's first emoji translator. After a lengthy process, the firm choose Broni out of a pool of over 500 candidates last month.Broni writes, "I sent in my application pretty much immediately... There is no doubt that emoji are powerful communicative tools, enabling emotional expression and understanding particularly where there might be traditional language barriers. However, we know that not every culture interprets the same emoji in the same way. By helping companies and organisations understand those differences, I plan to make a real difference in the world of global communication.”Part of his duties will include writing an "Emoji Etiquette Guide," consulting on the use of emojis in marketing, and analyzing emojis in a legal context.Previously: Emojis are like modern-day gargoyles to this Dutch architect
Manipulate a 3D model of the Rosetta Stone
The British Museum has released this nifty 3D scan of the Rosetta Stone, which includes a nice autoplaying audio summary of its significance. (more…)
Beautiful chart displays native speakers of world's languages
Spanish designer Alberto Lucas López created this gorgeous infographic that shows the proportion of native speakers of each major language. (more…)
Beautiful embroidered moths and butterflies
Yumi Okita creates strikingly accurate and colorful moths and butterflies from thread and felt. (more…)
Fabulous papercraft models of antique cameras
Korean artist Ji-Hee Lee makes all sorts of classic cameras as paper models, like this 1989 Rolleiflex. Here's a photo of the actual camera: (more…)
Relax like aristocracy in a Disney princess dress blanket
Carol Hladik was laid up on the sofa with an injury when she thought a fun blanket might help her feel better. The result was Disney princess-inspired crocheted dress blankets. (more…)
Astronomy rugs
I chanced across Emoh Store's gorgeous astronomy rugs while googling for the daytime-TV conspiracy science classic "Fabric of Time," and immediately ordered one. (more…)
Watch the incredible facial expressions of this new audio-animatronic Abraham Lincoln
San Bernardino-based company Garner Holt Productions (GHP) took over all animatronic builds from Walt Disney Imagineering a few years back, according to The Disney Blog. Their latest figure is a super-expressive Abraham Lincoln bust, which they revealed at at a recent open house.GHP describe their figure, which uses a proprietary silicone skin mask, as the "most advanced humanoid robotic head ever created." On MiceChat, the company's founder Garner Holt writes:This is a figure we’ve been developing — the one at our open house is actually the “phase II” version of the concept — and the reaction was absolutely stunning (it was overwhelmingly positive at Comic-Con, too, where we showed a short video clip of the head in development). The Lincoln bust is part of GHP’s Expressive Head Project, where we’ve endeavored to add realistic facial expression to animatronics in order to add an extra dimension of lifelike movement (a subtle way of saying, “We crammed more than 40 unique motions into this animatronic head!”)...The skin is the real star of the figure, and is so malleable it can replicate wrinkling around the eyes, crinkling the nose, and a variety of strikingly lifelike creases that appear and disappear as the face moves from expression to expression—it’s incredible! Most importantly, it’s been thoroughly tested to prove it’s highly durable for theme park use...The animatronic Lincoln bust we showcased at our open house represents the current state of the art in mechanical animation. It’s also the first in a new line of super-expressive animatronic products we’re calling “The Living Faces of History,” which we will market not only to our traditional theme park clients but to museums and cultural centers as a means of bringing cutting-edge technology into alternative narrative-driven locations.
This panda-shaped solar farm sets a new bar for cute creativity
Panda Power Plant in Datong, China is a multiphase solar farm building panda-shaped solar arrays. (more…)
A new, dubious "smart" cryptocurrency for prostitution
"Lust" is an initial coin offering based on the Ethereum blockchain platform, designed for prostitutes and their customers to exchange money for sexual services. (more…)
Paramotoring down to the local McDonalds
Youtuber Tucker Gott howls like a giddy child as he pilots his paramotor to McDonalds.Punctuated with delighted peals of "Yeah Buddy!" this video is full of gems. I especially enjoy Gott's observation of irony, flying over a cow and eating a hamburger that notionally lists "beef" as an ingredient.
Short film about Chris Ware: "I distinctly remember being told by my teachers, if you draw women, you're colonizing them with your eyes"
Chris Ware is inarguably one of the greatest cartoonists of the last 50 years. In this short film produced by Ian Forster and Nick Ravich, Ware talks about the challenge of writing stories from the viewpoint of an African-American school teacher named Joanne Cole.From his home and studio in Oak Park, Illinois, artist Chris Ware shares motivations and challenges for telling stories from the perspectives of others in his work. "I distinctly remember being told by my teachers, if you draw women, you're colonizing them with your eyes," Ware recalls of art school. "Do you not draw women and then maintain an allegiance to some sort of experience that only you have had? Or do you try to expand your understanding and your empathy for other human beings?"Though it might be uncomfortable, Ware strives to write from a place of empathy, expanding his stories to feature characters whose experiences differ from his own. Among these characters is African-American school teacher Joanne Cole, who appears in Ware's continuing comic series Rusty Brown. "I have to try to somehow push my limits and my understanding of how I feel through other people in what I'm doing," says the artist. "You risk falling on your face doing so, but that's a risk you have to take."Known for his New Yorker magazine covers, Chris Ware is hailed as a master of the comic art form. His complex graphic novels tell stories about people in suburban Midwestern neighborhoods, poignantly reflecting on the role memory plays in constructing identity. Stories featuring many of Ware's protagonists — Quimby the Mouse, Rusty Brown, and Jimmy Corrigan—often first appear in serialized form, in publications such as The New York Times, the Guardian, or Ware's own ongoing comic book series Acme Novelty Library, before being organized into their own stand-alone books.
FBI traced a 'fake news' disinfo attack on Election Day from Russia, CNN reports
The FBI monitored social media on Election Day 2016 to try and trace the source of a suspected Russian disinformation campaign that used "fake news," CNN reports. (more…)
Sessions declares new Trump war on 'leakers'
Noted racist and current U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions is sucking up to President Donald Trump this week by going on the attack against “leaks” on Friday. Sessions, who was too racist to get a job in Washington in the 1980s but is just racist enough to fit in 2017 warned of an impending crackdown on reporters and their sources, within the federal government. (more…)
Watch: On live TV Mexico's Vicente Fox uses F-word again about Trump's wall, likens Trump to dictator
On live CNN TV this morning Mexico's former president Vicente Fox did it again – he colored Trump's wall with the F-word and then had all sorts of other gem-like things to say about Trump. CNN's Alisyn Camerota was talking to Fox about current Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto's even demeanor last January when talking to Trump about the wall (leaked transcript here). Camerota: Do you think the president of Mexico should have been more forceful in saying it's never gong to happen?Fox: Well you can use my word – we will never pay for that fucking wall.Camerota (suppressing nervous smile): "I apologize to our morning audience for the salty language this morning. Perhaps I should have taken that offer for the five-second delay." Other fun Fox quotes from the interview:[About Trump] "He's always lying to the American people." "That's incredible that the United States people is accepting a president that doesn't want media...he's trying to shut them down...that's the attitude of a dictator.""Trump has to learn that the US is a democracy.""How can we trust a US president that lies every minute of the day?"
Comcast argues that charging customers more than the advertised price isn't false advertising
Surprise: Comcast is accused of overcharging customers. A class-action lawsuit in California alleges the telecommunications company falsely advertises its prices for services by tacking on hidden fees.Via Streaming Observer:According to the class-action lawsuit, Comcast has hidden fees they call the “Broadcast TV Fee,” which has increased from $1.50 a month in 2014 to $6.50 today, and a fee known as a “Regional Sports Fee” that has risen from $1 to $4.50 since 2015. Comcast has increased the fees even for customers who signed multi-year contracts for fixed monthly rates, sneaking in the fee increases after signing.Comcast's lawyers tried to get the lawsuit thrown out of court by arguing that the hidden fees can be found in the “Subscriber Agreement” and “Minimum Term Agreement” portion of the customer contract. However, as Streaming Observer points out, these portions of the contract "do not specifically state that the media giant will charge a Regional Sports Fee or Broadcast TV fee."The judge didn't buy it. From his order:The motion to dismiss the breach of contract claim is denied. The plaintiffs have alleged the existence of a valid contract, which was created when [Comcast customers Dan] Adkins and [Christopher] Robertson submitted their order for Comcast services through Comcast's website. It is plausible to infer from the complaint that, by clicking "Submit Your Order," Adkins and Robertson agreed to pay Comcast's advertised price, plus taxes and government-related fees, in exchange for the services Comcast offered them. It is also plausible to infer from the complaint that Comcast breached its agreements with the plaintiffs when it sent them bills charging them Broadcast TV and/or Regional Sports Fees (alleged to be neither taxes nor government-related fees) in excess of the agreed-upon price, and when it subsequently sought to raise the amount of the fees.
'Can You Talk to People Around the World on the Internet?,' asks this retro eighties music video
Youtuber "Hot Dad" has broken out his Casio keyboard, some dark wraparound shades, and is asking an important question, "Can You Talk to People Around the World on the Internet?" in this retro, cyber-tastic music video. Previously: Guy makes great song from a Facebook conversation about a hedgehog image
DRM in web standards creates new barriers to accessibility
The World Wide Web Consortium is pressing ahead with its project to standardize a DRM system for the web, without taking any legal steps to protect people whose legitimate activities would be impaired by the DRM system. (more…)
Optical illusion or ghost dog?
Rest in peace, Kosmo. (more…)
Hysterically twisted Twitter exchange between authors Chuck Wendig and Sam Sykes
A friend of mine on Facebook posted a link to this wonderfully twisted and funny Twitter exchange between the brilliant Chuck Wendig (author of Zer0es, the Star Wars Aftermath trilogy, and one of my all-time fave books on scrivener-craft, The Kiss-Ass Writer) and Sam Sykes (author of The City Stained Red).Cue the backwards violin music and read the rest of the exchange here.[H/t Andrew Terranova]
Purple paisley bell bottom pants
I needed a pair of purple paisley bell bottom pants. Everyone does!Needed.These fit pretty true to size.Mens Run & Fly 60s 70s Vintage Grape Paisely Corduroy Retro Bell Bottom Flares via Amazon
House Without Windows: a harrowing online graphic novel about the lives of children in the Central African Republic
My friend and fellow cartoonist Matt Wuerker pointed me to this incredible graphic novel that was just published online. House Without Windows, by cartoonist Didier Kassai and photojournalist Marc Ellison, uses an innovative mixture of cartooning, photos, fumetti, and 360-video to depict the lives of children in the Central African Republic.It is amazing, accomplished storytelling, but far more importantly, the stories being told, of children subjected to the horrors of chaos in that war-torn nation, are absolutely harrowing and heartbreaking.The title "House Without Windows" is a reference to the fact that media coverage of the crisis in this forgotten country has been minimal or nonexistent. I hope the tragic stories of these children can help correct that.width="900" height="673" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-538454" />
Introducing The After On Podcast - interviews with thinkers, founders, and scientists
Writing science fiction can get you amazing access to thinkers, founders, and scientists whose work touches on the stories you tell. It’s one of the great things about my job. Sure, writing cover stories for Wired would get my calls returned faster! But countless science and tech leaders trace their interests back to tales they read as youngsters -- which has lent me great success in requesting research interviews for my stories.Rob Reid's After On is available from Amazon.Setting my books in the present-ish day, I try to keep things consistent with current technology and knowledge, so I conduct lots of these interviews. And I learn troves from them. But as I get excited about a new field, I become prone to giddy tangents about how it all works, or why it matters. Giddy tangents have a place in fiction – but a limited one, and they should be used sparingly.I conducted dozens of interviews while writing my new novel After On (which came out out on Tuesday). Focusing on the storytelling meant leaving out huge amounts of newfound learning that just didn’t fit. Which was the right decision! But it also felt like a lost opportunity. And so I’ve created eight podcast episodes that deeply explore areas that fascinated me during my research. I’ll be posting them to Boing Boing on a weekly basis, starting with Episode One, which is all about augmented reality:A quick word on how these episodes are structured. My co-host is grizzled podcasting veteran Tom Merritt, who has been presenting tech news and culture to the world for over fifteen years. We open the show together, then cut to a long-form interview with an expert in the field in question. Then at the end of the episode, Tom and I relate the interview back to the novel. Prior to this point, it is in no way necessary to read the novel in order to connect to the podcast (non-readers can just tune out for the final section). And this week, you can actually read the relevant section (pages 1-51 of the novel) for free on Medium, where it’s posted in three excerpts, here, here, and here.In this week’s episode, I interview Meron Gribetz, CEO of the trailblazing AR company Meta. AR is at a fascinating point in 2017. Meta, Microsoft, and their various AR competitors have invested literal billions in the field. Yet few people have had any AR experiences beyond the constricted aperture of Pokémon Go. This is about to change. Meta’s latest product (the Meta 2) is thrilling to use, and is finding major enterprise customers. Google’s much-maligned Glass product is also enjoying enterprise adoption. The narrow field of view on Microsoft’s HoloLens leaves me wanting more, but the company’s investment in the market is highly validating. And other shoes are surely yet to drop, from Apple, Facebook, and maybe even Snapchat. Meron is a great guide to his emerging market, which we cover quite broadly in our wide-ranging interview. The ethical issues that next-generation AR will raise particularly intrigue me. I explore some of them in my novel, and Meron has an interesting take on them. Here’s a quick guide some of the episode’s highlights:04:47– How a company that has raised $100MM began with a Kickstarter.09:34– Why Meta thinks AR’s near future is about productivity, not entertainment.25:03– Ethical issues of AR in the wild, and the concept of “public by default.”42:07– A neuroscientific take on how UI elements light up different brain regions.By the way, one of the coolest things about meeting Meron at his office is seeing his desk – which is literally a freakin’ plank! The man is eating his own dogfood, as the saying goes, by doing without a computer. And so he accesses the Web, email and more in AR space.I hope you enjoy this podcast, and that you’ll consider joining me for some of the coming ones. Boing Boing has been my cherished guide to the digital world for most of my adult life, and it’s a huge honor to be sharing my work here. The schedule is below, and/or you can subscribe on iTunes by clicking here, then clicking the blue “View on iTunes” button (under the square After On image on the left side of the page), then clicking “Subscribe” in similar location in the iTunes window.Episodes and release dates: Episode 1 (August 3): Augmented Reality. Guest = Meron Gribetz,CEO of Meta, one of the top AR companies. Episode 2 (August 10): Neuroscience + Consciousness. Guest = Adam Gazzaley, a UCSF neuroscientist whose work on using video games as clinical tools has appeared on the cover of Nature. Episode 3 (August 17): Digital Privacy + Government intrusion. Guest = Cindy Cohn, who runs the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Episode 4 (August 24): Synthetic Biology's Promise + Peril. Guest = Andy Hessel, a major synbio thought leader and a prime driver behind GP-write, which some view as the heir to the Human Genome Project. Episode 5 (August 31): Quantum Computing. Guest = Steve Jurvetson, prominent venture capitalist, and a board member of the world's largest quantum computing company (DWave) for 15 years. Episode 6 (Sept 7): Nihilistic Terrorism. Guest = Sam Harrisone of the country's most prominent and controversial commentators on this subject Episode 7 (Sept 14): Super AI Risk. Surprise guest. Episode 8 (Sept 2): Fermi's Paradox and the anthropic coincidences. Guest = Stephen Webb, British astronomer and perhaps the world's leading authority on Fermi's Paradox.
Download 306,000,000 cracked passwords and make sure you're not using one of them
Troy Hunt, proprietor of the Have I Been Pwned? service, has made 306,000,000 known-cracked passwords available as a download -- you can grab the set and make sure that yours isn't among them, as these cracked passwords are the ones that are likely being used by hackers when they do brute-force attacks against encrypted password files. (more…)
Fencing with picket fences
As I was watching this video by Youtubers Mike and Alex of This is Mystical, I kept thinking to myself, "Why has this never been done before?"It seems like fencing with literal fences should be a thing. Yet my half-hearted internet search for "fencing sport with picket fences" brought up lots of, well, fences.So, touché to Mike and Alex for bringing the world this new sport and to Sam the "real fencing guy" for teaching us fencing's basics.
World getting better all the time
However sad things are at home, the trend worldwide is looking good. [via] Then consider this; and this:https://www.vidio.com/watch/68705-the-beatles-getting-better-lyrics
'Game of Thrones' fans abandoning huskies at an alarming rate
Siberian Husky, and Alaskan Malamute rescues are overflowing with dogs named Nymeria and Ghost. Thanks, Games of Thrones!Siberian huskies, the strong, wolf-like dogs originally bred for sled-pulling in the Arctic, have along with some of other wolf-esque breeds like the Alaskan malamute been gaining huge popularity in the US and the UK the last several years, due in large part to the influence of Game of Thrones — and before that, the Twilight movie franchise. The Daily Mail reported on the problem of large numbers of abandoned huskies showing up in British shelters three years ago, and here in the Bay Area, the phenomenon continues — and as the Chronicle reports, the dogs often show up in shelters with weird GOT-inspired names like Ghost, Nymeria, and Grey Wind.The dogs are likened to the Stark clan's direwolves, and it seems that far too many people are buying or adopting huskies hoping to add some Stark-like swagger to their homes, only to find out these dogs are a heavy-shedding handful.Angelique Miller, president of Northern California Sled Dog Rescue, tells the Chronicle that her numbers of monthly intakes of abandoned dogs has more than doubled, and she's seeing about 45 new dogs per month. "These people, they watch these shows and think how cool these dogs are. People can't even tell the difference between a husky and a wolf because they're always asking us at adoption fairs if these dogs are wolves — and it's clearly a husky. They're just following the trend of what they think is cute."She says in the past there have been upticks of abandoned dogs connected to movie releases like Snow Dogs and Eight Below, but clearly the biggest influence is now GOT — with many owners who sought out huskies as pets after the show premiered in 2011 now recognizing that they can't take care of the dogs anymore because they require too much exercise and grooming.San Francisco Animal Care & Control also reports seeing a lot of huskies come through, as has Bay Area Siberian Husky Club (BASH).Via SFist(GIF via Giphy)
Set of 3 mesh kitchen strainers for under $7
Amazon has a good deal on this set of fine mesh steel strainers today - $6.79 for three in different sizes. I bought them to replace the one we have that has a tear in the mesh and pokes my finger.
Caltech astrophysics professor who harassed women has resigned
Christian D. Ott, a tenured professor of theoretical astrophysics at the California Institute of Technology, has resigned in the wake of an investigation that found he had harassed two students.From BuzzFeed:"This has been a difficult situation for our community," the Caltech statement said. Caltech declined to provide any further comment to BuzzFeed News, and Ott did not immediately respond to a request for comment.According to more than 1,000 pages of emails and chat messages submitted to the investigators, first publicly reported by BuzzFeed News, Ott had become infatuated with Kleiser, whom he then fired due to his feelings. He later confessed his actions in increasingly inappropriate and erratic emotional exchanges with Gossan.Gossan filed a complaint with the university's Title IX office in the spring of 2015, which Kleiser joined soon after. Prior to Gossan's complaint, Kleiser had no idea she had been fired for reasons unrelated to her scientific work.Kleiser is relieved that Ott resigned. But her experience with him, as well as the "lukewarm" response from many in the faculty to news of the problem, has led her to decide to leave academia once her PhD is complete."I didn’t see a lot of action on the part of people that I considered to be my role models in my field," Kleiser said. "So that’s kind of difficult, and I think that makes it harder to want to stay and eventually take a permanent position in a place like this."Christian Ott has resigned from Caltech. I don't think divisive is the right word here, we wanted him gone. #caltech #womeninstem #research pic.twitter.com/Oc3J4BYmbd— Claire N. Saunders (@ClaireNSaunders) August 1, 2017
Guys at work have been feeding this huge spider for a year
Some guys at work have been feeding a huge spider that has been living inside a piece of web-covered equipment for a year. They shot this video, which reminds me a horror movie.
Trump says Boy Scout leader called him about his 'greatest speech.' Boy Scouts say there was no call
Trump gave a weirdly inappropriate, politically-laden speech to tens of thousands of Boy Scouts last week. Afterwards, the Head of the Boy Scouts gave a public apology, saying, "We sincerely regret that politics were inserted into the Scouting program."But in a Wall Street Journal interview, Trump said "I got a call from the head of the Boy Scouts saying it was the greatest speech that was ever made to them, and they were very thankful.” The Boy Scouts said they never called Trump.From Time:“The Chief Scout Executive’s message to the Scouting community speaks for itself,” the organization said, referring to a July 27 statement from Michael Surbaugh, the Chief Scout Executive for the Boy Scouts of America, who apologized to anyone in the scouting community who could have been offended or alarmed by the political rhetoric in the speech.
Watch Jimmy DiResta make a leather camera holder
In Jimmy Diresta latest video, he makes a case for his camera from a piece of leather. He molds the leather around a wooden form, uses a special kind of fork to make the stitching holes, adds a snap button, and tools it with a pattern. It looks great.
Is this artwork, winner of a drawing prize, even a drawing at all?
Wellington, New Zealand artist Kirsty Lillico won the annual $20,000 Parkin Drawing Prize for her piece seen here, titled "State Block." The work consists of a carpet scrap hanging over a string. "First of all, I've sort of re-represented a drawing made by someone else," Lillico said."Drawing, to me, it's not just about a pencil and paper. I'm using a knife and carpet and hanging it in a space to achieve the same ends."According to Lillico, State Block was inspired by someone else's architectural floor plan for a state-owned apartment."It's looking at the architectural (drawings) – positive, being black (drawn lines of an architectural design), and the negative being the spaces we occupy," she said.(Stuff.co.nz via Weird Universe)
Assistant police chief unrepentant after posting racist cartoon, but will lose job
Wayne Welsh, assistant police chief in Estherwood, La., posted a cartoon to social media depicting a mother holding a young girl under water with the caption "When your daughters(sic) first crush is a negro boy." KATC reports that he at first defended his posting in the initial outcry, but will lose his job all the same. (more…)
New DNA sunscreen becomes more effective the longer you stay in the sun
If you worry as much as I do about getting sun-damaged skin, this will be welcome news.Biomedical engineering researchers at New York's Binghamton University have a developed a new sunscreen, a think coating made out of DNA, that actually gets more effective the more time you spend in the sun. ScienceDaily reports:(Guy) German and a team of researchers developed thin and optically transparent crystalline DNA films and irradiated them with UV light. They found that the more they exposed the film to UV light, the better the film got at absorbing it."If you translate that, it means to me that if you use this as a topical cream or sunscreen, the longer that you stay out on the beach, the better it gets at being a sunscreen," said German.As an added bonus, the DNA coatings are also hygroscopic, meaning that skin coated with the DNA films can store and hold water much more than uncoated skin. When applied to human skin, they are capable of slowing water evaporation and keeping the tissue hydrated for extended periods of time.Thanks, Colleen!
This interactive bootcamp will give you a solid intro to web development
Web technology has matured considerably in the last decade, and developers are continually in demand. If you're looking to add some skills to your resume, or are just interested in exploring the possibilities of the web, check out this Interactive Web Developer Bootcamp.In this course, you’ll get a comprehensive overview of full-stack development using modern tools. After learning the basics of HTML5 and CSS3, you'll delve into front-end development to build functional interfaces using Angular and jQuery. You’ll learn how to connect your interactive pages to back-end data, and build application logic for projects that include a blogging engine and an e-commerce platform. This course gives you access to 180 video lessons, comes with a companion ebook, and lets you get specific feedback from instructors.The Interactive Web Developer Bootcamp is on sale now for $29.
Songs mangled by Google Translate, as sung by Idris Elba and Jimmy Fallon
On the Tonight Show, actor Idris Elba and host Jimmy Fallon took turns singing songs karaoke-style with lyrics humorously mangled by Google Translate. To start, Elba belted out Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back," or "The Baby Escaped" after being run through translation. "I love large saplings that is the truth. A few of your siblings were here. That woman showed up and has small hips with a sleeve around your head."Jimmy then continued the fun with Britney Spears' "...Baby One More Time" AKA, "Meet My Kids." For the final song, they sang a duet for "I'll Place Kindness on You," the Boyz II Men song formerly known as "I'll Make Love to You." "Shut your face, pray for dreams."
These computer-generated rocks look incredibly real
Digital artist Rens de Boer traveled to the island of Fuerteventura a couple times this year and took photos of rocks to "test equipment, workflows and develop new content."Samantha Cole of Motherboard writes:It took him five days to photograph and capture the landscapes he wanted to render, and another several weeks to rebuild them in video game making tool Unreal Engine with a process called photogrammetry, which works by compiling a host of images taken from various angles and using them to create realistic depth...Graphic card maker Nvidia provided de Boer with the GPUs that rendered these photorealistic rocks, two Geforce 1080 Tis, to be exact...(digg)
Trump's FBI pick Wray is confirmed by Senate to replace Comey, who was fired by Trump
Former Justice Department lawyer Christopher Wray was confirmed by the U.S. Senate to lead the FBI, about three months after its previous director James Comey was fired by President Donald Trump. (more…)
The life and tragic death of "Jeremy" from the classic Pearl Jam video
In 1992, Pearl Jam released director Mark Pellington's fantastically dark video above for the song "Jeremy." (Pellington was also the creator of MTV's incredible avant-garde documentary video series Buzz that I've posted about previously.) Actor Trevor Wilson was only 12 years old when he portrayed the troubled student in the "Jeremy" clip. Most of the world last saw Wilson on screen with Pearl Jam at the 1993 MTV Video Music Awards before he totally disappeared from the public eye. Turns out, Wilson drowned last August while on vacation in Puerto Rico. Over at Billboard, my pal Gil Kaufman tells the "Untold Story of Video Star Trevor Wilson's Fascinating Life & Tragic Death:"Cinematographer Tom Richmond remembers sitting next to Pellington in the director's Los Angeles home and watching endless VHS audition tapes from New York of kids vying to play the (anti-)hero of the "Jeremy" video. It became pretty clear early into the nearly 200 auditions that the kids they were watching were "typecasty," as if they'd read Pearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder's lyrics about an outcast high schooler -- based on the true story of Dallas 16-year-old Jeremy Delle, who killed himself in front of his classmates in 1991 after years of torment -- and decided they were had the perfect look and attitude for the part."In a cliché movie about junior high it would have been the picked-on kid, the outcast who looked funny or strange, and I could tell Mark was dissatisfied with that idea," says Richmond of the parade of odd-looking and over-acting kids they watched, whose performances felt a little too on-the-nose. "[Pellington] couldn't articulate what he was looking for, but he knew he wasn't looking for that."A few hours in, Wilson's audition came up and Pellington and Richmond looked at each other and said, “That's him!" It could only have been Wilson, Richmond recalls -- ironic, considering the novice 7th grade actor was a mess the day he auditioned."He was sick on his tape, and he didn’t play it like, 'Oh, I’m all angsty,'" remembers Pellington, then 30 and best known for his pioneering quick-cut work on the MTV show Buzz and iconic videos like U2's "One." "He was sitting there and I was looking at [his audition tape], and he was kind of dazed and numb and f--ked up. I found out later that he was sick. But he was so expressive, in a non-histrionic way.""Untold Story of Video Star Trevor Wilson's Fascinating Life & Tragic Death" (Billboard)
Alabama inmates use peanut butter trick to escape prison
A dozen prisoners at Jasper, Alabama's Walker County Jail escaped on Sunday and one is still at large. One of them used peanut butter to change the number above his cell door and then called for the guard, a new employee, to open it. The number the prisoner changed it to was actually the door to the outside. "And unknowingly to (the guard), he hit that lock and out the door they went," said Walker County Sheriff Jim Underwood. Eleven of the escapees were nabbed within eight hours. A manhunt is underway for the twelfth.From CNN:Meanwhile, as of right now, the Walker County sheriff said officials would look again at placing a young person in an control area to make decisions for 140 inmates. The camera system also needs to be equipped with more monitors, he added.Despite the current sticky situation, the sheriff said he doesn't have plans to put any dietary restrictions in place in the future."They love peanut butter sandwiches," said Underwood.
Autographed photo of Einstein sticking out his tongue sells for big bucks
This photo of Albert Einstein has been an old favorite of geeks-of-all-stripes for years. I remember my much older brother Mark, a scientist and surgeon, had a huge poster of it on his wall in college. An original print of the photo, taken by UPI photog Arthur Sasse on March 14, 1951 at Einstein's 72nd birthday party, just sold at auction for $125,000. The print is signed by Einstein at the bottom. The full frame shows Einstein with Princeton's Frank Aydelotte, head of the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton University, and his wife Marie Jeanette.(Space.com)
Watch this real life clown car empty out after an accident
The Honda Civic is roomier than one would expect.
12-in-1 Stanley Multitool for $11
I bought a couple of these Stanley Multi Tools last year. They are cheap, but really solid. I gave one to a friend and keep the other in my desk drawer for quick repairs.
"I'll keep doing that until I run out of batteries" Tennessee sheriff's deputies torture teenager with stun gun
This video is hard to watch. It shows a group of Cheatham County, TN Sheriff's Deputies restraining a teenager in a chair and shocking him repeatedly with a stun gun. (more…)
Public-domain Arabic pixel font
Alex Clay created "Arabic Pixel," which is to his knowledge the world's first public domain (CC0) Arabic font.
Profile of Lexi Alexander: director, martial arts champ, and the first (only) woman to direct a Marvel movie
Lexi Alexander is the German-Palestinian world kickboxing champ who moved to the US when Chuck Norris helped her get a Green Card; after helping the US Army develop its unarmed combat training program and working as a stuntwoman, she became a virtuoso action-film director, starting with indie movies and working her way up to directing Punisher: War Zone, making her the first -- and, as of now, only -- woman to direct a Marvel adaptation. (more…)
London house-purchase volume falls off a cliff
In May 2014, 259 Islington homes changed hands; in May 2016, 139 houses were sold in the Borough: this May, it was 89. (more…)
Jury to rule on whether the CIA's torture architects will stand trial for killing and maiming
Psychologist James Mitchell is the self-described "architect" of the CIA's torture program (a consulting gig that netted him a cool $80m at taxpayer expense), along with his partner John "Bruce" Jessen -- they're the pair who oversaw black-site torture programs that killed and maimed people who'd been convicted of no crime by any court, anywhere in the world. (more…)
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