by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KRYS)
When Tod Kurt of ThingM recommended these reversible Micro USB cables, I bought a 3-pack on Amazon for . They really do work. Both the USB male plug and the micro plug can be inserted without regard to the orientation, like a USB C plug. There is no "right side up." Why aren't all USB cables made this way? Read the rest
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Link | https://boingboing.net/ |
Feed | https://boingboing.net/feed |
Updated | 2024-11-25 10:00 |
by David Pescovitz on (#4KRRJ)
No, this isn't a concept design for a Space: 1999 reboot but rather an illustration of the new moon rover in development by Toyota and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Toyota has just signed a three year agreement with JAXA and created a Lunar Exploration Mobility Works department that they will staff up with 30 people in the next few months. Unlike NASA's 1970s Apollo moon buggies, this vehicle will be pressurized so astronauts won't need to wear oxygen-supplying spacesuits when tooling around the lunar surface. It'll be powered by "fuel cell electric vehicle technologies." From Space.com:If all goes according to plan, Toyota and JAXA will build a full-scale prototype in the 2022 time frame, design the flight model and build and test an engineering model about two years later, and build and test the flight model around 2027.Launch would follow in 2029."The rover will be used for missions to explore the moon's polar regions, with the aim both of investigating the possibility of using the moon's resources ― such as frozen water ― and of acquiring technologies that enable exploration of the surfaces of massive heavenly bodies," Toyota representatives wrote in the statement. Read the rest
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KRRM)
Seymour Hersh (82) has been an investigative reporter for over 50 years. In this Salon interview conducted by Chauncey Devega, Hersh says Trump has trolled journalism by getting them addicted to his "kitty-litter box of tweets."America is a kakistocracy and a pathocracy. Donald Trump's regime is just the crystallization of that fact. You have decades of experience as a reporter and journalist. How should one write about something that is so utterly outrageous and yet still find a way to make the public care, in a time when so many Americans are numb to it all?Do you really want me to try and make you feel better? Because I want you to make me feel better. This is where we are. It is incredibly messy. One mistake that was made by the media — and which is constantly being made — is living off Donald Trump's tweets. I call it the kitty-litter box full of Trump's tweets.The way it works is Donald Trump sends out a tweet. The cable news immediately repeats Trump's tweet, instead of doing what I would have done if I were king of the world and editor. I would look and see the changes inside the bureaucracy and the system. What is Trump doing? He is replacing good people everywhere with these extreme conservatives — they are not all necessarily fascists. These Trump government types do not want to give food to the poor. They don't think that immigrants should be treated well. Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KRRP)
This incredible offshore fortress and defense gun tower at Pembroke Dock, South West Wales, UK is for sale. It was built in 1851 and "designed to be operated by one officer and 33 men." Offers above £70,000 will be entertained. From the real estate listing:The North East Dockyard Tower was originally built to accommodate officers and men with storage for powder and provisions. The roof had guns mounted on traversing platforms and 12-pound brass howitzers in order to defend the Royal Dockyard of Pembroke Dock. The building is three stories in height and as you would expect solid in construction, however, it requires maintenance. Being offshore, the tower offers sweeping views of the Cleddau River, Pembroke Dock, Neyland and Llanstadwell.(via Neatorama) Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KRNP)
Trying to see the world through someone else's eyes is a great way to build empathy and understanding between people. Turns out, this approach -- when taken literally -- also works with robots. Researchers from the University of Bourgogne, University of Trento, and their colleagues used a head-mounted display to put people "inside" a robot and then studied their "likeability and closeness towards the robot.""We have demonstrated that by 'beaming' a participant into a robot we can change his or her attitude towards the robot," says University of Trento psychologist Francesco Pavani. "By 'beaming', we mean that we gave the participants the illusion that they were looking through the robot's eyes, moving its head as if it were their head, look in the mirror and see themselves as a robot.""Unlike exercises in which the participants couldn't t move the robot's head or do that in a coordinated manner with other body movements, in our study the experience of walking in the shoes of a robot led the participants to adopt a friendlier attitude, to perceive them as socially closer."From the abstract of their scientific paper published in Scientific Reports:When participant’ and robot’s head movements were correlated, participants felt that they were incorporated into the robot with a sense of agency. Critically, the robot they embodied was judged more likeable and socially closer. Remarkably, we found that the beaming experience with correlated head movements and corresponding sensation of embodiment and social proximity, was independent of robots’ humanoid’s appearance. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KRKP)
The Right to Repair movement has introduced dozens of state-level laws that would force companies to support independent repairs by making manuals, parts and diagnostic codes available, and by ending the illegal practice of voiding warranties for customers who use independent repair services, but these bills keep getting killed by overwhelming shows of lobbying force from members of the highly concentrated manufacturing sector, particularly Apple, whose CEO, Tim Cook, warned investors in January that the number one threat to Iphone sales is that customers are choosing to repair, rather than replace, their mobile devices.Last week, the FTC held a workshop on how a national Right to Repair regime could function, under the banner of Nixing the Fix; though most of the material presented at the workshop will be familiar to anyone who's followed the debate at the state level, the fact that the hearing happened at all is a hopeful sign, the first step on a long journey to a nationwide Right to Repair rule.Wiens of iFixit and US PIRG’s Proctor spoke in favor of fewer restrictions imposed by manufacturers when it comes to product repairs, as well as increased education for consumers and repair shops. Manufacturers have access to specific instructions and specialized tools, the argument goes, making it difficult or nearly impossible for consumers and repair shops to fix the products they own.Jennifer Larson, the CEO of the Minnesota-based IT hardware reseller Vibrant Technologies, said at the workshop that she’s “lost millions in revenue—I can’t even quantify over twenty years how much I’ve lost,†due to repair barriers that prove to be too costly and time-consuming for the clients she sells servers to. Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KRKR)
This is • real• not normal• not okay.Donald Trump: “Then I have an Article 2, where I have the right to do whatever I want as president.â€FACT CHECK: False.The president was speaking on Tuesday to the Turning Point USA event audience.Article 2 of the United States Constitution does not, in fact, grant the president any such power.Video from Vox media journalist Aaron Rupar.TRUMP: "Then I have an Article 2, where I have the right to do whatever I want as president."(Article 2 does not in fact empower the president to do whatever they want.) pic.twitter.com/qIFP1AbHw6— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) July 23, 2019 Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KRKW)
Accountability time.
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by Seamus Bellamy on (#4KRFB)
Friends, you're going to wish you were still making the scene with a magazine after reading this sentence: Google's web trackers are all up in your fap time and there's pretty much nothing (except maybe using a more secure browser like Firefox, read up on cyber security tips from the EFF, refusing to sign into a Google account and never going online without the protection of a VPN) that anyone can do about it.From The Verge:Visitors to porn sites have a “fundamentally misleading sense of privacy,†warn the authors of a new study that examines how tracking software made by tech companies like Google and Facebook is deployed on adult websites.The authors of the study analyzed 22,484 porn sites and found that 93 percent of them leak data to third parties, including when accessed via a browser’s “incognito†mode. This data presents a “unique and elevated risk,†warn the authors, as 45 percent of porn site URLs indicate the nature of the content, potentially revealing someone’s sexual preferences.According to the study, trackers baked up by Google and its creepy always-watching-you subsidiaries were found on over 74% of the porn sites that researchers checked out... for purely scientific reasons, of course. And the fun doesn't stop there! Facebook's trackers appeared on 10% of the websites and, for the discerning surveillance aficionado, 24% of the sites the researchers checked in on were being stalked by Oracle. According to The Verge, "...the type of data collected by trackers varies... Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KRFD)
Prosecutors accuse Epstein of coercing under-18 girls into sexual abuse, and paying victims to recruit others
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KRFJ)
“Beer hops earrings I made, I'm pretty proud of these,†says IMGURian Shancar1. Seriously cool! Turns out Shaun runs The Shores Woodshop, out of Saint Clair Shores, Michigan. They make lots of cool things including... these earrings! Buy these very beer hops earrings on Etsy for the homebrew nerd or craft beer otaku in your life.Also I love these Michigan shaped creations from The Shores Woodshop, offered in post earrings that are “first cut from an 1/8 piece of maple, 'inlaid' with a metallic epoxy resin, and finished with a gloss lacquer. They are about 1\2" tall and use a stainless push back post.â€Very cool. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KRFM)
Yesterday, I published a brief analysis of Elizabeth Warren's plan to close the loopholes that allows private equity to defraud investors, creditors and workers to make billions while destroying the real economy.Today, I'm going to suggest that you read Yves Smith's analysis of the proposal on Naked Capitalism. Private equity is one of the most politically and economically consequential forces in the USA and the world today, behind much of our inequality, looting, and policy dysfunctions.Private equity is a bezzle, protected by deliberately dull layers of obfuscation and complexity that allows its practicioners to claim that the reason they seem to be out-and-out crooks is that none of us are smart enough to figure out what they're doing.Warren isn't buying it. Her proposal builds on the scholarly investigations of Eileen Appelbaum and Rosemary Batt (here's some of Appelbaum's commentary on the proposal) to fashion a series of killing blows aimed at the industry's soft, vulnerable spots, from a two-year ban on dividends after PE acquisitions to giving worker pay and pensions bankruptcy priority, to treating gift cards as consumer deposits for bankruptcy purses.As Smith says, there's no chance that the current Congress and Senate would pass this, but that's not the point. The point -- as with Sanders' 2016 Medicare for All proposal -- is to shift the political center, normalizing ideas that sound impossible as part of our daily political discourse. If it's one thing the whole progressive wing of the Democrats have gotten good at in the past four years, it's changing the width of the Overton Window, from Warren to Sanders to AOC. Read the rest
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by Seamus Bellamy on (#4KRAS)
I'm a few years late to the Expanse party, but I am totally into it. I just finished devouring season two on Saturday evening and will likely dig into the third season later this week. Late or not, it looks like my catching up on this pretty damn delightful bit of sci-fi is timely because LOOK: the trailer for season four just popped!Being as I'm not an Amazon Prime member, it could be some time before I get to watch it, but it's good to know that the saga of the Rocinante is gonna keep on keeping on. You can catch season four, starting on December 14th. Read the rest
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by Rob Beschizza on (#4KRAV)
Adrian Storey decided to use a 5" portable TV--a monochrome cathode ray tube the size and weight of a bag of sugar--as a computer monitor. The first problem: it uses a 3.5mm jack as its sole RF input. There were further problems.1980s 5″ BW TV connected to a PC as 3rd monitor – Display port to HDMI cable into HDMI to composite video adapter, composite video adapter into old VCR, old VCR RF out into coaxial to 3.5mm mono jack adaptor. Mono jack to TV!!Achievement unlocked :)Ultimately the whole exercise was a little pointlessFun, though! Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KRAX)
After all the hoopla surrounding the new and creepy Cats movie trailer, this delightful 1986 PSA from the American Lung Association may provide some relief.(via r/ObscureMedia) Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KR9W)
Scientists have used laser light to activate neurons in a mouse's brain so the rodents "sees" non-existent lines. The technique, called optogenetics, switches on and off neurons that have been previously genetically engineered to be light-sensitive. According to Science News, "the results, described online July 18 in Science, represent the first time scientists have created a specific visual perception with laboratory trickery." In this case, the mice had been trained to drink water from a spout upon seeing the lines. From Science News:When optogenetics first debuted about 15 years ago, everyone was hoping to achieve this level of precise control over perception, and the behaviors that follow, says Karl Deisseroth, a neuroscientist and psychiatrist who pioneered the technique. “It’s exciting to get to this point,†says Deisseroth, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Stanford University....Similar approaches could let scientists create other sorts of perceptions, such as smells, touches and tastes, Deisseroth says.Previously: "Scientists remote control a mouse with a wireless LED brain implant" Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KR9Y)
By Facebook's own admission, more than 10 billion of the 12 billion Facebook accounts ever created have been fake; Facebook's growth has stalled out in high-income countries like the USA (where the company is actually losing users), and the majority of growth the company posted in 2018 came from "India, Indonesia, and the Philippines," which also happen to be places where Facebook says it has "meaningfully higher" rates of fake account creation, exacerbated by "episodic spikes" of fake accounts.Facebook claims to have 2.3 billion users, but it also has made a series of contradictory and confusing disclosures about that number that make it hard to credit: they told the SEC that 5% of their accounts were fake and 11% were duplicates (up from 1% and 6% in mid 2017), but no one knows what that number means because in 2018 the company stopped releasing quarterly numbers and switched to annual reporting. And in any event, Facebook won't reveal its methodology for determining fake and dupe accounts, saying that they use a "limited sample of accounts" and then apply "significant judgment" when interpreting their findings.But separately, Facebook says it saw 2.2 billion fake accounts created in Q2 2019 (that it knows about). That's the same number of active users the company claims to have. It's a big number.We're left having to take Facebook's word for the size of its user-base. The number of active Facebook users has a direct relationship to the rates that FB can charge to its advertisers, so it has a powerful motivation to, uh, optimistically interpret its data, and the fact that no one else is allowed to check its work makes the whole thing pretty dubious. Read the rest
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#4KRAZ)
You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it cross it.Watch as first-time riders, Tyler and Ariel, get bucked off by an uncooperative horse. (Digg) Read the rest
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by Rob Beschizza on (#4KRA0)
Meet Maximus Mighty-Dog Mueller II, the mayor of Idyllwild. He won the election with two thirds of the vote and will serve in perpetuity. Max has an instagram page. [via] Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KR53)
Two weeks ago, Puerto Rico's Center for Investigative Journalism published one of the most consequential investigative stories in the island's history: a trove of leaked private Telegram chats between Governor Ricardo Rossello and his most senior advisors and officials, in which the group use crude, homophobic and misogynist labels to mock and degrade opposition figures, Puerto Rican celebrities, and the people of Puerto Rico as they struggled with the aftermath of hurricanes Maria and Irma, left to swelter and die by a local and national government that had abandoned them.Since then, Puerto Rico has been roiled by mass demonstrations, initially calling for Rossello's resignation, but now for deep, structural reforms to an island whose long history has been one of colonial occupation, oppression, and looting.The protests have been led by feminists and queer activists, supported by the likes of Ricky Martin, a beloved, gay Puerto Rican pop star who was targeted for homophobic slurs in the leaks. As they've gained strength, the protests have drawn out more and more people from all walks of life -- with the vanguard still made up by political radicals who will not accept cosmetic compromises.The Puerto Rican government has responded with riot squads and violent suppression, in a spectacular miscalculation that has only brought out more people. To make things worse, the police appear to have manufactured a casus belli by setting off fireworks behind their lines, a fraud so transparent that it has robbed them of any credibility they had left. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KQS5)
J Michael Straczynski (previously) is known for many things: creating Babylon 5, spectacular runs on flagship comics from Spiderman to Superman, incredibly innovative and weird kids' TV shows like The Real Ghostbusters, and megahits like Sense8; in the industry he's known as a writing machine, the kind of guy who can write and produce 22 hours of TV in a single season, and he's also known as a mensch, whose online outreach to fans during the Babylon 5 years set the bar for how creators and audiences can work together to convince studios to take real chances. But in JMS's new memoir, Becoming Superman: My Journey From Poverty to Hollywood, we get a look at a real-life history that is by turns horrific and terrifying, and a first-person account of superhuman perseverance and commitment to the right thing that, incredibly, leads to triumphStraczynski's life story begins with a family story that's pure grifter American gothic. His grandfather, a Russian emigre and con artist, goes back to Europe to try to bilk his relatives out of whatever money they've snuck out of revolutionary Russia and into Germany. While there, he begins a sexual affair with his underage niece, luring her into bed by promising to send for her when he gets to America, which, of course, he never does, so she books her own passage and tracks him down.Their predictably tumultuous relationship is marked by infidelity and dishonesty, but then things get weird when she takes their son and daughter to Poland, only to take up with a Nazi-sympathizing police officer who takes them in when the Nazis invade, and there they are stuck. Read the rest
by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KQ21)
A few months ago I got a sneak listen to the pilot episode of Sam Greenspan's podcast of speculative journalism called Bellwether. Sam was a producer at 99% Invisible and he knows how to tell a great story. The thing I love about Bellwether is how Sam did real reporting (about the driverless car fatality that took place last year) and presents it as a piece of history from the future. I got chills when I heard it. The soundtrack is great, too!Here's the pilot episode. It's a must-listen:The good news is that Sam is Kickstarting the series, so there will be more episodes coming. I can't wait to find out what happens in the metastory.If you support the Kickstarter at a level of $20 or above, you get a cassette of music from Bellwether, produced by Beaunoise. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KPWN)
In my latest podcast (MP3), I read my essay SAMBA versus SMB: Adversarial Interoperability is Judo for Network Effects, published last week on EFF's Deeplinks; it's a furhter exploration of the idea of "adversarial interoperability" and the role it has played in fighting monopolies and preserving competition, and how we could use it to restore competition today.In tech, "network effects" can be a powerful force to maintain market dominance: if everyone is using Facebook, then your Facebook replacement doesn't just have to be better than Facebook, it has to be so much better than Facebook that it's worth using, even though all the people you want to talk to are still on Facebook. That's a tall order.Adversarial interoperability is judo for network effects, using incumbents' dominance against them. To see how that works, let's look at a historical example of adversarial interoperability role in helping to unseat a monopolist's dominance.The first skirmishes of the PC wars were fought with incompatible file formats and even data-storage formats: Apple users couldn't open files made by Microsoft users, and vice-versa. Even when file formats were (more or less) harmonized, there was still the problems of storage media: the SCSI drive you plugged into your Mac needed a special add-on and flaky driver software to work on your Windows machine; the ZIP cartridge you formatted for your PC wouldn't play nice with Macs.MP3 Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KPSQ)
After Alex Acosta helped Jeffrey Epstein get off the hook in Florida for “soliciting prostitution from a minor,†Epstein is reported to have received a number of odd visits while in detention -- from young women and from powerful men. One of the men was “James E. Staley, a top JPMorgan Chase executive and one of the highest-ranking figures on Wall Street,†reports the New York Times.Why was a JPMorgan Chase exec visiting Jeffrey Epstein?Apparently, to ensure that a pipeline of high-value clients kept flowing from the convicted sex predator and accused serial child sexual abuser to JPMorgan Chase.Kate Kelly, Matthew Goldstein, Jessica Silver-Greenberg and James B. Stewart reporting for the New York Times:Mr. Staley had good reason to maintain his relationship with Mr. Epstein, who received him at his Palm Beach office, where he had been permitted to serve some of his 13-month sentence in 2008 and 2009. Over the years, Mr. Epstein had funneled dozens of wealthy clients to Mr. Staley and his bank.Mr. Epstein, who was charged this month with sex trafficking of teenage girls, liked to portray himself as a financial wizard, someone whose business and investing acumen made him indispensable to corporate executives and other leaders. But there is little evidence to support that notion. The financial services that Mr. Epstein dispensed appear to have been mostly pedestrian, and his list of clients small.Mr. Epstein nonetheless managed to affix himself to a handful of prominent Wall Street veterans, including Mr. Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KPP3)
It really is amazing how stupid some people are.Yes, that dude on the e-scooter is nonchalantly crossing five, count 'em, 5 lanes of traffic on I-35 in Dallas. Josh Weatherl's car dashcam shot this incredible footage of a complete idiot zooming through freeway traffic on a LimeBike e-scooter."Bro! What are you doing?!" says Weatherl as he drives. "Oh my gosh, that is the most wild thing I have ever seen," laughs the motorist as he watches the scooter guy. "How did he get on here?!"The footage was recorded shortly before 9AM local time, and shows the scooter guy wearing a backpack and exiting south of the Dallas North Tollway exit.From the Dallas News:Dallas' dockless vehicle ordinance does not prohibit scooters from being operated on the interstate, but the city's website says they can be used on streets where the speed limit is 35 mph or lower. (The scooters are banned from sidewalks in downtown Dallas, Deep Ellum and the Cedars, as well as the Katy Trail.)A measure sponsored by state Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, that would've banned scooters from the Texas' highways, among other regulations, failed to get a vote on the House floor in the recent legislative session. Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KPP5)
• The change is expected to be a massive expansion of the government's power to seize, detain, and abruptly deport.• Previously, “expedited removal†was limited to undocumented immigrants caught within 100 miles of the U.S. border who had been in the U.S. for less than two weeks. The Trump administration's extrajudicial 'Expedited Removal' of undocumented immigrants will be radically expanded to apply everywhere within the United States, not just within 100 miles of the Mexico border, after the new rule is published in the Federal Register on Tuesday.On Tuesday, the Trump administration is expected to radically expand its power to rapidly deport undocumented immigrants who entered the United States within the past two years, using the 'Expedited Removal' fast-track deportation process which removes the involvement of any immigration judges.From the Washington Post's ICE beat reporter Maria Sacchetti:Officials are calling the new strategy, which will take effect immediately, a “necessary response†to the influx of Central Americans and others at the southern border. It will allow immigration authorities to quickly remove immigrants from anywhere they encounter them across the United States, and they expect the approach will help alleviate the nation’s immigration-court backlog and free up space in Immigration and Customs Enforcement jails.The stated targets of the change are people who sneaked into the United States and do not have an asylum case or immigration-court date pending. Previously, the administration’s policy for “expedited removal†had been limited to migrants caught within 100 miles of the U.S. Read the rest
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KPP6)
It's just black electrical tape, but it's made by 3M and a roll costs just on Amazon. It's temporarily out of stock but you can still buy it at this price and you'll get it when Amazon gets more. Read the rest
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KPKX)
Jon Baird a reporter on KNX 1070 radio, reports that FBI raided the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power this morning, brandishing sealed warrants. Details are sketchy but all I want to know is does this mean I can skip paying my bill this month?Federal agents are reportedly serving search warrants today at #LADWP and at #LosAngelesCityHall, as part of what has been reported as an “ongoing investigationâ€. The #FBI went in minutes ago. @KNX1070 pic.twitter.com/FlBbDrqtTo— Jon Baird (@KNXBaird) July 22, 2019Here at #LADWP, search warrants were being served today as part of an ongoing investigation. One of 3 people walking in the door put on an #FBI jacket as he entered. @KNX1070 pic.twitter.com/PeR3GQgG61— Jon Baird (@KNXBaird) July 22, 2019From Wikipedia:The LADWP has been criticized for allowing excessive overtime. In 2018, 306 of its workers took home more than $100,000 in overtime pay, while the agency paid $250 million for overtime, a new high for the agency. The most egregious example of this is a security worker who was paid $314,000 in overtime, on a listed base pay of $25,000, along with three peers who were paid more than $200,000 overtime each. (The nationwide median wage for security officers was $28,500 in 2018.) One policy which enables these large overtime payouts is a provision in the union contracts which requires a normal shift worked after more than one hour of overtime to be paid at double time, as well as that overtime is not based on working more than 40 hours in a week, but on working time beyond a "normal" shift. Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KPJ2)
Illegitimate popular-vote-losing United States President Donald Trump, folks. “If I wanted to win that war, Afghanistan would be wiped off the face of the earth, it would be over literally in 10 days," Donald Trump said today. “I just don't want to kill 10 million people.â€He is lying, again, of course. Donald Trump would totally kill 10 million people if he could figure out how to do it so that it would only benefit him."If I wanted to win that war, Afghanistan would be wiped off the face of the earth, it would be over literally in 10 days," Trump said. “I just don't want to kill 10 million people." pic.twitter.com/2h0JTa4ZCY— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) July 22, 2019 Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KPJ4)
Former Special Counsel Robert Mueller will arrive on Capitol Hill 'fully prepared' to testify, his spokesperson tells a CNN reporter today.CNN's Jessica Schneider reports that “Mueller has been prepping with a small group from the Special Counsel’s office at Wilmer Hale offices,†and that Mueller's spokesperson told CNN, “If you look at him and his career, he is someone who comes to the table fully prepared and he’s going to be ready Wednesday.â€MORE: Mueller will have a prepared opening statement that has not been seen by DOJ, according to the spox. His testimony will be in line with his public statement May 29. “If you listen to that statement, he made it clear you can basically expect him to stick to the report.â€MORE: Mueller will also submit a statement for the record to the committee beyond his opening, but that will simply be a redacted copy of his report and nothing else, his spox says. Mueller’s frame of mind? “He was subpoenaed obviously and he’s made clear that’s why he will be there.†Read the rest
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by Jason Weisberger on (#4KPJ5)
GerontionBY T. S. ELIOTThou hast nor youth nor age But as it were an after dinner sleep Dreaming of both.Here I am, an old man in a dry month,Being read to by a boy, waiting for rain.I was neither at the hot gatesNor fought in the warm rainNor knee deep in the salt marsh, heaving a cutlass,Bitten by flies, fought.My house is a decayed house,And the Jew squats on the window sill, the owner,Spawned in some estaminet of Antwerp,Blistered in Brussels, patched and peeled in London.The goat coughs at night in the field overhead;Rocks, moss, stonecrop, iron, merds.The woman keeps the kitchen, makes tea,Sneezes at evening, poking the peevish gutter. I an old man,A dull head among windy spaces. Signs are taken for wonders. ‘We would see a sign!’The word within a word, unable to speak a word,Swaddled with darkness. In the juvescence of the yearCame Christ the tiger In depraved May, dogwood and chestnut, flowering judas,To be eaten, to be divided, to be drunkAmong whispers; by Mr. SilveroWith caressing hands, at LimogesWho walked all night in the next room; By Hakagawa, bowing among the Titians;By Madame de Tornquist, in the dark roomShifting the candles; Fräulein von KulpWho turned in the hall, one hand on the door. Vacant shuttlesWeave the wind. I have no ghosts,An old man in a draughty houseUnder a windy knob. Read the rest
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#4KPJ7)
If you have a vehicle that isn't fancy enough to have air conditioning vents in the backseat area, you might want to consider this totally tubular invention. It's called the Noggle and it was designed to keep kids cool in the heat (and warm in the cold). It costs roughly $50 for an 8-foot-long one.(Geekologie) Read the rest
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by Rusty Blazenhoff on (#4KPJ9)
On October 18, 1953, former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt signed in as the "mystery challenger" on the popular game show What's My Line? By allowing the show's host to answer her initial questions, she managed to stump the blindfolded panelists for a while. But, after a few rounds, the 69-year-old Ms. Roosevelt started answering the questions herself and that's when one of the panelists got wise to her identity.(Nag on the Lake) Read the rest
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by Xeni Jardin on (#4KPJB)
New Orleans music and cultural legend Art Neville, who co-founded the Meters and Neville Brothers, has died. He was 81 years old. “Poppa Funk,†as he was known, shaped the sound of New Orleans for half a century, reports nola.com's Keith Spera. “In the latest blow for a New Orleans music community that had already lost Dr. John and Dave Bartholomew this summer, Neville died Monday after years of declining health.â€The keyboardist and singer was the voice of the Carnival anthem for the ages, 'Mardi Gras Mambo.'â€Excerpt from NOLA.com's obituary:"It was peaceful," said Kent Sorrell, Neville's longtime manager. "He passed away at home with his adoring wife Lorraine by his side. He toured the world how many times, but he always came home to Valence Street."Arthur Lanon Neville was born on December 17, 1937, the same day as New Orleans piano legend James Booker. As a boy, he lived in the Calliope housing development and Uptown on Valence Street. He was drawn to the Orioles, the Drifters and other doo-wop groups, as well as the piano-driven music of Professor Longhair and Fats Domino.He attended St. Augustine and Booker T. Washington high schools before earning his GED from Walter S. Cohen, where he’d hang out in the music room with fellow members of the Hawketts, the group he joined in 1953.He was barely 17 when, in 1954, he sang lead on the Hawketts’ remake of a country song called “Mardi Gras Mambo.†Local deejay Jack the Cat convinced the Hawketts to record "Mardi Gras Mambo" at his radio station. Read the rest
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by Jason Weisberger on (#4KPFF)
On Thursday, August 8th, in Silverlake, California you have the opportunity to see some amazing performers. The line-up includes Jim Turner, Dana Gould, and legendary guitarist Laurence Juber, all while supporting Swing Left Los Feliz.Evidently Gould will be portraying everyone's favorite conversant simian, Dr. Zaius.Hi, folks! It’s me, Jim Turner (yes, that Jim Turner)…I am working with a group putting on a benefit to raise funds to contribute to Dan McCreadys’ special election campaign to fill the seat representing North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District in the U.S. House. The special election, which will be held on September 10, 2019, follows allegations the Republican candidate committed election fraud in the initial election. It’s essential McCready is successful in his congressional bid and Swing Left Los Feliz (our group) aims to provide recourses to help make that happen - so the Democrats can hold the House while working towards flipping the Senate.And equally important: this particular election will be a referendum on trump and is really the first big election of 2020. It’s very important we win it.The benefit we’re throwing is Thursday, August 8 at The Satellite (used to be Spaceland in Silverlake) at 8:00. And it’s actually one of those benefits that's worth the price. You don’t even have to like Dan McCready. You’ll be that happy you come. Mainly because the inimitable, Dana Gould, will be emceeing the night in a very rare appearance as Dr. Zaius from Planet of the Apes!Also appearing will be:Moses StormLaurence JuberFrom Mueller She Wrote (Jordan Coburn, Jaleesa Johnson, and A.G.)2 Headed Dog (Dave “Gruber†Allen, Mark Fite, Jim Turner - featuring Biscuits & Gravy)Jonah SmithJ Elvis WeinsteinDeejay, Senor AmorThe Andy Paley Orchestra WHERE:Satellite: 1717 Silver Lake Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90026WHEN:Thursday, August 8, 2019, 8:00pmWe’ve got several ticket prices. Read the rest
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by Rob Beschizza on (#4KPDM)
With Boeing teetering toward the brink after two decades of mismanagement and two spectacularly deadly crashes, times are looking good for European rival Airbus; talk has even turned to the dangers of it assuming an effective monopoly on new sales for years.Well, check out the menu!the theoretical design is a hybrid-electric, turbo-propeller aircraft for regional air transportation. Inspired by efficient mechanics of a bird, it has wing and tail structures that mimic those of a bird of prey, while featuring individually controlled feathers that provide active flight control. ... While not intended to represent an actual aircraft, Airbus’ “Bird of Prey†is based on realistic ideas Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KPDP)
The #612strike protests that have rocked Hong Kong for more than a month continue to gather steam, as Hong Kongers march to demand that China make good on its promise to respect the island's right to self-governance.Sunday's massive demonstrations were followed by mob-beatings doled out by largely masked men in white outfits whom many believe to be members of Triad crime gangs. Hundreds of men armed with sticks and iron pipes stormed a subway station and set upon protesters who were leaving a demonstration. The mob attacked anyone not in white, catching some random subway passengers and bystanders in with the protesters that were their targets.Though the police did not arrive until after the mob had left, pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho was present, cheering on the mob as they beat the protesters and giving them a "thumbs-up" gesture, calling members of the mob "heroes" and shaking their handsThe police have made no arrests and victims of the mob say that no one has followed up on their police reports.The government issued a statement condemning both anti-extradition protesters on Hong Kong island and the Yuen Long mobs for causing the violent scenes. The police in charge said that the violence was a conflict between two political groups.At least 45 people were hospitalized and one was left in critical condition as a result of the mob attack. Among the injured is pro-democracy lawmaker Lam Cheuk Ting, 2 journalists from Stand News and a pregnant woman.Armed mobs attack anti-extradition protesters in a suburban Hong Kong subway station [Oiwan Lam/Global Voices]Ahead of today’s march, Hong Kong protesters have put together this video reading out their manifesto. Read the rest
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by Jason Weisberger on (#4KPDR)
This rugged watch band acts as a case to protect my Apple Watch as I fall all over myself.Hiking, fishing, falling down -- these are a few of my regular things. I am not particularly clumsy but I tend to space out spatially and will occasionally walk into a tree, or stumble over a rock. It gets worse when I have a 125lb dog pulling my right arm in the opposite direction of the 20lb dog on my left. Smashing the face of your Apple Watch is more expensive, thus far, than smashing my own face.This band takes a licking and the watch keeps on 'ticking.'I am hopelessly addicted to my watch, so a band that protects the device from me is pretty nice.This band fits the 42mm Series 3 watch I wear. SUPCASE also has bands for the other sizes and models.SUPCASE [Unicorn Beetle Pro] Case for Apple Watch 3, Rugged Protective Case with Strap Bands for Apple Watch Series 3 2017 Edition [42mm, Compatible with Apple Watch 42mm 2015 2016 ] (Black) via Amazon Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KPDT)
Researchers from the University of Chicago and Sony are developing a wearable electrical muscle stimulation system that boosts your physical reaction time without making it feel like you've lost control of your body. The latter is particularly important when considering the development of exoskeletons and other systems that bring us physically closer to machines for augmenting human capabilities. The system essentially zaps your muscles into contracting at precisely the right time while making it seem as if you're still controlling the movement. From IEEE Spectrum:The typical reaction time for a human is about 250 milliseconds—meaning it takes you about a quarter of a second after you see something to physically react to it. But the researchers explain that "our conscious awareness of intention takes a moment to arise, around 200 ms." In other words, it takes you about 200 milliseconds for your brain to turn sensory input into a decision to do something like move a muscle, and then another 50 or so milliseconds for that muscle to actually start moving. The researchers suggest that this 50-ish millisecond gap between intention and action is a window that they can exploit to make humans react more quickly while still feeling like the action they take is under their control.The video below shows a series of experiments that demonstrate how reflexes can be usefully accelerated without decreasing the sense of control, or agency, that the user experiences. It turns out that an EMS-driven improvement in reflexes of up to 80 milliseconds is possible while still maintaining the user's sense of agency, which is the difference between success and failure in these particular experiments. Read the rest
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by Jason Weisberger on (#4KPDW)
This is post is part of a series of reviews of Federal, State, and County provided campsites along California's amazing coastline.I've visited the Oceano Campgrounds at Pismo State Beach several times this summer. Conveniently located right off the 101 highway along the central coast of California, Pismo is a great place to take a break.There are other State-run campsites at Pismo, Oceano is not 'Oceano Dunes,' nor is it 'the Pismo North Campground.' Oceano sits on a lovely, bird-filled lagoon about 2 short blocks from the State beach. The sites are very typical of Cal State camping, picnic tables and fire rings. I've stayed in both sites with RV hookups and tent camping sites. I felt situated a little closer to other campers than I'd have liked for a several-day visit, but as a convenient overnight place to stop, cook and shower? Oceano kicks ass.The hosts and rangers are also very nice people here and are super helpful. There is a Mexican restaurant right outside the very modern and nice Visitor Center, however I have not tried it. The hamburger shack about 1 block towards the beach, Adam's Burgers, is fantastic. Enjoyed by both my daughter and I. There is also a small market, and a coffee shack that'll sell you t-shirts and stickers as well.There were a lot of RVs set up for lengthier stays. Most folks had dune buggy type cars, but nothing as cool as Wonderbuggy. Oceano Dunes is one of the last places folks can hoon around in the sand. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KP92)
Ten years ago, we showed you a method for baking cookies on your car dashboard on hot days while you're at work, filling your car with delicious baking smells and a tray of warm cookies for the commute home.Now, as the climate emergency deepens, car cookies are making a comeback, with the Nebraska Weather Service livetweeting its attempt to bake biscuits on a car dashboard amid an unprecedented midwestern heat-wave. The pan reached 185' F, and after 8 hours, the "slightly doughy" cookies had reached an internal temperature of 144.5' F. If you are wondering if it's going to be hot today, we are attempting to bake biscuits using only the sun and a car in our parking lot. We will keep you posted with the progress. Stay cool! #newx #iawx pic.twitter.com/cXZgdRIgcK— NWS Omaha (@NWSOmaha) July 18, 2019 (via The New York Post) Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KP94)
Oregon governor Kate Brown signed a bill that excuses public school students for taking "mental health days" just as they are excused for other illnesses. The bill was spearheaded by youth activists. From the Associated Press:(Eighteen-year-old Hailey) Hardcastle, who plans to attend the University of Oregon in the fall, said she and fellow youth leaders drafted the measure to respond to a mental health crisis in schools and to “encourage kids to admit when they’re struggling.â€Debbie Plotnik, vice president of the nonprofit advocacy group Mental Health America, said implementing the idea in schools was important step in challenging the way society approaches mental health issues.“We need to say it’s just as OK to take care for mental health reasons as it is to care for a broken bone or a physical illness,†she said.(Image: "Conceptual illustration of mental health" by Quince Media, (CC BY-SA 4.0)) Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KP96)
There is a booming market for app-based English-language tutors, many in the USA, who serve Chinese families where the parents are eager to have their children acquire English proficiency; these tutors are often also moonlighting teachers, or former teachers, who have been trained to spot and report signs of abuse. Many of these teachers say that they have witnessed both indirect signs of abuse, as well as directly witnessing horrific acts of on-camera violence in which abusive parents brutally beat their children.What's more, the tutors say that when they report this violence to the companies they contract to, like Vipkid, the companies do not take action beyond shuffling which teacher is working with that kid. Using private Facebook groups, tutors have compared notes and banded together to put pressure on the companies to take action.Corporal punishment is widespread in China, but recent legal reforms have banned most kinds of violent punishments for children. However, if the companies report parental abuse to Chinese authorities, it could undermine their ability to attract and retain clients -- narking out the parents who are paying the bills is bad for business.Edsurge's Emily Tate contacted many of the leading companies providing these services and while all said reassuring things about the company's plans to deal with abuse, they were notably short on details and often refused to answer followup questions.Adam Steinberg, a spokesman at VIPKid’s US office in San Francisco, said in a written statement that “the safety and security of teachers, students, and parents is a top priority for VIPKid and we take these matters very seriously.†Although he couldn't say precisely how many reports of abuse the company receives each day, he wrote that “we have a process to address these very rare instances directly with the parties involved to ensure their welfare.†That process, Steinberg said, includes ending classes before the full 25 minutes, deleting the video, and following up with both teachers and parents about the issue. Read the rest
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by David Pescovitz on (#4KP98)
Since 2013, Chicago artist Jim Bachor has turned potholes on the city streets into mosaics. At WGN9, he writes:What got me going with mosaics originally was the durability. I visited Pompeii for the first time in the late 1990s, and a tour guide pointed out an ancient mosaic and said, glass and marble don't fade. So that mosaic that we're looking at looks just like the artist intended 2000 years ago....I still don't know if it's legal or not, but I have had discussions with police through the years, about a half dozen, and once they know what I'm doing they don't have an issue with it. View this post on Instagram More work in progress shots from the 6th Detroit install. “Bouquet†is located at Riopelle and Adelaide in Eastern Market. •••••• #bachor #jimbachor #potholeart #potholeartinstallations #muralsinthemarket #easternmarket A post shared by bachor (@jimbachor) on Oct 5, 2018 at 7:20am PDT View this post on Instagram NOT FAKE NEWS! Sadly "This is not a pothole. Anymore." is on it's last legs. Check it out before it's gone! Northeast corner of Michigan and Ohio smack dab in the middle of downtown Chicago. Sad! (Photo credit: Pat Owens) A post shared by bachor (@jimbachor) on Jan 17, 2017 at 9:06am PST Read the rest
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KP9A)
It's not easy to find public trash cans in Tokyo (other than bottle-and-can recycling bins next to drink vending machines). Even so, there's hardly any litter on the ground. When I travel to Japan, I always keep a plastic bag in my knapsack to store trash until I come across a rare public gomibako (Tip: There's one in front of the Kiddy Land toy store in Harajuku). In this video, That Japanese Man Yuta challenges tourists to find a trash can in Shinjuku, Tokyo. Read the rest
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by Mark Frauenfelder on (#4KP4E)
Author, activist, and self-described "investigative satirist" Paul Krassner died at the age of 87 today in Desert Hot Springs, California. He was a personal friend and an early supporter of Boing Boing when it was a zine. Here are a few highlights of his long, active life:He wrote for MAD magazine in the 1950s.He launched a political satire/non-fiction zine called The Realist in 1958, which ran some of Robert Anton Wilson's first published work, and which was a big inspiration for Boing Boing. Paul kindly swapped subscriptions once Carla and I got Boing Boing off the ground.He edited Lenny Bruce's autobiography, How To Talk Dirty and Influence People.In the early 1960s he started an abortion referral service when abortions were illegal.When he moved to San Francisco, he became a roommate with Whole Earth Catalog editor Stewart Brand. Today, Brand tweeted "Farewell to my early role model and later roommate, Paul Krassner. 87. I remember that whenever he encountered a loose thumbtack, he reflexively turned it point-side-down."In 1967 he memorialized Walt Disney's death by commissioning a Realist illustration by famous cartoonist Wally Wood called "Disneyland Memorial Orgy," which featured famous Disney characters having sex with each other and taking drugs.He co-founded the Youth International Party (Yippies) in the 1960s with Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman, and entered a pig as the Yippie Party presidential candidate in the 1968 election.He was named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the Chicago Seven trial. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KP4G)
The Sackler family got richer than the Rockefellers by marketing Oxycontin in ways that kickstarted the global opioid epidemic, whose body count continues to rise -- more than 200,000 dead in the US alone, which is more Americans than died in the Vietnam war.The Sacklers aren't just as rich as a Gilded Age looter, they've also absorbed the Gilded Age tactic of fractioning off relatively piddling sums and giving them to cultural institutions as Exhibit A in the modern practice of looter reputation-laundering.But given the incredible death toll from opioids and leaks of sealed court documents that show the Sacklers' complicity in those deaths, institutions are starting to break ties with the family, helped along by artists like opioid survivor Nan Goldin, whose massive, mediagenic protest actions inside of galleries and museums have gone a long way to showing institutions that their Sackler wing is a very bad look indeed.The latest casualty seems to be the Louvre in Paris. Shortly after Goldin staged an action outside of the museum, the museum's board of directors suddenly remembered that they have a policy of removing endowment thank-yous after 20 years, and it had been 22 years since the Sacklers paid to have their names plastered all over the place. Now, every mention of the Sackler name has been purged from the institution, down to the smallest signs, which have been covered over with tape. The Louvre officially says that it was just enforcing its policies and it's nothing personal about the Sacklers, but they couldn't explain why they only remembered that they had these policies after Goldin called them to account in a public, showy way. Read the rest
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by Cory Doctorow on (#4KNTP)
Elizabeth Warren's bid for the Democratic 2020 presidential nomination has been dominated by a series of bold, detailed policy proposals that are designed to enact deep, structural changes in American law and policy to reverse 40 years of post-Reagan corruption and wealth accumulation by the richest 1%.One of these proposals deals directly with the finance sector, an area where Warren has real credibility, thanks to her excellent work in founding and structuring the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau (alas, many of the structures put in place to protect the CFPB from Republican Congressional meddling have backfired, saddling the Bureau with a long-term Trump appointee of the very worst sort).Writing on The Reformed Broker, Joshua M Brown describes how the Warren finance proposals "have been designed to deliberately shrink the financial services business in general and its profits in particular" and how Warren's detailed knowledge of how private equity allows the super rich to grow their fortunes by destroying real businesses and real jobs mean that these proposals are "banking-sector napalm...burning away every loophole and unfair advantage these funds have and disintegrating their profitability into ash"Here's how it works: My plan would transform the private equity industry and end this looting with a comprehensive set of legal changes, including:* Putting private equity firms on the hook for the debts of companies they buy, making them responsible for the downside of their investments so that they only make money if the companies they control flourish.* Holding private equity firms responsible for certain pension obligations of the companies they buy, so that workers have a better shot of getting the retirement funds they earned. Read the rest
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by Rob Beschizza on (#4KNQT)
An experimental dermal implant changes color in the presence of high acidity or blood glucose, potentially allowing diabetics and other patients to monitor their wellbeing without taking samples. The implant material can be integrated into tattoo ink formulations, making them as discrete or ostentatious as the wearer wishes.MedicalXPress:As detailed in the journal Angewandte Chemie, a colorimetric analytic formulation was injected into the skin instead of tattoo ink. The pigmented skin areas varied their color when blood pH or other health indicators changed. ... The authors claim that such sensor tattoos could allow permanent monitoring of patients using a simple, low-cost technique. With the development of suitable colorimetric sensors, the technique could also extend to recording electrolyte and pathogen concentrations or the level of dehydration of a patient. Further studies will explore whether tattoo artwork can be applied in a diagnostic setting. Read the rest
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by Rob Beschizza on (#4KNP3)
It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood! Sony Pictures: It only takes one person to inspire a world of kindness. Based on the true story, #ABeautifulDayMovie in theaters this Thanksgiving.If you haven't seen Morgan Neville's documentary about Fred Rogers, Won't You Be My Neighbor?, be sure to before the Hanks movie hits. Read the rest
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