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06 Feb 03:45

Museum of the American Cocktail in New Orleans, Louisiana

Museum of the American Cocktail

They say that New Orleans is the home of the first cocktail, and those who have visited find it hard to argue. Who is "they" you ask? Why, New Orleans of course.

The first official cocktail, a little libation that went by the name "The Sazerac", was a concoction of French brandy, water, sugar and bitters, and was allegedly dreamt up by a man named Antoine Peychaud in a apothecary shop in New Orleans’ French Quarter. The legend of the early mixologist and his signature drink lives on to this day, the spread of the story encouraged by the tourist industry and state legislature (The Sazerac is New Orleans' official cocktail) but like many things in this mysterious city, the tale has some smoke and mirrors, and facts have been...embellished.

It's a little strange for the curators of the Museum of the American cocktail to deny the fact, especially when they have a newspaper clipping from 1806 that contains the first use of the word ″cocktail″ in America, which is considered the a holy relic for mixologists and cocktail affecinados. However, one of the curators of the museum, Phil Greene, is a direct descendent of Antoine Peychaud. While he believes that his crafty relative Peychaud was quite the clever fellow, it would have been impossible for him to invent the cocktail in 1806, since he was only three at the time.

However and wherever the cocktail originated, the Museum of the American Cocktail has been recording and celebrating the history and evolution of the cocktail through the years. The museum was originally a traveling exhibit going from New York to Las Vegas, but it finally found a permanent resting place inside of the Southern Food and Beverage Museum on the New Orleans waterfront. The museum contains a variety of cocktail and bar memorabilia from antique cocktail shakers, cups, and bottles, to pro- and anti- prohibition propoganda.

While it might seem like a place where you could get a drink, the museum does not have a bar on the premises. They do however host events and mixology seminars that include alcohol.

06 Feb 02:21

Train Travel Inspired: The Passenger Restaurant

by Sarah Dobbins
--

trains

020113_xpost1615.jpgSomewhere between the ill-fated train trip on Sex and the City and a dream excursion aboard the Orient Express lies The Passenger, a rail travel inspired restaurant in the trendy Malasaña/Triball neighborhood of Madrid.

The Passenger Restaurant
  Apartment Therapy



06 Feb 00:52

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design

by Marni Katz

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

This month’s Designer Dailies follows the seemingly wacky antics of New York based designer Brooks Atwood. Atwood, Assistant Professor of Industrial Design at NJIT and head of Pod Design, the studio he established in 2003, works in many mediums, across the fields of architecture, industrial design, and creative environments. If you recall, we just posted about his Pod Chair. Pod specializes in integrating advanced technologies and attaining material transcendence. They’re definitely a success. Let’s take a peek.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Enjoying a fresh cup and the newspaper.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Gonna have a killer day ggrrrrrrraaaaaa!

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Off to work (contemplating jumping all the stairs).

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Grabbing a “bearded” cortado at my fave coffee shop. (They call me “line cutter,” but I’ve never cut.)

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

A brief farewell before my wife and I part ways for the day.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

O’Fortuna plays, skipping all the way to my studio.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Disciplining the new intern at the POD Design world headquarters.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Top secret new design—freshly 3D printed. Amazeballs!

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Headed to New Jersey Institute of Technology for my afternoon class.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

A fresh session of student mind-blowing-ness.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Minds blow/mind explosion.

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Meat please. They call me the Hamburgler (though I don’t steal ground meat).

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Reading my favorite mag, and a quick five minute cat nap before . . .

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Rocking out—doggie style!

Designer Dailies: Brooks Atwood of Pod Design in home furnishings featured architecture Category

Feasting with my amazing, beautiful, fabulous wife.

Share This: Twitter | Facebook | Discover more great design by following Design Milk on Twitter and Facebook. © 2013 Design Milk | Posted by Marni in Architecture, Home Furnishings | Permalink | No comments

06 Feb 00:46

ERMAHGERD Guillermo del Toro is making a Secret Garden movie

by Meredith Woerner
--

"pairing up with Lucy Alibar, the co-writer of Beasts of the Southern Wild"

Click here to read ERMAHGERD Guillermo del Toro is making a <em>Secret Garden</em> movie Dust off your giant knit hat and Dickon obsession, Guillermo del Toro is making a Secret Garden movie. But wait, it gets even better — GDT is pairing up with Lucy Alibar, the co-writer of Beasts of the Southern Wild. More »


06 Feb 00:38

Gendered for all of (pre)history

We literally come out of the womb ready to be the gender that is associated with our sex. How far back in American history can you spot where this started to happen? Pilgrims, American Indians, maybe even the Neanderthals?

06 Feb 00:17

Dell to go private

by Jason Kottke

In 1997, Dell Computer CEO Michael Dell famously said of Apple:

I'd shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.

Today, Michael Dell is part of a consortium giving the money back to the shareholders and taking Dell Inc. private.

Under the terms of the deal, the buyers' consortium, which also includes Microsoft, will pay $13.65 a share in cash. That is roughly 25 percent above where Dell's stock traded before word emerged of the negotiations of its sale.

Michael S. Dell will contribute his stake of roughly 14 percent toward the transaction, and will contribute additional cash through his private investment firm, MSD Capital. Silver Lake is expected to contribute about $1 billion in cash, while Microsoft will loan an additional $2 billion.

Tags: Apple   business   Dell   Michael Dell
06 Feb 00:16

The Panasonic Toughpad Press Conference

by editors
--

"Jan stops for a second and says there will be a demonstration. He says “With the nice police ladies we are to make some watersports,” and half-laughs, half-smiles awkwardly. He says that onstage in front of the world’s press. He seems to think that is fine. The women come forward and pour water from a jug over a toughbook sat in a perspex case. People take pictures.

A man in charge of something important just made a SEX PISS JOKE at the Panasonic Press Conference and that’s all fine. I don’t understand. I don’t understand. Is that fine? Is this just what happens at tech events? I want to have a lie down."

“I am not a tech journalist. I have never done this before. I don’t know what’s going on. Like most journalists everywhere, I am hungover.”

Grant Howitt | Look, Robot | Jan 2013 [Full Story]
06 Feb 00:13

Braid Developer Finds Linux Tools Lacking

by james_fudge
--

"The main reason is that debugging is terrible on Linux. gdb is just bad to use, and all these IDEs that try to interface with gdb to "improve" it do it badly (mainly because gdb itself is not good at being interfaced with). Someone needs to nuke this site from orbit and build a new debugger from scratch, and provide a library-style API that IDEs can use to inspect executables in rich and subtle ways.

Productivity is crucial. If the lack of a reasonable debugging environment costs me even 5% of my productivity, that is too much, because games take so much work to make. At the end of a project, I just don't have 5% effort left any more. It requires everything. (But the current Linux situation is way more than a 5% productivity drain. I don't know exactly what it is, but if I were to guess, I would say it is something like 20%.)

That said, Windows / Visual Studio is, itself, not particularly great. There are lots of problems, and if someone who really understood what large-program developers really care about were to step in and develop a new system on Linux, it could be really appealing. But the problem is that this is largely about (a) user experience, and (b) getting a large number of serious technical details bang-on correct, both of which are weak spots of the open-source community.

Secondary reasons are all the flakiness and instability of the operating system generally. Every time I try to install a popular, supposedly-stable Linux distribution (e.g. an Ubuntu long-term support distro), I have basic problems with wifi, or audio, or whatever. Audio on Linux is terrible (!!!!!!), but is very important for games. I need my network to work, always. etc, etc. On Windows these things are not a problem.

OpenGL / Direct3D used to be an issue, but now this is sort of a red herring, and I think the answers in the linked thread about graphics APIs are mostly a diversion. If you are doing a modern game engine and want to launch on Windows, Mac, iOS, and next-generation consoles, you are going to be implementing both Direct3D and OpenGL, most likely. So it wouldn't be too big a deal to develop primarily on an OpenGL-based platform, if that platform were conducive to game development in other ways.

I would be very happy to switch to an open-source operating system. I really dislike what Microsoft does, especially what they are doing now with Windows 8. But today, the cost of switching to Linux is too high. I have a lot of things to do with the number of years of life I have remaining, and I can't afford to cut 20% off the number of years in my life."

he's almost immediately destroyed by an Ubisoft intern

Braid developer Jonathan Blow says that he would love to use Linux as the main environment to develop his games, but the tools are horrible to use. Blow says that, while Windows has its own set of problems when it comes to programming, the lack of decent IDEs (Integrated Development Environment) and debuggers availble for Linux is holding the open source platform back.

read more

06 Feb 00:05

“Pizza Hut Taco Bell” by Bright Primate ft. Force of...

by demarko


“Pizza Hut Taco Bell” by Bright Primate ft. Force of Will

Every Friday, for the rest of 2013, Andrew Kilpatrick and Alex Kelly (they both run the Pxl-Bot netlabel) will showcase a different chipmusic artist as part of their Weekly Treats series. This means that every Friday they’ll not only post a brand new, original, exclusive and unreleased track FOR FREE, but they’ll also have interviews with the musicians on their website.

The most recent track is a cover of a Das Racist’s “Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell” by Boston’s own Bright Primate.

BUY Make your own chiptunes on a DSi with Korg's DS-10 Plus
06 Feb 00:04

Swamp Shack Changes and News

by dieselboi
--

hey-o!

Some tidbits of news from Portland’s street food scene:

Trey Corkern of The Swamp Shack on SW 5th and Stark announced this week that he will be closing the cart and going fully mobile with a food truck. The Swamp Shack has been a mainstay on SW Stark for four years. Many loved the bayou feeling of the worn wood and moss. You have one last month to visit the cart and then you’ll need to find the truck (or book it for your next event.)

__________

New Carts:

  • Quick and Dirty – bagels and coffee – SW Park and Montgomery
  • Bento Box – SW 10th and Washington
  • Tony’s Cucina – Cuban – SW 9th and Washington
  • Kesone Asian Fusion – Cartlandia @ SE 82nd and Harney
  • Good Eats by JC – Cartlandia

Closures:

  • Papa Pau! – closed for winter but states they will return
  • Filippe’s Food Shack – SW 10th and Alder

____________

Reminder that Cartathlon III is Feb 23. Be sure to sign your team up.

Enjoy the carts!

The post Swamp Shack Changes and News appeared first on Food Carts Portland.

06 Feb 00:02

When I open up a book and it's all rapey

06 Feb 00:02

We will not change the world with memes alone

by Annalee Newitz
Click here to read We will not change the world with memes alone Internet political scientist Evgeny Morozov has written a powerful essay in the New Republic about problems with the popular idea that the internet is an inherently democratizing force. The occasion for his ire is Steven Johnson's new book, Future Perfect: The Case for Progress in a Networked Age. Morozov upbraids Johnson and his cohorts for "internet-centrism," or the belief that there is something inherently liberating about the structure of the internet because it is decentralized. But is the internet actually decentralized? Morozov thinks it isn't: More »


06 Feb 00:01

Futurama's seventh season may ret-con the series' saddest moment

by Rob Bricken
--

NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

Click here to read <em>Futurama</em>'s seventh season may ret-con the series' saddest moment There's a hell of a lot for Futurama fans to get excited about in this three-minute premiere of the second half of the seventh season, debuting this summer on Comedy Central — a planet of apes, a Thing parody, tentacle-monster Leela, a war with a Cobra-esque evil organization, some mild robo-Satanism — but nothing, and I mean nothing, has me happier than that single shot of Fry playing with his dog Seymour. After the mind-shattering tragedy that was the "Jurassic Bark" episode, Seymour — and by extension every single person who wept hysterically while watching it — deserves a happy ending. And no, Clone Fry and Bender's Big Score don't count. I need real Fry, rescuing Seymour before he begins his fruitless, 12-year vigil. And some kind of scientific mumbo-jumbo explaining that the timeline where Seymour never reunited with Fry no longer exists would be nice, too. More »


05 Feb 23:55

Photoshop Tips! Isolating Lineart

Hello! Here is a short tip detailing a technique to put scanned lineart on its own layer in Photoshop. As with most things in Photoshop, there are various ways to do this, but this is just one.

Start off with your lineart! This can be something you’ve scanned, or something you’ve simply drawn onto a white layer and want to move to its own layer so you can color under it. If your lines are pure black and white, you can simply select all the black and copy it to a new layer, but if you’ve got grays in there it’s not so simple.

image

I am using Photoshop CS6, but this should work in any version that includes the Channels palette. Go to the Channels palette, hold Ctrl (Command on a Mac), and click the thumbnail of the RGB Channel (or CMYK if that’s the color mode you are using).

image 

This selects all the white/gray areas of the image. The lighter a pixel is, the more opaque its selection is; darker areas will be more transparent. However, this is the opposite of what we want, so go to the Select menu and choose “Inverse” (or press Shift + Ctrl + I).

Now we have the black areas selected. Go back to the Layers palette, make a new layer, and fill the selection with black (you can press Alt + Backspace to do this quickly). Now you can replace the original layer or fill it with white or do whatever you want to do with it. Your lineart is on its own layer with no pesky white background to block out your colors.

image

What’s the advantage to doing it this way rather than duplicating your original layer and setting it to Multiply? For one thing, you can now lock the transparency of your lineart and do color holds (the fancy term for coloring your lineart). I’m sure there are other benefits. Who knows!

image

 Join us next time on Photoshop Tips where I’ll reveal the secret menu option that draws comics for you. 

05 Feb 23:54

February 05, 2013


Only 8 hours left to grab tickets to the show!
05 Feb 22:11

Fantasy Map: Children’s Library Literary “Transit...



Fantasy Map: Children’s Library Literary “Transit Map”

This adorable map adorns the walls of the rather lovely Passmore Edwards Centre children’s library in Newton Abbot, England. The names of the “stations” were chosen by local children in a competition.

(Source: Devon Libraries/Flickr)

05 Feb 22:11

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop

by Christopher Jobson

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Aerial Photographs of Tulip Fields in the Netherlands by Normann Szkop Netherlands landscapes flowers

Abstract rainbows of color fill the landscape in these beautiful photos by French photographer Normann Szkop (nsfw-ish) who hopped in a Cesna with pilot Claython Pender to soar above the tulip fields in Anna Paulowna, a town in North Holland. Collectively, the millions of neatly planted flowers create sprawling patterns and designs that tourists flock to witness with their own eyes every season. See the entire 100+ photograph set over on Flickr. (via twisted sifter)

05 Feb 19:19

Food TV: Is Anthony Bourdain This Generation's Julia Child?

by Raphael Brion
--

'Anthony Bourdain is "our generation's foul-mouthed Julia Child."'

uhh, Julia Child had a hell of a cussmouth

anthony-bourdain-julia-child.jpg
[Photoshop: Raphael Brion/Eater]

The Tampa Tribune food writer Jeff Houck boldly makes the call that television personality Anthony Bourdain is "our generation's foul-mouthed Julia Child." Houck's reasoning — which apparently came to him in an "epiphany" — is that because they're both tall and do groundbreaking food television, they are the same. Quote: "A tall cook and author with a wry sense of humor who makes pioneering television shows and takes food seriously but scoffs at those who want to add too much puffery." Noting that Julia Child was a "culinary leader and a cultural icon," Bourdain is "taking the baton and running in new and exciting directions." Which includes being a judge on the pioneering television show Taste, the much-maligned series that's floundering in the ratings.

· Bourdain transforms America's taste [Tampa Tribune]
· All Anthony Bourdain Coverage on Eater [-E-]
· All Julia Child Coverage on Eater [-E-]

05 Feb 18:08

East Village Man Fights $30K In Fines For Renting Out Room Through Airbnb

by John Del Signore
East Village Man Fights $30K In Fines For Renting Out Room Through Airbnb Nigel Warren was headed to Colorado for a few nights last September and decided to subsidize his trip by renting out his room in his East Village apartment share for $100 a night. His roommates were cool with it, and the guests he found through Airbnb were quiet and polite. But while he was away, special enforcement officers from the city came to his apartment and issued his landlord a number of violations for operating an illegal transient hotel. The potential fines totaled $30,000, and Warren, a 30-year old web designer, has been trying to extricate himself from a costly Kafkaesque nightmare ever since. [ more › ]

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05 Feb 18:08

Chrome + Firefox = BFF with cross-browser video talks

by Jon Brodkin

The latest beta versions of Chrome and Firefox can make high-definition video calls to one another, thanks to a joint effort by Mozilla and Google to support WebRTC interoperability.

Mozilla and Google made the joint announcements yesterday, while demonstrating a video call:

Hey Chrome, this is Firefox calling!

WebRTC is a plugin-free, real-time audio and video communication specification. The technology and specification are in the early stages of development, which means simply supporting the current version of the spec isn't enough to ensure interoperability. Extra work must be done.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

05 Feb 18:01

Learn a little assembly language for the 6502 processor

by Mike Szczys

6502-assembly-tutorial

Evern wanted to write your own Atari 2600 games? This won’t get you quite that far, but it will teach you the very basics. It’s an assembly tutorial for the 6502 processor. The nice thing is that you need nothing more than your browser to participate thanks to the embedded JavaScript emulator which acts as assembler, machine, and debugger in one.

The 6502 was in a lot of early equipment. In addition to the previously mentioned Atari they can be found in the Commodore 64, Apple II, and the original NES. You can even find folks building their own computers around the chip these days (most notable to us is the Veronica project). The guide starts off slowly, providing a working program and challenging the reader to play with to code in order to alter the outcomes. It moves on to an overview of registers and instructions, operators and branching, and culminates in the creation of a simple game.

[Thanks Mathilda]


Filed under: computer hacks, how-to
05 Feb 17:39

Local web server trick allows Wii U Gamepad to moonlight as a PC controller

by Sean Buckley

Local web server trick allows Wii U Gamepad to moonlight as a PC controller

It may not be as easy to crack as the Bluetooth powered Wiimote, but the Wii U Gamepad is finally getting a little hacker's limelight -- one clever modder has figured out how to use it as a PC controller. By pointing the Wii U web browser at a local web server running a custom script, Chris Manning is able to read the Gamepad's input and map it to keyboard functions -- giving gamers with time and patience a complicated way to use the Wii U tablet as a simple PC gamepad. Manning told Kotaku that a future update will include touch-screen input, and he's also trying to crack Gamepad streaming, for PC gamers who can't quite wait for NVIDIA's Project Shield. The Wii U is still a long way from being properly hacked, of course, but we certainly won't shake a Wiimote at clever workarounds like this. If it works, it works. Skip on past the break to see the trick in action, or read Manning's video description at the source link to grab the necessary files.

Filed under: Gaming, Nintendo

Comments

Via: Kotaku

Source: YouTube

05 Feb 17:37

obscurevideogames: Shadowrun (Compile - Sega Mega CD - 1994)

--

ZOMG









obscurevideogames:

Shadowrun (Compile - Sega Mega CD - 1994)

05 Feb 17:34

まるです。

by mugumogu



あんなに頑なだった蓋
The cover of this box was once obstinate.




まるの重圧に耐えかねて
However, by Maru's strong pressure



すっかり柔和に。
It became really gentle disposition.




「箱の調教完了。」
Maru:[I succeeded in the training of this box.]



-----------------------------------------------


ベネッセの「いぬねこてくてく」さんにてご紹介いただきました。
2週にわたって登場します!

-----------------------------------------------

出版社が運営する書籍関連のフェイスブックページにて、
「まるです。お楽しみBOX」制作時の裏話や、
トレイラー動画などがご覧いただけます。

-----------------------------------------------









05 Feb 17:34

AT&T Brings Online Ad Targeting Tactics to TV Commercials

--

great

Experiments suggest that monitoring viewer behavior via set-top boxes could help make TV commercials much more effective.

Few cable subscribers realize it, but each time they switch channels, their TV provider makes a note of it. Today, that data is primarily used for internal research and to inform ratings. But newly published work from researchers at AT&T shows how it could also be used to make TV advertising more compelling.

05 Feb 17:30

The Very Definition of Hell. See Also: Comic Book Universes.

ebooks? what is wrong with them?
05 Feb 17:30

Extra! Extra!: Richard III Lyth Buryd at Lecitor

by Sarah J Biggs

Kings395_f33rDetailDetail of a miniature of Richard III (b. 1452, d. 1485); from the Biblical and genealogical chronicle from Adam and Eve to Edward VI, England (London or Westminster), c. 1511, with additions before 1557, King's MS 395, f. 33r

By this point, you have probably heard the big news out of Leicester: the skeleton found in the Greyfriars car park is indeed that of Richard III.  It is not very often that the world of medieval studies enjoys the thrill of 'breaking news'.  Of course, as has been well reported, it is not precisely news that Richard was buried in Leicester.  Those of us who were standing by to hear from the University of Leicester team can remember that it was not journalists but chroniclers who got the scoop. To name one example, a genealogical chronicle of the Tudor period includes Richard in the illustrated tree of succession, with the explanatory note: 'Richard that was sonne to Richard Dewke of Yorke & brother unto Kyng Edward the iiiith, was kyng after hys brother & raynyd ii yeres & lyth buryd at Lecitor [lies buried at Leicester]'.  A statement we now know is true!

Kings395_f32v_33rA tangled line of succession, culminating in (on the lower page, in roundels marked with coats of arms)  Edward IV, Richard III, and Henry VII; from the Biblical and genealogical chronicle from Adam and Eve to Edward VI, England (London or Westminster), c. 1511, with additions before 1557, King's MS 395, ff. 32v-33r

This genealogy handles Richard's demise and the subsequent succession in a way usual for medieval family trees: it visually erases the discontinuity.  Richard was killed in battle against the forces of his rival, Henry Tudor (Henry VII).  But here we see no great divide between the Plantagenet and Tudor dynasties.  Rather, Henry VII sits directly under Richard on the family tree, his lines of descent snaking up to join the main tree some generations in the past.

Harley7353Detail of the genealogy of Edward IV, on (below) trees sprouting from Edward I (right) and Peter of Castile (left), and including the severing of Richard II from the tree by a sword-wielding Henry IV (center); from the typological life and genealogy of Edward IV, England, 1460-c. 1470, Harley MS 7353

This is perhaps not surprising in a document originating during the reign of Henry's own grandson, Edward VI.  But at least one genealogy takes a different approach to the death and deposition of another Richard, King Richard II.  Richard II was overthrown by Henry IV, the first of England's Lancastrian kings, whose grandson Henry VI was, in turn, overthrown by Edward IV to restore Yorkist rule.  For this manuscript made during Edward's reign, therefore, Richard II would have been the rightful king unjustly deposed by a usurper.  And in this image, we can see the cutting of the line of succession made literal by a sword-wielding Henry IV, the violence of the dynastic discontinuity perhaps also suggesting violence against Richard II's own person – he died while in Edward's custody.

Royal20CVII_f134rThe autograph of Richard III (as Duke of Gloucester, before 1483); from Chroniques de France ou St Denis, France (Paris), last quarter of the 14th century, after 1380, Royal MS 20 C. vii, f. 134r

While Richard III's untimely end is one of the most colourful aspects of his story, it is also possible to reach out to the living king.  Richard owned a number of books during his life, a few of which still survive today, some in the British Library.  We know from signatures contained in its pages that Richard owned a copy of the French romance Tristan – a delightful tale of love and adventure.  And another book, on the 'Dedes of Knyghthode', holds the coats of arms both of Richard (as king of England) and of his wife, Anne Neville.  This volume was perhaps made for their young son Edward, who predeceased his father in 1484.  When we look at these books, they help bring back to life the hands that held them, a controversial monarch at a turbulent period in England's past.

Royal18AXII_f1rInitial 'H'(ere) of the arms of Richard III; from Vegetius, De re militari (The Book of Vegecy of Dedes of Knyghthode), England (London?), c. 1483-1485, Royal MS 18 A. ii, f. 1r

Nicole Eddy

05 Feb 17:29

Hourly Comic Day

by Emily Carroll
So yesterday was Hourly Comic Day, which I've never done before, so I finally gave it a shot! I don't usually do autobio comics, and I don't think I'll do more of them in the future really, but it was interesting to try it out in such a loose format. And before I get started saying any more self-conscious, apologetic stuff: there's a forum here full of hourly comics by other people too. Also Eleanor Davis's were good. And Anthony Clark's.

A note: eventually I say some things about the end of the game Journey.



05 Feb 17:26

What I’ve learned from Objectify A Male Tech Writer Day – and why I’m calling it off

by Leigh Alexander
The real mission has to be making everyone feel welcome, period.

"Objectify A Man in Tech Day" has become much bigger than I expected since I first wrote about it. At first I was excited, but now I see the scale of the discussion and coverage is creating a number of valid risks - and as a result, I'd like to call off the event.

The widely-covered event started out as a lark that emerged when I got fed up with experiencing - and seeing other women writers and presenters in gaming and tech - fielding irrelevant compliments on their appearance when people referenced their work.

I hoped the result of what we began calling "#Objectify day" would catalyse discussions about the way we use language and how seemingly-innocuous "compliments" are belittling and distracting. A lot of people liked this idea, understood the intention and found it fun.

My goal was that humor and empathy could help people open constructive dialog about sexism. And for a while it seemed like it could work! But there were also a lot of problems with my approach that came to light thanks to the feedback of some trusted friends and colleagues, and I take their concerns extremely seriously.

The dialogue's been great, but the end result - a day of circulating a hashtag on Twitter - runs the risk of catching fire with people who miss the point. #Objectify is not about celebrating objectification or about making people feel uncomfortable, but I'm increasingly worried that point will be lost and that harm can be done.

My friends and I have done our best to put clear information about our goals out there, but the sad fact is we can't expect everyone to read up or treat one another with respect. And there are some problematic risks even assuming everyone does "get it": We liked people comparing #Objectify to the Hawkeye Initiative but that also means we must consider similar criticisms, and the very real risk that our event would solicit homophobia, transphobia, ableism and other prejudices.

Though we wanted to call out gendered language, focusing on men in this way makes some dangerous assumptions about gender norms and sexuality:

For one thing, the event as it stands currently ignores the fact that gay men, trans men, men of color and any other man outside the "straight white guy privilege" zone are already victims of objectification. "Objectify a man" risks using harmful language toward people who may be vulnerable.

For another, some people feel that an environment of men tossing cute comments at each other ends up reducing women's sexual agency to a joke, since the compliments won't actually have the same effect on their intended recipients. But it's worse if the compliments do affect someone negatively -- is potentially triggering men who have body issues a victory for anyone?

We also need to consider people who live outside of the specific gender binary our society enforces: There are trans women, genderqueer and non-conforming people struggling every day not to be misgendered, and people living quietly with gender issues they may not share in the open. If these people end up caught in the crossfire of our event it doesn't matter whatsoever how well-intentioned we are: We risk actually traumatizing them.

I hoped discussions of gender norms would be one of the positive outcomes of #Objectify, and that attention to the issue would make it all worth some inevitable hostility. But for some people who may be exposed to the wrong kinds of language on the planned day, misunderstanding can be actually harmful, and that is absolutely not a risk I want to take.

"Starting dialogue" this way isn't worth potentially triggering others, putting them at risk or making them feel unsafe. I feel naive that I failed to fully consider the potential ramifications and want to apologize to anyone that was made uncomfortable or who felt threatened by my choice to approach an issue in this way.

There are a few good things, here: it's been an incredible learning experience, and I am still proud of the respectful attention my colleagues, friends and readership have given to issues of objectification and of making women feel welcome in tech. I've had positive conversations that would have been impossible even a year ago. That it took off in a larger way than I ever could have expected shows on some level that people care about change, and that makes me glad.

But the real mission is making everyone feel welcome, period. What I wanted to encourage through humor was caring, empathy and a willingness to listen and educate - now I've been asked to change course, and by calling a halt to #Objectify I hope I'm modeling those same qualities myself.

When people tell you they are hurting, are afraid or feel excluded, you don't get obsessed with your own sense of righteousness, you listen That's what this has always been about.

If you've been paying attention, I hope you continue thinking about the words you use to describe other people and their work. Please continue aiming to listen to and care for everyone who needs your help to feel respected, safe and welcome in tech -- or anywhere.

If you understood and appreciated our intention we thank you for your support, but we ask that if you've written about Objectify to please remove your post, or at least modify it to reflect our reasons for reconsidering this event.

Thanks for your compassion.

Leigh Alexander, gaming and social media culture journalist, is Gamasutra editor-at-large, columnist at Edge, Kotaku and Vice Creators Project, and contributor to Boing Boing,Thought Catalog and numerous others. This post first appeared at her blog, Sexy Videogameland.

05 Feb 17:23

Why football cannot last

by Alice
--

"What else besides CTE could have led a formerly intelligent, well-organized, responsible, and successful individual to morph into a desperate failure that ends his own life at the age of fifty?"

Forced retirement in your 30s (or through injury in your 20s, or even teens) from the only thing you're good at/love doing
Steadily declining wealth and fame
Marginalization in the present based on unrelated past actions or behavior
Perpetual immersion in hypermasculine culture since childhood

By Anthony Scioli, Ph.D.

“Just look at the gladiators… and consider the blows they endure! Consider how they who have been well-disciplined prefer to accept a blow than ignominiously avoid it! How often it is made clear that they consider nothing other than the satisfaction of their [coach] or the [fans]! Even when they are covered with wounds they send a messenger to their [coach] to inquire his will. If they have given satisfaction to their [coach], they are pleased to fall. What even mediocre gladiator ever groans; ever alters the expression on his face? Which one of them acts shamefully, either standing or falling? And which of them, even when he does succumb, ever contracts his neck when ordered to receive the blow?”

The above passage, with the exception of two minor word substitutions on my part, was written by Cicero 2,000 years ago. My point is that his description of the sacrificial gladiator of the ancient amphitheater can be applied all too easily to the players who currently do battle on the modern gridiron.

I am convinced that football, in its present form, cannot last. I will put aside the physical carnage that piles up every weekend, the torn cartilage, broken bones, blackened, bruised and ripped skin, the shredded muscle fibers; I am not a physician. However, I am a psychologist. From my perspective, I believe that the greatest health crisis precipitated by football involves the brain and the mind, especially for those at the professional level, and particularly for those who are retired, and have suffered one too many concussions. For these former gladiators, there is a great risk of succumbing to severe, life-threatening forms of hopelessness.

The hopelessness that descends upon the retired professional football player should not be a surprise. It is understandable if you begin with some knowledge of what changes occur in a soft and mushy brain that has been repeatedly concussed, or more bluntly, tossed and smashed from side to side within a bony skull-box. Repetitive brain trauma can result in Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE)

CTE has been detected in the brains of ex-football players well as former boxers. In CTE, there are signs of a spreading tau protein that normally serves a stabilizing function but becomes dislodged, primarily from the axons which transmit nerve impulses. The floating Tau form a spreading tangle of tissue that disrupts brain function. Rare diseases can precipitate this pathological cascade but so can repetitive head trauma. CTE has also been found in the aged, and those stricken with Alzheimer’s disease. The most commonly affected areas include the frontal lobes (decision-making, planning, willpower), the temporal lobes (memory and speech), and the parietal area (sensory integration, reading and writing). The most common emotional symptoms in those suffering from CTE include depression, anger, hyper-aggressiveness, irritability, diminished insight and poor judgment.

On 2 May 2012 former football star Junior Seau shot himself in the chest with a .357 magnum. Eighteen months earlier, Seau had driven his SUV off a cliff following an arrest on charges of domestic violence. He claimed that he had fallen asleep. Back then, many in his circle of friends and family hoped and prayed it was the truth. His brain was sent to a team of researchers at the Boston University School of Medicine. Their tests revealed a brain besieged by CTE.

A little more than a year earlier, in February, 2011, Dave Duerson, also a former professional football player, similarly committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest. He had texted a message to his family indicating that he was “saving” his brain for research. Three months later BU School of Medicine confirmed “neurodegenerative disease linked to concussions.” In high school, Duerson had been a member of the National Honor Society and played the sousaphone, traveling Europe with the Musical Ambassadors All-American Band. He attended the University of Notre Dame on both football and baseball scholarships. He graduated with honors, receiving a BA in Economics. Duerson played eleven seasons in the NFL.

Whenever interviewed, the researchers at the Boston University School of Medicine are reluctant to affirm a cause and effect link between CTE and suicide. They provide the typical (and not unreasonable) response that multiple causes often underlie human behavior, including suicide. While generally true, a case such as that of Duerson seems to beg the question, what else besides CTE could have led a formerly intelligent, well-organized, responsible, and successful individual to morph into a desperate failure that ends his own life at the age of fifty?

Anthony Scioli is Professor of Clinical Psychology at Keene State College. He is the co-author of Hope in the Age of Anxiety with Henry Biller. Dr. Scioli completed Harvard fellowships in human motivation and behavioral medicine. He co-authored the chapter on emotion for the Encyclopedia of Mental Health and currently serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Positive Psychology and the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. Read his previous blog articles.

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