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04 Dec 19:06

News in Brief: Obama Returns From Paris Climate Talks With Couple Energy-Efficient Light Bulbs

WASHINGTON—Triumphantly displaying the fruits of his diplomatic talks with 150 fellow world leaders at the COP21 climate change summit in Paris, President Obama returned to the U.S. this week with a couple energy-efficient light bulbs. “The international community came together with a common agenda to limit the devastating effects of global warming, and after much negotiation, we were able to secure several energy-saving light bulbs for every nation in attendance, which will ensure a more sustainable future for our children and grandchildren,” said Obama, holding up the two-pack of 60-watt equivalent bulbs and adding that, while they were initially more expensive than traditional incandescent bulbs, the cost would be recouped over time, as LED bulbs last 40 to 50 times longer. “These bulbs use 75 percent less energy than typical lighting and are Energy Star certified, and that will make a significant impact toward limiting the damaging effects ...











04 Dec 19:02

News in Brief: Shamefaced Man Stands Stock-Still As Acquaintance Zips Up Backpack For Him

MEDFORD, OR—Overcome with humiliation after being stopped on his way out of the office and informed his backpack was wide open, local billing specialist Dennis Lee, 30, reportedly stood stock-still Friday as coworker Mike Faziola zipped the bag up for him. “Oh, hold on, your backpack’s open. Let me get that,” said Faziola, as Lee—standing in full view of numerous colleagues—gritted his teeth, bent his knees slightly, and squeezed his shoulder straps tightly in his fists while he waited for the act to be over. “There you go. Don’t want your stuff falling out onto the street.” Sources confirmed that Lee’s few remaining shreds of self-respect were then swept away when, without any warning, Faziola grabbed the shame-ridden man’s sweatshirt hood, which had gotten twisted and bunched up underneath his backpack, and straightened it out for him.











04 Dec 18:30

Quiz: Just how Kafkaesque is the court that oversees NSA spying?

Philip.paulsson

5/11. And holy shit the FISA court is scary. How is this possible?!

This is an undated file photo of famed author Franz Kafka. An undated file photo of famed author Franz Kafka.(AP Photo/ho)

When Edward Snowden first went public, he did it by leaking a 4-page order from a secret court called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISA court. Founded in 1978 after the Watergate scandal and investigations by the Church Committee, the FISA court was supposed to be a bulwark against secret government surveillance. In 2006, it authorized the NSA call records program – the single largest domestic surveillance program in American history.

“The court” in Franz Kafka’s novel The Trial is a shadowy tribunal that tries (and executes) Josef K., the story’s protagonist, without informing him of the crime he’s charged with, the witnesses against him, or how he can defend himself. (Worth noting: The FISA court doesn’t “try” anyone. Also, it doesn’t kill people.)

Congress is debating a bill that would make the FISA court more transparent. In the meantime, can you tell the difference between the FISA court and Kafka’s court?

1

Section I. Every court has rules and procedures. Do the following describe proceedings in the FISA court, Kafka’s court, or both?

People who are served with court orders have to keep them secret. 

2

Judges hear only one side of the case – the government’s.

3

Lawyers are barred from reading secret government filings about their clients.

4

Lawyers have to respond to secret government filings – without reading them.

5

Section II. The FISA court has been the subject of intense debate in Congress and the federal courts. Which of these are quotes from real government officials discussing the FISA court, and which are direct quotes from The Trial?

“…proceedings are generally kept secret not only from the public but also from the accused.”

6

"The public cannot argue that the… opinion should be released until it has seen the opinion, and it cannot see the opinion until it has been released.” 

7

“The targets of their proceedings are ordinarily not represented by counsel. Indeed it seems likely that targets are usually unaware of the existence of the proceedings...”

8

"The courts don’t make their final conclusions public, not even the judges are allowed to know about them, so that all we know about these earlier cases are just legends.”

9
Section III. How about some extra FISA court trivia?

In 2013, a private attorney who argued before the FISA court, Marc Zwillinger, testified about the experience before an independent oversight board. Which of the following is an actual statement from his testimony?

10

In The Trial, an expert on that court declares: “I must admit, I never saw a single actual acquittal.” Historically, what percentage of government surveillance applications does the FISA court reject? 

11

The decisions of the FISA court, like those of the court in The Trial, are secret by default. A few months before the Snowden disclosures, four senators asked the FISA court to declassify summaries of some of those opinions. What did the court’s presiding judge say in response?

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Alvaro Bedoya is executive director of the Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law. From 2011 to 2014, he was chief counsel to the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology and the Law, and to its then-chairman, Senator Al Franken.

Ben Sobel is a researcher and incoming Google Policy Fellow at the Center.

04 Dec 18:09

Can You Identify The Architectural Landmark By One Small Detail?

by Nathan W. Pyle

Can you go 8 for 8?

04 Dec 17:29

I Have "Little Appetite For Those Who Hate Or Preach Intolerance," Trump Once Wrote

by Andrew Kaczynski
Philip.paulsson

That pic tho

“Through them, and through more recent friendships with Puffy Combs, Sammy Sosa, and others, I’ve had the chance to learn firsthand about the diversity of American culture, and it has left me with little appetite for those who hate or preach intolerance,” Trump wrote.

Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

Donald Trump has come under fire time and again during his presidential campaign for making disparaging remarks about all kinds of people spanning gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and more.

But back in 1999, Trump portrayed himself as the man above the fray, the serious candidate running for the Reform Party's nomination against men like Pat Buchanan, whom Trump once called too inflammatory to be elected president. In 1999's The America We Deserve, Trump takes Pat Buchanan to task for how he "systematically bashed blacks, Mexicans, and gays."

In that same book, he explains how Sammy Sosa and Sean Combs taught him about the diversity of American culture and deems Matthew Shepard's death a hate crime.

Trump also defends himself against infamous allegations made by a former employee that Trump had made insensitive comments about black and Jewish people.

The former Trump Plaza casino executive, Jack O'Donnell, wrote in a 1991 book that while encouraging him to fire a black employee, Trump delivered a speech outlining his negative views on black accountants, as opposed to Jewish accountants.

"I've got black accountants at Trump Castle and at Trump Plaza," Trump said, according to O'Donnell. "Black guys counting my money! I hate it. The only kind of people I want counting my money are short guys that wear yarmulkes every day. Those are the kind of people I want counting my money. Nobody else."

In his book, Trumped!: The Inside Story of the Real Donald Trump-His Cunning Rise and Spectacular Fall, O'Donnell alleged that Trump then said, "Besides that, I've got to tell you something else. I think that the guy is lazy. And it's probably not his fault because laziness is a trait in blacks. It really is, I believe that. It's not anything they can control... Don't you agree?"

Elsewhere in the book, O'Donnell writes that during a 1989 presentation for a television advertising campaign Trump erupted into a rant about the driver who had chauffeured him to the meeting.

"Do you know the driver that came over today had gray shoes on?" Trump allegedly said, according to O'Donnell. "Yeah! The motherfucker had gray shoes! He looked like some goddamn Puerto Rican. He looked like somebody we picked up from Spanish Harlem... Nobody! Fucking nobody wears gray shoes for me!"

Jeff Millman, an employee of an ad agency that worked for Trump's casinos and who was giving the presentation that day according to the book, told BuzzFeed News on Thursday that O'Donnell's account was accurate. Millman said Trump "blistered everyone in the room."

"After all the air was sucked out of the room, I had to go put on my show," Millman said.

In The America We Deserve, Trump denied the infamous, alleged comments about accountants.

"Several years ago John O'Donnell, who worked for me briefly and whom I fired, wrote a supposedly tell-all book in which he alleged that I made disparaging remarks about Blacks and Jews," wrote Trump. "This was a malicious attempt to smear me. Anyone who really knows me knows that I hate intolerance and bigotry."

Trump cites his work with famous boxers and rappers as evidence of his respect for the diversity of American culture, and proclaims that he has "little appetite" for hate.

"My longtime involvement in promoting some of the biggest boxing events in history has allowed me to become friends with men like Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier," wrote The Donald. "Through them, and through more recent friendships with Puffy Combs, Sammy Sosa, and others, I've had the chance to learn firsthand about the diversity of American culture, and it has left me with little appetite for those who hate or preach intolerance."

"One of our next president's most important goals must be to induce a greater tolerance for diversity," he wrote. "The senseless murder of Matthew Shepard in Wyoming— where an innocent boy was killed because of his sexual orientation — turned my stomach. We must work towards an America where these kinds of hate crimes are unthinkable. There are some issues I don't want to say much about. I support a woman's right to choose, for example, but I am uncomfortable with the procedures."

Neither the Trump campaign nor O'Donnell returned an inquiry for comment.

04 Dec 15:39

TV binging, exercise skipping linked to poor cognitive function

by Beth Mole
Philip.paulsson

Uh oh..

Passing on the gym to snuggle on the couch and binge watch whole seasons of your favorite show this weekend may not bode well for your brain.

In a 25-year study that tracked more than 3,000 young adults into midlife, researchers found that those with the highest television watching and lowest physical activity scored worse on certain cognitive tests than their fit, less TV-addicted counterparts. In particular, couch potatoes had slightly lower brain processing speeds and worse executive function, but they scored just as well as other participants on verbal memory tests. The findings, reported in JAMA Psychiatry, may suggest that such bad TV and exercise habits early in life could set people up for faster cognitive decline in later life, the authors said.

However, the researchers can only speculate on cognitive decline for now, because they only tested cognitive skills at the end of the 25 years—not at the beginning. Therefore, it’s possible that participants with slightly lower cognitive function scores at the end of the study had those same low scores at the start and just enjoy spending lots of time lounging in front of glowing screens. Researchers can't tell from the data as is.

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04 Dec 14:21

2015.12.01

Philip.paulsson

Hahah "I'm a doctor."

04 Dec 13:13

Turing’s Martin Shkreli regrets 5,000% price hike—says it wasn’t high enough

by Beth Mole
Philip.paulsson

What a douche.

Martin Shkreli being photographed for his role as CIO of MSMB Capital Management. (credit: Getty Images)

In a Healthcare summit hosted by Forbes on Thursday, Martin Shkreli, the founder and CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals, admitted he made a mistake by raising the price of a decades-old drug by more than 5,000 percent. But it’s not the mistake you might expect.

In response to an audience member who asked him if he would have done anything differently in regard to raising the price of the drug, Daraprim, Shkreli replied, “I probably would have raised the price higher.”

That price hike, which brought a pill of Daraprim from $13.50 to $750 earlier this year, has drawn fiery scorn from the public, media, and lawmakers. Daraprim is a 62-year old drug used to treat toxoplasmosis, a disease caused by a parasitic infection. Toxoplasmosis often strikes people with compromised immune systems, such as AIDS patients.

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03 Dec 19:59

I Asked A Psychoanalyst To Explain Donald Trump

by Ben Smith
Philip.paulsson

Wasn't freudian psychoanalysis discredited like, forever ago?

BuzzFeed News; Trump: Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Stanley Renshon is a sweater-wearing Freudian psychoanalyst who has made a sideline through the years of painstaking psychobiographies of American presidents.

The books are a clockwork feature of American public life: fascinating and the product of serious intellectual labor, but — like much psychoanalysis — a bit hard for the layman to know what to do with. Bill Clinton compensated for his mother’s neglect. George W. Bush grappled with his father’s shadow. Obama is driven to fulfill his mother’s legacy. OK.

But Renshon seemed the right man to turn to with a question I've been asking myself lately: What is Donald Trump's deal? Where does a person, and a personality, like that come from? There's an enormous amount of speculation on Twitter about the combination of charm and bombast, blunt truths and flat lies, thin skin and combativeness. I needed a bit of expertise.

Fortunately, Renshon, a practicing psychoanalyst who also has a Ph.D. in political science and teaches at the City University of New York Graduate Center, has thought a lot about Trump. His desktop “Trump” folder has accumulated more than a thousand files. He has read all the interviews. And he thinks he's isolated Trump's key characteristics in a couple of telling turns of phrase.

One is Trump's tic of telling you how much others like him.

"I think he actually, believe it or not, he has a need to be liked," says Renshon.

"He'll use the phrase 'he likes me' or 'they like me.' When somebody uses that phrase often, you have to give credit to the idea that that's something important to them, their need to be liked."

The word "nice" and the phrase "treats me nicely" appear often in the Trump corpus, Renshon notes.

"He wants to be treated nicely, softly, with kid gloves — he wants to be recognized for all the positives he brings to the table, but he's not so interested in the negatives," says Renshon.

"He wants to be liked, and it comes with a threat."

(If you doubt that Trump really, really wants you to like him, watch this.)

This poses an obvious question, Renshon acknowledges: "If he needs to be liked, why does he go after people in such an angry, hostile way?"

His answer: The other "pillar" of Trump's makeup is a need for validation.

"He wants to be known as the person he is, not the person you think he is. He's not a dumb person; he's not a clown. My guess is he truly resents those kinds of characterizations; and he wants to be known for his accomplishments in the business world, but also for his political success," says Renshon.

"My take on him is that he has been pretty surprised, personally, by his political success… I think he's surprised where he is and he's found a newfound source of self-respect for being where he is."

That is to say: The last few months have changed Trump, and he now needs validation not just as a brash brand, but as a political figure. That is to say: Watch out.

The Twitter diagnosis of Trump — and really, any politician or celebrity you don’t like, is narcissism. Renshon, who has been known to write letters to the New York Times asking them to stop diagnosing the people they cover, thinks that’s a “hollow and reductionist” label.

“He appears to be a real American nationalist with an observable, if bombastic, love of his country,” Renshon says. “Obviously a love of country is inconsistent with real narcissism, where there is no room for love of body or anything but yourself."

Renshon had one other glimpse of psychoanalytic insight into Trump, a side note in a much-mocked story about the hardship of having had to repay a million-dollar loan from his father.

"You don't want to go to Manhattan. That's not our territory," Trump recalled his father, a developer in less glamorous parts of New York, telling him.

“He was warning his son against going into the big city to try to make a name for himself in the Big Apple — and Donald didn't do that,” says Renshon. “He's got a lot of adventure in him and a lot of ambition in him, and he would like to be recognized for what he has accomplished.”

He doesn’t, Renshon added, have the burning personal ambition he saw driving Bill Clinton, or the sense of mission that motivates Obama.

“He doesn't have a clue of what he would do were he to get in,” speculates Renshon, who characterizes himself as middle-of-the-road politically, though he shares with Trump a skepticism about immigration.

Finally, he says he thinks Trump is for real: “I think he genuinely feels like the country is going to hell, and i think he genuinely feels he can do something about it.”

And there ends Trump’s session on the couch. There is more, no doubt, to excavate from the strange and combative life of a rich real estate developer’s son with a chip on his shoulder, but Renshon won’t be doing the digging.

“I haven't gone into his childhood very much,” he says. “I won't spend much time with it because I don't think he's going to become president.”

03 Dec 19:23

Uber color coding experiment promises smoother pickups

by Jon Fingas
Philip.paulsson

Good idea.

If you've ever used a ridesharing service, you've probably had that moment where you had to guess which car was your ride. Yes, you have the model and license plate, but what good are those on a dark and busy street? Thankfully, Uber might soon take...
03 Dec 19:12

Epson unveils world’s first in-office paper recycling system

by Sebastian Anthony
Philip.paulsson

This is awesome!!

Printer giant Epson has developed an in-office paper recycling machine. Called the PaperLab, you put waste paper in, and then new, bright white printer paper comes out. Epson says this process is more efficient than sending paper to an off-site recycling plant, and it's also much more secure: the PaperLab, which breaks paper down into its constituent fibres before building them back up into new sheets, is one of the most secure paper shredders that money can buy.

The specs of the machine are truly impressive. Within three minutes of adding waste paper to the PaperLab, it starts pumping out perfectly white sheets of new paper. The system can produce around 14 A4 sheets of paper per minute, or 6,720 sheets in an eight-hour workday. The PaperLab can also produce A3 paper, and you can tweak the thickness and density of the paper as well: if you want really thin white paper, that's cool; if you want thicker paper for business cards, it can do that too.

Epson says that the PaperLab is the world's first paper production system to use a "dry process." Paper-making processes usually require a lot of water, but the PaperLab requires only a tiny amount of water to "maintain a certain level of humidity inside the system," so it doesn't need to be plumbed into the mains. Presumably there's a small tank of water that needs to be filled up occasionally—hopefully with normal tap water, not £50-per-litre Epson Purified PrintXL Water.

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03 Dec 17:35

News in Brief: ‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens

Philip.paulsson

I feel like this is a recycled headline, but it is still sadly on point.

SAN BERNARDINO, CA—In the hours following a violent rampage in southern California in which two attackers killed 14 individuals and seriously injured 17 others, citizens living in the only country where this kind of mass killing routinely occurs reportedly concluded Wednesday that there was no way to prevent the massacre from taking place. “This was a terrible tragedy, but sometimes these things just happen and there’s nothing anyone can do to stop them,” said Michigan resident Emily Harrington, echoing sentiments expressed by tens of millions of individuals who reside in a nation where over half of the world’s deadliest mass shootings have occurred in the past 50 years and whose citizens are 20 times more likely to die of gun violence than those of other developed nations. “It’s a shame, but what can we do? There really wasn’t anything that was going to keep these ...











03 Dec 17:03

9 Facebook Invites You'd Actually Want To Accept

by Alanna Okun
Philip.paulsson

LOL @ #3

Oh, I’m way more than “interested.”

Open Bar 2 Blocks From Your House

Open Bar 2 Blocks From Your House

Alanna Okun / BuzzFeed

Your College Ex-Roommate's Friend's Improv Show. Just Kidding, It's Free Pizza!

Your College Ex-Roommate's Friend's Improv Show. Just Kidding, It's Free Pizza!

Alanna Okun / BuzzFeed

I'm turning 26!!! The theme is "hot single friends of friends only."

I'm turning 26!!! The theme is "hot single friends of friends only."

Alanna Okun / BuzzFeed

Networking Event: Bored Rich People Who Would Love Nothing More Than To Pay Your Student Loans

Networking Event: Bored Rich People Who Would Love Nothing More Than To Pay Your Student Loans

Alanna Okun / BuzzFeed


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03 Dec 16:34

Just Cause 3 devs say PC patch will take “a little bit of time”

by Kyle Orland
Philip.paulsson

I have had zero issues in a 2-3 hrs of playtime. The only minor annoyance is when the online part fails, but that's easily remedied by going offline. I would do it, but it's kinda neat to see if I've blown up more cars with one rocket launcher than any of my friends!

Better fix those technical problems before you land...

An inordinate amount of our recent Just Cause 3 review had to focus on the significant technical problems in the PC build of the game rather than the physics-based mayhem the title is designed for. We weren't alone in noting that these technical problems get in the way of what should be an effortlessly enjoyable experience.

The developers at Avalanche Studios and publisher Square Enix have heard those concerns loud and clear, but they say they'll "need a little bit of time" to roll out a patch that fixes the problems. As the developers write in a recent post on the game's Steam info page:

We know that some of you are encountering some technical issues—we’re looking into them all and we’re fully committed to providing you the best possible experience.

We know you’re going to want specific information on when a patch will land and what will be fixed—we would love to give you that information, and we will as soon as we have it. But right now, a little over one day since we launched, we have huge numbers of players in our enormous game world and we’re monitoring all the data coming in.

We need a little bit of time to recreate some of these issues and build fixes. Rest assured though—we are fully committed to making Just Cause 3 as awesome as possible. We already know loads of people are having a blast with the game but we’ll do all we can to make sure everyone is laughing and smiling as they play.

We could point out that it would be nice if the developers had been able to recreate and fix these widespread problems before the game was actually released. But that's not the gaming world we live in anymore; like it or not, "launch now, fix later" is becoming the de facto standard for many of the biggest games from big publishers.

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03 Dec 15:20

We Know Your Favorite Pop Star Based On These Random Questions

by Vikky Mathieu
Philip.paulsson

You got: One Direction
Directioner alert! Sure, it’s a band and not a pop star. But that doesn’t matter. You’re a big fan and you want everyone to know it.

Queen Bey or Queen Mariah?

03 Dec 01:15

2015 Los Angeles Auto Show: The sporty stuff

by Jonathan M. Gitlin

Jonathan Gitlin

We still don't know how much it costs (expect at least $400,000). We still don't know how many Ford will build (the rules say at least 100 road cars). But we do know what it's like to drive, thanks to Forza Motorsport 6. It's the new Ford GT.

17 more images in gallery

LOS ANGELES—We've already taken a look at the interesting technology on display at this year's LA Auto Show, as well as the cool concepts and custom cars. Today it's the turn of the sportiest stuff. Many of the big names we saw in New York—Aston Martin, Ferrari, McLaren—were absent. A few reappeared, inching closer to production like the Ford GT and Acura NSX. The former is Ford's celebration of its first win at Le Mans in 1966. The latter a hybrid sportscar that's more focused than BMW's i8 but a lot more affordable than any hybrid sports car McLaren, Ferrari, or Porsche has made.

Think of Alfa Romeo's Giulia Quadrifoglio as an Italian take on the M3—rear wheel drive, 505hp, and that endangered species, the manual gearbox. The fire-breathing one with the four-leaf clover will cost around $70,000, but the Giulia range starts at $40,000. We're still a little unsure how we feel about Fiat's Italian take on the Mazda MX-5. From some angles the new nose looks great, and the 1.4L MultiAir engine is interesting.

BMW's new M4 GTS should be extremely potent on track, and the interior detailing goes a long way to making sense of the car's potent price tag. Those looking for lap times beyond all should rather consider the Dodge Viper ACR. For some time now, Dodge's bewinged snake has been soundly trouncing all comers in fast lap competitions, and the latest version should be no exception.

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02 Dec 21:36

Can You Match The "Game Of Thrones" Quote To The Character Who Said It?

by targaryenxstark

Valar morghulis.

02 Dec 21:33

Are These 2015 Headlines Real Or From "The Onion"?

by Sarah Burton
Philip.paulsson

LOL I only got 5/9.

Often fact is funnier than fiction.

02 Dec 20:50

What rules should we have for genetically editing humans?

by Beth Mole
Philip.paulsson

I'm in the "none rules" camp. If I could have a baby with wings, then I'd reconsider having babies!

(credit: Georgetown)

WASHINGTON DC—In the decades since learning how to splice DNA, scientists have anxiously debated the ethics and ramifications of editing the genetic blueprints of humans—from the moral quagmires of eugenics and made-to-order babies to more nuanced uses in basic research and disease treatments. Do scientists understand enough of human biology to safely become life’s editors? Should researchers be able to edit unviable human embryos for research? If altered genes are heritable, does that infringe on the rights of the next generation? If scientists have the genetic capabilities to cure a disease, do they have an obligation to do it?

There are a lot of questions and huge differences in opinion within the research community. Regulations also vary wildly across the globe, with some countries instituting bans on certain practices and others embracing engineering. But amid the long-smoldering debate, new technology that makes it extremely easy to edit human cells, including germ-line cells (eggs and sperm), has brought theoretical uses closer to reality, reigniting concerns.

On Tuesday, hundreds of researchers from across the globe gathered in Washington, DC for a three-day summit aimed at hashing out the issues of editing human genes. The summit, co-hosted by the US National Academy of Sciences, US National Academy of Medicine, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the UK's Royal Society, is the start of a larger effort by the US National Academies to come up with a consensus study on the use of editing technology. The Academies expect to release the report in 2016.

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02 Dec 18:59

News in Photos: Butterball Releases New Travel-Size Turkey











02 Dec 16:12

25 Genius Tweets You'll Only Get If You're Clueless About Sport

by Richard Beech
Philip.paulsson

These are pretty funny.

“My girlfriend was devastated to find out that my mates call me ‘The Love Machine’ because I’m terrible at tennis.”


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02 Dec 14:03

Here's The Evolution Of Barbie's Face Over 56 Years

by Gabriel H. Sanchez
Philip.paulsson

Barbie has some mad side-eye going on.

A lot can change in 56 years…

1959 — Barbie makes her debut

1959 — Barbie makes her debut

Barbie / Mattel Inc.

1962 — Barbie Red Flare

1962 — Barbie Red Flare

Barbie / Mattel Inc.

1965 — American Girl Barbie

1965 — American Girl Barbie

Barbie / Mattel Inc.

1966 — Barbie Color Magic

1966 — Barbie Color Magic

Barbie / Mattel Inc.


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02 Dec 13:18

News in Photos: Obama Increases Sense Of Urgency By Riding Last White Rhino On Earth Through Climate Talk











02 Dec 04:38

Can You Tell Which “Star Wars” Fact Is True And Which Is A Lie?

by Tanner Greenring

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…. maybe.

Lucasfilm

02 Dec 04:22

Flashlights

Philip.paulsson

LOL @ hovertext

Due to a typo, I initially found a forum for serious Fleshlight enthusiasts, and it turns out their highest-end models are ALSO capable of setting trees on fire. They're impossible to use without severe burns, but some of them swear it's worth it.
02 Dec 03:30

Psy Is Back With Two Completely Batshit New Music Videos

by Kelley Dunlap
Philip.paulsson

Can't wait to watch these when I get home!

The king of YouTube defends his crown with “Daddy” and “Napal Baji.”

Heeeeey, sexy lady! Good news: K-pop sensation and literal internet-breaker Psy is back with two completely batshit new music videos.

Heeeeey, sexy lady! Good news: K-pop sensation and literal internet-breaker Psy is back with two completely batshit new music videos.

The music video for the singer’s hit “Gangnam Style” is still the most-watched video on YouTube with over 2.4 billion views.

AFP / Getty Images

The first video, “Daddy,” is the weirder of the two.

The song is also catchy AF. Good luck getting the "I got it from my daddy" hook out of your head!

youtube.com

It features three creepy, CGI’d generations of Psy...

It features three creepy, CGI’d generations of Psy...

Official Psy

Some split-screen bathroom antics...

Some split-screen bathroom antics...

Official Psy


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01 Dec 21:55

The OnePlus iPhone case comes with a OnePlus X invite

by Steve Dent
OnePlus has launched the "Sandstone" case for Apple's iPhone 6 and 6s, and guess what's inside? An invitation to purchase the OnePlus X. You have to admire the sheer chutzpah of that, though it's hard to imagine many folks turfing their $649-plus iPh...
01 Dec 21:51

Yahoo restricting Mail accounts if it detects ad-blockers (updated)

by Mariella Moon
Philip.paulsson

Wow. Fuck Yahoo.

Yahoo is reportedly preventing some of its users with ad blockers installed on their computers from accessing their email accounts. Digiday has spotted a thread on the Adblock Plus forums with complaints from a couple of people who couldn't access...
01 Dec 20:05

Locked in the Bathroom

by Reza
Philip.paulsson

LOL Lauren was briefly locked in the bathroom at a house party on Friday...

locked-in

01 Dec 16:11

Just Cause 3 suffering bugs, glitches, and FPS drops on consoles and PCs

by Mark Walton
Philip.paulsson

Oh man... this better not be the case for me! I have it preloaded and everything! At least my current PC exceeds the recommended specs...

Usually it's just PC players that get stiffed when it comes to launch day bugs—the disastrous Arkham Knight port being a prime example—but Just Cause 3 is reportedly causing problems on PC and console. Reports are coming in from multiple media outlets and Reddit users that JC3 is suffering from random frame rate drops, crashes, and disappearing oceans, to name just a few problems.

An early analysis of the the Xbox One version from NX Gamer claims that playing the game for more than hour leads to loading times of over 15 minutes, with the frame rate dropping to as low as 17FPS. NX Gamer also experienced multiple crashes—which is a particularly big problem for a console game—and other problems which could only be resolved by a full system reboot.

"This just looks like memory leakages where it's clearing out RAM," NX Gamer's video analysis says. "Some of the AI goes mad, the physics can react really oddly, and unfortunately on top of all these problems, the performance with a game that's totally designed around blowing stuff up and having this chaotic world doesn't perform very well at all."

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