Shared posts

14 May 19:07

American private universities use poor kids' tuition to subsidize rich kids' degrees

by Cory Doctorow

In The Atlantic, Jordan Weissmann does a very good job of summing up the New America Foundation's important new report, Undermining Pell: How Colleges Compete for Wealthy Students and Leave the Low-Income Behind [PDF], by Stephen Burd. The report documents how private universities in America have raised the cost of tuition to incredible heights, and reserve their "merit scholarships" (paid for with government grants) for wealthy students whose parents can pay the rest in cash, while poor students have to take out punishing loans, effectively subsidizing the rich students' education and career opportunities.

Sometimes, colleges (and states) really are just competing to outbid each other on star students. But there are also economic incentives at play, particularly for small, endowment-poor institutions. "After all," Burd writes, "it's more profitable for schools to provide four scholarships of $5,000 each to induce affluent students who will be able to pay the balance than it is to provide a single $20,000 grant to one low-income student." The study notes that, according to the Department of Education's most recent study, 19 percent of undergrads at four-year colleges received merit aid despite scoring under 700 on the SAT. Their only merit, in some cases, might well have been mom and dad's bank account.

There's nothing inherently wrong with handing out tuition breaks to the middle class, or even the rich. The problem is that it seems to be happening at the expense of the poor. At 89 percent of the 479 private colleges Burd examined, students from families earning less than $30,000 a year were charged an average "net price" of more than $10,000 annually -- "net price" being the full annual cost of attendance minus all institutional and government aid. Less technically, it's what students can actually expect to pay. At 60 percent of private colleges, that net price was more than $15,000.

In other words, low-income families are routinely being asked to fork over more than half of their annual income for the privilege of sending their child off to campus for a year.

How Colleges Are Selling Out the Poor to Court the Rich

    


14 May 14:53

There Goes Your Entire Day: GeoGuessr

by John Walker

Somewhere in Birmingham, right?

If you weren’t connected to the correct Twitter tubes this weekend, there’s a chance you may not have spent every waking moment playing GeoGuessr. So let’s put that right now.

Anton Wallén’s clever repurposing of Google’s Street View magics dumps you in the middle of somewhere, and you have to try to figure out where that is. You can move around in Street View as you might expect, but obviously you can’t zoom out to see the map you’re in. Once you’ve wandered about, hunted down clues to a location, and feel pretty sure of where you are, you drop a pin somewhere in the world on the map top right, and you score points based on how close you were. And then you keep doing that until you’ve forgotten to go to bed tomorrow night.

(more…)

13 May 15:23

Better Than Fries

by Jonco

Bits bites2Potato recipe

Thanks dgnb

 

13 May 13:35

At the bank…

by Jonco

At the bank

via

 

10 May 17:36

portrait of the villain as a baby



portrait of the villain as a baby

08 May 14:57

Photo



07 May 17:31

$10 gadget contains "the entire English Wikipedia with 3 million topics" (now $25)

by Mark Frauenfelder

(UPDATE: They've jacked the price up to $25 $29!) I don't have a WikiReader so I don't know if it's any good or not, but I love the idea of a $10 hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy. I ordered one just because it has a "Random" article button. If you have one, please let us know what you think of it in the comments.

  • Palm-sized device contains the entire English Wikipedia
  • Pre-loaded content, no internet connection needed
  • Ready to go right out of box
  • Touchscreen controls and keyboard
  • Uses 2 AAA batteries

Get in the know with the WikiReader. This palm-sized electronic encyclopedia contains the entire English Wikipedia covering 3 million topics -- equivalent to more than 1,000 volumes. No internet connection is required, it comes preloaded with the entire Wikipedia and is ready to use right out of the box. Easy touchscreen controls and touchscreen QWERTY keyboard allow you instant access to a world of knowledge. Never be out of date, either, as the content can be updated quarterly via online download or via MicroSD card. Runs on 2 AAA batteries which will last approximately 1 year.

UPDATE: I'm going to do this when I get mine.

WikiReader Pocket Wikipedia $10

    


06 May 12:26

Design Police, Bringing Bad Design To Justice With Stickers | Laughing Squid

by ivovaladares
03 May 13:01

Toyota Concept Vehicles: David, Guernica, Don Quixote

by Filippo

Advertising Agency: Y&R, Lima, Peru
Executive Creative Director: Flavio Pantigoso
Copywriter: Flavio Pantigoso
Art Director: Christian Sánchez
Producer: Fiorella Barrantes
Photographer: Alex Freundt
Account Director: Manuel Ahumada
Account Executive: Karen Salkeld

02 May 13:45

Newspaper Marketing Association Ads

by Gute Werbung

Newspaper Marketing Association: Bunny

Newspaper Marketing Association: Stuntman

Newspaper Marketing Association: Mariachi

“Where ads stand out every day.”

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy, Frankfurt, Germany
Chief Creative Officer: Dr. Stephan Vogel
Executive Creative Director: Dr. Stephan Vogel
Creative Director: Helmut Meyer
Copywriter: Lothar Mueller
Art Directors: Till Schaffarczyk, Christian Kuzman
Photographer: Norman Konrad, Stockphotos
Art Buyer: Magdalena Ignatowski
Account Supervisor: Michael Fucks
Advertiser’s Supervisors: Dr. Joachim Donnerstag, Markus Ruppe
Retouching: Paul Schäfer / E-N-D-I-S-T

01 May 14:12

Screwdriver car key

by Mark Frauenfelder

Make a screwdriver car key for that Gone in 60 Seconds feeling.

    


01 May 14:07

Video of recursive hand illusions

by David Pescovitz
"Screengrab" by Willie Witte. "None of the visuals are computer generated. All the trickery took place literally in front of the camera."
    


30 Apr 13:03

What Your Coffee Says About You

by DOGHOUSE DIARIES

What Your Coffee Says About You

The number of shots of espresso one takes is like a badge of honor.  You don’t just get to ask for a triple espresso, unless you’ve demonstrated the ability to fall asleep after a double espresso.

If you liked this comic, then you might like this one, posted two weeks ago.  The punchlines are eerily similar.  Jeff from pleated-jeans.com built a time machine, went into the future, and inspired by our comic, went back in time to post his own version.  Well done, Jeff.

26 Apr 13:37

Ben Egnal: Wine Bottle Resume

by Filippo

A bottle of wine with a custom-printed label and a handwritten note was sent to creative directors in lieu of a traditional resume. Because it’s not polite to show up empty handed.

Art Director: Ben Egnal

22 Apr 14:30

judhudson: awkward-elevator: Swedish Chef Ramsay Oh god, I’m...

















judhudson:

awkward-elevator:

Swedish Chef Ramsay

Oh god, I’m in tears, specially the last one.

22 Apr 14:27

Top 10 Awesome MacGyver Tricks That Speak For Themselves

by Whitson Gordon

Some life hacks require a complete how-to guide just to understand. Others are so genius in their simplicity that they speak for themselves. Here are ten of our favorite self-explanatory MacGyver tricks.

10. Make Perfect Pancakes with a Squeeze Bottle

It doesn't have to be a ketchup bottle, any kind of squeeze bottle will work—including the kind you buy empty from the store.

9. Use a Post-It Note to Avoid a Drilling Mess

8. Seal Plastic Bags with Old Bottle Caps

7. Remove a Stripped Screw with a Rubber Band

Then fix the hole with toothpicks.

6. Organize Anything with an Over-the-Door Shoe Holder

This works with anything from pantry items to cleaning products to gadgets, game controllers, and even cables.

5. Create an Instant Snack Bowl from Any Snack Bag

Then eat the snacks with chopsticks to avoid getting the mess on your fingers, too.

4. Create Extra Shelf Space with a Tension Rod

Tension rods are great for oh-so-many things.

3. Organize Cables with Toilet Paper Tubes

It ain't pretty, but what cable organization system is?

2. Use Soda Can Tabs to Save Closet Space

You can use them to hang pictures, too.

1. Use Binder Clips as Cable Catchers

Really, binder clips are just a MacGyver hacker's dream.


We know there are a ton of others out there, so if you've got your own favorites, share them below!

19 Apr 15:28

What happens when you wring out a washcloth in space?

by Maggie Koerth-Baker

For hand towels, astronauts get those little vacuum-packed pucks that you kind of have to unravel into a towel. But what happens when you actually put the towels to use?

Two Nova Scotia high school students, Kendra Lemke and Meredith Faulkner, submitted this experiment to Canadian Space Agency and got to see astronaut Chris Hadfield actually test it out on the ISS. The results are seriously extraordinary and you need to see them.

Thanks, Dean!

    


18 Apr 14:22

The Late Movies: Bluegrass Covers

by Matt Soniak

I love bluegrass, and I love quirky, unexpected cover songs. Smash the two together and I’m in heaven. Bluegrass pioneer Bill Monroe described the genre as “Scottish bagpipes and ole-time fiddlin'. It's Methodist and Holiness and Baptist. It's blues and jazz, and it has a high lonesome sound." Those aren’t words I would use to describe a lot of modern pop and rock music, but the incongruity of fiddles and distorted guitar, fat beats and down-home twang makes these bluegrass covers very endearing.

“Single Ladies”

The Cleverlys are a comedy-bluegrass group that, according to the band, is made up of members of a famed tobacco growing family from rural Cane Spur, Arkansas. They’re generally awesome, and their take on Beyonce is especially so.

“Creeping Death”

Iron Horse is a bluegrass band from Muscle Shoals, Alabama, that has recorded bluegrass tributes to Guns N’ Roses, Ozzy Osbourne, Metallica, Van Halen and, um, the Goo Goo Dolls. I especially like their take on this Metallica song, the Biblical themes of which make it a natural fit for bluegrass.

“The Way You Make Me Feel”

When you think of the “King of Pop,” you don’t think of three goofy looking (naturally) white dudes cruising around small town America in the back of a pickup truck with a standup bass, but Honeywagon makes it work.

“Blinded by Fear”

Swedish death metal filtered through bluegrass sounds less like bluegrass and a little more like something gypsy punks Gogol Bordello might come up with. Still awesome.

“I’m on Fire”

This just wouldn’t be a Matt Soniak music post without some mention of The Boss, would it? Even more so than tackling death metal with banjos, this cover really changes the whole sound of the original song. Bruce’s version is cold, desolate, minimal and tight. In the hands of Town Mountain, though, the song is full, warm, inviting and even has a little bit of swing.

“Bohemian Rhapsody” and “Centerfold”

Hayseed Dixie goes the extra mile on both these songs, not only having fun with the Queen classic and The J. Geils Band hit, but also making great videos for them. They ape the “floating faces” shots from Queen’s video and kick up the speed on Geils and company’s original video to sync with their faster version of the tune.

“I Gotta Feeling”

Given that it’s been played at every wedding reception I have been to in the last few years (and probably every one I haven’t been too, also), I get that this song is supposed to be a feel good, barn burning party anthem. But I didn’t get it. The Black Eyed Peas version doesn’t make me feel good, it doesn’t make me want to dance, and doesn’t make me think tonight’s gonna be a good night. It has all the charisma of a dead fish. Then, the Cleverlys took a stab at it and I got it! It’s fun, it’s funny and it makes me want to fill a mason jar with Cristal and hit the town with a banjo on my knee.

“Dancing in the Dark”

And one more Bruce song. This track from Born in the USA is a favorite around here, and the boys in Greensky Bluegrass do an admirable job with it. Bonus points for the great beard on the mandolin player.

    


17 Apr 14:10

This Telephone Pole Is My Only Hope!

by noreply@blogger.com (Jim Gill)

17 Apr 14:10

Ham! The Camera!

by noreply@blogger.com (Jim Gill)
17 Apr 12:50

How to win Snake

Andrewhhill

incredible

How to win Snake
16 Apr 22:51

Guitar Player Magazine Ads by Leo Burnett

by Gute Werbung

Guitar Player Magazine: 2012

Guitar Player Magazine: 1985

“Nothing goes right when music goes wrong.”

Advertising Agency: Leo Burnett Tailor Made, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Creative Director: Marcelo Reis, Guilherme Jahara
Art Directors: Raphael Taira, Alessandro Bernardo
Copywriter: Vinicius Stanzione

16 Apr 17:25

Are You a Wizard?

16 Apr 14:45

All visionaries, you know.

by Jessica Hagy

the alcohol is the key ingredient

Share and Enjoy:DiggStumbleUpondel.icio.usFacebookTwitterGoogle Bookmarks

12 Apr 18:22

You can now tell Google what to do with your account in the afterlife

by Florence Ion

There's no better way to start off the afternoon than coming to terms with your mortality, which you'll need to do if you want to take advantage of Google's new Inactive Account Manager. Google launched the service on its account settings page to give users options with their account should it remain inactive for an extended period of time.

It's simple to set up: choose a timeout period—three, six, nine, or twelve months of inactivity—and from there you can direct Google on what to do with your Gmail messages, Blogger posts, Contacts, Google+ account, Google Voice, and YouTube accounts. (Basically, any Google services you've used in the past.) After that time period of inactivity, Google will send out a text message and e-mail the secondary address you provide. If you don't respond, it will assume... well, the worst. "We hope that this new feature will enable you to plan your digital afterlife," Google concluded in the blog post.

If you have intentions of allowing a friend or family member to have access to that data, you can set up the service to notify up to 10 people that your account has been inactive for the time you've specified. Google will then ask for verification details for the listed people, like a phone number and e-mail address. When you're ready, you can send out an e-mail to those people you've entrusted with your data should anything happen to you.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

12 Apr 18:08

Hacker sends this through the mail to record a video of the process

by Mike Szczys

hacked-hardware-sent-through-mail

[Ruben van der Vleuten] wanted to get a look at the adventure a package experiences when shipped from one place to another. So he threw together this mishmash of components to record the experience. We certainly enjoyed watching the fast motion video found after the break. We wonder what the shipping agency thinks about this sort of thing?

Camera, digital storage, and battery technology have gotten to the point that it’s both cheap and easy to do this sort of surveillance. But there are a few logistical things that [Ruben] took into account to make this work quite well. First off, he need to hide the camera in a way that would ensure the package didn’t look suspicious. He ended up writing his name on the side of the box and boring a hole through one of the black letters which is smaller than a pea and very hard to spot. To make sure he wasn’t recording a ton of empty (dark) frames he also included electronics to sense motion. When the package is moving the video is always rolling. when not moving the hardware wakes for just 3 seconds every minute to shoot video.

[Thanks Brandon]


Filed under: lifehacks
11 Apr 16:32

Brothers in Binary

by Greg Ross

A number is said to be perfect if it equals the sum of its divisors: 6 is divisible by 1, 2, and 3, and 1 + 2 + 3 = 6.

St. Augustine wrote, “Six is a number perfect in itself, and not because God created all things in six days; rather the converse is true; God created all things in six days because this number is perfect, and it would have been perfect even if the work of the six days did not exist.”

Perfect numbers are rare. No one knows whether an infinite quantity exist, and no one knows whether any of them are odd. The early Greeks knew the first four, and in the ensuing two millennia we’ve uncovered only 44 more. But they have one thing in common — they reveal a curious harmony when expressed in base 2:

brothers in binary

10 Apr 21:16

Freak Brothers creator Gilbert Shelton's 1977 proposal for a "hurry tax"

by Mark Frauenfelder

When I read this as a 16-year-old I thought it was a brilliant idea. Decades later, I like it even more. (Giant size)

(Via Meine Kleine Fabrik)

    


09 Apr 12:56

April 07, 2013


Last day at Skeptech! Come see me!
09 Apr 12:48

Convertible coffee-table/sofa/dining room table + stools

by Cory Doctorow


Julia Kononenko, a designer in Kharkiv, Ukraine, created a clever piece of furniture that converts from a coffee table to a sofa to a dining room table with chairs. It's more small living-space porn for me -- the perfect thing for your 130sqft apartment.

In our apartments we are always in the confrontation with furniture for the living space. It is so important, that the Interior items possess little space, are multi-functional and small in size. I created a sofa for the living room, that can easily be transformed into a small dining-table with 6 padded stools. In terms of ergonomics it gives maximum comfort and convenience to the user. While transforming the sofa, the seat turns into six padded stools, and the backrest - into a countertop. From one small sofa, we can get a dining-table for 6 persones. Transformation furniture - ideal for limited space.

Сonvertible sofa