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26 Nov 17:07

The Universe Lights Up on Your Wrist

by Richard Kaufman

itqo_celestial_fireworks_bracelet

You must face the fact that it’s time to start your holiday shopping. Some folks dawdle, then run out on Christmas Eve to buy buy buy.

But if you wish to remain firmly seated on your derriere and shop from the comfort of your home, here’s something very 1970s for you: a bracelet using images captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope that twinkle in a starry way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eeEzQKsdRrE

It charges via a USB plug-in (included) and if your significant other is a little spacey (pardon the pun) he or she might find this to be a lot of fun.

Via Quint at Ain’t It Cool News.

24 Nov 01:16

New role playing game has clever text-based ascii animation

by Mark Frauenfelder

skeleton_boss_breathing

Stone Story is an RPG coming soon to Steam. From the developer:

Stone Story is an RPG set in a dark and vile world. The game's fluid ASCII art is painstakingly animated in plain text by a single insane game developer. Currently in closed alpha, the game features 6 locations to explore, 4 boss fights, mind-blowing ASCII cutscenes and plenty of loot to discover. Much more content is planned once the project reaches beta.

The casual play contrasts with the retro visuals, providing a unique experience that blends nostalgia with modern design principles. One of the game's defining mechanics is that you have no direct control of the player character. You choose what items to equip and which locations to visit, while an artificial intelligence does all the exploring, combat and looting. An expansive item crafting system allows you to combine otherwise disposable items--rewarding experimentation and making full use of all the gathered loot.

Stone Story will be published on the web, Win, Mac, Linux, iOS and Android. Initial language support will be English, Portuguese and Chinese. Further localization will be added based on regional stats.

[via]

23 Nov 20:54

The Remarkable Bass Reeves

by Karl Smallwood
Paul Brownlee

Badass Dude

bassreevesWhile historians posit that the Wild West was nowhere near as wild as Hollywood would have you believe, it was a place where certain lawmen forged reputations as legendary heroes in their pursuit of outlaws. (Although in some cases, such as Wyatt Earp, the lawmen were little better than some of the criminals, see: Wyatt Earp – The Great American… Villain?) As for “The Indomitable Marshal” Bass Reeves, he was a former slave turned Deputy Marshal who captured some 3000 outlaws in his long and storied career.

Born in 1838 somewhere in Arkansas, Reeves spent his childhood as the slave of State legislator William Steele Reeves. Little is known about Reeves’ youth and he seldom talked about it as an adult, but we know at various times he served as a water boy, a blacksmith assistant, and eventually as his master’s companion, considered an “upper servant” position that allowed Bass and his family to eat “at the house table”. With the death of William Reeves, Bass became the slave of one of William’s sons, George Reeves, a colonel in the Confederate Army during the Civil War. (And if you’re curious, see: Why is Colonel Pronounced “Kernel”?)

During his time with the colonel, Reeves became an excellent marksman with a hunting rifle, reportedly well surpassing the colonel himself. He was so good, in fact, that George Reeves started entering Bass into various turkey shoot competitions, some of which he won.  According to a newspaper interview given by Bass late in his life, he primarily functioned as the colonel’s valet, bodyguard, coachman, and butler, and Reeves even claimed he accompanied the colonel into battle during the Civil War.

However, ultimately an argument over a card game with the colonel escalated to Reeves beating him up and then fleeing to freedom in Indian Territory. There, Reeves was welcomed by the so-called “Five Civilized Tribes” (Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek and Seminole), spending his time on the run learning their languages and customs.

After the war, Reeves moved to Van Buren, Arkansas, becoming a successful rancher and occasional guide and scout for marshals into Indian Territory. He also added another feather to his cap and became a doting family man, marrying a Texas girl, Nellie Jennie, with whom he fathered nearly a dozen children.

Reeves would have likely lived out the rest of his years as a rancher if not for a concerted effort from a recently appointed judge called Isaac C. Parker to clean up the Western District of Arkansas in 1875. You see, since the end of the Civil War, Western Arkansas had become something of a hotbed for crime due to its close proximity to the same Indian Territory Reeves had lived in during the latter part of the war- a region many lawmen tended to steer clear of. The result was that this territory made for a great hide-out for outlaws seeking to escape justice.

bassreeves04Judge Parker, keen to curb the growing lawlessness in the over 75,000 square mile territory, appointed a man called James F. Fagan as a U.S. Marshal for West Arkansas and tasked him with finding 200 suitable deputies to help bring law and order to the region.

Bass being a crack shot with a rifle (and later with a handgun), being fluent in several Indian languages, knowing the Indian Territory like the back of his hand, and being on good terms with the various tribes that lived there made him a natural choice for a marshal. Despite racial prejudices of the day, Fagan wasted no time deputising Reeves, making him one of the first black Deputy U.S. Marshals in history and famously the first “west of the Mississippi”.

bass_reevesBefore getting to his storied career, we should take a moment to describe Deputy Marshal Bass Reeves. Standing an imposing 6 ft 2 inches tall (at the time the average height for an adult male in the United States was 5 ft 7 inches or about 170 cm) with a magnificent handlebar moustache, and a sly sense of humour, Reeves reputedly possessed incredible strength, eventually could fire his guns with extreme accuracy ambidextrously and took to wearing a giant black stetson and immaculately polished boots when on patrol.

After becoming a Deputy, Reeves became nothing short of a legend amongst the cattle rustlers and various other ne’er do wells of the Old West. It was even widely reported in his day, such as in the January 2, 1908 edition of The Daily Admoreite, that “he never failed to bring in a man he went after.  He would get them either dead or alive.”  Another report stated, “Place a warrant for arrest in his hands and no circumstance can cause him to deviate.” However, this doesn’t appear quite correct.  For instance, one report in the Bisbee Daily Review on February 22, 1906 both demonstrates Reeves’ incredible memory and that at least one individual got away:

Deputy Marshal Cordell brought in two prisoners, Barney Fixico and Wild Cat, yesterday, charged with the murder of Billy Cully, a Seminole Light Horseman, on the third of this month… When Wild Cat was put in jail here, one of the deputy marshals, Bass Reeves, recognized him as a man he had arrested once twenty years ago.  Reeves arrested him on a murder charge and was taking him to Fort Smith for trial.  When they reached the Arkansas river, Wild Cat made his escape.  He had not been seen or heard of since, and the officer supposed he was dead until he turned up at the jail here today.

Nevertheless, Reeves became one of the most respected and feared lawmen of the age for his dogged persistence, incorruptible nature, and reputation for being absolutely fearless in any circumstances, with the Oklahoma City Weekly Times-Journal once reporting that “Reeves was never known to show the slightest excitement, under any circumstance. He does not know what fear is.”

Among his countless adventures during his career, include this event reported in the September 4, 1884 edition of the Indian Chieftain,

Bass Reeves on his last trip had an experience that came near cutting short his usefulness and did send one man where he won’t fool with other people’s horses.  He had warrants for two men, Frank Buck and John Bruner.  While up the Canadian looking for prisoners he came on these men but did not known them.  He inquired for other parties whom he was after and Buck and Bruner volunteered to guide him.  At noon all parties camped, and while they were getting dinner he noticed Bruner stealthily pulling his pistol.  Suspecting something he stepped behind his horse and around to the front of Bruner and grabbed his pistol before he had time to use it, and at the same time pulled his own.  Glancing over his shoulder Buck was seen getting out his weapon, when as quick as a flash Reeves, still holding Bruner’s pistol in one hand, threw over his other and shot Buck dead.  Bruner was then secured and is now on his way to Fort Smith where he will have to answer to a double charge.

Another famed incident involved Reeves chasing down the three Brunter brothers, who ultimately managed to get the drop on him. It was reported that the men ordered Reeves off his horse at gunpoint and began to gleefully taunt the man who at that point in his career was already known as the “Indomitable Marshal”. Despite their taunts that they were going to kill him, Reeves calmly asked for the date. When the bemused brothers asked why he wanted to know what day it was, Reeves explained that their arrest papers needed to be dated before adding that, dead or alive, they were coming with him.

The outlaws immediately burst out laughing at the threat at which point Reeves grabbed the gun barrel of the nearest brother, pointing it away from himself.  At the same time, he drew his own gun as the other two brothers aimed to fire at him. Reeves was faster, managing to kill both before they could shoot him. Reports differ as to what happened to the third brother.

According to the excellent Reeves biography, The Black Badge, written by Judge Paul L. Brady, the first black Federal Administrative Judge in U.S. history and the great-nephew of Bass Reeves, the third brother survived the encounter and was taken into custody.  However, other accounts state that as the third brother was firing rounds from his diverted revolver, Reeves jerked it out of his hand and hit him on the head with it. Not apparently meaning to kill him, supposedly the blow to the head nevertheless fractured his skull and he died.

Whatever the case, despite being involved in many shootouts throughout his career, Reeves reportedly never sustained any serious injury while on the job, though according to a January 18, 1910 edition of The Daily Ardmorette,  “At different times his hat was shot in two, buttons were shot from his coat, his hat punctured and his bridle reins shot from his hand, but no bullet ever touched his body.”

Nevertheless, there was at least one report we found of Reeves not just getting shot, but killed, in a clearly misinformed February 5, 1891 edition of the Democratic Northwest, in which it states, “Deputy United States Marshal Bass Reeves was shot and killed by a negro outlaw named Christie, at Fort Smith, Arkansas.  Christie was being arrested for a murder committed some time ago.”

In one instance in his twilight years, he was even fired upon unexpectedly in an apparent assassination attempt. As reported in the November 15, 1906 edition of The Daily Ardmoreite,

Bass Reeves, a Negro Deputy Marshal, Shot at Near Wybark. Reeves was in his buggy north of Wybark and was driving under a railroad trestle on which the assassin was posted when a six-shooter cracked and a bullet splintered the wood of one of the ties in the trestle directly over his head. He saw the man and returned the fire but the would-be assassin got away and was probably unhurt… Reeves declines to say whom he thinks it was, but it is thought that he has a pretty good idea and will eventually get his man.

Particularly in his early days as a marshal Reeves also had trouble with certain lawmen, who didn’t take kindly to a black man arresting white outlaws.  For instance, in one incident reported in Judge Brady’s biography, a white police officer drew his gun on Reeves and threatened to shoot, not liking that Reeves was ordering around white federal prisoners that Reeves and other marshals were transporting to a penitentiary. A shootout was reportedly avoided owing to the senior deputy marshal coming to Reeves’ defense.

The first criminal Reeves ever killed likewise was due to said individual not taking kindly to a “black badge” ordering him around, with the man exclaiming as his last words according to Judge Brady, “A black badge don’t mean a damned thing to me!” before raising his rifle at Reeves, who then shot the man in the chest.

At the peak of his career, Reeves became so feared that some outlaws would simply surrender upon hearing that Reeves was looking for them. Not hyperbole, in one case we found in the newspaper archives, Reeves even literally caused the individual in question, Jerry McIntosh, to have nightmares about Reeves. As for his crime, McIntosh had, according to an article published in The Chickasha Daily Express on August 3, 1903,

…went home one night recently and dragged his wife from her bed and after pouring coal oil on her, set a match to her. The woman was terribly burned and her attending physician says she is in critical condition, with little hope of recovery. McIntosh says that he was drunk when he committed the act and hardly knew how it was done.

According to the July 16, 1903 edition of The Daily Ardmoreite, while on the run,

McIntosh says he dreamed last night that Deputy Marshall Reeves came upon him in the brush and when he jumped up to run the deputy shot and killed him.  When he awoke and realized that it was only a dream he decided to come to town and give up immediately…

belle-starrIn another case, famed female outlaw Belle Starr, “The Bandit Queen”, simply up and turned herself in when she heard Bass Reeves was the marshal that was sent after her.

Not all about using strength and guns to bring criminals in, Reeves also frequently used guile. For instance, during pursuit of two outlaws in the Red River Valley, Reeves and the other marshals thought the pair might be hiding out at their mother’s cabin.  However, if the brothers were there, approaching the cabin given the open terrain would have been a highly dangerous affair.  Instead, Reeves shot three holes in his hat, dirtied up his clothes, grabbed a walking stick and an old worn out pair of shoes and simply walked the near 28 miles to the house by himself and knocked on the door.

He then told a story to the mother of the criminals that he was on the run from the law, including narrowly escaping the marshals, and was desperately hungry and tired.  Given her son’s similar plight, she sympathized with Reeves and took him in.

Later that night her two sons showed up, announcing their presence by whistling off in the distance, to which the mother whistled back to indicate the coast was clear. After everyone went to sleep for the night, Reeves simply got up, walked over and quietly cuffed the two outlaws, according to news reports without even waking them up.  In the morning, they found Reeves with a gun sitting watching them sleep. He then marched them back to where the other marshals waited and the group rode the few day journey back to town, collecting a reported $5,000 reward (about $121,000 today) for the capture.

Beyond his apparent fearlessness and commitment to his job, Reeves’ sense of duty was also such that he famously tracked down and arrested one of his own sons, Bennie Reeves. As reported in the January 18, 1910 edition of The Daily Ardmorette,

A warrant for the arrest of the younger Reeves for murdering his wife had been issued and Marshal Bennett said that perhaps another deputy had better be sent to serve it. Old Bass was in the room and quietly said, “Give me the writ.” He went out, arrested his son, brought him into court and saw a jury try him, convict him, and sentence him to life imprisonment…

Bennie Reeves would eventually be freed from his life sentence at Fort Leavenworth owing to being a “model prisoner” and as far as newspaper reports indicate never committed another crime again.

All this said, Bass Reeves himself was once in legal hot water for alleged murder, as reported in the February 4, 1886 edition of The Indian Chieftain. The publication, which formerly (and later) spoke of Reeves in glowing terms in various articles, this time starkly changed their tune:

Bass Reeves, a notorious and unprincipled ex-deputy marshal is now in jail at Fort Smith charged with murder. Reeves, who is a negro, killed his camp cook [William Leech], of the same race, in the Chickasaw nation, in April 1884. He reported the killing at the time to have been done in self-defense…

However, the result of the investigation and subsequent trial, in which Reeves was represented by none other than famed United States Attorney W.H.H. Clayton, revealed that the incident in question had been a tragic accident. Reeves had accidentally loaded a cartridge for a .45 Colt revolver into his .44-40 Winchester, ultimately jamming it.  In the process of trying to pry the round out with a knife, the rifle accidentally discharged, hitting William Leech in the neck. Reeves was acquitted by the jury and once again resumed his duties as a marshal.

With Oklahoma officially becoming a state in 1907, Reeves, then 68 years old, left the Marshal service and lent his decades of experience to the newly formed Muskogee, Oklahoma police department for a further two years before retiring due to illness. He died a year later on January 12, 1910 from Bright’s disease, being remembered in his obituary as a “universally respected US Deputy Marshal who was absolutely fearless and had known no master but duty”.

In all, Reeves reportedly brought to justice over 3,000 criminals in his storied career and, despite being involved in countless shootouts, managed to bring in all but 14 alive in the execution of his duty.

If you liked this article, you might also enjoy subscribing to our new Daily Knowledge YouTube channel, as well as:

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The post The Remarkable Bass Reeves appeared first on Today I Found Out.

22 Nov 14:08

Are Jews people? Find out after the break on CNN

by Rob Beschizza

jews

How fast things move! Here's us, suggesting that media people stop using the cutesy term "alt right" to describe Sieg Heiling white supremacists. But they're already moving onto panel discussions on whether Jews are people. (more…)

21 Nov 20:09

Birthdays: The Beginning out in March ⊟The PS4/Steam world...

by 20xx
Paul Brownlee

Interesting. Harvest Moon Creator.





Birthdays: The Beginning out in March ⊟

The PS4/Steam world creation game by Harvest Moon’s Yasuhiro Wada will be released in North America March 7, and Europe March 10. It looks really interesting/weird/cute, and I cannot wait.

Being a NISA game, there’s a nice special edition up on the website, with artbook, soundtrack, plush, etc. Plus a “mystery item”! I hope it’s not a birthday suit, because I have one of those.

For more on this game, Wada did a Reddit AMA

PREORDER Birthdays: The Beginning
18 Nov 20:41

Every Time.

every-time

Submitted by: (via slyboner)

Tagged: meme
06 Nov 18:47

Jon Stewart's epic Twitter-war with Donald Trump

by Cory Doctorow
Paul Brownlee

It's too bad he left the daily show when he did. What could have been.

050-056c026d-1c66-4d42-9fae-a8

Speaking at the Stand Up For Heroes event, Jon Stewart tells the story of how Donald Trump went on an anti-Semitic tear, repeating over and over that Stewart's birth surname was Leibowitz, implying that he'd changed it to disguise his Jewish ancestry. (more…)

01 Nov 19:27

Things to Do Thanksgiving!

by Mercury Staff
Paul Brownlee

Interested Mike?

Your guide to holiday feasting without having to cook a damn thing! by Mercury Staff

Feast your eyes on this feast of restaurants offering literal feasts you can devour on Thanksgiving Day, all without needing to spend a single second in your kitchen cooking anything on your own. And if you don't feel like getting out of your sweatpants and/or jammies all holiday-long, some of these restaurants are providing you the option of just driving in and picking up that glorious bounty to go. Click the restaurant name for menu details and prices:

23Hoyt
Andina
Bluehour
Bread & Ink
Brix Tavern
Country Cat Dinner House
Dig a Pony Less a dinner and more a dance party with pie.
Doug Fir
Feastworks to-go option
Irving Street Kitchen to-go option.
Meriwether's Restaurant
Portland Spirit Thanksgiving Cruise
Raven & Rose
Ringside Grill to-go option.
Ruth's Chris Steak House
Swank & Swine
Urban Farmer
Verdigris

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28 Oct 18:49

Every TED talk

by Jason Weisberger
0-304

This'll save you a lot time going forward.

27 Oct 19:21

Screen Door Is More Than Chicken and Waffles (But There Are Chicken And Waffles)

by Walker MacMurdo
Paul Brownlee

Mike we may have to check this place out when you arrive.

Chicken and waffles. Chicken and waffles. Chicken and waffles. Yes, Screen Door became what's probably the most interminably packed restaurant in Portland—one whose shape-shifting jumble of almost-diners has become an omnipresent metaphor for our city's decadence—on the back of that gut-bustingly beautiful mountain of crispy, juicy goodness, fluffy starch and syrup ($14.95).

Related: Screen Door's Chicken and Waffles Is One of the 12 Wonders of Portland Food

Once you summit Mount Chicken and descend to the rest of the menu, you'll find a wealth of thoughtful pan-Southern cooking that isn't necessarily the grease fest you've been imagining.

The Screen Door Plate ($14.75) lets you mix and match sides like fried catfish and baked beans with seasonal salads from a rotating "local/organics" menu, like a take on a caprese with heirlooms and sherry vinegar that was a nice complement to a sizable scoop of mashed potatoes served in a ramekin of gravy.

Related: Must-Visit Brunch Spots in Portland

But make no mistake, Screen Door is soul food through and through. You'll struggle to find a way to order less than 2 pounds of food, and even those who triple down on salads will find themselves in a rock slide of Gorgonzola or Quadrello di Bufala. Screen Door may have blown up because of the chicken, but the depth to its menu keeps everyone coming back.

Eat: Screen Door's portions are gigantic, making starters unnecessary unless you're angling for leftovers. The Screen Door Plate is the customizable go-to for dinner, but the airy fried catfish comes highly recommended as one of your options. And you just can't go wrong with the fried chicken ($16.75).

Drink: The $28 bottle of Cava is an excellent, gently dry foil to a very luxuriant meal. Plus, there's something great about sparkling wine and fried chicken.

Most popular dish: Chicken and waffles.

Noise level: 90/100

Expected wait: Has anyone ever waited less than 30 minutes for a table? Expect 45 minutes to an hour at peak times. Wait it out over a boozy slushy at the Standard around the corner. Come on weekdays for breakfast and lunch, especially Tuesday and Wednesdays.

Who you'll eat with: Screen Door is Portland's everyman restaurant, so expect everyone from hip kids to dads to pot-bellied Midwesterners.

Year opened: 2006

2337 E Burnside St., 503-542-0880, screendoorrestaurant.com. 8 am-2 pm and 5:30-10 pm Monday-Friday, 9 am-2:30 pm and 5:30-10 pm Saturday, 9 am-2:30 pm and 5:30-9 pm Sunday. $-$$.

27 Oct 00:03

Noisy Coworkers And Other Sounds Are Top Distraction in Workplace, Study Says

by msmash
Paul Brownlee

News at 11. That's why I'd like to work from home again long term.

Sounds, especially those made by other humans, have ranked as the top distraction in the workplace, according to design expert Alan Hedge of Cornell. A staggering 74 percent of workers say they face "many" instances of disturbances and distractions from noise. Hedge says the noise is generally coming from another person, though it's much more disturbing when it's a machine that is making it. NPR reports: The popularity of open offices has exacerbated the problem. The University of California's Center for the Built Environment has a study showing workers are happier when they are in enclosed offices and less likely to take sick days. This does not bode well for some workers facing cold and flu season, when hacking coughs make the rounds. [...] Rue Dooley, an adviser at the Society for Human Resource Management, says HR professionals often call in, asking how to manage co-worker complaints about various bodily noises.

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25 Oct 20:49

Switch Controller plush is a very good boy ⊟ Shout-outs to...

by ericisawesome






Switch Controller plush is a very good boy ⊟ 

Shout-outs to plushsmith AnnaTheRed, who “couldn’t wait until March” to get one of these puppy controllers, so she made her own! I love this so much. More photos in her Flickr gallery!

SUPPORT TINY CARTRIDGE Join Club Tiny!
25 Oct 01:34

Father Turns His 6-Year-Old Son’s Drawings Into Reality

by liver

Dom is six and he likes to draw. Once he’s finished with his mini masterpieces, his dad then recreates their real world counterparts with a dose of digital magic and quite a bit of humor.

22 Oct 17:51

Wieden+Kennedy Set Up a Trump-Skewering Food Cart Downtown

by Dirk VanderHart
Paul Brownlee

This is great

by Dirk VanderHart

Screen_Shot_2016-10-21_at_2.55.42_PM.png
Nick Olmstead

NEW FOOD CART ALERT!

If you haven't been by Pioneer Courthouse Square lately, maybe drop in tomorrow and get online for the hottest new cart the city's seen in ages.

The folks at Wieden+Kennedy have spearheaded the Donald Trump's BS cart. Don't let the extensive-looking menu fool you—all they're serving is a single piece of baloney on white bread (the BS is technically for "baloney sandwiches").

According to Mercury Calendar Editor Chipp Terwilliger, they're even free, as long as you're willing to wait in line for a while. No racial epithets or sexual assault required, which, TBH, feels a little phoney.

According to the W+K Instagram, the cart will be open tomorrow from 11am - 2pm.

There is a new food truck in town. Its specialty: BS #TrumpServesBS

A video posted by Wieden+Kennedy (@wiedenkennedy) on


Screen_Shot_2016-10-21_at_2.57.25_PM.png
Jason Charles Franklin

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19 Oct 21:13

I love you, Nendoroid Mega Man X ⊟ I guess I never gave Mega Man...

by 20xx








I love you, Nendoroid Mega Man X ⊟ 

I guess I never gave Mega Man X’s character design enough credit. It’s not as clean or iconic as the original, but there’s more of like a super sentai type deal to it? I always loved the games, but not really the look.

I’m totally coming around as I stare at this Nendoroid Mega Man X Full Armor toy, out in April. Yes, this would do nicely. A lil’ X doing lil’ hadoukens on my shelf.

BUY Mega Man Legacy Collection (Retail), Mega Man Nendoroid
18 Oct 06:30

Demo Out Now For Castlevania Remade With Unreal Engine

by Joel Couture
Paul Brownlee

Like it

A developer has set out to remake the first Castlevania, and has released the first stage to show the work they've accomplished so far.

Read Demo Out Now For Castlevania Remade With Unreal Engine on Siliconera!

17 Oct 18:43

Legend of Zelda Fans Recreate Link’s Awakening Using Ocarina of Time’s Engine

by Casey
Paul Brownlee

Neat until the cease and desist

Two Legend of Zelda fans have taken on the daunting task of recreating the world of Link’s Awakening, originally for the Game Boy Color, by using the engine from Ocarina of Time.

Read Legend of Zelda Fans Recreate Link’s Awakening Using Ocarina of Time’s Engine on Siliconera!

16 Oct 23:35

The Future of Gaming!

Paul Brownlee

Builds High End Gaming PC - Plays 2D Low Budget Indie Games

10 Oct 02:32

Trailer for Black Mirror season 3

by Rob Beschizza
bm32

Charlie Brooker's back, and so are six of his stories: "The Twilight Zone for the digital age," as The New Yorker put it. (Previously)

08 Oct 07:35

October’s Monster Hunter Generations Free DLC Pack Lets You Dress Up Like Marth From Fire Emblem

by Casey

Another batch of free DLC is available for Monster Hunter Generations this month including gear based on Fire Emblem and even a creepy Zombie-kun costume for your Prowler.

Read October’s Monster Hunter Generations Free DLC Pack Lets You Dress Up Like Marth From Fire Emblem on Siliconera!

07 Oct 20:06

Some Dude Did a Supercut for All the Awkwardly Inappropriate FIFA 17 Glitches, and We're Dying

05 Oct 18:47

Amazon Piles On the Prime Benefits With New 'Prime Reading' Perk

by msmash
Amazon today unveiled the latest perk for Prime members in the United States: Prime Reading. With this, the company is offering access to "over a thousand" Kindle books, comics, magazines and more. The selection will rotate, the company says, suggesting that you should be able to read titles that aren't available today. GeekWire adds: The new perk, Prime Reading, lets Amazon Prime members access more than 1,000 e-books from best-selling authors at no extra charge, read a rotating selection of popular magazines, and read content from the company's Kindle Singles library, including classic short stories and essays. Prime reading is available on the Kindle app for iOS and Android, and on the company's Kindle e-readers and Fire tablets. The new perk comes in addition to the Kindle Owners' Lending Library, which lets Prime members who own Amazon devices borrow one e-book a month from a larger selection of titles. Separate from a Prime membership, Amazon offers the $10/month Kindle Unlimited e-book subscription service.Amazon Prime program costs $99 per year.

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04 Oct 19:46

Red Dwarf XI has arrived

by Jason Weisberger
Paul Brownlee

Well Mike....

csuhpwxwiaa86fi-jpg-large

Red Dwarf never gets old! Lister, Rimmer, Kryten and the Cat are back!

I just watched season eleven's kick-off episode, Twentica. Reminiscent of Star Trek's famous The City on the Edge of Forever, the crew travels back in time to prohibition America. Oddly, they find the prohibition is on science!

I could not be happier! Red Dwarf is back! Now just give me the Mighty Boosh and Black Books.

30 Sep 19:42

If It Works... Okay

30 Sep 16:58

Portland made a fantastic video to woo Japanese tourists

by Mark Frauenfelder
Paul Brownlee

Um....

odnarotoop

"Odnarotoop" is Portland spelled backwards with Japanese pronunciation. It's also the name of this Terry Gilliam-esque video with a catchy song.

Here's the English translation of the lyrics:

These are the mountains that rise in the distance
And this is the river that runs right beside us
And these are the bridges that always connect us in
Odnaraotoop

These are the streets where we meet up for breakfast
and maybe some ice cream or a few dozen donuts
and these are the places we drink when we’re finished in
Odnarotoop

Odnarotoop, Odnarotoop
everyone’s open, so do what you want to in Odnarotoop

And this is the music we play in our basements
and our in the street where the city can hear us
so sing right along if you’re planning to join us in Odnarotoop

Odnarotoop, Odnarotoop
everyone’s open, so do what you want to in Odnarotoop

This is the coffee we drink in the morning
and this is the treehouse my neighbor is building
everyone’s open and ready to greet you in Odnarotoop

And these are the bikes that we like to ride naked
and this is the art that we’re all busy making
everyone’s open so do what you want to in Odnarotoop

[via Tofugu]

22 Sep 19:03

Between Two Ferns With Zach Galifianakis: Hillary Clinton

by Mark Frauenfelder
Paul Brownlee

Ironically, Clinton is more relateable with this sort of deadpan candor

clinton

Best bit:

Galifianakis: Do you wonder what your opponent might be wearing (at the presidential debate)

Clinton: I assume that he'll wear that red power tie.

Galifianakis: Or maybe like a white power tie.

Clinton: That's even more appropriate.

21 Sep 18:53

What a Strapping Young Lad

21 Sep 18:23

Some Unlocalized Japanese Text Made It Into Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse

by Jenni
Paul Brownlee

Preorder canceled

If a certain set of circumstances knock out your partner in one of Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse's final boss battles, you'll encounter some untranslated Japanese text in the English version of the game.

Read Some Unlocalized Japanese Text Made It Into Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse on Siliconera!

21 Sep 03:52

What San Francisco says about America

by Mark Frauenfelder
Paul Brownlee

"It was also telling that Michael Collins of upstate New York chose to live there, whereas he doesn't live in other cities abroad. You could fill an encyclopedia with the implications that brings."

Image: Wikipedia

Journalist Thomas Fuller returned to the United States after 27 years abroad, mainly in Asia. He moved to San Francisco and wrote about the reverse culture shock he experienced. The thing that struck him the most was the disparity between the wealthy (ganja yoga, organic ice cream sandwiches, vegan shoes, Bluetooth compatible toothbrushes) and the poor (outbursts of the mentally ill on the sidewalks, vaguely human forms inside cardboard boxes).

From NYT:

Greater Bangkok, a sprawling metropolis with more than 10 million people, has 1,300 homeless people, a survey this year found.

San Francisco has less than one-tenth Bangkok’s population but six times as many homeless people. I’m sure you could fill a book with the reasons for this. Ms. Nopphan believes that homelessness is more intractable in rich societies. “In wealthy countries there are systems for everything,” she said. “You’re either in the system or out of the system.” There is no in-between in America. In Bangkok, by contrast, rich and poor coexist. There are vast tracts of cheap, makeshift homes and a countryside where people in the cities can return to if they lose their jobs or hit hard times.

20 Sep 17:55

Well, This Definitely Made My Day