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06 Jan 06:51

30 “Scams” Americans Think Are Normal, Shared By Non-Americans

by Aušrys Uptas

As someone from Europe, there are a lot of American things that I don’t really understand, like their obsession with pick-up trucks, massive houses, and football, aka hand-egg. And while I can kind of see why someone would enjoy them, there are certain “normal” Americans things that would be considered flat out scams in other countries.

Someone on Reddit recently asked people to share some things that are clearly scams but are considered “normal” by Americans, and received hundreds of answers in just a few days. Check out some of the best ones in the gallery below!

Someone on Reddit recently asked people to share some “scams” that Americans consider normal

#1

Image source: SteelWarrior-

Megachurches are literal scams. They make a lot of money, saying it’s for the church, then they buy 12 mansions.

#2

Image source: Forimdema19

“America is the greatest country in the world.”

#3

Image source: Mean_Increase_

Tipping restaurant servers so the owners of the restaurant don’t have to pay them a living wage.

#4

Image source: Pontus_Pilates

The idea that you need to work endless hours and never have time off.

There are plenty of countries where people work reasonable hours, have five-week summer vacations and the economies don’t fall apart.

You are not lazy if you don’t eat at your desk or while driving.

#5

Image source: demo1318

Somehow, a person who works 65 hours a week at a minimum-wage job just to pay the rent “isn’t working hard enough”. At the same time, an executive whose “work” boils down to signing a few forms, making a couple of phone calls, collecting investment payouts, and playing golf is considered “a hardworking American”.

#6

Image source: punsexual_disaster

Americans thinking that medical procedures are actually that expensive. Fun fact: In a normal country, you don’t pay tens of thousands of dollars.

#7

Image source: Naweezy

College Tuition. Being in debt for thousands of dollars as a young adult just starting their life

#8

Image source: Sexcalator

Healthcare, all the way. All those heartfelt stories on people who raised 100,000 for their neighbors surgery, and it’s great, but no one seems to question why that was necessary in the first place. The person in question has insurance and they’re still struggling to pay for this procedure?

Even worst if it’s life-threatening. People have to make GoFundMe’s, petition, all kinds of stuff. To have the basic right to not have to go broke when you see a doctor.

#9

Image source: JasperDyne

Millionaires/Billionaires are just like you and me, who just worked harder than everybody else.

#10

Image source: StanePantsen

“If you’re not 15 minutes early, you’re late.”
B*tch, that adds up to 65 hours a year you should have paid me for. That is 8 full days of work.

#11

Image source: Altrano

Really expensive funerals. People are charged astronomically high prices at a time when grief means they’re not prepared to make sound decisions.

#12

Image source: tripster72

Lawmakers allowed to invest in the stock market.

#13

Image source: Frigguggi

Trickle-down economics.

#14

Image source: vietcong420

Getting limited days worth of annual leave per year and then being encouraged not to use it.

#15

Image source: hoosyourdaddyo

The two party system

#16

Working 50+ hours a week to barely make ends meet, no health care, and no future but you’re ‘free’ so it’s worth it.

Image source: That_Trapper_guy

#17

Image source: ShwingMAN13

Advertising medicine. Seriously what the hell?

#18

Image source: deccytag

Your cellphone plans. In my country, I pay €20 for unlimited calls, SMS, and data. I work in phone sales, and whenever I speak to an American, they cannot believe how cheap our plans are compared to what they pay

#19

Image source: ArtyParty0848

College text books, you pay $400 for a book because you have to have the newest version that’s rarely changed much, and the school might offer you $40 and sell it for $150 used

#20

Image source: THExBEARxJEW

Health insurance. Studied abroad in France for a year. When I went to the hospital for urinary retention due to an infection and had to spend the night. The only thing I had to pay for was the antibiotics they gave me to take home for a week which was about $10 for 7 pills. Ours is a joke.

#21

Image source: MakubeXGold

The price for healthcare in America. For the love of God just travel overseas and compare, like, to any country in the world… And then realize how big of a rip-off it is in America. And it’s all insurance companies fault.

#22

Image source: imnotyourbrahhh

Charging $1 to add cheese.

#23

Image source: johnydeformed

Tax Filing

For the majority of wage earners, the IRS can easily determine how much you owe and tell you, or tell you what you’re owed in a refund. It’s simple.

That they don’t do so is only because tax preparation companies lobby lawmakers to keep the system as it is. Tax preparation companies only exist because they are legally allowed, middle men. They are slow, complicated, costly, and the opposite of free market efficiency.

#24

Image source: Gremlin0011

The pledge of allegiance was actually an advertisement to sell flags.

#25

Image source: WatchTheBoom

Politicians talk about the need for healthcare, but create legislation for healthcare insurance.

Those are not the same things. In fact, the latter actually is a barrier to the former.

#26

Image source: jude802

The push that ‘college is for everyone!’ Also, you aren’t able to default on your student loans, so banks will give them to anyone. Coincidentally, society started telling people that they should all go to college, no matter their situation, right after passing the bill that made student loans impossible to hide from.

#27

Image source: rainbowcadillac

‘Overdraft protection,’ which actually allows the bank to charge you when you use a debit card, instead of just declining the transaction.

#28

Image source: bloomfaith

Rent To Own products. (Rent-A-Center, Aarons, Conns, etc..) You end up paying triple or quadruple the value of the product for virtually no other benefit than you’d get if you just saved a little money and bought the product out-right.

#29

Identity theft. The bank fails to properly vet someone they gave money to, and now it’s your problem.

You did nothing, the bank made a mistake. How is that your problem?

And look at credit monitoring companies, they claim they can detect fraud on your credit report. Yet, credit monitoring companies and credit reporting companies are one and the same — literally the same company. So the real message is “pay us and we will not make false reports about you in our credit reports, we have the ability to detect falsehoods, but will only do so if you pay us”. There should be a clear case of libel here. The credit reporting companies often report things that they reasonably know to be false.

Image source: Buttons840

#30

Image source: ReapeR_ahhh

Paying thousands of dollars for basic dental work

The post 30 “Scams” Americans Think Are Normal, Shared By Non-Americans appeared first on DeMilked.

27 Feb 21:24

2% fra eller til

by Poul-Henning Kamp
Nu er det så godt som givet at Corvid-19 har nået pandemi-status og hvis der ikke sker nogle katastrofale mutationer siger de nuværende tal at der om nogle måneder er 2% færre personer over 50 år på kloden end der ellers ville have været. De 2% er et foreløbigt tal, det er formodenligt for lavt ...
22 Oct 20:23

A Miniature Radio Telescope in Every Backyard

by Tom Nardi

You probably wouldn’t expect to see somebody making astronomical observations during a cloudy day in the center of a dense urban area, but that’s exactly what was happening at the recent 2019 Philadelphia Mini Maker Faire. Professor James Aguirre of the University of Pennsylvania was there demonstrating the particularly compact Mini Radio Telescope (MRT) project built around an old DirecTV satellite dish and a smattering of low-cost components, giving visitors a view of the sky in a way most had never seen before.

Thanks to the project’s extensive online documentation, anyone with a spare satellite dish and a couple hundred dollars in support hardware can build their very own personal radio telescope that’s capable of observing objects in the sky no matter what the time of day or weather conditions are. Even if you’re not interested in peering into deep space from the comfort of your own home, the MRT offers a framework for building an automatic pan-and-tilt directional antenna platform that could be used for picking up signals from orbiting satellites.

With the slow collapse of satellite television in the United States these dishes are often free for the taking, and a fairly common sight on the sidewalk come garbage day. Perhaps there’s even one (or three) sitting on your own roof as you read this, waiting for a new lease on life in the Netflix Era.

Whether it’s to satisfy your own curiosity or because you want to follow in Professor Aguirre’s footsteps and use it as a tool for STEM outreach, projects like MRT make it easier than ever to build a functional DIY radio telescope.

Point and Shoot

The MRT, and really any radio telescope project like this, is essentially made up of two separate systems: one that provides the motorized aiming of the dish, and the receiver that actually captures the signals. Either system could work independently of the other, but when combined with the appropriate software “glue”, they allow the user to map the sky in radio frequencies.

Obviously, the electronics and mechanical components required to pan an antenna across the sky aren’t terribly complex. If you wanted to keep things really simple and were content with moving in a single axis, you could even do it with a “barn door” tracker. What’s really kicked off the recent explosion of DIY radio telescopes is the RTL-SDR project and the era of low-cost Software Defined Radios (SDRs) it’s inspired.

Unsurprisingly, the MRT also uses an RTL-SDR receiver for processing signals from the Low-Noise Block (LNB) in the dish. Professor Aguirre says that since they are still using the stock DirecTV LNB, the telescope is fairly limited in what it can actually “see”. But it’s good enough to image the sun or pick up satellites in orbit, which is sufficient for the purposes of demonstrating the basic operating principles of a radio telescope.

To move the satellite dish, the MRT is using an Arduino connected to a trio of Big Easy Drivers from Sparkfun. These are in turn connected to the stepper motors in the antenna mount, which are sufficiently geared so they can move the dish around without the need for a counterweight. This makes it an excellent candidate for enclosure inside a dome, which would allow for all-weather observations.

Both the RTL-SDR receiver and the Arduino are connected to a Raspberry Pi, which runs the software for the telescope and provides the interface for the user. The MRT GitHub repository contains all of the various tools and programs created for the project, mostly written in Python, which should provide a useful reference even if you’re not interested in duplicating the telescope’s overall design.

Wandering Through the Sky

When we visited Professor Aguirre, he was attempting to use the MRT to find the Sun. You’d think that a simple enough task in the middle of the afternoon, but thanks to an unbroken layer of steel-gray clouds hanging low in the October sky, Sol was absolutely nowhere to be found with our meager human senses.

Geostationary satellites as seen by the MRT

As the dish made its slow robotic pans across the sky, we spoke with the Professor about the telescope and the various revisions it went through over the years. Eventually the display lit up, showing a representation of an unusually strong signal, clearly the MRT was hearing something out there. After brief scrutiny, the Professor announced that we hadn’t found the sun; instead, the telescope most likely crossed paths with a geostationary satellite.

It was this raconteur style of discovery that kept visitors to the Mini Radio Telescope enthralled. Nobody expected this hacked together contraption of consumer-grade hardware to discover a new exoplanet or help solve some long-pondered mystery of the cosmos while sitting in a Philadelphia parking lot.

But it was more than capable of pointing out objects tens of thousands of kilometers away while our own eyes couldn’t even figure out where the Sun was. It reaffirmed in a very real way that something was out there, and students both young and old couldn’t help but be fascinated by it.

10 Mar 20:10

Photographer of the Week: March 4-8, 2019

by Bryan Esler
Every weekday, Photofocus curators share a great photograph taken by one of our readers. Every month we highlight photographs in the genres of architecture, portrait, outdoor, street and a flex category that changes each month. In March, we started featuring urban exploration photos. In April, we’ll explore the world of travel. As dedicated writers for…

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14 Oct 13:45

Ny Google Pixel-funktion screener uønskede opkald

by Kristoffer Jørgensen
'Call Screen' lader ejere af Google Pixel-telefoner screene telemarketing-opkald, inden de tages.
18 Jul 12:31

Typescript 3.0 på trapperne

by Tania Andersen
Projektreferencer skal give bedre organiserede projekter og hurtigere builds.
14 Jul 18:36

This Illustrator Hilariously Sums Up The True Struggles Of Adult Life

by Vaiva

Some comics are more relatable than others and these comics perfectly fit the first group.

Clare Kayden Hines is an artist from California who shares her observations about crazy, strange, mundane scenarios of the life in a form of colorful comics.

Clare started drawing from a very young age. “I started drawing after I got my first dog, Buttercup,” she told Bored Panda. “I was 5 and I was so obsessed with her that all I wanted to do was draw her on every piece of paper I could find. I eventually expanded to drawing other subjects beyond dogs. I’ve taken a few drawing classes, but in general, I just doodled and drew for fun… mostly during class or boring meetings. Probably way too much. My classmates started noticing me drawing in class and would ask me to draw pictures of their dogs for them!”

When asked about the start of the comics series, she explained that she’s quite new to the comic artist game. “I’d never done a “true” comic until I started this account in October 2017. I was working at a large tech company and felt starved for a creative outlet. I dreamt up an illustrated alter ego, Kayden Hines, who reflected the tension I felt between doing everything I was “supposed” to do, and my growing resistance to doing so. She was my comedic release.”

“I started illustrating Kayden as she went through various awkward, ridiculous, mundane, and frustrating life scenarios. There’s something so funny to me about our constant battles with ourselves to be functioning human beings. It’s like our brains are constantly at war with our sloth-like selves to get stuff done. And sometimes it’s the mundane things that feel the most insurmountable, like looking at a sink full of dirty dishes, saying “UGHHHHHHH, F*CKKKKKK”, and then doing the dishes anyway. Or responding to a long email from a camp friend asking “how are you?” that’s been sitting in your inbox for 3 months giving you anxiety.”

And what’s the best and worst thing about drawing comics? “The hardest part is definitely, when I have an idea or concept in my head, but I don’t have the technical skills or ability making the comic look how I want,” Clare explained. “It can feel very frustrating! The best part for me is making people laugh and having them see some part of themselves in my comics. I love that I can take an insane thought or observation that exists in my head, turn it into something tangible, and put it out in the world. Seeing people say they relate to my work or that they share similar experiences is such a cool feeling and makes me feel less alone in this crazy world!”

The author shared the importance of the comics to her by saying “it is my way of finding humor in the most mundane aspects of life, and making them universal and relatable. My goal—beyond my account being a creative outlet for me—is to make people feel less “alone” by seeing themselves in my posts.”

More info: Instagram

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09 Aug 18:48

50 Epic Design Fails That You Won’t Believe Actually Happened

by Andrius

We’ve covered some of the most hilarious design fails before, but there are still plenty of designers left who decided to skip that lesson and do it their own way. So here we go again!

From the horrific display of children mannequins hung on the wall as some sort of medieval warning to ‘The best Period pizza’ these will leave you scratching your head and thinking how was this ever approved…

Did you ever witness a design so bad that it was amazing? Then share your story in the comments!

(h/t: boredpanda)

#1 Made By Professionals

Image source: imgur.com

#2 So Secure

#3 This Clothing Display

Image source: www.reddit.com

#4 My Four-Legged Duck

Image source: imgur.com

#5 Urban Planning

Image source: www.reddit.com

#6 I Don’t Think That’s Something You Should Be Proud Of

Image source: imgur.com

#7 I’m Just Gonna Let The Fire Consume Me

Image source: www.reddit.com

#8 For When You Want A Near Death Experience Every Time You Use The Stairs

Image source: www.reddit.com

#9 This Old Toy Is Truly A Marvel

Image source: www.reddit.com

#10 Not For Navigational Purposes

Image source: www.reddit.com

#11 This Globe Doesn’t Have Europe On It

Image source: www.reddit.com

#12 Winnie

Image source: www.reddit.com

#13 I Never Imagined The Golden Gate Bridge Was As Bike Friendly As It Is

Image source: www.reddit.com

#14 Parking Fee Just Gotten Real

Image source: www.reddit.com

#15 Put Barbed Wire Across The Top Of The Gate. We Don’t Want Anyone Climbing Over It

Image source: www.reddit.com

#16 I Have A Good Idea For A Slogan, Boss

Image source: www.reddit.com

#17 This Counter Looks Like Someone Smeared Shit On It

Image source: www.reddit.com

#18 I Mean What The F*k Did They Expect?

Image source: imgur.com

#19 Cinnamonbun Earrings With Sugar Glaze

Image source: www.etsy.com

#20 The Impossible Quiz

Image source: imgur.com

#21 Ho Ho-No

Image source: www.reddit.com

#22 Spain’s New Shirt Looks Like It Got Dirty While Eating Bolognese Pasta

Image source: www.reddit.com

#23 The State Department Nailed My Girlfriends Passport

Image source: imgur.com

#24 This T-Shirt Design…

Image source: www.reddit.com

#25 Who Wouldn’t Love To Look Like They’re About To Shoot Their Dog?

Image source: www.reddit.com

#26 Hard Hats Are For Safety

Image source: www.reddit.com

#27 Perfect Together…In Life And Death? Looks Like The Couple Hung Themselves

Image source: www.reddit.com

#28 Wheelchair Access Leads To Staircase

Image source: www.youtube.com

#29 Don’t **** Your Dog In This Park

Image source: www.reddit.com

#30 Fantastic Ad Placement

Image source: www.reddit.com

#31 Oh Boy, There’s Platypus Period In My Tea!

Image source: www.reddit.com

#32 The More Legs The Merrier!

Image source: www.reddit.com

#33 Sure Boss, The Bus Has All The Seats In Place

Image source: www.reddit.com

#34 Put A Braille Sign On The Fun Mirror

Image source: www.reddit.com

#35 Putting Measurement Labels On A Non-Transparent Bottle

Image source: www.reddit.com

#36 Let’s Alphabetically Order The Floor Numbers

Image source: www.reddit.com

#37 I Love Rainbows So Much I Get…

Image source: www.reddit.com

#38 Not Every Product Needs A Mascot…

Image source: www.reddit.com

#39 My Wife Asked Me Why The Fridge Was Getting Warmer After She Kept Pressing The “Cold” Button

Image source: www.reddit.com

#40 This Toilet Roll Holder Lets You See Through To The Other Stall

Image source: www.reddit.com

#41 Great Find At Target Tonight

Image source: www.reddit.com

#42 This Tattoo Removal Shop Looks Like It Says “Change Fart”

Image source: www.reddit.com

#43 Insert Here

Image source: www.reddit.com

#44 Waterproofed The Wires Boss

Image source: imgur.com

#45 This Rug For Sale Online

Image source: imgur.com

#46 When You Want The Bigger Half Of The Pie…

Image source: www.reddit.com

#47 Nearly Gave Me A Heart Attack Upon First Glance

Image source: www.reddit.com

#48 Thought This Belonged Here

Image source: www.reddit.com

#49 This Gnome Salt Shaker

Image source: www.reddit.com

#50 It’s Supposed To Be A Safety Pin

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16 Jul 08:20

How to Construct the Most Versatile Studio Gear: V-Flats

by Vanelli
Flats are large rectangles of lightweight foam core. Theater set designers use them to create background scenery. Their lightweight design makes them easy to move around sets to be used as backgrounds, flagging light and as reflectors. Hinging two flats together—creating a letter V—creates what is know as a V-flat. Here’s how to construct your…
15 May 20:14

Men Are Hiding Baldness With Man Buns, But It’s Riskier Than You Think

by Dominyka Jurkštaitė

It Makes Perfect Sense Now…

It Makes Perfect Sense Now...

source

Can Confirm…

Can Confirm...

source

It Is A Solution For Many Women Also

It Is A Solution For Many Women Also

source

Can I Pull Any Of These Haircuts Off? Or Shave Head?

Can I Pull Any Of These Haircuts Off? Or Shave Head?

source

Gareth Bale Also Has A Little Secret

Gareth Bale Also Has A Little Secret

source

06 Oct 07:20

Mere end gratis musik: Spotify delte malware gennem reklamer

by Lasse Ørum Klinke
Flere Spotify-kunder, som ikke har opgraderet til Premium, har fået sig en ubehagelig overraskelse. Programmets reklamer har i flere tilfælde forsøgt at åbne malware-inficerede pop up-vinduer. Spotify udtaler, at problemet er løst.
06 Jun 04:49

Blog: Agil udvikling - fra hitmaskiner til konceptalbums

by Anders Lisdorf
Jeg har altid syntes at agil udvikling var vældig smart, og at der var en tvingende logik bag det, men omvendt har jeg også altid syntes der manglede noget. Man skal ikke have arbejdet agilt ret længe før man vil se, at de praktiske resultater ikke altid stemmer overens med de teoretiske forvente...
25 Nov 21:04

Turntable Sequencer Keeps the Techno Beat

by Dan Maloney

We’ve got to admit, we don’t have any idea what to call this hack. Artist [Graham Dunning] refers to it somewhat dryly as the “Mechanical Techno method”, but that doesn’t quite do it justice. We’re thinking “Turntable-sequencer-synthesizer-beat-box-dub-stepper thingy. With cowbell.”

Call it what you will, but [Graham] has really gone the distance in extracting as much sound as possible from the humble turntable, which is used as more of a synchronizer than a sound source. Although it does play records too – at least part of them; [Graham] masks the grooves and anchors the tone arm so that only part of a track is played. Other records are masked with conductive film over which wiper contacts are placed, providing triggers for various synthesizers. Particularly clever is the mechanical percussion section; a record is cut radially to form cams that mechanical followers trip over periodically to hit either the cone of a woofer for bass notes, or a cowbell for – well,  cowbell.

It may not appeal to everyone, but you’ve got to admit there’s something mesmerizing about watching this rig in action. The beat is pretty catchy, and as you can see in the live performance video after the break, there’s a lot of room for [Graham] to express himself with this instrument. We wouldn’t mind seeing how Compressorhead would put this rig to work in their performances either.

Thanks for the tip, [Shrad]


Filed under: misc hacks, musical hacks
17 Oct 13:35

Center for Cybersikkerhed: Flash-sårbarhed kan have ramt danske organisationer

by 50087

Emner

It-sikkerhed
http://www.version2.dk/artikel/indikation-paa-flash-saarbarhed-har-ramt-danske-organisationer-413966

Center for Cybersikkerhed (CFCS) opfordrer til, at alle organisationer straks installerer patch til Adobe Flash Player.

Version2
16 Apr 16:03

Another Alleged iPhone 6 Case Surfaces with Cutouts for Moved Power Button, New Volume Controls

by Richard Padilla
New photos showing what appears to be another case for Apple's larger-screen iPhone 6 have been posted by Nowhereelse.fr [Google Translate]. While details about the case's exact length are unknown, the images are said to have come from a Chinese accessory maker and show a case designed for the next-generation iPhone, similar to cases pictured last week and those on display at the Hong Kong Electronics Fair yesterday.

iphone_6_silicon_1
The case feature slightly rounded edges, similar to the design of the iPhone 5c and consistent with design drawings said to be for the iPhone 6. Like other cases and in line with a claim from KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the case also includes a hole for a button along the upper right side of the device, which may be the new location of the power button. Rectangular volume control buttons similar to the fifth-generation iPod Touch are also notably present.

iphone_6_silicon_2_annotated
Rectangular volume (1) and right side power (2) cutouts (Annotated by Nowhereelse.fr)
Apple's iPhone 6 is expected to launch in two sizes of 4.7 and 5.5 inches. The majority of leaks so far have depicted the 4.7-inch version, as it is reportedly on track for a release this fall. Apple is said to have been running into production issues with the 5.5-inch version, with that model likely seeing a release later this year or early next year.

Along with a larger screen, Apple's next-generation iPhone is expected to include a thinner profile, upgraded A8 processor, Touch ID fingerprint sensor, and an improved camera featuring optical image stabilization. A report earlier this week from Jefferies analyst Peter Misek also claimed that Apple is negotiating with carriers to increase the price of the iPhone 6 by $100.


Recent Mac and iOS Blog Stories
Apple Launches 8 GB iPhone 5c in 16 New European Countries [Updated]
Apple Seeds OS X Mavericks 10.9.3 Build 13D43 to Developers
Compliance Monitor Says Relationship With Apple Has 'Significantly Improved'
'Social Network' Director David Fincher Will Not Helm Steve Jobs Movie
T-Mobile Ending All Overage Charges, Challenging Rivals to Follow
Microsoft's 'Age of Empires: World Domination' to Launch on iOS This Summer
Photos of New Building at Apple's European Headquarters Show Glass Exterior, Spacious Interior
Civilization: Beyond Earth Coming to Mac This Fall







10 Mar 23:17

Photographing Just the Sky for Composites

by Nicolesy

The other day I was outside walking my dog, and just as I was approaching my house I could not help but notice the amazing clouds up in the sky. Where I currently live we rarely get good cloud-filled skies, so I tend to take notice when there is something other than a blank blue sky. Unfortunately, the sun was already on its way down, so there was no chance that I could drive anywhere decent to photograph a landscape with those gorgeous clouds.

Instead of writing things off, I decided to grab my camera and 70-200mm lens and get some stills of just the sky. I like to keep a collection inside of Lightroom with all of my clouds so that I can use them for future composite images (here is a recent article on how I use collections inside of Lightroom). My goal is to have a large enough collection of skies so that I can always have an appropriate sky to choose from when I need it most. Here is a small gallery of some of the clouds I photographed of the sky from the other night (click on the images to view larger and scroll through):

untitled-2119 untitled-2122 untitled-2123 untitled-2125 untitled-2128 untitled-2134

I’m learning that I can still create beautiful photographs when I am in front of a scene with no clouds in the sky. With my collection of skies I can easily replace the blue sky with something much more interesting. It has even encouraged me to photograph more landscapes with boring skies, scenes which I would have passed over in the past. With a some basic masking skills you too can drop a beautiful sky into a photograph, just like I did with this image of Shark Fin Cove in Santa Cruz, CA (click on the images to view larger and scroll through):

cali-6890 cali-6890-2

______

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Mosaic A complete solution for photographers using Lightroom who want to manage and share their photos. You can easily view images with their iOS app or web service. Plus your photos are backed up to the cloud with several plans to match your needs. Be sure to also check out the Lightroom Learning Center to learn new ways to work in Lightroom.

lynda.com Learn photography anytime, anywhere, and at your own pace—from bite-sized tutorials to comprehensive courses. Try lynda.com free for 10 days by visiting lynda.com/ Photofocus.

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Filed under: Landscape, Photography
16 Jan 16:49

Big Slugline Update, Including a Free Trial Version

by Stu

Slugline, the screenwrting app that Clint Torres and I make, has a big update today in the Mac App Store. Lots of new features, and (finally) a free, downloadable demo:

If you’ve been wanting to take Slugline for a test drive, now you can, with a fully-functional 14-day trial. There are no restrictions in the trial version—you can load, save, and work on screenplays of any length. After 14 days, you’ll have the option to buy Slugline from the App Store.

Read more, and download the trial, at the Slugline blog!

29 Aug 05:43

Drupal 8 APIs are freezing but not frozen

by Dries
Topic: 

Since Drupal 8's API freeze was announced on July 1, there has been some confusion about what API freeze means, from core developers as well as module and theme developers starting Drupal 8 upgrades of their projects. This post clarifies the API completion process, and documents what different audiences can expect from Drupal 8's development cycle and when.

API freezing is a process, not a point in time

As noted in the original API freeze announcement, as well as the Drupal core release cycle page, API freeze marks the point at which API changes are only allowed when needed to fix a major or critical issue. The process of completing the necessary remaining changes, however, will take time, and while that is happening, many important APIs are still changing.

The chart below illustrates the API freezing process, as well as what various groups of people affected by Drupal 8 development can expect during the rest of the release cycle:

Drupal api freezing

For core developers, July 1 marked the point at which core maintainers began to postpone API changes not necessary for solving critical and major issues to Drupal 9, so that module and theme developers who've already started porting their projects only need to keep up with changes that are sufficiently important to a healthy Drupal 8 release. We've labeled this part of the release cycle the "API completion" to clarify this process. During this phase, any proposed API changes must go through a process involving core committer approval. Core committers will increasingly restrict what sorts of changes are allowed as time goes on.

I'd like to start porting my module or theme now. What can I expect?

Module and theme developers are encouraged to start porting now so they can uncover critical and major API problems while they can still be fixed. But if you are hoping to go through the process of porting your module or theme only once, the best time for that is after the first release candidate (see "What can I expect for beta?" below). At that point, the number of critical issues should be at or just above zero, meaning API changes should be extremely rare and only occur if there's no other way to resolve a severe problem.

You can read a summary of the most important outstanding API changes, or view the ongoing list of approved API change issues to see if your module is affected by changes that are still in progress. The list currently includes many issues related to the routing system, the entity field API, and the theme system/markup. If your project touches these systems, you may want to hold off porting a while longer, or at least be aware that these elements (as well as others) are still in flux and might change significantly before Drupal 8 is released.

What can I expect from beta releases?

Beta 1 will still be the point at which we encourage any interested site builders to try out the beta and provide feedback on it, so it will include an upgrade path from Drupal 7 for testing. It's a great time for site builders to set up test sites in order to take Drupal 8 for a spin and provide feedback while things are still somewhat malleable. Just know that because Drupal 8 is still in development, critical upgrade path issues may arise that cause data loss, so make sure you're backed up!

Previously, we also identified beta as the point at which we'd have a stable API against which module and theme developers could port code. However, after evaluating the list of major and critical API changes still outstanding, we realize that those changes will take more time to complete than we would like to wait to release our first beta. Therefore, we now recommend that developers who are not interested in providing early API feedback on Drupal 8 wait until the first release candidate.

Closing thoughts

Release management is difficult, especially in a large distributed Open Source community like Drupal. Getting Drupal 8 released involves many people, many processes, and even technology challenges. The quality of the Drupal 8 release is really important so as a result, there are no hard-and-fast rules and we'll continue to adjust in the best interest of the Drupal project. I hope this update proves that point, and that it clarifies how and when we would like you to get involved. Let's make Drupal 8 our best release to date - in a timely manner!

20 Aug 19:24

The Peeping Tom: It Wasn't that Bad

by Michael Johnston

SvensonshowArne Svenson's show "The Neighbors" hanging at Julie Saul Gallery in New York City. The show was up from May 9 to June 29.
Photo courtesy Julie Saul Gallery.

Do you remember Arne Svenson? We wrote about him a while back, last May to be exact. He's the fellow who engaged in a long-term art project shooting pictures through the open windows of the apartment building on the other side of the street from where he lives in New York City. Sort of a glorified, gussied-up peeping-Tom kind of thing. Some of his neighbors were displeased, as they discovered large prints of themselves taken surreptitiously through their windows being put on view at a prestigious city gallery.

One couple sued.

Well, the court has now ruled—in the artist's favor. Judge Eileen Rakower of the New York Supreme Court limited her decision to the "circumstances presented here," but wrote that the artist's First Amendment protections outweigh the subjects' expectations for privacy.

Note that issues like this are never not going to be thorny, and, as Ctein often reminds us, such issues often come down to case-by-case adjudication.

Svensonneighbors16Arne Svenson, "The Neighbors" #16

Personally, I like the pictures, small JPEG renderings of which can be seen on Arne's website. But I sympathize more with the neighbors (the body of work is called "The Neighbors"). I find I identify with them more than I do with the photographer, and I know that I would definitely not want someone snapping pictures of me in my home through my open window.

But the judge's ruling seems sensible. Through the scaffolding of due process and legalese, the ruling seems to say, in effect, "In this case, it wasn't that bad."

Mike
(Thanks to several readers)

Original contents copyright 2013 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved. Links in this post may be to our affiliates; sales through affiliate links may benefit this site.

TOP's links!

(To see all the comments, click on the "Comments" link below.)
Featured Comments from:

Carsten S: "I am more concerned about the watching that he had to do to take the pictures than about the publication of that particular selection of photos."

David A. Goldfarb: "There are relatively few buildings like the Zinc Building in New York—seven stories with floor-to-ceiling windows and 21 apartments in a bustling Tribeca location, where an 880 sq. ft., 1 bdrm, 1.5 bath apartment sold for $1.375 million just this past April. If one wanted not to be on display, it would be easy enough not to live there."

Mike replies: I know this is off topic, but that's one of the reasons I like Waukesha: around the corner from me, there is a big, beautiful stone house with 5,000 square feet including an indoor gym, four one-car garages and an oversized garage for an RV, on a beautifully kept 2.5-acre lot with mature trees and a broad lawn. Hammer price: $319,000. Sold just a few months ago. Of course, it's not New York; but then, some people would prefer quiet, safe, friendly li'l ol' Waukesha. The realtor: "It takes a special kind of buyer. The taxes are very high." Taxes: $9k annually.

Back on topic: Does the size of your windows really change the issue? That sounds suspiciously like the old saw about a woman asking to be raped because of the provocative way she dresses. A central tenet of moral behavior is that you follow the principle rather than allowing yourself to be influenced by temptation or opportunism, no?

Of course, the courts have ruled, so we're only talking about ethics here, not legality.

Herman Krieger: "It looked like a window of opportunity."

Bill Poole: "Judging from the images on his site, these are beautifully composed photographs—not of the building residents, but incorporating fragments of their figures into the compositions. (The photographer seems to have gone out of his way to not include recognizable faces.) To me, the result is strangely moving: intimate without being personal or revealing."

Alan Fairley: "As an attorney, I was intrigued by the legal issues in the case. I poked around a bit and found that what Svenson did would almost certainly be actionable in jurisdictions that have a common-law right of privacy, as defined in the Restatement of the law of Torts. However, New York State does not recognize that common law right of privacy, which hamstrung the neighbor's ability to plead a viable claim against Svenson. Instead, they had to sue for 'unauthorized use of likeness for commercial purposes' which, not only in New York but virtually every jurisdiction, recognizes an exception for works of art. Thus, the lawsuit was doomed from the start.

"Personally, I find what Svenson did to be reprehensible, but on the other hand, I find the photographs luminously beautiful.  No one ever said art was simple."

20 Aug 19:24

Updating a Printed Wikipedia

by xkcd

Updating a Printed Wikipedia

If you had a printed version of the whole of (say, the English) Wikipedia, how many printers would you need in order to keep up with the changes made to the live version?

Marein Könings

This many:

That's surprisingly few printers! But before you try to create a live-updating paper Wikipedia, let's look at what those printers would be doing ... and how much they'd cost.

Printing Wikipedia

People have considered printing out Wikipedia before. A few years ago, student Rob Matthews printed every Wikipedia featured article, creating a book several feet thick.

Of course, that's just a small slice of the best of Wikipedia; the entire encyclopedia would be a lot bigger. Wikipedia user Tompw has set up a page for calculating the size of the whole English Wikipedia in printed volumes. It would currently fill a lot of bookshelves.

Keeping up with the edits would be harder.

Keeping up

The English Wikipedia currently receives about 125,000 to 150,000 edits each day, or 90-100 per minute.[1]ToolServer: Edit rate

We could try to define a way to measure the "word count" of the average edit, but that's hard bordering on impossible. Fortunately, we don't need to—we can just estimate that each change is going to require us to reprint a page somewhere. Many edits will actually change multiple pages—but many other edits are reverts, which would let us put back pages we've already printed.[2]The filing system for this would be staggering. One page per edit seems like a reasonable middle ground.

For a mix of photos, tables, and text typical of Wikipedia, a good inkjet printer might put out 15 pages per minute. That means you'd only need about six printers running at any given time to keep pace with the edits.

The paper would stack up quickly. Using Rob Matthews' book as a starting point, I did my own back-of-the-envelope estimate for the size of the current English Wikipedia. Based on the average length of featured articles vs. all articles, I came up with an estimate of 300 cubic meters for a printout of the whole thing.[3]That's a little larger than Tompw's estimate, but I'm assuming they're printed straight from the browser, which is less compact and includes images.

By comparison, if you were trying to keep up with the edits, you'd print out 300 cubic meters every month.

$500,000 per month

Six printers isn't that many, but they'd be running all the time. And that gets expensive.

The electricity to run them would be cheap—a few dollars a day.

The paper would be about one cent per sheet, which means you'll be spending about a thousand dollars a day.

You'd want to hire people to manage the printers 24/7, but that would actually cost less than the paper.

Even the printers themselves wouldn't be too expensive, despite the terrifying replacement cycle.

But the ink cartridges would be a nightmare.

Ink

A study by QualityLogic[4]QualityLogic: Cost of Ink Per Page Analysis, June 2012 found that for a typical inkjet printer, the real-life cost of ink ran from 5 cents per page for black-and-white to around 30 cents per page for photos. That means you'd be spending four to five figures per day on ink cartridges.

You definitely want to invest in a laser printer. Otherwise, in just a month or two, this project could end up costing you half a million dollars:

But that's not even the worst part.

If, someday, Wikipedia decides to go dark again, and you want to join the protest ...

You'll have to get a crate of markers and color every page solid black yourself.

I would definitely stick to digital.

10 Aug 10:21

The Super-Safe Quadruple Backup Workflow

by Richard Harrington

cloudbackup

We received a great question from a reader named Brent lately, all about backing up his digital life.

The Question 

Hi Photofocus,

After your repeated suggestion to backup, backup, backup, I’m finally ready to make the online plunge. I would greatly appreciate your recommendation for an online backup service.

I work on a 27″ iMac with 2.93 GHz Intel Core i7 processor and 2T hard drive.

That’s my home/freelance machine and the machine all my music and my Lightroom catalog is stored on. I want to backup all this data to the cloud so that I can, on occasion, grab some of those file from my office iMac with matching specifications.

I realize the initial backup could take a week. I’ve got high speed internet service.

- Brent

The Response 

The answer I am going to give you, is “it depends.”  There are several factors such as:

  • Are you looking for a pure offsite backup that’s strictly data
  • Do you want to be able to browse files for selective restoration (such as a corrupt file or accidental deletion).
  • Do you want to stream files from the cloud?

You’ve asked about photos and music, plus you likely have business and personal files too.  Let me tell you how I handle this.  Your budget may be smaller than mine… so add these options as they make sense.

  • Local Backup. I have my photo library on one Drobo. I have my music on another. These units are set so two of the five drives can fail with no data loss.  Both of these units backup to an 8-bay Drobo unit.  Files are constantly being verified and scrubbed for corruption (plus the unit emails me if there is a drive failure).  All in all, more expensive than single drive solutions, but worth every penny to me.
  • Cloud Data Backup. The entire contents of my computer and my entire Lightroom catalog are backed up using Crashplan. Their unlimited backup plan is $4 a month.  Just be sure to update the uploader preferences to take advantage of your bandwidth.
  • Photo Backup. I’m using Mosaic (and yes they sponsor our site).  But I used them before that and really like their stuff. They make backing up easy with a simple Lightroom plugin.  Even better is the Mobile and Web app that lets my browse my entire uploaded collection quickly.
  • Music Backup. I use three services.  I like iTunes Match as it makes it easy to sync between multiple computers and download files again.  I love Spotify to browse my music and share it between my devices easily.  I also buy music from Amazon, so those files are automatically backed up by their cloud service.

While this may sound like a lot… it’s really not.  The local backup is essential.  The Cloud option is dirt cheap… but slow.  It may take a month for the first backup if you have a lot of data.  The services for photos and music are really about convenience.  I love using my smartphone and tablet.  Having my music and photos there (without filling up the storage) is essential.

There are competitors on the market for all of these… but this is how I solve the very problem you ask about.

______

This Post Sponsored by:

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Mosaic A complete solution for photographers using Lightroom who want to manage and share their photos. You can easily view images with their iOS app or web service. Plus your photos are backed up to the cloud with several plans to match your needs.

The HDR Learning Center Check out new ways to use High Dynamic Range photography to make compelling images. Free tutorials and posts to get results. Produced in partnership with HDR Soft.

500px Join the world’s premier photo community. 500px lets you discover, share, buy and sell inspiring photographs.

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28 Jul 07:21

Prosecuting Snowden

by schneier

I generally don't like stories about Snowden as a person, because they distract from the real story of the NSA surveillance programs, but this article on the costs and benefits of the US government prosecuting Edward Snowden is worth reading.

Additional concerns relate to the trial. Snowden would no doubt obtain high-powered lawyers. Protesters would ring the courthouse. Journalists would camp out inside. As proceedings dragged on for months, the spotlight would remain on the N.S.A.’s spying and the administration’s pursuit of leakers. Instead of fading into obscurity, the Snowden affair would continue to grab headlines, and thus to undermine the White House’s ability to shape political discourse.

A trial could turn out to be much more than a distraction: It could be a focal point for domestic and international outrage. From the executive branch’s institutional perspective, the greatest danger posed by the Snowden case is not to any particular program. It is to the credibility of the secrecy system, and at one remove the ideal of our government as a force for good.

[...]

More broadly, Snowden’s case may clash with certain foreign policy goals. The United States often wants other countries’ dissidents to be able to find refuge abroad; this is a longstanding plank of its human rights agenda. The United States also wants illiberal regimes to tolerate online expression that challenges their authority; this is the core of its developing Internet freedom agenda.

Snowden’s prosecution may limit our soft power to lead and persuade in these areas. Of course, U.S. officials could emphasize that Snowden is different, that he’s not a courageous activist but a reckless criminal. But that is what the repressive governments say about their prisoners, too.

EDITED TO ADD (7/22): Related is this article on whether Snowden can manage to avoid arrest. Here's the ending:

Speaking of movies, near the end of the hit film "Catch Me If You Can," there's a scene that Snowden might do well to watch while he's killing time in the airport lounge (or wherever he is) pondering his fate. The young forger, Frank Abagnale, who has been staying a step ahead of the feds, finally grows irritated and fatigued. Not because they are particularly skilled in their hunting, nor because they are getting closer, but simply because they won't give up. In a fit of pique, he blurts into the phone, "Stop chasing me!" On the other end, the dogged, bureaucratic Treasury agent, Carl Hanratty, answers, "I can't stop. It's my job."

Ultimately, this is why many people who have been involved in such matters believe Snowden will be caught. Because no matter how much he may love sticking it to the U.S. government and waving the banner of truth, justice, and freedom of speech, that mission will prove largely unsustainable without serious fundraisers, organizers and dedicated allies working on his behalf for a long time.

They'll have to make Edward Snowden their living, because those who are chasing him already have. Government agents will be paid every minute of every day for as long as it takes. Seasons may change and years may pass, but the odds say that one morning, he'll look out of a window, go for a walk or stop for a cup of coffee, and the trap will spring shut. It will be almost like a movie.

12 Jul 07:00

Cape Cod Lightroom Workshop

by jgilbert@photoshopuser.com (Matt Kloskowski)

I’m heading to Cape Cod later this month and I’ll be teaching a weekend-long Lightroom 5 workshop. The class is through Orleans Camera Store and they’ve got a great weekend planned. Here’s the deal. On Saturday, I’ll be doing a classroom-style workshop of Lightroom 5 where we’ll cover everything from organizing your photos and setting up your catalog and a good photo management system, to editing your photos using the Develop module and even some Photoshop. The seating is limited to 100 people and there’s only about 10 spots left so grab a seat because it’ll sell out by next week. Then on Sunday, there’s a more intimate class of 20 students that will meet in the morning for an early sunrise shoot. We’ll grab breakfast, and then head into the classroom for some more 1-on-1 teaching, critiques, and Lightroom training. Sunday is actually sold out, but you never know. Some one may cancel at the last minute so you could always call up to see if you can get on a waiting list.

Here’s the link for more info and to sign up. I spoke to the folks over at Orleans camera store this week and they’re psyched… I’m psyched… so if you’re in the area I hope you can make it (only if you’ll be psyched though) ;)
Thanks and have a great weekend.

25 Jun 22:01

Animals in the News

Time once more for a look at the animal kingdom and our interactions with the countless species that share our planet. Today's photos include Iranian dog owners under pressure, a bloom of mayflies, Kim Jong-un visiting Breeding Station No. 621, animals fleeing recent fires and floods, and a dachshund receiving acupuncture therapy. These images and many others are part of this roundup of animals in the news from recent weeks, seen from the perspectives of their human observers, companions, captors, and caretakers, part of an ongoing series on animals in the news. [38 photos]



James Hyslop, a Scientific Specialist at Christie's auction house holds a complete sub-fossilised elephant bird egg on March 27, 2013 in London, England. The massive egg, from the now-extinct elephant bird sold for $101,813 at Christie's "Travel, Science and Natural History" sale, on April 24, 2013 in London. Elephant birds were wiped out several hundred years ago. The egg, laid on the island of Madagascar, is believed to date back before the 17th century. (Oli Scarff/Getty Images)
    


19 Jun 06:35

Webbutikker fanget i tekst-tyveri: Må hoste op med 30.000 kroner

by Jesper Kildebogaard
Proshop og Happii hapsede tekster om mobiltelefoner på siden Mobiltjek.dk. Det koster dem nu 30.000 kroner i erstatning.
11 Jun 08:39

Dwarf Fortress

I may be the kind of person who wastes a year implementing a Turing-complete computer in Dwarf Fortress, but that makes you the kind of person who wastes ten more getting that computer to run Minecraft.