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09 Sep 20:35

EDGE-WaLMaRT

by Sinapse
Jdbaker5

cool

This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our site for full content.

WaLMaRT released extended version of platformer EDGE.

Description: EDGE, the award winning retro-styled platform game has been extended! Download the free EDGE Extended DLC containing over 40 brand new levels, additional music and all-new races against the notorious Dark Cube! In EDGE players take direct control of the cube and roll their way around the game’s dozens of levels. Search for all the prisms, find the shortcuts to improve your times and compete through the Steam leaderboards!

Features:

  • Retro styled platformer
  • Classic 8-bit inspired soundtrack
  • over 100 levels (original, bonus and extended levels)
  • Free ‘EDGE extended’ DLC Now Available!
  • Steam leaderboards
  • 40+ Achievements
  • For Mac & PC (uses SteamPlay)

Publisher: Two Tribes
Developer: Two Tribes
Genre: Action, Indie, Platformer

Release Name: EDGE-WaLMaRT
Size: 230.84 MB
Links: NFO | HOMEPAGE | STEAM
Torrent search: NTi | KAT

Download: UPLOADEDMIRROR (SiNGLE LiNKS)

more at RLSLOG.net

04 Sep 18:08

Dont Starve The Stuff of Nightmares-FLTDOX

by pz1
Jdbaker5

cool

This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our site for full content.

DOX division of well know scene group FLT brought to us the latest patch available for Don’t Starve, check here what’s new on this update. Don’t forget to carefully read the nfo. Enjoy.

Publisher: Klei Entertainment
Developer: Klei Entertainment
Genre: Adventure, Indie, Simulation

Release name: Dont_Starve_The_Stuff_of_Nightmares-FLTDOX
Size: 16MB in 4F
Links: Homepage - Steam - NFO

Download: NTiTPBUPLOADED.net

more at RLSLOG.net

04 Sep 17:10

Gone Home-WaLMaRT

by aeckz
Jdbaker5

cool

This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our site for full content.

Scene group WaLMaRT has released the game “Gone Home”. Enjoy!

Description: June 7th, 1995. 1:15 AM

You arrive home after a year abroad. You expect your family to greet you, but the house is empty. Something’s not right. Where is everyone? And what’s happened here? Unravel the mystery for yourself in Gone Home, a story exploration game from The Fullbright Company.

Gone Home is an interactive exploration simulator. Interrogate every detail of a seemingly normal house to discover the story of the people who live there. Open any drawer and door. Pick up objects and examine them to discover clues. Uncover the events of one family’s lives by investigating what they’ve left behind.

Features:

* A Personal Story: created by veterans of the BioShock series and the writer behind Minerva’s Den, Gone Home offers the rich, nuanced details of one family’s struggles to deal with uncertainty, heartache, and change.
* An Immersive Place: return to the 1990s by visiting a home where every detail has been carefully recreated, and the sounds of a rainstorm outside wrap you in the experience.
* No Combat, No Puzzles: Gone Home is a nonviolent and puzzle-free experience, inviting you to play at your own pace without getting attacked, stuck, or frustrated. This house wants you to explore it.
* Fully Interactive Investigation: discover what’s happened to the Greenbriars by examining a house full of the family’s personal possessions, and the notes and letters they’ve left behind. Use your powers of observation to piece together a story that unfolds as you explore.

Publisher: The Fullbright Company
Developer: The Fullbright Company
Genre: Adventure

Release Name: Gone.Home-WaLMaRT
Size: 472.95 MB
Links: HomepageIGNGamespotNFONTiTPB

Download: UploadedRyushare

more at RLSLOG.net

04 Sep 16:58

Gunpoint Incl UPDATE 3-VACE

by aeckz
Jdbaker5

cool

This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our site for full content.

Group VACE has released puzzle game Gunpoint with 3rd update. Enjoy!

Description: Gunpoint is a stealth puzzle game that lets you rewire its levels to trick people. You play a freelance spy who takes jobs from his clients to break into high security buildings and steal sensitive data. To get past security, you’ll need to make creative use of your main gadget: the Crosslink. It lets you see how all the security devices in a level are wired up, and then you can just click and drag with the mouse to wire them differently. So you can connect a lightswitch to a trapdoor, then flick it when a guard walks across to make him fall through.

Features:

  • Rewire levels to work however you want
  • Trick guards into trapping themselves or shooting each other
  • Throw yourself – and others – through plate glass windows
  • Investigate a noir-inspired story of murder and espionage over 20 missions
  • Choose what to tell your clients, including lying to trick them
  • Choose your own playstyle: quick, quiet, non-violent, no living witnesses, or any combination
  • Discover new solutions to levels that no-one else has thought of
  • Buy specialist gadgets to suit how you want to play
  • All story stuff is skippable
  • Hardest puzzles are optional
  • No bosses – everyone dies in one shot, including you

Publisher: Tom Francis
Developer: Tom Francis
Genre: Puzzle

Release Name: Gunpoint.Incl.UPDATE.3-VACE
Size: 49.77 MB
Links: HomepageIGNGamespotNFONTiTPB

Download: UploadedRyushare

more at RLSLOG.net

08 Jul 19:08

One of Microsoft's Best-Kept Secrets - Python Tools for Visual Studio (PTVS)

by Scott Hanselman
Jdbaker5

cool

Python Tools for VS
 

I've talked some about the sweet support for node and PHP in Azure. You can also File | New | Node.js express application in WebMatrix, or run WordPress and get intellisense as well.

"I installed windows just so i can use PTVS" - Comment on Hacker News

But I'm consistently shocked that folks forget about Python at Microsoft. I am a C# person, myself, but the Developer Division at Microsoft loves their languages. C++, VB, C#, F#, etc and they aren't messing about when they get serious about a language.

One of the least-known and most-kick-butt free products we have is PTVS - Python Tools for Visual Studio. Whether you're just interested in learning Python or you're a hardcore PhD who wants mixed-language Python and C++ debugging or somewhere in between, you gotta check this out. (Seriously, the mixed-mode debugging thing can't be overstressed...)

The Misconceptions

  • Microsoft? Python?  Oh, it must be all about IronPython, that's dead, right?
    • IronPython is a community-run project and just put an 2.7.4 alpha out last month.  PTVS fully supports IronPython, but the most advanced support is for standard CPython!
  • PTVS needs VisualStudio? I don't have any money.
    • PTVS, combined with the Integrated/isolated VS Shell is completely and perpetually free.  And with the advent of VS2013, they've combined them into a single installer: https://pytools.codeplex.com/releases (at bottom of page).

This is Real

Here's my VS2013 after installing PyTools (PTVS). I've got IronPython which is Python running under the .NET CLR, but I've also got Django apps as well as a regular CPython or making a new project from existing code.

Python inside VS

You can see that PTVS knows what Python engines I have installed, and I can easily switch between them. Here you can see that VS is refreshing the auto-completion (intellisense) databases for each version.

A list of Python Interpreters

There's also a complete REPL inside Visual Studio for each:

Python REPL inside VS

Developing Django Apps in Visual Studio

Maybe you're a Django (one of Python's Web Frameworks) web developer, you can use VS to develop your app.

Go File New | Django App, then make a new Python Virtual Environment from the Solution Explorer, and watch Visual Studio freaking installed pip for you (the Python package manager). It's very seamless.

Adding a Virtual Python Environment

Which gives me this:

Python in my VS and I'm FREAKING OUT

Then I right click on "dev" and just like NuGet (except this is Python, so pip) I install django:

Installing Django

Django is massive, so this took a while, but still! And.....I've accomplished Hello World in Django. Well, Hello Django, at least, launched from Visual Studio.

Hello Django

You should feel free to go and run through the whole Django Tutorial if you like and even deploy your app to Azure! You can host Django on a regular Azure Web Site, or a Virtual Machine if you want more control.

You can even interactively debug Python running in Azure on Linux from your Visual Studio instance! Check out Steve do just that at PyCon in this YouTube video.

There's a bunch of great educational and quick start Tutorials on the Python Tools YouTube Channel, they are a great resource to bookmark.

You can attach to remote Python processes over SSL and debug if you like.

Setting up Python Debugging

It's Really Integrated

Let's get real here for a second. Lots of projects plug stuff into Visual Studio. You may have made it this far into the post and be saying "oh, wah wah, this thing sets up some batch files and some syntax highlighting and calls itself a full-featured Python IDE."

Um, no. This is the best of VS and the best of Python and I'm blown away. Check this out. PTVS knows that I'm doing unit testing here and they've integrated Python Unit Testing with the VS Unit Testing UI.

Unit Testing in Python and VS? My heart can't take it!

This is debugging, remote debugging, cross language debugging, tool tips, watches, locals, call stacks, unit testing, full REPL with inline graphics, profiling, cloud publish, best of class CPython support, and so much more.

Nailed it

If you're into Python or knows someone who is, for reals, drink it in and get on board at https://pytools.codeplex.com. Check out their samples. They've got Python talking to Kinect, Python talking to Excel and more. Their PTVS Documentation is really good as well.

Just getting started? Well, go Learn Python The Hard Way.

Installing PTVS

Here's the complete install instrucitons. You need VS, the PTVS, and some Python.

    PTVS is free

    Finally, explore the Resources and Docs for Python Tools for Visual Studio, including, but not limited to Editing, Refactoring, Unit Tests, Django, IPython notebook and Azure cloud computing, Kinect for Python and Pyvot - an Excel to Python bridge.



    © 2013 Scott Hanselman. All rights reserved.
         
    03 Jul 18:35

    Better Sorting Technology Means Recycled Glass Can Now Go into Bottles, Rather than Asphalt

    recyclglass.jpg

    The streets of New York don't glitter with gold, but they are pretty sparkly from all that recycled glass mixed in with the asphalt. Putting crushed-up glass into roadways was previously the go-to option for what to do with the stuff, since it was just about impossible to separate broken glass from the other stuff in the recycling bin in a cost-effective way.

    Now, however, better sorting technologies mean recycling companies can isolate clear glass—that's the stuff you want, if you want to turn it back into bottles--through a hi-tech series of automated processes. Check it out:

    Secrets From The Recycling Plant: How A Used Bottle Becomes A New Bottle from Planet Money on Vimeo.

    I realize it would be impossible to collect old bottles, sanitize them and re-use them, as we once did with milk bottles, but I wonder what the energy costs of that would be, versus recycling.

    (more...)
        


    27 Jun 16:24

    iD: a sequel to Madeline Ashby's excellent debut novel vN

    by Cory Doctorow
    Last year, I reviewed Madeline Ashby's smashing debut novel vN, a novel about robots, perverts and power. Now I'm delighted to see that Madeline has a sequel out, iD. She's written about it for John Scalzi's Big Idea:

    Readers of vN wanted to know more about New Eden Ministries, the church that developed the vN for post-apocalyptic mass production. Now they will. They wanted to know more about Mecha, the city in Japan built by and for robots. Now they will. They wanted to know how Amy thought she could just start orphanages for unwanted robots in the middle of the ocean, without any repercussions from the human world. They’ll see how that turned out.

    iD

    The Big Idea: Madeline Ashby>

        


    22 Jun 20:09

    Obama (candidate) vs Obama (president) on NSA spying

    by Cory Doctorow
    Jdbaker5

    meanie

    Here's Obama the Presidential Candidate debating Obama the Second Term President on surveillance; note how Obama the younger smashes through the cheap "privacy vs security" rhetoric of Obama the elder, showing the man for a thoroughly co-opted cynic who'll let the nation's spooks run wild. Here's Mike Masnick's take:

    Not only is there a massive difference in what's being said, but also in how it's being said. The Candidate Obama spoke clearly, directly strongly and without equivocation about protecting civil liberties and not giving up our freedoms. President Obama's speech, on the other hand, sounds weak, vague and unpresidential in comparison.

    Candidate Obama Debating President Obama On Civil Liberties vs. Government Surveillance

        


    22 Jun 02:32

    [video]

    21 Jun 13:34

    Взгляд

    21 Jun 13:32

    The redheads are here, we’re safe now (69 Photos)

    by Bob
    21 Jun 13:16

    The Top 15 Worst Miss USA Answers Will Leave You Scratching Your Head

    Submitted by: Unknown

    19 Jun 15:22

    An Insane John McAfee Teaches You How to Uninstall His Software (NSFW)

    by Jamie Condliffe

    John McAfee is one weird guy, and this video only serves to bolster that reputation. Uploaded to YouTube last night, it's a hilarious—and entirely NSFW—video which sees the man himself teach you how to uninstall McAfee Antivirus.

    Read more...

        


    18 Jun 15:24

    Keep your guinea pig protected with a rodent-sized suit of armor

    by Lauren Davis
    Jdbaker5

    cool

    Keep your guinea pig protected with a rodent-sized suit of armor

    If your guinea pig routinely dashes off into armed combat (or just likes the look of scale mail), you might want to outfit him or her in this handsome suit of armor, perfect for rolly-polly rodents.

    Read more...

        


    14 Jun 20:44

    Hurts So Good: A Beginner’s Guide Self-Myofascial/Trigger Point Release

    by Brett & Kate McKay

    header

    This post is brought to you by Poland Spring® Brand 100% Natural Spring Water.What’s this?

    We can’t all afford a personal masseuse or athletic trainer to regularly rub out the kinks, soreness, and tight spots in our muscles. But there is a way to massage oneself, with the benefit of being able to control exactly where and how much pressure to apply. For that reason, in recent years, doing exercises with foam rollers, massage balls, and the like has gained immense popularity. Yet with new products and cheesy accompanying infomercials coming out all the time, knowing what to do and how to do it can be an intimidating task. At worst, doing exercises wrong can lead to pain and discomfort, and ultimately injury.

    You may have heard varying terms for these exercises: trigger point release, active release techniques, or perhaps something similar. The technical term, however, is self-myofascial release (SMR). Other terms may mean different things for different people, so we’ll stick with SMR for the purposes of this post.

    Benefits of Foam Rolling

    Let’s dissect this science-y term we’ve just learned before diving into the how-tos of the various exercises.

    Fascia, as physical therapist Jane Anderberg described it to me, is much like that slimy layer on a chicken breast that you can peel off. Every structure in the body — organs, muscles, nerves, blood vessels, etc. — is covered in a layer of fascia. It’s almost akin to oil in your car’s engine — it allows everything to run smoothly and slide without friction. Through the overstress of our muscles, whether through overuse or trauma, our layers of fascia can get tears in them. When the tears don’t heal properly, the various layers of fascia in your body can adhere together in spots (called adhesions), which will cause pain and discomfort. These adhesions keep your muscles from working the way they’re supposed to, which keeps your body from living up to its potential for strong and natural movement.

    This is where where foam rolling and other similar exercises come into play. When we put pressure on these adhesions, they are released, and we can get back to optimal physical performance.

    In addition to releasing these adhesions, SMR also has some general benefits for our bodies:

    • aids in preventing injuries
    • gets rid of knots and tightness in your muscles
    • physically de-stresses your body so it can work more efficiently
    • increases flexibility
    • increases blood flow, which helps for faster recovery from workouts
    • reduces soreness from workouts

    To put together a comprehensive tutorial on some of the best SMR exercises you can perform, I talked to Damyko Busby a trainer who specializes in trigger point release at the Sky Fitness and Well Being gym here in Tulsa, OK.

    What You’ll Need

    • Damyko used Trigger Point Performance products in his photo demonstration. They’re a bit pricy, but they can give you a more targeted massage. If you don’t want to fork over the dough for Trigger Point Performance, you can get by with…
    • Foam roller. Several different foam rollers exist on the market at different price levels. A plain-old high density foam roller is the most affordable option and will get the job done. The only problem is after months of use, they start to lose their round shape. A foam roller with PVC pipe in the middle solves that problem. The added sturdiness of the PVC pipe also gives a deeper, more intense massage. If you want to get really targeted with your SMR, you can get foam rollers that have grids molded onto the surface.
    • Ball. Many physical therapists and mobility trainers recommend a lacrosse ball for self-myofascial release. I’ve been using one for a few months now and can’t complain. You can pick one up at Academy Sports for a few bucks.
    • Yoga block. Some of the exercises utilize a yoga block. Not necessary, but can come in handy.
    • Mismatched compression socks (optional).

    General Guidelines

    • Roll on the foam roller/ball until you feel a “trigger point” or “hot spot.” You’ll know you found one when it hurts. When you find a trigger point, stop and just rest on the foam roller for 10 to 20 seconds. Contrary to popular belief, it’s the pressure, not the rolling, that smooths fascia.
    • Avoid applying pressure on bones and joints. Just muscle.
    • Combine an abbreviated SMR with your regular warm-up on workout days. I like to focus on the spots that I have the most trouble with. Use one of your rest days to devote 30 to 45 minutes to SMR for your whole body.
    • Drink plenty of water after an intense SMR session.

    Feet

    Using Trigger Point Footballer

    feetroller

    1. Start with Footballer on heel. 2. Roll to ball of foot, stopping and applying pressure on any trigger points you find along the way. 3. Roll the Footballer on the inside of your sole. 4. And on the outside. Do the same with the other foot.

    Using Lacrosse Ball or Massage Ball

    feetball

    You can use a lacrosse ball for this exercise. 1. Start at ball of your foot. 2. Roll to your heel, stopping and applying pressure on any trigger points you find along the way. Don’t forget to get the insides and outsides of your feet.

    Soleus (Inner Calf)

    Using a Foam Roller

    calfroller

    Put one leg on top of the foam roller with your other leg crossed on top. Roll up and down your inner-calf to find your hot spots. When you find a hot spot, stop and lift your butt off the ground with your hands to apply more pressure on your leg. In addition to applying steady pressure on your trigger points, you can also rock side-to-side on them.

    Using Trigger Point Footballer

    rollercalf

    1. Place Footballer on the yoga block and your calf on the Footballer. 2. Place your other leg on top of the leg that you’re treating. 2. Roll all the way down your calf to your heel and all the way up near your knee. Stop on any trigger points and apply downward pressure on them. 4. Rotate your leg in to really work that soleus muscle.

    Using Lacrosse or Massage Ball

    ballcalf

    1. Place ball on yoga block, one leg on ball, and the other leg on top of the leg you’re treating. Roll up and down leg to find trigger points. 2. When you find a trigger point, point your toe forward and hold for a few seconds. 3. Then point your toe back towards you and hold. Alternate between pointing forward and back a few times. 4. Don’t forget to really work the inside of the soleus.

    Gastrocneumius (Outer Calf)

    Using Trigger Point Footballer

    rollersidecalf

    Using Lacrosse or Massage Ball

    ballsidecalf

    You can do the same thing with a ball. When you find a hot spot, use your non-supporting hand to rock your leg back and forth on the ball. It’s going to hurt, but it’s the good kind of hurt.

    Quads

    Using Trigger Point Quadballer

    quadroller

    1. Place the Quadballler just above your knee. 2. Lie down and prop yourself up on your forearms. Roll the Quadballer up and down your quad, stopping on any trigger points. Gently rock side-to-side. 3. In addition to rocking side-to-side on hot spots, bend your leg back at your knee. Hold for a few seconds. 4. Straighten your leg. Hold. Alternate bending and straightening your leg on your hot spots on your quad. You can do this with a foam roller too.

    Hip Adductors

    Using Trigger Point Quadballer

    insidequadroller1

    1. Place Quadballer on inside of your thigh. 2. Lie down, propping yourself up on your forearms. Roll Quadballer up to your groin, stopping on any trigger points. Apply pressure. 3. Straighten your leg and hold for a few seconds. 4. Bend your leg at your knee and hold. Alternate between straightening and bending on hot spots.

    Using Foam Roller

    interiorquadfoam1

    1. Start with foam roller near your knee on the inside of your thigh. 2. Roll up towards your groin, stopping on any trigger points. 3. With the foam roller, you can go higher up your adductor than you can with a Quadballer. Repeat on other leg.

    IT Band

    This is my favorite trigger point release exercise. If you run a lot, chances are you’ve experienced “runner’s knee.” Runner’s knee is caused by a tightening in your Iliotibial band, or IT band. The IT band is a thick band of fascia running on the side of your leg from your knee to your pelvis. Massaging your IT band can help loosen up tightness and prevent future injuries. Take it easy when you’re first starting out rolling your IT band. It’s going to hurt.

    itbandfoam1

    1. We’re going to roll the foam roller up and down the side of our leg starting at the top of the hip and down to just above the knee. 2. Lean back on your arm and bend your non-treated leg for added support. Roll up and down IT band, stopping on any hot spots. 3. If you really want to dig into those trigger points, lift both legs off the ground. Grimace. 4. In addition to applying steady pressure on hot spots, rock side-to-side on them. Repeat on other leg.

    itfoam2

    1. Turn your body in so you really work the inner part of your IT band. 2. Turn your body out to work the outer part.

    Piriformis

    This is my other favorite area to work during SMR sessions. If you spend your day sitting down like most folks, your piriformis muscle is probably very tight. Giving your butt a deep massage with a foam roller or ball will help alleviate some of that tightness.

    Using Foam Roller

    gluteroller

    1. Sit on the foam roller and shift all your weight to one side of your butt. Your piriformis is located near your hip joint. You’ll know you’ve found it when it starts hurting so good. Cross your other foot over your knee. 2. Roll backwards and forwards to look for trigger points. Hold when you find them. Repeat on other side.

    Using Lacrosse or Massage Ball

    gluteball

    1. Place ball on piriformis.  2. Find hot spots on piriformis and hold. 3. To really dig into it, lift the knee up on the side that you’re working. 4. Lower your knee like you’re doing a butterfly stretch. Hold. Bring back up. Alternate between a down and up position.

    gluteball2

    1. Another way to work your piriformis with the ball is to straighten your leg out in front of you. 2. Maintaining a straight leg, bring your leg out to the side. Hold. Repeat on other piriformis.

    Lats

    lat2

    1. Lay on your side with the foam roller beneath your lat near your armpit. 2. Work the roller down your side stopping and holding on trigger points. Don’t go too far down, though! You always want to stay on muscle. 3. To really work those hot spots, rock back and forth on the foam roller. 4. Rotate until your face is looking up at the ceiling and roll up and down to work the lats closer to your spine. Repeat on other side.

    Biceps

    biceps

    1. Lie on your stomach with your bicep resting on the foam roller. Work the roller up and down your bicep to find trigger points. 2. When you find a trigger point, rotate your arm in so that your thumb is pointing down. Hold. 3. Rotate your arm so that your thumb is pointing up. Hold. 4. Rotate your arm in and out like this for a few cycles. Repeat on other bicep.

    Back/Trapezius

    backroller1

    1. Place roller at base of spine. 2. Lean back. 3. Work your way up and down roller stopping on any hot spots. Be careful about applying too much pressure to your spine. 4. When the roller reaches your trapezius, arch your back and hold.

    backroller2

    5. With the roller beneath your trapezius, give yourself a hug. Hold. 6. Lift your arms straight in front of you. Hold. Alternate between self-hugs and raising your arms.

    middleback

    This next exercise requires two Trigger Point therapy massage balls and the little bag that holds them (don’t snicker). We’ll be hitting the fascia on the lower part of the trapezius.

    back1

    1. Lie back on the ground so that both Trigger Point balls are in-between your shoulder blades. 2. You may want to rest your head on a yoga block so you can apply enough pressure on the fascia you’re going to work. 3. Lift your arms straight in front of you. Hold. 4. Spread your arms crucifix style. Hold.

    backhug

    Biiig hug! Aww… owww!

    back2

    5. Lift your arms straight out. 6. Bring your right arm back above your head. Hold. 7. Bring your left arm back above your head. Look at that face. That’s the face of a man who’s getting rejuvenating deep tissue massage.

    Traps with a Lacrosse or Massage Ball

    upperback1

    1. Place ball between the wall and upper part of your trapezius. 2. Turn your body away from the wall. 3. Roll back on ball until you find your hot spots. 3. Lift arm straight out. Apply pressure on hot spot. Repeat on other side.

    upperback2

    5. Give yourself a hug. 6. Pull your arm on the side that you’re working on the ball across your body with your other arm.

    Chest

    chestball

    1. Place ball on pec and press down with both hands. 2. Roll ball around on pec until you find a hot spot and hold for a few seconds.

    chestballblock

    To apply more pressure on the ball you can use a yoga block.

    chestblockwall

    Or you can place the yoga ball on the wall to get more pressure.

    Deltoids (Shoulders)

    delts

    1. Stand with your shoulder to the wall. Place massage ball between you and wall. 2. Roll deltoid on ball until you find trigger points. 3. Really focus on the front part of your shoulder.

    deltblock1

    1-2. Use a yoga block to apply more pressure.

    Neck

    neck1

    1. Rest your neck on the foam roller, like you’re using it for a pillow. 2. Turn your head to your right. 3. Then to your left. No need to apply pressure -your own bodyweight will suffice.

    neck3

    5. Shift your weight on to your right side. 6. Perform a slight bridge by lifting your hips off the ground. 7. Rotate all the way onto your side. 8. Take a nap. Just kidding. Hold for a few seconds and then repeat on the other side.

    Big thanks to Damyko for taking the time to show us how to do some trigger point release. Another thanks to Jane Anderberg from Agility Physical Therapy and Sports Medicine in Denver for helping with the science.

        


    13 Jun 15:01

    Вечереет

    Jdbaker5

    cool

    10 Jun 20:57

    Austerity: the greatest bait-and-switch in history

    by Cory Doctorow
    Jdbaker5

    cool

    Mark Blyth, a delightfully sweary Scottish economist, talks for about an hour to Googlers about the stupidity of austerity as a means of recovering from recession, describing it in colorful, easy-to-grasp language. This is brilliant, accessible and important economics:

    Governments today in both Europe and the United States have succeeded in casting government spending as reckless wastefulness that has made the economy worse. In contrast, they have advanced a policy of draconian budget cuts--austerity--to solve the financial crisis. We are told that we have all lived beyond our means and now need to tighten our belts. This view conveniently forgets where all that debt came from. Not from an orgy of government spending, but as the direct result of bailing out, recapitalizing, and adding liquidity to the broken banking system. Through these actions private debt was rechristened as government debt while those responsible for generating it walked away scot free, placing the blame on the state, and the burden on the taxpayer.

    That burden now takes the form of a global turn to austerity, the policy of reducing domestic wages and prices to restore competitiveness and balance the budget. The problem, according to political economist Mark Blyth, is that austerity is a very dangerous idea. First of all, it doesn't work. As the past four years and countless historical examples from the last 100 years show, while it makes sense for any one state to try and cut its way to growth, it simply cannot work when all states try it simultaneously: all we do is shrink the economy. In the worst case, austerity policies worsened the Great Depression and created the conditions for seizures of power by the forces responsible for the Second World War: the Nazis and the Japanese military establishment. As Blyth amply demonstrates, the arguments for austerity are tenuous and the evidence thin. Rather than expanding growth and opportunity, the repeated revival of this dead economic idea has almost always led to low growth along with increases in wealth and income inequality. Austerity demolishes the conventional wisdom, marshaling an army of facts to demand that we recognize austerity for what it is, and what it costs us.

    Mark Blyth: Austerity - The History of a Dangerous Idea (via Memex 1.1)

        


    03 Jun 15:47

    Walking Your Octopus: A Guidebook to the Domesticated Cephalopod

    by Mark Frauenfelder
    Jdbaker5

    cool

    Bob Self, publisher of Baby Tattoo, says: "I have a lot of fun publishing books by artists whose work I really dig, but I had extra fun producing Baby Tattoo's newest (and widest) book Walking Your Octopus: A Guidebook to the Domesticated Cephalopod. The lavishly illustrated book is now available for pet lovers, octopus owners and art aficionados everywhere. Written and illustrated by 16 year veteran Disney story artist Brian Kesinger, the physical ink-on-paper book was designed for those who enjoy the more tactile things in life (a version of the book with fancy metal corners is available exclusively from the publisher). Not to leave out those who prefer their books to be enjoyed electronically, this project also marks Baby Tattoo's first excursion into the realm of e-books with a spiffy iOS version of the book that includes music and narration.

    Walking Your Octopus eBook for iOS | Hardcover

        


    29 May 15:56

    Little Italy Surprise: Serenading tourists on New York's Mulberry Street

    by Xeni Jardin
    Jdbaker5

    cool

    The latest CDZA musical experiment: Serenading Tourists on Memorial Day Weekend, from four stories above Mulberry street. Charles Yang on Violin, Michael Thurber on Double Bass, playing a Tarantella and "That's Amore." (Thanks, Joe Sabia!)
        


    29 May 13:44

    Watch BMX virtuoso Tim Knoll perform insane freestyle bike tricks

    by Xeni Jardin
    Jdbaker5

    cool

    A wonderful new video of graceful and impossible bike tricks by virtuoso BMX freestyler Tim Knoll, who is based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Filmed and edited by Tony Schneidewind. Music by Phil Knoll. Here's an interview with Tim. (Thanks, Joe Sabia!)