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02 Jun 02:08

Smart Glass: Flip a Switch to Make Opaque Turn Transparent

by Urbanist
[ By WebUrbanist in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

smart glass windows walls

Kiss curtains, blinds and shades goodbye - smart glass is not just an Xbox enhancement. Smart glass technology is evolving and faster than ever. It can shade rooms on demand, making them transparent and reduce thermal gain … all just by flipping a switch or even turning a key in a door.

smart glass door handle activated

There are various methods employed to make the transition, but one of the most fascinating involves low-power electrochromatic devices that can be activated in a variety of clever ways.

smart glass on off

Essentially, a current is passed through the window panel to turn it from transparent to translucent then back again – the voltage does not need to be sustained in between.

smart glass room examples

Aside from micro-blinds and mechanical smart windows, other variants on this technology include suspended-particle devices, which can be finely-tuned to allow in (and block out) desired levels of light, heat and glare.

smart glass passenger train

Applications to date include commercial windows and doors in places ranging from private skyscraper offices and public restrooms to hospital rooms high-speed trains. Smart glass can also be found in luxury sunroofs, meeting spaces, projection screens and television studio surfaces. As it becomes easier and cheaper to produce, the applications are limitless (above images by Sebastian Terfloth).

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[ By WebUrbanist in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

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02 Jun 01:33

explore-blog: What Pangea would look like mapped with modern...

31 May 00:04

Help the EFF save podcasting from a patent troll

by Mark Frauenfelder
The EFF is teaming up with Harvard’s Cyberlaw Clinic to challenge a lousy patent that a troll is using as an excuse to sue and send demand letters to podcasters. The EFF needs $30,000 to file the challenge. If you enjoy podcasts (like the ones we offer) and don't want them to go away, please chip in to fund the EFF's efforts.

A couple of months ago we wrote that podcasting was under threat from a patent troll. At that time, a patent troll named Personal Audio LLC had sued three podcasters and sent demand letters to a number of others. Since then, Personal Audio has filed two new lawsuits—this time against CBS and NBC. It has also sent additional demand letters to small podcasting operations. We’ve written often in the past about how patent trolls are a drain on innovation, and this latest troll is no exception. Since many podcasters barely make a profit, or simply do it for love, a shakedown from a patent troll threatens to shut down their program.

As with so many patent troll cases, the troll is asking for money despite having contributed nothing to the industry. By its own admission, Personal Audio tried and failed at its attempt to make an audio player. Having failed at actually making something, it became a shell company that does nothing but sue on its patents. And now it wants a handout from those who worked hard to create popular podcasts.

Save Podcasting
    


30 May 02:04

Painted People: 31 Works of Art on Human Canvas

by Steph
[ By Steph in Drawing & Digital. ]

Painted people main
Human bodies become exotic animals and crashed cars, or blend almost seamlessly into intricate backgrounds, with careful application of body paint and a bit of acrobatics. These 31 works of art turn people into living canvases, sometimes celebrating the graceful shapes and movement of their bodies, and at other times, disguising it.

Alexa Meade’s 2D Paintings on 3D People

Painted People 2D 1
Painted People 2D 2

Those aren’t two-dimensional paintings on a flat surface; they’re real, live people transformed into human canvases by artist Alexa Meade. “The models are transformed into embodiments of the artist’s interpretation of their essence,” says Meade. “When captured on film, the living, breathing people underneath the paint disappear, overshadowed by the masks of themselves.

Wallpaper People by Emma Hack

Painted People Wallpaper 1
Painted People Wallpaper 2

Painted models virtually disappear into patterned backgrounds in works by artist Emma Hack. The models must be painstakingly hand-painted to match up perfectly with backgrounds that are often very complex, and then remain perfectly still so the scene can be photographed. It can take as long as nineteen hours to apply the makeup for a single scene.

Human Animals by Gesine Marwedel

Painted People Animals

The graceful, flexible bodies of performance artists are an ideal medium for artist Gesine Marwedel, who uses paint to turn them into animals like flamingos, dolphins, hummingbirds and tigers. “Body painting is not just paint on a living canvas, it is picking up the body shapes in a subject and the painting on the body,” Marwedel told PSFK. “It is the transformation of a human being into a breathing, moving, living work of art.”

Painted Alive: Brilliant Work by Craig Tracy

Painted People Alive Tracy

Owner of the world’s first gallery dedicated to fine art body painting (located in New Orleans), Craig Tracy creates his own beautiful and surreal body painting portraits that blend human models into backgrounds or turn them into psychedelic works of art. Rather than hiding the models, however, Tracy celebrates the shapes of their bodies, often exaggerating them and using them for creative effect.

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Painted People 31 Works Of Art On Human Canvas

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[ By Steph in Drawing & Digital. ]

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29 May 11:10

May 28, 2013


Geeks! 5 Second Films just launched their kickstarter!





And a special message from Lord Ashby:

INTERNET! As most of you know, we've done a fair amount of work with 5 Second Films over the past year. If you loved Existential Crisis and Dragons, 50 Shades of Domestic Gray, Sanctions, Batman Academy, Office Survival, The Ugly Duckling and many more YOU ALREADY LOVE THEM!

Well, today they've launched a Kickstarter for their FIRST MOVIE. Yup. 5 Second Films is making a movie. Go check it out. You know it's going to be amazing.

29 May 10:59

Free David Byrne/St Vincent EP

by Cory Doctorow

OK, this is the best music-related news of 2013 to date -- David Byrne and St Vincent have released an EP of material from their Love This Giant tour (both the best tour and the best album I heard in 2012), and it's totally free. David Byrne writes,

After the release of Love This Giant last year, we did a tour of North America and Australia that was like nothing we’ve ever done before—drums, keys and Annie and I supported by 8 choreographed brass players. We did the new material, but also a lot of recognizable songs, arranged for that group. The sound is incredible, and it’s a bit of a visual spectacle as well. We were pretty excited at how it turned out. The critical and audience response was great too! Touring a group that size with a fairly complex show is a big financial gulp, so it has taken us a while to collect enough offers in North America and Europe, but ow they are in and we kick off in a few weeks.

One of our business folks had the idea that we might offer a taste of what we’re up to—so we put together an EP to give folks a taste of what to expect. It has one song that didn’t make it on the record (a waltz featuring some lovely glass harmonica), a couple of energized remixes of some of the album tunes and two live tracks of the sort of more familiar material we do in the set. Did we say it’s FREE? We’re very excited at how this whole project came out so we want more folks to discover it. Download it below!

Also, the pair are still touring!

David Byrne & St. Vincent announce release of Brass Tactics EP

    


28 May 21:03

Add Comments to a Formula in Excel for Your Future Reference

by Melanie Pinola

Add Comments to a Formula in Excel for Your Future Reference

Comments in Excel come in handy for documenting your spreadsheet so you can remember what all the formulas are for or to provide instructions for other spreadsheet users. The How-To Geek points out a special function you can use to add a comment directly in the formula cell.

This is the N() function. To use it, just add a plus sign after your formula and whatever you want as your comment in quotes within the function, as in the screenshot above. Then, whenever you click on that cell, you'll see both the formula and your comment on it. The function works in Excel 2013 and earlier versions.

Excel users probably already know the other way to add a comment to a cell—through the "Insert a Comment" command. That creates a sticky-note-like comment that pops up when you mouse over the cell.

The N() function above is better if you don't want those comments and red triangles cluttering your spreadsheet and you're adding comments for your personal use.

Additionally, the comments show up when you search Excel, so you could use the N() function to "tag" cells with formulas for easy reference later (e.g., "Q2 budget" or "estimate").

Add Comments to Formulas and Cells in Excel 2013 | How-To Geek

28 May 21:01

Upload Anything to Flickr's New 1TB of Space With a Simple Hack

by Eric Ravenscraft

Upload Anything to Flickr's New 1TB of Space With a Simple Hack

Recently, Flickr gave all of its users 1 terabyte of free space. Reddit user rlaw68 shows how to utilize that space for more than just photos and videos.

The process involves combining the file you want to upload with a gif. Flickr checks the headers of the file and sees a picture and grabs the whole thing. Unbeknownst to the server, though, your file is tagging along in a makeshift zip package. As per rlaw68's instructions:

So, how to do this:

1) Put the two files you want to combine into a single folder, preferably off the root of your drive, say c:\combos

2) Hit the Windows key + R, type in CMD and hit Enter

3) Change the directory to the root:

C:\users\Bill>cd \

4) And then to the folder where your files are:

C:>cd combos

5) Now, to combine the files type:

C:\combos>copy /B project1.zip+cat.gif project1.gif

6) That’s it! Now you’ll see a file called project1.gif in your \combos folder that you can upload and store on Flickr – it’ll appear as just whatever the .gif file was that you combined with your archive.

When you want to access it again, you just download the file, rename it with a .zip extension and open it like normal. If you're using a Mac, WonderHowTo also has a primer on how to accomplish this task.

This may not be useful for most situations. Flickr has an upload limit on photos of 200MB, and this process means that it's somewhat cumbersome for daily use instead of a service like Dropbox, but in a pinch, it never hurts to have a backup plan. While it won't work for uploading to Flickr, you can also hide files in a JPEG to keep certain data out of sight.

How to use that 1TB of free Flickr space to store stuff other than images | Reddit via WonderHowTo

25 May 00:26

Van Halen's "Eruption" guitar solo shredded by 14yo girl

by Xeni Jardin
The guitar solo from Van Halen's song "Eruption" played by Tina, who is 14. More than 3 million video views in 3 days. She was taught and filmed by Renaud Louis-Servais, and she's playing a Vigier Excalibur Custom.

Below, Eddie Van Halen performing the same, live.

    


22 May 10:29

Umbrella

by arbroath
22 May 10:25

Photo



20 May 22:18

Tawny-bellied hermit (Untamed Americas - NGC)



Tawny-bellied hermit (Untamed Americas - NGC)

18 May 12:37

Cambrian Fossil With Scissor-Like Claws Is Named For Johnny Depp

by Clay Dillow

Pack it up, science, we're done here.

Academy Awards continue to elude Johnny Depp, but as of today no one can say he hasn’t been immortalized. A 505-million-year-old Cambrian fossil of a creature with scissor-like claws has been named Kooteninchela deppi in honor of Depp’s role as Edward Scissorhands in the movie of the same name.

“When I first saw the pair of isolated claws in the fossil records of this species I could not help but think of Edward Scissorhands,” says researcher David Legg, who conducted the research into the fossil as part of his PhD at Imperial College London, in a statement. “Even the genus name, Kootenichela, includes the reference to this film as ‘chela’ is Latin for claws or scissors. In truth, I am also a bit of a Depp fan and so what better way to honour the man than to immortalise him as an ancient creature that once roamed the sea?”

Kooteninchela deppi shares many attributes with Depp, who is a wealthy actor who owns his own island. For instance, Kooteninchela deppi lived off the coast of British Colombia some half a billion years ago and used its scissor-like appendages to scour the seafloor sediment for creatures hiding there. And Depp was in a movie about pirates.

But seriously, Kooteninchela deppi is an important find and an important ancestor in the tree of life. It belongs to a group called the “great-appendage” arthropods (in reference to the claw-like appendages they share) and are early ancestors to everything from scorpions and centipedes to insects and crabs. So it’s legacy is quite extensive, branching out into everything from crustaceans to spiders. So in terms of its body of work, that’s something even a prolific a thespian as Depp has to respect.

[Imperial College London]

    


17 May 23:41

i can read

by nachgedacht
17 May 21:35

Scientists Agree On Climate Change, Why Doesn't The Public?

A new study confirms that the vast majority of scientists who research the climate accept that the planet is warming and human beings are largely responsible. Yet a large slice of the American public believes that scientists are deeply split about global warming.

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15 May 13:08

Suspected poacher trampled to death by elephant he was trying to shoot

by arbroath
Electrikmonkrjs

I like when the elephants win

A suspected poacher has reportedly been trampled to death by an elephant as he tried to shoot the beast in Zimbabwe. The bloodied remains of Solomon Manjoro were found by rangers after what was thought to be a botched poaching trip at the protected Charara safari area inside a national park.

The local man was charged by the elephant after he entered the game reserve for an illegal hunting trip with a friend. The dead man's alleged accomplice Noluck Tafuruka, 29, was later arrested inside the park and charged with illegal possession of a firearm. Zimbabwe's Sunday Mail reported: "The poacher was recently trampled to death by an elephant after he failed to gun down the jumbo during a hunting expedition."



It is believed Manjoro and Tafuruka encountered the elephant after entering the huge game reserve at the end of April. Police believe the pair, who were allegedly carrying unlicensed weapons, faced up to the beast and attempted to shoot it. However Manjoro was killed when the animal failed to fall and instead charged towards him.

Tafuruka was later arrested by local police inside the Charara reserve, which lies near Zimbabwe's Lake Kariba in the north west of the country. A third man, Godfrey Shonge, 52, from capital Harare, has also been arrested over the incident. The pair appeared last week in court to face charges of illegal possession of firearms and of contravention of local wildlife laws. The magistrate was told Manjoro and Tafuruka had entered the National Park between April 19 and 26 with the sole intention of poaching.
15 May 12:46

12 Animals We Wish We Could De-Extinct

by — By Maggie Severns and the Mother Jones news team

Do you miss the mammoth? Dream of dodos? Long for Lycaena dispar dispar? After centuries of driving species after species to extinction, we're now tantalizingly close to bringing some of them back. Using advances in genetic sequencing and molecular biology, scientists across the world are mining extinct animal specimens for ancient DNA to try to resurrect disappeared species. 

The science is complicated—National Geographic has a great rundown—and so are the ethics involved. But who can resist dreaming up a de-extinction "wish list"? With more species nearing the extinction danger zone every day​, there's no shortage of candidates, but some are more scientifically suited for resurrection than others. And even if we could bring a species back, should we? We looked to scientists to explain who they'd like to bring back, and which are best left in the past.

 

T. rex, extinct for 65 million years

Designed for "maximum bone-crushing action," Tyrannosaurus rex could down 500 pounds in a single bite. The first complete T. rex fossils, some the length of a school bus, were discovered in 1902 in Hell Creek, Montana, by legendary fossil hunter Barnum Brown, who employed dynamite and horses to dig up fossils all over North America. Given Rex's place in the popular imagination, it's somewhat surprising that only around 30 more specimens have been dug up since then.

Can we bring it back? As they say in bioscience, "You can't clone from stone." As Carl Zimmer explains in his excellent National Geographic piece on de-extinction, "In reality the only species we can hope to revive now are those that died within the past few tens of thousands of years and left behind remains that harbor intact cells or, at the very least, enough ancient DNA to reconstruct the creature's genome." T. rex and the rest of the dinos have been gone for at least 65 million years; it's not gonna happen. In fact, nearly all of the species we could theoretically resurrect are ones we wiped out in our relatively recent rise to the top of the food chain. "This suggests another reason for bringing them back," writes Zimmer. —Zaineb Mohammed

 

Passenger pigeon, extinct for 100 years

Said to have flown in massive, million-bird flocks that filled the North American sky, the humble passenger pigeon was considered one of the most social birds in North American history, but was wiped out in the early 20th century thanks to hunting and shrinking habitat. The last passenger pigeon, Martha, died in a Cincinnati zoo in 1914.

Can we bring it back? Referred to as the "poster-child for de-extinction," the pigeon's genome is already being sequenced by scientists like Ben Novak at the University of California-Santa Cruz. As National Geographic explains, passenger pigeon DNA could be swapped into corresponding bits of modern-day pigeon DNA—Novak's eyeing the band-tailed variety, found in the western United States—to create passenger pigeon stem cells. Those cells are converted into germ cells, and inserted into modern pigeon eggs. When the eggs hatch, seemingly ho-hum modern pigeon babies will emerge, but they'd be laden with passenger pigeon germ cells. When this new generation mates, the theory goes, it'll bring baby passenger pigeons to life.

Biologist David Ehrenfeld isn't sure this is such a good idea. "Who's going to mother the baby passenger pigeon?" he asks, noting that the band-tailed pigeon flies, mates, sings, and eats differently than the passenger pigeon. —Maddie Oatman

 

Saber-toothed tiger, extinct for ABOUT 10,000 years

The saber-toothed tiger was a compact killing machine, chasing small mammoths, giant sloths, and bison all over North America until about 10,000 years ago when it and many other species mysteriously died out at the end of the last Ice Age. Its genus name, smilodon, comprises the Greek words for "chisel" and "tooth," though the modern lion's bite is probably three times as strong as old smilodon's.

Can we bring it back? About 2,000 saber-toothed fossils have emerged from the La Brea tar pits in Southern California—it's the state fossil—and, being around 10,000 years old, they likely contain recoverable DNA. But so far, no scientists have actually attempted to recreate it. —Maddie Oatman

 

Dodo, extinct for 332 years

Dodos were once endemic to the forests of the beautiful, isolated island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. Historic accounts describe them as slow, awkward, and rather dumb—making for a convenient, if not particularly tasty, source of island protein. Dutch colonists gobbled up the last of them within 40 years of landing there in the 17th century.

Can we bring it back? Tropical paradises like Mauritius don't make great fossil vaults, so a fully intact specimen hasn't been recovered. Oxford geneticists have cobbled together some dodo DNA from a beak, but the bird's ungainly proportions and slim genetic diversity (a result of its small population size) could make it hard to reproduce. —Tim McDonnell

 

Great auk, extinct for 170 years

Great auks were once the penguins of the Northern Hemisphere, fanning out from Canada to Scotland. But humans started hunting them in prehistoric times, and by the 17th century, auks only lived in a few areas—and were still a popular source of meat and oil to boot. Newfoundland tried to petition the English to stop hunting auks in 1775, but to no avail. The last great auks are believed to have been shot in Iceland in 1844.

Can we bring it back? "If I could get another project going, it would be the great auk," says Stewart Brand, whose preservationist Long Now Foundation runs a de-extinction campaign called Revive and Restore. There are over 80 stuffed great auks in museums around the world that could help scientists sequence their DNA, too, but we couldn't find any current efforts to de-extinct the species. —Maggie Severns

 

Pyrean ibex, extinct for 13 years

The Pyrean ibex, also called a bucardo, was a wild goat that grazed the mountains of Spain until just over a decade ago. Hunting thinned the population throughout the 20th century. By 1989, there were only a few dozen left. The last bucardo, a female named Celia, was tracked by wildlife veterinarians across Spanish national parks until she was killed under a falling tree in 2000.

Can we bring it back? In July 2003, scientists briefly de-extincted the Pyrean ibex by cloning Celia. Using frozen skin samples, they made 439 eggs with Celia's DNA, and 57 of those nuclei developed into embryos inside surrogate mothers. Five survived the full term of pregnancy, and one was born. Unfortunately, the baby clone emerged with an extra, nonworking lung, leaving it unable to breathe properly. Minutes after birth, she died in the arms of one of the scientists who created her. —Maddie Oatman

 

giant ground sloth, extinct for 10,000 years

Giant sloths, which went extinct around the same time as saber-toothed cats and mastodons, probably had more in common with modern elephants than their cuddly counterparts today. These 20-foot behemoths weighed up to four tons and sported huge claws, says mammologist Ross MacPhee of the American Museum of Natural History in New York, where you can see one of the best collections of fossils from these behemoths that once roamed from the New World from Cape Horn to the Arctic circle.

Can we bring it back? MacPhee and his colleagues are at work piecing together the sloth's DNA from pieces of skin fossilized in South America, but it's slow-going. Moreover, modern sloths are too tiny to make good surrogate parents. In any case, says McPhee, it's not clear what we would gain from bringing giant sloths back. There's more potential ROI in bringing recently extinct sloths, like the cow-size Shasta ground sloth, which scatter endangered tree seeds as they munch their foliage. —Tim McDonnell

 

aurochs, extinct for 400 years

Fans of the 2012 movie Beasts of the Southern Wild will remember the mythological aurochs that returned from ancient days to chase after Hushpuppy. To recreate the giant creatures for the film, filmmakers wrapped Vietnamese potbelly pigs in nutria skins. These grandfathers of modern cattle became extinct in the 17th century due to hunting, disease, and habitat loss.

Can we bring it back? A European coalition of scientists known as Project Tauros plans to "backbreed" cattle species with traits similar to the aurochs, and hope to slowly reverse engineer the extinct beast. "It's straightforward trait selection," says Long Now Foundation's Stewart Brand. "The traits of the aurochs are very well documented, so they're going trait-by-trait back to it." Researchers in Poland also plan to try to recreate an animal that has 99 percent gene compatibility with an auroch to examine exactly why the giant cattle went extinct. —Maddie Oatman

 

NEANDERTHALS, EXTINCT FOR 28,000 YEARS

Our closest human relative, Homo neanderthalensis was shorter and stockier than humans but had the same brain size, wore clothes, made art, and buried its dead. Some believe Neanderthals became extinct by breeding with humans until there were none left, while others have suggested that they had trouble competing with humans, whose more advanced social networks and group skills made for better survival in harsh environments.

Can we bring it back? Piecing together bits of Neanderthal DNA would be difficult, but Harvard geneticist George Church has another idea: tweak human DNA so it matches that of the Neanderthal. But there's little popular demand in the scientific community for a Neanderthal comeback. "Too risky medically, both for the Homo sapiens mother and for the Homo neanderthalensis fetus," says Stanford law professor and de-extinction ethicist Hank Greeley. "Part of me would love to see what they were like, but I don't trust us to treat Neanderthals well." —Maggie Severns

 

tasmanian tiger, extinct for About 70 years

Resembling a cross between a wolf and a tiger, the Tasmanian tiger was actually more closely related to the kangaroo or the koala. And unlike its cousin the Tasmanian devil, this tiger was shy and secretive, as well as generally mute. Believed to have preyed on sheep, thylacine was likely driven extinct by human hunting of the kangaroos, small rodents, and birds it hunted for food, as well as competition with the dingo. The last Tasmanian tiger died at a zoo in Hobart, Tasmania, but lives on digitally on video.

Can we bring it back? In 2008, researchers in Australia extracted DNA from four 100-year-old Tasmanian tiger samples and injected a copy into some mice. The technique led to some interesting biological findings about the long-extinct animal, but the DNA samples were revealed to be too degraded for full cloning. Researchers at Penn State University have also looked into extracting DNA from the tiger's hair, but the absence of a closely matched surrogate still leaves cloning unlikely. —Zaineb Mohammed

 

Giant rodent, extinct for 2-4 million years

Thought to resemble a bull-sized guinea pig, scientists think this enormous rodent fought off saber-toothed cats with its massive teeth. Josephoartigasia mones was 10-feet-long nose-to-tail and thought to weigh up to a ton, based on a well-preserved skull discovered by an amateur paleontologist in Uruguay. Its modern cousin, the much smaller capybara, still lives in South America.

Can we bring it back? Unlikely. There aren't many specimens to provide scientists with DNA and no existing giant hamsters to act as surrogate mothers to modern-day giant rodent babies. —Maggie Severns

 

haast's eagle, extinct for 500 years

According to Maori legend, Haast's eagles were known to make off with human children, but the nine-foot-long bird mostly fed on moa, large emus that could weigh 300 pounds. Moa were slowly driven to extinction when the Maori arrived in New Zealand around 1300 AD, and the Haast's eagle wasn't far behind.

Can we bring it back? Not without moa around to munch on, and currently there aren't any projects devoted to de-extincting either species. —Maggie Severns

12 May 22:19

The Rejection Slip

by John Farrier

1

Hudson

Cartoonist Tom Hudson wasn't looking for new work. He just wanted to brag about having been rejected by Mad. His entire exchange with the editor was published in (and likely created for) the July 1963 issue of that magazine. Read it all at the link.

Link

10 May 11:37

Stoat runs rings around cat

by arbroath
10 May 00:36

A new bill introduced to congress today, called "The Unlocking Technology Act," seeks to make unlock

by Adam Dachis
Electrikmonkrjs

You want this to pass, really. Click through to let your congresscritters know they are doing the right thing here (for once)

A new bill introduced to congress today, called "The Unlocking Technology Act," seeks to make unlocking, jailbreaking, and otherwise modifying phones, tablets, and other mobile devices completely legal. It'll legalize DVD ripping as well. For more information, read this and contact your representative and show your support if this is something you want to pass.

09 May 23:30

Senator Elizabeth Warren introduces bill to lower student loan rates to the same rates paid by big banks, 0.75%

by Alan Benard for Poor Mojo's Newswire

Sen. Warren Introduces Bill To Lower Rates On Student Loans To .75% For One Year – Consumerist


While commercial and personal borrowers are currently enjoying historically low interest-rates on loans, and big banks are able to obtain loans at less than one percent interest, student borrowers have had to fight against lawmakers looking to raise interest rates on federally subsidized student loans. With the rates on Stafford loans set to bounce back to 6.8% from 3.4% on July 1, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren has introduced legislation that would actually lower that rate for one year to only .75%.

This is the same rate at which big banks are able to borrow money from the Federal Reserve, so Sen. Warren wants to know why banks get preferential treatment to America’s students.

“[T]he federal government is going to charge students interest rates that are nine times higher than the rates for the biggest banks,” said Sen. Warren, “the same banks that destroyed millions of jobs and nearly broke this economy. That isn’t right.”

That’s why Warren introduced the Bank On Students Loan Fairness Act [PDF], which would prevent Stafford loan rates from reverting to 6.8% on July 1 and would set the interest rates for loans disbursed until July 1, 2014, at “the primary credit rate charged by the Federal Reserve banks on July 1, 2013.”

08 May 21:43

Kitten Exercises on a Pillow Treadmill

by tastefullyoffensive.com
08 May 21:41

Cat Snores Into a Glass of Orange Juice

by tastefullyoffensive.com
08 May 21:40

A tarsier (Bill Bailey’s Jungle Hero - BBC)



A tarsier (Bill Bailey’s Jungle Hero - BBC)

06 May 19:24

Your armchair activist assignment of the day

by noreply@blogger.com (digby)
Your armchair activist assignment of the day

by digby

I get lots of good stuff in my email box, much of it informative with lots of good causes to contribute to. So, I thought I'd start sharing one of them each day that makes sense to ask a citizen who is working and has a busy life to spare a few minutes to make the world a better place.

Here's today's easy armchair activist assignment from Social Security Works:
Congress recently eliminated a part of the sequester that would affect people who fly frequently. All it took was a few words from wealthy business travelers who donate to their campaigns. It took only four days for the supposedly gridlocked Congress to 'fix' this part of sequester--just in time for Congress themselves to fly home for recess.

Yet Congress refuses to hear the cries of the 800,000 jobless workers in 19 states who suffered cuts of an average of $120 a month in their unemployment checks.

If you haven't taken this action yet--or tried, but couldn't--please take a moment and do so. Congress needs to know that the people are watching. Click here to tell your member of Congress to repeal the sequester.

Or the thousands of children about to be locked out of Head Start.

Or the disabled veterans who can't get the Social Security benefits they earned because of cuts to the Social Security Administration.

Click here to tell Congress: Repeal the Sequester.

The cuts are costing jobs and slowing already weak growth. With millions out of work, and the economy in trouble, they are not just dumb, but dangerous.

Join us, and wake Congress out of its stupor. Repeal the sequester.

Often signing petitions and joining groups is simply a way of boosting someone's membership list. This is not one of them. Social Security Works has been doing amazing work gathering data and putting together actions to save Social Security from the deficit fetishists for a long time.

Repealing the sequester has been assumed to be a complete non-starter among the Villagers from the very beginning. But it is the only principled position for anyone who cares about average working families and the most vulnerable members of our society. And it is an absolutely necessary tactical position for liberals who refuse to accept a Solomon's Choice of betraying the old and sick of the future for the young and sick of today. (By the way, you'll notice that it ends up being the same people...) It's not necessary --- deficit reduction is a sham. The economy will be much better off if they abandon it. This is a rich nation with more than enough money to cover its current bills and keep it's promises to pay them in the future.

Just say no. Repeal the sequester.. Liberals have to hold that position or the centrists will sell us out one meager, life-sustaining benefit at a time.


.
03 May 21:29

Adam Yauch Park: Late Beastie Boys Member Gets Brooklyn Playground Named After Him

by Spinner

Filed under: News, Music Appreciation


Adam Yauch MCA Beastie Boys

Late Beastie Boys member Adam "MCA" Yauch is getting a New York City park named after him.

City officials are turning the Brooklyn Heights-area Palmetto Playground into "Adam Yauch Playground."

The rapper, who died at age 47 due to throat cancer, actually used to hang out in the park. The local Brooklyn Heights Blog had been advocating for the park name-change and was on hand for the official dedication.
03 May 18:57

Chocolate Pieces Puzzle

by Vurdlak

Chocolate Pieces PuzzleChocolate Pieces PuzzleI just had to share this sweet chocolate animation with you guys! I know that missing piece puzzle was recycled so many times by now, but I’m sure you’ll admit it’s fun to see something so simple yet so amazing.

If I were a food company, I’d apply this principle immediately to generate some extra profit! What do you say? I can’t seem to pinpoint the answer, yet I’m perfectly aware you can’t generate matter out of nothing!

03 May 13:03

CISPA is not dead! It's coming back -- get ready!

by Cory Doctorow


Evan from Fight for the Future sez, "All of your phone calls, emails, petition signatures, and tweets are working. The privacy-killing back-from-the-dead zombie bill CISPA is a bit stalled in the Senate, with over $605 million in lobbying spent on it already, it's bound to be back to haunt us in some form soon. So we made an infographic to get everyone up to speed. This Spring, we'll be organizing the largest online privacy protest in history, to send this bill back where it belongs. Join us?"


    


02 May 13:06

Homeless man's A/B test of generosity based on faith

by Cory Doctorow


Redditor Ventachinkway caught a photo of a homeless man conducting a clever exercise in behavioral economics disguised as an inquiry into the levels of spontaneous generosity as determined by religious creed or lack thereof.

When I passed him he proudly announced "The atheists are winning!" (i.imgur.com) (via Glinner)

    


02 May 03:06

No Canvas Too Small for Intricate Masterpieces by Hasan Kale

by Steph
[ By Steph in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 1

Insect wings, grape seeds, cactus needles and thumbtacks are among the tiny objects that become canvases for stunningly detailed works of art by miniaturist Hasan Kale. The Turkish artist works on an incredibly small scale, often painting scenes from his native Istanbul, complete with reflections of the city’s characteristic architecture on rippling bodies of water and microscopic seagulls.

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 2

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 4

Kale’s works are so small, he doesn’t even need a palette – he mixes the minuscule amounts of paints required for each piece right on his own finger. The 53-year-old painter has been creating tiny works like these since the 1980s.

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 3

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 5

Using extremely fine paintbrushes, Kale faithfully renders these scenes with a remarkably steady hand. Many of the paintings are ephemeral, painted on perishable items like breadsticks.

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 7

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 8

Miniature Art Hasan Kale 9

Kale adds many more photos of his work on a regular basis at his Facebook page.

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[ By Steph in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

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