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11 Aug 11:48

900 Authors Protest Amazon With NYT Ad

More than nine hundred authors spent $104,000 to take out a full page ad urging Amazon to settle its dispute with Hachette Book Group. As far as we know, no one has taken out a full page ad at The Washington Post asking Hachette to give in to Amazon's request for lower priced books. Also, a one day single-page ad at the NYT costs $104k. Amazon is involved in a commercial dispute with the book publisher Hachette, which owns Little, Brown, Grand Central Publishing, and other familiar imprints. These sorts of disputes happen all the time between companies and they are usually resolved in a corporate back room. But in this case, Amazon has done something unusual. It has directly targeted Hachette's authors in an effort to force their publisher to agree to its terms. Comments
11 Aug 11:44

Assassin's Creed Monopoly to prowl store shelves in Europe

by Thomas Schulenberg
If it's popular enough, getting your preferred series printed on a Monopoly board seems like a matter of "when" rather than "if." Fans of the Mass Effect and Legend of Zelda series have had cause for celebration within the past few years, but now...
11 Aug 11:43

Amazon smacks back at Hachette in e-book pricing battle: We're doing it for the readers

by Brid-Aine Parnell

Etailer campaign responds to NYT author backlash

Amazon’s latest PR stunt for its contract dispute with publisher Hachette has seen the mega etailer establish a “Readers United” group in response to writers’ group “Authors United” to put pressure on the publishing house to lower its book prices.…

11 Aug 10:34

Microsoft's Very First Web Page, Back In 1994

Let's have a little memory test. This will require you being alive and on the Internet back in 1994 and able to actually remember anything that was on the Internet 20 years ago. Ladies and gentlemen, we present Microsoft's first attempt at a web page. Real homey, that. Comments
11 Aug 10:31

Microsoft Kills Windows 8.1 Update 2 and Patch Tuesday

It's that time again for Microsoft's Patch Tuesday, er….wait, what? Microsoft will no longer refer to the monthly updates at Patch Tuesday and will be from now on known as Update Tuesday. The biggest news about Tuesday is there is no Windows 8.1 update bundle and improvements to 8.1 will be doled out in monthly increments along with the standard updates. That's right, it's "Patch Tuesday" no more. As surely as if those two words were never spoken, LeBlanc has changed the name of Microsoft's monthly dump of security fixes to "Update Tuesday," meaning we can expect new features to show up along with our critical patches from now on. Comments
11 Aug 10:31

'Football Manager' will help actual football managers to find new players

by Daniel Cooper
Back in 2008, Everton FC raised eyebrows when it announced that it'd use the player database from the video game Football Manager to scout future recruits. Fast-forward to now, however, and every other manager in the league will have access to the...
11 Aug 08:55

Weaponizing cats: one hacker takes it too far

by Joe Jejune
would you weaponize cats with Warkitteh
We are shocked. Shocked, we say. Warkitteh turned a household cat into an unwitting hacker's accomplice. Cats, hacker humor, Wifi security.







09 Aug 07:01

"These two guys were flying to Singapore from Sydney and their...





"These two guys were flying to Singapore from Sydney and their carryon was over the "free" weight limit so the airline wanted to charge them $130." -stou

08 Aug 07:39

The Timex Ironman One GPS+: A Kindle for your Wrist

by Rob Enderle
Based heavily on Qualcomm’s TOC platform and focused on fitness; the soon to be released Timex Ironman One GPS+ is a fascinating product that for many in my age category may be a must have device.







08 Aug 06:26

Edward Snowden gets a three-year extension on his stay in Russia

by Jamie Rigg
After leaking details of questionable surveillance programs being conducted by the NSA and others, self-titled government spy Edward Snowden fled the US last year and was granted temporary asylum in Russia. The leaks have continued and he allegedly...
07 Aug 14:20

Finding Out Your Company Is Shutting Down Via Twitter

Nothing like getting the axe via Twitter...on April 1st to boot. Within the hour we all gathered in the common area for the formal announcement: That it was true, and we were getting shut down along with two other studios. The studio head said that Sony was very sorry that we had to find out about this via Twitter, that it was not supposed to happen that way. It was supposed to happen formally the next day. On April 1. Comments
07 Aug 11:03

Why Uber's ridesharing revolution could be undone by archaic laws and aging industry

by Ben Gilbert
Like electric cars, the decentralization of broadcast television, renewable energy and other burgeoning technologies, the world of "ridesharing" -- largely embraced by consumers -- is facing tremendous pushback from entrenched players around the...
06 Aug 14:36

PERSON OF INTEREST Scoop: Stars Jim Caviezel, Michael Emerson, Kevin Chapman, Sarah Shahi, Amy Acker and EP Greg Plageman Previews the Battle of The Machine Vs. Samaritan in Season 4

by Tiffany Vogt
As fans acutely recall, in the Season 3 finale of PERSON OF INTEREST, all our heroes were scattered to the four winds after it became necessary to adopt new identities in order to evade the all knowing eye of Samaritan, whose first task was to locate each of them — presumably, so that they could
Read More
06 Aug 11:36

A motorized bike will help you survive the apocalypse

by Billy Steele
When the apocalypse arrives (zombie or otherwise), you'll need to be prepared for anything. Part of said preparedness should certainly involve transportation, and thanks to the folks at Motopeds, there's a legit option. The Survival Bike: Black Ops...
05 Aug 10:59

What you need to know about hybrid and electric cars

by Steve Dent
Nearly a hundred years ago, a deal between Henry Ford and Thomas Edison to make electric cars fell apart because 1914 battery technology wasn't up to the job. From then on, cars ran almost exclusively on gas, driving us straight into our current...
05 Aug 10:53

Scientists create fully-functional brain neurons from mouse skin cells

by Mat Smith
It's a good excuse to shoehorn Pinky and the Brain on to the site, but scientists have managed to graft neurons reprogrammed from skin cells into the brains of mice. It isn't the first time that's been done, but it is the first time the researchers...
05 Aug 10:53

Visual microphone can pick up speech from a bag of potato chips

by Jon Fingas
You may want to be careful about the conversations you hold in the future; if you're near a window, someone might be listening in. A team of researchers from Adobe, Microsoft and MIT have developed a visual microphone algorithm that picks up audio by...
05 Aug 07:52

The Barisieur alarm clock automatically brews coffee while you wake

by Billy Steele
It's no secret the first five minutes of consciousness for many of us each morning involves brewing a cup o' joe. Well to help get a jump-start on things, designer Joshua Renouf has developed a striking alarm clock that starts the process before you...
05 Aug 07:51

Google sheds light on its child porn detector after sex offender arrest

by Mariella Moon
Thanks to Google, a sex offender was recently arrested after the company tipped off authorities about finding illegal photos of children in his email. Despite the good that came out of it, it raised a number of questions, such as "does Google...
05 Aug 07:48

Korean Shipbuilder Uses "Iron Man" Exosuit to Help Build World's Largest Freighter

by Jason Mick
New suits are expected to reduce employee injuries and allow for more rapid construction
04 Aug 17:40

Facebook Goes Down; Facebookers Call Cops

It appears that Facebook users are dead serious about being having access to their favorite Internet site. Nothing should stand in the way of their right to access and if it does, it's an emergency of the highest order. Frustrated Facebookers in Los Angeles took to calling 911 en masse to report Facebook was down. Take your meds, people. He wrote: "#Facebook is not a Law Enforcement issue, please don't call us about it being down, we don't know when FB will be back up!" Comments
04 Aug 08:51

Teamwork Isn't Always a Good Thing

Teamwork Isn't Always a Good Thing

Submitted by: (via justaride80)

Tagged: teamwork , raccoons , funny
03 Aug 06:12

New Shooter Taking It Old School

Have you guys seen this game yet? I like the way they are stripping away all the B.S. that has been added to games over the last decade or so. Your thoughts? Comments
03 Aug 06:06

A Full-Metal Dress for Electric Exhibitions

by Jessie Geoffray

Photograph by Kyle Cothern

Dutch designer Anouk Wipprecht has taken fashion to a shocking new level: She recently donned a custom-built metallic dress and zapped herself with nearly half a million volts of electricity. The stunt came about when she met ArcAttack, a band that makes music with giant Tesla coils. Together they decided to craft a shockproof costume for an upcoming show. Wipprecht built a spiked helmet and plate-metal dress and secured them over a head-to-toe suit of chain mail. For extra flair, she hacked toy plasma balls into shoulder ornaments. “Normally I work with fashion models,” Wipprecht says. “But this time, nobody else wanted to wear it.” When she walked between Arc-Attack’s Tesla coils at Maker Faire this May, Wipprecht remained unscathed. Her garment safely conducted the coils’ electrical bursts around her body and into the ground while lighting up her shoulders with tendrils of purple plasma. 

Time: 1 month
Cost: undisclosed

600: Approximate number of metal rings that link together the aluminum plates of Wipprecht’s dress

This article originally appeared in the August 2014 issue of Popular Science.








03 Aug 06:06

Effect Of Fracking On Wildlife Is Basically Unknown

by Douglas Main

Natural gas wells in Wyoming.
Ecoflight

Hydraulic fracturing has increased seven-fold across the United States since 2007. Over that time period, scientists' knowledge of the environmental impacts of fracking has not progressed nearly this much. Startlingly little research has looked at biological effects of this process on the environment and wildlife. But what we do know is alarming enough that more research is urgently needed, according to a new study, and the lack of knowledge quite stunning.

As you may know, in the course of fracking, various chemicals are mixed with water and injected into the ground at high pressures, releasing previously inaccessible stores of natural gas. The identity of some of these chemicals has not been disclosed, which is worrisome;: how can we possibly know the effects of an unknown substance? Some wells used a total of 20 or more undisclosed chemicals, the study noted. But the chemicals that are known to have been put into fracking fluids--methanol, xylene, hydrochloric acid, toluene, benzene, and formaldehyde--can cause a variety of health problems in humans, the authors wrote. 

How might this effect wildlife? Scientists don't know, and that's the problem. “If you look down on a heavily fracked landscape, you see a web of well pads, access roads, and pipelines creating islands out of what was, in some cases, continuous habitat," says Sara Souther, a conservation fellow at the University of Wisconsin, who is the first author of the paper. "What are the combined effects of numerous wells and their supporting infrastructure on wide-ranging or sensitive species, like the pronghorn antelope or the hellbender salamander?"

Typically fracking chemicals are injected 3,000 to 9,200 feet (900 to 2800 meters) underground, where it has been generally thought that they couldn't make it to the surface or mix with reservoirs of drinking water. But that isn't true, as scientists have found geological connections between these deep injection sites and surface drinking water, at least in the Appalachian Basin. And in the past few years there have been at least three scientific studies showing that fracking chemicals and/or methane can contaminate drinking water. Here's a 2011 example (PDF) from Wyoming; one from the same year in New York / Pennsylvania; and a 2013 study in the same general area.

The study, published in the August issue (PDF) of the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, also found that spills of drilling fluid or wastewater are not adequately studied or reported, and thus the impacts from these events are unknown. And gas companies didn't report over one-third of all spills in the last year, Souther said. Of the 24 states that are actively fracking, only five "maintain public records of spills or violations for oil and gas drilling operations," the authors wrote.

“We can’t let shale development outpace our understanding of its environmental impacts,” said study co-author Morgan Tingley, a researcher at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, in a statement. But all signs suggest that thus far, it has. The authors write that research should primarily focus on events that could "lead to contamination of fresh water, such as equipment failure, illegal activities, accidents, chemical migration, and wastewater escape, as well as cumulative ecological impacts of shale development."








03 Aug 06:03

LG Issues G Watch Update to Fix Issues With Corrosion

by Brandon Chester

LG's G Watch is one of the first devices to run Android Wear. Like many first generation tech products, early adopters are usually subject to problems due to design oversights and immature software. With the G Watch there have been reports from users that they are experiencing a little bit of both with an issue relating to corrosion of the watch's charging pins. The issue seems to occur primarily after long periods of exercise where the user has been sweating. This is because sweat contains salt, an electrolyte which dissolves and forms ions which allows the liquid sweat to better conduct electricity. This sweat forming around the contact pins causes corrosion in a chemical reaction where an oxide coating is formed.

It may be strange to think that a software update could fix an issue with metal corrosion on a device, but the issue occurs due to the current flow from the charging pins while surrounded by sweat. It is being reported that LG is issuing an OTA updating the watch from build number KMV78V to KMV78Y to fix the issue by disabling the current to the charging pins when the watch is not in the charging dock. A Google representative has confirmed with Android Police that this is the case and that the update began rolling out yesterday. Hopefully this update fixes the issues and saves LG from dealing with a plethora of warranty claims, and G Watch users from having to make them. The update should also address complaints from some users about discomfort and irritation of the skin underneath the charging pins on their wrists.

03 Aug 05:56

XBMC Is Officially Changing Its Name, Meet Kodi

All good things must come to an end sooner or later, so bid a fond farewell to XBMC. Don't freak, the program will still be around for quite a while to come, but now you will know it simply as Kodi, ending its somewhat passé attachment to the Xbox brand. Six years have passed since the Xbox Media Center became XBMC, and simply put, 'XBMC' fits less now than it did even in 2008. The software only barely runs on the original Xbox, and then only because some clever developers are still hacking on that platform. Comments
02 Aug 17:05

glitches in the matrix.





















glitches in the matrix.

01 Aug 15:32

Female cyclists should have their own lane, says ex minister

by Christofer Lloyd
Roumen.ganeff

Stupid politician of the day








30 Jul 15:36

Hungry Goat Precariously Balances on Accommodating Donkey In Effort to Reach Low Hanging Fruit

by Lori Dorn

A hungry goat trying to reach the low hanging fruit off a tree precariously balances on the back of a very accommodating donkey in this silly video posted by Rumble Viral. While it’s more than likely that this act was staged, the donkey was nonetheless very gracious in helping out a friend.

via Tastefully Offensive