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19 Apr 23:34

STUDY: Hillary earned more than America's top 10 CEOs...

18 Apr 23:35

RAND: Hillary needs one campaign plane just 'for her baggage'...


RAND: Hillary needs one campaign plane just 'for her baggage'...


(Top headline, 5th story, link)
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17 Apr 14:53

Shelter: Maderas Village

by Liv Combe

We're stoked to be heading down to Nicaragua with El Camino Travel, with whom we'll be spending nine glorious days eating fresh seafood, surfing, sailing to secluded beaches, and rolling cigars. Leading up to our adventures, we're taking a look at what will soon be our Nicaraguan home-away-from-home: Maderas Village

t’s easy for Matt Dickinson to name his favorite thing about Nicaragua: the weather. “It’s beautiful here for twelve months a year,” says the founding partner and general manager of Maderas Village. “As a native of Toronto, that’s huge.”

Well off the beaten path and nestled in the Pacific coastal hills of Nicaragua is Maderas, an eco-friendly, open-minded boutique hotel, hostel, and resort all rolled into one. Here, you’re just as likely to find a solo traveler taking surf lessons from the local instructors down on the secluded Playa Maderas as you as you an aspiring tech mogul who’s taken three weeks out of his schedule to hop a few flights and live in this vibrant, creative community in order to write the first draft of a business plan. 

And — even the five-minute walk to the Pacific comes in at a close second — that is Dickinson’s favorite thing about Maderas itself. 


“You can carry on life here without feeling like you’re compromising,” he says. “This isn’t the traditional idea of escaping to paradise. You’re not escaping or trying to get away from anything. What we celebrate here is going away and engaging. And that, to me, is what’s exciting — not necessarily realizing that you couldn’t work from paradise without giving up your real life, but rather that real life could be much, much better.”


Nicaragua is having a moment. It’s been hailed as the “next Costa Rica” — same beautiful tropical climate, a friendly culture, similar rice and beans dishes pervading the menu. Contrary to Costa Rica's well-beaten paths, though, Nicaragua is still relatively unexplored. 

The largest country in the Central American isthmus, Nicaragua borders Costa Rica to the south and Honduras to the north. The country has much to recommend it — sleepy surf towns, dramatic volcanoes, vibrant colonial cities, rain forests and nature preserves. As the L.A. Times put it, however, what Nicaragua also has is an image problem. It hasn’t been viewed as a mainstream tourist destination on account of its decades of political turbulence; the 20th century alone saw civil war, foreign intervention, dictatorship, and revolution. Not the stuff of timeshare fodder, to be sure. 


All the better, says Dickinson, who came to the country five years back, fresh out of the world of commercial real estate and looking to work on this development project. “The fact that Nicaragua was viewed by the world as dangerous — but was actually quite safe — was really appealing to me because that just equals opportunity. And the fact that it was still unexplored and had an association with adventure? Even better.”


The many buildings and rooms of Maderas didn’t all come into being at once. In the first two years of the project, Dickinson and his fellow founding partners worked on the main hotel, where the restaurant and bar is also housed, and then built three cottages and three cabañas. In year three, they put in four casitas. In year four, Maderas had a fundraising drive that brought in enough money for them to build a recording studio, which they just opened a few months ago. 

The Maderas buildings are made entirely with local and natural resources. The floors of the cottages and cabañas are constructed of wood from naturally felled trees from the Autonomous region of the country — primarily Brazilian cherry, ipa, teak, and tropical cedar; the walls are made from wood that was grown on nearby plantations. The roofs? Eucalyptus and palm leaves, which naturally regenerate on the tree every three months.

(Oh, and all the gorgeous wood furniture? That's the handiwork of the team of Nicaraguan carpenters that make up Maderas Collective.)


Maderas’ dedication to using local resources extends to the food they serve, where the meals are inspired by whatever is freshest at the local fruit, vegetable, and fish markets in the nearby surf town of San Juan del Sur. A typical breakfast could be granola with fresh fruit or the “Nica Tipica,” as Dickinson puts it — fresh eggs, avocado, tortillas, and home fries. Lunch is a burrito, falafel, or an omelette. Dinners are served family-style each night and range from chicken to sushi to grilled salt fish. 

The family-style dinner is very much on purpose, since the community at Maderas is more important than the physical makeup of the village (yep, even more important than the open-air yoga studio, the massage room, or the penthouse overlooking the ocean, as hard as it is to believe). Maderas is beautiful, to be sure, but what sets it apart is the vibe, the atmosphere, the idea that you can be both relaxed and deeply engaged at once. 

“Being at Maderas isn’t just about sitting on a hammock with a guitar and doing some writing,” says Dickinson. The recently opened music studio proves his point exactly — now, guests have the space to create something tangible. (A darkroom is next on the list.)


And that opportunity extends to more than just artists, Dickinson points out. “If somebody wants to come down and spend two or three weeks writing a business plan or programming, it’s all accessible and celebrated down here. Maderas is really just a place where you can come and sit back, think quietly, and work on whatever it is that’s your passion.”

And the fresh tropical fruit smoothies really don’t hurt, either. [H]

Want to check out Nicaragua for yourself? El Camino takes several trip there every year, and you can, too. The next is already sold out, but in the meantime, you can experience everything El Camino has to offer on their upcoming trip to Colombia. Grab your spot now.

Liv Combe tans freakishly fast. Look out, Nicaragua.
She's an Assistant Editor at Huckberry in San Francisco.
Follow her on Twitter and Instagram.

Images ©: 1-3, 5, 6, 9-11, 13, 15. Marianna Jamadi; 4, 7, 8, 12, 14. Garrett Cornelison Photography - Styled by Ruthie Lindsey; 16. Kayla Rocca

17 Apr 14:26

VW to Resurrect Classic Camper Van as New Electric Vehicle

by admin
[ Filed under Transportation & in the Cars & Trucks category ]

new revived vw camper

As distinctive as the Volkswagen Beetle, the Westfalia Camper is an icon of cross-country road trips – like the Bug, it has also been out of production for some time, at least until now.

vw camper revival

Mentioned at the New York Auto Show, this new design follows a number of somewhat more bus-like releases by Volkswagen in recent years, but will be much more closely tied to the aesthetic of this vintage favorite. The iconic flat nose would be achieved in part by placing a small electric motor below the front seats of the vehicle.

vw classic camper van

Neusser told Autocar that the design of the original VW van was “so iconic” that any attempt at a new model would have to have three “very important” design cues: “First the wide, solid, D-Pillar, second the boxy design of the centre section and, thirdly, the front end must have a very short overhang. The distance from the A-pillar to the front end must be very short.”


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17 Apr 14:24

Lane Splitter: Concept Car Separates into 2 Motorcycles

by admin
[ Filed under Transportation & in the Concept Vehicles category ]

lane car

Blending the shared social experience of driving and riding in a car with the liberating freedom to go your own way, this concept vehicle turns from one 4-wheeler to two 2-wheelers on demand.

lane car above

land split single side

Proposed by Mark Wilson and executed in detail by ArgoDesign, the result is an asymmetrical design that is flat on one side where the two pieces join and curved on the other. The wheels spread out in motorcycle mode and contract in car mode.

lane split motorbike car

late splitting deisgn

Chipp Walters, who designed several projects for NASA in the ’80s and ’90s, took lead on the project, and created what you see here. It’s what you might get if you crossed the little known 1980s cartoon M.A.S.K, the Akira motorcycle, the Batman Tumbler, and the Blade Runner Spinner—a seemingly plausible vision for a car that could split into two.”

lane concept car

lane split side view

land splitter land vehicle

An automated chassis lock hooks the two vehicles together, released at the push of a button. Originally pitched to Cadillac, the idea did not go over so well with conventional car companies, but perhaps in time.


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17 Apr 14:22

16 April 2015, Thursday

DEAL: Fuji S9200 w/50x optical zoom: $159. Was $299.

 

Salad Days ahead for Pirate Radio

You should know I've always wanted my own pirate radio station, at least since the 1970s when I did legitimate radio for a living.

The cockles of my heart were warmed when I read that the FCC is running out of money and closing a lot of field offices.

Pirates usually operate without much interference from the FCC, especially so long as they don't become too annoying. In fact, most just go on until they start selling ad space and really annoying the other stations. I know of a guy who was on the air for decades, and no one ever reported him because his station was so professional —  even with professionally produced station ID jingles — that no one ever bothered to see if he was licenced.

There is such a great future ahead for pirates that it even has the FCC wondering about it. Here's an article from Radio World about what the FCC has to say. They know good times are ahead.

Probably the only reason I don't have a pirate station today is because I have this website. I don't need pirate radio to get out 5-by-5 all over the world. Especially with eBay today, it's trivial (presuming you have radio engineering talent) to put anything on the air — but even easier to do it online.

I don't think on-air matters much. We watch all our "TV" online, as we get our radio online. Heck, if I'm in the car, I get better reception on my iPhone with a radio app than trying to get it off the air.

No kidding; a typical FM station uses a 128 kbps MP3 stream over IP to get the studio audio to the transmitter, and then that audio is squashed and mutilated beyond all recognition by all sorts of broadcast processors to make it sound awful, but loud. The online stream is usually that same stream, ahead of the broadcast processor, so the online feeds of many stations really are much cleaner than getting it off the air.

 

17 Apr 14:11

Hollywood Obamabot Gwyneth Paltrow Takes One Week “Food Stamp Challenge” . . . Quits 2 Days Later…

by ZIP
Update to this story. Via NY Post: Gwyneth Paltrow got off food stamps, then promptly went back to extravagant meals — including an $85-per-person gourmet barbecue dinner and a Beverly Hills affair hosted by David and Victoria Beckham, in the same night. Paltrow last week took a charity challenge to spend $29 a week on […]
17 Apr 14:09

Got Greek grandparents? If so, here’s a major opportunity for you.

by Simon Black
Traditional-houses-in-Plaka-area-under-Acropolis-,Athens,Greece-

April 16, 2015
Sovereign Valley Farm, Chile

Walking down the streets of Kalamata, not only had everyone known his name, they’d have offered him a drink and asked about his grandmother’s health.

But in New Jersey where he lived, Hector was a nobody.

Trading in the warm, sunny coast of Greece for bitter winters and relative isolation was unquestionably the hardest thing that Hector and his wife had ever had to do.

They left decades ago because, back then, America was the land of opportunity.

But today, after years of mind-numbing 9 to 5, increasingly painful taxes, and unconscionable fiscal irresponsibility, Hector’s son Nikos is taking the opposite approach and going back to Greece.

It’s 2015. Nikos knows that he doesn’t need to live in the same place as his company or his customers. He knows he can make money from wherever he is on the planet. And he wants to be in a nice, warm, beautiful place.

With Greek ancestry, Nikos has been able to obtain Greek citizenship—not only for himself but for his children too.

This entitles he and his family to live (and work) just about anywhere in Europe, to travel around the world, and even more easily invest as a global citizen.

It also means that no matter what happens in the US, that they have a back up plan.

Making sure to spend no more than 6 months in Greece each year, the family is not subject to Greek taxation.

If you happen to have any Greek in your ancestry I would strongly advise you follow Nikos’ lead and get the papers to prove it.

Some of our SMC members, including Nikos, have gone through the naturalization process without legal assistance (though this does require wading through Greece’s legendary bureaucracy).

To get started, anyone with Greek ancestry will need to compile a significant paper trail from your ancestors to you.

This includes the birth, death, and marriage certificates of your most recent Greek ancestor as well as those of everyone in between.

A helpful hint is that if you have a direct ancestor that is male, start with them first. They are much easier to trace given that all men had to register for the military with the Male Register.

(Note: Greece has had mandatory military conscription since 2009 for all males aged 19 to 45. There are exceptions, but if you just happen to be 46 or older, all the better.)

If you go through the process yourself, you’ll need to contact your home consulate to get started; this is primarily the Greek consulate that has responsibility over the area where you are resident.

For example, if you live in Calgary, you’ll need to contact the Greek consulate in Vancouver which has jurisdiction over Alberta.

Greece has a lot of obvious economic problems right now. And while I would never recommend holding significant financial assets there, a Greek passport can still provide significant benefit.

If you qualify, it’s something I would definitely consider—especially women and men over the age of 45.

17 Apr 14:05

Martin Scorsese Makes a List of 85 Films Every Aspiring Filmmaker Needs to See

by Josh Jones

Martin_Scorsese_Berlinale_2010

Before the rise of institutional film schools—ensconced in university walls with all the formality that entails—those seeking to learn the craft did so by apprenticing themselves to studios and master directors, and by watching lots and lots of movies. If we take the example of some of the most interesting filmmakers working today, this still may be the best way to become a filmmaker. Werner Herzog’s Rogue Film School, for example, forgoes the trappings of classrooms for a much more rough-and-tumble approach—and a direct confrontation with the medium. Kevin Smith dropped out of film school, as did Paul Thomas Anderson, spurred on partly by a love of Terminator 2. “My filmmaking education,” revealed Anderson, “consisted of finding out what filmmakers I liked were watching, then seeing those films.” It’s more or less how Quentin Tarantino learned to make movies too.

You could hardly do better—if you’ve decided to take this independent route toward a cinematic education—than apprentice yourself under Martin Scorsese. Or at least find out what films he loves, and watch them all yourself. Last year, we featured a list of 39 foreign films the estimable director of Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Hugo, Goodfellas (etc., etc., etc.) recommended to a young filmmaker. Today, we bring you a list of 85 films Scorsese referenced in the course of a four-hour interview he gave to Fast Company. “Some of the movies he discussed,” writes FastCo, “Others he just mentioned. But the cumulative total reflects a life lived entirely within the confines of movie making.” Shoot on over to Fast Company to read Scorsese’s commentary on each of the films below, and see an aesthetically pleasing version of his list over at MUBI as well.

Like I said, you could hardly do better.

  • Ace in the Hole
  • All that Heaven Allows
  • America, America
  • An American in Paris
  • Apocalypse Now
  • Arsenic and Old Lace
  • The Bad and the Beautiful
  • The Band Wagon
  • Born on the Fourth of July
  • Cape Fear
  • Cat People
  • Caught
  • Citizen Kane
  • The Conversation
  • Dial M for Murder
  • Do the Right Thing
  • Duel in the Sun
  • The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
  • Europa ’51
  • Faces
  • The Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The Flowers of St. Francis
  • Force of Evil
  • Forty Guns
  • Germany Year Zero
  • Gilda
  • The Godfather
  • Gun Crazy
  • Health
  • Heaven’s Gate
  • House of Wax
  • How Green Was My Valley
  • The Hustler
  • I Walk Alone
  • The Infernal Cakewalk
  • It Happened One Nght
  • Jason and the Argonauts
  • Journey to Italy
  • Julius Caesar
  • Kansas City
  • Kiss Me Deadly
  • Klute
  • La Terra Trema
  • The Lady From Shanghai
  • The Leopard
  • Macbeth
  • The Magic Box
  • M*A*S*H
  • A Matter of Life and Death
  • McCabe & Mrs. Miller
  • The Messiah
  • Midnight Cowboy
  • Mishima
  • Deeds Goes to Town
  • Smith Goes to Washington
  • Nashville
  • Night and the City
  • One, Two, Three
  • Othello
  • Paisa
  • Peeping Tom
  • Pickup on South Street
  • The Player
  • The Power and the Glory
  • Stagecoach
  • Raw Deal
  • The Red Shoes
  • The Rise of Louis XIV
  • The Roaring Twenties
  • Rocco and his Brothers
  • Rome, Open City
  • Secrets of the Soul
  • Senso
  • Shadows
  • Shock Corridor
  • Some Came Running
  • Stromboli
  • Sullivan’s Travels
  • Sweet Smell of Success
  • Tales of Hoffman
  • The Third Man
  • T-Men
  • Touch of Evil
  • The Trial
  • Two Weeks in Another Town

via FastCoCreate

Related Content:

Martin Scorsese Creates a List of 39 Essential Foreign Films for a Young Filmmaker

Martin Scorsese Reveals His 12 Favorite Movies (and Writes a New Essay on Film Preservation)

Wes Anderson’s Favorite Films: Moonstruck, Rosemary’s Baby, and Luis Buñuel’s The Exterminating Angel

Quentin Tarantino Lists His Favorite Films Since 1992

Akira Kurosawa’s List of His 100 Favorite Movies

Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness

17 Apr 13:16

'Game changer' protein could kill cancer...


'Game changer' protein could kill cancer...


(First column, 10th story, link)

17 Apr 13:14

Navy reveals jeep that shoots down drones with laser...


Navy reveals jeep that shoots down drones with laser...


(Third column, 8th story, link)

17 Apr 13:13

Earthworms rain down from skies over Norway...


Earthworms rain down from skies over Norway...


(First column, 17th story, link)

17 Apr 13:13

PHOTOS: China builds military runway in disputed South China Sea...


PHOTOS: China builds military runway in disputed South China Sea...


(First column, 6th story, link)

10 Apr 12:52

10 Fascinating Mysteries Of Life That Science Can’t Explain

by JFrater

Even though science has pushed our understanding of the living world to new heights, there are still some things that just plain baffle us. It seems that the more we uncover about life on this planet, the deeper the mysteries grow. 10Cows Always Face North Or South While Eating Most people don’t give much thought […]

The post 10 Fascinating Mysteries Of Life That Science Can’t Explain appeared first on Listverse.

10 Apr 12:46

Shutterstock Labs: How to Find Perfect Stock Images and Videos

by Ryan Dube
shutterstock-labs

Shutterstock is one of the premier places on the web for getting the creative images that you need. However, with their recent image search and image/video editing tool additions, Shutterstock has made it easier to make better use of the media you discover there. I don’t just say Shutterstock is a premier place because they give us an amazing deal on images (they do), but in all honesty the images you’ll find there are some of the higher quality images around. It isn’t too difficult to find those “authentic” photos that look more like something you’d actually find in real life, and not...

Read the full article: Shutterstock Labs: How to Find Perfect Stock Images and Videos

10 Apr 12:44

Millions Of People Think They Use Facebook, But Not The Internet

by Philip Bates
Connecting People

Millions of people say they don’t use the Internet – but talk enthusiastically about Facebook. How has this monopoly of the World Wide Web come about? And what wider implications does it have? Communications surveys were carried out across the developing world, but there were anomalies in their conclusions: despite stating that they don’t use the Internet, those questioned reacted very positively to Facebook. But what does this mean for us? What does it mean for businesses, including Mark Zuckerberg’s? And what does it mean for the World Wide Web? How is This Even Possible? Many admit to spending far...

Read the full article: Millions Of People Think They Use Facebook, But Not The Internet

09 Apr 15:18

Advice From a Master Angler

by rreed

After more than seven decades, most of them spent with a rod in his hand, Charles Gaines has learned the most difficult fishing lesson of them all—to slow down and enjoy it. The Birmingham, Alabama-based author’s latest book, Waters Far and Near: Tales of Angling Misadventure Around the World, is available today. Here, he shares more wisdom—about bonefishing in Cuba, Florida’s Forgotten Coast, and life on and off the water.


Left to right: Charles Gaines relaxes with a cerveza during a day tarpon fishing in Cuba; Gaines casts from a Cuban flats boat. Photographs by Eric Kiel

If you could hop on a plane and go to any of the places you’ve ever fished right now, where would it be?

Can I give you two?

There’s an island off the beaches of Abaco in the Bahamas called Duck Cay. You’re wading on perfectly white sandy bottom with the palm trees swaying in the breeze and the open Atlantic out in front of you. Its blue waters are full of really big, smart, educated bonefish.

The other would be the Traful River in Northern Patagonia, Argentina. It’s an eight-mile river owned on one side by Ted Turner and on the other side by an old friend named Meme Lariviere. She has the finest fishing lodge on the planet. Period. On any cast you can hook a landlocked salmon, a rainbow or a brown—all over ten pounds.

It’s becoming easier to travel to Cuba. What has your experience been like fishing there?

Flats, blue water fishing, and bass fishing—all of them are wonderful in Cuba and very few Americans get down there to do it. It’s going to be a phenomenal resource for American anglers. That’s the good news. The bad news is that it’s very quickly going to become Miami Beach.


RELATED: CHARLES GAINES ON FISHING IN CUBA


You’re worried the country will change with more visitors?

In a very short period of time it’s going to become like every other place in the Caribbean, just built up to the nines. Castro realized thirty or forty years ago that sport fishing was much more valuable to his economy than commercial fishing. So he set aside huge—I mean vast—tracts of fishing areas and made them into parks where no commercial fishing is allowed. The bonefish and permit have come back like gang-busters. He is—in terms of preserving fisheries in his native state—the biggest environmentalist in all of the Caribbean.

We face the struggle of crowds close to home—like the “Gone Florida” you write about. What did you mean by calling it that?

I grew up in Florida. I was born in Jacksonville seventy-three years ago and my father started taking me down to the Florida Keys when that was still a relatively undiscovered fishery. In the 1950s we were using glass rods and Medalist reels and hand-tied flies and nobody really knew what they were doing. There were only a handful of guides and a handful of anglers.

Once there was no such thing as a jet ski, those awful little inventions that ruin the flats and make all kinds of hideous noise. Those halcyon days are gone, baby gone.

Is there anywhere you would still consider that old, preserved Florida?

One of the stories in the book is about the area around Apalachicola, which they call the Forgotten Coast. And for some totally mysterious reason, that coast has never seen the kind of development that has, to my mind, ruined the rest of Florida.


RELATED: FLY FISHING'S ALL-STAR CAST


What have you learned by fishing with your family, and especially your daughter, a talented outdoorswoman?

Both my boys are excellent fishermen, but my daughter is the one who inherited that gene. She’s an intense fisherman, she’s a very good fisherman, and she’s an all-day fisherman. You get out in the boat and if it’s hot or windy or rough or whatever, she’s there for the day, buddy. She’s not going anywhere. I love that about her.

There is a lot of macho bullshit associated with outdoor sports. Maybe it’s because I’ve gotten old, but I’ve run out of patience for that particular form of fishing, which is very aggressive, very competitive, gear crazy, and always about who catches the biggest or the most fish. Women tend to bring to it more curiosity, and more enjoyment of the environment and the experience.


Cuba's Zapata Peninsula is surrounded by pristine blue water where bonefish thrive.

For some people it’s fishing, for others it might be golf or running. You’re saying once you do something for a long time, you realize the competition isn’t as important?

That’s exactly right. The competition abrades away the experience like a piece of sandpaper that sands off all the valuable corners. I can remember whole days of competitive fishing where I never noticed where I was. I’d be floating that stretch of the Snake River that runs near Jackson Hole, Wyoming. You’ve got the Tetons soaring up above you and all kinds of wildlife. I can remember coming home and not remembering a single thing I saw other than the water and the fly and the fish. That’s not right. 

There are stages that anglers go through. When you first start to fish, it’s all about numbers. And then you get a little more sophisticated and it’s all about size. Then the third stage is you only want to catch the pickiest fish. And then the next stage, you don’t care about the numbers, you don’t care about the size, you don’t care about the technical difficulty, you care about the experience. You care about the company, the place, and the beauty of the water you’re on.

Do you like being in this stage, then?

I wouldn’t swap it for any of the other stages. It’s spiritually gratifying. Fishing is like asking some gigantic question of the universe. Every time you throw your fly out there, that’s a question. The bite of the fish is the answer.

Waters Far and Near
Gaines' latest book is available today.

More by Charles Gaines
>Fly Fishing All-Star Cast
>Exploring Havana, Cuba
>Southern Master: Chef Frank Stitt

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09 Apr 15:17

Three New Spring Weekend Retreats

by rreed

Even if you left weeklong spring breaks behind in college, any one of these three new and recently renovated art-centric hotels merit at least a three-day weekend away.

21c Museum Hotel Durham
Durham, North Carolina
Built in 1937 and designed by the same New York architecture firm that drafted the plans for the Empire State Building, the iconic Art Deco Hill Building, located at the heart of downtown Durham, just got a big-time makeover as the fourth outpost of Kentucky-based hoteliers Laura Lee Brown and Steve Wilson’s boutique hotel group. 21c Durham, which opened on March 16, will play an important role in Durham's on-going revival. The fifteen-story property includes 10,500 square-feet of gallery space, a just-opened restaurant, Counting House, that serves global riffs on North Carolina ingredients like local greens with muscadine vinegar, shallots, and ricotta salata, and 125 rooms with modern details—terrazzo floors, green marble walls, silver leaf ceilings, and original abstract art. The swank 21c Suite takes up the entire fifteenth floor and has an outdoor tub for soaking on a private balcony.—21cmuseumhotels.com/durham


Photographs courtesy of 21c Durham

The Vendue
Charleston, South Carolina
Comprised of three eighteenth-century warehouses in Charleston’s historic French Quarter, the Vendue underwent a $5.5 million renovation to modernize the interiors. (If you’ve visited the Vendue before, you’ll appreciate that you can now get from one end of the hotel to the other without going outside—a bonus on rainy days.) Owners also completely revamped the lobby, restaurant, and signature rooftop bar—the view alone is worth a visit. They also added the city’s first artist-in-residence program and a long, light-filled gallery space that runs along Vendue Range (one of Charleston’s loveliest streets), featuring three installations a year, curated by local artist and gallery owner Robert Lange. The rest of the Vendue’s three hundred-plus permanent collection hangs throughout the hotel.—thevendue.com


Photographs courtesy of the Vendue

The Old No. 77 Hotel & Chandlery
New Orleans, Louisiana
Housed in a restored nineteenth-century coffee warehouse in New Orleans’s up-and-coming Warehouse Arts District, Old No. 77, set to open at the end of this month, is just four blocks from the French Quarter. With soaring ceilings, exposed-brick and original plaster walls, beautifully worn wide-plank hardwood floors, and midcentury furniture, the rooms and suites offer a quiet comfortable refuge for Crescent City travelers. A partnership with the New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts means you’ll find the work of talented local student-artists hanging everywhere from the lobby and guestrooms to the soon-to-open restaurant, helmed by chef Nina Compton, Top Chef alum and former chef de cuisine at Scarpetta at the Fountainbleau Miami. Bonus for dog-lovers: the good folks at Old No. 77 stock beds, bowls, toys, and treats for your pup—there’s even room service that caters to your canine.—old77hotel.com


Photographs courtesy of Old No. 77 Hotel & Chandlery

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09 Apr 15:05

Fotodiox Lens Mount Adapters

by mark

If you’re getting started in digital photography, or have just picked up your first DSLR/mirrorless camera, your first purchase should be OLD lenses.

Vintage manual lenses take as good (often better) images than newer lenses, particularly on a dollar-for-dollar basis. Search eBay, Goodwill, Craigslist, and thrift stores for old SLR gear. My favorite lens is a Asahi Super Takumar 50mm f/1.4 — it sells for around $100 on eBay, and probably much less in a local shop. The quality of the lens blows away the cheap “nifty fifties” you can buy new. That’s just one example of dozens if not hundreds. It’s an affordable way to learn about focal lengths and image quality.

But much more importantly, shooting with vintage manual lenses forces you to THINK about your photography. Having to focus each shot and choose an aperture has made me a much better photographer. You can’t fire and forget and hope the camera made a good choice for you. That’s the real value of shooting with manual lenses.

That brings us to the cool tools in question — how to mount old lenses on new cameras. On my Sony A57, my Takumar lenses are mounted using a $6 adapter from Fotodiox. It’s as simple as it gets — screw the adapter onto the lens, mount the lens on the camera. I also use a Fotodiox adapter on a manual Nikon 70-200 f/4 zoom.

Fotodiox makes adapters for just about every camera system in existence. They range from less than $10 to hundreds of dollars. Some adapters come with focusing glass, which you may need to focus to infinity depending on the lens-to-sensor distance on some cameras.

I’ve dealt with Fotodiox for nearly two years, and they’ve been a great company with great service — when one adapter shipped with a missing screw, they quickly shipped a replacement, no questions asked.

-- Aaron Weiss

Fotodiox Lens adapters
Prices vary

Available from Amazon

04 Apr 21:08

Brew Stash: Secret Underground Power-Free Beer Cooler

by admin
[ Filed under Home & Personal & in the Gadgets category ]

underground year round beer

This low-tech, beer-stashing solution uses the Earth’s naturally colder temperature to keep up to 24 cans of beer at ready-to-drink temperatures year round, all without needing an external energy source.

secret hidden beer stash

Far from being a futuristic idea, this eCool design owes a debt to a long history of storing beers in below-grade cellars that are naturally cooler yet don’t freeze, keeping your drinks in a reasonable temperature range during any season.

underground beer cooler design

Once you lift the lid, a simple manual hand crank brings your next beer can up to the surface and deposits it handily on a little side flap. Being fully-mechanical with no electricity for any part of the equation makes it cheaper, easier, more versatile and robust.

underground frosty beer system_edited-1

Digging the three-foot hole could be most easily done with a garden drill, though the creators of eCool suggest you can also just use a shovel and get your hands a bit dirty – after all, the beer will taste even better after a bit of hard work.


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04 Apr 21:05

Moonshine is the American Rebel Spirit

by Amanda Winkler

Originally published on March 25, 2015. Text below:

Moonshine evokes imagery of outlaw distillers practicing their craft by the light of the moon to evade the law. But Prohibition ended in 1933. Why are illegal moonshiners still a thing?

"To make this liquor on your own is really exciting to a lot of people. It's under the radar. It remains against the law to make distilled spirits even though wine and beer you can make legally [without a permit]," explains Jaime Joyce, author of Moonshine: A Cultural History of America's Infamous Liquor.

According to Joyce, it's also a matter of economics. Illegal moonshine is most prevalent in poor, rural America where getting licensed to make and sell distilled spirits comes with prohibitive costs. To a financially strapped family, it's more beneficial to risk jail and be able to afford food on the table than it is to shell out hundreds of dollars in fees. 

Joyce sat down with Reason TV's Anthony L. Fisher to discuss the economics and cultural significance of moonshine, it's role in the creation of NASCAR, and why this old school tradition has grown so popular among urban hipsters. 

04 Apr 21:03

Historic Florida home became makeshift Houseboat as it awaited a new plot of land

by Lori Zimmer

green design, eco design, sustainable design, Stambaugh Cottage, FLorida home at sea, Palm Beach maritime museum, palm beach country club, peanut island

A historic Florida home ended up stuck at sea once, after is was was evicted from its seaside plot. The owners of the hundred-year-old Stambaugh Cottage were forced to move it to make way for an encroaching golf course. Instead of demolishing the quaint cottage, the descendants of the pioneer who built it put it on a barge in the Intracoastal Waterway with the intent of moving it to a new spot. But the home got stuck at sea as it awaits historic preservation status, where it ultimately spent 3 years until it finally found a new home in North Carolina.

green design, eco design, sustainable design, Stambaugh Cottage, FLorida home at sea, Palm Beach maritime museum, palm beach country club, peanut island green design, eco design, sustainable design, Stambaugh Cottage, FLorida home at sea, Palm Beach maritime museum, palm beach country club, peanut island

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04 Apr 20:20

You can't buy a Tesla in Tesla, WV

by Chris Bruce

Filed under: Government/Legal, Green, Tesla, United States, Sedan, Electric, Luxury

The governor of West Virginia has signed the bill banning direct sales by automakers into state law. It means that Tesla is not able to open stores there.

Continue reading You can't buy a Tesla in Tesla, WV

You can't buy a Tesla in Tesla, WV originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 04 Apr 2015 15:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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04 Apr 20:14

The Statist Roots Of The Destructive War On Drugs

by Tyler Durden

Submitted by Laurence Vance via The Future of Freedom Foundation,

Although many states have legalized the use of marijuana for medical purposes, some states have decriminalized the possession of certain amounts of marijuana, and four states (Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington) have legalized the recreational use of marijuana, bipartisan support for the drug war throughout the United States continues unabated and unquestioned.

Why?

Why do so many Americans think that the property of other Americans should be confiscated, and that some of their fellow Americans should be fined, arrested, put on probation, subject to no-knock SWAT team raids, be treated as criminals, or locked in a cage for growing, manufacturing, processing, buying, selling, distributing, “trafficking in,” using, or possessing some substance the government doesn’t approve of?

Why do so many Americans support a war on drugs that:

  • unnecessarily makes criminals out of otherwise law-abiding Americans, clogs the judicial system with noncrimes, and expands the prison population with nonviolent offenders;
  • violates the Constitution, the principle of federalism, and increases the size and scope of government;
  • has utterly failed to prevent drug use, reduce drug abuse, or end drug overdoses;
  • fosters violence, corrupts law enforcement, and militarizes the police;
  • hinders legitimate pain management, hampers the treatment of debilitating diseases, and turns doctors into criminals;
  • destroys personal and financial privacy, and negates personal responsibility and accountability;
  • has been unsuccessful in keeping drugs out of the hands of addicts, teenagers, and convicts;
  • assaults individual liberty, private property, and the free market; or
  • wastes billions of taxpayer dollars and has financial and human costs that far exceed any of its supposed benefits?

I see a number of reasons that Americans in general support a government war on the mind-altering and mood-altering substances we refer to as drugs.

For some the reason is history. As far as many Americans are concerned, drugs have always been illegal and should therefore always remain so. It is simply unthinkable that it should be any other way. Yet, for the first half of our nation’s history there were no prohibitions against anyone’s possessing or using any drug.

For some the reason is society. The use of marijuana — for medical reasons or not — is still viewed negatively. And of course the use of other drugs such as cocaine, LSD, and heroin is disparaged even more. There is almost universal support for the drug war among all facets of society: engineers, teachers, preachers, physicians, clerks, accountants, secretaries, and housewives. But, of course, it doesn’t follow that because a majority of society supports something the power of government should be used against those who don’t.

For some the reason is political. The war on drugs enjoys widespread bipartisan support. Liberals, conservatives, Democrats, Republicans, moderates, populists, progressives, centrists, Tea Partiers — they all generally support government prohibition of certain drugs. The drug war is never an issue in any congressional primary or general election. As long as their party or their political group supports the drug war, most Americans will follow suit. The decision to use drugs should be an ethical, religious, medical, or moral decision, not a political decision.

For some the reason is religion. Support for the drug war can be found across the religious spectrum, encompassing Christians and Jews, Protestants and Catholics, liberals and conservatives, fundamentalists and progressives, and Trinitarians and Unitarians. Yet, there is no ethical precept in any religion that should lead anyone to believe that it is the job of government to prohibit, prevent, regulate, restrict, or otherwise control any substance that any adult desires to ingest of his own free will.

For some the reason is morality. Because, some assert, it is immoral to alter one’s mind or mood with illegal drugs, the government should ban the use of these substances. Do drug warriors likewise believe that it is immoral to alter one’s mind or mood with alcohol? If not, then they are woefully inconsistent in their proscription; if so, then they are woefully inconsistent in their prescription.

Dangers and vices

For some the reason is safety. Because it can be dangerous to use illicit drugs, some think the government should ban them. Yet there is no question that smoking marijuana is less dangerous than drinking alcohol. Alcohol abuse is a factor in many drownings; home, pedestrian, car, and boating accidents; and fires. How many drug warriors propose that the government ban alcohol? There are plenty of things that are much more dangerous than using illicit drugs: skydiving, bungee jumping, coal mining, boxing, mountain climbing, cliff diving, drag racing — even crossing the street at a busy intersection. According to the Journal of Forensic Sciences, there are more than 28,000 chainsaw-related injuries annually in the United States. Shouldn’t governments across the country declare war on chainsaws?

For some the reason is vice. Using drugs is said to be a vice like gambling, profanity, drunkenness, using pornography, and prostitution. But as only the latter is actually banned outright by the government, arguments for government action against select drugs are extremely weak. And what about the vices of pride, envy, wrath, sloth, avarice, gluttony, and lust? Why don’t drug warriors advocate government action against them? Vices in 2014 are still as the 19th-century political philosopher Lysander Spooner explained:

Vices are those acts by which a man harms himself or his property. Crimes are those acts by which one man harms the person or property of another. Vices are simply the errors which a man makes in his search after his own happiness. Unlike crimes, they imply no malice toward others, and no interference with their persons or property.

For some the reason is health. The use of mind-altering and mood-altering substances is said to be unhealthy. The federal government classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug with “no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States.” But even if drugs such as marijuana don’t provide benefits for certain diseases and medical conditions, they are certainly not nearly as deadly as the drugs administered by physicians that kill thousands of Americans every year, the drugs that cause thousands of hospital patients every year to have adverse reactions, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as aspirin that kill thousands every year. The most unhealthy drug is alcohol, which is a contributing factor in many cases of cancer, mental illness, fetal abnormalities, and cirrhosis of the liver. Alcohol abuse is one of the leading causes of premature deaths in the United States. There is no question that smoking marijuana is less dangerous than smoking tobacco. Common sense would dictate that it is tobacco that should be banned, not marijuana. And of course, the greatest health threat Americans face is obesity, not illegal drugs.

For some the reason is addiction. Certain drugs should be illegal, we are told, because they are addictive. The federal government says that marijuana “has a high potential for abuse.” But is that because it is addictive or because some people just want to get high? Legal drugs prescribed by physicians are certainly just as addictive as any drugs that are illegal. And of course, pornography, smoking, gambling, sex, shopping, and eating can be addictive. Drug warriors are very selective about which addictive behaviors deserve government action.

For some the reason is irrationality. Although every bad thing that could be said about drugs could also be said about alcohol, some drug warriors hold the irrational belief that drugs are just different from alcohol. Why? Because they just are.

For all, the reason is government. I believe the root of support for the drug war is simply this: trust in government. Unnecessary, irrational, and naive trust in government.

What’s so disturbing is that nowhere does the Constitution authorize the federal government to intrude itself into the personal eating, drinking, or smoking habits of Americans or concern itself with the nature and quantity of any substance Americans want to ingest. The Constitution is supposed to be the foundation of American government. The federal government is not supposed to have the authority to do anything unless it is included in the limited, enumerated powers granted to it in the Constitution. Yet some of the ardent enthusiasts of the Constitution are some of the most rabid drug warriors.

The war on drugs is a war on individual liberty, private property, limited government, the Constitution, American taxpayers, personal responsibility, the free market, and a free society that has ruined more lives than drugs themselves.

Every facet of government that contributes in some way to the monstrous evil that is the war on drugs should be dismembered, root and branch, and cast to the four winds.








02 Apr 22:30

$250,000 donated...

02 Apr 22:28

Joyful Iranians dance into night...

02 Apr 14:18

The Barbecue Bracket Winner is...

by rreed

With 58 percent of the votes in the final round, Red Bridges Barbecue Lodge in Shelby, North Carolina, is the winner of our 2015 Ultimate Barbecue Bracket.


From right: Red Bridges Barbecue Lodge on Washington Street in 1949; Red Bridges sign today (Via Facebook)


>Enlarge and Print Bracket

Although based in a North Carolina town of less than 30,000, the sixty-six-year-old barbecue joint, known for its chopped pork shoulder, hush puppies, and vinegar-sauced red coleslaw, managed to rally its fan base and come out on top of all five rounds. After beating out DCity Smokehouse, Skylight Inn, and Lexington Barbecue in the first three rounds, Red Bridges went up against Georgia’s Southern Soul Barbecue in the Final Four. The support continued into the championship matchup against Alabama favorite Saw’s BBQ.

We want to thank everyone who participated over the past couple of weeks. It goes without saying that the South is home to more great barbecue than could fit in one bracket. We hope this contest brought attention to a number of our favorites. And today, we want to offer hearty congratulations to Red Bridges Barbecue Lodge.

More Barbecue from G&G
>How well do you know your 'cue? Test your BBQ I.Q

>Five Unusual Barbecue Spots
>A Barbecue Road Trip

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01 Apr 23:51

CA WATER SHORTAGE TURNS 'SCARY'


CA WATER SHORTAGE TURNS 'SCARY'


(Main headline, 1st story, link)

01 Apr 23:49

The GOP is fighting over more military spending, What one Republican president had to say about such spending (Video)

by Editor

Eisenhower cc

Some within the GOP will always want more military spending. Whether in peace or during times of war their bias is always toward MORE. This disposition is not good for the Republic as President Eisenhower in his farewell speech explained.

Remember, this guy led our forces in World War II as a five star general, was a Republican president, and has an aircraft carrier named for him.

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01 Apr 23:48

Barack Obama, Corporate Shill

by Editor

Obama big biz cc

Sometimes Obama shills for the corporations. Sometimes the corporations shill for Obama and government. It’s the crony yin and yang.

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