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13 Oct 06:04

The Forgotten Spell, A Digital Gamebook From Tin Man Games For A Younger Audience

by AndroidSPIN

the forgotten spellTin Man Games is best known for their digital gamebooks from franchises like Gamebook Adventures, but with their supernatural and generally dark themes, these are primarily targeted at adult audiences. However, its next gamebook, The Forgotten Spell, is one that specifically targets a younger audience, in particular 8-12 year olds, a first for the Australia outfit.

The Forgotten Spell takes place in the world of fey, a world of faeries, which you must travel through in order to find the Forgotten Spell which has casting a powerful enchantment over the King of the Elder Fey. The gamebook incorporates the tried and true formula that Tin Man Games is known for which includes “animated page-turning, dynamic choice links, achievements and an automated inventory for objects”. One other fun fact about The Forgotten Spell is that it is illustrated by Tony Hough who has worked on projects such as Fighting Fantasy and Warhammer.

The Forgotten Spell is on the Google Play Store now for $3.99, so if you’re looking for something to get a 8-12 year old reading, hit the Play Store link below.

Game: The Forgotten Spell

Play Store Link

Price: $3.99

 

Full Press Release

New digital gamebook to cast spell on 8-12 year olds

Tin Man Games, well known for their Gamebook Adventures digital gamebooks and licensed apps based on Fighting Fantasy and Judge Dredd are aiming for a slightly younger market with the release of The Forgotten Spell. The first title in the Spellcaster Trilogy is released as an interactive book app today on iTunes, Google Play and Amazon Appstore for Android today!

The writer, Louisa Dent Pearce, said: “The Spellcaster Gamebooks are for younger readers, age 8-12 years. It’s great for kids who love fantasy and those who don’t usually like reading.”

The Forgotten Spell takes the young reader into the strange and dangerous world of the fey, a vast population of faerie creatures that inhabit a realm just out of reach of mortals. Readers must decide their fate as they journey through the decaying city of Suidemor on a quest to find the Forgotten Spell, a powerful enchantment cast over the King of the Elder Fey. They must be prepared to test their courage, strength and wit against the myriad of evil foe that await them by casting spells, solving puzzles, collecting valuables, and choosing where to go.

Tin Man Games has used its critically acclaimed gamebook engine, which transforms smartphones and tablets into interactive reading experiences. There is animated page-turning, dynamic choice links, achievements and an automated inventory for objects. Plus, the reader can use bookmarks to save their progress through the story. The app makes good use of the latest smartphone and tablet hardware, using the increased screen space of tablets to read horizontally or vertically.

The digital book has been beautifully illustrated by celebrated illustrator, Tony Hough, known for his work on Fighting Fantasy and Warhammer. Neil Rennison, creative director of Tin Man Games said, “We’ve always been a massive fan of Tony and it’s a privilege to finally work with him. His unique style is perfect to visually bring Louisa’s world to life.”

Louisa continued: “The adaptation of the Spellcaster Gamebooks into a Tin Man Games app is an exciting development in the creation of the series. Playing the app is quite a different experience to reading the print version, as Tin Man has included a beautifully designed interface and music soundtrack that really adds to the experience of exploring Suidemor.”

The Forgotten Spell is now available to download from the iOS App Store, Google Play and Amazon Appstore. It costs $3.99/£2.49/ 3,59 €.

Tin Man Games maintain a site dedicated to their Gamebook Adventures apps at www.GamebookAdventures.com.

Tin Man Games also runs a developer blog at www.TinManGames.com.au.

For more information about the Spellcaster Gamebooks in print and digital format visit www.spellcastergamebooks.com.

The post The Forgotten Spell, A Digital Gamebook From Tin Man Games For A Younger Audience appeared first on AIVAnet.

13 Oct 05:46

Is it Sexist to Recruit Women in Tech?

by Julie Ann Horvath, Contributor

Julie Ann Horvath ice cream

Julie Ann Horvath is a designer at Github, the open-source code development startup in San Francisco.

I recently gave an interview to Dame Magazine to discuss whether or not efforts to recruit women in tech are sexist, and while answering questions over email, I realized I hadn't really sat down and written enough about my worries, reasoning, and motivations around Passion Projects. There's a ton of great stuff in this interview (that didn't get written about in the article) that I think everyone needs to hear.

Here's the full interview:

1. Some say that Women in Technology Initiatives can do more harm than good, and that they don’t want to be seen as token females. As one of GitHub’s first female developers, did you ever feel a pressure to represent all female developers? What was that experience like?

I actually still worry about this pretty often. I think there's a misconception, even within GitHub, that I *speak* for all women at our company. Even amongst the Ladies of GitHub, we're a super diverse group of people. We're on different teams, some of us have families, some of us don't, we're from different parts of the world, have different backgrounds, different interests...It's not my job to be the figurehead of women at GitHub...but I'm protective of the culture we've built and want to enable more women to do awesome work and feel like they're valued as peers.

2. How did things change for you personally once GitHub hired more women?

I guess I hadn't noticed how much I missed working with other women.

I remember I was helping out a friend with a side project after work one day. We sat down and spent the night writing code together. It was just so...easy. To get along, to get on the same page, our arguments were productive and from the minute we sat down together there was an immediate sense that we respected each other.

I'm not saying these working relationships can't exist between across all genders. It was just cool to sit down with someone, write code, and assume that that other person was my peer. I didn't have to prove that I was as smart as them nor did I have to scream to be heard or have my opinion considered.

I knew I hadn't felt this at GitHub in a while. So when I got back from working on that project with my friend, I posted this status update on our internal communication tool we call 'Team':

"Made my first contribution to a friend's project tonight. Really fun to write code and work on projects with other lady scros [reference to the movie Idiocracy / inside joke]. Something I wish we had a little more of at GitHub. Which reminded me, it's been a while since we've hired a female engineer or designer. In fact, If we had a "Technical Lady Hubbers Hired" graph it would look like the one attached. Would anyone be interested in a few talks about growing an awesome female engineering culture from some amazing lady devs in the new year? I would be most willing to PRP [be responsible for] this effort."

That was the seed that Passion Projects would eventually grow from.

There are women who are super comfortable with being the only woman in tech. Some of them see it as an advantage, you know, being the unicorn. Tina Fey has a great quote about this in her book Bossypants on career advice for women who work in a male dominated industry:

“This is what I tell young women who ask me for career advice. People are going to try to trick you. To make you feel that you are in competition with one another. "You're up for a promotion. If they go for a woman, it'll be between you and Barbara." Don't be fooled. You're not in competition with other women. You're in competition with everyone.”

I don't just want to hire more badass women, I'm focused on keeping them. I don't want to hire women and put them on a shelf like "look at all our women" (I'm sure this is the tokenism Lea's worried about). My motivation is not for GitHub to beat other tech companies in the percentage of female employees race. I don't care about that.

I want to empower the women I work with, the women who inspire me. I want them to be more visible and I want other people to see that you don't have to be followed around by a fleet of nannies to be a successful woman in our industry. The women I see affecting change every day are so normal. We don't just need role models, we need to see people who weren't born on 3rd base succeed.

3. Do you agree that the anonymity of the internet makes it more attractive to women?

Absolutely. My coworker Kyle wrote a pretty good blog post entitled 'Pixels Don't Care' you should it check it out.

4. Some argue against having female role models. You wrote in your blog, however, that seeing a woman succeed in your environment made you realize you could do the same. In your experience why are female role models important? How did it impact you to have a female role model?

You have to have a connection with the people you look up to. With your mentors. For me, it's incredibly important for the people who mentor me to have come from a similar community, have a mixed background, or be a woman. Or all of those things. It's about relating to them.

My role model at my first company was all of those things. She prepared me for a ton of things that I was going to run into. And that she knew would upset me. In a lot of ways, she evened the playing field for me a little bit. And I try to do the same thing for the girls and women I mentor as well as those whom I work with.

5. What inspired you to create Passion Projects around the idea of featuring female role models? How is Passion Projects different from other Women in Tech initiatives?

I don't know how much it's different. One thing I've really pushed is that I don't want women to come and give talks about being women. I hate that. I get asked "What is it like to be a woman in tech" all the time. And I never really know how to answer that question. I think it goes back to the idea that every woman's experience in this industry is the same. They aren't.

I decided to ask these incredible women to speak about whatever project they're most excited about. This has kept the talks really diverse and interesting to everyone, not just women. The typical Passion Projects audience is usually split right down the middle, half men and half women. And I wouldn't have it any other way. It's just as important for men to see these women as role models as it is for women to.

6. You mentioned in your blog that you had some negative experiences early on. Can you share one story and explain how you dealt with the situation? How did that experience motivate you to create Passion Projects?

To be honest, I created Passion Projects because I didn't want to dwell on the negative experiences anymore. I think I got to a point where I was so frustrated with the leadership in this industry. Because I would hear "We should hire more women!!" on almost a daily basis from the same people who kind of refused to respect me as a peer. So in a lot of ways Passion Projects was an attempt to call all of their bluffs. I was finally asking my founders and this industry to put their money and their support where their mouths are.

The support from my coworkers, both female and male, has been totally extraordinary and inspiring.

7. What has been the biggest impact of Passion Projects? Any surprises or unexpected results?

I'm so happy with the communities that are being built around Passion Projects. And to be honest, It's really awesome that men are walking away from these talks inspired by these women speaking. It's great to see faces in the crowd I don't recognize. Because that means we're growing our community.

8. Women in Tech Initiatives can certainly increase visibility, but what makes a company a great place for a woman to work once she’s hired? If you were looking for a job today, what criteria would you consider about the work environment?

I need to see women in leadership roles. I need to see them contributing to product decisions. And I need to see that women at these companies aren't being tricked into competing with one another.

9. You wrote: “Over the years I've learned that the best way to make sure your experience doesn't go to waste is to invest it in the people around you.” How did you learn this lesson? Why is this important?

I learned this by connecting with other women in my industry. I realized that I was internalizing a lot of problems that weren't really mine to begin with. And that there were better ways to handle sh---y situations and conflict without blaming myself for other peoples's shit. It's my job to do my job, to design products and write code, and to be good at these things. It's not my job to correct the way that other people behave. Once I started talking to other women about some of these situations I was dealing with, I started connecting a lot of dots. And with their help and advice I was able to distance myself from these toxic situations and focus on the work I do.

I really wanna pay some of that forward. That's always been instilled in me. I think it has to do with coming from where I come from, seeing fucked up things and wanting to fix them.

10. Last but not least, is it sexist for companies to focus hiring on women? How do you find a middle ground between sexism and support?

Just to say they have? Absolutely. I struggle with this all of the time actually. And I'm incredibly careful about this internally and being clear that Passion Projects is not a recruiting mixer. I don't want the women who attend our events to feel like they're being preyed on. I've also been hesitant in partnering with other companies in any effort to scale the series specifically because I want them to have the right motivations. Sure, it's great your company wants to hire more women. But *why*? I think there are a lot of people talking about diversity in tech right now because they think it's what they're supposed to be talking about.

Don't get me wrong, I plan on taking full advantage of this to try to even the playing field for women and for people who come from different socio-economic classes, and belong to different races and ethnicities.
But not because someone told me those are things I should care about, but because that's who I am. And I'd like to make it easier for more people like me to learn, succeed, and become leaders in tech.

Read the article Are Efforts to Recruit Women in Technology Sexist? in Dame Magazine.

Horvath is a designer and frontend developer at GitHub. She is also the creator and organizer of Passion Projects, a monthly talk series designed to help surface and celebrate the work of women in the tech industry.

Join the conversation about this story »


    






13 Oct 05:37

Eve: True Stories is allowing players to write Eve's history book

by Alexa Ray Corriea

Involving Eve Online players in the narrative process for the Eve comic books is a way for them to interpret the world of New Eden for themselves and experience it on a deeper level — in a way, they are creating a history book for Eve, creative director Torfi Frans Olafsson told Polygon.

Olafsson said developer CCP Games felt compelled to adapt these player stories, these facts, into semi-fiction for Eve: True Stories. It would provide more interesting, intimate content for consumers, allowing them to connect to the Eve universe in a new way.

"We were looking at the decade anniversary of Eve, and we wanted to do something to celebrate the player stories that have emerged over the years," Olafsson said. "These stories, some of them...

Continue reading…

13 Oct 05:36

iPad 6 with 30-40% Higher Pixel Density Expected in 2014

by MacRumors

ipad5_2 Countering earlier reports about the possibility of Apple launching a larger, 12.9-inch iPad next year, KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo states in a new research note that the company will instead release a new sixth-generation 9.7-inch iPad with 30-40% higher pixel density than seen in both the current and upcoming full-sized iPad.

Contrary to speculation that next year’s iPad next year may come in a 12” form, or larger, we think it will not change from the current 9.7” format as we think a 12” iPad would not provide a good mobility experience given today’s technology limitations.

In light [of] advancing Oxide and a-Si technologies, the PPI of iPad 6, which we expect to come out at end-2014, will exceed that of 2013’s iPad 5 by 30-40%, which will offer more competent visuals.

In his research note, Kuo also touches on the third-generation iPad mini, which would be expected to launch alongside the higher-resolution iPad 6. Kuo believes that the second-generation iPad mini expected to be introduced at Apple’s media event later this month will adopt a Retina display and that there will be no further changes to resolution for the third-generation iPad mini next year.

Apple is expected to unveil both the fifth-generation iPad and the second-generation iPad mini during an October 22 event that will also showcase other Apple products such as Mavericks and the Mac Pro.

    



The post iPad 6 with 30-40% Higher Pixel Density Expected in 2014 appeared first on AIVAnet.

13 Oct 05:36

Apple Looking to Launch Lower-Cost iMac in 2014

by MacRumors

Apple may be preparing to release a cheaper model of the iMac in 2014, KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo states in a new research note. The analyst believes that sales of recent iMac models have failed to meet expectations and that Apple may look to introduce a lower-cost option in order to bolster sales in critical foreign markets.imac_family_2013

Our surveys indicate that Apple’s last iMac model, released at end-2012 with an all-new-design, shipped fewer-than-expected units in the worldwide market. We think the price was set too high and the model failed to make an impact in critical foreign markets like China. We thus think Apple may offer a budget iMac model to push shipments among non-US markets in the face of solid competition from Levono (CN), HP (US) and other rivals.

We are optimistic that a budget iMac would boost overall iMac shipments to grow 10-20% YoY in 2014.

After a major redesign last year, the iMac was given a surprise refresh last month as Apple updated the line of desktops based on Intel’s Haswell processors, faster PCI Express-based flash storage options, and new 802.11ac Wi-Fi capabilities. Currently, the entry-level iMac 21.5 inch iMac starts at $1,299, while the 27-inch iMac starts $1,799. Both models are $100 more expensive than the previous generation iMacs, which debuted in 2011.

    







The post Apple Looking to Launch Lower-Cost iMac in 2014 appeared first on AIVAnet.

13 Oct 04:19

Inbreker gereanimeerd na vlucht

Een inbreker in Helmond is bijna verdronken nadat hij op de vlucht voor de politie in een kanaal was gesprongen. Dat melden Brabantse media.

De man van 46 was vannacht met een andere inbreker in een sportschool op een industrieterrein aan het werk. Ze werden betrapt door de beveiliging, die de politie waarschuwde. Ondertussen waren de twee verdachten weggevlucht.

Beide mannen sprongen in de industriehaven van de Zuid-Willemsvaart. Een inbreker kon zelf uit het water komen, de ander werd bewusteloos door agenten uit het water gevist. Hij is gereanimeerd en is naar het ziekenhuis gebracht.

13 Oct 04:18

Research provides new insight into how the Earth's core was formed

by Andrew Webster

Scientists have long puzzled over just how the core of our planet was formed, and new research out of Stanford University suggests that it could have been a long and complicated process. The research shows that the core could have been formed through a process called percolation, which involves molten iron trickling through the solid silicate layer of the Earth to reach the center. It's a theory that has existed for some time, but the new research provides further evidence that it could have actually happened.

Continue reading…

13 Oct 04:18

The Crazy, Awesome Life Of A Google Street View Trekker

by Megan Rose Dickey

google street view

Google Street View explorers might have the best job in the world. 

Thanks to Street View trekkers, us common folk get to experience the entire world without ever leaving our home.

To highlight some of the treks, design firm B-Reel and Google teamed up to create a project that highlights these treks. 

Google Maps first started Street View as an experimental project back in 2007.



Since then, it has expanded its program to allow third parties to apply to become a Trekker to help map the world.



Thanks to Street View trekkers, Google has been able to capture imagery from locations on all seven continents.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






13 Oct 04:18

Foursquare for Windows Phone updated, brings new UI to 7.x users

by MobileNations

Foursquare for Windows Phone

It’s been awhile since the official Foursquare app for Windows Phone had an update. In fact, it was way back in June when we last saw some minor bug fixes come to the popular checkin app. Since then, we’ve also seen the Windows 8 version launch with high praise from users.

This morning, version 3.1.3.0 has landed and while it brings a few changes to Windows Phone 8 users (more on the below), from reader tips we’ve received, the Windows Phone 7.x version now has the new UI. (We haven’t been able to verify since we’re out of town, but a few of you tipped us on that fact).

The post Foursquare for Windows Phone updated, brings new UI to 7.x users appeared first on AIVAnet.

13 Oct 04:18

Proces tegen luchthaven Birmingham om crash UPS

BIRMINGHAM - Vier ingezetenen van de Amerikaanse staat Alabama hebben een rechtszaak aangespannen tegen Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport wegens de crash van een vrachtvliegtuig van UPS in augustus. Dit melden Amerikaanse nieuwssites zaterdag. Volgens de burgers is runway 18/36 waar de Airbus A300 van UPS had moeten landen te kort en door het geaccidenteerde terrein ook moeilijk aan te vliegen.

13 Oct 04:17

12 Famous Quotes That People Always Get Wrong

by Christina Sterbenz

shakespeare

Wordsmiths like Shakespeare and Robert Frost loved their sarcasm. But when you take comments like that out of context, they can mean the exact opposite of the author's intention.

That hasn't stopped us from spouting famous lines, many from classic literature, however we see fit.

We created a list of some frequently used quotes that people just don't understand. Some came from this Quora post. Others, we added from bits and pieces of our high school lit classes.

1. "I took the road less traveled." In Robert Frost's culturally omnipresent poem, "The Road Not Taken," he tries to decide which of two paths he should take. He looks down one but chooses the second, "just as fair" and "worn really about the same."

If you read the entire poem, the last stanza regales how he'll say "with a sigh" that his decision "made all the difference."

In reality, Frost arbitrarily chose his path, which didn't matter in the long run. He just wants to hide his pessimism.

Of course everyone today uses the quote as evidence of "forging your own path," "going your own way" and all those other tautologies, about fate and individualism.

2. "Money is the root of all evil." Not really. The love of money is the root of all evil, according to Timothy 6:10 from the King James Bible. 

3. "Nice guys finish last." Nice guys actually finish seventh. Leo Durocher, nicknamed Leo the Lip, served as the field manager for the Brooklyn Dodgers during the height of the Giants-Dodgers rivalry. He made some comment about Mel Ott, right-fielder for the Giants, being too nice, which made the team finish in seventh place. "Baseball Digest" later reprinted the column in which his quote appeared but changed "seventh" to "last place," according to Freakonomics blog.

Leo's misquoted words soon became a credo for over-aggressive coaches and guys with no romantic game everywhere.

4. Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou, Romeo? In most high school adaptations of Shakespeare's well-known play, Juliet raises a hand to her furrowed brow, searching for her lover from a balcony. But "wherefore art" doesn't mean "where." It means "why." Juliet questions why fate made Romeo a Montague, her family's sworn enemy.

5. “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” Most attribute this insight to Voltaire. In reality, Evelyn Beatrice Hall, a writer born two hundred years later, paraphrased a quote from Voltaire's "Treatise on Tolerance," which begged for understanding between religions.

Still, some report the original reads, "Think for yourselves and let other enjoy the privilege to do so too." But those words never appear in Voltaire's essay either.

6. "Love makes the world go 'round." The Duchess, a hideous character in Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland," makes this comment in passing right after she advocates beating her baby for sneezing. In context, the author meant the sweet quip sarcastically. But that didn't stop Ashlee Simpson from making a terrible song. 

7. "Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon 'em." In Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," Maria writes a letter to Malvolio, trying to convince him that another character, Olivia, loves him — dramatic, right? Maria uses the quote to appeal to Malvolio's ego, that Olivia (the false author) cannot deny his greatness. Thanks, Sparknotes.

8. "Oh East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet.” Talking heads in foreign policy sometimes use this quote as evidence that opposite sides of the globe will never see eye-to-eye. But if they read just a little farther in Rudyard Kipling's ballad, the next lines read, "But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth/When two strong men stand face to face, tho' they come from the ends of the earth."

Essentially, world colonization will happen regardless of geo-political borders, and we should all just get along.

9. "The Devil is in the details." Lazy people somehow bastardized a brilliant German architect's words to mean the exact opposite. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe really said, "God is in the details." He's also credited with another famous aphorism: "Less is more." 

10. "Good fences make good neighbors." Once again, Bobby Frost wrote a widely misunderstood poem. In "Mending Wall," a fence separates two neighbors' yards. Every spring, they collaborate and fix it. But in the process, they disagree on whether they need a barrier at all. Frost makes the last line of the poem ironic. These two curmudgeons simply keep their fence out of tradition, even though it means more work for them.

11. "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" More than one slick love letter has included this phrase. But arguably Shakespeare's most famous sonnet praised a man, not a woman. He actually wrote hundreds of sonnets about this guy, his dearest friend.

12. "Blood is thicker than water." This gets uttered around awkward family photos on the mantel of nearly every home in the country. The original phrase, however, meant the opposite. An earlier proverb preached, "The blood of the covenant is thicker than the water of the womb." In this case, "water of the womb" refers to family while "blood of the covenant" means blood shed by soldiers. So really, military bonds trump your siblings and parents.

SEE ALSO: 18 Obsolete Words That Should Have Never Gone Out Of Style

Join the conversation about this story »


    






13 Oct 04:17

Monster Cyclone Slams India, Sends Half A Million People Fleeing [PHOTOS]

by Dina Spector

Cyclone

A massive and powerful cyclone slammed into India's east coast on Saturday, sending nearly half a million people seeking shelter. 

Cyclone Phailin struck the eastern Indian states of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh shortly after 9 p.m. local time, the Guardian reports.

Up to 12 million people could be displaced by the storm, which is packing winds of over 130 mph and expected to cause an 11-foot surge in sea levels, according to the India Meteorological Department.

"This is one of the largest evacuations undertaken in India," Shashidhar Reddy, the vice-chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority, told the Guardian

A big wave smashes into a breakwater at a fishing harbor in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.



Waves crash onto the shore at a fishing harbor.



A girl runs for shelter in heavy rain brought by Cyclone Phailin in Ichapuram, a town in Srikakulam district, in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






13 Oct 04:16

Gezellige drukte tijdens Luchtvaartnieuws beroepenmarkt

LELYSTAD - Bedrijven, opleiders en bezoekers hebben elkaar zaterdag kunnen vinden tijdens de vijfde beroepen- en opleidingenmarkt die Luchtvaartnieuws in samenwerking met de Aviodrome in Lelystad organiseerde. De eerste reacties van diverse vertegenwoordigers van bedrijven en opleiders zijn dan ook positief. Men beschreef de bezoekers, die uit het gehele land afkomstig waren, als erg geïnteresseerd en goed voorbereid.

13 Oct 04:16

Silk Road commemorated with special edition ecstasy pills

by Dante D'Orazio

A drug dealer is keeping the memory of digital black market Silk Road alive with specially-printed ecstasy pills. "To pay our respect to DPR and to forever remember the legacy that was Silk Road we have made a small batch of special units," reads a message on the online storefront for TheHeineken, which sells an array of narcotics. "DPR" refers to Dread Pirate Roberts, the man behind Silk Road. Last week the FBI arrested Ross Ulbricht — who the agency alleges is Dread Pirate Roberts — and shut down the marketplace. Ulbricht has denied all charges.

Since the shutdown a number of other sites have moved in to fill the gap left by the Silk Road, including Sheep Marketplace, where the specially-marked pills are being sold. The tablets...

Continue reading…

13 Oct 04:15

Islamdebat in Belgie eindigt in schedelbasisfractuur

by Van Rossem
Niet alleen in Nederland wordt het islamdebat stevig gevoerd. Ook de Zuiderburen voeren heftige discussies. Vrijdagavond braken er rellen uit tussen de politie en bewoners van de wijk Meulenberg in Houthalen-Helchteren (hier, in het oude mijnwerkersland van Belgisch Limburg...
13 Oct 04:15

This Is The Costume Every Teen Is Wearing To New York Comic Con

by Melia Robinson

attack on titan cosplay

Within minutes of stepping onto the New York Comic Con showroom floor, it's easy to spot a pair of teeny boppers wearing the same outfit: white pants and shirt, knee-high leather boots, black straps buckled around the legs, and a cropped brown jacket emblazoned with a badge of navy and white wings. As they pass each other they stop, crumpling their right hands into fists over their hearts and placing the other hand behind their backs—a salute.

A new cult-like fandom is sweeping the Javits Center, where Comic Con is held through Sunday, October 12. These teenage attendees are obsessed with "Attack on Titan," a Japanese manga comic that spun into a television program in April.

attack on titan cosplayThe premise of the show is that humans were once nearly exterminated by monsters called titans, who eat humans for pleasure rather than as a food source. The few survivors isolated themselves by building massive walls around their city, but several hundred years later, the creatures return, hungry. A teenage boy, Eren, his foster sister Mikasa, and new friend Armin join a military service dedicated to eradicating them.

In the New York Tri-state area, a small group of high schoolers are growing a community to celebrate the show. They connect through Facebook (although they don't have a official group yet) and create event pages to organize meetups. Ali Chimelis, 18, and Jessica Ryan, 17, are leading the efforts. Twice they've arranged "Attack on Titan" photoshoots in Washington Square Park, where fans show up in costume. Roughly 20 people attended the most recent event, according to the girls.

attack on titan cosplayComic Con is the largest venue they've staged a photoshoot at, and offers the largest platform for raising awareness of the show.

Saturday afternoon, two dozen teenagers gathered by the stairs in the Javits Center's front parking lot, accessible to pass-holders only. Ryan, who who wore a dirty blonde wig cut off at the ears and a tight-lipped pout—when in character—stood off by the side.

"All right, next request?" she shouted above the roar of cheers and camera shutters. The crowd erupted, screaming the names of characters who should be photographed together.

attack on titan cosplay"Annie Leonhart and Petra Ral!" someone yelled.

Chimelis, whose eyes glittered with emerald green contacts, skipped to the front of the crowd. Two other cosplayers followed, the alive and angel versions of a soldier from the show. The alive one dropped to her knees and bent over backwards, while Chimelis launched her leg into the air in a pretend-kick to the girl's back. The angel version bowed her head with hands folded.

The pose, imitating Annie Leonhart's execution of Petra Ral, sent the bystanders into a paparazzi-like frenzy. Thirty seconds passed, and a new group took their place.

No one cosplays like teenagers.

Here's the scene...

comic con cosplay attack on titan

And the group's response.

comic con cosplay attack on titan

SEE ALSO: 15 Kooky Things We Saw On Day One Of New York Comic Con

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13 Oct 04:14

Vietnamese general to be buried

A grand procession is escorting the body of Vietnamese national hero General Vo Nguyen Giap to his home town for burial.
13 Oct 04:14

India cyclone leaves chaos in wake

Indian disaster teams begin a relief operation after Cyclone Phailin smashes homes and blocks roads, but a huge evacuation seems to have paid off.
13 Oct 03:36

Vietnam war leader General Giap dies

Vo Nguyen Giap, Vietnam's legendary general who masterminded victories against France and the US, has died aged 102.
13 Oct 03:35

Deadly monster truck crash in Mexico

At least eight people are killed and dozens injured at a show in Mexico as a modified pick-up known as a monster truck crashes into spectators.
13 Oct 03:35

The 12 Best Charts Of The Week

by Matthew Boesler

Here they are: the 12 best charts of the week.

1. The planet is leaving the Age of Commodities and entering the Age of Consumer Durables.

spending ladder chart

READ MORE: GOLDMAN SACHS: Here's What The World Wants »


2. The University of Chicago cleans up on the leaderboard for most Nobel Prizes in Economics.

nobel schools

READ MORE: These Universities Are Cranking Out The Most Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Economics »


3. Russia's economic inequality is nothing short of epic.

Russia inequality charts

READ MORE: Putting Russia's Unparalleled Wealth Disparity In Perspective »

4. Canada might have a housing bubble/problem.

canada construction labor force

READ MORE: Three Charts That Make Us Scared For Canada »


5. The prospect of a six-week debt ceiling extension is already putting pressure on Treasury bills maturing around Thanksgiving.

t-bill curve

READ MORE: T-Bill Hump Collapses As Markets Price In New Debt Ceiling Crisis Six Weeks Out »


6. Child abuse rises when consumer confidence falls.

spanking

READ MORE: 'High-Frequency Spanking' Increased Six-Fold During The Great Recession »


7. China's instant noodles market is growing at a significantly faster clip than the country's overall economy.

china noodle

READ MORE: China's $8.8 Billion Instant Noodle Market In Three Charts »


8. A recession indicator that is never wrong has some bad news.

important charts q4 60 60

READ MORE: Wall Street's Brightest Minds Reveal THE MOST IMPORTANT CHARTS IN THE WORLD »


9. 8% of the world's population controls 83% of the world's wealth.

world wealth pyramid

READ MORE: This Pyramid Shows How All The World's Wealth Is Distributed And The Gigantic Gap Between Rich And Poor »


10. Hiring intentions of U.S. small businesses have accelerated in 2013.

nfib hiring

READ MORE: Here's More Evidence That Obamacare Isn't Destroying Jobs »


11. The U.S. stock market — along with Switzerland's — is the most overvalued market in the world.

global market valuations

READ MORE: SOCGEN: In A Few Months, The Stock Market Will Drop 15%, Then Go Nowhere For Years »


12. Investing in USD/CNY volatility could be the long-term debt ceiling trade.

USD/CNY volatility

READ MORE: DEUTSCHE BANK: The Debt Ceiling Crisis Leaves The Chinese With A Dilemma »


AND DON'T MISS: Wall Street's brightest reveal THE MOST IMPORTANT CHARTS IN THE WORLD

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13 Oct 03:34

Grand Theft Auto 5 parody takes you to the barbershop

by Megan Farokhmanesh

Australian comedy duo Max and Sam created a live-action Grand Theft Auto 5 parody that highlights a few of the game's more humors quirks.

Although the video's star is ready to begin a mission, his hair isn't quite up to snuff. Watch above as he takes a trip the barbershop — with some alarming side encounters.

For more of Max and Sam's work, including parodies of Dark Souls and Metal Gear Solid, check out their YouTube channel.

Grand Theft Auto 5 launched last month. You can read our review here.

13 Oct 02:43

The Amazing Spider-Man 2's New York Comic Con teaser trailer

by Brian Crecente

Here's the teaser trailer used to announce The Amazing Spider-Man 2 at the New York Comic Con today.

The game is set for a release before the movie of the same name hits theaters in May. It will be coming to PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Wii U, Nintendo 3DS and Windows PC.

Check out the announcement here and our interview about the game here.

13 Oct 02:43

An MIT Scientist Wore Google Glass On A New York Comic Con Panel: 'We're In An Image Revolution'

by Chris C Anderson

Professor Google Glass

During the New York Comic Con panel for the Discovery Channel's new James Wood's hosted show "Futurescape," Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Project Innovator of The Camera Culture Group and Research Scientist John Werner strapped on a pair of Google Glass. 

After showing a "Futurescape" clip about nano machines that could one day be coursing through our bodies looking for diseases and problems, Werner chimed in with what he thinks is innovative about Google Glass — that the device has a camera looking at your eye to detect blinks and winks.

Werner used Google Glass as an example of what the future could potentially hold in regards to cameras "looking in" as opposed to looking out.

Specifically, to use the technology to detect health issues by analyzing data from such a device that might not otherwise be caught. 

He then briefly waved around a device his group is working on that looks into your eyes and can tell you if you're going to get specific retinal diseases. 

New Glasses Tech Fist Time

Werner said we're in the midst of an image revolution with the development underway of a trillion frames per-second camera, as well as a camera that can see around corners. 

The future could be bright, and everybody might be able to see it. 

SEE ALSO: Spike Lee's 'Oldboy' Remake Impresses At New York Comic Con

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13 Oct 02:12

T-Mobile makes data roaming free in 100 countries (128Kbps, but still)

by Jon Brodkin

T-Mobile's latest offer could save US cellular consumers from having to pay massive roaming fees when they travel overseas.

Beginning Oct. 31, individual and business customers in T-Mobile's Simple Choice plans "automatically get unlimited data and texting in more than 100 Simple Global countries worldwide, and they will only pay a global flat rate of 20 cents per minute for voice calls when roaming in the same countries," the company announced last night. "Eligible customers on T-Mobile’s popular Simple Choice plan won’t have to activate anything or pay an extra monthly fee."

The deal is good for both new and existing customers. As you might expect, the free data won't get you on a 4G LTE network, or even a 3G one. A fact sheet says the data roaming provides speeds of 128Kbps, "ideal for e-mail, web pages, navigation, and social apps."

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13 Oct 01:48

Ars readers react to the wild west of password cracking

by Ars Staff

As computing power gets cheaper, passwords get easier to crack. Until recently, common knowledge was that long, obscure phrases were much more difficult for hackers to crack.

But that's no longer the case. Dan Goodin brought us the details in his article How the Bible and YouTube are fueling the next frontier of password cracking. In it, Goodin describes many of the new techniques that security researchers (and their black hat counterparts) are using to push the limits of speedy password cracking.

"Password security is incredibly important," Alyeska wrote after reading the story. "It would be nice to see the Big Tech providers actually spend some damn research on this for elegant consumer solutions."

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13 Oct 01:47

Eindhoven wil ontslagen Blackberry-personeel lokken

by Tonie van Ringelestijn
De gemeente Eindhoven hoopt dat ontslagen medewerkers van Blackberry tijdelijk in zijn Brainport-regio aan de slag willen.
13 Oct 01:46

Delft University wins World Solar Challenge car race

by noreply@idg.co.uk (Martyn Williams)
A team from Delft University in the The Netherlands won the World Solar Challenge, a biennial cross-Australia race that puts solar cars up against harsh driving conditions.
    


13 Oct 01:45

Medewerker Ziggo bestolen van laptop met onversleutelde klantgegevens - update

by Joost Schellevis
Een Ziggo-medewerker is door diefstal een onversleutelde laptop met gegevens van 40.000 klanten verloren, zoals de naam, het e-mailadres en het onderwerp waarover de klanten contact hadden met de klantenservice.
13 Oct 01:44

Mozilla warns developers away from legacy plugins

by Dave Neal
Mozilla warns developers away from legacy plugins

Except Flash