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11 Jun 14:06

Your favorite see-through Pepsi is returning

by Janet Nguyen
None!

wow its really coming back

The '90s are coming, the '90s are coming!
11 Jun 13:50

Room of the Day: Family Memories Fill a Casually Elegant Parlor (10 photos)

by Becky Harris
None!

the futon made me to wtf

This parlor room holds fond memories for its owner. I say “parlor room” because that’s what it’s been known as in this family for generations. It’s in the triple-decker house the owner’s grandmother lived in and where her father grew up. Though the room was ready for a refresh, she wanted the retain...

11 Jun 13:38

Brainstorming App Ideas - Dilbert by Scott Adams

10 Jun 23:33

Milan’s Green Balconies

by The Sartorialist

902C0112Blog

I love how the balconies and windows of Milan overflow with flowers and vegetation! I show you these examples not because they are so special or unique but because it’s so common! It’s like a gift to the city because the people in that apartment get to enjoy it a little bit but it really just beautifies the city. It’s much more common in Milan than in Rome or Florence or almost any other city in Italy.

 

902C0033Blog

 

Milan-Green_2184blog

 

Come on New York we need to up our flower game!

10 Jun 21:05

Muppets make great substitute teachers, study says

by Janet Nguyen
A new study shows that kids can learn as much, or more, from Sesame Street as they do from preschool.
10 Jun 15:47

France’s boom-art Releases More European Art Inspired Surfboards

by Adil Habib
None!

wife how cool would these be ??

Impress your mildly pretentious friends with your knowledge of fine art while surfing at the same time with this limited edition range of surfboards from France’s boom-art. The art gallery specializing in all things skateboarding and surf has teamed up with fellow French surf enthusiasts UWL to produce the 404 Series, a line of boards inspired by European masterpieces.

The pieces are all handmade in France, with a limited run of only 10 boards in each design. Featured artwork include works by 18th-century French painter François Boucher and Dutch artist Jan Van Huysum, as well as a 1961 shot of Brigitte Bardot. Each board comes with a certificate of manufacture, fins, carrying case and display hook, and retail for approximately $2,100. You can shop the entire 404 range, as well as boom-art’s other art-inspired boards, online.

The post France’s boom-art Releases More European Art Inspired Surfboards appeared first on Selectism.

10 Jun 15:46

Doomed Smartwatch Project - Dilbert by Scott Adams

10 Jun 15:45

Sliding Scale: Swim Trunks

by Brad Bennett
None!

not as short as Croatia but pretty short.

Sliding_Scale_Swim_Trunks_LeadWelcome to the eighth installment of Sliding Scale, a series in which we bring you a single product for every budget. This month we’re rounding up Swim Trunks. Not too slim and not too loose; not too short and not not too long, these 10 responsibly-made pairs are just right. Note: all of the trunks Read more »
10 Jun 14:02

June 10, 2015

10 Jun 11:45

adidas Cycling & The 5th Floor Capture the Beautiful Streets of London

by Adil Habib
None!

phil i think i am going to buy a bike. how do you feel about that? i'm going to start looking on craigslist.

London and New York-based cycling team and collective, The 5th Floor, teamed up with adidas Cyling earlier this year for its 2015 cycling range of skin suits, jerseys, bibs, caps, overshoes and warmers. The range features adidas’ iconic three-stripe design and The 5th Floor’s signature green palette and shield logo. The team just released a new lookbook courtesy of photographer Jon Baines, showcasing the new range in action in and around the streets of London. Tour the beautiful city above and find out more about The 5th Floor here; more about the adidas Cycling range here.

The post adidas Cycling & The 5th Floor Capture the Beautiful Streets of London appeared first on Selectism.

09 Jun 17:00

- Dilbert by Scott Adams

08 Jun 16:19

How the two-liter soda is a relic of change

by Tony Wagner
None!

viagra for women ... should be interesting

$10
That's about how much Apple's new streaming music service will reportedly cost for unlimited music. The two-tiered service is likely to be announced next week. We took a closer look at what Apple might have to offer in comparison to other options in an already overly crowded music streaming market.

$488 million
That's how much the Red Cross raised for aid in Haiti following a devastating earthquake in 2010, more than any other aid organization. The Red Cross pledged to build hundreds of homes and says it's helped millions of Hatians with that money, but NPR and ProPublica's continuing investigation found that most of these claims were murky and unsubstantiated. In fact, some communities have reportedly received little or none of the promised aid.

17 percent
Summer is upon us, which means many teenagers will be looking for jobs. The good news is that teen unemployment is down to around 17 percent; in 2009, it had soared to 27.2 percent. But experts point to other economic challenges getting in the way of young Americans and that summer gig.

3
That's how many countries don't use the metric system: Liberia, Myanmar and the U.S. There have been some changes here, but they haven't moved past the beverage aisle. The hope was that recognizable, accessible measurements like a two-liter soda would ease the transition, but somewhere along the line things stalled.

18-6
That's the vote by the Food and Drug Administration approving flibanserin. Think of it as "Viagra for women." As the New York Times reports, the vote followed an intense lobbying campaign that accused the FDA of gender bias when considering drugs that treat sexual performance.

Here are the numbers we're watching and reading for Friday.
08 Jun 16:17

June 8, 2015

Picture of a surfer paddling out from Praia Mole beach in Brazil

Ocean World

Photograph by Chris Schmid

With the help of a drone, photographer Chris Schmid captures a birds-eye view of a surfer at Praia Mole, a popular party beach and surf destination in Florianpolis, Brazil.

This photo was submitted to the 2015 Traveler Photo Contest. Find your best travel photos and join the competition.

08 Jun 14:56

June 06, 2015

08 Jun 14:56

Ferris Bueller's day off was 30 years ago

by Janet Nguyen
Bueller? Bueller? Bueller? Bueller?
08 Jun 13:19

June 6, 2015

Picture of cherry blossoms at the Kyoto Imperial Palace in Japan

Imperial Blossoms

Photograph by Yukio Miki

A weeping cherry tree blooms on the grounds of the Imperial Palace in Kyoto, Japan. The trees typically bloom in late March and early April. It is like an old Japanese painting, and you should not miss [it], writes photographer Yukio Miki.

This photo was submitted to the 2015 Traveler Photo Contest. Find your best travel photos and join the competition.

08 Jun 13:18

June 08, 2015

05 Jun 15:35

El Gato Leadership - Dilbert by Scott Adams

None!

haha

05 Jun 14:47

WikiLeaks offering $100,000 for copy of the TPP

by Janet Nguyen
None!

right after the FIFA bribes?

The organization is crowdfunding to get a copy of the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
05 Jun 14:46

Employees Are Our Most Valuable Asset - Dilbert by Scott Adams

None!

i'm totally going to drop this one on them

05 Jun 14:46

June 05, 2015

05 Jun 14:44

Bird flu means fewer eggs for commercial operations

by Janet Nguyen
Prices soar 200 percent since April for bakeries, restaurants and manufacturers.
05 Jun 14:42

June 5, 2015

None!

awesome

Picture of a diver in front of the Hilma Hooker shipwreck off Bonaire

Hull-o

Photograph by Marc Henauer

A diver gazes at the Hilma Hooker, a cargo ship purposely sunk off the Caribbean island of Bonaire. The site is a popular destination for scuba divers.

This photo was submitted to the 2015 Traveler Photo Contest. Find your best travel photos and join the competition.

05 Jun 14:26

A New Photo Series Looks at the Surreal Reality of Tax Havens

by Jason Dike
None!

it doesn't really work like that anymore in corporate america... usually there are various legal reasons companies use these entities and tax just follows along. no idea about personnel income tax. but i think that's easier to hide. get on a plane with diamonds or a bunch of cash in your pocket, sell them, put the cash proceeds with an investor, boom appreciates tax free. trouble is getting that cash back into the states or across another boarder. usually these partnerships and such are so complex it takes the irs years to figure out what you are doing. ... plus there is no need to do any of this anymore because if you are wealthy enough then banks give you a lifetime loan. you'll never recognize gains in your lifetime.

Tax havens are an understandably murky world, conjuring pictures of fat cats smoking fine cigars while telling their accountant to “make some money disappear” over a rotary phone. And before you ask, yes, we’ve just watched “Scarface” followed by “Wall Street.” Paolo Woods and Gabriele Galimberti decided to look into several tax havens for their latest photo exhibit, capturing locations such as the British Virgin Islands, the City of London, Jersey and the Cayman Islands. With the project, entitled “The Heavens,” the duo went as far as to actually create a company the exhibition is named after, basing it in the same Delaware office as Apple, Coca-Cola, Google, General Electric and 285,000 other companies.

The exhibition takes place during France’s Recontres d’Arles, the annual photography festival, from July 6 to September.

The post A New Photo Series Looks at the Surreal Reality of Tax Havens appeared first on Selectism.

04 Jun 18:08

Owen & Fred Art Prints

by Nick Grant
Owen_Fred_Art_Prints_1I’ve decided to redecorate my office at work because it currently looks like a hobo lives in it, and I think one of these new 12″ x 18″ Art Prints from Owen & Fred will really help to class the place up. Designed and printed in the USA, the pictures showcase the technical drawings behind Read more »
04 Jun 15:03

The Real NHLer’s Guide to the Stanley Cup Final

by Mike Rupp

The least nervous I have ever been for a hockey game was before Game 7 of the 2003 Stanley Cup Final. That might sound crazy, especially since I was 23 years old and had just broken into the NHL. But thankfully I had Ken Daneyko.

We were all sitting down having our pre-game snack just a few hours before the game when Daneyko sits down and starts going off on one of his famous Story Time With Ken Daneyko tangents. He starts telling us about this story from the early ’80s when he was a young guy in the league. The Devils were up in Buffalo and he ended up bumping their goalie after a whistle. The Buffalo bench took exception to it, no doubt because Daneyko was a defenseman. So Dano lines up for the next faceoff when he gets a surprise.

Buffalo’s tough guy comes flying over the boards and lines up eye-to-eye with Dano. He doesn’t even square his shoulders to the ref for the faceoff. He’s just squared up to Dano ready to drop the mitts.

The only problem was, he forgot something. The ref turns to him all confused and points to his bench. The guy looks down at his hands. He forgot his stick!

And I’m just picturing Dano with his big beard and no teeth, looking at this guy like, “Gee, I wonder what you’re here for?’

Everybody was cracking up. Nobody was thinking about the game. We were just having fun. As a young guy, when you see that the vets are loose and excited to play, it gives you all the confidence in the world. We went out that night and won the Stanley Cup. I ended up scoring the game winner, something I had literally practiced thousands of times as a kid in my driveway in Ohio. But I don’t think I could’ve done it without Daneyko and the other vets on that team.

That’s the key thing I want you to pay attention to in this incredibly evenly matched Stanley Cup Final series. On paper, it’s really hard to find a difference maker between Chicago and Tampa. It’s going to come down to the mental. Mental, mental, mental.

During the playoffs, and especially during the Finals, you’re in a vacuum. Everything you eat is for a purpose. You’re stretching before you go to bed. You’re not answering calls or texts. You’re not checking Twitter. Nothing matters but hockey. It’s pretty neat, honestly. Makes you enjoy the moment more. But here’s the thing: You can either look at the situation and see what their is to lose, or what there is to gain. When you’re playing not to be the dog, it’s a dangerous mindset.

All the commercials are going to focus on Toews, Kane, Stamkos, Hedman, and all the other superstars in his series. But I’m sitting here wondering who is going to be the Ken Daneyko for their team. That’s the secret sauce for a lot of Stanley Cup winners.

Niklas_Hjalmarsson_Getty_TPT

Gut Reaction
The best top-six in the NHL vs. The best top-six in the NHL. Seriously, I don’t know how you can say which team has the advantage here. Every time you blink in this series, another superstar forward is going to be hopping over the boards. It’s going to create an extremely fluid and complicated chess match for both coaches. But you know what? If I’m Lightning coach Jon Cooper, I’m not going to overcomplicate things. I’m going to roll my lines and tell my guys to go out there and play. This Tampa team reminds me a little bit of the Bad Boy Pistons. I don’t want to say they disrespect their opponents, but they play with supreme confidence in what they’re doing.

I’ve been in locker rooms where the coaches are so worried about how to stop superstars like Kane and Toews that it starts kind of rubbing off on the players. You get so worried about what they’re doing that you almost forget that you have to score, too. That panic button mentality starts seeping into the team, and whenever Toews and Kane are on the ice, you’re just waiting for something bad to happen instead of playing your game. I don’t think Jon Cooper is going to have his team playing with one hand on the panic button. He’s going to be telling his guys to go get the puck and score.

Which brings me to my next point: Confidence.

What to Watch for
You have two defensemen on both sides who are playing with incredible confidence right now: Duncan Keith and Anton Stralman. Let’s start with Keith. This guy’s conditioning is so beyond your average NHL defenseman that it is unbelievable. It’s not just that he’s playing 31 minutes per game. It’s what he’s doing with the puck during those 31 minutes. He’s not just staying back and playing sound positional defense. Watch how he pump fakes shots at the blue line. Watch how he stops on a dime and then starts chopping his feet again to change direction. Those are little things that are extremely, extremely hard to do when you are winded.

As a winger, the defensemen who really give you headaches are the unorthodox ones. When you’re in the defensive zone covering the point, there’s kind of a “been there, done that” mentality, even when you’re covering elite defensemen. Basically, all you have to do is stay disciplined and keep in front of them to block their shooting lane. But Keith is not your average guy. He moves around so much and takes so many chances that other defensemen don’t. There’s only a handful of defensemen in the NHL who trust their speed enough to pinch like he does.

I’ll give you an example. When I first came to Pittsburgh, we would do this breakout drill where the defensemen would pass D-to-D and then get it to the winger on the wall. Kris Letang would come flying in on the pinch to break up the pass, and I’d get so pissed off because I’m thinking, What is this guy doing? He’s right up in my face every time. So I gave him a little whack on the shinpads one time and said, “Come on man, this is practice. You would never do that in a game.”

And he said, “I absolutely do that in the game.”

And he was right. We started the regular season and he would pinch in and break up those plays all the time, because he was one of probably five defensemen in the league who have that amount of confidence in their speed. He is a guy, like Keith, who never plays scared. Both won Cups in their early 20s. You connect the dots.

Along those same lines, Tampa’s Anton Stralman plays with a ton of conviction in his game. He has made a leap this season into the elite defensemen category because he’s not thinking anymore. There’s no hesitation to his reads in the defensive zone, and I’ve rarely seen him make a wrong decision in the playoffs. Cooper deserves a ton of credit for letting Stralman and Hedman just play. I played with Stralman in New York and he didn’t have to be that guy because he was on the third pairing. You could see that he had all the tools, but the Rangers already had those guys. If he made a mistake, he would be a scratch because they had so much depth. Some players play not to make mistakes. Others play to make a difference. It’s a subtle difference, but one that allows you to play with excitement. You need the right coach to bring that out, and Cooper is the right guy for Stralman.

Stralman and Hedman locking horns with Toews and Kane (assuming Kane plays on the first line) will be a whole lot of fun.

Which conveniently brings me to my next point. (See what I’m doing here?)

Ondrej_Palat_Getty_TPT

The X-Factor
Gosh, this series is hard to pick. On one hand, the speed of Tampa’s “Triplets” line overwhelmed even the Rangers, one of the fastest teams in the league. The transition goal that Ondrej Palat scored to ice Game 7 was a thing of beauty. The speed, the chemistry, the finishing ability — it was the perfect picture of what makes that line so special.

On the other hand, Chicago. What else is there to say? I’ve already talked about what makes Toews a once-in-a-generation leader and why you should respect Corey Crawford.

I’m looking at it on paper: The top-six cancel each other out. The top pairing defensemen cancel each other out. The coaches are both brilliant in their own way. Both goalies are hot. Both teams have incredible leadership in Toews and Callahan, plus hilarious glue guys in Andrew Shaw and Brian Boyle to keep things light.

I see one little area that could swing it, though. Chicago’s no. 3 and 4 defensemen. Niklas Hjalmarsson and Johnny Oduya have been very solid for the Blackhawks in the playoffs, and they will need to continue to be in order to contain the Triplets. The key word there is contain. Tampa’s top-six has scored 45 of the team’s 55 goals in the playoffs. If Chicago can slow down that production just a little bit, I think they win the Cup and seal a new NHL dynasty.

Who wins the Cup?
Chicago in 7.

Who wins the Conn Smythe?
Duncan Keith. I remember playing in the AHL against Duncan in the early 2000s and thinking, “Hmm. This kid is really talented, but he’s too small to do anything in the league.” And that’s why I’m highly qualified to be an analyst.

Hey everybody, it’s been fun breaking down the playoffs. Thanks for reading, and feel free to chirp me on Twitter @Rupper17.

04 Jun 14:21

June 4, 2015

None!

im surprised they dont wash off the mountain when it rains

Picture of the Seda Monastery in the Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, China

Residence Life

Photograph by Jing Wei, National Geographic Your Shot

Monastic dormitories crowd a mountain thats home to the Seda Larung Wuming Tibetan Buddhist Institute in Chinas Garz Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture. The monastery is the worlds largest Tibetan Buddhist academy, with tens of thousands of male and female attendees. According to Your Shot member Jing Wei, the impressive site is worth visiting to experience the peculiar landscapes and local life of the people there.

This photo was submitted to Your Shot, our storytelling community where members can take part in photo assignments, get expert feedback, be published, and more. Join now

03 Jun 19:44

June 1, 2015

Picture of a Hawaiian petrel

What Feeds Beneath

Photograph byAlejandro Prieto

While on an expedition at Todos Santos in south Baja California, Mexico, Your Shot member Alejandro Prieto was searching for big predatorssuch as marlins, sharks, or tunafeeding on sardine bait balls, but instead he found this Hawaiian petrel feeding on crustaceans. Luckily I was able to capture the moment it submerged its head to feed on the tiny food source, Prieto writes.

This photo was submitted to the 2015 Traveler Photo Contest. Find your best travel photos and join the competition.

03 Jun 17:54

Artist Daniel Rozin Creates a Mirror Made of Fur

by Jason Dike
None!

where can i buy this

Daniel Rozin’s latest work is the PomPom mirror. It’s essentially designed to leave you in a ball of confusion, standing in front of it while thinking, “What the fur?” The installation uses motion sensors and faux fur pom poms (so veggies and vegans can enjoy this guilt-free) to reflect the shape of the viewer in front of it. It’s part of a new exhibition at New York’s Bitforms and, if you want to become one with fur, you’ve got until the 1st of July before it’s gone.

The post Artist Daniel Rozin Creates a Mirror Made of Fur appeared first on Selectism.

03 Jun 17:52

bntailor: Panama Hat & B&TAILOR Brown Wool Suit for...



bntailor:

Panama Hat & B&TAILOR Brown Wool Suit for Summer