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04 Sep 14:16

Okay, it’s a little late but I’m getting ready for the National...















Okay, it’s a little late but I’m getting ready for the National Book Festival tomorrow (swing by at 11:15 to see me talk to Hari Kunzru and Katie Kitamura about balancing marriage, family and the writing life) so I’m a little panicky today! But my reward to myself for working on a Saturday will be a double shot of Reincarnation Blues and Sourdough, which I’m really looking forward to.

Big Boss Edith Chapin has had enough of novels for a while, so she’s picked up Gideon Rachman’s Easternization.

Friend of the Desk Colin Dwyer is keeping up with what he’s calling “DeLillopalooza,” so he’s got Ratner’s Star.

Our beloved and soon-departing Intern Sydnee (come back to us, Sydnee!) is very excited to’ve scored an advance copy of The Autobiography of Gucci Mane.

PCHH producer Jessica Reedy picked up Priestdaddy, because, as she says, “all the best memoirs are written by poets.”

And critic Annalisa Quinn is reading Jesmyn Ward’s Sing, Unburied, Sing – stay tuned for her review next week.

Have a good long weekend!

– Petra

04 Sep 14:15

Monday's Best Deals: Amazon Fire TV Stick, Eufy Night Lights, Workout Gear, and More

by Shep McAllister on Deals, shared by Jillian Lucas to Lifehacker

Amazon’s popular Fire TV Stick, 3- and 4-packs of Eufy night lights, workout gear from adidas and Reebok, and more lead today’s best deals.

Read more...

04 Sep 14:15

Fisher-Price Rolls Out a New Line of Complexes with Exercise Bike for Kids

fisher price exercise bikes for kids

Parents are concerned about how active their kids are. But rather than, you know, taking their kids outside, they’re relying on Fisher-Price to get their kids moving without actually going anywhere.

At CES, Fisher-Price introduced a new stationary exercise bike for kids to ride and that parents can just plop an iPad in front of and forget about. Finally, a way for your kid to play video games and feel the burn.

via Maroon 5

According to CNN, “The system is Bluetooth-enabled so the bike could work with the apps played on platforms such as Apple TV and Android TV. App dashboards tell parents how much time their child has spent peddling and what he or she has learned in that duration.”

So now not only does your kid get hours of guilt-free screen time, but also they can enjoy all the healthy obsessing over exercise that their parents do. A toy that brings the whole family together.

Submitted by: (via CNN)

04 Sep 14:15

How to Break Free From Social Media

image

This post presumes you already have a firm understanding of why you should cut ties with social media. If you aren’t there yet, you probably don’t need to read on. But perhaps you’d be interested in the following articles on happiness, avoiding depression, etc.

If you already know that social media is making you miserable and you’re just trying to find a way to escape then read on and follow this 5 step plan.

1. Tell your real friends your intentions. It’s crazy, but people might think you are unfriending them if you shut down your accounts. Do it in a non-judgmental fashion. “I just gotta lay low for a while.”  “I’m spending too much time staring at my phone.” Keep it simple, you don’t need to tell them that social media has become a leading cause of depression. They might not want to hear it, and that’s fine.

***Whatever you do, don’t pull one of those bullshit things where you post on social media that you are leaving social media.  People will just think you’re fishing for attention. Because you probably are just fishing for attention.***

2. Turn that shit off.

3. Make a list of what you’ll be missing.

You probably use social media for a number of reasons. Your original reason like connecting with old classmates that you haven’t seen in years was probably replaced by things like:

  • Spying on ex GF’s, BF’s, your kids, spouses, lovers.
  • Reading news (i.e. watching John Oliver clips)
  • Reading fake news
  • Collecting likes. And spending meaningful events in your life (like vacations, weddings, births) thinking about how to frame that moment on Instagram or Facebook and what you’ll say.
  • Looking at things you could buy.
  • Getting invited to events that you don’t want to go to, but… FOMO.
  • Looking at pictures from events that you missed that make them look way more fun than they actually were.
  • Taking 5 minute breaks from work.

4. Figure out healthy ways to replace what you’re missing.

  • Email an old friend that you haven’t connected with in a while.
  • Spend meaningful life events being present and undistracted by technology. Maybe just bring a camera or nothing to the beach or Disney World for one day to see how it goes.
  • Actually watch the concert or game you have attended. Especially if your friends or children are participating.
  • Stay informed on things you care about by subscribing to RSS feeds on a tool like The Old Reader! There’s almost infinite amazing content on every topic you can imagine. But you’re probably missing most of it while obsessing over random crap on Facebook.
  • Go for a 5 minute walk outside. Even if the weather stinks. Walks in the rain can be pretty awesome.
  • Meditate for 5 minutes. Just focus on breathing and clearing your head. No iPhone app or expertise required.

5. You’re free! Just because social media is a growth area and a new technology doesn’t mean it’s a good thing. I mean, seriously, your parents are watching you again! You’d finally broken free and moved to a different state. And now they know about everything you do.

04 Sep 14:15

Electrofishing for Whales

by xkcd

I used to work on a fisheries crew where we would use an electro-fisher backpack to momentarily stun small fish (30 - 100 mm length) so we could scoop them up with nets to identify and measure them. The larger fish tended to be stunned for slightly longer because of their larger surface area but I don't imagine this relationship would be maintained for very large animals. Could you electrofish for a blue whale? At what voltage would you have have to set the e-fisher?

—Madeline Cooper

So you want to give endangered whales powerful electric shocks. Great! I'm happy to help. This is definitely a very normal thing to want to do.

There are various electrofishing setups, but they all operate on the same general principle: An electric current flows through the water, and also through any fish that happen to be in the water. The electric current, through a few different physical effects, draws the fish toward one of the electrodes and/or stuns them.

For a long time, people didn't really notice that electrofishing injured fish at all. For the most part, stunned fish seemed to be fine after a few minutes. However, they frequently suffer from internal damage which isn't obvious from the outside. The electric current causes involuntary muscle spasms, which can fracture the fish's vertebrae. As this paper shows, these kinds of spinal injuries are more common and severe in larger fish.

As you mention, for a given electrofishing setup, larger fish are usually more affected than smaller ones.[1] Why? Well, we don't know. In their comprehensive 2003 study Immobilization Thresholds of Electrofishing Relative to Fish Size, biologists Chad Dolan and Steve Miranda modeled the way electric currents stun fish of different sizes, but caution that "no adequate conceptual system exists to explain the effects of size on electroshock thresholds from the perspective of electric fields."

None of these studies dealt with animals anywhere near the size of whales. The largest fish in Dolan and Miranda's study were still quite small. This experiment tested larger fish up to 80cm long,[2] but nothing whale-sized.[3] Since we don't know exactly why larger fish respond differently, it's hard to confidently extrapolate.

Fish are typically[4] stunned by equipment delivering about 100 µW of power per cm3 of body volume, so for a whale, that would be about 20 megawatts.

But there's a catch: Most electrofishing is done in fresh water. Unfortunately, blue whales live in the ocean,[5] where the salt water conducts electricity much more easily. That might seem like good news for our electrofishing plans, but it turns out to make it much more challenging.

Electrofishing works best when the water and the target animals are about equally conductive. In highly conductive saltwater, most of the current flows past the animals in the water rather than through them. This means that ocean electrofishing requires much more power. Using our simple extrapolation, instead of 20 megawatts, we might need a gigawatt. In other words, you'll need to bring a large nuclear generating station.

Simple extrapolation is misleading here, since we know that large animals respond to electricity differently. How differently? Well, according to an electrofishing.net post by Jan Dean, a human who fell into the water in front of a typical electrofishing boat could easily die.[6] Blue whales, which are even larger than humans,[citation needed] would presumably fare even worse.

Electrofishing temporarily stops a fish's heart.[7] The fish seem to recover, most of the time, but humans—and probably whales—have a harder time with cardiac arrest.

It's possible that giving blue whales massive electrical shocks isn't as good an idea as it sounded at first.

That's not to say there's no place in science for giving random electric shocks to large aquatic animals. A project at the Denver Wildlife Research Center used electrofishing-style equipment—linked to an infrared camera—to repel beavers, ducks, and geese from selected areas. Apparently, the results were "encouraging."[8]

So electrofishing equipment probably can't help you catch blue whales. However, if you're having trouble keeping them out of your backyard pond ...

... it's possible the Denver Wildlife Research Center can help you out.

[1] This can lead to larger fish being overrepresented in sampling studies.

[2] The fish they used in the experiment grew rapidly to a range of sizes, mainly because the larger ones kept eating their smaller siblings.

[3] There's been at least one case of dolphin death linked to illegal electrofishing.

[4] Actual quote from that paper: "The results for these tests were unsettling ... this observation was so unexpected that we stopped the experiment to recalibrate the equipment."

[5] I mean, unfortunately for Madeline. It's fortunate for the whales.

[6] While it sounds dangerous, people aren't often killed during electrofishing accidents. The 2000 EPA report "New Perspectives in Electrofishing" comments that "In the United States, since World War II, only about five electrocutions during electrofishing have been documented." I assume they just mean records weren't kept before World War II, but it's technically possible that the war involved so many electrofishing deaths that they need to exclude it from the stats.

[7] Until reading this paper, I didn't know clove oil was used as a fish anesthetic. You learn something new every day!

[8] The equipment kept the beavers away, although they returned as soon as it was turned off. It also worked on ducks and geese, although they had some problems with infrared waterfowl detection. The birds would usually take flight when the equipment turned on, although if it was cold enough, they'd just sluggishly paddle away.

04 Sep 14:13

A Home Owner’s Guide to Refinancing Your Mortgage

by Richard Barrington

mortgage loan refinancing

Low mortgage rates unleashed a massive wave of refinancing that was a windfall for millions of consumers, but what will happen once those unusually low mortgage rates are gone? Will refinancing mortgage loans effectively be sidelined as a financial resource for home owners?

While the opportunity to lower your interest rate may be the most compelling reason to refinance, it is just one of several. Refinancing can accomplish different things for different people, and the more you are aware of what refinancing can do, the more likely you are to be able to use it to your advantage.

5 compelling reasons to refinance your mortgage

Here are five good reasons to refinance:

1. Reduce interest rates

A drop in market rates can create a compelling opportunity to refinance. However, even if interest rates generally are not lower than those on your current mortgage, you still may be able to lower your rate by refinancing. Rates on shorter mortgages and on adjustable rate mortgages are generally much lower than those on 30-year mortgages.

So, if you can afford the higher payments that come with a shorter mortgage, you might be able to lower your interest rate by refinancing from a 30-year to a 15-year loan. As for adjustable rate mortgages, the drawback with them is that the rate is subject to vary, so you won’t necessarily be lowering your interest rate for the life of the loan.

However, if you only anticipate being in your current home for a few years more, you might be able to benefit from an adjustable rate mortgage without the long-term risk of rate fluctuations.

2. Lower long-term interest expenses

Shorter mortgages don’t just carry lower rates. They also mean paying interest for fewer years. Even if conditions are such that you can’t lower your mortgage rate, you might find you could achieve significant long-term savings by switching to a shorter mortgage.

3. Eliminate mortgage insurance premiums

Mortgages like loans from the U.S. Federal Housing Administration that allow low down payments also typically require that you pay for mortgage insurance. Once you have built more equity in your home though, you might qualify for a type of loan that does not require mortgage insurance, so that could represent a potential savings if you refinance.

4. Make monthly payments more affordable

Stretching your remaining payments out over a longer period can result in reducing those payments. Lengthening your loan is also likely to result in paying more total interest in the long run. But if it is the only way to make your mortgage affordable, this can be a good reason to refinance.

5. Switch from an adjustable rate to a fixed-rate loan

You may have chosen an adjustable rate mortgage for a variety of reasons, but if you plan on being in your home for the long-term it would reduce your financial risk to stabilize your monthly mortgage payments. You could do this by switching from an adjustable rate to a fixed-rate loan.

What you need to refinance

To take advantage of your refinancing opportunities, it helps to have the following:

1. Equity – and the more the better

While government programs temporarily made refinancing available to some home owners with little or no equity in their homes (due to the collapse in home prices following the housing crisis), generally you are going to need a solid amount of equity in your home in order to qualify for refinancing. If you have 20 percent or more, you may be able to qualify for a loan that does not require you to pay mortgage insurance.

2. A good credit score

Keeping your credit healthy means keeping your refinancing options open – and you never know when the right conditions might arise.

3. Steady employment

If you are thinking of refinancing, you might want to do it before you make a change in jobs. Lenders like applicants who have held their jobs for a long time.

4. Closing costs

Closing costs will probably total at least a couple thousand dollars, and very often much more than that. You can finance this, such as by adding the closing costs to the amount you are borrowing in the new mortgage. But this will be more expensive in the long run and could eat into your equity balance. As noted previously, less equity (or what’s known as a higher loan-to-value ratio) can negatively impact your ability to qualify for refinancing. Or it could result in you paying more in mortgage insurance premiums.

Consider a low interest rate environment as the low-hanging fruit among refinancing scenarios. However, it is not the only worthwhile reason to refinance. Getting the most out of the potential benefits that refinancing presents requires knowing the different things it can accomplish, and being prepared to act on your refinancing opportunities.

The post A Home Owner’s Guide to Refinancing Your Mortgage appeared first on Get Rich Slowly.

04 Sep 14:13

Upstate New Yorker's EDC: Fall '17 Update

04 Sep 14:13

Have a Great (Long) Weekend.

by Joanna Goddard

Have a Great (Long) Weekend.

What are you up to this weekend? I’m loving the weather right now — fall is in the air! Can’t wait for wool sweaters, rosy cheeks and crunchy leaves.… Read more

The post Have a Great (Long) Weekend. appeared first on A Cup of Jo.

04 Sep 14:13

Catalytic Enantioselective Synthesis of Highly Functionalized Difluoromethylated Cyclopropanes

by Maxence Bos, Wei-Sheng Huang, Thomas Poisson, Xavier Pannecoucke, André B. Charette, Philippe Jubault

Abstract

The first catalytic asymmetric synthesis of highly functionalized difluoromethylated cyclopropanes is described. The method, based on a rhodium-catalyzed cyclopropanation of difluoromethylated olefins, gives access to a broad range of cyclopropanes bearing ester, ketone, or nitro functional groups. By using Rh2((S)-BTPCP)4 as a catalyst, the corresponding products were obtained in high yields and high diastereo- and enantioselectivities (up 20:1 d.r. and 99 % ee). This methodology allowed preparation of enantioenriched difluoromethylcyclopropanes for the first time.

Thumbnail image of graphical abstract

Small rings: The first catalytic asymmetric synthesis of difluorinated cyclopropanes is described. The methodology employs a rhodium catalyst and affords access to functionalized cyclopropanes in high yields with high diastereo- and enantioselectivities. PMP=para-methoxyphenyl.

04 Sep 14:13

Comic for September 02, 2017

Dilbert readers - Please visit Dilbert.com to read this feature. Due to changes with our feeds, we are now making this RSS feed a link to Dilbert.com.
04 Sep 14:13

Genius Undermines Annoying Hipster Entrepreneurs At Cafe In One Swift, Epic Move

Two hipsters at a cafe try to start their business and then end up getting trolled by clever neighbor who overheard their plan.

Submitted by:

Tagged: facebook , hipster , funny , win
04 Sep 14:11

Two new Moto

by cellmate707

Lenovo-owned Motorola showed up new Moto phones and a 360-degree camera at the IFA Fair.

The IFA fair is taking place in Berlin and among all the news presented, Motorola’s two new smart phones – the fourth generation Moto Xi form of the Moto X4 and the new Moto Z2, plus a brand new Moto Mod 360 camera.

Moto x4 is the first of Motorola’s smartphones to support Amazon Alexa and a smarter camera that can capture photos in Augmented Reality (AR) using dual twelve-megapixel inserts. The front camera is up to 16 megapixels.

In addition to the cameras, the Moto X4 is a fairly typical mid-range phone with a eight-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 processor of 2.2, gigahertz, a 5.2-inch screen, three gigabyte work memory, 32 gigabyte storage, IP68 dust and water resistance and a 3,000 million hour battery with Motorola’s Turbopower fast-charging technology.

The Motorola Z2 Force Edition has a guaranteed unbreakable screen. The phone is made of aluminum and has a 5.5-inch Amoled screen with Quad HD resolution. It is also much thinner than its predecessor, which exceeded the battery capacity, which is only 2 750 milliamper hours compared to the previous 3,500.

Here too, you have invested in dual cameras on the back and the phone is also fully compatible with the Moto Mods system, making it easy to mount a Moto 360 camera to capture photos and movies at all angles.

Inside, there is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 processor, four gigabyte work memory and 64 gigabyte storage. The Android 7.1 operating system has a promised upgrade to Android Oreo eventually. In addition, Motorola has followed Apple’s example and removed the headphone jack.