Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,
Why wouldn't the top 1/10th of 1% love a central bank-funded guaranteed minimum income?
Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,
Why wouldn't the top 1/10th of 1% love a central bank-funded guaranteed minimum income?
Sharp’s Brewery gets a new identity, compliments of Buddy Creative and their “wave” inspired branding and packaging design. Playing off Sharp’s tradition of relentless and progressive ambition, the team captures the natural energy of waves in their bold new symbol.
The distinctive off-centered wave shape helps create a cohesive brand look across all of Sharp’s beer brands. It also inspires a clean and memorable canvas for packaging and other applications.
At first glance, the design comes off as quite simple. The design elements are minimal, but it successfully makes a statement of confidence and experience, even for a relatively young player in the world of cask beers.





Designed by Buddy
Country: United Kingdom
If you live in Philadelphia or New York City and consider yourself the true burger king/queen, you might want to jump on a current Groupon deal that could keep you in burgers and fries every day for an entire year for only $144. That is, if your body can handle such a thing. Yes, this is real.
Touting a value of $4,380 — a 97% discount – PYT’s Groupon deal for a burger and fries every day for a year only applies to dining in at its Philadelphia restaurant — or in NYC, which won’t get its own location until July 2015.
So for NYC residents, that means either saving up all your eating for a few months until you can go crazy, or driving to Philly every day.
Dividing up the value by 365 days, one can reasonably place a figure of $12 per meal on the deal (which is also the PYT Burger’s listed menu price, so there you go) which means you could get your money’s worth and more by visiting 13 times in a year, or around at least once a month.
The offer’s available until Wednesday at 11:59 PM EST, and must be redeemed within 120 days of purchase.
*Thanks to Jim of the bottomless stomach for the tip!
Previously in unending food: Olive Garden Offering $100 “Never Ending Pasta Pass” For 7 Weeks Of Food; Starbucks Thinks You Might Want To Buy Someone A $450 Metallic Gift Card (Again)
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submitted by TheNoodlyMessiah [link] [186 comments] |
Founded in 2002, Swiss-based RapidShare was one of the first and most popular one-click file-hosting services on the Internet.
Like most sites of this nature, RapidShare was frequently used by people to share copyright-infringing material. It was a relationship that got the company into trouble on various occasions.
RapidShare fought many legal battles with entertainment companies seeking to hold the company liable for the actions of its users, and to top it off the site was called out by the U.S. Government as a “notorious market.”
Hoping to clear up its image the company made tremendous efforts to cooperate with copyright holders and limit copyright infringements. Among other things, the company adopted one of the most restrictive sharing policies while (re)branding itself as a personal cloud storage service.
The anti-piracy measures seemed to work, but as a result RapidShare’s visitor numbers plunged. The dwindling revenues eventually cost most of RapidShare’s employees their jobs.
Today marks the beginning of the final chapter in RapidShare’s controversial history. The company just announced that it will shut down at the end of March and is recommending that users store their files elsewhere.
“Kindly note that RapidShare will stop the active service on March 31st, 2015. Extensions of STANDARD PLUS and PREMIUM will be possible until February 28th, 2015,” RapidShare writes on its homepage.
“We strongly recommend all customers to secure their data. After March 31st, 2015 all accounts will no longer be accessible and will be deleted automatically,” the company adds.
TF asked the company for further details on the planned shutdown but we have yet to hear back. The most likely explanation is that RapidShare can’t sustain its business with the smaller number of users it has today.
The demise of RapidShare marks the end of an era. Half a decade ago RapidShare was listed among the 50 most-visited sites on the Internet, with hundreds of millions of page-views per month, but in a just a few weeks it will be gone.
Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and anonymous VPN services.
Despite feeling like a bit of a dork, I rather enjoyed riding a Segway. That said, I still had to contend with crowded sidewalks and hazards on the ground while riding one. If the guys behind AirBoard have their way, we could soon be hovering in the air instead of riding on bumpy sidewalks.
Currently up for funding on Indiegogo, the AirBoard aims to be the world’s smallest manned aircraft. At just 70″ long, and powered by 4 large fans, the folding aircraft could be the 21st century version of the aforementioned Segway. Steering the AirBoard would work like a Segway as well – simply lean in the direction you want to fly in. A safe flying mode would ensure pilots don’t go more than five feet off the ground, and a computer would detect obstacles to help prevent collisions.
Its designers also envision that it could fold up for easy storage and transportation.
Sadly, the fundraising campaign won’t put you behind the control stick of an AirBoard, but instead the funds will be used to further develop AirBoard so it can eventually go into production in late 2015 and into 2016. That said, if you pledge at least $250(USD) towards their modest $30,000 goal, you’ll get priority ordering and a 15% discount off the purchase of the AirBoard if and when it eventually is built.
Click to enlarge.
More Unbelievable Facts Will DESTROY Your Understanding Of Time
The post Nearly everything in this ad is in your smartphone appeared first on Bits and Pieces.

A man is selling a "haunted" 2007 Apple MacBook on ebay.
He believes the spooky computer became populated with dead people's spirits after leaving it in a graveyard overnight.
Before you freak out, the seller says that the spirits inside the device aren't evil, they're just fun-loving pranksters. The computer has apparently been levitating, opening and shutting on its own, and displaying creepy wallpaper images.
“I’m NOT a computer expert, so I’m not sure which of these anomalous entities might have precipitated the haunting,” he says.
The computer is currently going for $222.50 and as a potential owner you can expect a lot of wacky behavior from the machine. The seller explains:
I noticed that ALL of my songs in iTunes had become scary or haunted. Second, the desktop background was changed to a scary photo. The following week, we (my wife, Barbie, and I) noticed some of our stuff around the house had been mysteriously rearranged. One night, we went out to dinner with my wife’s parents and their friends and some people from my wife’s work and some of their parents. When we came home, my baseball cards were all out of order and my wife’s rare American coins were in total disarray. To make matters spookier, I occasionally saw the computer levitating. In some cases the screen and keyboard would open and shut quickly, as though the computer were attempting to speak.

This is not the first time tech has crossed with the other realm. Last summer, a Reddit user shared a terrifying story of being haunted by his dead girlfriend on Facebook.
h/t the Daily Dot
SEE ALSO: A robot vacuum tried to eat its sleeping owner's head
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We got our first glimpse of the far side of the moon in 1959, and now, 56 years later, NASA is giving us another look—and it's incredible. Using data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, the agency has created this animation, which shows the phases of the far side of the moon from two views: First is a telescopic view, with the camera fixed on the Earth-Moon line; the second uses a short focal length, with the camera fixed to the moon's surface, that makes the earth appear small in the background.
LRO has returned hundreds of terabytes of data since its launch in 2009, which scientists have used to create highly detailed and accurate maps of the moon's far side. It looks a lot different from the side that faces us. According to NASA's website, "It lacks the large dark spots, called maria, that make up the familiar Man in the Moon on the near side. Instead, craters of all sizes crowd together over the entire far side. The far side is also home to one of the largest and oldest impact features in the solar system, the South Pole-Aitken basin, visible here as a slightly darker bruise covering the bottom third of the disk."
In addition to map making, scientists are also using LRO to determine the moon's mineralogy, examine its potentially volcanic history, search for water, and look for future landing sites. It's also snapped photos of the Apollo landing sites.