firehose
Shared posts
jtotheizzoe: From The Old Astronomer (To His Pupil) by Sarah...
From The Old Astronomer (To His Pupil) by Sarah Williams
The full poem:
Reach me down my Tycho Brahé, — I would know him when we meet,
When I share my later science, sitting humbly at his feet;
He may know the law of all things, yet be ignorant of how
We are working to completion, working on from then to now.
Pray remember that I leave you all my theory complete,
Lacking only certain data for your adding, as is meet,
And remember men will scorn it, ‘tis original and true,
And the obloquy of newness may fall bitterly on you.
But, my pupil, as my pupil you have learned the worth of scorn,
You have laughed with me at pity, we have joyed to be forlorn,
What for us are all distractions of men’s fellowship and wiles;
What for us the Goddess Pleasure with her meretricious smiles.
You may tell that German College that their honor comes too late,
But they must not waste repentance on the grizzly savant’s fate.
Though my soul may set in darkness, it will rise in perfect light;
I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.
What, my boy, you are not weeping? You should save your eyes for sight;
You will need them, mine observer, yet for many another night.
I leave none but you, my pupil, unto whom my plans are known.
You “have none but me,” you murmur, and I “leave you quite alone”?
Well then, kiss me, — since my mother left her blessing on my brow,
There has been a something wanting in my nature until now;
I can dimly comprehend it, — that I might have been more kind,
Might have cherished you more wisely, as the one I leave behind.
I “have never failed in kindness”? No, we lived too high for strife,—
Calmest coldness was the error which has crept into our life;
But your spirit is untainted, I can dedicate you still
To the service of our science: you will further it? you will!
There are certain calculations I should like to make with you,
To be sure that your deductions will be logical and true;
And remember, “Patience, Patience,” is the watchword of a sage,
Not to-day nor yet to-morrow can complete a perfect age.
I have sown, like Tycho Brahé, that a greater man may reap;
But if none should do my reaping, ‘twill disturb me in my sleep
So be careful and be faithful, though, like me, you leave no name;
See, my boy, that nothing turn you to the mere pursuit of fame.
I must say Good-bye, my pupil, for I cannot longer speak;
Draw the curtain back for Venus, ere my vision grows too weak:
It is strange the pearly planet should look red as fiery Mars,—
God will mercifully guide me on my way amongst the stars.
weightliftingcanadian: Karnam Malleswari (-69kg) Indias first...
Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated. |
Karnam Malleswari (-69kg), India’s first female Olympic medalist. She won bronze in Sydney in 2000.
I wish we had the wide shot of the full motion of her jerk instead of the cut just as she’s doing it, because she is so impressively fast. This is great.
Benedict Cumberbatch Punched A Journalist In The Face To Defend Keira Knightley’s Honour
bill-holmes: how the fuck did we get from there to where we are...
Arup Develops 3D Printing Technique for Structural Steel | Via A...
Arup Develops 3D Printing Technique for Structural Steel | Via
A team lead by Arup has developed a method of designing and 3D Printing steel joints which will significantly reduce the time and cost needed to make complex nodes in tensile structures. Their research is being touted as “a whole new direction for the use of additive manufacturing” which provides a way of taking 3D printing “firmly into the realm of real-world, hard hat construction.”
Aside from creating more elegant components which express the forces within each individual joint, the innovation could potentially reduce costs, cut waste and slash the carbon footprint of the construction sector.
Salomé Galjaard, the team leader at Arup, commented: “By using additive manufacturing we can create lots of complex individually designed pieces far more efficiently. This has tremendous implications for reducing costs and cutting waste. But most importantly, this approach potentially enables a very sophisticated design, without the need to simplify the design in a later stage to lower costs.”
The vicious battle that tore the greatest font design duo apart
Hoefler & Frere-Jones became one of the most renowned type foundries in the world for its creation of widely used font families such as Gotham and Whitney, but the foundry is now embroiled in a lawsuit between its two important namesakes. The foundry's name came from its leaders, Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere-Jones, with Frere-Jones largely responsible for creating fonts and Hoefler responsible for the business. But earlier this year, the two entered into a legal battle over Frere-Jones' stake in the company, which he alleges is 50 percent and Hoefler alleges was never meant to be equal.
To see what tore them apart, New York Magazine has taken a look into the background of the company, from how Frere-Jones came to be there, to how much he contributed, and why his claim is only being brought up now. It doesn't have an answer for who might win their battle, but it certainly suggests that Frere-Jones deserves more than Hoefler wants him to have.
- Source New York Magazine
- Image Credit Hoefler & Co.
- Related Items hoefler frere-jones hoefler co. hoefler type foundry jonathan hoefler tobias frere-jones font typeface typography
We give them nothing: The punishment of amateurs doing professional work
It was 20 years ago this September, in the sports office of the student newspaper, that my department took one of the stranger phone calls of a four-year career that saw plenty of weirdness. The football team wanted to know if we were paying one of their players.
I forget who answered the phone — it may have been me, it could have been Ted, the assistant sports editor who had a TV production class with Eddie Goines, N.C. State's all-everything wide receiver. At the beginning of the semester, Ted pitched Eddie the idea of writing a personal column for us in the upcoming football season. All three of us were seniors.
Eddie agreed immediately. He was projected as high as the late first round in the coming NFL draft, and was taking television and writing courses to prepare him for career in front of the camera — ideally as a commentator if it all worked out in the pros. Eddie's column was instantly successful. But shortly after the first one saw print, the athletics compliance office was on the line, heavily implying we'd done something wrong by not clearing this with them.
Ultimately we smoothed things out with assurances that Eddie was not paid and did not ask to be paid. We told them he was considered a junior staff writer and those worked for free. We got another lecture about Eddie's column potentially being an "extra benefit" given on account of his star status, but we blew that off and that was the end of it.
I didn't "clear" Eddie's column with anyone in the athletics department because it never occurred to me. Any student could come write for the paper — Christ, we begged them to every fall. Eddie owned every meaningful receiving record at N.C. State, but wasn't he a student like the rest of us?
I recalled all of this last weekend when I picked through the settlement terms EA Sports reached with a large group of former college students, most of whom also happened to play football. Over the past decade, these students appeared in EA's NCAA Football series under figleaf names like RB#9 or DE#94. They were still blatantly identifiable by multiple characteristics such as height, weight and hometown, to the point an army of video gamers had no trouble crowdsourcing the complete and accurate renaming of the roster and sharing it — through means provided by the game itself — within days after its release. Testimony from EA Sports and NCAA officials essentially acknowledged they used players' likenesses without their permission; the games were even coded with real names that were later stripped out. Last fall, Electronic Arts prudently chose to settle with the players and terminate the series that depended on this thinly-veiled "renaming" arrangement.
These college players aren't getting some money-for-nothing windfall. Figures range between $75 and $900 apiece depending on when they appeared in the video game and how many others file claims. An average amount kicked around is $400.
As the sports editor of my student paper I made $400. Each month. In 1994.
Hell, it was paid by the university out of student fees, not from some bag man with an obsession for us beating The Daily Tar Heel. I contributed to a university enterprise established to further the campus quality of life. So did Ted ($300 a month) and Mike and Joe ($200 each). We were all being paid for an extracurricular activity that also furthered our employability in the professional career we desired after college.
But not Eddie. Not on Saturdays, and not on Wednesdays, when he was read more avidly than all of us.
Twenty years later, $400 is what's getting some football fans — who like to tell college players on Twitter what they do and don't deserve for doing something they envy — angry about the idea of college player compensation, even when every university pays kids on campus similar amounts for doing a hell of a lot less for student life.
I get it: They resent that a lawsuit ended a video game many people enjoy. Something fun was taken away from them. Fine. But wouldn't a system where college athletes can be permissibly and modestly paid — like, say $400 — mean that video game could return?
If you're thinking that EA Sports made this series only as long as it, like the NCAA, could take advantage of the free use of thousands of football players' likenesses and labor, you're completely wrong. Over the past decade, EA Sports lobbied the NCAA to allow it to pay players. An NCAA corporate officer argued in favor of it, too. An NCAA Football video game that could use real, active players and their real faces — in the game as well as in its marketing — would return far more in additional sales than the $5 million or so it would cost to pay every Division I-A scholarship football player $400 each year. EA Sports could recoup that expense by selling 83,000 additional copies of a series that moves millions.
You can give a college player a $400 PS4 that plays video games, but not $400 to appear in one
Some, particularly those struggling with a lot of student debt, consider a free education to be fair compensation. Well, Notre Dame has offered full ride scholarships to football players since the days of George Gipp. The cost of a year at Notre Dame may be $55,000 today, but the actual "compensation" to a player remains the same as it was for the Four Horsemen, and their games weren't broadcast on NBC for $150 million.
But here's the juice: If you consider a scholarship compensation, then for a long time football players in fact have been compensated above that. And this is where the destruction of the NCAA Football series, over $400 per player, becomes truly ridiculous.
College bowl games are permitted to give everyone on both teams "gift bags," and it's not just a t-shirt and jar of barbecue sauce. Maryland and Marshall players all got PlayStation 4s for their unwatchable Military Bowl two days after Christmas. These gift bags are supposed to be limited to $550 in value, but that's not retail — that's the negotiated rate for whatever sugar daddy sells the bowl committee the watches, the PS4s, the Beats by Dres. Furthermore, conferences and universities are permitted to add goodie bags of their own. Their limit? There's that number again: $400.
Players are forbidden from selling this stuff, of course. But the explosion of fourth-rate bowl games over the past decade has meant nearly any scholarship football player who plays four years — the real grunts, the ones with no pro future — has been to at least one bowl. An analysis I did at another publication suggests 85 percent of college football players have gotten at least one gift package worth at least $550 in their careers. Gift packages have included things like watches, massage chairs — and $400 Best Buy gift cards.
But cash, whether that's from EA Sports or a university newspaper, for an athlete whose presence adds value to their products, we can't have that. What boneheaded, unfair and counterproductive nonsense, and it's led to all this, ex-college players with a whole lot of law on their side about to bring down the NCAA, or at least seriously rearrange its face.
What became of Eddie Goines?
He may not be a household name, but Eddie has built an acting career that consistently finds him work. He's gotten roles in cop dramas and soap operas and even a Beyoncé video. And millions of video gamers have spent hundreds of hours adventuring with him. He was the motion capture actor for C.J., the star of Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.
Eddie was my first interview when he was a redshirt freshman and I was an unpaid junior staffer. I covered the team for four years and knew he was exactly what these Twitter scolds say every college football player should be — as disciplined and motivated in the classroom as on the field. He made a serious pursuit of his degree and took the courses he needed to prepare for the non-football life he wanted. He spoke at our commencement.
Eddie wasn't given anything.
But he never played a down in the NFL.
In November of our senior year, in a wild shootout at Maryland, Eddie was tackled on a screen pass for a one-yard loss as State was driving for the winning touchdown late in the fourth quarter. He tore his anterior cruciate ligament, a devastating injury requiring surgery and months of rehabilitation.
Eddie wasn't drafted in the first round. Seattle took him in the sixth. He reinjured his knee in training camp and was released. All of his brilliant effort in college and all the opportunity he had earned with it vanished in a game against a 4-4 team.
The Monday after that game, Eddie appeared in the office, leaning on crutches. Ted and I froze when we realized who was in the newsroom. I thought about trying to say something to cheer up Eddie but realized I had absolutely no idea what his anxiety or disappointment could be like.
Eddie's next column was about the end of his career. He turned it in, printed out, proofread and neatly double-spaced. We didn't give him anything.
Roster File is Polygon's news and opinion column on the intersection of sports and video games. It appears on weekends.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of, and should not be attributed to, Polygon as an organization.
Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Hardy Reportedly Eyed for Marvel's 'Doctor Strange'
firehosebbbbbbbbbbbbcccccccccccccccccccccccccc
It seems as if Marvel is already looking to cast its ‘Doctor Strange‘ movie and reportedly has Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Hardy on its cast list.
According to Mike Fleming Jr. of Deadline, Marvel is eyeing both Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Hardy for the ‘Doctor Strange’ movie, though it wasn’t mentioned what roles they’d play. Though, dollars to donuts, they’re probably eyed for the titular role of Doctor Strange, otherwise known as Stephen Strange, the Sorcerer Supreme who protects the earth from the supernatural with his own brand of magic. Earlier this week, it was confirmed that Scott Derrickson, director of films like ‘Sinister,’ ‘The Exorcism of Emily Rose’ and ‘Deliver Us From Evil,’ will helm Doctor Strange.
This cast list hasn’t been confirmed, but we’ll let you know when more information about the ‘Doctor Strange’ film is released.
Next: Zeitgeist '60: Ten Comic Book Characters That Embody the 1960s
What Beats By Dre Are Actually Doing To Your Ears
xombiedirge: daily dose of stupid and obvious by Stjepan Sejic
roachpatrol: bankuei: everything-creative: A great idea to...
A great idea to connect the future with the past, seal your digital secrets with an old-school wax-sealing. The Top secret usb.
Man. I’m totally envisioning a Chinese sci-fi movie where the Emperor’s Orders are sealed USBs and you pull one out and everyone fucking kneels when it gets busted open…
Simple multi-user encrypted chat server for 5 users
firehosencat does everything
$ ncat -vlm 5 --ssl --chat 9876
Client ~$ ncat --ssl localhost 9876
Change localhost to the correct ip address.
by David Winterbottom (codeinthehole.com)
Ladd's Addition. 3 AM. Your Voice
firehoseWelcome to Portland
You were riding your bike singing an okee ballad haunting and beautiful and I called out that you had a lovely voice. It haunted me on my walk home. Did you hear me? My heart heard you and it opened to the flowers and the night air. Thank you.
Texas GOP Endorses "Reparative Therapy" For Gays - NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
firehose#nevergo
NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth |
Texas GOP Endorses "Reparative Therapy" For Gays NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth The Texas Republican Party now endorses so-called "reparative therapy" for gays, under a new platform given final approval at its annual convention Saturday. Texas GOP Endorses 'Reparative Therapy' For... Link; Embed; Email. Copy. Close. Link to this ... Texas GOP approves hard-line immigration positionChron.com (blog) all 717 news articles » |
id Software's Original 'Softdisk' Games Open Sourced
firehoseCatacomb!
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
We “will be paying no ransom,” vows town hit by Cryptowall ransom malware
firehoseDurham, New Hampshire will not negotiate with terrorists
The town manager of a hamlet in south eastern New Hampshire has defied demands that he pay a ransom to recover police department computer files taken hostage by Cryptowall, a newer piece of malware that encrypts hard drive contents of infected machines until victims pay for them to be decrypted.
"Make no mistake, the Town of Durham will be paying no ransom," Town Manager Todd Selig was quoted as saying by CBS Boston news. Police department computers for the town of almost 15,000 residents were reportedly infected Thursday after an officer opened what appeared to be a legitimate file attachment to an e-mail. By Friday morning, widespread "issues" were hitting the department computer network. It was shut down by noon that day to prevent the infection from spreading to other systems.
The game may be RIGged
The department was reportedly hit by Cryptowall, a newer form of crypto malware that rivals the better known CryptoLocker. According to a blog post published Thursday by researchers from Cisco Systems, Cryptowall has been gaining ground since April, when it was folded into the RIG exploit kit, which is software sold in underground forums that automates computer scams and malware attacks for less technically knowledgeable criminals. Cisco's Cloud Web Security service has been blocking requests tied to more than 90 infected Internet domains pushing Cryptowall scams to more than 17 percent of service customers.
Microsoft Fixing Windows 8 Flaws, But Leaving Them In Windows 7
firehosegreat
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Report: Watch Dogs Game May Have Influenced Highway Sign Hacking
firehoseof course, that's where the guy got the idea, and not the other way around
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Richard Sherman Will Be On The Cover Of Madden NFL 15
firehosecondolences on your loss Overbey, good luck next year
Photo
firehosePARKER, GET ME SOME PHOTOS OF YOUR GENITAL MUTILATION
Peyton Reed Is Ant-Man's New Director
firehosewelp
A Cup That Keeps One's Mustache Clean
Photo
firehoseenjoy this awesome great GIF of me and saucie while I go on an extended job-application/exam sharecation
Do you know the most popular religion in your state after Christianity?
firehoseyo is it
The biggest religion in every state remains Christianity. Roughly speaking, the U.S. population is 2 parts Protestant, 1 part Catholic, and 1 part everything else.
So what is that “everything else”? Based on the most recent date from Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies, this map shows every state’s second most practiced religion…
Did you guess your state’s correctly?