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16 May 23:29

bobbycaputo: National Guard Soldier Brings Back Artistic Photos...





















bobbycaputo:

National Guard Soldier Brings Back Artistic Photos from His Time in Afghanistan

Sean Huolihan isn’t the first soldier to spend some of his time overseas looking through a viewfinder instead of a rifle scope, but there’s a certain quality to the photos taken by the Iraq/Afghanistan Veteran that you don’t frequently find in images of war.

For 7+ years, Communications Section Chief Huolihan was a member of the Wisconsin National Guard, but his service took on a different dimension when he picked up a Nikon D90 and began taking pictures after a tour in Iraq. By the time he was deployed to Afghanistan a few years later, he had advanced to the point where he felt comfortable volunteering as the historian for the unit B 1-121FA HIMARS.

The images he came back with are more ‘artistic’ than you typically see. Pictures of rockets and machines of war are juxtaposed against silhouettes and star trails, making for a very interesting collection of photographs indeed.

(Continue Reading)

16 May 23:29

40 percent of PS4, Wii U, Xbox One power usage comes in standby mode, report says

by Samit Sarkar

The PlayStation 4 and Xbox One's standby modes and video capabilities are responsible for the vast increases in power usage over their previous-generation versions, according to a new report from the Natural Resources Defense Council.

The NRDC, a nonprofit environmental advocacy group, conducted extensive testing last month with the PS4, Wii U and Xbox One to determine the consoles' power consumption across a variety of functions. The organization collected its findings in a report called "The Latest-Generation Video Game Consoles: How Much Energy Do They Waste When You're Not Playing?" Prior to this report, the most recent NRDC paper on game console power usage came in 2008.

"The new consoles consume more energy each year playing video or in standby mode than playing games"

Headlining the new NRDC report is a staggering figure: If the PS4, Wii U and Xbox One replace the 110 million units of PlayStation 3, Wii and Xbox 360 consoles that were sold in the U.S. from 2005 through 2013, the total energy use of the three current-generation systems will top 10 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity per year — enough to power all of Houston, the nation's fourth-largest city. And that energy total would cost American households $1 billion in annual power bills, with 40 percent of it — $400 million — going to electricity that's wasted while the consoles are in standby mode.

Over the course of a year, the PS4 and Xbox One will consume two to three times as much energy as the latest models of the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, according to the NRDC. That's true even though both of the new consoles incorporate energy-saving features like improved power scaling (the ability to use only as much energy as a particular task requires) and options for automatically powering down after a certain amount of time.

"The new consoles consume more energy each year playing video or in standby mode than playing games," the report reads.

According to the NRDC's tests, the PS4 draws 8.5 watts in standby (3 watts with USB charging disabled), while the Wii U draws a mere 0.4 watts. The Xbox One, in its default configuration, consumes 15.7 watts in standby, largely due to Kinect voice control — the device is always listening for the phrase "Xbox on." The NRDC calculated that the Xbox One's standby power usage comprises 44 percent of its annual power consumption.

The Xbox One does use less energy than the PS4 when it's playing games (112 watts versus 137 watts) or streaming videos (74 watts versus 89 watts). However, the Xbox One's TV functionality requires the console to be on whenever a user wants to watch cable TV, which adds an extra 72 watts to TV viewing. The NRDC report recommends that Microsoft update the Xbox One to allow TV watching while the console is off.

The Xbox One's TV functionality adds an extra 72 watts to TV viewing

Sony and Nintendo didn't get away scot-free. The report suggests that Sony reduce the amount of standby power the PS4 requires with USB charging enabled but not in active use, and cut down power usage during streaming video playback. Nintendo, the report says, should change the Wii U's notifications so the console doesn't continually alert users that automatic power down is enabled — the nagging pop-ups can lead people to disable the feature, which would cause higher power usage.

The report notes that a combined 8 million units of PS4 and Xbox One consoles had been sold worldwide within two months of their launches in November. In their lifetime, those systems will use a total of 8,000 gigawatt-hours of electricity and be responsible for 3 million metric tons' worth of carbon dioxide emissions.

If neither Sony nor Microsoft change the way the PS4 and Xbox One currently run, the report warns, "Much of that energy will be consumed when no one is using the console but it is still listening for a voice command in the middle of the night and using higher power than necessary to keep USB ports active."

You can find many more details in the full NRDC report (PDF).

16 May 23:29

Growing Up in Arcades, A Flickr Pool Devoted to 1980s Arcade Photos

by Brian Heater

Growing Up in Arcades

Growing Up in Arcades is a Flickr pool dedicated to cataloging vintage photos taken in arcades between the years of 1979 and 1989. The nostalgia-driven collection features shots of Pac-Man, skee ball, Chuck E. Cheese’s, short shorts and other miscellany of the era.

Growing Up in Arcades

Growing Up in Arcades

Growing Up in Arcades

Growing Up in Arcades

via Dangerous Minds

16 May 23:21

Newswire: Helen Mirren and Aaron Paul join Colin Firth in that drone movie

by Sam Barsanti
firehose

w/e, just reboot Breaking Bad with Helen Mirren as Wilhelmina White and Aaron Paul as Jesse again

Some people may have been worried about Aaron Paul’s big-screen acting career after Need For Speed—as if he’d be trapped in a metaphorical pit of bad movies, with only sporadic offerings of Ben & Jerry’s to look forward to—but it seems those concerns were for nothing. Paul’s going to work with Helen Mirren and Colin Firth next, which is a considerable step up from a movie based on a video game.

This comes via The Hollywood Reporter, which says that Paul and Mirren will be joining Firth in Eye In The Sky, a movie about drone-based warfare. Mirren is signed on to play Colonel Michelle Madden, the head of a secret military drone operation, with Paul as one of her pilots. The movie focuses on one particular mission to blow up a cell of suicide bombers, but it quickly turns into a high-stakes debate on ...

16 May 23:21

CNN Fires Editor For Serial Plagiarism

firehose

"CNN has discovered multiple instances of plagiarism by Marie-Louise Gumuchian, a former CNN news editor. She wrote frequently about international news, writing and reporting about Africa, Europe, and the Middle East from our London bureau.
An unpublished story flagged last week during our editing process led to an internal investigation that uncovered other examples in about 50 published stories, and our investigation is ongoing.
We've terminated Gumuchian's employment with CNN, and have removed the instances of plagiarism found in her pieces. In some cases, we've chosen to delete an entire article.
Trust, integrity and simply giving credit where it's due are among the tenets of journalism we hold dear, and we regret that we published material that did not reflect those essential standards.
We also believe in letting audiences know when we've remedied situations that threaten to compromise that trust."

On Friday, CNN announced it had fired an editor for plagiarism.
16 May 23:20

The New York Times Shoves Tim Cook Back In The Closet

Cook is the CEO of Apple, that company that makes all of the things you either own or want to own at some point in the future. He's also gay. So why is the Times saying "There Are Still No Openly Gay Major C.E.O.s" today?
16 May 23:17

Watch This Cat Rap Along With Busta Rhymes

firehose

another "Look at Me Now" dub, but a good one

Somebody give this cat a record deal!
16 May 23:11

New Double Helix Visualization Revises What We Know About DNA

by George Dvorsky

New Double Helix Visualization Revises What We Know About DNA

By using an advanced microscopy technique, researchers have collected the most precise measurements to date of DNA's tangled structure. Their results showed significant variations to the well-known double helix — variations that are offering fresh insights into the inner workings of this life-bearing molecule.

Read more...








16 May 22:59

Cut up, Claire Brewster

firehose

fuck your maps









Cut up, Claire Brewster

16 May 22:54

Big Trouble In EVE China

by Rich Stanton
firehose

more fun to read about than play beat

By Rich Stanton on May 16th, 2014 at 9:00 pm.

One of EVE Online‘s most important features is that everything takes place on a single UK-based server called Tranquility. Cool story bro, but the only problem is that’s not quite true. The Chinese version of EVE Online has its own server, Serenity, operated by the publisher Tiancity – and it has just as much, if not more, capacity for the enormous player-driven events EVE is known for. Barely two months after all those headlines about B-R5 being ‘the biggest / most expensive videogame battle ever,’ a 23-hour war in EVE China made that look like a dry run. It was given a simple name: the slaughterhouse.

A brief history lesson about Serenity; EVE Online was launched in China in 2006 and initially operated by the publisher Optic Communication. After a hugely successful opening few months, which saw over a million accounts registered and a simultaneous login peak of just under 39,000 pilots, the game began to tank. Over 2007-2009 Serenity was in relatively dark times, never seeing more than 6,000 players logged in at one time.

When the licensing agreement expired in 2011, CCP decided to go with a new partner; Tiancity. At Fanfest one of the game’s producers, Duo Ye, ran through Tiancity’s strategy – they started trying to reduce the time between Tranquility’s expanions and the launch in China, naming the first in June 2012 ‘A New Era.’ They immediately started to pull the audience back in, setting a new simultaneous user high of 42,000 players, and by the second expansion ‘Inferno’ saw paying subscriptions double.

But player numbers are one thing. What’s really interesting is that Tiancity, at this stage in Serenity’s life, thought that things were too quiet. ““It was too calm and we wondered if we’d made an error in judgement,” says Ye. “So this was designed to get people fighting. There were too many ships locked up.”

(All screenshots by Rooks And Kings. Click to enlarge.)

In April 2013 they released the Retribution expansion and in August the Odyssey expansion – these together did things like rebalancing the most common combat ships (frigates, cruisers and destroyers) adding more ships, allowing players to train dual characters (so they could have a ‘combat alt’), revamped scanning, and various other minor tweaks.

Soon enough it would bear fruit.

“Fights in Serenity since Retribution have got bigger and more frequent,” says Ye. “Before Retribution it was mostly skirmishes, but afterwards we saw stuff like sovereignity and more life-or-death battles.”

“Before that point there were also less people playing,” says community co-ordinator and senior gamesmaster Ray Zhou. “And basically less people means less war.”

Serenity’s great war occurred in the system 49-U6U between two enormous coalitions, and was sparked by a defection. A huge western coalition existed between PIBC, the biggest corporation on Serenity with over 25,000 players, the mercenary group Veni Vidi Vici (usually called ’3V’), and the July and Fadeklein alliances.

The PIBC coalition, which stands for Pan-Intergalactic Business Community, is not only the biggest but also the oldest alliance in EVE China. They ‘own’ most of the north, the west and a big chunk of the centre of Serenity. 3V are in essence an enormous mercenary alliance – think of a PMC. This inclination and PIBC’s enormous coffers have led to a meeting of minds. Beyond even this, Serenity’s producer Duo Ye pointed out that the leaders of PIBC and 3V both live in the city of Chengdu, and are thought to be IRL buddies.

It seems that EVE is real everywhere.

The dispute began over a region of space known as ‘Tribute’ – which is basically a chokepoint to the north of Serenity. 3V have had control of this area, under the ultimate sovereignty of PIBC, since 2009. Over Christmas 2013 both FDK and the July alliance attempted to negotiate with PIBC for the region in order to secure a route to some of their more remote territories.

PIBC refused. Not only this, but an audio recording was leaked among the Chinese player community of a PIBC higher-up explaining that Tribute was an effective blockade against these alliances expanding.

Realising they were effectively being throttled over the long-term, things turned nasty and FDK and July Alliance attacked 3V for control of Tribute. Things went well – at first. But almost immediately PIBC began to bolster 3V’s forces, and overwhelmingly crushed the two aggressors. FDK beat a rapid retreat, losing plenty of turf, but July Alliance was overwhelmed and by the end of January 2014 disbanded.

The war for Tribute was over – but FDK, the fourth-largest alliance on Serenity, was licking their wounds, hungry for revenge, and realised PIBC was now too big to face alone.

Thus was formed a fateful alliance: the second coalition involved in the slaughterhouse was formed of the RAC alliance, the City of Angels, and Fadeklein. RAC is Serenity’s second-largest alliance with around 20,000 players, and was on very good terms with PIBC before 2008. It owns most of the south of Serenity’s map, and a good chunk of the centre.

City of Angels has 10,000 players of its own and is unusual in having a female CEO, who judging by her name is also rather witty. It roughly translates as ‘Everyone Log Off Now’ – so you can imagine what happens when she gets called as a primary target during battles.

FDK, RAC, City of Angels and FOF banded together in order to, in the players’ own words, ‘battle PIBC and prevent Serenity becoming one man’s game.’ But before this was even known about, the first move had been made.

The skirmishes and fallout from the Tribute battles had dispersed PIBC’s forces, and RAC and City of Angels (henceforth RACOA) made their first big move – sweeping across the south of the map to attack the Querious region. PIBC scrambled to pull their forces back together and defend their homeland.

Then the RACOA set out their stall – jumping 400 super-capital ships into the 49-U6U system in the Querious region. 49-U6U was basically another chokepoint, one that gave access to the south of PIBC’s territory. The alliance wanted this system as a staging post for raids into PIBC’s southern turf – and constructed an outpost to make the retake as difficult as possible for PIBC. This turned a series of battles and posturing into all-out war, as PIBC’s entire southern region came under threat.

On 25 March 2014 at 7am, PIBC jumped a heavy supercapital fleet into 49-U6U using a player-created cynosural field. The RAC / COA / FDK alliance responded by bringing in their capital fleet to defend the system. By 10am there were 2500 pilots in the system, which crept up over the day to 3001. EVE Online’s trademark time-dilation system (‘tidi’) kicked in, slowing the battle down to speeds where the server could handle what was going on.

Despite this the server crashed twice – with the second crash, coming at midnight, seen by many players as the turning-point of the whole battle. The two sides had been relatively evenly-matched. But when the server went back up, City of Angels didn’t reappear.

This is when the battle of 49-U6U became the slaughterhouse. With COA representing around a quarter of the RACOA’s fighting strength, there was no turning back, and one-by-one the Titans of the RAC alliance were targeted and fell.

This was a tale of the Titans. The lower end of the board paints a misleading picture: PIBC / 3V destroyed 53 carriers and 238 dreadnaughts, while RACOA destroyed 60 carriers and 468 dreadnaughts. But then you hit the larger scale and things go lopsided. RACOA destroyed a single Supercarrier, and 15 Titans. PIBC / 3V destroyed an amazing 38 Supercarriers, and an even more astonishing 69 Titans.

This meant a total of 84 Titans destroyed, one more than in B-R5. To put this in perspective, before the battle around 30 Titans had been killed in Serenity’s history.

A fully-fitted Titan on Serenity costs approximately 250 billion ISK. The total in-game value lost in the slaughterhouse, over the 23 hours from 7am to 6am, was 28.7 trillion ISK, but this overwhelming superiority at the top end means PIBC / 3V was responsible for 17.3 trillion – more than the entire 11 trillion total of B-R5. One major caveat, which we’ll explore in more detail later; ISK on China’s Serenity server is worth less than ISK on Tranquility.

Still, impressive no? Tiancity’s developers worked out a cute non-ISK sum: if one player had one manufacturing slot, and all the resources required, it would take 8900 years to rebuild the ships lost in this engagement.

I ask Duo Ye to summarise the fight. He is blunt. “Someone tried to defect, it didn’t go well, and PIBC crushed them.” And what of the aftermath? “Everyone is wondering now whether PIBC is so big that it’s just mopping up the rest of the map and becoming the only viable alliance, but I would say not from what I see. Yes there are consequences, for example one of the losing alliances paid a heavy amount of ISK to regain friendship with PIBC.”

But they’re still on the board? “Exactly, and PIBC is already involved in another war with other alliances. I wouldn’t like to say really, but one thing I will say is that the Chinese character is to resolve things through negotiations – they don’t necessarily want to kill you if, in the long term, that will provide more economic benefits. So yeah maybe they won’t kill you,” Ye lets out a hearty laugh, “but settle for some torture or something like that.”

I can’t help but wonder about that second server outage, however, which Tiancity freely admit may have had an impact on the battle – though equally, COA not reappearing may be down to a ‘tactical retreat.’ “We run a special process on Serenity so that if players know a massive battle is going to come in a specific system they can ring us in advance and tip us off,” says Ray Zhou. “So we know to reinforce that particular node for anything that might happen. But actually the nature of how 49-U happened meant the server was not reinforced on that day, which is why the server crashed twice.”

(All graphs by CCP Games.)

“The players don’t necessarily complain about it as our fault,” says Zhou, “because there were so many ships there and all the time we are working to enable the fights to get bigger and bigger – on that occasion it was almost bound to crash. No supercluster could have held that many people in EVE. So yeah I think they may have grumbled but ultimately understood that.”

“The interesting thing was that when the server crashed a second time there was another crash on a server for one of our other games, so the rumours from that game’s player community was that Tiancity was somehow ‘borrowing’ that server to support EVE,” laughs Zhou. “I should make it clear on the record this is not true, as well as not possible. And anyway the server we have for EVE in China is the best game server that money can buy.”

One of the other reasons 49-U is interesting is that the giant total of money lost isn’t exactly equivalent to ‘western’ EVE – just as the games have different servers, so too they have distinct economies. This was one of the most interesting aspects of Dr Eyjólfur Guðmundsson’s presentation on the second decade of EVE’s economy – he pointed out that the price of a PLEX (EVE’s subscription item) on Serenity had risen to around 3.6 billion. For comparison’s sake on Tranquility they tend to hover between 720-750 million.

Dr Guðmundsson revealed here that CCP and Tiancity had decided to stage an ‘intervention’ by using the PLEX stock captured from illegal traders to temporarily flood the market and lower prices. His problem was not with the price itself – as he pointed out several times, a PLEX is worth what a player pays for it – so much as the rapid rise in price, and he implied CCP would be hesitant about repeating this action.

Dhou Ye confirms that this is a feature of Serenity, with prices in general higher across the board, and players having more money. Why? “I don’t know but maybe it’s the habits of different countries,” says Ray Zhou. “Chinese people like to make a lot of money. Maybe that’s the same in space. You also have to remember we have less players total on Serenity than on Tranquility, but the universe is the same size; which means every player on Serenity I guess has a better chance of resources. When you are exposed to such chances, players make good use of them, and perhaps that’s why ISK is accumulated in greater quantities than on Tranquility.”

At this point a cynic would highlight the oft-repeated accusations of botting and RMT traders on Serenity. Having no evidence either way, I can’t possibly comment.

There are many more differences between Serenity and Tranquility than we can go into here. China has its own Fanfest, and the Chinese audience goes nuts for merchandise even moreso than we do – things like card sets, t-shirts, memory cards, mouse pads, badges, and zippos. There are also ‘idols’, famous female players like Zhu Mimi who acts as a diplomat for a large in-game corporation and has her own sizeable following. “30% of Serenity players say they are female,” deadpans Dhou Ye. “But we know the true number is more like 2%.” Welcome to New Eden.

The presentation also highlighted a few EVE marriages held in China, between players who met in-game, but went even further in explaining the popularity of individuals like Zhu Mimi. “This topic [lack of female players] is an eternal misery among the male playerbase,” says Ye. “So those female players that do exist are treated as very precious and become almost like mascots for corporations, even recruited while rookies.”

The final point to make about Serenity is that, whatever the truth of botting and the like, the server is no mere backwater to Tranquility. In the course of this article I ended up speaking to Lord Maldoror of Rooks and Kings, a corporation that makes brilliant EVE PvP videos and provided the screenshots of 49-U you see on this page, and he went out of his way to emphasise the metagame awareness of Serenity players.

“Serenity players have adapted tactics like our ‘False Tower‘ to their own use. That took place in the aftermath of the massive battle from which the screenshots are taken.” R&K’s ‘False Tower’ video is one of the smartest pieces of PvP I’ve ever seen, and even if you’re not into EVE worth a watch:

The point is that when it was used on Serenity, it was the same tactic but to a different end – suckering in players who thought they’d be pushed away by a ‘real’ tower. “[Stuff like this] is interesting because people on TQ sometimes consider Serenity to be either a mere haven for ‘RMT botters’ or else a backwater in the tactical metagame,” says Maldoror. “However, as the above example shows, the Fleet Commanders of Serenity do more than just passively inherit doctrines and strategies from the ‘main server’ – they expand and innovate on them.”

With no better example, one might say, than in how Serenity’s slaughterhouse dwarved B-R5 a couple of months after it happened.

Serenity is another universe, one that parallels Tranquility but is developing on its own path. Following the slaughterhouse, Tiancity will be mirroring CCP in adding a monument to Serenity’s 49-U system. PIBC and Fadeklein, meanwhile, have patched up – with the cost to Fadeklein being billions of ISK in reparations and a new CEO. What began as a war to stop Serenity becoming ‘one man’s game’ has ended with… well, perhaps that would be too pat.

After all, why kill someone if keeping them alive pays better?

You can read more of Rich Stanton’s EVE Online reporting, including his look at the big game hunters who track and destory EVE’s largest ships, and his diary of EVE Fanfest 2014 in Iceland. We’ll have more next week.

16 May 22:53

Ouya's Unsung Strength: Multiplayer For Parties

by Soulskill
firehose

couch multiplayer beat

An anonymous reader writes: "Ouya, the Kickstarted, Android-based gaming console, had a much easier time selling people the idea of a mini-console than selling people on the console itself. Once people got over the excitement of seeing an indie console break into the market, they asked, 'Wait, why would I want to play Android games on my living room TV?' Almost a year has passed, and we're finally seeing an answer to that question: party gaming. It's one thing to play a console against your friends online, but when you get a bunch of people in the same room, most console games are too deep and complex to just pick up and play in a fun, semi-competitive way. The person who owns the fighting game is going to mop the floor with everyone else. Mobile games, on the other hand, are often incredibly simple, and Ouya forces every game to have a free trial, so you can easily weed out the ones that aren't good for groups. For example: 'In Hidden In Plain Sight, your character is one ninja lost in a sea of CPU-controlled ninjas with exactly the same texture. In the first few seconds, you have to walk left, right, up, down, anything that will let you understand which of the characters on the screen is yours. Once you've got that, you have to figure out your opponents. Any move that doesn't look like is performed by the AI could give you away.'"

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16 May 22:53

Google I/O schedule mentions Android Wear and camera API, disses Google+

by Ron Amadeo
firehose

'Google+ accounts appear to now be referred to as "Google Identity," which is referenced in the session "Grow your app with Google identity." It mentions things like "cross-device single sign-on," a feature of the Google+ platform, but it never mentions the social network by name. The speaker, Jennifer Lin, lists herself on LinkedIn as working on the "Google+ Platform," but the session description says she now works for the "Google Identity Platform."

For comparison, last year's schedule mentioned Google+ 20 times. This year? Zero.'

fuck you plus

Andrew Cunningham

Google has posted the schedule for Google I/O, the company's annual product launch extravaganza held in San Francisco. While Google tries to keep things secret, many of the session names and descriptions end up being revealing anyway. Here's a list of the things that jumped out at us.

(The keynote this year is only two hours long! How will they fit everything in?)

Design, design, design

As promised, there is a huge focus on design this year, with 11 sessions dedicated to how things look and function. It looks like Google's grand unification across products is a go, too, with sessions titled "Cross-Platform Design," "Cross-Platform Interaction Design," "Cross-Platform Visual Design and Imagery," and "Cross-Platform Motion Design"—there will clearly be a lot of cross-platform designing going on. The "Cross-Platform Design" session looks to be the big one, with the design leads of Android (Matias Duarte) and Google Search & Maps (Jon Wiley) in attendance.

Read 12 remaining paragraphs | Comments

16 May 22:52

Shocker: Cable TV prices went up four times the rate of inflation

by Jon Brodkin
firehose

all carriers suck forever

The Federal Communications Commission today issued a report on average cable TV prices in the US, and to the surprise of no one, it turns out they went up a lot.

"Basic cable service prices increased by 6.5 percent [to $22.63] for the 12 months ending January 1, 2013. Expanded basic cable prices increased by 5.1 percent [to $64.41] for those 12 months, and at a compound average annual rate of 6.1 percent over the 18-year period from 1995-2013," the FCC said.

The basic cable increase was four times the rate of inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the 12-month period, and substantially above inflation for the 1995-2013 measurement.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

16 May 22:51

Saints, NFL Players Association trade statements in legal dispute

by James Brady
firehose

ha ha wow

The Saints also claim that the NFLPA has "inappropriately and unprofessionally discouraged free agents from coming to Louisiana."

ha ha WOWWWWWW

Injuries and workers' compensation are at the heart of multiple statements released by the New Orleans Saints and NFLPA on Friday.

The New Orleans Saints and the NFL Players Association engaged in a back-and-forth on Friday after the Saints supported a change to workers' compensation legislation in Louisiana. NFLPA head DeMaurice Smith released a letter to agents on Friday, warning potential free agents against signing with the Saints due to their support of a bill, HB1069, according to NOLA.com.

The bill would calculate workers' compensation benefits for injured athletes based on their earnings when they're injured, and not their earnings over the course of an entire season on average. In Smith's letter to agents, he warns that the bill will work to "bar or reduce workers' compensation benefits for professional athletes."

"Last week, the Saints organization again sponsored legislation that would substantially reduce workers' compensation benefits for players injured at any time other than during the 17 weeks of the regular season," Smith said, "In other words the bill, if passed, seeks to provide a lower benefit for a player injured in OTAs, minicamps, training camp or even postseason."

Player contracts are typically paid out on a week-to-week basis during the regular season, though pay is also distributed at various points in the offseason, but at a presumably lower rate. This is where the bill would be lowering what injured players receive. Smith ended the letter asking agents, "Please advise your players of the potential consequences of the Saints' efforts should they sign with the Saints."

The primary argument coming from the Saints, in a statement released by a lawyer representing the team, is that the courts have been on their sides in multiple cases, according to Tom Pelissero of USA Today. The Saints argue that multiple cases since 2006 have concluded that these compensations should be calculated based on the wages of the injury only. "Importantly, this law is not new, and in fact first arose from a professional athlete claim filed in April 2000," they said.

New Orleans' lawyers say that HB1069 "in no way reduces any eligible workers' compensation benefits to any potential free agent or current professional athlete in Louisiana." At this point, that statement hinges on their beliefs that any further cases regarding this will be settled in the same way as the cases cited above. They say that HB1069 is "now being sought for passage to stop the needless litigation and annual lobbying efforts of the NFLPA to circumvent the established case law."

The Saints also claim that the NFLPA has "inappropriately and unprofessionally discouraged free agents from coming to Louisiana."

16 May 22:42

Social Media Sites and Famous Brands As Game of Thrones Houses

firehose

want to do house sigils for house sigil concepts

House Game of Throne Houses: Pithy Pseudohonorable Innuendo
House Harry Potter Houses: Astrology for Kids
House Fraternity Houses: Communism for Rich Assholes
House Harvard Houses: Communism for Wealthy Assholes

Design Crowd asked their users to redesign Game of Thrones house banners for various ginormous companies, and while I like what they've done, I really wish I had their design known-how so I could make some fandom-specific ones. Fanfiction.Net: Pit of Voles. (via: BuzzFeed) Previously in Game of Thrones House Banners
16 May 22:38

Dad Way Scarier When Controlling Temper

SANTA ROSA, CA—Noting the 51-year-old’s increasingly flushed complexion, wide and intense eyes, and slow, heavy breathing during an argument Friday morning, local siblings Jeff and Katie Russell told reporters that their father, Dave Russell, ...






16 May 22:38

A little boy in a shopping cart plays Mario Kart in real life

by Joey White

DreamWorks digital effects artist Daniel Hashimoto has created another fun effects-laden video of his son. This time around, the kid is taking out Bowser in a store parking lot…

Previously…

16 May 22:37

Amnesty International Blasts Conditions Of NHL Penalty Boxes

LONDON—Exposing widespread cases of rampant neglect and overly harsh treatment, human rights organization Amnesty International released a damning report Friday decrying the cruel and inhumane conditions of NHL penalty boxes.






16 May 22:37

How Do You Build A City In Space?

After budget cuts at NASA, a loose agglomeration of private companies — including Elon Musk's SpaceX — have revived the dormant dream of colonizing other worlds.
16 May 22:30

jonahryantology: i made a shocking discovery today I have...

firehose

Beavishey Cumhuhhuh

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.



jonahryantology:

i made a shocking discovery today

I have officially hit my threshold for making fun of this guy’s face. I see it a lot, even blacklisting his name on xkit, aaaaaand I’m done with it.

Calling someone ugly is petty and mean and I’m not into it. (And truly, comparing someone to an early Mike Judge character design is not a compliment, don’t even try.) Criticize bad conduct, criticize professional work and even the fanbase(s), but this doesn’t really hold much substance for me.

16 May 22:29

Police commissioner in New Hampshire town is asked to quit over slur about ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune


Police commissioner in New Hampshire town is asked to quit over slur about ...
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Political leaders in a New Hampshire town have officially joined residents in demanding the resignation of a police commissioner who uttered a racial slur about President Barack Obama. Wolfeboro Town Manager David Owen posted a message Friday on ...

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16 May 22:29

Advocates: Ruling on Marriage Equality in Oregon Due at Noon Monday

by Denis C. Theriault

Almost two weeks ago, the advocates pushing to legalize same-sex marriage in Oregon this year were glumly contemplating a worst-case scenario.

A national group was trying to tangle a federal court case that's expected give Oregonians the right to marry anyone they want—potentially forcing advocates to push ahead with an expensive and emotionally exhausting ballot fight this fall. And, at the same time, another group, the Oregon Family Council, was working through an offshoot to complicate the fall election with a measure allowing businesses to discriminate against same-sex couples in the name of religious freedom.

Marriage equality advocates won two big victories since then. The people behind the discrimination measure dropped it in a huff last Friday. And then, this week, Judge Michael McShane curtly denied the National Organization for Marriage's literal 11th-hour bid to slow the court case. And now they've got another.

McShane has promised a decision on marriage equality at noon Monday—giving advocates enough time to safely pull the plug on a fall campaign to overturn Oregon's 10-year-old marriage ban. Presuming McShane does that work for them, following more than a dozen federal judges all across the country ever since the US Supreme Court ruled the federal Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional last year.

“We don't know which way the judge will rule, but we are hopeful that Oregon is on the verge of making history," Amy Ruiz, Oregon United for Marriage's deputy campaign manager, said in a statement.

History does seems due. But even if McShane casts down Oregon's marriage ban, it still may not arrive as speedy as everyone hopes. There's a chance he could stay that ruling pending further legal battles in federal appellate courts or the US Supreme Court. But other judges, notably in Arkansas, have dispensed with that wait.

And if McShane does the same, Multnomah County, at least, says it's ready to start letting people marry ASAP. Here's hoping.

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16 May 22:28

Tutorial: Adafruit Music Maker Shield

by adafruit
firehose

#soundstudies

Adafruit Products 1790-00

Tutorial: Adafruit Music Maker Shield @ The Adafruit Learning System.

Bend all audio files to your will with the Adafruit Music Maker shield for Arduino! This powerful shield features the VS1053, an encoding/decoding (codec) chip that can decode a wide variety of audio formats such as MP3, AAC, Ogg Vorbis, WMA, MIDI, FLAC, WAV (PCM and ADPCM). It can also be used to record audio in both PCM (WAV) and compressed Ogg Vorbis. You can do all sorts of stuff with the audio as well such as adjusting bass, treble, and volume digitally.

All this functionality is implemented in a light-weight SPI interface so that any Arduino can play audio from an SD card. There’s also a special MIDI mode that you can boot the chip into that will read ‘classic’ 31250Kbaud MIDI data from an Arduino pin and act like a synth/drum machine – there are dozens of built-in drum and sample effects! But the chip is a pain to solder, and needs a lot of extras. That’s why we spun up the best shield, perfect for use with any Arduino Uno, Leonardo or Mega.

Learn more!

16 May 22:27

i get that u dont like reed richards and ur entitled to ur opinion but u dont have to be so fuckin snide about it

The very first time Reed Richards saved the world from an alien invasion, he hypnotized the invaders into thinking they were cows and then released them into the food supply, which resulted in an outbreak of superpowered prion disease.

16 May 22:27

New Star Wars Rumors Include RetConning Aplenty And Blu-Ray Of Unaltered Original Trilogy - Bleeding Cool Comic Book, Movies and TV News and Rumors

by gguillotte
According to an interesting e-mail we’ve intercepted, and which purports to come from within Disney’s marketing department,  the studio are planning to re-release A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi on DVD/Blu-Ray/On Demand in their original form, without all the things George Lucas changed for the “Special Edition” releases back in 2004.
16 May 22:22

Vintage Blade Runner Featurette

by Bryant Frazer
For a real blast from the past, enjoy this documentary short on a trio of geniuses at work — director Ridley Scott, visual futurist Syd Mead and special photographic effects supervisor Douglas Trumbull — during the production of the still-astonishing Blade … more »
16 May 22:21

Wireless carriers again avoid strict rule against blocking apps

by Jon Brodkin
firehose

all carriers suck forever

"Hey, there's a rule against blocking, professional basketball player Trenton Hassell!" "No way, this block is wireless!"

The Federal Communications Commission asked a lot of questions in yesterday's net neutrality order. One of them is whether the commission should start treating fixed broadband and cellular Internet as one and the same for the purposes of no-blocking and anti-discrimination rules. But for now, the commission is continuing the course it's taken previously by treating fixed and wireless Internet differently.

Like the 2010 Open Internet Order that was largely struck down by a federal appeals court ruling, yesterday's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) lays out rules for ISPs to follow on disclosing network practices, blocking applications and websites, and discriminating against Internet services. But cellular carriers such as Verizon Wireless, AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile face less strict rules than fixed (e.g. wired) Internet providers, allowing them to block applications that don't compete against their telephony services.

In the 2010 order, "[t]he transparency rule applies equally to both fixed and mobile broadband Internet access service," the commission noted in the new NPRM. "The no-blocking rule applied a different standard to mobile broadband Internet access services, and mobile Internet access service was excluded from the unreasonable discrimination rule."

Read 27 remaining paragraphs | Comments

16 May 22:20

Bankrolled by broadband donors, lawmakers lobby FCC on net neutrality

by David Kravets
firehose

Greg Walden (R-OR) $109,250 ($30k NAB, $29k Comcast, $17.5k ACA, $15k NCTA; only Google is in the same ballpark among net-neutrality proponents at $18k under Google proper and $15k under Motorola. #1 House target of cable/satellite/TV production and distribution in the last two years, making up more than half of the total among the top 10 contributors and nearly a quarter of his career contributions.)

Eric Cantor (R-VA) $80,800 (but a small fraction of his $6.6M in career campaign contributions; media/cable doesn't even make the list of top-10 concerns, and Oracle alone donated $40k in the last two years. Industry's #3 House target.)

John Boehner (R-OH) $75,450 (Comcast $51k; small fraction of his multi-million last two years and $14.6M career. Industry's #5 House target.)

Fred Upton (R-MI) $65,000 ($25k NAB, $17.5k Comcast. $20k from Google in opposition. Industry's #8 House target.)

John Barrow (D-GA) $60,500 ($16k Comcast. $20k Microsoft in nebulous opposition. Received 27 industry donations within 3 weeks of votes affecting the industry, voting in favor of the donors every time.)

Robert Latta (R-OH) $51,000 (NCTA $11.5k, AT&T $10k. About 10% of his total career contributions are industry.)

George Butterfield (D-NC) $34,500 (NCTA $11.5k, CenturyLink $10k, AT&T $10k. About 10% of his career contributions are industry.)

Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) $33,000 (No organizations make his top 10. Google $15k in opposition. Small amount compared to securities and health industry.)

Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) $32,500 (Verizon $10k. Less than 10% of her career contributions are industry.)

Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) $31,500 (Less than 5% of her career contributions are industry. Most of her largest contributions are from health care and alcohol.)

Gene Green (D-TX) $27,000 (NCTA $10k. Drop in the bucket compared to oil and gas, health care, and trade unions.)

Scott Peters (D-CA) $21,800 (About 1% career. On the House Science, Space, and Technology committee.)

Joaquin Castro (D-TX) $18,250 (About 2% career.)

Kurt Schrader (D-OR) $16,000 (About 1% career; less than a single beer lobbyist.)

William Owens (D-NY) $15,500 (<1% career.)

Bobby Rush (D-IL) $15,000 (Verizon $9.5k. About 10% career.)

Loretta Sanchez (D-CA) $12,000 (About 5% career.)

Albio Sires (D-NJ) $9,000 (Verizon $9k, AT&T $8k. Not sure why Ars has him at $9k. About 15% career contributions are from industry.)

Alcee Hastings (D-FL) $7,000 (AT&T $9k, Verizon $8k. Not sure why Ars has him at $7k. About 5% career contributions.)

Marc Veasey (D-TX) $6,750 (Negligible.)

Bennie Thompson (D-MS) $6,500 (Negligible.)

Sanford Bishop (D-GA) $6,000 (Negligible.)

Henry Cuellar (D-TX) $5,000 (Negligible.)

David Scott (D-GA) $3,500 (Negligible.)

Gregory Meeks (D-NY) $3,500 (AT&T $10k. About 7% career.)

Corrine Brown (D-FL) $3,000 (About 1% career.)

William Clay (D-MO) $2,000 (Negligible.)

Nick Rahall (D-WV) $0 (LOL)

The 28 House members who lobbied the Federal Communications Commission to drop net neutrality this week have received more than twice the amount in campaign contributions from the broadband sector than the average for all House members.

These lawmakers, including the top House leadership, warned the FCC that regulating broadband like a public utility "harms" providers, would be "fatal to the Internet," and could "limit economic freedom."​

According to research provided Friday by Maplight, the 28 House members received, on average, $26,832 from the "cable & satellite TV production & distribution" sector over a two-year period ending in December. According to the data, that's 2.3 times more than the House average of $11,651.

Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments

16 May 21:52

FAA to streamline drone permit process

by Joe Silver

The Federal Aviation Administration, the US agency that regulates the law of the skies, indicated this week that it is streamlining its process for approving the use of some small unmanned aerial vehicles in the domestic airspace for certain commercial activities like filmmaking, farming, and utilities inspection.

While the FAA's complete set of rules on domestic drone operation will not likely be finalized within the next calendar year—this despite the fact that Congress created a framework for the FAA to grant permits for small commercial drones in low-risk situations in 2012 with passage of the FAA Modernization and Reform Act—the agency has indicated that it will take steps to permit some small-scale commercial drones sooner than anticipated.

“The FAA is proactively working to develop and disseminate information on the FAA’s authority… for people who want to operate [drones] for other than hobby or recreational purposes," an FAA spokeswoman told Ars on Friday.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

16 May 21:42

AMC Greenlights Billy Corgan’s Wrestling Show

by Stereogum
firehose

via Russian Sledges

A couple of years ago, Billy Corgan, a longtime wrestling fan, helped start Resistance Pro Wrestling, an independent wrestling league in Chicago. A few months ago, we learned that AMC was developing a reality show about Corgan and his involvement in the company. And now we learn that Billy Corgan and his pro grappler associates will indeed be coming to our televisions, and on the same network that brought us Don Draper and Walter White. TV By The Numbers reports that AMC has ordered the show, which still has no title, to series. It’s one of three new AMC reality shows, along with Visionaries, about Hollywood set builders, and something called Celebrity All-Star Bowling. Here’s how Corgan’s show is described: “Corgan will take us behind the scenes of this fascinating world, from creating storylines to choreographing fights to managing intense post-match locker room arguments, and will reveal that the most dramatic stories often take place outside of the ring.” The hour-long show has an initial order of eight episodes. I’m kind of excited? At the very least, I’m interested to see what they do with the unavoidable reality that Billy Corgan is taller than most pro wrestlers.