Shared posts

08 May 05:14

ghost420: nerdgerhl: I feel like there are probably too many...













ghost420:

nerdgerhl:

I feel like there are probably too many people just scrolling past this so let’s go through everything that’s going on here. 

1. With Roger’s voice actor standing off camera, Bob Hoskins acts into empty air and frantically sawing at his handcuff, continually looking up and down at different visual marks of various depths. Look at the slow pan up of his eyes in gif 4, and then the quick shift to his side. Think about how, on set, he was looking at nothing. 

2. Starting in gif 2, The box must be made to stop shaking, either by concealed crew member, mechanism, or Hoskins own dextrousness, as he is doing all of the things mentioned in point 1. 

3. In all gifs, Roger’s handcuff has to be made to move appropriately through a hidden mechanism. (If you watch the 4th gif closely you can see the split second where it is replaced by an animated facsimile of the actual handcuff, but just for barely a second.)

4. The crew voluntarily (we know this because it is now a common internal phrase at Disney for putting in extra work for small but significant reward) decided to make Roger bump the lamp and give the entire scene a constantly moving light source that had to be matched between the on set footage and Roger. This was for two reasons, A) Robert Zemeckis thought it would be funnier, and B) one of the key techniques the crew employed to make the audience instinctually accept that Toons coexisted with the live action environment was constant interaction with it. This is why, other than comedy, Roger is so dang clumsy. Instead of isolating Toons from real objects to make it easier for themselves, the production went out of its way to make Toons interact more with the live action set than even real actors necessarily would, in order to subtly, constantly remind the audience that they have real palpable presence. You can watch the whole scene here, just to see how few shots there are of Roger where he doesn’t interact with a real object. 

The crew and animators did all of this with hand drawn cell animation without computerized special effects. 1988, we were still five years out from Jurassic Park, the first movie to make the leap from fully physical creature effects to seamlessly integrating realistic computer generated images with live action footage. Roger’s shadows weren’t done with CGI. Hoskin’s sightlines were not digitally altered. Wires controlling the handcuff were not removed in post. 

Who fucking Framed Roger fucking Rabbit, folks. The greatest trick is when people don’t realize you’re tricking them at all. 

Traditional animation makes me cry

07 May 15:26

Researchers See a Post-Snowden Chilling Effect In Our Search Data

by samzenpus
Daniel_Stuckey (2647775) writes "How risky is it to use the words "bomb," "plague," or "gun" online? That was a question we posed, tongue in cheek, with a web toy we built last year called Hello NSA. It offers users suggested tweets that use words that drawn from a list of watchwords that analysts at the Dept. of Homeland Security are instructed to search for on social media. "Stop holding my love hostage," one of the tweets read. "My emotions are like a tornado of fundamentalist wildfire." It was silly, but it was also imagined as an absurdist response to the absurdist ways that dragnet surveillance of the public and non-public Internet jars with our ideas of freedom of speech and privacy. And yet, after reading the mounting pile of NSA PowerPoints, are all of us as comfortable as we used to be Googling for a word like "anthrax," even if we were simply looking up our favorite thrash metal band? Maybe not. According to a new study of Google search trends, searches for terms deemed to be sensitive to government or privacy concerns have dropped "significantly" in the months since Edward Snowden's revelations in July."

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.








07 May 15:23

Gun control: the NRA wants to take America's smart guns away

by Adrianne Jeffries

On a recent Thursday night, Maryland gun store owner Andy Raymond set up a video camera in front of a wall of rifles and sat down with a bottle of whiskey and a cigarette. He rested his tattooed arms on the glass counter, which contained more guns, and leaned toward the camera. It was time to undo the mess he’d made. “I’m Andy from Engage Armament,” he said, tapping his cigarette into a shot glass. “There’s been a lot of drama today here.”

The drama was over the Armatix iP1, a compact, .22 caliber, 10-round pistol made in Germany. The iP1 is a “smart” gun, meaning it only fires in the hands of its owner. Or rather, it only fires if it’s within 10 inches of its companion iW1 watch, which is presumably on the owner’s wrist. It can also be disabled with a timer or a PIN code.

Armatix-ip1-smart-gun-3

Engage Armament announced it would start carrying the iP1 on May 1st. It backpedaled less than 24 hours later, after gun-rights advocates lashed out on Facebook and called the store, threatening to shoot Raymond, his girlfriend, and his dog.

There has been renewed interest in smart guns since the Newtown school shooting, which reinvigorated the gun-control debate. However, there is immense pressure not to be the first to sell them. That’s because of a New Jersey law passed in 2002 known as the Childproof Handgun Law, which says that all guns sold in New Jersey must be state-approved smart guns within three years of a smart gun being sold anywhere in the country. The goal was to make smart guns mandatory as soon as the technology existed. Officially, no smart gun has been sold in the US yet — meaning if Raymond had sold one, it would have triggered the clause in New Jersey.

"My apologies to the people of New Jersey," Raymond said in the video, which was posted to Facebook but has since been deleted. "I did not know that I would be screwing you over."

Smart guns, or personalized guns, are designed to be useless unless unlocked by radio signal or a biometric authenticator such as voice activation, fingerprints, or a retina scan. When New Jersey’s law was written, proponents thought smart guns were just around the corner. They were supposed to be here over a decade ago, but politics keeps getting in the way.

"We thought it would take, I don’t know, three or four years for some American manufacturer to get the nerve up to do what is really not rocket science," says Bryan Miller, a gun-control advocate who led the charge for the 2002 law. "The reason it hasn’t happened is very simply because the gun industry and its lobby have intimidated American companies from doing it."

The CEO of Colt wrote an editorial supporting smart guns in 1997; he was ousted the next year. Smith & Wesson started building one in 1999 as part of a government order; the National Rifle Association immediately organized a Smith & Wesson boycott. Last month, Oak Tree Gun Club in California briefly carried the iP1, but a fierce backlash prompted a swift retreat before any were sold. The store now denies it ever stocked the gun, even though photos show otherwise.

"We want gun owners to feel like they are dinosaurs if they aren’t using smart guns"

Smart-gun advocates say the technology will stop kids from shooting themselves with their parents’ guns, undermine the market for stolen guns, and protect law enforcement from having their guns used against them. "We need the iPhone of guns," said Ron Conway, a Silicon Valley investor, referring to the phone’s fingerprint unlock. Conway is backing a $1 million contest for smart-gun technology. "We want gun owners to feel like they are dinosaurs if they aren’t using smart guns," he told the Washington Post.

Opponents counter that the technology adds an unnecessary failure point — you don’t want to fumble with a fingerprint unlock if someone is breaking into your home. They also fear the spread of laws like New Jersey’s, since similar proposals have been introduced in other states and in Congress. "The NRA does not oppose new technological developments in firearms," the group writes on its website. "We are opposed to government mandates that require the use of expensive, unreliable features, such as grips that would read your fingerprints before the gun will fire."

Criticism also comes from a surprising place: The Violence Policy Center, a gun control advocacy group, which has a long list of objections to smart guns. "There is this idea that the smart gun is a catch-all solution," says director Josh Sugarman, but people use their own guns in murders and suicides most of the time anyway. "Even if every gun was a smart gun, it would affect a very small percentage of gun violence in this country."

The focus on smart guns cannibalizes funding and attention that should be put toward gun-violence research and the fight to stop military-grade weapons from being sold to civilians, Sugarman says. And while smart guns tend to grab headlines, there is little evidence that people actually want them.

Armatix-smart-system

Still, smart-gun development continues. After the Newtown shooting, the White House issued a call for gun-safety technologies, including smart-gun systems, for which the Justice Department will soon award $2 million in grants. In Silicon Valley, the $1 million Smart Tech for Firearms Challenge has received more than 200 entries. There are products already on the market, including two fingerprint-unlocking accessories and the iGun, a rifle that uses a system similar to the iP1 but unlocks with a ring instead of a watch.

Perhaps the longest-running smart-gun technology is being developed by the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT). NJIT has been working on a "Dynamic Grip Recognition" system, which uses 32 sensors to measure pressure in a user’s unique grip, since the state passed its smart-gun law. The research group is now seeking private investment for a prototype gun.

NJIT Smart Gun

Njit-smart-gun-2

"We have found overwhelming consumer acceptance for the idea," says Donald Sebastian, NJIT’s vice president of research and development. "What people say in a poll may not translate to what actually happens in the marketplace."

The fact that there are some products commercially available may be enough to trigger New Jersey’s law even if no smart guns have been sold. Acting attorney general John Hoffman also has the authority to certify that the technology is ready. "We anticipate, in the near future, initiating a firearm testing and evaluation procedure to determine whether the Armatix iP1 handgun meets these statutory criteria," he wrote in a March 4th letter to State Senator Loretta Weinberg.

Senator Weinberg was a leading proponent of the 2002 law, which took six years to pass. She’s ready to toss it out, however, now that it’s being used to stop smart guns from being sold anywhere. If the NRA will drop its resistance to smart guns, she says she will introduce a bill to repeal the law.

It seems inevitable that some store is going to start carrying smart guns soon, regardless of what happens in Jersey. "Intimidation can’t last forever," says Miller, the former Ceasefire NJ director who now leads the gun-control group Heeding God’s Call.

Smart guns still seem inevitable, no matter what happens in New Jersey

Many gun owners don’t object to smart guns, as long as they’re still allowed to buy regular guns. "If someone wants to buy a smart gun, that is fine," Raymond said in his Facebook address. "When the law legislates it, that is a sin." After the apology, he and his shop were flooded with supportive emails, calls, and visits. Members of the Maryland Shooters forum even rallied for a barbecue at Engage Armament. "It is only a matter of time before such guns are available. Acting like babies about it doesn't make things better," one user wrote. "Assuming of course there is an actual market for such a bad idea."

06 May 19:52

Historical Map: Train and Tram Travel Times in Melbourne,...



Historical Map: Train and Tram Travel Times in Melbourne, Australia, c. 1920

A handsome isochrone map produced by Melbourne’s Metropolitan Town Planning Commission to show the “minimum” (i.e., absolute best scenario) travel time into the city via suburban railways and tram lines. Some later additions to the network seem to have been pencilled in at the bottom right of the map.

Side note: Wikipedia’s article on isochrone maps includes the incredibly lazy assertion that “isochrone maps have been used in transportation planning since 1972 or earlier”, simply because that’s seemingly the earliest example the author could find to cite. This map, as well as this example from Manchester in 1914 (one hundred years ago!), clearly show that they’ve been used for this purpose for much longer. The moral of the story? Don’t trust everything you read on Wikipedia!

(Source: Daniel Bowen/Flickr)

06 May 19:51

Word on the Street

06 May 16:12

Newswire: Bryan Singer hit with a second lawsuit alleging sexual assault

by Sean O'Neal

Bryan Singer may have dropped out of all public appearances to avoid allowing X-Men: Days Of Future Past to become overshadowed by the charges against him, but his silence definitely hasn’t quieted that story any. In the weeks since Michael Egan first accused the director of drugging and sexually assaulting him—all while in league with a not-so-secret society of industry executives, who throw parties allegedly for that specific purpose—some of the details of those parties have been further corroborated by anonymous insider-sourced exposés and even from other famous attendees, like Brett Easton Ellis. And now Egan’s claims have been joined by a second lawsuit, filed by a British man known only as “John Doe No. 117,” accusing Singer of the exact same thing.

Represented by attorney Jeff Herman—the same attorney behind Egan’s case, as well as similar cases brought against Elmo puppeteer Kevin Clash ...

06 May 16:12

gingerbatch-addict: salaamender: Sometimes I think to myself, “do I really want to buy another...

gingerbatch-addict:

salaamender:

Sometimes I think to myself, “do I really want to buy another chocolate bar?”
And then I remember that there is a super volcano under Yellowstone that is 40,000 years overdue and when it erupts it could potentially cover most of north America in ash and create a volcanic winter that kills half the worlds population
And I’m like, fuck yeah I want that chocolate bar

This is one of the most inspiring posts i’ve ever seen

not to mention that we’re millions of years overdue for a cataclysmic global extermination and that earth is in the direct path of more than a few asteroids. 

chocolate time

06 May 16:09

anaaesthetic: pandabomb: florida is a godless place. I went there once, got in the ocean, and...

anaaesthetic:

pandabomb:

florida is a godless place. I went there once, got in the ocean, and immediately had to evacuate because a bull shark was swimming right towards me. there was an alligator on the side of the freeway. meth addicts and men on tractors roam free. florida is america’s australia

I grew up in Florida. Please don’t insult Australia like that.

06 May 16:08

tenaflyviper: If you can’t find a place on your blog for...



tenaflyviper:

If you can’t find a place on your blog for Patrick Stewart in a bathtub dressed like a lobster, then your blog probably doesn’t deserve such majesty anyway.

06 May 16:07

Last Night's LEGO Simpsons Episode Was Filled With Philip K. Dick Puns

by Lauren Davis

Last Night's LEGO Simpsons Episode Was Filled With Philip K. Dick Puns

All the best stuff in last night's LEGO episode of The Simpsons was lurking in the background. Behind the story of Homer and Lisa are lots of little jokes about brick sizes and reality-distorting science fiction.

Read more...








06 May 16:06

Newswire: Another actor from The Wire is coming to The Walking Dead

by Sean O'Neal

Seth Gilliam, best known for his role as the eventually upstanding Ellis Carver of HBO’s The Wire, has joined the cast of The Walking Dead’s fifth season, according to Deadline. Unlike some previous Walking Dead casting announcements, attempts to match Gilliam’s role with his comic book analogue are proving futile: His character bears the name “Michael Todd,” though Deadline notes that this is just some sort of alias for the casting breakdown. (Even though the addition of Michael Todd to The Walking Dead world could do wonders for zombie skin. He’s also not the guy from Coheed And Cambria, since the survivors of the zombie apocalypse have suffered enough.)

What we do know is that his character is described as having “a friendly, puckish humor but also having a haunted side stemming from a dark secret” (which, in regard to that last part, may as well ...

06 May 16:05

Income Inequality Emerges As Key Topic To Avoid In 2014 Elections

WASHINGTON—Citing the recent failure to increase the federal minimum wage and the continuing struggles of the country’s shrinking middle class, political strategists reported Monday that income inequality has emerged as the most important topi...






06 May 04:46

Newswire: Orange Is The New Black officially gets a third season

by Sean O'Neal

On the heels of reports that Laura Prepon would be back in a major way in the third season of Orange Is The New Black, Netflix has officially confirmed there will be a third season of Orange Is The New Black. And lending some credence to those initial reports, the announcement was first made on Prepon’s Instagram account, which also featured a photo of a whiteboard list of “Season 3 Titles” that range from “Back To The Rape Well” to “Use Your Tears As Lube” to “The Rapiest Pap Smear.” 

This show is a comedy.

06 May 04:46

Photo



05 May 22:54

FC Copenhagen fans make one of the best tifos ever for derby

by Ryan Rosenblatt

When tifo becomes theater it takes on a whole new level of awesome.

There are tifos, and then there are entire plays acted out with tifo.

The tifo FC Copenhagen made for their derby against Brondby was the latter. And awesome.

It's theater! Classy football fans made classy theater art because they are classy. And then they drank a lot of beer and swore for 90 minutes.

The first banner reads, "The order has been given to shoot down the enemy," with the second reading, "Copenhagen is ours!"

Copenhagen wasn't quite theres as FC Copenhagen played to a 1-1 draw with Brondby, leaving both teams still tied for third in the league, but FC Copenhagen haven't been awarded their 10 super awesome tifo bonus points yet. Once they get those (and they are going to get those), they will shoot to the top of the Danish Superliga and win the league for the fifth time in six years, like they deserve.

H/T Washington Post

05 May 22:26

You Don’t Have To Apologize For Being White — Medium

by hodad

Tal. Hey bro.

I want to talk to you for a minute.

I read your article, ‘Why I’ll Never Apologize For My White Male Privilege’. First off, congrats on landing an article on Time. That’s huge.

And I get it, dude. You’re annoyed with the ‘check your privilege’ line. Hey, I am too. I think it’s overused, and it’s basically turned into a meme at this point.

I read your piece. You’re Jewish. Your family, or at least your family a couple generations ago, had it pretty damn rough. And your dad worked his ass off so that you could have the opportunities that he didn’t. That’s great.

But, I want to talk about this line right here:

It was [my grandparents’] privilege to come to a country that grants equal protection under the law to its citizens, that cares not about religion or race, but the content of your character.

This is where you messed up, bro.

This country actually does care about your race. A lot.

You brought up some of the horrors of the Holocaust. That’s a pretty heavy card to play off the bat, but it’s not going to work on me.

I forgot to tell you: I’m black. And I bet you can already guess where I’m going with this. You want to tell me about the systematic extermination of six million? I see that and raise you to ten million. You want to talk about a few years of forced labor? Let’s try for a few hundred. You seem to be able to trace your family’s history back pretty far. That’s awesome. I can’t, because they didn’t really keep records for property like that back then.

I’m sure that if you wanted, you could come up with some ways that somewhere in history, Jewish people had it rougher than black people. Or maybe even now. And we could go back and forth about this, endlessly.

But realistically, in the court of general opinion on historical victimhood, you’re not going to win. I will. Black people always do.

But really, is this a game that you want to win? Would you like to be at the bottom rung of the social ladder? Is pity what you want?

Probably not. And right there — that annoyed feeling that you probably had when I asked if you wanted people to be sorry for you — that’s the same feeling that a lot of people probably have when you accuse them of coming up with ‘imaginary institutions’.

It’s not imaginary, bro. It’s real.

It’s good that you’ve put effort into understanding your past. But we also need to understand everyone’s present.

What I’m trying to get at here is that bringing up various ways that your ancestors’ lives sucked isn’t a good defense for racism.

I’m not saying that you’re racist (but it’s okay if you are). I’m saying that you are, probably unwittingly, defending the racism that exists in society.

But, let’s stop talking about the past.

Tal, have you ever had a gun pointed at you?

I have, but only by police. The most recent time was when I was driving home and my car broke down, so I walked up to a highway police station for help. As I knocked on the door, two officers came up from behind me out of the bushes, guns drawn, and shouted at me to freeze. It turns out they thought I was trying to rob them. That wouldn’t have happened if I was white.

I bet you worry about your grades, or how you’re going to finish that last paper before the deadline. All college students deal with that. But you’ve probably never had to worry about whether or not you might die at a routine traffic stop. White people don’t have to deal with that. Because you don’t fit the ‘profile’ of a criminal.

That’s part of what people mean when they talk about ‘privilege’.

The ‘equal protection under the law’ you mentioned — it doesn’t quite work that way for people that look like me.

And again, I’m not trying to ‘win’ a comparison game here. I don’t feel sorry for myself, and I don’t want you to either. I could hit you with a ton of scenes from my life that would be hard to imagine for a dude like yourself. On the flip side, you talked a lot about your family, but I bet you’ve personally dealt with some stuff yourself that I couldn’t imagine.

But I can try to understand, which is what I also ask of you.

Tal, I am upset, but I’m not upset at you.

I want you to know that. I’m not upset at you. I’m upset at Time.

I’m upset at Time for publishing your essay. I’m upset at them for taking advantage of you.

I’m a graduate student, Tal, which means I sometimes teach college classes. Next year, I’ll be teaching a writing course. If you’d handed that essay in to me, you’d get, maybe, a C. Your claims just don’t hold water. You’re good at arguing, but not good at thinking (yet).

Your essay isn’t even particularly well written. There are grammatical and spelling errors all over the place. And that overwrought first paragraph, full of bizarre metaphors and SAT vocabulary, is pretty typical of a kid that still thinks that big words make you sound smarter. (Protip: this only works on dumb people.)

But you seem like a bright kid. I’m pretty sure that with a bit more life experience, some patient friends, and some guidance from a dedicated teacher or two, you’ll start to figure things out.

That’s why I’m so upset that Time would let you make a fool out of yourself on the Internet. It’s precisely because you’re such a smart kid. Because in a couple of years, you’re going to look back and feel horribly embarrassed.

I can’t understand why Time would give a kid that hasn’t even decided on his major, that can’t even use a spellcheck, and that can’t formulate a coherent argument, a national platform.

Actually, no. Tal, I think I know why Time did this. I think somebody over there wanted an article that would stir things up, and put the ‘privilege’-shouters in their place. They had a frankly racist agenda, but nobody had the guts to put their name on something so asinine. So somebody found your piece on the Princeton Tory, and scooped it up.

They needed a front. Someone with some credibility. You’re not perfect, but you’re a pretty good fit. You’re young, you’re at an Ivy League, and you’ve got the whole historical victim/rags to riches/American Dream backstory thing going on. Trust me, if some black or Asian or more interestingly ethnic kid had offered to write a similar article, you would have been dropped like a bad habit, for reasons we’ve already discussed. But they took what they could get.

So, Time, you’re not fooling anyone. And that’s really cowardly of you to use a kid who can’t even drink yet to do your dirty work.

But back to you, though, Tal.

Or more specifically, back to us.

You said that you won’t apologize for your privilege. That’s fine, man. I don’t think anyone actually wants you to apologize for anything. Really, all we can ask of you, especially at this early stage in your development of thinking about the world, is that you give it some thought. It’s hard, I know. If it was easy, all the bad stuff we have today — racism, sexism, homophobia, wars, all that — would be gone. But it’s not easy. These are hard problems.

I said earlier that it’s okay if you’re racist. It is. As long as you’re working at it, as long as you’re trying your best to listen, and to understand, and to not be racist, or sexist, or whatever, that’s all anyone can ask. It’s a hard battle, man. I’m racist and sexist too, but I’m doing my best not to be.

I’ll be honest, man. I don’t have an easy solution for you. But I do know that shutting down and rejecting what your friends are saying isn’t going to help, and really, it’s not an option. Your friends aren’t asking for pity, they’re asking you to understand them and work with them.

One last thing.

I can tell that you read a lot. I know you’re probably going to be busy hanging out and discovering life this summer, but I want to recommend a book. It’s called The Fire Next Time, by a really smart dude named James Baldwin. It’s short, but heavy. Read it slowly. I think you’ll like it.

I know it’s rough being a college student, so if funds are tight, hit me up and I’ll be happy to mail you a copy. I just landed a pretty lucrative fellowship, so I’m in a position of relative financial privilege.

And if you ever want to talk, my twitter is @dexdigi.

Have a good summer, Tal.

Original Source

05 May 21:27

chirpasaurus: so i herd u liek ships











chirpasaurus:

so i herd u liek ships

05 May 20:28

seananmcguire: sandandglass: President Barack Obama at the...





















seananmcguire:

sandandglass:

President Barack Obama at the White House Correpondents’ Dinner. 

And then the President’s field became fallow…

05 May 20:03

Photo



05 May 20:00

jadethemerman: did he give her 2 thumbs up?

firehose

via Dmitry Krasnoukhov



jadethemerman:

did he give her 2 thumbs up?

05 May 20:00

You Are a Rogue Device by Matt Fikse-Verkerk and Brendan Kiley -...

firehose

via Jakkyn



You Are a Rogue Device by Matt Fikse-Verkerk and Brendan Kiley - Seattle Features - The Stranger, Seattle’s Only Newspaper

The question is: How well can this mesh network see you?

How accurately can it geo-locate and track the movements of your phone, laptop, or any other wireless device by its MAC address (its “media access control address”—nothing to do with Macintosh—which is analogous to a device’s thumbprint)? Can the network send that information to a database, allowing the SPD to reconstruct who was where at any given time, on any given day, without a warrant? Can the network see you now?

The SPD declined to answer more than a dozen questions from The Stranger, including whether the network is operational, who has access to its data, what it might be used for, and whether the SPD has used it (or intends to use it) to geo-locate people’s devices via their MAC addresses or other identifiers.

05 May 19:24

Navy SEAL Caught Smuggling 10 Kilos Of Cocaine

A Navy commando who worked on counter-narcotics missions pleaded guilty to drug conspiracy. He had his wife carry the suitcase of cocaine from the plane — but she left it behind.
05 May 19:24

Crowdfunding for Portland's very own cat café!

firehose

"the Multnomah County Health Department has given Purringtons the green light to move ahead. We will now have no restrictions on what food we can offer."

05 May 18:51

Frozach Submitted

firehose

via Toaster Strudel

05 May 18:50

camel-pimp: According to Rollercoaster Tycoon, this is what two...

firehose

via KV







camel-pimp:

According to Rollercoaster Tycoon, this is what two thousand people drowning at once looks like.

05 May 18:49

communistmom: Going balls to the wall this semester You are...

firehose

via Rosalind



communistmom:

Going balls to the wall this semester

You are welcome in my class any time.  A+

05 May 18:29

You can finally watch a live video feed of the Earth from space in HD

by Jessica
firehose

via Bunker.jordan
"It’s also worth mentioning that parts of HDEV were designed by American high school students"

NewImage

ExtremeTech posted about this awesome new live feed from Ustream. View it below.

After being continuously inhabited for more than 13 years, it is finally possible to log into Ustream and watch the Earth spinning on its axis in glorious HD. This video feed (embedded below) comes from from four high-definition cameras, delivered by last month’s SpaceX CRS-3 resupply mission, that are attached to the outside of the International Space Station. You can open up the Ustream page at any time, and as long as it isn’t night time aboard the ISS, you’ll be treated to a beautiful view of the Earth from around 250 miles (400 km) up.

This rather awesome real-time video stream (which also includes the ISS-to-mission control audio feed) comes by way of the High Definition Earth Viewing experiment. HDEV is notable because it consists of four, commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) high-definition video cameras that are each enclosed in a pressurized box, but otherwise they exposed to the rigors of space (most notably cosmic radiation). The purpose of HDEV, beyond providing us with a live stream of our own frickin’ planet, is to see if commercial cameras are viable for future space missions, potentially saving a lot of money (space cameras have historically been expensive, custom-designed things).

HDEV, which consists of just a single enclosure, was delivered to the ISS a couple of weeks ago by SpaceX CRS-3. The box was connected up to the underside of the ISS via EVA/spacewalk, with one camera pointing forward (Hitachi), two cameras facing aft (Sony/Panasonic), and one pointing nadir (Toshiba, down towards Earth). If you watch the stream you will notice that it hops between the four cameras in sequence, with gray and black color slates in between each switch. If the feed is permanently gray then HDEV is switched off — or communications have been lost. Also note that the ISS has an orbital period of just 93 minutes — for a considerable part of that time the station is in the Earth’s shadow and can’t see much.

NewImage

The active video camera is connected to the ISS Columbus module via an Ethernet link, and then beamed down to the ground. From there, it looks like the video feed is combined with the current ISS-to-mission control audio feed, and then simply uploaded to Ustream. It’s an impressively simple (and cheap) setup.

It’s also worth mentioning that parts of HDEV were designed by American high school students through NASA’s HUNCH program. It’s good to see NASA fostering the next generation of astronauts and scientists!

Read more.

05 May 18:25

The greatest president who ever lived

firehose

via rnas

05 May 17:58

Are You a Spartaca? Symbol Based Activism and Positive Space

by natematias
firehose

via willowbl00

A few years ago, a close friend (not at MIT) asked for my advice. Work colleagues had been sexually harassed, and this friend didn't know what to do:  the offender was prominent, respected, and considered indispensable by his organisation. This friend took the courageous move of reporting the issue, starting a process that was emotionally difficult and risky for this friend's career. I was glad that this friend reached out to me. Although I mostly just listened, no one should have to be alone in their courageous acts for justice.

Have you faced gender-based workplace harassment in technology industry? Have you taken the risk of speaking out against that harassment, or have you instituted policies and practices in your organisation that protects people against gender discrimination? Have you felt too afraid to say or do anything? Are you committed to supporting people who have experienced these risks? In all these cases, you may be a Spartaca.

Yesterday, a psuedonymous collective published an article on The.List's Medium channel, launching a badge campaign focused on those who have felt unable to speak up about gender discrimination in tech.

 

And though we still can’t tell you what happened—because we can’t prove anything, and we can’t name names—we’re going to tell you that it did happen.

We wear this badge to say so, and to let every woman in tech know that she’s not alone.

"I am Spartaca"

Positive Space, Solidarity Campaign, or Something More?

We've seen profile image memes before, with hundreds of thousands of Twitter users changing their profiles Green in solidarity with Iranian protesters, and with the HRC equality meme of last year (see Elena Agapie's archive of equality meme images and the Facebook Data Science team's own analysis). Molly Sauter, Matt Stempeck, and I also wrote a piece about the theories of change included in the equality meme campaign. Spartaca however seems different, closer to two much older solidarity memes: LGBTQ Positive Space Campaigns symbolized by the triangle rainbow sticker and the (ancient) Christian Ichthys.

A Positive Space symbol, unlike Facebook and Twitter profile memes, includes commitments and a promise, well beyond an attitude of solidarity. It represents a commitment to listen, to be informed about support resources available to those who speak with you, and to accept that you don't have all the answers. The sticker is a promise by those who have the power to be visible about a risky issue to support those who can't take that risk. The sticker can also refer to spaces, not just individuals, where people will be welcomed and invited to speak about issues that are risky to voice publicly. The commitments associated with positive spaces are serious enough that there are many learning kits to help people take on the responsibilities associated with creating positive spaces (can anyone suggest some of the best? The one I know is GLSEN's Safe Space Kit).

Positive Space works well in contexts where at least some people are willing to risk posting a visible symbol whose meaning is universally recognised. In systems of total oppression, groups can't afford to make these symbols public. From the Christian Icythus to 20th century adaptations of Antigone (Anouilh in Vichy France, Fugard/Ntshoni/Kani in apartheid South Africa), these covert presentations of solidarity and support are rely on what communications scholars call grounding, relying on shared knowledge or perspectives that are less visible to power.

Since the risks faced by non-males in tech vary by team/company and can include sexual assault (trigger warning), "I am Spartaca" uses will likely range from casual solidarity, listening, to substantial support. It may include people who are making an appeal for support and those who have gone through experiences they can only describe in private.

Can Spartaca Change Women's Experiences in Tech, or is it Meaningless Clicktivism?

Whether it actually makes a difference depends less on whether it becomes a widespread movement and more on the ability of those who sign up to offer meaningful support. In its second day as a website/logo with no clear institutional ties, that potential is not yet clear. The language of the site also offers less clarity about whether allies are welcome, although I have been told via email that we are.

If Spartaca turns into just another profile image campaign, I don't think it will have the impact its creators desire. I hope they're able to create impact by channeling participants to learning, training, peer support, and a great network of organisations that support all marginalised people (not just women tech workers).

Going Beyond Profile Memes: Badging, Social Media Banners, and Lasting Public Profile Commitments

If we're going to support Positive Space-making on the web, perhaps we need something like the Open Badges initiative instead of profile images, which can't stay green forever. Unlike the equality meme, these badges are awarded upon the successful completion of trainings and other substantial learning activities. If organisations that offer training in positive space-making offered Open Badges, we could easily make software that inserted those badges into the top banner space of our various social networks-- and kept those badges in place even after we change banner images. That would make this campaign, and others, much more than a passing meme. At the same time, I think it's also important to offer a low-barrier option for people to show solidarity. As the first step in a longer journey toward education and support, the Spartaca image is a fantastic idea.

Am I a Spartaca? I'm still figuring out how to make a meaningful commitment. This summer, I do promise to find and take positive space training, which I haven't yet done. This summer, my fiancée and I have been planning to start prototyping a series of dinners where we attempt to create space for conversations that people feel are too risky to raise in public. If you know people who are good at this kind of facilitation and who can help us out, please get in touch.

05 May 17:55

Frozach Submitted

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