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14 Apr 18:26

America’s growing taste for Scotch whisky

by Roberto A. Ferdman
Scotch whisky

While some parts of the world have cut down on their single malts and Scotch blends, the US can’t seem to get enough. US Scotch whisky imports jumped 8% last year to a record $1.4 billion. It’s the fifth consecutive year in which Americans shipped in more of the Scottish spirit. In all, the US now drinks more than twice the Scotch it did only eight years back. US-Scotch-whisky-imports-Scotch-whisky-imports_chartbuilder America’s fast-growing taste for Scotch is good news for Scotland, where shipments amount to $7.2 billion annually, and account for nearly 85% of overall food and drink exports. Especially considering that elsewhere, Scotch isn’t selling quite so well. Global sales slowed considerably, and came in flat last year. Asia, in particular, seems to be losing its taste for the spirit. Imports fell in Singapore, Taiwan, and South Korea—the world’s third, seventh, and eight largest markets, respectively—and tumbled by nearly 30% in China, where a crackdown on gift-giving amongst government officials has reduced luxury consumption in general and curbed Scotch sales by some 66%, according to the Scotch Whisky Association.

Scotch whisky can only legally use that name if it’s made in Scotland and aged in oak casks for at least three years. The industry is so adamant about distinguishing its own brand that the drink is spelled “whisky” to separate it from other kinds of “whiskey.” There’s even a public register that allows Scotch producer to have their product checked by UK authorities and properly labeled.  Currently, the US is far and away the world’s largest importer. France is a distant second. Singapore, which functions as a waypoint for Asian sales, is an even more distant third. Who-s-shipping-in-the-most-Scotch-Scotch-whisky-imports-2013_chartbuilder It’s worth noting that while Americans may purchase more Scotch overall, the Americans drink much less of the stuff per capita than the French (who drink 1.9 liters a year on average, compared with 0.2 liters in the US) according to an analysis last summer in the Economist (registration required).

14 Apr 18:26

Foodies can get a bit annoying.



Foodies can get a bit annoying.

14 Apr 18:25

Tonight, Total Eclipse of the Moon


Melody Migas | flickr



Tonight, Total Eclipse of the Moon

14 Apr 16:49

Subscription service gets you unlimited coffee from independent New York cafes

by Dante D'Orazio
firehose

nothing says "I have a significant steady income and enough reserves to weather anything" like subscribing to things that aren't inherently periodical

What if you only had to pay for coffee once a month? With a new app, there's a way to do that. Called Cups, the app sells monthly subscriptions for unlimited coffee from a few dozen independent coffee shops around New York City. $45 a month gets you as much brew, drip, filter, pour-over, and filter coffee as you can handle. Tea's included too. If you need espresso (and who doesn't?) the subscription jumps up to $85 per month. That gets you any size espresso, americano, cappucino, latte, macchiato, and iced coffee you want. The only restriction is you have to wait 30 minutes between cups — a reasonable limitation that's probably a good idea for your health anyways.

While unlimited coffee certainly has appeal for true java lovers out there, the real idea behind Cups is that the app can help independent cafes take on the Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts of the world. Both of those coffee behemoths have extremely popular loyalty programs, and smaller shops with just a few locations have a hard time making nearly as compelling of a program. Indeed, the app's co-founder tells The Wall Street Journal that "it’s kind of like the Starbucks app but for independent coffee shops." With Cups, you're "rewarded" (i.e. pay less the more you drink) by seeking out participating coffee shops around the city. If it sounds like a crazy idea, the app (which goes live tomorrow for iOS and Android) first launched to some success in Israel back in 2012. And if unlimited coffee's a bit too much for you to handle, there are 5-, 10-, and 20-cup packages that offer a smaller discount.

14 Apr 16:44

Netflix streaming speeds on Comcast jump 65 percent after controversial deal

by Chris Welch

Netflix customers on Comcast are already seeing the benefits of a controversial pact between the streaming service and cable provider. Comcast jumped five spots in Netflix's ranking of ISP performance for the month of March. It now sits in fifth place, delivering an average streaming speed of 2.5Mbps — up from the 11th place spot it held in February, when Comcast delivered a pitiful 1.15Mbps average to Netflix subscribers.

"This month’s rankings are a great illustration of how performance can improve when ISPs work to connect directly to Netflix," said Netflix. It's also a great illustration of what happens when Netflix pays off cable providers to speed things up: Comcast now charts above Verizon FiOS and even Time Warner Cable, the very company it's hoping to snatch up in the coming months.


Ranking

"We are dedicated to delivering a great streaming experience and invest in continually improving that experience," Netflix said, largely ignoring the controversy and complaints that surrounded the Comcast deal. That agreement may set a painful precedent, but the company seems unfazed. "Part of that investment is working with ISPs to make Netflix delivery easy and to avoid congestion." Netflix is still pushing its Open Connect initiative as the best way to ensure a smooth streaming experience, and Reed Hastings has made clear that he doesn't want to go down the same, expensive road with other ISPs. But it appears his gamble with Comcast is already proving worthwhile for customers.

14 Apr 16:43

The best measure of an employee is how well she mentors others

by Max Nisen
What have you done for others lately?

On his faculty profile at Wharton’s management department, the first qualification that Adam Grant lists is not his work with Goldman Sachs and the United Nations, his Oprah-endorsed bestselling book Give and Take, or the distinction of being called “brilliant” by  Malcolm Gladwell. Those accomplishments are there, to be sure, but the first thing Grant wants you to know about him is that he is the school’s youngest and highest-rated full professor.

That’s consistent with Grant’s argument that the way we measure and reward achievement is all wrong. His book, which is being translated into dozens of languages and has been named one of the best books of 2013 by several outlets, focuses on how mentorship, generosity and helpfulness are a better path to success than trying to come out ahead in every interaction—which Grant calls “taking” behavior.

Most companies measure performance based on individual accomplishments. But that system doesn’t reward people for a lot of essential behind-the-scenes work. And it can reward people that either take credit for others’ work, or are better at showing off than working. The traditional approach sometimes advances the wrong people, and can end up hurting companies, Grant argues.

We recently spoke to Grant about his next steps, the future of data in the workplace, and why companies should have employees draw pictures. Our conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Quartz: Has the response to the book given you any ideas for future research?

Grant: One of the research directions I’m most excited about is how you develop a reward system that actually allows givers to rise. It’s not surprising that most organizations, when they give performance evaluations, compensation, and promotions, they focus on individual accomplishments. That’s the easiest thing to measure. One of the things that I’ve become increasingly aware of is that if you want givers to gain status and responsibility, you have to track and measure not just what they achieve, but also how those achievements affect other people. I think there are a variety of ways of doing this that I’d like to study.

One comes from some work I did with Johnson and Johnson. The CEO, Alex Gorsky, is fond of asking the question of senior leader candidates, “can you tell me of four people whose careers you made better?” That’s a really significant consideration when you’re looking at who you are going to promote into positions of authority. They want to look for people who weren’t just laser-focused on producing their own results, but who have actually gone out of their way to mentor other people. I’d love to study how you best track your contributions as a mentor.

Quartz: You probably get a ton of email and requests for help. How do you stay on-task?

Grant: I probably don’t do anything that falls into the realm of rocket science here. My inbox and a Word document are my to-do list, basically. When something is extra important or time-sensitive, it ends up in both places. And I’ll put in repeating task reminders in my calendar when I have stuff due.

Maybe this is unique to my job because I don’t have a boss, but what I find most helpful is to tell people that when something’s due, to ping me a day or two before and remind me of a deadline. That way it’ll be salient. When I’m in a meeting I’ll be thinking about that task if the meeting doesn’t require my full attention, when I’m walking or driving somewhere, and it’ll also be in my inbox and that way I’ll know it’s coming up. It also gives it a legitimacy to others, to feel like they’re not harassing me.

Quartz: Are there better ways to do research inside of companies?

Grant: I would love to see some research that looks like an idea from Lance Sandelands, who’s a professor at Michigan. One of Lance’s observations is that we lose a lot of information when we have people fill out a survey. A lot of the rich experience that we have at work, it’s pretty hard to convert into a number or rating.

Some organizations try to solve this problem by giving people open-ended questions where they write about their experience. But you end up with just mountains of data and its hard to code them and figure out how to analyze it. You end up in a position where maybe you use a few quotes, but you’re mostly trying to convert qualitative information into numbers. Lance’s idea, which I think is brilliant, is: Let’s say you want to figure out how engaged an employee is or what the quality of their work life is. Try asking an employee to draw a picture of their job.

I’ve done this a few times. It’s a different window into how people experience their jobs. You get some really very interesting things that nobody would ever say or think to say. When you engage the right brain and ask them to come up with an image of what their job is like, it’s pretty revealing. You can do the same thing if you’re trying to assess an organization’s culture, ask them to draw a picture of their culture. This is the kind of creative approach that more organizations should try out.

Quartz: What’s next for you? Another book, more research, or more work with companies?

Grant: Can I say all three? Then I will. Something I’m really excited about is that Wharton recently hosted our first People Analytics Conference. It drew together this extraordinary group of people from all kinds of organizations serious about bringing data to people decisions.

It gave me the idea for research or possibly a next book, that we need more evidence of how to do people analytics well. Particularly on the creative side. We know how to run  predictive models. We know how to do good statistical analysis and find what managers have a disproportionate impact. What we don’t know is how you figure out, when you’re running your predictive model, what traits to measure in the first place. We all know conscientiousness and grit can be really useful. But what else should we be looking for, and how do we find it? That’s going to be really interesting.

14 Apr 16:42

thebigbadfox: Sexuality is fluid you are permitted a maximum of one 3.4 oz (100 ml) bottle of...

thebigbadfox:

Sexuality is fluid

you are permitted a maximum of one 3.4 oz (100 ml) bottle of sexuality per passenger, all bottles must be carried inside a ziplock bag and placed in a bin for inspection prior to boarding the aircraft

And you know what’s really embarrassing? Leaving yours in the seat pocket when you get off the plane. Oh my god, you wouldn’t believe the trouble we had getting it back the last time that I did that. Peter’s still laughing.

14 Apr 16:42

Photo







14 Apr 16:41

Tax Time

by nedroid

Tax Time

14 Apr 16:41

Statue Of A Homeless Jesus Startles A Wealthy Community : NPR

by djempirical
firehose

'"One woman from the neighborhood actually called police the first time she drove by," says David Boraks, editor of DavidsonNews.net. "She thought it was an actual homeless person."

That's right. Somebody called the cops on Jesus.

"Another neighbor, who lives a couple of doors down from the church, wrote us a letter to the editor saying it creeps him out," Boraks added.

Some neighbors feel that it's an insulting depiction of the son of God, and that what appears to be a hobo curled up on a bench demeans the neighborhood.'

errbody hates jesus

The Rev. David Buck sits next to the Jesus the Homeless statue that was installed in front of his church, St. Alban's Episcopal, in Davidson, N.C.i i

hide captionThe Rev. David Buck sits next to the Jesus the Homeless statue that was installed in front of his church, St. Alban's Episcopal, in Davidson, N.C.

John Burnett/NPR
The Rev. David Buck sits next to the Jesus the Homeless statue that was installed in front of his church, St. Alban's Episcopal, in Davidson, N.C.

The Rev. David Buck sits next to the Jesus the Homeless statue that was installed in front of his church, St. Alban's Episcopal, in Davidson, N.C.

John Burnett/NPR

A new religious statue in the town of Davidson, N.C., is unlike anything you might see in church.

The statue depicts Jesus as a vagrant sleeping on a park bench. St. Alban's Episcopal Church installed the homeless Jesus statue on its property in the middle of an upscale neighborhood filled with well-kept townhomes.

Jesus is huddled under a blanket with his face and hands obscured; only the crucifixion wounds on his uncovered feet give him away.

The reaction was immediate. Some loved it; some didn't.

"One woman from the neighborhood actually called police the first time she drove by," says David Boraks, editor of DavidsonNews.net. "She thought it was an actual homeless person."

That's right. Somebody called the cops on Jesus.

"Another neighbor, who lives a couple of doors down from the church, wrote us a letter to the editor saying it creeps him out," Boraks added.

Some neighbors feel that it's an insulting depiction of the son of God, and that what appears to be a hobo curled up on a bench demeans the neighborhood.

The bronze statue was purchased for $22,000 as a memorial for a parishioner, Kate McIntyre, who loved public art. The rector of this liberal, inclusive church is the Rev. David Buck, a 65-year-old Baptist-turned-Episcopalian who seems not at all averse to the controversy, the double takes and the discussion the statue has provoked.

"It gives authenticity to our church," he says. "This is a relatively affluent church, to be honest, and we need to be reminded ourselves that our faith expresses itself in active concern for the marginalized of society."

The sculpture is intended as a visual translation of the passage in the Book of Matthew, in which Jesus tells his disciples, "As you did it to one of the least of my brothers, you did it to me." Moreover, Buck says, it's a good Bible lesson for those used to seeing Jesus depicted in traditional religious art as the Christ of glory, enthroned in finery.

"We believe that that's the kind of life Jesus had," Buck says. "He was, in essence, a homeless person."

This lakeside college town north of Charlotte has the first Jesus the Homeless statue on display in the United States. Catholic Charities of Chicago plans to install its statue when the weather warms up. The Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., is said to be interested in one, too.

The creator is a Canadian sculptor and devout Catholic named Timothy Schmalz. From his studio in Ontario, Schmalz says he understands that his Jesus the Homeless is provocative.

"That's essentially what the sculpture is there to do," he says. "It's meant to challenge people."

He says he offered the first casts to St. Michael's Cathedral in Toronto and St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York. Both declined.

A spokesman at St. Michael's says appreciation of the statue "was not unanimous," and the church was being restored, so a new work of art was out of the question. That statue found a home in front of the Jesuit School of Theology at the University of Toronto.

A spokesperson at St. Patrick's in New York says they liked the homeless Jesus, but their cathedral is also being renovated and they had to turn it down.

The most high-profile installation of the bronze Jesus on a park bench will be on the Via della Conciliazione, the avenue leading to St. Peter's Basilica — if the city of Rome approves it. Schmalz traveled to the Vatican last November to present a miniature to the pope himself.

"He walked over to the sculpture, and it was just chilling because he touched the knee of the Jesus the Homeless sculpture, and closed his eyes and prayed," Schmalz says. "It was like, that's what he's doing throughout the whole world: Pope Francis is reaching out to the marginalized."

Back at St. Alban's in Davidson, the rector reports that the Jesus the Homeless statue has earned more followers than detractors. It is now common, he says, to see people come, sit on the bench, rest their hand on the bronze feet and pray.

Original Source

14 Apr 16:41

Sheryl Lee on the "Twin Peaks" anniversary and her Colorado roots

by djempirical

Sheryl Lee, who played Laura Palmer on “Twin Peaks,” is coming home to Colorado this summer. Photo by: Photo by Alan De Herrera, provided by Tsunami Publicity.


Remember that part in “Twin Peaks” where Laura Palmer tells Agent Dale Cooper, “I’ll see you again in 25 years“?

It may have been a simple line of dialogue in the dark, surreal, cult TV show, but it’s coming true — in a way.

Sheryl Lee, who portrayed infamous murder victim Laura Palmer (and her cousin Maddy Ferguson) on the brilliant, early ’90s series and in David Lynch’s 1992 movie “Fire Walk With Me,” is really coming back.

Lee will appear at this summer’s Arise Music Festival, Aug. 8-10 at Loveland’s Sunrise Ranch, which features dozens of musical acts and quintessentially Colorado offerings like yoga, herbal workshops, visual art, films, poetry (courtesy of Lee) and environmental and social-justice causes.

This week was also the 24th anniversary of the April 8, 1990 premiere of “Twin Peaks,” which was a great excuse to chat with Lee over the phone from her SoCal home. And believe me when I say that her calm, warm personality is very different from the tortured characters she’s played over the years in films like John Carpenter’s “Vampires” and 2010′s “Winter’s Bone.”

Read on to find out what she likes best about Colorado, what she’ll be doing when she’s here, and why she hasn’t watched “Twin Peaks” in nearly 25 years.

So I understand you were born in West Germany, but you grew up in Boulder?

Right, from sixth grade on. I studied drama in other places but came back to do the summer program at the National Theatre Conservatory in Denver.

Does coming back here for the Arise Festival later this year have special significance?

Definitely. I’m grateful for anything that brings me back to Colorado. My whole family’s still there, and I’m the only one out (in California). It’s always a treat because Colorado means a lot to me.

I know you have a history of environmental activism and charitable work, but how did you get hooked up with the Arise Festival?

I’ve known (founder) Paul Bassis for several years. He is such an incredible force of wisdom and experience and creativity and vision. He reached out to me because he had read my poetry and knew some of what I was doing. When they had the festival last year I can’t remember what I was doing, but I wasn’t available, so we had bounced around the idea of doing it this year.

What will you be doing there? Reading poetry? Speaking to the crowd like Darryl Hannah did last year?

We’re in the process of creating it right now, but it’ll be using poetry I’ve already written and kind of developing it into a new form for this festival.

It’s an unusual festival, but definitely something that seems up your alley. Are you excited about anything else there?

I don’t go to regular music festivals because I tend to run in the opposite direction wherever there’s big crowds. But it does look really cool. Already there are things that I’m hoping to see and do. There’s a famous herbalist who’s teaching an herbology workshop (Brigitte Mars) that I’m really excited about. I’m just really excited to meet her.

It seems like there are more summer music festivals incorporating art, yoga and “conscious” elements like that these days.

I haven’t been to them, but it does seem like there’s a hunger for this kind of event. People are doing so many incredible, inspiring, interesting things all over this country wherever they are and whatever form that’s taking, and I think that’s where the hope is — seeing how innovative and creative people can be. Creative expression and (community-oriented) events like this are blossoming everywhere. It may be taking the form of a festival or photography or street art or a play or architecture, but it seems like there really is this beautiful wave happening.

So a couple different “Twin Peaks” anniversaries have come around recently, and since the show has seen such a rebirth on Netflix and DVD, and there’s the Blu-ray boxed set coming out at some point, it seems only right to ask you about it.

Of course.

One thing that’s always struck me about the show was that it was centrally about you, but you’re not really in it — at least not as Laura Palmer. Some of the best lines written for you are spoken by other people. But then I read that you got to play the character of Laura’s cousin Maddy because (co-creator and director) David Lynch liked you so much and wanted you back. How did he go about that?

I was so grateful to him for doing that because had I just stayed away it would have had a very different outcome. I was living in Seattle doing theater at the time they shot the pilot up there, and when I played Laura it was only two weeks’ worth of work — some flashbacks and still photos and morgue scenes of me wrapped in plastic! So I stayed up there and everybody else left. And then months later David called and said, “How would you feel about moving to L.A.?” I had been to L.A. briefly and I didn’t want to come back without a job. So he said, “You know, I want to bring you back on the show,” and I said, “I’m dead!” And he said, “Oh, don’t worry, I’ll figure it out.” So I came down — I don’t think I knew what role I was playing or what I was even doing — and I was grateful to work with him and that cast. I was so green and had never really done TV or film or even thought about it, but to be in that environment with such creative, kind people and learn and work like that was great.

Did you ever think the show would be this popular all these years later?

It’s so far from my daily life that I’m not really aware of it until all the sudden when I’ll be called to do interviews because it’s the 25th anniversary or something like that. That’s when I hear about that stuff. But other than that, not really. One of my kids is in middle school and said the other day the kids at his school had seen it and that completely startled me. I never had even thought that teenagers today would be watching it, and that was interesting to me just in terms of longevity.

I’m guessing you don’t watch the show with your kids?

I have not seen the show or the film in almost 25 years, so what’s interesting to me, as with any piece of art, is: what is it that makes it timeless? That makes it be able to cross generations, whether it’s music or a movie or a TV show? You see it a lot with music where generations, three generations of people, will still be singing along with a song.

I recently interviewed Ray Wise, who played your father (Leland Palmer) on “Twin Peaks,” about villains and typecasting, and how ever since “Twin Peaks” he’s gotten a lot of roles where he was cast as the villain. Did you find that too, in terms of getting offered roles as “the woman in peril”?

Yeah, that was definitely the case. Let me say this first about him: he’s one of the nicest guys. That’s one of the things that makes him such a brilliant actor — his range to be able to be that, to tap into that dark side that easily and in the same scene have this wild sense of humor. As a person he’s just the kindest, funniest, warmest, lightest man. He’s a wonderful person and as you get to know him like that you also appreciate the genius of his craft even more.

His range really is impressive. But so much of the cast of “Twin Peaks” has also done well for itself over the years.

Ray’s just phenomenal. Grace (Zabriskie, who played Lee’s mother Sarah Palmer on “Twin Peaks”) as well. They both have that same incredible range. There’s nothing they can’t do. I got to work with Grace again recently after all of these years now and (reconnect). She’s such a brilliant actress. I feel like I just learn and soak it up, like I’m sitting at the feet of a master.

But to answer your original question, it was weird at first with roles, or even people just seeing me, because Laura Palmer was dead and there was always this strange sense that people were seeing a ghost when they would see me. And the feeling of the show did create a lot of fear or discomfort, even if people loved it, even if they were huge fans. They’d still say, “Oh my gosh, that scared me so bad for awhile!” Like Ray, I saw script after script after that of young women who were the victims of violent acts or crimes, and I just couldn’t play those roles. “Twin Peaks” was so much more to me than that and as an artist I always want to be able to do something different so that I can keep growing and learning. So I waited and waited and waited after “Twin Peaks,” and I think that was when I went and did the (Oscar Wilde) play “Salome,” and then I did (the Beatles’ biopic) “Backbeat,” and then there was like a movie of the week I did around that time too. But really, for me, after “Backbeat” and really after “Salome” it was about breaking that stereotype, because I wanted to do something completely different. Media is a powerful thing and you see it with so many actors, where one role that brings them a lot of attention is sort of how they get defined.

What else should we know about what you’ve been up to lately?

You can check out my site BelovedNature.com, which is a little bit of what I’ve been up to aside from acting, and then the film I did with Grace is called “The Makings of You,” and oh my word, she is amazing in that role too. It’s Grace and Jay R. Ferguson from “Mad Men” and some other people. And then I did a role in Ami Mann’s film “Texas Killing Fields” a few years ago and she called me to do her new film — it’s called “Your Right Mind” — so that should be coming out soon.

Given how the focus of your life has changed, what keeps you coming back to acting?

I love being directed and I feel so grateful to be able to get to work with some of the directors I’ve worked with. I’ve learned so much, and when you’re on a set that feels safe and you’re with a director that can help you discover those parts of yourself or your craft that have you stretching and going outside of your comfort zone, it’s just so nice. I love directors who aren’t going back to the stereotypes, who are helping write and create roles for women that are not in the typical Hollywood box. I’m very, very interested in films that are going outside of stereotypical roles for women.

Original Source

14 Apr 16:25

T-Mobile says it's ending overage charges for good

by Chris Welch

T-Mobile plans to abolish overage charges across its US consumer plans starting May 1st. The latest "Uncarrier" move isn't as drastic or game-changing as it initially sounds, however; T-Mobile already phased out most overage charges with the introduction of its Simple Choice plans. Rather than hit subscribers with extra fees, the company instead slows down data speeds once customers run past their monthly allotment — a practice known as throttling. Still, today's announcement could benefit customers on some of the carrier's legacy plans, as CEO John Legere notes that the new policy applies to all consumer plans, not just Simple Choice.

"We’re putting an end to the fear of getting one too many pics or clicking on one too many links — and bam, you’re hit with overages. Not at the Uncarrier," Legere said in his latest brazen blog post. T-Mobile's fine print notes that the change applies to domestic voice, text, and data overages, so you may still run into some trouble while overseas or in other scenarios. We've asked the carrier to provide a list of cases where overages still apply.


T-Mobile customers rarely deal with overages anyway

"The consumer wireless movement is rapidly approaching a tipping point," Legere said. "Imagine the smile on my face as I watch millions upon millions of Americans flipping the bird to the insanity and pain of the past and joining this consumer revolution — while I sit back and watch the competition flounder." Legere hopes T-Mobile's decision will lead to a "national conversation" that eventually convinces Verizon Wireless, AT&T, and Sprint to eliminate any overage charges tacked onto their current plans. "It’s the right thing to do," he said.

In a separate press release, T-Mobile claims overages "take more than an incredible $1 billion out of consumers' pockets every year." But overages rarely lead to the "bill shock" they once did. Shared plans from AT&T and Verizon both offer large buckets of data that can prove difficult to accidentally exceed, and consumers can also sign up to be notified — more than once — when they've nearly hit the limit of those packages. For T-Mobile, today's news marks the end of the carrier's latest string of "Uncarrier" announcements. Those include a new Simple Starter voice plan and more free data for tablet customers.

14 Apr 16:14

Fantasy Flight Games is hiring

by Polar_Bear
firehose

right after they got lambasted by a ton of employees on glassdoor, but w/e

who wants to move the the suburbs of St. Paul :/

Fantasy Flight Games is hiring

Fantasy Flight Games is hiring a new Pre-Press Production Associate. Could this be your ticket into the gaming industry? Source From the announcement: Job Description The Pre-Press/Production Associate is responsible for the following: •Preparing files for press, including checking of files and quality control. •Checking PDFs, physical printouts and product samples for quality control. •Use [...]
14 Apr 16:12

Banksy

14 Apr 16:12

"DIM SUM" - Illusion City (Aisystem/Micro Cabin - Sega Mega CD -...



"DIM SUM" -

Illusion City (Aisystem/Micro Cabin - Sega Mega CD - 1993) 

14 Apr 16:11

49ers Aldon Smith arrested in LAX for false bomb threat - Atlanta Journal Constitution

firehose

hey Overbey
this is hilarious

'San Francisco 49ers linebacker Aldon Smith was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport Sunday after allegedly telling airport security he was in possession of a bomb.
An ESPN reporter says the trouble began when Smith was selected for secondary screening while going through airport security. "Smith then became belligerent and uncooperative with the process and with the TSA agent, making the comment that he was in possession of a bomb," the reporter said.
TMZ posted this video of Smith in handcuffs, surrounded by airport police. The site reports Smith told police he did nothing wrong, and that they were going to be "embarrassed." '


Yahoo Sports

49ers Aldon Smith arrested in LAX for false bomb threat
Atlanta Journal Constitution
San Francisco 49ers linebacker Aldon Smith (99) stands on the field before an NFL football game against the Indianapolis Colts in San Francisco, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Smith is active and set to play against the Colts two days after being arrested and jailed ...
Aldon Smith held at LAX for alleged bomb threatSFGate
Sports shorts: 49ers' Smith, a former MU star, arrested at LA airportSTLtoday.com
49ers' Smith arrested after airport incidentHouston Chronicle
San Jose Mercury News -The Seattle Times
all 212 news articles »
14 Apr 16:04

Photo

firehose

where panda-kun at



14 Apr 16:00

Pluto May Have Deep Seas and Ancient Tectonic Faults

by samzenpus
firehose

miss you, boo

astroengine (1577233) writes "In July 2015 we get our first close look at the dwarf planet Pluto and its moon, Charon — a fact that has scientists hypothesizing more than ever about what we might see there. One of the latest ideas put forward is that perhaps the collision that likely formed Pluto and Charon heated the interior of Pluto enough to give it an internal liquid water ocean, which also gave the small world a short-lived plate tectonics system, like that of Earth."

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14 Apr 15:59

Seattle Bookstores Embrace Amazon.com

by samzenpus
firehose

"It turns out many of the thousands of new (Amazon) workers at their downtown headquarters are avid readers who prefer shopping at the local stores."

An anonymous reader writes "Even though many independent bookstores around the country blame their closing on competition from Amazon.com, bookstores in Seattle are booming thanks to Amazon's growth. It turns out many of the thousands of new workers at their downtown headquarters are avid readers who prefer shopping at the local stores. '"A lot of our customers work at Amazon," said Tracy Taylor, the general manager at the Elliott Bay Book Company, one of the city's largest independent booksellers. The store, about a mile from Amazon headquarters, last year earned what Ms. Taylor called the "first substantial profit" in almost 20 years, enough to even pay employee bonuses.'"

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14 Apr 15:59

Harrison Ford would be 'very anxious' to return for 'Blade Runner' sequel

by Rich McCormick

Harrison Ford has completed a Reddit Ask Me Anything (AMA) session, in which he reminisced about being offered a part in 1977's Star Wars, confirmed his interest in a possible Blade Runner sequel, and revealed that the man who plays Indiana Jones does indeed like snakes.

The actor is heavily rumored to be at work on the upcoming Star Wars: Episode VII, but did not confirm during the course of the Q&A session whether he would be returning to play suave smuggler Han Solo. He did, however, discuss another of his most famous roles, saying he was "curious and excited" about the prospect of a second Blade Runner movie. Ford, who played protagonist Deckard in the 1982 sci-fi classic, said he would be "anxious" to work with director Ridley Scott again, provided the script for a possible sequel was good. Scott was reported to be in talks about a sequel to Blade Runner in 2012, but few hard details have surfaced.


Ford said he would be "anxious" to work with Ridley Scott on a 'Blade Runner' sequel

Ford also shared a range of stories from his lengthy career. Some of his most famous scenes and quotes — such as the "I know" response to Carrie Fisher's "I love you" in The Empire Strikes Back — are famously regarded as ad-libs. The actor clarified their origin, saying that the new lines were suggestions he floated during the filming process rather than total surprises to the cast and director. When asked about his most outlandish injury, he recalled tearing a ligament in his knee after being run over by an airplane on the set of the first Indiana Jones movie, but could not recall which knee was injured. He was also asked to clarify whether Han Solo or Greedo shot first in Star Wars IV: A New Hope. Ford, well-known for his gruff responses during interviews, offered a pitch-perfect reply: "I don't know and I don't care."

14 Apr 15:58

Akamai Reissues All SSL Certificates After Admitting Heartbleed Patch Was Faulty

by samzenpus
firehose

wokka wokka

SpacemanukBEJY.53u (3309653) writes "It took security researcher Willem Pinckaers all of 15 minutes to spot a flaw in code created by Akamai that the company thought shielded most of its users from one of the pernicious aspects of the Heartbleed flaw in OpenSSL. More than a decade ago, Akamai modified parts of OpenSSL it felt were weak related to key storage. Akamai CTO Andy Ellis wrote last week that the modification protected most customers from having their private SSL stolen despite the Heartbleed bug. But on Sunday Ellis wrote Akamai was wrong after Pinckaers found several flaws in the code. Akamai is now reissuing all SSL certificates and keys to its customers."

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14 Apr 15:57

spiped

firehose

hmm

spiped:

Spiped (pronounced “ess-pipe-dee”) is a utility for creating symmetrically encrypted and authenticated pipes between socket addresses, so that one may connect to one address (e.g., a UNIX socket on localhost) and transparently have a connection established to another address (e.g., a UNIX socket on a different system). This is similar to ‘ssh -L’ functionality, but does not use SSH and requires a pre-shared symmetric key.

14 Apr 15:57

Facebook reportedly planning money storage and transfer services

by Jacob Kastrenakes
firehose

great

Facebook is reportedly planning to take a step into financial services, allowing users in select regions to store money online to use for making payments and transferring funds to others. According to the Financial Times, Facebook could obtain regulatory approval in Ireland to begin offering these services as an "e-money" institution within a matter of weeks. This approval would apparently allow it to operate throughout Europe.


"Remittances are a gateway drug to financial inclusion."

But despite moving forward in Europe, Facebook's eventual goal seems to be offering financial services in developing countries, where the social network has a chance to become an integral part of the financial infrastructure. "Remittances are a gateway drug to financial inclusion," one person with knowledge of Facebook's plans reportedly tells the Times. Facebook is reportedly also speaking with several international money-transfer startups about partnerships, though it's unclear how these would factor into the alleged service from Facebook.

Facebook did not provide a comment to the Times on its report. It's been aggressively exploring new business models ever since it went public though, and many tech companies have already been trying to let smartphones take over for wallets and credit cards for a few years now. Facebook, it seems, may have a similar idea, and with a robust network of people already using it, that may allow for easy transfers between friends and businesses. There would of course be major privacy and security issues for Facebook to mitigate, but Facebook has rarely been shy about trying new services to see what sticks.

14 Apr 15:54

World of Darkness canceled as CCP Atlanta is hit with layoffs

by Emily Gera
firehose

I hope they land well. WW must be fuming over the wasted license

Fuck the Falcons

World of Darkness, the in-development massively multiplayer online title based on the Vampire: The Masquerade universe, is no more, developer CCP announced today.

CCP's Atlanta office will see layoffs of 56 employees, it was confirmed, with a number of staff offered roles within the company.

"The decision to end the World of Darkness MMO project is one of the hardest I've ever had to make," CCP CEO Hilmar Veigar Petursson said in a prepared statement. "I have always loved and valued the idea of a sandbox experience set in that universe, and over the years I've watched the team passionately strive to make that possible.

"... To our current and former employees and fans of World of Darkness, I am truly sorry that we could not deliver the experience that we aspired to make. We dreamed of a game that would transport you completely into the sweeping fantasy of World of Darkness, but had to admit that our efforts were falling regretfully short. One day I hope we will make it up to you."

The remaining team in Atlanta will focus on developing games within the Eve universe, making the first time the company has worked on a single games universe as a whole since 2006.

CCP has kept quiet about World of Darkness game since its initial reveal in 2006. The massively multiplayer title was brought into full production in 2009; however, The company laid off approximately 15 members of staff last December, in what the company called a "strategic adjustment" in Atlanta.

"The change was due to our evaluation of the game's design and ongoing development needs," read a statement from the studio at the time. "While this was a difficult decision, CCP remains committed to the franchise and our promise to make a compelling, rich and deep World of Darkness experience."

The long in-development game was said to incorporate the open-world sandbox style of DayZ and Rust, while maintaining the core dynamics of being either human or vampire.

Developing...

14 Apr 15:52

Conspiracies abound

by Ian
firehose

ifacom playing skyrim

Conspiracies abound

14 Apr 15:48

Alfred Rethel & Robert Reinick, Triumph of Death, 1902

firehose

death you rakish bastard



Alfred Rethel & Robert Reinick, Triumph of Death, 1902

14 Apr 15:46

Breaking Boxes

by vihartvihart
Physical and emotional tips for breaking down boxes.
Views: 46079
1028 ratings
Time: 12:35 More in Entertainment
14 Apr 15:45

Portland Schoolboy Q show shut down because of cracking in the venues floor (Crystal Ballroom)

firehose

this shit is getting insane, even if it's legit and this is just a coincidence. not sure if there's been a rap show in Portland that hasn't been shut down in the last six months

Heres a link: https://twitter.com/KATUNews/status/455596521845583872

My girlfriend and I waited in line for 2 hours (arrived at the Crystal Ballroom around 7:50PM). Doors were set to open at 8PM and the show started at 9PM. We didn't get into the venue until 10PM. They were letting people in 2-4 at a time. We missed the opening acts consisting of: Audiopush, Vince Staples and most of Isaiah Rashad's set (was able to see 2-3 songs). Q came out on stage, but he only played 30 minutes into his set when they shut him down. The show was even being interrupted multiple times throughout his set in regards to a possible shut-down. Q was being very respectful of the venue and security, asking the crowd to work with them to displace the weight. Apparently the floor (we were on the second level, and the floors are floating wood) had a severe crack in one of the support beams. Eventually 2 heavy-set security guards came out and pretty much shut him down during "Man of the Year". Q told everyone, "this is some weak ass bullshit, there was problems with this fucking venue from the beginning -- people waiting in line for 2-3 hours and missing most of this show; try and get a refund, fuck this."

tl;dr waited in line for 2 hours (arrived at a reasonable time), missed most of the show, Q was shut down 30 mins into his set -- FUCK YOU CRYSTAL BALLROOM.

submitted by geezern
[link] [40 comments]
14 Apr 15:43

(via Twitter / torrents_txt: [On “Goat Simulator”]...

firehose

"If they wanna call it a simulater, they should at leas tmake it so you can do real goat stuff!!! Take it from someone who knows alot about goats caus I raise them. You should be able to eat grass and graze with other goats and drink milk and I know goats can jump high but the goat jumping in this "SIMULATER" is just stupid. no way a goat can jump that high and there tung shouldnt be able to stick to stuff like that."

"I dont know why someone hasnt brought out a realisic goat simulater yet caus goats are so interesting and bring so much joy into peoples lifes."

14 Apr 15:42

Ghibli + Pets

firehose

via Lori













Ghibli + Pets