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17 Feb 20:40

All apps should be as brilliant as this Israeli sheet music app

by Leo Mirani
Tonara’s sheet music app follows the musician rather than the other way round. Tonara

It’s the rare app that feels truly innovative, anymore. But one worth paying attention to is Tonara, a sophisticated piece of software from an Israeli company of the same name.

Like dozens of other apps, it offers digital sheet music, so musicians can keep their libraries on one device rather than several fraying pamphlets. But unlike its competitors, Tonara takes advantage of the astonishing power packed into an iPad, for which it is specifically designed, and in doing so sets a model for app development well beyond the world of music.

Tonara doesn’t expect its users simply to follow the tempo they set. Instead, it uses the iPad’s built-in microphone to listen to the music, even if there are multiple instruments playing, showing the musician where she is at any given time—and where she should be.

The most obvious benefit of this feature is that it turns the page only when the player is ready. But more importantly, that feature allows musicians to review their practice sessions after each piece of music, giving them a better idea of where they hesitated or went wrong. It also lets musicians annotate the generously spaced sheet with notes, allowing easy sharing between students and their teachers. 

Tonara’s new CEO, Guy Bauman, estimates that some 6 million children are currently learning how to play the piano in the United States and another 50 million or so in China. The combined global music education market is worth billions, he says, yet no company dominates the market. The industry is mostly made up of private schools and teachers, and the sheet music industry has failed to take advantage of technology. Tonara wants to step into that gap.

17 Feb 20:35

NY fashion designer found dead in Hudson river - Press of Atlantic City


New York Daily News

NY fashion designer found dead in Hudson river
Press of Atlantic City
This undated photo provided by the New York City Police Department on Saturday, Feb. 15, 2014, shows fashion designer Michele Savoia. Police say Savoia's body was discovered off Chelsea Piers, Sunday, Feb. 16, not far from where he lived aboard his ...
Famed Fashion Designer Michele Savoia Found Dead in Hudson RiverNew York Observer

all 239 news articles »
17 Feb 20:34

Even if Target and The Home Depot won’t put their carts away, the parking lot still needs to be plowed

by Abraham

Reporter John Atwater captured this image of wintery passive aggression yesterday in Boston…

Home Depot Plowing

(via Reddit)

I can only imagine the cathartic satisfaction the snow plow driver must have felt, and perhaps is still feeling…until this pic makes its way to his bosses.

17 Feb 19:46

Delighted Health Insurance Executives Gather In Outdoor Coliseum To Watch Patient Battle Cancer

HARTFORD, CT—Creating an electric and intimidating atmosphere with their cheers and vocal cries for blood, throngs of health insurance executives reportedly crowded into a massive outdoor coliseum on Aetna’s corporate campus Monday to watch on...
    






17 Feb 19:46

Harmonix returns with a weird, first-person shooter musical hybrid

by Colin Campbell

A music game that is also an arena first-person shooter is, at the very least, a fresh idea.

And fresh ideas are something the rhythm genre badly needs. Mapping music to physical movement has been the life's work of developer Harmonix, from its hip underground origins with Frequency through to the hyper-commercial overblown grandiosity of Guitar Hero and Rock Band.

But always, the mechanic was some variation on hitting a button or making a movement at the right time, in order to generate harmonious chords, the beats flying towards the player like an explosion in a frisbee factory.

It was fun, while it lasted. But this genre crashed into a tree some time in 2009, and was buried, without much fanfare or fuss, in a closet under the stairs. The dance genre is all that remains.

Harmonix returns from the years of excess, slimmer and fitter, with Chroma, an altogether new creative approach, a shedding of the old. It is, bizarrely, a free-to-play musical arena-shooting game, an FPS with a heavy emphasis on melody and tunefulness.

It's a reminder that, leaving aside the bloated mid-decade sequelized drum beats and riffs of those plastic-peripheral games, this has generally been a company that likes to try new ideas.

"People used to joke all the time, you should do an FPS based on musical notes," said publishing director John Drake. "Well, now we have done it. In the past, music games became sims, but we feel like there is a lot more to them as a component of gameplay."

So, Chroma. Basically, you run around a chrome-bedecked world and you shoot a gun. It emits a laser beam in various hues, which is also a musical note or sequence. Different guns and different characters fire different tunes. You can assemble whole teams dedicated to, say, improvisational jazz.

The world is a clean, sci-fi space-station loft conversion, a motley of sounds and tunes, competing for dominance. There are additional gubbins like dynamic environments (hark, a doom-tower rises!) and fast-travel foot-pads.

Chroma_cinematic-still-01

While it's possible to use the musical premise to make sweet tunes, you're also in the thick of a team-based game, in which the point is to eliminate foes. And although hitting beats cleanly and mustering tonal combination is beneficial to firepower and hit points, there is a clear tug-of-war going on in the game's design between the 'musical' and the 'FPS' parts of this symphony.

Still early in design, this feels like one that could end up being a deeply unexceptional shooting game, or a wondrous new take on music. Because while the idea of shooting people with rocket-launchers is as ho-hum as a Peruvian pan-pipe troupe, the notion of making music with weapons and teams is positively Beethovian.

I put this point to Harmonix CEO Alex Rigopulos. "For this game to genuinely be about music in any meaningful way, we've needed to make considered deltas off of established shooter gameplay tropes," he said. "We want to focus the player's attention on the music and get them into a musical flow state through gameplay."

Playing in a multiplayer deathmatch, I was way more interested in the kinds of sounds I could make, how the combinations fitted with the throbbing back-beat, how my guns harmonized with the guns of others, than I was in death-streaks. The running around and killing people was a kind of subliminal soundtrack to the real aural experience.

"Yes, the experience we're trying to summon for players is all about sound, rhythm, light, color and sensory spectacle," added Rigopulos. "It's a very different headspace than most shooters, and on some level much more about creation than destruction."

Chroma_logo

The developer is Hidden Path Entertainment, which has solid credentials for its work on Counter Strike: Global Offensive. There are plenty of classic shooter tropes tucked into the game's design, like specialized classes.

Each class is currently designed to fit certain styles of play, from those comfortable with basic first-person shooter mechanics to those who seek rhythm-based perfection.

Obviously, the different classes make a range of noises, but they also come with a variety of skill-sets; that is, ways in which they interact with the music in order to be fired and benefits they accrue, if fired on the downbeat.

This allows some personal latitude in terms of choosing a class that suits your own desire to make music or spread mayhem. Basic classes shoot tunes and that's about it, while others demand a more choral bent. At this fairly early point in development, the balancing is a long way from completion. Harmonix makes no bones about the fact that the early alpha, beginning today, is an attempt to test the basic concept as much as a tweaking operation. There is much to be learned in the months before a planned rollout.

Chroma_concept-02

Attempts in the past to merge combat and music have been cursory and marginal. Rez was an on-rails shooter that behaved like an electronic musical instrument, but it was hardly an exercise in free expression. Likewise Gitaroo Man was a jaunty rhythm game with an alien invasion back-story tagging along.

A free-form shooter mapped to music is a genuinely new idea, and we are a long way away from really understanding what might be offered by such a thing. There is definitely a mesmerizing beauty in pumping out an actual, real song while leaping between firing positions and tackling enemies. But it's not much use if, while you seek euphonic perfection, your team is being murderized.

While demoing the game, Drake talked about potential multiplayer team scenarios in which a rock-n-roll squad battled against, say, a classical music team, each coloring the world with their favored musical contribution, a battle of the genres. This is an exciting idea; musical dominance as a victory condition, brought about by making use of the beat, rather than twitchy shooting skills. As a design challenge, adding in the complexities of a free-to-play commercial environment, it is gargantuan.

17 Feb 19:43

Photo



17 Feb 19:31

intentandoseringeniero: Comentario truñoso :D

firehose

via Osiasjota
aw skeet skeet



intentandoseringeniero:

Comentario truñoso :D

17 Feb 19:31

accidentallydomesticated: (via TumbleOn) thank you for...

firehose

via willowbl00: "#missingannie"







accidentallydomesticated:

(via TumbleOn)

thank you for noticing.

17 Feb 19:30

Snow Division

firehose

via willowbl00

Snow Division

By JULY in Toronto, Canada.

Submitted by: Unknown (via Street Art Utopia)

17 Feb 19:27

Photo

firehose

via Russillow bl00dges













17 Feb 19:25

sandandglass: Jason Jones talks to a Russian woman protesting...

firehose

via willowbl00

















sandandglass:

Jason Jones talks to a Russian woman protesting against Russia’s anti-gay laws.

don’t give up. we’re all so close.

17 Feb 19:24

Hi, Wil! I'm not trying to be antagonizing. You seem to be rather progressive, and really vocal on a lot of social issues. I'm bringing this up because I feel like you'd take it seriously. Using 'spirit animal' is kinda uncool. Different forms of it belong to specific cultures that are already having a hard time with erasure/delegitimization, partially through appropriation. I've heard suggestions of using 'patronus', or 'daemon' (from His Dark Materials trilogy) as alternatives. Cheers!

firehose

such bad, very unapology

firehose shared this story from WIL WHEATON dot TUMBLR:
Wil Wheaton is bad at apologizing (clickthrough or text view required)

I got a lot of messages like yours that were bordering on antagonizing, but I’ll respond to you: this was entirely news to me, and I never meant to be offensive.

I’ll be honest: I think it’s a little much to get upset about this, but I am fully aware that I’m living life on Scalzi’s Lowest Difficulty Setting, with the Celebrity Cheat enabled, so I’ll own that reality up front. My ancestors murdered untold numbers of Native Americans, and I hate that my country was built on their blood, and I hate that the worst poverty in America exists on Tribal lands. What I hate the most is how many Americans don’t know or care. Those issues are, in my opinion, more important than words. Having said that, I see the point you make, that so much has already been taken from native people, and when a White Guy takes something more, it’s uncool.

I never meant to take anything from anyone. I think Spirit Animals are really cool, and I love everything I’ve ever learned about native or aboriginal culture. I’m not trying to appropriate or lessen anything by expressing how much Kelly Sue inspires me, and how I try to be more like her.

17 Feb 18:55

did-you-kno:  Source

17 Feb 17:32

Pickles, aka ‘Catasaurus Rex’, The 3′ Long, 21 Pound Tomcat

by Lori Dorn

Pickles aka “Catasaurus Rex” is a super-sized tomcat who is over three feet long and weighs 21 pounds was put up for adoption twice before at the MSPCA (Massachusetts Society to Prevent Cruelty to Animals). Now Pickles has found a wonderful home with Andrew Milicia and Emily Zervos, a Boston couple who stated that, although they weren’t necessarily looking for Pickles, it was love at first sight.

Pickles is definitely part of the family now. He’s so much fun. We love him…He’s a ladies man.

Andrew Milicia and Pickles

Emily and Pickles

Emily, Andrew and Pickles

Pickles aka Catasaurus Rex

images via Ruaridh Connellan/Barcroft Media

via Daily Mail, Daily Picks and Flicks

17 Feb 15:05

teratophilia: why do bronies get so upset about being friendzoned? i thought friendship was...

firehose shared this story from Apparently Fish Need Bicycles..

teratophilia:

why do bronies get so upset about being friendzoned? i thought friendship was magic

17 Feb 14:57

Guess they can laugh about it now

by Lana Berry
firehose shared this story from SBNation.com - All Posts:
they been laughing about it since it happened

Spotted this at an art shop on my way to a Mardi Gras parade. I mean ... I guess? I don't know. I'm uncomfortable.

17 Feb 06:58

Fort Boyard, the Useless “Stone Vessel” | Socks Studio Located...

firehose shared this story from ryan panos.















Fort Boyard, the Useless “Stone Vessel” | Socks Studio

Located in a sea bay between Aix and Oléron Island (La Rochelle, France), Fort Boyard is a stone building conceived as an artificial island, originally built to protect the harbours of Aix Island (Île-d’Aix) and Rochefort. Due to the limited ballistic artillery range in the late 17th century, the site was seen as a gap in the line of defense which the fort should have filled.

Fort Boyard is oval-shaped, 68 metres (223 ft) long and 31 m (102 ft) wide. At the centre is a yard enclosed by walls 20 m high: on the ground floor the tickness of the walls is carved by stores and quarters, while the upper floors are occupied by casemates for guns and mortars. The first floor also houses the services, kitchens and canteens, the entrance to the guardroom, a police room and the latrines. Four sets of stairs connect the different floors. The façade on the interior yard is composed by three superposed floor of arcades, while on the exterior the fortified wall is only pierced by embrasures for the cannons. The language of the building, with its oval shape and the disposition of the exterior embrasures, seems inspired by the image of a 17th century vessel. For this peculiarity the fort is sometimes referred to as the “vaisseau de pierre” (stone vessel).

17 Feb 05:18

Reality show snake-handling preacher dies -- of snakebite - CNN

firehose

"A Kentucky pastor who starred in a reality show about snake-handling in church has died -- of a snakebite."


ABC News

Reality show snake-handling preacher dies -- of snakebite
CNN
(CNN) -- A Kentucky pastor who starred in a reality show about snake-handling in church has died -- of a snakebite. Jamie Coots died Saturday evening after refusing to be treated, Middleborough police said. On "Snake Salvation," the ardent Pentecostal ...
Memorial Page For Snake-Handling Pastor Receiving Support, HateLEX18 Lexington KY News
Pastor Jamie Coots, snake-handling TV preacher, dies of viper's biteNew York Daily News
Snake-handling preacher killed by serpentfox4kc.com
Hollywood Life -The Wire -The Grio
all 765 news articles »
17 Feb 04:52

How to run your own e-mail server with your own domain, part 1

by Lee Hutchinson
firehose shared this story from Ars Technica:
speaking of

Aurich Lawson

E-mail is old and complex. It's the oldest still-recognizable component of the Internet, with its modern incarnation having coalesced out of several different decades-old messaging technologies including ARPANET node-to-node messaging in the early 1970s. And though it remains a cornerstone of the Internet—the original killer app, really—it's also extraordinarily hard to do right.

We most often interact with e-mail servers through friendly Web-based front-ends or applications, but a tremendous amount of work goes into hiding the complexity that allows the whole system to work. E-mail functions in a poisoned and hostile environment, flooded by viruses and spam. The seemingly simple exchange of text-based messages operates under complex rules with complex tools, all necessary to keep the poison out and the system functioning and useful in spite of the abuse it's constantly under.

From a normal person's perspective, e-mail seems like a solved problem: sign up for Internet access and your ISP gives you an e-mail address. Google, Apple, Yahoo, or any number of other free e-mail providers will hook you up with e-mail accounts with gigabytes of space and plenty of cool value-added features. Why do battle with arcane dragons to roll your own e-mail solution?

Read 51 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






17 Feb 04:46

This is New Orleans food

by Lana Berry
firehose shared this story from SBNation.com - All Posts:
lana's coverage is typical tourist lol bullshit, but at least she went to Cochon

lunch with @thecajunboy at @cochonbutcher was intense. is this enough food for 2 people? #sogood #imdeadnow #bye pic.twitter.com/jpXNSvOYiy

— Lana Berry (@Lana) February 15, 2014

This is from Cochon Butcher, a butcher shop, sandwich place and wine bar on Tchoupitoulas Street. I didn't even eat it all and I had to go lay down for a minute.

17 Feb 04:28

The best food item I've seen all weekend

by Lana Berry
firehose

nope.gif

No way anything else can take this down

Real talk: this king cake from Cochon Butcher has peanut butter, banana, and bacon in it. I'm moving here.

17 Feb 04:26

Is this even legal?

firehose

Welcome to Vancouver, WA

While browsing on craigslist for possibly paid internship, I stumbled upon this. Link to craigslist. Screenshot in case it goes down.

Note the following

You must have a current concealed weapons permit. You will not be required to carry a weapon this is necessary to ensure that you have no criminal past.

Instead of doing background check, they rely on this bullshit...

Is this legal?

submitted by jM2me
[link] [33 comments]
17 Feb 04:20

Ray Rice arrested after incident with his fiancee in Atlantic City

by Matthew Fairburn
firehose

these fucking guys

Rice was charged and released on Friday.

Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice was charged and released from jail over the weekend after a physical altercation with his fiancee, according to the Baltimore Sun.

Rice and his fiancee were both charged in the incident, which took place on Friday at the Revel casino on the boardwalk in Atlantic City. Both were released that night. Rice's attorney described the incident as a "minor physical altercation."

Rice has become one of the faces of the Ravens franchise after Ray Lewis retired and Ed Reed left last season. Two years ago Rice signed a five-year, $35 million contract with the Ravens. He's coming off a rough year in which he rushed for just four touchdowns and 660 yards.

The Ravens are aware of the situation, according to the Baltimore Sun, and Rice's attorney said this wasn't much more than a misunderstanding.

More from SB Nation NFL

Don't read this: The worst of the Incognito/Martin report

The year in sadness: A moving tribute to Jimmy Haslam's Browns

Punch the Commish: An oral history of a tradition that hasn't started yet

Longform: The rejection of Myron Rolle

NFL mock draft: Johnny Manziel is our new No. 1

17 Feb 04:17

Photo




http://www.messynessychic.com/2013/04/01/sophia-vs-jayne-the-other-photos-behind-that-sideways-glare/

17 Feb 04:16

A Bit Of Sad News

firehose

boo DC boo

Okay, so this is sad, but the Movement is ending with issue 12.

Unfortunately, this book just never found a big enough audience.  The people who loved it, loved it hard, but that number was too small.

I am bummed about it, we wanted to do a book that didn’t read or look like anything else out there, and I think we accomplished that. I take the responsibility, I think it took a little while for people to really adopt the characters, which was a conscious choice but also a risky one in this very cautious market where people have to be extra careful of which books they choose.

Whenever a book is cancelled, people often get mad at the publisher—it’s understandable, but in this case, we received nothing but support from DC. They knew it was a dicey prospect, a book not set in Gotham or Metropolis with no known heroes, and an unusual core theme. They knew it was a bit risky commercially and they did it anyway, and they let us run out to twelve issues to finish it properly, when almost any other publisher would have cut it earlier on.

I have a bunch of people to thank. First, everyone at DC, but Dan Didio especially. Dan championed this book and it wouldn’t have happened without him. He said it was time we had a book like this, and he believed in us and was a cheerleader for the book all along. Jim Lee also had kind things to say, and that means a lot.

Second, I have to thank the people who inspired some of the characters…Jay Justice was a big inspiration for Virtue, I saw her cosplay Batgirl and I just wanted to WRITE that so badly that I made a character so I kinda could. Also, thanks to Jill Pantozzi and Al Davison for help with Vengeance Moth, so that her being in a wheelchair wasn’t simply a surface detail, but MOSTLY to the great B.A., who was my biggest inspiration and supporter on this character and who looks exactly like VM and makes me smile all the time.

I want to thank our spectacular editing team. I do not have enough good things to say about these guys, Joey Cavalieri and Kyle Andrukiewicz. They are the kind of editors you dream of getting but rarely actually get. They cared about the book, they cared about the readers and they cared about the characters. I know it’s hard to imagine but that is actually considered a little old-fashioned in some places. They were always 100% supportive and never changed anything except for the better. If you see a book with their name on it, you want it, it is guaranteed to be good.

The biggest thanks has to go to the art team, with colorist Chris Sotomayor and most especially, Freddie WIlliams II. I have rarely worked with an artist so dedicated, so creative and so rewarding to collaborate with.. Freddie is the reason the characters looked so amazing and unique, he designed them all (except for Tremor, who he adapted). If you want Burden’s jacket or Tremor’s cloak, it’s because of Freddie. If you recognize the characters, if you fell in love with them, it’s because of Freddie. Freddie, you amaze me and thank you, thank you, thank you, for always doing such amazing work even with a pain-in-the-butt writer like me. You are the best. And Chris, your colors made everything better, you paint emotion like no one else. THANK YOU.

I have to save the corniest, but truest thank you for the audience. I know this book wasn’t for everyone, but a lot of you stuck with us and tried to spread the good word and you made every issue worthwhile. Because of you guys, it was worth all the hard work. Thank you so much for the reviews, fanart, fanfic, cosplay, and lovely comments. They warmed our hearts over and over again.

This is the end of this book, hopefully it won’t be the end for the characters…several of them have been popular with readers and creators, and maybe we will see them again.

There are still three more issues, and they are CORKERS. Please stick with us until the end, you will be glad you did, and if we keep the numbers the same without going down after the announcement, it makes it much more likely that the Movement will appear somewhere else, hopefully somewhere awesome.

Mouse, Virtue, Katharsis, Tremor, Burden, Rainmaker and Vengeance Moth thank you all so, so much!

 

 

 

17 Feb 04:11

Photo



17 Feb 04:09

Video Game Logic | 1bb.png

firehose

via Osiasjota

1bb.png
17 Feb 04:08

The Plus in Google Plus

by John Gruber
firehose

via Albener Pessoa

Claire Cain Miller, writing for the NYT (ran on the front page of yesterday’s print edition):

The value of Plus has only increased in the last year, as search advertising, Google’s main source of profits, has slowed. At the same time, advertising based on the kind of information gleaned from what people talk about, do and share online, rather than simply what they search for, has become more important.

The conventional wisdom about Google is that they’re selling our privacy to advertisers. That’s no longer a fringe opinion — it’s the consensus. They’re breeding resentment.

17 Feb 03:27

"Male privilege is “I have a boyfriend” being the only thing that can actually stop someone from..."

firehose shared this story from Apparently Fish Need Bicycles..

“Male privilege is “I have a boyfriend” being the only thing that can actually stop someone from hitting on you because they respect another man more than they respect your rejection/lack of interest.”

- The Sociological Cinema (via ugh)
17 Feb 03:19

Your 60-Hour Work Week Is Not a Badge of Honor

by Soulskill
firehose shared this story from Slashdot.

An anonymous reader writes "We've all had to deal with long, tough work weeks, whether it's coming in on the weekend to meet a project deadline, pulling all-nighters to resolve a crisis, or the steady accretion of overtime in a death march. It's fairly common in the tech sector for employees to hold these tough weeks up as points of pride; something good they achieved or survived. But Jeff Archibald writes that this is the wrong way to think of it. 'If you're working 60 hours a week, something has broken down organizationally. You are doing two people's jobs. You aren't telling your boss you're overworked (or maybe he/she doesn't care). You are probably a pinch point, a bottleneck. You are far less productive. You are frantically swimming against the current, just trying to keep your head above water. ... We need to stop being proud of overworking ourselves.'"

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