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14 Jan 19:41

Public posts on Facebook become results for Russian search engine

by Casey Johnston
A page of Yandex search results, soon to be augmented on the front and from the back with Facebook's data.

Facebook entered a partnership Tuesday with the Russian search engine Yandex that will allow Yandex to index public Facebook data in the countries it serves and use them as search results. In exchange, Yandex will deliver traffic to Facebook.

While Facebook and Google dominate their respective categories in the US, Russia has its own favorite social network (VKontakte) and search engine (Yandex). According to Quartz, VKontakte has over 100 million active users, more than Facebook has in the country, though Russians on Facebook tend to be more affluent and urban. Yandex, like Google, is not only a search engine but an array of services and is similarly integral to the way Russians use the Internet.

Starting Tuesday, Yandex will start using Facebook’s data in two ways. First, it will take “public” posts and comments from users in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, other CIS countries, and Turkey and display them as search results for relevant queries. Second, on the back end, Yandex will take data from Facebook, like posts that have “resonance,” and use that to augment its search result rankings.

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14 Jan 19:39

Starbound Update Will Add Permadeath, Wipe Universe

by Graham Smith
firehose

R.O.F.L
I have this, Amy gifted it to me, and I have not touched it because straight-up fuck this early access nonsense

By Graham Smith on January 14th, 2014 at 5:00 pm.

A videogame, yesterday.

In a post on the Starbound blog, the game’s development team have outlined coming fixes and additions to the next version of the game. Good news: they’re adding a permadeath mode, for those who want to add a little more risk to their galaxy exploration. Bad news: they’re kickstarting this new permadeath mode by wiping the entire universe, including player’s ships and characters.

It’s like playing alpha games is already a kind of permadeath mode.

The developers say that this patch contains “a fix for save files”, which should make it the last time they have to wipe ships and characters and “hopefully” the last time they wipe worlds. If you’ve built anything you’re particularly proud of, take your screenshots now before your homestead is swallowed by the celestial wipe.

On the plus side, when you create your new character there’s the promise of a greater number of decorative hats. Here’s the full list of feature and content additions for the next update:

Additions:

  • New game modes! Permadeath and drop-everything-on-death modes.
  • Revolvers, pulse rifles, hand grenades, shivs, Floran needlers, Floran thorn hammer
  • Human guards now wear soldier uniforms
  • More decorative hats! Yay, hats!
  • More random encounters
  • Possibly more content, if it’s finished on time!

There’s more on the official blog, including a list of the bug fixes the patch will bring.

I continue to vacillate wildly on how I feel about alpha games. On the one hand, I’m old enough to remember a time when PC games were regularly released in a broken state and never fixed, and so the constant updates and community engagement of the alpha process remains an exciting improvement. On the other hand, I lost a three-hour-old DayZ character the other day because I was beaten to death by invisible zombies other players could see but I could not.

Sometimes at night I fall asleep and dream of a universe where I’m a Nintendo journalist, and I write about three polished, excellent games every year. But after the sixth Mario iteration, the dream ends with me waking up screaming. So, you know. Swings and roundabouts.

__________________

« Who Are The Real Monsters In The Forest? (Probably You) |

chucklefish, Starbound, the problem of alpha games.

14 Jan 19:39

The 17 Most Influential Burgers Of All Time

We interviewed burger historians and experts (hello, dream job!) to determine which patties made the biggest impact on the burger industry—and the world at large.
14 Jan 19:38

Photo



14 Jan 19:37

A Month Of Surveillance By GPS Is Up To 6,875 Times Cheaper Than Using People

When the U.S. Supreme Court said two years ago that hooking a GPS device onto someone’s car to track his movements for a month is unconstitutional, the FBI acknowledged that it had about 3,000 such devices installed around the country. Presumably, the agency would have to go back to trailing these people in unmarked cars. Here's why that's impossible.
14 Jan 19:37

China General's Daughter 'Sorry' Over Cultural Revolution Death

The daughter of a top Chinese Communist Party official has apologized over the killing of one of her teachers, the latest former Red Guard to express remorse for the horrors of Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution, state media said Monday.
14 Jan 19:37

Texting Is No Longer Cool

firehose

yay

Number of text messages being sent falls for the first time ever as more people turn to Whatsapp and iMessage.
14 Jan 19:37

Mitt Romney Actually Did The 'Gangnam Style' Dance

At a gathering for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Days Saints at Arizona State University, Mitt Romney did an abbreviated "Gangnam Style" dance on stage.
14 Jan 19:34

Newswire: Prep for a bunch of upcoming Man Man dates with the band's new video

firehose

Man Man beat; no tour dates of note

Man Man’s On Oni Pond came out late last year, but the band is (thankfully) still releasing videos and singles for tracks from the LP. Below, The A.V. Club has the premiere of the new clip for “Loot My Body,” one of the album’s more genre bending tracks. The video features plenty of raucous live footage, all of which should help fans get stoked for the band’s upcoming U.S. tour. Dates for the two-month jaunt are below.

Man Man tour 2014
Jan. 16—V Club Live—Huntington, West Virginia
Jan. 17—Zanzabar—Louisville, Kentucky
Jan. 18—Barley’s Taproom—Knoxville, Tennessee
Jan. 19—Off Broadway Nightclub—St. Louis, Missouri
Jan. 21—Southgate House—Newport, Kentucky
Jan. 22—The Loft—Lansing, Michigan
Jan. 23—Grog Shop—Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Jan. 24—Main Street Armory—Rochester, New York
Jan. 25—The Stood—Purchase, New York
Jan. 26—The Met—Pawtucket, Rhode Island
Jan. 28—Pearl Street—Northhampton, Massachusetts
...

14 Jan 19:34

Status Symbols: Nintendo Power Glove

by Trent Wolbe

Status Symbols are devices that transcend their specs and features, and become something beautiful and luxurious in their own right. They're things that live on after the megapixel and megahertz wars move past them, beacons of timeless design and innovation.

In December of 1989 Roger Ebert ended his review of Nintendo-produced Fred Savage film The Wizard thusly:


The studio may have targeted kids who are Nintendo fans. But here the problem is that the movie doesn’t have much Nintendo in it, and some of that is wrong (when it’s announced, for example, that the third level of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has been reached, the movie screen clearly shows the first level). “The Wizard” is finally just a cynical exploitation film with a lot of commercial plugs in it…it will disappoint just about everybody and serve them right for going in the first place.

What a dick!

If Ebert had spent a fraction of the time he did investigating TMNT pagination errors researching the average American kid below “the age of reason” a quarter-century ago he would likely have found that the underage, NES-worshipping public couldn’t have smelled a continuity error if it sat on our peach-fuzzed upper lips during The Wizard. We were too busy picking our jaws up off the floor as feather-haired antagonist Lucas Barton lifted the first-ever mass-marketed virtual reality device out of a military-grade aluminum case:

“I love the Power Glove,” the prepubescent megalomaniac cooed softly, flexing his digits with a satisfying latex crinkle. “It’s so bad.” I never wanted to simultaneously kill someone and be somebody so bad in my entire life.

And he was right: the Mattel-designed, Nintendo-licensed controller was Michael Jackson Bad.

NO GLOVE, NO LOVE

Image04

For a kids’ product, the Power Glove had quite an impressive pedigree. The engineer Thomas Zimmermann had worked with virtual reality pioneer Jaron Lanier to develop its predecessor, a robotic surgery-oriented wearable called the DataGlove that provided 256-point resolution to measure flexion of each finger, as well as the ability to detect the yaw, pitch, and roll of the entire hand. To get the MSRP down to $99 when it hit shelves in the summer of 1990, Mattel ditched all but 2 bits of digital (get it???) resolution and two dimensions of rotational analysis. This meant the Power Glove could only detect rough “trigger-pull” finger movements for button-presses and single-plane wrist-rolling for D-pad emulation. It worked in tandem with a set of three ultrasonic sensors — much like the Wii sensor bar, the onerous Velcro-on-TV-mounted setup signaled that the resident gamers took their screen time seriously, even when the screen was dark.

Nothing said “I’m probably a robot” better than strapping a molded-plastic-and-spandex game controller onto your primary appendage

From a design perspective, there is simply nothing that comes close to the 1990-ness of the Power Glove. In 2013 we often look for ways to integrate tech seamlessly into our lives; back then, it was all conspicuous futurism — nothing said “I’m probably a robot” better than strapping a molded-plastic-and-spandex game controller onto your primary appendage. NES-style controls (accompanied by a peculiar numpad) rested permanently on the forearm, connected to dual ultrasonic transmitters on the knuckles by an overly complicated conduit. An extra-long cable plugged right into the port of your Nintendo, which was the closest you could feasibly come to shaking hands with Mario himself.

The box art is vaguely reminiscent of Tron’s game grid on a stormy night. The massive bolt of lightning shooting from those fingertips over neon ray tracing became an unforgettable allegory for the unbridled power that was presumably bestowed on the user upon donning the Glove; last year’s ‘90s-drenched AAA title Far Cry: Blood Dragon steals unflinchingly from Mattel’s vintage design template.

And as if Lucas Barton wasn’t a bad enough evangelist in his own right, he had a legion of sunglasses-at-night lookalikes spreading the gospel in print and on TV.

Image00

Hello ladies.

This was the rhetoric of technology in the early ‘90s, long before iMinimalism steamrolled popular maximalism. We will not just make your life better. We will transform your brief, miserable shitstain of an existence into something worth living… for just under a hundred bucks.

REGULAR BAD

So… yeah. I forced my daddy to buy me one. I wore sunglasses into Toys “R” Us — I was on a mission for digital / intergalactic self-empowerment funded by the First National Bank of Dad. For the duration of the car ride home I felt like I was really part of something, like I had instantly evolved into a member of an exclusive club whose primary activities were kicking futuristic ass, being cooler than all my friends, and french kissing girls with my lightning tongue whenever I wanted.

And then I tried to play the first level of Rad Racer with just one hand.

This premium slice of the future wasn’t going to turn me into a cyberwarrior

Controlling sprites with a virtual-reality glove turned out to be far less intuitive than Lucas made it seem during his brief onscreen demo in The Wizard. There were only two (bad) games that actually exploited the finger-sensing potential, Super Glove Ball and Bad Street Brawler. To use the Power Glove with any other title you had to enter in a special code on that awkward numpad to “program” the glove for use with the game. For a brief moment it did feel powerful to direct car movement by rotating my wrist, and to control acceleration by curling a finger… but it was a far cry from the precision of using the stock NES controller. It was also way too easy for the TV-mounted sensors to get out of spatial sync with the Glove, requiring constant resetting of the unit via the on-dash “center” button.

After only a short time in-glove it became apparent that this premium slice of the future wasn’t going to turn me into a cyberwarrior — in fact, if you were at all serious about gaming, the Power Glove was ushered back into its lasery box almost as hastily as it had been rushed into the living room. It was a good thing I was wearing sunglasses when that happened, or the whole world would have seen the bitter tears of disappointment welling up in my spoiled little eyes.

(VIRTUAL) REALITY CHECK

Image02

I would love to report that my experience with the Power Glove humbled me; that I became a wiser and more media-savvy eight-year-old. Instead, my obsession with video game peripherals metastasized, leading to a lifetime of gimmicky lust defined by the Sega CDs, Neo Geos, and Virtual Boys of the world.

Roger Ebert, it turned out, had been right as usual

Roger Ebert, it turned out, had been right as usual. The Japanese puppeteers behind Fred Savage and Jenny Lewis had taken me for a ride, had exploited my fandom for long-term corporate sustainability. But that’s what makes the world go ‘round, right? No matter how pathetic the Power Glove might have been, it grabbed onto a part of the popular conscious that binds early-'90s gamers around the world together for eternity, and I wouldn’t wanna live in a world where that shitty version of virtual reality never existed.

Thanks to GamerDoc in Pasadena for the loaner glove.

14 Jan 19:33

Tumblr now lets you mention and link to specific users inside posts

by Ellis Hamburger

As Tumblr evolves from blog network to modern social network, it is today adding a long-awaited feature: user mentions. When you type an @ symbol into Tumblr's compose screen, a new field auto-populates a list of usernames so you can directly refer to specific profiles when you write about them. When somebody mentions you, a new notification will appear inside your Activity page.

The feature isn't a major addition to the site, but is indicative of Tumblr's increasingly contextual user experience. What was once a quick way to post text and photo posts is now a social network with a notifications page, user "profiles" you can link to, and a news feed many media publications leverage to spread news. Instagram notably also added the ability to tag users in posts this past year — a move seen that makes it easier to monitor specific friends across Instagram, but which also arguably provides one more online identity to monitor and curate. Tumblr, however, won't likely encounter any blowback for its implementation of people-tagging. Tagging has long been a staple of both creation and consumption on the site. Today's update just saves you a few clicks.

14 Jan 19:33

Lomography Konstruktor review: the $35 camera you build yourself

by Sam Byford

Dscf1459-1024

Construction

I live in Japan, a country with a large audience for both photography and DIY model kits. Besides the usual toy robots, you can find more esoteric options — one popular magazine called Otona no Kagaku (Science for Adults) comes with kits to build everything from electric guitars to analog synthesizers. I once helped my brother build a 1930s-style twin lens reflex camera from one of these kits, so the idea of the Konstruktor wasn't totally alien to me. "The Konstruktor is a favorite in Japan," says Lomography's Nadia Sheng. "We attribute this to the Konstruktor's tactile design concept and Japanese hobbyists' long-spanning interest in both plastic model kits and photography."

Anyone can build this camera, Lomography says – but it's not easy

I say all this because, coupled with my long-standing love for film cameras — including some made by Lomography, like the updated LC-A+ — I should be the perfect customer for the Konstruktor. But Lomography is aiming the kit at a wider audience. "We believe that 12-year-old kids are also able to build the Konstruktor," Sheng tells me. "Building the Konstruktor is not necessarily connected to expertise — it is also a question of patience and concentration."

That could be why building the Konstruktor sent me into multiple fits of rage. For the most part, putting the countless pieces together is a simple question of following diagrams and using the provided screws and screwdrivers. But certain steps in the construction nearly drove me over the edge, requiring either impossibly deft manual dexterity or a preternatural ability to decipher opaque instructions.

"Design-wise, it was very hard to find a [construction method] that was not too hard to build but also not too easy, as it would be boring," the company tells me. To that end, the most complex element of an SLR's design — the light chamber with the flipping mirror — is more or less pre-assembled, only requiring that you attach various elements of the Konstructor around it. This is definitely a good decision on Lomography's part. The company says the camera can be built between one and two hours — it took me about an hour, except for one step that ate up 20 minutes by itself and another that stretched over two days.

Dscf1813-1024

The first step is to assemble the lens, which appears simple on the face of it; the optics are all contained in a single part, and you just need to fit that part to the barrel and the mount. But the instructions don't make it clear in which order these pieces slot together, leaving me with irrevocably blocked bayonet lugs that made it impossible to mount the lens on the camera. Fortunately, a trip to the Tokyo Lomography store the next day resolved my issue. But not everyone lives near a Lomography store, and I can see this causing problems for some — just make sure not to make the same mistake I did.

Another stumbling block involved a tiny spring with looped ends used in the shutter mechanism. Hooking it onto the necessary parts is a task fiddly enough to quicken the pace of a heart surgeon, but from the instructions you'd expect it to be as simple as hanging a coat on a rack. It’s one of the rare times you have to do anything more complex than slotting and screwing plastic parts together, and it’s going to surprise quite a few people that buy this camera.

There are a couple of big sticking points, but it's always fun to build

But, as Lomography rightly points out, the Konstruktor wouldn't be much fun if it were too easy to build. Frustrating as many of its stages were, they made things all the more satisfying when I got to apply the finishing touches by picking my own stickers and leathery grip. Sure, I might have preferred for more of the challenge to come from complex design rather than a vague set of instructions, but it felt good to finally have the completed camera in my hand.

000027-1024

Shooting

So, how is the Konstruktor to shoot? It's actually kind of a blast. The secret is the viewfinder, which is a lot of fun to use; while the ghostly image is a little dim on the ground glass, it's clear enough to enable pinpoint focusing. This has historically not been an option with Lomography cameras, most of which offer basic zone-focusing controls or none at all. I also loved using the manual shutter cocking mechanism, where you flip a lever next to the lens in order to move the mirror into place. It's a tactile action that gives the camera even more of a hands-on feel.

Despite its precise focusing and use of "full-frame" 35mm film, however, the Konstruktor isn't a great camera for anyone looking for extreme depth-of-field effects. The lens is a 50mm prime, which is a reasonably versatile focal length, but its fixed f/10 aperture limits the ability to blur backgrounds unless you're focusing on a close subject with a lot of space behind them. The decision was likely made because of the basic nature of the camera's shutter, which is also limited to a single, fairly slow speed of 1/80. Even with 100 ISO film, my photos turned out well-exposed on a cloudy day, so a wider aperture may have been impractical. Lomography tells me that the lens' specifications are matched to the mirrorbox, but the Konstruktor's mount allows for easy removal and attachment, and the company recently released a $19.90 pair of close-up and macro lenses. Sheng told me earlier that the question of additional lenses for the Konstruktor system was Lomography’s "best-kept secret," so it’s possible that more will follow.

Are more lenses coming? Lomography won't say

The Konstruktor is surprisingly solid for something that I "built" myself, but it's not without issues. Although the completed camera feels at least as sturdy as many other Lomography products, a lot of the moving parts are a little too stiff. Turning the focus ring would often twist the entire lens off its mount, and — more problematically — the film-winding knob sometimes fails to move the correct amount, leading to unintentionally overlapping photos. Some Lomography aficionados would argue that such accidents are all part of the fun, but for a camera that at least theoretically allows for greater precision than most of its peers, it's more of a bug than a feature.

Compounding this is the unreliable shot counter which, no matter how tightly I screwed it on, just would not move reliably with the film spool. If I put down the camera in the middle of shooting a roll, I'd have no idea how many pictures I had left — even if the film had wound on correctly. More oddly, there's no window on the back of the camera to indicate what type of film is loaded. Those planning to use the Konstruktor intermittently had better hope they remember the ISO they're shooting at.

000006-1024

But this is a $35 camera, after all, and knowing what I do about the way it was put together makes its flaws as charming as annoying. I remember the first time I got a roll developed on a Holga camera; the lack of electronics inside made me feel like I'd physically directed the light onto the film myself. The Konstruktor amplifies that feeling to infinity. Each frustrating twist of the film knob is rendered worthwhile when you see the results it brings. Perhaps more than any other camera, the Konstruktor embodies the spirit of Lomography's devil-may-care ethos.

As such, the excitement and trepidation before getting your photos back is stronger than ever with the Konstruktor. And the results, unsurprisingly, are mixed. I found that quite a few photos turned out blurry due to me accidentally flipping the flimsy bulb mode switch, and despite the smooth focusing mechanism, the plastic lens is rarely very sharp. But that's almost expected with most Lomography cameras — the unpredictable results are why you shoot this way, not a reason to be disappointed.

I got at least a few keepers on each roll I shot, which is par for the course with toy cameras. The Konstruktor does particularly well with black-and-white film, in my experience, producing soft tones that flatter the slow lens — otherwise, you'll want to shoot at ISO 100 in good light to get similarly clean pictures.

Dscf1821-1024

Lomography Konstruktor

Good Stuff

  • A ton of fun to use
  • Super cheap
  • The satisfaction of a job well done

Bad Stuff

  • Occasionally unclear instructions
  • Unreliable handling
  • Limited settings

There's nothing quite like this camera

At $35, I have a hard time not recommending the Konstruktor to anyone with an interest in photography. The build process strikes the right balance between frustrating and rewarding, the finished camera is unique and a lot of fun to shoot, and although the images you get back are obviously not of the best technical quality they're very much in line with what you'd expect or hope for from a Lomography camera. And, as long as you're willing to go through the arduous process of developing film in 2014, you’ll feel a lot prouder of the idiosyncratic results.

It's also a pretty good entry point into film photography as a whole. Putting the pieces together for yourself gives solid insight into the mechanics of how cameras work, and the fixed exposure settings mean you don't have to do much more than point, focus, and shoot. The Konstruktor is a perfect rainy-day project for anyone, but for some it could be the first step toward a new passion.

The Breakdown

More times than not, the Verge score is based on the average of the subscores below. However, since this is a non-weighted average, we reserve the right to tweak the overall score if we feel it doesn't reflect our overall assessment and price of the product. Read more about how we test and rate products.

  • Hardware / design 7
  • Image quality 5
  • Interface / controls 8
  • Features 8
  • Performance 6
14 Jan 19:32

UPDATE 1-Beanie Babies creator gets probation for tax evasion - Reuters


San Francisco Chronicle

UPDATE 1-Beanie Babies creator gets probation for tax evasion
Reuters
(Updates with probation, remarks from Warner, judge). By Mary Wisniewski. CHICAGO Jan 14 (Reuters) - The billionaire creator of Beanie Babies, Ty Warner, will serve two years of probation, including mentoring high school students, following his guilty plea ...
No Jail Time For Beanie Babies Billionaire Tax Evader Ty WarnerForbes
Beanie Baby Maker Ty Warner Avoids Jail in Tax CaseBloomberg
Beanie Babies creator gets probation, no prisonKansas City Star
Los Angeles Daily News -Minneapolis Star Tribune
all 172 news articles »
14 Jan 19:32

Newswire: Kanye West is under investigation for punching yet another dude

Kanye West is under investigation by the Beverly Hills Police Department after punching yet another person. In West’s defense, if the details of the case are true, the punch does seem at least a little warranted. According to reports, West’s fiancée, Kim Kardashian, was headed to a meeting when an 18-year-old man began shouting epithets at the paparazzi surrounding her, allegedly calling them “f----t-ass n-----s”—something Kardashian told him wasn’t cool. The same man then began directing his slurs at her, calling her a “stupid slut” and a “n----- lover.”

Supposedly Kardashian then dialed up West, whom the man is also said to have called the n-word, apparently around the same time he was telling Kardashian he would “kill [her], slut.” Minutes later, West showed up and tracked the man to a nearby chiropractor's waiting room,  then punched him. West left the scene before police could arrive. According ...

14 Jan 19:31

Judge rejects preliminary approval of NFL concussion settlement

by Ryan Van Bibber

A federal judge refused to approve the proposed settlement between retired NFL players and the league on Tuesday, citing concerns about whether it would be enough to cover all potential claims.

A federal judge has rejected the preliminary approval of a $675 million settlement between the NFL and retired players over concussion claims. Judge Anita Brody denied the settlement out of concerns that it would not be sufficient to cover all potential claims from plaintiffs.

From Judge Brody's statement:

"I am primarily concerned that not all Retired NFL Football Players who ultimately receive a Qualifying Diagnosis or their related claimants will be paid. The Settlement fixes the size of the Monetary Award Fund.

"In various hypothetical scenarios, the Monetary Award Fund may lack the necessary funds to pay Monetary Awards for Qualifying Diagnoses.

"More specifically, the Settlement contemplates a $675 million Monetary Award Fund with a 65-year lifespan for a Settlement Class of approximately 20,000 people."

The judge asked for additional information from both parties concerning the financial details of the settlement.

The final sum agreed upon by both sides actually totaled $765 million. That amount included portions set aside for research, education and baseline testing for eligible plaintiffs, leaving the $675 million for paying actual claims. Not all claims would have been addressed the same. For example, players with ALS would be eligible for up to $5 million, with payouts scaled for different neurological diseases and death benefits.

Payments were to be distributed over a 20-year period, with up to half of the money being available immediately for players in need. That was cited by plaintiffs' lawyers as one of several factors in agreeing to the settlement, which was seen by some to be too small from the outset.

The judge also cited concerns about the impact of the settlement on other organizations, including the NCAA.

14 Jan 19:31

Film Room: Percy Harvin

by Cian Fahey

Percy Harvin: injury-prone contract bust, schematic weapon of doom, or both? Film Room dives in to his brief healthy forays with Seattle this season.

read more

14 Jan 19:31

Fred Jackson wants to play 3-4 more years

by Jon Benne
firehose

Welcome to New Orleans

Jackson had an improbable resurgence at age 32. He thinks he can keep producing at a high level for a few more years.

Buffalo Bills running back Fred Jackson was an unlikely producer in 2013, putting up one of his best seasons ever at age 32. Jackson believes he can continue sustaining his production and wants to play three or four more years in the league.

At an age when most of his peers are either retired or in severe decline, Jackson found a second wind. He rushed for 896 yards on 207 carries and nine touchdowns, good for 4.3 yards per carry. He credits the timeshare with C.J. Spiller for keeping his legs fresh, believing that will keep his career alive a few more years.

The Bills entered the season planning to utilize Spiller as the feature back, but injuries derailed that plan. Spiller suffered a high-ankle sprain in Week 4 and re-injured it in Week 7, severely limiting his speed and durability. Jackson ended up playing 663 offensive snaps on the season, compared to just 389 for Spiller. The injury wasn't the only factor — Bills coach Doug Marrone trusted Jackson more on third downs and pass protection, an important factor given the Bills' struggles at quarterback this season.

Spiller still had a fine season, recording 927 rushing yards on 201 carries and getting 4.6 yards per carry despite the injuries, but it wasn't quite the breakout year the Bills were hoping for. With Jackson turning 33 next month and entering the final year of his contract, look for the Bills to try committing to Spiller again as the main back. Ironically, a reduced workload could indeed help Jackson reach his goal of lasting three or four more years in the league.

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14 Jan 19:30

Mindy Kaling’s ‘Badly Drawn Girl’ Dartmouth comic strip riffs on campus life

by Steve Sunu
firehose

Dartmouth beat; hey billtron

Mindy Kaling’s ‘Badly Drawn Girl’ Dartmouth comic strip riffs on campus life

Mindy Kaling is best known for her show “The Mindy Project” and her time playing Kelly Kapoor on “The Office,” but did you know she also wrote and drew a comic strip called Badly Drawn Girl during her college years at Dartmouth? The strip — credited to Kaling before she changed her name — ran [...]
14 Jan 19:25

Large-Eyed Cat Slowly Rises and Sets Behind the Bedcovers

by Lori Dorn
firehose

Russian cats beat

A large-eyed black point cat slowly rises and sets behind the bedcovers in this YouTube video posted by Elmira Sagitova.

Rising cat

via Cateelicious, Prickly Legs, Daily Picks and Flicks

14 Jan 19:18

Media Player Nightingale Reaches 1.12.1; First Release Since Songbird

by timothy
firehose

UGH NO
FUCKING STOP
UGH UGH UGH

ilikenwf writes "The Nightingale developers have announced version 1.12.1 of the media player, forked from the now defunct Songbird (RIP). Improvements include a new localization infrastructure, enhanced stability, battery drain fixes for OS X, Unity integration fixes, libnotify integration, new first run pages, and more (Release Notes). If you already use Nightingale, the automatic update feature should have notified you of the release. If not, get the new version here."

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14 Jan 19:18

Want Kobe's haircut? That'll be $830

by Bill Hanstock

Well, that seems reasonaWHAAAAAAAAATTTTT

See that photo up there? That's what Kobe Bryant's current hairstyle is. (The "none.") TMZ has obtained an invoice from LA Sports Arena on Jan. 2 that lists one charge: "GROOMING SERVICE FOR KOBE BRYANT." The base charge for this grooming service? $725. Add in the 15 percent tip and you're up to a cool $833.75. A steal!

And in case you're wondering, yes, this was basically for a haircut. From TMZ:

We spoke with a rep for Nike ... who tells us "Kobe doesn't typically wear makeup during the shoots, so the grooming would be primarily for hair."

You can see the invoice here.

Maybe they tidied up shop downstairs as well? Otherwise, that's ... quite a touch-up with the clippers.

14 Jan 19:17

Ryo Takemasa

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy

Ryo Takemasa via #grainedit

 

Charming work from the talented Ryo Takemasa, a graduate of Musashino Art University and member of the Tokyo Illustrators Society.

Ryo Takemasa via #grainedit

 

Ryo Takemasa via #grainedit

 

Ryo Takemasa via #grainedit

 

Ryo Takemasa via #grainedit

 

——————–

Also worth viewing…
Kevin Dart Interview
Mitch Blunt
Thereza Rowe

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Thanks to Mister Retro: Machine Wash Deluxe for being this week's sponsor.






Original Source

14 Jan 19:17

Buddhify

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy

Buddhify teaches you to meditate and relax a little on the go. Totally giving this app a try. Thanks Lifehacker.

Original Source

14 Jan 19:17

Photo

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy
14 Jan 19:17

There is such a thing as sexually transmitted food poisoning

by Esther Inglis-Arkell
firehose

stop fucking food
(didn't read)

There is such a thing as sexually transmitted food poisoning

Just when you think that sex ed in high school and posters at clinics have covered all the times it is necessary to use protection, the human body (and various microbes) throw yet another horrifying sex scenario at you. We now suspect that people can get sexually transmitted food poisoning.

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14 Jan 19:15

How I Made Sure All 12 Of My Kids Could Pay For College Themselves

firehose

one of the steps is "buy each of them a car"

My wife and I had 12 children over the course of 15 1/2 years. Today, our oldest is 37 and our youngest is 22. I have always had a very prosperous job and enough money to give my kids almost anything. But my wife and I decided not to.
14 Jan 18:33

Multnomah County GOP AR-15 raffle to celebrate the legacy of MLK and Abe Lincoln

firehose

Meanwhile, in Portland

14 Jan 18:28

Photo

firehose

via Russian Sledges
Wacintosh



14 Jan 18:20

Ian McKellen and 27 Nobel Laureates Protest Russia's Gay Rights Record

by Kelly Faircloth
firehose

via Russian Sledges

Ian McKellen and 27 Nobel Laureates Protest Russia's Gay Rights Record

Sir Ian McKellen recently took some time out from charming escapades with best bro Patrick Stewart for a very serious cause. He's collaborated with his friend, Nobel-winning chemist Sir Harry Kroto, on an open letter to Vladimir Putin, calling for the repeal of Russia's law against "homosexual propaganda."

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14 Jan 18:14

The Surprising Da Vinci 3D Printer Series

by General Fabb
firehose

via GN

At CES 2014 we bumbled into a rather large booth (which we estimate cost around USD$40,000 just for the floor space at CES) from XYZ Printing. You may not have heard of XYZ Printing before, but we think they could be a contender. 
 
How could such a new entrant afford a gigantic booth at CES? It’s because XYZ Printing is an offshoot of Korean giant Kinpo Group, a huge company of some 40,000 staff that produce all kinds of useful products ranging from electronics to automotive. Kinpo can afford what ever they like. 
 
The 3D printer they exhibited was the Da Vinci, which apparently has three models. It’s a plastic-extrusion device with a relatively large print volume (200 x 200 x 200mm) with a single extruder. As you can see in the image at top, the machine has an enclosed but not heated build chamber, making prints of both ABS and PLA more reliable. The machine is capable of printing 0.1mm layers, much like more expensive machines. 
 
Ok, but this doesn’t sound particularly unique; many machines have such specifications.  
 
But there is one major difference. The Da Vinci 1.0 is priced at only USD$499!
 
That’s spectacularly less than even the so-called “mini” 3D printers from the major suppliers. 
 
If you can afford more than USD$500, you might consider their more advanced models. 
 
The USD$649 Da Vinci 2.0 includes two extruders and will be available in 2014Q3 and strongly resembles the 1.0 version. 
 
The USD$999 Da Vinci 2.1 includes two extruders and a touch screen capable of instant previews of print models, as well as an app to remotely control the machine. It will apparenlty also be available later in 2014.
 
We think the Da Vinci machines represent a significant price breakthrough. A slick, assembled machine with great specs available for under USD$500 could make some considering similarly priced DIY kits to reconsider their purchase.