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18 Dec 17:58

New and updated Apple apps must be iOS 7-compliant by Feb. 1

by Megan Geuss

On Tuesday, Apple told developers of iOS apps that any new or updated apps must be iOS 7 compliant after February 1. After the deadline, only apps built with the latest version of Xcode 5 will be reviewed for approval by the Cupertino company.

Since the arrival of the iPhone 5S, Xcode 5 has been able to handle 64-bit processes, and it lets developers create new interfaces more in tune with iOS 7's new design direction. It also gives developers access to new APIs, like the ones that govern backgrounding. Developers using Xcode 5 can still target older versions of iOS, but it's clear that Apple wants its developers to start targeting iOS 7 sooner rather than later.

The post on Apple's developer's site also refers curious readers to its “iOS Human Interface Guidelines” page for more information about iOS 7's general aesthetic. As iOS 7 is one of Apple's more visually divergent version updates, it's no surprise that getting apps to conform to that new look is one of the company's latest concerns.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






18 Dec 17:45

The Great Train Robbery: A Robber's Tale, BBC One, review - Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

The Great Train Robbery: A Robber's Tale, BBC One, review
Telegraph.co.uk
If you want a polished drama, Chris Chibnall is your man. The writer who created Broadchurch always seems to have wrestled with every detail, ready to lay them out in front of the viewer in his own time. The only problem with polish, of course, is that it does ...
Ronnie Biggs of the 'Great Train Robbery' Dead at 84ABC News
Ronnie Biggs, notorious participant in Great Train Robbery, dies at 84Washington Post
'Great Train Robber' Ronnie Biggs dies, aged 84CNN
The Guardian -Reuters -Fox News
all 457 news articles »
18 Dec 17:44

Photo



18 Dec 17:43

Tablets make it impossible for kids to get lost in a story

by Commentary
Total immersion.

I’ve spent a lot of time watching my three- and five-year-old daughters explore, play and read on an iPad. While touch-screen devices are wonderful in many ways, they do a really lousy job in one particular area: deeply engaging kids in narrative. Interactivity is stopping children from falling in love with stories. This, I fear, will have long-term consequences, depriving children of one of the most important benefits of reading for pleasure, the essential inner work of imagination and empathy.

The trouble with tablets

More children now read on electronic devices than read physical books according to a recent survey of nearly 35,000 8- to 16-year-olds conducted by the UK’s National Literacy Trust. But screens don’t seem to be improving their experience of reading. Children who read only on-screen are three times less likely to enjoy reading (12% vs. 51%) and a third less likely to have a favorite book (59% vs. 77%). Other key findings:

  • 15.5% of kids who read daily, but only on-screen, are above average readers.
  • 26% of those who read daily in print, or both in print and on-screen, read at an above average level.

So why don’t tablets enhance the experience of reading? Most children will not fall in love with reading as quickly as they will get hooked on an interactive game. A touch-screen device makes it all too easy for a child to dismiss reading as boring or “flat” in comparison with the instant gratification of games and apps. There are simply too many distractions just a click away. Children are most likely to engage with stories in the right environment and context, and that means away from a screen.

How interactivity is killing narrative

Interactive stories are designed for young children who may still need guided reading, but that interactivity often creates more of a game experience than a reading experience. Instead of being the focus, the story becomes merely a background.

Best-selling children’s author Julia Donaldson, whose picture books dominate top 10 lists, explains why she vetoed an e-book version of her most famous title, The Gruffalo, in a 2011 article in the Guardian. “The publishers showed me an e-book of Alice in Wonderland,” Donaldson said. “They said, ‘Look, you can press buttons and do this and that,’ and they showed me the page where Alice’s neck gets longer,” said Donaldson. “There’s a button the child can press to make the neck stretch, and I thought, well, if the child’s doing that, they are not going to be listening or reading.”

The typical argument for interactive stories goes like this: Soon enough, children will only read on screens, and where readers are going, publishers must follow. Kate Wilson, the founder of children’s publisher Nosy Crow argues that publishers must create reading experiences for touch-screen devices so that children will continue to read. “We shouldn’t go a little way down the digital path or do it half-heartedly and with reluctance,” she writes. “We should, I think, go to where our readers are going, and make sure that they read along the way.”

Nosy Crow’s apps are favorites of my daughters, but they still fall short when it comes to engaging kids’ imaginations and immersing them in a narrative. Most apps for kids are crammed with interactive inanities, interactivity with no objective apart from getting kids to tap on the screen. This is especially aggravating in storybook apps. The stream of sound and movement signifying nothing does not allow the cognitive and emotional space required to deeply engage with a story in the way that an old-fashioned book does. When we’re engaged in a story, we’re actually feeling the story, imagining how the characters feel and how we would feel in the same situation. That experience is hindered when children are busy trying to figure out what happens next when you tap on the screen.

On books and bonding

Bedtime reading is, sadly, declining and there is some early evidence to suggest that screens are partly to blame. The tablet has become the pacifier of choice in the modern family and both parents and children see using a tablet as a solitary experience rather than a shared activity. A recent poll showed that only 13% of parents read to their kids every night. Interactive stories will never be a substitute for reading a book with a young child. Physical books offer a parent and a child a unique opportunity to bond. During a bedtime story, the only stimuli are the adult’s voice and intonation and the book’s pictures. The best stories require interpretation and stimulate discussion between parent and child.

The reading diet

Reading for pleasure is not instinctual. Unlike the instantly alluring tablet, engaging with stories is an acquired skill that takes time and effort. Parents should encourage a balanced “diet” of online and offline reading—both for older kids reading by themselves and for toddlers who need guided reading—to provide them with the necessary mental space to engage with a story in a deeper way.

The window of opportunity for children to fall in love with reading is shorter than ever. As the author Neil Gaiman recently said: “Fiction can show you a different world. It can take you somewhere you’ve never been. Once you’ve visited other worlds, like those who ate fairy fruit, you can never be entirely content with the world that you grew up in. Discontent is a good thing: discontented people can modify and improve their worlds, leave them better, leave them different.” We don’t want to lose that.

We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com

18 Dec 17:43

Between a quarter and a third of everything on the web is copied from somewhere else

by Leo Mirani
And repeat.

There’s a lot of junk on the web. There is also a lot of good stuff on the web. And then there is the stuff that’s been lifted from the good and dropped amid the dross—the aggregation, the block-quotes, the straight-off copy-paste jobs.

The extent of that duplication now has a number: according to Matt Cutts, a long time Google search engineer who developed Google’s family-friendly “SafeSearch” filter and who now leads Google’s web spam team, “something like 25% or 30% of the web’s content is duplicate content.”

That’s not necessarily a bad thing. Not all of the duplication is plagiarized or hastily created traffic-seeking junk. Examples of inoffensive duplication include quotes from blogs that link back to the original blog, or the thousands of pages of technical manuals scattered across the web that are updated with small changes but remain largely the same.

Nonetheless, if search engines didn’t have a way to detect duplications, the internet would be almost unnavigable. Google’s approach, as you’ll almost certainly have noticed when you use it, is to omit pages that have very similar content, but to offer users the ability to see the similar results if they’re really interested. Things that are auto-created, however, like a blog that’s made up entirely of feeds from other blogs, might be treated as spam, Cutts says. That means most people will never encounter this large chunk of the internet. It also means there’s that much less you need to get through before you finish reading the entire internet this morning.

Note: This post is based on a YouTube video posted by Cutts, which means in a manner of speaking, this too is duplicate content. 

18 Dec 17:35

Ouidah Museum: Unveiling Campaign | Via











Ouidah Museum: Unveiling Campaign | Via

18 Dec 17:21

Roku Finally Adds YouTube To Its Iconic Media Player

by Unknown Lamer
DeviceGuru writes "Roku's popular Linux-based media players have long been criticized for their glaring omission of YouTube video support. As of Dec. 17, that is no longer the case, provided you have the high-end Roku 3 player and live in the U.S., Canada, Ireland, or the U.K. Google's YouTube channel is available immediately for the Roku 3 in resolutions up to 1080p, and will be supported on additional models (though probably just Roku 2) next year, according the company. Previously, the only way to run YouTube over a Roku box was to use the third-party, subscription based PlayOn service, which requires a connected PC or Mac running the PlayOn app. The YouTube update also adds a Send to TV feature, letting you send videos to the Roku for display on the TV with a single click."

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.








18 Dec 17:05

Bitcoin Crashes All Over Again, Because Of China

The price of bitcoin has plummeted following an announcement from China's largest bitcoin exchange that it would no longer be accepting new yuan deposits.
18 Dec 17:05

Dr. Luigi announced for Wii U, hits eShop this month

by Sinan Kubba
Dr. Luigi, an other-sibling-themed spin on Dr. Mario, closes out the Year of Luigi with a bang when it hits the Wii U eShop on December 31 in North America - as for Europe, the doctor isn't in until January 15. Dr Luigi features an online mode for ...
18 Dec 17:02

Pussy Riot, Greenpeace crew may go free on Russia amnesty bill - USA TODAY


Toronto Star

Pussy Riot, Greenpeace crew may go free on Russia amnesty bill
USA TODAY
MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's parliament on Wednesday passed an amnesty bill that will likely apply to the 30-member crew of a Greenpeace ship detained after an Arctic protest, but it wasn't immediately clear if and when the activists would be allowed to leave ...
Amnesty Bill in Russia Could Free ActivistsNew York Times
Russia passes new amnesty law that could free prisonersBBC News
Putin: Amnesty to free punk band duo despite 'disgraceful' protestReuters
RIA Novosti -Wall Street Journal
all 705 news articles »
18 Dec 16:59

bison2winquote: - Zen, Martial Champion (Konami) (arcade -...



bison2winquote:

- Zen, Martial Champion (Konami)

(arcade - 1993)

18 Dec 16:58

Wow. US housing is roaring back to life

by Matt Phillips
US housing is looking considerably brighter. ​

Builders broke ground last month on the most new houses in nearly six years, suggesting an important pillar of the US economy continues to grow even after mortgage rates rose sharply.

Housing starts jumped 23% in November, compared to the prior month.

Importantly, single-family homes jumped 21%, the largest month-over-month rise since 1991. That’s an big development as much of the growth in housing starts recently has been centered in the volatile multi-family sector.

This shouldn’t be a total surprise. After all sentiment among home builders has also been surging recently. And that’s usually seen as a good predictor of housing activity. And more broadly, strength in housing is good news for the US economy as a whole. After today’s housing data hit Morgan Stanley economists said they “see underlying final private domestic demand—consumption, business investment, and residential investment taken together–accelerating” in the fourth quarter.

And going forward, US construction should continue to grow. All good stuff.

18 Dec 16:49

nprfreshair: TODAY: Writer/directors Joel (left) and Ethan Coen...



nprfreshair:

TODAY: Writer/directors Joel (left) and Ethan Coen talk about their writing process on Fresh Air: 

Ethan: It’s mostly napping.

Joel: We go to the office, we’re there, we’re in a room together. We take naps, but you know, the important thing is that we’re at the office should be inspired to actually write something. No, we don’t split it up. One of us won’t write something and then give it to the other to react to, we actually kind of talk through whatever we’re doing together … [For dialogue] we kind of talk it back and forth and kind of work it out together.

The Coen brothers’ films include The Big Lebowski, No Country for Old Men, True Grit, Fargo, O Brother Where Art Thou? and most recently, Inside Llewyn Davis.

Hear their 2011 interview for True Grit.

image via screenit

18 Dec 16:49

Fisherman’s Best Friend Fisherman’s Sweater:...









Fisherman’s Best Friend

Fisherman’s Sweater: Original Penguin  |  Leather Jacket: Schott Perfecto  |  Shirt: Ben Sherman

not shown:  Boots: Wolverine 1000 Mile |  Chinos: Uniqlo  |  Wool Gloves: Orvis

18 Dec 16:24

Schoko-Werkzeuge - Google Search

by russiansledges
18 Dec 16:21

Photo

firehose

via Jakkyn
the spider bot is likely a variant of http://www.amazon.com/Combat-Creatures-Controllable-Disc-Firing-All-Terrain/dp/B009CK7WE6/
A 75mW or higher laser pointer can pop balloons



18 Dec 16:06

Harvard Sophomore Charged in Bomb Threat | News | The Harvard Crimson

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy
8d2cc425146099670fad12b892654e24
OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy

Classmate, 2 hours ago | Having been in the class, section, exam room, and was even evacuated to the library with Eldo, I can say this is a shocking and unfortunate surprise. He always came to lecture, sat in the front of the room, and provided insightful and constrictive discussion regularly. He clearly did the homework and cared about the class, and I’m certain if he would’ve gone into the final without having studied at all, he would’ve gotten at least a B. It’s a shame that this option crossed his mind as a risk worth taking. Should this have been well premeditated, it disgusts me that the thought of getting a low grade in this class was enough motivation for him to do what he did. It was a fairly easy class, but the exam was worth a very significant portion of the class grade, and we still haven’t received a single (concrete) assignment grade to date.

Eldo Kim, a Harvard sophomore, has been charged in relation to Monday’s unfounded bomb threat on Harvard’s campus.

UPDATED: December 17, 2013, at 9:58 p.m.

Harvard College sophomore and Quincy House resident Eldo Kim, 20, has been charged in connection with Monday’s unfounded bomb threat against four buildings on Harvard’s campus, according to the affidavit.

Kim will appear in U.S. District Court in Boston on Wednesday for an initial hearing before U.S. Magistrate Judge Judith G. Dein. Assistant U.S. Attorney John A. Capin is handling the case for the government. The public defender's office is currently representing Kim, according to Department of Justice spokesperson Christina DiIorio-Sterling.

According to a press release by the Boston U.S. District Attorney’s office, Kim could face a maximum five years in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $250,000 fine if charged under the bomb hoax statute.

According to the affidavit, Kim told authorities he was “motivated by a desire to avoid a final exam scheduled to be held on [Monday].” Kim was present for that exam, which was held in Emerson Hall at 9 a.m., when the fire alarm went off, the affidavit says.

“According to KIM, upon hearing the alarm, he knew that his plan had worked,” the affidavit reads.

Earlier that morning, at approximately 8:30 a.m, Kim sent emails to two Harvard officials, an affiliate of Harvard University Police Department, and the President of The Crimson, saying that bombs had been placed two of four buildings, including the Science Center, Sever Hall, Emerson Hall, and Thayer Hall. In those emails, Kim wrote, “be quick for they will go off soon,” according to the affidavit.

The emails were sent using Guerrilla Mail, a free online application that generates temporary anonymous email addresses. Additionally, Kim used a free application called TOR, which generates a random anonymous IP address for temporary use that is difficult for law enforcement to trace.

According to the affidavit, authorities were able to determine that Kim had accessed TOR on the Harvard network before sending the email.

The threats prompted the evacuation of all four buildings shortly after 9 a.m..

Original Source

18 Dec 07:59

Photo



18 Dec 06:32

sex-coffee-and-comicbooks: vampirpillango: atlasobscura: Slate...



sex-coffee-and-comicbooks:

vampirpillango:

atlasobscura:

Slate presents an amazing, interactive digital version of Olaus Magnus’ 1539 Carta Marina, a chart that portrays the sea as teeming with monsters… 

When the chart was made, in the early years of the Age of Exploration, there was a lingering belief in the existence of griffins, unicorns, dragons, the phoenix, the monstrous races, and a host of other unnatural creatures. Modern science was in its infancy. Although adherents to the direct observation of nature would soon challenge hearsay and tradition and begin to classify animal life, at the time the medieval imagination was still free to shape its own forms of the natural world. The chart’s giant lobster gripping a swimmer in its claws, a monster being mistaken for an island, and a mast-high serpent devouring sailors would have represented actual fears of the unknown deep.

Those and Olaus’ other fanciful sea beasts are not mere decorations to fill empty spaces. Nor are they only visual metaphors for dangers lurking in the sea. Intended as representations of actual marine life, they are identified in the map’s key.

Click through to Slate to explore the stories of each creature, and read more on the chart’s origins… 

Olaus Magnus’ Carta Marina: Sea monsters on a gorgeous Renaissance map…

This is really cool.

18 Dec 06:30

Photo



18 Dec 06:27

Dating Tip #232: Take her to see your dead wife’s...



Dating Tip #232: Take her to see your dead wife’s grave. 

Good date idea. Clara’s face says approval! 

Credit to: the-woman-of-belgravia

18 Dec 06:26

Christmas package from Mom and Dad arrived!  There’s rum...

firehose

via saucie
Lacassine rum cannot be good





Christmas package from Mom and Dad arrived!  There’s rum in it!

The rum was made in Lacassine

This floors me utterly.

18 Dec 06:22

zimmingham a réagi à votre billet “AW FUCK NAMCO HIGH IS OUT??? I GOTTA GET IN AND START ROMANCING...

firehose

via Snorkmaiden

18 Dec 06:21

"Things like racism are institutionalized. You might not know any bigots. You feel like “well I don’t..."

firehose

via Snorkmaiden

“Things like racism are institutionalized. You might not know any bigots. You feel like “well I don’t hate black people so I’m not a racist,” but you benefit from racism. Just by the merit, the color of your skin. The opportunities that you have, you’re privileged in ways that you might not even realize because you haven’t been deprived of certain things. We need to talk about these things in order for them to change.”

-

Dave Chappelle (via foxynonsense)

This is the Dave Chapelle white people don’t quote.

(via basedempoweredethnicwoman)

The whole In the Actors Studio interview this comes from needs to be watched, its incredible

18 Dec 06:21

Undocumented Feature

firehose

via Snorkmaiden: "Long Live Google Reader"

And it doesn't pop up a box every time asking you to use your real name. In fact, there's no way to set your name at all. You just have to keep reminding people who you are.
18 Dec 04:07

Walt Mossberg's final Wall Street Journal column looks back on two decades of tech

by Rich McCormick

After 22 years of insightful and important commentary on consumer technology, Walt Mossberg has written his final column for The Wall Street Journal and its All Things D tech blog. In it, Mossberg picks out the twelve most influential products from his time as the newspaper's tech reviewer, identifying each one as something that changed the course of digital history. Included among his dozen are Windows 95, the Palm Pilot, Google's search engine, and the iPhone.

The products chosen weren't necessarily big sellers — his first choice on his chronological list, the Newton MessagePad, was an "outright flop" — but Mossberg believes each of his selections improved ease of use and added value for the average consumer. His tastes and criteria have led to a few arguably strange selections, such as 1997's Palm Pilot included in place of possibly more deserving candidates in Sony's PlayStation or Netflix, but most of his choices were bona-fide game changers.


This is Mossberg's final column for 'The Wall Street Journal,' but he's not retiring

This is Mossberg's final column for The Wall Street Journal, but he's not retiring: Mossberg says he'll "still be doing reviews on a new online site." Details of that site are yet to be announced, but Mossberg and co-executive editor Kara Swisher have reportedly been in talks with prospective investors including NBCUniversal, Bloomberg, and Cox. It's unclear whether Mossberg's new site will get to keep the All Things D brand that he's so intrinsically linked to — the name reportedly belongs to the publishers of The Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones.

18 Dec 04:06

The Girl With Three Biological Parents

firehose

cytoplasmic transfers

“We’re mixing the DNA of two women in a single baby,” said Sheldon Krimsky, a bioethicist and professor of urban and environmental policy and planning at Tufts University. “I don’t see how that can be ethical.”

Alana Saarinen is apparently a normal, well-adjusted 13-year-old. But there is something extraordinary about her — every cell in her body is different in a way that is nearly unprecedented.
18 Dec 04:05

Indian official: Diplomat's arrest in NYC barbaric - Yahoo News

by gguillotte
firehose

'India was ready to retaliate against American diplomats in India by threatening to downgrade privileges and demanding information about how much they pay their Indian household staff, according to the Press Trust of India news agency.

Police also removed the traffic barricades near the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi, a demand by the Indian government in retaliation for Khobragade's treatment, PTI reported. The barriers were a safety measure.'

Devyani Khobragade, India's deputy consul general in New York, is accused of submitting false documents to obtain a work visa for her Manhattan housekeeper. Indian officials said she was arrested and handcuffed Thursday as she dropped off her daughter at school, and was kept in a cell with drug addicts before posting $250,000 bail. In a statement, the U.S. Marshals Service confirmed that Khobragade was subjected to the same booking procedures as other prisoners, including being strip searched — viewed in India as the most disturbing part of the arrest — and locked up with other female defendants.
18 Dec 03:59

Harvard Sophomore Charged in Bomb Threat | News | The Harvard Crimson

by russiansledges
firehose

via Russian Sledges

According to the affidavit, Kim told authorities he was “motivated by a desire to avoid a final exam scheduled to be held on [Monday].” Kim was present for that exam, which was held in Emerson Hall at 9 a.m., when the fire alarm went off, the affidavit says. “According to KIM, upon hearing the alarm, he knew that his plan had worked,” the affidavit reads.
18 Dec 03:57

Ruined Adulthood | 764.jpg

firehose

via Osiasjota

764.jpg