Shared posts

14 Nov 18:46

Every Boston College player had a hand in this beautiful goal

by Travis Hughes
firehose

I'm sorry for all the sports shares--I know the SPORTS contingent here is basically me and Overbey--but perfectly coordinated plays like this in any sport but baseball are as fascinating to me as anything else in the world

Tape to tape to tape to tape to tape to goal.

The Vermont women's hockey team set a Hockey East record for attendance on Friday night when they hosted Boston College.

Yes, the Catamounts lost 6-1 to the fifth-ranked Eagles, so one might assume the crowd of 2,000-plus went home sad. But you haven't seen one of those six goals. Hoooooly crap.

6_field_medium

That's all five Boston College players touching the puck in under five seconds, ending with an easy tap in goal for junior forward Emily Field. This made the score 6-0 in the second period. They didn't score again, and we're assuming that's because they just felt bad for Vermont at this point.

Anyway, I've watched this about 30 times in a row. I can't stop.

via BC Interruption

14 Nov 18:44

South Dakota ranchers irked by Joan Jett pick for Macy's parade float - CBS News

by gguillotte
South Dakota Cattlemen's Association President Cory Eich, who farms and ranches near Canova in eastern South Dakota, said Wednesday he thinks it was a mistake to select Jett because she is a supporter of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which promotes a vegetarian diet and criticizes livestock production practices. Her stands don't mesh with South Dakota, a state where the cattle industry makes up a huge part of the economy, he said. The Rapid City Journal first reported some South Dakota residents were upset with the pick.
14 Nov 18:44

White House to Allow Insurers to Continue Canceled Health Plans - WSJ.com

by gguillotte
President Barack Obama said Thursday that insurers will be able to continue health-insurance coverage next year for current policyholders that otherwise would be canceled under the new health-care law.
14 Nov 18:42

Google Brings Street View to the Canals of Venice

by EDW Lynch

Yesterday Google announced that Google Street View is now available in the canals and walkways of Venice, Italy. Because of Venice’s watery layout, the Street View team had to document the city with the Trekker backpack, covering some 265 miles on foot and 114 miles by boat.


View Larger Map

Google Street View in Venice

via Official Google Blog

photo and video via Google

14 Nov 18:40

Photo



14 Nov 18:38

Google Books ruled legal in massive win for fair use

by Joe Mullin

A long-running copyright lawsuit between the Authors' Guild and Google over its book-scanning project is over, and Google has won on the grounds that its scanning is "fair use."

In other words, the snippets of books that Google shows for free don't break copyright, and Google doesn't need the authors' permission to engage in the scanning and display of short bits of books.

On the fair use factor that's often the most important—whether or not the fair use of a work hurts the market for the original work—US District Judge Denny Chin seemed to find the plaintiffs' ideas both nonsensical and ignorant of the limits on the Google Books software:

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






14 Nov 18:38

In 6 months, US law enforcement asked Google for data on 21,000 users

by Cyrus Farivar

Google and other tech companies have been actively fighting at the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in an attempt to tell the public more about the types of US law enforcement orders that they must comply with.

While that case continues, Google announced on Thursday that US government (local, state, federal) requests for data has reached 21,683 users between January through June 2013.

By comparison, the company’s previous reporting period (July through December 2012) saw requests from US authorities for 14,791 accounts—a jump of about 32 percent. Again, the United States remains at the top of this list by a wide margin. India, Germany, France and the United Kingdom round out the next four positions, respectively.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






14 Nov 18:38

"Tokyo and Mexico Subway Maps" Painting by Kim Tackett Ahh,...



"Tokyo and Mexico Subway Maps" Painting by Kim Tackett

Ahh, nothing like some subway map-inspired art to start your day. I quite like this!

(Source: kim.tackett/Flickr)

14 Nov 18:28

J.J. Abrams' Pet Peeve: When Futuristic Stories Use Present-Day Jargon

by Charlie Jane Anders
firehose

Top comment: "Does he mean like driving a 1968 Corvette, talking on a Nokia phone while listening to Beastie Boys' SABOTAGE?"

J.J. Abrams' Pet Peeve: When Futuristic Stories Use Present-Day Jargon

Sunday sees the first episode of Almost Human, the android-cyborg buddy cop show from some of the peeps behind Fringe. Co-creator J.J. Abrams has been doing interviews to promote the show, and he brought up the biggest thing that annoys him in future-set stories: anachronistically present-day references.

Read more...


    






14 Nov 18:26

NBC just bought a network to cash in on toddlers and tablets

by Commentary
Sprout’s cast of characters are perennial favorites for the preschool set. Photo by Sprout

Running a kids network isn’t child’s play. The age 2-5 demographic has become hotly contested in recent years by Disney and Nickelodeon, but now NBCUniversal has its eye on the ratings crown as well.

Yesterday, NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment acquired the 24-hour preschool network Sprout, buying out its remaining partners, PBS and HIT Television Ventures, for an undisclosed sum. “We see enormous potential in Sprout, and we are committed to our investment in the kids and family arena,” said Bonnie Hammer, chairman of NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment.

The “enormous potential” Hammer refers to is in one key area: mobile apps, which are increasingly becoming the preferred method of viewing for the preschool audience targeted by Sprout. More than half of households with children now own a tablet, up 40% from last year. A new study by Common Sense Media found that the average amount of time children spend using mobile devices has tripled since 2011, from 5 to 15 minutes, while Amazon says 65% of the most-replayed shows on its Prime Instant Video streaming service, which can be viewed via tablets, are programs for kids.

While Sprout reaches 60 million homes and boasts 1.5 billion on-demand views since its 2005 launch, its app numbers are less impressive. Sprout’s app, launched in March 2012, has been downloaded 1.5 million times. Meanwhile, the Watch Disney Junior app, which Disney debuted in June 2012, has already been downloaded 5 million times, generating more than 650 million video views. Nickelodeon, which introduced a new app for its flagship network in February,plans to roll out a Nick Jr. app for preschoolers next spring.

“We have been been amazed at how quickly kids have embraced this new technology,” Nancy Kanter, executive vice president and general manager of Disney Junior Worldwide, told The New York Times last month. “We’re talking billions of minutes spent watching.” Given Sprout’s robust lineup—with top kids shows like Sesame Street, The Wiggles, and Barney—its paltry app presence represents an untapped market for NBCUniversal, which has spent the past year beefing up its mobile app offerings for NBC, USA, and Syfy.

The company will need to move swiftly to catch up with Disney, which is aggressively targeting its mobile audience by premiering its newest show, Sheriff Callie’s West West, on its Watch Disney Junior app Nov. 24, several months before it airs on the Disney Channel and Disney Junior networks. Otherwise, Sprout will continue to wither in the mobile realm.

Follow Jason on Twitter @jasonlynch. We welcome your comments atideas@qz.com

14 Nov 18:26

Ryan North Celebrates 25 Issues Of "Adventure Time"

"Adventure Time" writer Ryan North discusses hitting the quarter-centennial mark and the importance of precious things. Plus, exclusive cover art!
14 Nov 18:26

Dengue fever outbreaks in the US leave scientists looking for answers

by Amar Toor

Aedes aegypti, a mosquito species known for spreading dengue fever, feeds on a human (Image: James Gatheny).

Dengue fever was eradicated from the US nearly 70 years ago, but the devastating tropical disease has made something of a comeback in recent years, following outbreaks in Florida, Hawaii, and Texas. Unlike dengue outbreaks in other parts of the world, its American resurgence has so far been limited in reach — though researchers are still struggling to explain why it hasn't spread further.

The mystery grew more complex today at the annual meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, where scientists from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) presented preliminary findings of a study comparing two cities: Key West, Florida, and Tucson, Arizona. Dengue reappeared in Key West four years ago, but has yet to surface in Tucson, despite the fact that both cities are home to Aedes aegypti — a species of mosquito known to carry the disease — and that dengue remains endemic in neighboring Mexico.

Commonly known as "breakbone fever" because of the severe aches and pains it entails, dengue is fatal in only rare instances, though it’s remarkably difficult to treat. Symptoms include high fever, severe joint pain, and rashes, and can sometimes lead to a deadly form of hemorrhagic fever.


"It is still a mystery as to why dengue infection has not shown up here."

Kacey Ernst, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of Arizona in Tucson and co-author of the study, says she chose to compare the cities because at first glance, they appear to share commonly-cited dengue risks. People surveyed in both cities said they spend about an hour outside every day, and nearly identical proportions reported using central air conditioning, which is believed to lower the risk of dengue infection. In fact, Tucson may be at greater risk of a dengue outbreak because mosquito control programs there have been less aggressive than in Key West, and because many Tucson homes use cooling systems that increase humidity, making them more habitable for mosquitoes.

For some reason, though, Tucson remains dengue-free, while the disease continues to spread from Key West into the Florida mainland. Ernst speculates that there may be human or biological factors that would limit the ability of mosquitoes to transmit the disease in Tucson, though she and co-author Mary Hayden, a scientist at NCAR, have yet to determine what those may be.

"It is still a mystery as to why dengue infection has not shown up here," Ernst said at today’s meeting in Washington, DC. "When researchers looked at why dengue is not more common along the Texas side of the Mexico border, they cited factors limiting contact with mosquitoes, like people spending a lot of time in sealed, air conditioned buildings. Those issues are extremely important considerations, but we don't think they fully explain why Key West has dengue and Tucson doesn't."

Global dengue cases increased thirtyfold last year

Dengue emerged as a global threat in the 1950s, but infection rates have accelerated dramatically in recent years. Earlier this year, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that global cases of dengue fever had increased by a factor of 30 in 2012, making it the world's fastest-spreading vector-borne viral disease, outpacing both malaria and West Nile virus. Overall, there are between 50 million and 100 million dengue infections each year, the WHO estimates, and about 12,000 dengue-related deaths. It's not clear what drove its resurgence in the US, though many have speculated that climate change may be responsible.

Dengue has traditionally been most prevalent in tropical climates, and especially in poorer countries, where poor sanitation systems give rise to widespread mosquito breeding grounds. The Indian city of Delhi recently saw a particularly devastating outbreak, though it's certainly not alone. According to the WHO, an estimated 2.5 billion people — about 40 percent of the world’s population — are currently at risk of contracting the disease.

Strong mosquito control and sanitation systems have been credited with limiting dengue’s spread in the US, though its irregular patterns add an extra layer of mystery to an already puzzling disease. Unlike malaria, dengue can’t be cured or treated with drugs, and there is currently no dengue vaccine on the market. As a result, the only way to prevent infection and spread is through mosquito control. Yet even detecting it can be a challenge for American physicians who have little experience with dengue, leading Ernst to speculate that the disease may have already appeared in Tucson without being identified.

"One of the tricky things with dengue fever is that in many cases, when people are infected they may show minimal symptoms and not seek medical care," Ernst tells The Verge. "Given our lack of history with dengue in the United States, many physicians are unlikely to think about dengue as a differential diagnosis, unless there is travel history."

Satellites and genetics

Scientists are working toward a dengue vaccine, though attempts to combat all four (and possibly five) forms of the disease have so far fallen short. Others have begun developing new ways to track and neutralize Aedes aegypti. Researchers in Australia recently genetically engineered a dengue-resistant form of the mosquito to be deployed in Vietnam, while scientists at NCAR have begun work on a computer program capable of scanning aerial satellite images for cans, buckets, and other water-filled containers where Aedes aegypti lay their eggs.

"The commercially available imagery from these satellites are now capable of providing clear images of relatively small objects on the ground,” says Paul Bieringer, a scientist at NCAR who collaborated on the satellite project with researchers at the Colorado-based STAR Institute. The idea, he explains, is to create maps that can simulate the spread of of dengue from water containers in particular areas, which may provide a deeper understanding of the meteorologic and human-based factors that drive it. This could prove particularly valuable, he notes, "in areas where ground-based surveillance is limited."

Ernst and Hayden, meanwhile, plan to continue their research with a comparison of two cities in Mexico that have somehow remained dengue-free while surrounding areas have not. They hope further comparisons will help shed light on how the disease moves and behaves.

14 Nov 18:26

Chevron apologizes after its gas line explodes in Ellis County - KENS 5 TV


New York Daily News

Chevron apologizes after its gas line explodes in Ellis County
KENS 5 TV
MILFORD — Officials in Milford said residents will likely have to wait until late Friday night before they can return home following a gas pipeline explosion Thursday morning south of the town in Ellis County. The explosion occurred just after 9:30 a.m. at a ...
Texas town is evacuated after gas explosion; no injuries reportedBellingham Herald
Pipeline explodes in North Texas; town evacuatedAlbany Democrat Herald
Town evacuated after gas pipeline explodes in rural North Texas; no injuries ...WPMI Local 15 News

all 124 news articles »
14 Nov 18:25

Hawaii football uniforms successfully make rainbows look tough

by Bill Hanstock
firehose

lol lingering ass shot

Check out the Rainbow Warriors' hype video for their new retro unis. So gorgeous.

14 Nov 18:17

Yuki the Talking Shiba Inu Says ‘Hello!’

by Kimber Streams
firehose

no god only shiba

In this 2012 video, Yuki the Shiba Inu dog says “Hello!” when prompted by her owner.

Here’s another video of Yuki showing off her tricks:

videos via James Kimball

via Tastefully Offensive

14 Nov 18:16

Rob Ford On Oral Sex Allegations: 'I've Got More Than Enough To Eat At Home'

firehose

this fucking guy

Speaking to reporters on Thursday morning, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford said he intends to sue former staffers who told police he did drugs and cavorted with suspected prostitutes.
14 Nov 18:15

Feds Printed Their Own 3D Gun And It Literally Blew Up In Their Faces

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives produced its own version of the Liberator, a gun made of plastic that can be produced using a 3D printer and blueprints made available online earlier this year.
14 Nov 18:14

Guardian of the Galaxy’s Chris Pratt Might Land The Lead In Jurassic World

firehose

Idris Elba should have the lead male role in every franchise beat

Names like Josh Brolin and Idris Elba had been rumored previously but now it looks like Parks & Recreation's Chris Pratt might get the chance to be eaten by dinosaurs. 
14 Nov 18:14

RZA Speaks on Raekwon and Wu-Tang Album Delay, But Assures It’s Still “Brotherly Love”

by Andy B.
firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE

rza

Remember that 20th anniversary Wu-Tang reunion album we were supposed to get this year? Well, RZA has been pretty vocal recently about what’s causing the delay. In an interview with Grantland, he placed the blame on Raekwon for not showing up to studio sessions. Rae responded on Twitter, writing, “Yea I just read that RZA article? Sh*t is funny to me. I love u RZA, u know what it really is.”

During an appearance on the recently-revived The Arsenio Hall Show last night — 20 years after the Clan first performed on the show — the Wu leader elaborated on the hold-up, but assured fans him and The Chef “got nothing but brotherly love for each other.” Could it be the creative differences that Method Man spoke of that’s keeping the pair apart?

I been reaching out to all the Wu-Tang brothers and all of us came to the table so far — Method Man came and did a lot of verses, Inspectah Deck, myself — but Raekwon is the last one to come to fit his verses on. So in the article I was like, Yo, Raekwon, my brother, we need you. Come on up here, drop your verses and let’s make this one final album for the fans… I know Raekwon’s gonna be there, he know I love him, and we got nothing but brotherly love for each other. But put some of the business to the side and let’s go make this music, yo.

Watch the interview after the jump…

Related:
New Music: Christian Rich Feat. RZA “Supaman”
Wu-Tang Clan Gives Update on Drake’s ‘Wu-Tang Forever’ Remix
20 Years Later, Wu-Tang Clan Reflect on ‘Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)’ (Video)

14 Nov 18:13

Photo

firehose

via Dmitry Krasnoukhov



14 Nov 18:05

A Doctor Who Prequel Minisode Starring Not the Doctor You Were Expecting

firehose

OHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT
OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT OH SHIT

Well. Doctor Who fans? You're going to want to watch this. Trust me.
14 Nov 18:03

Under Armour goes after activity tracking in a big way with acquisition of MapMyFitness

by Dante D'Orazio
firehose

huh

Under Armour is making a major play to gain a foothold in the fitness tracking market, which is led by the likes of Nike, Fitbit, and Jawbone. The company has snapped up MapMyFitness for $150 million, giving it instant entry into the blooming activity tracking business. MapMyFitness isn't known for specific devices; rather, it offers a way to analyze, use, and share the data provided by hundreds of other devices. Since its launch in 2007, the company has signed up 20 million users, of which nine million use the service at least once per month, according to The Wall Street Journal. One of the more appealing features of MapMyFitness — which is split up into a number of apps like MapMyRun and MapMyRide — is its social functionality, which allows users to share workout data with friends as an incentive to exercise a little longer.

It's not immediately clear how Under Armour will specifically use MapMyFitness, but it is readily apparent that it will take advantage of the platform for future tracking devices. In a statement, Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank says that "we are better positioned to design open, digital products for the athlete of tomorrow" as a result of the acquisition, adding that the purchase is "about enhancing our digital expertise to drive the future of performance innovation." He added to The Wall Street Journal that "athlete biometric measurement is a new business we’re just getting behind."

With MapMyFitness' valuable community, the company may be able to become a major competitor to Nike, which launched its first tracking devices back in 2006. It's since seen success with the Nike Fuelband. Under Armour has made a single fitness tracking device in the past — earlier this year it launched the Armour39 heart rate monitor band (above), which sells for $149.99 and wraps around your chest. We'll have to wait and see what Under Armour does with the acquisition, but the company has already made clear that it will run MapMyFitness as a subsidiary, keeping the staff in its current Texas offices. Current users shouldn't expect the service to shut down, either, though the company hasn't yet announced its full plans.

14 Nov 18:00

Photo



14 Nov 18:00

Programming with people: Fancy Hands lets developers add human workers to apps

by Ben Popper
firehose

roflcry

Eight years ago, Amazon revolutionized the way companies could draw on human labor by creating its Mechanical Turk platform. With "MTurk," as it is sometimes known, workers could be delivered the same way Amazon sold computing resources through its AWS division: on demand, via the cloud, and in a way that was capable of scaling up and down with ease. The only drawback was that Mturk was largely limited to "simple human intelligence tasks," or as critics called them, "SHITS."


A "human API"

In recent years, however, there has been a push to evolve the capabilities of the field known as crowd computing: a mix of human and machine intelligence capable of executing more complex tasks. The newest entrant to the field is New York startup Fancy Hands, which offers on-demand personal assistants. Fancy Hands recently rolled out a "human API" that allows developers to easily add an army of human workers to any mobile or web app.

"Mechanical Turk is really great but a huge majority of the tasks on there are simple things like deciding if video content is not safe for work or not," says Ted Roden, Fancy Hands' founder and CEO. "We wanted to do something a few steps above that." So far, Fancy Hands has been baked into apps from big brands, so that if a customer tweets a request through the service, a real human can go out and fulfill it. "It might be really complex to design an app that books a restaurant reservation for you, but a human can easily accomplish that."

"API-enabled worker communities are the future of labor."

"API-enabled worker communities are the future of labor," says Max Yankelevich, the chief architect at Crowd Computing Systems, a competitor of MTurk and the Fancy Hands API. "Software can leverage these ‘hybrid crowds’ to distribute customers' work among qualified workers in various communities." By hybrid, Yankelevich means a combination of human and machine intelligence. "That's what crowd computing is all about — separation of labor providers and software-platform providers."

By combining complex offline work with the kind of simple microtasks laborers can do online, crowd computing can produce more interesting results. "The next step in evolution is to wire tasks together," says Yankelevich. "For example, engage a worker to take a picture of products on a store shelf and then have a different crowd worker analyze those pictures for compliance with the brand's marketing rules for shelf display."

"Like Google Now, but actually does the hard work of buying your airline ticket."

There are around 15,000 people in Fancy Hands’ on-demand labor pool, with an average of 1,000 actively working on tasks each day. Some critics have accused this kind of startup of replacing good full-time jobs with piecemeal work. "Our bread-and-butter workers are folks from small-town America struggling to find work who would rather do this full-time than work at the local gas station," says Roden. "So I don’t believe it's exploitative." Piecemeal workers don't get health insurance or a minimum wage, but they do set their own price for each task.

Fancy Hands has an assortment of plans offering between five and twenty-five chores per month. For developers looking to build Fancy Hands' workforce into their apps, the API is free, and they decide what they are willing to pay per task. Roden says he hopes to improve the service over the next year by focusing on predictive intelligence. "The ultimate goal would be to help build an app that anticipates your needs, like Google Now, but that actually does the hard work of buying your airline ticket or calling the car service."

14 Nov 17:33

Walmart is sending mixed messages for the holiday shopping season

by John McDuling
firehose

the most baffling part of Wal-Mart's wage phobia is that most people who work at Wal-Mart also live in places where Wal-Mart is their primary retailer. Paying higher wages means its employees will either be able to afford to buy more things from Wal-Mart, or can afford things like health care and day care that allows them to... work more hours at Wal-Mart.

Walmart is predicting it will have slightly less wealth this coming quarter.

Walmart-quarterly-selling-general-and-administrative-expenses-Sales_chartbuilder (1)

The numbers: Quite decent. Walmart reported net income for the third quarter of $3.7 billion, or $1.14 per share, a 6.5% increase on last year, and ahead of Wall St estimates of $1.11. Total revenue was $115.7 billion, up 1.7%. But shares have sunk by about 2% in pre-market trading as the company’s forecast for the December quarter, which includes the crucial US Christmas and Thanksgiving sales periods, underwhelmed analysts. It expects Q4 earnings to range between $1.50 and $1.60 per share ( Wall St was looking for $1.69, according to FactSet). That will bring full-year earnings to somewhere between $5.01 and $5.11 per share, below Wall St consensus for $5.19. 

What’s interesting: The low forecast for the holiday period is a concern for the US economy, given that it’s the biggest consumer and seller of many of the nation’s largest consumer brands. And it’s all the more galling given that the company says it has “developed our best holiday plan ever” and is  ”committed to being the number one retail destination.” There are three mentions in the company’s earnings release of its “aggressive” plans to target the key trading period.

The takeaway:  Despite Walmart’s efforts to internationalize itself, quarterly results reinforce the fact that this remains a US business. Sales at its US stores and its wholesale club, Sam’s Club, accounted for about 88% of the company’s top line. And while US sales only edged up 2.4%, profits were up 5.8%. Although the company doesn’t break down its expenses by country, this implies further cuts to its US cost base. While investors love its ruthlessly efficient supply chain, America’s largest employer has come in for criticism for its wages and benefits, amid claims that many of its workers live below the poverty line. Numbers like this may add fuel to the fire.

14 Nov 17:30

Android 4.4 KitKat, thoroughly reviewed

by Ron Amadeo
firehose

The new launcher: "There is still no auto-rotate support—if you turn the phone sideways, the launcher obliviously stays vertically oriented. ... The Google Search bar cannot be removed, you can't hide icons from the app drawer, and you can't add screens to the left of the home screen. ... this is basic version 1.0 stuff."

A common theme is UI features cribbed from OEMs, especially Samsung.

The default status bar's functionality is nerfed, and its settings are buried.

The phone app doesn't have a dial pad by default and still doesn't support horizontal orientation.

SMS is rolled into Hangouts and half-assed.

"emojis only work properly if both users have Google Keyboard 2.0 installed"

"The clock app now uses the horrible skeuomorphic mess of a time picker that was first introduced in Google Calendar. The Jelly Bean option was an elegant, dead-simple way to enter the time. It was mostly just a number pad, so 9-0-0-am-OK would set the alarm for 9:00am. The new time picker is laid out like a clock, and you move the hands around the clock face to pick a time."

Previously, there was one app that handled both the camera and gallery. Now the camera is its own app, and there are _two separate gallery apps with unique interfaces but identical functionality_. The only difference is one requires G+, the other doesn't.

"KitKat will be many people's first exposure to Cloud Print, and they will be presented with this massive list of printers, phones, and tablets without a way to control it. I have one actual printer and have cleaned up Cloud Print a few times in the past, but I still had 12 devices listed. The only way to delete printers to is to log on to the Cloud Print website from a desktop browser. ... Any time a factory reset happens, a duplicate entry for the device is made—I already have two Nexus 5s listed. We're not even sure why Android devices show up here, because printing to them doesn't even work."

BTW, phones and tablets show up as printer devices because that's what Chrome-to-Phone used to send content: print jobs.

So, about that CyanogenMod installer...

After three Jelly Bean releases in a row, Google has unleashed a major revision to the world's most widely used operating system. With the Nexus 5 comes Android 4.4 "KitKat." KitKat brings a ton of enhancements: support for hidden system and status bars, printer support, and lower memory usage. It also has a number of user-level improvements, including a new dialer, a Google-infused home screen, and a whole pile of UI refinements.

The lower memory usage is particularly important because Google hopes this is the feature that will finally kill Gingerbread and other older versions of Android. Ice Cream Sandwich raised the system requirements for Android quite a bit, and to this day you still see lower-end phones shipping with Gingerbread because of the lower barrier to entry. Unfortunately, the only device that currently runs KitKat is the Nexus 5, which has a whopping 2GB of RAM, so there isn't much memory testing that we can do right now. We'll have to wait for actual low-memory hardware running KitKat to evaluate any of the low-memory requirement claims.

We can take a look at just about everything else, though. We believe KitKat is the biggest Android release since Ice Cream Sandwich. Google has touched nearly every part of the OS in some way, so there's a lot to cover.

Read 47 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






14 Nov 17:16

Atlanta Braves paying 55 percent of new stadium cost

by Matt Verderame
firehose

more than $300 million in taxpayer expenditure to deprecate a 20-year-old stadium

The organization will be funding more than half of the new stadium, where it will start playing in 2017.

The Atlanta Braves are getting a new stadium, and paying handsomely for it. The team is opening up a new ballpark in Cobb County come 2017, and is funding 55 percent of the $672 million cost, according to the Marietta Daily Journal.

The rest of the funding will be public, coming from the residents of Cobb County. There have been promises made that more than 95 percent of the county will not see an increase in taxes to help fund the stadium project.

The move into Cobb County will represent a shift for the Braves, who have been playing in Fulton County since the team moved to Atlanta from Milwaukee before the 1966 season.

Atlanta will be moving out of Turner Field, which is still a relatively new venue. The Braves starting playing there in 1997 after playing in Fulton County Stadium for over 30 years, winning a World Series in the building in 1995.

More from SB Nation MLB:

Clayton Kershaw, Cy Young winner and $300 million man

Ben Cherington, Man of the Year

Spencer Hall: A desperate trip into the ruins of Turner Field

Presenting SB Nation's 2013 MLB Awards

MLB Hot Stove | 4 teams pursuing Nelson Cruz

Death of a Ballplayer: Wrongly convicted prospect spends 27 years in prison

14 Nov 17:14

Possible sinkhole reported in yard in Florida - USA TODAY

firehose

never go


Washington Post

Possible sinkhole reported in yard in Florida
USA TODAY
DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) — Residents of several Florida homes have been evacuated due to a possible sinkhole that opened in a backyard in Pinellas County on Thursday. Dunedin Deputy Fire Chief Trip Barrs said the hole appeared to be about 12 feet wide ...
Dispute with Citizens delayed repairs to Dunedin home swallowed by sinkholeTampabay.com
Two homes collapse into sinkhole in DunedinABC Action News
Notable sinkholes from around the globeBaltimore Sun
Reuters -San Francisco Chronicle -MyFox Tampa Bay
all 144 news articles »
14 Nov 17:07

The Fall Of The House Of Moon

firehose

longread; Sun Myung Moon

Sex rituals, foreign spies, Biden offspring, and the Unification Church's war-torn first family.
14 Nov 17:05

Is AT&T Finally Getting Better Than Verizon In Big Cities?

firehose

lowest bar competition
all carriers suck forever

The wireless carrier is pouring money into the problem, and a top executive says the issues will dissipate by the end of the year.