Shared posts

23 Sep 23:49

Google launches 'Constitute,' a new tool for designing governments

by Russell Brandom

The process of drafting a constitution is usually long, intricate and politically fraught -- but with 160 different active constitutions to draw from, it's also uniquely amenable to data analysis. With that in mind, Google has partnered with the Comparative Constitutions Project to launch a new site called Constitute, devoted to comparing the world's constitutions. It examines nearly 350 constitutional themes, organized into topics like the duties of a citizen and the role of the executive. The result is a comprehensive view of how countries structure their governments, and a powerful tool for any would-be founders. As one co-founder put it, "If want to see what African constitutions have to say about the rights of women after 1945, you can do that in just a few clicks."


"Our aim is to arm drafters with a better tool for constitution design and writing," Google said in a post accompanying the launch. That's a niche audience, to put it mildly, but it's also an important one. In 2013 so far, Zimbabwe has already voted on a new constitution, and 2012 saw both Somalia and Syria adopt new founding documents, along with nearly half a dozen revisions from other countries. The hope is that, if Constitute can influence the next generation of constitutions and give citizens a greater sense of ownership over the documents, it could have a huge impact in years to come.

23 Sep 23:22

Watch A Boring Sedan Rip A $400K Lamborghini Aventador In Half

The $400,000+ Lamborghini Aventador destroyed dramatically at the hands of a midsize sedan in Brooklyn this weekend conveniently did so in front of a couple of cameras
23 Sep 23:21

the-fisher-queen: ileolai: #FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT (sigh)

23 Sep 16:23

peashooters-personal: French Onion Soup Porn!!!















peashooters-personal:

French Onion Soup Porn!!!

23 Sep 16:22

Spelunky gets a primetime slot with Emmys cameo

by Alexa Ray Corriea
firehose

Spelunky beat?

Stay Connected. Follow Polygon Now!

By Alexa Ray Corriea on Sep 23, 2013 at 11:30a

Mossmouth's rigorous platformer Spelunky made a surprise appearance during the 2013 Emmys broadcast last night, proven true in a screenshot posted to Twitter by Superannuation.

During the presentation for Best Writing In A Variety Series, the team of winner The Colbert Report showed a brief montage of its writers in action. When the video cut to writer Rob Dubbin — who has also written pieces about video games for Kill Screen, was playing Spelunky in a rather cozy-looking living room. Presumably the unforgiving platformer is the impetus behind the show's wit.

Following the broadcast, Mossmouth's Derek Yu took to Twitter to congratulate Rob and comment on the appearance of his game during the program. In a reply to Yu, Dubbin suggested that the game's cameo had been deliberately arranged for the montage.

Check out our feature on the creation of Spelunky here.

Tap for more stories

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23 Sep 16:21

twentypercentcooler: the-hero-dies: Wonder Woman and sassy...

firehose

autoreshare





twentypercentcooler:

the-hero-dies:

Wonder Woman and sassy Batman. This image is based off of a series of tweets by Chris Sims that I included above. I thought it was funny, so I drew it.

Fan. Tastic.

23 Sep 16:21

How Apple sold 9 million iPhones this weekend

by Leo Mirani
firehose

"this release marks the first time that China got the iPhone on the same day as other important markets. In December 2012, when the iPhone 5 went on sale in China nearly a month after elsewhere, it sold two million units in the first few days. ... Also in Asia, Apple finally came to an arrangement with DoCoMo, Japan’s biggest mobile network operator. With more than 40% of Japanese subscribers, that’s another vast market for the new iPhones to tap into."

apple iphone sales

Apple this morning said it sold nine million units of its new iPhones, the 5S and 5C, in the three days since they became available on Friday Sept. 18. That’s Apple’s best opening weekend yet, despite criticism that the iPhone 5S is no great leap and that the 5C is just a repackaged iPhone 5. When it launched the iPhone 5 last year, Apple sold five million units in its opening weekend; the iPhone 4S sold four million the year before. A back-of-the-envelope calculation using last quarter’s average sale price of $580 suggests over $5 billion in gross sales for Apple this weekend.

Many expected a surge in sales thanks to the iPhone 5C. That appears to have been the exact opposite of what happened. Mobile analytics firm Localytics says that the more expensive iPhone 5S sold nearly four times as much. Indeed, Tim Cook confirmed that the 5S is more popular: “The demand for the new iPhones has been incredible, and while we’ve sold out of our initial supply of iPhone 5s, stores continue to receive new iPhone shipments regularly,” he is quoted as saying in the press release.

So what accounts for the remarkable success of Apple’s latest offerings? Most obviously, this release marks the first time that China got the iPhone on the same day as other important markets. In December 2012, when the iPhone 5 went on sale in China nearly a month after elsewhere, it sold two million units in the first few days. Even assuming that number has remained the same, that’s a significant boost right there.

Also in Asia, Apple finally came to an arrangement with DoCoMo, Japan’s biggest mobile network operator. With more than 40% of Japanese subscribers, that’s another vast market for the new iPhones to tap into.

So much for why the numbers jumped so dramatically over the past two years. What about the impressive, and counter-intuitive success of the more expensive 5S? That is possibly the result of a basic human behavior: the existence of a cheaper (and in this case plastic) item makes the marginally more expensive one that much more attractive. In addition, subsidies in some parts of the world have been changed around to add to the impression.

To be sure, 9 million phones in three days is an impressive number whichever way you look at it. But it says less about the new range of iPhones than it does about the fact Apple phones continue to be desirable largely for being Apple phones. That is a position few companies ever achieve. But it is not something that can last forever.


23 Sep 16:19

The Mary Sue Exclusive Preview of Powerpuff Girls #1!

The Powerpuff Girls return, if not to the small screen than at least to comics this week, from IDW Publishing. Here's the solicit, cover, and first eight pages of the issue!
23 Sep 16:19

Here’s What Went Down at Last Night’s Emmys, Where Funny Ladies Made History And Game of Thrones Won Nothing

firehose

'For the first time in Emmy history women took home the gold for both comedy writing and directing. Writing went to Tina Fey and Tracy Wigfield for the 30 Rock finale, and Gail Mancuso was named Best Director for an episode of Modern Family, becoming only the second woman to win in that category. Gasp! Are you telling me ladies can be funny?! This was actually a banner year for female TV directors in general, as a grand total of seven of them were nominated among the four directing categories. In addition, Abi Morgan upset the competition to win for Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Dramatic Special for her work on the BBC’s excellent (now cancelled) The Hour.'

only other notable thing that happened: Colbert Report finally beat the Daily Show

Ah, the Emmys. It can be a weird thing for fans of genre TV, since sci-fi/fantasy shows rarely get nominated, and when they do, they rarely win. Case in point: Game of Thrones, which was nominated for four awards at last night's ceremony and didn't win any of them. But still. When it comes to women working behind the scenes, something really cool happened. See what that is, and check out the rest of the winners, behind the jump.
23 Sep 16:17

Alien PEZ Dispenser is Not a Real PEZ Dispenser, But Should Be

I know, I know there's no practical way for this PEZ dispenser to have another, tiny PEZ dispenser head that extends when you open it, offering tiny PEZ, but rationality has nothing to do with my desire for an Alien Queen PEZ dispenser.
23 Sep 16:17

You’re Getting Post-Serenity Firefly Stories Thanks To Dark Horse

Instead of waiting for that Serenity sequel film that's probably never going to happen, why not continue the story of the Firefly crew in comic book form?
23 Sep 16:13

[priv] ios 7 - Keyboard extremely sluggish on iOS7 with iPhone 4s - Ask Different

by macdrifter
firehose

iOS 7 update breaks typing on iPhone 4*. To fix, "try Settings > General > Reset all settings."

@themindfulbit @Veritrope per conversation yesterday: Fix Sluggish Typing in iOS7
23 Sep 16:11

[toread] [priv] Brewbot: The Smart Brewing Appliance by Cargo — Kickstarter

by macdrifter
firehose

tl;dr: like a 3D printer, but for beer. Home-sized, but geared to small commercial breweries as a test platform

built in the UK, inspired by Portland (developed at XOXO, first commercial prototype is at Bailey's Taproom on SW Broadway)

£1,500 (~$2,400) to £2,500 (~$4,000)

23 Sep 16:02

[priv] Smashing through the media hype: iPhone 5s fingerprint reader not really “less secure” or “hacked”

by macdrifter
firehose

it's just as exploitable as every other fingerprint reader that doesn't check for a pulse

23 Sep 16:00

[toread] [priv] The Importance of Whimsy in Learning to Program -

by macdrifter
firehose

'I guess what I’m saying is if gets.chomp can keep me engaged enough to switch career paths and become a 24/7 programmer who dreams in code just think what naming an XML parser “Nikogiri” instead of “XML Parser” could do? ... We could write our code in a way that communicates “Hey, we’re having fun. We’re playing. Stay with us and can play, too.” Just think about it next time you start naming a class CSVReader.'

as someone who deals with docs/QA for a living

GO
FUCK
YOURSELF

23 Sep 15:57

Photo



23 Sep 15:53

Dis Bunneh Tastez Yummy

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE
finally, a true GPOY/IFAPOM

Dis Bunneh Tastez Yummy

Submitted by: Unknown

Tagged: gif , kitty , bunny
23 Sep 15:52

Muslim Brotherhood banned by Egyptian court

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE

Court rules that Islamist party's assets should be confiscated as crackdown on supporters of Mohamed Morsi escalates

The Egyptian authorities have banned the Muslim Brotherhood, sealing the marginalisation of the Islamist movement that was the country's most powerful political group until as recently as the July overthrow of Mohamed Morsi.

A court on Monday ordered the freezing of the Brotherhood's assets and also banned its spin-off groups, state media reported.

In practice, the group had almost been forced underground already by the arrest this summer of thousands of its members – including most of its leaders – and the killing of about 1,000 more.

It is a familiar predicament for the Brotherhood, which has been banned for most of its 85-year history and has successfully fought off every threat to its existence.

Originally banned under Gamal Abdel Nasser, it was tacitly tolerated under his successor, Anwar Sadat. During the last years of Hosni Mubarak's regime, several of its members were allowed to be elected to parliament in an independent capacity.

"I don't think it will have an effect," Abdel-Rahman Daour, a pro-Morsi activist close to several leading Brotherhood members, said of the new ban.

"People think the Brotherhood can be dissolved through governmental decisions. But it has existed for 85 years and survived far worse."

The group's London-based spokesman, Abdullah al-Haddad, tweeted: "The Muslim Brotherhood are part and parcel of Egyptian society. Corrupt illegitimate judicial decisions cannot change that … [The Muslim Brotherhood] will continue to be present on the ground: they cannot kill an idea, they tried before and failed – they are trying again and they will fail."

Brotherhood members who remain at liberty say that the arbitrary arrests and state-led killings of their colleagues remain a far more serious threat to the organisation's operational capacity.

Only a handful of senior Brothers dare live in the open, and two recently told the Guardian that they were unsure of who was now in charge of the group, following the arrest of its leader, Mohamed Badie, and his deputies.

Young members say this breakdown in communication has made the group more fragmented, and also finally given them the chance to have more say in the activities of the group, which is usually highly hierarchical.

"Now the youth are just by themselves," said Daour. "And they work together far better than when the leaders are involved. Now that the leadership is gone, no one needs to ask permission for anything any more."

In an example of the Brotherhood's current organisational chaos, a group of younger members spent over two months drafting an apology for some of the mistakes the movement made during the post-Mubarak period. But when the statement was released on a Brotherhood-linked website, one of the remaining Brotherhood leaders instantly ordered its removal, claiming it did not represent the group.

Daour said this had frustrated young members but claimed they still wanted to remain part of the group. "No one is going to leave. But it's going to get more revolutionary," Daour argued.

Thought to number between 300,000 and 1 million members, the Brotherhood remains highly unpopular among much of the rest of Egypt's population of 85 million, who blame the group for trying to grab too much power following Morsi's election in 2012.


theguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds








23 Sep 15:50

Photo

firehose

via Snorkmaiden
looks shooped but is giving me ideas for the pup's bowtie



23 Sep 15:44

Photo

firehose

via Snorkmaiden
context is a Ciroc ad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5vlYYqnXVo







23 Sep 15:42

When someone makes a relevant joke

firehose

via willowbl00
at least Moffat stopped writing the Pope before this new one



When someone makes a relevant joke

23 Sep 15:42

Video: SEA@LAA: Swarm of bees delays the game for 23 minutes | MLB.com

by gguillotte
firehose

baseball is dumb
announcers in all sports are almost as dumb as baseball

23 Sep 15:41

A New Chapter | CyanogenMod

by gguillotte
firehose

via Albener Pessoa

CyanogenMod is making a serious push for the mainstream, which is nice. They're doing it as a VC-backed startup, which is not.

Having said that, I paid for CM7, and I paid for CM again when Privacy Guard hit the CM10 builds. I'll keep paying for it as long as it sticks to the core mission of being a bullshit-free, Google-optional Android build.

The biggest obstacle we wanted to get out of the way is the hideous installation process. Today there are more open and unlockable devices than ever, but they all have their quirks and wildly different installation procedures. We’ve done our best to document the process for every device we support on our wiki, but it is still a daunting process for mere mortals. This is not sufficient—installation needs to be easy and safe. This is a great deal of complexity to manage when you are talking about almost a hundred different devices, but we decided to tackle it. Our installer will be available on the Play Store in the coming weeks.
23 Sep 15:36

Bone Flowers: Sculptures Made of Rodent Skeletons

by Steph
firehose

via willowbl00
paging Hilary

[ By Steph in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

Bone Flowers Skeleton Sculptures 1

A white sculpture of a dandelion becomes infinitely more interesting the closer you look, as you begin to pick out the tiniest of paws, vertebrae and tufts of fur. Petals are made up of rib cages, stems of spines. Skulls come together to form the base of the flower. Tokyo artist Hideki Tokushige produces these honebana, or bone flowers, in honor of the cycles of nature.

Bone Flowers Honebana

Bone Flowers Skeleton Sculptures 2

Bone Flowers Skeleton Sculptures 4

Tokushige procures (already-dead) carcasses of rodents and keeps them frozen so the flesh can be picked off the skeletons more easily without causing damage to the delicate bones.

Bone Flowers Skeleton Sculptures 5

Once he’s finished completing and photographing the sculptures, Tokushige disassembles them and buries the remains. Using these mice, which are kept in cages throughout their short lives and then frozen to feed to other animals in the least grisly way possible, reflects “a sense of our modern view of nature and life.”

Bone Flowers Skeleton Sculptures 6

Bone Flowers Skeleton Sculptures 7

“Some might think it weird,” says Tokushige of using bones. He states that proximity to bones was normal throughout much of human history, but we’re not as used to seeing them anymore. “Still, someday we all go back to bones and back to soil.” The artist crafts the bones into flowers as a means of paying respects to the dead, our cultural customs and the realities of the life cycle. Flowers are temporary, but bones can last millennia.

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[ By Steph in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

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23 Sep 15:36

Chaos Computer Club Bypasses Apple's Touch ID System (with copy of original fingerprint)

by Arnold Kim
firehose

via Overbey
don't forget who has the largest biometric database in the world, including all sorts of domestic non-criminal (background checks, public schools) and international visitor prints: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_Automated_Fingerprint_Identification_System

and that's just the one that's public information and in the US

The Chaos Computer Club claims to be able to bypass Apple's new Touch ID fingerprint sensor with a photo of the original user's fingerprint. The bypass is demonstrated in this short video:


The system is detailed in a how to which requires obtaining the original user's fingerprint:
First, the fingerprint of the enroled user is photographed with 2400 dpi resolution. The resulting image is then cleaned up, inverted and laser printed with 1200 dpi onto transparent sheet with a thick toner setting. Finally, pink latex milk or white woodglue is smeared into the pattern created by the toner onto the transparent sheet. After it cures, the thin latex sheet is lifted from the sheet, breathed on to make it a tiny bit moist and then placed onto the sensor to unlock the phone. This process has been used with minor refinements and variations against the vast majority of fingerprint sensors on the market.
Apple's new iPhone 5s includes a fingerprint sensor called TouchID, which can be used to unlock the iPhone as well as make purchases on the Apple iTunes store. Users, however, can continue to use a pin or password as an alternative to the fingerprint sensor -- though that is arguably even less secure than duplicating someone's fingerprint.
    






23 Sep 15:31

Introducing our Ladies Collection 100% Goodyear welted on lasts...

firehose

via Multirussian Sledgercide




124301 - NAVY SUEDE


124348 - MARACCA SUEDE

Introducing our Ladies Collection

100% Goodyear welted on lasts specially designed to meet ladies tastes & fitting. Not just another small men’s shoe… 

Check the new additions HEREMuch more to come really soon!

23 Sep 15:24

ilikelookingatnakedmen: camperjon: peashooter85: What...

firehose

via Toaster Strudel

"Later in the evening she won another fight against a woman named Martha Jones." Martha never wins



ilikelookingatnakedmen:

camperjon:

peashooter85:

What fighting like a girl was all about in Georgian Era Britain —- Elizabeth “Lady Bare Knuckles” Stokes

Think that women’s boxing or MMA fighting is a recent development in fighting sports?  Think again.  From the 18th to early 19th century it was not uncommon for women to fight in the ring as well as men.  Back then boxing was not the boxing of today, not by a long shot.  Venues tended to be saloons, pubs, small arenas, or even open streets and back-alleys.  Rules differed from venue to venue, but for the most part fights were done bare knuckled, and many fights were a no holds barred type setup.  Some fights even included deadly weapons such as clubs, swords, and staves.  Needless to say, injury and death was common.

One of the most famous female fighters in early 18th century Britain was Elizabeth Stokes (born Elizabeth Wilkinson), a mother and fighter whose career lasted mostly throughout the 1720’s.  In 1722 she was challenged by Hannah Highfield for a prize of three guineas.  Stokes accepted the challenge by offered a counter challenge,

 “I, Elizabeth Wilkinson of Clerkenwell, who had earlier had some words with Hannah Hyfield, ‘challenged and invited’ her adversary to meet her on the stage for three guineas. Each fighter would hold half-a-crown in each hand and the first to drop the money would lose the battle”


Elizabeth won after a 22 minute fight, giving Hannah Hyfield a savage thumping that caused her to drop her coin.  Later in the evening she won another fight against a woman named Martha Jones.

After the fight with Hannah Hyfield Stoke’s career took off, making her the most popular female fighter in Britain and earning her the name “Lady Bareknuckles”.  After marrying her husand James Stokes, the couple often fought in paired and tag-team matches.  Incredibly Stoke’s even fought men on a number of occasions, something that was rare in bareknuckle boxing.  Even more incredibly, she trounced them every time, beating the crap out of them with her swift and powerful fists.  Not only was she a master pugilist, Stokes was also skilled with weapons as well.  She was known to be particularly skilled with the cudgel and short sword.

By the mid 19th century women’s fighting had come to a close as professional organizations, rules, and Victorian Era prejudices against women drove the sport underground and turned fighting into a gentlemen’s sport.

I don’t know why bare-knuckle Pugilism is so interesting to me

Maybe I just like people punching things with their bare fists

But dammit if the sport it isn’t going to be a big part of Ranger Pugsly’s camp

OMG THIS IS AWESOME

but my facebones are twitching just reading it

23 Sep 15:22

okay, I painted myself blue, made blue spikes in my hair, and the lube. But why doesn't my partner want to do a Sonic roleplay with me?

by oolongs
firehose

via willowbl00

you’re going into it too fast.

23 Sep 15:19

poppycockle: hero

firehose

via Snorkmaiden



poppycockle:

hero

23 Sep 15:16

"It was once the darling of open source advocates and socially-conscious entrepreneurs, but I now..."

firehose

via willowbl00

"the sharing economy is a temp agency crossed with a Zynga game. Wonderful."

It was once the darling of open source advocates and socially-conscious entrepreneurs, but I now consider the term “sharing economy” to be co-opted by predatory business models. Here’s how it happened.

Whenever technological or social change threatens a power structure, that power structure always tries to reassert itself. In the age of the Internet, we already see how monopolists are trying to keep the institution of copyright alive with DRM, and nonsense rhetoric about “buying,” “selling,” and “stealing” thin air. Now, as the industrial model gives way to a more distributed way of life, the people at the top of last century’s food chain aren’t just trying to stay there. They’re trying to make sure that the food chain itself doesn’t get devoured by the swarm.

Here’s an example. The same way we can talk about Bitcoin to not necessarily mean Bitcoin but rather decentralized money in general, I’m going to give the co-opted “sharing economy” a mascot. A big, fuzzy rabbit. Specifically, TaskRabbit.

TaskRabbit is a website where people can post jobs that they need done — running an errand, fixing a broken table, painting a wall, whatever — and other people can bid to do the job for a certain price. So far, so Craigslist. But TaskRabbit also does a background check on anyone they allow to accept a job. In return for this, they take a 15% cut out of all payments. Oh, and as you do enough tasks to “level up,” you get rewards like a T-shirt, or even business cards because you’re a “real professional.”

So, the sharing economy is a temp agency crossed with a Zynga game. Wonderful.



- Read more: The Swarm Economy Is Not Silicon Valley’s “Sharing Economy” - Falkvinge on Infopolicy