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20 Sep 21:12

The world’s best selling alcohol is finally traveling West

by Commentary
Baijiu, the Chinese firewater.

China’s largest liquor company, Kweichow Moutai, just announced its weakest first-half profit growth since 2001. The falling revenue highlights a trend that analysts knew to be true for months: President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on extravagance has hit domestic producers hard.

Moutai, famous for $300 bottles of the white liquor known as baijiu, which is popular with the politburo, raked in cash at half the pace of the year-earlier period. Meanwhile, the company fell from the fifth most popular brand gifted by Chinese millionaires to 13th, according to a survey by Hurun Report. (It can at least stand proud in the fact that Moutai is the only Chinese brand to make the list.)

But, Moutai and its national rival Wuliangye have hope—in the form of a competitor. London-based beverage behemoth Diageo has doubled down on efforts to expand the baijiu market. Diageo initially invested in the Chinese baijiu brand Shui Jing Fang last year, and in July, the company put down an additional $358 million to become the brand’s sole shareholder.

The company hasn’t been shy about global ambitions to expand a spirit that generated a massive $92 billion last year. Gilbert Ghostine, president of Diageo Asia Pacific, says the company’s goal is to “build Shijingfang into the leading international Bai Jiu brand.”

In fact, Diageo already launched baijiu marketing initiatives in London last year and is rolling out Shui Jing Fang in Italy, Qatar, Spain and the United Arab Emirates this year. The company also brought on the brand’s first American general manager, James Rice, who is planning a baijiu launch party in his native Los Angeles this year.

Exports still account for only 10% of Shui Jin Fang’s total sales, but Diageo is banking on its wide-scale marketing efforts to increase that number. More familiarity among worldwide consumers can only benefit other Chinese baijiu makers, who hope that gaining American and European shelf space can make up for the declining sales at home.


20 Sep 20:53

Holy Crap

20 Sep 20:52

Valve's Steam Box teased for Monday reveal on official countdown page

by Sean Hollister

Valve is counting down to Monday morning at 10AM PT. That's when the company will likely reveal the Steam Box, its plan to create a video game console that runs Linux and plays PC games.

Earlier this week, Valve co-founder Gabe Newell said that we should expect the company to share more information on its living room hardware plans very soon, and today hthe company's erected a teaser site titled "The Steam Universe is Expanding in 2014." That teaser site actually has space for three countdown clocks in all: the first one has 72 hours remaining, indicating that it should expire Monday at 3PM Eastern / 10PM Pacific.


"Last year, we shipped a software feature called Big Picture, a user-interface tailored for televisions and gamepads," the site reads. "This year we’ve been working on even more ways to connect the dots for customers who want Steam in the living-room. Soon, we’ll be adding you to our design process, so that you can help us shape the future of Steam."

We've been following Valve's Steam Box idea since well before it was public knowledge, and we're eager to see how far along Valve's plans really are. If we had to guess, the three distinct countdown clocks point to the "Good," "Better" and "Best" target hardware configurations that Gabe Newell told us about, in our wide-ranging January interview.

20 Sep 20:50

Baby Elephant, Rooster, and Human Try to Wake a Sleeping Dog

by Kimber Streams

A baby elephant, a rooster, and a human with a long strand of grass all try their best to wake up a dog in this video by Zac Guénette. Apparently no one wants to let that sleeping dog lie.

via Tastefully Offensive

20 Sep 20:50

TV: Newswire: Dick Wolf and Steven Bochco bringing more murder to TNT

by Mike Vago

Steven Bochco—who's enjoyed a successful career as a TV writer/producer alternating between gritty, acclaimed dramas like Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, and NYPD Blue, and absurdly high-concept fare like Cop Rock, Doogie Howser, M.D., and Blind Justice—has once more embraced his serious side, creating a new cop show for TNT.

Murder In the First will follow Taye Diggs and Kathleen Robertson as they take on one high-profile murder case each season. The first season, set to air next summer, is just 10 episodes long, and will find the detectives investigating a dead addict with ties to a Silicon Valley mogul. In the likely event that the show finds an audience, we fully expect Bochco to return to his first love, and pour the money and clout the show earns him into Cat And Mouse, the show about a mystery-solving Burmese you just know he ...

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20 Sep 20:49

Wasted Rita

20 Sep 20:48

Quit your job, move to North Dakota and start drilling for gas

by Matt Phillips
  • The typical household in the heart of the US natural gas patch, North Dakota, has seen its income soar 17% between 2000 and 2012, thanks to the energy boom. Over the same period, the typical US family saw its income slump 7%. Here’s an inflation-adjusted look at how things have gone over the last few years.

 

  • And it’s not just North Dakota. Other states in the region—Wyoming, South Dakota, Montana and Nebraska—are seeing similar improvements in incomes. Also, Louisiana, a bit further south.
  • There’s no secret to why this is. The job growth in the energy sector has been nuts.

This is the definition of a boom. And it’s the latest edition of a rich history of such US economic surges. Titusville in 1859. Texas in 1901. But if there’s one thing the US has learned, it’s that a gusher only lasts so long. So if you’re heading out to the gas patch, you ought to get there while the getting is good.


20 Sep 20:47

BEHOLD MY POWER: Jackie Brown Is Now at the Laurelhurst

by Erik Henriksen

Okay, FINE, this likely isn't my doing. But I'm taking credit for it anyway. Remember when the Laurelhurst booked Out of Sight, and I said somebody should do an Elmore Leonard film fest? And then the next week, the Laurelhurst went and got Get Shorty? And I got greedy and was all hey, great, cool, now let's make Jackie Brown happen? So check this out: Starting tonight and going through Thursday, the Laurelhurst's got Jackie Brown, which is one of those very, very few films that somehow manages to get better every time you watch it and Tarantino's best movie. C'mon. Look at Robert Forster and Pam Grier here:

That clip reminds me: Even if you don't like, say, fantastic characters, or Elmore Leonard plots, or Samuel L. Jackson or Michael Keaton or Robert De Niro or Bridget Fonda or Chris Tucker or Tarantino, Jackie Brown's worth seeing just for its soundtrack:

And, of course:

I generally watch Jackie Brown about once a year. The chance to see it on the big screen this time around is... well, clearly, I'm pretty excited. Jackie Brown screens every night at 9 pm through Thurs Sept 26 at the Laurelhurst (2735 E Burnside). Admission's $4.

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20 Sep 20:46

Parents Complain After Child Forced to Reenact Slavery on a Field Trip - COLORLINES

by djempirical

During a Nature’s Classroom field trip organized by Hartford Magnet Trinity College Academy last year, a 12-year-old black girl was forced to pretend she was a slave as part of a historical reenactment. During the simulation she was called the N-word, chased through the woods, and threatened with physical violence including whipping and cutting her Achilles. Nature’s Classroom has been criticized for this same reenactment in the past, but continues do it. 

Now, Sandra and James Baker—the girl’s parents—have taken their complaints to the Connecticut School Board and the Human Rights Commission after 10-months of trying to get an apology from their daughter’s former school. Other students who went on the same trip were recently debriefed, and described being similarly horrified by the experience. 

Original Source

20 Sep 20:45

Film: Newswire: Disney and Jerry Bruckheimer are breaking up 

by Sean O'Neal

Sensing that some of the incredibly expensive sparks have gone out of their relationship, Disney will end its first-look deal with producer Jerry Bruckheimer in 2014—a resolution that, as in anything involving Jerry Bruckheimer movies these days, has taken a very long time to arrive. Also, it’s surrounded in confusing noise, with both sides insisting that their divorce after more than 20 years is not about The Lone Ranger, and certainly not the increased tension that film’s failure brought to the development and budgeting of other Bruckheimer films, like the recently delayed Pirates Of The Caribbean 5, to the point where Disney is now just nagging him all the time. “Where’s the script, Jerry? Do you really need to build your own train, Jerry?” And so on.

But that’s not an accurate viewpoint, says the man who believes history will vindicate The Lone Ranger as ...

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20 Sep 20:44

Verizon now lets you watch live FiOS TV anywhere you want

by Dan Seifert

Verizon FiOS customers have been able to watch live television on their iPads for some time now, but today the company is expanding that feature to Android and the iPhone. In addition, Verizon is lifting the restriction on watching live TV while connected to your home network — you can now watch live TV anywhere you go, provided you have the necessary bandwidth, of course.

The updated apps let users watch live feeds from 75 channels in or out of the home, as well as select local channels depending on where they currently are in New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC. More live content and local channels are expected to be added to the app later this year and into next. The FiOS Mobile app also lets subscribers manage their DVRs, use their devices as remotes, look up other account-related information, and watch on demand content.

Verizon follows behind Time Warner Cable, Comcast, DIsh, Cablevision, and DirectTV, which all offer some level of live content to watch outside of the home. Verizon's offering does provide considerably more channels to watch than say, Time Warner Cable, which limits customers to content from 12 networks and 16 local news stations. Verizon's updated FiOS Mobile apps are free for subscribers and available in the Google Play Store and iTunes App Store now.

20 Sep 20:42

Chipworks: Apple’s A7 is made by Samsung, M7 is indeed a separate chip

by Andrew Cunningham
Chipworks

A few hours after iFixit's high-level teardown of the iPhone 5S and 5C, Chipworks has started to tear down the individual components inside the phone to see what makes it tick.

Their first discovery involves what we've been wondering about the A7 since Apple first mentioned how similar it is in size to the previous A6: its manufacturing process. It turns out that Apple is indeed using Samsung's 28nm Hi K Metal Gate (HKMG) process to build the chip, a slight shrink from the previous 32nm HKMG process used in the A6, the A6X, and some A5 variants. For those who don't know, an upgraded manufacturing process can cram more transistors into a smaller amount of space, ultimately allowing the chips to fit into physically smaller phones and making more chips fit on a single wafer of silicon (which reduces cost in the long run). Samsung uses this same 28nm process to build its own Exynos 5 Octa chips.

Most chipmakers don't begin producing brand-new chips on brand-new processes at the same time. Typically, you want to limit the number of things you're changing at once to reduce the likelihood of manufacturing issues—this is what led Intel to its current "tick-tock" system for chip updates and is what prompted Apple to begin testing Samsung's 32nm process in the relatively low-volume iPad 2 (this was, of course, after the third-generation iPad had shipped—while it was the latest-and-greatest of Apple's tablets, it used a larger A5 built on the proven 45nm process). We've been hearing reports that the iPhone 5S is in relatively short supply, and while we can only speculate, it could be that the A7's yields aren't quite as good as the A6's just yet.

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20 Sep 20:39

Follow Friday: Apple CEO Tim Cook joins Twitter

by Nathan Ingraham

Apple CEO Tim Cook joined Twitter today as his company launched its latest iPhone 5S and 5C smartphones. His first tweet mentions his visits to the Apple Store earlier today as the new iPhones went on sale: "Seeing so many happy customers reminds us of why we do what we do."

While Cook's account isn't yet verified by Twitter, one of his first followers was Apple senior VP Phil Schiller, who also retweeted Cook's first tweet. We've reached out to both Apple and Twitter to confirm that this new account is actually Apple's CEO.

20 Sep 20:39

Blackberry to cut 4500 jobs amid earnings plunge - BBC News


BBC News

Blackberry to cut 4500 jobs amid earnings plunge
BBC News
Blackberry has announced it is planning to cut 4,500 jobs, or 40% of its worldwide workforce, in an attempt to staunch huge losses. The smartphone maker said it anticipated a loss of as much as $995m (£621m) when it reports its second-quarter earnings next ...
BlackBerry takes huge loss as sales collapseThe Globe and Mail
BlackBerry's downfall came down to appsUSA TODAY
BlackBerry to Cut 40% of Work Force After Big LossNew York Times
The Independent -euronews -Wall Street Journal
all 310 news articles »
20 Sep 19:47

Its Nuclear Plant Closed, Maine Town Is Full of Regret

by samzenpus
firehose

all Maine towns are full of regret

mdsolar writes in with a story about the fallout from a nuclear plant closing on a small town in Maine. "In a wooded area behind a camouflage-clad guard holding an assault rifle, dozens of hulking casks packed with radioactive waste rest on concrete pads — relics of the shuttered nuclear plant that once powered the region and made this fishing town feel rich. In the 17 years since Maine Yankee began dismantling its reactors and shedding its 600 workers, this small, coastal town north of Portland has experienced drastic changes: property taxes have spiked by more than 10 times for the town's 3,700 residents, the number living in poverty has more than doubled as many professionals left, and town services and jobs have been cut. 'I have yet to meet anyone happy that Maine Yankee is gone,' said Laurie Smith, the town manager. 'All these years later, we're still feeling the loss of jobs, the economic downturn, and the huge tax increases.'"

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20 Sep 19:28

Switcheroos: Oven & Shaker's Ryan Magarian Opening Bar in Ping

by Erin DeJesus
firehose

ohhhhhhhhh shiiiiiiit
OHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT

pingpdxbar500aaa.jpg

Photo of Ping courtesy Official site

ChefStable's Old Town restaurant Ping has officially died. The space, which had closed for a revamp earlier this year, will instead be re-born into a full-time commisary kitchen for Rick Gencarelli's growing sandwich spot Lardo — as well as a bar by Oven & Shaker bartender Ryan Magarian. The Oregonian is first to report the switcheroo:

[ChefStable owner Kurt] Huffman is bringing in Oven & Shaker bartender Ryan Magarian to build a new, 50-seat bar in the next-door space with lively cocktails, Lardo sandwiches and as many as 40 craft beers on tap.

This one's developing; more information as it becomes available.
· Ping Officially Closes; Cocktail Bar, Lardo Commissary Planned [OregonLive]
· All Previous Ping Coverage [Eater PDX]
· All Previous Ryan Magarian Coverage [Eater PDX]

20 Sep 19:27

shiralipkin: somethingclassysomethingvulgar: if you live with...









shiralipkin:

somethingclassysomethingvulgar:

if you live with a cat, you have had this conversation. 

Truth.

20 Sep 19:27

▶ Necessary Roughness Referee scene - YouTube

by hodad
firehose

I miss Scott Fujita

20 Sep 19:25

DualShock 4's design was informed by major first-person shooter developers

by Tracey Lien
firehose

obviously the way to bring in new people who wouldn't buy your stuff anyway is to design your hardware around the old guard who pre-ordered it before it was announced

Stay Connected. Follow Polygon Now!

By Tracey Lien on Sep 19, 2013 at 8:30p

Sony Computer Entertainment sent out prototypes of the PlayStation 4's DualShock 4 controller to major first-person shooter creators before it arrived at the peripheral's final design, Sony's Mark Cerny told IGN.

According to Cerny, Sony's many controller prototypes were tested with consumers, but they were also tested with developers to determine what the best design would be for certain kinds of games.

"We sent out prototypes to major FPS creators," Cerny said in the interview. "We looked at the top-selling titles — if they were people we could talk to, we began sending over a stream of controllers. And we would ask them things like concavity or convexity, or trigger pressure, or trigger location or accuracy or the like.

"It was extremely helpful to have the designers of some of the top FPSes on our controller design project."

The PlayStation 4 launches in North America on Nov. 15 and in Europe on Nov. 29.

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20 Sep 18:56

Opinion: How to be a lousy video game parent

by Colin Campbell
firehose

invert the headline

"Parents who understand, but don't care that their small children play games involving murder, strippers, drug-use and torture are not likely to be producing ideal citizens. It's not necessarily the case that these games will wreak any lasting damage — they're just video games — only that extended over-exposure to careless parents is rarely an ideal start to life.

If parents don't care what games their kids play, what else is being waved through?"

What's the difference between a good video game parent and a bad one?

In the days and weeks ahead, untold millions of children will play Grand Theft Auto 5, a game that is explicitly designed for adults. If you do not believe that this is true, you don't know children.

Kids always find ways to experiment with adult behaviors, and always have. As a schoolboy in the 1980s I was fond of degenerate diversions such as smoking, gambling, drinking ... and that was just to pass time on the school bus.

As a former dissolute teenager, I am hardly in a position to castigate today's children for following the same behavior patterns. But now, as a father of four boys, I am in a position to question grown-ups, most especially myself, for shitty parenting.

When it comes to video games, it seems to me that there are three rules for parents. (If I claimed to always follow these rules, I'd be a liar, as you will see.)

1. Always know what they are playing

There are plenty of moms and dads who have no idea what games their children are playing. But special scorn should be heaped on those who know, but don't care.

Anyone who works at a games retail outlet has stories about those parents who come in to buy violent or sexually explicit games for their kids, and who are not swayed in the least by any advice that "this product is not really appropriate for children."

Gta5

Parents who understand, but don't care that their small children play games involving murder, strippers, drug-use and torture are not likely to be producing ideal citizens. It's not necessarily the case that these games will wreak any lasting damage — they're just video games — only that extended over-exposure to careless parents is rarely an ideal start to life.

If parents don't care what games their kids play, what else is being waved through?

Leaving aside my teenage son, who moves in orbits entirely alien to me and to society as a whole, I always know what games my kids are being exposed to.

That doesn't mean I always make the right choices.

Gazing fondly as my seven-year-old played 'war' in the school playground recently, I heard him yelling, at the top of his lungs, "Terrorists Win!" Perhaps I should have been more judicious in allowing such a small child to watch me and the teenager playing Counter Strike: Global Offensive.

Parents and kids are all individuals and it's mostly a question of common sense, of trial and error, but those ESRB ratings really are a good starting point. There's a good reason why the sticker says "For Adults."

2. Try to play with them

I know some amazing people who have spent their formative years playing video games with their parents.

Leaving aside those games that are morally dubious in their outlook, it doesn't seem to matter which games they played, everything from Uno and Kinect Sports to Final Fantasy and World of Warcraft.

Games are good at teaching kids about the value of striving towards a goal, of practicing to achieve perfection. They show how problem solving takes thought, patience and cooperation.

Jpeg

They are also full of trashy stuff, but that doesn't matter, because so is just about everything else, whether that be kids literature or pop music or your favorite sports team.

The game I enjoyed the most with my kids was Quantum Conundrum, in which we solved puzzles together. Now we play Minecraft; there are few games more harmonious and useful to family life.

Even if there is limited utility in video games, the mere act of doing something with your kids, anything, is better than doing nothing with them.

It probably doesn't matter if you venture out on nature hikes or throw a ball about or read a story or play a board game, the mere connection of parent-plus-kid is good.

3. Don't be a dick

That old Larkin line about parents is bang on. There's just no escaping the fact that every day I am doing something, probably the same thing, over and over again, to fuck up my kids.

Most of my parenting effort goes into hiding the truth from my children, that I am kind of an asshole. Video games are not often involved, but when they are, it's illustrative.

The kids come sauntering into my den, asking for my time and attention, just at the point when my Civilization 5 empire is going through a Medieval rampage of glorious expansion. Can't these brats see that they are interrupting a golden opportunity to seed the very globe with my benevolence?

An offer to name some settlements after their night-time snugglies can only keep the little barbarians at bay for so long. Sooner or later, reluctantly, I am going to have to abandon my own fun and attend to my pesky responsibilities as a parent.

Brave_new_world

Turns out, making a video game a higher priority than raising kids is a poor way to parent. This may seem like an obvious point, especially if you are not a parent, but saying and doing are two different things. Putting anything in front of your duties as a parent — work, booze, TV, sports, the need to just sit in a hotel room for a week or two — is non-optimal parenting.

No parent wants their kids to remember them, later in life, back turned, hunched over the dull glare of a screen. In celeb biographies of the future, MMOs will be the new 'my father came home late, often smelling of alcohol.'

It may be that video games can add to a rounded and positive child-parent relationship and, as the likes of Jane McGonigal remind us, that they contribute immensely to life and health and liberty.

But whether or not you have games in your family life is probably not as good an indicator of your value as a parent, than your capacity for being thoughtless, lazy or selfish.

20 Sep 18:56

mamebo: owlsarefreakingridiculous: Tawny owlets by Jeff...

firehose

"if my desk weren’t against a wall I would have flipped it violently from this cuteness"



mamebo:

owlsarefreakingridiculous:

Tawny owlets by Jeff Moore

if my desk weren’t against a wall I would have flipped it violently from this cuteness

20 Sep 18:54

The Internet Hates Me

by djempirical
firehose

a surprisingly deep read about how

1. Reddit is horrible, even when they realize it and try to correct it;

2. Being the subject of a meme is horrible;

3. Having an ex who writes about your being a meme on the Internet is horrible;

4. Some hipsters don't want attention, they're just earnestbros tired of the R2K of it all

oh hiI moved to New York City, and I needed to make money. I wasn’t having luck getting a job. It's a common tale.

My solution was to grab my typewriter that I bought at a yard sale for 10 dollars and bring it to a park. I’d write stories for people, on the spot—I wouldn’t set a price. People could pay me whatever they wanted. I knew that I had the gift of writing creatively, very quickly, and my anachronistic typewriter (and explanatory sign) would be enough to catch the eye of passersby. Someone might want something specific; they might just want a story straight from my imagination. I was prepared for either situation.

Original Source

20 Sep 18:53

Is HTML5 the Future of Book Authorship?

by samzenpus
firehose

considering epub is just HTML, it's also the present

occidental writes "Sanders Kleinfeld writes: In the past six years, the rise of the ebook has ushered in three successive revolutions that have roiled and reshaped the traditional publishing industry. Revolution #3 isn't really defined by a new piece of hardware, software product, or platform. Instead, it's really marked by a dramatic paradigm change among authors and publishers, who are shifting their toolsets away from legacy word processing and desktop publishing suites, and toward HTML5 and tools built on the Open Web Platform."

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20 Sep 17:31

TV: Fan Up: China, IL’s Brad Neely praises the “pine trees and blood” of his home state

by Erik Adams
firehose

Brad Neely autoshare; attn: Arkbros

The Internet features more than its share of negativity and snark—sometimes you’ve just gotta vent. But there’s plenty of room for love, too. With Fan Up, we ask pop-culture people we admire to tell us about something they really, really like.

The fan: As a cartoonist, animator, writer, and musician, Brad Neely’s output sits at the intersection of the profound and the profane—his most widely circulated work, the musical short “Cox & Combes’ Washington,” is a foul-mouthed rap cataloging the almost-historically accurate badassery of the United States’ first president. That spirit carries over to Neely’s Adult Swim series, China, IL—set among the students and faculty of “the worst college in America”—which begins its second season on September 22.

The fanned: Neely’s home state, Arkansas  

Brad Neely: I grew up in Arkansas, my wife grew up in Arkansas, both our sets of parents ...

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20 Sep 17:27

GoDaddy Purchased The Domain Name Market Today

firehose

"GoDaddy has acquired Afternic and SmartName from Name Media. Name Media is probably best known for the BuyDomains brand. They own one of the largest portfolios of domain names in the world at nearly 1 million domains."

GoDaddy just made a major move in the domain name market.
20 Sep 17:26

Recycling bins in the City of London tracked people’s movements for over two months

by Siraj Datoo

redacted docs

City of London staff knew for a week that recycling bins in the local authority were tracking the movements of passers-by, but didn’t put a stop to it until news reports prompted a public outcry.

London-based startup Media Metrica, which also goes by the name Renew, installed tracking devices in a dozen of its internet-connected bins, most of them along a busy street in the City of London. The devices, called Renew Orbs, recorded a unique ID on people’s smartphones in order to track them. Few were aware of the scheme.

Quartz was the first to report about the tracking in a story on August 8. The program was shut down a few days later. Now, our freedom of information request has turned up documents that shed new light on the chronology.

Renew began testing the devices on May 21, which means the tracking went on for two-and-a-half months before it was stopped. Renew CEO Kaveh Memari didn’t tell the City of London about it until a meeting on July 31.

“We were surprised,” a spokesperson for the City told Quartz. “At the meeting, they showed us some data from their website. At least one person on our team thought it was an experiment that was now closed. We asked them to send us an email about it, and we then sent it to our lawyers within one-to-two days to see if it was legal.”

Yet the City didn’t do anything about the program until after Quartz’s story was published. On Friday, August 9, Philip Everett, the authority’s director of environmental services, wrote to Memari:

As you will appreciate, there are potential issues for the City in being involved with data collection technology, albeit it has not been agreed or approved by the City and has only recently come to the City’s attention.

After the weekend, Everett emailed again demanding that Renew “cease all data collection.” He continued:

I have to say I think you approach to the publicity on this is naïve in the extreme. You have clearly initiated and publicised this your when it must have been clear that this would raise all sorts of public anxiety, justified or not, and before you had checked the full legal position or obtained the views of the Information Commissioner or the City. You have therefore put us in an embarrassing position, and potentially prejudiced our positive working relationship with the Information Commissioner.

In having these bins on the street you can only exercise the powers we can exercise, You are there by licence. You have acted in this case without it; the first we heard on this was on 31 July, and we still have not heard from your lawyers the advice they gave to you on its legality, (even for a trial), nor have we had any formal proposal from you so we could check it ourselves.

The tracking program remains shut down. Memari didn’t respond to a request for comment.


20 Sep 17:25

cheskamouse: thefingerfuckingfemalefury: Damn Vulcan...

firehose

"The Thug life, after much debate, logically chose Mr. Spock."



cheskamouse:

thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

Damn Vulcan mafia…

Mr.Spock did not choose to be a part of the Thug life,

The Thug life, after much debate, logically chose Mr.Spock.

And isn’t that a lovely fedora? (A true fedora. Not one of the little porkpie hats presently wishfully going by the same name.) …Also: nice suit. :)

20 Sep 17:15

Apple’s iOS 7 includes a surprise: a ticket to the next generation of the internet

by Christopher Mims
firehose

"That it showed up in Apple’s software and not Google’s shows that Apple’s technical chops are substantial"

The first _commercial_ implementation, based heavily on the Linux kernel MPTCP project, which has incidentally been available for Galaxy S2 and GNex since ICS. So Apple's technical chops re: MPTCP are about as good as some bedroom hackers on GitHub.

Further, the implementation is limited to servers Apple controls because they haven't figured out the latency issues that have been a problem with client-only MPTCP since 2011. Only Siri appears to use MPTCP on iOS 7, and only some of the time: http://perso.uclouvain.be/olivier.bonaventure/blog/html/2013/09/18/mptcp.html

People are going crazy for the new iPhone—and they don't even know about its most advanced feature, which Apple did not announce.

For five years, researchers have toiled over an obscure bit of fundamental internet infrastructure that promises to make the connections to our mobile devices faster and more reliable than ever, and if you’ve already downloaded Apple’s iOS 7 to your iPhone or iPad, you could be using it already.

It’s called multi-path TCP, and here’s why it matters and how it works: At present, if your phone or tablet is connected to Wi-Fi and a cellular network at the same time, it can only use one or the other connection to transmit data. But what if your Wi-Fi connection or your 3G connection drops? Whatever data was being transmitted—data for an app, a webpage, an iMessage—will fail to arrive, and you have to try again, usually after getting a frustrating error message or a blank page. Just as importantly, if one of your connections to the internet slows down, or speeds up, your phone has no ability to use its other connections to its advantage, leading to a poorer and slower experience overall.

Activate Siri to feel the power of the future

Multi-path TCP allows your phone to send data by whatever way it’s connected to the internet, whether that’s Wi-Fi, 3G or ethernet (say, if it were running on a laptop connected to the internet via a cable). And if you want to activate it, says one of the researchers who built multi-path TCP, you have only to use Apple’s voice command software, Siri.

This is the first time that this new means of connecting to the internet has appeared in a commercial product. That it showed up in Apple’s software and not Google’s shows that Apple’s technical chops are substantial, even when the company isn’t highlighting what it’s up to.

What this means for the internet as a whole

The ability to connect and maintain a continuous connection to the internet over multiple wired and wireless connections might sound like a nice-to-have feature rather than one that’s all that important, but there’s a reason researchers worked on this problem for five years before coming up with a standard that could be widely implemented: Multi-path TCP is the future. It’s arguably the first and most important change to the low-level architecture of the internet to reflect the fact that our connections to it are more mobile and wireless than ever.

In a September 2013 presentation (pdf) to the Australian Network Operations Group, computer scientist Mark Smith suggested that Multi-path TCP was the beginning of a larger change in how the internet is built, in which individual devices decide how they will communicate with one another, rather than simply relying on the protocols that have already been built into the computers that pass along all our traffic to and from the internet. Such a “dumb” network connected to “smart” hosts—the smart hosts being our phones, tablets and PCs—would allow for rapid experimentation and evolution of the fundamental language of the data devices are passing back and forth.

This will be especially important as the internet—and our airwaves—become ever more congested. Already, the protocol that handles most requests for web pages and data for apps, plain old TCP, is being crowded out on some networks by another, less well-behaved protocol designed to stream video and audio. In some ways, multi-path TCP is an effort to address this competition: If your phone sees that your Wi-Fi network is begin strained by that episode of Breaking Bad you’re streaming or pirating, it can switch to your 3G connection to maintain a reliable connection.

So far, the only way that Apple’s devices appear to be using this protocol is to communicate with Siri, which makes sense: Understanding speech is a difficult enough problem that Apple, like Google, probably sends recordings of our voice into the cloud, where powerful servers can parse our speech, rather than processing it on our relatively wimpy mobile devices. For an application like this, speed is of the essence, and having as many paths to get data to and from Apple’s servers is critical.


20 Sep 17:06

The hidden Bitcoin economy of Florida's 'homeless geeks'

by Adi Robertson
firehose

our dynamic internet learn 2 code economy

For most, a life on Bitcoin is a short experiment. For some of Pensacola, Florida's homeless, though, the currency has become a lifeline, making up the gap that low-paying or intermittent jobs and public assistance can't fill. Wired profiles the men and women who have developed an alternative virtual economy, raising charity money through Bitcoin and making small amounts of money through Mechanical Turk-like jobs that pay in Bitcoin rather than requiring a bank account. Though Bitcoin still isn't widely accepted, services like Gyft can turn the currency into gift cards for food or other necessities, and mobile phones and computers are affordable even for some people who can't make a monthly rent payment. Jesse Angle, who earns money by completing simple online tasks for Bitcoin, says the system is less risky and embarrassing than panhandling. He and his friends, he says, are "kind of the homeless geeks."

20 Sep 17:01

The line for new iPhones vs. the line for cronuts

by Ritchie King
firehose

god can these two lines please join up human-centipede style

apple-vs-cronut

In the SoHo neighborhood of New York City morning, two separate queues of people were waiting to get their hands on coveted items: new iPhones and cronuts.

The SoHo Apple store and Dominque Ansel Bakery, where cronuts are made, are within five blocks of each other. (Cronuts are a faddish—and oft-copied—hybrid of croissants and donuts.) Quartz estimated the distance of each line at 9 a.m. ET based on first-hand observations and photos posted on Twitter. Apple’s was roughly twice as long, which shouldn’t be too much of a surprise given today was the debut of two new iPhone models, the 5C and 5S.

Soho Apple store line goes up Greene to Houston and continues on Houston ugh http://t.co/GRtjR8gCg3
erin mccann (@mccanner) September 20, 2013

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