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10 Sep 21:06

The chart Tim Cook doesn’t want you to see

by David Yanofsky

At Apple’s iPhone presentation today, Tim Cook presented the following chart:

iphone-sales

At best the chart is misleading; at worst it’s disingenuous. The chart has no scale. It could be showing billions of iPhone sales or it could be showing hundreds of iPhone sales.

Furthermore, showing sales cumulatively tacitly overstates the number of iPhone users, since some iPhone purchases are replacing older or broken iPhones.  Many of the phones Apple is claiming as praiseworthy in this chart found the junkyard years ago.

Using data from Apple’s own quarterly reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, I made a better chart:

LB_7986_adjusted_bw

The overlay shows that, although Apple can boast more than 400 million iPhones sold for all time, its quarterly sales of the product have declined over the last three quarters.

Also worth noting is that the chart shown gives a preview of Apple’s sales ahead of its fourth-quarter earnings release on October 21. Judging by the change in slope on its chart, quarterly sales of iPhones continued to decline.

Read this next: Everyone was wrong about the price of the iPhone 5C, and it could hurt Apple in China

 


10 Sep 21:05

John Kerry Costs U.S. Defense Industry $400 Billion

WASHINGTON—Responding to initial reports that Syria may relinquish its stockpile of chemical weapons following Secretary of State John Kerry’s assertion that doing so would decrease the likelihood of American military strikes, representatives ...
    






10 Sep 20:58

Apple’s “cheap” iPhone 5C will cost over $700 in China

by Lily Kuo
iphone 5c china apple

Apple just announced its new iPhone 5C, a less expensive version of its original smartphone that could help it in emerging markets where shoppers are inclined to cheaper smartphones. As we’ve written, some analysts think Apple would have to drop its iPhone price tag to about $400 for it to really expand in that market, where it has just a 5% share of the smartphone sales by volume.

But according to Apple’s Chinese website, the iPhone 5C with 16 gigabytes of memory will start at 4,488 renminbi, or $733. That’s not that much cheaper than the price of the existing iPhone 5 in China of 5,288 renminbi, or $864.

Bloggers on Sina Weibo, China’s largest microblog network, have already seized on the price. One blogger called the new iPhone 5c “the so-called cheap phone.” One user posted, “Apple is too expensive. I’m finally saying bye bye!” Another, referring to a report of a teenager who sold his kidney to buy an iPhone last year, said, “My doctor told me that selling one of my kidneys still wouldn’t be enough to buy the iPhone 5c. What do I do now?!”


10 Sep 20:58

Wacom Introduces New Bamboo Pad Line

by Caleb Goellner

With the Cintiq and Intuos lines recently refreshed, Wacom seems to be shooting for tablet trifecta territory by giving its entry-level Bamboo line an overhaul. While Bamboo devices used to serve as pretty basic versions of Wacom’s other tablets, the new Bamboo Pad is a 4.21 x 2.63″ multitouch trackpad packed with a stylus supporting 512 levels of pressure sensitivity.

Now available in a silver wired ($49) version, plus a wireless ($79) model with four color options, the Bamboo Pad is compatible with Mac and PC. Mac users need to install drives to get it to work. Windows 7 and 8 users can plug and play without installing drivers and also get access to a free download of the Bamboo app.

Anybody hoping to do much drawing on this device will want to note that the stylus doesn’t come with an “eraser” nib and seems to pack just one potentially programmable button. It looks pretty similar to Wacom’s mobile device-centric Bamboo Feel, which is also compatible with the Bamboo Pad.

You can see the Bamboo Pad (and its stylus) in motion in Wacom’s official product video, below.

10 Sep 20:58

Gif based web comics, Stephen Vuillemin







Gif based web comics, Stephen Vuillemin

10 Sep 19:31

Apple Product Launch

by Dorothy
firehose

via Snorkmaiden

Comic

10 Sep 19:30

Breaking Bert

10 Sep 19:30

Photo



10 Sep 19:24

Gawker Normal 22-Year-Old Buys $250,000 Apartment | Kotaku Yikes!

by Lauren Bertolini on lauren ☄, shared by Annalee Newitz to io9
firehose

""For us"— for normal 20-somethings, average ones, the absolute median of all 22-year-olds, unexceptional in all ways—"that's what Manhattan housing is." It's a $2,100 per month apartment rental, at age 22. But:

After calculating my purchase price based on a monthly payment of $2,000, I realized a small purchase was feasible and a sound investment. With some $50,000 in the bank—a nest egg from my family augmented by savings that I’d stashed away by working in retail since the age of 14—I settled on a budget of approximately $250,000 and began searching listings and seeking real estate agencies and brokers.

(Spoiler: she found one.)

The word that best sums up this little tale: "Normal." A normal story of a normal 22-year-old, in this big city of ours, Manhattan, "where dreams are made of," as they say in the song. All of you 22-year-olds should be able to relate to this apartment-purchasing experience, lest you be considered abnormal."

10 Sep 19:14

Hi, this is Gary get out Somerville Robots tumblr. I closed my Google Voice account and stop...

firehose

does anyone want to copy and paste Google Voice transcriptions of City of Somerville voicemails into a tumblr?

if not that's cool too

Hi, this is Gary get out Somerville Robots tumblr. I closed my Google Voice account and stop receiving these beautiful mistakes. If you receive voice messages Somerville Google Voice account and would like to take this tumblr over, please let me know with a question.

10 Sep 19:13

What's the most awesomely gritty world in science fiction or fantasy?

by Charlie Jane Anders
firehose

25 votes for Detroit. Not RoboCop Detroit (though he inevitably shows up), just Detroit

What's the most awesomely gritty world in science fiction or fantasy?

Lots and lots of fantasy universes try to be "dark" or "gritty," or "realistic" — but only some of them actually feel like places where you could get into amazing trouble. Places where you can actually feel the grime on every surface. What's your favorite "gritty" world from either science fiction or fantasy?

Read more...


    






10 Sep 19:09

Janelle Monáe's Streaming New Album

by Courtney Ferguson

The cyborg known as Janelle Monáe is releasing her album The Electric Lady tomorrow, but you can listen to that crazy shit right now—it's streaming over here. Um guys, it's awesome. Go and get an earful. Her sophomore album is a gigantic, arching playground for Monáe's hyper-creative, epic songs/stories, which blast from R&B to dance to emotive ballads to hiphop (and is that Prince, I hear?!). She continues her ongoing dystopian soundscapes about a world where persecuted cyborgs and music revolutionaries are hunted, loved, and empowered through ass-shaking funk. Through the haze of her futuristic rock operas, I think one aspect of her big-idea music gets overlooked: She kills it. Monáe's a dance-powered freak machine with interstellar pipes, and even without buying into her carefully constructed world she's going to make you move that junk. But added bonus: If you take the plunge and dive into her constructs, she'll make your mind—not just your feet—go blammo. She may be a tiny pompadoured fireplug, but her albums are huge weird sci-fi monsters built to enslave measly human brains. Pitchfork has a great cover story right now about her Wondaland artsy commune with its dance parties, teepee think tanks, and legion of rug-cutting art kids, not to mention Monáe's ambitious origin story.

Janelle Monáe plays the Roseland on October 29. Hone those moves.

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10 Sep 19:08

It's Happening Tonight!

by Alison Hallett
firehose

"Dahl is quickly reduced to someone who does little more than stand around (sometimes topless!) while all the guys in the movie threaten to rape her. It's problematic any time a film has one female character and she's reduced to either a damsel or rape bait; compounding the shittiness here, though, is that... dammit, Dahl looks and sounds just like Starbuck. Starbuck! A character who was the opposite of this!

On its own, Riddick's treatment of Dahl (to say nothing of Riddick's treatment of Dahl) is problematic. (SPOILER! In the film's final scenes, Riddick miraculously cures Dahl of her lesbianism.) Within the larger, not-always-female-friendly genres that Riddick inhabits, though, it doesn't just feel problematic—it feels slack-jawed and regressive. And it's why Riddick, which starts out so well, leaves a grimy and sour aftertaste."

FILM—It wasn't screened in time for our deadline, but we're still going to recommend Riddick—Vin Diesel's return to the creepy-eyed antihero he played in 2000's great sci-fi thriller Pitch Black. After a disappointing sequel, Riddick aims to go back to basics—bringing Battlestar Galactica's Katee Sackhoff along for the ride. NOTE: THIS FILM ALSO FEATURES AT LEAST ONE SPACE PUPPY. EH
Various theaters, see our forthcoming review at portlandmercury.com and Movie Times

UPDATE: Don't go see Riddick.

MUSIC—With a catalog of reggae hits that's even bigger than you remember, the chance to see Jimmy Cliff is the chance to see a living legend in action. For this tour, he'll be telling the stories behind his historic songs, making this a can't-miss—especially considering Cliff still performs with more energy and soul than performers a third his age. NL
w/Ethan Tucker; Wonder Ballroom, 128 NE Russell, 8:30 pm, $39-40

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10 Sep 19:06

DC’s explanation of why Batwoman can’t get married is nonsense

by Rob Bricken
firehose

yadda yadda whatever
what irks me is DC saying that getting married means you can't do your fucking job

DC’s explanation of why Batwoman can’t get married is nonsense

By now, we all know about Batwomangate, in which DC forbade the marriage of Batwoman Kate Kane to her fiancée Maggie Sawyer — causing co-writers J.H. Williams III and W. Haden Blackman to quit the series. DC has been in recovery mode, and DC co-publisher Dan DiDio tried to explain the situation. Here’s why he was still completely wrong.

Read more...


    






10 Sep 19:06

Batman and Captain America Rescue Cat From Burning Home

firehose

"Buckland, a former firefighter who served with the Department of Defense in Iraq, runs a service called Heroes 4 Higher that sends costumed superheroes to parties and other events to “bring an age-appropriate, positive message of inspiration, safety and daring to dream.”

Buckland and Marcum were doing just that at an American Legion post when a fire broke out in a house nearby. Seeing the smoke, they dashed to the house to check whether there was anyone inside. Marcum (Captain America) broke the window, and as the smoke poured out, Buckland (Batman) said, “I reach down and grab something furry.” That was the cat; the homeowners turned out to be out of town, but their cat was overcome by smoke and had to be resuscitated by Buckland."

In a real-life superhero crossover, two men dressed as Batman and Captain America rescued a cat from a house fire in Milton, West Virginia, on Saturday. ROBOT 6 has more details.
10 Sep 19:03

Fuck You, Leaf Blowers

by Anonymous
firehose

"I garungoddamntee"

Every goddamn day I have off I have to listen to what seems like 2-5 hours of your fucking leaf blowing starting around 8 or so in the morning. I am talking to you, Volunteers of America. Why don't you find someone to volunteer to rake or sweep up these leave? I work nights and all I want on my mornings and days off is some peace and fucking quiet. If I ever find out whose decision it is to have gas powered lawn equipment going every waking moment, I garungoddamntee you that I will stand outside your house at two in the morning and for 3 hours blast the intensified sound of nails running down a chalkboard. I fucking hate you so much.

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10 Sep 19:03

Google Glass can now name the song you're listening to

by Nathan Olivarez-Giles
firehose

everything is always listening beat

Google rolled out its monthly Glass update today, adding four new features to the experimental hardware: sound search, photo vignettes, and some integration with both YouTube and Google Apps. Sound search is essentially a voice-controlled version of the song-identifying Google Play widget found on Android. If you're wearing Glass and hear a song you like, just long press on the touchpad then swipe forward to launch sound search. You can also long press on the touchpad and then say, "OK Glass, what song is this?" to activate the feature.


Vignettes on Glass allows you to superimpose a small image of the app you're currently using on top of photos you take, giving viewers insight into what you were doing at the Glass taps into Google Apps for the first time time the photo was taken. The update also adds YouTube videos to search results — and yes, if you want to, you can watch any of these YouTube clips on Glass' diminutive display.

Lastly, the September update allows Glass users to connect the device to Google Apps accounts — good for corporate users who don't want to tie the device to a personal email address. The Glass team warns that Google Apps compatibility is still in the early stages and won't be bug-free, but basic features like email should be working.

10 Sep 19:02

Roku Android app update lets you stream video from your phone to your set-top box

by Nathan Ingraham
firehose

"it's limited those who own the Samsung Galaxy S III, Galaxy S4, Nexus 4, HTC One, and last-year's Nexus 7"

Forgot password?

We'll send you an email with a link so that you can reset your password.

If you signed up using a third party service like Facebook, Google+, Twitter or Yahoo, make sure you are logging in that way.

Great!

Choose an available username to complete sign up.

In order to provide our users with a better overall experience, we ask for more information from Facebook when using it to login so that we can learn more about our audience and provide you with the best possible experience. We do not store specific user data and the sharing of it is not required to login with Facebook.

10 Sep 19:01

Falling With Helium

by xkcd
firehose

"I managed to lock up my copy of Mathematica several times on balloon-related differential equations, and subsequently got my IP address banned from Wolfram|Alpha for making too many requests. The ban-appeal form asked me to explain what task I was performing that necessitated so many queries."

Falling With Helium

What if I jumped out of an airplane with a couple of tanks of helium and one huge, un-inflated balloon? Then, while falling, I release the helium and fill the balloon. How long of a fall would I need in order for the balloon to slow me enough that I could land safely?

Colin Rowe

As ridiculous as it sounds, this is—sort of—possible.

Falling from great heights is dangerous.[citation needed] A balloon could actually help save you, although a regular helium one from a party obviously won't do the trick.

If the balloon is large enough, you don't even need the helium. A balloon will act as a parachute, slowing your fall to non-fatal speeds.

Avoiding a high-speed landing is, unsurprisingly, the key to survival. As one medical paper[1]De Haven H. Mechanical analysis of survival in falls from heights of fifty to one hundred and fifty feet. Injury Prevention. 6(1):62-b-68. put it,

It is, of course, obvious that speed, or height of fall, is not in itself injurious ... but a high rate of change of velocity, such as occurs after a 10 story fall onto concrete, is another matter.

... which is just a wordy version of the old saying, "It's not the fall that kills you, it's the sudden stop at the end."

To act as a parachute, a balloon filled with air, rather than helium, would have to be 10 to 20 meters across—far too big to be inflated with portable tanks. A powerful fan could be used to fill it with ambient air, but at that point, you may as well just use a parachute.

Helium

The helium makes things easier.

It doesn't take too many helium balloons to lift a person. In 1982, Larry Walters flew across Los Angeles in a lawn chair lifted by weather balloons, eventually reaching several miles in altitude. After passing through LAX airspace, he descended by shooting some of the balloons with a pellet gun.

On landing, Walters was arrested, although the authorities had some trouble figuring out what to charge him with. At the time, an FAA safety inspector told the New York Times, "We know he broke some part of the Federal Aviation Act, and as soon as we decide which part it is, some type of charge will be filed."[2]ARMCHAIR AIRMAN SAYS FLIGHT FULFILLED HIS LIFELONG DREAM, New York Times, July 4, 1982

A relatively small helium balloon—certainly smaller than a parachute—will suffice slow your fall, but it still has to be huge by party balloon standards. The biggest consumer rental helium tanks are about 250 cubic feet, and you'd need to empty at least 10 of them to put enough air in the balloon to support your weight.

You'd have to do it quickly. The compressed helium cylinders are smooth and often quite heavy, which means they have a high terminal velocity. You'll only have a few minutes to use up all the cylinders. (As soon as you emptied one, you could drop it.)

You can't get around this problem by moving your starting point higher. Since the upper atmosphere is pretty thin, anything dropped from the stratosphere up will accelerate to very high speeds until it hits the lower atmosphere, then fall slowly the rest of the way. This is true of everything from small meteors[3]By the time meteors hit the Earth, they have slowed down to a few hundred miles per hour. to Felix Baumgartner.[4]Jason Martinez, Falling Faster than the Speed of Sound, Wolfram Blog, October 24, 2012

But if you inflated the balloons quickly, possibly by connecting many canisters to it at once, you'd be able to slow your fall. Just don't use too much helium, or you'll end up floating at 16,000 feet like Larry Walters.

While researching this article,[5]Additionally, while researching impact speeds for this article, I came across a discussion on the Straight Dope Message Boards about survivable fall heights. One poster compared a fall from height to being hit by a bus. Another user, a medical examiner, replied that this was a bad comparison:

"When hit by a car, the vast majority of people are not run over; they are run under. The lower legs break, sending them into the air. They usually strike the hood of the car, often with the back of the head impacting the windshield, "starring" the windshield, possibly leaving a few hairs in the glass. They then go over the top of the car. They are still alive, although with broken legs, and maybe with head pain from the nonfatal windshield impact. They die when they hit the ground. They die from head injury."

The lesson: Don't mess with medical examiners. They're apparently pretty hardcore. I managed to lock up my copy of Mathematica several times on balloon-related differential equations, and subsequently got my IP address banned from Wolfram|Alpha for making too many requests. The ban-appeal form asked me to explain what task I was performing that necessitated so many queries, so this is what I put:

I hope they understand.

10 Sep 18:59

BBC finally reveals some actual Doctor Who 50th anniversary details

by Rob Bricken
firehose

'And now back to that "protest". It seems that former Doctors Peter Davidson, Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy were spotted outside BBC headquarters, carrying signs that read “No Classics? No 50th!” and “Have a heart, Classic Doctors want a part!” ... the question is whether this is just a silly publicity stunt, almost assuredly orchestrated by showrunner Steven Moffat, or if they were filming some kind of funny short for TV broadcast or as a DVD extra.

I will say this, though: If Moffat and the BBC can get three classic Doctors together for a short, why was it so prohibitively difficult for them to make an appearance in the 50th anniversary special? Hmm...'

BBC finally reveals some actual Doctor Who 50th anniversary details

Finally, the BBC has released some details about their Doctor Who 50th anniversary celebrations, the biggest news of which is that the 50th Anniversary Special will be 75 minutes (hey, longer than an hour!) and subtitled The Day of the Doctor. Meanwhile, why are those three old Doctors protesting outside the BBC?

Read more...


    






10 Sep 18:57

Liveblogging The iPhone 5S Event From My Busted iPhone 4S

firehose

"Jenna Wortham, who writes about technology for a website called the New York Times, told me she wants the gold iPhone. I'm blocking her on twitter"

"there are like a million colors of this new $30 case but they all look like a 1950s children's toy version of a rotary phone"

2:02 iPhone corrected fingerprint to fongerprit? Ok greetings from the Netherlands I guess
2:05 oh apple says they encrypt the fingerprints. Cool because its not like it was just revealed last week that the NSA has been working for decades to break just that kind of encryption oh wait
2:06 just, like, use gloves with your iPhone

"iPhone 5S will cost $200 for 16gb and $300 for 32gb. The iPhone 4S is now free. Fyi the iPhone 4S has a tendency to shatter and is limited as a liveblogging tool."

12:18: the cracks on the back of the phone are shedding small shards of glass into my palm.
10 Sep 18:56

More women are going into math and science but bypassing tech careers

by Commentary
firehose

and going into social and physical sciences

'Women also lack of female role models (or even a sponsor) and find few opportunities in their local economies, an Elance survey found.

“Young women look at computer science and feel like they don’t belong” or that the career won’t suit them, said Telle Whitney, president of the Anita Borg Institute, which seeks to increase women’s impact on technology. Though she sees a positive shift at universities and major employers that want to welcome more women, a lot of “unconscious biases in the workplace” cause many young women to depart after just a short time.'

Screen Shot 2013-09-10 at 10.39.44 AM

Despite some visible female CEOs at IBM, Hewlett Packard and Yahoo,  women are turning off computer careers even as more of them sign onto other science or technical jobs.

Women have seen an overall increase in their share of many science and engineering jobs, but their proportion of computer jobs has dropped since 1990, a new Census report shows.

Women represent almost half of all US workers, and now hold 47% of mathematical jobs and 61% of social science jobs such as psychologist and economist, but there are “significant underrepresentation” elsewhere: 27% of computer professionals and 13% of engineers. The computer field is important because it has grown to represent  almost half of all STEM occupations.

Women are especially underrepresented as computer network architects (11.1% of all those jobs) and as systems administrators (19.1%). They’re scarcer still in engineering fields, mechanical (6.3%) and geological (6.7%)

“It’s pretty pathetic,” said Dede Haskins, former president of Women in Technology, a Washington, D.C. group. “It’s such a dramatic problem” that large amounts of money and programs are “being thrown at it” to encourage girls and young women to consider computer and engineering jobs.

Though this data covers the US, the decline in women in tech field is affecting many countries, with India having the lowest participation rates of women in science and technology.

“Even in countries where the numbers of women studying science and technology have increased, it has not translated into more women in the workplace,” find researchers at the Women in Global Science & Technology (pdf). 

Why are women skipping software development jobs?

The answers are complex. ”Female parity in the science, technology and innovation fields is tied to multiple empowerment factors, with the most influential being higher economic status, larger roles in government and politics, access to economic, productive and technological resources, and a supportive policy environment,” the Women in Global Science & Technology report said.  Equal pay and child care support also help.

Women also lack of female role models (or even a sponsor) and find few opportunities in their local economies, an Elance survey found.

“Young women look at computer science and feel like they don’t belong” or that the career won’t suit them, said Telle Whitney, president of the Anita Borg Institute, which seeks to increase women’s impact on technology. Though she sees a positive shift at universities and major employers that want to welcome more women,  a lot of “unconscious biases in the workplace” cause many young women to depart after just a short time.

You can follow Vickie on Twitter at @WorkingKind. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com


10 Sep 18:52

Tonight in Music: Hornet Leg, Barra Brown, Andrew WK & More

by Ned Lannamann
firehose

Andrew WK beat


HURRY UP, HORNET LEG, BLESST CHEST
(East End, 203 SE Grand) I've said it before, but Hornet Leg is one of the best and prickliest pop bands in Portland, whether they're tripping through the garage, making arty noise, or working with sleek dance grooves. On the band's latest long-player, Wrecking Ball, Chris Sutton (also of Dub Narcotic Sound System) leads us through another dark pop journey filled with loads of hooky twists and turns. One listen, and I'm ready to call it my favorite of 2013 (hear the proof in "Summer's Eve" and "Slave Ship"). Hornet Leg remains a sort of enigma, creeping out for select performances, which always add an extra layer of grit and stench to Sutton's fantastic pop songs. Creepy, sexy, cool. MARK LORE


BARRA BROWN, VIKESH KAPOOR
(Secret Society, 116 NE Russell) There are seemingly infinite amounts of up-and-coming musicians in Portland, but it's very rare to find a universally talented musician with such promise. Barra Brown and his quintet stand more of a chance for longevity than the average indie rocker or electronic artist that we're seeing pop up with increasing frequency. It's also highly unusual to find new jazz artists, let alone ones producing a truly unique sound. Brown has a contemporary flair, with finely tuned improvised jazz skills, and a tight set that will surely captivate a growing audience. "Songs for a Young Heart" includes Cake-style rocking trumpet parts, with diverse tempos and tight instrumentation. There aren't many drummers/composers/flautists flooding the music scene right now, and this one you certainly shouldn't miss. ROSE FINN


ANDREW W.K., SONS OF HUNS, BLACK SNAKE
(Hawthorne Theatre, 1507 SE César E. Chávez) Party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party party.


HERE COME DOTS, BOOKS ON FATE, QUIET COUNTRIES
(Alhambra Theatre, 4811 SE Hawthorne) Earlier this year, Here Come Dots released A House in the Country, the full-length follow-up to their 2011 EP Dusk. And House is aces, an overlooked but worthy rock record with smart songwriting and involving production. Opening track "It's a Curse" barrels out of the gate with stratospheric guitar chimes and a tornado-like melody. Meanwhile, "The Plans" steadily builds up a massive sound with a few simple ingredients. Here Comes Dots all came from Southern Oregon, although I don't know if that's the reason their sound has a broader scope than typical Portland guitar-based bands. Still, they fit right in with other great Pacific Northwest rock bands, a region that's downright lousy with them. Make no mistake, though; Here Comes Dots is one worth getting acquainted with. NED LANNAMANN


SOUVENIR DRIVER, PSYCHOMAGIC
(Bunk Bar, 1028 SE Water) Souvenir Driver's 2012 release, Lifts the Curse, was the first album recorded by the now four-piece band that evolved out of frontman Nate Wey's solo project of the same name. Over the course of 10 tracks, far-off vocals get drenched, but never lost, in a dreamy haze. The band allows their audience to drift along with amazing ease. It's the kind of music that feels so familiar on the first listen that you could spend hours trying to pin down what is so haunting about tracks like "Futures" or "More." I've given up on trying to connect the dots. Clear and emotive lyrics cascade and resonate with repetition, as they draw the listener into a self-contained comfort zone on each track. "Feel the Flood," a new song off the band's upcoming album, Living Water, takes a similar approach, and adds a thick layer of driving synth to the mix. CHIPP TERWILLIGER

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10 Sep 18:50

Business Insider’s Sexist CTO Has Resigned, But He’s Still Everything That’s Wrong With Tech | Betabeat | The Lowdown on High Tech

by djempirical
firehose

#startupculture

Brogrammer incarnate (Photo: Twitter)

Brogrammer ad (Photo: Twitter)

No week is really a great week to be a woman in tech, but this week has been especially terrible–and ladies, it’s only Tuesday.

Hot on the heels of Techcrunch’s Titstare embarrassment, the CTO of one of tech media’s most prolific publications revealed himself to be a hateful bigot fond of tweeting the n-word alongside boring, overplayed missives about “feminazis.”

Until this morning, Pax Dickinson was the CTO of Business Insider, and even though he’s been spewing bile 140 characters at a time for quite a while, it took a Twitter shitstorm to force his resignation.

It was this tweet, sent at a moment when the tech community’s penchant for sexist drivel is already being rightfully thrust under the microscope, that finally pushed him into the spotlight:

From there, a quick stroll through Mr. Dickinson’s tweet history reveals a hateful, ignorant creep who–in case you’d forgotten–was until this morning the technical leader of a massive technology publication. This isn’t some no-name IT consultant echoing sentiments scraped from r/mensrights. This is an executive-level leader at a well-known, venture-backed publication who has become so comfortable and secure in his white dudeness that he fears no retribution whatsoever in tweeting stuff like this:

Like most people championing unpopular opinions, Mr. Dickinson and his handful of conservative defenders appear to believe that tweeting sentiments such as “poors shouldn’t procreate” make them somehow brave or praiseworthy, as if they’re simply broadcasting a fundamental truth the rest of us are too P.C. or chicken to come out and say ourselves. With his finger permanently hovering above the block button, Mr. Dickinson exists in a meticulously maintained bubble where anybody who attempts to argue reasonably against his opinions is immediately silenced, allowing him to continue thriving in a world in which privileged brogrammers can tweet a loaded racial epithet free of consequence.

Mr. Dickinson is the most recent and potent example of sexism (and racism, and classism) in tech, but he’s certainly not the only one. Such a rancorous person doesn’t scale the corporate ladder–tweeting all the while!– without some sort of systemic acceptance (or at least tolerance) of his attitudes.

But Mr. Dickinson doesn’t exist in a vacuum: until this morning, he had employees and coworkers and bosses, and yet somehow he’s been allowed to spew hatred at every opportunity with only a meaningless Twitter bio qualifier protecting him: “Unprofessional opinions not endorsed by anyone respectable.” This is a man who had hiring power at a major tech publication yet felt comfortable tweeting about his distaste for women and minorities, whose behavior has been implicitly condoned by the organization he represents. And we wonder why women and minorities are so underrepresented in tech?

“You’re allowed to be racist and sexist until the Internet embarrasses us about it” isn’t an appropriate answer to charges of institutional sexism. It just sends the message: “be sexist–but don’t get caught!” which in some ways is even worse.

Mr. Dickinson has earned our ire, but it’s not enough to come down hard on him. Tweeting something snarky might make us feel all warm inside, and it’ll probably elicit knowing snickers. But will calling out one person–or even getting one person fired–really have a lasting effect on the system that’s allowed Mr. Dickinson to feel perfectly comfortable dropping the N-word on a public platform? To feel okay dismissing wholesale the experiences of women in an industry he shares?

It’s a start, for sure. But until we take a sledgehammer to the structures that shelter dudebros like Mr. Dickinson, I’ll keep getting called bitchy and unqualified and adorable on Twitter and Hacker News and probably even in the comments of this post.

Original Source

10 Sep 18:49

This is the gold iPhone 5S

by Dante D'Orazio
firehose

you can get a leather case for it, too

Love it or hate it, the gold iPhone is real. You may be one of the naysayers who calls it tacky, but admit it, you know deep inside that you adore it. What do you need to know about the new model other than the glamor shots below? Well, Apple says it'll be available alongside the black and white models, and it's officially called gold, not champagne, if you were wondering. And a fun fact before you check out those photos: the last time Apple made a broadly-available device in gold was with the original iPod Mini nearly a decade ago. Gold's back!

Developing. Check out our iPhone Live Blog for the latest updates — and join us after for The Verge Live!

10 Sep 18:42

Apple demos Nike+ Move alongside new M7 processor for enhanced fitness apps

by Ellis Hamburger
firehose

attn: saucie

At its keynote today, Apple announced the M7 "motion coprocessor," a key feature in the iPhone 5S, which measures the accelerometer, compass, and gyroscope continuously. The processor identifies user movement and can tell apps if you're stationary, walking, or driving based on what Phil Schiller calls "contextual awareness." Schiller briefly demoed the functionality with a new app from Nike called Nike+ Move.

Apple frequently shows off its favorite apps that take advantage of new hardware or software features in its upcoming devices. Last year, Apple demoed Real Racing 3's performance on its new A6 processor.


Nike_move

Developing. Check out our iPhone Live Blog for the latest updates — and join us after for The Verge Live!

10 Sep 18:41

Linguistic Lessons from Conlangs

firehose

conlangs beat

allthingslinguistic:

An interesting article by Christine Schreyer (who you might recognize from Kryptonian) on using conlangs to teach linguistic anthropology. Abstract: 

In my Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology class, my students are assigned the task of creating a new language over the course of the term. As the students learn new aspects of linguistic analysis they develop those pieces of their languages, including: phonology, morphology and syntax, proxemics and non-verbal communication, and language change. In this paper, my students and I argue that created languages help anthropology students realize how closely connected language and culture are, since students have usually found it hard to create any piece of their language without first imagining who the people are and what their culture is like (in other words - world building). Finally, we argue that creating languages allow students to more fully understand the concept of “cultural relativity” or the idea that each culture is unique and that we should not judge a culture based on how it compares to our own way of looking at the world.

There’s also an article by Schreyer on how people using media and technology to revitalize endangered languages can learn from other people’s efforts to learn conlangs like Klingon and Na’vi. It’s behind a paywall, but here’s an excerpt: 

Na’vi also has numerous YouTube postings that are dedicated to helping others learn the language. Some of them are of Paul Frommer, who is seen describing the language.31 Interestingly, in the comments to one of these videos, one person reflected ‘this is great but I just wish we had the same enthusiasm for real endangered languages’. Other Na’vi speakers who wish to share what they have learnt about Na’vi with future learners have also posted YouTube videos such as the video ‘Na’vi Lesson 1: Vowels and Ejectives’. Like Klingon, Na’vi also has an iPhone application, as well as a Global Positioning System translation system, and these are just some of the ways that Na’vi speakers can improve their Na’vi language skills through information technology. […]

One way that endangered language communities can emulate the language planning of created language communities is by incorporating ‘the cool factor’ into their own curriculum and documentation efforts. For instance, the innovation does not have to be connected to technology, but could instead be a new or different way of learning the language. The Haa shagóon ítx yaa ntoo.aat, Tlingit language board game, that I developed with Taku River Tlingit First Nation community members is one such instance of using novel ideas to help encourage language use. The game is a fun and interactive way to learn Tlingit and also models real-life activities since community members continue to fish, hunt, and gather berries and medicines even today (Schreyer & Gordon, 2007). Also, while only a few copies of the game have been printed due to limited funding (Schreyer, 2011a), the copies that are in the community have been professionally printed adding to its ‘cool factor’ since the game resembles other board games, such as monopoly or risk, that individuals might be familiar with.

More educational material relating to conlangs can be found at The Conlanger’s Library and from DS Bigham (see especially these slides describing a course on invented languages). 

10 Sep 18:41

Adobe Schedules October Feature Updates to Creative Cloud

by Bryant Frazer
firehose

"Premiere Pro has native support for new UltraHD, 4K, and raw formats — as well as Red Dragon 6K footage — and multicam and closed-captioning tools have been improved." And AE gets cloud-facilitated collaboration. Without the move to CC, this probably would've been Premiere Pro/AE CS6.5.

Adobe announced a slew of forthcoming updates to its Creative Cloud video tools, including a new color pipeline linking Premiere Pro and SpeedGrade, expanded native format support for 4K and higher resolutions, and performance and workflow enhancements in Premiere. The … more »
10 Sep 18:39

Apple Announces the iPhone 5c, A Lower-Cost Plastic iPhone Available in Various Bright Colors

by Kimber Streams
firehose

Zune cases beat

iPhone 5C

At today’s event in Cupertino, California, Apple has announced the new iPhone 5c, a lower-cost iPhone with a hard-coated polycarbonate (plastic) body available in a variety of bright colors like green, blue, pink, yellow, and white. The 5c uses the same 4-inch Retina display, A6 processor, and 8-megapixel rear camera found in the iPhone 5, but has a slightly larger battery than its predecessor and will feature a new FaceTime HD front camera with better low-light performance and improved audio. Apple says the iPhone 5c supports “more LTE bands that any other smartphone in the world” and has Dual-band Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0.

The iPhone 5c will be available for pre-order on Friday, September 13th, and will launch in the US, Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan, Singapore, and the UK on September 20th. The 16GB model will cost $99 and the 32GB version will retail for $199 with a two-year contract. Apple has also created a set of environmentally friendly custom cases for the iPhone 5c made of soft-feel silicon rubber, which will retail for $29 apiece.

Today Apple also announced the iPhone 5s, a new iPhone with a built-in fingerprint sensor for unlocking the phone and authenticating iTunes purchases.

For more coverage on the iPhone 5c, head over to The Verge.

iPhone 5C

iPhone 5C

images via Apple

10 Sep 18:36

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