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15 Jul 18:35

Music: Newswire: Take Back The Night organization not super stoked about Justin Timberlake's new single

by Marah Eakin

Unsurprisingly, Justin Timberlake’s decision to name his new single “Take Back The Night” isn’t exactly sitting well with the sexual assault awareness organization of the same name. The group’s lawyers have sent Timberlake a letter about both the name-aping and the content of the song, which TBTN Executive Director Katherine Koestner says is “definitely very sexual and not at all clearly anti-sexual violence.” As Koestner told Radar, phrases in the song like “Use me” don't really work “for anyone affiliated with the organization.” The group also notes that the popularity of the song has already usurped its prominence on sites like Wikipedia.

To Timberlake’s credit, his representatives have already responded to Take Back The Night, saying the singer (who never went to college) had never heard of the organization or its rallying cry before he wrote the song. Koestner said that she hopes this misunderstanding ...

Read more
15 Jul 18:31

Michelle Obama Finally Gets Around To Reading ‘Dreams From My Father’

WASHINGTON—Saying that she had put it off for a long time and that now was as good a time as any, Michelle Obama told sources Monday she had finally gotten around to reading her husband’s 1995 memoir Dreams From My Father.
15 Jul 18:25

A Guide to Popular TV Shows* in 2013

by Haley Crain
Courtney shared this story from The ToastThe Toast:
I feel like that basically sums up Revenge, tho

*that I don’t watch.1-gameofthrones

2-walkingdead

3-newgirl

4-onewordtitles

5-doctorwho

 

The post A Guide to Popular TV Shows* in 2013 appeared first on The Toast.

15 Jul 17:38

Photo



15 Jul 17:36

The Next Three Trials of George Zimmerman

by gguillotte
firehose

never go to Florida
also, NBC News will probably settle out of court with Zimmerman for editing the 911 tapes

The end result of Zimmerman killing Martin will probably be Zimmerman _getting paid by NBC_ and Martin's family _losing money taking Zimmerman to court_.

“One of the things that ‘Stand Your Ground’ does, is it says that if you prove by a preponderance of the evidence, which is 51%, that you acted lawfully under ‘Stand Your Ground’ you can’t be prosecuted criminally sued civilly, and he’s just gotten a not guilty verdict,” [University of Miami criminal law professor Tamara Rice Lave] said. “And so it’s pretty clear he’s going to win that (civil case).”
15 Jul 17:29

Is Fox making another Predator movie?

by Meredith Woerner

Is Fox making another Predator movie?

Is Fox teasing a surprise Predator announcement at this year's San Diego Comic-Con? This teaser poster certainly wants to you think that.

Read more...

    


15 Jul 17:28

Ubisoft won't make new games unless they can build up a franchise

by Alexa Ray Corriea
firehose

no new ideas

Operating on the idea that the market currently runs in a "blockbuster world," Ubisoft will not develop a game unless they feel they can build a franchise on it, according to a recent interview with senior vice president of sales and marketing Tony Key on A List Daily.

Key said that last fall's Assassin's Creed 3 included the largest marketing campaign the company has ever launched, but that it "doesn't feel so big any more." The company now sets the game's campaign as a precedent, and will apply the "blockbuster" approach to upcoming titles Assassin's Creed 4 and Watch Dogs.

When asked, Key said that the company views Watch Dogs as the foundation of a larger franchise, something the company keeps in mind when deliberating game ideas.

"That's what all our games are about; we won't even start if we don't think we can build a franchise out of it," he said. "There's no more fire and forget — it's too expensive.

"We feel like we're in a really good place with Watch Dogs, but until we're the biggest game of the year we're not going to be satisfied," he added. "Last year we cleaned up at E3 because we were pretty much the only next-gen game around. Watch Dogs for us is really a franchise because we're tapping into something people really care about, never more than when the NSA PRISM scandal broke."

Key added that Ubisoft "absolutely" changes its marketing technique when a current event relates to their game. The ongoing situation regarding the Prism surveillance program is similar to Watch Dogs' strong emphasis on information sharing and intelligence gathering — something Ubisoft has taken advantage of.

"At one point in Watch Dogs, Aidan taps into the surveillance system of an apartment building and he's looking at what everyone is doing," he said. "We had a screen shot of this guy sitting in his apartment with a department store female mannequin sitting with him and he's talking to it. When the PRISM story broke on Wednesday, we had that screen shot out on Friday on social media and said, 'You never know who's watching.' We were able to react very quickly, and that's what social media brings."

15 Jul 17:27

Linux 3.11 Officially Named "Linux For Workgroups"

by samzenpus
An anonymous reader writes "Linus Torvalds decided to change the code name for Linux 3.11 and even submitted an alternate Tux Logo. Heise reports: 'For this release, Linus Torvalds changed the code name from "Unicycling Gorilla" to "Linux for Workgroups" and modified the logo that some systems display when booting: it now depicts a Tux holding a flag with a symbol that is reminiscent of the logo of Windows for Workgroups 3.11, which was released in 1993.'"

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15 Jul 17:25

Oldest Lunar Calendar Found In Scotland

by samzenpus
firehose

meanwhile, in Aberdeen(shire)

First time accepted submitter eionmac writes "The BBC reports that Archaeologists believe they have discovered the world's oldest lunar 'calendar' in an Aberdeenshire field. Excavations of a field at Crathes Castle found a series of 12 pits which appear to mimic the phases of the moon and track lunar months. A team led by the University of Birmingham suggests the ancient monument was created by hunter-gatherers about 10,000 years ago. The pit alignment, at Warren Field, was first excavated in 2004. The experts who analyzed the pits said they may have contained a wooden post. The Mesolithic calendar is thousands of years older than previous known formal time-measuring monuments created in Mesopotamia. The analysis has been published in the journal, Internet Archaeology"

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15 Jul 17:18

USB 3.0 continues to steal Thunderbolt’s thunder

by Andrew Cunningham
firehose

great

PCs that use Thunderbolt are rare, and they're getting rarer.
Chris Foresman

For Thunderbolt fans hoping that the high-speed interface will catch on, we've got more bad news: an Acer representative talking to CNET has said that the company has no plans to support Thunderbolt in its PCs this year. Acer's Aspire S5 Ultrabook was one of the few Windows laptops to include Thunderbolt support when it was introduced in early 2012.

"We're really focusing on USB 3.0—it's an excellent alternative to Thunderbolt," said the Acer spokesperson. "It's less expensive, offers comparable bandwidth, charging for devices such as mobile phones, and has a large installed base of accessories and peripherals."

By itself, the news of one company distancing itself from Thunderbolt might not be a big deal, but this is just another example of the trouble that Thunderbolt faces two-and-a-half years after its public introduction in the 2011 MacBook Pro. A Newegg search reveals a handful of high-end desktop motherboards that support it (five boards, all above $150), but the complete list of non-Apple prebuilt systems that have ever supported the interface is pretty short.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    


15 Jul 17:16

11-inch MacBook Air review: living with Apple's smallest laptop

by David Pierce
firehose

tl;dr:
- "without a touchscreen, without the eminently adaptable Windows live tiles, the 11-inch Air just feels like a laptop made slightly too small."
- no point to the 11" Air when the 13" is better in every respect and costs $100 more

Note: be sure and read our 13-inch MacBook Air review for lots more on Apple's latest laptops.

When my parents bought me my first laptop, I fought tooth and nail to spend the extra money and get a bigger model. The 15-inch Dell Inspiron E1505 I cajoled them into purchasing was backpack-fillingly large and back-breakingly heavy, but man did it have screen space.

Eventually, my computing needs changed. My laptop stopped being my TV, my game console, my desk, and my serving tray for late-night Bagel Bites. I needed a computer that was powerful but not quite so huge. So I bought a 13-inch MacBook Pro, which served me well until I dropped it one too many times and downloaded one too many torrents, at which point it clutched its chest and collapsed in my living room. This time I bought a 13-inch MacBook Air.

Now, two-plus years of liveblogs and cross-country flights later, it’s falling apart — one of the USB ports only works half the time, audio output is horribly inconsistent, and it’s always a desperate sprint to make it through a meeting before my battery croaks. It’s time for a new machine.

15 Jul 17:09

This Is A Real Startup Job Opening: Holistic 'Heart Baker'

firehose

lol the summary

Look, I'm not saying that startup culture is generally one of spoiled manchildren and poorly prioritized money, but shelter-finding service Airbnb is looking for a full-time baker.
15 Jul 17:06

Bill Nye throwing the first pitch at Saturday's Mariners/Angels game

by Robert T. Gonzalez
firehose

bow tie beat; meanwhile, in Seattle

Bill Nye throwing the first pitch at Saturday's Mariners/Angels game

In a bow tie, of course.

Read more...

    


15 Jul 17:05

CCI EXCLUSIVE: Liu Joins Simone's "Legends of Red Sonja" Superstar Roster

firehose

Not worth clicking through, it's PR. Just updating the ridic roster:
'The group, assembled by current "Red Sonja" writer Gail Simone, includes such talents as Devin Grayson, Rhianna Pratchett, Leah Moore, Tamora Pierce, Nancy Collins, Meljean Brooks, Kelly Sue DeConnick, Mercedes Lackey and Marjorie Liu.'

Gail Simone has assembled an all-star, all-female lineup of writing talent for Dynamite's "Legends of Red Sonja," a miniseries celebrating the character's 40th anniversary. Marjorie Liu discussed her involvement with CBR.
15 Jul 17:02

REAL TIME FULL SCAN HACKING

by Christopher Noessel

GitS-cybrain-06

GitS-cybrain-10 GitS-cybrain-09 GitS-cybrain-08

When Section 9 monitors a cyborg’s brain for real-time evidence of hacking, we see a monitoring scan. It shows a screen-green wireframe brain floating at an oblique angle in a black space. A 2D rectangle repeatedly builds it with a “wipe” from front to back, which leaves a dim 3D trail in its passing that describes the brain shape. Fans of the National Library of Medicine’s The Visible Human Project may see similarities, though the project’s visualizations would not be available until a year after the film’s release.

GitS-cybrain-05 GitS-cybrain-06

In the upper left is a legend reading, “REAL TIME FULL SCAN HACKING” with some numbers, with another unintelligible legend in the lower right. The values in the upper left never change, and the values in the lower legend change too rapidly to read them. After a beat, a text overlay appears on the right hand side of the screen with vaguely-medical terms listed in all capital letters, flying by too quickly to read*. There is an additional device seen in the corner of the frame, with progress-bar-like displays with thick green lines that wobble left and right. Two waveforms hang above this, their labels off screen. Yellow “fireworks” appear near the “temples” of the brain, indicating the parts under attack.

A question of usefulness

If data doesn’t change or changes too fast to read, it is worth asking if the data should be shown at all. If it’s moving too fast, other representations might work better, like a progress bar, a map, or sparkline. Of course, we know that many programmers may use this kind of output during the run of a program so that if the program stops, the last few activities may be immediately known, so this may be more code than interface.

*Vaguely-medical terms

If you’re the sort of nerd who obsesses over details, following is the text that flashes on the right hand side of the display. There’s nothing in it that is really helpful or informative to a review. It’s mostly internal organs or parts of the brain augmented with “CHECKS” and “CONNECTS”. There’s one exception, about halfway through the 5-second sequence, where it reads “M.YGODDESS CHECK.” Diegetically, it could be a programmers slang for a body part. More likely it’s a reference to Oh! My Goddess!, a manga by Kosuke Fujishima that’s been in print since 1988.

GitS-cybrain-07

ACCESS
CHECK CONNECT
MOTOR FIBERS CHECK
CONNECT POINT NCL
NCL. AMBIGUOUS
SEARCH AN ARTFICIAL B
NCL. AMBIGUOUS CHECK
AN ARTIFICIAL BODY’S PO
GANGLION SUPERIUS CHECK
NO REJECTION
FORAMEN JUGULARE PAG
GANGLION INFERIUS
GANGLION INFERIUS
PROPER VOLTAGE
RAMIPHARMNGEI CAL.L.D
N. LARYNGEUS SUPERIOR
RAMIPHARYNGI CHECK
PLEXUS PHARYNGEUS CHECK
PLEXUS PHARYNGEUS CHECK
NEXT
M.LEVATOR VELI PALAT
MM.CONSTRICTORES PHA
CALLING…
M.LEVATOR VELI PALAT
MM.CONSTRICTORES PHA
CONNECT
N.LARYNGEUS SUPERIOR
N.LARYNGEUS RECURRE
RAMUS EXTERNUS CHECK
NEXT
M.CIRCOTHYROIDEUS
RAMIESOPHAGEI CALLIN
N.LARYNGEUS RECURRED
NO REJECTION
CHECK FEEDBACK TO
NCL. AMBIGUUS
RAMITRACHEALES CHEC
FEEDBACK TO NCL. AMBI
RAMIESOPHAGEI CHECK
NEXT
N.LARYNGEUS INFERIOR
CONNECT N.VAGUS MOTOR
CHECK OVER
EXTEROCEPTIVE SENSOR
CHECK STRAT
CONNECT POINT NCL
NCL. SPINALIS N TRIG
SEARCH AN ARTIFICAL B
NCL.SPINALIS N.TRIGG
CHECK
AN ARTIFICIAL BODY’S PO
TR.SPINALIS N. TIGGER
NO REJECTION
TR.SPINALIS N.TRIGE
CANALICULUS MASTOID
VISCEROMOTOR FIBERS
CANALICULUS MASTOIDS
CONNECT POINT NCL
NCL. DORSALIS N. VAGI
RAMUS AURICULARIS CH
CHECK FEEDBACK TO
NCL. SPINALIS N. TRIGEG
SEARCH AN ARTIFICIAL B
N. VAGUS ENERROCEPTIN
FEEDBACK TO
NCL. SPINALIS TRIGER
CHECK OVER
ANARTIFICAL BODY’S PO
NCL.DORSAL IS N. VAGI
GANGLION SUPERIUS
NO REJECTION
GANGLION SUPERIUS CH
FORAMEN JUGULARE PAS
GANGLION INFERIUS CHE
SAFETY CONNECT PROGR
RAMICORDIACICERVICA
CALLING…
RAMICORDIACICERVICA
NO REJECTION
NEXT
RAMICORDIACICERVICA
CALLING…
PLESUS CARDIACUS CAL
RAMICORDIACICERVICA
PLESUS CARDIACUS CHE
M. ATSUMO TOKAORU CHE
ATOMIC DISPOSITION C
M.YGODDESS CHECK
CHECK OVER
GUSTATORY FIBERS
CHECK STRAT
CONNECT POINT NCL.
NCL. SOLITARIUS
SEARCH AN ARTIFICAIAL B
NCL. SOLITARIUS CHECK
AN ARTIFICIAL BODY’S PO
GANGLION SUPERIUS
NO NOIZE
NEXT
GANGLION SUPERIUS CH
FORAMEN JUGULARE PRE
GANGLION INFERIUS CHE
GANGLION INFERIUS CHE
RAMIPHARYNGEI CALLING
RAMIPHARYNGEI CHECK
PLEXUS PHARYNGEUS CA
NO REJECTION
PLEXUS PHARYNGEUS CH
TASTE BUDS CALLING
CHECK FEEDBACK TO
NCL. SOLITARIUS
TASTE BUDS CONNECT
FEEDBACK NCL. SOLITAR
CHECK OVER
VISCEPOSENSORY FIBER
CHECK STRAT
CONNECT POINT NCL
NCL SOLITARIUS
SEACH AN ARTIFICIAL B
NCL. SOLITARIUS CHECK
AN ARTIFICIAL BODY’S PO
TRACTUS SOLITARIUS C
NO NOIZE
TRACTUS SOLITARIUS C
GANGLION SUPERIUS CA
NO REJECTION
GANGLION SUPERIUS CH
FORAMEN JUGULARE PAS
GANGLION INFERIUS CA
N.LARYNGEUS SUPERIOR
N.LARYNGEUS RECURRED
PLEXUS PULMONAL IS CA
N. LARYNGEUS RECURRED
RAMIESOPHAGUI CALLI
N. LARYNGEYS INFERIOR
RAMITRACHEALES SUPERIOR
RAMUS INTERNUS CALLI
PLEXUS INTERNUS CALLI
PLEXUS PULMONALIS CH
PLEXUS ESOPHAGEUS CA
RAMIESOPHAGEI CHECK
N.LARYNGEUS INFERIOR
PLEXUS EXOPHAGEUS CH
TRUNCUS VAGALIS POST
RAMITRACHEALES CHEC
TRUNCUS VAGALIS ANTE
RAMUS INTERNUS CHECK
VOCAL CORO CALLING
TRUNCUS VAGALIS POST
RAMICOEL CALLING
RAMIRENALES CALLING
TRUNCUS VAGALIS ANTE
RAMIHEPATICI CHECK
PLEXUS HAPATICUS CAL
RAMIGASTRICIPOSTER
RAMIRENALES CHECK
PLEXUS RENALIS CALLI
RAMICOELIACI CHECK
PLEXUS COELICUS CALL
RAMIHEPATICI CHECK
PLEXUSHEPATICUS CALL
RAMIGASTRICI ANTERIO
PLEXUS COELICUS CHEC
RAMI GASTRICIPOSTER
PLEXUS RENALIS CHECK
RAMIGASTRICI ANTERIO
CHECK FEEDBACK TO
BCL. SOLITARUS
PLEXUS HEPATICUS CHE
FEEDBACK TO NCL. SOLIT
VOCAL CORD CHECK
CHECK OVER
CHECK CONNECT
MOTOR FIBERS CHECK
CONNECT POINT NCL
NCL. AMBIGUUS
SEARCH AN ARTIFICAL B
NCL.AMBIGUOUS CHECK
AN ARTIFICAL BODY’S
GANGLION SUPERIUS CA
GANGLION SUPERIUS CH
NO REJECTION
FORAMEN JUGULARE PAS
GANGLION INFERIUS CAL
GANGLION INFERIUS CHE
PROPER VOLTAGE


15 Jul 17:00

Jenny McCarthy joins 'The View' - USA TODAY

firehose

uninterrupted crazy


Philly.com

Jenny McCarthy joins 'The View'
USA TODAY
SHARECONNECT 4 TWEETCOMMENTEMAILMORE. It's official: Barbara Walters confirmed on Monday'sThe View that comedic actress Jenny McCarthy will join the chatfest when its 17th season begins Sept. 9. The announcement comes just five days after ...
Jenny McCarthyKGO-TV
Jenny McCarthy named to join ABC's 'The View' during talk show's wave of host ...Minneapolis Star Tribune
Jenny McCarthy joins ' The View ' panel There's room on “ The View ” for Jenny ...New York Daily News
TV News Check -The Idaho Statesman -OnTheRedCarpet.com
all 58 news articles »
15 Jul 16:55

Pacific Rim Has Been Beaten By Grown Ups 2 At the U.S. Box Office. No. I Can’t. I Am Unable to Can.

firehose

called it

We don't often report on box office numbers here at The Mary Sue, but this bit of information is relevant to our interests and also so very, very Monday-ish.
15 Jul 16:55

PBS Teases More Carmen Sandiego With Suitably Vague Tumblr Post

firehose

whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat
"this is not about new episodes"

On July 13th the PBS Tumblr posted this photo, of a recognizable red hat and black glove combination with the caption,

Where in the world did this come from? Stay tuned for something awesome!

It would appear that we have a mystery on out hands.  However, the question today isn't "where in the world is Carmen Sandiego?", but where in time will we be getting what looks a lot like more of our favorite jet-setting villain. Children of the 90's, start looking for clues!

15 Jul 16:53

Red Circle’s New Series The Fox Gets a First Issue and a Fiona Staples Cover

firehose

journalists~

A new superhero has joined the fray! Enter Red Circle Comics' The Fox-- a reporter who just took up the suit for a little career advantage and ended up getting way more than he bargained for. Anyone else think he looks like Batman and Spiderman's lovechild? I'd read that. Head under the cut for details!
15 Jul 16:52

Curing the country of gun violence requires research into video games too

by Brian Crecente
firehose

shared because Crecente misspelled Barack Obama, 5th graf

Gun violence is so pervasive, so deadly an issue in America that it should be treated and researched as a contagious disease, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

And that's why video games needs to be part of the research that goes into curing this bullet-fueled epidemic. Video games have become so deeply ingrained in modern society, that ignoring their impact would be akin to ignoring the effects of movies, of music or of the daily news on society. And all of those forms of media play an important role in any complete, holistic approach to solving the problem of American gun violence.

In tackling this disease — which has injured or killed 105,000 people in 2010 alone — the CDC is setting out to identify the epidemiologic triangle of gun violence: the agent (or the weapon or shooter), the host (or the victim) and the environment (the conditions of the shooting).

Once identified, the CDC believes, it can more clearly figure out a way to "interrupt the connections" within this deadly triangle.

This same approach was used by the CDC to combat tobacco use and reduce motor vehicle injuries and deaths and now gun violence. This most recent study comes not because of some sudden insight or realization but in part because, in mandating a new study, President Barak Obama removed the restriction on government research into gun violence.

Video games shouldn't be demonized, but they can't be ignored

This public health-driven approach brings with it an eclectic mix of research. The CDC hopes to look into everything from the use of voice-recognition smartguns and weapons that can't fire at children to research into the socioeconomic backgrounds of shooters and their victims, to the impact of watching news about a shooting or playing violent video games.

While a relatively trivial part of what is shaping up to be the study into gun violence in America, researching video games might derail the project.

After all video games have, over the preceding decades, become the proverbial wolf to the country's many violent, public acts. The tenuous direct, casual connection between violence and video games has become so studied, so overwrought with politics and scapegoat finger pointing that it's becoming white noise.

It was video games, purely video games, that the NRA blamed for the Newtown shooting. It was video games that became Columbine's distraction.

Video games as agents for inducing violence is so steeped in hyperbole, so absurd a notion to today's public (about half of which now play these very games) that some point to it as an example of why such broad studies shouldn't take place.

But dismissing even the possibility that games could have a negative impact on society dismisses too the notion that they could have a positive one.

Games, like movies, like music and books, do effect change. Game developers know this. And I think game players do too.

We know it when a game inspires us to work out, or teaches us about history, or gets us to think about the underpinnings of deeply held beliefs.

Video games are a powerful form of expression and communication; they shouldn't be demonized, but they can't be ignored.

Researching video games, once more, as part of this broader examination of a gun-sickened nation, brings with it the chance to create a singular work of research that can be used to start healing the country.

If it can be done free of politics, free of the heavy-hand of gun-manufacturers, gun lobbyists — but also video game makers and their own significant lobby — then perhaps the questions that seem to raise their head with every shooting, can finally be put to rest. And gamers shouldn't fear research that finally strives to insert their hobby into the national context in which it belongs.

Good Game is an internationally syndicated news and opinion column about the big stories of the week in the gaming industry and their bigger impact on things to come. Brian Crecente is a founding News Editor of Polygon.

15 Jul 16:51

New Leaf duping glitch discovered I’m pretty sure I...

by ericisawesome


New Leaf duping glitch discovered

I’m pretty sure I accidentally did this a month ago but never thought anything of it, and didn’t think too hard about how to replicate the bug, but Heatran posted instructions for duplicating an Animal Crossing: New Leaf item when you’re visiting a friend’s town (online, not local):

"What you do is, drop the items off, then the host ends the game. As it saves, [the visitor turns] off the wireless via switch on 3DS. Bam. Duplicated. Cloned."

Apparently the timing is a little tricky on when to hit the wireless switch (some believe it’s when the saving animation circles 1-1.5 times, others believe it’s even earlier), and there’s no guarantee that messing around with your game like this enough times won’t corrupt your save.

A number of people are concerned about how this trick might ruin the game’s “economy" or even it’s tone. I debated over whether we should post it at all, but ended up getting some great advice from Molly. All I know is, it will probably be a lot easier to get your hands on Japan’s 7-11 items, Sloppy furniture, and other items you can’t order from the catalog.

Thanks to MoxieCrossing for the pic.

BUY Animal Crossing: New Leaf, AC:NL guide, upcoming games
15 Jul 16:50

stml: Norwich council takes delivery of its first computer.

by theburnlab
firehose

via GN



stml:

Norwich council takes delivery of its first computer.

15 Jul 16:50

turntechgofuckurself: We need to talk about the calendar I...

firehose

via Albener Pessoa









turntechgofuckurself:

We need to talk about the calendar I found in New Hampshire

15 Jul 16:49

Vintage Camera Lens Bracelets by SDPNT

by Christopher Jobson
firehose

via GN
fuck your glass

Vintage Camera Lens Bracelets by SDPNT jewelry cameras

Vintage Camera Lens Bracelets by SDPNT jewelry cameras

Stefaan duPont over at SDPNT is making some wonderful one-of-a-kind cuffs from old camera lenses. Every bracelet is completely unique and can’t be duplicated. The store opened for the first time about two hours ago, so check it out. (via notcot)

15 Jul 16:49

What language is for

firehose

via Rosalind

In 1866 the French Academy of Sciences banned discussion of the origin of language. The nature of language in an evolutionary context is a big question which just keeps giving. But obviously the French academy thought that it was giving a little too much without resolution. Despite being fascinated with the topic at one point, and reading books such as The Symbolic Species and The Language Instinct, I've come away with the opinion that there's a lot to the evolution of language which is just unk
15 Jul 16:37

I Broke Arma 3

by birgirpall
firehose

new birgirpall

Alpha and beta footage. Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/wgbdvs Twitter - https://twitter.com/Biggidvs.
From: BirgirPall
Views: 626573
14907 ratings
Time: 11:38 More in Gaming
15 Jul 16:27

Why Mobile Web Apps Are Slow

firehose

'But the real elephant in the room here is that in all these articles on this subject, rarely does anyone actually quantify how slow JS is or provide any sort of actually useful standard of comparison. (You know… slow relative to what?) To correct this, I will develop, in this article, not just one useful equivalency for JavaScript performance–but three of them. So I’m not only going to argue the “traditional hymns” of “wa wa JS is slow for arbitrary case”, but I’m going to quantify exactly how slow it is, and compare it to a wide variety of things in your real-life programming experience so that, when you are faced with your own platform decision, you can do your own back-of-the-napkin math on whether or not JavaScript is feasible for solving your own particular problem.
...
If you believe JavaScript performance is going to get there eventually, really the hardware path is the best path. Either Intel will have a viable iPhone chip in 5 years (likely) and Apple will switch (unlikely), or perhaps ARM will sort themselves out over the next decade. (Go talk to 10 hardware engineers to get 10 opinions on the viability of that.) But a decade is a long time, from my chair, for something that might pan out.
...
When JavaScript people or Ruby people or Python people hear “garbage collector”, they understand it to mean “silver bullet garbage collector.” They mean “garbage collector that frees me from thinking about managing memory.” But there’s no silver bullet on mobile devices. Everybody thinks about memory on mobile, whether they have a garbage collector or not. The only way to get “silver bullet” memory management is the same way we do it on the desktop–by having 10x more memory than your program really needs.

JavaScript’s whole design is based around not worrying about memory.'

If you've been looking for an extremely detailed explanation on why mobile web apps are so slow and why they aren't going to be getting faster anytime sooner, look no further.
15 Jul 16:25

Three reasons why Larry Summers should not be the next Fed chairman

by Matt Phillips
firehose

this fucking guy

larry summers

Lawrence Summers, the brilliant and famously irascible economist and former US Treasury secretary, still appears to be very much in the running for the next chairmanship of the Federal Reserve.

You likely know the back story. Summers is an intellectual force of nature, almost bred to be an influential economist. Both of his parents were economists. Two of his uncles—Paul Samuelson and Kenneth Arrow—were Nobel laureates in the discipline. He did his undergraduate work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his doctorate at Harvard, where he became a tenured professor in his late 20s, one of the youngest ever. He spent two years as chief economist at the World Bank, joined the Clinton administration in 1993, and succeeded Robert Rubin as Treasury secretary in 1999. He had a tumultuous stint (paywall) as president of Harvard University, followed by a remunerative tour in Hedgefundistan (paywall). Then it was back to Washington as director of Obama’s National Economic Council until the end of 2010.

And then there’s the downside. The so-called “toxic memo” at the World Bank, an internal document in which he argued, provocatively, the economic merits of rich countries shipping their toxic dreck to poor countries, calling the logic “impeccable.” His musings while president of Harvard that “innate” differences between men and women could help explain why few women reach the upper echelon of the sciences. In accounts of his time in the Obama White House, Summers emerges as an unmanageable, control freak. Obama fix-it man Pete Rouse’s famous memos on White House operations note “there is deep dissatisfaction within the economic team with what is perceived as Larry’s imperious and heavy-handed direction of the economic policy process,” according to Ron Suskind’s inside look at the early days of the Obama administration.

Suskind also reports that while at the White House Summers appeared to believe he was next in line for the chairmanship of the Fed and was apparently furious when then-Treasury secretary Tim Geithner counseled Obama to reappoint Ben Bernanke. Now Summers is showing up in short lists of possible successors to Bernanke. (We reached out to him for comment on Friday, and will update with any response.)

Summers’ personality generates more passionate feelings than your typical technocrat. It’s not this reputation, however, which leads us to think he’s not the right fit for the Fed’s top job. It’s his record on some of the most important economic questions that have come along during his career. Here’s a look.

1. He was a big part of the Clinton-era deregulatory push that led up to the financial crisis

Then undersecretary of the Treasury Summers confers with secretary Robert Rubin back in 1998. AP Photo / Ron Edmonds

As President Bill Clinton’s Treasury secretary, Summers negotiated key details and the passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act in 1999. That was the law that effectively did away with the Depression-era protections that separated commercial banks—more tightly regulated entities with access to Federal Reserve funding and FDIC consumer deposit protections—from Wall Street trading houses that engaged in riskier activities like bond trading and underwriting corporate debt. It was widely seen as the culmination of a 30-year deregulatory push in Washington. “At the end of the 20th century, we will at last be replacing an archaic set of restrictions with a legislative foundation for a 21st-century financial system,” Summers told the New York Times, when the Clinton administration struck a deal on the law.

Instead, the passage of the act the end of the 20th century set the stage for the first financial panic of the 21st century, which peaked in 2008 with the collapse of Lehman Brothers. True, Lehman was a standalone investment bank that had not merged with an plain vanilla banking entity. But Lehman’s fall really only marked the start of the worst phase of the crisis. The US government and tax payers were forced to put billions into entities such as Bank of America, Citigroup and AIG—among others—where the risk-taking, trading culture of Wall Street—long quarantined by Depression-era regulations—had infected institutions and brought them to the brink of a collapse that would have had disastrous impacts on the economy.

Current CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler, who served in Summers’ Treasury, has acknowledged publicly that the deregulatory impulse might have been over active during the Clinton administration. Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Neal Wolin—who also served under Summers—admits that to some extent the Clinton era was “‘intoxicated by the success of the markets’ and went too far.” Even the big dog himself, Bill Clinton, has performed a mea culpa for his administration’s deregulation of the derivatives business, which caused plenty of problems that emerged in the crisis. He blamed bad advice he got from Summers and former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, saying “‘I think they were wrong and I think I was wrong to take” their advice.

If Summers has made similar acknowledgements, they’re awfully hard to find. As recently as early 2012, Summers told an interviewer: [Time: 11:20] “What I didn’t favor was the continuation of so-called Glass-Steagall in the United States, rules that … kept banks and investment banks separate… And I think the evidence is that I’m right about that. If you look at the big failures, Lehman and Bear Stearns were both standalone investment banks. Perhaps if they had been combined with banks they would have been in a more healthy situation.”

2. He was especially wrong about derivatives

In the late 1990s when the then-head of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, a woman by the name of Brooksley Born, wanted to publicly explore regulating the bets between financial market participants known as derivatives. Summers—along with Washington’s other top financial power brokers of the era, Rubin and Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan—pushed hard against such a move. The Washington Post reported:

Summers, then the deputy Treasury secretary, mounted a campaign against it, CFTC officials recalled.

“Larry Summers expressed himself several times, very strongly, that this was something we should back down from,” [top aide to Born, Daniel] Waldman recalled.

In one call, Summers said, “I have 13 bankers in my office and they say if you go forward with this you will cause the worst financial crisis since World War II,” recounted [Michael] Greenberger, a University of Maryland law school professor who was Born’s director of the Division of Trading and Markets. Summers declined to comment for this article.

For more on the battle over derivatives regulation, check out this excellent Frontline on the topic. Or read Summers’ testimony on the subject from back in 1998.

Of course, derivatives became a huge issue during the financial crisis, famously almost destroying insurance giant AIG, which had to be propped up with what turned out to be one of the largest—$182 billion in taxpayer money, which has since been recovered—rescue of the entire debacle. But even that hasn’t settled the issue of derivatives regulation. Five years after the crisis, it’s still a political football. A Fed chairman invested in derivatives regulation would help cement rules into place.

In a 2009 op-ed co-written with then-Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, Summers endorsed “strong oversight” of so-called over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives. But Summers’ statements on derivatives have been less than full-throated.

3. He was hostile to warnings about the financial crisis

The most famous example of this was the August 2005 Federal conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The conference had pretty much devolved into an extended praise poem for then-departing Fed chairman Greenspan. University of Chicago economist Raghuram Rajan had to go and spoil things by delivering a paper that warned about dangerous risks to the financial system that ballooned under Greenspan’s watch.

The conference turned contentious, as Summers publicly smacked down the analysis saying he found the “slightly Luddite premise of this paper largely misguided.” Of course, Rajan’s paper proved one of the more public, prescient warnings of the looming financial crisis that was ever delivered. After the experience of the last decade, it would probably best to have someone in the top job at the Fed who would give such warnings a bit more thought.

The bottom line

Some, such as the Financial Times’ Edward Luce, have made the argument that Summers’ thick skin makes him ideal to lead the Fed through its next phase, which—hopefully—will involve weaning financial markets off the extraordinarily easy money policy the Fed was forced to put in place because of the financial crisis. “The most important quality is intellectual leadership–something Mr Summers would offer in greater abundance than the others,” Luce writes.

We’d respectfully suggest that the lesson of Greenspan’s tenure—when the central bank became something of a personality cult—is that it is a dangerous thing for the Fed to be a one-man show, dominated by a single, dazzling intellect. That’s even more true when the intellect in question has been wrong on key questions related to one of the Fed’s key roles: Regulating Wall Street.


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