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19 Jun 04:38

Oculus Rift using its millions to hire more staff

by Jessica Conditt
Oculus tells Engadget plans for its new cash
The Oculus Rift creators recently secured $16 million in funding from investors, on top of their September Kickstarter bounty of $2.4 million - and they're going to use that cash to bulk up the team.

"We're using the funding to ramp up on hiring more smart people, the best and brightest that we can find," Oculus Rift CEO Brendan Iribe told Engadget. "The dev kit as it is now, that we're shipping, will stay the same, and the software side will just keep getting better."

Oculus Rift currently employs fewer than 50 people, and the new hires will be mostly engineers, Iribe said. Right now the headset is in development for PC games, but that doesn't mean other platforms are out of the running completely.

"We're always looking at other platforms, looking at consoles; we're also looking at Android and the mobile side in a big way - but right now we really are focused on the PC platform," Iribe said.

Sony President Shuhei Yoshida said he loves the Oculus Rift, though the PS4 doesn't currently support the VR headset. Yoshida wouldn't say if the PS4 will support Oculus Rift in the future - and he said it with a big smile, Engadget noted.

JoystiqOculus Rift using its millions to hire more staff originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 18 Jun 2013 22:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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19 Jun 04:37

NVIDIA To License Its GPU Tech

by Soulskill
An anonymous reader writes "Today in a blog post, NVIDIA's General Counsel, David Shannon, announced that the company will begin licensing its GPU cores and patent portfolio to device makers. '[I]t's not practical to build silicon or systems to address every part of the expanding market. Adopting a new business approach will allow us to address the universe of devices.' He cites the 'explosion of Android devices' as one of the prime reasons for this decision. 'This opportunity simply didn't exist several years ago because there was really just one computing device – the PC. But the swirling universe of new computing devices provides new opportunities to license our GPU core or visual computing portfolio.' Shannon points out that NVIDIA did something similar with the CPU core used in the PlayStation 3, which was licensed to Sony. But mobile seems to be the big opportunity now: 'We'll start by licensing the GPU core based on the NVIDIA Kepler architecture, the world's most advanced, most efficient GPU. Its DX11, OpenGL 4.3, and GPGPU capabilities, along with vastly superior performance and efficiency, create a new class of licensable GPU cores. Through our efforts designing Tegra into mobile devices, we've gained valuable experience designing for the smallest power envelopes. As a result, Kepler can operate in a half-watt power envelope, making it scalable from smartphones to supercomputers.'"

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19 Jun 04:37

The life aquactic


Albert Robida





The life aquactic

19 Jun 04:33

PHOTOS: Brazilians Flood Streets To Protest World Cup Spending, Government Corruption

by Travis Waldron
firehose

via Mintie

Hundreds of thousands of Brazilians poured into the streets of at least 25 cities across the country Monday, blanketing the streets of major cities like São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro and climbing to the roof of the Brazilian National Congress in Brasilia, the nation’s capital. The protests, sparked last week by a smaller demonstration against fare hikes on public buses, are taking place around the Confederations Cup, the soccer tournament that began Saturday as a tune-up for Brazil’s 2014 hosting of the World Cup.

The World Cup has become a symbol of corruption and overspending in the country. Brazil, originally slated to spend less than $1 billion in private funding on soccer stadiums, has already spent more than $3 billion, most of which has come from public funds. Meanwhile, schools and hospitals are overcrowded, understaffed, and underfunded, infrastructure is crumbling, and income inequality is rising as Brazil’s minimum wage remains low. The money spent on the World Cup, the protesters say, would be better spent on efforts to help ordinary Brazilians.

Though there were small pockets of violence during demonstrations in some cities, the vast majority of the protests remained peaceful, according to local news reports. Here are pictures from Monday’s protests:

An estimated 100,000 protested in Rio de Janeiro. (Credit: AP)

An estimated 30,000 Brazilians flood the streets of São Paulo. (Credit: AFP)

Brazilians protest for spending on hospitals and schools instead of the World Cup. (Credit: @AnonNewsDE)

Protesters amass in front of Brazil's National Congress in Brasilia. Sign reads: "Cup for whom?" (Credit: AP)

A Brazilian police officer pepper sprays a protester in Rio de Janeiro. (Credit: AP)

Brazilian protesters in the streets of São Paulo. (Credit: Globo News)

Protesters dance on the top of the Brazilian National Congress in Brasilia. (Credit: Globo News)

    


19 Jun 02:06

I Don't Want to See Zack Snyder's Take on Wonder Woman

by Charlie Jane Anders
firehose

'After watching 300, Watchmen, Sucker Punch and Man of Steel, there's plenty that I admire about Snyder's film-making. He's great at creating arresting visuals, and he has a deep appreciation for the grammar of comic-book storytelling, creating splash pages on the screen.

But he has a problem with capturing real emotions, as opposed to surfaces, something the cold and depthless Man of Steel confirms. And he especially has a problem with female characters, because his love for pulp imagery leads him to explore women as fetish objects. It almost doesn't matter if, as some have discussed, Snyder is trying to turn this fetishization on its head or show how it's harmful — it still tends to dominate.'

Zach Snyder is about as clumsy as a blockbusters-only director gets without being named Michael Bay

I Don't Want to See Zack Snyder's Take on Wonder Woman

Now that The Man of Steel has set a new record for June movie openings, Warner Bros. is rushing ahead with plans to create a DC Universe on screen. Which means one thing: we'll finally get a big-screen version of Wonder Woman, and she'll probably be created by Sucker Punch director Zack Snyder. That's a terrible idea.

Read more...

    


19 Jun 02:04

Nolan Opposed "Man of Steel's" Controversial Ending

firehose

tl;dr Doctor Who analogy summary: They made Zod his Time War

Many fans were dismayed by the controversial ending of director Zack Snyder’s "Man of Steel," and they weren't alone: Producer Christopher Nolan initially balked at the scene. Warning: Spoilers!
19 Jun 01:30

This cult brand made Indians the world’s biggest rum drinkers

by Adam Pasick
firehose

'Old Monk survives in India by word of mouth—its owners say they have never spent a dime on advertising—and the custom of Indian enthusiasts like COMRADE, the “Council of Old Monk Rum Addicted Drinkers and Eccentrics.”

Devotees claim that when drunk with soda or water, Old Monk doesn’t give you hangovers—a cuba libre-like Old Monk with cola spiked with lime and chili is also permitted. It’s very cheap at Rs 400 ($6.85) for 750 ml; along with its competitors, Old Monk can take advantage of India’s large sugarcane crop for its raw materials.'

Enjoy the rum, boys. AP Photo/Saurabh Das

There are enough intriguing factoids and anomalies in the International Wine & Spirits Research’s global league table of booze to fuel a year’s worth of barroom debates. (Russia consumes an absolutely staggering amount of vodka, and France drinks more Scotch whiskey than all of Britain.) But one country’s consumption of rum jumps right off the chart: India drinks a massive amount of rum compared to the rest of the world—more than 400 million liters a year, or twice the consumption of United States in second place. Per capita the figures are not quite as impressive. India drinks 0.3 liters per person a year, nowhere near Caribbean cohorts like Cuba or the Dominican Republic, but that still puts it on par with developed countries like  France, Britain and Germany.

Why rum and not, say, gin? That’s the favorite in the Philippines, which has a similarly muggy climate.

In turns out the secret to India’s fondness for rum can be traced to a single brand, Mohan Meakin’s Old Monk. It’s the fifth-most popular rum in the world, but few outside of India have ever heard about it. Unchanged for decades, Old Monk survives in India by word of mouth—its owners say they have never spent a dime on advertising—and the custom of Indian enthusiasts like COMRADE, the “Council of Old Monk Rum Addicted Drinkers and Eccentrics.”

Devotees claim that when drunk with soda or water, Old Monk doesn’t give you hangovers—a cuba libre-like Old Monk with cola spiked with lime and chili is also permitted. It’s very cheap at Rs 400 ($6.85) for 750 ml; along with its competitors, Old Monk can take advantage of India’s large sugarcane crop for its raw materials.

Alas for Old Monk and its fans, modern times have not been kind. Sales have plunged by about half since 2002 and it now sells only a quarter of the volume of category leader McDowell’s No.1 Celebration, owned by the Indian giant United Spirits Ltd. In April, Mohan Meakin announced that it would revamp Old Monk’s packaging for the first time and roll out a new pricing structure to position the rum as a premium product. Some advertising might also help—India bans outright alcohol ads, but companies get around this sponsoring other products and events.

A turnaround is not impossible. Old Monk is a venerated brand, and a bit of marketing could unleash the enthusiasm of longtime customers while finding a new audience among young Indian drinkers and perhaps even rum aficionados around the world. But there is also a chance that the world has moved on, and Old Monk will be doomed to insignificance, or perhaps snapped up by one of the massive spirits conglomerates that now dominate the industry. In the end it will come down to one question: Can you teach an Old Monk any new tricks?


19 Jun 00:49

Iceland resumes whale hunting, endangered Fin Whale killed

by Xeni Jardin
firehose

via multitasksuicide


"Kristjan Loftsson, CEO of the the company Hvalur hf." Photo: News of Iceland.

Icelandic news outlets are reporting that an Icelandic whaling company, Hvalur hf, "caught its first fin whale yesterday evening," after sailing out yesterday with two boats, both due back in port today.

Fin whales are the second-largest whale, and are classified as an Endangered species.

From News of Iceland:

The whale quota is for 154 fin whales but 20% of unused quota from last season can be added to that number, so possibly a total of 180 whales will be caught. Since 2009 there has been in effect a five year licence to catch the species so that licence expires this year. All of the products from the fin whales will be sent to Japan, except for the fish meal and the fish oil, they are for human consumption. Around 200 people will be employed because of the whale hunting, at land and sea. The products will be processed at three locations in Iceland: Hvalfjord, Hafnarfjord and Akranes.

The Animal Welfare Institute, one of many animal advocacy groups protesting the hunting of this endangered species in Iceland, issued a press release condemning the kill:

Susan Millward, executive director of AWI, said, “Contrary to statements from Icelandic government officials, these majestic animals, second in size only to blue whales, are not ‘Icelandic’; they belong to no one country. Fin whales are highly migratory, endangered, and are protected under a number of international treaties.Today’s killing of an endangered fin whale makes it absolutely clear that years of international diplomatic efforts have failed, and that Iceland is determined to act as a rogue whaling nation, no matter the cost to this species, and to the country’s own tourism and seafood industries.”

From Agence France Press:

Fin whales are the second largest whale species after the blue whale. Iceland also hunts minke whales, a smaller species. That hunt began in May, and so far seven minke whales have been harpooned, whaling officials said.

The International Whaling Commission imposed a global moratorium on whaling in 1986 amid alarm at the declining stock of the marine mammals. Iceland, which resumed commercial whaling in 2006, and Norway are the only two countries still openly practising commercial whaling in defiance of the moratorium.

Japan also hunts whales but insists this is only for scientific purposes even if most of the meat ends up on the market for consumption.

    


18 Jun 22:58

No arrests yet in slaying of man acquainted with New England Patriots player ... - Boston.com


CNN

No arrests yet in slaying of man acquainted with New England Patriots player ...
Boston.com
By Wesley Lowery, Brian Ballou, John R. Ellement and Nikita Lalwani, Globe Staff and Globe Correspondent. The investigation into the murder of a Dorchester man who has been linked to New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez continues, but no one ...
Oklahoma football: The Sooners' brush with Aaron HernandezNewsOK.com
Killing near Aaron Hernandez home: Victim's family raises questionsSan Jose Mercury News
NFL's Clown Shoes: All-Aaron Hernandez EditionBleeding Green Nation
Gettysburg Times -Behind the Steel Curtain
all 1,326 news articles »
18 Jun 22:45

Chipotle becomes first US fast food chain to label all genetically modified ingredients

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Chipotle is letting its customers know a little more about their burritos by opening up about the presence of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) within its ingredients. The Mexican-themed fast food restaurant has begun marking all products that include GMOs on the company company website, helping to bolster its focus on organic and local foods. According to NaturalNews, this makes Chipotle the first US restaurant chain to include such labels. Eventually, the chain also wants to eliminate GMOs from its menu entirely.


The labeling debate continues

While many US grocers specifically sell organic fruits and vegetables, just about everything else — including prepared food from restaurants — is rarely labeled. Environmental and consumer advocacy groups have argued that this should change. Though there's debate about whether growing and consuming GMOs leads to adverse effects, there's been no definitive and widely-accepted study on their long-term impact on health and the environment. It's become a major issue in many states, and even went up to public vote in California last year before ultimately failing. But enough consumers seem to be interested in the presence of GMOs that it's lead grocers like Whole Foods to instate GMO labeling requirements.

Though Bloomberg Businessweek reports that Chipotle began labeling GMOs back in March, the addition hasn't been widely noted until now. So far, Chipotle says that it hasn't noticed a negative financial impact because of the change — but as Businessweek notes, very little on the menu is available for anyone who's hoping to avoid GMOs entirely.

18 Jun 22:36

Dogs Outlandishly Dyed and Groomed to Look Like Fictional Characters & Wild Animals

by Kimber Streams
firehose

nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnope

Creative Dog Grooming

photo by Ren Netherland of Barcroft Media via CBBC

These amazing photos of multicolored, creatively groomed dogs were taken by photographer Ren Netherland at creative dog grooming competitions across the United States. The dogs have been dyed and carefully sheared to depict cartoon characters, wild animals, and even mythical creatures in a very unique art form. More photos of the outlandishly groomed animals can be found at Netherland’s website and at Barcroft Media.

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

Creative Dog Grooming

photos by Ren Netherland of Barcroft Media via The Telegraph

via Digg

18 Jun 22:35

Fanboys in Free Software | Martin's Blog

by gguillotte
We need to find solutions to the fanboys and one of the solutions I came up with is to block them on my blog posts. I can tolerate trolls as it’s much easier to handle them. But fanboys are only there to harm you to diminish your work so that their world view doesn’t break. And that’s why I call them religious fanatics. They behave exactly the same. Just compare that to Intelligent Design to resolve the cognitive dissonance caused by evolution. I dislike any religious fanaticism whether it’s a crusade, jihad, IRA or free software. Any religious motivated fanaticism is harmful and needs to be fought, even if it is free software. Yes one can grow a thick skin to handle the fanboys, but that just shouldn’t be needed. Being compared to Hitler hurts no matter how thick your skin is. And if a GNOME developer stops work because of KDE fanboys it’s not GNOME who lost a developer, it’s free software who lost a developer. It’s one of us. We are also GNOME!
18 Jun 22:30

Adobe Profit Tops Estimates on Cloud Subscriber Growth - Bloomberg

by gguillotte
firehose

great

Profit excluding some items for the period through May was 36 cents a share, San Jose, California-based Adobe said in a statement today. That beat the average 34-cent estimate of analysts compiled by Bloomberg. Sales were $1.01 billion, matching the average projection.
18 Jun 22:26

カワウソ劇場 食事編 (by mixjam11)

firehose

is it the motherfucking weekend yet



カワウソ劇場 食事編 (by mixjam11)

18 Jun 22:22

Gunpoint review: slick shoes

by Justin McElroy

By Justin McElroy
on June 18, 2013 at 6:00p

Game Info
Platform Win, Mac, Linux
Publisher Suspicious Developments
Developer Suspicious Developments
Release Date 06/03/2013

I am Richard Conway, star of Gunpoint.

The third-story plate glass window turns to razor-sharp confetti as I hurl myself through it. My landing is softened by a guard who I put to sleep with a single rabbit punch. A second guard, drawn by the noise, throws open a door and pulls his pistol on me. He fires, but instead of sending me to the Great Beyond, the pull of his trigger ... shuts off the lights. He's mine.

I am a spy-for-hire, and I am very good.

When fans of gaming clamor for innovation, real innovation, it's in hopes of moments like this. We've been shooting people in the face for two decades and I don't know that it really makes me feel anything any more. But when mechanics are as fresh and well-composed as they are in Gunpoint, allowing your imagination to buy into the fantasy isn't just easy, it's instinctual.

Richard's two-dimensional missions in Gunpoint are usually simple enough: penetrate a locked-down facility, get something of value, get out. Conway's aided by his Bullfrog pants, which allow him to leap dizzying distances and cling to any surface. You choose the trajectory and power of your jump with your mouse and fling your hero forward, hoping for the best.

It feels fantastic, especially as the device's power evolves over time. Thanks to some intricate animations and sound effects, there's a great sense of power (and a little vertigo) every time Conway launches himself into (or over) a building. Using it for quick escape (like sticking to a ceiling as a guard passes underneath) feels equally ... right.

Gunpoint is a puzzle game, and a playground

Gunpoint-tall-1a

Instead of stopping there, developer Suspicious Developments hyphenates Gunpoint's genre with the addition of the Crosslink. By pressing the Alt key, Conway sees a wireframe of his targeted building and the colorful network of electricity that connects every device and switch therein. By clicking and dragging between two devices, he is able to rewire them and create traps, diversions and even pathways to his goal.

This is easier to understand in practice: In one level, I rewired a building so that the ping of my elevator arriving triggered a sound detector in that room. That sound detector was rigged to a light on the floor above, turning it off. A guard on the floor moseyed to the nearest lightswitch to rectify the problem, except I had connected the lightswitch to an adjacent locked door I needed to pass through. And guess who was on the other side of the door waiting to leap at the unsuspecting guard and incapacitate him?

Gunpoint-tall-1b

This turns Gunpoint into something of a puzzle game, but it's also a playground. Sure, your plan of connecting an elevator button to a trapdoor may not pan out, but it's almost as much fun to watch it go wrong and try to recover on the fly. Even if you have to resort to gunplay (most levels reward you for silence and non-violence) or are killed, you always have the opportunity to return to an autosave just seconds prior, so there's no risk in experimentation.

As Conway upgrades his abilities - like the power to turn switches into deadly traps by connecting them to an outlet - the possibilities get even broader ... and more sadistic.

Gunpoint-screen-2

If you want some additional challenge (and money for upgrades) you can retrieve data from hacked laptops in many levels. I was so invested in Conway's scalpel-sharp execution that completing every aspect of each mission was basically a given.

The exquisitely designed mechanics are well-supported by a fantastically moody soundtrack that blends jazz and electronic influences and a wry, if a touch convoluted, story. You can typically choose between a couple of missions to attack, but bouncing back and forth between narrative threads can make the story a bit tough to follow.

Wrap Up:

Gunpoint is a delightfully lean experience

Gunpoint isn't a long game - for $10, it doesn't have to be - but it's a delightfully lean experience. From the mechanics to the artistic direction, any trace of bloat has been done away with (if it was ever there to begin with). As mainstream games continue to balloon in budget and feature sets, Gunpoint is a bracing reminder of how lovely simplicity, when exquisitely executed, can be.

About Polygon's Reviews
18 Jun 22:18

"If we can’t write diversity into sci-fi, then what’s the point? You don’t create new worlds to give..."

““If we can’t write diversity into sci-fi, then what’s the point? You don’t create new worlds to give them all the same limits of the old ones.””

-

Jane Espenson (from interview with Advocate.com)\

I dunno how many which ways this needs to be said

(via aragingquiet)

18 Jun 22:00

The Google footnote that perfectly captures US government surveillance secrecy

by Zachary M. Seward

Google just asked the court that oversees surveillance of foreigners inside the United States to let the company disclose more information about government demands for information. The filing, before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, argues that the first amendment of the US constitution protects Google’s right to reveal the number of data requests it receives from the secretive court and how many of its users are affected by those requests.

In setting up a high-profile court challenge with the government, Google may be seeking to bolster its reputation on privacy after disclosures that it and other technology companies participate in US surveillance programs. “Google’s reputation and business has been harmed by the false or misleading reports in the media,” according to the filing, which you can read in full here.

But look no further than the footnote on the first page of Google’s filing for a sense of the rabbit hole into which this is heading: “Noting in this motion is intended to confirm or deny that Google has received any order or orders issued by this court.”

In other words: Dear FISA court, please let us reveal more information about your data requests—which is not to say that you have issued any!

And that, in a nutshell, is the bizarre reality of challenging government actions that must, by the government’s decree, remain secret. It’s similar to president Barack Obama’s remark that “we welcome that debate” over surveillance programs that his administration has fought to keep hidden from public view.

The FISA court will, of course, consider Google’s motion in private.


18 Jun 21:57

Music: Newswire: What's worse, the title of the new Ministry album or its cover art? 

by Josh Modell

The once-mighty industrial-rock juggernaut Ministry (or at least its sole original member, Al Jourgensen) has been threatening for years to stop making music: In interviews for the last few albums, Jourgensen has sworn each would be the last. And yet he's soldiered on through near-death experiences (massive bleeding ulcers and dysentery!) to continue making music. But From Beer To Eternity, due out September 6, is the last, he again swears. Considering Jourgensen's primary collaborator, Mike Scaccia, died after collapsing on stage late last year, this time might really be it. But on to the important news: The cover for From Beer To Eternity (no, we didn't make that title up) features Jourgensen's head on somebody else's ripped body, and he's got a bunch of naked women in a big net. Apparently Smell The Glove was taken?

Read more
18 Jun 21:56

Steel Diver is Nintendo's first free-to-play game

by Jessica Conditt
Steel Diver is Nintendo's first freetoplay game
Nintendo is working on a free-to-play version of Steel Diver, the 3DS launch title that served as a submarine simulator, shoot-em-up and strategy game, Nintendo executive Shigeru Miyamoto told IGN at E3. Nintendo will develop a fresh game, with new design, for the free-to-play version. Miyamoto didn't announce any platforms, but said Steel Diver will be available at retail along with the digital launch.

"There is something we're doing with the Steel Diver idea that I think is going to open things up with that game," he said. "It's going to be very fun. We're exploring from a perspective of where we can take that from a multiplayer standpoint - it's going to have this four-player battle mode that I think is going to be very interesting."

Nintendo was unsure about how to handle the free-to-play model, whether with microtransactions or subscriptions, but the team's main focus was to retain entertainment value, Miyamoto said. The free-to-play Steel Diver should pop up direct from Nintendo "relatively soon."

Last year during E3, Nintendo President Satoru Iwata noted (again) that the company wasn't interested in developing free-to-play games, but reassured investors that the Wii U supported that structure.

JoystiqSteel Diver is Nintendo's first free-to-play game originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 18 Jun 2013 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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18 Jun 21:54

After an Easy Hearing, the NSA and FBI Are Ready for a Drink

by Philip Bump, Atlantic Wire
firehose

via multitasksuicide: "Tell your boss," NSA Director Keith Alexander told the FBI deputy director, "I owe him another friggin' beer."

Post-hearing exchange caught on mic.
18 Jun 21:54

Three Former NSA Employees Praise Edward Snowden, Corroborate Key Claims

by Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic
firehose

via multitasksuicide

The men, all whistleblowers, say he succeeded where they failed.
18 Jun 21:54

Should You Commute by Citi Bike? One Man's Hilariously Detailed Analysis

by Henry Grabar
firehose

via saucie

tl;dw: "It's not a pain in the ass at all. It's great! All you have to do is learn how to use it."

Dorothy Rabinowitz isn't the only one making videos about Citi Bike, the New York City bikeshare program that debuted last month.

Filmmaker Casey Neistat has turned a more analytical eye towards the program (he uses numbers), with the premise: Getting to work in New York City is a pain in the ass. Is Citi Bike a pain in the ass?

Neistat has a considerable reputation in the cycling community. His video on the ease of stealing a bike, picked up by the New York Times, are instant classics, and his demonstration of the ills of New York City bike lanes has been viewed more than 6 million times.

So what does he think of Citi Bike? I won't spoil the suspense. Like all of the Neistat's videos, it's fun to watch.

    


18 Jun 21:49

[video] Will Season Four Of ‘Downton Abbey’ Finally Show The Wizards Using Their Powers?

The popular series about a castle full of wizards and magical servants has been surprisingly magic-free so far, but hopefully that will change in the fourth season.
18 Jun 21:36

Sexy Late Night Commercial for the NSA with Sasha Grey

by EDW Lynch

Actress Sasha Grey stars in this hilarious parody commercial for the NSA that likens the government agency to a phone sex hotline. As Grey points out, NSA stands for “no strings attached.” The video is written and directed by Ryan Perez for Funny or Die.

Are you lonely? Are you looking to make a connection? Do you want to listen in on the naughtiest ingoing and outgoing conversations? Then join the NSA.

Sexy NSA commercial with Sasha Grey

18 Jun 21:33

wilwheaton: (via Daily Kos: Data intrusion) Heh.

18 Jun 21:33

Ahmadinejad Signs On As Dean At Sarah Lawrence

BRONXVILLE, NY—Building on a decades-long career serving government and academic institutions in his home country, outgoing Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad officially accepted a position at Sarah Lawrence College as the next Dean of Students, ...
18 Jun 21:32

These Are The Fantastical Victorian Off-Roaders That Didn't Exist

by Jason Torchinsky on Jalopnik, shared by Annalee Newitz to io9

These Are The Fantastical Victorian Off-Roaders That Didn't Exist

Cars have been around longer than people realize, with larval versions dating back to the early 1800s. What's also been around a long time is people's infatuation with the idea of a go-anywhere exploration vehicle. Even if they were only built in jingoistic imaginations, it's still a start.

Read more...

    


18 Jun 21:32

Quote of the Day: Masturbating Fetuses

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy

As Congress debates imposing a 20 week ban on abortion, Rep. Michael Burgess (R-TX) urges banning the procedure at 15 or 16 weeks. Why, you ask? Because, simply put, fetuses like to jerk off. And how could we deny them of that god-given right? Burgess, who was also an OB/GYN said:

“Watch a sonogram of a 15-week baby, and they have movements that are purposeful… They stroke their face. If they’re a male baby, they may have their hand between their legs. If they feel pleasure, why is it so hard to believe that they could feel pain?”

There is so much to unpack here. First of all, I’m kind of impressed a Republican from Texas would publicly approve of masturbation. I mean, some of them have campaigned against the sin. I would think the fact that a fetus masturbates would turn a conservative Republican into a pro-abortion fiend! I also appreciate that he specifies that it’s the male fetuses who engage in the activity. It’s certainly not very lady like for a female fetus to do it, which is probably why Burgess has only observed the males.

You can check out the video, posted by AmericaBlog.

Original Source

18 Jun 21:31

Google asks for permission to publish FISA data, says 'misleading' reports hurt the company

by Adi Robertson

Since The Guardian and The Washington Post published a series of leaked documents, companies named as participants in the PRISM surveillance program have attempted to set right what they call "misleading" claims about their data. Earlier this month, Google asked the attorney general and FBI director to let it include requests made under the controversial FISA rules in its periodic transparency report, which details the number of requests for user information that it receives. Now, the company has filed a motion asking the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to allow it to publish estimated numbers of FISA requests without fear of reprisal.

"Google's reputation and business has been harmed by the false or misleading reports in the media, and Google's users are concerned by the allegations," wrote attorney Albert Gidari. "Google must respond to such claims with more than generalities. Moreover, these are matters of significant weight and importance, and transparency is critical to advancing public debate in a thoughtful and democratic manner." While Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and others have attempted to get permission to publish FISA request numbers, Google recently backed out of a deal that would have allowed them to publish numbers — but only as part of general law enforcement requests, preventing users from seeing how many FISA requests actually came in.

"Google's reputation and business has been harmed by the false or misleading reports in the media."

FISA requests aren't officially classified information, but gag orders forbid companies from disclosing them. In order to get around this, Google argues that the First Amendment gives it the right to publish general numbers of requests, and it's asking the court to issue a statement confirming this. If its request is granted, Google will have permission to publish two things: the total number of requests made under FISA and the number of users or accounts that are affected.

Neither of these numbers, of course, will actually be exact. Google wants to copy the framework it uses for National Security Letters, the "secret subpoenas" sent by the FBI. That means that it would offer vague ranges for requests and users: National Security Letter numbers are published in intervals of 1,000.

In the past weeks, companies have started to publish more general information about the number of requests they receive from governments. Yahoo, for example, said it received between 12,000 and 13,000 requests from government bodies within the last six months. Because of the aforementioned rules, however, it can't break out the number of FISA orders, meaning that these numbers are a broad overview of law enforcement requests.

18 Jun 21:31

Brushless gimbal 3D printed and bolted to quadcopter

by Mike Szczys
firehose

so fuckin' cool

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A handful of 3D printed parts, some brushless motors, and a bit of control hardware add a flair of cinematography to this quadcopter.

[Sean] sent in a tip about his work after seeing yesterday’s feature of a brushless gimbal being used to improve image stability with a shoulder mounted camera. That rig was designed to be used with a quadcopter, and this hacks shows why. It’s obvious from the demo footage that the gimbal — which is mounted directly to the frame of the TBS Discovery quadcopter — does a great job of keeping the image steady. The panning and tilting in directions contrary to the physics of flight make for a much more interesting video experience. Watch the inset video which is a live feed from the aircraft to the pilot. As the quadcopter makes very sharp banking turns you wouldn’t even be able to tell the pitch or roll have changed in the HQ version.

You can see a pair of images detailing the 3D printed parts and the assembled gimbal below.

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