Shared posts

24 Jun 21:06

Tastestalking

Discovery is a pretty broad activity for one tool, but the idea is simple. Some cycles are inward, convergent paths, meaning you end up getting deeper and narrower into a topic over time. For certain topics, this isn’t always bad. Often you would go deeper on subjects that matter to you. In general though, you want to slowly move outwards. It’s a form of diversification. You don’t want your sources to stagnate, or you could end up missing out on a larger context. The path you want to be on is the divergent one, the outward spiral. Cast a wide net first, and then edit out what’s not worth it. Unfortunately, discovery is woefully under served as a category in feed readers.

You could look at how a service like Facebook does it. Facebook uses a black box algorithm to populate your newsfeed with stories it thinks you will find interesting. It uses some form of machine learning to figure out what you want to see. It works pretty well, but most likely it is convergent, meaning it won’t budge at all from what you have looked at previously. Not the end of the world, but it’s rarely if ever going to surprise you. Part of making sure that your feed won’t stagnate is making sure that you keep pushing outwards looking for more voices.

So, if we had a discovery tool for feed readers, it should help with a few common cases: following sources, people, and possibly tags. The first two sources and people are easier to do now. Often sources will have firehose feeds for everything they publish, and if you really enjoy that source, it’s a good idea to subscribe. I really like The Awl, so I subscribe to a feed that has all their stories, regardless of who wrote them. On the other hand, I don’t always want to read all the stories that come from Wired, but I do want to know what Mat Honan is writing about. In that case, I will subscribe to just his author feed. In both cases, it requires a ton of manual labour to go find those feeds for individuals. It would be much more awesome if I had a tool that could aggregate stuff like this for me.

I call this tastestalking. You, for whatever reason, enjoy someone’s taste, and want to just follow what they have to say. In many cases, I found that people produce great content across many sites; Twitter, Del.icio.us, and Pinboard are just a few. If you end up following those people in many places, you can get a fuller picture of what and how they are thinking about certain topics, which in turn help inform your own thinking.

Another reason for discovery is so your feed is never empty. The best way to combat this is to follow people. Just follow anyone, seriously, anyone referenced in anything that is currently in your stream. The fact that someone you already read is choosing to mention another person is a positive signal.

You are also running up against a natural decay of feeds to which you did subscribe. People stop writing, they have major life events, their companies fold. There are a ton of reasons why feeds stop being published, so you should always be subscribing at a slightly faster rate then the old feeds are decaying.

And finally, edit. If a feed just isn’t cutting it anymore, kill it.

14 Jun 16:21

“Slogans do not imply change”

rachel shared this story from Born Of An Atom Bomb.



“Slogans do not imply change”

14 Jun 16:20

We're scared of this Toothless cosplay from How to Train Your Dragon

by Meredith Woerner
firehose

excellent construction, unfathomably creepy

How to Train Your Dragon is both awesome and amazing, but the very best part was the puppy/kitty dragon Toothless. One clever costumer has recreated the dragon in real life! It's amazing, adorable, and also kind of horrifying.

Read more...

    


14 Jun 16:19

The Games For Change conference is coming up June 17-19 and...

firehose

G4C site: http://www.gamesforchange.org/
conference is in NYC
Hidden Agenda!



The Games For Change conference is coming up June 17-19 and although I can’t afford to attend (is a ticket really $560??), I found this great listing by our friends at Babycastles with a listing of their Games of Change Hall of Fame, a curated selection by Syed Salahuddin and Kunal Gupta.

Their selections are:

Hidden Agenda, a 1988 DOS game found here.

Lim, an online game by Merritt Kopas.

Papers, Please by Lucas Pope, photo above, where you act as an immigration inspector. For Mac or PC.

Vigilance, by Martin Le Chevallier, from 2001, for Mac and PC, that lets you play as the security guard in a camera booth watching crimes committed in public and allowing you to take action (or not).

Wait, by Lindsay Grace, who we profiled in the original Punk Arcade exhibit with his game Big Huggin’. In this game, the player is encourage to slow down, smell the roses, and play very minimally.

These and 5 more honorable mentions are listed in the Hall of Fame. Find out more and give them a try!

14 Jun 16:15

Yahoo fought back against 'unconstitutional' government order before joining PRISM: NYT

by Sam Byford
firehose

lol

Yahoo failed to overturn a government order in a court dispute that ultimately led the company to join PRISM, the NSA and FBI's controversial surveillance program, the New York Times reported. A heavily redacted document from 2008 shows a company — identified by the Times as Yahoo — petitioning the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) to review an order from the government based on a belief that it violated the Fourth Amendment.

The FISC called Yahoo's concerns "overblown" in its decision, saying it is "settled beyond peradventure that incidental collections occurring as a result of constitutionally permissible acquisitions do not render those acquisitions unlawful."


Yahoo "presented no evidence of actual harm"

Yahoo "presented no evidence of actual harm," said the court, and that "where the government has instituted several layers of serviceable safeguards to protect individuals against unwarranted harms and to minimize incidental intrusions, its efforts to protect national security should not be frustrated by the courts."

Yahoo issued a strong rebuttal to allegations that it was involved in PRISM soon after news of the program first leaked. "Yahoo has not joined any program in which we volunteer to share user data with the U.S. government," said general counsel Ron Bell. "We do not voluntarily disclose user information. The only disclosures that occur are in response to specific demands."

The Washington Post reported this week that the government could collect data through PRISM without the knowledge of participating companies; only extremely high-level executives were said to be aware. Twitter has so far managed to abstain from participating in PRISM.

14 Jun 16:15

Google Retiring Chrome Frame

by samzenpus
An anonymous reader writes "Google today announced it is retiring Chrome Frame, a plug-in that brings Chrome's engine to old IE versions. The company wouldn't share an exact date, but did say it will end support and cease releasing updates sometime in January 2014. Google's reasoning appears to be based on the fact that Chrome Frame was released (initially in September 2009 and then as a stable build in September 2010) at a time when old versions of Internet Explorer, which don't support the latest Web technologies, were still in very high use."

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14 Jun 16:15

Jeb Bush: US economy needs immigrants because they're 'more fertile' - Washington Post

firehose

amercia


San Francisco Chronicle

Jeb Bush: US economy needs immigrants because they're 'more fertile'
Washington Post
Former Florida governor Jeb Bush (R) argued Wednesday that the United States should pass immigration reform because the U.S. economy needs the labor of young immigrants, and immigrants are “more fertile.” “Immigrants create far more businesses than ...
Jeb Bush touts 'fertile,' pro-family immigrantsThe Hill (blog)
Jeb Bush: America will decline without immigrantsDeseret News

all 115 news articles »
14 Jun 16:14

Fellas, Facebook is allowing your profiles to be used for this disgraceful new hot or not app

by Commentary
firehose

"investors have put more than $3.5 million into a service that furthers that aim by stealing the information of hundreds of millions of people without their knowledge or permission in order to subject them to public scrutiny"

article text frustratingly comes right up to the misandry line, but this is just as bullshit as anything else that works the same way

Facebook profiles being used for hot or not, again.

Human beings are notoriously bad at visualizing large numbers. So getting a handle on the sheer size of Facebook’s 1.1 billion users is understandably difficult. Imagine Manhattan’s population density in an area twice the size of the state of New Jersey (a little over 8,700 sq. miles) and you’ll get an idea of Facebook’s sheer scale.

With all of those people sharing untold billions of moments every day, Facebook has faced unremitting scrutiny regarding user privacy—specifically, what is public to whom and the degree to which users control their own data. For the most part, Facebook has done a pretty good job in establishing clear data usage policies that govern what information is private and what information can be used by advertisers without your permission.

The core paradigm is that of opt-in: you control what data you post, how public or private it is, and which 3rd party apps can access it. This is as it should be. But a new service, Lulu, abuses opt-in to such an alarming degree that it’s a wonder Facebook has not already shut it down.

The basic premise is this: A girl meets a guy at a party, but wants to know what other women think of him. She signs into Lulu where, if the lucky man is in her extended Facebook network, she can find anonymous reviews left by other women covering everything from his looks to his earning power to his sexual prowess (or lack thereof).

Lulu’s founder, Alexandra Chong, says that the service is simply the natural extension of women’s longstanding desire to see if a guy is everything he’s purporting to be. And while some may consider that a worthy goal, the site’s methods should draw serious scrutiny from anyone remotely concerned with their digital privacy.

Men, whose Facebook profiles provide the foundational content for the site, are explicitly banned from the app. Furthermore, they are not notified when their information is captured, nor when their profiles are viewed, saved, or reviewed. In fact, the only way a man can have his information removed from the site is to email his Facebook profile name to privacy@onlulu.com or to download a separate app (conveniently also made by Lulu) and then deactivate his own profile.

One doesn’t need to be John Rawls to imagine the public outcry that would meet a service that crawled Facebook for women’s names and profile photos for the explicit purpose of rating them as potential partners—almost solely based on their appearance. Facebook itself started as much less innocuous version of that, and was promptly harangued in the press and shut down. That women have actually taken to defending Lulu is even harder to understand.

That women want to discuss guys they may know in common is hardly surprising. What is surprising is that investors have put more than $3.5 million into a service that furthers that aim by stealing the information of hundreds of millions of people without their knowledge or permission in order to subject them to public scrutiny.

In an age where opt-in is the accepted standard for all social networks, it is horrifying that one exists where the profile owners are banned and the profile reviewers are anonymous. Lulu disgraces not just the women who use it but also the companies that allow it to exist.

We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com


14 Jun 16:11

Photo



14 Jun 16:10

A Morning at Speedy’s (June 8, 2013) …Somehow I...

















A Morning at Speedy’s (June 8, 2013)

…Somehow I forgot to take a pic of my breakfast for Foodspotting. Oh well. (Poached eggs on toast. Tea, when it came out, was true “builder’s tea”: milk in first, hot water and teabag added, so it was first more ivory-colored than otherwise. But it got pretty strong soon enough.)

In the third image: during Sherlock filming, this English Heritage plaque is cunningly concealed by the application of a fake light fixture.

Sorry if some of the pics are a little grainy or blurry: I didn’t want to annoy the other patrons with overmuch pointing and flashing.

14 Jun 16:08

letsmakeloaf: guys why is it called the walk of shame and not the laid parade

letsmakeloaf:

guys why is it called the walk of shame

and not the laid parade

14 Jun 16:05

@gguillotte: Boudin's sleeping on my foot. - http://photos.app.net/6761603/1

Boudin's sleeping on my foot. - http://photos.app.net/6761603/1

1371225758915_robin.jpeg

by @gguillotte via App.net

14 Jun 15:58

The 2013 "Dance Your Ph.D." competition has officially begun!

by Robert T. Gonzalez

Calling all past and present Ph.D. students! Have you ever felt the urge to convey your graduate work through interpretive dance? Well now's your chance; Science's 2013 "Dance Your Ph.D." Contest has officially begun!

The rules are pretty straightforward. You must be a Ph.D. or be working towards one; the Ph.D. must be in a science-related field (the competition's definition of "science-related" is pretty flexible, check out the FAQs for details); and you must — obviously — be in the dance.

A $500 dollar prize will be awarded to the best dances in the categories of physics, chemistry, biology, and social sciences. The grand-prize winner will receive an additional 500 bucks, plus another prize that has yet to be announced (previous years' winners have been awarded travel and accommodations to the TEDxBrussels conference to be recognized for their achievements).

Here's how to enter:

1. Turn your Ph.D. thesis into a dance (you can check out last year's winners to ignite your creative spark)

2. Post the video at Vimeo.com

3. Send the video link to the good folks at GonzoLabs by October 1st.

The Dance Your Ph.D. competition has been going on since 2007, and is the brainchild of Science Contributing Correspondent John Bohannon, principle investigator over at the GonzoLabs. There, you'll find more info on the competition and loads of videos from past contestants. You can also check out the competition on Facebook.

The dance featured up top is by Joel Miller, 2011's grand prize winner and first place entry from the physics category. The title of the dance is "Microstructure-Property relationships in Ti2448 components produced by Selective Laser Melting: A Love Story." It's about titanium hips, and you can read more about it here.

Read more...

    


14 Jun 15:57

Gibbons Walks a Suspension Bridge Like a Tightrope

by Rusty Blazenhoff

In this video from 2012, a Lar Gibbons named Siam walks a suspension bridge like a tightrope at South Africa’s Monkeyland.

Video via South African Animal Sanctuary Alliance

via Tastefully Offensive

14 Jun 15:57

The Evolution of iPhone Home Screens From iOS 1 to iOS 7

by Kimber Streams
firehose

Seeing them side-by-side really drives home how claustrophobic the new icons look. The image is blown right up to the edges of the icons; the only one that benefits is Passbook.

iOS Evolution

Redditor iKurac has created a graphic that illustrates the evolution of the iOS home screen from the first iteration of iOS up to the recently announced and completely redesigned iOS 7. A larger version of the image can be viewed at imgur.

image via iKurac

via reddit, Business Insider

14 Jun 15:51

Comic for June 14, 2013

14 Jun 15:37

Late-night round-up, The Daily Show - Week of June 10

by Kevin McFarland
firehose

"everything about the first week without Stewart in 14 years suggests everyone involved is just trying to keep the ship afloat while the captain goes ashore to explore for a bit. In that regard, it's a little bit like the fourth season of Community, only not as soulless and a lot funnier."

When Jon Stewart announced that he would be taking a three-month leave of absence to direct his first feature film—a passion project and political drama based on Maziar Bahari’s memoir Then They Came For Me—it took a few moments before the panic set in over the second bit of information, somewhat lost in the shuffle: John Oliver would take over as a guest host, the first extended substitute in Stewart’s tenure. No tragedy had ever kept Stewart away—and some of his greatest moments have come from steeling himself to perform in light of harrowing events. But a project of personal significance led Stewart to seek out some well-deserved time off to pursue directing a film.

Since Craig Kilborn left the show under acrimonious circumstances, and Stewart took over, The Daily Show has moved in a sharply political direction, which led to a dramatic improvement and ...

Read more
14 Jun 15:31

ConcernedFangirl: if this aint the most amazing thing you've heard all week then i dont know what to do with you

firehose

CompuServe beat

ConcernedFangirl: if this aint the most amazing thing you've heard all week then i dont know what to do with you:

gigaku:

ok so today when julie and i were waiting to go meet wILLIAM SHATNER, we decided to kill some time at a thrift store near her house cos it’s possibly the single most amazing place on earth

. i was on the verge of not getting [this book] because I accidentally bought it twice so this would be my third copy, and like why on earth would i need three copies of the exact same book. 

except

i couldn’t just
leave it there. this was a vintage star trek novel, and it needed a home. a safe home, not just tossed in a shelf at some thrift store where no one would treasure it. so i bought it,

I had to reblog this because (while it’s always nice that someone’s happy they’ve picked up a book of mine) this one is something special. There’s only one person to whom I would have signed a book this way: it’s my old friend and former fellow CompuServe sysop George Brickner — who went by the handle “Dupa T. Parrot” on the SF Forums at CIS, back in the day, and was hence nicknamed “The Bird”.

George lived all the time I knew him in Chicago, and died there suddenly a couple/few years back. His family (from whom he’d apparently been long estranged) finally found him again, and disposed of his property; and his book collection seems now to have made its way into the thrift shops.

(sigh) Please take good care of that book. And thank you for giving it a new home where it’ll be appreciated  :)

14 Jun 15:31

The Poster for the First GTA Doesn't Look Like Grand Theft Auto

by Evan Narcisse

The Poster for the First GTA Doesn't Look Like Grand Theft Auto

Nowadays, we're all used to the house style of the marketing art for Rockstar Games' blockbuster open-world games: paneled mosaics with character likenesses and heavy black orders, with the game series' name spelled out in the Price Is Right font. But GTA promo images didn't always look like that. They used to be a lot more cinematic. Just look at this poster for GTA 1.

Writer Luke Bellmason shared an image of a Grand Theft Auto poster on Twitter tonight and the thing's hella cool just a historical document. The studio that would later change names to Rockstar North is called DMA. The game is advertised as a Sony Playstation/PC CD-ROM game, which is hilarious to consider in these modern times where we still don't know if a PC release for GTA V is coming. The art direction of the poster is decidedly retro, harkening back to art styles used to advertise the gritty crime dramas of the 1970s. And, of course, the font isn't the familiar one that we're all so used to now. Times sure have changed, huh?

The Poster for the First GTA Doesn't Look Like Grand Theft Auto

14 Jun 15:29

Dotcom Alleges Megaupload Raid Was Part of Deal To Film The Hobbit

by samzenpus
firehose

lol

c0lo writes "Kim Dotcom alleges, in an 20 min interview with the Australian public television, that Megaupload was offered up by the New Zealand's PM 'on a silver platter' as part of negotiations with Warner Brothers executives for shooting The Hobbit in New Zealand. He promises that he'll substantiate the claims in court. He also says that the extradition case the U.S. government is weak and the reason behind the latest delay in extradition hearing (postponed from August this year to March next year) is an attempt to bleed Dotcom dry of his money. Also interesting, Dotcom says that the latest debacle of the massive scale online online surveillance by U.S. spy agencies has triggered an 'explosion' of interest in mega.co.nz, the 'cloud storage' site with user generated encryption."

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14 Jun 15:29

Wii Party U introduces tabletop gaming to GamePad

by Tracey Lien
firehose

can't wait for Cards Agaiinst U

Nintendo's upcoming party game, Wii Party U, features several game modes, one of which allows players to play tabletop games on the Wii U's GamePad.

Wii Party U will allow players to access a minigame mode, which contains a collection of traditional party games similar to those found in titles like Wii Party, Mario Party and Fortune Street, a tabletop mode that uses the GamePad exclusively and a brand new house party mode where the focus is on the player using the GamePad.

In one house party game we played called 'Name That Face', we were given a description that we had to act out using our face and take a picture of ourselves doing so with the GamePad. The descriptions ranged from "Your tongue can talk" to "Calling a goose." After taking a photo, the image would appear on the television screen where the other three players — using their Wii remotes — would have to quickly select from a multiple choice screen which face we were trying to pull. The player who guessed the correct answer in the least amount of time would score points.

In another house party game called 'Lost and Found Square,' the player holding the GamePad had to describe the location of an object on a map to the other players so they could pinpoint where it was on the television screen.

Wii Party U will release later this year after recently being delayed.

14 Jun 15:27

Astonishing X-Men #67 cover

firehose

autoreshare



Astonishing X-Men #67 cover

14 Jun 15:24

Microsoft Office makes the leap to iOS with iPhone app - Washington Post

firehose

this is happening while Microsoft is running a commercial for Win8 bashing Apple for not being able to run MS Office on iOS


ABC News

Microsoft Office makes the leap to iOS with iPhone app
Washington Post
A surprise popped up in the iTunes Store Friday: an iPhone version of Microsoft Office. The app has its limitations. It's free to download but only works for those who subscribe to Microsoft's Office 365 service, which costs $10 a month or $100 a year. It's not for ...
Review: Long-awaited Office for iPhone another tool for Office subscribers, but ...Minneapolis Star Tribune
Microsoft sticks it to the iPad with Windows-first Office strategyComputerworld
Microsoft Enables Office 365 for Apple iPhone, But Not For iPad.X-bit Labs
Slate Magazine (blog) -Newsday
all 223 news articles »
14 Jun 15:22

jeshaka: doughdeer:

firehose

via Kara Jean

14 Jun 15:20

Guitarduino show and tell

by Mike Szczys

guitarduino-show-and-tell

[Igor Stolarsky] plays in a band called 3′s & Sevens. We’d say he is the Guitarist but since he’s playing this hacked axe we probably should call him the band’s Guitarduinist. Scroll down and listen to the quick demo clip of what he can do with the hardware add-ons, then check out his video explanation of the hardware.

There are several added inputs attached to the guitar itself. The most obvious is the set of colored buttons which are a shield riding on the Arduino board itself. This attaches to his computer via a USB cable where it is controlling his MaxMSP patches. They’re out of the way and act as something of a sample looper which he can then play along with. But look at the guitar body under his strumming hand and you’ll also see a few grey patches. These, along with one long strip on the back of the neck, are pressure sensors which he actuates while playing. The result is a level of seamless integration we don’t remember seeing before. Now he just needs to move the prototype to a wireless system and he’ll be set.

If you don’t have the skills to shred like [Igor] perhaps an automatic chording device will give you a leg up.

[via GeekBoy]


Filed under: Arduino Hacks, musical hacks
14 Jun 15:20

The dark side of the SkyMall catalog

by Nathan Ingraham

If you've taken a US flight in the last couple decades, there's a pretty good chance you've encountered the ubiquitous SkyMall catalog. It's like the in-flight version of a train wreck — you know there's almost nothing in the pages that should interest you, but you can't look away. But despite the fact that the company has been reasonably successful over the last decade, with estimated yearly revenue of $130 million and high rates for placement in its catalog, SkyMall recently merged with a company that Rohin Dhar of The Atlantic called "more of a parody of a tech company than a real company at all." Dhar's report digs into SkyMall's relationship with Xhibit Corp., a company that throws lots of buzzwords like "cloud based technology" and "online and mobile social media management" around without actually showing off any products. "Most of how the company presents itself is vaporware," Dhar says, and it actually makes most of its money from selling sketchy weight-loss products. The question remains: how did SkyMall get tied up with Xhibit, and does it stand a chance of surviving this merger?

14 Jun 15:20

Birthday Song's Copyright Leads To a Lawsuit For the Ages

by Soulskill
New submitter chriscappuccio sends this excerpt from the NY Times: "The song 'Happy Birthday to You' is widely credited for being the most performed song in the world. But one of its latest venues may be the federal courthouse in Manhattan, where the only parties may be the litigants to a new legal battle. The dispute stems from a lawsuit filed on Thursday by a filmmaker in New York who is seeking to have the court declare the popular ditty to be in the public domain, and to block a music company from claiming it owns the copyright to the song and charging licensing fees for its use. The filmmaker, Jennifer Nelson, was producing a documentary movie, tentatively titled 'Happy Birthday,' about the song, the lawsuit said. In one proposed scene, the song was to be performed."

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14 Jun 15:16

Listen to Neil deGrasse Tyson Funk the Universe

by Robert T. Gonzalez

Earlier this year, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson made an appearance on Joe Rogan's podcast to talk black holes, multiverses, and extremophiles. So, naturally, someone mixed the interview audio into a funky rap about the Universe.

Read more...

    


14 Jun 15:14

8-Bit Cinema: Star Trek (2009) Retold in 120 Animated Seconds

by Justin Page
firehose

they nail different game styles but my OCD can't get over the multiple pixel sizes

CineFix has released a new episode of 8-Bit Cinema where the 2009 JJ Abrams sci-fi action film, Star Trek, is retold in 120 animated seconds. It was created by filmmakers Norwood Cheek and David Dutton.

14 Jun 15:12

Thanks, EU, but Iceland isn’t so keen on joining any more

by Simone Foxman
iceland president democracy european union

Iceland is rethinking its desire to become a member of the European Union, putting talks with the European bloc on hold for the time being. Although it had completed about a third of the accession negotiations, polls indicate the Icelandic people don’t want their country to become part of the EU.

In a press conference with Stefan Fule, the Czech official responsible for EU membership, Icelandic Minister for foreign affairs Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson said the decision is all about the people: “This is how democracy works,” he said.

The irony probably isn’t lost on southern Europe, where citizens have pushed back at politicians who pressed ahead with economic austerity handed down by the troika—European leaders, the European Central Bank, and the IMF—to the detriment of their own economies. The IMF admitted last week that some of its decisions were made to help the euro at the expense of Greece, which is in its sixth year of recession.

Iceland is also a painful symbol that Europe’s economic mess may have been handled all wrong. Burdened with an insolvent banking sector and forced to take an IMF bailout, Iceland’s economic situation was, at one time, worse than Greece’s. Its economy contracted sharply in 2009 and 2010, but has since notched decent growth.

“Three or four years ago, our policy measures were probably opposed by most established governmental or financial authorities in Europe. But the end result is that Iceland is now on the road to a much stronger recovery than any other European country that has faced a financial crisis in recent years,” Olafur Grimsson, Iceland’s president, said earlier this year. In particular, Iceland let its banks fail, imposed capital controls, and eschewed austerity measures.

On the continent, the difference between being a member of the 17-state euro currency bloc and the 27-state European Union is becoming more stark. Membership in the European Union imposes regulation, budgetary costs, and financial oversight–enough that it’s making the UK consider leaving. By halting progress to become the next EU member state, Iceland is hesitating about even the first step.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Ireland let its banks fail, imposed capital controls, and eschewed austerity measures. It should have said Iceland.