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12 Jun 19:27

Sharp Suits, Absurd Feedback From Advertising Clients Turned Into Sharp-Witted Posters

by Justin Page

Sharp Suits

Dublin, Ireland-based designers Mark Shanley Paddy Treacy of Mark + Paddy have created Sharp Suits, a clever project where they collected absurd feedback and quotes from advertising client and turned them into posters.

Ireland’s creative community got together to release a lot of pent up anger and sadness through the medium of the A3 poster, all in aid of Temple Street Children’s Hospital. The work was exhibited by the kind folks at The Little Green Café, Bar and Gallery. The exhibition ran from November 2nd – 7th.

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

Sharp Suits

images via Sharp Suits

via So Bad So Good, Alexandra Tyler

12 Jun 19:26

Errata, Paintings on a Canvas of Books

by EDW Lynch
firehose

fuck your books

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

In her series “Errata,” artist Ekaterina Panikanova creates large-scale paintings using grids of open books as her canvas. The paintings feature disquieting, almost nightmarish images of childhood, memory, and mental illness. The book grids allow the paintings to be mixed and matched by turning pages, allowing the artist to create collages of multiple subjects.

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

Errata by Ekaterina Panikanova

via DesignTAXI

12 Jun 19:26

I guess Shin Megami Tensei IV’s NPCs aren’t really...

by ericisawesome


I guess Shin Megami Tensei IV’s NPCs aren’t really into mobile gaming

Had a lot of fun with this E3 demo! I have a feeling that this will be another Atlus game we post lots of screenshots from.

PREORDER Shin Megami Tensei IV, upcoming games
12 Jun 19:25

Iran can’t shop at Costco any more

by Theo Francis
firehose

"The reports from US retailer Costco—flagged via the creatively dubbed IRANNOTICE, a special SEC form created just for this purpose—show that, during the first half of fiscal year 2013, the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Japan held two memberships at the discount warehouse chain"

This was so much cheaper at Costco.

We’ve previously noted the scale of the business that continues with Iran despite US sanctions. But to stay on the right side of the law, some American companies are taking the opportunity to report every picayune transaction to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which is responsible for monitoring breaches. Good thing, too. Because it turns out that Iranian embassy staff in Japan were busily shopping at Costco’s 15 stores there.

The reports from US retailer Costco—flagged via the creatively dubbed IRANNOTICE, a special SEC form created just for this purpose—show that, during the first half of fiscal year 2013, the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Japan held two memberships at the discount warehouse chain, known in the US for its wine selection, organic produce and bargain high-end meat. The cards were used by four employees to ring up a total of about $5,178 in merchandise or services over six months. No word on what they bought.

Iran’s critics may be happy to hear that both memberships have now been canceled, though not before the embassy spent another $319. All told, Costco estimates that it made $168 in profits from the memberships since the start of its fiscal year in September—a rather ascetic 3.05% profit margin on sales to the Islamic Republic.

Two Iran Air employees also had a card in the UK, where Costco has 24 stores, but haven’t been using it. Just to be on the safe side, Costco canceled that membership, too.

“The Company does not intend to continue these activities,” Costco concluded in its quarterly report.


12 Jun 19:18

Trent Franks Thinks Few Raped Women Get Pregnant - HispanicBusiness.com

firehose

TW: amercia


ABC News

Trent Franks Thinks Few Raped Women Get Pregnant
HispanicBusiness.com
U.S. Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., sponsor of a bill that would limit abortions to the first 20 weeks, said Wednesday few women become pregnant through rape. Franks spoke at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on his bill, The Washington Post reported.
Clueless Republican Trent Frank Ignores Pregnancy Rate of 5.0% Per RapePoliticusUSA
To Stop Being the Party of Stupid You Must Stop Being StupidThe Atlantic
The Myth That Rape Rarely Causes Pregnancy Comes From Nazi ExperimentsThe Slatest
Jezebel
all 126 news articles »
12 Jun 18:55

QB Jackson could return to Seahawks

by gguillotte
firehose

attn: Overbey

If re-signed, Jackson likely would compete with Brady Quinn for the backup job to Russell Wilson.
12 Jun 18:53

Facebook to introduce clickable hashtags - The Guardian

firehose

#fml


The Guardian

Facebook to introduce clickable hashtags
The Guardian
Facebook has announced plans to introduce clickable hashtags for users. The tool is already widely used on other media, such as microblogging site Twitter, so users can find out what others are discussing. Facebook users have long-adopted the hashtag, ...
Facebook formally introduces hashtags – let the discovery beginDigital Trends
#Hashtags Coming to FacebookABC News
Facebook adds 'hashtag' feature, taking a page from TwitterReuters
GlobalPost -Digital Spy -Los Angeles Times
all 190 news articles »
12 Jun 18:53

Everyday Hero WIN

firehose

via Christopher Lantz

12 Jun 18:52

First Teaser Trailer and Poster Released For ‘The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug’

by Kimber Streams

Warner Bros. has released the first trailer and poster for The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, the second part in The Hobbit film trilogy directed by Peter Jackson. The film is scheduled to release in the US on December 13th, 2013.

The second in a trilogy of films adapting the enduringly popular masterpiece The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien, “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” continues the adventure of the title character Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) as he journeys with the Wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and thirteen Dwarves, led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) on an epic quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor.

The Hobbit

image via The Hobbit

12 Jun 18:30

German Parliament Tells Government To Strictly Limit Patents On Software

by Unknown Lamer
jrepin writes "On Friday the 7th of June the German Parliament decided upon a joint motion to limit software patents. The Parliament urges the German Government to take steps to limit the granting of patents on computer programs (PDF, German; English translation). Software should exclusively be covered by copyright, and the rights of the copyright holders should not be devalued by third parties' software patents. The only exception where patents should be allowed are computer programs which replace a mechanical or electromagnetic component. In addition the Parliament made clear that governmental actions related to patents must never interfere with the legality of distributing Free Software."

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.



12 Jun 18:29

Did Path Cheat Its Way To The Top?

Path is not a popular app. Outside of privacy crusaders and various geek niches, it's virtually unknown—a sanctimonious social network built to appeal to Facebook's haters, that ended up appealing to few. But for some reason, it's spiking in popularity around the world. Inexplicable, right? No—just shady spam tactics and money at work.
12 Jun 18:29

Mario & Mega Man: Together at Last

by Evan Narcisse
firehose

'My first thought after seeing this image from the official Super Smash Bros.: “A million slashfic stories start here.” '

Mario & Mega Man: Together at Last

A human. An android. Will they be friends? Foes? Who knows? My first thought after seeing this image from the official Super Smash Bros. site: “A million slashfic stories start here.”

12 Jun 18:29

The secret to bringing down India’s birth rate: get more women to watch soap operas

by Gwynn Guilford
An Indian woman attends to her chores as a man watches on television the Super Eights match between India and Pakistan at the World Twenty20 cricket at a slum in Mumbai, India, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool

India’s population will overtake China’s by 2021, putting a huge strain on resources and public services. And though the country’s overall birth rate has fallen a lot, it’s still explosive in rural areas (pdf).

So how to get rural women to have fewer children? As we just discussed, coercive sterilization is probably not the best way to go. But things you might expect to bring the birth rate down, like higher female literacy or urbanization, don’t necessarily seem to do so, as Stanford professor Martin Lewis explains.

However, there’s one kinda bizarre thing that does correlate with lower fertility: cable TV.

Over a three-year period, academics Robert Jensen and Emily Oster researched rural villages in five Indian states. They found that once the village got cable TV access, fertility declined within a year (pdf):

Cable access and pregnancy The Power of TV: Cable Television and Women's Status in India, Robert Jensen and Emily Oster

This has happened elsewhere too. Fertility dropped markedly as more and more Brazilian villages got on the cable grid (pdf) from 1970 to 1999, according to research by academics Eliana La Ferrara, Alberto Chong, and Suzanne Duryea. Here’s how birth rates declined in Brazil over the years that cable availability spread:

Average number of births, by age cohort "Soap Operas and Fertility: Evidence from Brazil," Eliana La Ferrara, Alberto Chong, and Suzanne Duryea

One thing stands out in that study, though. Fertility only declined among poor rural women who could access Rede Globo, the network with a corner on the telenovela market. Why? Perhaps because, at a time in the 1970s when fertility was running at around 5.8 births per woman, nearly three-quarters of female characters of child-bearing age on Globo’s telenovela shows had no kids and 21% had just one child.

Also notable: When Brazilian women were exposed to imported TV shows, nothing happened. The authors note that “programs that are imported from Mexico and the US…are generally not perceived as realistic portraits of Brazilian society.” This suggested to them that “TV programs that are framed in a way that makes them immediately relevant for people’s everyday life may have significant effects on individual choices.”

Though Jensen and Oster’s research in India didn’t focus on the impact of a single type of program, they too conclude that Indian soap operas, which tend to feature independent urban women, might be the critical factor in driving down birth rates. Exposure to TV also tended to accompany a shift in values—fewer rural women who had TV said they found domestic violence acceptable or expressed a preference for male children.

So perhaps the Indian government should consider ramping up the reach of cable, and churning out Bollywood-style telenovelas with strong, compelling and—most importantly—childless female leads. It’s got to be a lot cheaper than sterilization camps.


12 Jun 18:21

Transgender student suit goes to Maine high court

by gguillotte
BANGOR, Maine (AP) — Lawyers for a transgender girl and an elementary school that required the fifth-grader to use a staff bathroom instead of the girls restroom clashed before Maine's highest court Wednesday over whether her rights were violated, a case that lays bare the difficult decisions facing school administrators.
12 Jun 18:21

Screenshots of Despair

12 Jun 18:20

Pretty Notable

by Josh Marshall

Sen. Tester all but supporting Snowden leak. "First of all, Snowden probably shouldn't have done what he did. But the fact of the matter is is I don't see how that compromises the security of this country whatsoever. And quite frankly, it helps people like me become aware of a situation that I wasn't aware of before because I don't sit on that Intelligence Committee." Read.

    


12 Jun 18:19

UPS Doesn’t Offer “Insurance,” Even If An Employee Tells You It Does

by Chris Morran
firehose

via Russian Sledges
"like those times when I find it easier to refer to myself as Ryan Gosling, because we’re both human and male, which makes us virtually identical in the big picture"

The term “insurance” carries with it a boatload of connotations, so if you go into a UPS branch to ship a package and someone offers you “insurance” for a few extra dollars, you might think that you’ll be covered in case your shipment gets mangled along the way, but UPS employees are mis-using the term in order to upsell an add-on that doesn’t offer anywhere near the level of coverage one might expect.

San Francisco’s KPIX-TV recently spoke to an area man who thought he was buying insurance coverage from UPS on a shipment of two headlights. He says he’d already repacked the lights in their original packaging, thrown in a bit more foam padding and newspaper for good measure, but decided to fork over some more money for the extra peace of mind.

When one of the headlights arrived broken, he attempted to make a claim but it was denied because his package had included the newspaper padding inside. That’s when he fell into the Declared Value rabbit hole.

FIND THE FINE PRINT
See, UPS doesn’t actually sell insurance coverage on the packages you ship. Instead, it sells “Declared Value Coverage,” which allows the shipper to make a claim for the full declared value of the package (up to $50,000), so long as the packaging meets UPS standards.

The lengthy UPS Terms document [PDF] even states, somewhere on page #35, that Declared Value Coverage is not insurance:

“When a shipper declares a value in excess of $100, it does not receive any form of insurance. Shippers desiring cargo insurance, all risk insurance, or another form of insurance should purchase such insurance from a third party.”

Of course, for as detailed and lengthy as the Terms of Service are, the document points back to the UPS website when describing what isn’t covered by Declared Value:

–loss or damage resulting from improper, inadequate or unsafe packaging or wrapping that fails to meet UPS’s published standards related thereto set forth in the Terms or at ups.com

And so the fun begins at UPS.com, where there are multiple pages with shipping guidance.

Nowhere on the page with guidelines for preventing damage claims does it say that newspaper would be a reason for denying a claim.

Nor does it say anything on UPS.com’s FAQ about Declared Value Coverage, other than to say that its claims people use ISTA 3A standards for determining whether a package was properly put together.

There’s the Packaging Guidelines page, which only says “Use adequate cushioning material” and does not call out newspaper as a no-no.

Then there is the Packaging Materials Page, which doesn’t list any forbidden packaging but does link to further pages about acceptable materials. Following the link to the Loose Fill page brings up nothing about newspaper, even though we’d describe it as a “lightweight, non-fragile” material.

To get an indication that newspaper may void your claim — though it doesn’t say this explicitly — you have to go the Internal Packaging page, which lists both Kraft paper and “paper cushioning” as acceptable. However, each of those paragraphs include the qualifying parenthetical of “(not newspaper or newsprint).”

Finally, we stumble upon UPS.com’s step-by-step guide to packing your shipment, where on page 2 it reads, “Improper cushioning material includes clothing, blankets, towels, newspaper/newsprint, and pillows.”

Phew!

WHAT’S IN A NAME?
KPIX-TV went undercover to three separate UPS Store locations in the San Francisco area, and at each store the employee attempted to upsell them on “insurance” coverage, never mentioning Declared Value.

The UPS Store claims that it trains employees to use the phrase “Declared Value Coverage,” but says that “Unfortunately, there may be times when an employee thinks it’s easier to refer to it as insurance.”

Which is like those times when I find it easier to refer to myself as Ryan Gosling, because we’re both human and male, which makes us virtually identical in the big picture.

MAY WE MAKE A SUGGESTION?
If UPS and the UPS Store really want to stop this confusion, they will not only train employees to not say “insurance,” but will also train them to clearly explain the difference between the two.

Furthermore, the company could provide employees with a list of immediate no-nos that would allow the customer to know that his Declared Value claim stands a high risk of being denied. It could be a piece of paper or a poster that says something like, “If your package has any of the following… it is not considered properly packaged by UPS standards.”

But of course then UPS wouldn’t get to upsell an all but useless coverage to unwitting customers.


12 Jun 18:18

"Study finds nobody has ever actually found your tweet via a hashtag."

“Study finds nobody has ever actually found your tweet via a hashtag.” - TechCrunch...
12 Jun 18:18

Photo

by aquackingduck
firehose

via Russian Sledges









12 Jun 18:17

Photo

firehose

via Russian Sledges









12 Jun 17:49

And everything is going fine

12 Jun 17:28

oldflorida: Good morning! It’s good to be the doughnut queen,...

firehose

want to be the doughnut queen



oldflorida:

Good morning!

It’s good to be the doughnut queen, 1940’s.

I think I found my life’s ambition…

12 Jun 17:27

Know your airlines

12 Jun 17:23

Coming Soon: Cities That Are Ecosystems

by Annalee Newitz
firehose

arcology beat

Coming Soon: Cities That Are Ecosystems

The future of the city may be the country. At least, that's what a group of future-minded architects and city designers now believe. To make cities sustainable and carbon neutral, we will have to design buildings to be more like ecosystems or living organisms.

Read more...

    


12 Jun 17:21

Bloomberg targets political donations in latest gun-control push - Reuters


WTNH

Bloomberg targets political donations in latest gun-control push
Reuters
By Edith Honan. NEW YORK | Wed Jun 12, 2013 2:58pm EDT. NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, in his latest bid for tougher gun control, is urging the city's legions of Democratic donors to withhold funds from four Democratic ...
Newtown families return to Hill as administration restarts gun control pushNBCNews.com
Bloomberg: No money to Senate Dems over gun votesUSA TODAY
Bloomberg steps up gun control effort with letter targeting donors; group plans ...Minneapolis Star Tribune

all 49 news articles »
12 Jun 17:20

Comic for June 12, 2013

12 Jun 17:08

Vietnam now exports more electronics than sneakers and t-shirts

by Matt Phillips
This is what most of Vietnam's export sector looked like a decade ago. Not any more.

Samsung as we reported earlier today, is shifting more and more of its smartphone manufacturing from China to Vietnam, where labor is cheaper. And it’s worth a look at how fast that’s changed the complexion of Vietnam’s export sector in general. In recent years a surge in foreign direct investment pushed production of mobile phones and components sharply higher. Now exports of the devices account for a larger share of the country’s total exports than footwear and even textiles. Electronics exports accounted for 23% of all exports through the first five months of 2013. This great chart from JP Morgan economists lays out the story.


12 Jun 17:07

Which Country Gets The Unwanted Title Of World's Murder Capital?

firehose

Honduras

It has just 8 million people, but with as many as 20 people killed there every day, it now has the highest murder rate in the world.
12 Jun 17:07

Time Warner Cable reportedly paying producers to keep TV off the web

by Nathan Ingraham

While there's a growing population of cord-cutters — those who get their TV from the internet rather than traditional cable services — there's still a large amount of content (like sports and HBO) that just isn't available online in a timely fashion. According to Bloomberg, that's partly because cable companies like Time Warner Cable are offering incentives to media companies and content providers to keep their shows off of internet services. Bloomberg's unnamed sources said those incentives were typically either more money or the threat of dropping programming from the media company, though there were no specific examples of companies that have been strongarmed in such a fashion.

TWC's CEO Glenn Britt made a statement at the National Cable & Telecommunications Association yesterday in which he essentially admitted his company had contracts in place media companies that carried such restrictions. "We may well have ones that have that prohibition," Britt said. Other executives were a bit less forthcoming. "It's in everybody's mutual interest that we are protecting the ecosystem in a way that continues to keep the value of that programming that we have and the way its delivered to our subscribers today," said Charter Communications CFO Chris Winfrey. Spokespersons for both companies declined to elaborate further. HBO for one has already said that the downsides of opening up HBO Go to those who aren't cable subscribers outweigh the benefits — is extra cash from the cable companies part of its reasoning?

12 Jun 17:07

Istanbul