Shared posts

22 May 18:35

Xbox Live video, music purchases will transfer to Xbox One

by Danny Cowan
firehose

just not games, you know, the stuff you bought the thing for

Xbox Live video, music purchases will transfer to Xbox One
Video and music purchased through the Xbox Live Marketplace will transfer to the Xbox One for storage and playback, Microsoft corporate vice president Phil Harrison confirmed to Polygon.

Harrison noted the cross-platform media compatibility when asked about the Xbox One's reported inability to play Xbox 360 discs and downloaded games. "Actually, to be clear music, movies, television will [transfer]," Harrison said. "All that comes across. Anything that you've acquired from Xbox Video or Xbox Music will move across."

Currently, Xbox Live Marketplace movie, television, and music purchases are playable across an individual user's Xbox 360, PC, and tablet and smartphone devices.

JoystiqXbox Live video, music purchases will transfer to Xbox One originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 22 May 2013 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments
22 May 18:35

amandaonwriting: IRELAND’S NEWEST STAMP features an entire...



amandaonwriting:

IRELAND’S NEWEST STAMP features an entire short story written by a talented Dublin teenager.

Source

Now there’s a market you won’t crack every day.

22 May 18:29

The London Subway Map Recreated With Just Code

firehose

CSS

This developer recreated the entire London subway map without using a single image.
22 May 18:24

New trailer for Simon Pegg's beer-soaked apocalypse The World's End

by Meredith Woerner

Get a better look at the evil soul-sucking baddies Simon Pegg, Nick Frost and director Edgar Wright are teaming up to fight in their new apocalypse comedy The World's End. This will be the finale to the Blood and Ice Cream trilogy, and while we haven't even seen the movie yet, we already miss this trio. Hopefully the end of the Cornetto trilogy doesn't mean the end of these three fellas working together.

Read more...

    


22 May 18:18

Makers Of Nutella Force Fan Who Created World Nutella Day To Shut It Down

firehose

"Update: As of today, there are reports that Ferrero has been in contact with Sarah Russo and has worked out an arrangement by which Nutella Day will be reinstated with the company's blessing. The company is blaming the cease & desist on over-zealous lawyers as opposed to any public backlash. This may satisfy some people, while others will note that aggressive intellectual property laws and protection lead to this kind of collateral damage all the time."

Ferrero, the makers of Nutella, a hazelnut/chocolate spread that everyone loves, sure doesn't like anyone to use anything remotely like its name ever.
22 May 17:56

Music: Great Job, Internet!: The first single off Goodie Mob's reunion album features Janelle Monáe, is totally nuts

by Eric Thurm

Atlanta hip-hop group and original home of Cee-Lo Green Goodie Mob has set an August 27 release date for Age Against The Machine, its first album since reuniting last year and the first to feature the full line-up since 1999. “Special Education,” the just-released first single, sets a ridiculously high bar for the rest of the album. The track features an insane, almost industrial exploding funk beat, a stately chorus from fellow Dungeon Family member Janelle Monáe bemoaning uniformity in music, and a pretty killer verse from Cee-Lo himself.

Read more
22 May 17:55

Man Killed By FBI Confessed To Triple Murder

firehose

this never stops happening

A man with ties to the Boston Marathon bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev allegedly confessed to a unsolved triple homicide before he was shot and killed after attacking an FBI agent.
22 May 17:54

Kinect is always listening on Xbox One, but privacy is a 'top priority' for Microsoft

by Dave Tach
firehose

I have less of a problem with Microsoft having an internet-connected camera and microphone in every house as I do with a Windows-based operating system being responsible for their security

By Dave Tach on May 21, 2013 at 8:24p

The Xbox One's Kinect microphone is always listening and waiting for specific commands, Microsoft's hardware program manager John Link told Polygon today.

Microsoft revealed today that Xbox One will support commands native commands for powering the console on and off. Xbox 360 Kinect users can power off the console by using voice commands to navigate the menus, but not power on their consoles with the device.

In response to a question about whether that functionality means that Kinect is always on, Link said that Kinect is always listening, but in a limited capacity. It also helps ensure developers can count on the peripheral, he said.

"The Kinect has a variety of settings," he said. "You know, it's always available to the system, so ... you can count, as an application developer or a game developer, [that] everyone's going to have a Kinect. You always have that stream available. And then, you know, there are settings, obviously, in the console to be able to change the settings of how your Kinect is used, if you're interested."

The always-on functionality even when the console is powered down comes courtesy of "multiple power states," he said. At its lowest setting, which Microsoft refers to as "wake on voice," the peripheral is "listening" for specific commands.

The Kinect will "be just listening enough to know that, 'Hey, I heard something interesting. Somebody's probably trying to wake me up.' It sends it to the console for confirmation, and then it can really power up to that high-power state."

The Verge contacted Microsoft about potential privacy concerns of a device that's always listening — if not recording — the sound it hears. A spokesperson for Microsoft responded by saying that the privacy is a "top priority" for the company.

"The new Kinect is listening for a specific cue, like 'Xbox on,'" the spokesperson said. "We know our customers want and expect strong privacy protections to be built into our products, devices and services, and for companies to be responsible stewards of their data. Microsoft has more than 10 years of experience making privacy a top priority. Kinect for Xbox 360 was designed and built with strong privacy protections in place and the new Kinect will continue this commitment."

In This Storystream:

Previous Next
22 May 17:52

Amazon, Warner Bros. Go Into Fan-Fiction Business

firehose

oh boy

Amazon has teamed with Warner Bros.Television on Kindle Worlds, billed as the first commercial publishing platform for fan fiction allowing fanfic writers to earn royalties for certain corporate-sanctioned stories.
22 May 17:52

How to Make Cloud Strife’s Buster Sword From the ‘Final Fantasy’ Video Game Series

by Justin Page
firehose

Man at Arms beat

In a recent episode of “Man at Arms” by Break Media, master blacksmith and prop maker Tony Swatton took it into his own hands and recreated the huge Buster Sword wielded Cloud Strife in the Final Fantasy video game series. He built the sword from scratch at his Sword and Stone shop in Burbank, California. Previously we wrote about Tony’s custom built version of Finn’s sword from Adventure Time, the batarang from The Dark Knight films and more.

via Kotaku

22 May 17:49

The GIF Search Engine We've All Been Waiting For

firehose

http://giphy.com
visual, tag-based, animates on mouseover

Turns out there's a GIF for every occasion.
22 May 17:47

Through My Eyes, Photographer Documents 2 Years of His Life in First Person Photo Series

by EDW Lynch
firehose

i'm ruined
I see these and can only think "he's really good at Surgeon Simulator"

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

In his series “Through My Eyes,” Kazakhstan-based photographer Timur Zhansultanov has been documenting his life for the past two years with photos taken from the perspective of his own eyes.

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

Through My Eyes by Timur Zhansultanov

via Design You Trust, PetaPixel

22 May 17:46

Microsoft: No cross-platform play between Xbox One and Xbox 360

by David Hinkle
firehose

"Because of the different architecture of the systems it's not possible"
oh horseshit, your own team did it with The Licensed FPS Whose Name We Dare Not oh whatever YA FUCKIN DID IT WITH SHADOWRUN NO PROBLEMS DUDE

Microsoft No crossplatform play between Xbox One and Xbox 360
Don't expect any cross-platform play between Xbox 360 and Xbox One. That's what Microsoft Xbox UK marketing manager Harvey Eagle confirmed to Videogamer.

"Because of the different architecture of the systems it's not possible. Your Xbox Live account on 360 will carry over to Xbox One. That same account will work on both platforms. The multiplayer won't," Eagle told Videogamer. The Xbox 360 is built on PowerPC architecture, while the Xbox One utilizes an x86 chipset - so no purchased games will transfer to the new system.

The Xbox One was announced by Microsoft yesterday during its Redmond campus Xbox reveal event. The Xbox One is due to launch later this year. Xbox Live profiles and corresponding Achievements on Xbox 360 will carry over to Xbox One, which also bumps up the friends limit to 1,000.

JoystiqMicrosoft: No cross-platform play between Xbox One and Xbox 360 originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 22 May 2013 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments
22 May 17:44

nodaybuttodaytodefygravity: aibohphobia: guys, i don’t like...







nodaybuttodaytodefygravity:

aibohphobia:

guys, i don’t like it.

We’re not going to talk about the fact that the National Geographic Twitter just told a rainbow to go home because it’s drunk?

22 May 17:44

The Ultimate Spaceship Face-off, Interactive Guide For Comparing the Speeds of Famed Sci-Fi Ships

by Justin Page
firehose

spolier: TARDIS always wins
Heart of Gold is always hilarious

The Ultimate Spaceship Face off

Slate interactives editor Chris Kirk created a very handy interactive guide for comparing the speeds of some of the most popular spaceships from science fiction television shows, films and the real world. You can select a destination (Alpha Centauri, Galactic Center, Andromeda Galaxy) and instantly view the visual race between each of the ships and then get specific results afterward.

It’s a little odd that a genre about science, the field of precision, can be so imprecise. The truth is that spaceships almost always fly at the speed of the plot. But, for those who refuse to accept that, this is a definitive guide to ship speeds, based on highly scientific computer simulations and highly unscientific speculation.

List of the spaceships:

Enterprise (Star Trek), Millennium Falcon (Star Wars), TARDIS (Doctor Who), Heart of Gold (The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy), Planet Express (Futurama), Jupiter 2 (Lost in Space), Serenity (Firefly), Galactica (Battlestar Galactica), Voyager 1 (NASA)

The Ultimate Spaceship Face off

The Ultimate Spaceship Face off

22 May 17:42

Xbox One marketplace won't have separate XBLA, XBLIG channels

by Jessica Conditt
firehose

'In this new approach, indie games, AAA games and everything in-between will co-exist in the same "Games" marketplace. Harrison said this will solve discoverability problems that indie games face today'
OK. How?

Xbox One marketplace won't have separate XBLA, XBLIG channels
Xbox One will not have separate sections for indie or download-only games, such as Xbox Live Indie Games and Xbox Live Arcade on the 360 - instead, Microsoft's new console will feature games, and "just games," Microsoft Corporate Vice President Phil Harrison told Eurogamer.

"In the past we had retail games which came on disc, we had Xbox Live Arcade and we had Indie Games, and they had their own discrete channels or discrete silos," Harrison said. "With Xbox One and the new marketplace, they're games. We don't make a distinction between whether a game is a 50-hour RPG epic or whether it is a puzzle game or whether it is something that fits halfway between the two."

In this new approach, indie games, AAA games and everything in-between will co-exist in the same "Games" marketplace. Harrison said this will solve discoverability problems that indie games face today, and Microsoft will still be able to highlight titles that it thinks players should pay attention to.

"We don't give up the ability to put a spotlight on the products that we think are going to be exciting to our user base, but in addition to that, what your friends are playing, what other people think is hot in your area, your country, your continent, will propagate up the most interesting and exciting games," Harrison said.

The Xbox One "Games" tab will feature game recommendations and trends, and will have catalog and search functions. The entire system is a blend of curated and popular games, Harrison said. Microsoft will maintain its current strategy with indie developers, meaning indies won't be able to self-publish their games on Xbox One, as they can on PS3, Vita, Wii U, Steam, and eventually, the PS4.

JoystiqXbox One marketplace won't have separate XBLA, XBLIG channels originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 22 May 2013 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments
22 May 17:40

La. schools' Minimum Foundation Program changes shot down

by gguillotte
firehose

This also would have effectively gutted Gifted and Talented programs, which are part of special education.

The action means that, unless there is a sudden change, the state will return to its 2011-12 public school funding package to aid schools for the 2013-14 school year, with no changes to special education aid. Parents and students are not likely to notice changes. However, the vote also means that the state will have to come up with an additional $30 million, which is significant in a session where extra state dollars are relatively scarce. In addition, $12 million of the $30 million stems from dollars owed by the state to local school districts as part of the costs of vouchers before the state Supreme Court ruled the funding method was unconstitutional. ... The key issue that made this one controversial was a provision that would change the way the state supports about 82,000 special education students. Under the proposal, 10 percent of the money would be based on a student’s disability, where and how the student is educated, and academic performance.
22 May 16:50

Is Portland Anti-Science?

firehose

Nope.

Several things combined to kill it:
1. Portland is very anti-establishment, and fluoridation was backed by tons of money from the start. The initial ad blitz raised suspicions that turned those voters against fluoridation on principle. When a vote excludes the burbs like this one did, you are not going to win on money--if anything, the 3-to-1 fundraising advantage for fluoridation advocates _hurt_ them, especially as it got out to the press.
2. The vote was on the regional watershed, but the vote excluded the burbs. About a third of the affected population would be paying for and receiving fluoridated water that they weren't allowed to vote on. Voters on the geographic fringes of Portland voted against the overreach.
3. The vote was on fluoridation only--there was nothing else for providing dental care for the poor and young, which is a bigger and more visible problem. The opposition came up with a lot of persuasive, credible data that fluoridation alone wasn't going to improve anything, and that the money spent on fluoridation would be better spent on improving access to regular dental care. This is the group I'd pin the swing on, as they would have jumped on fluoridation as part of a comprehensive dental health plan, but looked at fluoridation by itself as a waste of time and money.
4. The craziest mainstream opposition were people who are hung up on the idea that Portland's tap water tastes better than anyone else's and they didn't want to fuck with that. But that included a rally of the very powerful food and beverage industries in Portland, many of which export their goods to fluoridated cities anyway.

Anti-science voters sure as hell weren't the 11% swing.

rachel shared this story from Discover Magazine:
Yeah, probably.

For years, Portland has ranked as one of America's greenest cities. While its eco-minded culture has been famously lampooned in Portlandia, the city's environmentally friendly reputation is well earned, as (Seattle-based) Grist notes: Portland’s public transit system is held up as a model for the country. Per capita carbon emissions are down 26 percent since 1990. Portland consistently tops lists for most bike-friendly city. The city even has an eco-pub. So how is it possible that the citizens
22 May 16:30

Photo



22 May 16:25

Photo

firehose

comcastic



22 May 16:24

actegratuit: Takashi Murakami, Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow,...







actegratuit:

Takashi MurakamiWho’s Afraid of Red, Yellow, Blue and Death, 2010

22 May 16:23

Photo

firehose

this dish is so poorly prepared
EA is trying to publish it





















22 May 16:22

A little crosswalk justice in Somerville

by adamg
firehose

"So I'm crossing Washington St. in Somerville, just outside of Union Square towards Sullivan. Its a sort-of-four-lane road, for people who like to get creative with their driving. I've lived here for a decade and have been almost-hit at least a dozen times when someone stops to let me cross and people pass them on the right.

Tonight, I'm in the crosswalk and a car stops for me. I walk out, give the guy a little wave (because I'm polite like that) and wouldn't you know some guy in a sedan some whizzing down the road and passes the stopped car on the right, apparently not cluing into the fact that crosswalk + stopped car = pedestrian in the road. I see him coming and kind of step back to keep from getting run over. After he goes by, I start to step away from the car who has stopped for me, and at just as I take a step the car who stopped puts on his blue flashers, drives around me, and pulls the guy over! Yes MA'AM, the car was an unmarked police car! Oh, sweet sweet instant justice! I literally doubled over laughing as I walked away. There are so many bad drivers going through my neighborhood (as I said above, I've nearly been hit as a pedestrian multiple times and was very close to getting t-boned by an oil truck that ran a hard red light that everyone runs with no cops in sight to stop them.) This was just the most glorious moment, and I needed to share."

rachel shared this story from Universal Hub - All Boston, all the time.

A story to make any pedestrian's heart glad.

22 May 16:20

Snakes on a Train

While the box promises “100 Trapped Passengers - 3,000 Venomous Vipers”, in reality there are only about a dozen passengers and a small handful of snakes shown in the film. There is also a wholly unconnected subplot regarding two female passengers smuggling drugs.

Link

22 May 16:20

Thousands of Whistle Blowers Vulnerable After Anonymous Hacks SAPS

by Unknown Lamer
firehose

thanks, Anon

First time accepted submitter fezzzz writes "Anonymous performed a data dump of hundreds of whistle blowers' private details in an attempt to show their unhappiness with the SAPS (South African Police Service) for the Marikana shooting. In so doing, the identities of nearly 16,000 South Africans who lodged a complaint with police on their website, provided tip-offs, or reported crimes are now publicly available." Reader krunster also submitted a slightly more in depth article on the breach.

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



22 May 16:18

Xbox One won't let indies self-publish

by Richard Mitchell
firehose

welp

Microsoft didn't have anything to say to smaller independent developers during its Xbox One announcement. Such studios might have been hoping for bigger news from the company's E3 press conference, but it looks like there out of luck. Unlike the PS3, Vita, Wii U and, soon, the PS4, indie devs will not be able to self-publish their games on Xbox One, reports Shacknews.

Matt Booty, general manager of Redmond Game Studios and Platforms, told the site that Microsoft will "continue to court developers in the ways that we have." He did add that the company will "explore new business models and new ways of surfacing content," but ultimately concluded that "Microsoft Studios is a publisher that works with a wide range of partners, as do a lot of other people, to bring digital content to the box."

Currently, the only way self-publish on the Xbox 360 is via Xbox Live Indie Games. While the niche channel has seen a few successful developers, most see greater success on other platforms like Steam and PSN. Furthermore, the XBLIG service is stagnating according to some developers, and its future remains unclear.

JoystiqXbox One won't let indies self-publish originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 22 May 2013 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments
22 May 16:18

Parallelogram Doormat

by EDW Lynch

Parallelogram Doormat

Parallelepipedus Kovrikus is a clever parallelogram doormat designed by Vladimir Pavlenko for Moscow-based Art. Lebedev Studio. It is available at their online store.

Parallelogram Doormat

via swissmiss

22 May 16:02

To locate the next Arab Spring revolution, look to the soccer stands

by Josh Meyer
firehose

'“It has reached a breaking point. They are calling for overthrow, and using very similar chants to fans in Tunisia and elsewhere,’’ said al-Ahmad, of the Institute for Gulf Affairs. “When they are all together, they are not afraid anymore.”

Dorsey predicts the next revolt will be in Algeria. Soccer fans there are increasingly voicing opposition to 76-year old president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who is recovering from a stroke in Paris. Recently, they interrupted a moment of silence during a match to commemorate the death of a former leader, chanting “Bouteflika is next.”'

Egyptian soccer fans

It’s been said that soccer tells us all we need to know about life, parenting, even globalization.

Now a Singapore-based blogger says soccer can tell us which Middle East or North African government will be the next to blow. At the top of the list: Algeria and Saudi Arabia.

Over at his blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, James M. Dorsey looks at soccer as a lens through which to view the fault lines carving up the Middle East and North Africa. In Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and other countries, he says, soccer played a key role in allowing pent-up anger and frustration to percolate into organized protest that forced transitions from autocratic rule to more open societies.

In these countries, those engaging in public forms of dissent are often tortured and “disappeared.” Soccer fans, in contrast, are allowed to vent as much as they want, and in large numbers. Stadiums become incubators of protest and insurrection. One only has to watch the action off the pitch to accurately gauge the mood of the people and see how close they are to erupting into mass protest, Dorsey tells Quartz.

Dorsey, a former Wall Street Journal foreign correspondent, has been writing his blog for three years. In February 2011, he focused on the role of the militant, highly politicized, and well organized soccer fans, known as Ultras, in Egypt’s uprising. Here’s a taste:

One catch: Often, especially in family-run monarchies, the countries’ leaders own soccer clubs as a status symbol, so fans might just be mad at the government for the latest losing streak. That might have been the case recently in Saudi Arabia, where fans booed Prince Faisal bin Turki, the owner of Riyadh soccer club Al Nassr FC.

Saudi soccer fans booing and pelting a prince. http://www.Alhilal.com/The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog

Dorsey doesn’t think so, and contends the Saudis are in trouble. Washington-based Saudi dissident Ali al-Ahmad agrees, based on the increasingly militant behavior of young male soccer fans in the stands as well as on Facebook and YouTube.

“It has reached a breaking point. They are calling for overthrow, and using very similar chants to fans in Tunisia and elsewhere,’’ said al-Ahmad, of the Institute for Gulf Affairs. “When they are all together, they are not afraid anymore.”

Dorsey predicts the next revolt will be in Algeria. Soccer fans there are increasingly voicing opposition to 76-year old president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who is recovering from a stroke in Paris. Recently, they interrupted a moment of silence during a match to commemorate the death of a former leader, chanting “Bouteflika is next.”

Dorsey says some very influential security types, as well as soccer officials, follow his blog for hints as to what is to come. One US intelligence official agrees with Dorsey’s premise. The official, who has spent decades in the Middle East and North Africa, said CIA officers routinely attend matches to glean clues as to where a country is headed.

Often, the official said, an autocratic regime would cover up burgeoning dissent by blaming it on hooliganism. The CIA person on the ground would mention that, too, in the cable back to headquarters: “They would take note of it all, and put it in context. As soon as the prince shows up, everyone starts booing. That sort of thing.’’


22 May 15:39

Students are the victims and culprits of India’s broken higher education system

by Commentary
Allahabad University in Allahabad, India

I recently read an article on the Kafila blogmore like an angry, reflective rant—written by some students from St. Stephen’s College in Delhi.  To quickly summarize, the piece criticized the draconian views of the principal of St. Stephen’s College regarding curfews on women’s dormitories and his stymieing of his students’ democratic ideals of discussion, protest, and open criticism. More broadly, though, the article’s writers seemed to be speaking about the larger stagnant institution of Indian higher education, overseen by a class of rigid administrators represented by this sexist and bigoted principal, as described by the students. The students’ frustration was palpable in the text and their story felt to me like a perfect example of what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object. Except Indian students are not an unstoppable force. Not even close.

In 2007, I was a student at St. Stephen’s College for seven months as part of a study abroad program offered by my home institution, Brown University. In as many ways as possible, I tried to become a Stephanian: I joined the football (soccer) team, acted in a school play written and directed by an Indian peer, performed in the school talent show, was a member of the Honors Economics Society, and went to several student events on and off campus. More importantly, though, I was a frequenter of the school’s cafe and enjoyed endless chai and butter toasts with my Indian peers under the monotonous relief of the fans spinning overhead.  Most of my friends were third years, like me, and all of them were obviously very bright. I was curious about their plans after they graduated. With only a few exceptions, they were planning on pursuing second undergraduate degrees at foreign universities.

“Wait, what?! You are studying here for three years just so you can go do it again for four more years?” I could not grasp the logic of this.

What changed my understanding was when I started taking classes at St. Stephen’s College. Except for one, they were horrible.

This was not an isolated incident—all my fellow exchange students (six from Brown University and even more from Rutgers University in the next apartment block) concurred that the academics were a joke compared to what we were used to back home. In one economic history class the professor would enter the room, take attendance, open his notebook, and begin reading. He would read his notes word for word while we, his students, copied these notes word for word until the bell sounded. Next class he would find the spot where the bell had interrupted him, like a storyteller reading to children and trying to recall where he had last put down the story. He would even pause slightly at the end of a long sentence to give us enough time to finish writing before he moved on. And this was only when he decided to show up—many times I arrived on campus to find class abruptly canceled. Classmates exchanged cell phone numbers and created phone trees just to circulate word of a canceled class. I got a text almost daily about one of my classes. My foreign peers had many similar experiences.

I would sit in class and think to myself, “Can you just photocopy your notebook and give me the notes so I can spend my time doing something less completely useless?” I refused to participate. Instead, I sat at my desk writing letters to friends.

If it were not for the fact that attendance counted towards my marks, I would have never showed up at all. There was no need. I calculated the minimum attendance required not to fail, hit that target square on, and still got excellent grades. In one political science class, the only requirements for the entire period between August and December were two papers, each 2,500 words. I wrote more intense papers in my US public high school in a month. Readings were required but how can this be enforced when there is no discussion that makes students accountable for coming to class prepared? The only questions I heard asked during my classes were about whether the material being covered that day would be on the exam. Remember, this is not any regular liberal arts college—St. Stephen’s College is regarded as one of, if not the best, college in India.

The best learning experience I had was hundreds of miles from campus with four other students and one professor on a trek to Kedarnath during October break . We had multi-day conversations spanning morality, faith, and history. During one memorable overnight bus ride, our professor told us the entire Mahabharata epic from memory while we leaned over seats or squatted in the aisle to be closer to the campfire of his voice while the rest of the bus dozed around us. The thirst in these students was there and this professor exemplified passionate teaching.

But the system is broken. Bearing in mind the richness of India’s intellectual tradition, my entire study abroad experience in India, from an academic standpoint, was an enormous disappointment.

To pause for a moment, here is the problem with me talking about this topic: right now many Indians reading this are starting to feel defensive.  “Nationalist” is a term I have heard as a self-description as they defend Mother India from the bigoted, criticizing foreigner. They focus on me rather than the problem. I have had people de-friend me on Facebook and walk out on meals because I politely expressed an opinion on politics or history that went against the publicly consented “Indian opinion.”

For a nation that prides itself on the 17 languages printed on its currency, I am greeted with remarkable intolerance. Even after living in India for close to three years, attending an Indian college, working for an Indian company, founding an Indian company, paying taxes in India, and making India my home, I am not Indian enough to speak my mind. But in a nation that rivals all others in the breadth of its human diversity, who is Indian enough? Because if loyalty and a feeling of patriotism were the barometers for “Indianness,” rather than skin color or a government document, then I would easily be a dual US-Indian citizen. This Indian defensiveness is false nationalism. It is not a stance that cares about India, it is one that cares about what others think of India, which is not nationalism. That is narcissism.

My voice should be drowned out by the millions around me who are disappointed with how they have been short-changed by the Indian government—their government. Education is one of the most poignant examples of this and serves as great dinner conversation amongst the elite: “The Indian education system is lost in the past and failing India.” Everyone at the table nods, mumbles their concurrence, and cites the most recent Economist article or PricewaterhouseCooper study on the matter in order to masquerade as informed.

“Yes, how sad.”

“Yes, how terrible.”

“Yes, India must fix this.”

Yet among my fellow Indian education alumni I mostly hear a deafening silence when it comes to action. What is remarkable is that all students in India know what I am talking about. They know and are coping: Indian students are taking their useless Indian liberal arts degrees and going abroad to get real ones that signify a real education. A real education being one that challenges the intellect and questions paradigms, not one of rote memorization and conformity. Or, as was the case with my Indian friends at Brown, they skip India altogether. Sure, I took some unimpressive classes at Brown and no curriculum is perfect, but Indian students should be demanding more. Much more.

The article I read by the Stephenian students was a step, but too little of one and in the wrong direction. Dorm curfews? The students of St. Stephen’s College need to dig deeper and question why they are in those dorms in the first place. Griping about the loss of their democratic rights in school? Wake up: Students have no recognized rights. If they did, then their right to an education would be respected, but the status quo says otherwise. How dare they discuss it, says the system.

To provide another anecdote, I used to interview Indian students applying to Brown University. While the admissions office says this forms a small component of the application relative to other factors like grades, activities, test scores, and essays, they nevertheless like to arrange an alumni interview whenever they can. The purpose is to be conversational and get a sense for the human who is obscured by the very impersonal scores and grades; it is not meant to be an interrogation. The applicant is also encouraged to ask me questions and learn more about Brown. In all the interviews I did, only one applicant truly inspired me to write a glowing review of our encounter. Similarly, I constantly get asked by Indian parents what the secret is to getting in to schools like Brown. I have even been hired by a few parents to consult for them and assist their son or daughter in the application process.

What consistently struck me about these students was their (and their parents’) cookie cutter attempts to craft the perfect applicant. That in itself was not remarkable—high school students all over the US do this—but what I found different was the lack of depth. The students spent hours at tutorials to ace board exams and maybe had an activity outside of the classroom here and there, but there was nothing, except in that one outstanding student, that provided an outlet for their personality to shine through. I particularly focused on helping the students with their essays (I never wrote for them, only edited) and coaxed them to describe why they had done some activity or loved some class. Dead stares and long telephone pauses ensued.  There seemed to be no spark—no inquisitive magnetism pulling them towards exploring the unknown. I was teleported back to the economic history class I took at St. Stephen’s and I felt like the professor: these students would look up from their notebooks at me and want to know what to copy next. These students were adapting to be seen as the best within a broken system—it was an overwhelmingly depressing epiphany.

In my opinion, the students of India have two choices: either let the government sort itself out or take ownership of the problem themselves. Mass protest against the inertia of regressive forces is an atavistic trait in young Indians. Indeed, modern India was born out of such actions.  Moreover, many of the cultural revolutions throughout history have had students waving the banners. What I find inspiring about St. Stephen’s students writing the article I referenced at the beginning is that they have the most to lose in this fight and are starting to fight anyway.

Fact: Every student at St. Stephen’s is part of India’s elite. While there is a reservation system for the admission of scheduled castes and others residing at the bottom of India’s socioeconomic pyramid, once every student at St. Stephen’s enrolls they become a member of the elite, irrespective of background. With that name stamped on their diploma, the world becomes easier because they are part of “the club.” For example, an idiot who graduates from Harvard and learned nothing probably has an easier chance of getting a great job than the genius from an unheard of college. Sad but mostly true. The same can be said with respect to the Ivy League, Oxford and Cambridge, and elite schools all over the world. It would be easy for St. Stephen’s students to not challenge the system and continue to move down the conveyor belt because, relative to other schools, their actual education matters less; the name and reputation of the school relieves some of the weight that the student’s intellect would otherwise have to carry.

The opposite side of this same coin, though, is the upside St. Stephen’s students could reap.  St. Stephen’s students also have the most to gain from change. Because St. Stephen’s College is such a great school, it can attract great names and create a great curriculum. Imagine if my teachers had actually taught their classes? Whoa. Instead of just the promise and illusion of an amazing liberal arts education, St. Stephen’s students would get that education. If the end is knowledge, then St. Stephen’s students win big.

We are entering a year of politics and elections. With elections comes the possibility of change. The most troubling line in the student’s article was in reference to the “wielding of disproportionate power by the Principal,” which was: “Education in India awaits a rescue from the hands of such figures.”

Who, may I ask, do you hope to be your rescuers? Your representatives in government? Your parents? The characters from Rang De BasantiThere is a window available if only there existed the resolve and determination within India’s students to seize it, which remains to be seen. One lesson that no college is very good at teaching: In life, you should not expect others to fight your battles for you. While higher education is a public good and has champions in the private and public world, students are the ultimate stakeholders. If the students at St. Stephen’s College want to practice the potent words that they wrote in Kafila, then it is time to stand up and be counted. If not, the only people who suffer will be themselves.

A version of this article was originally published in Kafila.

Follow Thane Richard on Twitter @ThaneRichard. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.


22 May 15:36

Anon asked: What do you think of the outfits in Age of Wulin/Wushu? Oh man, I LOVE these designs!...

Anon asked: What do you think of the outfits in Age of Wulin/Wushu?

Oh man, I LOVE these designs! They’re so incredibly beautiful and well thought through. I feel like you can truly feel in character with them, and they actually look like they belong to the game, they really fit the setting.

image

image

image

image

image

And there even are ones that look sexy! But guess what, I don’t feel objectified looking at them! They actually feel like it’s something these characters  could wear because they want to. This is the result of good character designs. It’s really well thought through designs.

image

image

And I mean, look at these details. How great aren’t they?

image

image

So yes, I approve to these outfits VERY much. Anyone is free to disagree, of course, but I really don’t mind them myself.