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22 May 15:31

Obras da série Guerra dos Tronos ganham capas inspiradas em literatura de cordel

by Cláudia Fusco
firehose

via Osiasjota

Já imaginou misturar as obras de fantasia de George R. R. Martin com a clássica literatura de cordel do nordeste brasileiro? Bom, se você realmente imaginou isso, provavelmente você é Tenement Funster, o designer brasileiro por trás desse trabalho super criativo e bacana de ilustração. Utilizando uma técnica inspirada na xilogravura, Funster adaptou as cinco capas dos livros já publicados da série Guerra dos Tronos. Dá até vontade de ver essas imagens em edições de verdade dos livros, né?

Para ampliar as imagens e ver mais detalhes, clique nos links abaixo:

“A Guerra dos Tronos”

“A Fúria dos Reis”

“A Tormenta de Espadas”

“O Festim dos Corvos”

“A Dança dos Dragões”

 

22 May 15:30

Photo

by rosalafae
firehose

via Rosalind



22 May 15:29

Photo

firehose

via Kara Jean



22 May 15:29

Knits For The Chill 58. Isamu Noguchi.

firehose

via multitasksuicide



Knits For The Chill 58.

Isamu Noguchi.

22 May 13:43

meme4u: http://memeblock.com/

22 May 08:01

Wi-Fi connections stalling on AirPort Extreme with 7.6.3 firmware

firehose

it just works

Recently, I’ve had a recurring Wi-Fi issue:

  • A device shows full Wi-Fi signal strength, as it normally does at home.
  • Almost daily, the device stops being able to connect to the internet over Wi-Fi, but doesn’t report this as a connectivity problem — connections just sit there, spinning, waiting, until they eventually time out and fail. (Like AT&T in Manhattan.)

    This happened most often on my iPhone 5 with the latest iOS version (6.1.4), but it also happened with the previous version (6.1.3) at the same frequency.

  • Connectivity could be restored instantly, every time, by turning off the Wi-Fi, turning it on again, and letting it reconnect to the base station.

I complained on Twitter, and this sounds like a widespread issue with AirPort Extreme Base Stations and Time Capsules running the newest firmware, version 7.6.3. A number of people said downgrading to 7.6.1 completely fixed the issue for them, so I tried it.

I didn’t even know how to downgrade. Here’s how: in AirPort Utility, hold Option while hovering over the firmware version, and it becomes a drop-down menu. Pick whatever firmware you’d like and click Update. (warning: at your own risk, I don’t know, etc.)

I did this five days ago, and the problem hasn’t recurred once. A few additional people since then have reported similar results.

If you’re having this problem, downgrading to 7.6.1 may fix it.

22 May 04:38

The American Who Bought Mongolia

The Mongolian Stock Exchange occupies a single room. On any given day, it’s quieter than the nearby National Library, as 20 or so traders in cubicles click away softly on their laptops. This muted bourse hardly seems a place to make a fortune, but James Passin, who needs no prompting to declare that he’s “super bullish on Mongolia,” swears it is.
22 May 04:34

Why We Should Turn The World Map On Its Side

firehose

"According to Cobo, the best point that we can use to orient ourselves is the Sun rising in the east above the Equator. As he points out, the very word orientation comes from the Latin oriens, which means east, or sunrise, while ‘disorient’ means losing direction, losing one’s way or, literally, losing the east. In Western culture, north is used to determine all other directions, yet the origin of the word itself comes from the Proto-Indo-European prefix ner-, which means down or under, but also left, and was commonly used as ‘left when facing the rising Sun’. Thus, in order to determine north, one needs to know the direction east."

The Equator once marked the edge of the civilised world. If we put it at the center, we might see our place in the heavens.
22 May 04:31

Why Young People Are Sick Of Facebook

firehose

tl;dr: "increasing number of adults on the site ... and the “drama” that they described as happening frequently"

“Everyone’s saying Facebook’s dead.” A new study explores teens’ strained relationship with the largest social network.
22 May 04:30

Awesome security system

by ThePEOPLEOFMB

486823_10152870371440624_1136100431_n

 

Can opener security system sent in from a secret source.

22 May 04:28

Father Excitedly Tells 10-Year-Old Son About New Video Game System

firehose

lol

WEST HAVEN, CT—Following Microsoft’s official unveiling of their latest video game console Tuesday, 41-year-old father of two Richard Shearer excitedly told his son David, 10, about the new features of the Xbox One.
22 May 04:26

EA is developing Wii U games, has bigger plans for PS4 and Xbox One, CFO says

by Dave Tach
firehose

makes more sense

By Dave Tach on May 21, 2013 at 7:00p

Electronic Arts is developing games for the Wii U, but not as many as the company is developing for Sony and Microsoft's consoles, EA's chief financial officer Blake Jorgensen said today during the Stifel Nicolaus 2013 Internet, Media and Communications Conference.

Jorgensen's statement seems to contradict a statement last week from EA spokesman Jeff Brown, who said last week that the company has "no games in development for the Wii U currently."

When asked by a conference attendee which console manufacturer would lead the next generation, Jorgensen said that consumers, not publishers, would be the ones to decide.

"You know, I think Nintendo's business was more [an] extension of their last console," Jorgensen said today.

"I think what the consumer will find is a lot more powerful gameplay with the new boxes that are coming out, and a lot of excitement, but it'll remain to be seen as to the services associated with those as to how consumers decide which direction they might want to go."

EA previously announced that neither Madden NFL 25 or FIFA 14 would make their way to Wii U this year, the latter because "commercial results were disappointing" for FIFA 13, which was a launch title for Wii U. Today, Jorgensen also revealed that NBA Live 14 is headed to next-gen consoles.

22 May 04:25

Aurora Attackers Were Looking For Google's Surveillance Database

by Soulskill
firehose

great

An anonymous reader writes "When in early 2010 Google shared with the public that they had been breached in what became known as the Aurora attacks, they said that the attackers got their hands on some source code and were looking to access Gmail accounts of Tibetan activists. What they didn't make public is that the hackers have also accessed a database containing information about court-issued surveillance orders that enabled law enforcement agencies to monitor email accounts belonging to diplomats, suspected spies and terrorists. Whether this was the primary goal of the attacks as well as how much information was exfiltrated is unknown. current and former U.S. government officials interviewed by the Washington Post say that the database in question was possibly accessed in order to discover which Chinese intelligence operatives located in the U.S. were under surveillance."

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.



22 May 04:24

GameStop stock takes hit following Xbox One used game story

by Alexander Sliwinski
firehose

lol, even though not true

Image
Microsoft's plans for the used games market on the newly announced Xbox One were a roller coaster ride this afternoon, with GameStop being the one to lose its lunch on the ride. The company's stock started an immediate dip once the news began to circulate that the console wouldn't support used games, closing the day down five percent (down -1.98 to 36.78/share).

Microsoft issued a statement after the market's close regarding Wired's report, stating the news wasn't accurate, but wouldn't detail exactly how the information was incorrect.

"It doesn't help Microsoft to block, and will alienate consumers. They should stay out of the controversy," said Wedbush Security analyst Michael Pachter who attended today's reveal of the new console at the Microsoft campus. "It is a dumb idea for Microsoft to get involved."

He continued, "They could just as easily invalidate a download if the same disc is subsequently downloaded to another Xbox One, and the seller of the game wouldn't complain. The article reaches a conclusion without foundation, and was irresponsible."

As of this posting it's still unclear what Microsoft's plans are for the used games market. GameStop's pre-owned video game products represented $2.4 billion in sales, representing 27.4 percent of the company's income and $1.1 billion (48.1 percent) of company's gross profit in its previous fiscal year.
[Image: nuttapol yupothong via Shutterstock]

JoystiqGameStop stock takes hit following Xbox One used game story originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 21 May 2013 19:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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22 May 04:23

Evolucio / Onionlab via Archdaily Projected onto the façade of...











Evolucio / Onionlab via Archdaily

Projected onto the façade of the Musées d’art et d’histoire de Genève, Onionlabs ‘Evolucio’ is a piece that revolves around the graphic and sound abstraction of the concept it is named after: evolution. Created with 3D projection mapping techniques, It is construed as transformation, construction and alteration of reality through time; evolution as a discontinuous creation process as well.

Taking the evolution concept even further, Evolucio was conceived as an open transformation process so that it can also be adapted to different façades and projection surfaces, and so that it can continue its transformation process. Available for further projections, it can be adapted to various physical formats, e.g. indoor structures, or different façades.

Watch the video

22 May 04:18

EA Sports Ignite trailer shown at Xbox One reveal 'pre-rendered using in-game assets'

by Michael McWhertor
firehose

bullshot

By Michael McWhertor on May 21, 2013 at 10:00p

The footage of EA Sports' Ignite engine shown at today's Xbox One reveal event was pre-rendered using assets from Electronic Arts' next-gen FIFA, Madden, NBA Live and UFC games, says Andrew Wilson, executive vice president of EA Sports.

Asked whether snippets of real-time gameplay were featured in the teaser for FIFA 14, Madden NFL 25, NBA Live 14 and EA Sports UFC, Wilson said no and explained the reasoning behind its Xbox One showing.

"It was all pre-rendered," Wilson told Polygon. "Listen, we're not hiding behind that fact. This was an event that we've been planning for a number of months on a new platform. And what we wanted to do was use real game assets, so they're all real game assets, straight out of our game teams, but we had to get it into a format that would be usable in this style of event.

"What I'm really happy to say, though, is that our games right now are delivering on that, and in some cases more," Wilson said, "and we're going to show a lot more of that at E3 in a couple of weeks. And then by the time we get to launch, the sky's the limit of where we get to."

Wilson added that the pre-rendered footage of its four sports titles is "following where our games are going and certainly in line with what we're seeing in our games right now on console."

EA Sports Ignite will power the developer's future games, which EA says "will be alive with players who think, move and behave like real athletes and dynamic living worlds, transforming the way people play and experience games on next-gen consoles."

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22 May 04:14

Inspiration - Women in Armour Sword Photography  Model/Actress:...

by joanna-molloy














Inspiration - Women in Armour

Sword Photography 

  • Model/Actress: Nicole Leigh Jones
  • Copyright: © Photographer Gayla Partridge

Nicole Leigh Jones as Victoria Celestine. Photoshoot for the film Shroud (2013) - Independent Gothic Western.

Source: © Jetrefilm Entertainment LLC

22 May 04:14

Poorly drawn lines


poorlydrawnlines.com


poorlydrawnlines.com

Poorly drawn lines

22 May 04:08

Photo

firehose

via Snorkmaiden





22 May 04:05

Oh Come On

by Josh Marshall
firehose

via Overbey

At the risk of drawing more obloquy upon myself, I have to second the questions Jack Shafer raises in this piece just published by Reuters: What was James Rosen Thinking?

There are a few points that seem important to make about this story.

The first is that, as I said earlier today, you cross a big line when you go from investigating journalists to prosecute leakers to accusing journalists themselves of committing crimes by doing what is by any measure their jobs - trying to sleuth out as much information as possible in order to inform their readers. It's important to note that the DOJ didn't do that. Rosen wasn't charged with anything. He apparently didn't even know any of this had happened until the piece was published in the Washington Post over the weekend. But the government did walk up to the line by suggesting the theory that Rosen had himself committed a crime in order to get a warrant to examine his email.

Reporters and anyone who believes in the 1st Amendment is right to find this worrisome. But it's wrong to suggest that using a legal argument to get a warrant is the same as trying to charge Rosen with a crime. It's simply not the same.

The point that Shafer makes though is one that's been rattling around my head since I caught up on this story yesterday morning. Rosen may have been doing what national security reporters do as a matter of course. But I can practically guarantee you he went about it unlike most any national security reporter I know. I used to do a decent amount of national security reporting myself. And to protect your sources rather than yourself directly, there are basic things you do and don't do. One is you don't get into the details of exchanging classified information over the phone or over email.

Shafer says it better than I can ...

Rosen's journalistic technique, if the Post story is accurate, leaves much to be desired. He would have been less conspicuous had he walked into the State Department wearing a sandwich board lettered with his intentions to obtain classified information and then blasted an air horn to further alert authorities to his business. For example, one data point investigators used to connect Rosen with his alleged source, Kim, was the visitor's badge the reporter wore when calling on the State Department offices. According to security records, Rosen and his source left the building within one minute of each other and then returned only several minutes apart inside the half-hour. A few hours later that day (June 11, 2009), Rosen's secret-busting story was published.

Even teenagers practice better tradecraft than this when deceiving parents.

Shafer also notes the little noted fact that Rosen essentially burned a US intelligence asset (i.e., someone who was ratting out his country to the US) in a hostile foreign country, for no clear reason. It's doubtful that many other editors or publications would have published the piece at all.

As you can probably tell, I'm a bit conflicted about this whole episode. I've spent a decent amount of money over the last decade paying for pricey legal advice to keep myself and other TPM reporters out of trouble. So the issues raised here are ones I'm quite familiar with from personal experience and about which I've received a lot of professional advice. But the DOJ didn't indict anyone or seemingly make any effort to. They took a step I think they should not have taken. But they did so putting together a case against a government employee who more or less in plain sight (thanks to Rosen, in part) leaked what looks to have been highly classified information about US spy networks overseas. It's difficult for me not to be more shocked by the self-interested preening of fellow journalists over a comically inept reporter and source than the arguable dangers this episode holds for press freedoms. Indeed, I've tried and failed. I can't.

    


22 May 04:04

Photo

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE









22 May 04:03

Client: The site isn’t working right. Me: That’s strange. I download a page and take a look at the...

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE
aka about a fifth of my job

Client: The site isn’t working right.

Me: That’s strange.

I download a page and take a look at the code.

Me: It looks like a bunch of the code is missing. Did you have anyone modify the site?

Client: No, nothing like that.

Me: Well there are entire chunks of code missing that was there yesterday.

Client: Oh yeah, that was me, some of the code seemed unnecessary. Back to the issue at hand, why isn’t the site working?

22 May 03:44

Why Chinese moms still love Fisher Price toys and Americans don’t

by Commentary
firehose

American moms "are also overwhelmed by products that have too many bells and whistles, so a product and its package needs to convey a return to simplicity even if it’s a complex item. This explains the popularity of the website Etsy, since American Gen Y moms embrace handmade, one-of-a-kind items that stand out against other mass produced goods."

Chinese mother and her daughters

We hear all the time about how global millennials work, travel, date and shop, but we rarely hear about how they mother.

To reach this critical market, it’s worth examining the choices of Chinese and American customers in the demographic, born in late 1970s to the early 2000s. For example, China’s one-child policy fuels consumption patterns, competitiveness about education, and more extreme doting among parents and grandparents. Ultimately, millennial moms appear motivated by the same thing: buying the absolute best for their children, with a limited emphasis on cost. But what Chinese and American moms consider to be “premium” is in fact different.

American moms are looking for items that have longevity and can adapt past a specific moment in time (such as a high chair that converts to a regular chair when the child grows) to increase the use and value. Chinese moms want highly specialized products to be the absolute best at one thing instead of a “jack of all trades” tool that ultimately is not the best.

Chinese moms want products to help project their femininity, like Swarovski crystals. American moms, however, are highly focused on products that are authentic and don’t look fake. They are also overwhelmed by products that have too many bells and whistles, so a product and its package needs to convey a return to simplicity even if it’s a complex item. This explains the popularity of the website Etsy, since American Gen Y moms embrace handmade, one-of-a-kind items that stand out against other mass produced goods.

Safety is a universal concern among both groups of moms. Chinese moms want proof that a product is high quality, made with safe materials and has packaging that communicates good craftsmanship, brand heritage, sound manufacturing and design. They have a harder time accepting young brands because they need to believe in the product’s history to demonstrate quality and safety. (Keep in mind, long brand history in China means five years or more, since commercial markets only reestablished 30 years ago.) American moms are also looking for proof of these qualities but with one big difference: they are willing to embrace new brands as an underdog that has assumed integrity. An example of this is the Honest Company, which actress Jessica Alba started to sell products like diapers and soaps that are safe for kids and the environment.

Perhaps the sharpest difference between the two groups is around educational toys. Chinese moms, in part due to the pressure caused by the one-child policy, want Fisher Price and LeapFrog products that will help their kids learn about shapes, colors, animals, hand-eye coordination, maps, and math. But young US moms are moving away from the intense pressure Gen X mothers put on their kids to learn from an early age (think Baby Einstein). Instead, they’re turning to concepts such as Kiwi Crate, which sends once-a-month care packages filled with creative projects for kids; and Toca Boca, which develops digital toys and games, where there are no rewards or winners—it’s all about using your imagination.

Chinese moms are attracted to a look and feel that is international. They have strong cultural perceptions about what is “good” to buy. For example, they believe in American toys, such as Lego; European food; and Japanese or Korean fashion. American moms often gravitate to products or brands that feel comfortable for them, but they also want to expose their children to a variety of global “experiences,” like  Little Passports, a monthly package of letters, souvenirs, and activities that highlight places around the world.

Both Chinese and American Gen Y moms believe that they cannot sacrifice their own well-being for their baby. They care about creating balance. For American moms, this means investing in family experiences that she enjoys as much as her kids do. For Chinese moms, this means making sure to indulge both herself and her child with status brands, or items that make them feel special.

We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.


22 May 03:38

Xbox One not backward compatible with Xbox 360 games

by Samit Sarkar
firehose

herp the derp!

By Samit Sarkar on May 21, 2013 at 2:05p

The Xbox One won't play any existing Xbox 360 games, said Microsoft's Marc Whitten in an interview with The Verge.

The lack of backward compatibility results from the new console's hardware architecture, which is a significant departure from that of the Xbox 360. "The system is based on a different core architecture, so back-compat doesn't really work from that perspective," said Whitten, corporate vice president of Xbox Live.

The Xbox 360 does support certain original Xbox games through software emulation — more than 450 titles, almost half the console's library — although backward compatibility can be spotty, depending on the game in question.

Sony's PlayStation 4 is in the same situation as the next Xbox — it won't natively support PlayStation 3 games, because the upcoming system's AMD-made "Jaguar" x86 processor is too different from the PS3's Cell processor. Sony hopes to make back catalog games available on the PS4 through streaming and emulation.

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22 May 03:36

Xbox One not backwards compatible with 360 discs/XBLA purchases; Gamerscore does transfer

by Jordan Mallory
firehose

lol @ XNA

Xbox One lacks backwards compatibility with 360 discsXBLA purchases, Gamerscore transfers Microsoft's minty-fresh Xbox One will be unable to play Xbox 360 discs, nor will your multitude of Xbox Live Arcade purchases transfer to the new machine, our friends at Engadget have learned.

The incompatibility is due to the fact that the Xbox One runs on x86 processor architecture, whereas the Xbox 360 ran on PowerPC. This fundamental difference in hardware architecture prevents the Xbox One from natively running Xbox 360 games, regardless of how powerful the thing may be.

"We care very much about the investment people have made in Xbox 360 and will continue to support it with a pipeline of new games and new apps well into the future," a Microsoft representative told Engadget. Part of that investment will transfer, however: Your Xbox Live Gamerscore.

Earlier this year, Sony also announced that its PlayStation 4 will make the jump to a processor built on the x86 platform.

JoystiqXbox One not backwards compatible with 360 discs/XBLA purchases; Gamerscore does transfer originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 21 May 2013 14:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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22 May 00:33

The audacious plan to end hunger with 3-D printed food

by Christopher Mims
firehose

h/t Tadeu

'Pizza is an obvious candidate for 3D printing because' IT'S FUCKIN' PIZZA

also apparently 'it can be printed in distinct layers, so it only requires the print head to extrude one substance at a time. Contractor’s “pizza printer” is still at the conceptual stage, and he will begin building it within two weeks. It works by first “printing” a layer of dough, which is baked at the same time it’s printed, by a heated plate at the bottom of the printer. Then it lays down a tomato base, “which is also stored in a powdered form, and then mixed with water and oil,” says Contractor.

Finally, the pizza is topped with the delicious-sounding “protein layer,” which could come from any source, including animals, milk or plants.'

Why bake when you can extrude?

Anjan Contractor’s 3D food printer might evoke visions of the “replicator” popularized in Star Trek, from which Captain Picard was constantly interrupting himself to order tea. And indeed Contractor’s company, Systems & Materials Research Corporation, just got a six month, $125,000 grant from NASA to create a prototype of his universal food synthesizer.

But Contractor, a mechanical engineer with a background in 3D printing, envisions a much more mundane—and ultimately more important—use for the technology. He sees a day when every kitchen has a 3D printer, and the earth’s 12 billion people feed themselves customized, nutritionally-appropriate meals synthesized one layer at a time, from cartridges of powder and oils they buy at the corner grocery store. Contractor’s vision would mean the end of food waste, because the powder his system will use is shelf-stable for up to 30 years, so that each cartridge, whether it contains sugars, complex carbohydrates, protein or some other basic building block, would be fully exhausted before being returned to the store.

Ubiquitous food synthesizers would also create new ways of producing the basic calories on which we all rely. Since a powder is a powder, the inputs could be anything that contain the right organic molecules. We already know that eating meat is environmentally unsustainable, so why not get all our protein from insects?

If eating something spat out by the same kind of 3D printers that are currently being used to make everything from jet engine parts to fine art doesn’t sound too appetizing, that’s only because you can currently afford the good stuff, says Contractor. That might not be the case once the world’s population reaches its peak size, probably sometime near the end of this century.

“I think, and many economists think, that current food systems can’t supply 12 billion people sufficiently,” says Contractor. “So we eventually have to change our perception of what we see as food.”

There will be pizza on Mars

The ultimate in molecular gastronomy. (Schematic of SMRC’s 3D printer for food.) SMRC

If Contractor’s utopian-dystopian vision of the future of food ever comes to pass, it will be an argument for why space research isn’t a complete waste of money. His initial grant from NASA, under its Small Business Innovation Research program, is for a system that can print food for astronauts on very long space missions. For example, all the way to Mars.

“Long distance space travel requires 15-plus years of shelf life,” says Contractor. “The way we are working on it is, all the carbs, proteins and macro and micro nutrients are in powder form. We take moisture out, and in that form it will last maybe 30 years.”

Pizza is an obvious candidate for 3D printing because it can be printed in distinct layers, so it only requires the print head to extrude one substance at a time. Contractor’s “pizza printer” is still at the conceptual stage, and he will begin building it within two weeks. It works by first “printing” a layer of dough, which is baked at the same time it’s printed, by a heated plate at the bottom of the printer. Then it lays down a tomato base, “which is also stored in a powdered form, and then mixed with water and oil,” says Contractor.

Finally, the pizza is topped with the delicious-sounding “protein layer,” which could come from any source, including animals, milk or plants.

The prototype for Contractor’s pizza printer, which helped him earn a grant from NASA, was a simple chocolate printer. It’s not much to look at, nor is it the first of its kind, but at least it’s a proof of concept.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6XASxni0I0

Replacing cookbooks with open-source recipes

SMRC’s prototype 3D food printer will be based on open-source hardware from the RepRap project. RepRap

Remember grandma’s treasure box of recipes written in pencil on yellowing note cards? In the future, we’ll all be able to trade recipes directly, as software. Each recipe will be a set of instructions that tells the printer which cartridge of powder to mix with which liquids, and at what rate and how it should be sprayed, one layer at time.

This will be possible because Contractor plans to keep the software portion of his 3D printer entirely open-source, so that anyone can look at its code, take it apart, understand it, and tweak recipes to fit. It would of course be possible for people to trade recipes even if this printer were proprietary—imagine something like an app store, but for recipes—but Contractor believes that by keeping his software open source, it will be even more likely that people will find creative uses for his hardware. His prototype 3D food printer also happens to be based on a piece of open-source hardware, the second-generation RepRap 3D printer.

“One of the major advantage of a 3D printer is that it provides personalized nutrition,” says Contractor. “If you’re male, female, someone is sick—they all have different dietary needs. If you can program your needs into a 3D printer, it can print exactly the nutrients that person requires.”

Replacing farms with sources of environmentally-appropriate calories

2032: Delicious Uncle Sam’s Meal Cubes are laser-sintered from granulated mealworms; part of this healthy breakfast. TNO Research

Contractor is agnostic about the source of the food-based powders his system uses. One vision of how 3D printing could make it possible to turn just about any food-like starting material into an edible meal was outlined by TNO Research, the think tank of TNO, a Dutch holding company that owns a number of technology firms.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x6WzyUgbT5A

In TNO’s vision of a future of 3D printed meals, “alternative ingredients” for food include:

  • algae
  • duckweed
  • grass
  • lupine seeds
  • beet leafs
  • insects

From astronauts to emerging markets

While Contractor and his team are initially focusing on applications for long-distance space travel, his eventual goal is to turn his system for 3D printing food into a design that can be licensed to someone who wants to turn it into a business. His company has been “quite successful in doing that in the past,” and has created both a gadget that uses microwaves to evaluate the structural integrity of aircraft panels and a kind of metal screw that coats itself with protective sealant once it’s drilled into a sheet of metal.

Since Contractor’s 3D food printer doesn’t even exist in prototype form, it’s too early to address questions of cost or the healthiness (or not) of the food it produces. But let’s hope the algae and cricket pizza turns out to be tastier than it sounds.


21 May 23:14

Xbox One uses non-removable hard drive, supports external USB storage

by Danny Cowan
Xbox One uses nonremovable hard drive, external storage supported via USB
Microsoft senior director of product planning Albert Penello confirmed with Engadget that the upcoming Xbox One console will ship with 500GB of non-removable, non-replaceable integrated storage. He assures, however, that alternative storage solutions are available.

While users will be unable to service the Xbox One's internal hard drive or replace it with a larger-capacity device, Penello notes that external storage devices can be connected via one of the console's three included USB 3.0 ports. Connected USB devices will be capable of storing all content supported by the Xbox One's hard drive, including installed game data and downloaded software.

JoystiqXbox One uses non-removable hard drive, supports external USB storage originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 21 May 2013 18:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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21 May 23:04

Apple’s tax bill is a window into the global post-industrial economy, and all its problems

by Tim Fernholz
firehose

"But economists fear that pure knowledge economies promote inequality. They employ fewer low-skilled workers, which means the returns to capital accrue to a smaller, higher-skilled group of individuals. No wonder Levin, a Michigan representative, was driving the Apple investigation forward. His state is America’s auto manufacturing heartland. His constituents need better education and infrastructure to get a leg up in the globalized market, and that requires more taxes. ... Apple, for all its independence, needs its home country, too, and not just for cultural ties and a place to call home (in other words, the $2 billion headquarters it’s constructing in Cupertino, California). Apple needs the US to enforce global intellectual property rights that protect its foreign sales."

Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Permanent subcommittee on Investigations Chairman Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., holds up his own Apple iPhone, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 21, 2013, as he presses Apple CEO Tim Cook, left, for answers about how Apple, the world's most valuable company, and based in Cupertino, Calif., diverts a billion dollars to an Irish subsidiary as a tax strategy, according to a report issued this week by the subcommittee.

The testimony by Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, on his company’s tax-avoiding habits has elicited mixed reactions. Some thought the company was being nailed to the cross; others thought the hearing added up to an Apple love-fest. But on the whole, the hearing wasn’t really about Apple’s tax shenanigans, since it isn’t really news that US multinationals do all kinds of tricky things to legally avoid paying corporate taxes.

The real purpose of this hearing was to solve a problem that goes far beyond Apple: the US is becoming a post-industrial economy whose most successful companies have more customers around the world than in the United States. Apple is a prime example because of its innovative business and powerful brand; until recently, it was America’s most valuable company. Here’s what the senator who lead the panel, Carl Levin, had to say:

More and more, intellectual property is the dominant source of value in the global economy. It is also highly mobile—unlike more tangible, physical assets, its value can be transferred around the globe, often with just a few keystrokes. The secret to Apple’s business success isn’t in the aluminum and steel and glass of my iPhone and other Apple products. Its profits depend on the ideas that bring those elements together in such an elegant package. That intangible genius is intellectual property that is nurtured and developed here in the United States. The key to offshore tax avoidance is transferring the profit-generating potential of that valuable intellectual property offshore so that the profits are directed not to the United States, but to an offshore tax haven.

As more US companies become increasingly transnational like Apple, the fear is that less of their earnings will end up in the hands of US shareholders and taxpayers. The idea is to update tax laws that were designed for a world in which companies employed mostly one nation’s workers, sold their goods to foreign companies and consumers, and paid taxes in their home countries. Now, with freer trade and capital flows, many US companies glean the bulk of their profits from selling ideas abroad, often through foreign companies they directly control. As we saw today, that makes the question of where they should pay taxes a big conundrum.

Cook says his company doesn’t use gimmicks to avoid corporate income tax, but he still squirmed when senators probed him about the deal undergirding Apple’s tax avoidance strategy: An “arms-length” agreement made by Apple executives in California to share its intellectual property with an Irish company—entirely controlled by Apple executives in California.

In Apple’s defense, it employs some 50,000 employees in the US, out of 75,000 around the world, and pays significant taxes, though nowhere near as much as it would if its accounting were less creative. Apple’s employee count also doesn’t include all the subcontracted factory workers at companies like FoxConn, which far outnumber its US workers by most estimates.

Of course, there’s value in breeding a knowledge economy that boasts innovative companies; in theory, ideas are worth more than widgets. But economists fear that pure knowledge economies promote inequality. They employ fewer low-skilled workers, which means the returns to capital accrue to a smaller, higher-skilled group of individuals. No wonder Levin, a Michigan representative, was driving the Apple investigation forward. His state is America’s auto manufacturing heartland. His constituents need better education and infrastructure to get a leg up in the globalized market, and that requires more taxes.

Apple, for all its independence, needs its home country, too, and not just for cultural ties and a place to call home (in other words, the $2 billion headquarters it’s constructing in Cupertino, California). Apple needs the US to enforce global intellectual property rights that protect its foreign sales.

There are plenty of ways to balance its US and global interests, whether by closing tax loopholes, fixing the whole corporate tax code or eliminating corporate taxes entirely in favor of much higher taxes on dividends and capital gains. The 21st century economy is fraught with many such challenges. Let’s hope the US Senate can tackle at least one of them.


21 May 23:03

Google+ adds card UI and larger cover photos to mobile site

by Terrence O'Brien
firehose

via Tadeu: "Yahoo buying Tumblr, Google trying to be like Tumblr"

Google adds card UI and larger cover photos to mobile site

Google has been spending quite a lot of time tweaking, streamlining and generally beautifying the interface of its "social backbone." But while the mobile apps and desktop site have seen near constant updates, the mobile Google+ site has languished slightly behind. Today Mountain view is delivering a little bit of parity for those on platforms that don't have an official app, such as Windows Phone 8 and BlackBerry 10. The update brings the new card UI to the phone-focused version, along with easier to see and tap +1 and re-share buttons. The updated profile experience is also going mobile, with large cover photos and more touch friendly icons coming to both personal profiles and pages. There's no need to wait patiently while this rolls out either: the new mobile Google+ site is already live.

Filed under: Internet, Mobile, Google

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Source: Google+

21 May 23:01

Spelunker on Wii U VC Here’s the big news everyone’s...

by 20xx
firehose

"This is truly the next generation of ways to play crazy hard platformers from 1985. ... You can also yell at it. Not to change your TV inputs or anything, but just out of rage."





Spelunker on Wii U VC

Here’s the big news everyone’s going to be talking about on Twitter today: the NES version of Spelunker is being released on Wii U Virtual Console. Not Spelunker HD, as released on the PlayStation Network, but Spelunker One.

This is truly the next generation of ways to play crazy hard platformers from 1985. And unlike some other world-changing video game news announcements, we have a firm release date and price point: May 30 for $4.99. You can also yell at it. Not to change your TV inputs or anything, but just out of rage.

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