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16 Mar 06:27

jimhines: i-eat-men-like-air: doctaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa: CNN...





jimhines:

i-eat-men-like-air:

doctaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa:

CNN Discussion feat. Amanda Seales and Steve Santagati.

you know what, fuck it, I’m going to reblog this twice because I have a story to tell.

Almost two years ago I was approached by a man at a bar. He was very handsome— tall, with great cheek bones and the kind of eyes that crinkle at the corners with every smile. That man asked to buy me and my friends a drink. 

Not wanting to give him the wrong idea, we turned him down. None of us were single, and we’d all had experiences where men have expected things from us after providing seemingly generous acts of charity. 

That man spent the rest of the night harassing us. He followed us around the bar, dumped a beer over my friend’s head when she confronted him, made lewd comments about my ass when I walked passed to go to the bathroom. We tried to tell the bar staff what was happening, but with the room being so crowded, by the time we managed to locate the bouncer, he’d disappeared into a throng of people.

That man approached us when we were on our way to our car. He was verbally aggressive, throwing slurs at us and stepping into our personal space. When I pushed him away, he punched me in the face hard enough to knock me down. When my friend tried to call the police, he slammed her head into a wall. 

We were lucky that after that, he panicked an ran away. It could have been much, much worse.

Bottom line? Fuck you if you think all women want is attention from attractive men. Fuck you for eternity.

Attention from an attractive man didn’t give me an ego boost. It gave me a fucking black eye. 

"Attention from an attractive man didn’t give me an ego boost. It gave me a fucking black eye."

16 Mar 06:19

sniffing: Technology has cum so far



sniffing:

Technology has cum so far

16 Mar 02:35

daymare, n.

firehose

'A fearful or frightening fantasy experienced while awake; a daytime nightmare (in literal and figurative senses of nightmare n. 2). Also spec. (now rare): a feeling of suffocation or great distress experienced while fully conscious.'

'1830 R. Macnish Philos. Sleep x. 148, I have strong doubts of the propriety of considering this affection as any way different from the incubus, or night-mare... The only difference, indeed, which I can perceive between the two affections is, that in day-mare the reason is always unclouded—whereas in incubus it is generally more or less disturbed.'

OED Word of the Day: daymare, n. A fearful or frightening fantasy experienced while awake; a daytime nightmare
16 Mar 02:34

weareallmedie:Julie Andrews on Lady Gaga’s tribute to The Sound...

















weareallmedie:

Julie Andrews on Lady Gaga’s tribute to The Sound of Music at the 87th Academy Awards, 2015.

Don’t remember which celeb it was that made the rude tweet about Gaga singing and them making Julie listen to it?

READ THIS YOU DICK. Lucky for us this lady is Julie fucking Andrews and she is ten times classier than you.

Also it was GORGEOUS.

16 Mar 00:41

Windows 10 to support peer-to-peer downloading of apps and updates

by Peter Bright
firehose

what could possibly

We're still waiting for a public update to the Windows 10 technical preview, but candidate builds are continuing to leak from Redmond.

Last week we saw that build 10031 had made the Start menu translucent. This week, build 10036 has leaked. Perhaps its most interesting new feature? It'll support peer-to-peer (P2P) downloading of both apps and operating system updates.

Peer-to-peer downloads will be optional, and if enabled they will support two modes: systems will be able to either retrieve updates from other machines on the same local network, or from both the local network and PCs on the Internet.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

15 Mar 23:22

Friday the 13th: Part XVIII

by Doug

Friday the 13th: Part XVIII

Because today is Friday the 13th and tomorrow is Pi Day! With a rare splash of colour, just for fun :)

15 Mar 23:05

Beware the Eyes of Marge

15 Mar 23:05

Angry eyes

Angry eyes icon
15 Mar 23:04

Explaining the “USB 3.1 Gen 1” port in the Retina MacBook

by Andrew Cunningham
firehose

'The 10Gbps version of USB 3.1 that you probably think of when you think about USB 3.1 is called “USB 3.1 Gen 2.” USB 3.0 has retroactively been renamed “USB 3.1 Gen 1,” and it retains a theoretical transfer rate of 5.0 Gbps. The USB-IF has confirmed to us that “USB 3.1 Type 1” uses the same controllers as USB 3.0, so we can expect to see some early Broadwell-based Type C systems like the Retina MacBook come with “USB 3.1” even though they’re using what we have heretofore known as “USB 3.0” controllers. The new Chromebook Pixel, likewise, comes with these 5Gbps Type C ports, though Google’s spec sheet refers to them by speed rather than by a USB version.'

The announcement of the new Retina MacBook has prompted a flurry of attention to the USB Type C spec, a story we’ve been following since the port was just a gleam in the USB-IF’s eye. It’s not the first device to use Type C, but it’s certainly the most noteworthy, and it’s the first laptop that insists on using Type C for everything from power to data to display output.

Apple’s spec page for the new MacBook says that this port supports “USB 3.1 gen 1,” which there hasn’t been much discussion about. We know that the USB Implementers Forum finalized the USB 3.1 spec back in 2013, and that it raises the theoretical bandwidth of the USB bus from USB 3.0’s 5Gbps to 10Gbps. That’s not the version of the USB 3.1 spec that Apple is offering.

“USB 3.1 Gen 1” is USB 3.0

USB 3.0 was a major change to the spec. It introduced something called the “Extensible Host Controller Interface,” or xHCI, a single interface that could work with all extant versions of the USB spec. Supporting USB 1.0, 1.1, and 2.0 previously required a mix of different interfaces, but xHCI brought them all together and made it easier to make future additions (hence “extensible”).

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

15 Mar 23:02

Faking it, Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger

15 Mar 23:01

Snap Shots: Just Jack in Tokyo

by Camper English
firehose

Grizzly-san

Oil bar Golden Gai Tokyo Japan2

November 2011: Oil Bar in Tokyo serves only two things: Jack Daniel's and Triangle Shochu. Read about my trip to Japan here.

 

15 Mar 23:01

The Worst Internet Things bracket

by Jon Bois
firehose

"Jon (Bois) tweets like someone who's trapped in a room that won't unlock until he loses every one of his followers."

There are millions of Internet things. Most of them are great! 64 of them are bad. This is a preview of SB Nation's Selection Sunday show, live tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern.

Midwest Region

This is by far the toughest region of the tournament.

(1) SOMEONE IM'ING YOU ON FACEBOOK. As most recently passed along by Scientific Podcast Goes Boink: "Twitter is for loving people you've never met, and Facebook is for hating people you've always known." Facebook is largely an awful place, made more awful by the perpetual threat (before you disable instant messages) of your high school friend making your laptop ding and asking you to come see his prog-rock band with two drummers, no singer, and a rapper in a VOTE FOR PEDRO shirt.

It's made still more awful by the fact that the "read receipts" feature is on by default, so if you've read their IM and haven't answered, they know it. This is the top overall seed, because read receipts are the worst thing about the Internet. The right to ignore people must be preserved. Anyway, if you get one of these IMs, usher everyone out of the building in which you live, burn it to the ground, and live in the forest until you don't hear airplanes anymore.

(16) LOCAL TV STATION WEBSITES. These are especially wretched experiences if you're a freelance writer struggling to pay rent, because the half-done sentences and "they're/their/there" errors twist the knife ever deeper. Some TV station websites are perfectly fine. Some will ask you to take three surveys and watch a commercial from your local dentist and then dump you in an article full of Loren Ipsum.

(8) AD PLAYS, ACTUAL VIDEO DOESN'T. Out of principle, I don't use ad blockers. This is one reason I will never blame anyone for using them.

(9) ATHEISTS WHO LOVE TO ARGUE. Here's a fun one: tell them there's a gap in the fossil record and then immediately mute them. This will banish them to their own specialized Hell, thereby disproving their argument.

(5) KICKSTARTERS FOR WEDDINGS. I swear upon every shred of journalistic integrity I have that I have seen people do this.

(12) TINDER PHOTO IS A GUY IN OAKLEYS WITH A FISH HE CAUGHT. Lady friends tell me that easily a third of Tinder photos are of men, especially middle-aged men, showing off fish they caught. They presumably are gunning for the "rugged outdoorsman" aesthetic, but they're rocking M-frame Oakleys, which takes in more of an "I buy my pants at Home Depot" direction.

(4) FACEBOOK RE-ARRANGING YOUR FEED. If email or books or anything else used algorithms to bork around with the order of your consumption, we wouldn't stand for it. We put up with it on Facebook because Facebook does not matter.

(13) ANY TIME AOL DOES ANYTHING. don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox don't buy vox

(6) GOOGLE KILLING GOOGLE READER. Google Reader was my favorite social media network of all time. It was essentially the best possible version of what Facebook could have been. Then Google trash-canned it in an apparent effort to herd us all to Google+. And look, you're reading this on Google+ right now! You're even wearing a Google+ T-shirt, and you flew a Google+ to work this morning!

(11) PERSON ON EVERY GOTOMEETING CALL WHO IS BANGING A POT AND SHRIEKING. One person's holding a crying baby. Another has a dog who won't shut up. The presenter is standing in the bathroom, towel over his face, speaking 35 feet away from a speakerphone made in 1996. Conference-calling is like swimming, in that human beings clearly aren't gonna get any better at it, no matter how much time we're given.

(3) LINKEDIN REQUEST FROM YOUR HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER. no

(14) JON BOIS' TWITTER FEED. 1. Jon works on ambitious project that takes him a month, meaning he'll give you, what, four pieces of content in that time? 2. Jon repeats the same eight or nine gags over and over. 3. Jon tweets like someone who's trapped in a room that won't unlock until he loses every one of his followers. It's insufferable.

(7) ALL INTERNET DISCOURSE ABOUT BACON. "I am on Team Bacon! I have no palate and I want to belong. Bacon pizza."

(10) MARCH MADNESS BRACKET REPURPOSING TROPES. Oh, so you're too precious to just list some things, God forbid. Yeah, leave that for BuzzFeed. You're not like them.

(2) ITUNES. I thought I was the only one who messed up a sync and ended up wiping an entire music library that I had spent years building, but multiple friends have told me that they did the exact same thing. iTunes is like having your hand held by a robot who wants to walk into the ocean and die.

(15) 23-YEAR-OLD BACHELOR INSTAGRAMMING HIS FRIED EGGS. "Made eggs. Giggity giggity! #ForemanGrill #FamilyGuyQuotes"

West Region

This is by far the toughest region of the tournament.

(1) POP-UP ADS ON ILLEGAL SPORTS FEEDS. They're manageable if you can fullscreen it, but otherwise, the game you're watching has to be Game 7 of the Super Bowl in order to possibly be worth it.

(16) PERSON WHO TYPES "WOW" IN FRONT OF RETWEET. Wow. Just wow.

(8) ROUGHLY 85 PERCENT OF INTERNET MEN. You're being yourselves and I wish you would stop.

(9) EVERYTHING LONGER THAN 4,000 WORDS. As someone who wrote a 43,000-word article last year, I am one of the worst offenders of all. I don't think we're interesting enough to be talking this much.

(5) VAPING. Yeah, I mean, vaping seems pretty silly and all, with the dumb custom-built vape-rigs and whatever. But ...

(12) PEOPLE WHO HATE VAPING. ... they're not trying to bother you, they're just some folks going off by themselves and dorking out over something they enjoy. They're over there having fun and you're over here clawing your damn eyeballs out in bitter anguish. Everything is fun and pretty good except for you.

(4). ANYONE WHO CHARGES MONEY FOR A "HOW TO BLOG" CLASS. Welcome to Jon's Blogging School!
1. Work very, very hard and be prepared to not make money for a while
2. Look for stuff nobody is doing, and do that; don't be afraid to aim high and fall short
3. Learn how to Photoshop and make video and do other stuff like that, there's lots of stuff for that on YouTube
4. Promote your stuff like you're proud of it, and if you're not proud of it, don't get too down about it, because failure is okay and probably necessary
5. Be nice

Thank you for attending Jon's Blogging School!

(13) EXPERT VILLAGE VIDEOS THAT ARE SPLIT INTO 14 PARTS. This actually would be a 1-seed if it still stood today as the colossal trash fire it once was. If y'all missed out on 2008-era Expert Village ... man, it's the stuff that should be taught in school.

For example, there might be a how-to video on how to make pancakes. This could be accomplished with a three-minute video, but Expert Village dragged the affair out into a 12-minute epic, split it up into 45-second videos, uploaded them all to YouTube, and dumped 30-second ads in front of each one. They never made playlists or linked to the rest of the videos, either, so watching them in order was nearly impossible. They're probably still out there somewhere. It's digital ruin porn.

(6) SOMEHOW ENDING UP ON ANSWERS.COM.
"Jesse Owens was born on September 12th, 1913."
[three rollover ads consume screen]
"You won't believe how many gold medals he"
[click to next slide]
"won! Jesse Owens won over one million gold"
[nine video ads start auto-playing; your laptop's processor melts and spills out of the USB ports]
"trophies."

(11) CRAIGSLIST DATING. Go use literally any other dating service. Go find romance literally anywhere else. Go meet someone on a Wikipedia talk page.

(3) PEOPLE WHO THREATEN TO UNFOLLOW CELEBRITIES. "Grandpa, how did you win this medal?" The old man's eyes welled with tears. "I followed Kanye West and found him annoying."

(14) YELP REVIEWER WHO QUOTES THE "NO TIPPING" SCENE FROM RESERVOIR DOGS. The rarest of Pokemon is the person who misattributes this quote to Tyler Durden.

(7) OFFICIAL LIVE TV STREAMS THAT PLAY THE SAME FOUR ADS OVER AND OVER. Over the last year, I have seen the Aaron Rodgers "pump you up" State Farm ad more than I have seen my family.

(10) PODCAST MUSIC IS PODCASTER'S BAND RECORDED FROM PHONE. It is a ska band.

(2) MANUAL RETWEETERS. I probably like you, but I definitely like you if you don't know what this means.

(15) BLOGGERS GOING ON CAMERA. When I went on camera to announce this bracket, I had to keep my cardigan on because there was a giant toothpaste stain on my shirt. We are irredeemable.

South region

This is by far the toughest region of the tournament.

(1) BRANDS. Every holiday eventually loses its intended spirit. Christmas has its commercialism, Easter has its Easter bunny, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day has dozens of brands desperately crawling over one another to repurpose the Civil Rights Movement to sell stuff. They take turns throwing themselves upon the pyre every single year because they are stupid.

(16) ANYONE WHO STARTS ANYTHING WITH, "SORRY, FOLKS." We really don't need any more scolding on the Internet. Except for this bracket. We need this bracket, and then no more scolding after that.

(8) PEOPLE WHO COMPLAIN ABOUT BUZZFEED. I wish they would find a more prominent font/shade with which to credit folks, sure. By and large, though, they're making stuff that people enjoy, and unlike many sites of their kind, they don't carpet-bomb their pages with ads that make their pages unnavigable. Please note that you'll rarely, if ever hear a non-creating Internet user whine about BuzzFeed. If you're complaining about them, you're probably someone who creates Internet stuff yourself. You should be more like them, because people enjoy them a lot!

(9) MAYOR OF YOUR CITY CITES BUZZFEED. This is admittedly unfortunate, though. 14 Reasons Why Knoxville Is The Best City In The World!

(5) GCHATTERS WHO HIT ENTER AFTER EVERY THIRD WORD. You step away from your computer. From the other room, you hear it: DINK. DINK. DINK DINK DINK. DINK. DINK DINK. DINK. Maybe all your friends just saw the President tweet at you and ask you if you want to eat pizza and play Mario Kart! Or maybe Brandon from work is thinking about watching Chopped.

(12) PEOPLE WHO COMPLAIN ABOUT BLEACHER REPORT. it's a good site that i occasionally enjoy

(4) RESTAURANT WEBSITES. The lone exception is the website for my sandwich shop, of which I am very proud. We are closed.

(13) FUTURISTS. Spencer wanted me to put this one in. I don't remember why. Maybe they will understand why in the future.

(6) WRITERS WHO TRY TO BE MADDOX. This isn't the problem it used to be, I don't think, so it's only a 6-seed. In the earlier days of the Internet, Maddox was one of the only hugely visible Internet Writers. In a proto-Internet full of boring writing and useless crud, Maddox was doing his own thing, and doing it really well. He might not be your bag, and is only sometimes mine. In any case, thousands of Internet Dudes decided to try to be him without really understanding what made him good, and the results were metric tons of the most furious, obscene, offensive, and dull writing there's ever been.

(11) CROSSFIT MESSAGE BOARDS. Lemme expand this definition just slightly, because I feel like sharing this:

There's a bodybuilding dot com thread where two guys argue about how many days are in a week (via @katiebakes ) http://t.co/qeiZSlXdyZ

— SPENCER HALL (@edsbs) January 4, 2015

(3) COLLEGE FOOTBALL FANS WHO TWEET AT HIGH SCHOOL RECRUITS. no

(14) FOLLOW-UP EMAILS FROM PR PEOPLE. This is kind of a self-indulgent entry, which is why it's a 14-seed, but my phone buzzes 10 times a day on account of emails from PR people asking me to promote God-knows-what. Half of them are "I just wanted to follow-up" emails that drag the entrails of the original email behind them like a cloak. I once had a PR person email me, send four follow-up emails, and call me "unprofessional" for ignoring them.

(7) SOMEONE ASKING "DID YOU GET MY EMAIL" IN REAL LIFE. "No. I do not own a computer."

(10) ROLLOVER ADS THAT WON'T GO AWAY AND TELL YOU YOUR OPINION MATTERS. No it doesn't, as evidenced by the fact that I am trying to watch a video shot from someone's phone of the scene in Home Improvement when a kid tells Tim Taylor that "Tool Time" is more like "Fool Time." My opinion could not matter less.

(2) OBAMA'S TWITTER MENTIONS. bad

(15) NEW PARENTS ON FACEBOOK. Actually, I'm gonna call an audible and shift this to, "people who complain about new parents on Facebook." That is very entry-level "joyless Internet lump" material. I am the monster I hate.

East region

This is by far the toughest region of the tournament.

(1) R*DSK*NSFACTS.COM. That site is part of Dan Snyder's effort to prop up his racism and culture-marginalizing for long enough to sell a few more sweatshirts. I didn't link to the site. Instead, that link goes to what is probably my favorite video on YouTube. It's from a 1994 high school football game. If you haven't seen it, then ohhhh man, you will not regret the five minutes you give it.

(16) YOUTUBE LEGAL DISCLAIMERS UNDER UPLOADS OF "THRILLER" THAT SAY "I DID NOT MAKE THIS SONG." I actually love these. They're here because I wanted to bring them up.

(8) ANYTHING ABOUT STAR WARS. It's Star Wars night at the ballpark! Dress up like your favorite Star War! Every Star Wars movie is bad.

(9) SPOTIFY AD INTERRUPTS AQUEMINI. The $10 it takes to achieve an ad-free Spotify experience are the best $10 I spent every month.

(5) DR. HORRIBLE'S SING-ALONG BLOG. I feel like maybe we should grant amnesty for those among us who recommended Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog to the rest of us. Some of us are lousy at math, some of us can't run fast, and some of us have terrible taste. Who among us, and all that.

(12) GOOGLE MAPS TELLS YOU TO TAKE THE C TRAIN. If you're trying to get home in New York and you're supposed to take the C, just take literally any other train. Get off at any stop with a name you like, knock on someone's door, and ask if you can live with them.

(4) GCHAT BREAKUPS. don't

(13) WEB-FUNDED DOCUMENTARIES WITH SOUNDTRACKS THAT ARE JUST WHISTLING. Either whistling, or acoustic-guitar strumming with some twentysomething doof singing "hey-oh! oh-oh-oh!" over it. I recently gave a few bucks to a Kickstarter for a documentary that looked really intriguing, only to find it was formed with the aesthetic touch of a bank commercial.

(6) YANKEES WRITING THINKPIECES ABOUT THE SOUTH. "The South is a land of many contrasts. I was in Atlanta's airport one time. Louisville is next to Memphis."

(11) HATE-FOLLOWING. It ain't good for you.

(3) BASEBALL TWITTER DURING SPRING TRAINING. It's mostly just fans getting in dumb fights and beat reporters sharing grainy, long-distance photos taken through a chain-link fence of David Freese like he's the dang Sasquatch.

(14) HOCKEY TWITTER DURING THE NBA FINALS. Insecurity issues abound. It's fine for a sport to be the third- or fourth-best sport! That means it's still a pretty good sport!

(7) COORS LIGHT REVIEWS ON BEERADVOCATE. Years ago I made a foray into beer-snobbery and found that it was deeply unrewarding. A growler of Old Man Inquisitor Excoriationist Old Sea Shipwater Man XLVIIIIIIII Ale Stoutale Nitro Interlocutor Behemoth Alestout is great, sure, but so is a can of crummy light beer on a hot day. Every beer is pretty good.

(10) COMMENTER ON EVERY DUNK VIDEO WHO SAYS "THAT WAS A TRAVEL." We in this field of work refer to them as "dunk truthers."

(2) WOMEN BEING ASKED THINGS AND THEN BEING CORRECTED WHEN THEY ANSWER. don't do this

(15) SPORTSWRITERS TWEETING FROM AIRPORTS. I've said this before, but we as sportswriters really need to keep on the low with our grievances. Just quietly do our work and not get noticed. When the inefficiencies of our society are rid of, our jobs will first on the chopping block. Who needs a bunch of jerkholes getting between them and the sports? Nobody, really. We need to very quietly ride this deal out until the wrong person notices and does away with this entire useless industry. I mean, do you know how to work a drill press? I don't!

15 Mar 23:01

Kermit the Frog introduced the Clippers starting lineup

by Jacob Price

Kermit the Frog welcomes Blake Griffin back to the starting lineup! https://t.co/s7ibkL0U8O

— Los Angeles Clippers (@LAClippers) March 15, 2015

He hung out with Nate Robinson and Glen Davis before the game too.

Getting our game face on with my pals Nate & Big Baby pre-game @LAClippers vs. Houston! pic.twitter.com/RKBZYNqGDx

— Kermit The Frog (@KermitTheFrog) March 15, 2015

That's none of our business though.

15 Mar 22:58

purpleyin: yourkingandqueen: dbvictoria: Incredible beds I...





















purpleyin:

yourkingandqueen:

dbvictoria:

Incredible beds

I love the bed fandom

I seriously want like a couple of these. Non-standard furniture, especially the multifunction or space saving kind, I am a sucker for. Why we not get this more often, make life more efficient people-who-decide-what-furniture-to-sell please.

15 Mar 22:54

Interior of Chief Klart-Reech’s house, Alaska’s...



Interior of Chief Klart-Reech’s house, Alaska’s State Library, ca. 1895

15 Mar 22:45

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - DIE OPPRESSORS!

by admin@smbc-comics.com
popular shared this story from Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal.


New comic!
Today's News:

 OH MY GOD IT'S HAPPENING

15 Mar 22:44

coffeeanddonatus:A Mongolian grammar in Russian (1835).A closeup...



coffeeanddonatus:

A Mongolian grammar in Russian (1835).

A closeup if the gorgeous types in Grammatika Mongolskago jazyka (St. Petersburg, 1835), a Mongolian grammar by the noted Russian scholar and Mongolia expert Aleksei Aleksandrovic Bobrovnikov (1821-1865). Born in Irkutsk, near the norther border with Mongolia, Bobrovnikov studied at the Irkutsk Seminary, and went on to teach language and mathematics at the Kazan Ecclesiastical Academy. Bobrovnikov’s second (and much larger) work, Grammatika Mongolsko-kalmyckago jazyka (grammar of the Mongolian-Kalmuk language) was printed in Kazan in 1849.

15 Mar 22:44

Early Bloom In Rogue Valley Too Early For Many Bees

15 Mar 22:43

samjoonyuh:Perspective. 





samjoonyuh:

Perspective. 

15 Mar 22:43

Original Script TextSpeaking of Christmas……since Monica and I are starting a new...

Original Script Text

Speaking of Christmas…
…since Monica and I are starting a new business and have like no money…
…this year maybe we could do Secret Santa and then we each only buy one gift.
And there’s the added mystery of, you know, who gets who.

15 Mar 21:42

Photo



15 Mar 21:33

asvprock:don’t use the bathroom in your dream its a setup

asvprock:

don’t use the bathroom in your dream its a setup

15 Mar 18:07

assckles: "what would MLK Jr say about these protests" literally don’t know because he was shot and...

assckles:

"what would MLK Jr say about these protests"

literally don’t know because he was shot and killed too

15 Mar 18:04

Watch: An eagle in Dubai claims a world record for highest flight, captures it all on camera

by Caitlin Hu
firehose

birbs

Fly like an eagle, into the future.

An eagle named Darshan launched into flight yesterday (Mar. 14) from the top of the world’s tallest building, Dubai’s Burj Khalifa tower, with a live-stream camera strapped to its back. The minute-and-a-half-long flight over Dubai, organized by the advocacy group Freedom Conservation, offers vertiginous views of the city’s downtown.

The eagle, trained by a falconer in Thonon, France, descended a vertical distance of 2,700 feet (more than half a mile) to a fountain at the base of the building. Freedom Conservation, which arranged the stunt to highlight the plight of endangered eagles, claimed the flight set a world record for “highest-ever recorded bird flight from a man-made structure.”

Born in captivity, Darshan had never flown that high. But in the wild, many eagle species fly much higher on their own—the bald eagle, for example, glides at altitudes of up to 10,000 feet. The two highest-flying bird species on record are the endangered Ruppell’s griffon vulture, which has been spotted flying at 37,000 feet (the same height as a coasting commercial airplane), and the bar-headed goose, which has been seen flying over the Himalayas at heights of nearly 28,000 feet.

Darshan’s is not the longest bird flight recorded. In December 2013, a wild sea eagle stole a camera from wildlife rangers in Western Australia and recorded 70 miles of flight before losing interest in its prize and dropping the device. In other conservation awareness-raising stunts, Freedom Conservation has launched eagles from the Aiguille du Midi peak in the French Alps, over a hockey stadium in Geneva, Switzerland, and from Paris’s Eiffel Tower.

15 Mar 17:56

Considering MacBooks

by Gabe
firehose

'I'm skittish at investing any more in Thunderbolt while Apple tips it's hat toward a new connection standard. Thunderbolt was going to be my single connection. I don't have a strong opinion about Thunderbolt, good or bad. I just don't want to be caught between two competing formats.'

It's been quiet around here because I don't care that much about watches. But one thing that I've been thinking about since the Apple tech parade was the introduction of the new MacBook design.

First thing's, first: I love the idea of a single connection laptop. I hate cables. My current setup is a Retina MacBook Pro and a Thunderbolt monitor. The rMBP has a power cord and a Thunderbolt cable connected. Everything else is connected to a Thunderbolt dock and the monitor. I release my laptop from its desktop prison at least once a day, and the fewer cables to disconnect, the better.

The USB-C connection seems like a nice evolution. It's symmetrical so it's easy to connect. It also carries power both directions so it could be used to charge a device from the MacBook or it could charge the MacBook from another device. USB-C also carries high density data. There's enough there to drive an external 4K display and Ethernet. It's a solid option with a lot of potential, even if it provides lower bandwidth than Thunderbolt 2.

Which brings me to my biggest point of confusion. Why not incorporate the USB-C connection into the Retina MacBook Pro and the MacBook Air? I'm skittish at investing any more in Thunderbolt while Apple tips its hat toward a new connection standard. Thunderbolt was going to be my single connection. I don't have a strong opinion about Thunderbolt, good or bad. I just don't want to be caught between two competing formats.

The portability of the new MacBook is the showcase feature. For me, the new MacBook is the iPad Pro. It has long battery life, is super portable and is intended to be used without a power cable. I love the idea, I just don't think it fits what I need.

The update to the Retina MacBook Pro was modest but it still stands out as the overall best combination of features for me. The rMBP gets 10-12 hours of battery life, which is longer than the MacBook. It has the gorgeous Retina display and the new haptic feedback mouse (which I doubt is going to woo me much). But it's a solid package. The only major price difference is 1.4 lbs. The Retina MacBook Pro is heavier and slightly larger than the MacBook for the same price. But the rMBP includes USB3 connections, Thunderbolt, SD card reader and separate power connection that doesn't require a dongle.

As pointed out on Twitter, the new rMBP can drive multiple 4K displays too.

I'm somewhat happy with the updates but disappointed in a few areas. I anticipated the arrival of TouchID to the MacBook line. Given the enormous growth of online shopping (we named a day of the year "Cyber Monday" because of it) I had expected to see Apple pioneer TouchID as an easier way to make purchase from Target.

I also expected greater touch sensitive surface area. The new ForceTouch is a modest first step but I hoped to see more of the rest area of the MacBook models to accept touch input. We're approaching the transition between old-world computing and new world touch input. I anticipated that this year's models would begin that transition.

I think Apple continues to draw a heavy line between adolescent and adult computing. The MacBook line is for college students and the MacBook Pro line is for people that make a living with their computers. The MacBook Air line is the awkward middle child.

Is September going to see further updates to the MacBook line? I doubt it. I think this is the big change for 2015. I'd be pleasantly surprised if they proved me wrong.

15 Mar 17:42

Anti-doxing strategy—or, how to avoid 50 Qurans and $287 of Chick-Fil-A

by Nathan Mattise

"Nate, wake up. Your phone keeps going off."

This was two months ago—Monday morning, 4am—and I was asleep. But I remember what happened vividly. A decently hard nudge from my girlfriend did what technology couldn't, and I woke up to look at my phone. It showed two missed calls from unrecognized numbers alongside a slew of texts. I took a quick glance at the earliest unread message.

"Hey, 8chan has doxxed you," it read. "Message me on Twitter for more info."

Read 52 remaining paragraphs | Comments

15 Mar 17:38

CELEBRATE PI DAY!

firehose

via willowbl00

15 Mar 17:32

Robert Durst Arrested In New Orleans

Durst, the subject of the HBO series "The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst,"  has made national headlines as a person of interest or suspect in three deaths since 1982. He now faces a reopened investigation in Los Angeles into the 2000 death of his former friend Susan Berman, which may be bolstered by the show itself.
15 Mar 17:32

The Hipster Bar Of Donetsk Moves Lock, Stock And Cocktails To Kiev

For those who left the fighting in eastern Ukraine, a new place where everybody knows your name.
15 Mar 17:31

Wedgie

This article is about the wardrobe malfunction. For the polyhedron defined by two triangles and three trapezoid faces, see Wedge (geometry).

Link (thanks, purex!)