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12 Nov 22:46

How the craft beer revolution made cans cool again

by Svati Kirsten Narula
Burnside Brewing Co can

For decades, US beer drinkers have operated on the assumption that high-end, foreign brews come in bottles, while down-home, budget beers are packaged in flimsy, 12-oz. cans, the better for pounding and crushing.

Instagram Photo

Though the cheap stuff never really went out of style, America’s consumption of beer in metal cans showed definite signs of waning in the early 1990s, while bottled beer picked up in popularity—a trend that lasted pretty much right through the economic go-go years leading up to the financial crisis.

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american beer

But when a preference for canned beer reasserted itself a few years ago, it wasn’t just that the recession had US consumers falling back on cheaper options, or that hipsters were having a moment with the humble, blue-collar authenticity of cheap canned brews like Pabst Blue Ribbon.

There was another, influential group of consumers contributing to the trend, those who were propelling the US craft-beer movement by spending a bit more for small-batch, higher-quality, domestic brews—these beers were and are increasingly being packaged in cans, too.

Instagram Photo  Aluminum is recycled at a much higher rate than glass; it can be taken to venues where glass is not typically allowed; and it’s a better canvas for intricate designs than the paper labels wrapped around glass bottles.  

Craft brewers love cans because they better protect beer from light and oxygen—two of a brew’s greatest enemies. Light exposure is what makes beer “skunk,” or smell awful. Light penetrates glass bottles, even the dark brown ones, but it doesn’t go through aluminum cans. And unlike a bottle cap, the seal on top of a can doesn’t let any oxygen in or out.

Concerns about canned beer bearing a metallic taste, which once was a factor that made bottles more appealing, should be long gone now. Decades ago, when the cans were made of tin and lined with lead, that was a valid worry. Today’s cans are made from aluminum and have a water-based polymer lining, though, so the beer doesn’t even touch the metal.

American craft brewer Oskar Blues is credited with kicking off the craft canning trend in 2002, with the success of its Dale’s Pale Ale .

Instagram Photo

California’s Sudwerk Brewing Co. has just begun to package its signature craft lager in aluminum cans. The 25-year-old company has never done this before, but co-owner Trenton Yackzan said, in a press release, that “the time was right for us to join the legion of craft brewers who have begun putting some of their beers in cans.” Rexam, one of the world’s largest beverage canning companies, is manufacturing the pale-yellow-and-green Sudwerk cans. A few years ago, Rexam was doing this for just a few craft brewers; in 2014, Sudwerk is one of more than 40 such accounts.

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sly fox topless beer can
There’s been plenty of innovation in aluminum beer packaging recently; 2013 saw bowtie-shaped cans from Budweiser, cans that changed color as they got colder, from Coors Light, and a “topless” can from Sly Fox, with a peel-back lid that made drinking from the can more like drinking from a glass.(AP/Matt Rourke)

John Hargrove, an account director at packaging firm MVW in Richmond, Virginia, says the craft industry’s packaging preference is more about aluminum versus glass than it is cans versus bottles. Aluminum is recycled at a much higher rate than glass; it can be taken to venues—sporting events, campgrounds, beaches—where glass is not typically allowed; it’s not hard to manufacture in different sizes and shapes (the standard 12-ounce can is most popular, but brands can differentiate themselves with taller, shorter, or skinnier ones, as Red Bull has done); and it’s a better canvas for intricate designs than the paper labels wrapped around glass bottles.

Instagram Photo

People also perceive metal cans as being more conducive to ice cold beer. In any case, though, most beer aficionados make a habit of pouring their drink into tall glasses for sipping, no matter whether it comes from a bottle or can.

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12 Nov 21:01

This map shows which states produce the most NBA players

by Tom Ziller

We analyze birthplace data to determine why so many NBA players come from Washington, D.C. and Mississippi.

As a part of my NBA preview feature focused on maps that explain the league, I looked at the birthplaces of American players. I found that if you looked both at prior generations of players and current players, you found a simple pattern: large cities produce most of the league's players. For example, here's the heatmap that shows birthplaces of the NBA players born since 1980.

us since 1980

The strongest producers aren't much of a surprise: New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia, with nods to Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Indianapolis, Detroit, New Orleans, the Bay Area and Seattle. These are the major population centers of the nation, so it's expected to see most players come from those areas.

But I wanted to find out if some areas produce NBA players at a higher rate than expected historically. So I adjusted for population and produced this map based on all-time NBA player counts. (Note that a Hall-of-Famer counts the same as a 10-day call-up in this map. There's no weighting for games played or quality of the player. Just raw numbers of players born in a state or territory.)

NBA states per capita

As it turns out, Washington has an extraordinary record of producing NBA players. With 68 current and former players born in Washington, the District's rate per million of current resident is around 125. That's five times higher than the nearest state. It's so high that it's eyebrow-raising, in fact. Here are some potential explanations.

* Washington is only urban, and we discovered from our previous maps that cities tend to produce most NBA players. Therefore, while other states have rural populations less likely to produce NBA players that in theory drag down their per-capita rates, D.C. does not.

* These maps rely on birthplaces only. (Thank you as always to basketball-reference.com for the data.) Perhaps an outsized number of suburban Maryland and Virginia children are born in D.C. such that the District's birth rate is abnormally high given its population. As it turns out, D.C.'s birth rate is among the highest in the nation, but not abnormally so.

* Washington is overwhelmingly black. The NBA is overwhelmingly black. This seems like the most simple explanation, and it's backed up when you see what state follows D.C. on the list: Mississippi. D.C.'s population is 50 percent black. Mississippi leads the 50 states with a 37 percent black population. The U.S. Virgin Islands, which has produced three NBA players despite a tiny current population of 100,000 and follows Mississippi closely in per-capita NBA player production, is 76 percent black.

Here's a U.S. census map from 2000 showing percentage of black population in each U.S. county.

Census map, black population

It doesn't match up with our per-capita NBA birthplace map perfectly. But the broad strokes are pretty close in the Deep South and along the eastern seaboard.

What stands out are Indiana and Kentucky. Those two states have reputations as basketball wonderlands but middle-of-the-pack black populations. That suggests that local culture plays a major role in basketball player development. And in fact, that cultural argument reinforces the correlation between black populations and higher rates of NBA player production we see in D.C., Mississippi and the U.S. Virgin Islands: basketball is a game deeply embedded in certain diverse populations. It builds strongly local cultures, and that ultimately leads to success.

Some other notes on this subject:

* One of the pitfalls here is that we're using data on NBA player birthplaces collected since the late 1920s, but only accounting for current population. Obviously, population has shifted dramatically over 90 years. That means that the American West may be underrated on our map since it didn't have high levels of population for most of the NBA's life. We'll see if Arizona and Nevada, for example, starts producing many more NBA players.

* Vermont is the only U.S. state to never produce an NBA player. Neither Guam nor the Northern Mariana Islands have done so either.

* Alaska can only claim one NBA player who was born there, Mario Chalmers. Carlos Boozer was born in Germany and Trajan Langdon was born in California. Such is the limit of using birthplace data. High school data might be more representative if so many players didn't attend prep academies in Virginia, Connecticut and Florida.

* In raw numbers, California (the most populous state) leads the way with 352. New York follows with 310.

* No, I'm not sure how Montana has produced nine NBA players either. It has the smallest black population in the nation (4,000 black residents for 0.67 percent of the population as of the 2010 census) and no major basketball culture as far as anyone outside Montana can tell. (For the record, all nine of the NBA players born in Montana are white. Phil Jackson is the only one in the Hall of Fame.)

* The three players born in the U.S. Virgin Islands: Tim Duncan (of course), Raja Bell and Charles Claxton, who played seven minutes for the Celtics in 1996.

12 Nov 20:55

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12 Nov 20:55

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12 Nov 17:21

Reflecting escalations

by sharhalakis

by Turu

12 Nov 17:19

Excited Dog Enters ‘The Incredible Dog Shrinking Machine’ and Emerges As a Smaller Version of Himself

by Lori Dorn

A playful Goldendoodle excitedly runs into a box labeled “The Incredible Dog Shrinking Machine” and when called by his human, exits out the other side as a significantly smaller version of himself. While the box probably not magic, the trick is incredibly clever.

via reddit, Daily Picks and Flicks

12 Nov 17:07

A Webcomic About Two Cosmic Scoundrels By A Creator Of Homestar Runner

by Lauren Davis

A Webcomic About Two Cosmic Scoundrels By A Creator Of Homestar Runner

When Homestar Runner co-creator Matt Chapman teams up with Samurai Jack artist Andy Suriano, magic happens. Space magic. Their webcomic Cosmic Scoundrels follows a pair of futuristic rogues and their ludicrous adventures on the wrong side of the law. Plus, expect plenty of Easter eggs.

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12 Nov 16:58

The Sex Abuse Scandal Plaguing USA Swimming

There’s a horror in the shadows of American competitive swimming: a continuing legacy of sexual abuse, usually involving male coaches who prey on young women — and a governing body that looks the other way.
12 Nov 16:58

John Oliver Is Outdoing 'The Daily Show' And 'Colbert'

Confession: "I haven't watched an entire episode of 'The Daily Show' or 'The Colbert Report' in months."
12 Nov 16:57

NATO: Russian Troops Have Crossed The Ukranian Border

NATO officials have seen Russian military equipment and Russian combat troops entering Ukraine this week, its top commander says.
12 Nov 16:56

AT&T will stop investing in high-speed fiber internet until net neutrality rules decided

by Colin Lecher
firehose

all carriers suck forever

After President Obama called on the FCC to pass strong net neutrality rules, Chairman Tom Wheeler reportedly backed away from the statements, saying he favored a more "nuanced" solution. But regardless of where the debate stands, AT&T says it won't budge on a new project: at a conference today, CEO Randall Stephenson said AT&T would stop investing in a plan to bring high-speed fiber connections to 100 US cities until the FCC determines a path for internet regulation.


AT&T brought the service to Austin last year

"We can't go out and invest that kind of money deploying fiber to 100 cities not knowing under what rules those investments will be governed," Stephenson said, according to a report from Reuters. AT&T brought the service to Austin last year, beating Google, and said they were exploring more investments in major metro areas. But as of April, negotiations with the cities were still in early stages.

Stephenson also said the FCC would face litigation — possibly years' worth — if it decided to pass tough rules, such as Title II, which would treat the internet like a utility.

AT&T, of course, has long taken the stance that tough open internet rules would hurt competition, and other service providers have saber-rattled about potential lawsuits over new rules. But preemptively canning investments in a service, especially one as in-demand as fiber, is a new move. If AT&T follows through, there may not be new investments until some time next year, when rules are set to be decided on.

12 Nov 16:54

Visual Studio 2015 goes even more cross-platform with Clang, Android emulator

by Peter Bright

NEW YORK—The next versions of Visual Studio and .NET were given their official names today—Visual Studio 2015 and .NET 2015—along with a first preview release using this name.

Visual Studio 2015 will also take the next step along Microsoft's path of making Visual Studio into a cross-platform development tool. Visual Studio 2013 took strides in this direction with its preview support for HTML5/Cordova apps, and with Xamarin, .NET developers can reach multiple platforms.

In Visual Studio 2015, that cross-platform reach is going to include C++, too. Microsoft's development environment will include support for the Clang compiler and LLVM infrastructure for targeting Android and, in a later iteration, iOS.

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12 Nov 16:53

Samsung made a rap video about corporate diversity

by Chris Welch

Every so often, Samsung goes off its very focused, formal path and does something truly bizarre. The Galaxy S4 unveiling at Radio City Music Hall still ranks as the company's strangest, most surreal moment; we're not sure that can ever be topped. But dammit, Samsung's going to try. As 9to5Google points out, the company has posted a new video to its Samsung Tomorrow YouTube account that shines a spotlight on diversity and accessibility programs within its workforce. Nothing strange about that. It's your standard corporate / HR move. But the magic here is in Samsung's delivery. The company hired Korean rapper Mad Clown to spit out its sustainability stats over a completely generic backing track. Why? We'll never know. But we'll never get tired of Samsung getting weird.


Here we go once again
Samsung to the rescue
Put wings to your dreams
Everyone just listen

Samsung, we 280,000 humans
40 percent 112,000 women
You don’t have to worry after giving birth
Sit back, relax, no need to work
It’s all taken care of
Leave it up to us
Family friendly company
With kindergarten [???]

So many good employments waiting for you
Finding people with great skills and talents too
Sign up for Samsung software membership
Have talent for design
Go to Samsung design membership

Samsung’s all for diversity
We have in that full whole internship
For the student of handicap, make your dreams come true
All the possibilities what you want, we can do it all for you
We’re just letting our dreams come true
Shit

Make it shine, let us smile
Samsung we’ll be there
A global harmony with people, society, and environment
Samsung

12 Nov 16:53

Humanity just landed a spacecraft on a comet

by Elizabeth Lopatto

Just after 11AM Eastern, the European Space Agency's Philae lander made contact with the surface of a comet. The 250-pound probe settled on a patch of the 2.5-mile-long comet and began running its instruments, ESA said.

Philae left Earth a decade ago, hitching a ride on ESA's Rosetta orbiter. About 7 hours asgo, Rosetta released the washing-machine-sized probe, and it began to fall toward its target, a comet called 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. Though the landing site was picked to be clear of debris, it was possible that Philae wouldn't stick the landing — especially after the head Rosetta lander, Stephan Ulmac, said yesterday that Philae's thrusters, meant to stabilize the craft as it landed, might not work.

No spacecraft has ever before had a controlled landing on a comet, though NASA's Deep Impact slammed a probe into one in 2005 to find out what composed the comet's core.

After Rosetta launched in 2004, it orbited earth three times, using our planet's gravity as a slingshot to propel Rosetta to the speed required to catch 67P. Rosetta is powered by solar panels, but at its farthest point from the sun, it got only about 3 percent of the sunlight we get here on Earth. So scientists designed it to go into a kind of hibernation, with only the most vital functions running. In January, Rosetta woke up and in August, it caught 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko.

12 Nov 16:51

Microsoft To Open Source .NET and Take It Cross-Platform

by Soulskill
firehose

"Microsoft is also making Visual Studio free for small teams"

An anonymous reader writes: Microsoft today announced plans to open source .NET, the company's software framework that primarily runs on Windows, and release it on GitHub. Furthermore, Microsoft also unveiled plans to take .NET cross-platform by targeting both Mac OS X and Linux. In the next release, Microsoft plans to open source the entire .NET server stack, from ASP.NET 5 down to the Common Language Runtime and Base Class Libraries. The company will let developers build .NET cloud applications on multiple platforms; it is promising future support of the .NET Core server runtime and framework for Mac and Linux. Microsoft is also making Visual Studio free for small teams.

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12 Nov 16:43

What the heck happened? [via]

firehose

via Tadeu



What the heck happened? [via]

12 Nov 16:42

The Postal Service Could Economize by Making Full Use of Its Assets

firehose

via Ibstopher

The Washington Post called for further cuts to the Postal Service and implicitly cuts in pay and benefits in an editorial today. There are two points worth noting on its proposed agenda.

First, the Postal Service has already experienced enormous downsizing. It employed more than 900,000 workers in 1999. In the most recent data it employed 587,600, a decline of 35 percent. This downsizing has been associated with substantial gains in productivity, so it is wrong to imply that it has not been changing with the times.

The other point is that the Postal Service could improve its finances by expanding rather than contracting. Specifically, it can return to providing basic banking services, as it did in the past and many other postal systems still do. This course has been suggested by the Postal Service's Inspector General.

This route takes advantage of the fact that the Postal Service has buildings in nearly every neighborhood in the country. These offices can be used to provide basic services to a large unbanked population that often can't afford fees associated with low balance accounts. As a result they often end up paying exorbitant fees to check cashing services, pay day lenders and other non-bank providers of financial services.

A postal banking system would provide competition for the private financial system, which undoubtedly explains why so many politicians are unwilling to consider it as a route to addressing the Postal Service's financial issues. In the past politicians have often intervened to protect the private sector so that it would not lose business to the Postal Service. For example, in 1999 many members of Congress intervened on behalf of FedEx and UPS, who were concerned that they were losing business due to an effective ad campaign by the Postal Service. (They also sued to stop the ad campaign.)

The Postal Service has been placed in a nearly impossible situation where it is expected to be profitable on a strict business basis, but it is prevented from pursuing potentially profitable paths by the political power of the businesses with whom it would be competing. This is the core problem facing the Postal Service which is not mentioned by the Post.

 

Thanks to Robert Salzberg for calling this one to my attention.

12 Nov 16:40

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firehose

this is the weirdest Alice in Wonderland adaptation I've ever seen



12 Nov 16:39

audible-smiles: UM I CANT BELIEVE THIS you guys I can get all seven of these buttons for five...

audible-smiles:

UM I CANT BELIEVE THIS

image

you guys I can get all seven of these buttons for five dollars I’m not even hesitating its happening now

12 Nov 16:32

Amazon Studios Greenlights Seven New Television Pilots for the 2015 Season

by Glen Tickle
firehose

phillip k dick beat

otherwise:

"Point of Honor — At the start of the Civil War, a Virginia family makes the controversial decision to defend the South while freeing all of their slaves"

uh, wow, ok

7pilots

Amazon Studios has given the green light to seven new television pilots for the 2015 season from established creators like Ridley Scott (Alien) and Frank Spotnitz (The X-Files) as well as some newcomers. The pilots will be filmed and released on Amazon Prime Instant Video at which point viewers can provide feedback to Amazon about which pilots should be picked up for a full season.

Amazon released the titles and descriptions of the series in a blog post on their official Hollywonk site.

Cocked — A big city corporate lapdog is forced to return home and save his family’s struggling gun business, much to the horror of his liberal wife, his opinionated teenage kids and the older brother who never left. The hour-long dark comedy pilot was created by Sam Baum and Sam Shaw and stars Sam Trammell (True Blood), Jason Lee (My Name is Earl) and Brian Dennehy (The Good Wife).

Mad Dogs — When a group of underachieving forty-somethings reunite to celebrate the success of their buddy at his estate in Belize, the trip spirals into a darkly comedic labyrinth full of lies, deception and murder – putting their friendships to the ultimate test. An hour-long dramatic comedy created by Cris Cole (The Bill) and executive produced by Shawn Ryan (The Shield), the pilot stars Steve Zahn (Dallas Buyers Club), Billy Zane (Twin Peaks), Romany Malco (Weeds), Michael Imperioli (The Sopranos) and Ben Chaplin.

Salem Rogers — After a decade in a posh rehab center, an outrageously untamed former supermodel tries to recreate her success in a new world she barely recognizes…a place where people no longer jump at her command, or (gasp!) even remember who she is. The half hour comedy stars Leslie Bibb (About a Boy), Rachel Dratch (Saturday Night Live) and Jane Kaczmarek (Malcolm in the Middle) and was written by newcomer Lindsey Stoddart, who submitted Salem Rogers to Amazon Studios as part the open screenplay process.

The Man in the High Castle — Based on Philip K. Dick’s award-winning novel, The Man in the High Castle questions what the world would look like if the Allied Powers had lost World War II and Japan and Germany ruled all nations, and tells the story through characters in various states of posing (spies, sellers of falsified goods, others with secret identities).  The hour-long dramatic pilot stars Alexa Davalos (Mob City), Luke Kleintank (Pretty Little Liars) and Rubert Evans (Hellboy) and is executive produced by David Semel (Madam Secretary, Heroes), Frank Spotnitz (The X-Files) and Ridley Scott (Killing Jesus).

The New Yorker Presents — America’s most award-winning magazine is brought to life in this docu-series that spotlights the writers, artists and subjects featured in its revered pages. In the pilot episode, Academy Award winner Jonathan Demme (The Silence of the Lambs) directs a documentary piece based on Rachel Aviv’s article, “A Very Valuable Reputation.” The pilot also features segments with Andrew Garfield (The Amazing Spiderman), writer Ariel Levy and artist Marina Abramovic. Oscar and Emmy winning documentarian Alex Gibney  (The Armstrong Lie) executive produces.

Point of Honor — At the start of the Civil War, a Virginia family makes the controversial decision to defend the South while freeing all of their slaves, pitting the family against one another and testing their strength, courage and love. Written by Carlton Cuse (Lost), the hour-long drama stars Nathan Parsons (True Blood) and Annebelle Stephenson (Revenge).

Down Dog — A dashing, happy-go-lucky LA yoga instructor has breezed through life, women and jobs, but when he breaks up with the woman who runs his yoga studio, he’s finally forced to face obstacles, and has to learn how to transcend himself.   The half hour satirical comedy stars Josh Casaubon (I Just Want My Pants Back), Paget Brewster (Criminal Minds) and Kris Kristofferson (Lone Star), and was written by Robin Schiff (Are You There, Chelsea?).

image via Hollywonk

12 Nov 16:30

International Cryptozoology Museum, A Fascinating Collection of Mysterious Creatures in Portland, Maine

by Lori Dorn
firehose

meanwhile, in Portland(, ME)

International Cryptozoology Museum

The International Cryptozoology Museum in downtown Portland, Maine, houses a fascinating collection of mysterious creatures of legend and lore. Founded in 2003 by respected author and researcher Loren Coleman, the museum seeks to educate the public about cryptozoology or “the study of hidden or unknown animals.”

Cryptozoology is the study of hidden or unknown animals. These are usually larger zoological species that, to date, remain unverified by science, such as Yetis, Bigfoot, Lake Monsters, and Sea Serpents, as well as hundreds of other yet-to-be-found animals (cryptids) worldwide, but which compelling ethnoknown evidence has been collected for their possible existence. It also encompasses the study of animals of recent discovery, such as the coelacanth, okapi, megamouth shark, giant panda, and mountain gorilla.

The museum was recently named one of the “Best Museums in New England” by GoLocal Worcester.

Scott Beale and I recently visited the museum and met founder Loren Coleman, who generously gave us a personally guided tour. During the tour, Scott was able to capture some amazing photos.

Loren Coleman

The International Cryptozoology Museum

Bigfoot Game

International Cryptozoology Museum4

International Cryptozoology Museum1

International Cryptozoology Museum2

International Cryptozoology Museum3

International Cryptozoology Museum

International Cryptozoology Museum

photos by Scott Beale

12 Nov 16:28

Today’s Assassin’s Creed: Unity Reviews Shouldn’t Make Us Feel Such Schadenfreude, But They Do - Sacre bleu!

by Victoria McNally
firehose

'Kotaku called the game indicative of “creative dead ends the series has wandered into”; both Joystiq and Polygon noted that the drops in framerate ultimately proved incredibly distracting, with the latter publication alleging that “its moment-to-moment performance varies between acceptable and abysmal.” Even IGN, who gave the game the most favorable review we could find, labelled the protagonist a “one-dimensional character whose motivation is little more than the standard revenge tale.”

And that is all, of course, to say nothing of the fact that Ubisoft deliberately embargoed all of these reviews from going up until after the game went on sale today, a move that helps Ubisoft at the expense of both the consumer and the reviewer, who must agree to the game manufacturer’s terms in order to get early access for reviewing in the first place (hey, if you’re looking for “ethics” and “corruption,” that might be a good place to start).'

shutterstock_149170301

Back in early high school, one of my music teachers told me this: when you get up to audition in front of a group of people for whatever reason, deep down in their heart of hearts, they want you to succeed. They might look bored and they might hate you as a person, but even so, they’d rather hear you perform well then sit there and watch you suffer.  The same holds true with any criticism—as much as the public loves a snark-filled takedown, not a single reviewer truly enjoys wasting their time watching movies, playing games, or reading books that are not good.

But. But.

Sometimes, after an oft-publicized gaffe that illuminates many of the core problems facing a particular industry —such as “we didn’t have time to include playable multiplayer female characters because that’s the ‘reality of production,’” just as an example— it’s difficult, at certain moments, to not embrace the teensiest bit of pleasure upon hearing that the final product of all that hemming and hawing and “but it would have been double the animation!” excuse-making didn’t quite make it work.

Indeed, one feels a bit like the dog from Duck Hunt looking at all the reports of glitchiness, stagnant storytelling, and—seriously—microtransations. Like, gee, I wonder what kind of character you could have added to the story of a scruffy European man jumping off of buildings to make it more innovative and interesting? Hmmmm. Such a quandary, that one.

duckhunt

But in all seriousness, the reviews are… well, not much to write home about. Kotaku called the game indicative of “creative dead ends the series has wandered into”; both Joystiq and Polygon noted that the drops in framerate ultimately proved incredibly distracting, with the latter publication alleging that “its moment-to-moment performance varies between acceptable and abysmal.” Even IGN, who gave the game the most favorable review we could find, labelled the protagonist a “one-dimensional character whose motivation is little more than the standard revenge tale.”

And that is all, of course, to say nothing of the fact that Ubisoft deliberately embargoed all of these reviews from going up until after the game went on sale today, a move that helps Ubisoft at the expense of both the consumer and the reviewer, who must agree to the game manufacturer’s terms in order to get early access for reviewing in the first place (hey, if you’re looking for “ethics” and “corruption,” that might be a good place to start).

All in all, it sort of seems like Ubisoft messed this one up—which, honestly, is too bad, even if we did get super annoyed at them this year for all that “women are too hard to animate” nonsense. Hopefully Assassin’s Creed: Rogue and AC Chronicles: China, which has an actual honest-to-god female protagonist, will ultimately do better than their much-hyped French Revolution-based counterpart, and then maybe the studio will finally take note and start moving forward with new ways to innovate the same old guy-stabbing-templars storyline. We can hope.

(image via wavebreakmedia/Shutterstock.com)

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12 Nov 16:27

Newswire: Michael Shannon goes absolutely insane in the new Deerhoof video

by Marah Eakin
firehose

HARDEST FASTEST AUTOSHARE

Fans of both eccentric indie rock and those times in movies and on TV when Michael Shannon goes absolutely fucking nuts will surely like the new video from Deerhoof, which happens to include both. The Vice Cooler-directed clip for “Exit Only” features not one but two Shannons, one mild-mannered and one wild and enthusiastic. Fair warning to the squeamish: Some teeth fall out, and there’s blood involved. There’s also a Discman!

The track is from Deerhoof’s new and pretty excellent La Isla Bonita, which is in stores now.


12 Nov 16:27

Dyslexie, An Ingenious Typeface Designed to Make Reading Easier for People With Dyslexia

by EDW Lynch
firehose

hopefully it's at least as good as Comic Sans

Dyslexie Font for Dyslexics

Dyslexie is a typeface specifically designed for people with dyslexia. Dutch designer (and dyslexic) Christian Boer created the typeface with subtle tweaks to the letterforms that increase their readability for people with dyslexia. As Boer explains, dyslexics tend to mirror and rotate letters as they read, which makes reading very difficult. Many common typefaces aggravate this problem by having very uniform letterforms–for instance “b” and “d” may appear as mirror images of one another. The characters in the Dyslexie typeface have a slight cursive slant and slightly varied vertical elements and openings to prevent similar letters from being confused. Heavier bases help visually anchor the letters so dyslexics are less likely to rotate them.

According to Boer, user feedback and several research studies indicate that Dyslexie does make reading easier for many people with dyslexia. Dyslexie is currently on display at the 2nd Istanbul Design Biennial through December 14, 2014. It is available online for a variety of systems and devices, and it is free for home use.

Dyslexie Font for Dyslexics

Dyslexie Font for Dyslexics

Dyslexie Font for Dyslexics

images via Christian Boer

via Dezeen

12 Nov 14:46

Federal AIDS website insecurely transmitted user locations for years

by Dante D'Orazio

Everyone loves to hate Healthcare.gov, but there are plenty of other bad websites out there. Take, for example, AIDS.gov. The Washington Post reports that the site has failed to adhere to basic web security protocols for the past few years. As a result, anyone snooping on internet traffic could easily find the location and identity of someone searching for locations that offer HIV testing facilities or other services.

The culprit is encryption — or rather, the lack thereof. Like the vast majority of websites, AIDS.gov and another similar government site offering HIV assistance, has not used SSL encryption to maintain its users' privacy. SSL, also known as Secure Sockets Layer, is often used on banking websites to scramble data sent between people and websites. It's typically denotes by a green padlock in the address-bar.

A disappointingly low security standard for a sensitive matter

Without SSL, third parties could have easily snoop on the web activity of those using the Department of Health and Human Services-run site. That included the precise longitude and latitude of those using the app or website to find nearby clinics or aid centers. Those who used such services on the website while on public WI-Fi hotspots would be at particular risk.

Considering the history of HIV and AIDS, it comes to the surprise of many that the HHS made little effort to keep the privacy of its users secure. But it serves as a worthwhile reminder that not nearly enough sites use SSL or other encryption technologies. According to The Washington Post, AIDS.gov is thankfully no longer on that list — encryption is now mandatory.

12 Nov 14:12

Black IT Pros On (Lack Of) Racial Diversity In Tech

by timothy
Nerval's Lobster writes While pundits and analysts debate about diversity in Silicon Valley, one thing is very clear: Black Americans make up a very small percentage of tech workers. At Facebook, Google, and Yahoo, that number is a bit less than 2 percent of their respective U.S. workforces; at Apple, it's closer to 7 percent. Many executives and pundits have argued that the educational pipeline remains one of the chief impediments to hiring a more diverse workforce, and that as long as universities aren't recruiting a broader mix of students for STEM degrees, the corporate landscape will suffer accordingly. But black IT entrepreneurs and professionals tell Dice that the problem goes much deeper than simply widening the pipeline; they argue that racial bias, along with lingering impressions of what a 'techie' should look like, loom much larger than any pipeline issue.

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12 Nov 13:22

Newswire: Mulaney and Bob’s Burgers will be switching spots on Fox’s Sunday schedule

by Sam Barsanti
firehose

Yay, Bob's Burgers gets promoted

It looks like Fox’s stirring display of confidence in Mulaney‘s ability to pull in any viewers at all is continuing. Just last month, the network cut the order for the show’s first season from 16 episodes to 13 episodes, which it obviously did because those extra three episodes would’ve gotten such good ratings that Fox would’ve looked greedy if it had aired them. But seriously, though, the show is doing awful.

Whether it’s because of that or not, Deadline is reporting that Fox has bumped Mulaney from its 9:30 timeslot down to Bob’s Burgers’ 7:30 spot. Bob’s Burgers will be moving to 9:30, which means it will not only have the luxury of following Family Guy, but also the freedom to no longer worry about constantly being preempted by football games. The change goes into effect “immediately,” so look ...

12 Nov 13:04

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12 Nov 10:42

welele: Un algoritmo que crea personajes en 8 bits en el...

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via Rosalind













welele:

Un algoritmo que crea personajes en 8 bits en el Tetris

Mu jarcor nene

12 Nov 10:37

sixpenceee: A graphic guide to Cemetery Symbolism, created by...

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via Rosalind











sixpenceee:

A graphic guide to Cemetery Symbolism, created by Michelle Enemark, text by Allison C. Meier. Click on the above pictures to enlargen.