Shared posts

28 Aug 02:10

Wood Burning Chiminea Outdoor Fire Pit

by Erin Carstens

Having a chiminea in the backyard sounds so fancy. Like buying a cravat at Barney's or Tarjay. Lucky for the less fancy of us out there, this particular chiminea is made by a decidedly un-fancy-sounding company called The Blue Rooster Co., and they describe their outdoor fire pit as "Prairie Style."

The egg-shaped firebox and its chimney extension are made from a non-rusting solid cast aluminum alloy body. The opening is fitted with a stainless steel mouth screen; additional hardware and fasteners are stainless as well.

At 52" tall x 22" wide (and just 80 pounds thanks to being cast aluminum instead of cast iron) the Prairie Chiminea is large enough to eat a full size fire log, and roast many a marshmallow so you can join in the eating too. A terrific gift for the dads who like gathering the whole fam for s'mores around the fire. And if the whole fam isn't into chiminea bonding as much as Dad is, give him a s'mores roasting rack so you can just place your orders at the grill and have him deliver them to the living room TV.

28 Aug 02:10

Texts From SuperheroesFacebook | Twitter | Patreon



Texts From Superheroes

Facebook | Twitter | Patreon

28 Aug 02:10

Writing Supplies

by Bill Amend

28 Aug 01:08

#1592 – Baking

by Chris

#1592 – Baking

28 Aug 01:08

You must go offline to view this page

by Dan Jones
28 Aug 00:53

#1593 – Groceries

by Chris

#1593 – Groceries

28 Aug 00:53

Drone Training

The joke will be on him in a few weeks when animal control shows up and takes custody of his Roomba.
28 Aug 00:53

Black holes could delete the Universe

by Jason Kottke

In their latest video, Kurzgesagt takes a look at black holes, specifically how they deal with information. According to the currently accepted theories, one of the fundamental laws of the Universe is that information can never be lost, but black holes destroy information. This is the information paradox…so one or both of our theories must be wrong.

The paradox arose after Hawking showed, in 1974-1975, that black holes surrounded by quantum fields actually will radiate particles (“Hawking radiation”) and shrink in size (Figure 4), eventually evaporating completely. Compare with Figure 2, where the information about the two shells gets stuck inside the black hole. In Figure 4, the black hole is gone. Where did the information go? If it disappeared along with the black hole, that violates quantum theory.

Maybe the information came back out with the Hawking radiation? The problem is that the information in the black hole can’t get out. So the only way it can be in the Hawking radiation (naively) is if what is inside is copied. Having two copies of the information, one inside, one outside, also violates quantum theory.

So maybe black holes holographically encode their information on the surface?

Tags: black holes   Kurzgesagt   physics   science   video
28 Aug 00:52

Pocket Samurai Titanium Keychain Knife

by Erin Carstens

StatGear knows we can't all be samurais, but we can all carry a pocket knife. And if they shape their Tanto blades like katanas, put some Japanese characters on them, and call them Pocket Samurais, maybe sliding the titanium tools onto our keychains as part of our EDC will make us feel a little more like EDSamurais.

The knives are machined from Grade 5 titanium, with 440C stainless steel for the blade. They're handy for opening boxes, cutting rope, trimming loose ends, and spearing sushi rolls. Open the Pocket Samurai measures just over 120mm, with a blade length of 50mm. Get yours for 25% off retail value for a limited time.

28 Aug 00:52

#1594 – Couple

by Chris

#1594 – Couple

25 Aug 23:06

UT-Austin Removes Confederate Statues

by Dan Jones

In a letter to the Texas campus’s community, The university’s president, Greg Fenves, wrote that after the events in Charlottesville, it had become clear to him “that Confederate monuments have become symbols of modern white supremacy and neo-Nazism.”

He said the statues’ historical and cultural significance was compromised by what they symbolized, and noted that they were erected in the midst of Jim Crow and segregation and that they represented “the subjugation of African-Americans.”

“The University of Texas at Austin has a duty to preserve and study history,” Mr. Fenves wrote. “But our duty also compels us to acknowledge that those parts of our history that run counter to the university’s core values, the values of our state and the enduring values of our nation do not belong on pedestals in the heart of the Forty Acres.”

24 Aug 11:48

‘You Must Go Offline to View This Page’

by John Gruber

Thoughtful bit of cleverness from Chris Bolin.

23 Aug 19:57

Learning more about clinical depression with the PHQ-9 questionnaire

by Mary Giliberti

Editor’s note:

Now when you search for "clinical depression" on Google on mobile, you'll see a Knowledge Panel that will give you the option to tap “check if you’re clinically depressed”, which will bring you to PHQ-9, a clinically validated screening questionnaire to test what your likely level of depression may be. To ensure that the information shared in the PHQ-9 questionnaire is accurate and useful, we have partnered with the National Alliance on Mental Illness on this announcement. Please see a guest post from them below.

Clinical depression is a very common condition—in fact, approximately one in five Americans experience an episode in their lifetime. However, despite its prevalence, only about 50 percent of people who suffer from depression actually receive treatment. To help raise awareness of this condition, we’ve teamed up with Google to help provide more direct access to tools and information to people who may be suffering.

You may have noticed that in Google search results, when you search for depression or clinical depression in the U.S., you see a Knowledge Panel for the condition which provides general information about it, the symptoms, and possible treatment options. Today PHQ-9, a clinically validated screening questionnaire which can help identify levels of depressive symptoms is also available directly from the search result. By tapping “Check if you’re clinically depressed,” you can take this private self-assessment to help determine your level of depression and the need for an in-person evaluation. The results of the PHQ-9 can help you have a more informed conversation with your doctor.

depression.gif

Mental health professionals often refer to major depressive disorder as clinically significant depression or clinical depression. Clinical depression is a treatable condition which can impact many aspects of  a person's life. The PHQ-9 can be the first step to getting a proper diagnosis.

Statistics show that those who have symptoms of depression experience an average of a 6-8 year delay in getting treatment after the onset of symptoms. We believe that awareness of depression can help empower and educate you, enabling quicker access to treatment. And while this tool can help, it’s important to note that PHQ-9 is not meant to act as a singular tool for diagnosis.

We hope that by making this information available on Google, more people will become aware of depression and seek treatment to recover and improve their quality of life.

For more information about depression, you can explore our website.

23 Aug 19:57

The oldest known photo of a US President

by Jason Kottke

John Q Adams Photo

A daguerreotype photograph taken of President John Quincy Adams in 1843 has recently surfaced and is due to be auctioned off by Sotheby’s in October.

The daguerreotype, which carries an estimate of $150,000 to $250,000, was taken in a Washington portrait studio in March 1843, when Adams was in the middle of his post-presidential career in Congress. He gave it as a gift to a fellow representative, whose descendants kept it in the family while apparently losing track of its significance.

Emily Bierman, the head of Sotheby’s photographs department, called it “without a doubt the most important historical photo portrait to be offered at auction in the last 20 years.”

It’s mind-blowing that there are photos of the 6th President of the US — James Monroe, the 5th President, was not photographed. Adams was born in 1767, several years before the Revolution, and served as President until 1829, but he isn’t the earliest born person to be photographed. That honor (probably) belongs to John Adams (no relation), who was born in 1745.

Tags: John Quincy Adams   photography
23 Aug 15:34

Comic for 2017.08.23

23 Aug 15:34

Photo



22 Aug 20:11

Nintendo Lighters

by Erin Carstens

Are you going to fire up the NES or ignite the Game Boy tonight? These Nintendo-themed lighters have all your old school flame-flicking needs covered. I wonder if they also come with a means of converting flame to fireball for Mario cosplay and Halloween costumes.

Leaf Lock Gear's "Controller" and "Portable Video Game" releases are linse lighters, designed both to bring on the nostalgia and prevent the nostalgic from burning their thumbs during use. Linse lighters have built-in adjustable nozzles that tilt from 0 to 45 to 90 degrees to direct the flame away from your thumb as you tilt the lighter to light a candle, pipe, cigar, cigarette, or...other stuff. Leaf Lock Gear specifically notes, "These lighters are great for use with glass."

The Nintendo lighters have push button ignitions and are shown here as a 2-pack. If you'd rather chill than light up with your childhood gaming systems, check out the FreezerBoy Game Boy refrigerator magnets instead.

22 Aug 18:18

Civil War lessons often depend on where the classroom is

by wtopstaff
Dan Jones

😠

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The Civil War lessons taught to American students often depend on where the classroom is, with schools presenting accounts of the conflict that vary from state to state and even district to district.

Some schools emphasize states’ rights in addition to slavery and stress how economic and cultural differences stoked tensions between North and South. Others highlight the battlefield acumen of Confederate commanders alongside their Union counterparts. At least one suggests that abolition represented the first time the nation lived up to its founding ideals.

The differences don’t always break down neatly along geographic lines.

“You don’t know, as you speak to folks around the country, what kind of assumptions they have about things like the Civil War,” said Dustin Kidd, a sociology professor at Temple University in Philadelphia.

Lessons on the war and its causes usually begin in the fifth through eighth grades. That means attitudes toward the war may be influenced by what people learned at an age when many were choosing a favorite color or imagining what they wanted to be when they grew up.

The effect may not be obvious until a related issue is thrust into the spotlight like this month’s violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, and the resulting backlash against Confederate symbols.

Growing up in Charlottesville, Kidd said, he was taught that “folks from the North” had put forward the “misconception” that slavery was the cause of the war. The real origin, he was told, could be traced to groups of colonists from England who despised each other long before the rebellion began in 1861. Not until graduate school did he begin to question that premise.

Confederate sympathizers have long promoted the “Lost Cause” theory that the Southern side was heroic against impossible odds, and that slavery was not the driving force behind the war. Edward Countryman, a history professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said he learned that idea growing up in New York state in the 1950s.

“I recall my father coming home when I was about 8 or 9 with two Civil War caps, one’s gray and one’s blue. And I wanted the gray one,” Countryman said. “The belief, strongly, that the Civil War had been about anything but slavery was very, very powerful.”

A 2011 Pew Research Center poll found that 48 percent of Americans said the Civil War was mainly about states’ rights, compared with 38 percent who said its main cause was slavery. Nine percent said both factors were equal.

The divide in opinions broke down more by race than geography. Forty-eight percent of whites chose states’ rights over slavery, while 39 percent of blacks did. But 49 percent of self-described Southern whites chose states’ rights compared with 48 percent of whites who did not consider themselves Southern.

The president of the Texas NAACP said finding “kinder” ways to describe the war’s origins masks racism.

“States’ rights is about the whole idea of permitting slavery and allowing the South to do what they do, or, after slavery, to allow the South to engage in Jim Crow,” Gary Bledsoe said. “You can’t sanitize history and have history report that master and slave were out there singing ‘Kumbaya’ in the fields.”

Texas has 178 confederate monuments. Only Virginia has more, with 223, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights advocacy group.

Democratic state Rep. Eric Johnson, meanwhile, is demanding the removal of a nearly 60-year-old plaque rejecting slavery as the Civil War’s “underlying cause.” Republican House Speaker Joe Straus has called for checking the accuracy of that plaque and nearly a dozen other Confederate symbols located around the state Capitol alone.

When curriculum standards were approved in 2010 by Texas’ Republican-controlled Board of Education, debate focused on slavery being a Civil War “after issue.”

The state’s fifth- and seventh-graders taking Texas history courses, and eighth-graders taking U.S. history, are now asked to identify the causes of the war, “including sectionalism, states’ rights and slavery.”

Eighth-graders also compare ideas from Abraham Lincoln’s inaugural address with those from Confederate President Jefferson Davis’ inaugural address, which did not mention slavery and instead endorsed small-government values still popular with many conservatives today.

The eighth-grade curriculum also lists Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson alongside Frederick Douglass, a 19th century abolitionist, as examples of “the importance of effective leadership in a constitutional republic.”

Home to about 5.3 million public school students, Texas has a textbook market so large that volumes published for its classrooms can be sold in other states, though that influence has waned recently. Publishers can now more easily tailor electronic materials to the needs of individual markets.

Still, in 2015, a publisher promised to make editorial changes after a mother in Houston complained that her son’s ninth-grade geography textbook referred to African slaves as “workers” and immigrants.”

Virginia’s standards of learning for U.S. history to 1865 include “describing the cultural, economic and constitutional issues that divided the nation” and “explaining how the issues of states’ rights and slavery increased sectional tensions.” Alabama fifth-graders “identify causes of the Civil War from the Northern and Southern viewpoints.”

Contrast that with Delaware, where school districts set their own curriculum but a syllabus for the eighth grade suggesting what might be covered during instruction says that abolition meant that the American people could for the first time “seriously claim to be living up to their commitment to the principle of liberty rooted in the American state papers.”

In Michigan, curriculum also is decided locally, though the state’s social studies standards for the Civil War and Reconstruction in eighth grade include the instructions: “Explain the reasons (political, economic, and social) why Southern states seceded and explain the differences in the timing of secession in the Upper and Lower South.”

Massachusetts’ framework for a U.S. history course asks students to “describe the rapid growth of slavery in the South after 1800 and analyze slave life and resistance on plantations and farms across the South.”

Chester Finn, president emeritus of the conservative Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an educational nonprofit, called teaching history and social studies “a real jigsaw puzzle” since many states leave standards up to school districts.

Still, “If the state curriculum calls it the ‘War of Northern Aggression’ and says states’ rights were dominated by the Yankee army crushing the good people of the South, and slighting the whole slavery issue,” Finn said, “you can influence what a million kids take away.”

___

Sign up for the AP’s weekly newsletter showcasing our best reporting from the Midwest and Texas: http://apne.ws/2u1RMfv

The post Civil War lessons often depend on where the classroom is appeared first on WTOP.

22 Aug 12:16

Disclaimer: Eclipse or not, absolutely never look directly at...











Disclaimer: Eclipse or not, absolutely never look directly at the sun without international safety standard compliant equipment!

22 Aug 12:16

Google may launch a new Chromebook Pixel and a mini Google Home

by Alex Wagner

Last year came and went without a new Chromebook Pixel from Google, a new report claims that 2017 may be different.

Google is planning to announce a new Chromebook Pixel at a fall event alongside its new Pixel smartphones. That’s according to Android Police, who don’t have many concrete details about this new Chromebook Pixel yet, but suggest that it could be similar to the Bison device that we heard rumblings about last year.

Reports in late 2016 suggested that Google was prepping a new laptop codenamed “Bison” that would run a hybrid of Android and Chrome OS called Andromeda. The device was rumored to feature a 12.3-inch display, a tablet mode, 32/128GB of storage, 8/16GB of RAM, and more.

While it’s unclear if this new Chromebook Pixel is indeed the Bison, it is a possibility since we never saw that Andromeda-powered Bison come to market. Whether or not this new Chromebook Pixel is the Bison or not, though, it’s expected to be a Chromebook rather than run Andromeda.

Today’s report also claims that Google is prepping a mini version of the Google Home. However, like the new Chromebook Pixel, details on this mini Google Home are largely a mystery.

The mini Google Home could be a response to Amazon’s Echo Dot. The Echo Dot is a smaller version of the standard Echo that loses some of the audio performance but is also considerably cheaper, making it easier for folks to buy several units and stick them all over their home. Google may want to launch a mini Google Home for the same reason, giving consumers a cheap way to get Google Assistant in most every room of their home.

Would you be interested in a new Chromebook Pixel or mini Google Home?

22 Aug 12:16

Texts From SuperheroesFacebook | Twitter | Patreon



Texts From Superheroes

Facebook | Twitter | Patreon

21 Aug 16:55

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

 

Digital artist MrRedButcher draws these awesome and freaky realistic versions of Pok?mon! There's lots more on his page be sure to check them out, here are some of our favs...

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Freaky Realistic Pokemon Fan Art

Artist: MrRedButcher

Follow us on:
 

August 21 2017
21 Aug 15:43

Eclipse Birds

'Hey! Put her down!' 'No, it's ok! The next chance for me to be carried to a blood cauldron isn't until 2024!'
21 Aug 15:08

Spaghetti Monster Colander

by Erin Carstens

Pastafarians, Flying Spaghetti Monster sympathizers, people who just enjoy a good googly-eyed car emblem, I hope you're hungry! For your deity has appeared to me in colander form. He says he wants to live in your kitchen. Watch over your tongs and mixing bowls. Drain your cooked noodles and co-host Sunday night spaghetti feeds.

Hailing from quirky household design studio OTOTO the Flying Spaghetti Monster colander joins the ranks of the Toothpig and the Nessie Ladle as the company's latest whimsical interpretation of a common kitchen tool. FSM manifested as strainer can hold a handsome pile of pasta, measuring 7-1/2" x 12" x 8-1/2".

21 Aug 12:09

Keytendo Video Game Console Key Holder

by Erin Carstens

Somewhere between way too much and not nearly enough geek lies the Keytendo, an NES-themed key holder, and your Goldilocks gift for a geek.

Modeled after a Nintendo video game console, this wall-mounted rack includes a pair of keychains with dangling plugs that fit perfectly into the Keytendo's controller ports. One for you, and one for Player 2.

Up top the game cartridge slot serves as a storage tray for other small implements of EDC, or your extra lives.

In addition to the 2 controller input keychains, the Keytendo comes with a wall mounting bracket and hardware.

21 Aug 12:09

Solar eclipse myth busted: it’s perfectly safe for kids to be outside during an eclipse

by Jason Kottke

Throughout history, total solar eclipses have been unnerving. To ancient cultures, they signified bad omens, the apocalypse, or that the Sun was being eaten by a sky creature.

There were a tumult, and disorder. All were disquieted, unnerved, frightened. Then there was weeping. The commonfolk raised a cup, lifting their voices, making a great din, calling out shrieking. People of light complexion were slain as sacrifices; captives were killed. All offered their blood.

But even in modern times, a lack of scientific understanding of what happens during a solar eclipse can cause apprehension and panic. Until hearing the same story from two different people in the past week, I had no idea that during solar eclipses, it is routine for schoolchildren to be kept inside until the “danger” has passed. Charles Fulco, a NASA and AAS 2017 U.S. Eclipse Educator, is trying to allay these fears by addressing common eclipse misconceptions.

“The Sun is more dangerous during an eclipse.” This is utter nonsense and for some reason, has persisted into the 21st Century. An eclipsed Sun is no more dangerous than the “everyday” Sun, but for some reason, some districts still keep teachers and students in their rooms with pulled shades, watching the eclipse on a screen, rather than outdoors, safely and under the care of a professional educator. I believe their fear of nature is transferred to the students as well: If the adult says an eclipse is scary and dangerous, than it must be!

Phil Plait agrees:

As I make my final preparations for my eclipse travels (rural western Wyoming, if you’re curious) I’m hearing stories that are making me very unhappy: Some school districts across the country are telling children to stay inside during the eclipse, out of fear they’ll damage their eyes.

Let me be clear: Schools, administrators, teachers, parents: Don’t do this. YOU CAN LET THE KIDS SEE THE ECLIPSE. You just have to be safe about it.

I can appreciate the difficulty of telling 25 first graders there’s something cool happening with the Sun and then trying to get them not to look directly at it, but keeping kids inside is not the answer. For one thing, they’re missing out on a genuine celestial spectacle & learning opportunity and for another, you’re teaching people bad science. A friend, who is one of the smartest people I know, was genuinely concerned for her kids’ safety during the eclipse because when she was a kid, she was kept inside a classroom with the shades drawn because, she was told, it was dangerous for them to be outside. Dangerous to be outside in the sunshine! A clear case of educators doing the exact opposite of what they should be doing.

Tags: 2017 solar eclipse   Charles Fulco   science   Sun
21 Aug 02:47

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

 

3D artist Filip Hodas created this incredibly creative series of a post-apocalyptic geeky pop culture wasteland...

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Pop Culture Dystopia Fan Art

Artist: Filip Hodas

Follow us on:
 

August 20 2017
20 Aug 11:36

Old.

Can you believe they're rebooting guy with a spear, but with a girl?!
20 Aug 02:22

Off Grid Survival Axe Elite

by Erin Carstens

Off Grid Tools' Survival Axe Elite is a more compact and finely-tuned version of the company's original multi-tool, the Trucker's Friend. (It's also an updated version of itself, formerly called the Lil' Trucker.) The new axe design, according to Off Grid, gives wielders a better grip and more balanced weight distribution while holding or throwing it.

Oh yeah, the Survival Axe Elite is ripe for the throwing.

And the hammering, prying, pulling, and screwing. Like a true warrior, this axe serves numerous functions, including:

  • Hammer
  • Pry bar/wedge
  • Sharpened hook
  • Nail puller/wire twist
  • Hex wrench
  • Spanner (for hose couplings)
  • Gas shut-off
  • Folding sawzall blade (replaceable)
  • Can opener
  • Bottle opener
  • Glass breaker/punch
  • Strap cutter (replaceable)

The black-on-black Survival Axe Elite is made of an all-steel head and tang attached to a lightweight, glass-filled nylon handle. Need a gift for a man? Axe for an Off Grid Elite.

18 Aug 19:12

iOS 11’s SOS Feature Allows You to Temporarily Disable Touch ID and Require Passcode

by John Gruber

Juli Clover, writing for MacRumors:

Emergency SOS is activated by pressing on the sleep/wake button of an iPhone five times in rapid succession. When the requisite number of presses is complete, it brings up a screen that offers buttons to power off the iPhone, bring up your Medical ID (if filled out) and make an emergency 911 call.

Along with these options, there’s also a cancel button. If you hit the sleep/wake button five times and then hit cancel, it disables Touch ID and requires a passcode before Touch ID can be re-enabled. Touch ID is also disabled if you actually make an emergency call.

This is a handy hidden feature because it allows Touch ID to be disabled discretely in situations where someone might be able to force a phone to be unlocked with a fingerprint, such as a robbery or an arrest. With Touch ID disabled in this way, there is no way to physically unlock an iPhone with a finger without the device’s passcode.

It’s also worth noting that there’s no real way to tell that Touch ID has been disabled in this manner.

This is a fantastic feature. In addition to being useful for anyone with Touch ID, it will also assuage concerns over coerced unlocking of your phone with a facial ID scanner (which is widely believed to be coming in the new high-end iPhone).

Once iOS 11 ships, spread the word about this to your friends and family.

Update: Some great details about how Apple has implemented this:

  • If you actually make an SOS phone call, iOS does not lock you out of using Touch ID. That is, if it’s an actual emergency, Apple doesn’t want to make it harder to unlock your phone.

  • There’s a bit of haptic feedback when this feature is invoked, so you can do this discreetly in your pocket and know you hit it.

  • In the current developer beta (beta 6), the display stays on indefinitely while in Emergency SOS mode. You have to tap the on-screen Cancel button to get the screen to turn off. In a future beta, hitting the power button one more time should darken the display again. That way, you can disable Touch ID and turn off the display without ever removing your iPhone from your pocket.