Shared posts

23 Jan 14:59

Tetris-Like Puzzle Game 'Shades' Named Apple's Free App of the Week [iOS Blog]

by Mitchel Broussard
The "super simple, surprisingly challenging" puzzle game Shades, by developer UOVO, has been named by Apple as this week's App of the Week. Launched last year, and also featured in the App Store's "Best New Games" section, the game usually costs $1.99 to download.

The game takes inspiration from Tetris, with falling blocks of varying color hues - instead of shapes - needing to be slotted into the correct position by the player. Matching hues make darker colors, resulting in chain moves that can knock out entire rows of blocks.

Screenshot (136)
A mesmerizing, calming, zen-like experience that quickly evolves into a devilishly challenging puzzler. Meditation + Panic. It's a fantastic combo.

A very simple game that will challenge you to think very fast.

"Surprisingly difficult!" ~ The guys who made it.

Features:
- Simple rules
- Intuitive gameplay
- Difficult to master
- 3 modes of play. Easy. Medium. Hard.
- Beautiful, colorful, minimalist design.
- Sound design by ONBC
The longer players spend in the game and the better they become, the quicker the game evolves into a frantic rush to slot blocks into the correct position as they fall faster and faster.

The game currently sits at a solid 4.5 star rating in the App Store, with one review calling it "Tetris meets 2048" and many others praising its addictiveness alongside the challenging nature the game slowly builds up to. Shades: A Simple Puzzle Game can be downloaded for free for the next week from the App Store. [Direct Link]






23 Jan 14:57

Richard Scarry's Busy World Transformed Into A Silicon Valley Town

by Gergo Vas
Ryan Mustard

This is pretty good.

Richard Scarry's Busy World Transformed Into A Silicon Valley Town

Richard Scarry's lovely children's series Busytown becomes a deeply disruptive, data-driven, gluten-free Silicon Valley town in Tony "Lunchbreath" Ruth's project, with the appropriate jobs and descriptions.

Read more...








21 Jan 22:48

Uncharted Knockoff Is Busted In Hilarious Ways

by Patricia Hernandez
Ryan Mustard

This is great fun.

Unearthed: Trail of Ibn Battuta is not Uncharted. But boy does it try.

Read more...








20 Jan 21:31

NBC to Stream Super Bowl XLIX on iPad and Mac for Free, No Cable Subscription Required

by Juli Clover
NBCUniversal today announced that it's debuting a new "Super Stream Sunday" promotion, which will allow all U.S.-based users to watch 11 continuous hours of NBC content through the NBCSports.com website and through the NBC Sports Live Extra app on the iPad/iPod touch without the need for a cable subscription.

Super Stream Sunday, which starts on February 1 at noon Eastern Time, will include Super Bowl XLIX, the Super Bowl XLIX halftime show with Katy Perry, and the Super Bowl XLIX pre- and post-game shows. It will also feature an episode of The Blacklist.

superbowlxlix
Accessing NBC content through NBC.com or within the NBC Sports Live Extra app typically requires a cable subscription and authentication through logging into the service, but for the Super Stream Sunday period, no logins will be required, allowing everyone to watch the Super Bowl for free. NBC is running the promotion in an effort to make people aware of its TV Everywhere offerings, which offer television content on a range of devices with a cable subscription.

While iPad and iPod touch users can watch the Super Bowl using the NBC Sports Live Extra app, NBC is not able to stream content to the iPhone as it does not have NFL live-streaming rights for smartphones due to an exclusive deal the NFL has with Verizon Wireless.

Verizon Wireless and the NFL plan to introduce a Super Bowl Stadium app that will offer "exclusive in-stadium video content" that includes commercials and replays shown from four camera angles. Users not in the United States or Mexico can access the Super Bowl through the NFL's Game Rewind service.

NBC Sports Live Extra can be downloaded from the App Store for free. [Direct Link]






20 Jan 16:16

How to browse to google.com

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

This is a good description. It always seems amazing how much abstraction there is in our network models.

This article attempts to explain, in great detail, what happens when you type 'google.com' into your browser and press enter.

To pick a zero point, let's choose the enter key on the keyboard hitting the bottom of its range. At this point, an electrical circuit specific to the enter key is closed (either directly or capacitively). This allows a small amount of current to flow into the logic circuitry of the keyboard, which scans the state of each key switch, debounces the electrical noise of the rapid intermittent closure of the switch, and converts it to a keycode integer, in this case 13. The keyboard controller then encodes the keycode for transport to the computer. This is now almost universally over a Universal Serial Bus (USB) or Bluetooth connection, but historically has been over PS/2 or ADB connections.

An I, Pencil for the internet age.

Tags: Google   WWW
18 Jan 16:39

Only A Time Traveler Could've Predicted Syfy's 12 Monkeys Would Be Good

by Charlie Jane Anders
Ryan Mustard

Interesting.

Only A Time Traveler Could've Predicted Syfy's 12 Monkeys Would Be Good

It seemed like a totally preposterous idea: turn Terry Gilliam's weird, clever movie 12 Monkeys into an ongoing TV show. This seemed clearly doomed to suckitude. But in a totally implausible twist, the Monkeys show is actually surprisingly terrific. Spoilers ahead...

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16 Jan 19:55

24 pieces of life advice from Werner Herzog

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

9. Carry bolt cutters everywhere.

Werner Herzog Bear

Paul Cronin's book of conversations with filmmaker Werner Herzog is called Werner Herzog - A Guide for the Perplexed. On the back cover of the book, Herzog offers a list of advice for filmmakers that doubles as general purpose life advice.

1. Always take the initiative.
2. There is nothing wrong with spending a night in jail if it means getting the shot you need.
3. Send out all your dogs and one might return with prey.
4. Never wallow in your troubles; despair must be kept private and brief.
5. Learn to live with your mistakes.
6. Expand your knowledge and understanding of music and literature, old and modern.
7. That roll of unexposed celluloid you have in your hand might be the last in existence, so do something impressive with it.
8. There is never an excuse not to finish a film.
9. Carry bolt cutters everywhere.
10. Thwart institutional cowardice.
11. Ask for forgiveness, not permission.
12. Take your fate into your own hands.
13. Learn to read the inner essence of a landscape.
14. Ignite the fire within and explore unknown territory.
15. Walk straight ahead, never detour.
16. Manoeuvre and mislead, but always deliver.
17. Don't be fearful of rejection.
18. Develop your own voice.
19. Day one is the point of no return.
20. A badge of honor is to fail a film theory class.
21. Chance is the lifeblood of cinema.
22. Guerrilla tactics are best.
23. Take revenge if need be.
24. Get used to the bear behind you.

I bet this is some of the stuff you learn at Herzog's Rogue Film School:

The Rogue Film School is not for the faint-hearted; it is for those who have travelled on foot, who have worked as bouncers in sex clubs or as wardens in a lunatic asylum, for those who are willing to learn about lockpicking or forging shooting permits in countries not favoring their projects. In short: for those who have a sense of poetry. For those who are pilgrims. For those who can tell a story to four year old children and hold their attention. For those who have a fire burning within. For those who have a dream.

Tags: books   lists   movies   Werner Herzog
16 Jan 00:17

“Startup” will glitterbomb your least favorite people

by WIRED UK
Ryan Mustard

This idea cracks me up.

Someone ruined your day? Why not take sweet, petty revenge by sending them a surprise envelope full of glitter, guaranteed to get everywhere and annoy them for, potentially, weeks? Such fabulous vengeance can now be easily attained, thanks to ShipYourEnemiesGlitter.com.

Calling glitter "the herpes of the craft world"—and it should be noted that the whole site is written with the kind of NSFW potty mouth that can only be born from years of minor frustrations, finally boiling over into a shimmering rage—the service will send an envelope crammed with powdery shiny stuff anywhere in the world for the princely sum of AUS$9.99 (about US$8.15). Even better, they'll cram in a note telling the recipient how much of a jerk they are.

Yes, this is an actual service you can pay real Earth money for. What's more, there's apparently a long-ignored market for glittery retribution. "The response has been f***ing huge," the site's founder Mathew Carpenter tells WIRED.co.uk. "We've been upvoted on Reddit thousands of times, the amount of times the website has been shared on Facebook and Twitter has been more than I can count whilst drunk, and for some reason we're making a tonne of money. Who knew, aye?"

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

15 Jan 03:36

How To Win At Game Of Thrones (The Board Game)

by Luke Plunkett

Game of Thrones is not like other board games. While there are plenty of strategy games out there, and plenty of games where people have to be dicks to each other, none walk the line between them as well as Fantasy Flight’s classic. Which can make it tough to get your head around. So I’m here to help.

Read more...

12 Jan 15:48

Rise of the Robots

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

This is more of the same contentious stuff, but I had some thoughts.
We've already had cycles of "job killing" technological innovation. I wonder what makes this next one so different? I assume they would say it's because it's exponential once the robots can make decisions for themselves.
This gets posed as a doomsday scenario, but there's an upside too. Humans have to do less work, frees up the brain to think about other things.

From Martin Ford, a book due out in May called Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future.

Artificial intelligence is already well on its way to making "good jobs" obsolete: many paralegals, physicians, and even -- ironically -- computer programmers are poised to be replaced by robots. As technology continues to accelerate and machines begin taking care of themselves, fewer jobs will be necessary. Unless we radically reassess the fundamentals of how our economy and politics work, this transition could create massive unemployment and inequality as well as the implosion of the economy itself.

See also Humans Need Not Apply. (via Tyler Cowen, who thinks highly of Ford's writing on automation and jobs)

Tags: books   Martin Ford   Rise of the Robots   robots
11 Jan 23:16

Your detoxing juice cleanse is bullshit

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

I can't resist sharing this, and I hope no one takes this too seriously, but this seems like a Kottke post that Eric could have written.

Buzzfeed's Carolyn Kylstra asked some scientists and medical professionals about juice cleanses and while they are (mostly) harmless, they definitely don't do any of the magical things you think they do, like flush the toxins out of your body or reset your system.

"I don't know why someone would do a juice cleanse," Dr. John Buse, M.D., Ph.D., chief of the division of endocrinology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told BuzzFeed Life. "There's very little evidence that it does anything good for you."

And it definitely won't "rid your body of toxins." That really is what your liver (and your kidneys and intestines) is for. "I don't like the marketing around juice cleanses," Eric Ravussin, Ph.D., associate executive director for clinical science at Pennington Biomedical Research Center, told BuzzFeed Life. "That it's going to detox and mobilize all these toxins and all that -- this is pure marketing."

Update: From the NY Times in 2009, Flush Those Toxins! Eh, Not So Fast. The last paragraph makes me angry:

Still, many people swear by these programs. Denise Whitney, 37, a registered nurse and mother of three in Traverse City, Mich., did the Master Cleanse over a seven-day period, plus six days of pre and post cleanse, which included consuming copious amounts of organic juice, fruit and vegetables. "With all the fast food, preservatives, chemicals in our food, it seems impossible that our bodies are not loaded with toxins," Ms. Whitney said, adding that she plans to repeat it in the next few months. "I had more energy during this cleanse than I can ever remember having."

Can we get this nurse unregistered, please? FFS. But at The Guardian, Oliver Burkeman cautions against over-debunking.

We live in the Age of Debunking: no sooner has somebody made a false or hyperbolic claim online (resulting in clicks) than someone else announces, with an air of triumph, that they've debunked it (resulting in clicks). I plead guilty. And often enough, debunking is a noble pursuit: the idea that we only use 10% of our brains, to pick one example, is flat wrong, and people who believe it ought to be corrected. No convincing evidence of a Benghazi conspiracy has ever been unearthed. Marie Antoinette almost certainly didn't say "let them eat cake".

But the internet's enthusiasm for a vigorous debunking now frequently spills over into what you might call the pseudo-debunk. Sometimes, this involves cynically claiming you're debunking when you're really just disagreeing -- thereby implying that your opinion is more than mere opinion; it's "the facts".

(via @fakejoshstein & @neversent)

Tags: Carolyn Kylstra   food   science
09 Jan 04:39

Nate Boyer: De Oppresso Liber

by Scipio Tex
Ryan Mustard

I'm so proud to have had this guy on the team.

If you're a Longhorn, read this. Then pass it on.

A fantastic piece about Longhorn Nate Boyer.  If you thought you knew Boyer's story, you don't.  There are details about Boyer's background and experiences overseas that I had no idea about.  Lost wanderer, relief worker in Darfur, Green Beret, Longhorn.

This may have been the last time before returning to college football that he was nearly killed but it was hardly the first. Back in 2008, working out of Najaf, Iraq, just days into his first run with the 10th Special Forces Group, an IED took out the vehicle directly in front of his.

As Boyer scrambled in the aftermath to provide security, he smelled what he thought was burning chicken from a barbecue only to see a medic scraping ash off the charred torso of an American soldier.

"First week," he said. "I thought, 'OK, this is real.' "

This a beautifully written piece by Dan Wetzel about a man I respect deeply.  Read it.  If you're not inspired by his search for meaning, challenge and communion, seek help.

Hook 'em, Nate.

08 Jan 22:30

Virtual Reality Exercise Bike Is Almost Like Going Outside

by Gergo Vas
Ryan Mustard

Imagine this with a VR headset.

Virtual Reality Exercise Bike Is Almost Like Going Outside

With 3D movement and Oculus Rift support, Norwegian Activetainment's fitness bike, the "Ebove B\01" (via Prostetic Knowledge), can help put some fun into the rigorous monotony of training. Install some mechanical fans and it's almost like going for a real ride.

Read more...








08 Jan 00:14

One (Likely) Reason Big Video Games Are Releasing Broken

by Luke Plunkett
Ryan Mustard

Shared accidentally.

One (Likely) Reason Big Video Games Are Releasing Broken

Last year was marred by a number of major video games releasing in varying states of disrepair. Whether it was online woes or hilarious bugs , it was not the best year for the developers responsible, nor was it for the consumers stuck with busted games.

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07 Jan 19:31

LAPD orders over 3,000 Tasers to go with its body cameras [Updated]

by Cyrus Farivar
Ryan Mustard

Hopefully it records a buffer of like 5 minutes before as well.

The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), the nation’s third-largest police force, has just placed an order for over 3,000 Tasers—specifically the X26P Smart Weapon.

This model automatically records “every user action,” including when and for how long the shock weapon was fired. According to Reuters, the Tasers will also automatically activate body-worn cameras.

The LAPD did not immediately respond to Ars’ request for comment.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

06 Jan 22:55

Deadspin Worst Damn Knife Thrower Nearly Kills His Assistant | Jalopnik Ted Always Worries: CNN's Ex

by Jane-Claire Quigley
Ryan Mustard

Do yourself a favor and watch the "Worst Damn Knife Thrower..."

06 Jan 22:13

My Reddit AMA is over. Thanks to everyone for participating

image

You can read it here.

If I didn’t get to your question, I’m sorry. Feel free to ask me on Facebook or Twitter. And many thanks to all of you for your continuing support!

24 Dec 22:04

Battle of the Five Armies is a soulless end to the flawed Hobbit trilogy

by Andrew Cunningham
Ryan Mustard

Shared because I know someone who enjoy's hating on movies so might as well hate on one that deserves it. And I learned the word Deuteragonist http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuteragonist

It's a damn shame that the three Hobbit films feature so little of the titular hobbit.

Martin Freeman has established himself as a quietly great actor with serious dramatic and comedic chops, and his scenes in these movies have consistently been the best thing about the films. Bilbo Baggins is the only character capable of eliciting genuine reactions from the audience, which is what Peter Jackson's bloated Hobbit trilogy needed more than anything—Bilbo's scenes form the kernel of what could have been a smaller, quieter, but ultimately more narratively successful series of films, one where Bilbo's personal journey isn't swallowed whole by loud Lord of the Rings-style battle sequences.

Other than Freeman's wonderful, quiet little scenes and a bare handful of others, Battle of the Five Armies is one big two-hour-and-24-minute-long argument against splitting the book up into three films.

Read 18 remaining paragraphs | Comments

24 Dec 06:46

‘Room to Spare’

by John Gruber

According to ThinkUp, this was my most popular tweet of 2014.

23 Dec 23:21

Bruce Schneier on Whether North Korea Is Actually Behind the Sony Hack

by John Gruber
Ryan Mustard

This is interesting. Doesn't mean N.K. didn't do it, but the case against them isn't very strong.

Bruce Schneier:

I am deeply skeptical of the FBI’s announcement on Friday that North Korea was behind last month’s Sony hack. The agency’s evidence is tenuous, and I have a hard time believing it. But I also have trouble believing that the U.S. government would make the accusation this formally if officials didn’t believe it.

19 Dec 21:20

NASA just e-mailed a wrench to space

by WIRED UK
Ryan Mustard

This is the coolest.

When International Space Station Commander Barry Wilmore needed a wrench, NASA knew just what to do. They "e-mailed" him one. This is the first time an object has been designed on Earth and then transmitted to space for manufacture.

Made In Space, the California company that designed the 3D printer aboard the ISS, overheard Wilmore mentioning the need for a ratcheting socket wrench and decided to create one. Previously, if an astronaut needed a specific tool it would have to be flown up on the next mission to the ISS, which could take months.

This isn't the first 3D-printed object made in space, but it is the first created to meet the needs of an astronaut. In November astronauts aboard the ISS printed a replacement part for the recently installed 3D printer. A total of 21 objects have now been printed in space, all of which will be brought back to Earth for testing.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

19 Dec 17:09

Minecraft creator outbids Jay-Z, buys priciest home in Beverly Hills

by Kyle Orland
Ryan Mustard

I love the fact that his last name is Person so when they replace pronouns with [Person], it makes it seem generic. Also, glad to hear this story about a guy who would do exactly what I would do if I just got a 2 billion dollar pay day. I would quit working and spend the money.

If you need yet another sign that the game industry is a serious business force and that game creators are the new entertainment moguls, look no further than the newest purchase by Minecraft creator Markus "Notch" Persson. The Mojang cofounder, who cashed out of the company after a $2.5 billion Microsoft buyout in September, just set a record for a Beverly Hills real estate purchase by laying down $70 million on a mansion in the Trousdale Estates neighborhood.

As reported by Curbed LA, the 23,000-square-foot residence features "a candy room, a car showroom, vodka and tequila bars, a 54-foot curved glass door that opens onto the pool, eight bedrooms, 15 bathrooms, apartment-sized closets, and a movie theater." Oh, and let's not forget the "three high-definition 90-inch television screens [that] bring panoramic views of Los Angeles from the roof into the down stairs lounge." the $5,600 toilets in each bathroom, and the cases of Dom Perignon that were reportedly part of the deal. There are tons of pictures and video of the ridiculous residence over at its official listing website.

“[Persson] fell in love with the house, its sleek contemporary design, and its spectacular panoramic views that sweep from downtown LA to the Pacific Ocean,” Aaroe Group agent Katia De Los Reyes, who helped represent Persson in the sale, said in a statement. “The fact that the house also was completely furnished in such great style was another major selling point for him.”

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

19 Dec 17:03

2015 Texas Longhorns Football Recruiting: LB Malik Jefferson Commits to Texas

by Scipio Tex
Ryan Mustard

Apparently this is huge. Sounds like a good football player and it's a head to head recruiting win over the aggies.

Owns space like Captain Kirk.

19 Dec 15:24

That's One Way To Play Jenga

by Gergo Vas

That's One Way To Play Jenga

Impressive Jenga skills right there.

Read more...








18 Dec 22:14

Now THIS is a Murican movie theater!

18 Dec 14:14

Product Review: The Invisible Backpack of White Privilege from L.L. Bean by Joyce Miller

Ryan Mustard

Didn't read the whole thing. This line got a LOL though - "The Invisible Backpack of White Privilege is great for carrying questionable things like weed, Ponzi schemes, and sex crimes."

[Originally published December 18, 2014.]

- - -

[Thank you, Peggy McIntosh.]

- - -

The Invisible Backpack of White Privilege is pretty decent, I guess. I’ve had one as long as I can remember. My parents said it just showed up in the mail when I was born, and L.L. Bean’s policy is to replace the backpack for free if it ever breaks, so I don’t have anything to compare it to. It’s $8 extra to get your initials monogrammed, which I personally think should be free of charge. The backpack comes in different colors, more recently Irish, Italian, and Buffalo Plaid.

The Invisible Backpack of White Privilege is great for carrying questionable things like weed, Ponzi schemes, and sex crimes. I have lived in dense urban areas my whole life, and the cops never once search my Invisible Backpack. Then again, that’s probably just because, like people always tell me, I have a really trustworthy vibe as a person.

My roommate Sam has a visible backpack from The North Face, which he says cost him so much that he and his family are still paying for it, whatever that means. Personally, I prefer function over trend. Sam had the nerve to suggest that if I were to trade my backpack for his backpack, I’d see what he means. I told him if he’s really that dissatisfied with his own backpack, he should just return it to the store and buy one like mine instead of criticizing me all the time, because from what I can see, my backpack’s only advantage is that it comes with a more positive attitude and frugal spending habit than all the other backpacks. He got really quiet and things between us have grown uncomfortable.

The backpack also includes one or more upwardly mobile forefathers who had special opportunities to garner and accumulate family wealth during times of legalized overt discrimination against people without Invisible Backpacks. According to the L.L. Bean catalogue, my great-grandfather was “A poor country boy who put himself through Harvard in the 1800s and worked incredibly hard to build a fortune on nothing but his own merits.” I guess that’s one of the backpack’s cooler features, but it’s not like it changes the fact that I have to do the work of picking up and putting on and walking around with a backpack on my back, just like anybody else.

The Invisible Backpack of White Privilege is by no means immune to hardship. As an inner-city youth, my artist mom and small business-owner dad struggled financially with no margin for luxury. Having one of the shabbiest Invisible Backpacks at private school and college gave me a complex, and I perpetually felt like “a poor boy in a rich boy’s school,” to quote F. Scott Fitzgerald.

In fact, The Invisible Backpack contains the complete works of F. Scott Fitzgerald, along with the Western Canon, largely written by people with my same Backpack. In rough weather, it’s handy to have a rich literary tradition to provide a validation of selfhood verging on the grandiose. Combined with a detachable Gore-Tex underdog mentality that serves to justify the backpack’s pathological egotism, it often makes me consider writing a novel of my own. Should I choose to do so, the Invisible Backpack of White Privilege comes with the instructions and encouragement to create a writing career/funny video/indie band/online satirical essay based on various unpleasant situations experienced while wearing the backpack.

The Invisible Backpack of White privilege can occasionally get pretty heavy. Its one design flaw is a hidden zipper compartment on the bottom containing anonymous multitudes slaughtered in the name of Western Civilization, yet I have no idea who these people are or where they come from. I inquired about it with an L.L. Bean customer service representative, who seemed to know nothing about the product. Thankfully, the manager was very familiar with the demands of my backpack, and explained to me that without this secret pocket, the backpack could not exist. It is a burden I complain about often, but could never imagine actually taking off.

A nice little detail about The Invisible Backpack is its built-in cosmetic mirror. The mirror enforces the basic conformity of my facial structure to an arbitrarily Caucasian globalized standard of looks. When I gaze into this mirror, it fills the void of human longing with the subconscious Pavlovian reassurance: I am a valued citizen, I can have love. Regardless of weight, age, injury, disability, a thoughtful nature, and other characteristics alienated by modern society, I can strain my features to approximate an internalized construct of what advertising defines as the default human face. I can garner instant trust and acceptance despite countless unexamined character deficiencies. Deficiencies such as always wearing a backpack, even in the shower.

All in all, The Invisible Backpack of White Privilege is a satisfactory product. To be completely honest, I kind of have trouble connecting with people who don’t own one. I’m giving 2 out of 5 stars because I have really high standards. I’d give 3 stars except there’s no mesh water bottle holder on the side (wtf). I am a big fan of L.L. Bean and just ordered the Heteronormative Long Johns as a Christmas gift for my daughter.

16 Dec 20:18

The Terminator Paradox

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

Pretty Good

Finally, courtesy of the Auralnauts, we get the Terminator trailer that we deserve. Time travel is hilarious.

I wish we could send you back with pants, but the technology just isn't there yet. So as soon as you hit the ground, you're going to want to find some pants. I know you can do it...because you already did it.

Like the old wives' tale says, if you want to fix the future, just keep sending Terminators back in time. (via @mouser_nerdbot)

Tags: movies   remix   The Terminator   trailers   video
11 Dec 19:15

2015 Recruiting: Scouring the landscape for tight ends

by Jonathan Wells
Ryan Mustard

Either I need to be more mature, or we need to rename the position to something other than tight end.

Taking a look at some out-of-state prospects who could be potential backup recruiting options at tight end

This is the third in a series of posts on Texas and its recruiting of the tight end position.

Part One took a look at UT's recent misfortune-laden history of recruiting and development at that position, and pointed out several low-rated recruits who developed into NFL Draft picks at other schools in the nearly seven years since Texas last had a tight end drafted.

Part Two focused on seven in-state tight ends who may be good fallback options (either as offers or preferred walk-ons) for the Longhorns in the event that they aren't able to get commitments from any of the three very highly-rated national recruits to whom they have offers out and are still strongly pursuing.

The overall picture of UT's tight end recruiting for the 2015 class hasn't changed a lot in the month since I posted Part Two. Chris Clark, Devonaire Clarington, and Will Gragg are still the staff's top three targets, Gragg seems like a lock to stick with his Arkansas commitment, and Clark and Clarington both seem to like Texas a lot but aren't in a hurry to commit. Texas landing both Clark and Clarington is unlikely. Texas landing one or the other seems about as likely as them missing on both, and the latter scenario could lead the staff to send out some eleventh-hour offers to try and fill the class's tight end needs.

For that reason, it's essential that they identify and establish communication (something they've probably already done) with some acceptable Plan B (or C or D) options who may be open to signing with Texas if a scholarship slot presents itself. As stated, Part Two featured some Texas high school athletes who could be viable backup options.

Today, in Part Three, we'll travel beyond the state's borders and look at some (mostly under-the-radar) out-of-state high school recruits who I think have potential and could be added to the list of Plan B/C/D options. It's worth noting that tight end might just be the position for UT that has benefited the most from out-of-state talent in the past two decades. Former Longhorn tight end stars Pat Fitzgerald, Bo Scaife, and Blaine Irby all hailed from other states, and current tight ends Geoff Swaim, Andrew Beck, and Blake Whitely are also non-Texans.

UT's current top recruiting targets at tight end are all out-of-staters, so it wouldn't be too unexpected if the next few guys on the staff's board were as well, despite some of the in-state players they're known to have had contact with in recent weeks and months. Who might catch the staff's attention if they look outside the state's borders for a Plan B, C or D tight end?

I'm glad you asked! Here are a few lesser-known prospects who aren't in the same league talent-wise as Clark/Clarington/Gragg, but all bring something to the table and, in my opinion, have some upside that at least makes them worth a look. I'll list them in alphabetical order by last name. Though I've been researching this topic for well over two months, I admit that this is far from a comprehensive list of worthy out-of-state tight end recruits, as I'll leave that task to those who actually get paid to do such research and evaluation.

John Carroll (St. Francis - La Canada, California) - committed to San Diego State

Both a very talented tight end and a speedy linebacker, Carroll was recruited by San Diego State as an athlete and committed to the Aztecs in November over an offer from UNLV and interest from some Pac-12 programs. In three varsity seasons at tight end/inside receiver, the 6'3" 220-pound Carroll caught 121 passes for nearly 1,700 yards and 20 touchdowns, and as a senior he was his team's leading tackler with 85 total stops (63 solo).

In his highlights he shows soft hands and appears to be a good route-runner with good speed for the position. He has not been graded by Rivals but the 247Sports evaluators rate him as a three-star prospect, the #22 tight end nationally, and as a top-75 recruit in California. On their 1-10 skill grades, they give him 8s for his frame, athleticism, hands, route running, and ability at the point of attack.

Brandon Dillon (Carroll - Flora, Indiana)

He was just last week named to Indiana's Class A All-State First Team at tight end. At 6'4" 225 pounds, Dillon has the size to be a receiving mismatch at pretty much any level, and along with deceptive speed he has feet nimble enough to get him snaps at running back as well. As a senior, he caught 52 passes for 879 yards and 6 TDs, and also carried the ball 82 times for 510 yards and 12 TDs. He also found time to make 70 tackles as a linebacker. Sure, it's class A football in Indiana, but how many kids anywhere finish their high school career with 1,300+ yards rushing, 2,200+ yards receiving, and 200+ tackles? Not many.

Give him a redshirt year to bulk up and get used to the speed of the college game and I think he could be a very good tight end for somebody in a few years. He looks like he's got plenty of room to fill out and add weight, and the catch and run he makes at the 1:20 point in his highlights gives you an idea of how he gained over 3,500 yards from scrimmage in his career (and no, I'm not just referring to the 5'8" linebackers he's running away from). I think those who wanted Texas to pursue (current UTEP commit) Hunter Thedford would be fans of Dillon.

Julian Dunn (Newtown, Connecticut)

Because if you miss out on Connecticut's top tight end recruit (Chris Clark), why not recruit the guy who may be the state's second-best one? (Note: there's a player later on this list who might have something to say about who Connecticut's top two tight ends are.) A four-year varsity player, the 6'3" 230-pound Dunn had over 1,000 receiving yards and 22 touchdowns as a junior, and in his just-completed senior season he caught 42 passes for 683 yards and 14 TDs. He's a very aggressive blocker and seems to take a lot of pride in that facet of his game. I come to that conclusion based on the fact that he holds the Connecticut state record for receiving touchdowns in a career (49), yet his senior highlight video shows nothing but blocking plays for the first 2:15.

As with many talented tight end prospects, Dunn is also a good basketball player, and as a junior he averaged over 17 points and 8 rebounds per game. Press reports indicate that he has received interest from schools like UConn, UMass, Boston College, and some Ivy League programs over the past year, but none of the recruiting services list him having any offers. He'll be a steal for somebody.

Nate Heaps (American Fork, Utah)

The 6'4" 236-pound Heaps caught 63 passes for 689 yards and 4 touchdowns as a senior, and helped lead his team to its first state championship berth since the JFK administration. His consensus two-star rating seems low to me. He has the size and ability to be a good blocker at the point of attack, and is a capable but not explosive downfield receiving threat. He probably won't average 14 yards per catch in college, but he looks like the type of receiver who could make a living by consistently getting open and picking up 6 or 7 yards on 3rd and 5, something David Thomas always seemed to be doing in his Longhorn heyday. The major recruiting services list him having an offer from (FCS) Weber State and interest from some of the region's FBS programs.

Isaac Moorhouse (Anderson Christian School - Anderson, South Carolina)

He's an under-the-radar prospect in every sense of the word. The 6'5" 235-pound Moorhouse suits up for the Anderson Cavaliers football program, which is comprised of student-athletes from several small private schools in western South Carolina, as well as some home-schooled boys who otherwise wouldn't have the opportunity to play high school football. The program has only been in existence for a few years, isn't well known, has yet to produce a Division I athlete, and its schedule doesn't include high profile opponents. And to make Moorhouse's recruitment even more difficult, a bout with mono earlier this year left him too sick to attend any football camps during the summer.

His size is the first thing about him that jumps out in his highlights, along with his hands and how well he moves when running downfield. He's not the smoothest or swiftest tight end on this list, but I think he'll be a much better player once he's had access to some D1-level speed and strength training. He caught 35 passes for 609 yards and 14 TDs as a junior, and had 28 catches for 369 yards and 9 scores this fall, and after the season he was named team MVP. He also plays basketball, and though he's mostly a post he has occasionally played point guard, which is something I'd really love to see film of.

Furman, Georgia State, and Wofford all showed interest earlier in the year. More recently, Florida Atlantic has been in touch with him over the past month, Cornell visited his school last week, and - most interestingly - he says TCU contacted his team's offensive coordinator recently to ask about him. How serious the Horned Frogs' interest is in Moorhouse and whether they like him at tight end, defensive end or some other position is not yet known. As of this writing, he has yet to receive a full scholarship offer from any school.

Foster Moreau (Jesuit - New Orleans, Louisiana)

The 6'5" 240-pound Moreau received a Tulane offer last week, and now has offers from essentially every Louisiana school not named LSU, along with some SEC interest. On the list of desirable qualities in a tight end, he's at least decent in every facet, and has a chance to be very good in some of them. He is reported to have 4.7 forty speed, already has good size for the position, and his head coach thinks he "can easily add 30 pounds." He also makes a pair of one-handed catches in his senior highlight tape that are among the more difficult grabs you'll see any tight end make. The first comes on the play that starts 1:20 into the video.

Going into last week's LSHAA Division I state championship game (in which Jesuit defeated state powerhouse John Curtis to win its first state title since 1960), Moreau had 34 receptions for 454 yards and 6 TDs for the season  If he doesn't get offered by any P5 schools like LSU or Texas, he'll likely have a fine career at a Conference USA or Sun Belt-level program.

Jared Streit (Eden Valley-Watkins High School - Eden Valley, Minnesota)

Streit is another football/basketball athlete with a body well built for both sports. Standing 6'6" and reported to be around 230 pounds, Streit is both a disruptive defensive end and an unfair mismatch at tight end for his school's competition level. He finished the 2014 season with 60 tackles, 9.5 sacks and a blocked punt, and it was actually his work on defense that earned him a spot on the St. Cloud Times' All-Area team, but he made a big impact at receiver/tight end as well, catching 39 passes for 765 yards and 12 TDs.

He moves well for a big receiver, reportedly running a 4.8 forty in his team's fall camp, and he has the ball skills you'd expect from an athlete who's been a varsity basketball player since he was in 8th grade. He has received interest from schools like North Dakota State and other FCS programs in that region, and he has attended games at Minnesota. He reports having one offer, though if he lived within 50 miles of Dallas-Fort Worth I think there's a good chance he'd have ten times as many.

Owen Tyler (Northwest Catholic - West Hartford, Connecticut)

He's a coach's son, the youngest of four siblings (including one girl) who all played high school football, and he has played all over the field during his high school career. At 6'4" and 240 pounds, he has the size to excel at several positions, and he has seen time at linebacker, tight end, wide receiver, and quarterback. His father and head coach Mike Tyler describes him as a player with a very high football IQ, and one who can be plugged into pretty much any position and excel there. The elder Tyler, who played football at Boston College, also says Owen comes from a family of late bloomers and may not quite be done growing.

As a junior, he caught 44 passes for 492 yards, and was in on 70 tackles, including 13 for loss. Playing more at QB and less at TE/WR his senior year, he caught 11 passes for 148 yards and 4 TDs, while on defense he led the team in total tackles with 97. His recruitment got off to a slow start because he didn't attend any football camps during the summer before his junior year, and when he impressed some FBS schools at camps this past summer, he found that some that liked him were already full at tight end for their 2015 class.

His recruitment may pick up late, as he says his senior highlight video (see below) has helped him receive interest from some programs which "weren't extremely interested in previous weeks". Rhode Island has offered him as a defensive end, while Monmouth and Stony Brook have offered as a tight end. I like him at TE, though I'll acknowledge that middle linebacker or defensive end may be his best position long-term. It will be up to his next head coach to sort that out.

Also notable about Owen Tyler is a "catching skills" workout that he says he does almost every day, in which he practices catching footballs one-handed. A three-minute video of him doing this was posted on YouTube in April, and he says it has impressed coaches who have seen it, which I don't doubt at all.

In Part Four, we'll return to Texas and take a look at some players who may prove to be among the state's top tight end prospects for the 2016 and 2017 classes.

10 Dec 22:54

T-Mobile Announces New Unlimited 4G LTE Data Plan With 2 Lines for $100 [iOS Blog]

by Juli Clover
Ryan Mustard

Unlimited eh?

T-Mobile today announced that it is planning to introduce a new Simple Choice family plan that offers 4G Unlimited Data at prices starting at $100 per month for two people. According to the carrier, additional lines can be added for $40 per month for each line.

T-Mobile currently offers an unlimited data option for its Simple Choice family plans, but pricing starts at $140 for two people, meaning the new plan will offer unlimited data at a much lower cost.

tmobilefamilysharingT-Mobile's price comparison chart, click for larger version
Currently, four people on an unlimited Simple Choice family plan would pay $220 per month, but with the new lower pricing, the same plan for four people will cost $180.
This holiday season, the traditional carriers are flooding the airwaves with a mishmash of confusing shared data promotions. Between them, AT&T, Sprint and Verizon have 24 different family and promotional rate plans, and, not surprisingly, 81 percent of people recently polled describe all the data promotions in the wireless industry as "somewhat confusing" or "very confusing." And a full 75 percent say they "hate" policing their own family members' data usage on the carrier's shared data plans, while more than 40 percent say they often worry about overage penalties on those plans.

T-Mobile said it's time to put a stop to the madness. It's time to free wireless customers from having to decipher confusing gigabyte promotions, from policing their own family's data usage and from punishing overage charges. The Un-carrier is cutting through the clutter and complexity with a radically simple idea: everyone on your family plan uses as much data as they want. And, you can do it at a better price without ever worrying about domestic overages.
In addition to offering a cheaper unlimited data plan for families, T-Mobile is also re-introducing a deal that offers 4 lines for $100 with 10GB of data. The plan provides 2.5GB of LTE data per line through 2016, dropping down to 1GB of data after that.

Both of T-Mobile's new family plan offers will be available for a limited time beginning on Wednesday, December 10.






10 Dec 17:46

When AT&T throttles, turning off 4G or switching phones won’t help

by Jon Brodkin

If you have an AT&T unlimited data plan and are looking for a creative way to avoid throttling, you’re probably gonna have a bad time.

As we reported last week, AT&T is still throttling unlimited LTE plans once users hit 5GB in a month, even when there’s no network congestion. That’s despite a lawsuit filed against AT&T by the Federal Trade Commission and criticism from Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler.

However, AT&T imposes a less-strict policy on non-LTE plans—those users are only throttled in times and places where the network is congested. AT&T claims there is some kind of technological limitation preventing it from treating all customers the same but that it will eliminate the gap sometime next year. “Once technologically available, we expect to adopt the same model for customers with 4G LTE smartphones on unlimited plans sometime in 2015,” the company told Ars last week.

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