Shared posts

10 Sep 15:02

Ten Novels

by Julie Moronuki

I read a lot of fiction. Reading fiction seems to have fallen out of favor in some circles, and I know many people who are skeptical of the value of reading it.

I read fiction for a lot of reasons. For one thing, I think it’s the best way to learn empathy. You can know someone for years, especially when you’re kids, and never get inside their heads the way you can get into characters’ heads in novels, and fiction can expose you to characters in situations and from environments that you will never come into contact with in your usual life. That’s why it’s important that you read good fiction, though – good fiction, quality fiction, can here be distinguished from not very good fiction by how believable and deep the characterizations are. It doesn’t mean the novel has to be realistic; science fiction and fantasy novels still have characters that act in ways we find believable, or not, and the characterizations in them can be quite profound.

I also read fiction because sometimes it’s the best vehicle for philosophical argumentation of one sort or another. Fiction can present a distinct point of view that can serve as commentary in a way that nonfiction authors often shy away from in the name of objectivity and fact.

And, of course, quite often I read it just because I enjoy it. I read a lot of murder mysteries, for example, not expecting to learn much about anything (although I still look for believable characterization), simply wanting a tight plot to keep me guessing.

So, I’m going to be writing about books, including fiction, on this blog more, and I wanted to start here, with 10 novels that made some difference to me. I’m going to try to explain why each was so influential for me, but – ah, but! –
- I haven’t read most of them for years. So I’m writing about them now only from memory. - Some of them just came, as books sometimes do, at the right moment in my life to hit me a certain way. - The interpretations are, at any rate, subjective, of course. - These are all great novels, with one possible exception. Thus most of them are layered and the themes that struck me are not necessarily the most important or meaningful themes of the books.

I do not care about the potential for spoilers, so beware if that’s important to you. At any rate, I tried to keep the plot summaries brief. And, finally, this post is going to be unfinished for now because I have another post I want to write tonight, too.

The Borribles by Michael de Larrabeiti

The Borribles is a trilogy for young readers. I cannot overstate how much impact the first two books had on me when I first read them, when I was about 8 or 9.

The Borribles are a group of runaway kids in London who live in the sewers. They have pointed ears and are constantly trying to avoid interactions with the police because if the police catch them – and they steal a lot in order to survive and are sometimes engaged in wars with rival gangs of sewer kids – the police will clip their ears and then the kids will be returned to normal society where they will have to grow up. The grown up world is consumerist, antagonistic (instead of cooperative, like the Borribles lifestyle), and authoritarian. There is hierarchy within the Borrible tribe, but authority is based on achievement and trust and is still more cooperative than antagonistic.

The themes that resonated with me were the intense anti-materialism and anti-authoritarianism and the ways that these kids formed and enforced their own codes of ethics. This is the book that got me started thinking of ethics in an analytical way. That’s no small thing for a book aimed at young readers.

I didn’t get the third book until I was an adult. I think it was banned for a while due to the violence. They are violent books. Kids fight for their lives and for what they believe in, and there are deaths, some memorably horrific. My older son has read them, though. It’s a heartwarming feeling, getting him started on anarchy at such a young age.

The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles by Julie Andrews Edwards

Yes, that Julie Andrews.

This is another children’s novel, and I believe I’ve read it more than 20 times over the years. For a long time, I would read it every time I got sick and got to stay home from school. But what a book!

Three children live next door to a nutty professor who visits a land in which fantastic creatures such as the Oily Prock and the Whangdoodle live. He teaches the children to go with him, using these things called “scrappy caps.” Each time they go, there are adventures, and the eventual goal is to get to the palace to meet the last Whangdoodle who rules over the fantasy land. It turns out the Whangdoodle is in want of a female Whangdoodle (it is a truth universally acknowledged, you know), and fantastic and amazing things happen. The descriptions of all the creatures and features of Whangdoodleland are glorious, and for the young reader, it’s all enchanting.

But you must know, as an adult, what’s coming. The children lose their scrappy caps or something like that, and they are saddened that they can’t go to Whangdoodleland anymore (or perhaps they lose them in that world and then can’t go home?). But of course they can. The important thing wasn’t the caps. The caps were only something to believe in. The real power to go to Whangdoodleland existed within the children the whole time.

This was the first book I ever remember reading where, after each time I read it, the world itself seemed more elegant and enchanted than it had before I read it. It was as if it improved my actual vision, and I saw more beauty and with greater clarity than I had before.

But, of course, the book is just a scrappy cap, something to believe in. That power of seeing beauty and being enchanted was already within me, wasn’t it?

Red Sky at Morning by Richard Bradford

After I outgrew The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles, this was the book I read and re-read every time I needed cheering up. It’s a funny novel, although the ending is not happy. I do not know if the humor translates well to people who did not grow up in New Mexico, as that is where most of the novel takes place, and much of the humor is in the “local color” category, it seems to me. Still. It is one of those books that can make me laugh out loud just thinking about certain scenes.

The Plague by Albert Camus

Well, let me start by saying this: The Plague is not my favorite of Camus’s works. It’s also not the first I read. The Fall is my favorite of his books, followed closely by The Exile and the Kingdom, and of course the first of his books I read was The Stranger. So many people start with The Stranger and think Camus’s message is LOL NOTHING MATTERS and never read anything else he wrote, and that’s a damn shame. He’s a more interesting thinker than that. I usually tell people, if they ask, that they should start with The Plague if they want to understand Camus because, yes, the world is absurd and existence is absurd and yet he makes the case that we should still act morally, caring for one another. (The Fall is a more complex book and please do not start your Camus with that one because, while I think it’s brilliant, it’s also difficult, even more so if you’re not already familiar with Camus’s themes. I could be wrong, though, I don’t know.)

A Night of Serious Drinking by Rene Daumal

My God, I only read this book once but it stuck with me. Voltairean.

A Soldier of the Great War by Mark Helprin

Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon by Jorge Amado

There is so much I want to say here. I found, when I was younger, that I didn’t really like myself very much. I was sort of angry and bitter and depressed all the time. Very misanthropic, really judgmental in a way that I didn’t really like being around myself. And I wanted to make myself a better person – less judgmental, more forgiving and patient, more tolerant, happier.

Oddly enough, the thing that helped most was reading a lot of South American literature, especially Jorge Amado and Gabriel García Márquez. I think it’s because they tend not to write characters who are good or evil; they tend to write characters who are complicated and flawed and often good and sometimes bad and human in a way that I used to be judgmental about. Their characters are passionate and often behave dramatically and commit a lot of adultery, and yet they are not bad people and it’s nearly impossible to feel that they are. So these books finally gave me the humility to make myself a more bearable person.

And Gabriela is the queen of all those characters for me, she and her husband, Nacib. They are not characters who will dazzle with intelligence, which is what I was mostly attracted to when I was an unpleasant person. They are so fully drawn as characters, so rich in their passions, and their actions are so comprehensible. I don’t really care to share with you the plot of the story. It is good and interesting, and the ending is good. What I want is for you to know these two people, and for that, you have to read the book.

Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner

Sabbath’s Theater by Philip Roth

I don’t think I’ve ever met another woman who liked this book, and I can understand why, I think. Well, in fact, Roth doesn’t seem to be much of a hit with the ladies. No matter.

Some Prefer Nettles by Junichiro Tanizaki

19 Jul 22:45

Lessons from the plagiarism in Melania Trump’s speech

by Josh Bernoff

Parts of Melania Trump’s speech at the Republican National Convention are strikingly similar to Michelle Obama’s speech from eight years ago. How does this happen? Plagiarism at this level is typically the result of sloppiness, not outright theft. If you don’t want this to happen to you, then you need to change how you work. What … Continue reading Lessons from the plagiarism in Melania Trump’s speech →

The post Lessons from the plagiarism in Melania Trump’s speech appeared first on without bullshit.

19 Jul 22:44

Ohrn Image — Urban Landscape

by Ken Ohrn

Looking lost — on Bute near Melville.  A relic of decades long ago.

Relic.on.Bute

 


19 Jul 22:44

Marissa Mayer has screwed up on everything at Yahoo, and especially Tumblr

More bad news at Yahoo, which is expected to be sold off to Verizon or some other bottom feeders. It looks like Yahoo has now written off just about three quarters of the nominal value of Tumblr: they wrote off $482 million this week, and $230 million last fall, $712 million in all, and it was purchased for $1.1 billion in 2013.

Todd Spangler,  Marissa Mayer Touts Yahoo Q2 ‘Progress,’ May Be Last Earnings as CEO

Yahoo disclosed that during the second quarter of 2016, it took impairment charges totaling $482 million for Tumblr, the blogging site it acquired in 2013 — the biggest deal under Mayer’s leadership. The write-down was the result of a combination of factors, according to the company, including decreases in projected Tumblr operating results and estimated future cash flows. That comes after Yahoo took a $230 million goodwill-impairment charge for Tumblr for the fourth quarter of 2015.

[…]

In 2012, Yahoo hired Mayer, a prominent Google exec who at one time led its search business. But Yahoo’s financial performance has continued to decline, despite her efforts to double down in Internet search to compete with her former employer (even as Google is a key search partner, along with Microsoft, Mozilla and others). Another strategy that didn’t pay off: Yahoo’s ill-fated foray into original long-form entertainment, with shows that included the pickup of season 6 of cult comedy “Community” after NBC cancelled it.

With the Tumblr write-down, Yahoo posted a net loss of $440 million for Q2 (versus a net loss of $22 million in the year-earlier period), or 46 cents per share. Yahoo’s operating loss for Q2 ballooned more than tenfold, to $490 million, compared with the year-earlier quarter.

I’d like to see Tumblr spinned out and reanimated, but it will likely just molder.

19 Jul 22:44

Amanda Gefter, The Bridge From Nowhere

Amanda Gefter, The Bridge From Nowhere:

The question of being is the darkest in all philosophy.” So concluded William James in thinking about that most basic of riddles: how did something come from nothing? The question infuriates, James realized, because it demands an explanation while denying the very possibility of explanation. “From nothing to being there is no logical bridge,” he wrote.

In science, explanations are built of cause and effect. But if nothing is truly nothing, it lacks the power to cause. It’s not simply that we can’t find the right explanation—it’s that explanation itselffails in the face of nothing.

This failure hits us where it hurts. We are a narrative species. Our most basic understanding comes through stories, and how something came from nothing is the ultimate story, the primordial narrative, more fundamental than the hero’s journey or boy meets girl. Yet it is a story that undermines the notion of story. It is a narrative woven of self-destruction and paradox.

How could it not be? It stars Nothing—a word that is a paradox by its mere existence as a word. It’s a noun, a thing, and yet it is no thing. The minute we imagine it or speak its name, we spoil its emptiness with the stain of meaning. One has to wonder, then, is the problem with nothingness or is the problem with us? Is it cosmic or linguistic? Existential or psychological? Is this a paradox of physics or a paradox of thought?

Either way, here’s the thing to remember: The solution to a paradox lies in the question, never in the answer. Somewhere there must be a glitch, a flawed assumption, a mistaken identity. In so succinct a question as “how did something come from nothing?” there aren’t many places to hide. Perhaps that is why we return again and again to the same old ideas in new and improved guises, playing the trajectory of science like a fugue, or variations on a theme. With each pass, we try to lay another stepping stone in James’s elusive bridge.

19 Jul 22:44

Curating a workplace of the future

Curating a workplace of the future:

chieftech:

“Its hard to keep track of all the various on trend ways that we’re supposed to make a good workplace. Half of them feel like hollow gimmicks of the moment by businesses struggling to show how hip they are.”

- Michael Williams

19 Jul 22:44

Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, reunited, discussing who the GOP presidential candidate is.

STEPHEN: It's Donald Trump.
(JON does spit-take into STEPHEN's face.)
JON: The guy from "The Apprentice"?
STEPHEN: Yep.
JON: The guy who did a McDonald's commercial with Grimace?
STEPHEN: Same guy.
JON: The guy who filed for bankruptcy in 1991.
STEPHEN: And '92.
JON: And 2004.
STEPHEN: And 2009.
JON: That guy.
STEPHEN: Yes.
JON: Mike Tyson's business advisor. That guy.
STEPHEN: Indeed. Same guy.
JON: The guy whose eyes look like tiny versions of his mouth.
STEPHEN: Yes. The guy who looks like an angry Creamsicle.
JON: Decomposing jack-o-lantern.
STEPHEN: Human-toupee hybrid.
JON: That guy.
STEPHEN: Yes.
JON: A guy who looks like he's actually wearing a Donald Trump costume. That guy.
STEPHEN: Yes. A loose-fitting one at that.
JON: The guy who wrote, and I quote, "Oftentimes, when I was sleeping with one of the top women in the world, I would say to myself, 'Can you believe what I'm getting?'" That guy.
STEPHEN: Yes. The same guy who said, and I quote, "I have black guys counting my money; I hate it. The only guys I want counting my money are short guys that wear yarmulkes all day."
JON: That guy.
STEPHEN: Yes. That guy.
JON: By the way, we wear them all day.
19 Jul 22:43

"Swine flu was concocted in a lab by the U.S. government in order to create widespread panic,..."

“Swine flu was concocted in a lab by the U.S. government in order to create widespread panic, allowing the Jewish-Republican-Techno-Primitivist-cannibal-baby-raping-phermaceutical-pushing Shadowy Cabal in Charge of Everything That Happens Ever to force their puppet Obama to roll out vaccinations on a mass scale, which would be tainted by mercury/lead/lithium/fluoride in order to destroy your immune system/teeth/freewill/love of God, America and apple pie/brain, as a culmination of their plot which began with the crucifixion/discovery of America/Great Depression/nuking of Japan/Sept. 11, thus allowing them to secure their stranglehold on the world and bring about their satanic-pagan-fundamentalist-Christian-tree-hugging-communist New World Order as a shadow government ruling through the U.N. It’s all true: I saw it on the internet.”

- David Davies, It’s a Conspiracy
19 Jul 22:43

This Immersive Light Sculpture Visualizes Internet Connections as Laser Beams

by DJ Pangburn for The Creators Project

Images courtesy the artist.

With Shelter, digital artist Mathieu Le Sourd a.k.a. Maotik creates an immersive light sculpture through which the public can observe the “poetic representation” of a global network that connects billions of people. Maotik describes Shelter as a“symphony of lights” where laser beams sketch paths and patterns inside a geodesic dome. Smokes gives the light sculpture an extra dose of three-dimensionality.

“Following my experiences working in geodesic domes, video mapping, and other media displays, I am interested in exploring the possibilities of this new immersive environment by creating a virtual world where data connections between machines are visible with laser beams,” Maotik writes on his website.

Maotik calls the installation an “open form” that offers various combination options to the viewer, who he calls an interpreter. He built a system with a random creation process across a range of settings defined by data transfer.

Maotik explains, “Sound design will translate the visual into a sonic experience that will dive the public to the center of this electronic landscape.”

Does Shelter seem to play as a refuge from mass electronic communication? Sure, on some poetic level. Then again, he may just remind us how deep inside the internet rabbit hole we have fallen.

SHELTER - AN IMMERSIVE LIGHT SCULPTURE BY MAOTIK from MAOTIK on Vimeo.

Maotik presented Shelter—produced by BAM Festival—at the festival Metamorphoses in Liège, Belgium this past May. Click here to see more of Maotik’s work.

Related:

Control an Army of Fireflies with Your Fingertips

Artist Opens Up a Wormhole Inside a Giant Dome

Imagine You're on Jean Paul Gaultier's Catwalk in This New Installation

19 Jul 22:42

Twitter opens up online application for verified account status

by Ian Hardy

Twitter has over 300 million users across the world but only a select few of those have a blue button beside their name, indicating their “verified” status.

The social media company announced today a new online application process for users to apply for verified status and score their own blue badge of honour. The social network typically monitors and approves verified status in a very hands-on way, but that is all set to change thanks to a new verified application process.

Twitter states on its site that a verification badge “lets people know that an account of public interest is authentic,” specifically in music, TV, film, fashion, government, politics, religion, journalism, media, sports and business.

“We want to make it even easier for people to find creators and influencers on Twitter so it makes sense for us to let people apply for verification,” said Tina Bhatnagar, Twitter’s vice president of user services in a statement sent to MobileSyrup. “We hope opening up this application process results in more people finding great, high-quality accounts to follow, and for these creators and influencers to connect with a broader audience.”

Twitter launched verification in 2009 and now has close to 187,000 verified accounts, representing less than one percent of its user base.

Twitter notes the application process will start rolling out today and that it will respond to requests via email if approved. Details needed for verification are a phone number, confirmed email address, bio, profile photo, birthday and website. Tweets shared from that account must also be open to the public.

“If your request is denied, you can submit another request for the same account 30 days after receiving the email from us,” says Twitter in a statement.

SourceTwitter
19 Jul 22:40

The temperature goes up in Vancouver housing wars, with stories on data and racism

by Frances Bula

Just when you think things can’t get any more virulent in Vancouver’s debates over real estate, they do.

As far as I can tell, the heat went up starting with the province’s decision two weeks ago to release three weeks worth of data on sales, which showed that about five per cent of Vancouver real estate is bought by foreign investors, according to data now being collected by the province.

(The data indicated some distinct hotspots in Richmond and Burnaby, where the rates were 14 per cent and almost 11 per cent respectively.)

Then Pete McMartin at the Vancouver Sun weighed in after that, making a forceful case that now it was pretty clear that racism was really underlying the conversation. His argument, if I can summarize, was that, since it’s clear that foreign-investment levels aren’t that high, what’s really going on is that Vancouverites just don’t like wealthy Chinese people of any description. Only he was a lot more vividly than that.

That, of course, sparked a huge reaction, with Justin Fung (Housing Action for Local Taxpayers) and Fenella Sung (Friends of Hong Kong) becoming the go-to spokespeople on local media making a counter-argument, that the current debates over housing do not have a race-related element and, if I’m capturing this correctly, they’re really just focused on the reality of the Chinese economy.

Then the Georgia Straight weighed in with several articles, including Travis Lupick’s two-part series on Vancouver’s history when it comes to race and real estate, here and here. That contrasted, at one point, the way stories and studies about the overwhelming influence of foreign money appear to get much more public traction that stories and studies that assign it a role as just one factor among many.

He also wrote an earlier news story quoting Vancouver human-rights activist Victor Wong, which really made people set their hair on fire, as well as accusing the Georgia Straight of now being in bed with developers.

Then Doug Todd from the Vancouver Sun added his essay arguing that the current conversations are really about policy, not race.

Throughout it all, each side made accusations that the other side is just trying to shut down any conversation. There were also suggestions that white people don’t have any authority to talk about racism (although it seemed to me that suggestion was only made about those raising issues about racism, not if they were saying there is no racism). And there were those who suggested that you had to pick your side — you could talk about racism or you could talk about affordability.

As for me — well, I’d like to see, as I’ve said elsewhere, a conversation where we can talk about what is and isn’t problematic about coverage where race is involved, without either side screaming “you’re trying to shut down the conversation.”

I know my journalism students struggle with race issues and have for years. I had a whole class once a decade ago that balked at writing a story from a school-board report that suggested Chinese ESL students were performing differently on certain tests from other ESL students. For them, the idea of referring to anything with a generalization about race was abhorrent — even if it was a rigorously conducted school study. It took a lot of talking from me to get them off that position.

I’ll have more to say about this at a later date.

19 Jul 15:15

Toronto Vintage Bicycle Show through the years

by dandy

TVBS 2012-1

Photo by David Keogh from the 2013 Toronto Vintage Bicycle Show. 


Toronto Vintage Bicycle Show Throughout the Years

In honour of the fifth year of Community Bicycle Network's Toronto Vintage Bicycle show coming up THIS WEEKEND  on July 24 in Trinity Bellwoods Park, we've decided to put together a little photo compilation of past years from the dandyBLOG.

Here's a look at the popular show throughout the years:

2013

Photos by David Keogh from the 2013 dandyBLOG post.

TVBS 2012-2 TVBS 2012-3

2014

Photos and captions by Kyle Schruder from the 2014 dandyBLOG post.TVBS 2014-1 TVBS 2014-2

...A very fancy adult-sized trike. This would've been what ladies would ride. TVBS 2014-3

Greg Thomas poses with a '36 CCM Flyte with Endrick rims.

2015

Photos by Kyle Schruder from the dandyBLOG 2015.Vintage Bicycle TVBS 2015-2 TVBS 2015-3

Related on the dandyBLOG:

Old and Pretty: The Toronto Vintage Bicycle Show

More Photos From the Vintage Bike Show

Toronto's Fourth Annual Vintage Bike Show

Switchback Cyclery: a bike shop that builds community

19 Jul 15:15

Flickr Hero Photos of the Week

by Zee Jenkins

Our two new cover photos on our Flickr social media channels are: ‘Milky Way Above Lavender Fields’ by Krasi St Matarov on Facebook and Google+ and ‘Grecian Sunrise’ by Joe deSousa on Twitter and Tumblr.

Congrats, Krasi and Joe! Your shots are beautiful. And to everyone else that submitted photos this week to the Flickr Heroes group thank you all.

Milky way above lavender field in Bulgaria
Grecian Sunrise

We can’t wait to discover our next Flickr Heroes! New Heroes are selected every Monday.


19 Jul 15:15

Two obvious financial tips

I think the LinkedIn euphemism for it is a "portfolio career," but really what that means is I have a bunch of stuff on the go simultaneously.

So for the past three months I've been working with Google, directing a small team on an invention project. I have my vending machine bookshop; I advise a couple of hardware startups; I've been doing a bit of teaching, etc, etc. I am trying to avoid building another agency.

Working for myself: I love the independence.

Working for myself: Holy shit I hate thinking about cashflow. It destroys any kind of creativity I have, and stops me being casual.

There's a time for hustling, and there's a time for being casual. I find the most interesting opportunities emerge from coffees and talking widely. And interesting opportunities breed interesting opportunities -- as Jack says, you get what you do. So, doubly important to hold off accepting anything until the great stuff appears.

And if I haven't got much money in the bank? That's when I make bad decisions. I mean, this is a question of BATNA: If my Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement is that I can't pay my mortgage, then I have to take whatever gig is going, at whatever terms.

I follow two rules to keep myself sane as an independent. This goes for freelancers, contractors, sole traders, and whatever other forms of "self-employed" there are out there.

It occurred to me that other people might be interested, so I thought I'd share them here.

Pay yourself a salary

Business money is not my money. To smooth out peaks and troughs, all gigs pay into a separate account and I pay myself monthly.

My salary is the same amount every month, and paid on the same day of every month.

(Business) taxes also come out of this float.

Build a runway

Once I take into account business expenses and my salary, I can calculate how many months I can survive without work. That's my runway.

If my runway is six months, I can sleep at night. If it's six months minus one day, that's a psychic shitstorm right there.

The reason being that it typically takes me three months to go from asking around to starting a gig (longer for the most unusual ones). Then let's say I get to invoice after a month's work, then it takes a month to get paid, then add a month as a buffer... that's six months right there.

When I started as an independent again, I kept my salary super low until I built up my six months runway.

There's a flip side: If the runway is too long, I stop being hungry. Being hungry is good.

Minimum viable financial management

Two tips. Not rocket science. I imagine most people have something similar. For me, this is what gives me room to be exploratory, and how I sleep easier at night.

19 Jul 15:14

John Kerry Threatens Turkey With NATO Expulsion

by Tyler Durden
mkalus shared this story from Zero Hedge.

While the experts debate if Turkey's flash coup was staged or merely grossly incompetent, a rather theatrical fallout is taking place between Turkey and the US.

Recall that on Saturday, as part of its populist campaign to blame the coup on the US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, Turkey accused the US of being "behind the military coup", to which John Kerry promptly responded that such allegations are "utterly false" and harmful to relations. Kerry also said that authorities should respect the rule of law during their probe of the coup. Kerry also noted that there would be no prompt deportation of Gulen (something which is also in Erdogan's favor), when he said that "we fully anticipate that there will be questions raised about Gulen, and obviously we invite the government of Turkey ... to present us with any legitimate evidence that withstands scrutiny and the United States will accept that and look at it and make judgments appropriately," he said.

This however did not lead to any moderation in Turkish rhetoric, and yesterday, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim threatened threated to go to war with any country that would "stand by" the exiled Fethullah Gulen; this would naturally imply the US which is where Gulen is currently located. "The US is behind the coup attempt. A few journals that are published there [in the US] have been conducting activities activites for several months. For many months we have sent requests to the US concerning Fethullah Gulen. The US must extradite him," said the Labor Minister in a statement.

Curiously, despite all the posturing, Turkey has yet to send out a formal extradition request.

However, the tensions between Turkey and US appear to have spilled over this morning, when moments ago John Kerry threatened Turkey that it could lose its NATO membership "if it fails to uphold the principles of democracy in the wake of an attempted coup" the US has warned. 

“NATO also has a requirement with respect to democracy and NATO will indeed measure very carefully what is happening,” Kerry tells reporters in Brussels after attending a meeting of European Union foreign ministers. It was unclear how that "requirement" fits with Turkey - one of the world's largest, US-supplied military forces - housing the all-important Incirlik airbase which provides the US (and NATO) with a convenient staging point for air missions across the entire middle east. ministers

“My hope is that Turkey is going to move in ways that do respect what they have said to me many times is the bedrock of their country,” he says.  Kerry adds: “I spoke with the foreign minister three times in the last days and he assured me that they fully intended to respect the democratic process and the law; now obviously a lot of people have been arrested and arrested very quickly” and “the level of vigilance and scrutiny is obviously going to be significant in the days ahead."

This is happening as none other than one of the EU's top bureaucrats voiced a suggestion that the coup had indeed been staged. As Reuters reported earlier, the swift rounding up of judges and others after a failed coup in Turkey indicated the government had prepared a list beforehand, according to EU commissioner dealing with Turkey's membership bid, Johannes Hahn, said on Monday. "It looks at least as if something has been prepared. The lists are available, which indicates it was prepared and to be used at a certain stage," Hahn said. "I'm very concerned. It is exactly what we feared."

So very concerned that Europe is doing, drumroll, precisely nothing. Why? Because Erdogan still holds two million Syrian refugees as the most important bargaining chip that allows him to do anything and everything and get away with it, or else unleash another wave of migrants into Germany, leading to another collapse in the popularity of the German chancellor if not worse.

That said, we

We wonder if Kerry has seen the latest news according to which Turkey has "democratically" purged around 8,000 police officers following the failed coup, with more than 6,000 people in the army, the judiciary and other state bodies arrested as part of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's response to Friday's staged coup, in which rebel pilots held Erdogan's Gulfstream in their sights and yet inexplicably did not shoot.

At a joint news conference with EU foreign police chief Federica Mogherini, US Secretary of State John Kerry said that America stands "squarely on the side of the elected leadership in Turkey," but that "we urge the government of Turkey to to uphold the highest standards of respect for the nation's democratic institutions and the rule of law".

"We will certainly support bringing the perpetrators of the coup to justice but we also caution against a reach that goes beyond that and stress the importance of the democratic rule being upheld," he added.

We, on the other hand, expect the hollow jawboning and empty empty jawboning and threats to continue even as Erdogan rounds up tens of thousands of political opponents and throws them in prison without any due process, oponents, all in the name of the "democratic process."

19 Jul 15:13

Twitter Favorites: [ReneeStephen] Why is there no timesheet task option for "Because it was Monday, everything was hard and took twice as long as it should have" ? #devlife

Renée Stephen @ReneeStephen
Why is there no timesheet task option for "Because it was Monday, everything was hard and took twice as long as it should have" ? #devlife
19 Jul 15:13

Accessible Jupyter Notebooks?

by Tony Hirst

Pondering the extent to which Jupyter notebooks provide an accessible UI, I had a naive play with the Mac VoiceOver app run over Jupyter notebooks the other day: markdown cells were easy enough to convert to speech, but the code cells and their outputs are nested block elements which seemed to take a bit more navigation (I think I really need to learn how to use VoiceOver properly for a proper test!). Suffice to say, I really should learn how to use screen-reader software, because as it stands I can’t really tell how accessible the notebooks are…

A quick search around for accessibility related extensions turned up the jupyter-a11y: reader extension [code], which looks like it could be a handy crib. This extension will speak aloud a the contents of a code cell or markdown cell as well as navigational features such as whether you are in the cell at the top or the bottom of the page. I’m not sure it speaks aloud the output of code cell though? But the code looks simple enough, so this might be worth a play with…

On the topic of reading aloud code cell outputs, I also started wondering whether it would be possible to generate “accessible” alt or longdesc text for matplotlib generated charts and add those to the element inserted into the code cell output. This text could also be used to feed the reader narrator. (See also First Thoughts on Automatically Generating Accessible Text Descriptions of ggplot Charts in R for some quick examples of generating textual descriptions from matplotlib charts.)

Another way of complementing the jupyter-a11y reader extension might be to use the python pindent [code] tool to annotate the contents of code cells with accessible comments (such as comments that identify the end of if/else blocks, and function definitions). Another advantage of having a pindent extension to annotate the content of notebook python code cells is that it might help improve the readability of code for novices. So for example, we could have a notebook toolbar button that will toggle pindent annotations on a selected code cell.

For code read aloud by the reader extension, I wonder if it would be worth running the content of any (python) code cells through pindent first?

PS FWIW, here’s a related issue on Github.

PPS another tool that helps make python code a bit more accessible, in an active sense, in a Jupyter notebook is this pop-up variable inspector widget.


19 Jul 15:13

Nervous? We Should Be

by Jane Frances Dunlop

Gertrude Stein, in an essay on the theater from the 1930s, wrote that “nervousness consists in needing to go faster or go slower so as to get together. It is that that makes anybody nervous.” Nervousness, that is, is not an individualized experience but a social relation. To be nervous is to be trying — and failing — to get to a point of emotional cohesion, or at least understanding, with another in the midst of a performance.

I think we live in nervousness these days.

What Stein writes about the spectator-performer relationship resonates with the contemporary experience of social media. In the theater, we watch action unfold in real time without necessarily being in time with it. The players on stage and the audience each have a rhythm of emotional responsiveness that is not in sync as the action unfolds. Social media make out of our everyday performances the same nervousness that Stein found in the theater.

Performance relies on a sense of presence. It occurs in a shared location and creates a proximity that is disguised as togetherness. But the performers and the audience are still separated into their delineated spaces. They are close but not together. For Stein, this means that the actors’ and the audience’s emotions are “syncopated”: The actions conveyed by the actors and observed by the audience provoke an out-of-time empathy.

Stein’s nervousness is, I want to argue, the sensation of empathy alongside its impossibility, its incompleteness. Fellow feeling, feeling alongside, is an exercise in imagining our experiences as correlative, but togetherness alone does not guarantee such correlativity. Together is not at once, but rather in proximity. This, here, is the point and value of nervousness: It marks how empathy, how feeling together, inevitably includes a distance — in time, if not in space — that we wish we could overcome.

To be nervous is to be aware of time as disjunctive. We can’t avoid recognizing that we are all out of sync

To be nervous is to be aware of time as multiple, as disjunctive. Nervousness is always an aspect of mediation, and so has been on the rise since modernity. With social media, we are accumulating encounters that suppose a shared space and yet are inevitably executed from different places. We enact our relationships as a series of encounters in which we become aware of occupying different emotional times.

Each of our engagements with social media stages a small theater, and a proximity disguised as togetherness. Platform as stage — a device touched becomes proscenium, and we are made performer and audience. As both simultaneously, we are increasingly attuned to our syncopated interactions with one another. The particularities of our positions, all the ways that we are experiencing the world differently, are confirmed by the differences in our emotional time. Presents proliferate. We can’t avoid recognizing that we are all out of sync — in different emotional times in the same conceptual space.

This means much of our emotional labor is spent caring for relationships in a together that is also very much an apart. Though social media platforms tend to posit a kind of isolation, an ability to operate autonomously in a time of one’s one, they intensify our emotional investment in one another. Nervousness stems from this experience of living, feeling, and building emotional lives in digital ubiquity.

If social media promise a kind of unilateral access to sociality, nervousness belies that promise. Social media propose an ideal of sociality as something to be achieved, an end goal that can be completed. Nervousness reminds us that the work of being social is never complete. But at the same time, that nervousness is also the means by which we actually begin to do the work of being together across and through these media. It marks the work of entanglement.

To be tangled is to be close enough to become enmeshed with one another while still being different, discrete things. Nervousness is the affect of that weaving. It is the possibility of being together and not just in mere proximity of each other that makes us feel nervous. In being made nervous, we learn how to live in the feeling of being in different emotional times, to be together while apart.

Nervousness articulates the emotional labor of keeping time with a system that is out of time with you. It makes us realize that we are doing this work, and it is important, because this work is worth doing. Naming our emotional labor is essential, so that we do not erase the effort we make to care.

Nervousness is like a glitch. Like other kinds of glitching and friction, it makes it possible for us to perceive the systems that we work through. It makes the work of sustaining a syncopated relation with another legible as a kind of dissonance. In the context of relationships mediated online, what Stein calls “nervousness” is emotional noise, the affective friction in our interactions. This failure to communicate with perfect transparency — this noise in the signal — also confirms that there is in fact something being communicated.

In The Interface Effect, Alexander Galloway describes how interfaces tend toward becoming so intuitive that they become indiscernible and thus inoperable. When we no longer notice them, we can’t consciously determine how to use them. He quotes this passage from Michel Serres:

Systems work because they don’t work. Non-functionality remains essential for functionality. This can be formalized: pretend there are two stations exchanging messages through a channel. If the exchange succeeds — if it is perfect, optimal, immediate — then the relation erases itself. But if the relation remains there, if it exists, it’s because the exchange has failed. It is nothing but mediation. The relation is a non-relation.

Noise, glitching, nervousness are instances of system imperfection, essential non-functionality. They let us situate ourselves in relation to one another and the systems that mediate us. To the extent that social media interfaces generate glitches, they deepen rather than extinguish nervousness and thus deepen emotional connection.

Nervousness, like noise, indicates that we are not trapped as isolated nodes in a networked totality. Instead, it confirms the space between us. The failure to reach empathetic togetherness that it signals nevertheless confirms there is someone else (or many others) present and makes unmistakable their different standpoints.

Nervousness is like a glitch … and a clear signal is never a possibility

Having to think of our relationships in terms of the discomfort of not getting it right, of having to pay further attention, our mediated interactions gain rather than lose value. We usually think of people who are in the room with us as being present and capable of being connected with, but this is merely a bias. The people in the room with us can be inaccessible or as out of sync with us as those online. We may be totally indifferent to them in a way we can’t in the social media space, where their presence becomes a notification, a demand for reciprocity.

We talk about how we are unwittingly used in experiments by social media platforms, how we know we are always being watched. And we also know that in our efforts to feel together, contemporary life requires we participate in platforms that make emotional demands of us, regardless of our ambivalence about the data we generate. Alongside our suspicions of how social media frame our exchanges, it is important to pay attention to how and why they stick or catch. The nervousness about digital communication technologies may simply be part of how being alive always already makes us nervous.


Thinking about the emotional labor of connectivity can too easily fall into end-of-world anxiety about our perpetual performances on social media.

I want to interrupt that anxiety with nervousness.

Though both affects begin in a sense of apprehension, in awareness of the emotional labor required to reach the future, nervousness is different from anxiety. Anxiety is a clinical condition. It suspends possibility: Anxiety attacks, and it becomes impossible to be anything except oneself. Anxiety, in the collapse of a panic attack, moves inward. It forces a self-absorption for survival.

Nervousness, as an attempt to go faster or slower so as to get together, holds onto the presence of others as that which is overwhelming, unsettling. This disturbs the smooth sociality promised by social media companies and preserves the inescapable friction of difference that is sociality.

I would rather be nervous than anxious. Anxiety is panic. When we insist that, because of technology, we are living in anxious times, we bring ourselves into our own catastrophe and paralysis. I do not want to name my social media condition — the contemporary condition — as something pervasively and unavoidably damaging to me. I do not want to participate in world building that totalizes technology’s harm. The times cannot be unlivable, because they are where we live.

When we regard nervousness as emotional glitching, it confirms that a clear signal is never a possibility: We cannot understand each other perfectly. We cannot feel together. We are living in muddles and tangles of our emotions as we strive to feel together. We live in the mess of misunderstanding. The unease that comes from being out of time with one another is necessary and not going away. And this is a good thing.

I do not want to participate in world building that totalizes technology’s harm. The times cannot be unlivable, because they are where we live

Nervousness is ultimately produced through the facts of our incommunicable differences that exist online and off. Utopian visions of social cohesion too often forget these real ways in which our experiences of the same world are different. As writer and futurist Madeline Ashby reminds us, one person’s utopia is another’s dystopia.

But to palpably experience nervousness, as social media force us to do, is to be able to track these differences and trace their patterns. It is crucial to be nervous — it confirms that we are not solipsistic, not ignorant of disparate experiences of the world and past and present inequities. The nervousness that technology now foregrounds stems not merely from mediation but from an old nervousness that is tied to those social inequities and the sense that popular imaginaries of feeling exclude or only conditionally acknowledge the experiences of so many people. The ability to feel one’s nervousness come and go is a sign of privilege. Most people are already nervous, already operating outside the frictionless experience that signals privilege.

The purveyors of today’s networked culture often try to efface nervousness with convenience and solipsism, preventing the understanding that eases exclusion. Social media platforms promise that difference can be erased, can be made irrelevant to an isolated user who does whatever whenever. But belief in that false promise simply reinforces selfishness and disconnection, and ultimately incites the anxiety and sense of doom of the despairing tech critic.

Culture and emotion are, as theorist Sara Ahmed writes, “sticky” with the accumulation of histories and practices. Sticky is what happens when our relations turn into affects that cling to objects, to people. This is how culture constructs emotions, how values and practices are built from our relations. To illustrate stickiness, Ahmed gives the example of the feminist killjoy who loudly disagrees with the conditions of inequity she sees. Her disagreement, her relation to the conditions she challenges, turn into a quality that sticks: She is disagreeable, disruptive. The reality of the conditions is dismissed, is made to stick to someone else.

This is how we build systems of inequity and re-enact them for each other: Nervousness shows us they are here. We do not like to be made nervous because nervousness is a desire to get to a different speed, to correct the discrepancies we feel between our experiences of the world. It reminds us that we are functioning in difference. It maintains relation despite discomfort and forces an acknowledgement that we are out of sync, operating in inequity. Nervousness tells us that there is always difference and always work necessary to address that difference, but it never erases it.

Writing about the difficulty of diversity work, Ahmed argues that what is hard to some does not exist for others. She forces us to ask why anyone would think they could escape the hard, the difficult. In nervousness, what is hard becomes also something that can be worked with and through. It is hard to know what to do in the world, hard to be aware of the impacts and implications of the systemic inequities manifest in all our relations. Ashby refers to this when she talks about the distribution of utopias and dystopias. Nervousness is not only recognizing emotional times out of sync but also that one person’s emotional time may be easier, is better, than another’s.

This is why we should be nervous: nervous about the difference we are living in and apprehensive about the futures that it anticipates. Nervousness reminds us of the affective costs and conditions of our relations as well as inequities in who performs emotional labor and who experiences affective distress. It makes us aware of the work required by relationships and the work we must undertake to acknowledge and accommodate differences (of location, of time, of gender, sexuality, race, ability, poverty, literacy) that inhere in all our relations, all our performances of self and of belonging.

Ideally, this awareness stops short of overwhelming us. We can then nervously prepare for different futures, contradictory and inconsistent ones. We can nervously try to bring ourselves together without ever assuming we’ve got there.

19 Jul 15:13

Marissa Mayer has screwed up on everything at Yahoo, and especially Tumblr

by Stowe Boyd

More bad news at Yahoo, which is expected to be sold off to Verizon or some other bottom feeders. It looks like Yahoo has now written off…

Continue reading on »

19 Jul 15:13

The (not so) secret life of a networked and networking scholar

files/images/park.jpg


Paul Prinsloo, Open distance teaching and learning, Jul 22, 2016


I am increasingly left wondering how long social networks - Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus, LinkedIn - can survive. They can disappear absurdly quickly - remember Friendster? MySpace? And I think that dissatisfaction with the existing sites is strong enough that users will quickly drop them if something better comes along. There are several issues. One is the lack of privacy and security. This is what Paul Prinsloo addresses in this article. But there's more. Another are the sorting algorithms that struggle with the basic contradiction between what we want to see and what the social network makes money showing us. Another is the steadily dropping quality of discourse on these sites. The advice to "never read the comments" should now be applied to the daily news.

[Link] [Comment]
19 Jul 15:12

Tony Schwartz Could Have Saved Civilization

by Rex Hammock

trump-shadeJane Mayer’s New Yorker magazine piece about Tony Schwartz, ghost-writer of Trump’s book, Art of the Deal, is depressing.

While yes, it’s depressing to learn what Schwartz is revealing–that his 18 months of being embedded with Trump convinced him that Trump is a “sociopath”–that’s not what I’m talking about. Even his fans would probably admit he’s, well, “different,” when it comes to his personality. And, frankly, the word “sociopath” is not really a clinical term these days, if my TV crime-show training is correct. I think the “politically correct” term is antisocial personality disorder. But then, we know that Trump is not a fan of the politically correct.

Here’s what’s depressing: That Schwartz waited so long.

To Mayer, he admitted, “I put lipstick on a pig. I feel a deep sense of remorse that I contributed to presenting Trump in a way that brought him wider attention and made him more appealing than he is. I genuinely believe that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.”

I don’t care that Schwartz now says he’s donated to charities his percentage of the proceeds from the books sold (a 50% cut) since Trump announced he was running for President.

I don’t care that Schwartz now says he hasn’t been able to sleep since then, as well.

I care that he has waited until Trump is one of only two people who will be our next President…and it has taken him over a year to share his unique insight with the rest of us, “that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.”

I’m sorry, but if someone thinks there is an “excellent possibility” that “the end of civilization” will occur if people don’t know what he knows, that person doesn’t have the liberty of sitting on such information for over a year–or several decades if one goes back to the original publishing date..

It may have meant something during all those rallies when Trump held up the book and claimed it was the best book ever written (except when he discovered the evangelical vote, he changed that to “second best after the Bible”).

Now it’s a little too late for Schwartz to ask for a Martin Niemöller-esque mulligan on saving civilization. You said nothing when it mattered most.

No, Mr. Schwartz, you were the boy with his finger in the dike.

You waited too long.

You could have saved civilization, but you blew it.

As I’ve written before, Trump backers won’t care.

They won’t believe Schwartz, now.

Even Trump knows he could take a gun out on 5th Avenue and start shooting people and his backers won’t care.

That’s why it’s depressing.

19 Jul 15:12

Pixelmator for iOS Adds Quick and Magnetic Selection Tools

by John Voorhees

Pixelmator 2.3 for iOS was updated today to add the same Quick Selection and Magnetic Selection tools that were introduced on the Mac with Pixelmator 3.5 in May. The Quick Selection Tool lets you paint over an image with your finger to select it. Magnetic selection grabs the outline of an object based on anchor points you create as you trace around the object with your finger. Pixelmator detects the edges of the object in the image and snaps the section to them. In my brief tests, both selection tools worked well and are particularly well-suited to touch.

In addition to the new selection tools, Pixelmator 2.3 adds many small refinements and other improvements, including:

  • Apple Pencil pressure sensitivity support for the Quick Selection Tool;
  • Greater Apple Pencil precision when using the Free Selection Tool;
  • a 'tap to invert selection' button;
  • improvements to the precision and speed of the Color Selection Tool; and
  • snap to pixel precision for the Free, Rectangular, and Elliptical Selection Tools.

Pixelmator 2.3 for iOS is a free upgrade for existing Pixelmator customers and is available to new customers on the App Store for $4.99. Pixelmator 3.5 for Mac, which we previously covered, is available for $29.99 on the Mac App Store.


Like MacStories? Become a Member.

Club MacStories offers exclusive access to extra MacStories content, delivered every week; it's also a way to support us directly.

Club MacStories will help you discover the best apps for your devices and get the most out of your iPhone, iPad, and Mac. Plus, it's made in Italy.

Join Now
19 Jul 15:08

Hi Fi Raspberry Pi – digitising and streaming vinyl

by Liz Upton

Over at Mozilla HQ (where Firefox, a browser that many of you are using to read this, is made), some retro hardware hacking has been going on.

vinyl record

The Mozillans have worked their way through several office music services, but nothing, so far, has stuck. Then this home-made project, which started as a bit of a joke, landed on a countertop – and it’s stayed.

Matt Claypotch found a vinyl record player online, and had it delivered to the office, intending to tinker with it at home. It never made it that far. He and his colleagues spent their lunch hour at a local thrift store buying up random vintage vinyl…and the record player stayed in the office so everybody could use it.

Potch’s officemates embarked on a vinyl spending spree.

1-SuvYfwtYQ7xAfUYACc7GtA

1-cx_LPjsu4DmlNoxWdxtEPQ

What could be better? The warm crackle of vintage vinyl, “random, crappy albums” you definitely can’t find on Spotify (and stuff like the Van Halen album above that you can find on Spotify but possibly would prefer not to)…the problem was, once the machine had been set up in a break room, only the people in that room could listen to the cheese.

Enter the Raspberry Pi, with a custom-made streaming setup. One Mozillan didn’t want to have to sit in the common area to get his daily dose of bangin’ choons, so he set up a Pi to stream music from the analogue vinyl over USB (it’s 2016, record players apparently have USB ports now) via an Icecast stream to headphones anywhere in the office. Analogue > digital > analogue, if you like.

The setup is surprisingly successful; they’ve organised other audio systems which weren’t very popular, but this one, which happened organically, is being used by the whole office.

You can listen to a podcast from Envoy Office Hacks about the setup, and the office’s reaction to it.

Mozilla, keep on bopping to disco Star Wars. (I’m off to see if I can find a copy of that record. It’s probably a lot better in my imagination than it is in real life, but BOY, is it good in my imagination*.)

*I found it on YouTube. It’s a lot better in my imagination.

The post Hi Fi Raspberry Pi – digitising and streaming vinyl appeared first on Raspberry Pi.

19 Jul 15:08

On the Nature of Mathematical Concepts

files/images/verena_huber_dyson.jpg


Verena Huber-Dyson, Edge, Jul 22, 2016


I studied under  Verena Huber-Dyson when I was in Calgary and was opened to a world where we question assumptions, consider alternative (but complete and consistent) forms of formalization, and a range of reasons why we ought to question our core 'truths' about mathematics and logic. "This century has seen the development of a powerful tool, that of formalization, in commerce and daily life as well as in the sciences and mathematics. But we must not forget that it is only a tool. An indiscriminate demand for fool proof rules and dogmatic adherence to universal policies must lead to impasses," she writes in this article from 1998. "Think of mathematics as a jungle in which we are trying to find our way. We scramble up trees for lookouts, we jump from one branch to another guided by a good sense of what to expect until we are ready to span tight ropes (proofs) between out posts (axioms) chosen judiciously. And when we stop to ask what guides us so remarkably well, the most convincing answer is that the whole jungle is of our own collective making - in the sense of being a selection out of a primeval soup of possibilities. Monkeys are making of their habitat something quite different from what a pedestrian experiences as a jungle."

[Link] [Comment]
19 Jul 15:07

The Philosophical Concept of Algorithmic Intelligence

files/images/ancient-hands-argentina.jpg


Pierre Levy, Pierre Levy's Blog, Jul 22, 2016


"A science of human intelligence is indeed possible," writes Pierre Levy in a post last year, "but on the condition that we solve the problem of the mathematical modelling of language. I am speaking here of a complete scientific modelling of language, one that would not be limited to the purely logical and syntactic aspects or to statistical correlations of corpora of texts, but would be capable of expressing semantic relationships formed between units of meaning, and doing so in an algebraic, generative mode." I think we can agree that Facebook isn't this. Where the question gets hard is when we ask whether this is what we need. Is a scientific modelling of language, or of thought, possible? Is it desirable? Would we find this language physically instantiated in the human brain? 

[Link] [Comment]
19 Jul 15:07

Consciousness is a Big Suitcase

files/images/_87929120_87929119.jpg


Marvin Minsky, John Brockman, Edge, Jul 22, 2016


Words like like 'intuition' or 'consciousness' are "suitcase words", says Marvin Minsky in this interview from 1998, "that all of us use to encapsulate our jumbled ideas about our minds. We use those words as suitcases in which to contain all sorts of mysteries that we can't yet explain." And in turn, he says, we start to think of these as entities in their own right, as things with no structures we can analyze. But consciousness, he says, "contains perhaps 40 or 50 different mechanisms that are involved in a huge network of intricate interactions...  human brain contains several hundred different sub-organs, each of which does somewhat different things." Or, for example, "A 'meaning' is not a simple thing. It is a complex collection of structures and processes, embedded in a huge network of other such structures and processes." Or memory: "we use... hundreds of different brain centers that use different schemes to represent things in different ways. Learning is no simple thing."

[Link] [Comment]
19 Jul 15:06

Ohrn Image — Public Art

by Ken Ohrn

Three linked images at Pender and Columbia, depicting “Snapshots of History”.

As written above the “1936” mural:  “These murals commemorate the history of the Chinese Canadians and recognise their significant contribution to the growth and prosperity of Vancouver, British Columbia and Canada. This work was created by muralist Shu Ren (Arthur) Cheng with the co-operation of the Chinese Freemasons of Canada, the City of Vancouver, and the Vancouver Chinatown Merchants Association.  (Arthur Cheng, 2010.7.1 – 8.10). ”

Chinatown.1 Chinatown.2 Chinatown.3

Click an image for more viewing options.


18 Jul 22:02

The 7 biggest problems facing science, according to 270 scientists

files/images/Replication-2.jpg


Julia Belluz, Brad Plumer, Brian Resnick, Vox, Jul 21, 2016


These problems are nothing we haven't seen before, but this article makes a good case for each, plus some good discussion on proposed remedies (quoted):

  • Academia has a huge money problem
  • Too many studies are poorly designed. Blame bad incentives.
  • Replicating results is crucial. But scientists rarely do it.
  • Peer review is broken
  • Too much science is locked behind paywalls
  • Science is poorly communicated to the public
  • Life as a young academic is incredibly stressful

Science, they say, is "ripe for disruption". But what would that even look like?

[Link] [Comment]
18 Jul 22:00

The final developer preview of Android 7.0 Nougat is now available

by Rose Behar

We’re now one step closer to seeing Android 7.0 Nougat in the wild. The fifth and final beta of the operating system is now being rolled out over the air, bringing with it near-final system updates.

There are no major changes in this latest preview, which is to be expected with a final developer release. Primarily the update provides bug fixes and optimization improvements.

It also delivers an emulator that developers can use for final testing of their apps, the final APIs, and the latest system behaviours and UI.

Those who are already enrolled in the beta program will get Developer Preview 5 right away. Those who aren’t enrolled can do so by opting in to the program with a phone or tablet at android.com/beta with a Nexus 5X, 6, 6P, 9, or Pixel C device. They can also get it by downloading and flashing the update manually or sideloading.

Among the new features set to launch with Android 7.0 are the additions of a deep-linking tool titled launcher shortcuts, a “more human-looking” emoji design, split-screen multitasking and new quick setting toggles.

Any unanswered questions about Nougat? The Android engineering team announced in its blog post regarding the final preview that it will host a Reddit AMA at r/androiddev on July 19th from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. PST.

Related reading: Android N Hands-on: Everything you need to know (Video)

SourceGoogle
18 Jul 21:59

The All-New Glif iPhone Tripod Mount

by John Voorhees


The first Glif, an iPhone tripod mount by Studio Neat, was released in November 2010. Fast forward almost six years to today and Studio Neat is back with an all-new version of the Glif that looks like the best one yet.

Having a tripod mount for your iPhone is surprisingly handy. Club MacStories members may recall that just last month, Graham Spencer and I used the Glif for two very different projects. Graham mounted his iPhone to a Glif to take time-lapse movies of the Australian sky, while I used my Glif with a GorillaPod tripod and microphone to record interviews with developers at WWDC. Those projects, which we described in detail in the Club MacStories Monthly Log, were very different, yet perfectly suited for the Glif.

The latest version of the Glif focuses on three areas. The first is a quick-release lever that makes it easier to get you iPhone in and out of the Glif. The second is multiple mounting points that let you mount the Glif in landscape or portrait mode, or attach additional items to the Glif like a light and microphone that can turn your iPhone into a portable movie rig.

Studio Neat introduces two accessories for the Glif, a handle and a wrist strap.

Studio Neat introduces two accessories for the Glif, a handle and a wrist strap.

The third improvement to the Glif is the introduction of two accessories. The first is a handle that screws into one of the Glif’s mounting points. The handle should make it easier to hold your iPhone steady without accidentally covering the camera lens with your finger. The second accessory is a strap that you can loop around your wrist for added protection against dropping your iPhone.

As with previous Studio Neat products, the new Glif is a Kickstarter campaign. Over time, I’ve become more cautious about the Kickstarters I back, especially when it comes to hardware products, but Studio Neat is one of the few companies where I do not hesitate to back a product I want, because it has a solid track record of past success. For a $25 pledge, you will receive the new Glif if the project is funded, while $50 gets you the Glif, handle, and wrist strap. If you want two complete sets of the Glif and its accessories, you can pledge $100.

→ Source: kickstarter.com