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Thursday, May 26, 2016

Not Like Clarence

An excerpt from VerySmartBrothas -

DEAR BLACK PARENTS: PLEASE LOVE YOUR CHILDREN SO THEY WON’T GROW UP TO BE CLARENCE THOMAS

But mostly I want her to be in love with who she is. Not a suffocating, consuming, constricting, and narcissistic love where she’s the only meaningful entity in her universe. But a love where she’s able to acknowledge, accept, embrace, and find the beauty and the value in all the things that make her her. A love of herself and her skin and her nose and her lips and her hair and her people and her parents and her Blackness that exists without reservation or shame and permeates and inspires others around her to strive for their best selves.
Basically, I do not want her to be Clarence Thomas. 
Because if she were to become Clarence Thomas — a person whose shame of and disgust with himself and his Blackness is so pervasive and palpable and, unfortunately, powerful that it can literally alter history — it would mean that I failed. That I was an abject and thorough disaster of a parent. That something I did or didn’t do turned this smiling, rolling, bouncing, and burping six-month old bundle of Blackness into a joyless and self-loathing schlemiel who grew to rue the day she was born Black.
http://verysmartbrothas.com/dear-black-parents-please-love-your-children-so-they-wont-grow-up-to-be-clarence-thomas/

New Nudes

From The Huffington Post -

The concept of “nude” has long referred only to pale tones when it comes to cosmetics and clothing. Thanks to efforts by both small and large brands, the term has started to become more inclusive of what’s nude for everyone.

But the desire for diverse options when it comes to skin tones is not limited to shoes, outwear and makeup: There’s a need for nude underneath, too.

Enter Naja, a lingerie brand from creative director Catalina Girald and actress Gina Rodriguez. Thanks to a new range of nude underwear modeled by 10 diverse women, the company has turned the “typical nude” on its head.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nude-lingerie-skin-tones-diverse_us_5745bf1ce4b0dacf7ad38833

Donovan Livingston's Harvard Graduate School of Education Student Speech

You Can Help With Cancer Research

From Upworthy -

I spent a few minutes digging in my yard all in the name of cancer research.
By Erin Canty

There is rainwater seeping into my jeans, and my instructions are about to blow away. But my front yard could hold the cure to cancer, so I keep digging.

I am outside my home in Portland, Oregon, digging in the soil with a small plastic scoop I requested from the Natural Products Discovery Group at the University of Oklahoma. An interdisciplinary team of researchers are hard at work there, looking for fungi and natural products found in soil that may be used for a host of drugs and cures for cancer, infectious diseases, and even heart disease.

So the least I can do is get my knees wet.

http://www.upworthy.com/i-spent-a-few-minutes-digging-in-my-yard-all-in-the-name-of-cancer-research?c=upw1

http://npdg.ou.edu/citizenscience


Bosch Parade 2016 // Bosch leeft!




History Lesson

From BlackAmericaWeb.com

Little Known Black History Fact: Tallahassee Bus Boycott

On this day in 1956, FAMU students Wilhelmina Jakes and Carrie Patterson sat on a city bus in Tallahassee, Florida. and began what would become a seven-month boycott of the transit system. Through the efforts of a local church leader and civic groups, protesters were able to get Black drivers hired and integrate the bus lines.

http://blackamericaweb.com/2016/05/26/little-known-black-history-fact-tallahassee-bus-boycott/?omcamp=es-baw-nl&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=New%20Campaign&utm_term=BAW%20Subscribers%20%28Weekly%29

Fruity Bus Stops

From Atlas Obsura - 

Strawberry Bus Stop

http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/konagai-japan-fruit-shaped-bus-stops?utm_source=Boomtrain&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20160526&bt_email=fayesharpe@gmail.com&bt_ts=1464275422442

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Authors Say NO!

From Rolling Stone -

Stephen King, Cheryl Strayed Sign Open Letter Condemning Donald Trump

"The rise of a political candidate who deliberately appeals to the basest and most violent elements in society ... demands ... an immediate and forceful response," over 400 authors write in letter

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/news/stephen-king-cheryl-strayed-sign-open-letter-condemning-donald-trump-20160525#ixzz49jJFlAeY
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook


The Best

From The New Yorker -

A FULL REVOLUTION
In the run-up to the Olympics, Simone Biles is transforming gymnastics.
By Reeves Wiedeman



http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/05/30/simone-biles-is-the-best-gymnast-in-the-world?mbid=nl_160525_Daily&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8970946&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=922460323&spReportId=OTIyNDYwMzIzS0

Meet this year’s youngest Spelling Bee competitor

Monday, May 23, 2016

What a Sad Man

Excerpts from 2 Paragraphs -

The Supreme Court of the United States found in favor of Timothy Tyrone Foster, a black man on death row in Georgia. Convicted of killing a white woman in 1987, Foster's case before the nation's highest court claimed that he was a victim of racial discrimination at his original trial. SCOTUS agreed in a rare 7-1 decision, with Chief Justice John Roberts writing: "The focus on race in the prosecution's file plainly demonstrates a concerted effort to keep black prospective jurors off the jury."

~~~~~~~~~~

Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court's only African American Justice, was the lone dissenting vote.

~~~~~~~~~~

Of course he was (my comment).


A Deep Dive

This is long, but worth the read.

From The New Yorker -

THE BANK ROBBER
The computer technician who exposed a Swiss bank’s darkest secrets.
 By Patrick Radden Keefe

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/05/30/herve-falcianis-great-swiss-bank-heist?mbid=nl_TNY%20Template%20-%20With%20Photo%20(41)&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8959693&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=922244030&spReportId=OTIyMjQ0MDMwS0

Just Let Him RIP

From Consequence of Sound -

BET Awards mock Madonna and Stevie Wonder’s Prince tribute at the Billboard Music Awards

"Yeah, we saw that. Don't Worry. We Got You."


http://consequenceofsound.net/2016/05/bet-awards-mocks-madonna-and-stevie-wonders-prince-tribute-at-the-billboard-music-awards/

Wealth Distribution

From Vox -

Something massive and important has happened in the United States over the past 50 years: Economic wealth has become increasingly concentrated among a small group of ultra-wealthy Americans.

http://www.vox.com/2016/5/23/11704246/wealth-inequality-cartoon

Why Obama is one of the most consequential presidents in American history

Sunday, May 22, 2016

I Met a Girl and . . .

Laughing til it Hurt!

Every Mom can relate to this scenario.  Read the entire message.  I dare you not to laugh out loud.

From StumbleUpon -

Guy panic-texts his wife after their son pukes everywhere, internet cannot get enough



http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1JhMev/:1GHP2NVT2:h154ZrzH/hellogiggles.com/guy-panic-texts-wife-son-pukes

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Redemption

Excerpts from The Huffington Post Highline -

Meet the Ungers

Merle Unger escaped from jail for the first time in 1967, when he was an 18-year-old dropout with an interest in petty crime. People in his native Greencastle, Pennsylvania, saw him as a harmless character—a scrawny kid who figured out how to tie his bedsheets together and climb out of the nearby jail at night so he could see his girlfriend and play bingo at the Catholic church before climbing back into his cell in time for roll call. He did this until a sheriff’s deputy went to play bingo, saw Unger sitting there and was like, wait a minute.

Whenever jail officials increased security, Unger found another route out. A local radio station started a Merle Unger Fan Club. His public defender made T-shirts that said, “Merle, baby, where are you?”

In 1975, after more escapes and arrests, he found himself locked up in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, fixating on a skylight in the lunchroom, 45 feet up. Early one morning he tied a piece of rope to a 5- or 10-pound dumbbell and wrapped the other end of the rope around his neck. He piled up some tables, put a small step ladder on top of the pile, climbed atop a beam, pulled up the ladder, set it up again, reached higher, hurled the dumbbell through the skylight’s glass, and climbed through the broken window into the December cold, wearing a short-sleeved shirt. “I mean, I’m not proud of that,” Unger told me last month. “I just wanted my freedom.”

~~~~~~~~~~

In the middle of all this, in the ’80s, Unger happened to meet a woman. A fellow inmate in Florida had put a personal ad in Mother Earth magazine, and he got so many responses that he sold the extras to other prisoners for a dollar apiece. Unger bought a few, sent letters and a woman from Illinois came to visit. They ended up getting married in 1988 and had two children, both conceived in prison. He says his life changed when he held his infant son for the first time: “I didn’t want to commit no crimes anymore.”

In Unger’s telling, this is the moment he developed an obsessive interest in the American legal system. Another friend worked in the prison’s law library and told him about a case in which a federal inmate earned his freedom by challenging the constitutionality of the jury instructions in his trial. Unger spent hours studying the case. It was all he could talk about. And the more he read, the more he thought he might have a shot at winning a new trial on the murder charge if he came back to Maryland to fight it.

~~~~~~~~~~

Unger v. State doesn’t say that these prisoners should be freed, only that they can ask to be retried. In practice, though, there’s a strong incentive to settle cases where the defendant has a clean prison record. Re-trying a case that’s 30 or 40 years old can be tricky: the witnesses have moved away, the detectives are dead and the case file is skeletal, or missing, or destroyed. Since the decision came down, 142 of 231 prisoners have negotiated their freedom, almost all of them getting probation. One was acquitted at a new trial. Another eight have died behind bars before they could get a hearing. There are still about 70 prisoners with open cases, which means that even more may yet go free.

http://highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/meet-the-ungers/

Friday, May 20, 2016

The Nice Guys Official Trailer #2 (2016) - Ryan Gosling, Russell Crowe M...

Otto – Self-Driving Trucks



Now the downside -

http://2paragraphs.com/2016/05/self-driving-trucks-threaten-3-5-million-american-jobs/

Quiet Discontent

An excerpt from the New York Times -

No Sound, No Fury, No Marriage

My marriage had long ago turned into the cliché of roommate-ness, and that it could suffer such a change without any emotional upheaval was revealing. In fact, the silence said it all.

The words I don’t say to my neighbors, the words that get held on my tongue, are: I wish you had heard a fight. I wish our voices had been loud enough to carry across the valley. He and I may have free speech, but we’re not so good at frank speech.

Shakespeare had it right: “My tongue will tell the anger of my heart, or else my heart, concealing it, will break.” I never spoke of the anger in my heart, the mounting resentments and hurts, and neither did he. I never demanded attention or care, and neither did he. And that’s why we broke.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/22/fashion/marriage-breakups-separation.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share&_r=0

Deja Vu

Valedictorian barred from high school graduation because he has a beard

Amite High School Class of 2016 valedictorian Andrew Jones was not allowed
to participate in his own graduation because of his beard. (WLTX 19 NEWS)


http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/valedictorian-barred-high-school-graduation-article-1.2643541

H/T Tiff

He thought he was a terrible father until he talked to his dad.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Wood Hotline

There’s a Hotline for People With Knotty Wood Questions
Inside Wisconsin's Forest Products Laboratory, where experiments are conducted on all things wood.

By David Jester

http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/theres-a-hotline-for-people-with-knotty-wood-questions?utm_source=Atlas+Obscura&utm_campaign=f2e9493ee3-Newsletter_5_19_20165_17_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_62ba9246c0-f2e9493ee3-59905913&ct=t(Newsletter_5_19_20165_17_2016)&mc_cid=f2e9493ee3&mc_eid=866176a63f

Fake Trees

An excerpt from Atlas Obscura -

A pine cell tower tree built by one of the leading companies 
in the cell tower concealment business in Tuscon, Arizona. 
(Photo: Bill Morrow/CC BY 2.0)



All over the world, there are trees that quietly carry our phone messages. They come in variety of species: palm, cypress, fir, elm, pine, cacti. Perhaps you have passed by one of these alien trees before, or spotted them sticking high above the natural treeline. From top to bottom, nothing about these trees is natural.

Despite telecommunications and utility companies' best efforts, cell phone tower trees are notoriously unattractive. The architecture of these fake trees is also not the least bit convincing. For example, the pine cell towers have metal “trunks” that lack the pliability of natural trees, and support a small tuft of branches and fake foliage that attempts to cover up the hardware underneath.

http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/take-a-look-at-americas-least-convincing-cell-phone-tower-trees?utm_source=Atlas+Obscura&utm_campaign=f2e9493ee3-Newsletter_5_19_20165_17_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_62ba9246c0-f2e9493ee3-59905913&ct=t(Newsletter_5_19_20165_17_2016)&mc_cid=f2e9493ee3&mc_eid=866176a63f

Combat Juggling?

From Now I Know -

Combat juggling was created by a well-known juggler (to the extent that there is such a thing) named Jason Garfield. Garfield, per Wikipedia, "is regarded as one of the most controversial members of the juggling community" (yes, really) because he "despises the concept of 'artistic juggling,' promoting the idea that juggling should also be regarded as a form of sport." Combat juggling, which adds competition and athleticism to something typically reserved for clowns and magicians, probably fits that bill. And while it still seems like a joke, it's become increasingly popular since. As VICE reported, the sport matured enough that, in 2011, ESPN3 ended up airing a combat juggling competition, and YouTube is littered with videos of people dueling while juggling with sometimes hilarious results. (Yes, sometimes, someone gets hit in the head and no, the rules don't allow you to bludgeon your opponent.) 

http://nowiknow.com/combat-juggling/

Luma: Surround WiFi with speed, safety and security

The Product -



The Critique -



The Creator -

Epic Rant

No, not Kanye.

http://www.christies.com/features/Neal-Cassady-long-lost-letter-to-Jack-Kerouac-comes-to-auction-7393-1.aspx?sid=554654ea10defb39638b510d&wpsrc=newsletter_tis

Bucket List Ideas

Never say never.

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1MJYBL/:1G!TxI1Ig:g@D-!NcP/www.roughguides.com/special-features/50-things-to-do-before-you-die

Mom's Voice is Magical

From CNN -

Study: Mom's voice works like a charm on your brain

Less than one second. That's how long it takes children to recognize their mother's voice. And that voice lights a child's brain up like a Christmas tree.

A new study from Stanford University School of Medicine studied how children reacted to mom's voice compared to a woman they didn't know. Kids were not only more engaged by mom's voice than a stranger's, scientists found, but this response was noted beyond just auditory areas of the brain.
Parts of the brain related to emotion, reward processing, facial recognition and social functioning are also amped by hearing from mom. In short, a child's ability to communicate socially is in a large way affected by how he or she reacts to mom's voice.

http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/18/health/mom-voice-study-trnd/index.html

Sticky Glue for Cars

From Mashable -

Google's self-driving cars haven't hit many things since they first took to the roads in 2015, but its collision avoidance technology isn't perfect. Now, it appears Google is working on some safety provisions in case one of their vehicles hits a pedestrian.
Google has patented a unique solution that puts a glue-like adhesive on the front end of the self-driving car. The patent, first seen by The Mercury News, describes the sticky covering as a way to catch pedestrians in case of a collision in order to minimize harm.
http://mashable.com/2016/05/19/google-car-stick-glue-adhesive/#rudNsLH.Agq5

Competition for Alexa

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Geez Louise!

An excerpt from the Vox -

The TSA is hard to evaluate largely because it's attempting to solve a non-problem. Despite some very notable cases, airplane hijackings and bombings are quite rare. There aren't that many attempts, and there are even fewer successes. That makes it hard to judge if the TSA is working properly — if no one tries to do a liquid-based attack, then we don't know if the 3-ounce liquid rule prevents such attacks.
So Homeland Security officials looking to evaluate the agency had a clever idea: They pretended to be terrorists, and tried to smuggle guns and bombs onto planes 70 different times. And 67 of those times, the Red Team succeeded. Their weapons and bombs were not confiscated, despite the TSA's lengthy screening process. That's a success rate of more than 95 percent.
http://www.vox.com/2016/5/17/11687014/tsa-against-airport-security

Quote

"Faced with the prospect of voting for either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton, Mary Anne Noland of Richmond chose, instead, to pass into the eternal love of God on Sunday, May 15, 2016, at the age of 68." [Richmond Times-Dispatch]

Relationships in the Digital Age

http://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily-shouts/are-you-sure-you-want-to-unsubscribe-from-this-relationship?mbid=nl_160517_Daily&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8934576&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=921695380&spReportId=OTIxNjk1MzgwS0

Rugby Recruiting

From Upworthy - 



http://www.upworthy.com/these-gay-rugby-players-are-dismantling-stereotypes-one-photo-at-a-time?c=upw1

Monday, May 16, 2016

No Cheating!

From The Atlantic -

Iraq’s Anti-Cheating Campaign: For the second year in a row, Iraq has ordered telecom companies to shut down the Internet in an attempt to prevent cheating among thousands of sixth-graders taking national exams this month. Human-rights activists say Iraq’s test-related blackouts violate citizens’ free-speech rights and can help governments escape scrutiny in cases of abuse. Elsewhere, blackouts or censorship are usually connected to political or military events.

Print Your Own T-Shirts

For the adventurous do-it-yourselfer.

http://www.wired.com/2016/05/burn-silkscreen-print-shirts-home/?mbid=nl_51616

Janitor Gets Degree

An excerpt from CNN -

Custodian picks up degree from college he cleaned for almost a decade

Michael Vaudreuil is used to picking things up at school. He's a custodian at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts.

But over the weekend, he picked up something he'll definitely want to keep: a college degree.
Vaudreuill, 54, graduated with a mechanical engineering degree from the same place where he's cleaned and emptied the trash for the past eight years.

http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/16/us/custodian-graduates-from-college-he-cleaned-trnd/index.html

Tea Remedies

An excerpt from Little Things - 

Eight Cozy Cups Of Tea To Soothe Your Every Affliction  

By Rebecca Endicott


Headache And Poor Circulation: Cinnamon Tea

Headache And Poor Circulation: Cinnamon Tea
Heeral Chhibber for LittleThings
Cinnamon is another cozy, warming spice that might conjure up images of Christmas cookies or your morning oatmeal.
This flavorful and familiar bark isn’t just good in mulled cider, though; soaking cinnamon sticks in hot water yields a rich, strong tea that can help cure a stubborn headache.
Because of its strong anti-inflammatory properties, cinnamon improves circulation and helps to reduce head pain, which is most often caused by minor swelling of the sinuses and of the facial muscles.

http://www.littlethings.com/tea-home-remedies/?utm_source=huffingtonpost.com&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=pubexchange

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Avicii - Broken Arrows

Love the message!

99 Cent Rentals

iTunes is offering 99 cent rentals of hit movies, including Chi-Raq and The Butler.

You're welcome.

A Heavy Burden Multiplied

An excerpt from The Washington Post -

The invisible tax on black teachers
By John King May
John King is U.S. education secretary.

Research conducted recently by the American Federation of Teachers found that, while more teachers of color are being hired than in the past, they also are leaving the profession more quickly than white teachers.

Improved compensation and working conditions can help address this, of course. But one factor in teachers’ decisions to leave deserves special attention: the “invisible tax.”

According to some African American male teachers, the “invisible tax” is imposed on them when they are the only or one of only a few nonwhite male educators in the building. It is paid, for example, when these teachers, who make up only 2 percent of the teaching force nationally, are expected to serve as school disciplinarians based on an assumption that they will be better able to communicate with African American boys with behavior issues.


It is also paid when they have to be on high alert to prepare their students for racism outside of school. “Every time I take my students to an engineering competition, or to speak with industry partners, or to tour colleges, I have to have the code-switching talk,” explained Harry Preston, an African American physics teacher in Baltimore. “That is a mental tax I personally pay as an educator.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Sharif El-Mekki, principal of the Mastery Charter School’s Shoemaker campus in Philadelphia, has noted that the African American teachers he speaks with are of two minds about these extra duties. “They feel honored and appreciated that they are asked,” he said, “but when so many different people are asking them for help, it becomes a burden.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-invisible-tax-on-black-teachers/2016/05/15/6b7bea06-16f7-11e6-aa55-670cabef46e0_story.html?hpid=hp_no-name_opinion-card-b%3Ahomepage%2Fstory



Too Cute!

A photo of Lincoln Ball trying to train his new puppy by showing him a YouTube video has gone viral on Facebook.


http://abcnews.go.com/Lifestyle/boy-makes-puppy-watch-youtube-tutorials-training-adorable/story?id=39126358

A Roaming Mindset

An excerpt from StumpleUpon -

Instead Of Renting An Apartment, Sign A Lease That Lets You Live Around The World
Roam provides short-term apartments with a communal feel, for today's digital work-from-anywhere nomad.

If you can afford the airfare, it's getting easier to be a digital nomad. Roam, a new network of co-living spaces, offers a lease that lets you continually move: After a couple of weeks or months in Madrid, you can head to Miami, or Ubud, Bali. By 2017, the startup plans to have 8-10 locations around the world.

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/3cg0MT/:wk0ttLt2:jlSqRSM./www.fastcoexist.com/3059469/instead-of-renting-an-apartment-sign-a-lease-that-lets-you-live-around-the-world


The Accountant - "Who Is The Accountant?" Trailer [HD]

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Greatest Innovation Era?

An excerpt from The New York Times -

What Was the Greatest Era for Innovation? A Brief Guided Tour
Which was a more important innovation: indoor
plumbing, jet air travel or mobile phones?

By NEIL IRWIN MAY 13, 2016

We’re in the golden age of innovation, an era in which digital technology is transforming the underpinnings of human existence. Or so a techno-optimist might argue.

We’re in a depressing era in which innovation has slowed and living standards are barely rising. That’s what some skeptical economists believe.

The truth is, this isn’t a debate that can be settled objectively. Which was a more important innovation: indoor plumbing, jet air travel or mobile phones? You could argue for any of them, and data can tell plenty of different stories depending on how you look at it. Productivity statistics or information on inflation-adjusted incomes is helpful, but can’t really tell you whether the advent of air-conditioning or the Internet did more to improve humanity’s quality of life.

We thought a better way to understand the significance of technological change would be to walk through how Americans lived, ate, traveled, and clothed and entertained themselves in 1870, 1920, 1970 and the present. This tour is both inspired by and reliant on Robert J. Gordon’s authoritative examination of innovation through the ages, “The Rise and Fall of American Growth,” published this year. These are portraits of each point in time, culled from Mr. Gordon’s research; you can decide for yourself which era is truly most transformative.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/15/upshot/what-was-the-greatest-era-for-american-innovation-a-brief-guided-tour.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&region=CColumn&module=MostEmailed&version=Full&src=me&WT.nav=MostEmailed&_r=0

When Schools Allow Creativity & Innovation

From Stanford Magazine -

FAB FEATS: Juliana Cook, ’15 (above), works in Blikstein's lab,
where creations range from sculptures to 3-D printing projects.
Photo: Tamer Shabani, '14


IMAGINE WALKING INTO A HIGH SCHOOL classroom and, instead of rows of desks and chairs facing a whiteboard, you see workbenches. Stationed around the room is an array of machines: a 3-D printer, a laser cutter, a vinyl cutter and a milling machine. Metal drawers and storage shelves are stocked with wood, resins, burlap, glue, machinable wax, acrylic and dozens of other supplies.

You have entered a fab lab.

What’s that? Short for “fabrication laboratory,” the concept—born at MIT in 2001—was to create an environment full of multipurpose tools where one could build nearly anything. The idea caught on, and now there are close to 600 fab labs worldwide, according to fablabs.io, a website that supports and organizes the fab lab movement. The underlying goal is to provide broad access to modern means of invention.

http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=86044&utm_medium=Email&GenwiShareGUID=E6F0A8E4-4D3E-4D11-AE82-657C0E75D103

A Black Golfer We Can Be Proud Of

Excerpts from Stanford Magazine -

PRECOCIOUS: Stackhouse has been winning tournaments since she was 6.
Photo: Casey Valentine/Isiphotos.com

MARIAH STACKHOUSE has never been known to shrink from the spotlight. Not when students and faculty flocked to her gallery to watch her complete the best round in the history of women’s collegiate golf—a 10-under-par 61 in her first tournament at the Stanford Golf Course as a freshman. Not when she was asked to give a speech introducing former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to a packed banquet hall in 2014. And not when the Cardinal’s season depended on her overcoming a two-stroke deficit with two holes to play against Baylor at the NCAA championships last May.

~~~~~~~~~~

The young fans who flock to her tournaments find a similarly magnetic role model in Stackhouse, who is personable, quick to laugh and, at 5-foot-2, close to their size. (Among the things her young fans don’t know about her but would no doubt admire: She has a nearly encyclopedic memory for song lyrics.) Says Stackhouse of her pint-size acolytes, “I love it when little black girls tweet me or come up to me at tournaments to say, ‘I want to go to Stanford!’”

http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=86084&utm_medium=Email&GenwiShareGUID=ABDBABB2-E56D-4C81-A749-A69CD9EC0FEC

Patterns in Our World

From The Smithsonian - 

The Science Behind Nature's Patterns

A new book explores the physical and chemical reasons behind incredible visual structures in the living and non-living world



A furled chameleon tail obviously takes its shape from the rolling of a tube,
but its pattern is distinct from that created by rolling an even tube,
such as that of a garden hose. The gentle taper of the tail produces
a logarithmic spiral—one that gets smaller,
yet the small parts look like the large parts. 
(Michal Filip Gmerek/Shutterstock.com)


The undulations of a sand dune reveal a pattern in time as well as space.
Sinuous waves arise from a pulse, an ebb and flow, as grains of sand
are blown in the wind. (Denis Burdin/Shutterstock.com)

Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/science-behind-natures-patterns-180959033/#HmG7CfIdXah4fwCG.99


Friday, May 13, 2016

Google Needs You

An excerpt from PC Magazine -

Google Will Pay You to Drive Around in Its Self-Driving Cars

BY ANGELA MOSCARITOLO 

The Web giant is looking to hire "vehicle safety specialists" in Arizona to be part of its self-driving car project. 

Calling all college graduates in Arizona with a clean driving record and no criminal history: Google wants your help.

The Web giant is looking to hire "vehicle safety specialists" in the state to be part of its self-driving car project. As per the job description, those selected will be tasked with driving an autonomous vehicle around the state for six to eight hours per day, five days per week, collecting data for Google's engineering team. Drivers will earn $20 per hour, according to The Arizona Republic.

"Test drivers play an important role in developing our self-driving technology," Brian Torcellini, head of operations for Google's Self-Driving Car testing program, told the paper. "They give our engineers feedback about how our cars are driving and interacting with others on the road, and can take control of the vehicle if needed."

http://www.pcmag.com/news/344438/google-will-pay-you-to-drive-around-in-its-self-driving-cars

Trump and the Holy Ones

An excerpt from The New Republic -

Why Evangelicals Like Trump
Fundamentalist approaches to evangelicalism have long fostered anti-intellectual and authoritarian mindsets.
BY MUGAMBI JOUET

The support that Donald Trump has received from legions of evangelicals has puzzled and “surprised” many people. After all, the presumptive Republican nominee is exceptionally vulgar and, despite claiming to be a devout Christian whose favorite book is the Bible, knows little about scripture and has emphasized, “I don’t like to have to ask for forgiveness” from God. One common explanation for this apparent contradiction is that numerous evangelicals embrace Trump’s agenda, from eviscerating Obamacare to cracking down on undocumented immigrants and barring Muslims from entering America. But Trump and his evangelical supporters think alike in more ways than people realize. Fundamentalist approaches to evangelicalism have long fostered anti-intellectual, anti-rational, black-and-white, and authoritarian mindsets—the very traits that define Trump.

The historian Richard Hofstadter explored the roots of the issue in his 1966 book Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, which described how the spread of evangelicalism since the eighteenth century fostered the notion that education is an obstacle to faith. Not all evangelicals thought alike, although many were convinced that people need not read any book except the Bible. As the influential preacher Dwight L. Moody (1837-99) proclaimed, “I do not read any book, unless it will help me to understand the book.” Hofstadter concluded that this anti-intellectual conception of religion extended to life outside the church. Hardline evangelicals became particularly disdainful of reflection and refined ideas, leading some to be drawn to “men of emotional power or manipulative skill.”

https://newrepublic.com/article/133488/evangelicals-like-trump?utm_source=New+Republic&utm_campaign=7710bae9ba-Daily_Newsletter_5_13_20165_13_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c4ad0aba7e-7710bae9ba-59581889

"I Am His Hands. He Is My Eyes." The Friendship That Built a Forest

Can We Pay Some More Folks?

A tweet from Patrick Stewart as seen on The Huffington Post -


Made me forget the humidity for a moment. 
Worth 5 bucks.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-patrick-stewart-tweet_us_5735799ce4b077d4d6f2b8d3

Vortex .Bladeless Wind Generator.

Well That Says It All

From The Washington Post -

Ann Telnaes cartoon -
Paul Ryan met with Donald Trump today


Baby Bison Takes on Wolf and Wins | America's National Parks

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Meet Gboard



Once you add the keyboard, you'll need to hold down the GLOBE on the left of the space bar and select Gboard to activate it.

Being able to search within apps is a super cool feature.

Enjoy!

He's a Nasty, Slimy, Sleaze-bag

An excerpt from Salon - 
Hollywood’s unforgivable Woody Allen cowardice: What the controversy at Cannes really proves
The latest Allen imbroglio is a powerful reminder of the entertainment press's deference to powerful men
JACK MIRKINSON
~~~~~~~~~~
Over the past two days, Woody Allen has found his attempts to publicize his new movie somewhat hampered. Instead of his latest directorial effort, everyone is talking about the decades-old allegations that he sexually molested his daughter, Dylan Farrow, when she was a little girl.
The timeline goes something like this: The Hollywood Reporter recently ran a cover story about Allen in which it not only avoided asking him directly about his daughter’s allegations against him, but also allowed him to portray his marriage to Soon-Yi Previn—who, lest we forget, was his stepdaughter before becoming his wife—in what can only be described as extremely questionable terms.
~~~~~~~~~~
I am sympathetic to the pressures that journalists face when dealing with aggressive publicists who threaten to torpedo a story if certain questions are raised. These are not easy things to contend with. It’s also no simple task to ask a legendary figure about highly sensitive portions of his personal life. But sometimes you just have to suck it up and do your job. What good is it to be allowed in a room with Woody Allen if you can only do it in a compromised, grossly tainted way?
The question of whether people should continue watching Woody Allen’s movies is something that everyone has to answer for themselves. The question of how major stars and production companies can still work with him is another, separate minefield. The question of whether or not the allegations that his own children have leveled against him should occupy a central part of how we think about him—and, crucially, how journalists approach him—is something that requires no such introspection. The charges against Allen should never be allowed to stray from our collective consciousness again. Hopefully The Hollywood Reporter and the rest of the entertainment press will remember that in the future.
http://www.salon.com/2016/05/12/hollywoods_unforgivable_woody_allen_cowardice_what_the_controversy_at_cannes_really_proves/?source=newsletter

A Grocery Store With No Staff

An excerpt from Good -

The Future Of Shopping Just Opened In This Tiny Midwestern Town
by Jesse Hirsch & Alicia Kennedy

When Sweden’s first unstaffed grocery store opened earlier this year, it received a flood of breathless global coverage—it’s a concept both novel and posh, a natural advancement of our quest for eternal convenience. The store was the brain-child of tech guy Robert Ilijason, whose origin myth centers on dropping his last jar of baby food in the wee hours and not knowing where to go. Customers in Viken can now register with an app on their phone that will allow them to swipe into the store and pay for purchases without speaking to another human being—peak modern luxury.

The concept of the unstaffed store has broader implications than 3 a.m. munchies for the tech-bro set, though. For real disruption, look no farther than Farmhouse Market, posted up in humble New Prague, Minnesota (population 7,800.) Farmhouse, the first American iteration of the 24/7 supermarket, was opened by the husband and wife team of Paul and Kendra Rasmusson. The goal is simple: provide healthful, local food at affordable rates. By cutting the cost of staffing—an issue that might not immediately come to mind when considering how to fix food deserts—they’re able to offer better prices to rural, non-affluent customers.

https://www.good.is/articles/farmhouse-market?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailygood

SignAloud: Gloves that Transliterate Sign Language into Text and Speech

Black Baseball

An excerpt from The New Yorker -

The Mission of a Black Baseball Team
BY JOHN FLORIO AND OUISIE SHAPIRO

Sports fans know that black participation in Major League Baseball has dropped precipitously in the past few decades. According to a report published last year by USA Today, less than eight per cent of major-league players in 2015 were African-American; that figure was nineteen per cent in 1986. And the decline can be seen at every level of the game: Little League, the minors, high school, college—even H.B.C.U.s. Thirty years ago, it was virtually impossible to find a white player on an H.B.C.U. team. Today, Winston-Salem State, Florida A&M, Prairie View A&M, and North Carolina Central all field teams in which the majority of players are not black. Only a few schools—Clark Atlanta, Morehouse College, and Lane College—regularly fill their rosters entirely with black players.

http://www.newyorker.com/news/sporting-scene/the-mission-of-a-black-baseball-team?mbid=nl_160512_Daily&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8914754&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=921243805&spReportId=OTIxMjQzODA1S0

Scouting American Giants for Aussie Rules Football

This Town Has No Doors, No Locks and No Crime

9 - 3 ÷ 1/3 + 1 = ? The Correct Answer (Viral Problem In Japan)

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Wanting to Go Home Again

It's easy to understand why Ta-Nehisi Coates is the celebrated author that he is.

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/05/on-homecomings/481818/?utm_source=nl-atlantic-daily-051016

New Titles

An excerpt from The Atlantic -

U.S. Laws Will No Longer Sound Like a Vaguely Racist Uncle
Congress removed the last uses of “Oriental” and “Negro” from federal statutes on Monday.

Congress unanimously passed a bill Monday to remove the last pockets of archaic racial terminology such as “Oriental” or “Negro” from federal law, replacing them instead with more modern terms.

The law targeted two anti-discrimination subsections of the U.S. Code that used outdated language to describe racial groups. In one section of the Department of Energy Organization Act, “a Negro, Puerto Rican, American Indian, Eskimo, Oriental, or Aleut or is a Spanish speaking individual of Spanish descent” will be replaced with “Asian American, Native Hawaiian, a Pacific Islander, African American, Hispanic, Puerto Rican, Native American, or an Alaska Native.”

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/05/congress-race-oriental-negro/482238/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Vox%20Sentences%205/11/16&utm_term=Vox%20Newsletter%20All

Check Out the New Smithsonian Museum


https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/museums/a-first-look-inside-the-smithsonians-african-american-museum-stunning-views-grand-scale/2016/05/10/80ac784e-160e-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html?hpid=hp_no-name_aahmc-7pm_1%3Ahomepage%2Fstory

Meet Mer-Bot

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Stranger Than Fiction

From The Guardian -

The day we discovered our parents were Russian spies

For years Donald Heathfield, Tracey Foley and their two children lived the American dream. Then an FBI raid revealed the truth: they were agents of Putin’s Russia. Their sons tell their story

by Shaun Walker

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/07/discovered-our-parents-were-russian-spies-tim-alex-foley

Not Sure Why We Care

From Wired -

No, Jose Ramirez’s Helmet Doesn’t Defy the Laws of Physics


http://www.wired.com/2016/05/no-jose-ramirezs-helmet-doesnt-defy-laws-physics/?mbid=nl_51016

A Toy That Teaches Coding

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/05/16/sphero-teaches-kids-to-code?mbid=nl_160510_Daily&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8902853&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=921027606&spReportId=OTIxMDI3NjA2S0

Hmmmm

An excerpt from The New Yorker -

Modern Philosophical Paradoxes and Conundrums

BY 


There is no more room on the subway, yet at every stop additional passengers keep boarding the train.

If you don’t tell your mother about your new tattoo, does it exist for her?

How many people need to show up to your party before it can actually be considered a party? How many people need to leave before the party is over? Why is Mark still here?

http://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily-shouts/modern-philosophical-paradoxes-and-conundrums?mbid=nl_160510_Daily&CNDID=27124505&spMailingID=8902853&spUserID=MTE0MzE0NDEyNDUyS0&spJobID=921027606&spReportId=OTIxMDI3NjA2S0

An Amish Primer

http://nowiknow.com/amish-commerce/

Queen of Katwe - Official Trailer

What is a Superdelegate?

An excerpt from The Wrap -

But what in the world is a superdelegate anyway? It’s a fancy term for major elected officials, notable party members (including former presidents) and some members of the Democratic National Committee who can support any candidate they choose and can switch their support at any time, right up to the actual nomination.

These elite party members represent 712 of the 4,763 delegates who will attend July’s Democratic convention in Philadelphia — and therefore hold serious sway in determining the party’s presidential nominee.

http://www.thewrap.com/what-is-superdelegate-short-explainer-democrat-hillary-clinton/

YES to Early Bedtimes

I have always been a proponent of early bedtimes for kids.

When Ben and Frankie complained about going to bed at 8:00 (in California), I reminded them that on the East Coast, it was 11:00, so they should be grateful for the chance to stay up so late.

They didn't fall for this rationale long, but it worked great for a while.

~~~~~~~~~~
An excerpt from Slate -

In Defense of Absurdly Early Bedtimes

I make my kids go to sleep by 7:30 p.m., without exception. They’re happier and might even be smarter and healthier because of it.

By 

Summer is right around the corner, which means I’ll soon undergo my annual metamorphosis into the monster of a parent who drags her kids away from barbecues and outdoor concerts an hour before other parents do. Yup, I make my almost 2-year-old and 5-year-old go to bed at 7 and 7:30 p.m., respectively. I know—you think I’m rigid, no fun, that I’m denying my kids a joyful childhood because they rarely get to frolic outside at dusk. I get a lot of crap for it. “Can’t you just … ?” My friends ask. No. I’m sorry, no, I can’t.

That’s because my kids are happier and more fun to be around when I stick with a consistent and early bedtime. And ever since I’ve started looking at the science, I’ve become only more convinced that the earlier you say night-night, the better. Research consistently shows that putting kids to bed early is beneficial for their physical, emotional, and cognitive development. Not only do kids tend to sleep more when the lights go out sooner, but they also may get a greater proportion of restorative sleep, too. Early kid bedtimes are also great for parental sanity. Sipping a glass of wine in silence? Snuggling up with your spouse to watch a grown-up movie for once? It’s really quite lovely.

http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/the_kids/2016/05/put_your_kids_to_bed_early_to_make_them_smarter_happier_and_fitter.html


Preparing to Give a Speech?

This app can help.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ummo/id1102924965?mt=8

From the iTunes Description:

Ummo is your personal speech coach.  Whether you are practicing for a presentation or looking to improve your day-to-day communication, use Ummo to track your filler words ("Umms" and "Uhhs", "like", "You know"), pace, word power, clarity, and more.

Meet the Godfather of the Lowrider Bicycle

These Monks Make a Wicked Hot Sauce

Monday, May 9, 2016

He Should Be Hanged by His Balls

An excerpt from USA Today -

Detroit priest removed for abusing girl now works with pregnant teens

A Catholic priest removed from churches in metro Detroit after he was accused of sexually abusing a teenager is now the development director of a new Catholic center in Eastpointe he cofounded that counsels pregnant teenagers, prompting calls for him to step down.

The Rev. Kenneth Kaucheck, 69, was banned from public ministry by the Archdiocese of Detroit in 2009 after church officials determined he had sexual misconduct in the 1970s with a 16-year-old girl he was counseling as a priest.

Kaucheck is now a director at the Gianna House Pregnancy and Parenting Residence, next to St. Veronica Catholic Church in Eastpointe. Opened last year in a former convent, the center takes in teenagers and young women who are pregnant, assisting them and any children they might later have.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2016/05/09/detroit-priest-removed-abusing-girl-now-works-pregnant-teens/84158910/

Heaven Help Us

From USA Today -

In a new survey of American military personnel, Donald Trump emerged as active-duty service members' preference to become the next U.S. president, topping Hillary Clinton by more than a 2-to-1 margin. However, in the latest Military Times election survey, more than one in five troops said they’d rather not vote in November if they have to choose between just those two candidates.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/05/09/troops-prefer-trump/84157670/

Shocking, But It Shouldn't Be

An excerpt from The New York Times -

Louisiana’s Color-Coded Death Penalty


The last time a white person in Louisiana was executed for a crime against a black person was in 1752, when a soldier named Pierre Antoine Dochenet was hanged after attempting to stab two enslaved black women to death with his bayonet.

This is just one of many grim facts in a new report describing the history of capital punishment in Louisiana and analyzing the outcome of every death sentence imposed in that state since 1976, when the Supreme Court reversed its brief moratorium on executions and allowed them to resume.

Racism has always been at the heart of the American death penalty. But the report, in the current issue of The Journal of Race, Gender, and Poverty, drives home the extent to which capital punishment, supposedly reserved for the “worst of the worst,” is governed by skin color.

In Louisiana, a black man is 30 times as likely to be sentenced to death for killing a white woman as for killing a black man. Regardless of the offender’s race, death sentences are six times as likely — and executions 14 times as likely — when the victim is white rather than black.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/09/opinion/louisianas-color-coded-death-penalty.html?ribbon-ad-idx=6&rref=opinion&module=Ribbon&version=context&region=Header&action=click&contentCollection=Opinion&pgtype=article

What Have They Done?

An excerpt from The New York Times -

G.O.P. Has Only Itself to Blame

 

The Republican Party is trapped between a rock and huckster.

Now that all of their other presidential candidates have dropped out of the race, Donald Trump is the last demagogue standing. He is their presumptive nominee. Their party belongs to him. It’s a YUUGE … disaster.

Now the few remaining serious folks in that party have to make a decision: support this man who, if current trends in polling hold, is likely to lose the general election by an overwhelming margin (and likely do even more damage to the party brand and hurt the chances of down-ballot candidates), or they can … wait, they don’t really have another option other than to sit out this cycle and pretend that their party hasn’t gone stark raving mad.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/09/opinion/gop-has-only-itself-to-blame.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-left-region&region=opinion-c-col-left-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-left-region

A 6'8" Superstar in the Water

An excerpt from The New York Times -

At 16, Reece Whitley Stands Tall in and Out of Water


Whitley will compete this week at the Atlanta Classic at Georgia Tech, a three-day competition starting Friday that is akin to a midterm. It will give Whitley a better idea of where his swimming stands heading into the United States Olympic trials in late June in Omaha.

There is so much more than meets the eye to the 6-foot-8 Whitley, an African-American in a sport that is becoming more diverse. The 2012 United States Olympic swim team included three black swimmers — Anthony Ervin, Cullen Jones and Lia Neal — all of whom will vie for spots on the 2016 squad. Last year, Neal helped make N.C.A.A. history in the 100-yard freestyle at the Division I championships, finishing second behind her Stanford teammate Simone Manuel and ahead of Florida’s Natalie Hinds in the first 1-2-3 finish by black competitors.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/10/sports/at-16-reece-whitley-stands-tall-in-and-out-of-water.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=photo-spot-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0


Edison Takes A Stand - Scandal

An excerpt from the "Trump Card" episode of Scandal

Another View

An excerpt from Very Smart Brothas -

FEATUREDRACE & POLITICS

DARTH BECKY WITH THE GOOD HAIR AND THE NOT-SO-GOOD UNDERSTANDING OF MATH IS THE REAL TERRORIST

Last week, when explaining the history, etymology, and context behind “Becky,” I referred to Iggy Azelea as Darth Becky. Which A) she is (duh) and B) was one of those jokes that wasn’t really a joke. Because she’s not the only one. There really are swarms of Darth-ass Beckys out there — stealing swag, taking up sidewalk space, sabotaging conversations with strategic tears, ruining office potlucks with cucumber casseroles, and tattle telling to human resources because you put a period after the “Good morning” you replied to her “Good morning!” email instead of an exclamation point and she was hurt and threatened by that — and they really do need to be stopped. And they need to be acknowledged as what they are. Terrorists.
Perhaps this characterization seems harsh, but there’s no other way to describe their knack of using their Whitewomanness — and the sympathy and consideration they’re often given for merely possessing it — as a means to infiltrate, disrupt, and manipulate. For instance, let’s consider what happened to University of Pennsylvania economics professor Guido Menzio for having the misfortune of sitting next to the Darthest of Beckys on a plane.

http://verysmartbrothas.com/darth-becky-with-the-good-hair-and-the-not-so-good-understanding-of-math-is-the-real-terrorist/

~~~~~~~~~~~

This references an earlier post entitled, "Profiling Gone Wrong . . . Again."

Hide & Seek Kitties

From Mashable -

16 cats that are absolutely terrible at hide-and-seek

Number 10 is my favorite.

Can you find Number 16?

http://mashable.com/2016/05/08/cats-hide-and-seek/?utm_cid=mash-com-social-huffpo-partner#VSYQO3xFZEq2


Catching Up

With the cast of The Wire.

From The Root -

http://www.theroot.com/articles/culture/2016/05/the_wire_the_ultimate_where_are_they_now.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content%26

~~~~~~~~~~

Season 4 is hands down the most accurate portrayal of many inner city educational systems in America.

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Diva?

From the Root -

Lauryn Hill Shows Up Late For Concert Again, Dragged (and Defended) on Twitter

The hip-hop icon started her Atlanta show more than two hours late on Friday and set off a conversation on the merits of her career the next day.

http://www.theroot.com/articles/news/2016/05/lauryn_hill_shows_up_late_for_concert_again_dragged_on_twitter.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content%26

~~~~~~~~~~

This is me y'all.

Over two hours late?

Who does she think she is?

This behavior screams, "I'm more important than you.  My time is more valuable than yours."

But mostly it screams, "What the heck?" (Not my first choice of words here).

Some folks are giving her a pass by saying she's an artist, and her artistic expressions can't be rushed or be bothered by the constraints of time.

No, what this is, more than anything, is business; or in this case, bad business.

Although this behavior is not new for her, it certainly doesn't excuse it.  The fans that remain in her corner should know that by now.

They've got to be asking themselves, "Is she worth it?"

And I'm guessing many are thinking . . .

Oh hell no!

Kudos!

An excerpt from The Root - 

15-Year-Old Memphis Student Gets Perfect ACT Score

Dwight Moore, Jr
Christian Brothers High School


A 15-year-old high school sophomore got a perfect score on the ACT (American College Testing) exam, reports Blavity.com.

Dwight Moore, a student at Christian Brothers High School in Memphis scored a 36 out of 36 on the college entrance exam putting him in rare company—less than one percent of the 1.9 million test takers received a perfect score in 2015.

http://www.theroot.com/articles/news/2016/05/_15_year_old_tenn_students_gets_perfect_act_score.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content%26