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Thursday, October 12, 2017

Wi-Fi Ballons For Puerto Rico

An excerpt from Atlas Obscura -

The Plan to Launch Giant Wi-Fi Balloons Over Puerto Rico
Alphabet’s Project Loon aims to help get the heavily damaged island back online.
BY ERIC GRUNDHAUSER

As Futurism is reporting, Project Loon has received expedited approval from the FCC to launch wireless data-providing balloons over Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands as soon as possible. The goal of Project Loon is to provide internet coverage to inaccessible or less developed parts of the world by floating large balloons in the stratosphere, at about 65,000 feet. The balloons carry signal relay points capable of communicating with service providers on the ground—in a sense they are more or less floating cell towers. According to Project Loon’s website, the balloons can stay up for as long as 190 days at a time.

http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/google-balloon-puerto-rico-loon-cell-internet

Star Wars Lego Mania

Eminem Rips Donald Trump In BET Hip Hop Awards Freestyle Cypher

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Young Commercial Airline Pilot Jonathan Strickland makes History by film...




https://blackamericaweb.com/2017/10/11/25-year-old-jonathan-strickland-is-the-youngest-pilot-ever-hired-by-ups/?omcamp=es-baw-nl&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Campaign%2010-11-2017&utm_term=BAW%20Subscribers%20%28Daily%29

Meet the 2017 MacArthur Fellows

Helping Students Acclimate

An excerpt from the LA Times -

At UCLA, a dorm floor dedicated to first-generation students
By Teresa Watanabe

Desiree Felix didn’t make her way to UCLA with the help of helicopter parents who hired tutors, hounded teachers or edited her application essays.

Her father is a handyman with a sixth-grade education. Her mother finished high school and helps manage apartments.

At Kennedy High School in Granada Hills, Felix had to figure out most of the nuts and bolts of preparing for and applying to colleges on her own. She didn’t know anything about Advanced Placement classes until her sophomore year, and she came close to missing UC’s application deadline.

In her freshman year, Felix has chosen to live on a newly created dorm floor just for students like her who are the first in their families to attend college.

“I wanted to be around people who understood and shared my experiences so I could connect with them,” she said on move-in day as she unpacked her bags and arranged her new desk.

The dedicated dorm floor is UCLA’s latest effort to support its first-generation students, who make up 32% of undergraduates — a strikingly high number for an elite university.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ucla-first-gen-students-20171002-story.html#nws=mcnewsletter

In Case of Emergency

An excerpt from KQED News -

Here’s What You Should Have in Your Emergency Bag
By Erika Aguilar

We reached out to San Francisco’s Neighborhood Emergency Response Team (NERT) to get tips on what should be in your emergency “go bag”:

Q: What should be in my go bag?

“Things you cannot live without,” said Capt. Erica Arteseros of San Francisco’s Fire Department. She is the training coordinator for the NERT team of volunteers. Here’s a list of things to get started:

Medication
An extra set of keys
Eyeglasses or contact lenses
Hearing aids
A change of clothes
Some water and snack bars
Cash in small bills
A first-aid kit
Flashlight
A portable radio
Charging cables for your cellphone and a portable cellphone battery pack
A copy of your ID

https://ww2.kqed.org/news/2017/10/10/heres-what-you-should-have-in-your-emergency-bag/

IQ Explained

From Vox -

IQ, explained in 9 charts
By Brian Resnick

https://www.vox.com/2016/5/24/11723182/iq-test-intelligence


Saturday, October 7, 2017

Roman J. Israel, Esq. Trailer #1 (2017) | Movieclips Trailers

Why we still need courtroom sketch artists

The Supreme Court's Ruling on the Anthem

An excerpt from Rolling Stone -

What the Supreme Court Says About Sitting Out the National Anthem
Some public schools are telling student-athletes they can't kneel during the anthem – but that's unconstitutional
By David S. Cohen

The Supreme Court very forcefully declared that punishing students for not participating in the Pledge of Allegiance was unconstitutional. The decision had nothing to do with the students' religion and everything to do with their constitutional right to freedom of speech. As the Court wrote, in language that has become one of the most important principles of modern free speech law:

"If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion, or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein. If there are any circumstances which permit an exception, they do not now occur to us."

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/what-the-supreme-court-says-about-sitting-out-the-national-anthem-w507503?utm_source=rsnewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=daily&utm_campaign=100617_17


Lin-Manuel Miranda - Almost Like Praying feat Artists for Puerto Rico [M...

Silicon Kidneys

An excerpt from Wired -

SILICON ISN'T JUST FOR COMPUTERS. IT CAN MAKE A PRETTY GOOD KIDNEY, TOO
By MEGAN MOLTENI

Now, after more than 20 years of work, one team of doctors and researchers is close to offering patients an implantable artificial kidney, a bionic device that uses the same technology that makes the chips that power your laptop and smartphone. Stacks of carefully designed silicon nanopore filters combine with live kidney cells grown in a bioreactor. The bundle is enclosed in a body-friendly box and connected to a patient’s circulatory system and bladder—no external tubing required.

The device would do more than detach dialysis patients—who experience much higher rates of fatigue, chronic pain, and depression than the average American—from a grueling treatment schedule. It would also address a critical shortfall of organs for transplant that continues despite a recent uptick in donations. For every person who received a kidney last year, 5 more on the waiting list didn’t. And 4,000 of them died.

There are still plenty of regulatory hurdles ahead—human testing is scheduled to begin early next year1—but this bioartificial kidney is already bringing hope to patients desperate to unhook for good.

https://www.wired.com/story/artificial-kidneys?mbid=nl_100617_daily

Apply to Work for the President

An excerpt from InStyle -

This Is Not a Drill! You Can Now Apply to Work for Former President Barack Obama
By Lara Walsh

Whether you've dreamt of a career in politics, hoping to someday make a significant difference in your community, or are just a big fan of Barack Obama, look no further, because a select group of 20 applicants will now have the opportunity to work alongside the former commander in chief.

On Thursday, the former president took to Instagram to encourage politically-minded individuals to apply to his Obama Foundation Fellowship Program. The two-year program seeks to help future leaders work through hot public issues in innovative ways, with governmental institutions and beyond traditional establishments.

http://www.instyle.com/news/obama-foundation-fellowship-program-application

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Tell 'Em Todd

Hilarious Tweets

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/marriage-tweets-that-are-just-plain-funny_us_59d56a16e4b0380b6c9a22d3?ncid=APPLENEWS00001

Sustainable Energy Science & Policy: Dan Kammen

The Human Value of Fair Trade

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Liberal Redneck - On Guns

Michael Strahan Thinks Colin Kaepernick Doesn't Get Enough Credit for Pr...

Trevor Responds to the Las Vegas Shooting & Trump Tweets the Weekend Awa...

How aspirin was discovered - Krishna Sudhir

Patient Becomes Caregiver

An excerpt from Buzzfeed News -

This 24-Year-Old Who Survived Cancer Twice Is Now A Nurse At The Hospital Where She Was Treated
"Never in a million years did I think that at the age of 24 I would have achieved my biggest and wildest dream — to work at the hospital I was treated at as a child/teenager."
By Stephanie McNeal

Brown, now 24, underwent chemo for a year at the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta and went into remission.

When she was 15, her cancer returned.

"I had just tried out for my high school cheerleading team," Brown told ABC News. "I actually ran a mile while I had cancer and had no idea...There weren't symptoms but my mom and dad could tell that something was different about me and they knew that something was a little off."

Brown's experience inspired her to become a pediatric oncology nurse, and last week, she started working at the hospital where she was treated.

https://www.buzzfeed.com/stephaniemcneal/child-who-beat-cancer-returns-as-a-nurse?utm_term=.mrwyxalgQ#.ntdG9YBJj

Double Standard

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

‘Lone wolf’: Our stunning double standard when it comes to race and religion
By Khaled Beydoun

In what police call the deadliest attack in modern American history, 64-year-old Stephen Paddock opened fire on concertgoers at a country music festival in Las Vegas on Sunday.

Despite the scale of the attack and Paddock’s being armed with more than 10 rifles, Las Vegas Sheriff Joe Lombardo immediately dismissed any ties to terrorism, classifying Paddock, a white male from a rural town 80 miles from Las Vegas, as a “local individual” and a “lone wolf.”

We have yet to determine whether Paddock was motivated by anyone or anything, so many are tiptoeing around terms such as “terrorist.” But if Paddock were Muslim, his status as a local individual would be entirely irrelevant, and the motive of “Islamic terrorism” or “jihad” would likely be immediately assumed, even without any evidence.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2017/10/02/lone-wolf-our-stunning-double-standard-when-it-comes-to-race-and-religion/?utm_term=.6e339ea464d8

Tattoos as medical condition monitors

Sunday, October 1, 2017

They Helped Us See the World

An excerpt from the Paris Review -

John H. Johnson and the Black Magazine
By Dick Gregory



Let me tell you a story about Jet magazine.

In the late 1970s, I went to the African country Uganda, which was falling apart under Idi Amin. His rule was over, and he had left a mess. I wanted to see about helping sick and hungry folks over there. I got on a plane, and then onto a bus. Things were crazy, with people fighting for control of the country. A group of men made everybody get off the bus I was on. And the saddest thing was: suddenly I was looking at a nine-year-old African child with a gun, who walked up to me and said, “Get up on the sidewalk.”

A man on a bicycle jumped off and said, “Dick Gregory! Dick Gregory!” He looked at that little punk packing the gun and said, “Get outta here. You know who this man is?”

And how did the man on the bicycle know who I was? Jet magazine.

That man said to me, “I see all your work, brotha. I just … ” And he started crying. Because he had read about me in Jet.

Jet and Ebony magazines exposed black people to the world—not just the negativity but the positive things, too. We got to see black folks we had never seen, hear about black folks we had never heard of. Let’s say your sister was a judge. How would I know that? Because Jet magazine put it out there. Let’s say your daddy was a scientist in California, but I’m in New York. How would I know? The New York Times wouldn’t mention it. So we looked at Jet and said, “Wow, this is positive stuff, not just the negative stuff about black folks that the white press was talking about.” Ebony and Jet had black photographers taking pictures of people and things that white photographers wouldn’t even have thought of.

https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2017/09/26/john-h-johnson-black-magazine/#nws=mcnewsletter

Why you can't fly a plane to space

Why is Africa building a Great Green Wall? BBC News

Trevor Noah: Is the World Getting Better? #GOALKEEPERS17

Billie Holiday-Strange fruit- HD

What really happens when a fly lands on your food

So Wrong

From the AP & Time -

A Man Told His Friends He Needed Help Moving. They Didn't Realize They Were Robbing a House for Him

(GREAT FALLS, Mont.) — Police in Montana say a man told friends he needed help moving and got their unwitting help stealing $40,000 worth of items from another man's home.

One of the friends allegedly rented a U-Haul without knowing it would be used in a crime. The other told police he became suspicious and left after he saw military medals in the Great Falls home. He doubted 36-year-old Patrick Joseph Adams Jr. served in the military.


Investigators say the true homeowner came home later that night, found his home had been burglarized and called 911.

http://time.com/4964291/great-falls-movers-robbed-house/


Straight to Hell

http://www.vulture.com/2017/09/lin-manuel-miranda-cant-hide-his-disgust-at-trump-tweets.html

The ancient city designed to track time

The surprising cause of stomach ulcers - Rusha Modi

New Rule: The Kremlin Konnection | Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)

Saturday, September 30, 2017

Consider Heading North Kids

An excerpt from the Boston Globe -

Canadian colleges offer US students lower tuition and Trudeau instead of Trump
By Laura Krantz

CAMBRIDGE — In a sweaty high school gymnasium on a recent Monday evening, 25 college recruiters set up tables with glossy brochures and free pens. Among them were Quest University, Mount Allison University, the University of Waterloo, and Bishop’s University.

Most Americans can’t locate these schools on a map (hint: they’re all in Canada), but nonetheless about 100 US students and their parents attended the fair, curious to learn about them. Why? The lure of reasonably priced tuition and a chance to study outside the United States.


As private college costs in the United States creep ever-closer to $70,000 a year, Canadian schools are seizing on unprecedented interest among Americans increasingly unwilling to accept mountains of debt for an undergraduate degree.

Colleges in Canada, which are almost all public and receive more government support than their US counterparts, are significantly cheaper, as little as $8,000 per year at Brandon University in Manitoba, or $15,000 at McGill, in Montreal.

http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2017/09/27/canadian-colleges-focus-recruitment-efforts-students/esfIXhe9ctB66yrrQ7a2cO/story.html?et_rid=606374700&s_campaign=todaysheadlines:newsletter

Friday, September 29, 2017

Lt Gen Silveria addresses cadets about racism incident

Co-opted

An excerpt from Vox - (Bold is mine)

The NFL has officially whitewashed Colin Kaepernick’s protest
The co-opting of protests against racism has a storied history in our country.
Updated by Louis Moore

Last Sunday, in the largest single-day athlete protest in American sports history, players across the league linked arms and took a knee during the national anthem. But it was a toothless gesture. The demonstration, which started as a protest against police brutality by San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, had become a “mere picnic.”

Last weekend’s wave of protest was prompted by an angry rebuke by President Trump during a rally in Alabama. The president called for any “son of a bitch” who took a knee to be fired by the NFL. In response, players across the nation knelt in front of the flag during Sunday’s games. But these protests meant something different. Billionaire team owners who had donated to Trump’s campaign joined in. The symbol of taking a knee came to mean something else — unity, anger toward Trump, free speech. Kaepernick’s bold statement against systemic racism had been co-opted.

The beauty and brilliance of Kaepernick’s protest the previous season is that it put all athletes and fans on notice. "I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color," Kaepernick told reporters. He did not mince words.

And his truth drew the ire of white fans. For two minutes, they had to confront systemic racism and police brutality, something most fans don’t want to acknowledge, especially during a football game. In short, Kaepernick took a page from Bill Russell’s activist athlete playbook. As Russell noted in 1964, “We have got to make the white population uncomfortable, because that is the only way to get their attention.”

https://www.vox.com/first-person/2017/9/28/16379618/nfl-take-a-knee-protest-colin-kaepernick

Wardrobe Malfunction Statement

From Vox -

Someone took an upskirt photo of actress Natalie Morales. Her response is required reading.
Updated by Constance Grady


https://www.vox.com/culture/2017/9/27/16375446/natalie-morales-upskirt-photo-response

Thursday, September 28, 2017

What is Solar Power? | National Geographic

Meet The Black Comedian Who Has Become Japan’s Most Unlikely Star (HBO)

A Supreme Court Clerk

From the Washington Post -

From her dad’s killing during the crack epidemic to a Supreme Court clerkship
By John Woodrow Cox



https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/from-her-dads-killing-during-the-crack-epidemic-to-a-supreme-court-clerkship/2017/09/27/e631eb7c-8de0-11e7-8df5-c2e5cf46c1e2_story.html?hpid=hp_hp-top-table-main_wright-1130a-1%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.0f6e0abe7bac

Quote

“The flag is drenched with our blood.” - Fannie Lou Hamer

From the NY Times - Charles Blow

(A powerful article. Too good from start to finish to post snippets. - Faye)

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/28/opinion/the-flag-is-drenched-with-our-blood.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&_r=0

Three Amigos


ROB CARR VIA GETTY IMAGES
Former U.S. Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton enlivened the opening ceremonies of the Presidents Cup at Liberty National Golf Club on Sept. 28, 2017, in Jersey City, New Jersey.

Terrible

Inside One of Baseball’s Last Manual Scoreboards

Donald Trump Won't Admit Defeat on Health Care

Wake Up to Gabe Fleisher | September 27, 2017 Act 3 | Full Frontal on TBS

A City Built For Driverless Cars

Excerpts from Now I Know -

The Town that Drives Itself

Ghost towns have a few hallmark features — lots of buildings, lots of roads, and no residents. These uninhabited towns were once bustling with commerce and community, but for reasons which often differ from place to place, they’re now desolate and abandoned.

~~~~~~~~~~

That’s hardly a ghost town. It’s bright, clean, and airy. And — importantly — the stoplights are working.

Really, that’s the most important part. Mcity wasn’t built for people. It was built for cars — autonomous ones.

~~~~~~~~~~

Mcity opened its doors — er, roads — in 2015. It is a 32-acre urban landscape with all sorts of roadways. There are railroad crossings, roundabouts, differently-paved streets, highway on-ramps, crazy intersections with confusing left turns, and more. The buildings, as you can probably tell by the above, are just facades, and there are no people beyond the researchers; instead, there are fake pedestrians that don’t know how to safely cross the street. (The image below is an example.) The purpose of the city is to test driverless cars and the technology which controls them, with researchers across disciplines and employers taking advantage of this one-of-a-kind city.

http://nowiknow.com/the-town-that-drives-itself/

How cars went from boxy to curvy

Grooving at California’s Most Retro Roller Rink

Painless Way to Save Money

I've discovered a painless way to save money with these weekly plans.  They were found on Pinterest.  Here's to happy savings!






Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Is an unusual name good for you?

Renew Your Passports Pronto!

From PureWow - H/T Alisha

Yikes, Here’s What Happens if You Don’t Renew Your Passport This Fall
By HEATH GOLDMAN

Unless you renewed your passport yesterday, do yourself a favor and take it out right now. If it expires anytime next year, get yourself renewed now.

Why is that? Well, as reported by the L.A. Times, fewer people apply in the fall, so wait times from September to December are the shortest (just four weeks instead of months).

Here’s another (very tricky) reason: In January 2018, the Real ID Act kicks in. This means driver’s licenses from 23 states (including New York and California) won’t cut it for domestic travel, forcing folks to use their passports.

https://www.purewow.com/news/best-time-to-renew-passport?utm_medium=email&utm_source=national&utm_campaign=25100&utm_content=News_editorial

I won't trade in my iPhone 6s for an iPhone 8 or iPhone X

Former neo-Nazi removes swastika tattoos after unlikely friendship

Ken Burns: Today's Divisiveness Has Roots In Vietnam

Commentary: Trump's Comments Drive Athletes to Unify | Real Sports w/ Br...

Obama Scholars

From Occidental College -

THE BARACK OBAMA SCHOLARS PROGRAM

Beginning in fall 2018, the Barack Obama Scholars Program at Occidental College will empower the next generation of leaders in active pursuit of the public good. Honoring the legacy of Occidental’s most famous student, this scholarship program will provide a comprehensive experience for exceptional students of all backgrounds who seek the opportunity to create lasting and meaningful change.

http://obamascholars.oxy.edu

How to Avoid A**holes

An excerpt from Vox -

A Stanford psychologist on the art of avoiding assholes
"Not giving a shit takes the wind out of an asshole's sails."
by Sean Illing

The world is full of assholes. Wherever you live, whatever you do, odds are you’re surrounded by assholes. The question is, what to do about it?

Robert Sutton, a psychology professor at Stanford University, has stepped up to answer this eternal question. He’s the author of a new book, The Asshole Survival Guide, which is basically what it sounds like: a guide for surviving the assholes in your life.

In 2010, Sutton published The No Asshole Rule, which focused on dealing with assholes at an organizational level. In the new book, he offers a blueprint for managing assholes at the interpersonal level. If you’ve got an asshole boss, an asshole friend, or an asshole colleague, this book might be for you.

https://www.vox.com/conversations/2017/9/26/16345476/stanford-psychologist-art-of-avoiding-assholes

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

10 Advantages of Being Left Handed | Top 10 List

The Japanese Town Growing Masterpieces With Rice

Hansen Unplugged: Anthem protests not about disrespecting the flag

Why 23 million Americans don't have fast internet

Einstein's miracle year - Larry Lagerstrom

When Is the Right Time for Black People to Protest?: The Daily Show

How does the Nobel Peace Prize work? - Adeline Cuvelier and Toril Rokseth

Quote

The players have not committed the sin of introducing politics into football. Their sin is to be black men talking about politics when the NFL wants them to shut up and entertain. - Travis Waldron

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nfl-football-political_us_59c91815e4b06ddf45f9b002?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

Monday, September 25, 2017

Searching for Answers on Blood Road

Bob Costas on NFL protests and patriotism (full CNN interview)

John Oliver - NFL Anthem Kneel

Beaten . . . With Class

An excerpt from the Washington Post -

The NFL beat Trump. Soundly.
By Jerry Brewer

The NFL players stood, knelt, raised fists, sat, abstained . . . whatever felt right. They did it mostly as a team, a collection of individuals who choose to play together and sacrifice for each other. During the national anthem, they didn’t act like a brainwashed mass who had traded their diversity just to wear the same colors.

The latter is a flat and uninformed way to view the concept of team, and the same could be said for the different ways we act as American citizens. You have to understand that to grasp the power and poignancy of one of the most meaningful Sundays in NFL history. Throughout the nation and in London, the league responded to President Trump’s scathing, profane and ignorant criticism by showing him two things he can neither comprehend nor inspire as a leader: empathy and unity.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/the-nfl-responds-to-trump-by-embracing-its-diversity/2017/09/24/07d57814-a15c-11e7-ade1-76d061d56efa_story.html?utm_term=.ec30b6723b74