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Thursday, September 10, 2015

Technology Working

(NEWSER) – A couple who has one home in Ontario, Canada, and one in Fort Myers Beach, Florida, was at the Canada home when they noticed someone breaking in ... to the Florida home, 2,300 miles away. They were checking out the home via webcam Saturday night and saw a strange man inside on the surveillance video, the News-Press reports. They contacted Florida authorities, describing the guy and reporting that they watched him enter the home twice—once to take some personal items including their daughter's purse, and again an hour or so later to remove the TV, NBC 2 reports.
"He rang the door bell six times, he tried to break in the front door, couldn't get in the front door so he went around to the back door to the sliding glass door and pried it open," says the owner of a home-watch company who had checked on the house just hours earlier. The man was gone by the time deputies arrived, but they found pry marks on two doors. The following day, a deputy pulled over a man who failed to stop at an intersection and recognized him from the copy of the surveillance video the couple provided to authorities. Thomas Hinton, 45, was arrested and charged with burglary and grand theft; he's also suspected in a number of other local burglaries.

http://www.newser.com/story/212589/couple-catches-burglar-2k-miles-away-via-webcam.html?utm_source=category&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20150909

Not Recommended

Genius College Kid Gets Drunk, Designs an Entire Airplane, and Can’t Remember Any of It

by Rafi Schwartz

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 September 8, 2015 at 11:05
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image via twitter / spacepeople
The fact that college students tend to go out, get drunk, and do stupid things isn’t, in and of itself, all that remarkable. What would be remarkable is if, in the midst of a drunken episode, a college student were to put their expensive education to good use, and–perhaps bolstered by lowered inhibitions–design something genuinely creative, and of potential benefit to the general public.
That, as it happens, is exactly what occurred this past weekend at Michigan Technological University. There, after a night of booze-soaked revelry, one mechanical engineering student stumbled back to his dorm room, and proceeded to design an entire airplane, nose to tail, complete with complex aerodynamic calculations, and rough model sketches. Upon sobering up, however, this boozy brainiac had absolutely no recollection of ever having created his own model of flying machine. 
Keith Fraley, roommate to the designer-in-question documented the alcohol-fueled design session on Twitter:
image via twitter / spasepeople
It’s worth noting that the vehicle in question technically isn’t an airplane at all. It’s actually an “ekranoplan,” a plane-like structure which skims over the surface of a body of water, rather than lifts off to become fully airborn. 
Tens of thousands of retweets later, and the Michigan Tech roommates have become bona fide mini-celebs, attracting the attention of aeronautics and alcohol enthusiasts, alike. Speaking with The Guardian, the drunken designer (using the pseudonym “Mark”) and Fraley offered a few insights into how a night of drinking could lead to an entirely new ekranoplan design. Explains Fraley : 
It all started around 11.30pm. Mark burst into the room in a drunken sway, asking where his textbooks were and after greeting me he rushed back out of the room. From what the person who brought him up [to the shared accommodation] was saying, Mark had a ton of rum and vodka-mixed drinks.
He then came stumbling back two minutes later to grab his giant whiteboard. I just laughed as I sat on the computer listening to his murmurs. Around 1.30am, he came back and he sat on the couch with a worn look on his face.
My friend Cody and I both looked at Mark as he then began to spew information about his whiteboard designed craft and the calculations behind it. Cody and I were in tears from laughter because the aerospace mathematics he tried telling us about sounded like a slurred robot. I did no encouraging towards the creation of this, but I did encourage him to continue talking because it was hilarious.
While a graph paper sketch and whiteboard full of calculations is, indeed, impressive, it’s important to note that they are not, in and of themselves, a foolproof design. But, says Fraley, there are plans to test the creation as a “remote-control model” with other mechanical engineering students. 
The designer himself has reportedly chosen to remain anonymous, for fear that his drunken escapade could negatively impact future job prospects. Still, that hasn’t stopped him from landing on the radar of some interested parties, dutifully impressed at his mechanical engineering skills. Tweeted Fraley two days after his initial pictures went viral: 
http://magazine.good.is/articles/drunk-college-student-designs-airplane?utm_source=thedailygood&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailygood

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Attention: NY Family & Friends

Below you'll find a fascinating video on your antiquated subway system.  Old or not, it provides invaluable service to a whole bunch of folks, including me when I visit the city.

Is it better to know how antiquated it is, or is it better to ride blissfully along?

What Will They Think of Next?

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Love This Momma!

From The Root - (Bold is mine)

Shonda Rhimes' Epic Story On How Her Mom Shut Down Anyone Who Doubted Her

"This lady says I’m not made for Ivy League schools

Friday, September 4, 2015

Simon is an A**

This kid tried to quit band, teacher had other plans



http://www.upworthy.com/he-didnt-want-to-quit-band-so-his-teacher-helped-figure-out-a-way-to-keep-him-playing?c=upw1&u=6861cbea6edfdfe5a709ee39ad3c14b64135e61f

Remember Him?



http://www.upworthy.com/bob-ross-once-painted-only-in-gray-for-a-colorblind-fan-it-was-incredible?c=upw1&u=6861cbea6edfdfe5a709ee39ad3c14b64135e61f

Love The Message

From Upworthy - 

Lisa Price, founder of hair and skin-care company Carol's Daughter, and Emily Greener, co-founder of the nonprofit I Am That Girl, teamed up to create the #BornAndMade campaign.




http://www.upworthy.com/the-bornandmade-campaign-is-celebrating-women-and-its-fantastic?c=upw1&u=6861cbea6edfdfe5a709ee39ad3c14b64135e61f

AMERICAN MASTERS | Althea Gibson - Preview | PBS

Michael Who?

IN THE FIRST 239 days of 2015, 185 black men were murdered in the city of Baltimore. In post-Katrina New Orleans, FiveThirtyEight concluded, black residents are more likely to live in poverty than before the hurricane 10 years ago. The Washington Post recently released data indicating that every nine days, on average, American police kill an unarmed black man. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a 9.1 percent black unemployment rate for July, nearly twice the rate of whites.
White America grows exasperated by the insistence that race still matters, but these facts are a neon sign pointing not at post-racialism but to an entrenched underclass. In Akron, Ohio, hometown of LeBron James, the black poverty rate is 28 percent, 12 points higher than the state average. To James, the numbers are not just a topic, ammunition for winning an argument, but statistical recognition of his life before fame. Days after the anniversary protests marking Michael Brown's death in Ferguson, Missouri, James partnered with the University of Akron and countered the numbers with other numbers, pledging $41 million to send as many as 2,000 at-risk Akron kids to college.
It was a massive initiative, a reminder that, in addition to protest and pressure, the rhetoric of pulling oneself up by one's bootstraps means nothing without boots. It was also something else: proof that James is the signature socially conscious athlete of his time. By this measure he need not aspire to be Michael Jordan. He's already run right past him.
James and Dwyane Wade organized the first athlete protest of the killing of Trayvon Martin. James used his power to rally players and challenge the NBA to be decisive on Donald Sterling. James wore an i can't breathe shirt in warm-ups to show solidarity with young black men disposable to society because they lack his talent. Instead of blaming hip-hop or admonishing the less fortunate, he confronted the "dead or in jail" narrative that permeates black male life with a real program backed by real money. He wrote an enormous check as part of staring down a bitter truth: If "dead or in jail" is as good as it gets for black boys who don't have a blinding 40-yard dash time or a bull's-eye jumper, then at this late date in the American story, integration has been a colossal failure.
James does not live independent of his environment, and neither did Jordan. James is in the prime of his youth and earning power amid national protest and Black Lives Matter. His generation is not a new target of police brutality; it is the latest edition of the same old target. He grew up witnessing the collision between the progress of some and the dead ends for most of the kids who look like him, at a time when the term "post-racial" sounds not only ridiculous but naive. America could not be more racial than it is right now.
Jordan, meanwhile, came of age during the most comprehensive wave of conservatism in the 20th century, a political retrenchment that followed the sweeping social ambition of Lyndon Johnson. Jordan was 15 when the Supreme Court struck down minority set-asides in the landmark Bakke case, limiting affirmative action, and 18 when President Ronald Reagan fired 11,000 striking air traffic controllers. Jordan's 1980s were a market correction of the 1960s, not a time of protest or challenge but one of accumulating individual wealth while Great Society, labor union and New Deal gains and attitudes were being scaled back. Jordan's time was when money was celebrated as the only measure. Greed is good.
The similarities between James and Jordan end when their shared No. 23 jersey rests on a hanger, for Jordan has never been known for a single courageous social act. While James attempts to bridge the powerless to a future, Jordan sued a defunct supermarket chain and won $8.9 million over an advertisement that reportedly yielded all of $4. (Jordan said he planned to donate the money to charity.)
James has accepted a challenge of his times so foreign to the 1980s, making him an heir not to Jordan but to the civil rights movement, to Jim Brown and Bill Russell, to the idea of the athlete as activist. Every day of his career has existed under the shadow of Jordan, but as citizen, LeBron does not look up to Michael. It should be the other way around.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/13530915/cleveland-cavaliers-star-lebron-james-michael-jordan-beat-area
H/T Ben.

Softened the Blow

An excerpt from Rolling Stone -

Sony Softened 'Concussion' to Avoid NFL's Wrath, Leaked Emails Show
Script altered, marketing strategy changed so Sony would "[tell] a dramatic story and not [kick] the hornet's nest"

BY DANIEL KREPS September 2, 2015

The football drama 'Concussion' altered its script and marketing strategy to avoid a potential legal showdown with the NFL, leaked emails reveal Sony Pictures
In the upcoming film Concussion, Will Smith plays Dr. Bennet Omalu, the physician who discovered a link between brain trauma and football players. The trailer for the film finds Omalu first diagnosing chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and hinted at the NFL's efforts to downplay the situation and keep it from public view. However, the drama might not be as hard-hitting as the trailer suggests.

According to leaked emails uncovered from the Sony hack, the production company, Smith's reps and director Peter Landesman discussed how to alter the film by removing scenes from the script that provoked the NFL, the New York Times reports. As Concussion's first trailer shows, the film is being marketed as a whistleblower story rather than an attack on the NFL, a multi-billion dollar corporation that "owns a day of the week," as one character says in the preview.



Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/news/sony-softened-concussion-to-avoid-nfls-wrath-leaked-emails-show-20150902#ixzz3klxOJ6Wu
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

RAISING DION

From The Root -

Raising Dion: Comic Book About a Single Black Mother Raising a Superpowered Son Is a Must-Read  




http://www.theroot.com/blogs/the_grapevine/2015/09/raising_dion_comic_book_about_a_single_black_mother_raising_a_superpower.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content%26

http://www.dennis-liu.com


Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Inside The Actors Studio Jamie Foxx Full Episodes Full Episodes

This is one of my favorites.

If you're short on time, skip over to 25:35 to see Jamie ad-libbing on the piano.


"Concussion" Doctor = UC Davis Doctor

Yesterday I posted the trailer for the new movie, "Concussion," about the doctor who discovered the link between head injuries found in football players and brain damage.  He's on staff at UC Davis Hospital in Sacramento.

~~~~~~~~~~

From the Sacramento Bee and the New York Daily News -

The first trailer for the movie “Concussion,” starring Will Smith, has been released.
The movie is about Dr. Bennet Omalu, the Lodi doctor who first identified chronic brain injury as a common factor in the deaths of several former NFL players. Smith plays Omalu – who also is the chief medical examiner for San Joaquin County and associate clinical professor of pathology at UC Davis.
Sacramento Bee reporter Andy Furillo wrote about the doctor in May: “Dr. Bennet Omalu, who cuts open dead people for a living, has distinguished himself in the medical arts through his detailed examination of brains. It was in this practice that his life intersected with the death of Pro Football Hall of Fame center Mike Webster of the Pittsburgh Steelers.”


Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/entertainment/ent-columns-blogs/video-break/article33155265.html#storylink=cpy



http://www.sacbee.com/entertainment/ent-columns-blogs/video-break/article33155265.html

Monday, August 31, 2015

Saturday, August 29, 2015

I Support . . .

Respond to the brief survey to see which presidential candidate represent ideas most like your own.

http://www.isidewith.com/elections/2016-presidential-quiz?from=JGSaZPGwN

H/T Forrest

This Might Help

Cellphone contract freebies you might be missing.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/komando/2015/08/28/cellphone-contract-freebies/32469421/?csp=tech


Best Car?

Or best electric car?

You decide.

~~~~~~~~~~

An excerpt from a review - 

Elon Musk has once again given the world a car that is among the most thrilling things on the road, not just for what it delivers, but for what it promises.

http://www.wired.com/2015/08/tesla-model-s-p90d-review/?mbid=nl_82815

~~~~~~~~~~

Another one - 

(NEWSER) – For those who think electric cars will never outperform gas ones, Consumer Reports has something to say. In its latest test drive of Tesla's new Model S P85D, the writers said the all-wheel-drive sedan "performed better in our tests than any other car ever has, breaking the Consumer Reports Ratings system." It so wowed the raters that they called it "brutally" and "explosively" quick, saying Tesla had created an "insane" drive mode whose 1.02 G's of force on acceleration (it goes from zero to 60mph in 3.5 seconds) is like jumping off a building, not to mention "frighteningly eerie in its silent velocity" sans the traditional engine roar. Basically, the 80-year-old publication's auto editor Mark Rechtin tells Business Insider, it "defies the laws of physics." And it was built by a startup in, wait for it, the United States of America.

http://www.newser.com/story/212020/new-tesla-model-breaks-consumer-reports-scale.html?utm_source=happyhour&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20150828