How Long Does it Take to Cook a Turkey With the Most Powerful Flashlights in the World?

Wicked Lasers’ $200 torch beams out 4100 lumens of blinding light. That’s very intense light! From the video above, it would appear six of the flashlights can cook a whole turkey in about 2.5 hours. Considering a turkey takes 20-minutes a pound in the oven, that’s incredible! In fact, it’s actually kind of unbelievable, so we reached out to the laser people to double check that this is correct. More »

Thanksgiving Day: The Holiday Dish I Lost In The Divorce

The holidays are a time take stock of what we’re most grateful for in life. For divorcees, that may include no longer having to share a turkey dinner with your ex, your former in-laws and their weird, weird side dishes.

With that that joyous thought in mind, we asked our readers on Facebook and Twitter to share the the holiday dishes they lost in the divorce — for better or worse. (You probably don’t miss your ex mother-in-law’s infamous Jell-O mold, but your ex’s apple and sage stuffing? That stuff was pretty amazing.)

Click through the slideshow below to see some of the funniest responses, then head to the comments to share the holiday dish that you lost in your divorce.

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Caviar ATM Debuts In Los Angeles, Also Sells Truffles & Bottarga (PHOTO)

We get it. You’re a high-powered executive/European art dealer/insufferable foodie/socialite about town and you don’t always have time for a leisurely meal at Petrossian, Los Angeles’ premiere caviar restaurant.

Now your high-class cravings are covered with LA’s first caviar vending machines, located in Westfield Century City, Westfield Topanga and Burbank Town Center.

Described as “caviar boutiques,” the vending machines stock caviar from all over the world. They also offer other gourmet foods like truffles, escargot, bottarga blinis, gourmet salts and caviar accessories.

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Lenovo ThinkPad Twist review: an old form factor gets new life with Windows 8

Lenovo ThinkPad Twist review

It used to be that “convertible PC” could mean only one thing: a laptop whose display swiveled around, folding down into tablet mode. Now that Windows 8 is here, though, the category has become a bit muddied. How else to describe our recent collection of reviews? In just the past few weeks alone, we’ve tested a laptop whose screen folds all the way back, an Ultrabook whose display flips inside the hinge and yet another with a slide-out keyboard. Anything goes — at least until consumers decide which form factor they like best.

But when Lenovo calls its new ThinkPad Twist a convertible, you can rest assured it’s using the old-school definition. As the name implies, it has a rotating screen that allows it to be used as a 12-inch slate. And, like all the business-friendly ThinkPads that came before it, it sports a well-engineered keyboard, a secondary set of touch buttons and, of course, that signature red pointing stick. Now, though, it runs a much more finger-friendly OS, and has a touchpad that can support all the new gestures in Windows 8. It’s one of several new touch-capable notebooks from Lenovo, but it’s the only one geared toward business users. So is this worth the upgrade from an older ThinkPad? And is it a better buy than Lenovo’s other Win 8 convertible, the IdeaPad Yoga 13? Read on to find out.

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Miss D.C. Discusses Her Double Mastectomy

WASHINGTON – When Allyn Rose was 16, she lost her mom to breast cancer, the same disease that killed her grandmother and great-aunt. Now, the 2012 winner of Miss District of Columbia and upcoming Miss America contestant has elected to have a double mastectomy, removing both breasts as a preventative measure to decrease her chances of developing the disease.

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Hurricane Sandy Thanksgiving Facebook Page Connects Needy Residents With Dinner Hosts

A Facebook page created in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy wants to ensure every resident will get to enjoy a Thanksgiving meal.

An anonymous admin organizes the effort on Hurricane Sandy- Thanksgiving Adopt A Family For Dinner, a page created on November 5 with an inaugural post inviting families to connect.

“With the televised visions of the heartbreaking losses from Hurricane Sandy, that have affected so many in NJ and NY, I have decided that I would like to help by matching people in need with families willing to invite them into their homes for a home-made (or store bought ) Thanksgiving Dinner,” said the post. “Let’s offer these families something that they can be truly thankful for during this season of giving.”

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Jack Taylor’s Spotlght: Scarlett And Black

Jack Taylor ’15, a transfer from UW-Lacrosse, plays point guard on the basketball team. “[Taylor is] the real deal … a very special player who just might be the next leading scorer in the nation,” said Grinnell associate head coach, David Arseneault ’09, in an interview on the Grinnell College Athletics website. The Pioneers open the season tonight in Waverly, Iowa against Rockford College.

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Jesse Jackson Jr. Submits Letter Of Resignation

CHICAGO — Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., a once-rising political star who has been on a months-long mysterious medical leave for bipolar disorder while facing separate federal investigations, has resigned from Congress, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner said Wednesday.

Jackson’s resignation comes just two weeks after voters re-elected him to a ninth full term and amid a continuing House Ethics Committee investigation into his dealings with imprisoned ex-Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich. There also have been reports of a new federal probe into possible misuse of campaign money.

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Facebook to end user voting on privacy issues

If you’ve been a long-time Facebook user, then you know how controversial some of the privacy updates have been on the social networking site. The company launched its current site governance model in 2009, which gave users the right to vote on privacy policy issues. However, Facebook is now proposing to get rid of that system, saying that Facebook has outgrown the old model.

Facebook wants to replace the system with one that solicits high-quality feedback instead of just votes. This would also prevent votes from being triggered by copy-and-pasted comments from privacy activists. Currently, if a proposed change gets 7,000 “substantive comments,” Facebook users can vote on the change and the vote will be binding if more than 30% of all Facebook users vote.

Facebook says that it’s doing away with the voting system because it “resulted in a system that incentivized the quantity of comments over their quality.” Therefore, the social network is “proposing to end the voting component of the process in favor of a system that leads to more meaningful feedback and engagement.”

Facebook is also proposing changes to its Data Use Policy, which explains how the site collects and uses user data. In the coming weeks, Facebook will roll out new ways of responding to questions and comments from its users, and they’ll be launching a section on Facebook where you’ll be able to submit questions about privacy to the company’s chief privacy officer of Policy, Erin Egan.

[via TechCrunch]


Facebook to end user voting on privacy issues is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
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After Hurricane Sandy, The Costs Of Doing Nothing To Protect New York Come Into Focus

NEW YORK — For years, the city and the state of New York commissioned reports about the dangers of rising sea levels combined with a powerful hurricane. And for years, dissuaded by the costs of doing something, New York put in place few new preparations for a massive storm surge.

Now we have the first glimpse of the costs of doing nothing: at least 97 deaths in and around New York City, and $33 billion in damage from Hurricane Sandy in New York State alone, according to Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Next time the damage done in dollars and in lives could be far worse. At its peak, Sandy was only a Category 1 storm. Its winds never went above 90 miles per hour near New York. Were something like a Category 4 storm, with winds of 131 to 155 miles per hour, to make landfall near the city, the devastation would be awful.

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