What Will Replace Affirmative Action If The Supreme Court Kills It? | The New Republic

Ever since conservative courts and voters began trying to eliminate affirmative action in the 1990s, universities have sought creative ways to boost their enrollment of minority students without explicitly relying on race. When California voters banned racial preferences in public universities in 1996, for example, the University of California responded by adopting admissions preferences based on socioeconomic status instead. And after a federal appellate court struck down the University of Texas’s race-based affirmative action program, the school adopted a plan that guaranteed admission to those students graduating in the top 10 percent of their high school class.

When the Texas effort—known as the Top Ten Percent Plan—failed to generate the racial diversity school officials sought, the university returned to using explicit racial preferences. Those preferences are now being challenged in the Supreme Court case of Fisher v. Texas, and many expect the conservative justices to deal what could be a fatal blow to race-based affirmative action at American public universities. Once again, however, the universities have a secret weapon they hope will allow them to circumvent such a ruling: data mining.

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James Holmes Attorneys Asked For Return Of Theater Shooting Suspect’s Notebook

CENTENNIAL, Colo. — Authorities say that attorneys for the Colorado movie shooting suspect called the University of Colorado four days after the attack and asked the school return a package that James Holmes had sent to his psychiatrist.

University police chief Douglas Abraham said the call alerted them to the presence of the unopened package in the campus mail room. He made the disclosure Monday in a hearing where defense attorneys were trying to find out who told Fox News that the package contained a notebook with writing detailing violent plans.

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Dospara Galleria XF-A ‘Let’s go by train 9 A’ Gaming PC

Dospara-Galleria-XF-A-'Let's-go-by-train-9-A'-Gaming-PC

Dospara has dropped another gaming PC for the mass market, the Galleria XF-A ‘Let’s go by train 9 A’. This Let’s go by train 9 A certified gaming PC is packed with a 3.40GHz Intel Core i7-3770 quad-core processor, an Intel H77 Express Chipset, a GeForce GTX 670 2GB graphics card, an 8GB DDR3 RAM, a 2TB hard drive, a DVD Super Multi Drive, a 550W power supply and runs on Windows 8 64-bit OS. The Galleria XF-A ‘Let’s go by train 9 A retails for 101,980 Yen (about $1,236). [Product Page]

MSI B75MA-G43 Micro-ATX Motherboard

MSI-B75MA-G43-Micro-ATX-Motherboard

Here comes a new micro-ATX motherboard from MSI, the B75MA-G43. Based on Intel B75 chipset, the board supports for Intel LGA1155 processors and features four DDR3 DIMM memory slots (up to 32GB RAM), one PCIe 3.0 x16 slot, one PCIe 2.0 x16 slot and two PCI slots. In terms of connectivity ports, it has one SATA 6.0 Gbps, five SATA 3.0 Gbps, two USB 3.0, four USB 2.0 and Gigabit Ethernet. The B75MA-G43 is expected to retail under $60. [MSI]

Charles Karel Bouley: The Jenni Rivera I Knew: Family First

When I got off the bike there was a single text message: It’s not a rumor, Jenni’s plane has vanished, on way to office, will text later. I stared at the screen. That’s not possible. It’s a mistake. I immediately felt so much.
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Hitachi CP-AW252WN Short-Throw Projector

Hitachi-CP-AW252WN-Short-Throw-Projector

Hitachi hits back with their new short-throw projector, the CP-AW252WN. Adopting the 3LCD display technology, the CP-AW252WN is able to project a 100-inch image from a distance less than 3 feet away. Apart from that, it also provides 1280 x 800 WXGA resolution, 2500 ANSI lumens brightness, 4000:1 contrast ratio and up to 5000 hours of lamp life (Eco Mode). Pricing info is still unknown at the moment. [Hitachi]

‘Parenthood’ Christmas Episode: Max Burkholder On Kristina’s Fate, Asperger’s, Vending Machines And More

Parenthood” viewers have been fearing this week’s Christmas episode (Tues., Dec. 11 at 10 p.m. EST on NBC), which sees Kristina’s (Monica Potter) health taking a turn for the worse after being diagnosed with cancer earlier in Season 4.

Max Burkholder — who plays Max, the son of Kristina and Adam Braverman (Peter Krause), on “Parenthood” — told HuffPost TV via phone that he “cried so much” when he read the script for the NBC series’ Christmas installment, titled “What to My Wondering Eyes.” Below, 15-year-old Burkholder talks about Max’s journey with Asperger’s, Kristina’s fate, missing his TV sister Sarah Ramos, seeing his TV mom smoke pot and that damn vending machine.

Max has really come a long way this season. What do you love about playing him?

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Transcend 16GB (8GBx2) JM1600KSH-16GK DDR3 SO-DIMM Memory Module Kit

Transcend-16GB-(8GBx2)-JM1600KSH-16GK-DDR3-SO-DIMM-Memory-Module-Kit

Transcend is about to launch their latest DDR3 SO-DIMM memory module kit, the JM1600KSH-16GK. As part of the JetRam series, this 16GB (8GBx2) memory module kit comes with 2Rank x8bit DRAM specification, operates at 1600MHz speed and is backed by a lifetime warranty. The JM1600KSH-16GK will start shipping from January for 6,480 Yen (about $78). [Transcend]

Queen’s Christmas Message to reportedly air in 3D, project the royal presence further (update: not entirely first)

Queen's Christmas Message to be broadcast in 3D, project the royal presence

Loyal subjects of the United Kingdom who also embrace the cutting edge of TV may get an extra treat this year. Queen Elizabeth II has reportedly recorded her annual Christmas Message in 3D, supposedly becoming the first member of the British Royal Family to embrace the video format after Prince William turned it down for his wedding. We’ll naturally need 3D glasses to catch all the nuances if it happens, although the extra dimension wouldn’t be exclusive to the producers at BSkyB who captured it: both the BBC and ITV should supposedly have access as well. While donning funny-looking eyewear for a speech isn’t usually our first choice for entertainment, we’ll make an exception for Her Majesty if Buckingham Palace confirms the 3D broadcast. Besides, it may be the perfect test of a new 3D TV waiting under the tree.

Update: Thanks to reader Steve, we now know that claims of this being the Queen’s first sojourn into 3D weren’t right. While it would certainly be the first Christmas Message in 3D, we’ve learned that a CBC TV crew only just got to shoot in 3D earlier this year. Technically, the very first 3D footage of Queen Elizabeth II was recorded on her coronation in 1953, but it wasn’t discovered and processed until just recently.

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Via: The Verge

Source: The Independent

Twitter launches photo filters for iOS and Android apps

We’ve been anticipating the arrival of photo filters on Twitter’s app for awhile now, with a rumor having surfaced back on November 2 that the social network was going to launch its own filters to compete against Instagram. The information came from inside sources, who stated that the filters would be launched “in the coming months.” Now, a little over a month later, Twitter has officially announced the photo filters and rolled them out to its iOS and Android apps.

The issue quickly gained attention as Instagram pushed out a “glitch” that caused its photos to appear cropped or otherwise incorrect on Twitter. This turned out to be intentional, with Instagram’s CEO stating that users would be better off viewing the images on Instagram rather than via the Twitter cards. Soon after, the Instagram images stopped appearing in Twitter altogether.

Yesterday we reported that sources claimed Twitter would be launching its photo filters this month, and that the app was currently in testing. Now, a short 24 hours later, both the updated iOS and Android apps have been launched via their respective app stores. Says the social network, “Starting today, you’ll be able to edit and refine your photos, right from Twitter.”

The new apps offer eight filters, including Black and White, Warm, Cool, Vintage, Cinematic, and Happy. The filters’ effects can be viewed before being applied to an image using both grid and swiping views. Images can be “auto-enhanced” using a color and light balancing tool, and can be cropped using the new “Crop” tool. You can check out the new photo options via the nifty video from Twitter below.

[via Android Community]


Twitter launches photo filters for iOS and Android apps is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
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