Boston Blizzard: Northeast Snowed In As ‘Nemo’ Barrels Through

BOSTON — A storm that forecasters warned could be a blizzard for the history books, with a potential for up to 3 feet of snow, clobbered the New York-to-Boston corridor on Friday, grounding flights, sending office workers home early and knocking out power to half a million customers across the Northeast.

By Friday night, more than 18.5 inches of snow had fallen in parts of central Connecticut, and more than 16 inches covered parts of Mansfield, Mass., a half-hour drive southwest of Boston. Throughout the Northeast, more than 500,000 homes and businesses lost electricity as wet, heavy snow, freezing rain and howling winds caused havoc.

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‘Being Mandela’: Nelson Mandela’s Granddaughters Bring An Icon’s Legacy To Reality TV (VIDEO)

The last time Zaziwe Dlamini-Manaway saw South Africa’s infamous Robben Island penitentiary, she was just 8 months old and being smuggled in by a prison guard to see her grandfather. For many years, she couldn’t imagine making a trip back.

“We didn’t want to go for years and years, because that’s where my grandfather was,” Zaziwe, now 35, told The Huffington Post. “It was a painful place and we didn’t want to relive it,” she said, recalling the return visit she eventually made, along with her sister Swati Dlamini, 33, and other siblings.

Their grandfather, 94-year-old civil rights icon Nelson Mandela, hasn’t heard about the emotions the women’s trip to his old prison cell evoked, though he may when an episode of their reality TV show, “Being Mandela,” airs on the NBC-affiliated Cozi TV in the coming weeks.

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The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: Stuck

Who’s to say that hours of bludgeoning Orcs with abandon while expecting the safety of reincarnation at a continue point doesn’t make us just a little more cavalier with our corporeal selves? Animator Doug Hindson explores the effects of blurring of digital and analog realities in Stuck. More »

Macmillan settles with Department of Justice over collusion accusation

In April, the Department of Justice sued Apple and five publishers, accusing them of joining together to raise ebook prices in an effort to put the kibosh on Amazon’s oft-criticized discounting of bestselling books. Not surprisingly, the accusation was denied, and a few of the publishers settled with the DoJ fairly quickly. Now Macmillan has begrudgingly settled as well, leaving only Apple.

Macmillanmac_logo

In a statement released today, Macmillan said that it has settled with the Department of Justice “because the potential penalties became too high to risk even the possibility of an unfavorable outcome.” The publisher admits to no wrong doing, however, and states that settling is not an admission of guilt in the matter. The settlement must still be approved by court, but assuming it is, retailers will be able to discount the publisher’s ebook titles after a three day wait.

At the heart of the issue is Amazon’s discounting of recently released bestselling books at $9.99. The alleged collusion, according to the Department of Justice’s lawsuit, resulted in priced rising to $12.99 and $14.99. When the lawsuit came down, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, and Hachette Book Group all settled straight away, while Pearson waited until December 2012.

According to The Wall Street Journal, per the settlement, the discounting will be in effect for two years, with the start of those two years being December 18, 2012. Now that Macmillan has conceded to a settlement, Apple is the last of the six accused that hasn’t settled. Apple has said nothing on the matter, having denied any wrongdoing from the start.

[via Wall Street Journal]


Macmillan settles with Department of Justice over collusion accusation is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

O hai, Twitter now has LOLcat language opshun, kthxbai

O hai, Twitter now has LOLcat language opshun, kthxbai

It’s been a busy week at Twitter, what with new rollouts like an upgraded search engine that’ll pull in older tweets and a simplified search tool for mobile app users. So it’s now time to have some fun. As a little easter egg, the social media giant has added a LOLcat language option to add a bit of internet meme flavor to the normal Twitter web interface. The changes are what you might expect: Twitter is now TWTTR, “Compose new tweet” is COMPOZE NEW TWEET, “conversation” is CONVERSASHUN, “Who to follow” is HOO 2 FOLLOW and so forth. No, your timeline won’t automatically transform into a stream of grammatical and spelling errors and your own tweets won’t be magically LOLcat-ified either (for that, we suggest hitting the Speak LOLcat translator link below). Still, it’s a fun little weekend distraction if you’re not quite tired of the I Can Has Cheezburger meme just yet. You’ll find “LOLCATZ” under the language drop down section in Settings, or you can just click on the source to check out your Twitter page in all its LOLcat glory.

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Via: The Next Web, Twitter

Source: Twitter (LOLCat language)

Snow Storm: CT, MA, NJ, NY And More States Hit By ‘Nemo’ Blizzard

A look at effects in states and provinces in the path of the storm sweeping across the Northeast and southern Canada:

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Megan Smolenyak: Hey, Prince, Your Roots Are Showing

Prince Rogers Nelson, better known as Prince, has the music world intrigued with the series of singles he’s been releasing. I thought I’d take a peek into his pre-Minnesota, pre-purple, ancestral past. Here are a few of the discoveries I found scattered in the branches of his family tree:
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How Many Heartbeats Does Each Species Get in a Lifetime?

Have you ever wondered how many heartbeats an average person has in their lifetime? What about for cats or dogs or other animals? Turns out because of metabolic rates and size of different species, each animal gets around a billion beats. More »

Tom Teicholz: Bill Clinton Transforms LA

President Bill Clinton, Inventor Dean Kamen, White House Chief Technology officer Ken Park and Astronaut Leland Melvin were among the big name speakers at this year’s by-invitation-only TRANS4M conference, held at the California Science Center in Los Angeles this past Thursday.
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Drone List Released By FAA Shows Which Police Departments Want To Fly Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), commonly known as drones, may be coming to a police department near you.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has released an updated drone authorization list as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request made by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a non-profit organization for digital civil liberties.

The new list reveals 81 entities that have applied for permission to fly drones in U.S. airspace, including a number of government agencies and universities. Seventeen police departments and sheriff’s offices across the country have also filed, among them are stations in Little Rock, Ark., Gadsden, Ala., Miami, Fla., Ogden, Utah, and Seattle, Wash.

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