Pixar inspires graphic comment on NSA surveillance

Here comes Luxo Jr.? Not exactly.

(Credit: SQorck/YouTube screenshot by CNET)

Living in the emotional Switzerland of my blissful neutrality, as I do, it’s warming when people are inspired to create art to express dissent.

So here is a very simple piece of animation, designed to emote a certain frustration with goings-on in the secret areas of government.

It was delivered to me in an anonymous e-mail — address snowdenhatesrussianfood@gmail.com — that seemed to have been encrypted by goats.

However, I understand it was first posted to Reddit and has now taken on a life of its very public own, with almost 1 million views on YouTube.

More Technically Incorrect

Paralyzed artist paints with mind alone

Heide Pfüetzner paints wearing an EEG cap that measures spikes in her brain activity.

(Credit: Startnext)

Heide Pfüetzner calls her 2007 diagnosis with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig’s disease, a “personal catastrophe.” Six years later, she’s celebrating a personal triumph as an exhibit of her paintings, all created by her mind controlling a computer, makes its debut.

The exhibit, titled “Brain on Fire,” opened Friday on Easdale, a small island off the west coast of Scotland. Visitors to the Easdale Island Hall there will see vibrantly colored digital paintings created by the paralyzed artist using a computer program that lets her control digital brushes, shapes, and colors by concentrating on specific points on the screen.

Heide Pfüetzner

(Credit: Startnext)

“For the first time, this project gives me the opportunity to show the world that the ALS has not been the end of my life,” Pfüetzner says on the Startnext crowdfunding page where she exceeded her $6,500 goal for mounting an exhibit in Easdale. Pfüetzner’s daughter lives on the island; the longtime painter visited often before her illness and considers it one of her favorite destinations.

[Read more]

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Buy the 11th Doctor’s First Car on eBay

I know that you really had your heart set on buying the TARDIS, but Matt Smith is not getting rid of that. But he is parting with his first car. This Vauxhall Corsa was the first vehicle he purchased at age 18. It’s a 2000 model and it still runs, with only 60,000 miles on it.

matt smith car
Smith had this to say:

“While I have been travelling the universe in my TARDIS, my much-loved Vauxhall Corsa, aka The Shed, has been parked outside my parents’ house. As my first ever car, it has seen lots of adventures, not to mention a fair few mishaps (hence the dents). I’ll be very sad to see it go but I understand my parents want their driveway back! I’d love to find a new owner for this great little car, particularly as all the profits will go to Starlight, which is an amazing charity that brightens the lives of seriously and terminally ill children.”

He holds a special place in his heart for this car, but it is time to let go. Head over to eBay and put in a bid for a good cause.

[via BuzzFeed via Nerd Approved]

How to Set Up a PC, the Right Way

How to Set Up a PC, the Right Way

All expecting parents have read What to Expect When You’re Expecting, because when that little bundle of joy drops out of mommy, you’d better be ready with lots of paper towels and a whole lot of specialized knowledge about what to do from that moment forward. Though it’s not quite as messy (or scary), setting up a new PC requires a similar sort of informed approach if you want to raise it properly from the moment it squirts out of the Fedex truck and into your life.

Read more…

    

Oculus explains the battles against latency and motion sickness in VR

Oculus Rift staring into space

Current VR just can’t match our natural experiences — real life doesn’t have much lag, for example. However, Oculus has just published a pair of research posts showing the ways that it’s closing the gap between simulation and reality. Steve LaValle, Oculus’ Principal Scientist, explains how prediction minimizes the latency inherent to head tracking; coder Tom Forsyth, meanwhile, has advice on what developers can do to reduce motion sickness. Both studies dive deep, and may not be for the faint-hearted. If you’re willing to follow Oculus down the rabbit hole, however, you may learn a thing or two about VR’s future.

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Via: Oculus Blog

Source: Oculus (1), (2)

All You Can Arcade is Like GameFly for Arcade Machines

If you love the idea of playing classic arcade games, but don’t want to be tied down to just a single machine, you could always build a MAME cabinet. But that doesn’t give you the exact controls and screen of the original machine. If you’re an arcade purist, you need to play on the actual machines.

But if you’re like me, you don’t have the money or space to dedicate to dozens of arcade machines in your home. Well, assuming this new service takes off, you may soon be able to play different arcade machines all the time, using a model similar to Netflix or GameFly.

all you can arcade

With All You Can Arcade, you can keep arcade machines in your house for a rental fee of $75 a month each, or you can trade them in whenever you feel like it for another machine. Renters can select to keep 1, 2 or 3 games at a time. The site provides not only geotargeted listings of available machines, but tools for arcade machine owners to manage their rentals and deliveries.

arcade journey

The site charges no delivery or pickup fees to renters. Arcade machine owners keep 75% of all rental fees to cover the cost of the machines and their costs. While I’m not certain there’s a ton of money to be made, there’s definitely an opportunity for arcade machine owners to earn a little extra money from their machines – as long as they can handle the local pick-ups and deliveries without too much expense.

all you can arcade truck

At this point, the service is launching with a number of games available for delivery and pick-up in the San Francisco and Sacramento, California areas, but hopes to expand to other areas in the future.

BlackBerry Z10 subsidy increases as sales suffer

The BlackBerry Z10 is the one phone that aims to revive the company and increase its market share, but seeing as how BlackBerry suffered a loss last quarter, they’re going to have to pull out the big guns. A handful of major carriers and retailers have discounted the Z10 to as low as $49 in order to increase sales for the new BlackBerry 10 device.

blackberry_z10_review_sg_0-580x369

It’s only been four months since the Z10′s release, but it seems BlackBerry has waited long enough for sales to increase, and they’re wanting units out the door ASAP. Both Amazon and Best Buy have discounted the phone to a measly $49 after signing a two-year contract. That’s a whopping 75% off of the original $199 price tag.

As for the carriers, AT&T and Verizon are now selling the device for only $99 – half off of the original price. If you’re looking for the best deal, hitting up either Amazon or Best Buy would be the best option, obviously, but $99 is still a decent price for a phone that’s only four months old.

Off-contract prices for the phone are remaining the same, however, and it doesn’t look like T-Mobile is offering any kind of discount on the Z10 either. According to the Wall Street Journal, a BlackBerry spokesperson said that the price cut is merely just a “part of life cycle management to tier the pricing for current devices to make room for the next ones,” and “now is the right time to adjust the price.”

Four months does seem a bit early to start bringing the price down on devices, but does this mean we’ll see a second-generation Z10 sooner than we would normally expect? The company is still pumping out updates for the Z10, including BB 10.1, as well as what looks to be BB 10.2 that was leaked earlier this month.

VIA: Wall Street Journal


BlackBerry Z10 subsidy increases as sales suffer is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Napolitano Will Inherit Turmoil As University Of California’s New President

By Sharon Bernstein

LOS ANGELES, July 13 (Reuters) – In hiring Janet Napolitano to run the sprawling University of California, state officials are counting on the Homeland Security chief’s political savvy and fund-raising prowess to restore a system racked by years of budget cuts and turmoil.

Napolitano, a two-term Arizona governor plucked by President Barack Obama in 2009 to be Secretary of Homeland Security, said on Friday she would leave that post to run the university’s 10-campus system, pending final approval by the board of regents expected next week.

Chosen from among more than 300 candidates in part because of her political skills, the 55-year-old Democrat will take the helm as the university is struggling to recover from economic crises that have eaten away at the state budget on and off for nearly two decades.

Cuts of nearly $1 billion over the last five years have led to tuition increases and class shortages, and have strained relations with faculty and staff through the imposition of furlough days and hiring freezes.

“Her job is to restore the glory of the system,” said Jack Stripling, who covers college leadership for the Chronicle of Higher Education.

To do that, Napolitano will have to persuade the politicians who control the state budget that a high-end university is an asset worth paying for – while showing faculty, staff and the 234,000 students that she is on their side.

“The thinking is, you bring in someone with political savvy to solve what is essentially a political problem,” Stripling said.

In making their choice of a new president, university leaders picked someone with experience managing a large, highly political organization, said UC spokeswoman Dianne Klein. The university budget, including its hospitals and medical centers, is more than $24 billion.

“It’s a dynamic position, and she is somebody who has experience managing big complex organizations,” Klein said.

TIGHT BUDGET

Napolitano’s tenure will begin as the campuses – along with the state – recover from prolonged economic downturn. But even though the legislature and Governor Jerry Brown have restored some funds, budgets remain tight.

As a result, Napolitano will need to find creative ways to raise money and trim spending, even as she preserves the quality of teaching and research for which the system is known.

“Secretary Napolitano has the strength of character and an outsider’s mind that will well serve the students and faculty,” Brown said in a statement. “It will be exciting to work with her.”

But Robert Powell, a chemical engineering professor at UC Davis who heads the system-wide academic senate, said Napolitano will also need to spend time getting to know the university by meeting with students and professors and touring campuses.

“She needs to get out to the campuses – meet with faculty, meet with staff, look and see what these places are like and how students live here,” Powell said.

A lawyer by training, Napolitano is an unusual choice because she has not worked in academia. Her predecessor, Mark Yudof, is also a lawyer but was chancellor of the University of Texas and president of the University of Minnesota before taking the reins in the most populous U.S. state.

Napolitano was born in New York City and raised in Pittsburgh and Albuquerque. She was appointed a U.S. attorney for Arizona by Bill Clinton, and later elected state attorney general and governor.

As Homeland Security chief, she drew the ire of some Republicans, who said she painted an overly rosy picture of the Administration’s border security efforts.

Napolitano will be the 20th president of the University of California, and the first woman. She acknowledged that she was not a typical candidate and said she would meet with faculty, students, politicians and others to learn about the system.

“Whether preparing to govern a state or to lead an agency as critical and complex as Homeland Security, I have found the best way to start is simply to listen,” Napolitano said. (Additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler)

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Planetary Nebula NGC 2392: The Radiant Death Of A Star (PHOTO)

Stars burn long and bright, sometimes up to billions of years, so when it comes to the end of their life span, the celestial spheres tend to go out brilliantly.

Planetary nebula NGC 2392, a star located 4,200 light-years from Earth and now in one of its final phases of life, is no exception. This “Eskimo Nebula” meets its death in a radiant blaze of glory in a composite photo released by NASA on Thursday.

So which colors in the image correspond to parts of the nebula? NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory explains in a statement :

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More on Solar System

Sad Songs May Actually Elicit Pleasant Emotions

If you’ve ever gotten weepy listening to Coldplay’s “Fix You” (Just us?), new research may have an explanation for why.

Scientists at the Tokyo University of the Arts and the RIKEN Brain Science Institute in Japan found that listening to sad music can actually trigger positive emotions. They explained that sadness triggered from art is not the same kind of sadness triggered by an actual sad event, and in fact could actually feel pleasant.

“Emotion experienced by music has no direct danger or harm unlike the emotion experienced in everyday life. Therefore, we can even enjoy unpleasant emotion such as sadness,” researchers wrote in the study. “If we suffer from unpleasant emotion evoked through daily life, sad music might be helpful to alleviate negative emotion.”

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