Gawker Frat Blames Blacks for Making Racially Insensitive Party About Race | Jezebel Haunted House A

Gawker Frat Blames Blacks for Making Racially Insensitive Party About Race | Jezebel Haunted House Attraction Includes Being Touched by a Man in Underwear | Kotaku The 12 Best Games for the iPad | Lifehacker The Scientifically Best Time to Drink Your Coffee

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Who Actually Owns Your Favorite Beers

Who Actually Owns Your Favorite Beers

Thirsty? Nothing like an ice cold Leinenkugel or a Goose Island. Infinitely better than that watered-down Natty Light or, worse, Keystone…. right? You might cherish your small-batch brewery buzz, but the truth of the matter is that you probably have no idea just how big the people backing your beer actually are. Here’s a breakdown of some of the biggest brews actual origins.

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Build A Special Centerpiece For The Concrete In Design Contest!

Partner with European super-star designers to make concrete centerpieces!ITALCEMENTI, ALESSI and LPWK Design Studio have partnered up to find a
designer who can take their innovative mortar mixture and create a
brilliant centerpiece with it to become a mass produced product!

Rhapsody changes its look for iOS 7, enhances radio experience with new features

It may be a little late to the party, but Rhapsody today updated its app to meet the looks of Apple’s iOS 7. Aside from going the flat route on the overall design, the application has also been improved with a number of handy features throughout. Listeners will now see a swipe-to-reveal menu (much …

Is Nikon About to Release a New Small Full-Frame Camera to Rival Sony?

Nikon has been teasing the photography world lately with a series of seductive videos that hint at some amazing cool camera on the horizon. Will this thing actually be what people expect, and can it rival the recent Sony powerhouses?

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It’s Finally Safe to Make Your Friends Use Twitter

It's Finally Safe to Make Your Friends Use Twitter

The Twitterscape has evolved steadily in the last five years, but maybe never more significantly than in the last week. With the addition of photo/video previews and inline interactions nestled directly into the tweets themselves, it’s a whole other playing field—one your Twitter-phobic friends will actually like. Here’s how to ease them in.

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A Love Story That Spawned A Hardware Revolution In The Kitchen

nomiku-team

Neither of them had any entrepreneurial history before they met. Abe Fetterman was a plasma physics Ph.D. at Princeton and Lisa Qiu had worked in hospitality at Jean-Georges and Mario Batali before entering the magazine world.

But while watching Top Chef episodes during their first week of dating, they clicked.

Lisa, who was working around some of the most elite chefs in the world, saw an immersion circulator on a Top Chef episode. These devices are used to cook with the “sous-vide” method, where food is vacuum sealed and slow-cooked in a water bath to a precise and even temperature. High-end chefs have raved that sous-vide helps them create perfectly cooked food, like steaks where the core is evenly rare without having burnt exteriors.

She confessed that she would have loved to have had one.

But at the time, sous-vide machines cost well over $1,000, which was far out of reach for an admittedly money-poor grad student and associate magazine editor in Manhattan.

So Abe gallantly offered to make one with off-the-shelf parts for about $50.

It was the beginning of a partnership that would spawn a company, a family and an adventure through the factories of Shenzhen, DIY workshops in the Lower East Side and then Silicon Valley. Ultimately, the now-married couple wants to start a home-cooking revolution where the once avant-garde technique of sous-vide becomes cheap and easy for everyone.

They just released the Nomiku, which is the product of well over a year’s work and has a pre-order price of $299.95. It’s a home sous-vide machine that you can plop into a bucket of water, and then turn a knob to an exact temperature. It then circulates water around whatever it is that you’re working on – be it eggs or salmon in a bag.

“Nomiku is all about modernizing your whole kitchen,” Lisa said. “We see the kitchen as a home manufacturing center. It should be both clean and beautiful.”

She went on, “When we started, the cheapest immersion circulator was $1,000. We completely disrupted the whole market and we’re making a whole, completely new one.”

Not long after Abe made a DIY sous-vide machine, they started running workshops in Lower Manhattan for other hobbyists and chefs who wanted to hack their kitchen appliances.

Eventually, they came up with an idea to create an affordable sous-vide machine – something that would be way easier for regular people than the kitchen appliance hacks they had been teaching. To put their project in motion, they joined a cross-border hardware accelerator that links San Francisco and Shenzhen called HAXLR8R.

While getting totally burned out designing the product and negotiating with suppliers, they took a vacation to Thailand where they reconnected with a former Momofuku line chef named Wipop Bam Suppipat, who had taken some of their Manhattan DIY workshops.

Luckily enough, he turned out to be an RISD grad with a degree in industrial design. They spent days together talking non-stop about the product until the point where it became a no-brainer for Suppipat to join as the third co-founder.

Last July, they ran a Kickstarter campaign that raised the most out of any other proposal in the food category.

With the $586,000 they raised came the tough part, which involved working through all of the design and logistical issues necessary to create a functioning prototype.

“We got really really burned out,” Lisa said. “It was 24/7 with barely any sleep, working on a prototype every day.”

Even so, the trio had complementary skills. Lisa had the Mandarin necessary to negotiate with manufacturers and navigate the often frustrating local business culture, while Abe and Suppipat had the technical and design chops to create a prototype that was easy to use and cheaper to make.

“Abe is a genius. He did a lot of the magic,” Lisa said. “I don’t think you could’ve gone to Shenzhen and done this. But we had a good melange of mentors from HAXLR8R, I speak Mandarin and we used a lot of new technologies like 3D printers.”

They were able to build the initial Nomiku with about $20,000. Still, there were setbacks. They found that steam was leaking into the Nomiku’s motor system, creating the risk that the device would rust. They also had to secure a UL certification from a third-party lab to make sure the Nomiku was safe to retail in the U.S.

After a few months of production setbacks (which are pretty common for Kickstarter projects), they launched the Nomiku last month. They also raised a small seed round from angels, including i/o Ventures’ partners Paul and Dan Bragiel, Ligaya Tichy, who previously ran community for Airbnb, and former EA Popcap executive producer and Tilting Point co-founder Giordano Contestabile.

I ran a test of it side-by-side along some other DIY immersion circulators and a competing Anova product. (This is because when you host a sous-vide dinner in San Francisco, everyone offers to bring their own machine, even ones they built themselves).

We made vegetables like eggplant with harissa, Romanesco cauliflower with lemon and anchovies and asparagus with the Nomiku, while doing meats and eggs in the other devices.

I’m new to sous-vide cooking, but it did definitely improve the taste of eggs, shrimp and thicker cuts of salmon.

Nomiku faces competition from much bigger, well-funded competitors like Anova, a lab equipment company that migrated into making water bath products for cooks, and PolyScience, another similar competitor.

A more experienced sous-vide cook and Anova-using friend had the following feedback: he felt that Nomiku’s user experience was more intuitive with a rotating dial instead of a touchscreen. But he said that it lacked features like a timer and was slightly slower in getting the water bath to the appropriate temperature than the Anova.

Update: Nomiku said this difference is because their product uses a PTC heating element instead of a conventional coil heater like the Anova. The reason for this design choice is that PTC heating elements don’t burnt out and self-limits their power when they get too hot.

Nomiku’s heating has a slight heating curve from being a PTC element (the type that never burns out and self limits its power when too hot) versus the Anova with conventional coil heater.

But the Fettermans and Suppipat don’t seem that fazed by their better-capitalized competitors.

“I don’t know what their strategy is and I’m not worried about them,” she said. “What we worry about is whether our customers are happy. Did they have a great experience? With every great idea you will have competitors. The only thing you can do is focus.”


Woman cited for Glassing and driving ‘pretty sure’ she’ll fight ticket

Cecilia Abadie, legal pioneer?

(Credit: One Minute News/Screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET)

More than once, I’ve seen people wearing their Google Glass on the street as if it were a badge of honor.

Now, the first woman to have been ticketed for donning Google’s futuristic nose-adornment at the wheel, is defending her own honor.

In an interview with the Associated Press on Thursday, software developer Cecilia Abadie seems already to be preparing her defense.

“The Glass was on, but I wasn’t actively using it,” were her words.

In essence, she wasn’t commanding her Glass to do anything, so they sat in a passive mode like a dog waiting for the orange ball to be thrown.

It is said that the officer who stopped her did so because she was allegedly speeding. However, when he noticed that her eyewear looked a touch extra-terrestrial, he added a citation for distracted driving.

[Read more]

Related Links:
Woman gets ticket for wearing Google Glass while driving
The 404 1,375: Where we lift the curtain on our new studio (podcast)
Google smartwatch: Will it be an ‘iPhone moment’ for wearables?
An appreciation for the Nexus 4, the little smartphone that could
Police using big rigs to catch texting drivers

    



Should This Historic Architectural Icon Be Razed?

Even in a city famed for the sheer scope of its award-winning architecture, the old Prentice Women’s Hospital building in downtown Chicago stands out, thanks to its sculptural, futuristic facade. But soon, Prentice might not be standing at all—if Northwestern University has its way.

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Expand NY: Come see bionic suits, play VR games, mingle with robots and get special perks courtesy of Outlook.com

November’s here, and that means Expand NY is mere days away, people! If you’re among those unfortunate souls who have yet to buy their tickets to the show, perhaps a rundown of some of what you’ll see on the show floor will serve as sufficient enticement to join us.

Like robots? We’ve got those in …