Make Your Own Concrete Thwomp

Like most Mario video game characters, Thwomps are bad guys, yet are still somehow cute. These spiked cinder blocks have personality. Sure, they are trying to pulverize you, but you still have to love them.

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If you want a nice solid concrete version, (because what else would you make a Thwomp out of?) Instructables user mactothefuture can show you how. He made this replica of the Thwomp from Super Mario Bros. and it looks awesome.

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He used a mold box and cast the block from concrete. Now it is ready to smash anything the goes under it. Working with concrete is tricky, but I bet you can do it with some practice. All of the details are up on Instructables if you want to give it a try.

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[via Nerd Approved]

Ninja Blocks Starts Pre-Orders For The Ninja Sphere Smart Home Hub

NinjaSphere Ninja Blocks, the Australian startup that created Ninja Blocks to create physical triggers for IFTTT style recipes that can detect motion, temperature and humidity, a window and door sensor and more, successfully followed those up with the Ninja Sphere, a connected home smart hub which raised over $700,000 AUD back in January on Kickstarter. Now, the company is set to ship the Ninja Sphere, and… Read More

HP's Luxury Smartwatch Looks Absolutely Stunning

HP's Luxury Smartwatch Looks Absolutely Stunning

If you thought the Moto 360 was beautiful , brace yourself for HP’s luxury smartwatch. This thing is just drop-dead gorgeous.

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Take a look at HP's luxury smartwatch

Despite their utility, smartwatches remain a geeky niche item thanks to a certain lack of je ne sais quoi. However, HP is partnering with a retailer called Gilt to build an Android and iOS compatible smartwatch that may finally tick the style box,…

An illustrated history of the 'Console Wars'

Casio G-SHOCK GBA-400 puts features where they belong

casio-gba-400-0Smartwatches are becoming a fad but veteran watch maker Casio isn’t taking the bait. Instead of overloading its Bluetooth-enabled G-SHOCK GBA-400 with smartphone features, it is taking the opposite approach and is putting the “smart” back into the smartphone but still leaves the watch in control. Even with the advent of these sophisticated and hi-tech time pieces, there are those … Continue reading

Twitter’s latest transparency report: the struggle over national security requests

Twitter has published its latest transparency report, and in it we see the continual struggle tech companies face when it comes to the balancing act between government and users. The company has pushed for permission to publish more detailed information on national security requests, but still has not gained it. Twitter has been fighting for the right to publish more … Continue reading

Logitech G402 Hyperion Fury is touted to be the world’s fastest gaming mouse

hyperion-g402When it comes to gaming peripherals, one particular company does tend to stand out from the rest of the ordinary crowd, and that would be Swiss-based Logitech. They have introduced a fair number of gaming mice and keyboards in the past, and it does not look as though their efforts are about to stop anytime soon. No sir, in fact they will forge onward with what they deem to be the world’s fastest gaming mouse, which means it would have outdone the Logitech G502 Proteus Core Tunable gaming mouse that was announced earlier this year in April. Ladies and gentlemen, kindly welcome the new Logitech G402 Hyperion Fury gaming mouse!

This ultra fast FPS gaming mouse will boast of Logitech’s exclusive Fusion Engine sensor technology which is capable of tracking more than 500 inches per second (IPS) reliably, while Logitech’s exclusive Delta Zero sensor technology is touted to deliver unrivaled accuracy throughout your gaming exploits and adventures. It is hardware like this that makes it harder and harder to blame the peripherals we use for a particular loss in a match, which leaves the last scapegoat – bad luck, standing. How bitter is the truth that one does not have what it takes to make the cut right at the very echelon.

The Fusion Engine in the Hyperion Fury will combine state-of-the-art optical sensor technology with an accelerometer and gyroscope, hence allowing it to provide unmatched tracking speed. There will be a 32-bit on-board ARM processor that will power the Fusion Engine in Hyperion Fury, enabling reliable and accurate tracking speeds which exceed 500 inches per second. Not only that, the clever use of lightweight materials and low-friction feet would pave the way for high-speed moves, all the while offering the most comfortable feeling. DPI shifting also enables the Hyperion Fury to go from 4000 DPI to 240 DPI in the blink of an eye. Expect the Logitech G402 Hyperion Fury FPS Gaming Mouse to arrive later this month for a relatively affordable $59.99 a pop.

Press Release
[ Logitech G402 Hyperion Fury is touted to be the world’s fastest gaming mouse copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

The Gaza War: Concerted Efforts for a Ceasefire or a Humanitarian Truce

The positions of U.S. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry concerning Gaza are puzzling, because of their blurry nature, incoherence, and their lack of a corresponding strategy of thinking and execution. The efforts of the Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon are marred by dithering and over-cautiousness, as he fears inviting Israeli resentment, Arab censure, and American wrath. Turkey has butted in on the Gaza issue to rival and outbid Egypt, after the latter toppled the Muslim Brotherhood-led regime and its regional project, of which Turkey and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan were a key sponsor as he turned against the secular traditions of Atatürk and the Turkish republic. Iran kept mum in the beginning, before it finally spoke through the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and called for arming Hamas – which Tehran has been supplying with rockets via the tunnels in Gaza. Qatar has almost installed itself as the exclusive representative of Hamas, negotiating on its behalf and communicating its demands to Washington, New York, and Cairo. Saudi Arabia has supported the Egyptian ceasefire initiative, and expressed reservations about the so-called Qatari-Turkish alternative initiative. Saudi Arabia is also keen on not abandoning or disregarding the Palestinian Authority led by Mahmoud Abbas, and seeks to save the Arab peace initiative from total demise. Then there is Hamas, which sees events in Gaza as a strategic achievement for having brought it back to the political fore. The events in Gaza also gave Hamas the chance to challenge Israel’s might and military machine, made it a de facto negotiating party opposite Israel, and rallied sympathy and support from the international and Islamic public opinion. As for Israel, it has now added to its list of demands disarming the Palestinian factions, demilitarizing Gaza, and demolishing the tunnels either through international guarantees or the destruction of homes and buildings situated on top of them, at any cost. In the meantime, the number of Palestinian civilian casualties has surpassed 1,300 with around 7,000 injured. In the meantime as well, and while Hamas’s rockets negotiate with Israel’s, a Palestinian child is being killed every hour. And in the meantime still, the chances for peace are on a path to extinction amid increasing clamoring for a “humanitarian truce,” while the specter of more massacres looms on the horizon.

With its viciousness and violence, Israel has reaped a strategic setback in its war with an organization it designates as “terrorist,” and yet with which it was forced to negotiate – through a third party – for a ceasefire. Israel has reaped for itself a reputation for moral bankruptcy and lack of values as it has justified the targeting of civilians, the killing of children, and the shelling of UN-protected schools.

The Israeli government – and the Israeli public’s support of its actions – has drawn the ire of the international public opinion, which can no longer bear seeing the child victims, destroyed homes, and the bombardment of the only power plant in Gaza and its hospitals.

For the first time, a significant number of commentators, historians, and academics now dare to describe Israel’s actions as “ethnic cleansing.” Some of them have stated that what had happened in 1948 was truly “ethnic cleansing” meant to pave the way for the Jewish state of Israel after driving out the Palestinians, both Christians and Muslims. More and more voices are criticizing Israeli practices in Gaza, where people are humiliated and deprived of the chance to lead normal lives because of Israel’s crippling blockade.

Some in the American – and not just the European – media began challenging the narrative that Israel is exercising its right to self-defense, and that Israel warns families to evacuate their homes before shelling them – but evacuate to where, as everyone is now asking? Questions have started making their way to the public opinion regarding what Israel really means by insisting on getting international recognition for it as a Jewish state – in the sense of a state free of Palestinians – and what this may entail in terms of forced deportations and “ethnic cleansing” in the 21st century.

Certainly, all this anger directed at Israel has not exempted Hamas from the responsibility of hiding rockets among Palestinian civilians, launching rockets on Israelis, and building tunnels to receive sophisticated weapons from Iran and donations from countries and individuals sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood. All this while Hamas was joining a government led by the Palestinian Authority, which is committed to peaceful negotiations rather than armed struggle. Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, and other armed organizations, wanted to impose themselves as direct players against Israel – or others wanted them to do so.

These “others” have different identities, nationalities, and goals. Who was behind the abduction and murder of three young Israelis? Who is pushing Hamas to launch rockets and reject the Egyptian initiative for a ceasefire? Perhaps Qatar and Turkey encouraged Hamas to reject the Egyptian initiative, but it is Iran whose name is linked in more than one forum to the incitement to ignite a confrontation with Israel. The reason, as many are suggesting, is that Iran wants to tell the Obama administration that it possesses the keys to the Middle East, not just in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Sudan, and Yemen, but also in the Israeli backyard.

Tehran is aware that President Barack Obama wants more than anything to have the conclusion of a nuclear deal and the normalization of relations with Iran become his historical legacy. Tehran believes that it can drag the United States to where it wants it to be, namely, to give Iran what it wants – the nuclear deal, blessing its regional role, and pledging not to attempt to overthrow its regime. Iran believes that the time is right for bargains and to communicate a message highlighting its importance in terms of developments in the Palestinian – Israeli conflict, since it can either stop the flow of rockets or double the number of rockets sent to Hamas and other organizations.

A ceasefire is the first stop that the UN and the United States are seeking, and to achieve it, Ban Ki-moon is closely coordinating with John Kerry to assist him in his efforts. Ban Ki-moon has been expressing sorrow, regret, and resentment on a daily basis, calling for a “humanitarian truce,” “ceasefire,” “dialogue,” and addressing the root causes of the problem. The key to a ceasefire seem to be in the hands of Qatar, Turkey, and Iran in light of their ties to Hamas and Islamic Jihad, regardless of the implications of Qatari-Turkish support for the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood and of Iran being the Shiite sponsor of the resistance against Israel.

In parallel, the hurdles impeding a ceasefire are growing not only because of Hamas’s rejection of a permanent ceasefire if not accompanied by an end to the blockade, but also because Israel is determined to continue the war on Gaza to destroy the tunnels, having realized that this is an achievable goal while eliminating Hamas’s rocket arsenal would be much more difficult to accomplish.

Efforts are focused on achieving a ceasefire or a humanitarian truce accompanied by behind-the-scenes efforts for an agreement that would address both Israel and Hamas’s demands. In other words, according to a Western diplomatic source, the aim is to “reach a ceasefire agreement accompanied by an agreement that would address other issues, including disarmament in Gaza, opening the crossings, and the return of the Palestinian Authority to the Strip.” The source said, “Disarmament is intended to be a guarantee to Israel that Gaza would not be used again to launch rockets, which, if agreed upon, would require a monitoring mechanism in place.” The diplomat, who is familiar with these efforts, stressed the “importance of giving the Palestinians guarantees regarding the opening of the crossings and the movement of persons and goods, as well as fishing, and the return of the Palestinian Authority to Gaza.”

How realistic these aspirations are is something that is yet to be determined. For one thing, they remain exploratory ideas being developed by Washington with Riyadh, Doha, Cairo, and Ankara, but not with Tehran, unless this is being done secretly. The Israeli campaign against John Kerry, whom the Israelis have described as an “alien,” has backfired somewhat, but it did not shut down communications between the Obama administration and the government of Benjamin Netanyahu. John Kerry is still looking for that elusive solution, and believes that the tragedy in Gaza could move things toward radical solutions to the Gaza Strip, namely transforming the Strip into a demilitarized zone and disarming Palestinian factions in exchange for lifting the siege on Gaza and the return of the Palestinian Authority to the Strip.

Israel might be interested in such a solution, which would render Gaza a model for what the Palestinian state as desired by Israel would look like – that is, a demilitarized state that does not have sovereignty. What Israel does not want and will not allow is the “two-state” solution as John Kerry envisions and as the international community has adopted it.

Therefore, it is difficult to imagine that radical solutions to the Palestinian question are within reach. Instead, it is possible to imagine that hundreds of Palestinian civilian victims, if not thousands, may perish before a ceasefire agreement is reached between Hamas and Israel, one that would tackle the relationship between them on the ruins of Gaza and its people.

What will not happen is forcing Egypt to open its border with Gaza so that Israel can bombard it and drive its people out. What is likely to happen, however, is Israel taking all military measures to ensure the destruction of the tunnels and to prevent their reconstruction in order to bring in more rockets, even if that took committing massacres that ruin Israel’s reputation further.

What will the Obama administration do? It will issue condemnations, as it had done against Israel’s shelling of an UNRWA-run school. It may allow a UN Security Council resolution to be passed, along the lines of the presidential statement it allowed to be issued last week. This had set a precedent in U.S. attitudes regarding statements and resolutions issued by the UN Security Council on Israel, as the statement in question spoke about accountability and criticized the continuing violations of international humanitarian law.

What the Obama administration needs to do requires, first, going back to the drawing table to draft a strategy to address the Israeli – Palestinian conflict based on the facts on the ground, including, most notably, the fact that Netanyahu has declared that Israel would never accept Palestinian sovereignty in the West Bank or Gaza, in the process signaling the death of the “two-state solution,” which represents a pillar of U.S. policy.

A partial treatment of the Gaza issue one the basis of disarming it in return for lifting the siege is nothing more than an example of the radical decline in Washington’s positions, since this would undermine the “two-state solution” and accelerate its demise.

It remains that the Middle Eastern countries should stop taking advantage of the Palestinians, especially Turkey and Iran. But the Arab countries have also long exploited the Palestinian cause, and flooded Palestine with empty promises. It is time for these countries to either support a military solution explicitly and take part in the war with Israel, or find other ways to support the civil resistance of the Palestinians before Israel begins implementing the demographic solution, which requires Israel to engage in “ethnic cleansing” to become a purely Jewish state. There are many options. At the Palestinian level, it has become urgent for all rival leaderships to decide whether a Palestinian child killed every hour is a cheap price to pay or whether it is too high a cost.

Translated from Arabic by Karim Traboulsi

RaghidaDergham.Com

10 Tips For Surviving Your Quarter Life Crisis

When I think about my quarterlife crisis, I don’t think about regrettable text messages or the science behind 4 a.m. nachos that “soak up” alcohol — though those things were certainly a part of it. I think, instead, of the disconnect I felt between what I was doing and what I actually wanted. Though I regularly committed to jobs, boyfriends and friendships, I completely lacked conviction in any of those choices. I passively accepted whatever came my way.

One restless evening while mindlessly applying to jobs I hoped might save me, I realized how ridiculous it was that I expected a job, boyfriend or carefully constructed Instagram persona to rescue me. To be happy, I needed to take control of my choices. And I knew my biggest hurdle would be self-confidence. Finding self-confidence was as illusive to me as finding twenty bucks in an old jacket pocket.

I began writing about my struggle to escape various twentysomething ruts for the website HelloGiggles and quickly realized that what I was going through was relatable — and it had actionable solutions. Confidence became more and more tangible to me. My book The Twentysomething Guide To Getting It Together [Adams Media, $16.99] focuses on the practical tactics that helped me start feeling good about my life. Here are some of those tactics, which build confidence while simultaneously conquering any quarterlife crisis — because, after all, one victory does not exist without the other.

1. Find a career mentor. They are all around you!
You are not alone in this — as much as you may think so while struggling to fall asleep at night. Not only do you have friends to commiserate; you’ve got coworkers, bosses and teachers who are happy to share their secrets. So get on their calendar and learn their magical ways. Having the courage to speak your goals aloud can help make them feel real.

2. Do whatever it takes to limit your social media consumption. Whatever it takes.

Some ideas? Don’t let your phone or computer automatically save your social media passwords. Keep technology just out of reach. Give your roommate a water gun and instruct them to hit you right in the eye every time you log in. Social Media can be a fun way to check out your aunt’s Farmville activity, but it can also damage your confidence. Profiles represent each member’s greatest hits, not their experimental polka album. If you try to compare your real life to those standards, you may lose track of your own goals in favor of impressing others.

3. Exercise your brain to make positive connections.
Stop bombarding yourself with negativity. Contrary to the mythology that surrounds him, LeBron James was not born with the ability to make his free throws — he practiced until his brain became so comfortable with the motion he didn’t even need to think about it. In much the same way, your brain can be trained to think positively. How? Try giving out five compliments a day to the people around you. It’ll help you recognize life’s finer points.

4. Get to know your vices so well they can’t fool you anymore.
People use vices to distract themselves from responsibility. Some vices are obvious: smoking, television, videogames, etc. Others are a bit sneakier. During my quarterlife crisis, I did things like stay up hours past my bedtime trying to book the cheapest possible trip to a friend’s wedding. I hid procrastination behind a seemingly productive activity. Why I avoided something as glorious as sleep so adamantly, I’ll never know.

5. Don’t waste time trying to attain the perfect “beach body.”
In my twenties, I got pretty tired of trying to love my body: a finicky organic machine that would rather catch a cold than sprout even one lousy abdominal muscle. Taking care of your health should not be about loving your body, but about learning to love yourself. So take yourself on long runs on the beach, draw yourself an Epson salt bath and curl up with yourself for a long night’s sleep. You are worth it!

6. Get a planner and let it work it’s magic.
Write everything down and your planner will do the rest. It’ll keep track of bills, your toilet paper supply and whether happy hour is going to conflict with your friend’s improv show. Being on top of your schedule helps you to feel less like a scatterbrain and more in control. Maybe one day you’ll have a Spidey-sense for the things on your to-do list, but during your quarterlife crisis? Write everything down.

7. Don’t allow break ups to become breakdowns.
It seems obvious, but I’ll say it anyways: nobody has to be the bad guy during a break up. When feelings get hurt, there is an urge to place blame — but that’s not always helpful. Even if you outwardly blame the other person, you’ll inevitably end up blaming yourself deep down. So don’t engage in the blame game. Comfort yourself with a Die Hard movie whenever possible.

8. Don’t take your friends for granted. Maybe take them for ice cream, instead.
As hectic as it is to wrap your mind around adult responsibilities and as tempting as it is to accumulate large quantities of acquaintances, don’t blow off close friends in your twenties. Tell them what’s on your mind and listen to what’s on theirs because comparing notes on your quarter life crisis with a trusted confidant is essential to survival.

9. Make a five-year plan but don’t etch it in stone. Who are you? Moses?
It’s good to plan for the future: to look ahead and focus small tasks towards a larger goal. But make sure you are happy most of the time. Don’t be afraid to admit that you were wrong about your dream career. Take a deep breath and allow new inspiration in.

10. Don’t be so hard on yourself.
Your twenties are essentially Life Lessons 101, not a Master Class in Perfection. So relax! Save some soul-searching for your thirties, nerd!