Parent’s Voice Book Storyteller lets you be there even when you aren’t

parents-voice-book-storytellerChildren are extremely precious gifts, and boy, do they happen to grow up extremely fast. Having said that, it is best to always devote as much time as possible with them in order to enjoy their growing up years before they end up as rebellious teens who have forgotten the tender years that they spent with you. Some parents do carry out the tradition of reading bedtime stories to their children, but if you are unable to be there in person during certain times due to business travels and the like, then the $69.95 Parent’s Voice Book Storyteller would be the ideal replacement.

The Parent’s Voice Book Storyteller is a storytime buddy which would allow you to prerecord any picture book, allowing a child to hear it being read in your voice. Perfect for loved ones who are unable to be there at bedtime or story hour, the device itself can be clipped to the cover of any illustrated hardback or paperback, where it then records your voice as you read the book. You will have to do so page by page though, so no skimping on this part! Why not spring a surprise as well by inserting personal messages or even throwing in your very own sound effects for that special touch? The recorder is capable of recognizing each page visually, so should a child skip to the end of a book, or to flip back to the beginning, the narration will keep up with the pace. A trio of AA batteries will allow the Parent’s Voice Book Storyteller to run for up to 30 hours.
[ Parent’s Voice Book Storyteller lets you be there even when you aren’t copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Himalayan Heat keeps the room cozy during winter

himalayan-heaterFor those of us who happen to live in the northern hemisphere, winter is about to descend upon us, and that would mean making the necessary precautions in order to make sure that one will remain nice, warm and cozy right at home. Heating does take up a huge chunk of the monthly bills most of the time, and it is wise to take time to shop around for the most efficient and effective heater to ensure that everyone in your home remains warm and cozy, even when it is freezing outdoors. Why not do that in style with the $129.95 Himalayan Heat 1500W Electric Fireplace Heater?

While the Himalayan Heat does resemble the form factor of a fireplace, it does more than that – it functions like central heating instead. Not only that, it will be accompanied by a whisper quiet fan that is capable of heating up the place effectively as long as it is no larger than 180 sq. ft. in size. Offering the best of both worlds, you and your family will enjoy the instant ambiance of a traditional fireplace experience, while sporting a captivating design which will appease both classic and traditional decoration styles. It is perfect for condominiums, lofts, apartments or single homes. Using it is a snap – all that you need to do is to plug it in, and you’re good to go! The patented flame technology would offer you with a realistic flame which can be enjoyed regardless of the season – even without the heat turned on, just for the LED flame effect itself.
[ Himalayan Heat keeps the room cozy during winter copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Origami Millennium Falcon: Folding Hyperspace

She may not look like much, but she’s got folds where they count. This little adorable Millennium Falcon was made by Adamite85, an origami artist in the Czech Republic.

origami falcon 620x444magnify

I have no doubt that this simple, yet very accurate model of the Millennium Falcon could make the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs. And since it is origami, it probably folds space rather than going into hyperspace. That doesn’t really make it any faster though. It is an elegant vessel from a more civilized age.

I love how he got all of the details, but it just looks cutely squished, like an AT-AT stepped on it. Great job Adamite85.

Jony Ive Is So Focused On Design He Doesn’t Know Apple’s Key Financial Numbers

Jony Ive Apple design lead Jony Ive spoke to an audience at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art last night, the Wall Street Journal reports, addressing the difficulties in designing an Apple smartwatch. The Apple Watch design process was “difficult and humbling” because of the expectations consumers have with regards to wearable tech and fashion, Ive said, but perhaps his most… Read More

Divided cities learn lessons from one another's struggles

2014-10-31-2014oct31omalleybelfast.jpgPadraig O’Malley

By Charles M. Sennott

BELFAST — This city has risen in the aftermath of the 1998 Good Friday agreement, a treaty that brought an end to 30 years of sectarian violence known as “The Troubles.”

Pockets of despair and challenges still exist in finalizing the formula for a government shared between the country’s Catholics and Protestants. But the days of car bombings, violent street protests, sectarian killing and heavily armed soldiers patrolling the streets are over.

Investment is pouring into the economy. Employment is up. A once sprawling British army barracks is being transformed into a residential community. The notorious Crumlin Road Jail where paramilitaries were held is now a museum. You can feel the public confidence returning in the downtown area.

In the gloriously restored Edwardian architecture of City Hall, the 5th annual Forum for Cities in Transition (FCT) gathers political and civic leaders from 14 divided cities to “promote reconciliation through resilience.”

And this city knows resilience.

The simple concept behind the Forum for Cities in Transition is built on a philosophy of peace and reconciliation that is the life work of Padraig O’Malley, professor at the McCormack Graduate School of Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.

O’Malley’s core idea is that divided cities have much to learn from each other. There are, he believes, shared patterns as well as political, social and psychological traits that perpetuate conflict. The best way to overcome these patterns and traits is through an intervention by those who have experienced them and have learned how to break the cycle.

“You are here to share with each other and to learn from each other,” O’Malley told some 200 delegates from cities that include Baghdad, Jerusalem, Mitrovica in Kosovo and Kaduna, Nigeria among others.

“In all of your cities and societies, you face the same problems,” he said. “The process to end conflict is long and difficult and complex. You must not stop. Your societies must not stop. It’s hard, hard, hard work.”

The FCT was born out of a 1997 conference where members of the Ulster Unionist Party, which believes Northern Ireland should remain within the United Kingdom, refused direct talks with Sinn Fein, the political arm of the Irish Republican Army (IRA). The IRA had conducted a campaign of bombings and armed struggle against the British army with a goal of uniting the 26 counties in the South with the six counties in the North as one Irish republic.

The two parties were convened in South Africa, where O’Malley famously brought together both sides so that they could hear Nelson Mandela, freed after two decades in prison to lead his country to end apartheid, articulate a profound challenge: “We did it. Why can’t you?”

That was the beginning of a 17-year peace process for Northern Ireland. This year’s FCT is a show of progress.

Martin McGuinness, a former commander in the IRA and now the Deputy First Minister who shares power with the leading unionist party, spoke to the gathering at City Hall Thursday, saying, “We have been through a remarkable journey here.”

Referring to Belfast and his hometown of Derry, he added, “These two cities have changed incredibly over the last years.”

He described the effort in Derry to build a foot bridge that links the Catholic and Protestant neighborhoods on opposite sides of the River Foyle: “Sometimes small things can make a difference. Now people know each other, are working together and living together,” he said.

It’s called the Peace Bridge.

Northern Ireland’s “peace process has been a beacon of hope to other conflicts around the world,” McGuinness added. “Other people are looking to learn from the experiences we have had here. I see what is happening in Iraq, Syria, Eastern Ukraine, and it is absolutely heart breaking to see people losing their lives to conflict. I don’t go to these places offering a solution. None did that for us because it has to be done by the people themselves. All sides need a recognition that conflict can go on for a very long time unless they work together to stop it. If that motivation is missing, the fighting will continue.”

He took questions from a Palestinian delegation from Ramallah that said it was losing hope in its peace process, and from the Lebanese city of Tripoli about how best to provide care and counseling for fighters as they transition to peace. They were practical conversations, a sharing of valuable lessons about what works and what doesn’t in these divided societies.

But perhaps the most pointed question came from FCT delegate Valdete Idrizi of Mitrovica in Kosovo. The city is struggling to find peace after the end of the 1999 conflict that pitted Kosovar Albanian fighters against Serbian forces and paramilitaries under the late Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic.

Idrizi, who heads up Community Building Mitrovica, a non-governmental organization that seeks to build alliances between the different sides of the divide, talked about the bridge in her town. It, too, spans two divided communities – ethnic Albanian Muslims on one side and the Serbian Christians on the other – but it is not a “Peace Bridge” like the one in Derry. In fact it has repeatedly been the site of violent clashes as recently as this summer. UN peacekeeping forces stand beside idling Humvees that anchor both sides of the bridge.

Idrizi asked McGuinness if he would accept an invitation to their still-divided city and share the lessons he has learned about how to make the journey toward peace.

“We need your help,” she said.

McGuinness ended his talk, saying, “See you next year in Kosovo!”

GlobalPost Co-founder Charles M. Sennott is Executive Director of The GroundTruth Project, which trains and mentors the next generation of international correspondents to do social justice reporting that can make a difference, and to do it safely.

Naya Rivera Dons Slinky Backless Dress To UNICEF Masquerade Ball

Naya Rivera chose to wear a low-cut black backless dress with a thigh-high slit to UNICEF’s Next Generation Masquerade Ball on Thursday night at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery. She attended with her husband, Ryan Dorsey.

Rivera has been busy filming the last episodes of “Glee.” Season 6, the final season, is set to premiere next year.

“I’m sure it’s going to get crazy [emotional] at the end,” she told Glamour. “Because outside of high school, we never have a marker of time to see how people grow, so it’s just been very warm and fuzzy. Every single one of the cast is like a member of my family.”

naya rivera

naya rivera

naya rivera

What To Do When Your Daughter Gets Her Period

Stay calm.

If you’re the parent of a girl, inevitably, at some point she will emerge from the bathroom or come home from school and inform you, in some probably unexpected fashion, that her menstrual cycle has begun. It’s highly unlikely that she will use that particular genteel phrase, but whatever she says and no matter her age, Dr. Louise Greenspan, a co-author of “The New Puberty: How to Navigate Early Development in Today’s Girls,” says parents need to normalize it. “React in a calm way. Internally you may be freaking out that your 4th grader has her period, but externally you need to be calm.”

Something's Not Quite Right With This MSNBC Poll

Polling is a tricky business, and numbers can often be misleading, but it’s safe to say that there’s something suspect about this data:

polling gaffe
(via FTVLive)

We’re going to go ahead and hold off on trusting anything from “Sept. 39” …

This Week in Science: A Rocket Catastrophe, Miniature Stomachs, and a Seriously Smelly Comet

Seven days; lots of science in the news. Here’s our roundup of this week’s most notable and quotable items:

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The Antares rocket, built by private space outfit Orbital Sciences powered by refurbished Soviet engines from the 1960s, explosively failed to launch on its planned resupply mission to the International Space Station. Researchers found and positively identified a part from Amelia Earhart’s plane — a piece of aluminum recovered from an uninhabited south Pacific atoll. Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko smells like a combination of formaldehyde, rotten eggs, a dirty horse stable, vinegar, and bitter almonds.

Using stem cells, scientists created miniature human stomachs in the lab. The newly discovered Atlantic Coast leopard frog (Rana kauffeldi) is the first new frog found in the U.S. and Canada since 1986, and the first new frog found in New York or New England since 1882. The state of Louisiana moved to bar researchers who recently spent time in Ebola-affected African nations from attending a major scientific meeting being held in New Orleans in early November, sparking protests from scientists.

Hallucinogenic mushrooms seem to work by linking up brain regions that do not normally communicate with each other, a British-led team found. Hibernation may have saved mammals from the extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs. Thirty-three genes, many related to brain development, were found to have some connection to autism. Australian surgeons performed the first-ever “dead heart” transplants, using donor hearts that had stopped beating for about 20 minutes before being placed in the recipients.

Two ancient viruses were recovered from a 700-year-old chunk of caribou poop found in Canada. Swiss researchers developed a DNA barcode that could be used to track milk through the food system–even after it’s been turned into cheese or yogurt. Fish are smarter than previously assumed.

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“This Week In Science” is brought to you by the World Science Festival. For more engaging science news, conversations, media and more, check out the Festival’s website.

'Eat, Pray, Love' Author Elizabeth Gilbert Reveals Her Greatest Regret (VIDEO)

Elizabeth Gilbert’s 2006 memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, sparked a global conversation about what it means to find your calling and fulfill your life’s purpose. Her personal transformation — from a devastating divorce to a yearlong, soul-searching quest around the world — resonated deeply with millions of readers who could relate to Gilbert’s search for authentic happiness.

While Gilbert was sharing a lifetime’s worth of lessons with a live audience on Oprah’s The Life You Want Weekend Tour, one reader asked her an interesting question: What’s her greatest regret? As usual, her answer was honest and insightful.

“My greatest regret was that I didn’t learn how to tell the truth sooner,” Gilbert says. “That was a really big, hard thing for me that I actually have to say I’m still working on.”

Gilbert admits she spent her childhood, adolescence and young adulthood telling people what she thought they wanted to hear. “You asked me a question, I didn’t look into myself for the answer,” she says. “I look into your eyes like, ‘What do you want me to say?’ and I try to bring you that. And that got me in so much trouble.”

The reason is simple: we all want to be liked. “For years, I didn’t say no to people and I didn’t say the truth to people because I didn’t want them to not like me, and I didn’t want them to be mad at me and I didn’t want them to be disappointed.”

When she finally learned how to say no to people, Gilbert says exactly what she feared came true: they were disappointed and didn’t like her as much. “And that’s fine,” she says. “You let them go and you keep around you the people who can live in your truth with you. And the rest of them, say goodbye.”

Also during the tour, Gilbert shared her definition of God, gave tips on how to move past fear, and revealed her greatest spiritual teacher.

Find out when Oprah’s Life the Life You Want Weekend Tour is coming to a city near you.

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