Green Starts Here announces the ShowerSaver

showersaverThe earth does have limited resources, but this does not mean it doesn’t have the capability to sustain all of us – close to 7 billion people, and growing. However, it would require careful management of the existing resources, as well as maximizing what we already have right now. Every little bit counts, and this would include making sure we use water as sparingly as possible. After all, fresh water is extremely limited in quantity compared to sea water, and you aren’t going to bathe using sea water, are you? Green Starts Here hopes to help kick in some sense of water savings with the ShowerSaver, which is a monitoring device that one would use in the shower so that the user can gain access to real-time information concerning their shower duration and water consumption.

How does the ShowerSaver work? For starters, it will feature a sensor which enables it to turn on and off automatically, so all that users are required to do is to install it and start showering, washing away the day’s grime and sweat. Even better is the fact that it does not require any kind of plumbing, and neither do you need it to control the water flow, adding to the overall simplicity of its installation.

I suppose you can say that the shower is slowly embracing the 21st century, as studies have shown that users, when provided with the right information, can make the relevant positive changes in their behavior such as a shorter shower time. This will help out in your bank balance in the long run, while the environment will also benefit from lower fresh water and energy consumption, in addition to other related carbon emissions.

The ShowerSaver has a design of a virtual water level that rises in tandem with shower duration, where it then corresponds to green, yellow, and red. These are color cues with which our minds are very familiar with, and the average shower can cost up to $500 annually per person, so hopefully the use of the ShowerSaver will be able to be extended well beyond the home. Expect to fork out $59.95 for the ShowerSaver if you’re interested in joining up with Captain Planet and the Planeteers.

Press Release
[ Green Starts Here announces the ShowerSaver copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Ferguson Celebrates Thanksgiving After A Quiet Night

FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Protesters in Ferguson pressed pause Thursday as the city welcomed Thanksgiving, decorating boarded-up storefronts with some Dr. Seuss inspiration and gathering for church services — a stark contrast to previous days of outrage over the grand jury decision in the Michael Brown case.

No police officers or Missouri National Guard members stood sentry outside the Ferguson police station, which has been a nexus for protesters since Monday night’s announcement that Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, who is white, wouldn’t be indicted for fatally shooting the unarmed black 18-year-old in August. On that downtown street, beneath a lighted “Season’s Greetings” garland, three children used paintbrushes to decorate the plywood covering many storefront windows that was put up to foil potential vandals. One quoted from “The Lorax” by Dr. Seuss: “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better, it’s not.”

“We thought we’d do what we could to make it a little more attractive and then try to bring the kids into it and get them involved in making the businesses appear a little less scary, depressing,” said Leah Bailey, as her 7-year-old son Dennis climbed a ladder to finish an orange dragon.

Since the grand jury’s decision, protests have taken place across the country. Most have been peaceful. But at least 130 demonstrators who refused to disperse during a Los Angeles protest were arrested Wednesday night, while 35 people were detained in Oakland following a march that deteriorated into unrest and vandalism, according to police officials.

Back in Ferguson, Greater St. Mark Family Church sits blocks from where several stores went up in flames after the grand jury announcement. A handful of people listened to the Rev. Tommie Pierson preach Thursday that the destruction and chaos was by “a small group of out-of-control people out there.”

“They don’t represent the community, they don’t represent the mood nor the feelings of the community,” Pierson said. “I would imagine if you talked to them, they probably don’t even live here. So, we don’t want to be defined by what they did.”

In downtown St. Louis, a group gathered near Busch Stadium for what organizer Paul Byrd called a “pro-community” car rally meant to be peaceful and counter the recent Ferguson violence he suggested has tarnished the region’s image.

Byrd, a 45-year-old construction worker from Imperial, Missouri, declined to say whether he supported Wilson but noted, “I totally support police officers.” The cruise was escorted by a city police vehicle; no protesters showed up.

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Link to grand jury documents: http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_documents/ferguson-shooting/

Mexico's President Vows To Reform Police In Wake Of Students' Disappearance

MEXICO CITY, Nov 27 (Reuters) – Embattled President Enrique Pena Nieto on Thursday proposed simplifying Mexico’s chaotic police structure and a new law to stop collusion between officials and gangs as he tried to defuse anger over the apparent massacre of 43 students in September.

Pena Nieto has been under growing pressure from protesters to end impunity and brutality by security forces since the trainee teachers were abducted by corrupt police in the southwestern city of Iguala on the night of Sept. 26.

The government says the students were murdered and their bodies incinerated after police handed them over to a drug gang.

“Mexico cannot continue like this,” Pena Nieto said in a speech to an assembly of political leaders.

“After Iguala, Mexico has to change,” he said, noting that the reforms aimed to create a new law against infiltration by organized crime and redefine powers in the penal system.

The president said he would send an initiative to Congress to unify multi-layered police forces in Mexico’s states and had ordered a special security operation in the Southwest, large swathes of which are plagued by drug gangs.

Mexico has a plethora of police forces, as hundreds of municipalities, 31 states and the capital Mexico City each has its own. But poor training and salaries as low as 5,000 pesos ($370) per month encourage corruption.

Several of Pena Nieto’s predecessors also undertook police reforms, but problems have persisted and infiltration by gangs is widespread. Some Mexican states who got rid of municipal forces remain wracked by violent crime.

Pena Nieto said the government would also launch a program to boost growth in economically backward and troubled areas of the country including the Southwest, ensuring they would get preferential financing conditions.

“Today there are two Mexicos: One that is part of the global economy with growing levels of income, development and well-being; and then there is a poorer Mexico with historical problems that have been unresolved for generations,” he said.

Only about 2 percent of crimes in Mexico result in convictions, and despite the indictments of several senior Mexican officials in U.S. courts, very few of them have had to face investigations, let alone trial, at home.

Pena Nieto said he aimed to introduce a single, nationwide phone number for emergencies, preferably “911” for simplicity.

(Reporting by Mexico Newsroom; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Gunna Dickson)

Wasilat Tasi'u, 14-Year-Old Nigerian Girl, Sentenced To Death For Murdering Husband

KANO, Nigeria (AP) — The father of a 14-year-old child bride accused of murdering her husband said Thursday he was appealing to a Nigerian court to spare his daughter the death sentence.

Wasilat Tasi’u is on trial for the murder of her 35-year-old husband, Umar Sani, who died after eating food that Tasi’u allegedly laced with rat poison. “We are appealing to the judge to consider Wasilat’s plea,” her father, Isyaku Tasi’u, told The Associated Press on Thursday.

On Wednesday witnesses told the High Court in Gezawa, a town 60 miles outside Nigeria’s second largest city of Kano, that Tasi’u killed her husband two weeks after their wedding in April. Three others allegedly died after eating the poisoned meal.

The prosecution, led by Lamido Soron-Dinki, senior state council from the Kano State Ministry of Justice, is seeking the death penalty.

The case calls into question the legality of trying a 14-year-old for murder under criminal law and the rights of child brides, who are common in the poverty-stricken, predominantly Muslim northern Nigeria region.

“She was married to a man that she didn’t love. She protested but her parents forced her to marry him,” Zubeida Nagee, a women’s rights activist in Kano, told AP. Nagee and other activists have written a letter of protest to the Kano state deputy governor.

Nagee said Tasi’u was a victim of systematic abuse endured by millions of girls in the region. Activists say the blend of traditional customs, Islamic law and Nigeria’s constitutional law poses a challenge when advocating for the rights of young girls in Nigeria.

Justice Mohammed Yahaya adjourned the court until December 22. Tasi’u is in state juvenile custody.

8 Babies Appropriately Dressed As Turkeys On Thanksgiving

Putting your baby in a turkey costume: The Thanksgiving tradition that should definitely exist if it doesn’t already. Here’s proof:

turkey costume

turkey costume

Turkey.

A photo posted by Jimmy Fallon (@jimmyfallon) on Nov 11, 2013 at 1:02pm PST

jimmyfallon/Instagram

ashleymizell/Instagram

My little turkey! #babyturkey #firstthanksgiving

A photo posted by Nicole MacIntyre (@nikki_wacko) on Nov 11, 2014 at 9:54am PST

nikki_wacko/Instagram

jamieladie/Instagram

familyandcraft/Instagram

allisfoster/Instagram

Miami Spice

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Cecilia Paredes, Corinthians Blue, 2014, acid free photographic print, 51 ¼ x 51 ¼ in. (130.18 x 130.18 cm), ed: 1/7. Courtesy Diana Lowenstein Gallery.

As the infamous “Black Friday” shopping extravaganza approaches at the end of November right after Thanksgiving Day, most Americans seem to be mesmerized over the opportunity to purchase an electronic doohickey at a deep discount, along with those misguided souls that are actually stationed in a pup tent just outside the entrance to a Wal-Mart weeks in advance for the dubious honor of being the first in line for that bargain TV. I read last year about a woman who prepared herself with a winning strategy for a potential Xbox battle by spraying two cans of concealed mace towards other customers’ eyes, enabling her to grab her ill-gotten loot and make a run for it! For a relatively small but distinguished fraternity called the “art world,” most of the pre-Thanksgiving conversations turn to the extraordinary activities developing in Miami and the artists to watch who create the works presented during the biggest art week anywhere in the world. To be nondiscriminatory, I must point out there are plenty of well-dressed folks who don’t mind spending time in an advance line to gain entrance on opening night to one of the major satellite exhibit halls just to get a glimpse of a trendy new artist, accompanied by a possible first shot at acquiring a work of art before someone else claims ownership. In fact, there is a kind of mad dash into a quasi-post-Black Friday syndrome, as each of a dozen or more fairs opens the flood gates to a crowd with a mission. In reality, rushing to get first dibs on a really hip artist may not be worth racing down a packed corridor, as many of the top collectors already have nailed down their acquisitions in advance that will remain on display for the duration of the fairs. But, not to worry: there are plenty of goods on display, whether you’re an early bird or arrive later in the week.

The majority of the hundreds of emails I start receiving daily in early November are almost all connected to Miami Art Week, and the interaction between art dealers and the impressive complexity of the individuals who descend on the city, including many of the world’s most ambitious and committed art collectors. Everybody seems to have a press release that pitches their wares, and each day the information on this event seems to multiply in all directions with increasing fervor. There’s a lot of money at stake during Art Week in Miami, both buying and selling, trading and baiting, mixing and matching, hedging and wedging, and, of course, schmoozing all afternoon and into the endless parties at night. At the end of the day, the climax of the cocktail conversation inevitably turns to new discoveries and what’s hot and what’s not.
Art fairs come and go, but the city’s original and longest running contemporary and modern art fair, Art Miami, celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, together with its adjacent sister fair CONTEXT, has the enviable position of showcasing annually a great deal of high level, cutting edge works that are always a highlight. Maintaining this enviable and preeminent position in America’s contemporary art fair marketplace is a complicated feat, as each year the management employs a rigorous vetting process for galleries that invariably denies some prior participants to make room for new and more exciting prospects. Needless to say, the management turns away more qualified applicants than it can possibly accept, as they strive to maintain or exceed the previous selection of top quality exhibitors. Visitors to the fair obviously reap the benefits of a strict and highly competitive admission process. With over 200 galleries exhibiting nearly 2000 artists from sixty countries, it’s like a world art tour with only two stops.

The recently released list of galleries to join Art Miami continues to make this fair a remarkable assemblage of innovative works by emerging and established artists. Here’s an accounting of noteworthy new exhibitors that caught my attention:

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Roy Lichtenstein, The Living Room, 1980, woodcut and screenprint, sheet size: 58 1/8 x 72 in. Printer/Publisher: Gemini G.E.L. Catalogue raisonné: Corlett / Fine 250. Ed. size: 60, plus proofs. Signed, dated, and numbered, lower margin. Courtesy Susan Sheehan Gallery.

The late Ivan Karp, the genius behind O.K. Harris and the original partner with legendary art dealer Leo Castelli, once told me that Roy Lichtenstein was arguably the most consistent artist of the 20th century and likely the best of his Pop Art compatriots. The Living Room by Lichtenstein presented by Susan Sheehan Gallery (New York) is a great example of the artist’s best work from Gemini G.E.L. (Los Angeles) and combines elements of woodcut and screenprint that depict a sophisticated interior environment that is about as idiosyncratic as this artist could get, including an artwork about art. (http://www.susansheehangallery.com/)

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Fabiano Parisi, Il mondo che non vedo #110, 2011, archival fine art pigment print, 39 3/8 x 59 in. (100 x 150 cm), Ed: 1/6. Courtesy Diana Lowenstein Gallery.

Fabiano Parisi’s panoramic and dynamic images from Diana Lowenstein Gallery (Miami) are among the most fascinating and mysterious photographic images at the fair. Perhaps the wide angle jumbo architectural compositions of Thomas Struth and Andreas Gursky may have had a positive influence on these majestic portrayals of public places in various stages of decomposition. The grandeur and magnificence of these spaces on their way to extinction make this series a jaw-dropping history lesson in aesthetic deterioration and ultimate, tear-jerking destruction. Part forager, documenter, trespasser, surveyor, adventurer, risk taker and discovery artist, Parisi offers works that are impossible to pass by without stopping for a closer examination. (http://www.dianalowensteingallery.com/)

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William Fisk, Untitled No. 75 (from the Portrait Series), 2014, oil on canvas, 74 x 48 in. Courtesy Nicholas Metivier Gallery.

William Fisk’s astonishing, life-like paintings render delicately crafted utilitarian objects that can take the artist between three months and a year to complete. The new works presented by Nicholas Metivier Gallery (Toronto) would indicate that Fisk likely could master any item he discovers that can provide a decent creative encounter. He scours secondhand stores or the internet to find just the perfect challenging image that also may include humorous elements or patinaed irony as technology has rendered them obsolete. In other cases, the artist decides on an exquisite, practical form that he knows instinctively can be successfully re-created in his signature photorealist style. (http://www.metiviergallery.com/)

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Ryan McGinness, Superstring Wormholes, 2010, acrylic on wood panel, 48 in. diameter. Courtesy Galerie Forsblom.

Ryan McGinness of Galerie Forsblom (Helsinki) throws out a grab bag of disparate images collected from memory that skillfully incorporates contemporary icons and recognizable symbols. The artist reaches into his design background and picks out graphic fragments that are mixed and matched and often mirrored against each other. McGinness presents an unexpected but pleasant rainbow of colors that explode within a circle, which are tied together with swirling lines that range from barbed wire to a wandering, meandering ball of string on the loose. (http://www.galerieforsblom.com/)

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Robert Rauschenberg, Shuttle Buttle/ ROCI USA (Wax Fire Works), 1990, acrylic, fire wax, enamel, and object on mirrored aluminum, 72 5/16 x 144 5/16 x 17 1/2 in. Courtesy Hollis Taggart Galleries.

Hollis Taggart Galleries will present Robert Rauschenberg’s Shuttle Buttle/ROCI USA (Wax Fire Works), which depicts a double portrait of the space shuttle that on a clear day, the artist might have been able to see launch from Cape Canaveral on the other coast from the end of his long dock on Captiva Island. Rauschenberg, a master of masters at incorporating images from printed mass media, could take any subject and make it sing. As one of Rauschenberg’s dealers and a friend for many years, I was fascinated to see close up this whirlwind of a man piece together extraordinary compositions with confidence and perfection. When he decided a found object was necessary to complete his assemblage, he simply went out to his backyard junk pile and immediately scooped up a winner. (http://www.hollistaggart.com/)

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Barry X Ball, Perfect Forms, 2010-2014, mirror-polished 24K gold on nickel on copper on SLA rapid prototype model and solid brass with stainless steel armature/fittings and resin filling, 21 x 16.4 x 7 in. Copyright Barry X Ball, courtesy CONNERSMITH., Washington, D.C.

Barry X Ball of CONNERSMITH. is definitely on the ball with his series of Perfect Forms, which are delightful, mirror-polished 24K gold on nickel on copper with solid brass and stainless steel armatures. The artist got his inspiration from Boccioni, who was stimulated by the industrialization in Italy at the turn of the 20th century. This anonymous dashing figure seems to sprint through intergalactic space in his coat of armor right out of an adventure movie, accompanied by multiple sharp angles and sophisticated curves that add to his ambulatory sprint and could fit right into the Guggenheim’s recent Italian Futurism show. (http://www.connersmith.us.com/)

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Salvador Dalí, Sewing machine with umbrellas, scene shoot for a film project involving a writer and model, New York and Madrid (1951), gouache on cardboard, 25 x 32 cm. Courtesy Galeria Mayoral.

Salvador Dalí’s Sewing machine with umbrellas offered by Galeria Mayoral likely may be the most interesting and original work by this history-changing artist that I have seen in many moons. In this composition, a vintage sewing apparatus morphs into an architectural futurist structure (a factory for patching things up?) on center stage in the foreground, with a distant landscape and other buildings in the background. It’s an exceedingly handsome unique example of the surrealist sensibility that Dalí invented. http://www.galeriamayoral.com/

These personal picks are just a comparative handful of remarkable artists represented by 45 new exhibitors for the 2014 edition of Art Miami, which opens with a VIP Private Preview on Tuesday, December 2 and benefits the Perez Art Museum Miami and Miami Light Project. For the latest updates on Art Miami and CONTEXT, and a full list of this year’s exhibitors, visit http://www.art-miami.com/ www.contextartmiami.com.

13 Kids Who Desperately Need Those Post-Thanksgiving Meal Naps

Whether it is actually the turkey that makes you sleepy or not, Thanksgiving is still a perfect storm of many tiring things — entertaining family and a big filling meal. Kids are just as prone to post-Thanksgiving feast exhaustion. Luckily for them, it’s socially acceptable to pass out wherever they happen to be at that moment.

In the spirit of sharing, we asked the HuffPost Parents community to send us their favorite snapshots of their children napping on Thanksgiving. Little ones, we feel you.

LAPD: Ferguson Protesters To Be Released By Thanksgiving Dinner

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Demonstrators who can’t make bail after being arrested during Los Angeles protests linked to the Ferguson police shooting will be released in time for Thanksgiving dinner, police said Thursday.

About 90 people remained in jail after being arrested late Wednesday, and those who weren’t able to pay the $500 bail were to be released on their own recognizance, LAPD Commander Andrew Smith said. A total of 338 people were arrested over three days during protests in Los Angeles, including 145 on Wednesday.

Those with outstanding warrants or who were arrested on suspicion of a felony will not be released, but those taken in for disturbing the peace and failure to disperse — both misdemeanors — will be freed, Smith said.

Many of them would have otherwise remained in custody until Monday, when courts reopen after the holiday weekend.

“We have the legal right to keep them until Monday but it’s the holidays,” Smith said.

Another 35 people were arrested in Oakland on Wednesday following a march that deteriorated into vandalism.

On Monday and Tuesday, some demonstrators in Oakland vandalized businesses and blocked freeways.

During the demonstration Wednesday in Los Angeles, people marched to a federal building and police headquarters but were turned away by police after heading toward the county jail and then the Staples Center arena.

Nine people were arrested for sitting in a bus lane on U.S. 101 near downtown during one of the busiest driving days of the year.

Start Burning Off That Turkey With This Wood and Leather Weight Set

Start Burning Off That Turkey With This Wood and Leather Weight Set

Rarely does fitness gear prioritize form over functionality (understandably) and that’s why most of the time exercise machines and ellipticals are hidden away in a basement workout room. But wouldn’t you be more inclined to exercise if your workout gear was in the living room next to the TV? This stylish set of woo and leather weights makes it more convenient to stay in shape because you won’t feel you have to hide it away.

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Slingbox will now suggest YouTube videos based on what you're watching

It’s getting to the point where when a gadget can’t access YouTube it’s more noteworthy than one that can. With that in mind, how the venerable Slingbox 500 and Sling TV interact with Google’s video empire is pretty damned neat: the platform now uses…