These 3D Printed 'Face Vases' Are A Real Thing You Can Own

There is something very SNL sketch-worthy about the “Fahz,” a customized vase imprinted with the faces of those you love.

Maybe it’s the pleasantly dorky Kickstarter video associated with it, in which a couple in matching glasses and black tops make sure to pronounce “fahz” simultaneously (they’re adorable). Maybe it’s the name “Fahz” itself, which sounds vaguely dirty but is actually quite clever. It’s about time someone made light fun of how silly it sounds when a person says “vahs” when they mean “vayse.” Flat A’s are American as apple (ayple?) pie.

And so, we support everything to do with this project. It’s camp yet futuristic (3D printer is needed, therefore Kickstarter!), cheesy yet weird, and best of all, in the service of getting you to put flowers inside the outlines of your kids’ fahzes. You obviously need to do that.

Since Valentine’s Day is around the corner, we thought we’d just gently float this across the internet. Behold (in the video above), the only piece of customizable art you’ll ever need.

These Twitter-Sourced Collages Paint A Dark Portrait Of Today's Iran

Sheida Soleimani learned early about injustice. Her parents, outspoken critics of the Iranian government, fled the country during the regime collapse of the 1970s, alongside so many moderates. Sheida’s mother was raped and imprisoned on her way out, forced to endure an indefinite period of time apart from her husband and his eldest daughter, Sheida’s older sister. Her father was luckier: he made it across the mountains to Turkey, eventually cutting a path for himself and his family to the bovine calm of the midwestern United States.

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Spirituality, Rationality, Justice , 2014 (cows tongue, blonde hair, pink background). Sheida Soleimani.

This is where Soleimani grew up, going to school with kids who asked her excitedly about magic carpets (circa the release of “Aladdin”). Despite the relative peace of her childhood, wounds are embedded in the work she makes today. A 24-year-old MFA student in Detroit, she has caught the eye of art bloggers captivated by her disturbing collage series, “National Anthem.”

Her Chagallian take on Soviet-era propaganda art mixes images and objects of her own making with what she calls a “deep ongoing database” of photographs sourced from Twitter. Soleimani’s subjects range from the bruised bodies of enemies of the state, to typical Iranian foodstuffs like pomegranates, rice and octopus. In these dreamlike tapestries, she filters the story of today’s Iran through the spirit of her family’s personal history.

sheida soleimani
Illuminated, 2015 (purple background, carpet pattern, bruised women). Sheida Soleimani.

The image above is built heavily from a photograph circulated on Twitter in 2013, of a woman punished by government officials after supposedly speaking against the Iranian government. “They censored her face, but you can see how completely bruised and tortured she was,” Sheida said by phone. “The caption in Farsi was ‘Victim of the Islamic Republic.’ I thought that was pretty poignant. She’s clearly a victim. She looks like a woman whose husband beats her.”

sheida soleimani
Reformist, 2014 (carpet background, ball, nipples, oil). Sheida Soleimani.

Communist propaganda posters made use of symbols to reach illiterate peasants — for instance, agricultural imagery to promise prosperity. In a nod to this visual tactic, Sheida weaves in Iran’s GDP-boosting products like rice and seafood. She also questions the role of Orientalism in how Iran is seen by way of squares of carpet patterns, which often approximate the censoring motif of the original media images. Her objects have “specific symbolic heft,” she says. “I think of that severed octopus tentacle,” she says, “broken but still grasping, like the woman.”

sheida soleimani
Tanned, 2014 (orange background, nail polish, lamb feet). Sheida Soleimani.

sheida soleimani
Neda, 2014 (green background, ladder, b&w face)). Sheida Soleimani.

sheida soleimani
Halal, 2014 (white background, crane, eyelash). Sheida Soleimani.

Worker Dies On Taiwan Film Lot To Be Used For Scorsese Movie

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — A worker was killed in an accident Thursday at a Taiwanese film lot during preparations for the shooting of a new Martin Scorsese movie, media reports said.

Taiwan’s Central News Agency said Chen Yu-lung was killed and two other men were injured when scaffolding around a building being torn down suddenly collapsed. All three were Taiwanese contractors hired by the film’s producers. The lot belongs to the Chinese Culture and Movie Center, which issued a statement saying the contracting film crew bore responsibility for health and safety in the accident.

The news agency said shooting had not yet begun on the movie, a historical drama titled “Silence” about two Jesuit priests in 17th century Japan, based on a 1966 novel by Japanese author Shusaku Endo. The cast includes Liam Neeson and Andrew Garfield of the “Amazing Spider-Man.”

Scorsese is in Taiwan to shoot the film, but it wasn’t known if he was on the lot.

A spokesman for the film could not immediately be contacted.

The website Deadline Hollywood quoted an unidentified representative of the film as saying that the contractors had been brought in to reinforce the building after it was deemed unsafe by the producers, and that the ceiling collapsed during the reinforcement, killing one worker and injuring two.

Scowcroft and Brzezinski's Five Most Interesting Ideas

Co-authored by Joe Cirincione, President of the Ploughshares Fund and author of Nuclear Nightmares.

You’re busy. So you didn’t have time to watch last week’s Senate Armed Services Committee hearing when former national security advisors Brent Scowcroft and Zbigniew Brzezinski reviewed the state of the world over two riveting hours. As the saying goes, “class was in session.”

Don’t worry. We are happy to share our notes. Here are five of their best insights:

U.S. needs to deal with the Middle East as it is, not as we wish it to be

Unsavory leaders do bad things, but that doesn’t mean the U.S. can intervene in every situation. Intervention needs be restrained and self-interested, and guided by a nuanced understanding of the countries in question.

  • Brzezinski: “I never quite understood why we had to help or at least endorse the overthrow of Assad…Whether we liked it or not, Assad does have some significant support in Syrian society, and probably more than any one of the several groups that are opposing him.”

  • Scowcroft: “I think we have to be a participant in the Middle East, but we should not want to be an owner…To try to go in and end the Syrian war, I don’t think we want to own Syria. It is a very, very complicated country, as are some of the others in the Middle East. And I agree with Zbig basically. We have to be in the Middle East but not of the Middle East.”

Diplomacy can work with Iran – and it’s a lot better than war

Yes, diplomacy with Iran is tough, but what are the alternatives? The entire international community favors a peaceful resolution with Tehran, and its unclear that a military approach will ultimately work, let alone benefit the United States. For these reasons Congress should allow negotiations to run their course before imposing new sanctions.

  • Scowcroft: “I think two things are likely to happen if we increase the sanctions. They will break the talks. And a lot of the people who have now joined us in the sanctions would be in danger of leaving — because most of the people who joined us in sanctions did not do it to destroy Iran. They did it to help get a nuclear solution.”

  • Brzezinski: “All of the parties negotiating, including our closest allies as well as the Russians and the Chinese, favor a continuation of the negotiations for reasons specific to their own interests. If the negotiations broke down the whole process would collapse. And then what would be the alternative? Should we then attack and bomb them and thereby make the war in the Middle East even more explosive? We have to ask ourselves, why should we do this?…I don’t see any benefit in the United States in that transpiring.”

Iran isn’t the problem, it could even be part of the solution

Creating stability in the Middle East depends on finding partners with an ability and interest in playing a constructive role. Egypt is one such country, Turkey may be another. With a nuclear deal, Iran could potentially be a third.

  • Scowcroft: “Iran is different. We don’t know how different and we don’t know what the results will be. But their behavior is quite different from when Ahmadinejad was head of the government. And it seems to me that ought to try to take advantage of that. The foreign minister has served in the UN, at NATO… The mullahs are not nearly as vociferous as they were before. Does that mean anything? We don’t know. But it seems to me it’s worth testing.”

  • Brzezinski: “Iran is beginning to evolve into what it traditionally has been, a very civilized, important historically country. But we have to be very careful not to have this dramatic and suddenly reversed. Not to mention the negative consequences for global stability that this would have. And the reduction and a willingness in Iranian, a willingness in some fashion to prevent the extremists and the fanatics that are attempting to seize control over the Muslim world from prevailing.”

NATO needs a makeover

NATO needs an overhaul that creates both conventional deterrence to Russian aggression, and generates political buy-in from wayward members of the Alliance. Although Putin has taken steps in Ukraine most would have thought unfathomable, he is probably not fool enough to try it against a NATO country. The Alliance can make sure he doesn’t by creating credible conventional deterrents and better articulating its role in the 21st century.

  • Brzezinski: If Putin invades a Baltic country, were not going to “storm ashore like in Normandy to take it back. We’ll have to respond in some larger fashion, perhaps. But then there will be voices, ‘Well, but this will plunge us into nuclear war.’ Yeah, I think deterrence has to have meaning. It has to have teeth in it. And it has to create a situation in which someone planning an action like that has no choice but to anticipate what kind of resistance will lie in counter.”

  • Scowcroft: “I believe the contribution of some of the Europeans to NATO is deplorable…First of all, they don’t feel threatened. And secondly, they’re basically exhausted after two wars. And they’re just happy to leave everything up to us, including paying for it. There I think we ought to give it some thought. But my sense is we would get greater European support if we had ideas about how to use NATO usefully now that, to me, a threat of a march of Russian troops into Western Europe is not a reasonable thing to happen.”

The world has changed, and our policymaking needs to catch up

Cyberwarfare, climate change, the Arab Spring, and other issues are defying long-held assumptions about the international system. Meeting these challenges will require nuanced, principled policy making from the United States and a willingness to cooperate with allies and adversaries alike in unfamiliar ways.

  • Brzezinski: “I’m not quite sure that in recent years, particularly in the face of the novelty of the challenges that we face, that there has been enough of the bipartisan dialogue about these critical issues at the highest level…My hope is that your deliberations will shape a bipartisan national security strategy. Such bipartisanship is badly needed and I think we all know that, given the complexity and severity of the challenges that America faces.”

  • Scowcroft: “Globalization says that modern technology, modern science, and so on, is pushing the world together, and the Westphalian system says, ‘Nonsense. We’re all unique, separate, sovereign’…And we’ve barely begun to deal with it. And I add climate change to it because it demonstrates what we cannot do, the nation state alone. No nation state can deal with climate change. We have to cooperate to make it work. It’s just that way.”

The 114th Congress would do well to heed the advice of its elder statesmen. Their words are a helpful antidote to the tendency to let good politics drive bad security policy.

Class dismissed.

Speaker Boehner, Cancel Netanyahu's Address to Congress

For the sake of diplomacy, peace, and respect for our ally Israel, to say nothing of stability in the Middle East, Speaker Boehner must cancel the joint session of Congress with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. If he does not, I will refuse to be part of a reckless act of political grandstanding.

The Republicans may have read the Constitution on the House floor, but they don’t seem to understand Article II which vests the responsibility for foreign affairs in the President.

If the invitation was aimed to extract a better deal from Iran and protect our friend and ally Israel, then the Speaker miscalculated, for it will do the opposite. If the invitation was aimed at scoring political points by undermining the administration, it’s deeply troubling that the Speaker is willing to undercut diplomacy in exchange for theatrics on the House floor.

The U.S. is in the midst of high-stakes diplomacy between five major powers and Iran. A joint session, organized in this manner, at this time, undermines the only way of stopping a nuclear-armed Iran – a negotiated solution. Preventing this would be not only inappropriate, but extremely dangerous. Let me be clear – I would oppose such tactics by any Speaker, Democrat or Republican. Leadership serious about bolstering Israel’s security should be focused on using the historic, multilateral sanctions in place today that have brought Iran to the table. Sidestepping the White House in this way could easily fracture the united front America has built with Russia, China, Germany, and others.

Iran’s extremists are eagerly awaiting any excuse to walk away from an agreement. If negotiations do fail to progress, it must be crystal clear that it was Iran, and not the U.S., who failed. This will be critical if we’re to have the mandate needed to respond accordingly, and in a multilateral way in the future.

Netanyahu is finding this visit to be extraordinarily controversial within his own country. To schedule the joint session immediately before a national election is a dangerous and reckless precedent. I will not dignify this irresponsible joint session – an affront to diplomacy, process, and security – with my presence. Congress ought to heed the advice of experts. As former Israeli Ambassador to the U.S., Michael Oren, recently stated when asked about the ill-timed joint session, “It’s advisable to cancel the speech to Congress so as not to cause a rift with the American government.”

There’s still time for Speaker Boehner to reconsider his ill-advised effort. Wait until Israelis have cast their ballots, and find out if the time on the clock for negotiations runs out. I will not participate in a calculated slight from the Speaker and the House leadership to attack necessary diplomacy. When nuclear security and Middle East stability hang in the balance, no member who cares about peace and Israel should participate in this effort to undercut our President.

MimoPowerTube delivers portable power, Star Wars style

star-wars-saber-plugAre you looking forward to the upcoming Star Wars film that is set to hit the silver screen in due time? Surely, the continuation of this space opera franchise, to continue from where Star Wars: The Return of the Jedi left off all those years ago, is a massive undertaking. Since then, we have had three underwhelming prequels, not to mention a whole slew of fiction that accompanied it, in addition to numerous toys and other merchandise. Well, you might want to add the $29.99 MimoPowerTube to your list, as this Star Wars inspired portable battery pack certainly looks the part.

It mainly resembles that of a lightsaber hilt as well as other Star Wars characters, where you can choose from numerous styles, as each of them will come accompanied with a USB charging cable – not to mention its fair share of tips in order to make sure that it will be compatible with just about every smartphone out there as far as possible, even throughout the galaxy. The various designs from which you will be able to pick from include those of C-3PO, Darth Vader, a lightsaber, and Stormtrooper, stashing 2,600mAh of juice within, taking approximately 3 to 4 hours to charge up. Definitely one of the cooler looking portable battery designs around to date.
[ MimoPowerTube delivers portable power, Star Wars style copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

DIY LEGO Creation Station: Imagination on Wheels

Like millions of children around the world, Instructables member Tez_Gelmir’s son is a big LEGO fan. And like millions of families around the world the father and son often end up spending a lot of time sorting through their piles of LEGO just to get the parts they want to use. So Tez_Gelmir decided to build the LEGO Creation Station.

lego_creation_station_tez_gelmir_1zoom in

lego_creation_station_tez_gelmir_2zoom in

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As you can see it’s a toy workshop on wheels. It has a built-in desk, drawers (Tez_Gelmir organized their LEGO according to the pieces) and two shelves with tubs. The tubs are meant for storing works in progress or as a temporary LEGO dump if Tez_Gelmir and his son need to pack up quickly. When it’s fully folded it looks like a large LEGO piece. Tez_Gelmir also made a minifig-size model of the LEGO Creation Station, which you can see in Tez_Gelmir’s stop motion video demo.

Check out Tez_Gelmir’s build log on Instructables if you want to build your own LEGO Creation Station.

[via Neatorama]

Over time, things sure do get weird when it comes Facebook friend requests.

Over time, things sure do get weird when it comes Facebook friend requests. [Truth Facts]

Read more…



OpenSignal: 25% Of Android Smartphones Have Dual SIM Capabilities

dual simWhen we choose our smartphones, some of us choose the one with the best hardware, the biggest screen, the fastest processor, best camera, and etc. Other choose depending on operating system, price, durability, and so on. There are also some who choose devices that have the ability to support dual SIMs, but exactly how popular is this feature?

As it turns out it is rather popular. According to a report from OpenSignal (via GSM Arena), it seems that 25% of all Android devices out there have the dual SIM capability. This is based on the 1 million or so users who have OpenSignal’s Android app. The report also goes to show that such a feature is especially popular in Nigeria, followed by Bangladesh, Tanzania, and Guatemala just to name a few.

Interestingly enough it seems that over in Norway, dual SIM devices are practically non-existent with not even 1% of the market. In terms of which dual SIM devices are the most popular, Samsung snags the top three spots with the Galaxy Core, Galaxy Win Duos, and Galaxy S Duos. Nokia also made it into the list with the Nokia XL.

For those unfamiliar with dual SIMs, it is basically where the phone will allow the user to have more than one SIM card active at a time. They can receive messages from either SIM card and can choose to call out using whichever SIM card they prefer. It makes it ideal for users who have more than one line but don’t want to carry more than one handset.

OpenSignal: 25% Of Android Smartphones Have Dual SIM Capabilities , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Apple Now Leads The Luxury Gift Market In China, Overtakes Hermès

hermes chinaThinking about buying a loved one a luxury gift? There are plenty of options to choose from, such as branded clothing, a luxury watch, a fancy pen, cars, jewelry, and etc. Those are all valid options, but as it turns out over in China, gifting a loved one an Apple product would be the ultimate luxury gift.

According to a report from Reuters (via 9to5Mac), it seems that Apple has managed to nab the number one luxury gifting spot in the country. Who held the previous spot, you ask? It was none other than luxury fashion house Hermès International SCA, who for those unfamiliar brand makes all kinds of fashion items.

This includes designer clothing, accessories like ties and scarves, fragrance, and more. In fact the company is known to be one of the more pricier fashion house around. By nabbing the spot, Apple also pushed other luxury fashion brands further down the list, such as Louis Vuitton, Gucci, and Chanel.

It seems that Apple is on a streak here. An analyst had previously suggested that China could be Apple’s largest market and it certainly seems that way. Not only is Apple displacing international fashion brands, but they are also upsetting local brands such as Xiaomi whom Apple overtook to become the leading smartphone manufacturer in the country.

[Image credit – Retail Design Blog]

Apple Now Leads The Luxury Gift Market In China, Overtakes Hermès , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.