Ouya Up For Sale (Rumor)

ouya-16gbWord on the street has it that game console manufacturer Ouya, has just put itself up on sale, at least this is what the signs from a leaked internal memo point to. So far, there has been no official word on the matter, but assuming that this particular leak is reliable and of course, very real, it should be confirmed sooner rather than later. The memo itself does seem to be rather legitimate, at least the content within.

We do happen to have fond memories of the Ouya, especially since this is one particular game console that began its life as a Kickstarter project a few years ago, and along the way, there were enough people who had faith in the Ouya game console to see the $8.5 million raised, and then some. However, the company did not take the road well traveled when it came to its business directions, since the game inventory was made available for Android devices, whereas before this, it was limited to just Ouya consoles.

The leaked internal memo is touted to hail from company CEO Julie Uhrman herself, where it cited that “the company had failed to satisfy one of its investors’ conditions and that renegotiation over the debt had been unsuccessful.” Going on about upcoming developments, it has been rumored that Uhrman did mention that “We are looking for expressions of interest by the end of this month.” Does this mean that the Ouya console will be no more? Only time will tell.

Ouya Up For Sale (Rumor) , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.



DARPA Looks To Mechanize Human Brains

darpa-brainThe amalgamation of man and machine – isn’t this the utopian life, where one will be able to have that emotional connection, and yet make all the logical choices, not to mention not having to go through degenerative brain diseases that would adversely affect the quality of life. It seems that DARPA has come up with a two-year research program that will develop what is known as RAM Replay. RAM Replay is a description for implants for ‘Restoring Active Memory’, and this concept has a long history of projects with the aim to deliver an interface which is active at the level of the conscious mind.

In other words, we are talking about a cognitive implant here, where the rawest form will see a cortical modem cost approximately $10 a pop, with the device having the rough size of a couple of coins, now how about that? Do take note, however, that this idea of an implant that will help restore memories in humans is still too far fetched at the moment for present technologies to bring it to pass, so a far more realistic goal would be to ensure that one can store memories in the first place, and even then, it is a downright difficult and challenging task at hand.

Well, you know what they say – the journey of a thousand miles begin with one step.

DARPA Looks To Mechanize Human Brains , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.



LG G4 Coming To Verizon, AT&T, Sprint And T-Mobile

lg-g4-industrial-design-14

Earlier today LG officially unveiled its 2015 flagship smartphone, the LG G4. The company has confirmed its specifications and features, and LG’s carrier partners have also confirmed that they’ll be carrying the device. In the United States the LG G4 will be coming to Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile, all of the four major carriers in the country. Even U.S. Cellular has confirmed that it will be carrying the device.

T-Mobile is actually running a preview program for the G4 in the United States and it will giveaway one unit per day for free before the device becomes available for purchase in the country.

Anyone can sign up for the preview program through May 25th and if they’re selected T-Mobile will send them a new G4 to keep and preview. The carrier says it will start selling the new flagship from LG “this spring.”

Sprint also confirms that it will be offering the device to its customers, it expects to start selling the LG G4 in June. U.S. Cellular will also start selling the device in June.

Verizon confirmed through its Twitter account that the LG G4 with Advanced Calling for HD Voice and Video is “coming soon,” it’s yet to confirm any more details.

AT&T will also be selling the device though like the other carriers it hasn’t confirmed the exact release date or even pricing, expect this information to arrive a few days before the device actually goes on sale.

LG G4 Coming To Verizon, AT&T, Sprint And T-Mobile , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.



SCOTUS and Marriage Equality — The Sky Is Not Falling

The Supreme Court of the United States heard two and a half hours of arguments on marriage equality on Tuesday. Now we must wait patiently until June when SCOTUS will announce their decision. Optimism and polls on marriage equality are higher than ever, perhaps because citizens in 36 states and Washington, D.C., already have marriage equality, and the sky did not fall.

Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC) are proud to say marriage equality has been part of our DNA for almost 50 years. One of the first things our founder, Rev. Elder Troy Perry, did after forming Metropolitan Community Church in 1968 was to begin performing marriage ceremonies.

2015-04-28-1430237142-1282492-Rev.Perry_Rev.WilsonSCOTUS2015.jpg
(MCC Founder, Rev. Elder Troy Perry, and Moderator, Rev. Dr. Nancy Wilson, working for marriage equality for almost 50 years.)

Over my decades of ministry, I have married hundreds of same-gender couples, and MCC has performed tens of thousands of marriages.

Early in my ministry, two elderly women, Connie and Eva, came to me to marry. They met in 1932 in Marlene Dietrich’s lesbian-friendly nightclub in Berlin. Eva was German; Connie was African-American. They were separated by World War II but reunited when Eva came to live with Connie in the United States. For decades, they lived as “Mrs. Winne and her maid Connie” until they found MCC and realized they could finally be authentically who they were: lifelong lovers, married in every way but in the eyes of the law. Everything changed when they knelt together at the altar to profess the love they had shared for 40 years. They were finally able to be open.

In 1975, Rev. Freda Smith, an MCC pastor, performed the wedding of Anthony Corbett Sullivan and Richard Frank Adams. The marriage laws in Colorado did not specify gender, so a county clerk saw no reason not to give them a license. MCC performed the first legal same-gender marriage in the country!

In June of 1970, The Advocate published “Perry Plans Marriage Test.” Reporter John Zeh described Rev. Perry’s plan to challenge California’s opposite-gender-only marriage laws. And he did! Represented by LA attorney Al Gordon, Rev. Perry brought the suit on behalf of Neva Heckman and Judith Bellew, a couple whose wedding he officiated in 1969. MCC mobilized the world’s first action for legal recognition for same-gender marriages. The lawsuit was dismissed, but the struggle had begun.

In 1971, Life magazine devoted two pages to Metropolitan Community Churches in an article called “Homosexuals in Revolution: A Church for Homosexuals.” Rev. Perry was pictured performing a wedding ceremony for Andre Charland and Richard Castle. The caption noted that marriages were being performed, but they were not legal — an indirect recognition of the inequality we faced.

All along, we knew that dismissing our marriages was unjust and probably illegal. For decades, MCC members around the world joined Rev. Perry in Valentine’s Day actions. We would go to the local officials, as same-sex couples, dramatically ask for a marriage license, and just as dramatically be turned down.

When Valentine’s Day rolls around next February, it is likely that all couples who choose to marry will be able to do so in the United States and in a growing number of other countries.

We know that being true to ourselves and our families is having an impact. When an MCC minister, Rev. Roberto Gonzalez, performed the first public same sex wedding at an ILGA conference in Rio in 1994, no one dreamed that Brazil, Uraguay, Argentina, Mexico City, Colombia, and Venezuela would today recognize legal marriages or civil unions.

When Rev. Dr. Brent Hawkes of Canada researched Canadian law and performed Canada’s first legal marriage in 2001 — and it held up in court in 2003 — we knew the orbit of planet justice had shifted on its axis.

History is being made. We have told our stories, claimed our stories, and treasured our stories. As Evan Wolfson stated in a recent Face the Nation interview, even if SCOTUS rules against marriage equality, we will continue to work for equality state-by-state.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Decoding the New Face of America: An Interview With dlR USA CEO Carlos de León

2015-04-27-1430173942-162077-multicultural.jpg

It is undeniable that America is experiencing a new mix of ethnicities and cultures like never before. New generations are more diverse, come from different cultural backgrounds and are gradually reshaping the face of the country, a fact that will have a significant, long-term impact on US society as we know it. To help businesses understand and adapt to the new, emerging multicultural reality, Carlos de León, CEO of dlR USA, recently shared with me his insights on this interesting yet controversial topic.

Ernesto Sosa: The nation’s demographics are changing towards a multicultural America. What does this change mean for today’s businesses?

Carlos de León: America is going through a significant demographic change that will have many implications in years to come. Today’s multicultural mix comes with new set of values, consumption habits, perceptions and expectations from consumers now based not only on their heritage and family backgrounds, but on their experiences in the US as well. In addition to that, we have radical changes taking place in communications and technology, which are helping people being more productive, more independent from traditional media, stay connected and share with families and friends everywhere. These new consumer groups are not isolated in niche markets, but on the contrary, are growing and creating their own path towards becoming active participants in the US.

The acculturation model is no longer valid, nor does it explain how the nation’s identity will evolve from now on. Today’s minorities are becoming majorities and influencing the market in many ways. A good example is how the mainstream is adopting new trends in food, music and the arts from minority groups. Artists such as Pitbull, Jennifer Lopez, Enrique Iglesias and Aziz Ansari are just some of the success stories from performers that have reached notorious popularity by defining themselves in the new multicultural space. Another example is the rise of Latin, Chinese and Indian food products in regular supermarkets, next to well established national brands fighting for the same share of the market. And how about the growing interest for sports such as soccer, driven by a strong multicultural fan base as they use this “new” space to connect with their heritage, but also to develop their own sport experience in the US? Assuming that consumer habits will stay the same and will follow the status-quo, can be a very expensive – if not catastrophic – mistake. Understanding and monitoring how these new consumers are defining their own spaces and identity will help brands and organizations effectively adapt their strategies to better target and serve these audiences.

ES: With the growth in ethnic markets, organizations are changing the way they approach ethnic marketing looking towards more efficiency and integration. Three concepts dominate the discussion and at the same time generate a lot of confusion: multicultural, total market and cross-cultural. Can you clarify the differences between these models and do you think there is one right approach to be adopted?

CDL: The multicultural approach aims to target clearly defined ethnic groups separately. This approach is valid when there is a special need for very distinctive messaging and/or marketing activities for each group. The model can be very useful for delivering tailored messages, but it requires dedicated resources, agency partners and budgets for each target group.

The cross-cultural approach on the other hand leverages insights considered successful from ethnic markets to reach across ethnic and general markets. This way, companies try to “cross-over” those successful creative or communication elements looking to replicate their appeal. There are clear efficiencies in this approach, but also opportunity costs, if those insights or executions are not properly translated in a relevant manner to different audiences. There is also the risk that what works for one segment may not work for another, if not relevant.
Now a total market approach can be defined as a marketing program created to reach all consumers, across general and ethnic markets. Diversity is reflected in all the marketing by leveraging cultural cues and focusing on universal truths to also gain efficiencies. This said, there is not one single winning approach. The US is a complex market with very diverse consumers. Companies still need to do their due diligence, study their target and determine the best marketing strategy to make the proper connection between their products and services and their target consumer.

ES: A recently announced upcoming study by dlR USA “Multicultural Game: Deciphering Total Market” aims to provide updated, valuable information to help businesses better understand multicultural America. What can you tell us about this new research initiative?

CDL: This new study looks at how the US market is being reshaped for the future. It will provide an in-depth look at how America is changing and the ways each ethnic group is helping define the country’s new identity. We are dissecting the major ethnic groups with the final purpose of understanding the market as a whole with an updated and fresh segmentation model that includes clear and actionable recommendations for organizations and brands. Through cultural “deep dive” research and multiple ethnographic and quantitative methodologies we are looking to get a complete view of people’s lives. For this particular research we will be spending more than 200 hours with Asian, African American, Hispanic and Caucasian families nationwide, learning about their challenges, lives, and expectations for the future and, most importantly, letting them tell us who they are as individuals in the US.

We firmly believe that companies, brands or even political figures that understand the difference between designing a uniform marketing strategy, and one that includes relevant cultural differences, will be the ones dominating the US market in the future.

ES: The country’s new emerging identity certainly comes with new consumer behaviors and expectations towards products and services. What are the top trends dlR USA sees leading this transformation?

CDL: First of all, minority groups are strongly influencing the mainstream at many levels – from the rise of new foods and ingredients in the American diet and eating choices to changes in sports and entertainment. For instance, the increased consumption of avocado and cilantro nationwide is not only due to Hispanic consumers, but also the general population.
Another important trend we are seeing is new multicultural generations looking to reconnect with their roots, while being extremely careful in avoiding negative stereotypes. Re-branding themselves and becoming cultural ambassadors is part of their motivation. As they grow demographically, their influence is already starting to be seen in media, sports, music, literature, politics, among other venues. New generations are looking to be part of America, but are also very proud of their background and love to be able to express it and have the best of both worlds.
The rise of the hyper connected consumer that does plenty of product research online, is another interesting trend with many implications for brands. The purchasing experience is being reinvented as we speak, which represents more opportunities for brands to engage and win over consumers through multiple touch points.

ES: With the rise of the connected, omni-channel consumer and a new purchasing process reinvented by technology, how would you describe this emerging generation of consumers?

CDL: The new generation of connected consumers in multicultural America, not only accepts but embraces with openness the new multicultural reality, using digital tools to pick and choose the “cool” things from other cultures they identify with. Learning from each other and collaborating within their own cultural boundaries is accepted. These consumers additionally expect interaction with brands along the whole purchasing process, which can be a significant change for brands that must now adapt to offer a new multi-channel customer experience.
This is particularly true for the “Z” Generation. Current 13-18 year olds are the true digital natives. Although we consider Millennials digital savvy, it is this next generation the one setting a new set of expectations and demands when it comes to purchasing products and services. We are amazed by how well they understand the power technology gives them, based on recent studies across different industries. Already mastering technology use, they expect fast, fluid transactions and have little patience for complicated messages or marketing clutter. If organizations try to push marketing messages through traditional marketing channels to these new consumers without taking the time to really understand who they are, brands face immediate disconnection.

ES: How does dlR USA see the future of ethnic marketing evolving in the United States?

CDL: What makes the US market so exciting is how diverse it is becoming. Cultural and language differences will be very relevant as different consumer groups gain critical mass in size and demand access to dedicated media content like never before.
Companies need to find new ways to optimize resources when it comes to multicultural targeting. The key is to first understand the market, the business and of course the consumer base, to validate if a particular approach works best for a brand at any given moment. But make no mistake, there is no “one-size fits all” strategy, particularly in the new US, a nation with over 320 million people and probably the greatest cultural diversity in the world.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Candice Patton of The Flash Talks About Meeting the Fans! Part II

2015-04-27-1430176480-69348-CandicePatton_Headshot.jpg
Candice Patton is Iris West in The CW’s series The Flash. Follow Candice on Instagram and Twitter @candicekp and on Facebook at facebook.com/candicepatton

It’s hard not to love Candice Patton. I tried and failed. What about you? Oh! Did you see Part I of this interview?

I was in the mood for some fun questions.

You know, Candice doesn’t even need an introduction. Is anyone even reading this intro or did you skip right to the questions? 🙂

You majored in theater, yes? Is theater something you would love to do more of in the future or are you more of a TV/Film girl?

I would love love love to do theatre. It’s how I started and essentially it’s my heart. I think going back to theatre can only strengthen my work.

I would love to do a non-musical Broadway or Off-Broadway play.

Cats or dogs?

I’m growing to appreciate cats, but I am definitely a dog person. I just love them. I want one, but can’t seem to commit to having one full time with this job and traveling all the time. I hope one day I can make the leap. I think having a dog would change a lot of things for me in a good way.

What’s wrong with the phrase “off the chain?”

Hahahah! Nothing is wrong with it, if you just got out of your time machine from 1999. (I’m looking at you, Dad). [Author’s Note: Awwww!]

What will you do during The Flash hiatus?

I really hope to keep working. Film is something I have my eye on and hope timing wise I can find something just right. If not, there are a couple of conventions I will go to in Europe and maybe travel while I’m there. And of course I have to get some of that lovely California sun.

Have you done conventions?

I’ve been to San Diego Comic Con, but that was really only to introduce The Flash to the world. I don’t think that was a typical convention. I do have one planned this May in Birmingham, UK. It will be great to be face to face with the fans. I’m excited about that.

What did your family say to you when you said you were moving to L.A. for an acting job? What did they say when you told them you wanted to be an actor? At what age did you make the decision to act for a living?

Well I didn’t have an acting job when I moved to LA. I was just naive enough to think that moving to LA was the next step after college. My parents were really supportive. My dad always told me to do what I love and I’ll never work a day in my life. I was NEVER once told to consider anything but my dreams. It’s probably one of the greatest gifts my parents gave me, because it never occurred to me to do something other than what I loved.

I was thinking about being an actor from a young age. Around 2nd or 3rd grade I remember watching I Love Lucy and being enamored with Lucille Ball. I was so enamored by her and it was then that it occurred to me that I want to do whatever it was that she was doing. As soon as I could I was in school plays every year and it never really stopped. I don’t know that I ever made the decision to be an actor for a living, it was just a natural progression from being in plays, to studying theatre in college, to moving to LA. I just followed my passion and one day I started getting paid for it. I’m really lucky to have found something I loved at such a young age.

You played Bernard Avery’s widow on an episode of Rizzoli & Isles. At the time, did you have any idea how huge a following this show had? Tell us about your time on the set of Rizzoli & Isles.

No, I was unaware of the following that show had. That was a really great experience for me. It was one of the few really meaty guest star roles I’ve had and it was challenging to do that sort of work on camera. We, as actors, so rarely get to practice scenes with emotionally high stakes under the pressure cooker of a TV set, having to go take after take, with all sort of distractions to contend with around us.

Have you read any of The Flash fan fiction with Iris? What are your thoughts on fan fiction?

There’s Iris fan fiction? That’s news to me. I try to stay off the parts of the internet which pertain to me or my character to a large degree. But, I think fan fiction is a great way for people to express themselves and storylines they want to see. I think it’s a wonderful creative outlet! I believe I wrote / read some fan fiction when I was a teenager. It was fun!

Be sure to read Part I of my interview with Candice Patton!

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Blue Hill Chef Dan Barber Used Waste To Make One Of Gisele Bündchen's Favorite Meals

Gisele Bündchen might live the glossy life of a supermodel, but the Brazilian stunner isn’t opposed to eating waste.

Food waste, that is, which Mrs. Tom Brady proudly scarfed down at Blue Hill chef Dan Barber’s two-week-long pop-up, appropriately named WastED. Bündchen declared the feast to be “one of the best meals” she’d ever had in a post on Instagram.

In a conversation with HuffPost Live’s Nancy Redd on Tuesday, Barber explained that cooking with yesterday’s food scraps is actually incredibly common among chefs — it’s just not something they publicize.

“It wasn’t hard [for me to do] because chefs do that every day,” he said. “We just don’t call it waste.”

In the case of ravioli, a patron will likely encounter “greens damaged from yesterday, not used from yesterday, or cooked from yesterday,” repurposed with other fresh ingredients.

“I wanted to take what good chefs do every day in their restaurants and wear it on our sleeve,” he recalled. “This is actually wasted food, but we’re going to put it in the context of delight and pleasure.”

Watch more from Dan Barber’s conversation with HuffPost Live here.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Robert Putnam – And Why Community Schools Matter

We shook hands with Robert Putnam, author of Our Kids, a terribly important new book about the opportunity gap last week. Better yet, when we explained that we were the director of the Coalition for Community Schools and National Coalition Chair respectively, he gave us a hearty smile, and encouraged us to continue our important work. In his book, Putnam recognizes the power and potential of community schools to address some of the challenges that our young people, our families, our communities and the entire society face.

Putnam’s core argument is that the gap in the well-being of young people by social class has widened enormously in the past 40 years, leaving the American Dream in crisis. While the challenges facing low-income children of color is most severe, the problem is widespread, cutting across all groups in our society. His analysis presents a unique set of issues for public education at a time when forces beyond school are having a growing impact on student learning and development, and while our public education policies contribute to focus narrowly on academic achievement and test scores.

Here are a few of most compelling points he made:

  1. Low income kids are increasingly isolated and “just do not trust anyone….they live in an untrustworthy environments.”
  2. All kids do dumb things but rich kids have “air bags” that inflate when they hit trouble. Poor kids have no air bags.
  3. Isolation leads to young people who lack ‘savvy.’
  4. Fewer ‘smart poor’ kids graduate college than ‘dumb rich’ kids.
  5. The class gap is overlaid on the racial gap, deepening the crisis for America’s rising number of children of color.
  6. Inequality of income is closely linked to the gap. Families under economic stress simply do not have the bandwidth to blow up the air bags for their children.
  7. America has reached a dangerous moment when we simply do not worry about other people’s kids.

Co-authored by:
Lisa Villarreal
Education Program Officer, The San Francisco Foundation;
Chair, Coalition for Community Schools

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Breaking the Sound Barrier

I go around and around about classical music and opera not being popular, especially with younger audiences. It really bugs me. How do you get them to enjoy it and not make it feel so foreign?

For years, arts organizations have done outreach to schools in their towns. This exposes the students to the art forms, but does it build an audience? Most average families cannot afford tickets to most classical events, so I doubt that many kids go home and beg their parents to take them. And when they are out of college, what happens? Did we build an audience?

What the exposure might do is open their world to the possibility of being a classical musician. I remember a theater troupe coming to my high school. Seeing them made me want to be an actor. Later, as a 16-year-old usher at the Santa Fe Opera, I realized what the singers were doing was possibly a way to match my unwieldy voice with the acting. I ended up being an actor who sings, or vice versa. I followed the dream. However, It did not make me want to be an audience member. I was into the doing and not the seeing. Of course, as an adult, this has changed.

How do we break the barrier?

2015-04-28-1430197912-4950323-music3.JPG

Last week, I was driving home the two hours from San Francisco after a day of teaching private voice lessons when I found the NPR show From the Top on the dial. If you do not know about this show, you should. (Go to their website: fromthetop.org) The show focuses on young classical musicians — all instruments — highlighting their performances by going around the country looking for America’s top classical talent and showcasing them before a live audience. It is pretty stunning and exciting to hear these young people and their mind-blowing talent. An added bonus is their YouTube channel, which shows some interviews and human interest stories a la the Olympics. The charming host, Christopher O’ Riley, has a great way with the participants and seems to make them comfortable enough to be open and honest.

On Facebook, I saw an announcement from Backstage, the trade publication for the TV and film industry, that a Pilgrim Studios casting director is “seeking young, dynamic, New York-based opera singers to star in their own unscripted TV show intended for a major cable network.” It goes on to say that:

This is from the award-winning producers of Oprah Winfrey’s Lindsay. The site says that this series will follow the lives of established and up-and coming performers both on and off the stage. From navigating auditions to preparing for the next big role, they will document the lives, loves, careers, trials and joys of real rising stars in the big city.

All I can say is IT IS ABOUT TIME.

Our world is focused on media, film, television and streaming. Anything popular has to be available easily and affordable on these mediums, not to mention immediate. What I would really like to see is From the Top being aired on mainstream television and not only on public television, as great as I feel that network is. It will be very interesting to see if the reality show about opera singers takes off. I have often thought the opera world would make a great reality show because some of the goings-ons are not to be believed. Even though the experience of live sound cannot really be adequately replicated, the training and the preparation as well as the subjectivity will be fascinating to people who are unfamiliar with what it takes.

If the various forms of classical music can be mainstreamed, then you have an audience.
We need to encourage participants but we also need to grow an audience.

If you have an audience, then you have sponsors, and you have exposure and a buzz.

There has been a barrier that need to go. Kudos to all the dedicated artists and presenters who are fighting the good fight of arts education. I am hoping that mainstreaming the art form will only make their job easier. Maybe it will even make it more affordable. Eventually, some folks should be willing to leave the comfort of their living rooms and get to the live performances.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

SCOTUS Marriage Equality

2015-04-28-1430245688-2155924-danzcolorplus6344.jpg

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.