An update to Google Maps has brought with it an interesting added bonus for Android smartphone users: access to maps, right there on your wrist.
If those three acronyms made sense to you, congratulations, you’re a designer! Or at least someone who’s in the loop. While Dropbox has a commanding presence on mobile and on the desktop, there are some moments when all you have is a web browser. And usually in those moments, download a large Photoshop PSD file is not only time consuming, … Continue reading
Personal drones are all the rage now, even hitting mainstream media because of rather questionable antics. But not everyone might be interested in hulking quadrocopters the likes of which Amazon plans to use for deliveries. There are, of course, more than a dozen “mini” drones in the market, but these are pretty much just toys with very little strength for … Continue reading
It’s getting real for Sony’s Project Morpheus. The electronics giant has posted job listings (eight, all told) for veteran animators, level designers and a few others to fill out a studio dedicated entirely to making virtual reality games. “Based in …
Indonesia, Malaysia Agree To Provide Temporary Shelter To Migrants Still Stranded At Sea
Posted in: Today's ChiliPUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) — Indonesia and Malaysia agreed Wednesday to provide temporary shelter to thousands of migrants believed to be stranded at sea, a potential breakthrough in the humanitarian crisis confronting Southeast Asia after weeks of reluctance by the region’s nations to take responsibility.
The announcement was made by Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman after a meeting with his counterparts from Indonesia and Thailand called to address the plight of the migrants. Most of them are the long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar and others are Bangladeshis fleeing poverty. “Indonesia and Malaysia agreed to continue to provide humanitarian assistance to those 7,000 irregular migrants at sea,” Anifah told reporters, reading from a statement. He said the two countries “also agreed to provide them temporary shelter provided that the resettlement and repatriation process will be done in one year by the international community.”
A few thousand migrants have already made it to shore in Indonesia’s Aceh province and Malaysia’s Langkawi island. About 450 were rescued by Indonesian fishermen on Wednesday and brought ashore.
He did not say if the refugees would still be accepted even if there was no cooperation from the international community, or when the humanitarian process will start. Also, it is not clear how the three governments reached the figure of 7,000 refugees. The U.N. refugee agency believes there are some 4,000 at sea although some activists had initially put the number at 6,000.
Anifah said Malaysia and Indonesia invite other countries in the region to “join in this endeavor.”
Significantly, the agreement does not include Thailand even though it participated in the talks. Thailand has previously said it cannot afford to take any more migrants since it is already overburdened by tens of thousands of other refugees from Myanmar.
Most of the refugees stranded on big boats in the Andaman Sea are believed to be victims of human traffickers, who entice them in Myanmar’s Sittwe province and in Bangladesh with promises of passage to Malaysia and jobs once they land there.
But in reality, they are held for ransom, either on the trawlers or in jungle camps in Thailand through which they transit before slipping into neighboring Malaysia. The victims then have to ask their relatives back home to give money to the smugglers in return for their freedom.
“The enforcement agencies of the countries concerned will continue to share intelligence information in their efforts to combat people smuggling and human trafficking,” Anifah said.
Anifah also urged the international community to “uphold their responsibility and urgently share the burden of providing the necessary support to Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand in addressing the problem.”
He said it was also decided in the meeting to address the “root causes” of the problem, which should be “addressed by all parties concerned.” But the statement did not name Myanmar, which refuses to recognize Rohingya as citizens and says it will not take blame for their exodus. The cautiously worded statement highlighted the sensitivities at play in the region where countries are loath to criticize each other.
Anifah said the three countries propose that the international community provide them with financial assistance to enable them to help the migrants who would be sheltered in a designated area to be agreed by the affected countries and administered by a joint task force.
The international community should also take responsibility for the repatriation of the migrants to their countries of origin or resettlement in the third countries within a period of one year.
— 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.
The Revenge of Declan Walsh
Posted in: Today's ChiliA New York Times story that has exposed the alleged involvement of a Pakistani IT company, which is planning to launch “Pakistan’s largest media infrastructure“, in a multimillion fake degree scam, has caused an earthquake in the country’s media. On May 17th, the New York Times reported that Axact, the self-proclaimed most successful private sector company in Pakistan, has made millions of dollars by issuing fake university degrees. The report has shocked and embarrassed most Pakistanis about the fraudulent businesses that have thrived in their country because of the government’s ignorance while the other experts have questioned the impact of this scandal on the future of Pakistan’s growing tech sector. The NYT exposé will have a profound impact on the future and the credibility of Pakistan’s news media.
In Pakistan, everyone has a favorite television talk-show host. Everyone watches political debates before going to bed. The talk-show hosts are household names. They are famous, controversial, venerated and loathed. While some people bet on the patriotism and piety of their loved hosts, the others swear that some of these anchorpersons, certainly those with whose views they disagree, are on the payroll of the national or international intelligence agencies. In a nutshell, conversations about the media and television news personalities are as popular a hobby as topics like cricket, Islam and America.
For the past many months, an upcoming news channel, BOL (which in Urdu means to speak), has added a new layer to the conversation about the news personalities. BOL has been hiring some of the most influential and highly paid journalists who previously worked for top media companies. BOL had caused a storm in the media because at one point people even stopped speculating about the limits of its finances. After all, one big channel can only hire a few top journalists at a time but BOL, much to everyone’s amazement, was recruiting almost anybody who was somebody in the industry. Where was so much money coming from? While it was known that Axact, the IT company, funded the upcoming news channel, the NYT story now informs us that Axact’s money was all black.
Shoaib Ahmed Shaikh, the chief executive of Axact, has chosen an immature approach to respond to the NYT story. Instead of addressing what he still calls as ‘allegations’ by the New York Times, Mr. Shaikh has begun to shoot the messenger, Declan Walsh, the reporter who investigated and reported the story. In a speech that was apparently made to the staff of BOL and then distributed on the social media, Mr. Shaikh hid himself under the infamous umbrella of patriotism and dispelled the significance of the NYT report because, according to him, it was filed by a journalist who had been expelled from Pakistan. Thus, the report, to paraphrase the CEO’s argument, should be read as sort of a revenge from the journalist against being thrown out of Pakistan in 2013. Mr. Shaikh also reiterated the most commonly used Pakistani phrase, “a foreign conspiracy against our country” to put the NYT story in the context. He insisted that the reporter had no credibility because the government had previously declared him a persona non grata and banned his entry to Pakistan.
If Mr. Shaikh, the CEO of an upcoming news channels, believes that Mr. Walsh’s credentials are “questionable”, then he is surely oblivious what outstanding journalism looks like. His views about a widely admired investigative reporter who covered Pakistan for many years for the British newspaper, the Guardian, and then the NYT would disappoint everyone who had hoped that BOL would adhere to the core values of independent journalism. It is true that Mr. Walsh had been expelled from Pakistan but most Pakistani journalists did not approve of their government’s decision. Excellent reporting of some untold stories, such as the 2011 story Pakistan’s Secret Dirty War that highlighted the army’s involvement in human rights abuses in the province of Balochistan, irked the government so much that they never forgot or forgave Mr. Walsh until they finally kicked him out of Pakistan. No journalist, including Mr. Walsh, should be sorry for doing a great story. So, Mr. Shaikh is not engaging in appropriate professional behavior by making personal attacks on a reporter instead of focusing on the contents of the NYT report.
I found two things truly discomforting in Mr. Shaikh’s speech. The first one was his condescending attitude toward the reporters because of the meager salary they are paid. He gave the reporters a very ludicrous incentive to join and stay with his television network: clean restrooms. He reminded them that they had the option to join BOL to make good money or go back to the old times when newspapers failed to pay the journalists for months because of insufficient budgets. Secondly, he said that the purpose of BOL was to promote Pakistan’s “positive image” in the world. That is primarily a flawed approach for any media organization. Journalistic institutions are not responsible for promoting any brand or image. Their job is to tell stories accurately. The task to promote countries and individuals is generally entrusted either to ambassadors or public relations specialists not journalists. If promoting Pakistan’s ‘positive image’ is the goal at BOL, he should clearly admit that his is a propaganda channel of the government not a news organization. After all, CNN and BBC, for instance, do not assert any such commitment to promote the positive image of the country from where they are aired.
An independent news media is essential for Pakistan’s democracy but it is also more important to be transparent about the sources of funding for news organizations. In the first place, journalists should not work for a media organization that makes money through illegal means. Shady money is very likely to cause disruption and police raids on media organizations. That’s the worst thing any journalist would want to encounter while working on a story.
Secondly, big businesses should not use journalism as a shield to protect their controversial activities. In spite of extremely hard circumstances for a free press, several journalists in Pakistan have lost their lives in their pursuit of telling the truth. In the wake of the Axact scandal, it is not only the future of one company or a CEO that is at stake. It is disturbing how economic hardships have made Pakistan’s journalists vulnerable to working for companies whose sources of revenue are doubtful. Most journalists I know say they did not join the profession to make money. They chose to become journalists because they were passionate about telling stories. In Pakistan the CEO of Axact has kept the bar very low. He says journalists should work for him so that they can use clean restrooms in Pakistan’s “finest and most modern infrastructure.”
— 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.
Mom With Breast Cancer Says 'Grey's Anatomy' Saved Her Life: 'That TV Show Was Probably My Sign'
Posted in: Today's ChiliAn Israeli woman is crediting ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ with saving her life after an episode of the medical drama prompted her to seek a second opinion about a lump in her breast.
Two years ago, Sarit Fishbaine visited a breast specialist to get a check-up. The doctor told her that she had “lumpy breasts,” but assured her that she “had nothing to worry about.”
“I was 34 years old, healthy and nursing my third child — any lumpiness, [the doctor] said, was probably due to milk collecting in one area of the breast and the issue would likely subside once I stopped nursing,” Fishbaine told Yahoo! News.
(function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = “//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.3”; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, ‘script’, ‘facebook-jssdk’));
Posted by Sarit Fishbaine on Thursday, February 5, 2015
Six months later, however, after she had stopped breastfeeding, a lump in Fishbaine’s left breast did not go away. She initially dismissed it as nothing, but warning bells sounded after she caught an episode of “Grey’s Anatomy.”
“In the episode, a young mom arrives at Seattle Grace Hospital for a mastectomy after her breast cancer had been mistaken for milk collecting in her breast. I couldn’t fall asleep that night — it felt like a huge warning sign,” she told Yahoo!
The very next day, Fishbaine made an appointment to see another breast specialist.
This time, the doctor sent her for an “urgent mammogram and biopsy.” It was soon discovered that Fishbaine had Stage 3 breast cancer, which had spread to her lymph nodes.
“I started six months of chemo right away and after that I had surgery, I had a mastectomy and then I had radiation therapy so I got the full package,” Fishbaine told NBC News. “I love ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and I love watching TV and I think God works in mysterious ways and that watching that TV show was probably my sign.”
Fishbaine, who lives in Kvutzat Yavne, a religious kibbutz in Israel, is now cancer-free. She says she’s getting reconstructive surgery and working to “rebuild” her life.
On May 16, Shonda Rhimes, the director, producer and screenwriter of “Grey’s Anatomy,” shared Fishbaine’s story on Facebook.
“Humbling,” Rhimes wrote.
(function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = “//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.3”; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, ‘script’, ‘facebook-jssdk’));
Humbling…
Posted by Shonda Rhimes on Friday, May 15, 2015
Fishbaine isn’t the first in her family to have a story go viral. As The Times of Israel points out, Fishbaine’s dad — Sydney Engelberg, a professor who teaches at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem — won the hearts of netizens earlier this month after a photograph surfaced of him holding a baby during a lecture.
“Dad, you’re the best!” Fishbaine wrote on her Facebook page at the time, per a Times translation.
(function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = “//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.3”; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);}(document, ‘script’, ‘facebook-jssdk’));
המקום – אוניברסיטה ידועה בירושלים.הקורס – התנהגות ארגונית.המרצה – ד”ר סידני אנגלברג. הארוע – בנה התינוק של אחת הסטודנ…
Posted by Sarit Fishbaine on Sunday, May 10, 2015
— 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.
Nearly one in five college women were victims of rape or attempted rape during their freshmen year, with the most falling prey during their first three months on campus, according to a new study.
The study, published online Wednesday in the Journal of Adolescent Health, surveyed 480 female freshmen at a university in upstate New York in 2010. The results confirm other research that has found about 20 percent of women are victimized by sexual assault in college. A Centers for Disease Control report last year showed 19.3 percent of women are victims of rape or attempted rape during their lifetimes.
An accompanying editorial in the journal says the research shows “rape is a common experience among college-aged women.” The researcher, Kate Carey, professor of behavioral and social sciences in the Brown University School of Public Health, wrote that if a similar number of young people were breaking their legs in their first year of school, “we would expect that the community would do something to enhance the safety of the environment.”
Lisa Maatz, vice president of government relations at American Association of University Women, said Carey’s study shows the problem of sexual violence among young women is “probably even worse than we thought.”
“My mind boggles a bit at the statistic that they found,” Maatz said, adding that Carey’s data “is critical” to efforts to address campus rape.
The study found sexual violence widespread. Among those surveyed, 37 percent said they were either raped or attacked by someone who attempted to rape them at least once from age 14 through the end of their freshman year.
Students were most vulnerable during fall semester of their freshmen year — a period often called the “red zone” between the start of classes and Thanksgiving break.
Figures include rape by incapacitation or force, both attempted or completed. Incidents of verbal abuse or unwanted touching are not included. Chart via Brown University.
Previous research showing one in five college women had been raped has been challenged by conservative columnists and think tanks for more than 20 years. More recently, criticism has focused on research conducted on two Midwestern campuses in 2007.
“The challenge we have is the research varies a lot in terms of who is being focused on, and how the target behaviors are defined,” Carey said. “It has been exceedingly difficult to get a hard number because of all this variation in the literature.”
Colleges and universities have moved in recent years to gauge the prevalence of sexual violence on campuses. The survey results show variation, depending on how the questions are posed.
- Princeton University: One-in-six women said in a survey they had been sexually assaulted.
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology: 17 percent of women and 5 percent of men in a survey said they’d experienced sexual assault.
- University of Oregon: 10 percent of women had been raped, and 35 percent had at least one forcible sexual encounter.
- Occidental College: Nearly 8 percent of students said they’d been sexually assaulted.
- Kansas State University: Less than 1 percent said in a survey they’d experienced unwanted sexual contact at the school.
- University of Kansas: More than 1-in-10 had experienced sexual harassment or assault at the school.
“As a general rule it probably is a good idea and a responsible thing for a campus to do, even if they find out information that surprises them like my data surprised me,” Carey said. “Certainly it has to be done in a sensitive way.”
— 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.
I last saw Todd Haynes thirty years ago in a semiotics class at Brown on “Pastiche and Parody”. I remember him as the intent red-haired young man, always leaning forward, with two hands pressed on the desk, as he dialogued with professor Silverman about Baudrillard. He delivered his oral presentation on Genet with the same serious intensity.
I glimpse him again, thirty years later, on the top terrace of the Cannes Palais, overlooking the Riviera. His new film Carol has just premiered here in Cannes to rave reviews. The red hair is now tinged with grey; the intensity has expanded into a relaxed grin. Perhaps the new jovial ease comes not only by the passing of decades, but by the phenomenal success of his film. Todd laughed heartily as he greeted journalists, who all enthused about the breathtaking beauty of his film, opining that it may win the great prize this year at Cannes.
For Carol, the story of a love affair between a young pretty shop clerk (Rooney Mara) and a wealthy unhappy housewife (Cate Blanchett), set in 1950s New York City, stuns with its sensuousness, reminding one of the Hollywood cinema of old, where the camera takes time with lingering shots on characters, turning them into stars. Based on a Patricia Highsmith novel The Price of Salt (1952), the story begins (after a flash-forward) with the timid young clerk spotting the wealthy commanding lady in a department store as the latter shops for a Christmas present for her daughter. We follow the clerk’s sensitive still eyes as she stares with rapture at the mink coat, the elegant gloves, the sweep of coiffed blonde hair. Desire–glamour–is born from the gaze. We too become absorbed in watching.
In fact, the gaze becomes the cinematic theme of the film. Acclaimed cameraman Ed Lachman films Therese, the shop clerk, with her eyes peering mournfully out a rainy window; he films her (after the two women have become friends) gazing obsessively at Carol’s gloved hands on a steering wheel, as the two take their first drive together. In turn, Carol–when the dynamics shift–stares longingly at Therese’s fleeting figure through the reflecting glass of a cab window. For the duration of the film, the two women alternately “look” at each other–their hands, their mouths, their eyes–with nothing short of obsession. This is desire, this is love.
It is a love that is forbidden: lesbianism in the 1950s. Therese herself does not even know what to think of her overwhelming feelings of desire. She queries her boyfriend: “is it possible to love….a woman?” The climax of the film is a run-away road trip, with the two women escaping from social constraints into their own romantic world, going from one hotel to another, much like the celebrated escape of Humbert Humbert and Lolita. Throughout, we have a sense of secretive simmering passion–and taboo.
It is clear that the movie carries a social-political message, about societal controls on people’s sexual intimacy, and the risks of choosing an alternative life style. Both women risk being ostracized–or worse–because of their affair. Yet what makes the movie outstanding is not the political message, but rather the alluring aesthetics of each shot: the snow falling on the wintry street; the landscape of Cate Blanchett’s emotionally charged face; the eerie quiet in Rooney Mara’s elegant eyes; the 1950s decor of Carol’s mansion; the browns and greys of Therese’s modest tenement apartment. The pace of the movie is quiet, pure, undisturbed by anything that is not essential to the story (and thankfully, as this is the 1950s, no cell phones, no texts, no “noise”). We are fixated on two characters, one story.
It is a movie that will remind many a spectator of the first time he or she fell in love.
But maybe it’s not so simple.
I asked Todd if it was that simple. Could it be that his semiotics background, back at Brown, informs theoretically the way he construes the “construction of desire” (a term we often discussed in class) and “the gaze”? In Highsmith’s novel, much is made of this “gaze” by the lower-class woman on the upper class.
Todd laughed –facetiously quoting an Irigaray feminist text we had read in class thirty years ago—and then immediately gave a serious (and unexpected) response.
“What is interesting to me about Highsmith’s novel is that it basically links the desiring subject to the criminal subject because both are overproductive minds. The criminal narrator of Highsmith’s Strangers on a Train is similar to Therese’s mind in The Price of Salt as both have the same furtive hyperactive quality. Here the crime is love, and love is illegal. Therese cannot find the words for her desire; it is beyond syntax. She cannot piece it together. She is butting up against language and meaning and what she knows to be possible [in her social sphere]. When the two women finally do make love, then the desire comes into form: it can be stated.”
Leaving the Derridean theory (quickly) aside, Todd turned to what seemed to be most at stake in this film for him: the shift of power from Carol, the wealthy middle-aged woman, to Therese, the enamoured petite young clerk.
“Carol is the emblem of the privileged class, a perfect manifestation of female glamour and elegance that disarms Therese and initially furthers her anxiety about who she is. Carol is a construct of Therese’s imagination. In this film, we are always in the point of view of the more amorous character: the disempowered person. We shoot through windows and glass, to make you think of the act of looking and looking back, with people positioned on either side of the glass. When we think of our love affairs, our most memorable ones are those that put you on the side of the weaker and desiring subject.”
I asked Todd why he, a gay male director, so often privileged the disempowered woman as the main character in his films, from his Barbie Doll Karen Carpenter to the paranoid allergic housewife in Safe.
“Stories about marginal women,” he explained. “Are more interesting than films about men; they contain the limits of social burdens; women’s lives are more burdened by society, in the choices they make, as they carry on the institutions of the family, satisfying men. There is less freedom in their lives. In films about men, you can pretend that these limits can be escaped [with heroic vanquishing stories] but not so much with women. Filming women allows me to show how we all share these restrictions.”
As for the wonderful road trip–which adds such sparkle to the film–this too has a political undertone:
“The road trip is essential to the novel and the film, in that it is the only place where we think we are free from the constraints of society.”
And yet the film has a fresh revolutionary undercurrent–and an exhilarating conclusion. The power dynamics between Carol and Therese eventually shift, as do as well their positions in society. As Todd noted: “Therese changes! She grows up, and by the end,” he laughed warmly. “She wears a full skirt!”
In fact, Therese, the disempowered girl, [warning: plot spoiler!] , becomes, by the end of the film, an established confident photographer, her success launched by the photos she has taken of Carol during their road trip, photos that frame her face and body, putting the glamour in perspective.
It is her gaze that now dominates.
Some critics have asserted that the film is appropriately called “Carol”, as Cate Blanchett’s acting is extraordinary, but for me, the film could have been called “Therese”, as I could watch the film over and over, just to observe her mysterious watching eyes.
— 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.
L’Oreal is partnering with 3D bioprinting company, Organovo to take their current skin farming to the next level. L’Oreal currently grows its own skin for testing beauty products and formulations. It is a necessary step before releasing products to market, so L’Oreal can see just how safe and effective its formulas are. Organovo is an industrial bioprinting company that 3D-printed … Continue reading