It’s time to freshen up, comb that hair, exercise that jaw, and maybe bring out the dictionary or translation guide. Facebook Messenger’s new video calling feature, which was announced barely a month ago, is now starting to roll out everywhere and on every platform. Messenger is shaping up to be one distinct and, more importantly, distinguishable product apart from Facebook’s … Continue reading
ReVault looks just like any ordinary smartwatch, but its main feature’s quite different from others in the category: it has wireless local storage you can access like a private cloud. According to its Indiegogo page, the storage is accessible from yo…
Toshiba is gearing up to release a new touchscreen all-in-one desktop PC namely the dynabook D81/S. This space-saving system is configured with a 21.5-inch 1920 x 1080 Full HD touchscreen display, a 2.50GHz Intel Core i7-4710MQ processor (w/ built-in graphics card), an 8GB DDR3 RAM and a 3TB hard drive.
Furthermore, the system comes complete with a 92-megapixel webcam, a BDXL drive, a 3-wave tuner, 2x USB 2.0 ports, 4x USB 3.0 ports, Gigabit Ethernet, HDMI input and output ports and built-in Onkyo made speakers. Running on Windows 8.1 Update 64-bit OS, the dynabook D81/S provides WiFi 802.11ac and Bluetooth 4.0 for connectivity.
The Toshiba dynabook D81/S will hit the market from May 22nd for unannounced price yet. [Toshiba]
Steph Curry's Daughter, Riley Curry, Steals The Spotlight During Post-Game Press Conference
Posted in: Today's ChiliNBA MVP Steph Curry led the Golden State Warriors to a 110-106 win over the Houston Rockets in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals on Tuesday night, stealing the spotlight with 34 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists.
But after the game, someone stole the spotlight from him: His own daughter.
Riley Curry, who will turn 3 in July, dominated the post-game news conference the way her dad dominated on the court — at one point even telling daddy he’s too loud, and ordering him to be quiet:
So forget the game highlights. Here are the Riley highlights:
A picture truly is worth a thousand words pic.twitter.com/6tVYoWG85I
— Golden St. Warriors (@warriors) May 20, 2015
Riley Curry cuteness level = + pic.twitter.com/FAmqgFc9tw
— CBS Sports NBA (@CBSSportsNBA) May 20, 2015
Riley Curry Podium Game.
WATCH » http://t.co/PTYYGcFDC8 pic.twitter.com/Hx7CmHIwVA
— Golden St. Warriors (@warriors) May 20, 2015
Riley Curry is the real MVP. pic.twitter.com/khQOr8cRLp
— Kristen Ledlow (@KristenLedlow) May 20, 2015
Stephen Curry (and daughter) LIVE on NBA TV right now. pic.twitter.com/OEoVZLjYmT
— NBA TV (@NBATV) May 20, 2015
Someone get that kid an agent.
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BookFilter Exclusive: Naomi Novik On Her Acclaimed New Fantasy Novel "Uprooted"
Posted in: Today's ChiliUPROOTED
By Naomi Novik
$25 (hardcover); Del Rey
Naomi Novik is one of the most successful fantasy authors of the past decade. She splashed onto the scene in 2006 with three books published in three months on the venerable Del Rey imprint, making Novik an immediate critical and commercial sensation. The Temeraire series combines the Napoleonic Era with dragons in a manner both witty and insightful. (When your beast of burden is a talking, fire-breathing dragon, questions of self-determination and slavery become a lot more interesting.)
Even before the first book was published, it was optioned by director Peter Jackson (more on that in a minute). But other stories, other ideas have pushed their way in as Novik builds to the ninth and final volume of the Temeraire tales, due out in 2016. One idea in particular wouldn’t go away and the result is Uprooted, a stand-alone fantasy out now to considerable critical acclaim. Her peers in particular have praised it, with everyone from Ursula K. Le Guin to Lev Grossman to Tamora Pierce (the author Novik read in the school library as a child, rather than going out to play during recess) chiming in.
Novik sat down with BookFilter to discuss her new book, her childhood, how her parents met and separated and met again across the sea, a lost novel and much more. Head to BookFilter for the complete interview. Highlights are below.
Based on the Polish and Russian fairy tales her mother read to Novik as a child growing up in Staten Island, Uprooted begins in classic fashion with a corker of an opening line: “Our Dragon doesn’t eat the girls he takes, no matter what stories they tell outside our valley.” Novik has you immediately and never falters. The novel begins with a ritual: the once-a-decade ceremony when the local wizard (nicknamed the “Dragon”) chooses a young maid to take away to his tower, where she serves him in ways the locals can’t imagine but spend an awful lot of time trying.
Everyone simply knows the beautiful and winning Kasia will be chosen and yet it’s our narrator Agnieszka that the Dragon almost reluctantly takes. From the fate of Agnieszka to the fate of her valley to the fate of the kingdom and indeed the world, the scope of this story slowly but inexorably expands. So does the magic, whether the highly detailed, scientific magic of the Dragon or the more creative, “instinctive” magic that Agnieszka soon proves adept at.
The medieval world Novik creates is as rooted in reality as her Napoleonic one. But unlike most fantasy, what you remember best is not the world but the vivid and complex characters. In what is ultimately a rather remarkable novel, there are no genuine villains. Oh there is danger and evil aplenty (as symbolized by the malignant Wood that encroaches on Agnieszka’s valley); armies clash, people struggle for power and so on. But time and again Novik reveals characters driven not by a black heart but by sincere if sometimes misguided impulses. Indeed, nothing is scarier than someone doing great evil for what they consider a higher purpose. In shortUprooted is the best and boldest novel she’s written. So far.
NAOMI NOVIK ON HOW TO GET AN AGENT IN TWO EASY STEPS
Novik is one-half of a publishing industry powerhouse. She’s an acclaimed, best-selling author and a champion of online fan fiction (where Novik got her start) via the Organization For Transformative Works. Her husband Charles Ardai is an Edgar Award-winning author in his own right as well as the founder of the pulp fiction imprint Hard Case Crime. Here Novik tells how they met and her fortuitous path to getting an agent.
NAOMI NOVIK ON BREAKING INTO THE FEDERAL RESERVE
Novik grew up in the 1970s surrounded by numbers and science. Her parents were steeped in them while working on computers after emigrating to the US from Eastern Europe. Here Novik describes making like Matthew Broderick and playing early online games by remotely accessing the Federal Reserve computers.
NAOMI NOVIK ON NOT TALKING ABOUT THE MOVIE VERSION OF TEMERAIRE
The Temeraire series was optioned by Peter Jackson about a decade ago. Novik remains a huge fan of the director, but after years of enthusing about the potential for a movie or TV series or something, Novik suddenly clams up politely when the issue is broached yet again. Given the length of time that has passed, outsiders can only surmise that the option has lapsed or someone else is circling the project or something is about to be announced…or that a project that would be ridiculously expensive and difficult to mount may simply be on the backburner for years to come. You decide.
This much is clear: Novik is not a one-trick pony. Her Temeraire series was a clever idea: The Napoleonic Era! And dragons! Of course! But it is the execution that makes it an ongoing pleasure. (The final book will be out in 2016.) And with Uprooted just released to acclaim and numerous other stories bursting to get out (led by an idea that springs from The Secret Garden), we can safely say Novik won’t be one of those authors who builds one great world and then gets trapped in it. Temeraire is just the beginning. Head to BookFilter for the complete, in-depth interview.
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the founder and CEO of BookFilter, a book lover’s best friend. Head to BookFilter if you want to find more great picks in every category. You’ll discover smart picks by our crackerjack staff, not crowd-sourced reviews saying — yet again — hey, you should read “The Girl On A Train!” (I mean, you should, but you knew that already, didn’t you?) You’ll know what just came out in stores, get great ideas for what to read next or find a smart and affordable gift in every category. If you’re a super-fan of cookbooks or history or mystery or you name it, come to BookFilter and you can browse through lists of every release in every category and do your own filtering!
Note: Michael Giltz is provided with free galleys and final copies of books in the hope that he’ll review or write a story on them. He receives far more copies of books than he could ever cover.
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Julie Earley, 50, disappeared without a trace from Trotwood, Ohio, in May 2012, and her sister, Kim, says she is convinced that Julie’s husband, Cregg, killed her in a fit of rage.
“Cregg is a rageful, violent person, a liar and very narcissistic. I am very afraid of him,” Kim says in the video above. “When I found out my sister was missing, it was instant panic. I immediately thought Cregg had done something to her.”
Julie’s sister-in-law, Jill, also believes Cregg has something to hide. “Am I convinced Cregg killed her? Yes, I am,” Jill says. “I want Cregg to know, you think you can run, but you can’t hide.”
But Cregg, who had been married to Julie for seven years, vehemently denies the accusations. “I love Julie,” he says. “I’ve saved her life so many times; I would have never hurt her.”
Cregg says he believes his wife is still alive and that someone picked her up from their home. He accuses Julie’s ex-husband of being involved in her disappearance — but the ex-husband points the finger right back at Cregg.
Although the FBI asked Cregg to take a polygraph test, he refused. “I don’t believe in them,” he says. “I don’t personally feel that I have to prove anything to anybody … Her family’s been falsely accusing me since she disappeared. I don’t care what they think. I don’t care what anybody thinks. I have nothing to do with my wife’s disappearance.”
Cregg adds, “My wife has been missing three years, and my world is still in shambles.”
Kim responds, “He tries to play like he’s the victim. In fact, he’s the murderer.”
What does Cregg say happened on the day Julie disappeared? Why did he wait more than a week to report her missing? Watch more from Wednesday’s episode of Dr. Phil here.
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E-mail, instant messaging, social networks. Advancements in these technologies and services have made it super easy to share things like web pages to someone half way around the world. But for sharing the same things with people in the same room, things have sometimes become more complicated. That is the motivation, or the justification, for Google’s newest Chrome extension simply … Continue reading
The 2016 MX-5 Miata was slowly but surely turning out to be Mazda’s return to glory as far as the Miata line was concerned, delivering the unique experience that only open-air driving can deliver. But while the 2016 Miata’s top-down mode lets you enjoy the breeze on your face, physics tells us that it may come a price of a … Continue reading
Last November, Samsung introduced Flow, which lets users seamlessly share activities between devices. (Yes, much like Apple does with Continuity.) And while the software still isn’t fully baked, the South Korean company is now letting people give it …
Apple has introduced the all new 15-inch MacBook Pro that comes with the new Force Touch trackpad. Unlike its predecessor, this updated MacBook Pro boasts the new Force Touch trackpad that brings a new dimension of interactivity to the Mac. With built-in force sensors and a Taptic Engine that delivers haptic feedback, the Force Touch trackpad allows you to click anywhere with a uniform feel and customize the amount of pressure needed to register each click.
As for the rest of the specs, the system is built with a 15.4-inch 2880 x 1800 IPS LED-backlit Retina display, a 2.2GHz Intel Core i7 processor, an Intel Iris Pro Graphics, a 16GB 1600MHz DDR3 RAM and a 256GB SSD. Price itself is set at $1,999. [Product Page]