Partime Swiss Edition to take off this summer

partime-watchWhile the world might be enamored with the flavor of the day at the moment where timepieces are concerned with smartwatches being released left and right, what with the Apple Watch being one of them, there is still a sizeable crowd out there who would prefer something that is a whole lot more traditional. Partime, for instance, is a young watch brand that hails from Zurich which will be going on board Swiss International Airlines in order to deliver its duty free range this summer by offering a new design. The Partime Swiss Edition is so special, it can only be bought when you are at an altitude of 10,000 meters – that is, in the middle of a flight, and these watches will be numbered and available exclusively to passengers of Swiss.

The Partime Swiss Edition is special enough to come with in a 45 mm, polished stainless steel case, where it will be individually numbered to ensure its uniqueness, will be waterproof, sports a LCD display, a digital time display that can show up at the touch of a button, and a battery life of approximately 2 years. Sounds like a dream timepiece to us, especially for those who love to spend plenty of time in the skies!

Press Release
[ Partime Swiss Edition to take off this summer copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Electroloom Fabric 3D Printer: Seamless Seamstress

We’ve seen 3D printed clothing before, but it’s usually not made of fabric or if it is, it’s basically made through a hybrid of CAD and knitting. The Electroloom could be the first 3D printer that creates clothes out of fabric, combining the familiarity and comfort of traditional clothing with the efficiency and personalization of 3D design.

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Electroloom co-founder Aaron Rowley says he and his colleagues were inspired by one of their university projects, which involved the creation of artificial blood vessels. They used a process called electrospinning to create the microscopic scaffolding. Aaron and his peers realized they could use electrospinning on a macro level and create clothing. Put simply, Electroloom sprays a fabric solution over a mold. When the solution solidifies, just take it off the mold and it’s ready to wear.

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Electroloom currently uses a cotton and polyester solution as its ink. With it, the team has consistently made tank tops, skirts and sheets of fabric.

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Now the team wants to share their invention with other makers, so they started a Kickstarter fundraiser.

Pledge at least $4,500 (USD) on Kickstarter to get an alpha Electroloom as a reward. Again, this is just an early prototype and is not meant for daily use. You can however pledge lesser amounts to get items of clothing that were printed on an Electroloom prototype.

[via TechCrunch]

Apple Debuts New 15-Inch MacBook Pro With Force Touch And $1,999 27-Inch Retina iMac

15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display Apple has updated both the 15-inch MacBook Pro With Retina Display, and the 27-inch iMac, with new specs that include Intel Core processors, as well as a new Force Touch trackpad for the MacBook, which provides opportunities for unique input via a secondary, deeper click, as well as Apple’s trademark “taptic” feedback, which makes it feel like the trackpad is physically… Read More

Facebook Toying With Allowing Businesses To Message Users On WhatsApp

whatsapp-logo-newAt the moment WhatsApp is based on an annual subscription model which admittedly is a pretty low price, although given the number of active users, that translates to hundreds of millions of dollars a year. However like we said with the amount of users WhatsApp has, there is a lot of potential to be had.

According to a report from Bloomberg, Facebook recently revealed some of their plans to monetize the platform in the future, one of which could involve allowing businesses to advertise to WhatsApp users directly. Speaking at the JPMorgan technology conference, David Wehner, Facebook’s chief financial officer revealed that enabling B2C messaging was one of the ideas Facebook had.

“We think that enabling that B2C messaging has good business potential for us. As we learn those things, I think there’s going to be opportunities to bring some of those things to WhatsApp, but that’s more longer-term than the near-term.” If this sounds like something you’re not on board with, fret not as this is merely an idea and not something Facebook will be implementing anytime soon.

In fact last year Facebook revealed that they had no plans on monetizing WhatsApp just yet, although if this is any indication, it looks like Facebook is starting to cook up some ideas. Considering that they paid a whopping $19 billion for the platform, we’re pretty sure they would like to see a return soon.

Facebook Toying With Allowing Businesses To Message Users On WhatsApp , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.



New 15-inch MacBook Pro With Force Touch Launched

macbook proAccording to a rumor from yesterday, it was suggested that Apple could launch a new 15-inch MacBook Pro this coming Wednesday. Well, it looks like the rumors were almost right because instead of a Wednesday launch, Apple has actually launched it a day earlier than expected which is today.

For those who are looking to purchase a new MacBook Pro it seems like the launch is pretty good timing and given the refreshed specs, perhaps this might be an option worth considering. Probably the most notable change Apple has made to the laptop is the inclusion of the Force Touch trackpad which was originally introduced in the 12-inch Retina MacBook.

For those unfamiliar, the idea behind the Force Touch trackpad is to allow users to click anywhere with a uniform feel, and will also sport a Taptic Engine that provides tactile feedback while being used. Users are also able to specify the amount of pressure that is required in order for it to register a click.

Apart from the introduction of the Force Touch trackpad, Apple has also updated the laptop with new Intel Broadwell processors which will start at a 2.2GHz Intel Core i7 model at $1,999, but users can choose to customize its specs with better processor speeds and graphics at an additional cost. If you’d like to learn more or place an order, hit up Apple’s online store  for the details.

New 15-inch MacBook Pro With Force Touch Launched , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.



Apple Unveils Cheaper 27-inch 5K iMac Models

imac retinaIf you have seen Apple’s 27-inch Retina 5K iMac in the stores, then you know that it is a thing of beauty. The display is incredibly sharp and while some might debate the need for such a high-end display, one has to admit that it looks good. Unfortunately its price also put it out of reach for a lot of customers, but thankfully that is no longer the case.

Along with the announcement of the updated 15-inch MacBook Pro with the Force Touch trackpad, Apple has also announced a cheaper iMac configuration which starts at $1,999 for the 27-inch 5K model. This particular model will feature a 3.3GHz quad-core Intel Core i5 processor and will sport an AMD Radeon R9 M290 GPU.

It will be accompanied by 8GB of RAM, 1TB of storage, and twin Thunderbolt 2 ports. Oddly enough there is no option for users to choose the Apple Fusion drive so that’s something worth considering if you absolutely have to have it. Sounds good so far, right? Now for those who are still hankering for the top of the line model, it seems that Apple has dropped the price on that as well.

Previously the model was priced at $2,499 but it looks like Apple has dropped it by $200 because it is now priced at $2,299, making it slightly more affordable for customers. The specs and configuration remains the same as before except that it comes with a new price tag. If you’d like to place an order, pop on over to the Apple Online Store for the details.

Apple Unveils Cheaper 27-inch 5K iMac Models , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.



16 Images That Capture The Dark And Beautiful Love Affair Between Art And Punk

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Washington Project for the Arts, “Punk Art” catalogue, front and back covers, 1978.

“To me, punk rock is the freedom to create, freedom to be successful, freedom to not be successful, freedom to be who you are,” punk Jedi Patti Smith once said. “It’s freedom.”

In 1975, Smith released the album “Horses,” which would go on to shape the visions of future punk rockers throughout the late 1970s and beyond. To some, this groundbreaking album, touching on subjects from sex to suicide, LGBT experiences to extraterrestrials, signified the beginning of punk rock’s dominant musical reign.

Looking back at Smith’s iconic “Horses” 40 years later, one can easily see that punk rock and punk art were never too far apart. The cover of the album itself, a slightly blurred black-and-white portrait of Smith in androgynous menswear, was snapped by Robert Mapplethorpe. In her collection of essays “Sex, Art and American Culture,” Camille Paglia called the unassuming yet revolutionary image “one of the greatest pictures ever taken of a woman.”

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Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946 – 1989) Patti Smith, negative 1975, Gelatin silver print. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, Jointly acquired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, with funds provided by The David Geffen Foundation, and The J. Paul Getty Trust. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation.

Since its early beginnings, punk music has mingled with the realm of fine art (as recently crystallized by exhibitions including the Met’s “Punk: Chaos to Couture“). In 1978, Marc H. Miller and Bettie Ringma mounted a particularly historic exhibition dedicated to the visual artists contributing to the punk ethos at large at the Washington Project for the Arts in Washington DC. It would later be known as the first Punk Art exhibition.

Why were artists… attracted to rock & roll?” Rolling Stone’s John Rockwell asked in his 1976 review of “Horses.” “Well, first of all, by the Sixties it was as integral a part of the American consciousness as soup cans and a lot more powerful than they were. It epitomized rebellious violence that mirrored the meditative quiescence that other avant-gardists were sinking into, and it did so with flash and perverse style. Equally important, its simplicity of structure evoked a response in artists caught up in an aesthetic of minimalism and structural process.”

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Alan “Suicide” Vega with his sculpture of TVs and other electrical appliances gathered from the trash, 1975. Photo by Yuri.

Over 30 years later, this original Punk Art exhibition remains as crucial as ever, with many of the punk progenitors still active in the scene today. Now, Bowery 98’s “Punk Art Exhibition — The Catalogue” is featuring some of the most iconic images associated with the movement too, from Ruth Marten’s tattoo performance to Alan “Suicide” Vega’s trash sculptures.

The gallery is known for its love of all things pop culture, so it makes sense that such a venue would celebrate the Rectal Realism, downtown filmmakers and all around “bad boys” that have come to distinguish the genre.

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Definition taken from Punk Art Exhibition — The Catalogue.

My sculpture is an example of Punk visually,” Vega is quoted proclaiming in the catalogue. “A not-give-a-shit attitude about just piling up a load of garbage and proving it could look good too… I found TVs in the street… I would go into these light stores and shove lights into my pockets… occasionally I throw in radios… there are lots of broken wires, smashed bulbs, chains, broken glass, and other kinds of things that just threaten people.”

See the origins of the twisted love affair between punk rock and punk art in the images below, and check out Gallery 98 for the full, online-only exhibition.

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Brits Get To Weigh In On Which Historic Figure Appears On 20 Pound Note

LONDON, May 19 (Reuters) – The British public will for the first time be able to help decide which historic figure – in this case a creative one – appears on the next version of the country’s 20 pound note, the Bank of England said on Tuesday.

The BoE regularly changes who appears on British banknotes, and there was controversy in 2013 when the choice of Winston Churchill to succeed 19th century social reformer Elizabeth Fry on the five pound note meant future notes would depict no women other than the current monarch Queen Elizabeth.

One of BoE Governor Mark Carney’s first public acts after he took office in July 2013 was to announce that novelist Jane Austen would appear on the 10 pound note from 2017, and making the BoE more transparent has been one of his main goals.

Carney said on Tuesday that the BoE would invite the public to nominate British artists, craftsmen, designers or filmmakers who they would like to see on the 20 pound note, which currently shows economist Adam Smith.

“The design of these notes must command respect and legitimacy, and should inspire,” Carney said at London’s Victoria and Albert design museum.

The public can nominate British artists who are no longer living via the BoE’s website until July 19, and a decision will be made by a committee of BoE officials and art experts early next year.

The other figures on Bank of England notes are evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin on the 10 pound note and steam engine inventor James Watt and his business partner Matthew Boulton on the 50 pound note. (Reporting by David Milliken Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)

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The Global Search for Education: Oppi-tunities for Parents

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Sandra Jackson-Dumont, Cathy Rubin and Randi Weingarten at
Oppi Festival Kick Off

Call me mad or just insanely curious, but I visited over 20 schools before I selected one for my kids. For me, the way I educated my kids was the most critical decision I ever made in my life. In virtually every school, the head of school would remind us at the end of the tour, “this is a partnership between us the school and you the parents – we are in this together!” I knew back then I had a very challenging journey – a huge job in front of me. I knew I wanted an education about education!

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The Oppi Festival at Leman Manhattan School

A Festival like Oppi 2015 would have been a magnet for me, i.e. a chance to experience the world’s greatest thinkers debate why gender matters, why the arts are so critical in education today, why kids must have global skills to survive in today’s world – in an organic, richly intellectual setting where all you need is a passion for your kid’s education and a Sam Adams beer. Why oh why was Oppi not around in the 90’s?

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The Oppi Festival at Leman Manhattan School

The fact is, it is now. I’m sorry for the parents that missed Siva Kumari’s (@siva_kumari) vision for a global education for all students. I’m sorry for the parents who missed Columbia University’s Erick Gordon (@ErickGordon) present his cutting edge work on making literature more compelling for kids. I’m sorry for the parents who missed Sandra Jackson-Dumont (@sandrajd), Kati Koerner (@nycaier) and Harriet Taub’s (@mftanyc) dream dare do visions for the arts and education reform in the next 5 to 10 years. I’m sorry for the parents who missed thought leaders Randi Weingarten (@rweingarten), Andy Hargreaves (@HargreavesBC), Pasi Sahlberg (@pasi_sahlberg), Wendy Kopp (@wendykopp), Simon Breakspear (@SimonBreakspear), Frances Strickland, Gavin Dykes (@gavindk), Naomi Williams (@nomew), Craig Hatkoff (@chatkoff), Lord Jim Knight (@jimpknight) and so many others discuss global education change, its impact on schools and why traditional education models must find balance with the needs of a 21st century child. I’m sorry for the parents who missed Looplabs’ “Rethinking Music Creation in a Cloud” (@looplabsmusic) workshop. I’m sorry for the parents that missed artists Taylor Mali (@taylormali), and Jon Burgerman (@jonburgerman). I’m sorry for the parents who didn’t see the pitch fest showcasing the next generation of edutainment products that parents and schools may soon be purchasing for kids, presented by Sweden’s and Finland’s up and coming entrepreneurs. What parent wouldn’t want to test these products out and share parenting experience with the creators on how to make them better? I’m really sorry for the parents (and the kids) who missed the charismatic James Harris from Usher’s New Look Foundation (@UshersNewLook) who reinforced my belief that the dreamers of today are the doers of tomorrow.

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The Oppi Festival at Leman Manhattan School

One of my children came home in middle school and told me, “Mom, my school has NO idea what is going in the world.” He was referring to the technological revolution that has turned knowledge and learning upside down, inside out and asked all of us to rethink how, what, why, when and where we learn. This started me on a journey to explore the meaning of education in his world versus the world I was educated for – a world all parents need to think about when it comes to the education of their children. Why are the test results we used to rely on no longer the ones that matter? Why do we need to think about what we test? There are innovations going on all over the world right now to change the way children learn – are you aware of them? Do you understand why the next great engineer, doctor, dancer, filmmaker or entrepreneur can literally come from anywhere?

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The Oppi Festival at Leman Manhattan School

My message to the Oppi Festival (@OppiFestival) and Suklaa is thank you for an amazing two days of global learning. My message to parents: you’re raising global citizens, you’re preparing global scholars and self-starters – the way you educate them is the most important gift you can give them – get involved in the global conversation.

For more information on the Oppi Festival

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C. M. Rubin

(All Photos are courtesy of Susan Cook)

Join me and globally renowned thought leaders including Sir Michael Barber (UK), Dr. Michael Block (U.S.), Dr. Leon Botstein (U.S.), Professor Clay Christensen (U.S.), Dr. Linda Darling-Hammond (U.S.), Dr. MadhavChavan (India), Professor Michael Fullan (Canada), Professor Howard Gardner (U.S.), Professor Andy Hargreaves (U.S.), Professor Yvonne Hellman (The Netherlands), Professor Kristin Helstad (Norway), Jean Hendrickson (U.S.), Professor Rose Hipkins (New Zealand), Professor Cornelia Hoogland (Canada), Honourable Jeff Johnson (Canada), Mme. Chantal Kaufmann (Belgium), Dr. EijaKauppinen (Finland), State Secretary TapioKosunen (Finland), Professor Dominique Lafontaine (Belgium), Professor Hugh Lauder (UK), Lord Ken Macdonald (UK), Professor Geoff Masters (Australia), Professor Barry McGaw (Australia), Shiv Nadar (India), Professor R. Natarajan (India), Dr. Pak Tee Ng (Singapore), Dr. Denise Pope (US), Sridhar Rajagopalan (India), Dr. Diane Ravitch (U.S.), Richard Wilson Riley (U.S.), Sir Ken Robinson (UK), Professor Pasi Sahlberg (Finland), Professor Manabu Sato (Japan), Andreas Schleicher (PISA, OECD), Dr. Anthony Seldon (UK), Dr. David Shaffer (U.S.), Dr. Kirsten Sivesind (Norway), Chancellor Stephen Spahn (U.S.), Yves Theze (LyceeFrancais U.S.), Professor Charles Ungerleider (Canada), Professor Tony Wagner (U.S.), Sir David Watson (UK), Professor Dylan Wiliam (UK), Dr. Mark Wormald (UK), Professor Theo Wubbels (The Netherlands), Professor Michael Young (UK), and Professor Minxuan Zhang (China) as they explore the big picture education questions that all nations face today.
The Global Search for Education Community Page

C. M. Rubin is the author of two widely read online series for which she received a 2011 Upton Sinclair award, “The Global Search for Education” and “How Will We Read?” She is also the author of three bestselling books, including The Real Alice in Wonderland, is the publisher of CMRubinWorld, and is a Disruptor Foundation Fellow.

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What Happens If You Drink Before You Know You're Pregnant? New Research Has A Scary Answer

Trying to having a baby? You might want to hold off on that evening cocktail — even if you’re not sure whether you’re pregnant yet.

While we all know that drinking during pregnancy can inflict long-lasting damage on a baby, the effect of alcohol on a developing embryo before a woman knows she’s pregnant has been less studied.

Now, provocative new research on mice suggests that a mother’s drinking — even in the first three weeks of pregnancy — may create changes in the genes of the embryo that can cause permanent damage.

In light of the findings, the researchers suggest that women would be wise to cut back on drinking, or avoid alcohol altogether, as soon as they make the decision to get pregnant.

“Our findings suggest that alcohol can harm fetus in early pregnancy, a time period when women are often not aware of their pregnancy,” Dr. Nina Kaminen-Ahola, a biologist at the University of Helsinki and the study’s lead author, told The Huffington Post in an email. “Therefore it would be good to decrease the alcohol consumption as soon as one plans to have a baby.”

However, it’s too early to say how much alcohol consumption it would take to harm a human fetus during early pregnancy, and more research is needed in order to provide specific guidelines. “It is important to remember, that this is a mouse, not a human study,” Kaminen-Ahola said.

In the study, the researchers fed alcohol to female mice who were at a stage of pregnancy that is equivalent to three to four weeks of human pregnancy. They found that the mice pups exhibited symptoms similar to human fetal alcohol syndrome, including hyperactivity, decreased growth rate and structural changes to the face and skull.

The early exposure to alcohol created changes in the embryo’s epigenome — the set of chemical compounds that regulate the genome — which led to alterations in the expression of genes in the brains of the infant mice. These changes were observed in the hippocampus, a brain region associated with learning, memory and emotion that is known to be heavily affected by alcohol. Researchers also found changes in the bone marrow of the infant mice, and in some tissue within the mouse’s snout that plays a role in the sense of smell.

Why did the alcohol exert such a significant and long-lasting effect on the tiny mice? The researchers explained that early pregnancy is a critical time for cell division and differentiation. The embryo is vulnerable to external influences at this stage, and any changes can become widespread because the cells are rapidly dividing.

Therefore, the effects of alcohol on the embryo “cause life-long changes in brain structure, function, and behaviour,” Kaminen-Ahola said.

The researchers said that the findings may eventually be used to help diagnose, and hopefully treat, alcohol-induced damage in infants.

“Ideally, a swipe sample from inside the mouth of a newborn could reveal the extent of damage caused by early pregnancy alcohol exposure,” Kaminen-Ahola said in a statement.

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