Pokemon GO Beta begins today in USA

gobetaToday the Pokemon Company have opened the floodgates – just a TINY bit – for US Beta Testers of the augmented reality game Pokemon GO. This game will allow gamers around the world to find and collect and battle Pokemon as they appear in the real (augmented) world. This is a sort of Mixed Reality game in that part is … Continue reading

Xbox TV rumored to make an E3 debut

xbox-one-820x420-820x420With E3 growing steadily closer, we’re getting increasingly interested in what Microsoft and Sony are doing with their current consoles. Rumors have suggested that both companies are planning to release some sort of incremental update to their flagship consoles. However, now it looks like Microsoft may be announcing something completely different. For years we’ve heard rumors that Microsoft would release … Continue reading

iDevices Socket gives incandescent bulbs an IoT upgrade

idevices-socketUpgrading existing lights to connected versions usually means choosing between fancy LED bulbs and those you already have, but iDevices is pitching a way to keep both. The new iDevices Socket screws into a regular bayonet light socket – whether a ceiling fixture, standalone lamp, or wall sconce – and has a ring of multicolor LEDs for mood lighting; however, … Continue reading

Osmo's blocks are like Lego for coding

There’s a growing sense among educators and parents that learning to code is a valuable life skill. The UK has implemented programming in its computing curriculum, and several companies have cropped up with toys and games designed to teach young’uns…

Hitman Episode 3 Release Date Confirmed

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The new Hitman game is off to a great start. It’s an episodic title and IO Interactive has already released two episodes that take Agent 47 to Paris and Sapienza respectively. The developer confirmed the Hitman Episode 3 release date today. It follows up quite nicely to the big fashion show event of Paris and the expansive nature of Sapienza.

Hitman Episode 3: Marrakesh has been confirmed today. The developer says that episode three had to be extraordinary as it takes the baton from Paris and Sapienza.

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The team built Marrakesh with a maze of alleys, a variety of souks that line the medina walls, and they even put in a proper shisha café. Players can even enjoy the shade on the rooftop terraces of Marrakesh. Beyond the busy marketplace, players will find the Swedish Consulate building.

Players will take out two main targets in Marrakesh, the first is a private banker called Claus Strandberg who is holed up inside the Swedish Consulate and the other is army General Reza Zaydan who is protected by his elite squad of soldiers are a temporary headquarters in the heart of Marrakesh.

IO Interactive says that both targets will be challenging to reach and both will have some entertaining special moments attached to them which will enable players to give them some poetic justice. Marrakesh also brings more live content for players as it has been designed to keep them busy with a wide range of challenges. It’s also going to be the location for the upcoming Elusive Targets and Escalation Contracts.

Hitman Episode 3 is going to be released on May 31st for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC.

Hitman Episode 3 Release Date Confirmed , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Xiaomi Announces Affordable 4K Mi Drone

Xiaomi is known for making affordable products that offer specifications similar to those of competing products on the market. That’s one big reason why the company has shot to popularity in such a short span of time, and why it has managed to sell tens of millions of handsets in China and neighboring countries. Xiaomi has been teasing the launch of its first drone for the past week and today it formally announced the Mi Drone, which is quite affordable and yet offers 4K video recording.

Xiaomi is going to offer two models of the Mi Drone. The first costs $380 and has a 1080p camera, this drone will be crowdfunded on the company’s Mi Home app starting tomorrow.

The Mi Drone comes with a remote control which uses a Xiaomi Mi smartphone as a viewfinder. The drone itself has a 5,100mAh battery which can be easily removed.

Xiaomi’s drone is quite similar to other quadcopters but the company points out that its drone is easier to service and since the camera module is detachable like the rotors, it has an element of modularity to it as well.

The other is a $460 model which is essentially the same drone but with a 4K camera. The 4K Mi Drone is going to be available for testing through an open beta program by the end of July.

 

Xiaomi Announces Affordable 4K Mi Drone , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Toyota And Uber Form Strategic Alliance

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One of the biggest car manufacturers in the world has announced that it has formed a strategic alliance with one of the biggest ride-hailing services in the world. The alliance will enable more drivers to get on Uber, allowing Toyota to sell more cars in the process while the increase in drivers will help Uber put more drivers on the road to cater to rising demand.

Toyota’s lending arm is going to launch a new leasing program to provide cars to Uber drivers. A spokesman for the company said that this program will take effect in the United States and in several other countries but not in Japan. They’re aiming to launch this program by the second half of this year.

Drivers who purchase their Toyota vehicles under this new program will be able to cover their lease payments through Uber earnings. Toyota Financial Services will be leasing vehicles with flexible terms allowing more people to get cars and start driving with Uber.

The Japanese car manufacturer has also made an investment in Uber but the terms of this investment haven’t been disclosed. The Wall Street Journal reports that Toyota’s investment in Uber is less than $100 million.

This isn’t the first such partnership we’ve seen between traditional car manufacturers are services like Uber. General Motors has already made a $500 million investment in Lyft, and both companies are also collaborating on self-driving cars.

Toyota And Uber Form Strategic Alliance , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

This Might Be The Only Way Moms Can Get Some Time Off

Is there a way for mothers to ever truly get a break? The BreakWomb moms have an idea. 

In the trio’s latest video titled “How Moms Get Time Off,” one of the moms has a sprained ankle and must rest on the couch. When her friends hear about her many naps and the way she got out of baking three dozen brownies for a class bake sale because of her injury, they want in on the action, too.

“So was there a particular way you fell off the curb?” one mother asks. 

Don’t try this at home, moms. 

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The Dreaded Phone Call

The situation:

It was the dreaded phone call.

The Vice Principal at our son’s school called to tell us Riley had gotten in trouble for pulling on a female classmate’s pants. He hadn’t pulled them down, mind you, but her parents were very upset when she told them the story, and they brought it directly to the principal the next day.

I’ll be honest — I panicked. I started to get that same feeling I get when I’m ready to go off on someone in ALL CAPS IN A FACEBOOK COMMENT THREAD.

My son? Sexually harassing a poor girl in his class?! How dare he! This is just like a boy — to think he can do whatever he wants to a girl’s body and get away with it.

I know this feeling well. It’s a disproportionate reaction (sometimes called “a trigger,” but now that word has been used in so many bizarre ways that I try to avoid it). The fact is, I was a raised as a girl. I’m transgender and now live as a man, but I still have deep and powerful wounds around boys and bodies, and have had many men throughout my life think that my body was their property. And I knew that if I was the one to deal with the whole pulling-on-a-girl’s-pants situation, I would end up yelling at Riley, and the first seeds of shame around sex and sexuality could be planted in him.

As I felt that all-caps feeling, I knew I had to manage my shit. I delegated the situation to my partner Biff, who doesn’t have the same triggers and traumas around boundaries that I do. “I’m just not going to handle this well, for Riley or the school, so I need you to talk to him and deal with the Vice Principal,” I said. Biff seemed confused, but he picked up the mantle, talked with Riley, and managed the school staff.

While that was happening, I looked for the learning. I worked hard to interrogate my own experiences around bodies and broken boundaries. Where did that trauma come from? For some, it may be easy to identify the root of a disproportionate reaction. But for me, it took some work.

It took remembering the boys on the playground taunting me for my big feet and flat chest. The popular boy I had a crush on in middle school, who asked me to the spring dance as a joke, then told everyone (ha ha). The constant gaze on my body, all the way until the day I stopped looking like a girl. The man who followed me across three bus transfers and then exposed his erection when he finally got me alone in the back row where no one else was around. The high school boyfriend who pressured me relentlessly to have sex with him, and never noticed that I didn’t really like any of the intimate things we were already doing.

The feeling that still haunts me to this day — that I’m not able to say I don’t like what’s happening to me, and can we please do something else.

Those little things, none of which my non-trans partner understands, have all added up to big things. And when I think my little boy might be acting out some of those same dynamics… I freak out.

I truly needed to step back and remind myself that Riley is not the male gaze. He’s not rape culture. He’s not a flasher. He’s just a kid who’s still learning not to tickle other kids if they tell him to stop, not to get hyper and pull on a girl’s pants, and not to touch other kids’ butts because he thinks it’s funny. This one situation is not symbolic for everything that’s ever happened to me, and it’s my job as a parent to approach his mistakes for what they are — mistakes.

Then I took some deep fucking breaths. It’s not easy for me to practice mindfulness, but it was critical in this situation so I didn’t make a mess of things. I needed to remind myself that every situation is not only a chance for him to grow, but for me to learn about myself.

In this situation, here were my #ParentingGoals:

  • Raise a son who respects everyone’s bodies and boundaries… and ESPECIALLY those of women.
  • Raise a son who understands that he will always have relatively more power than most women around him.
  • Raise a son who listens, every time, when someone tells him not to touch them.
  • Raise a son who feels empowered about his sexuality, not ashamed of it.
  • Build a relationship with my son where he feels he can bring issues, questions, and mistakes to me, trusting that I will listen to him and help him work through them — not wig out and make him feel bad.

Tips and Tricks:

  • Manage your shit. I’m not telling you to “get over” your traumas. I’m suggesting that you get through them. Get the support you need to figure out where your triggers come from, unpack them, and find healing. Don’t surround yourself with people who encourage you to wallow and sit in your wounds– find those who see those hurts, and want to help you place them in the broader context of your life. The newest data on neuroscience and trauma tells us that when we are reminded of our traumas, our capacity for empathy dwindles to almost zero. If you stay stuck in your trauma, your ability to empathize with your child is gone. And you’re going to need empathy if you’re going to be a great parent.
  • Delegate. If a parenting situation is bringing up big things in you, find someone else to deal with it. It might be a partner, a teacher, or any other adult in your kid’s life. Biff definitely didn’t understand why I was asking him to handle this situation, but he heard that I wasn’t able to, and stepped in immediately. Hopefully you have someone(s) in your life who can do the same. A simple, “You know, I’m feeling a little too upset about this to really be productive right now. Would you mind talking with her about what she did?” might work. If all I’m going to be able to do is yell and make my kid feel like shit, I’m not the right person to engage with him.

Side note: I use this same tactic with all anti-racism or other anti-oppression work I do. The goal of that work, for me, is to undo white supremacy and homophobia in the world and in individuals. If/when I’m so upset by something that I’m not able to communicate in a way that is effective enough to drive us toward that goal (like, if I’m going to lose my shit or respond in all-caps), I ask someone else to step in. Acting out of my trauma will never help reach the goal of ending oppression. My basic question is always, “Can I deal with this in a way that is driving us towards a better world?” and if the answer is yes — if I think I can engage in a productive way, with love and empathy — I move in. But if the answer is no, and I know I’m going to react and not respond, I will be completely counter-productive and legitimately harmful…so I ask someone else to step in and handle it.

  • Look for the learning. Begin to identify when your kid has pushed a button, and use it as an opportunity to grapple with your shit. I hate it when one of my kids stumbles onto something painful in me. Hate it. But if I’m able to pick up the rock of discomfort and look under it, usually there is something gross and disgusting that has been waiting to see the light. And if given enough light, it usually shrivels and dies. Only then am I able to say, “Riley — what you did is a big deal, because we do live in a world where boys sometimes think they can touch girls however they want. So it’s really important that no matter how much fun it might seem, you always listen when a girl tells you she doesn’t like what you’re doing. Do you understand?” And then I’m able to have a developmentally-appropriate conversation about him that doesn’t start with an accusation of him “contributing to rape culture.” We will totally get there with him — just not at age eight.
  • Practice mindfulness. Eek! I’m scared to even write this. I’m always worried about getting too touchy-feely, and I consider myself to be science- and evidence-based in my life and in my parenting. Well, it turns out that meditation, or other mindfulness practices, are singularly successful in building empathy. The deep breaths I take when I’m feeling reactive — that’s mindfulness. Anger is the only emotion that doesn’t require breath. Joy and sadness both need breath to survive, and I’d rather be sad and vulnerable than angry. I struggle quite a bit with attention and focus, so traditional meditation has been hard for me (I get bored and my mind wanders and I don’t seem to be able to master it, even after trying many times). So I actually use a meditation app for kids, called Smiling Mind. The kids and I do it together, and the five-minute guided exercises (read by a sexy-sounding Australian) work great for me AND the kids. Their energy becomes much more focused, as does mine. This type of work will help you slowly identify (and eventually master) your reactions. You’ll soon be able to notice when you’re having a disproportionate reaction to something, which is all you need to stop yourself from reacting… and start responding instead. I imagine that one day I won’t have those reactions at all (it’s something I strive for), but I feel peaceful about where I am now. I can at least see that a reaction is happening, and ask for help managing it. I think that consciously breathing, and noticing that I’m starting to go down the all-caps road, is enough for me… for now.

TL;DR: Here are the main things to keep in mind when dealing with disproportionate reactions and your kids.

Manage your traumas.

Delegate, if possible.

Look for the learning.

Practice mindfulness.

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San Francisco 49ers Slam North Carolina's Anti-Queer Law

The San Francisco 49ers just scored a touchdown for the queer community in North Carolina. 

The football organization has joined the long and continually growing list of sports groups, businesses, politicians, celebrities and others who are calling for the repeal of North Carolina’s House Bill 2 (HB2).

“The San Francisco 49ers are deeply concerned about North Carolina’s recently-enacted House Bill 2, which overturned protections for LGBT people and sanctioned discrimination across the state,” 49ers CEO Jed York said in a statement released on Tuesday. “HB2 does not reflect the values of our organization, of our country, or the majority of North Carolinians,” he added.

York urged North Carolina Governor Jim McCrory, who signed HB2 into law in late March, and the “leadership of North Carolina’s legislature to repeal this law in the current legislative session.” The football team also donated $75,000 to North Carolina’s largest queer advocacy group, Equality North Carolina.

HB2 prohibits cities in North Carolina from passing non-discriminations laws to protect queer people. It also prohibits trans people from using public restrooms that correspond with their gender identity.

In the two months since the controversial bill was signed into law, the state has reportedly lost millions in revenue and thousands of jobs. A recent report from the Charlotte Chamber states that Mecklenburg County, where Charlotte, North Carolina, is located, “has suffered an economic blow of $285 million and a loss of as many as 1,300 jobs as a result of HB2.” What’s worse, a study by the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law found that HB2 could cost North Carolina up to $5 billion a year if it isn’t repealed.

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