Quirky Retro Video Shows Evolution Of The Video Game Controller

Video game controllers have come a long way.

The Oculus Rift virtual reality headset would have been a mere fantasy for gamers in the late 1950s, who were more used to using a simple, 2-buttoned plastic box to play “Tennis for Two.”

To celebrate the evolution of the gaming device, YouTube channel “Super Deluxe” put together a quirkily retro video featuring animations of the world’s most popular controllers.

From Atari to Xbox, they’re all there.

Check it out in the clip above.

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John Oliver Says Brexit Vote Is A Warning For U.S. Trump Supporters: 'There Are No F**king Do-Overs'

Last week’s Brexit vote triggered economic uncertainty around the world — and as “Last Week Tonight” host John Oliver pointed out, the very name United Kingdom “is beginning to sound a bit sarcastic.”

Oliver called the U.K. Independence Party leader Nigel Farage the “three-time cover model for Punchable Face magazine” and said Boris Johnson, the former London mayor and another leader of the Brexit movement to leave the European Union, is a “a shaved orangutan with Owen Wilson’s hair.”

Both men hailed the day of the vote as “Independence Day,” which Oliver found just a little weird:

“First, Britain was already independent. In fact, it’s what many other countries celebrate their independence from. And second, the sequel to the movie they’re quoting actually opened this week and features the wholesale destruction of London — which is beginning to feel pretty fucking appropriate right now.”

Then there’s U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

As Oliver noted, Trump found a way to make the Brexit vote about himself:  

“You might think, ‘Well that is not going to happen to us in America. We’re not going to listen to some ridiculously haired buffoon, peddling lies and nativism in the hopes of riding a protest vote into power.’” Oliver said. “Well let Britain tell you, it can happen, and when it does, there are no fucking do-overs.”

Check it out in the clip above.

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HuffPost Rise: What You Need To Know On June 27

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Welcome to the HuffPost Rise Morning Newsbrief, a short wrap-up of the news to help you start your day.

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Fujifilm instax SHARE SP-2 prints smartphone pics in 10s

01With smartphones, everything is almost instant these days, including the taking and sharing of photos to capture once in a lifetime moments. Snap a photo, upload it to social networks, and you’re done. But not everyone has a Facebook or Instagram account, and sometimes you want physical keepsakes, for yourself or for others. Fujifilm’s new instax SHARE smartphone printer SP-2 … Continue reading

Android navigation buttons rumored for yet another change

nexus-navAndroid’s navigation buttons are almost the perfect example of what user interfaces should be. They should be near invisible to the user’s mind, not requiring conscious thought to use. They really only get noticed when things break or change. The latter will seem to be the case according to a recent insider tip. According to the source, Google will be … Continue reading

Shoot actual fire from your eyes with this 'Cyclops' helmet

There are good and bad ideas in the DIY annals, then there’s this X-Men inspired helmet that lets lets you shoot flames from your eyes. Developed by YouTube user “Sufficiently Advanced,” the “Cyclops Visor” is simply a welding helmet with a fuel tank…

Vodafone's Smart Ultra 7 is another unremarkable refresh

Vodafone is back in Moto G territory with the Smart Ultra 7, an own-brand smartphone designed to replace the decent Smart Ultra 6 from last year. The new model is a smidge more expensive — £135 on pay-as-you-go, rather than £125 — but o…

Hero Catches Ducklings Falling From 30-Foot High Ledge

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Just call Eric Pelno the defender of the ducks.

When it started raining ducklings during a family trip to the Busch Gardens Tampa theme park on June 19, Pelno immediately switched into “beast mode.” 

Video going viral shows him catching more than a dozen of the fluffy baby birds as they leapt, lemming-like, off a 30-foot high ledge.

The bizarre rescue began when Pelno’s girlfriend, Channing Deren, felt something fall onto her shoulder as the couple and her 6-year-old daughter Audrey were walking to a ride.

I had no idea what it was,” Deren told FOX 13 News. “So we looked down and it was a baby duck.” The family spotted a nest in the ride’s stone barricade, which she said contained “like 20 duck faces just looking down at us.”

In a Facebook post, Deren detailed how her partner “just went into beast mode” as the ducklings began dropping down. He did his best to catch one baby bird after another, gently setting them safely on the ground.  

I was doing ok until they started jumping two at a time, haha,” Pelno later added.

Although one of the birds suffered an injury to its leg, which was treated by park staff, all of the babies were eventually reunited with their mother.

Watch the full video here:

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Urban Parks: From Dumping Grounds to Centers of Energy

A major initiative by New York City Parks Commissioner Mitchell J. Silver cogently explored at the recent and fascinating Parks Without Borders Summit is to make parks more porous and accessible and, by extension, to foster park equity, the idea that all parks are well maintained.
2016-06-26-1466966651-4771145-pwbheaderbeforeandafter.gifThe goal of the Parks Without Borders initiative is to make “parks more open, welcoming, and beautiful by improving entrances, edges, and park-adjacent spaces.” Image courtesy New York City Department of Parks & Recreation

This comes during one of the most exciting periods in modern urban history in which parks have gone from being dumping grounds perceived as dangerous to centers of energy. This renaissance has been brought about by forward-thinking municipal officials, public-private partnerships such as the Central Park Conservancy and the Prospect Park Alliance, along with the support and advocacy of New Yorkers for Parks, the New York Restoration Project, the Trust for Public Land, and other savvy, resourceful and entrepreneurial groups.

This would have been unthinkable a generation or so ago, but the city’s parks have come a long way. Central and Prospect Parks, jewels created by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr. and Calvert Vaux, have been rewoven into the city and the relatively new High Line (one of the city’s best non-prescription mood elevators), has unequivocally demonstrated the potential for pairing historic preservation and design, as well as landscape architecture, architecture and horticulture – the project is by James Corner Field Operations (project lead), Diller Scofidio + Renfro, and Piet Oudolf.

Add to this richness Brooklyn Bridge Park by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates and Governor’s Island by West 8 (the next phase of the latter – an ambitious and astounding project called “The Hills” – opens in July), along with other projects, and the picture in the Big Apple is impressive.

But when it comes to New York parks, the concept of porosity is not altogether new. Ninety years ago the Central Park Association, organized to “stimulate and aid the City of New York to restore Central Park to life and vigor,” enlisted prominent citizens to promote access to the park through various stone gates along the its perimeter.
2016-06-24-1466800157-8956055-engineersgate.jpgEngineers’ Gate, Central Park. Image courtesy The Cultural Landscape Foundation.

The chairman for the “Hunters’ Gate” on West 79th was Theodore Roosevelt, while efforts for the “Women’s Gate” were led by Edna Ferber, and others.
2016-06-24-1466789970-7492383-HIGHLINE.jpgComposite image courtesy The Cultural Landscape Foundation.

There are twenty entrances along the edges of the 843-acre park; by contrast, there are eleven entrances to the vastly smaller High Line.

While Commissioner Silver’s Parks Without Borders Summit focused on New York City’s five boroughs, issues of park porosity, connectivity, and accessibility are being raised across the country. In fact, as the value of parks new and old is rediscovered, demand for increased access (both visual and physical) has also grown considerably. As I told the Summit’s sold out crowd convened at the New School, access to parks in Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco and other urban centers are increasing access to parks by making them more porous (breaking the edges), creating networks and systems, and capping sites (building over roadways and similar infrastructure).

In New York, the rehabilitation of Bryant Park, just blocks from Time Square, was a significant milestone when it reopened in 1992. Landscape architect Laurie Olin’s surgically precise design has created a stage for a broad range of programs and events.
2016-06-26-1466983711-7697338-LA_Grand_ParkMatthew_Traucht20147.jpgGrand Park, Los Angeles. Image courtesy The Cultural Landscape Foundation.

In Los Angeles, the work by Rios Clementi Hale is transforming Grand Park, a formidable site, through new pedestrian circulation patterns, improved access for those not able bodied, expansive sight lines and enhanced signage. And, visitors can even play in the fountain’s basin.
2016-06-24-1466790057-7852921-DiscoveryGreenbefore.jpgDiscovery Green, before. Image courtesy Hargreaves Associates.
2016-06-24-1466790087-9361222-DiscoveryGreenAfter.jpgDiscovery Green, after. Image courtesy Hargreaves Associates.

Discovery Green in Houston, however, is perhaps one of the more radical and successful interventions. Mary Margaret Jones at Hargreaves Associates has re-engineered a bland ten-acre expanse of surface parking fronting the city’s convention center into a verdant and vibrant park, one that is attracting families with children, and spurring construction along its borders (which the designers are responding to with new entry points).

Several major parks systems, notably Boston’s Emerald Necklace, arguably a future World Heritage Site, and the Louisville Olmsted parks, are overcoming the effects of poor stewardship decisions made decades ago. In Boston, a vital connection for the entire park system that for decades had been given over to vehicular parking, has been reclaimed.
2016-06-24-1466790144-4731024-Chicago1.jpgChicago riverfront, before. Image courtesy Sasaki Associates.
2016-06-24-1466790179-8341209-Chicago2.jpgChicago riverfront, after. Image courtesy Sasaki Associates.

One of the most exciting, and without question popular, is the work along Chicago’s riverfront by Gina Ford at Sasaki Associates (note: Ford is a TCLF Board member). With street-level entries down to the river, and the creation of pedestrian-friendly dock-like structures along the water’s edge with raked seating, the design offers flexible events spaces, places for kayaking, and boat launches – all representing new and dramatic opportunities for interaction with the city.

Houston’s Buffalo Bayou Park by the SWA Group is the realization of a century-old idea to create paths and passageways along the bayou. For the automobile-centric city, the re-emergence of Houston’s seminal feature to include a network of paths that connect the Bayou–as a shared civic amenity — with its contiguous neighborhoods and infrastructure that blurs the line between art, landscape architecture and architecture is nothing short of revolutionary.
2016-06-24-1466790656-2222852-FreewayPark.jpgFreeway Park, Seattle. Image courtesy The Cultural Landscape Foundation.

Capping roadways as Lawrence Halprin did in 1976 with Seattle’s Freeway Park has proved not only viable, but has helped close old wounds created when highway projects violently severed neighborhoods. The concept underlying Halprin’s pioneering masterwork has taken hold in Dallas with Klyde Warren Park by The Office of James Burnett.
2016-06-26-1466960962-4113712-kwp_before_woodallrodgersfreeway.jpg
Section of Rogers Woodall Freeway, before the construction of Klyde Warren Park. Image courtesy Kylde Warren Park.
2016-06-26-1466961223-3805421-locationmaplinknew.jpg
Klyde Warren Park. Image courtesy Klyde Warren Park.

Here, the aggressive and original programming by the non-profit that operates the park has solidified it as a local must-see destination; and the park has also knit back together sections of downtown and the arts district. Additionally, The Presidio in San Francisco is burying a set of roadways and building a thirteen-acre park above it, while back in New York City, dlandstudio has proposed a park over a portion of the Brooklyn Queens Expressway, a 1950s-era project by Robert Moses that not only created a gash through an established neighborhood, its presence has been associated with elevated asthma rates. The proposal would create new park space in an area that desperately needs it.

When Commissioner Silver and I discussed his Parks Without Borders initiative more than a year ago, I recognized it as a logical step in the evolution of the city’s parks. What was fascinating to learn was the intense public interest. In tandem with the summit, the city held a contest to determine which eight parks would receive funding towards rehabilitation that created greater access and openness. According to the city’s website, they received more than “6,100 suggestions for improving 692 parks, which is more than a third of all the parks and playgrounds in the city.”

The increased demand is also resulting in increased engagement. The top down dictates that scarred New York and other cities nationwide are being replaced by bottom up, community oriented decisions made with the benefit of forward thinking municipal leadership and leading landscape architects.

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Freedom 251 ultra cheap smartphone starts shipping June 30

ringingbells-freedom251-800Indian company Ringing Bells is defying all odds, and possibly some lawsuits, to make good its almost too good to be true promise of a 251 Rs ($4) Freedom 521 smartphone by June 30. Or rather, as is now the case, “starting” June 30. That is what company founder and CEO Mohit Goel continues to promise, despite its super cheap … Continue reading