So it’s Valentine’s Day (again) and you’re single (again). Even though you’ve been right-swiping your heart out on Tinder, you’ve failed to find love nearby. So what can you do? Try a new activity? Maybe meet some new people? Nah. Just move to another city where your chances are better.
Moby wants you to join his perpetual pool party in Los Angeles, and a group of scientists wants Chin
Posted in: Today's ChiliMoby wants you to join his perpetual pool party in Los Angeles, and a group of scientists wants China to use "spatial economics" to design more walkable cities. Plus: informal transit in Nairobi, a failed utopia in California, radical ideas for the Vegas of 2034, and a significant prehistoric site that’s currently being uncovered in downtown Miami. Check out this week’s Urban Reads.
Now that we know it was an eight-inch steel pipe that brought the world’s largest-diameter tunneling machine to a halt
If you follow anyone who was down in Miami for the art fairs earlier this month, you might have seen their photographs of the Miami Marine Stadium, a decaying, dilapidated oceanfront venue for powerboat racing that turns 50 years old next week. Condemned in 1992 after Hurricane Andrew, it’s since been plagued by vandalism and covered in graffiti.
I love architecture from the future, but this new apartment tower by Porsche Design—equipped with car elevators that allow owners to park their Bentleys and Bugattis right next to their living rooms—doesn’t come from the future. It’s just a gimmicky cylinder.
For those of us stuck in the slushy northern reaches of the country, the first weeks of December are always painful—for the internet (and Instagram, and Twitter) is full of interesting art on view at Design Miami/ and Art Untiled. Here’s some of the best of what we’re missing out on (or, if you hate Miami, narrowly avoiding).
Miami’s starchitect magnet, “Super Zips” for the rich, the real story behind our city-dwelling squir
Posted in: Today's ChiliMiami’s starchitect magnet, "Super Zips" for the rich, the real story behind our city-dwelling squirrels, and why Americans are driving less. Plus, a chilling portrait of homelessness in gentrified New York City—all in today’s urban reads.
Aereo continues expansion, plans service rollout in Miami, Houston and Dallas-Ft. Worth
Posted in: Today's ChiliFor a company’s that’s mired in legal red tape, Aereo’s nationwide expansion isn’t showing any signs of slowing. The streaming service, which uses an antenna / DVR system to deliver local broadcast stations, will soon launch in three additional major cities — Houston and Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX; Miami, FL — in a rollout scheduled to complete by the end of September. Interested parties can head to Aereo’s site now to get a leg up on pre-registration for the service, with rates starting at $8/mo for 20 hours of DVR storage. Take note, the first month’s gratis, but after that it’s the same old subscription ball-and-chain just like any other. And, hey, at least this is one way to guarantee Moonves’ content kingdom and his trusty Chenbot still have a home on your flatscreen or iPad or, you know, device.
Miami judge accuses Google, Apple of using the courts ‘as a business strategy’ (updated)
Posted in: Today's Chili Miami U.S. District Judge Robert Scola had choice words for Apple and Samsung Google during a patent dispute between the pair, accusing the two of of having “no interest in efficiently and expeditiously resolving this dispute” and instead using such proceedings “as a business strategy.” The Florida case began in 2010 and has since swelled to over 180 claims, causing the pair to ask the court to reduce the scope of the case. That caused Judge Scola to rail against the combatants, saying “without a hint of irony, the parties now ask the court to mop up a mess that they made,” adding that he would “decline this invitation.” Instead, he gave them four months to streamline the case themselves, lest it be placed on hold until all the nearly 100 terms in dispute are defined to everyone’s satisfaction — but we know how that’s gone before.
Update: The original post mentioned Samsung and Apple as the disputants, but it’s actually a suit involving Google and Apple. Thanks for all who pointed it out.
Filed under: Cellphones, Misc, Tablets, Apple, Samsung
Via: Games Industry International
Source: Bloomberg