This summer, it has felt like the terrible news just won't stop. A digital journalism expert at Columbia University offers advice for dealing with the barrage of news updates flowing to our screens.
It's been a long time coming for the VCR. After beating out Betamax and LaserDisc for home viewing dominance in the 1980s, VHS players are going away for good.
The answer to the first question of a Q&A during Mr. Robot's highly anticipated Comic-Con panel Thursday evening summed up the entire event. Asking the pressing question of Summer 2016, a fan wondered who among the cast plays Pokémon Go.
After audience laughter and cheers, Carly Chaikin replied, "From a Mr. Robot perspective, do you guys know what kind of access you're handing over when you play that game?"
It was a lighthearted remark with a serious undertone, and that set the tone for the whole panel.
While there were unfortunately precious few details given out about the rest of the forthcoming season (although Rami Malek did note that there is a "mesmerizing" hack coming that was filmed as one long take), cast members Malek, Christian Slater, Portia Doubleday, Chaikin and new Season 2 addition Grace Gummer all shared their opinions on why Mr. Robot has become a breakout — and Emmy-nominated — hit for USA Network. Read more...
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Big Shiny Robot! | 3 Comics That Are Sticking It To The Man Big Shiny Robot! Comic books have a long history of taking shots at the establishment. Superhero comics are pretty much predicated on the little guy standing up to the big corrupt guy; but if we're being honest, they're pretty tame in their dissent. They are published ... |
Wall Street Journal | SoftBank Embraces Smart Robots, Emotional Cars Wall Street Journal Speaking at a company event Thursday, Mr. Son, SoftBank's chief executive, laid out a future of artificial intelligence, smart robots and the so-called Internet of Things. These areas would be in addition to SoftBank's existing core business of selling ... Honda Softbank partnership to deliver smarter AI for carsSlashGear SoftBank Is Designing An Emotional Car To Make Your Drives Home Less LonelyFortune all 109 news articles » |
Phys.Org | Asimo meets Pepper: Honda and Softbank partnering in robots Phys.Org Honda said it's focusing on AI research with a new laboratory in Tokyo set to open in September. SoftBank said its robotics unit Cocoro SB, which is researching cloud-based artificial intelligence, will work with Honda on research that seeks to ... Ride-a-long-a-robot: Honda and SoftBank team up to work on robo-passenger endeavorDigital Trends all 11 news articles » |
Irish Times | Silicon Valley shifts focus to robots and artificial intelligence Irish Times The new era in Silicon Valley centres on artificial intelligence (AI) and robots, a transformation many believe will have a payoff on the scale of the personal computing industry or the commercial internet. Computers have begun to speak, listen and see ... |
Robohub | Why football, not chess, is the true final frontier for robotic artificial intelligence Robohub The perception of what artificial intelligence was capable of began to change when chess grand master and world champion Garry Kasparov lost to Deep Blue, IBM's chess-playing program, in 1997. Deep Blue, it was felt, had breached the domain of a ... |
Castanet.net | Melania Trump backlash Castanet.net In the future, a tiny robot made from pig gut could capture it and expel it. Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are designing an ingestible robot that could be used to patch wounds, deliver medicine or dislodge a foreign object ... |
New York Times | Artificial Intelligence Swarms Silicon Valley on Wings and Wheels New York Times The new era in Silicon Valley centers on artificial intelligence and robots, a transformation that many believe will have a payoff on the scale of the personal computing industry or the commercial internet, two previous generations that spread ... and more » |
Dallas Morning News | El Centro moves on after shooting: 'We will not be defined by this at all' Dallas Morning News In the end, Johnson was holed up in an El Centro hallway when police used a robot armed with explosives to kill him and end the standoff. Adames was able to tour his campus ... “People could envision the future of that space rather than the past,” said ... and more » |
Slate Magazine (blog) | The Emmys Have a Knack for Being Both Stodgy and Trailblazing at Once Slate Magazine (blog) Joining The Americans as a first time Best Drama contender is the incisive Mr. Robot, whose star Rami Malek adds some fizz to the Best Actor in a Drama category. ... I'm sure these groups have overlapping taste, but this dynamic would explain both the ... and more » |
Justin S Reid posted a photo:
It was the nicest shot of a poor evening sunset wise. Always bring a lee filter with you. via 500px ift.tt/1QDRrBO
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Evening walk along the Thames
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London, England.
Olympus OM-D E-M10.
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Search efforts for the three men killed in the Didcot power station collapse resumed today when the remainder of the building was demolished.
Demolition workers Ken Cresswell, 57, and John Shaw, 61, both from Rotherham, South Yorkshire and Chris Huxtable, 34, from Swansea, were trapped under 20,000 tonnes of rubble when the structure unexpectedly crumbled on February 23.
Four people died in the disaster, but only one body, that of Mick Collings, 53, has been recovered so far. It is still unknown what the causes of the tragedy were.
A remote demolition brought down the remainder of the decommissioned site shortly before 6am, in a unique operation that will make use of 10 remote-controlled robots.
The building - which was due for demolition when it partially collapsed - was too unstable to be approached and a 50-metre exclusion zone was set up around what is left of the building.
The 11 plastic explosives attached to the structure were detonated and, once, the site is considered safe, teams will be deployed to resume searching the remnants of the plant for the first time since May.
Roland Alford, who is the explosives contractor at the power station, said the four-month delay in completing the demolition was necessary on safety grounds.
He told the Press Association on Saturday: “There has been quite a lot of criticism about delays, questioning why it has taken so long to get to this point, but the fact is nothing like this has ever been attempted before and this is not a simple demolition.
“We have been working on it night and day since March and built up quite a sizeable team of very expert people to work on this, to come up with the charges, the methods of doing it and training.”
He added: “It was almost unthinkable to send people to work underneath there and place charges, given the fact the building could come down at any moment - you legally can't justify that.”
Robots of a variety of sizes will carry out some of the work deemed to be too unsafe for humans, a number of which can be controlled remotely using a sophisticated camera set up.
Roads and trains will be halted in the surrounding area while the demolition takes place.
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Read more: Climate Change, Democrats, Republicans, Energy, Environment, Clean Power Plan, Epa, Green News
Over the past 30 years, coal companies have been playing fast and loose with our land, water, and pocketbooks by using a loophole in our federal laws that allows them to issue non-binding IOUs, instead of purchasing reliable insurance, to clean up dangerous coal mines if they go out of business. This reckless practice is known as self bonding.
Since there is nothing backing up these IOUs except the companies' own impermanent balance sheets and the legal equivalent of a pinky swear, when self-bonded coal companies go out of business, working families and honest taxpayers are left to foot the bill for cleaning up (also known as reclaiming) dangerous coal mines, while coal companies get off scot-free.
This horribly irresponsible practice has been so prevalent that, over the years, coal companies have racked up billions of dollars worth of mining liabilities without providing any assurance that the money will be there to finish the job of reclaiming their mining sites.
Fortunately, the federal Department of Interior is reviewing self bonding and considering making changes to the process. That's why this week, on the last week of the Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation, and Enforcement's (OSMRE) comment period on self bonding, we are standing up and demanding the federal government put a stop to it.
On Wednesday, more than 37,000 Sierra Club members and supporters submitted comments to OSMRE, calling on them to end the practice of self-bonding. Sierra Club volunteers also dropped off a check for $3.86 billion at OSMRE's headquarters, reminding administrators of the enormous amount in self-bonded coal liabilities still outstanding across the US.
While this was going on, Sierra Club and our partners also made an aggressive media push that included holding a teleconference outlining the significant risks to letting this practice continue, and also placing ads saying as much in a popular Washington, D.C. newspaper frequented by policy experts. This week, we wanted to make clear that it's not OK to just walk away from land you've destroyed, polluted, and then profited from, while leaving your neighbors to foot the bill for billions of dollars worth of mining liabilities.
The need to end self-bonding is especially urgent given the ongoing wave of coal company bankruptcies ― which has claimed some of the world's biggest coal companies like Peabody Energy, Arch Coal, and Alpha Natural Resources ― and the real danger these coal companies' finances pose to taxpayers. After all, $2.4 billion of the $3.86 billion in outstanding coal mining liabilities across the country is held by bankrupt coal companies.
Unfortunately, it doesn't stop with the costs of reclaiming coal mines. On top of the billions of dollars Americans must pay for these unreclaimed mines, the sites themselves can also be highly polluting and dangerous, and leaving them unreclaimed poses serious health risks to surrounding communities. They also pose an economic threat, because leaving them bare, open, and unreclaimed makes it very hard for communities to attract and support other forms of economic development and opportunity, which is urgently needed in coal country, including here in my home state of West Virginia.
We're calling on OSMRE to immediately issue a new guidance that no new self-bonds should be issued to any coal company and make clear that bankrupt mine operators must not self-bond as they emerge from bankruptcy.
We're committed to making sure local families are protected from irresponsible coal executives who are threatening to leave behind dangerous, polluting mine sites that will plague communities for generations to come.
Self-bonding is about simple fairness, after all: if you destroy the land, you clean it up ― especially if you've made big profits in the process. You don't walk away and leave it to your neighbor. It's time for self bonding to stop, once and for all.
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