Bespoke typefaces have become all the rage in Silicon Valley. Google has its Roboto font family that's become a cornerstone of the identity of many of their Material Design applications. Apple has its custom-made San Francisco, which recently became the default typeface across the entire Apple family of devices. And while Microsoft can't take credit for developing Segoe, the company has made the font its own, using it as a core part of the Microsoft, Windows, and Office branding.
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Conservationists and law enforcement have struggled to catch the Walter Whites behind wildlife trafficking. But could some plastic eggs and GPS trackers change the game?
Sometimes life really does imitate art. In the fourth season of the hit TV show, Breaking Bad, police put GPS devices on barrels of methylamine to try and track the show's protagonists to their meth lab. Inspired by the episode, Kim Williams-Guillen, a conservationist with Paso Pacifico, decided to take the concept one step further: what if you could catch wildlife poachers by slipping GPS devices into convincingly faked wildlife parts? In this case: Hollywood-inspired, high-tech sea turtle eggs; fake eggs so convincingly crafted that poachers would have a hard time distinguishing them from the real thing.
“Every year millions of sea turtle eggs are taken by poachers for sale on the black market. Paso Pacifico's solution has the potential to reveal the trade routes and destination markets for trafficked sea turtle eggs,” the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) said.
We're trying to find Stringer Bell, not Wallace.
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Lithium-air batteries are considered highly promising technologies for electric cars and portable electronic devices because of their potential for delivering a high energy output in proportion to their weight. But such batteries have some pretty serious drawbacks: They waste much of the injected energy as heat and degrade relatively quickly. They also require expensive extra components to pump oxygen gas in and out, in an open-cell configuration that is very different from conventional sealed batteries. In a new concept for battery cathodes, nanometer-scale particles made of lithium and oxygen compounds (depicted in red and white) are embedded in a sponge-like lattice (yellow) of cobalt oxide, which keeps them stable. Researchers propose that this material could be packaged in batteries that are very similar to conventional sealed batteries yet provide much more energy for their weight.
Image credit: Courtesy of the researchers
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A freshwater spider (Dolomedes) runs along the water's surface, leaving vortices behind its four pairs of stroking legs. In this National Science Foundation-supported project, dye studies were performed in order to determine what the propulsion mechanism is of the water strider (Gerris remigis), a common water-walking insect, approximately 1 centimeter long that resides on the surface of ponds, rivers and the open ocean.
Image credit: Courtesy John Bush, MIT
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Express.co.uk | REVEALED: Scientists find the BEST BISCUIT for tea dunking... but do you agree? Express.co.uk A ROBOT has managed to settle an age-old debate which has had Britons arguing over their steaming mug of PG Tips for years - what's the best biscuit for dunking? By Rebecca Perring Rebecca Perring. PUBLISHED: 14:33, Mon, Jul 25, 2016 | UPDATED: ... Revealed: the best biscuit for dunking into your teaTelegraph.co.uk all 10 news articles » |
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Express.co.uk | REVEALED: Scientists find the BEST BISCUIT for tea dunking... but do you agree? Express.co.uk A ROBOT has managed to settle an age-old debate which has had Britons arguing over their steaming mug of PG Tips for years - what's the best biscuit for dunking? By Rebecca Perring Rebecca Perring. PUBLISHED: 14:33, Mon, Jul 25, 2016 | UPDATED: ... and more » |
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Last year, a pair of anthropologists traveled to central Appalachia to talk to locals about the so-called “War on Coal.” They trekked across nine counties in West Virginia and eastern Kentucky, recorded hundreds of conversations, and published the results in a report for the Topos Partnership, a public interest communications firm.
Appalachians told the researchers they want independence, and they believe independence comes from work. Work used to come from coal, but mining jobs are fleeing the region. In the last five years, Kentucky and West Virginia shed 15,000 coal jobs.
“When we have coal, then we have money put into our communities, but when you don't have coal, your coal miners leave. They go places,” said a woman from Logan County, West Virginia. Coal miners could make upwards of $80,000 a year, and they spent their hard-earned dollars at the grocery down the block and the bar around the corner.
As coal departs, Appalachia is being forced to reinvent itself. Amid reports of economic decline are stories of rebirth, of communities reclaiming their independence.
Kentucky tech startup Bit Source is hiring out-of-work coal miners and teaching them to write code.
“The realization I had was that the coal miner, although we think of him as a person who gets dirty and works with his hands, really coal mines today are very sophisticated, and they use a lot of technology, a lot of robotics,” Rusty Justice, the firm's cofounder, told NPR. State officials are working to extend high-speed internet access to the Eastern Kentucky to support more ventures like Bit Source that provide well-paid jobs to coal veterans.
Analysts say the shift to clean power will create more jobs than it eliminates. Enterprising coal workers are trying to bring a few of those jobs to Appalachia.
Retired Kentucky coal miner Carl Shoupe and his colleagues on the Benham Power Board are spearheading a citywide energy efficiency program. Contractors will make homes more power-thrifty — installing insulation, sealing windows, etc. — and homeowners will pay for the upgrades through a charge on their monthly electric bill. The charge will be less than what customers save on energy.
Shoupe believes communities that once ran on coal can add jobs and save money by investing in energy efficiency. According to a report from Synapse, an energy consulting firm, Kentucky could create more than 28,000 jobs by embracing energy efficiency and renewable energy.
In a region wounded by strip mining and mountaintop removal, some families are trying to heal the earth, transforming depleted mining sites into vineyards.
Virginia's David Lawson built Mountainrose Vineyard on fields that had been strip mined by his grandfathers, according to YES! Magazine. He named wines Jawbone and Pardee after coal seams.
Kentucky's Jack Looney, the son of a coal worker, built Highland Winery on a strip mine. Looney told the Associated Press that grapes grow well on land cleared by mountaintop removal. His wines pay tribute to the region's history with names like Blood, Sweat, and Tears and Coal Miner's Blood.
Appalachia's future remains tenuous. Coal is dying. Jobs are vanishing. Skilled workers are fleeing the region. But as the Topos report noted, Appalachians are pragmatic. Said a woman from Pike County, Kentucky, “Try something new — if it doesn't work, do something else, you know? Just try till you find what works.”
The biggest challenge may be the loss of identity. Difficult, backbreaking, and dangerous though it was, mining gave Appalachians a sense of purpose. It defined a region as gritty and determined. How do you go from wresting energy from the bowels of the earth to writing code or growing wine?
“I wanted to be a coal miner so bad I could taste it … I wanted to have that pride,” said former Virginia coal miner Nick Mullins in an interview. Mullins came to change with his surroundings. When he was 18, a mining company blew the top off the mountain behind the house where he grew up. He never wanted to mine again.
“What is life unless you can live it?” asked Mullins. “What is a community if it's not there anymore?”
This story was written and produced by Nexus Media.
In this week's Brain Buffet, we get to the bottom of why cats love to curl up in boxes or other small spaces, show off a vending machine that dispenses books, look at some podcasts to start your day, and much more.
Welcome to Lifehacker's Monday Brain Buffet, a series where we round up interesting, informative, and thought-provoking podcasts, interviews, articles, and other media that will teach you something new, inspire you, and hopefully start your week off on the right foot.
When bookstores put those shelves out front or around the side of their stores that advertise books for a dollar or two, people walk right past them and don't even think about it. When you put those same books in a vending machine that you can pop a couple of coins into and get a random book with the luck of the draw, well, suddenly that game aspect of the whole thing makes people flock to it and turns it into an interesting game of chance that's fun to play—and fun to watch. [via YouTube]
Summer is here, Comic-Con started this weekend, and other huge conventions aren't far behind! If you're heading out to one, or heading to another major convention of some stripe, you'll need some tips to help you make the most of the experience. Of course, we have some great tips to help you survive, and to stay healthy while you're there, but this piece from Forces of Geek is also full of tips to make the most of your experience, not just survive while you're there. For example, they highlight the “5-2-1 Rule,” which mandates five hours of sleep per night, two full meals a day, and one shower a day—and all of those sound pretty damned important to me.
They also include some tips to avoid the dreaded Concrud, but also some great pointers to surviving the Dealer's Room:
The hard part of a dealers room is not breaking your convention budget. Believe it or not, most dealers are also fans and they know what you're going through. It's rare to see a dealer get pushy about making sales. Most are just happy to see you come by. Speaking as a dealer, even at conventions where my sales are low, I always see a bump in online sales after the event and that's because I know not everyone can buy something that weekend, but because I have good product and am not pushy, people appreciate that, and remember after the event to see what I have available when they do have the bucks to spend.
...
Best day to buy? That depends. If price is your number one concern, then do your shopping on Sunday (or whatever the last day is). The closer it is to the final hour for the dealers room at that event, the more likely you're going to find special clearance sales and offers. Dealers don't want to lug all that stuff back home (or worse… ship it), so many are going to slash some prices. Now, that said… it's a bit of a game. If you see something you want on Saturday, there's no guarantee it will still be there on Sunday—so you take your chances. And if you bought something at full price on Friday, and see it for nearly half price on Sunday, it may seem unfair, but there was always the chance there would not have been any left by Sunday. It's a bit of a gamble.
All in all, if you're headed a big convention—whether it's a comic, sci-fi, anime, or other gathering this summer or fall, it's worth a read to help you prepare. [via Forces of Geek]
Normally I don't include infographics in these roundups, but I love this one—mostly because some of the exports are just truly unique, and others make perfect sense. For example, the UK exports lemon curd to Kenya (which makes sense because Kenya isn't really known for its lemons and lemon curd is delicious) which is really interesting, but also China exports pandas to Canada, which is also really interesting. Almost as interesting as the fact that the US exports beer (specifically Brooklyn Brewery) to Sweden and wolf urine to Japan. [via Mental Floss]
We've talked a lot about great podcasts and which ones you should listen to, but this thread at Quora is full of recomendations if you're looking for something to spice up your morning commute, or you're interested in trying something a little different.
http://lifehacker.com/the-best-infor…
There are well over a hundred answers, tons of links, and some great podcasts on topics all over the map. Here's one good answer with an mix of podcasts on various topics:
- BBC's From Our Own Correspondent (an in-depth look at the stories behind the top news headlines around the world, told by BBC correspondents, journalists and writers in a captivating storytelling format; hosted by Kate Adie)
- Optimize with Brian Johnson (condensed big ideas from the best books on optimal living and micro classes on how to apply these ideas; here's where I get a lot of book recommendations, including most recently Seneca's On the Shortness of Life)
- Invisibilia (a show about invisible forces that affect and control human behavior: our ideas, beliefs, and emotions)
- Intelligence Squared (the world's leading forum for debate and intelligent discussion; I like the diversity of topics that are covered and that include Brexit, democracy, foreign intervention, capitalism, the art market, contemporary literature, feminism, events in the Middle East)
- The Memory Palace (storytelling podcast about events from the past)
- Middle East Analysis (podcast on events happening in the Middle East and North Africa regions; the main contributor is international lawyer and political advisor Dr. Harry Hagopian)
- This Is Your Life with Michael Hyatt (a podcast dedicated to living a life with more passion, working with greater focus, and pursuing goals that give purpose and meaning to our lives)
Of course, that's just the tip of the iceberg, and just a few worth checking out. Seriously, scroll through the full thread—you might find some duds, but all in all there are at least a few you'll either be able to vouch for because you listen to them, or a few you'll want to subscribe to. [via Quora]
Another Mental Floss piece, but I couldn't resist given the subject matter. After all, we all know that cats love boxes, but why? They also love small spaces like sinks and other small containers, but the reasons behind why are all poorly understood—however, you may have predicted the reason why:
Cats, Wilbourn reasons, take comfort in cramped spaces because it makes them feel more secure and dominant. “I think part of it goes back to when they were kittens and inside the womb, feeling safe and comforted. There's a feeling of coziness, being able to do what they want to do, and just feeling untouchable.”
Science has been able to support this theory. Animal behaviorists have studied stress levels in newly arrived shelter cats and found that felines with access to boxes had lower stress levels and faster adjustment periods than those without [PDF]. Even if they're not quite as protected as they think they are—you can pretty much do anything to a cat who is in a box as you could a cat who is outside of one—their perception may be that they're insulating themselves from harm.
Another good theory is that small spaces help cats retain body heat, which explains things like sinks in the summer time and cardboard boxes well, any other time. [via Mental Floss]
You might not think a robot could do something that requires finesse like saute up the perfect bratwurst, but you'd be wrong. Not only does it handle the meat like a pro, it turns the sausages to make sure they get that delicious char on all sides, avoids overcooking them entirely (which is more than some people can say), and even serves them up and tells you to enjoy your meal.
I, for one, welcome our new sausage grilling robot masters. [via YouTube]
That's all for this week! If you have thought-provoking stories, interesting podcasts, eye-opening videos, or anything else you think would be perfect for Brain Buffet, share it with us! Email me, leave it as a comment below, or send it over any way you know how.
Title GIF by Nick Criscuolo. Additional photos by Mental Floss and yoppy.
A great way to exercise at work, Timbuk2 flash sale, Timex watches, a $75 Hoover WindTunnel, and more lead Monday's best deals.
Bookmark Kinja Deals and follow us on Twitter to never miss a deal. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more.
If you're looking for a powerful vacuum that'll suck up all that pet hair, but don't want to spend a fortune, look no further than Amazon's deal on the Hoover WindTunnel 3 Pro Pet. On sale for $75, you not only get a great bagless vacuum, it comes with the Pet Tool Pack, which includes a pet turbo tool, a pet upholstery tool, and a telescopic extension wand.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IT2ISZ0/…
Indochino is your favorite custom clothing company, and this week they're offering Kinja Deals readers their best shirt pricing ever. $279 gets you five shirts with promo code KINJA5. Read more about the deal here.
http://deals.kinja.com/indochinos-bes…
Some of our peers have Melania'd the discount we launched with Indochino back in May, so we can't call it an exclusive anymore. However, it's still the best pricing they've ever offered, so if you missed out last time or want more suits, here's your chance. Read more here.
http://deals.kinja.com/heres-the-best…
If you can't find the time to get to the gym every day, this under-desk elliptical lets you squeeze in some light exercise while you fill out your TPS reports. This typically sells for $170 on Amazon, and today's $100 Gold Box deal is the best price we've ever seen.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00SIBYETQ/…
The complete Firefly DVD is still available for an all-time low $13, but if you're ready to chuck physical media out into the black, you can buy the full series (season) for $10 on Amazon and iTunes right now.
https://www.amazon.com/Firefly-Season…
If you want a Big Green Egg charcoal grill, but don't want to cash in your 401(k) to buy one, this Char-Griller alternative is down to an all-time low $288 today, and a great investment for meat lovers everywhere.
The Char-Griller Akorn Kamado Kooker features a 306 square inch cast iron cooking surface (which is most similar to the $829 large Big Green Egg), and traps heat inside a heavily-insulated stainless steel body. Our deal researcher, Corey, owns a BGE, and I asked him about it on Slack:
And I use my BGE for about 70% of meat meals.
Probably 90% during the warm months.
Best Father's Day gift I'll ever get.
Lana jokes that she's the one who benefits most because I cook on it all the time.
Worth the price just for its ability to cook pizza, IMO.
But pork chops, lions, tenderloin are beyond incredible on it.
Obviously, this isn't the “real thing,” but the consensus among Amazon reviewers is that it's at least nearly as good, which sounds like a decent compromise considering it's only about 1/3 of the price, and comes with a stable cart and folding shelves, both of which you'd need to buy separately with the Egg.
http://www.amazon.com/Char-Griller-K…
We see $10 off deals on PlayStation Plus just about every week, but today...are you sitting down? Today, you can save $11.
Running low on digital storage space, or just want to start keeping better backups? Amazon's marked the 2TB WD Elements external drive to $70, which is about as low at that capacity ever gets.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00…
Fried foods are delicious. Fried foods will kill you. These are the laws of our cruel existence, and generally-speaking, there's no avoiding them. I'm not going to tell you that cooking foods with this $60 air fryer is healthy, but Chefman claims that it uses 80% less oil than conventional deep frying, resulting in less trans fat in your favorite meals.
https://www.amazon.com/Chefman-RJ38-E…
If you enjoy eating at Chili's, Macaroni Grill, Maggiano's, or On The Border, this discounted Brinker gift card is basically a free entree.
Another huge sale from Timbuk2 brings a ton of their excellent bags down to hard-to-resist levels. Be sure to let us know what you pick up in the comments.
The “midway” colorway of one of your five favorite carry-ons is down to $159.
http://co-op.kinja.com/these-are-your…
A few colors of your favorite messenger bag, the Commute/Command lines, are also discounted.
http://lifehacker.com/five-best-lapt…
Sporting a lower price and a built-in touchscreen, the GoPro Hero4 Silver might actually a better choice than the Hero4 Black for most consumers. Today on GoPro's eBay storefront, you can get a refurb for just $244, the best price we've seen. And since you're purchasing it direct from GoPro, it'll still be backed by a one year warranty.
http://gizmodo.com/gopro-hero4-bl…
The extremely versatile and reliable Timex Ironman watches are under $25 today only on Amazon. Water resistant of up to around 300 feet, take these on a few laps around the pool and cool off during this Heat Dome without worrying about how much time you're spending in the water.
The Logitech G502 was your choice for best gaming mouse (though you don't need to be a gamer to appreciate its benefits), and the upgraded Proteus Spectrum model (which includes fully adjustable backlighting) is on sale for an all-time low $60 today.
http://co-op.kinja.com/most-popular-g…
http://lifehacker.com/improve-your-v…
The marquee spec here is the DPI range of 200-12,000, adjustable on the fly. There are also five easily movable and removable weights, and 11 customizable buttons, along with the classic Logitech dual-mode scroll wheel. Mechanical microswitches and a braided cable are also nice touches.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B019OB663A/…
Update: Sold out.
These cheap LED lights can stick directly into your grass to light a path to your front door, and since they include built-in solar panels, you won't have to run any wires or replace any batteries. $18 for a 2-pack is one of the best deals we've seen on a product like this.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01…
People keep saying that ethernet is dead, but every time we post a good deal on an ethernet switch, they fly off the virtual shelves. This one's so good that it's already somewhat backordered, so log onto Amazon and lock in your order before it's totally unplugged.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00…
If you've never checked out Nordstrom's Anniversary Sale, you're missing out on some pretty awesome savings. The retailer puts a bunch of Fall and Winter styles on sale way before they go into the stores. Once the sale is over, you'll only be able to get them for full price, so you'd better get on it.
The MTA is a dumpster fire. Anything short of Stockholm syndrome and you'll be having a bad time riding the MTA, and that's before taking the heat dome into account. Save on already-discounted uberPOOL rides during commuting hours with the Uber Commute Card.
Here's a stack of terms:
What to know
- Redeem by: Wednesday, August 31, 2016
- This offer is subject to Terms and Conditions
- Your two-week Commute Card period will begin on the day you take your first ride; your first ride must be completed between August 1 and August 31, 2016
- Valid Monday through Friday between the hours of 710 AM and 58 PM only. Trips must begin and end in Manhattan below 125th Street. Valid on $5 POOL service only
- The total voucher cost includes New York sales tax ($3.91), New York Black Car Fund Fee ($1.07) and the uberPOOL Commute Card ($44.02)
- $100 is a comparable retail price; MSRP is based off of two $5 uberPOOL rides per weekday
- Offer is final sale; offer cannot be combined with other offers or promotions
- Valid for new and existing Uber riders; limit one per person
- May be used to obtain the discount stated on the Voucher until the “redeem by” date stated above; after that time, the customer may obtain a full refund of the purchase price of the Voucher by contacting Gilt City's customer service team
Restaurant Week is back with 3-course lunches and dinners for $29 and $42 respectively. It's a great excuse to try some new restaurants, but you can save even more (always) by maximizing your credit card rewards.
Amex is offering up to four $5 credits when you spend $35 or more on restaurant week meals, while Chase Freedom happens to be in the middle of their 5% back on dining rotating quarter. You have to manually activate both these offers.
So where's the threshold? If you value your 5% back on Chase at face value (Ultimate Rewards points are actually worth more or or less depending on how you redeem them), your check needs to exceed $100 to get more from your Chase Freedom, which isn't much of a stretch!
2200mAh is about as small as USB battery packs get, but this one includes a built-in Lightning connector so you can plug it directly into the bottom of your iPhone.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00LNI5KN0/…
The Shark Navigator Lift-Away is one of your favorite affordable vacuums, and you can get a refurb from Amazon today for $90, or $46 less than buying a new one.
http://gear.kinja.com/your-favorite-…
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01…
If your home or apartment doesn't have screen doors installed, this easy-to-install magnetic curtain will achieve the same effect, meaning you can let in some fresh air, while keeping out the bugs.
https://www.amazon.com/Magnetic-Scree…
Everyone needs a kitchen scale, and this $10 model from Etekcity is notable for its detachable bowl design.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00F3J9EGO/…
http://lifehacker.com/5840209/why-yo…
Tool collection seen better days? Everything you see above, plus a carrying case, is on sale for $99 today.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JN3FGA4/…
It's a scientific fact that every outdoor space looks better with copper string lights, and while $30 isn't a particularly low price for a 66' strand with 200 bulbs, this set does include a remote that can power them on and off, and even make them dim, pulse, and strobe on demand.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01HB72UYS?…
You never want to be in a situation where you need a solar and hand crank-powered weather radio with a flashlight and USB port for charging your phone, but you probably should buy it just in case. This one also includes a 130 lumen flashlight, and even an ultrasonic dog whistle.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B015QIC1PW/…
http://thevane.gawker.com/you-need-to-bu…
If you're still wrestling with a terrible inkjet printer at home, do yourself a solid and pick up the reliable Brother HL-2380DW monochrome laser printer today for just $80 (refurbished) today.
While it doesn't print in color, it more than makes up for that with the ability to spit out 32 pages per minute, duplex printing, and inexpensive toner cartridges that can last for years without being replaced. We've posted a lot of Brother deals in the past, and we've heard nothing but good things from readers about them. Plus, this particular model has a sterling 4.4 star review average on Amazon, a built-in scanner, and AirPrint and Google Cloud Print support, so it should serve you well for years.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01BHSL7VY/…
http://gear.kinja.com/bestsellers-br…
http://gear.kinja.com/brother-makes-…
Hopefully you never need a dash cam, but owning one can really save your bacon in the result of an accident. This affordable TaoTronics model has all of the features most people need, and you can score one today for just $63.
That price gets you 1080p recording, night vision, auto on/off, and a g-force sensor to automatically lock your footage in the event of an accident. Now go film some meteors.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01FLPZNB4/…
http://jalopnik.com/russian-dashca…
If you still haven't watched Firefly, or just want to own a physical copy for posterity, the complete Blu-ray is down to $13 on Amazon, the best price ever listed. Shiny!
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001EN71CW/…
You've heard of Automatic's smart driving assistant, but if $80-$100 is too rich for your blood, this cheap OBD2 dongle connects to any iPhone or Android device over Wi-Fi, and can fulfill many of the same functions using various third party apps.
https://www.amazon.com/Goliath-Indust…
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After every episode of Mr. Robot before this past Wednesday night's, I ended up asking myself the same question: Is this TV show ripping off all its cinematic influences in order to combine them into something new, or is it just ripping them off?
But after Wednesday's episode, the series' most referential yet, I'm starting to think that the show is up to more than just nodding toward the giants on whose shoulders it stands. This time, if you connect the dots between the allusions, they begin to form a bigger picture.
A few recappers noted one or two individual Kubrick references in “eps2.1_k3rnel-pan1c.ksd,” but no one seems to have put them all together, revealing how each of the episode's three principal storylines echoes a different Kubrick movie.
Eyes Wide Shut
Let's start with the first Kubrick reference I noticed in the episode:
Angela's storyline begins when E Corp CEO Phillip Price propositions her with a mysterious, vaguely sexual invitation: “Have you ever had dinner at Fidelio's?” Fidelio is the name of Beethoven's only opera, and it derives from the Latin for faithful, but any Kubrick diehard will recognize it first and foremost as the passcode used to get into the secret gatherings in Eyes Wide Shut. Given the nod, it seems like no coincidence that Angela's entrance into the restaurant is soundtracked by a song called “Just Say the Word.”
Angela's plotline also echoes the journey of Tom Cruise's character in Eyes Wide Shut, Dr. Bill Harford, in other ways. Like Harford, Angela finds herself for the first time infiltrating the luxe lives of shadowy men of power. And as with him, what might have seemed like an erotic encounter becomes nothing but creepy. In each case, the protagonist eventually discovers that the powerful men have conspired together to cover up some nefarious deaths.
Dr. Strangelove
While the Angela plotline echoes Eyes Wide Shut, the Dominique DiPierro (Grace Gummer) plotline echoes Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. This is most obvious when we she unearths the poster for F Society's “End of the World Party,” which completely rips off a poster design for Dr. Strangelove, and if you look closely, even bears the subtitle “Or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love F Society.”
In fact, her whole plotline in this episode finds her obsessed—and perhaps vaguely attracted to—the end of the world. She attempts to have cybersex with “happyhardonhenry806,” a man whose priapic moniker is reminiscent of Strangelove's own “Buck Turgidson.” When she stops, she asks her Amazon Echo, “Alexa, when is the end of the world?”
The Shining
Elliot's plotline is about being cooped up and going mad, so it's appropriate that it's packed with references to The Shining. The most obvious one is one of Elliot's hallucinations, which shows two twins wearing blue dresses with white ribbons. Interestingly, creator Sam Esmail (who also wrote and directed the episode) also tosses in a third girl wearing Kubrick's favorite color. In fact, there are splashes of the same shade of bright red throughout the episode, which add in a more subliminal way to the Kubrickian feel.
And then there's Elliot's attempt to stay sane and avoid relapse by writing in his notebook, which echoes Jack Torrance's attempts to keep his head and try not to fall off the wagon by working on his manuscript. We were introduced to this coping mechanism in the season premiere, but in this episode it falls apart in rather Shining-esque fashion:
* * *
This is not the first time that Mr. Robot has tipped its cap to Kubrick, of course (nor is Mr. Robot the first TV drama to salute the cinematic master). Esmail has spoken about how he “was doing Kubrick film festivals at my house when I was in high school,” and in an interview with Vulture last year, he spoke about how “one of the biggest influences on the show is Stanley Kubrick in general”:
In terms of Clockwork, the title cards are an inspiration. There are these glasses that I make Darlene [Carly Chaikin] wear that are a little bit of a nod to Lolita. And, actually, it's not a huge spoiler, but there'll be a little bit of a nod to Dr. Strangelove in the season finale that people can look out for.
What does this all add up to? I think it has something to do with another recurring theme in the episode: the F-word.
As Slate TV critic Willa Paskin noted in her smart review of the premiere, the second season of Mr. Robot spends a lot of time critiquing itself. With its repeated idle banter about Seinfeld, its disses directed at NCIS (which, as Paskin points out, airs in reruns on USA), and its harrowing depiction of the sheer sadness of watching Vanderpump Rules, Mr. Robot has more and more become a TV show that doesn't just push the boundaries of television but also draws attention to its limits.
And while regular Slate contributor Sam Adams sees all this episode's bleeped-out F-words as a symptom of the show's juvenile attempts to be subversive, I see them differently: as Mr. Robot's way of highlighting the limits of what you can and can't say on TV.
After all, “eps2.1_k3rnel-pan1c.ksd” doesn't just bleep the F-word, it's largely about censored F-words. Why else would it not only repeat the word so many times but open and close the episode with the origin of the name “F Society”? And soundtrack its main montage with a song by a band called Holy F---? And go out of its way to black out the word on screen, in a manner that makes it look not so much bleeped as redacted?
The episode even includes a (censored) F-word in both its final shot and its final line, with DiPierro looking at the sign on F Society headquarters and exclaiming, “You've gotta be f---ing kidding me.” You can imagine Esmail wanting to write the word into his screenplay and thinking the same thing.
This surprisingly jokey ending also reminds me of another movie that uses the F-word as its final punchline: Eyes Wide Shut. In the movie's closing exchange of dialogue, Nicole Kidman's character tells her husband, “You know, there is something very important we need to do as soon as possible.” When her husband asks, “What's that?” she responds, “Fuck.”
After pulling off the unlikely feat of putting must-watch prestige television on the USA Network, Esmail has been given more creative control than just about anyone else on television. But while he's now free to make the show about as cinematic as he wants, he's still running up against restrictions. After pulling off the nifty trick of changing “Fun Society” to “F Society,” he wants to point out that there's still at least one thing he can't say: “Fuck Society.”
The days of coins and tickets are over, making way for ‘seamless, stress-free mobile parking' that will send you away blubbing
I try to keep up with the modern world. I have all the mandatory equipment: computer, cash card, mobile phone. I can do things online, I can tweet, and I have learned to obey robot voices without screaming but, sometimes, even with all my equipment, a little everyday task can defeat me. Such as trying to park the car. Because, of course, things have changed again. Last week, I found that the days of coins and tickets are over for no particular reason that I can find, other than to drive me raving mad.
Related: It's marvellous that summer's here, but am I too old to sunbathe?
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Telegraph.co.uk | Revealed: the best biscuit for dunking into your tea Telegraph.co.uk Sarah Barnes, an Outreach Officer at the Institute, teamed up with Wired.co.uk to test ten biscuits in terms of 'dunkability'. Barnes used an igus robolink D robot arm to dunk the biscuits - ensuring no outside forces altered the results - and timed ... and more » |
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Sunset of London. Taken at Greenwich Park. I have a few of this sunset but this is one of my favourite. There was lots of couples enjoying the romantic view together.
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Gorgeous view of London which shows Tower Bridge, The Tower of London, River Thames and all the buildings rising above the city.
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London
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Watch how the world became obese https://t.co/aC8jFBtiCv this map shows each country's obesity rate, 1975 to 2014https://t.co/iROotlGS8X
— Max Galka (@galka_max) July 18, 2016
The rise of obesity (credit: Trends in adult body-mass index in 200 countries from 1975 to 2014)
The rise of severe obesity (credit: Trends in adult body-mass index in 200 countries from 1975 to 2014)
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Keri Brandt was once a strident vegetarian—but marrying a cattle rancher complicated her relationship with eating animals. She added meat to her diet and began to examine her black-and-white view. "In fact, I lost some friends in marrying David,” she says in this short documentary, which comes to us as a part of the world-traveling web series The Perennial Plate. “I had some friends who were vegan, and it was really hard for them to understand that I could fall in love with a cattle rancher."
To learn more about this series, visit its Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter pages.
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Heartbeats: Parker at Stonegate earns award MyCentralJersey.com ... to wait out their loved one's surgery in the medical center. The operating rooms will be used for all surgical specialties including robotic surgery, general surgery including advanced laparoscopic procedures, orthopedic, spine, neuro, and ... |
Telegraph.co.uk | Why Rich Tea biscuits are decent dunkers but brilliant for baking Telegraph.co.uk It's often been said that baking is a science. And now the science behind the dunkability of 10 of the nation's much-loved biscuits has been tested, by both robots and humans. The results from the dunking experiment, which was undertaken at the ... Trading is definitely coming to Pokémon Go, Niantic confirmsWired.co.uk VOTE: Are Rich Tea Biscuits Really The Best For Tea Dunking? Rank Your FavouriteHuffington Post UK all 9 news articles » |
Once more, triple-digit summer temperatures and dry conditions are fueling wildfires across California. Getty photographer David McNew has been covering many of these fires for more than a decade, and has an eye for finding the visual beauty amid the horrible destruction and efforts to battle these blazes. Gathered here are some of McNew's compelling photographs of Californian wildfires over the past decade.
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Group says move would allow shoots to be banned if birds of prey are illegally killed, amid withdrawal from hen harrier scheme
Grouse shooting estates should be licensed so that authorities have the power to ban them if birds of prey are illegally killed, the RSPB has urged, as it quit a government initiative to save the hen harrier in England.
The hen harrier action plan is a Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs-led scheme in which landowners, shooting groups and conservation organisations agreed to work together to increase numbers of hen harriers in England.
Related: The mystery of the missing hen harriers | Patrick Barkham
Continue reading...Actor was previously convicted of killing three endangered animals but higher court in Rajasthan has overturned the verdict
The Bollywood star Salman Khan has been acquitted of shooting and killing three endangered animals nearly two decades ago, a verdict that overturned a lower court's ruling that would have sent the actor to jail.
Khan and seven other people, including Bollywood actors, had been accused of killing a gazelle and two antelopes over two days in 1998 while filming a movie in Rajasthan state.
Related: Bollywood box office takings down for first time in five years
Continue reading...Read more: Environment, Sustainability, Green News
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A new study of old masters finds that capturing and showing off decadent and expensive meals is a decidedly old-fashioned practice. Like today's Instagrammers, it was all about projecting an image.
In the 1980s, I remember that many scientists feared that ozone depletion was irreversible and the headlines in many newspapers declared that nations were powerless to stem the growing loss of ozone - the great hole in the ozone that threatened us all. But the Montreal Protocol proved that the pessimists and the naysayers were wrong. Virtually all the parties have met their obligations under the accord. Nearly 100 of the most ozone-depleting substances have been phased out. And as a result, the hole in the ozone is shrinking and on its way to repair. It's why we're here today... Now, that's the good news. The bad news is that in too many cases, the substances banned by the Montreal Protocol have been replaced by hydrofluorocarbons - HFCs - which are safer for ozone, but are exceptionally potent drivers of climate change - thousands of times more potent, for example, than CO2.
The Montreal treaty allows nations to amend it to ban substitute chemicals that have negative environmental effects even if they do not harm the ozone. And American chemical companies such as Dow, DuPont and Honeywell have already begun to patent climate-friendly HFC substitutes.
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‘Robot Wars' returned to our screens last night after a 12-year absence - and, for many, it was as though it had never been away.
The geeks' delight drew an audience of two million viewers, representing a 10% share and, pointedly, a fair few more than tuned in for the beleaguered ‘Top Gear' series finale.
Three weeks ago, ‘Top Gear's final show of six drew 1.9million viewers, and lead presenter fell on his sword the following day.
Judging by the positive reviews so far for the techy reboot, it looks as though hosts Dara O'Briain and Angela Scanlon and resident warriors Sir Killalot, Matilda, Dead Metal and Shunt, will enjoy a far smoother run.
Critics and viewers praised the mix of old and new elements of the show, the robots re-booted, the hosts replaced but the participants' attention to detail, the fans' devotion, the pyrotechnics all upstanding and present. If it ain't broke, and all that...
Books, puzzles, pantomime programmes and other rare items among hoard, the gift of an eccentric American collector
A small army of Dick Whittingtons and a tribe of cats have arrived at the Guildhall library in London, which was founded using the real medieval mayor's legacy, in a bequest from an eccentric American collector.
The treasury includes books, games and puzzles, glass magic lantern slides, pantomime programmes and posters, and a unique copy of a tiny hand-coloured early 19th-century book. All are related to the legend of the poor boy leaving the city in despair until he heard the sound of Bow Bells, and was urged by his cat to turn back and make his fortune and thrice become mayor of London.
Continue reading...Exhibition at Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge shows biblical pair in original state after onetime owner painted over nudity
Adam and Eve are once again as naked as the day they were created, centuries after some prudish hand wrapped his loins in a grass skirt and draped a veil around her, in an illustrated book to go on display at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge.
The original naked figures correct according to the biblical account where Adam and Eve only became ashamed of their bare bodies when they ate the forbidden fruit and were expelled from the Garden of Eden were considered perfectly suitable by Queen Anne of Brittany in 1505, who commissioned the book as a gift for her five-year-old daughter, Claude. The book, made by a court painter known as the Master of Antoine de Roche, was created to teach the little princess the alphabet as well as the story of creation.
Continue reading...with the tip of his finger, a smartphone, and a sharp sense of humor, the italian artist creates finger painted personalities.
The post finnano fenno's digital finger paintings turn vintage cars into a quirky cast of characters appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
Using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers at the University of Arizona captured the first direct, time-resolved images of an exoplanet, a young, gaseous exoplanet known as 2M1207b, shown above, located some 160 light-years from Earth. The planet is four times the mass of Jupiter and orbits a failed star, known to astronomers as a brown dwarf. And while our solar system is 4.5 billion years in the making, 2M1207b is a mere ten million years old. Its days are short--less than 11 hours--and its temperature is hot--a blistering 2,600 degrees Fahrenheit. Its rain showers arrive in the form of liquid iron and glass.
"2M1207b is likely just the first of many exoplanets we will now be able to characterize and map," said Steward Observatory astronomer Glenn Schneider who co-authored the study with Lunar and Planetary Laboratory's Adam Showman released this February 16, 2016.The composite image above shows the exoplanet (the red spot on the lower left), orbiting the brown dwarf 2M1207 (center). 2M1207b is the first exoplanet directly imaged and the first discovered orbiting a brown dwarf. It was imaged the first time by the VLT in 2004. Its planetary identity and characteristics were confirmed after one year of observations in 2005. 2M1207b is a Jupiter-like planet, 5 times more massive than Jupiter.
The alien planet orbits the brown dwarf at a distance 55 times larger than the Earth to the Sun, nearly twice as far as Neptune is from the Sun. The system 2M1207 lies at a distance of 230 light-years, in the constellation of Hydra. The photo is based on three near-infrared exposures (in the H, K and L wavebands) with the NACO adaptive-optics facility at the 8.2-m VLT Yepun telescope at the ESO Paranal Observatory.
The researchers, led by UA Department of Astronomy graduate student Yifan Zhou, were able to deduce the exoplanet's rotational period and better understand its atmospheric properties--including its patchy clouds--by taking 160 images of the target over the course of ten hours. Their work was made possible by the high resolution and high contrast imaging capabilities of Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3.
"Understanding the exoplanet's atmosphere was one of the key goals for us. This can help us understand how its clouds form and if they are homogenous or heterogeneous across the planet," said Zhou.
Before now, nobody had ever used 26-year-old Hubble to create time-resolved images of an exoplanet. Even the largest telescope on Earth could not snap a sharp photo of a planet as far away as 2M1207b, so the astronomers created an innovative, new way to map its clouds without actually seeing them in sharp relief: They measured its changing brightness over time.
Daniel Apai, UA assistant professor of astronomy and planetary sciences, is the lead investigator of this Hubble program. He said, "The result is very exciting. It gives us a new technique to explore the atmospheres of exoplanets."
According to Apai, this new imaging technique provides a "method to map exoplanets" and is "an important step for understanding and placing our planets in context." Our Solar System has a relatively limited sampling of planets, and there is no planet as hot or as massive as 2M1207b within it.
"Do these exotic worlds have banded cloud patterns like Jupiter? How is the weather and climate on these extremely hot worlds similar to or different from that of the colder planets in our own solar system? Observations like these are key to answering these questions," said Showman.
Zhou and his collaborators began collecting data for this project in 2014. It began as a pilot study to demonstrate that space telescopes like Hubble and the James Webb Space Telescope, which NASA will launch in late 2018, can be used to map clouds on other planets.
The success of this study lead to a new, larger program: Hubble's Cloud Atlas program for which Apai is also the lead investigator. As one of Hubble's largest exoplanet-focused programs, Cloud Atlas represents a collaboration between 14 experts from across the globe, who are now creating more time-resolved images of other planets using the space telescope.
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The Daily Galaxy via University of Arizona and ESO
MATTEO MONTANI Acquerello 3, 2014, 200×150 cm
Are we facing imminent doom? Will the universe collapse? That disparity between theory and observation indicates the Standard Model theory of a constantly expanding universe has been outpaced by new measurements of the Higgs and top quark. A stable universe is one in a low energy state where particles and forces interact and behave according to theoretical predictions forever. That's in contrast to metastable, or unstable, meaning a higher energy state in which things eventually change, or change suddenly and unpredictably, and that could result in the universe collapsing. The Higgs and top quark are the two most important parameters for determining an answer to that question. Recent measurements of the Higgs and top quark indicate they describe a universe that is not stable at all energies.
“It's going to take some work for theorists to explain this,” Kehoe said, adding it's a challenge physicists relish, as evidenced by their preoccupation with “new physics” and the possibilities the Higgs and Top quark create. “I attended two conferences recently and there's argument about exactly what it means, so that could be interesting.”
So are we in trouble? “Not immediately,” Kehoe said. “The energies at which metastability would kick in are so high that particle interactions in our universe almost never reach that level. In any case, a metastable universe would likely not change for many billions of years.”
“The ability to measure the top quark mass precisely is fortuitous because it, together with the Higgs boson mass, tells us whether the universe is stable or not,” said Robert Kehoe, a physicist at Southern Methodist University. “That has emerged as one of today's most important questions.”
“We want a theory — Standard Model or otherwise — that can predict physical processes at all energies,” Kehoe added. “But the measurements now are such that it looks like we may be over the border of a stable universe. We're metastable, meaning there's a gray area, that it's stable in some energies, but not in others.”
In the post-Big Bang world, nature's top quark — a key component of matter — is a highly sensitive probe that physicists use to evaluate competing theories about quantum interactions. Physicists at Southern Methodist University have achieved a new precise measurement of a key subatomic particle, opening the door to better understanding some of the deepest mysteries of our universe.
The researchers calculated the new measurement for a critical characteristic — mass — of the top quark. Quarks make up the protons and neutrons that comprise almost all visible matter. Physicists have known the top quark's mass was large, but encountered great difficulty trying to clearly determine it.
The newly calculated measurement of the top quark will help guide physicists in formulating new theories, said Kehoe, who lead the SMU group that performed the measurement.
Top quark's mass matters ultimately because the particle is a highly sensitive probe and key tool to evaluate competing theories about the nature of matter and the fate of the universe. Physicists for two decades have worked to improve measurement of the top quark's mass and narrow its value.
“Top” bears on newest fundamental particle, the Higgs boson. The new value from SMU confirms the validity of recent measurements by other physicists, said Kehoe. But it also adds growing uncertainty about aspects of physics' Standard Model.
The Standard Model is the collection of theories physicists have derived — and continually revise — to explain the universe and how the tiniest building blocks of our universe interact with one another. Problems with the Standard Model remain to be solved. For example, gravity has not yet been successfully integrated into the framework.
The Standard Model holds that the top quark — known familiarly as “top” — is central in two of the four fundamental forces in our universe — the electroweak force, by which particles gain mass, and the strong force, which governs how quarks interact. The electroweak force governs common phenomena like light, electricity and magnetism. The strong force governs atomic nuclei and their structure, in addition to the particles that quarks comprise, like protons and neutrons in the nucleus.
The top plays a role with the newest fundamental particle in physics, the Higgs boson, in seeing if the electroweak theory holds water. Some scientists think the top quark may be special because its mass can verify or jeopardize the electroweak theory. If jeopardized, that opens the door to what physicists refer to as “new physics” — theories about particles and our universe that go beyond the Standard Model. Other scientists theorize the top quark might also be key to the unification of the electromagnetic and weak interactions of protons, neutrons and quarks. In addition, as the only quark that can be observed directly, the top quark tests the Standard Model's strong force theory.
“So the top quark is really pushing both theories,” Kehoe said. “The top mass is particularly interesting because its measurement is getting to the point now where we are pushing even beyond the level that the theorists understand. Our experimental errors, or uncertainties, are so small, that it really forces theorists to try hard to understand the impact of the quark's mass. We need to observe the Higgs interacting with the top directly and we need to measure both particles more precisely.”
The new measurement results were presented at the Third Annual Conference on Large Hadron Collider Physics, St. Petersburg, Russia, and at the 8th International Workshop on Top Quark Physics, Ischia, Italy.
“The public perception, with discovery of the Higgs, is ‘Ok, it's done,'” Kehoe said. “But it's not done. This is really just the beginning and the top quark is a key tool for figuring out the missing pieces of the puzzle.”
The results were made public by DZero, a collaborative experiment of more than 500 physicists from around the world. The measurement is described in “Precise measurement of the top quark mass in dilepton decays with optimized neutrino weighting” and is available online at arxiv.org/abs/1508.03322.
To narrow the top quark measurement, SMU doctoral researcher Huanzhao Liu took a standard methodology for measuring the top quark and improved the accuracy of some parameters. He also improved calibration of an analysis of top quark data.
“Liu achieved a surprising level of precision,” Kehoe said. “And his new method for optimizing analysis is also applicable to analyses of other particle data besides the top quark, making the methodology useful within the field of particle physics as a whole.”
The SMU optimization could be used to more precisely understand the Higgs boson, which explains why matter has mass, said Liu. The Higgs was observed for the first time in 2012, and physicists keenly want to understand its nature.
“This methodology has its advantages — including understanding Higgs interactions with other particles — and we hope that others use it,” said Liu. “With it we achieved 20-percent improvement in the measurement. Here's how I think of it myself — everybody likes a $199 iPhone with contract. If someday Apple tells us they will reduce the price by 20 percent, how would we all feel to get the lower price?”
Another optimization employed by Liu improved the calibration precision by four times, Kehoe said.
Top quarks, which rarely occur now, were much more common right after the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago. However, top is the only quark, of six different kinds, that can be observed directly. For that reason, experimental physicists focus on the characteristics of top quarks to better understand the quarks in everyday matter.
To study the top, physicists generate them in particle accelerators, such as the Tevatron, a powerful U.S. Department of Energy particle accelerator operated by Fermi National Laboratory in Illinois, or the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, a project of the European Organization for Nuclear Research, CERN.
SMU's measurement draws on top quark data gathered by DZero that was produced from proton-antiproton collisions at the Tevatron, which Fermilab shut down in 2011.
The new measurement is the most precise of its kind from the Tevatron, and is competitive with comparable measurements from the Large Hadron Collider. The top quark mass has been precisely measured more recently, but there is some divergence of the measurements. The SMU result favors the current world average value more than the current world record holder measurement, also from Fermilab. The apparent discrepancy must be addressed, Kehoe said.
As the only quark that can be observed, the top quark pops in and out of existence fleetingly in protons, making it possible for physicists to test and define its properties directly.
“To me it's like fireworks,” Liu said. “They shoot into the sky and explode into smaller pieces, and those smaller pieces continue exploding. That sort of describes how the top quark decays into other particles.”
By measuring the particles to which the top quark decays, scientists capture a measure of the top quark, Liu explained.
But study of the top is still an exotic field, Kehoe said. “For years top quarks were treated as a construct and not a real thing. Now they are real and still fairly new — and it's really important we understand their properties fully.” — Margaret Allen.
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The Daily Galaxy via Southern Methodist University
Image credits: With thanks to Michael Taylor / Shutterstock
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
Space Science image of the week is this strangely meandering channel, carved on the Moon, is one of the most famous features on our nearest celestial neighbour. It shot to fame in July 1971 when the two astronauts of Apollo 15 drove their lunar rover to its very edge.
Known as Hadley Rille, the feature is named after the 18th century British mathematician and inventor John Hadley. In 1721, Hadley presented a telescope that used a non-spherical mirror to the Royal Society in London. Shaped as a parabola, the mirror avoided the aberration caused by a spherical mirror, and set the shape for all telescope mirrors to come.
Hadley Rille is thought to have been carved by an ancient lava flow, dating back just over 3 billion years to soon after the Moon formed. It stretches more than 120 km, up to 1500 m wide and more than 300 m deep in some places.
From their close-up position, the Apollo astronauts photographed what looked like strata in the walls of the rille. This suggests that there were many volcanic eruptions, each building a new layer. Then, a channel of lava cut through these deposits. When it drained away, it left the sinuous rille we see today. However, planetary scientists are not entirely sure of the details of the process.
This image was taken by ESA's SMART-1, which explored the Moon from 2004 to 2006. Its miniaturised camera demonstrated that smaller equipment could still provide first-class science.
This image was taken from an altitude of about 2000 km. It spans about 100 km and shows the region around Hadley Rille centred at about 25°N / 3°E.
SMART-1 was ESA's first mission to the Moon. It tested new engine technologies, including a solar electric propulsion system that will carry ESA's BepiColombo mission to Mercury in 2018.
At the end of its mission, SMART-1 was flown closer and closer to the lunar surface until it was intentionally crashed on 3 September 2006. During its mission, it had completed more than 2000 orbits of the Moon.
Credit: ESA/Space-X, Space Exploration Institute
A look at the wild works Kickstarter creators are making for Burning Man this year.
a team of designers has suspended dozens of crafted origami cranes from a courtyard ceiling, arranging them in a spiraling configuration overhead.
The post flock of origami birds fills french courtyard for the festival des architectures vives appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
Chalcid wasp (Perilampus sp.) collected in Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan, Canada, and photographed at the Centre for Biodiversity Genomics (sample ID: BIOUG21601-C03; specimen record: http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_RecordView?processid=CNGSF2717-15; BIN: http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_BarcodeCluster?clusteruri=BOLD:ACV0077)
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Turquoise Mountain is also committed to providing a sustainable source of income
for Afghanistan's young women. Currently over half of Turquoise Mountain's
calligraphy and jewelry students are women.
On the third sublevel of the Smithsonian's Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington, D.C., a new exhibition “Turquoise Mountain: Artists Transforming Afghanistan” featuring jewelry, woodwork, rugs, calligraphy and pottery made by Afghan artisans, gives visitors a feel for what it's like to live in a society where craft, art and practical living solutions are coming together.
A non-profit organization founded in 2006, the Turquoise Mountain project aims to physically restore the historic city center of Kabul after years of turmoil and to restore the traditional crafts of the city. The project is giving artisans the lessons and resources they need to relearn traditional craft. This collaborative effort between Afghan artisans and the folks at Turquoise Mountain also has helped local artisans find new markets, both domestic and international, according to Tommy Wide, Director of Exhibitions at Turquoise Mountain.
Urban regeneration in Afganistan organized by the Turquoise Mountain Project.
Turquoise Mountain aims to restore Afghan tradition without keeping Afghan artists in the past. “The last thing I'd ever want to do is for this presentation of tradition to be seen as locking Afghanistan into its traditional methods,” Wide says. “It's about the fruitful preservation, but also transformation, of these traditions through the careful, judicious use of new materials, new techniques, new machinery, new design.”
This calligraphy was created by a teacher at the Turquoise Mountain Institute in
Kabul. The Institute has trained more than 450 artisans since its founding eight
years ago.
Collaboration is something that Turquoise Mountain stresses. Nasser Mansouri, a celebrated classical Afghan woodworker, came up with the idea that visitors should be able to touch the woodwork he would create of the exhibit, and this principle was incorporated into the design of the entire exhibit. Wide notes that the exhibit questions how we approach art. “It's not just treating the art as an aesthetic object, but as a lived experience and a story, and the person behind the art.”
Afghan lapis lazuli has been traded for thousands of years. It can be found in Tutankhamen's funeral mask and was ground into powder for the blue pigments used by Renaissance artists in Europe.
To drive this point home, the exhibit provides large photographs of the artisans themselves, and each explanatory panel is written by the artist, not the curator. “That was really important for us, that it was all in their voices, so the visitors have an unmediated connection with the artist,” Wide says.
The tactility of the exhibit highlights the strong connection between form and function in the craft of the artisans. The jali panels, designed by Mansouri, have several uses in Afghan society: to regulate light, to divide rooms and to create beauty. In the exhibit, visitors are encouraged to touch Mansouri's woodwork, which includes large archways and samples of the jali panels.
Beautiful flowers and traditional patterns are carved into the Himalayan cedar of the arches and columns, and darker walnut wood of the jali panels are carved with geometric lattice patterns, like a kaleidoscope. Visitors can lift the panels and hold them up to the light to see how the panels block and let through light to project the patterns onto the wall. The texture of Mansouri's woodworking is enticing to touch, as the wood itself is smoothed but the patterns jut out to greet the hand.
Since 2006 Turquoise Mountain has worked in partnership with the community of
Murad Khani, providing employment, education, healthcare, and a renewed sense
of pride.
While the jewelry in the exhibit cannot be touched, its texture is also enticing. The main attraction is a beautiful gold and emerald necklace designed in a collaboration between Pippa Small, a British designer, and Saeeda Etebari, an Afghan jewelry maker. Etebari, who is deaf, decided to make rain a motif in the design of the necklace, which is reflected in the emerald beads scattered throughout the gold fringe. The pottery in the exhibit reflects the name of the Turquoise Mountain organization, as the clay is found in the hills of Afghanistan and the pots are then glazed in turquoise.
Turquoise Mountain focuses on what Afghanistan has to offer, rather than what it lacks. Wide sees the strength of Turquoise Mountain's work in the way it harnesses the skills and beauty that are already present in the country. Turquoise Mountain does well to act as an intermediary between the artisans and the rest of the world, helping to accentuate and promote what they do.
“Turquoise Mountain: Artists Transforming Afghanistan” is on display in the Sackler Gallery until January 29, 2017. To find out more, visit asia.si.edu or turquoisemountain.org.
The post Traditional artisans breathe new life into Afghanistan via Turquoise Mountain Project appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.
A new study has ‘solved' the problem plaguing our island for generations; which biscuit is best to dunk in a cup of tea to avoid the tragedy that is a soggy, broken biscuit?
The scientific team (they even used an official dunking robot) conclusively found that McVitie's Rich Tea biscuits came out on top.
But we're not so sure; what about the humble chocolate digestive or the Garibaldi, goddammit?
To help put the matter to bed once and for all we have put together this quiz so you can decide which biccie is truly the nation's favourite for the biscuit tin.
Vote!
Kelvin MacKenzie has sparked further outrage over his attack on Muslim newsreader Fatima Manji by threatening to mount and counter-complaint about her to Ofcom.
The Sun columnist penned a controversial article last week saying it was inappropriate for “a young lady wearing a hijab” to front Channel 4 News' coverage of the Nice terror attack.
His original piece has so far sparked almost 2,000 complaints to press regulator Ipso.
But today MacKenzie revealed he himself planned to lodge a “formal complaint” with the broadcast watchdog for a breach of “impartiality”.
He claimed Manji should not have worn her headscarf given the Nice attackers' religious motivation was “central” to coverage of the incident.
He pointed to the Tory peer Baroness Waris, who sometimes wears a hijab on television, saying: “A Muslim woman does have a choice [to wear the clothing]”. Warsi has previously accused MacKenzie of peddling “respectable racism” and “xenophobia”.
The former Sun editor wrote:
“I will be looking at making a formal complaint to Ofcom under the section of the broadcasting code which deals with impartiality.
“Since the question of religious motivation was central to the coverage of the Nice attack, I would ask whether it is appropriate for a newsreader to wear religious attire that could undermine the viewers' perception of impartiality.
“A Muslim woman does have a choice.”
But the comments provoked fury from social media users, including BBC journalist Julia Macfarlane.
The reporter quipped that given MacKenzie's stance he presumably “thinks men shouldn't report on any crime perpetrated by a man”.
Kelvin MacKenzie thinks Muslims shouldn't report on terror. Assume he also thinks men shouldn't report on any crime perpetrated by a man
— Julia Macfarlane (@juliamacfarlane) July 25, 2016
Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron also admonished MacKenzie's counter-complaint, saying the threat to complain to Ofcom following his own “bigoted remarks” was “beyond belief”.
Other Twitter users joined in voicing their anger at MacKenzie, outraged at his latest column that further provoked the media row raging over Manji.
Extraordinary that Kelvin Mackenzie thinks it's ok to make a complaint on the basis of an individual's dress & faith https://t.co/xqFvwW2HoB
— Akeela Ahmed (@AkeelaAhmed) July 25, 2016
@jpublik @fatimamanji Can I complain to them about Kelvin Mackenzie being an absolute tool?
— Rob Remain (@robotbotch) July 25, 2016
The Sun has maintained a ‘no comment' stance over the anger at MacKenzie since the row broke out.
It deleted a tweet promoting his story amid a string of angry responses.
I'm hard to shock but speechless that @Channel4News @fatimamanji has been treated this way by @TheSun @TellMamaUK pic.twitter.com/REv4fCeqLY
— Afua Hirsch (@afuahirsch) July 18, 2016
Manji herself hit back at MacKenzie last week, promising “not [to] be deterred in this mission by the efforts of those who find the presence of Muslims in British cultural life offensive.”
Writing in the Liverpool Echo, poignant because of its longstanding animosity toward's MacKenzie and the Sun for the tabloid's Hillsborough disaster coverage, Manji said she would complain to Ipso.
She ended the piece by referencing The Sun's infamous 1989 front page which bore the headline ‘THE TRUTH', blaming Liverpool FC fans for the disaster at Hillsborough stadium which left 96 dead.
“THE TRUTH?” she wrote, “I confess. I pi**ed on Kelvin MacKenzie's apparent ambitions to force anyone who looks a little different off our screens, and I'll keep doing it.”
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Thomas Tompion Scientist of the Day
Thomas Tompion, an English clock maker, was baptized July 25, 1639.
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I hop off the boat into a horde of red-white-and-blue-clad 4th of July revelers. Looking back at the mighty Savannah River, I see a half dozen children playing in the water, with two sets of alligator eyeballs cresting the water thirty feet or so beyond.
“What's going on here,” I ask Tonya, my guide and companion for the week, who also happens to be of the Savannah Riverkeeper (a contributor to the funding of this part of my project).
“Oh that's fine, those gators are always here,” she cooly replies.
We're halfway through our journey down the Savannah River from above Augusta to the ocean, tracing the proposed route for a new gas pipeline, meeting the people that would be impacted along the way. This trip is part of a series of short films telling the stories of our most passionate defenders of freshwater around the United States. A gas pipeline of this magnitude has dredged up fiery passions on all sides of the issue. With it being Independence Day, we eschewed any set plans and posted up on a sandbar, which shortly after our arrival turned into a party barge destination of epic proportions. Before long, we earned an invite to the “real” 4th of July barbecue on the banks of the river a mile or so downstream.
Tonya seems to know everyone, so I get to know everyone. With an equal number of t-shirts featuring the Union and Confederate flags, I try to downplay my upstate New York roots and fit in with the 150 or so partiers. I ask everyone I can about their feelings on the proposed Palmetto Pipeline. Most seem to be against its implementation, but not for the reasons I might expect.
Looking back a year later, there were certainly a handful of people opposing it for purely environmental reasons, but the most repeated complaint was the proposed use of eminent domain by Kinder Morgan, the company responsible for the construction of the pipeline. Employing eminent domain could save millions of dollars for Kinder Morgan, removing the need to negotiate with individual landowners. This basically means landowners' properties would be assessed for a certain value (usually quite low). Kinder Morgan would pay the property owners to get the right of way to build the pipeline. However, this leaves the landowner, who still technically owns their property, to pay taxes on land they could no longer use. This didn't sit well for many of the people we met.
Eminent domain is typically used for large public works projects, such as highways or power lines, and the proposed use by a private company enraged many local landowners and motivated them to fight for the protection of their land and water.
Meeting these people and understanding their fight has greatly widened my understanding of why people care about rivers. Having grown up paddling and guiding on rivers around the country, I hold them in high regard for an entirely different set of reasons than my new red-white-and-blue Georgia and South Carolina friends. Despite the different routes to this passion, the end result is the same, people wanting to protect the integrity of their rivers.
In early 2016, government officials reasoned that eminent domain couldn't be used because there wasn't a significant public benefit to the additional gas it could provide. The Savannah River will run a little freer thanks to the hard work of an unlikely group of advocates crossing political and demographic boundaries to protect the water and the land.
The Water Is for Fighting project, funded in part by a National Geographic Young Explorer Grant, documents the challenges facing our nation's freshwater resources. Corey Robinson is collecting these stories through film, still pictures and words. Check back next week for the third of a four-part series of documentary videos about the project.
Follow along with @coreyrobinson #w4f2015
Visit Corey's Website
“Whisky is for drinking, water is for fighting.”
In the 1980s, I remember that many scientists feared that ozone depletion was irreversible and the headlines in many newspapers declared that nations were powerless to stem the growing loss of ozone - the great hole in the ozone that threatened us all. But the Montreal Protocol proved that the pessimists and the naysayers were wrong. Virtually all the parties have met their obligations under the accord. Nearly 100 of the most ozone-depleting substances have been phased out. And as a result, the hole in the ozone is shrinking and on its way to repair. It's why we're here today... Now, that's the good news. The bad news is that in too many cases, the substances banned by the Montreal Protocol have been replaced by hydrofluorocarbons - HFCs - which are safer for ozone, but are exceptionally potent drivers of climate change - thousands of times more potent, for example, than CO2.
The Montreal treaty allows nations to amend it to ban substitute chemicals that have negative environmental effects even if they do not harm the ozone. And American chemical companies such as Dow, DuPont and Honeywell have already begun to patent climate-friendly HFC substitutes.
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Read more: Climate Change, Pollution, Technology, Science, Environment, Politics, Green News
OPM Disability Retirement under FERS or CSRS: That state of cognitive dissonance Lawyers.com Blog (blog) For all other species, even a momentary state of unawareness can mean death. Predators seek the narrow window of advantage; that is the evolutionary determinism which propagates death, and shows mercy of life for those who close all such seams of ... and more » |
Baltimore City Paper | The Republican National Convention Day Two: Cognitive dissonance in the Public Square Baltimore City Paper Donna Woods stands in Cleveland's Public Square talking about a knotty statewide conspiracy in Ohio that kept her husband's murder by a doctor under wraps when very, very famous conspiracy theorist Alex Jones interrupts her. Jones, the wildly popular ... |
Metropolis Magazine | On Cognitive Dissonance and The Architectural Canon Metropolis Magazine Of the two possible resolutions to cognitive dissonance, the second one — inventing a fictitious reality — is actually the least painful. The next year I also presented guest lectures to a similar architecture class. This time, I taught a slightly ... |
Diginomica | Being human Watson boots up a new future for IBM in cloud robotics Diginomica For example, does a piece of text have a high degree of anger in it? There is a set of APIs around speech recognition and object recognition, and because these are all offered as discrete cloud services via a pay-per-use licensing model, the costs ... and more » |
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In an effort to stem the depletion of groundwater and keep Arizona's prized Verde River flowing, two vineyards are buying water credits through a new exchange designed to balance the basin's water use for the good of the river and the local economy.
Launched last week by the not-for-profit Friends of Verde River Greenway, the Verde River Exchange connects residents and businesses in the valley willing to temporarily reduce their water use with others seeking to offset the impacts of their groundwater pumping. As in many basins, groundwater helps sustain flows in the Verde, so the exchange is focused on motivating groundwater users to balance their withdrawals.
In the first pilot, a local family agreed to forego the irrigation of a small pasture for one year, generating water credits that will partially offset the use of groundwater by Merkin Vineyards and Page Springs Vineyards. The two vineyards, in turn, will purchase the water credits, providing revenue that can be used to compensate the local family.
It's a novel approach to motivating river protection, and it remains to be seen how much voluntary action the exchange generates. But it provides a vehicle for those wanting to do their part to sustain a healthy river in their backyard.
“There are few tools for communities to manage (their water) use,” said Chip Norton, president of Friends of Verde River Greenway, “and so we believe the Verde River Exchange is launching at an opportune time.”
The over-pumping of groundwater, which is depleting crucial water reserves and drying up rivers across the United States and much of the world, is a vexing problem. Especially where laws or norms allow private landowners to pump as much water as they want from beneath their land, the threat of groundwater depletion can be difficult to pare back.
The Verde River, a stunning ribbon of green that winds 195 miles from spring-fed headwaters north of Prescott to the greater Phoenix area, is one of Arizona's few remaining healthy river systems. An avian paradise, the Verde and its forested corridor provide habitat for more than two hundred and twenty species of birds, and help sustain muskrats, river otters and ninety other mammals.
While Arizona is often praised in water circles for its pioneering 1980 groundwater act, the law only applies to five “active management areas,” including Tucson and Phoenix. Groundwater pumping in regions outside of those designated areas, including the Verde Valley, remains more or less unrestricted.
“The exchange is something new,” said Jocelyn Gibbon, lead coordinator of the exchange and principal of Freshwater Policy Consulting, based in Flagstaff, Arizona. “We don't know anywhere else it's being done quite this way on a voluntary basis.”
In setting up the pilot project for the exchange, the team perceived the two vineyard owners as likely to care about the long-term health of the river and the long-term prospects for the community, Gibbon explained. “We thought they might be willing to step up and say, ‘We'll help you do this.' To our great excitement, both of them said yes.”
Page Springs Cellars and Vineyards overlooks Oak Creek, a beautiful tributary of the Verde known for the canyon it carved outside of Sedona, a popular tourist town amidst stunning red rocks. It is Oak Creek that will benefit from this first transaction of the exchange.
Both Page Springs and Merkin Vineyards use highly efficient drip systems to irrigate the grapes for their wines, so the two are no strangers to water stewardship. The exchange enables them to go above and beyond efficient water use and give some water back to the river.
Together the two vineyards' purchase of water credits this year will offset the impact of irrigating about nine acres of their grapes.
“Not only will it (the pilot) have an impact on the river, but also on what people think is possible,” Gibbon said. “The Verde Valley is changing and increasingly people are appreciating the river as an asset in many ways. It would be really exciting if people saw (the exchange) as a tool and something of a cultural norm.”
Three years in the making, the exchange includes among its funders and partners, The Nature Conservancy of Arizona, the Walton Family Foundation, Environmental Defense Fund, the Bonneville Environmental Foundation (BEF), as well as Friends of Verde River Greenway.
“I think it's a critical pilot that others can look at, understand, and consider replicating (or creating enabling conditions for) in other places, says Todd Reeve, CEO of BEF and creator of the Water Restoration Credit now used widely by water users throughout the western United States to balance their water footprints.
As water pressures intensify with population and economic growth, creative solutions like the Verde River Exchange offer some honest hope that we can actually have healthy rivers side-by-side with healthy economies.
It's an aspiration worth toasting over a nice glass of wine.
[Disclosure: Todd Reeve and I co-created the water restoration initiative called Change the Course, which has partnered on a number of projects in the Verde Valley, including this pilot project of the exchange.]
Sandra Postel is director of the Global Water Policy Project, Freshwater Fellow of the National Geographic Society, and author of several books and numerous articles on global water issues. She is co-creator of Change the Course, the national freshwater initiative that has restored billions of gallons of water to depleted rivers and wetlands. She is working on a book about repairing and replenishing the water cycle.
Pikliz
It's a sauce, it's a relish, it's a veg-intense condiment you'll find in almost every Haitian home in every South Florida Haitian restaurant. Pikliz (pronounced pik-leez) makes the most out of heat-resistant summer crops like carrots, cabbage, chiles and onions. It looks like cole slaw. Be not deceived. It packs a Scotch bonnet sucker punch. Adding a second Scotch bonnet makes it truer to the Haitian ideal. Unless you can truly stand the heat, start with one.
It seems easier to bung all the vegetables in the food processor, but if possible, resist the temptation. Hand chopping the vegetables results in crisper, more authentic pikliz. This quick fuss-free pickle will be ready to eat after 48 hours, but flavors will bloom the longer you keep it. And you can keep it indefinitely.
Enjoy a spoonful or two of pikliz on just about anything, including corn bread from any -- and every -- region.
2 cups cabbage (about half a pound), thinly sliced
1 carrot, diced
1 red pepper, diced
1 onion, diced
1 to 2 Scotch bonnet peppers, minced *
1 teaspoon sea salt
2/3 cup fresh orange juice
1/3 cup fresh lime juice
1 cup cider vinegar
4 whole cloves
4 garlic cloves
1/4 teaspoon black pepper corns
In a large bowl, mix together the sliced cabbage, diced carrot, pepper and onion and minced Scotch bonnet. Sprinkle in sea salt and toss to combine. Pour in the orange juice, lime juice and cider vinegar. Vegetables should be just about submerged. Give them a stir and drop in the cloves, garlic cloves and pepper corns.
Pour everything into a generous 1 quart container with a tight lid. Refrigerate for a couple of days, giving the jar an occasional shake when you think to.
Yield: About 3 cups.
*Avoid Scotch bonnet burn. Wear rubber or latex gloves when mincing them. Wash your knife, cutting board and hands when you're done.
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Q. Dear Umbra,
Is there a way to know and compare the sustainability qualities of 3D printer “inks”?
Guest
Sacramento, California
A. Dearest Guest,
When people of decades past envisioned The Future, I'm fairly certain they pictured a desktop appliance capable of constructing everything from car parts to calzones, right alongside all the jetpacks, spaceships, and friendly robot maids. Even now, the concept sounds so sci-fi: a portable machine that can build pretty much any object we can dream up, layer by ultrathin layer. But The Future is here, my friends — and with it, the same questions of sustainability we should be asking about all of the other technological breakthroughs of modern life. I look forward to writing the inevitable column about jetpack energy efficiency somewhere down the line.
But today, we're looking at 3D printer “inks,” which are really better described as “materials.” There's nothing really inky about the various plastic, metal, ceramic, wood, paper, and other ingredients that get loaded into these printers and then squeezed out into any number of products. The possibilities are seemingly endless: You can even use foods and, wow, biological components like cells and tissues as base materials. So you can see how a question like yours, Guest, quickly becomes “How can you compare the sustainability qualities of … pretty much anything?”
However, I doubt the average person is out in the garage printing ears (paging Dr. Frankenstein, amiright?). Owners of at-home 3D printers are probably sticking to a much narrower range of materials — most likely different sorts of plastic. So let's take a closer look at those options, shall we?
The two most commonly used plastics in the consumer 3D printing world are ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene, for the chemistry buffs) and PLA (polylactic acid). Both are known as thermoplastics, which means they can be easily melted down and molded. And environmentally, there's a clear winner here: PLA. That's because it's a bioplastic derived from renewable materials such as corn, sugarcane, or tapioca. PLA is not without its issues, true, but unlike other plastics, it's not based on petroleum and requires less energy to produce. What's more, it's compostable via commercial composting outfits, if not in your own backyard. Also in the plus column: It releases fewer irritating fumes than other plastics when the 3D printer is doing its thing. PLA isn't suitable for every use — it can't handle the highest temperatures, for one — but it's among the greenest choices out there.
ABS isn't exactly an eco-villain, though. It's tough (as anyone who has ever stepped on an errant LEGO brick can attest) and long-lasting, which is better than a less-durable, more-disposable plastic. And though it's a petro-plastic, it's at least recyclable. And there's at least one ABS filament on the market that claims to be biodegradable.
There are a bunch of other plastic options, of course, among them nylon, PET, high-impact polystyrene, polycarbonate, and PVA (polyvinyl alcohol). PVA stands out in this crew because it's water-soluble and biodegradable. PET — the stuff from which our disposable plastic water bottles spring — also shows promise as an eco-friendly material because you might soon be able to recycle your old bottles into printer filament at home.
Beyond plastics, this question really begins to expand. I've seen all kinds of creative non-plastic gizmos popping out the business end of a 3D printer: rings, lamp shades, paper cathedrals, wooden owl figurines, and the list goes on. So rather than droning on about the relative merits of aluminum versus stainless steel versus gold, ceramic, and porcelain, I'll leave you with a framework to evaluate those materials on a case-by-case basis. One, how impactful is the production of the raw material? Is it highly energy-intensive or toxic? Two, how durable is it? Will your creation serve for many years, or is it destined to be a flimsy throwaway? And three, what happens at the end of its useful life? Can this material be easily composted or recycled, or will it end up in the landfill? You'll have to do some research, Guest, but these questions will guide you to the greenest options for whatever project you're cooking up.
In the meantime, I'll be dreaming about the The Future. I do hope it doesn't take too long for the flux capacitor to get here.
Extrudedly,
Umbra
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