These are the gadgets to own if you love the outdoors.
“I can't quite explain why I harbored high hopes for Bad Moms, a comedy about three stressed-out Chicago mothers on an empowerment bender,” Slate's film critic Dana Stevens writes of the movie from the creators of The Hangover, the one that could have portrayed motherhood in a post-Bridesmaids, postBroad City, completely 2016 kind of way. Unfortunately, “the dad minds behind Bad Moms don't seem to understand, or be terribly curious about, the minds of mothers,” Stevens concludes. Elissa Strauss, looking at what the movie gets right and wrong about motherhood today, had a more charitable take: “Seeing a group of funny moms have dude-comedy-style fun in a competition-free atmosphere is a much-needed corrective to the frazzled, uptight moms that we usually see onscreen.”
The gals of Bad Moms were hardly the only moms on our minds this week. In fact, right now moms are having a bit of a moment. (Mom-ment?) Decidedly not-bad mom Hillary Clinton became the first woman (and first mom) to clinch a major party's presidential nomination (but what will we call Bill?) at the Democratic National Convention, and Michelle Obama mothered a nation in her radical Democratic National Convention speech. Dads go hand-in-hand with moms, and this week we got to know vice presidential Democratic nominee Tim Kaine and quickly decided that he is a total dad, of the bad-joke-making, multiple-harmonica-carrying, balloon-kicking variety. Chelsea Clinton, she of underappreciated '90s style and still-unwritten public persona, spoke at the DNC too, shouting out A Wrinkle in Time and sending its sales soaring in the process. The only thing that would have made the week better is if Hillary had quoted more Hamilton lines in her speech.
What else is going on besides moms and politics? In these dog days of summer, there's a MadTV reboot out, and it's a far cry from the show's original incarnation. The Absolutely Fabulous movie pokes fun at, or maybe exposes the hypocrisy of, society. We're pondering how after the Looking movie/finale, HBO may no longer be the go-to place for LGBTQ stories. Bojack Horseman tackled abortion, the new Star Trek movie didn't tackle disability, Mr. Robot loves its Kubrick references, and Taye Diggs may be unfollowing you on Twitter right now.
A few more highs and lows from the week in culture:
Babies who are at risk of developing cerebral palsy could be helped by a robotic “onesie”, designed by a team at the University of Oklahoma, US.
The motorised exoskeleton, which is attached to the baby via a harness and skateboard-type-crawler, helps young children develop motor and cognitive skills and promotes early movement.
With power steering, the Self-Initiated Prone Progression Crawler (SIPPC) device gives babies a push towards early walking and crawling on the level of their peers.
Not only that, but it allows doctors to monitor the child's movement and brain activity on a 3D scanner.
SEE ALSO
Toddler Dedicated To Guiding His Twin Sister With Cerebral Palsy Through Childhood
Cerebral palsy affects movement and muscle coordination and is diagnosed in every two children in 1000 born in the UK, according to Cerebral Palsy UK.
Therapy to reverse the effects of the disease must start as early as possible, but most children are not diagnosed until they are at least one-year-old.
Trials are currently ongoing with 56 infants in America, and the scientists admit there is much more to be done before it is more widely available to patients.
The new technology is enabling detection in babies as young as two months old, giving them the best start in life.
The Workprint | 'Mr. Robot' review: A nice game of chess The Workprint This prompts Elliot to confess that he lost his job because he destroyed a bunch of secure servers in his company's server room — he just doesn't remember doing it…something about anger toward the people who couldn't go on their expensive vacations ... Mr. Robot: season 2 episode 4 review eps2.2_init1.asecThe Nerd Recites Mr. Robot: Init1 ReviewDen of Geek! Dreaming of a (Slightly) Darker Future on Mr. RobotFilm School Rejects (blog) Hidden Remote -whoismrrobot.com all 105 news articles » |
Film School Rejects (blog) | Dreaming of a (Slightly) Darker Future on Mr. Robot Film School Rejects (blog) He's been court ordered to see a psychiatrist (Krista) for anger management. The final pieces click into place as Elliot pulls out their father's old Mr. Robot jacket and tells his sister about his plans to destroy Evil Corp. Elliot has become Mr ... Mr. Robot: Init1 ReviewDen of Geek! 'Mr. Robot' Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Game of ChessHidden Remote all 90 news articles » |
Den of Geek! | Mr. Robot: Init1 Review Den of Geek! They catch up on the usual Alderson topics: Darlene's panic attacks, Elliot's anger issues and eventually, their dead dad. Elliot opens his closet and shows Darlene that he still has the “Mr. Robot” jacket their father used to wear when he went to work ... |
Hidden Remote | 'Mr. Robot' Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Game of Chess Hidden Remote Things are getting interesting as Elliot Alderson continues to wrestle with his Mr. Robot persona. It's gotten to a point where he takes up a game of chess on the suggestion of his new friend Ray. However Ray doesn't exactly know what's at stake for ... and more » |
VDARE.com | Automation: Delivery Robots Look Likely for Austin Implementation VDARE.com “You'd order something as usual online. You'd be offered Starship delivery in the checkout area. And then you'd be notified through your mobile phone when your parcel was ready for delivery. The power is then in your hands,” Harris-Burland said. |
Huffington Post | The Bachelorette Episode 9 Recap: "Exotic Overnight Dates" Huffington Post Chase, who acts like an emotionless robot, but this can now be attributed to his parents' divorce, so this has become more palatable to Jojo, who can now turn his dysfunctional-childhood frown upside down. Jojo walks Luke out and they are both crying ... The Bachelorette Recap: 'Double Fantasy'Nashville Scene Ashley Hebert's 'Bachelorette' Men Tell All Surprise Was A Weird, Unnecessary Live UltrasoundBustle The Bachelorette Clip - Ashley Hebert Live Ultrasound - The Hollywood GossipCelebrity Gossip WISN Milwaukee -Wetpaint -Wetpaint all 681 news articles » |
AlterNet | Freddie Gray Denied Justice—and the Whole Damn System Is to Blame AlterNet If we can figure out how to put a robot on mars, then we can figure out how to hold police accountable. It's only complicated if you're ... The fact that the charges were dropped in such a high-profile case has provoked anger, particularly among those ... and more » |
Den of Geek! | Mr Robot season 2 episode 4 review: Init1 Den of Geek! They catch up on the usual Alderson topics: Darlene's panic attacks, Elliot's anger issues and eventually, their dead dad. Elliot opens his closet and shows Darlene that he still has the Mr Robot jacket their father used to wear when he went to work ... 'Mr. Robot' Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Game of ChessHidden Remote all 82 news articles » |
Robots are great aren't they. When they're not making cocktails on cruise ships they're picking up boxes or (trying) to save lives.
Well now you can add another skill to their repertoire as this rather astonishing robot can build an entire house, and it can do it in just two days.
Meet Hadrian X - a lorry-mounted robot that with clinical precision can lay all the bricks needed to build a house in a fraction of the time it would take us puny humans to do it.
Hadrian was created by an Australian firm, Hadrian X uses advanced 3D mapping and a laser guidance system to make sure that each brick is perfectly laid on top of the other.
Of course the real benefit of Hadrian X isn't the precision it's the fact that it can work solidly, 24 hours a day and seven days a week.
Capable of laying a 1000 bricks per hour and cutting each individual brick to size, Fastbrick Robotics believes that their new robot could revolutionise the construction industry.
Instead of traditional cement, Hadrian X uses a special construction glue.
‘By utilising a construction adhesive rather that traditional mortar, the Hadrian X will maximise the speed of the build and strength and thermal effeciency of the final structure,' explains the company.
Fab News: More Comic-Con Goodness and Disney Adventures MiceChat (blog) The incredible panelists included Jeff Russo (Fargo, The Night Of, Power, Legion), Mac Quayle (Mr. Robot, American Horror Story, Scream Queens, The People v. O.J. Simpson), Tyler Bates (Guardians of the Galaxy, Salem, Kingdom), Mike Suby (The ... |
Hidden Remote | 'Mr. Robot' Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Game of Chess Hidden Remote Things are getting interesting as Elliot Alderson continues to wrestle with his Mr. Robot persona. It's gotten to a point where he takes up a game of chess on the suggestion of his new friend Ray. However Ray doesn't exactly know what's at stake for ... and more » |
Headlander, the newest game from Double Fine and Adult Swim Games, is a charming mix of '70s sci-fi themes, Metroid-style gameplay, and the kind of weirdness that has always characterized games from both companies. It also has a character named Earl who completely kills any suspension of disbelief in the very first seconds of the game, which you can watch above. Here's his dialogue:
And I'm through. Y'all should be hearing my on your helmet radio now. I know y'all got a lot of questions, but there ain't no point in trying to talk, because you ain't got no lungs. Y'all just come out of stasis, so you don't likely remember much. This is gonna be a hard pill to swallow, but—hells bells! Shepherds again! Y'all gonna need yourself a body. Welcome to the future! Ain't much sure why, but Methuselah wants a hold of you. We gotta get y'all off this ship.
For a large proportion of Headlander's audience—and Double Fine's entire staff, apparently—there's nothing about that dialogue that sounds wrong. But for anyone who's spent any time in the South, it's nails on a blackboard. In five out of ten sentences, Earl uses “y'all” to address a single person. Not even a person, actually, but a severed head, making it even less likely Earl is somehow referring to the main character and her family or some other implied collective group: she's literally just a head. This is more wrong than waking up as a lungless head in a space helmet, more terrifying than rogue artificial intelligences or killer robots or any futuristic horrors Double Fine could ever dream up. Maybe it's part of the game—maybe Earl is a bad simulation of a Southerner. Or maybe the simplest rule in southern dialect has somehow been botched once again. I'll never know, because I couldn't get past the beginning out of fear of how Earl might mangle the language next.
In fairness to video game writers, it's not always a hard-and-fast rule. Arika Okrent took a look at the issue for Slate back in 2014, and concluded that the singular “y'all” was occasionally used, in a few special situations: particularly when Southerners exaggerated their speech to get better customer service from Northerners. (I've never heard that, but I've heard the possessive use, as in her example of “How're y'all's grits?”) But even in those rare cases, no one uses “y'all” exclusively instead of “you,” the way Earl does, even in the far distant future. And the one thing everyone agrees on is that Southerners, who actually use the word, are the ones who are most likely to insist it's plural only. So if your character's from the South, odds are he or she is not going to use it as a singular. (If your character's a Northerner who is misusing the word out of ignorance or spite, you're probably doing something too complicated for a video game.) So a good rule of thumb for non-Southerners: just use it as the plural. They still teach Latin at Andover or wherever, right? Or Spanish, at least? Would you use vosotros or ustedes or voi or whatever second person plural you're familiar with? Use “y'all.” Otherwise, just play it safe and stick to “you.” If foreign languages make you uneasy, memorize this handy mnemonic:
If you're speaking to one person,
Using “y'all” will make things worsen.
But if “all of you” would work,
Then it's time for “y'all,” you jerk!
Don't get fancy and don't showboat. You're probably already naming a character “Earl” or something, so you're on thin ice to begin with. So let me address all of you, as in more than one of you, as in plural: Y'all have made sure that anyone who's ever had the slightest hint of a southern accent is an expert in what it's like to have people think you're dumb because of the way you talk, so trust us on this one: Y'all have gotta stop screwing this up, 'cause it's making y'all sound stupid.
Lessons from Brexit and learning to better communicate robotics research and innovation Robohub Hilary Sutcliffe and MATTER have been working with the University of Sheffield across a number of departments and faculties to create an agenda for future responsible research and innovation; more than merely putting plasters over public concerns, we ... |
Times Higher Education (THE) | The robots are coming for the professionals Times Higher Education (THE) ... for their predictions of what universities would look like in 2030, there was scant mention of the impact of technology except in so far as it directly affects pedagogy, via innovations such as massive open online courses (“Future perfect: what ... |
DMDII Seeks Proposals for Advanced Manufacturing R&D Projects IndustryWeek Low-Cost Robotics and Automation: This seeks robotics and automation solutions that are affordable, reconfigurable, and adaptable, and that exhibit the precision, repeatability, and productivity of conventional automated solutions. They must also ... |
From Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works team — the same folks that brought you the strategic recon aircrafts U-2 Dragon Lady and SR-71 Blackbird as well as the stealth fighter jet F-117 Nighthawk — now comes Spider (not to be confused with this one), a device to repair blimps more efficiently than ever.
As Skunk Works explains, old methods to repair blimps are time-consuming. One has to deflate the blimp (which can take hours), and walk around with a bright, handheld light, looking very carefully for rips and tears.
By contrast, the Spider (short for Self-Propelled Instrument for Damage Evaluation and Repair), however, uses two magnetic halves, one to shine a bright LED light outside the blimp, and one that senses this light from the inside, thus exposing holes and problem areas. It can then move its patching mechanism over said hole, repair it, and then snap before and after pics of the fix, allowing a pair of human eyes to inspect it later. Read more...
More about Transportation, Spider, Robots, Blimps, and TechMon dieu! What with tout le torture, les plotteurs and les attempted meurtres, Versailles is now about as sexy as Robot Wars
Not-So-Bad Philippe is sulking in front of the fire because his frere, le roi, has not unreasonably locked up the Mauvais Philippe for plotting against him. Louis barges in and tells Not-So-Bad Philippe to cheer up and come for a gallop for old times' sake. Not-So-Bad Philippe agrees but is still sulking.
Cue the title music, and much excitement. Because the BBC used exactly the same music during its coverage of the London Anniversary athletics at the weekend, prompting hopes/fears that they might be planning to roll it out for the Rio Olympics in just over a week's time. Who knew this piece of sub early-70s Genesis was the Nessun Dorma de nos jours? Perhaps the BBC thought Versailles = Sexy, Rio = Sexy, so wanted to find a way of combining the two. Only Versailles is now about as sexy as Robot Wars. Having spent the first episode ripping their kit off at any opportunity, the court of Versailles has taken an oath of chastity.
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