Friday, July 26, 2013

95% Stories We Tell

All Critics (98) | Top Critics (35) | Fresh (93) | Rotten (5)

Everyone has a different story. I found myself holding my breath listening to them talk. The story twists like a thriller.

Stories We Tell is not just very moving; it is an exploration of truth and fiction that will stay with you long after repeated viewings.

Part of the movie's pleasure is how comfortable the "storytellers" are with their director; you get a sense of a complicated but tight-knit family, going along with Sarah's project because they love her.

Never sentimental, never cold and never completely sure of anything, Polley comes across as a woman caught in wonder.

After you see it, you'll be practically exploding with questions - and with awe.

Fascinating personal documentary.

Slowly but surely Polley pieces together her own family's history to create a kind of cinematic narrative - complete with a twist straight from a soap opera.

An unconventional but wonderfully assembled exploration of how -- and why -- we tell stories, all wrapped in a closely guarded family secret.

Polley is savvy, using her talent as a director -- as a storyteller -- to give it universal appeal even though it's a very specific account.

Perhaps the most organic, transformative meeting of form and function I've seen this year.

Stories We Tell is cinema cutting to the profound truth of why we use narrative to make sense of the world.

For the most part, Polley's thoughts and feelings are pretty much absent, but the film makes some nice observations about memory and how it affects - yup - the stories we tell.

The movie isn't really about the Polley family: It's about memory, and loss, and forgiveness, and, through it all, hope. It'll knock you over.

What emerges is a fascinating and illuminating story, one that runs the gamut from intense joy to deep sadness and features a couple of surprising twists that take proceedings off in strange and unusual directions.

An honest and authentic documentary that powerfully explores the filmmaker's own family.

Polley's portrait of modern family life is a playfully profound discussion of narrative forms - the way in which we each construct our own reality through stories, part truth, part invention.

A decent piece of work, but too fussy for its own good.

Polley approaches every character with compassion, intent upon blessing them, and serving the audience with useful questions about how we seek the truth.

Polley is working in the tradition of Orson Welles, but her trickery can be exasperating; it also neutralises many of the emotional revelations.

With Away From Her and Take This Waltz, actress-turned-filmmaker Polley has proved herself as an unusually gifted director, but this inventive, moving documentary reveals even more artistic ambition.

What saves it is our realisation that it isn't just a documentary.

A bittersweet and compelling autobiographical family portrait.

Kane-like in its mirrored complexity, flashing in its mischievous irony, the story is a shiny maze which Polley enters knowing exactly where and what her Minotaur is - the secret of her paternal parentage - while spinning for us a thread to follow.

Polley ... smilingly tells us that a story like hers can never truly be tied down, even as she screws every last piece into place.

Polley's cine-tribute is a gripping and absorbing meditation on the unknowability of other lives.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/stories_we_tell/

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

G20 soft pedals on debt consolidation in favour of growth - Russia

MOSCOW | Sat Jul 20, 2013 4:53pm IST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - G20 policymakers have soft-pedalled on goals to cut government debt in favour of a focus on growth and how to exit central bank stimulus with a minimum of turmoil, Russia's finance minister said on Saturday.

The final communique from Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers addresses fiscal consolidation less strongly than had been expected, with discussion focusing chiefly on spillover effects from the withdrawal of monetary stimulus by developed countries, Russia's Anton Siluanov told Reuters.

"(G20) colleagues have not made the decision to take responsibility to lower the deficits and debts by 2016," Siluanov said on the fringes of the G20 meeting in Moscow. "Some people thought that first you need to ensure economic growth.

"You can of course, expect growth, but it may not come anytime soon and debt will keep piling up," Siluanov said, adding that fiscal consolidation should remain a priority.

"The communique addresses (consolidation) more softly, nonetheless we will raise this issue at the leadership level (in September)."

The G20 did not discuss at length Friday's move by China to start interest rate reforms, but Siluanov and other countries will monitor how the reforms are being implemented.

Beijing removed a floor on the rates banks can charge clients for loans, which should reduce the cost of borrowing for companies and households.

The U.S. and the European Central Bank said during the meeting that their policy of low interest rates will continue, Siluanov said: "The question is about the quantitative easing programme, for how long this process will continue."

SPILLOVER EFFECTS

The spillover effects on developing countries from the withdrawal of quantitative easing policies by developed nations, and the United States in particular, dominated the weekend's discussion.

"There were no arguments but there was discussion," Siluanov said. "Emerging countries are very concerned about the predictability of (those policies), how it will all continue.

"We have agreed that coordination is needed, exchange of information is needed."

The G20 also discussed long-delayed reforms to the International Monetary Fund quota system. The governance reform is languishing as the United States, the IMF's largest shareholder has not given a green light to it.

The Obama administration wants Congress to shift $63 billion from an IMF crisis fund to the IMF's general accounts in order to maintain U.S. power at the international lender and make good on an international commitment made in 2010.

Congressional approval of the IMF funding changes is necessary to complete reforms at the lender that the international community has already agreed including reform of voting shares, known as quotas, to boost the power of emerging economies.

"There is a feeling that the process has stalled," Siluanov said. (Additional reporting by Maya Dyakina. Editing by Mike Peacock)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/INbusinessNews/~3/MQyXE4y00-Q/story01.htm

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Grosvenor and Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels to deliver central London hotel scheme

LONDON and HONG KONG - Grosvenor and The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels, Limited (HSH) have announced today that they have agreed terms to enter into, upon completion of HSH's purchase of a 50% interest in 1-5 Grosvenor Place, SW1 in London, United Kingdom, a 50:50 joint venture partnership that seeks to redevelop the site.

The newly formed partnership will aspire to redevelop the 1.5 acre site opposite the gardens of Buckingham Palace and overlooking Hyde Park into a mixed use scheme incorporating HSH's first hotel in the UK -- The Peninsula London.

Mr. Clement K.M. Kwok, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of HSH, commented: "London is one of the world's most important financial centres and a key international gateway city for business tourism. This project is consistent with our Group's long term strategy, representing our desire to further expand in Europe."

Mr. Peter Vernon, Chief Executive Officer of Grosvenor Britain and Ireland, said: "We're incredibly excited to be working in partnership with Asia's longest standing hotel operator whose expertise will be invaluable to delivering an exceptional scheme in such a prominent location in central London."

The partnership will be formed following HSH's acquisition of Derwent London's 50% leasehold interest in the site for GBP132.5 million (approximately HK$1,564 million, exclusive of value added tax and other applicable taxes).

HSH and Grosvenor will work together to design and submit a planning application to develop the site following an extensive consultation phase with the local community.

Source: http://www.eturbonews.com/36308/grosvenor-and-hongkong-and-shanghai-hotels-deliver-central-londo

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Researchers Focus on Eczema-Food Allergy Link - Health News ...

FRIDAY, July 19 (HealthDay News) ? The skin disease eczema may be an important factor in the development of food allergies in infants, a new British study suggests.

The breakdown in the skin barrier that occurs in eczema could play a key role in triggering food sensitivity in babies, the researchers from King?s College London and the University of Dundee said.

?This is a very exciting study, providing further evidence that an impaired skin barrier and eczema could play a key role in triggering food sensitivity in babies, which could ultimately lead to the development of food allergies,? Dr. Carsten Flohr, of King?s College London, said in a college news release.

The researchers said the discovery suggests that food allergies may develop via immune cells in the skin rather than in the gut and that the findings indicate that eczema may be a potential target for preventing food allergies in children.

A link between eczema and food allergies has been known for some time, but this study ? published July 18 in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology ? adds to growing evidence of the skin barrier?s role in the process, according to the researchers.

The study included more than 600 infants who were 3 months old and exclusively breast-fed from birth. They were tested for eczema and checked to see if they were sensitized to the six most common allergenic foods.

Egg white was the most common allergen, followed by cow?s milk and peanuts. The more severe the eczema, the stronger the link to food sensitivity, independent of genetic factors.

It?s believed that the breakdown of the skin barrier in infants with eczema leaves active immune cells found in skin exposed to environmental allergens ? in this case food proteins ? which then triggers an allergic immune response, the researchers explained.

They also noted that food sensitivity does not always lead to food allergy and they?re conducting a follow-up of the infants in this study.

?This work takes what we thought we knew about eczema and food allergy and flips it on its head. We thought that food allergies are triggered from the inside out, but our work shows that in some children it could be from the outside in, via the skin,? Flohr explained. ?The skin barrier plays a crucial role in protecting us from allergens in our environment, and we can see here that when that barrier is compromised, especially in eczema, it seems to leave the skin?s immune cells exposed to these allergens.?

This finding opens up the possibility that by repairing the skin barrier and preventing eczema, it might be possible to reduce the risk of food allergies, Flohr added.

More information

The American Academy of Dermatology has more about eczema.

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/07/19/researchers-focus-on-eczema-food-allergy-link/

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Origami for iOS and Android: A Better Way to Share With Family

Origami for iOS and Android: A Better Way to Share With Family No one wants their parents on their Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or any other social media site they might be busy embarrassing themselves on. They surely don't want to see pictures of you on the verge of consciousness every night and you certainly don't want them posting embarrassing things in a public forum. Origami keeps things private, so everyone wins.

What does it do?

Lets you share photos, albums, videos, and text messages with other members of your designated family. In addition to being an app, you also get the domain of [yourfamilyname].origami.com, where you get all the functionality of the app versions. Both the mobile app and the website have the same, familiar timeline-style feed. It will even send you a daily newsletter (if you so choose) with all of your family's latest happenings.

Why do we like it?


Not only are parents or grandparents joining social media sites often a point of contention, but there are some images, videos, and memories in general that you want to make sure stay within your family. And it doesn't really feel like adding an extra burden onto your social media plate, because for the most part (especially if you're the type of family that would use this app), you're already sharing these things anyway. Origami just simplifies it. However, the service is $5 a month, and with all the free?even if less convenient?options out there, it's probably not worth it for people who don't regularly keep up with their family online. But if you've got a family that loves and/or needs to use the internet to stay connected, this is a wonderfully private, easy way to do it.

Origami, Download this app for: iOS, Android; $5/month (free for first 30 days)

The Best: Confidence that everything is only being seen by family

The Worst: Subscription-only

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/origami-for-ios-and-android-a-better-way-to-share-with-830613222

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Friday, July 19, 2013

The 10 Most Controversial Wikipedia Topics Around the World

The 10 Most Controversial Wikipedia Topics Around the World

Give a bunch of scientists a dataset like Wikipedia to play with, and it'll keep 'em amused for a long old time. Now, a team of researchers from Oxford University have mined the rich seam to work out the ten most internationally controversial topics on the online encyclopaedia.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/pLLraSKkQHc/the-10-most-internationally-controversial-topics-on-wik-823867680

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The Millions : The Spanish Prisoner Redux: On Finn Brunton's Spam ...

spamspamspamspam

It was not long after the death of the Yasser Arafat that I received an email purporting to be from a cousin of his, soliciting my assistance in spiriting away several hundred thousand dollars held in a secret account somewhere. I had a Hotmail account at the time: its spam filters were not as effective as Gmail?s, so a lot of this kind of stuff got through. Filters have come a long way since then ? and so, in turn, has spam itself. A colorful assortment of international tradespeople, drug-pushers, swindlers, and fraudsters, spammers have become a familiar feature of our digital landscape. Finn Brunton?s investigation of the question of spam, Spam: A Shadow History of the Internet ? the problems of defining it, understanding it, and tackling it ? takes us to the front of an ongoing and highly sophisticated technological war, a keenly contested territorial struggle for control of the information superhighway.

coverThe precursor to the modern Internet was the U.S. government-sponsored Usenet network. It was the product of a marriage of convenience between two very different groupings: the ?Iron Triangle? of the US Department of Defense, the U.S. Congress, and the defense industry on the one hand, and an Ivory Tower of pioneering computer geeks and academics on the other. Merging the hierarchical and technocratic secretive culture of the military with the libertarian, communitarian ethic of an emergent hacker ethos, the Internet?s complex and contradictory cultural formation contained the seeds of an identity crisis that would be brought into sharp focus by the advent of spam in the 1990s.

?Spam,? in the Usenet era, denoted the practice of posting excessively voluminous or repetitious missives across various newsgroups. The word?s contemporary association with commercial self-promotion can be traced back to 1988, when a scammer called Rob Noha posted a message in multiple newsgroups, in waves across several days ? subject line: ?Poor College Student needs Your Help!!:-(? ? asking readers to contribute a dollar each to ?Jay-Jay?s College Fund.? The message provoked an outcry from network users, enraged that the system was being so flagrantly abused. Reluctant to resort to oppressive policing measures to combat the new scourge, the system administrators were happy to hand the matter over to mob justice:

We have received a number of inquiries about JJ?If you view these questions as the burning issues of our time, you might wish to call JJ yourself. You can reach him at: Rob Noha (aka JJ) 402/488-2586.

And they did, in droves. In time, the administrator?s withering sarcasm would prove to have been misplaced: when large-scale commercial spam began in earnest in the 1990s, this scourge did indeed become one of the ?burning issues of our time,? because it highlighted critical ambiguities about the nature of the Internet. What was it for? Who owned it? Who, if anyone, had the moral, ethical, or legal right to police it?

Six years later, the issue was brought into the limelight once again, courtesy of two immigration lawyers from Arizona, Laurence Canter and Martha Siegel, who circulated a 34-line email to users of 6,000 active newsgroups, soliciting clients with the offer of assistance in filling in applications for a Green Card Lottery run by the U.S. government. Applicants needed only to send their details on a postcard to be eligible, but Canter and Siegel posed as necessary middlemen who could help with the paperwork of registration, for a fee.

The online community was predictably enraged, but powerless; in the absence of any structural system of redress, suggestions for remedial solutions were limited to the usual collective vigilantism. (?Let?s bomb ?em with huge, useless GIF files, each of us sending them several, so as to overwhelm their mailbox and hopefully get these assholes? account cancelled by their sesames.?)?Canter and Siegel later published a bestselling book, How to Make a Fortune on the Information Superhighway, which expounded an essentially Lockean argument whereby the Internet geeks who populated the network from its earliest days were characterized as backward ?natives,? while the authors were cast in the role of Wild West ?pioneers.? The ?land,? they argued, should belong to those, like Canter and Siegel, who would work it profitably. The ?natives,? stuck in a primitive social system ? a volunteerist, commons-based economy ? had no meaningful rights to it. Canter and Siegel spawned a wave of imitators, a veritable cottage industry of how-to guides, including Davis Hawke?s The Spambook, Jason Heckel?s instruction manuals, ?How to Profit from the Internet,? and Rodona Garst?s Premier Services, ?exemplary gray-area spammers,? who were (according to their brochure) ?opening the doors to cyber space and smoothing the transition into these infinite markets.?

Several important developments had fundamentally altered the online landscape by the mid-1990s: the foundation of Tim Berners-Lee?s World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), alongside the emergence of the Marc Andreessen-led Mosaic web browser, meant the networked computer was about to become far easier to use for many more people, bringing into the online world ?a vast influx entirely free of pre-existing intellectual commitments to the ethos of computational resource sharing, research, non-commercial use, and radically free speech.? On New Year?s Day in 1995, the ban on commercial activity on the NSFNET (the successor to Usenet) was rescinded; the Internet ceased to be the property of the U.S. government.

coverBy 2000, the infamous ?419 message? ? named after the section of the Nigerian penal code pertaining to online fraud ? had established itself in the popular consciousness as the quintessential spam email. As Brunton explains, the 419 scam was merely an updated version of the ?Spanish prisoner? confidence trick of years gone by: a beautiful, aristocratic woman, incarcerated by the King of Spain for oblique political reasons, needs your help to escaping; in return she will give you some part of her fortune. The plot requires money for bribing guards, hiring guides, and purchasing supplies for the trek through the mountains. Things don?t work out as planned; more money is needed for more bribes, the prisoner falls ill and needs money for a doctor, and on and on. Brunton takes us back a whole century, to a New York Times account of one such syndicate operating in the U.S. in 1898 via Havana: the ?prisoner,? in this instance, is a certain Captain D. Santiago de Ochoa, imprisoned in Cuba with a trunk full of French banknotes buried in New Jersey. A variation on the theme would appear in Martin Amis?s London Fields, in which the temptress Nicola Six persuades her lovestruck admirer to part with a large amount of cash to help smuggle a couple of non-existent Thai children to safety. In its modern, digital version, the scam was being carried out on an industrial scale:

What makes 419 so remarkable is that all of this business, this international criminal activity and transfer of wealth and the creation of a small population of specialized, almost craftsman-like spammers, is the constantly metamorphosing story of the Spanish Prisoner ? possibly, quantitatively, the most told and retold story of the twenty-first century so far.

Some people lost more than others. In 2000, a businessman named James Adler unsuccessfully sued the government of Nigeria and the country?s central bank, after having paid $5.6 million over several years to participate in transferring stolen funds out of the country, with the promise of a 40 percent cut. A Czech retireee, Jiri Pasovsky, murdered a Nigerian secretary at the country?s Prague embassy in 2003 after being told that the consulate could not help him recover losses amounting to around $600,000. The phenomenon was gloatingly satirized by Nigerian actor and comedian Nkem Owoh, in his 2005 song ?I Go Chop Your Dollar?:

National Airport na me get am / National Stadium na me build am / Presiden na my sister brother / You be the mugu, I be the master / Oyinbo ["white person?] I go chop your dollar / I go take your money disappear

Once a new generation of spam filters had learnt to spot the distinctive, cajoling language of commercial spam ? as the programmer Paul Graham, developer of the successful Bayesian spam filter observed, ?the Achilles heel of the spammers is their message? ? spammers turned to innovative new techniques with increasingly mind-boggling results. Cue the arrival of ?Litspam,? cut-up literary texts statistically re-assembled to take advantage of flaws in the design and development of Bayesian filters. Filtering may have killed off conventional spam ? couched in the language of the respectable sales pitch ? but Litspam was an entirely different register, devoid of the usual syntactic rhythm; words functioned not as signifiers but as carriers. The messages read like utter gibberish, with excerpts from Shakespeare plays or Obama speeches messily spliced with the occasional significant word.

New laws and filters had all but wiped out the world of legitimate online marketeers pushing low-margin products, leaving the field open to criminals pushing low-take-up, high-margin products.?Spam had shifted from sales pitching for goods or sites to phishing, identity theft, credit card scams, or spreading viruses, worms, and other malware. It became

much more criminal, experimental and massively automated?A striking example of the move into a new kind of computationally inventive spam production. Somewhere, an algorithmic bot with a pile of text files and a mailing list made a Joycean gesture announcing spam?s modernism.

This new phase also saw the proliferation of ?splogs,? spam blogs designed to deceive search engines into directing people to their pages. Comprising more than half of the total number of all blogs, these were made up of RSS feeds from other blogs and news sources, chopped up and remixed, inserting relevant links, hour after hour and day after day with minimum human supervision. ?Content farms? actually produced human-authored text for some such blogs, filling the web with what Brunton calls ?a nonsensical poetry of uselessness? ? articles such as ?How to wear a sweater vest? and reviews of deodorant containers. The content was utterly meaningless, but just about realistic enough of to attract both search engine returns and clicks.

Having established a working definition of spam ? ?the use of information technology infrastructure to exploit existing aggregations of human attention? ? Brunton is realistically pessimistic about the prospects for a spam-free future. Because the very characteristics that enable spam to happen are also at the core of what makes the Internet what it is: that unique openness and ease of communication, the flexibility of open access, of anonymity and ambiguity. Lose these and you lose the essence of the Internet as we know it, and what remains is ?a carefully specific theme park of a system,? a civic-minded, highly-managed proprietary space ? in relative terms, a closed network.

The poise and elegance of Finn Brunton?s prose is all the more remarkable considering the high level of technical detail that necessarily pervades this Shadow History of the Internet.?For all his pragmatism, he still dares to imagine that our contemporary online ecology might someday evolve into ?media platforms that respect our attention and the finite span of our lives expended at the screen.? If there is hope, it is surely to be found precisely in the communitarian ethic of the anti-spam movement itself, in the tireless efforts of a multitude of enthusiasts driven by a desire to fulfill the tremendous potential of the digital revolution ? a movement whose own history comprises, in Brunton?s words, ?a decade-long case study in online collaboration, community work, and negotiation at the barricades.?

Image Credit: Flickr/epSos.de

Source: http://www.themillions.com/2013/07/the-spanish-prisoner-redux-on-finn-bruntons-spam-a-shadow-history-of-the-internet.html

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Young Women And Breast Cancer - TODAY'S TMJ4

CREATED Jul. 17, 2013

  • The face of breast cancer is getting younger. Why more women in their 20s face this life-changing diagnosis. A health report every woman needs to see, tonight at 10 on TODAY?S TMJ4. Video by tmj4.com

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MILWAUKEE -?The face of breast cancer is getting younger. Why more women in their 20s face this life-changing diagnosis.?

A health report every woman needs to see, tonight at 10 on TODAY?S TMJ4.

Source: http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/Young-Women-And-Breast-Cancer-215805811.html

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'Battlestar Galactica' writer working with Sony Santa Monica on non-God of War game

Veteran television screenwriter Michael Angeli, known for his work on TV series Battlestar Galactica, Dark Angel and Caprica, is working with God of War developer Sony Santa Monica on an all-new project.

Angeli said at this morning's Battlestar Galactica panel at San Diego Comic-Con he's working on a new video game with Sony that's not a God of War title. Speaking with Angeli after the panel, he said he's been doing writing on the game for the past two and a half years. After the studio wrapped development on God of War: Ascension for PlayStation 3, he said, the full team of about 150 staffers transitioned to work on the new and still unannounced project.

Due to the unannounced nature of the project, Angeli said he couldn't elaborate on the game or the platform, but said that his Battlestar Galactica work, as well as his journalism background, helped him land the writing gig.

Earlier this year, players decoded a secret message hidden in God of War: Ascension that ultimately lead to an image of the planet Earth with the message "When the Earth stops, the journey begins..."

God_of_war_ascension_teaser

Polygon has reached out to Sony Computer Entertainment seeking comment about Angeli and Sony Santa Monica's project.

Source: http://www.polygon.com/2013/7/18/4535666/battlestar-galactica-writer-michael-angeli-sony-santa-monica

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Penn State's Sandusky settlements hit $60M so far

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) ? Penn State University has reached tentative settlements totaling about $60 million so far with men who claim to have been sexually abused by former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky, a trustee said Thursday.

The trustee, Ted Brown, said he was unsure of how many claims have been settled and how many remain in negotiations.

"We approved settlements for approximately $60 million," Brown told The Associated Press. He said that figure does not cover every claim made and that he expected trustees to be asked to approve more when tentative agreements are reached.

The trustees voted last Friday to authorize members of a committee to approve settlements on the university's behalf, without detailing how many accusers have come forward with sex-abuse claims involving Sandusky, how many have settled and how much money might be involved.

A person familiar with the discussions told the AP on Thursday that about 25 of 31 outstanding claims were covered by the approximately $60 million in settlements the trustees approved. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity to avoid giving information that the university has chosen not to reveal.

Brown said trustees were briefed on the dollar figure in private before the vote. School officials have said they will not publicly discuss specific figures until the deals have been made final, which could happen in the coming weeks.

The deals are limited to a range of dollar values that the board received in a closed-door session before their public meeting last Friday at a branch campus and another meeting held June 25.

Sandusky, 69, was convicted of 45 counts of child sexual abuse, including violent attacks on boys inside school facilities, after a three-week trial last summer in which eight victims testified against him. He is serving a 30- to 60-year prison term and maintains he was wrongfully convicted. He is pursuing appeals.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/penn-states-sandusky-settlements-hit-60m-far-161903999.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Young Mad Scientist Super Awesome Sylvia Is Kickstarting A Robotic Watercolor Set

61af185768a2790f7942c3745445992b_largeA 12-year-old maker named Super Awesome Sylvia (she is quite super awesome) is looking for $50,000 to build a robotic watercolor, the WaterColorBot, set that can draw nearly anything you design in a computer paint program. Asking why you don't just take brush to paint pot with your hand is irrelevant - this, friends, is a robotic watercolor plotter. 'Nuff said.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/zpFbARw_MCU/

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As NFL camps approach, Broncos' AFC West rivals face uphill chase

It wasn't all that long ago ? before a Hall of Fame quarterback reeled in a future Hall of Fame quarterback to work in Denver ? that the Broncos were stuck in the AFC West basement.

Even as the preseason hype is in full force about what the Broncos can be in 2013, how far they can go and whether there is a trophy at the end of the road, they know what square one looks like.

"It all starts in your division," Broncos coach John Fox said. "That's your only guaranteed way into the playoffs. Our guys know that. Whatever people say ? we call that outside noise ? doesn't matter because you have to understand the only guaranteed way to get in the tournament is to take care of your division.

"When you have success, you have a bull's-eye on your chest. Everybody is out to get you. We swept our division a year ago, so all those cats are out there right now planning to not let it happen again."

With NFL training camps set to open soon, the offseason plans of the Broncos' AFC West brethren are largely in place. When personnel executives look at the West, they still see a clear favorite in the Broncos with three other teams in various stages of rebuilding.

In the Chiefs, NFL personnel people see the team with the most potential to chase Denver if they live a charmed life in Andy Reid's first season as Kansas City's head coach.That starts with Reid finding a way to repair the league's worst passing offense in 2012 (169.6 yards passing per game) around their biggest offseason acquisition in quarterback Alex Smith.

Smith should fit quickly into Reid's version of the West Coast offense, which emphasizes quick decisions and efficient play. Smith is plenty efficient ? he was 20-6-1 in his past 27 starts for the run-heavy San Francisco 49ers.

But Reid is trying to add a little spice to the mix and put the threat of the deep ball back into the Chiefs' attack by clearing Smith to take a few well-placed risks. Smith threw 30 touchdown passes over his past 25 starts as a conservative game manager in Jim Harbaugh's offense in San Francisco.

The Chiefs used the No. 1 pick in the draft to acquire Central Michigan offensive tackle Eric Fisher, protecting their investment in Smith.

The Chiefs hope Smith can mesh with another play-action run offense with Jamaal Charles in the Kansas City backfield. Smith was the league's highest-rated passer out of play-action plays last season, with a rating just better than 132 before he was sidelined with a concussion, then benched by Harbaugh to put Colin Kaepernick in the lineup.

The Chiefs also signed cornerback Dunta Robinson and wide receiver Donnie Avery in free agency and re-signed wide receiver Dwayne Bowe to a multiyear contract.

"I loved being in the NFC East all those years, but the AFC West, that looks challenging to me," Reid said.

In Oakland, the Raiders continue to remake themselves in the second year of former Broncos defensive coordinator Dennis Allen's tenure as coach. General manager Reggie McKenzie's biggest move also came behind center when he traded Carson Palmer and his substantial contract to the Arizona Cardinals and acquired Seahawks backup Matt Flynn has the Raiders' starter.

Flynn has started only two games in his five NFL seasons, but Allen anointed Flynn the team's No. 1 quarterback and compared Flynn's career track to that of Houston Texans quarterback Matt Schaub and the Green Bay Packers' Aaron Rodgers. But the Raiders also used a fourth-round pick in April's draft on Arkansas quarterback Tyler Wilson to go with Terrelle Pryor on the depth chart.

After signing a lucrative deal in Seattle in 2012, Flynn was beaten out by rookie quarterback Russell Wilson in training camp. Flynn was easily the Raiders' biggest offseason acquisition, in addition to signing veteran safety Charles Woodson, as McKenzie took a low-key, draft-heavy approach to the roster this offseason.

In San Diego, former Broncos offensive coordinator Mike McCoy inherited a proven quarterback in Philip Rivers, but McCoy and first-year Chargers general manager Tom Telesco faced an almost total rebuild in the team's offensive line.

The Chargers have put their faith in veteran free agent offensive linemen Max Starks and King Dunlap to go with their first-round pick from April in D.J. Fluker.

McCoy also hired former Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt to help smooth out Rivers' play. Rivers has thrown 35 interceptions over the past two seasons combined. With a long to-do list, the Chargers took a measured approach to the offseason, with two of their high-profile signings ? Starks and pass rusher Dwight Freeney ? coming in May.

"I'm excited about what's there, but we know we have some work to do to get our program in place and make clear what we expect," McCoy said. "We all know there's plenty to do, and what's been done in Denver is the kind of success we're looking for. We just have to get to work and make sure we're ready to make the most of all of the opportunities we have."

Jeff Legwold: jlegwold@denverpost.com or twitter.com/jeff_legwold


Comparison shopping

With training camps set to open across the league during the next two weeks, NFL personnel executives say the Broncos are the favorites in the AFC West by a wide margin. Here's a snapshot of the work their fellow West teams have done this offseason:

Kansas City Chiefs

2012 record: 2-14; 0-6 in AFC West.

Notable numbers: Finished 32nd in passing yards (169.6 yards per game), and defense was 27th in run defense (135.7 rushing yards allowed per game).

Broncos dates: Nov. 17 in Denver; Dec. 1 in Kansas City.

Biggest acquisition: QB Alex Smith.

Oakland Raiders

2012 record: 4-12; 2-4 in AFC West.

Notable numbers: The Raiders have lost at least 11 games in eight of the past 10 seasons. They have not won 10 games since an 11-5 finish in 2002.

Biggest acquisition: QB Matt Flynn.

San Diego Chargers

2012 record: 7-9; 4-2 in AFC West.

Notable numbers: QB Philip Rivers has thrown 35 interceptions combined over the past two seasons and has been sacked 79 times in that time, including a bone-numbing 49 times in 2012.

Biggest acquisition: Rookie OT/OG D.J. Fluker.

Jeff Legwold, The Denver Post

Source: http://feeds.denverpost.com/~r/dp-sports/~3/iQo8vggLDkk/nfl-camps-approach-broncos-afc-west-rivals-face

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