Researchers from GRASP Lab at the University of Pennsylvania developed software to allow toy-sized nano quadrotors to fly in tight, precise and eerie formation. Gmoke sez, “William Gibson dreams of a mass of these things comprising a flying skyscraper. I imagine them as surveillance and policing drones ready to stop the OWS action or Arab Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Offworld Discovery Date : 31/01/2012 22:38 Number of articles : 4
‘With the music, it’s a whole new avenue we done opened up for kids and for people to look up to,’ Khalifa tells MTV News. By Rob Markman Wiz Khalifa Photo: MTV News Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania’s hip-hop roots run deep. Wu-Tang Clan ‘s RZA once called the Steel City home, and mid-1990s Death Row Records MC/producer Sam Sneed held the city down as did Dr. Dre’s production affiliate Mel-Man. Still, when Wiz Khalifa put the ‘Burgh on his back with his 2010 hometown ode “Black & Yellow,” the city had officially arrived as a hip-hop hot spot. “Everybody’s hardworking and it’s not like a big music scene out there, so when you got somethin’, you just go with it,” emerging Pittsburgh MC Chevy Woods said in a December interview. “Everybody sees the light that shines on [Khalifa] and Mac [Miller] and now it’s trickling down to everybody else.” After Wiz blew the doors off, Mac Miller came next. Though both rappers are signed to Rostrum Records, a local label, they came up separately. Khalifa has his Taylor Gang crew, while Miller has the Most Dope collective. “With the music, it’s a whole new avenue we done opened up for kids and for people to look up to,” Khalifa said of how he helped shine a spotlight on the ‘Burgh, paving the way for future MCs. “It’s a reality now out there, so it’s really important for us to just embrace ’em and motivate ’em and push ’em forward.” As a kid, Wiz moved around a bit but began to call the ‘Burgh home at an early age — particularly the rough-and-tumble Hazelwood section. “You really won’t get it if you’re not from there,” Wiz said of his hometown. “Just growing up in Pittsburgh and knowing different neighborhoods, having family there and just loving it, it’s like no other place.” As far as Pennsylvania goes, Philadelphia has churned out the most rap talent. From Schoolly D to Will Smith to Beanie Sigel’s State Property and now Maybach Music’s Meek Mill, Philly has had no shortage of rap representation. While they sit within the same state lines, Pittsburgh and Illadelph couldn’t be more different. “We always had love for Philly. It was harder for Philly to embrace us because we’re a little bit slower to them or to more East Coast towns,” Wiz said. “Philly is more East Coast than Pittsburgh. It’s closer to New Jersey and New York, so the vibe is way more fast-paced. Pittsburgh, it’s just laid-back … Midwest almost on some country stuff.” Stick with MTV News all week as Mac Miller takes us back to the ‘Burgh and spotlights the city’s vibrant hip-hop scene. Then tune in to “RapFix Live” on Wednesday at 4 p.m. on MTV.com for exclusive behind-the-scenes footage from Mac’s hometown shows. Related Videos Back To The ‘Burgh With Mac Miller And Wiz Khalifa Related Artists Wiz Khalifa
My name is Marta and I’m a Spanish belieber. I’m going to try to tell you my Bieber experience. The contest to meet Justin was very, very hard. There was four days of nerves and no sleep because the contest was based by how many “likes” you got. I asked my friends & family for votes. My dad was asking their friends for vote too and my friends did the same. At lunch time my friends and I were voting with 20 computers in the computer room. We had many votes, but weren’t sufficient because the other girls who were in the contest had more votes than us. At 7:03 p.m. I heard my phone. I started to shake and answered it. The man said to me that in 3 days, at 5pm more or less I would meet Justin. Everyday I feel so bad for not hugging Justin or didn’t tell him how I need him in my life. But I’m happy because at the end of the day, I met him and it was my dream. My sisters, brothers, members of my big family want to say that you shouldn’t give up. Never because dreams come true. I want to also say that if you have the opportunity to meet him, to tell him how many you love him and hug him. I’m the girl on the right (@martasancheez) and my friend is the girl of left (@cuquii96) Video of us crying after meeting Justin. Follow this link: My name is Marta and I’m a Spanish belieber. I’m…
My name is Marta and I’m a Spanish belieber. I’m going to try to tell you my Bieber experience. The contest to meet Justin was very, very hard. There was four days of nerves and no sleep because the contest was based by how many “likes” you got. I asked my friends & family for votes. My dad was asking their friends for vote too and my friends did the same. At lunch time my friends and I were voting with 20 computers in the computer room. We had many votes, but weren’t sufficient because the other girls who were in the contest had more votes than us. At 7:03 p.m. I heard my phone. I started to shake and answered it. The man said to me that in 3 days, at 5pm more or less I would meet Justin. Everyday I feel so bad for not hugging Justin or didn’t tell him how I need him in my life. But I’m happy because at the end of the day, I met him and it was my dream. My sisters, brothers, members of my big family want to say that you shouldn’t give up. Never because dreams come true. I want to also say that if you have the opportunity to meet him, to tell him how many you love him and hug him. I’m the girl on the right (@martasancheez) and my friend is the girl of left (@cuquii96) Video of us crying after meeting Justin. Follow this link: My name is Marta and I’m a Spanish belieber. I’m…
My name is Kelsey. I’m 13 and from Pennsylvania . One day I was sitting at home to hear my mom yelling with excitement , “Come here look what your aunt sent me on Facebook!” I came downstairs to think it was something dumb, to find a picture of Justin Bieber holding the sign my aunt had made for him saying, “Hi Kelsey and Lexi. Can’t wait to see you Friday night at the show!” My sister and I were so excited, we had no idea we were going to his little concert on QVC. 2 days later it was the day we were gonna see Justin Bieber perform. There were no promises that we were gonna meet him, but we were still very excited! My aunt had comeover to pick us up and right away came in with 2 signed posters! He wrote our names on it and signed it! At his little concert on QVC he performed 5 songs, he was there to promote his album “My World 2.0”. Right after he was done performing, my aunt told us to come with her. We had no idea what was going on so we walked down all these stairs to get to the basement. I opened the door and there was Pattie, his whole band, Scotter, Ryan, and so many more people. Then I saw Justin Bieber. He walked right up to me, gave me a hug and we talked for 5 minutes! He asked if we wanted a picture and of course I said YES. I gave him another hug and left. March 12th 2010, was one of the best days of my life and a day I will never forget because I met my hero. View original post here: My name is Kelsey. I’m 13 and from Pennsylvania. One…
My name is Kelsey. I’m 13 and from Pennsylvania . One day I was sitting at home to hear my mom yelling with excitement , “Come here look what your aunt sent me on Facebook!” I came downstairs to think it was something dumb, to find a picture of Justin Bieber holding the sign my aunt had made for him saying, “Hi Kelsey and Lexi. Can’t wait to see you Friday night at the show!” My sister and I were so excited, we had no idea we were going to his little concert on QVC. 2 days later it was the day we were gonna see Justin Bieber perform. There were no promises that we were gonna meet him, but we were still very excited! My aunt had comeover to pick us up and right away came in with 2 signed posters! He wrote our names on it and signed it! At his little concert on QVC he performed 5 songs, he was there to promote his album “My World 2.0”. Right after he was done performing, my aunt told us to come with her. We had no idea what was going on so we walked down all these stairs to get to the basement. I opened the door and there was Pattie, his whole band, Scotter, Ryan, and so many more people. Then I saw Justin Bieber. He walked right up to me, gave me a hug and we talked for 5 minutes! He asked if we wanted a picture and of course I said YES. I gave him another hug and left. March 12th 2010, was one of the best days of my life and a day I will never forget because I met my hero. View original post here: My name is Kelsey. I’m 13 and from Pennsylvania. One…
Mitt Romney had a sizable lead going into the week only to fall short to the onetime House speaker. By Gil Kaufman Newt Gingrich Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images If it weren’t clear before, the results of the South Carolina primary Saturday night (January 21) made it crystal that former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney is in for the fight of his political life in his quest to nab the Republican presidential nomination . After holding on to a double-digit lead as recently as Tuesday, Romney came up short in South Carolina, defeated by a surging Newt Gingrich. Buoyed by two solid debate appearances this week, former House Speaker Gingrich managed to turn the tide in the first contest in the South, proving once again that the party faithful are not yet willing to fall into lockstep and give Romney a smooth ride to the nomination. Gingrich pulled off the upset victory despite a potentially crushing distraction Thursday in the form of an ABC News interview with his second ex-wife. In it, Marianne Gingrich claimed the ex-congressman had asked her to agree to an open marriage so he could carry on an affair with his now-third wife. Romney started the week with a solid lead, but the distance between him and Gingrich shrunk in the days before the primary. In addition, on Thursday, the race was scrambled thanks to a trio of unforeseen events that further muddied the waters. First, Republican leaders in Iowa announced that the final count in that state’s caucus revealed that Romney’s eight-point win over Rick Santorum was actually a 34-point loss, which handed the former Pennsylvania senator a pyrrhic victory in that first-in-the-nation contest. A short time later, Texas Governor Rick Perry announced he was suspending his campaign and would be throwing his support behind Gingrich, which could solidify the former House leader’s draw to the all-important bloc of Evangelical Christian voters. The third shoe to drop was the ABC interview. By Friday night, a Romney adviser told CNN the race was “real tight,” even as a Gingrich staffer predicted a victory after the candidate came in fourth place in the two previous primaries. Santorum seemed to have secured third place at press time, with Libertarian candidate Congressman Ron Paul at fourth. Before results were announced, CNN reported that exit polls show the most important quality for Republican voters is that a candidate can beat President Obama. Experts told MTV News that if Romney landed his second win in a row, he might take the wind out of Gingrich’s sails and get one step closer to a virtual lock on the nomination should he win the next test, the January 31 primary in Florida. A further black cloud over the Gingrich win for Romney: The winner of the S.C. primary has gone on to secure the Republican nomination in every election since 1980. Long considered the front-runner and likely nominee, Romney has gone from looking like he would win an unprecedented three primaries in a row to start the season to just one victory and continuing questions about his appeal to the party’s conservative base. Though his campaign continues to be far ahead of the rest of the field in fundraising, even if Romney can pull it out, the constant battering of his image and r
Mitt Romney had a sizable lead going into the week only to fall short to the onetime House speaker. By Gil Kaufman Newt Gingrich Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images If it weren’t clear before, the results of the South Carolina primary Saturday night (January 21) made it crystal that former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney is in for the fight of his political life in his quest to nab the Republican presidential nomination . After holding on to a double-digit lead as recently as Tuesday, Romney came up short in South Carolina, defeated by a surging Newt Gingrich. Buoyed by two solid debate appearances this week, former House Speaker Gingrich managed to turn the tide in the first contest in the South, proving once again that the party faithful are not yet willing to fall into lockstep and give Romney a smooth ride to the nomination. Gingrich pulled off the upset victory despite a potentially crushing distraction Thursday in the form of an ABC News interview with his second ex-wife. In it, Marianne Gingrich claimed the ex-congressman had asked her to agree to an open marriage so he could carry on an affair with his now-third wife. Romney started the week with a solid lead, but the distance between him and Gingrich shrunk in the days before the primary. In addition, on Thursday, the race was scrambled thanks to a trio of unforeseen events that further muddied the waters. First, Republican leaders in Iowa announced that the final count in that state’s caucus revealed that Romney’s eight-point win over Rick Santorum was actually a 34-point loss, which handed the former Pennsylvania senator a pyrrhic victory in that first-in-the-nation contest. A short time later, Texas Governor Rick Perry announced he was suspending his campaign and would be throwing his support behind Gingrich, which could solidify the former House leader’s draw to the all-important bloc of Evangelical Christian voters. The third shoe to drop was the ABC interview. By Friday night, a Romney adviser told CNN the race was “real tight,” even as a Gingrich staffer predicted a victory after the candidate came in fourth place in the two previous primaries. Santorum seemed to have secured third place at press time, with Libertarian candidate Congressman Ron Paul at fourth. Before results were announced, CNN reported that exit polls show the most important quality for Republican voters is that a candidate can beat President Obama. Experts told MTV News that if Romney landed his second win in a row, he might take the wind out of Gingrich’s sails and get one step closer to a virtual lock on the nomination should he win the next test, the January 31 primary in Florida. A further black cloud over the Gingrich win for Romney: The winner of the S.C. primary has gone on to secure the Republican nomination in every election since 1980. Long considered the front-runner and likely nominee, Romney has gone from looking like he would win an unprecedented three primaries in a row to start the season to just one victory and continuing questions about his appeal to the party’s conservative base. Though his campaign continues to be far ahead of the rest of the field in fundraising, even if Romney can pull it out, the constant battering of his image and r
A clear victory could all but secure the nomination for Romney, but a close call or loss would be detrimental, experts say. By Gil Kaufman Mitt Romney Photo: Joe Raedle/ Getty Images No Republican has ever won his party’s presidential nomination without notching a win in South Carolina. That’s just one reason former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney is hoping that when the dust clears Saturday night (January 21), he will be celebrating his second primary win in a row and, in theory, the key to his party’s nomination. South Carolina was expected to present Romney with his biggest challenge to date, due to its heavy Evangelical population. The man vying to be the Republican Party’s first Mormon presidential nominee was up by anywhere from 11 to 15 points in polls taken in the week before Saturday’s vote, with some predicting he’d get more than 40 percent of the vote. By Friday morning, however, a number of polls had him in either a dead heat with or trailing former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Both men were well ahead of former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum and Congressman Ron Paul. In addition to his eroding poll numbers, Romney suffered a series of unfortunate events Thursday when a further analysis of the vote in Iowa revealed that Santorum had actually won the too-close-to-call Iowa caucus by 34 votes, erasing Romney’s razor-thin eight-vote win and his bragging rights for going 2-and-0. A short time later, Texas Governor Rick Perry abruptly dropped out of the race , throwing his support behind Gingrich. “If [Romney] wins South Carolina, it depends by how much. If he wins by 15, I would say, yes, he’s [the presumptive nominee]; if it’s in the close single digits, he’s not running at a pace to get the majority of the delegates,” said Columbia University professor of political science Robert Y. Shapiro, an expert in voting and political behavior. “All Gingrich has to do is stay in and if can run close enough and continue to raise money he could keep running.” Romney, who still has his solid New Hampshire win in pocket, has been taking heavy fire from Gingrich over the past few weeks. The former congressman has taken Romney to task for what he has deemed his opponent’s “vulture capitalist” ways while running the investment firm Bain Capital, where Romney oversaw the shuttering of a number of businesses, resulting in numerous layoffs. Romney has hit back at Gingrich for what he labeled an attack on “free enterprise,” accusing him of sounding like a Democrat in his criticisms. Larry Parnell, an associate professor and program director of the graduate school of political management at George Washington University, said the net effect of a potential Romney win and a possible shift in Perry voters to Gingrich could turn what he described as a “circular firing squad” of GOP nominees into a duel between the two men. “If [Romney] wins South Carolina, he will still have to deal with Gingrich, and it could slow him down,” said Parnell, a former press aide for the presidential campaign of Democrat Jimmy Carter. In terms of appearances, Parnell said even with a win in South Carolina, Romney is not likely to declare himself the presumptive candidate, because it could draw even more fire from his remaining opponents. “It’s in his best interest to keep conducting himself the way he has,” he said. “To say that now he’s ready to take on President Obama is just waving a red flag in front of Gingrich.” As long as he continues on the slow-and-steady path of wins, Parnell said, Romney should be able to weather the storms and likely come out on top. After the now-narrow loss in Iowa and a more convincing win in independent-leaning New Hampshire, observers have been looking to the solidly red state of South Carolina as the first test of whether Romney can convince traditional Evangelical voters that he is the right choice for the party. Parnell said that given South Carolina’s record in picking the eventual establishment candidate, any deviation from that norm (i.e., a too-close-to-call Gingrich finish or win) could cause some serious problems for Romney. A win, however, would prove Romney is a viable national candidate and ease the pressure on him to win over the party’s still-reluctant-to-commit base. Over the past week, Gingrich urged Santorum and Perry to drop out of the race so conservative voters can rally behind just one “anti-Romney” candidate, arguing that he is the only remaining candidate who knows how to build a national campaign. Even as his poll numbers jumped, though, Gingrich faced another obstacle Thursday when his second ex-wife appeared in an ABC News interview in which she claimed the former speaker had urged her to have an “open” marriage so he could continue an affair with his then-mistress, now-wife Callista. Both men agreed a solid Romney win in South Carolina could all but ensure his eventual path to the nomination, though a close Gingrich finish could propel the ex-congressman to Florida’s primary January 31. Check back for up-to-the-minute coverage on the primary races and stick with PowerOf12.org throughout the 2012 presidential election season.
Another Mitt Romney win could provide hard-to-stop momentum going into Florida. By Gil Kaufman Mitt Romney Photo: Getty Images With the field of candidates cut down by half from just one month ago, the Republican presidential nomination could very well hinge on the results tomorrow in the South Carolina primary. Leading nominee Mitt Romney went into the first contest in the South with a historic double win in the Iowa caucus and New Hampshire primary. But on Thursday, Romney’s razor-thin eight-vote victory over former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum was essentially vacated when the final tally put Santorum up by 34 votes . The reversal didn’t have any real impact on Romney’s status — delegates from Iowa won’t be decided until a later date — but it robbed him of bragging rights. With former House Speaker and Newt Gingrich surging in the polls leading up to the South Carolina vote and Texas Governor Rick Perry dropping out Thursday (while throwing his support behind Gingrich), suddenly Romney’s path to the nomination has a few more roadblocks. In a race that has seen more twists and turns than anyone could have predicted, here are five things to look for in Saturday’s primary: Margin of Victory If former Massachusetts Governor Romney posts a decisive, double-digit victory, it could provide the sense of momentum he’s been lacking so far. And after (almost) winning Iowa and decisively taking New Hampshire , a solid win in a Southern state with a large Evangelical voting bloc might signal that the GOP’s traditional base is finally coalescing around Romney. However, if Gingrich can pull off a win — he went from being in a double-digit hole to leading in some polls as of Friday — the race could turn into a two-man duel that lasts well past the next contest in Florida on January 31. Post-Primary Polling In addition to being the first Southern contest, South Carolina is the first state with a serious jobs problem on the primary slate. With an unemployment rate of 9.9 percent (versus the steadily falling 8.5 national rate), exit polls could provide a snapshot of what issues are on the minds of South Carolinians and whether they think Romney is the man who can lead the nation out of its economic downturn. His continuing stumbles on the release of his tax returns and a quip about how the $374,000 he earned in speaking fees last year was “not very much” might eat into his leader status. Exit polls could also give Romney a sharper picture of how much of the Evangelical vote he is drawing and whether he has a chance of siphoning those ballots away from Gingrich. Where Gingrich Lands No modern GOP candidate has won his party’s nomination without a win in South Carolina. And though Gingrich was left for dead just last summer, he has risen to the top of the contender heap, currently representing the strongest challenge to Romney. The politically savvy Washington veteran has been merciless in his criticism of his more moderate opponent, while finishing just high enough to stay in it as his potential rivals fall by the wayside. If Gingrich pulls off an upset victory or comes within a few percentage points on Saturday, he could drive Santorum off the map and survive to battle Romney through the next several contests. Exit polls could also reveal whether the interview aired by ABC News on Thursday night with Gingrich’s second ex-wife, Marianne, had a strong impact on his appeal to female voters. In it, Marianne Gingrich, whom he divorced in 2000 after he’d already begun living with his current wife, alleged that the former congressman had proposed they have an open marriage so he could continue his affair with his now-third wife. Gingrich, who proposed to Marianne before his divorce from his first wife was finalized in 1981, has faced questions during his entire run about whether conservative voters might show distaste for Gingrich’s two divorces and admitted infidelity. The Colbert Factor Viewers of Comedy Central’s “The Colbert Report” have gotten a good laugh out of the mockery Stephen Colbert has been making of the influence of Super PAC money on this year’s election. And though his request to run for the presidency of the United States in South Carolina was turned down by election officials, the “Definitely Not Coordinating with Stephen Colbert Super PAC” has been running mock attack ads in the state and has put up some poll numbers that would make former candidate Perry blush. Could his savage satire of big money resonate with some voters and help swing the primary just enough to make Super PACs a talking point? The Tea Party The leaderless upstart political movement’s unofficial ground zero is South Carolina, home to the state’s junior Senator Jim DeMint, who is considered the ideological forefather of the Tea Party among elected officials. While the TP has faded somewhat in profile since it stormed the 2010 midterm elections, a recent New York Times Magazine story noted that the defiantly unorganized organization has “had a hard time settling on any obvious alternative to Romney.” If the TP were to assert itself and get out the vote against Romney, it could signal a problem for him in other unabashedly red states. Check back for up-to-the-minute coverage on the primary races and stick with PowerOf12.org throughout the 2012 presidential election season. Related Videos New Hampshire Primary Sparks Youth Conversation