Want to contribute to the stories on Bar Karma ? We have a couple pitches ready for development. Try your hand at this one, about a radical manifesto. TV YOU CONTROL: BAR KARMA TONIGHT at 12 am/11 pm c

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Help Develop A Story for Bar Karma
Want to contribute to the stories on Bar Karma ? We have a couple pitches ready for development. Try your hand at this one, about a radical manifesto. TV YOU CONTROL: BAR KARMA TONIGHT at 12 am/11 pm c

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Help Develop A Story for Bar Karma
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Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged bar, bennyhollywood, content, couple-pitches, Hollywood, karma, stories, the-stories
Dense, walkable, resilient towns and cities are a key component of getting off oil, and viable main street retail is the key to having vibrant main streets. For historic preservationists concerned about the fabric of our main streets, successful stores are key to maintaining our main street buildings. That’s why National Trust for Historic Preservation is behind Small Business Saturday ; the big businesses are usually in the big boxes in the ‘burbs. But it isn’t just about buildings; it’s about jobs…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Do Your Shopping On Small Business Saturday
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Tagged bennyhollywood, details-were, discovery, fabric, global-climate, Hollywood, killing-trees, national-trust, shopping, stars, stories, take action
It was a trailblazing ‘showcase’ deal in global climate negotiations: Norway agreed to send $1 billion to Indonesia , if the nation would put a moratorium on logging its natural forests and peat lands, and replant degraded areas. The deal would reduce carbon emissions by millions of tons, and prevent widespread habitat loss. Indonesia accepted, and the details were to be finalized at the upcoming climate summit in Cancun. There’s just one small problem… More on that, below, and other stories from the… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Week in Pictures: Has Indonesia Broken Forest Protection Deal? Is WiFi Killing Trees? And More (Slideshow)
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Tagged details, global-climate, green news, healthy, indonesia, killing-trees, Nation, natural-forests, Pictures, stories
In the nine years after 9/11, has our country really had a chance to heal? This year, the 9/11 anniversary has been at the center of a number of controversies, from threatened Quran burnings in Florida to debate over an Islamic community center set to be built in lower Manhattan to American Muslims toning down Eid Al-Fitr celebrations (Eid is the major holiday commemorating the end of Ramadan; this year, it falls on September 10th.) for fear they will be seen as supporting the attacks. Although these have been the stories dominating the media, they are not the only ones. At the same time, there will be memorials held across the country, including an annual Buddhist interfaith ceremony in New York. In light of both the controversies and rememberances in the media, do you think that America has truly begun to heal from the events of 9/11? If not, what do you think we need to do to begin to close the wounds? added by: sgwhites
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged attacks, country, country-really, from-threatened, Hollywood, kitsap, manhattan, memorials-held, quran, stars, stories, The Pacific, TMZ
It’s pretty hard—even for media liberals—to defend a guy in paramilitary duds swinging a billy club outside a polling site, or a government official bragging about having declined to do everything in her power to help someone because of the white color of his skin. So on today’s Morning Joe, Margaret Carlson, Norah O’Donnell and Mike Barnicle were obliged to engage in a modicum of hand-wringing over the incidents. But once having discharged that duty, the trio set about doing what libs do best: finding ways to minimize the matters and excuse the MSM’s failure to cover them. To be sure, Carlson did call the statement by the USDA official “hateful” and said one should be “ashamed.” And Norah O’Donnell and Mike Barnicle agreed with Joe Scarborough that the MSM can fairly be criticized for undercovering these stories. But then the three started their excuse-a-thon: Carlson: “I mean, there’s more [racism] on one side [whites] then the other,” though that didn’t change the fact that what Sherrod did was wrong. O’Donnell: On this [Sherrod] particular case, while this egregious in my mind, it is an isolated, we believe, incident. There’s no suggestion that the USDA is doing this as a systematic problem. So I worry that in a climate that there have now been, that there is an effort to pile up a lot of these racially-charged stories , that concern me about things, that we’re, you know, setting up these black versus white stories in this country, that these instances are, because, are trying to create some kind of narrative about where we are in this country. And that makes me nervous. Do you know what I’m trying to say? Do you know what I’m trying to say? Barnicle: Out there, in this big large universe beyond television, that people are more obsessed with other issues like their jobs and their incomes than they are with what someone said in March working for the Department of Agriculture. After agreeing that if the polling site intimidators would, if white, have been immediately arrested and that there would have been more media coverage, Barnicle continued . . . BARNICLE: At this point, the incessant coverage of it, with all of the questions, it’s like scratching a sore. That’s all it’s doing. It’s pulling a scab. As Joe Scarborough observed: “But who’s covered it? Fox has covered it, but even the Washington Post said nobody else has covered it.” After Scarborough accused the MSM of ignoring the stories, Carlson had the last word. CARLSON: Maybe not ignored. I mean, there’s so many stories that slip by and go through the cracks , you don’t know . . . They did prosecute the guy who was holding the billy club at an almost all-black precinct. So, intimidating white voters at an all-black precinct? would you go to another precinct where there might be more [abruptly ends at hard commercial break]. Let’s summarize the libs’ arguments: The media shouldn’t make too much of all this. The Sherrod thing was an isolated case. Covering these stories is just going to stir up bad feelings. And anyhow, the stories aren’t that important, compared to the economy. And, hey, lots of stories slip through the media cracks: these just happened to be two of them. And you know, the voter intimidation was really pretty harmless. All of which goes to prove a point that Scarborough made: with media liberals who think like this, were the racial tables turned, these stories would have been the subject of 28-part front page series.
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Morning Joe Libs Sweep Sherrod, Voter Intimidation Under Carpet: Let’s Not ‘Scratch A Sore’
After our stories last month detailing American Apparel ‘s photo-based hiring policy , picky beauty standards , and pissed-off work force , we wondered: Have things changed at AA? According to a recent job applicant: not a bit. More
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hot Stuff, TV
Tagged apparel, jobs, last-month, none-solid, our-stories, recent-job, stories, things-changed
On Wednesday we asked for your vacation horror stories , and you people delivered with some shitty vacations. Literally. Step on in for tales of woe that will shock and amaze you, and might make you stay at home this summer. More
June 28, 2010 | 1 comments Shifty Science: Programmable Matter Takes Shape with Self-Folding Origami Sheets A prototype sheet that folds itself into two different shapes may lead to objects that can assume any number of forms on command By John Matson Self-folding robotic sheet SHAPE-SHIFTER: The segmented sheet created by researchers at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology can fold itself into a boat or an airplane shape in a matter or seconds. The Harvard Microrobotics Lab Researchers at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) have invented a real-life Transformer, a device that can fold itself into two shapes on command. The system is hardly ready to do battle with the Decepticons—the tiny contraption forms only relatively crude boat and airplane shapes—but the concept could one day produce chameleonlike objects that shift between any number of practical shapes at will. Self-folding sheets are just one facet of programmable matter, the attempt to build structures that can shape-shift on demand. The idea, says study co-author Daniela Rus, a roboticist at M.I.T., is bringing materials and machines closer together to make everyday objects that can be programmed, much like people program a computer. “Instead of programming bits and bytes,” she says, “you program mechanical properties of the object.” The system, described in a paper published online this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, consists of a thin sheet of resin–fiberglass composite, just a few centimeters across, segmented into 32 triangular panels separated by flexible silicone joints. Some of the joints have heat-sensitive actuators that bend 180 degrees when warmed by an electric current, folding the sheet over at that joint. Depending on the program used, the sheet will conduct a series of folds to yield the boat or airplane shape in about 15 seconds. The folding-sheet approach is an extension of the field of computational origami, the mathematical study of how flat objects can be folded into complex, three-dimensional structures. Although the design presented in the new paper takes only two shapes, the researchers say that in principle the system could produce many more. “We were looking for ways to embed a bunch of different functionalities into one low-profile sheet,” says study co-author Robert Wood, an electrical engineer at Harvard University's Microrobotics Laboratory. “In the longer run we'd like to develop systems to bring this not to just three, four or five shapes but to a much greater scope of different achievable shapes.” Given a set of desired three-dimensional shapes, the group's algorithms determine how to fold the sheet to produce each of the final shapes and then how to accommodate those different folding sequences on a shared sheet. Another algorithm optimizes the sheet for its desired purpose, limiting the number of embedded actuators needed to produce the final shapes. On the airplane–boat prototype sheet, for instance, only half the joints have actuators. The researchers note that although the algorithms produce a workable folding pattern to make a given shape, human experts are often able to design a more efficient scheme. “It doesn't know how to get creative, and sometimes human origamists can see a few moves ahead, like a chess player,” Rus says. “You see patterns that are not obvious to a computer program that does a step-by-step process.” In the near term Rus envisions the computational origami technology forming the basis of three-dimensional display systems—for instance, maps that can reproduce the topography of a given region on demand. “You can imagine making machines that have the ability to give you three-dimensional views of the objects they render,” she says. In the more distant future programmable matter applications might move beyond mere shape mimicry to involve programmable optical, electric or acoustic properties. Video courtesy of the Harvard Microrobotics Lab added by: EthicalVegan
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged current, folding-origami, global-issues, harvard, Hollywood, most-important, national, science, sheet, stories, trusted-guides
Correspondent Kaj Larsen investigates the alarming rise in the number of soldiers who have been traumatized by war and are now accused of bringing the violence home. Of the more than 2 million men and women who have served in the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as many as a third of them may now have post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. A growing number of these vets are being charged with violent crimes, and Kaj travels to prisons and mental health facilities in Arizona, Colorado and Oregon to hear their stories. “War Crimes” premieres Wednesday, July 7 at 10/9c on Current TV. “Vanguard,” airing weekly on Current TV Wednesdays at 10/9c, is a no-limits documentary series whose award-winning correspondents put themselves in extraordinary situations to immerse viewers in global issues that have a large social significance. Unlike sound-bite driven reporting, the show's correspondents, Adam Yamaguchi, Kaj Larsen, Christof Putzel and Mariana van Zeller, serve as trusted guides who take viewers on in-depth real life adventures in pursuit of some of the world's most important stories. For more, go to http://current.com/vanguard . added by: Kaj
The cottage industry of quirky Bill Murray stories — the ones that have him attending a Halloween party in Williamsburg or sneaking up behind an unsuspecting man in Union Square and covering his eyes — seem almost too perfect to be true. It’s like Murray and Wes Anderson sat around on the set of Rushmore and decided to carefully curate the “Bill Murray” that exists today, forever flummoxing publicists, journalists and fans alike. But then, every once in a while, Murray says something in the press that makes you think that he is as legitimate as they come — that all the stories are probably true. For instance: Remember that time when Bill Murray completely blew off Josh Hartnett?

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Bill Murray Unimpressed by Josh Harnett, Finds Possible Soulmate in Christopher Doyle
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged Actors, blew-off-josh, egglesfield, finds-himself, Hollywood, military, murray, New Movie, newswire, Pictures, stories, TMZ, too-perfect, williamsburg
