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A Liberal East Coast Science Writer Talks to a Pro-Trump Texan Strength Coach about COVID-19

A weight-lifting guru, author and podcaster calls the U.S. response to the pandemic an “exercise in hysteria" that might do more harm than good

-- Read more on ScientificAmerican.com




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May 10, 2020: So You Want To Write A Game

Not going to lie to you, it's a sweet gig, but there are a LOT of things you should know before you take the plunge.

Luckily, our pals at Kobold Press have compiled many of them into the new edition of their fantastic book, Complete Kobold Guide to Game Design, Second Edition. You can buy physical or digital versions at that link, and the lessons are good reading even if you aren't looking to publish a game, but just run a campaign with friends.

Andrew Hackard

Warehouse 23 News: Your Own Dungeons, Just A Doodle Away!

Draw some cards, then draw your way through a dungeon – it's Deadly Doodles! This fast-paced fun game for 1-4 players is available in both print and PDF forms, thanks to Warehouse 23!




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Prince Charles and Camilla write a letter to 'Everyone at Royal Mail' to thank them for vital role

Addressed to 'Everyone at Royal Mail,' the letter from the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall commends their 'dedication, resilience and hard work'. Adding that many are relying on post to feel close to loved ones.




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Prince Charles and Camilla write a letter to 'Everyone at Royal Mail' to thank them for vital role

Addressed to 'Everyone at Royal Mail,' the letter from the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall commends their 'dedication, resilience and hard work'. Adding that many are relying on post to feel close to loved ones.




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Sean Penn and daughter Dylan head to Malibu beach as Sean's ex Robin Wright is also beach-bound

He's a two-time Oscar winner taking some downtime to accompany his daughter to the beach for a sunny weekend outing.




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A different destiny in writing


Among the steadily growing voices expressing their angst against discrimination, suppression and abuse of women, those of Indian feminist writers are fast gaining in pitch and range. Abha Sharma captures some of these.




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Chhattisgarh CM Baghel Writes to PM Modi, Requests for Rs 30,000 Crore Aid

The chief minister wrote to the prime minister, reiterating that a financial aid of Rs 10,000 crore should be given immediately from this package to get the state's economy back on track.




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Connect Chancellor: COVID-19 Writing Competition For College Students

The Telangana State Council of Higher Education (TSCHE) has announced the 'Connect Chancellor' programme, which is a platform to bring out creativity, innovation and novel ideas - an opportunity to the students of state universities to write articles, stories and poems,




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Intolerance row: After writers boycott Bangalore Literature Fest, directors issue statement

Kannada writer TK Dayanand and poet Arif Raja have boycotted the Bangalore Lit festival that is being held in the city on December 5 and 6.




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Two-Day WWII Writing Workshop for Kids and Teens

Mon, 02/18/2013 -
10:00 to 15:00
Mon, February 18th, 2013 |
10:00 am to 3:00 pm
Tue, February 19th, 2013 |
10:00 am to 3:00 pm

 

Monday, February 18, and Tuesday, February 19, 2013

 

Family Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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Historical Fiction: Imagining—and WRITING—the PAST!

July 23–27. Registration required

Mon, 07/23/2012 -
10:00 to 16:00
Mon, July 23rd, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm
Tue, July 24th, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm
Wed, July 25th, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm
Thu, July 26th, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm
Fri, July 27th, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm

July 23–27

Price: 
$850
Family Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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Historical Fiction: Imagining—and WRITING—the PAST!

Summer Writing Camps with the DiMenna Children’s History Museum and Writopia Lab! Pre-registration required.

Sat, 06/23/2012 - 09:00 to Wed, 06/27/2012 - 16:00
Sat, June 23rd, 2012 | 10:00 am to Wed, June 27th, 2012 | 5:00 pm

Ages 8–18

Price: 
$850
Family Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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Historical Fiction: Imagining—and WRITING—the PAST!

Summer Writing Camps with the DiMenna Children’s History Museum and Writopia Lab! Pre-registration required.

 

Mon, 06/11/2012 - 09:00 to Thu, 06/14/2012 - 16:00
Mon, June 11th, 2012 | 10:00 am to Thu, June 14th, 2012 | 5:00 pm

For ages 8–18

Price: 
$700
Family Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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Writing Workshop: Historical Fiction of the Civil War

Two-day workshop for young writers ages 8-14

Tue, 03/20/2012 - 10:00 to Wed, 03/21/2012 - 16:00
Tue, March 20th, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm
Wed, March 21st, 2012 |
11:00 am to 5:00 pm

The New-York Historical Society and the DiMenna Children’s History Museum are proud to host a young writers workshop in partnership with Writopia Lab, a nationally recognized non-profit organization that has led workshops for kids ages 8 to 18 since 2007. This unique Historical Fiction Writing workshop will be co-facilitated by a New-York Historical Society educator, who will introduce the writers to many different themes related to the Civil War.

Family Programs: 
Sold out: 
0




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The wireless telephone: a treatise on the low power wireless telephone, describing all the present systems and inventions of the new art: written for the student and experimenter and those engaged in research work in wireless telephony / by H. Gernsback

Archives, Room Use Only - TK6550.G47 1910




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Lightning flashes and electric dashes: a volume of choice telegraphic literature, humor, fun, wit & wisdom / compiled by W.J. Johnston ; with contributions from the pens of all prominent writers in the ranks of telegraphic literature, as well as sever

Archives, Room Use Only - PN6231.T4 L54 1882




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The secret corresponding vocabulary: adapted for use to Morse's electro-magnetic telegraph, and also in conducting written correspondence, transmitted by the mails, or otherwise / by Francis O.J. Smith, Esq

Archives, Room Use Only - HE7673.S65 1845




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Autobiographical and other writings / by Alan A. Campbell Swinton

Archives, Room Use Only - Q171.S95 1930




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Telegraphy / by Sir W.H. Preece and Sir J. Sivewright ; revised and partly rewritten by W. Llewellyn Preece

Archives, Room Use Only - TK5261.P77 1914




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Signalling: Morse, semaphore station work, despatch riding, telephone cables, map reading / written by an officer of the Regular Army and edited by Captain E.J. Solano

Archives, Room Use Only - UG580.S65 1916




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The Phillips code: a thoroughly tested method of steno-telegraphy arranged for use in wire and radio communication: adaptable to teletype, teletypewriter and telemeter communication services / by Walter P. Phillips

Archives, Room Use Only - HE7669.P55 1945




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The thorough cipher code for telegraphing and for written communications where secrecy is desirable: a carefully compiled arrangement of ciphers and commercial and general meanings: with easy methods for the largest possible use of condensed material and

Archives, Room Use Only - HE7669.B87 1891




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The railroad fist, or, Caswell system: a treatise on the expert rapidity of handwriting / Guy Rich Caswell

Archives, Room Use Only - Z43.C37 1923




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Adani Transmission Q4 profit falls 60 pc to Rs 59 crore on one-time write off




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Bobby Wagner, K.J. Wright will “definitely” take Jordyn Brooks under their wings

"At the end of the day, you want to pick the best position and hopefully it's a good sign that people are starting to value the linebacker position."




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COVID-19 crisis: Chhattisgarh CM writes to PM, asks for Rs 30,000 crore package for state




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Naidu writes to PM, requests scientific probe into Vizag gas leak incident




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Home Minister Amit Shah writes to Mamata Banerjee, says trains with migrants labourers not being allowed into state, "Injustice with West Bengal migrant labourers"




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Students write to CM for rent relief

Students write to CM for rent relief




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Investigation on drug mafias being handled in 'inefficient manner' in Punjab: Bajwa writes to Ravi Shankar Prasad




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Punjab CM writes to PM Modi, seeks incentive for farmers




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Punjab CM writes to Amit Shah, seeks interim compensation of Rs 3,000 crore




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Amarinder writes to PM for increasing MSP of paddy, giving bonus to farmers




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Write Libraries, Not Frameworks

When a programmer thinks "I've got some code that will make others' lives easier", there are two forms that can take: a library, or a framework.




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Soft X-ray varied-line-spacing gratings fabricated by near-field holography using an electron beam lithography-written phase mask

A fabrication method comprising near-field holography (NFH) with an electron beam lithography (EBL)-written phase mask was developed to fabricate soft X-ray varied-line-spacing gratings (VLSGs). An EBL-written phase mask with an area of 52 mm × 30 mm and a central line density greater than 3000 lines mm−1 was used. The introduction of the EBL-written phase mask substantially simplified the NFH optics for pattern transfer. The characterization of the groove density distribution and diffraction efficiency of the fabricated VLSGs indicates that the EBL–NFH method is feasible and promising for achieving high-accuracy groove density distributions with corresponding image properties. Vertical stray light is suppressed in the soft X-ray spectral range.




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Bizarre new marine worms covered in bristles, wrinkles & bumps

An extraordinary arrangement of bristles, wrinkles and wart-like bumps cover the cold skin of Sphaerephesia amphorata, a new deep-sea worm described and named by researchers […]

The post Bizarre new marine worms covered in bristles, wrinkles & bumps appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.




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‘The Wrong Wrights’: A Graphic Novel from Smithsonian Books

In the first volume of the Secret Smithsonian Adventures graphic-novel series from Smithsonian Books, The Wrong Wrights, four middle-school kids visit the Smithsonian’s National Air […]

The post ‘The Wrong Wrights’: A Graphic Novel from Smithsonian Books appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.




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Human Evolution Rewritten: We owe our existence to our ancestor’s flexible response to climate change

Many traits unique to humans were long thought to have originated in the genus Homo between 2.4 and 1.8 million years ago in Africa. A […]

The post Human Evolution Rewritten: We owe our existence to our ancestor’s flexible response to climate change appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.





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Smithsonian botanist writes book on his discoveries in the secret land of Myanmar

The Weeping Goldsmith, written as a first-person narrative, follows Botanist John Kress through nine years as he surveys Myanmar’s teak forests, bamboo thickets, timber plantations, rivers and mangroves to document its incredible botanical biodiversity.

The post Smithsonian botanist writes book on his discoveries in the secret land of Myanmar appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.




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Mobile Phone locked Sdcard with Write Protection




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Los Angeles comedian, 'Parks & Recreation' writer Harris Wittels, 30, dies in possible drug overdose

File: (L-R) "The Sarah Silverman Program" writer Harris Wittels, comedian Sarah Silverman, executive producer/head writer Dan Sterling and actress Laura Silverman, arrive at Comedy Central's Emmy Awards party at the STK restaurant Sept. 21, 2008 in Los Angeles.; Credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Mike Roe with Jennifer Velez

Harris Wittels, a comedy writer who worked on "Parks & Recreation," has died at 30, the Los Angeles Police Department's Jane Kim tells KPCC.

Wittels was discovered by his assistant around 12 p.m., Kim said, and was already dead. Kim said that Wittels' death was a possible overdose, but that the Coroner's Office would determine the cause of death. Wittels had attended drug rehab twice.

Comedy Central, where Wittels worked on "The Sarah Silverman Program" and "Secret Girlfriend," confirmed Wittels' death, as did the comedy show he appeared at Wednesday night.

Comedy Central tweet

Meltdown Show tweet

Wittels was also well known for his @Humblebrag Twitter account and later book, helping to popularize the idea online of the false modesty of bragging while trying not to look like you're bragging.

Wittels had spoken about his struggles with addiction in places including Pete Holmes's podcast "You Made It Weird" in a November episode.

"I just really stopped caring about my life," Wittels said on "You Made It Weird," explaining how he got into doing drugs. "I just really started to think, well, if I'm only here for 80 years, then who cares if I spend it high or not?"

Wittels received his first big break when Sarah Silverman saw him performing comedy and gave him a job writing for her Comedy Central show.

Wittels also wrote for HBO's "Eastbound & Down," several MTV awards shows and the American Music Awards. He had a recurring role on "Parks & Recreation" and was a regular guest on the "Comedy Bang Bang" podcast.

Comedians, actors and fans mourned Wittels' death online.

Harris Wittels Storify

See Wittels in a scene from "Parks & Recreation":

Wittels on Parks & Recreation

Listen to Wittels on "Comedy Bang Bang":

Wittels on Comedy Bang Bang

This story has been updated.

This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org.




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'Ready Player One' was written using cheat codes — here are our 11 favorites

A Nintendo Entertainment System.; Credit: Mark Ramsay/Flickr Creative Commons

Mike Roe

There have been plenty of video game movies over the years, but there have been far fewer actually good ones. "Ready Player One," based on the 2011 video game-inspired novel, has the chance to be a great one thanks to the announcement that Steven Spielberg has signed on to direct.

That book was inspired by classic video games, and was written using classic video game cheats to play parts of classic games and write them into his book, author Ernest Cline said in a recent talk. That got us thinking about the classic video game cheats and secrets that stuck with us from our younger days playing classic video games — here's our top 11.

1. The Konami Code

Up up down down left right left right B A start! This code became such a part of video game culture that it got its own name. It was popularized in various games made by Konami, particularly Contra, leading to it also being known as the "Contra Code" for its ability to give you 30 lives in the game. Before the Internet, it was spread through gaming magazines and word of mouth — it was so influential that there are still developers who put it in their games. (There's even an entire Wikipedia page of games, both from Konami and others, that use the Konami Code. It's even been used on some websites.)

What is the Konami Code

2. Street Figher II Turbo's turbo

The game that I actually used a code for the most as a kid, the Super Nintendo code down, R, up, L, Y, B on the second controller didn't give you any advantages — it just kicked the speed up. By default, you had a few selections for how fast the game would be, but you could multiple that several-fold with this code, letting you and your friends battle at what at the time felt unbelievably fast.

3. Super Mario Bros.'s Minus World

This one doesn't involve a code, but players managed to discover what was deemed a glitch in the game that put you into a messed up version of another level, dubbed by fans the Minus World due to just "-1" instead of a full level number appearing at the top of the screen. There was no way to escape the glitched level, no matter how hard you might try, sending you to play it over and over again until your time ran out or you were killed by enemies. Still, modern players have found that you can go on thanks to various computer emulators and the like; see some of the worlds beyond below:

Minus World video

4. Metroid and Justin Bailey

Fans early on discovered that the password JUSTIN BAILEY allowed you to start with all of the available weapons along with plenty of life and ammo. Fans didn't know whether Justin Bailey was a reference to an actual person, just a code coincidence or something else, but that didn't stop them from eagerly playing through with this code. It also removed lead character Samus Aran from her armor, allowing players to discover that the game's star was an early female lead character, even if her armor didn't clue players in before the end of the game without the code.

Justin Bailey video

5. Doom's God mode

By typing the letters iddqd in PC game Doom, players could enable God mode, making them essentially invincible and letting them power through the early first-person shooter. The code had been available in developer id's earlier game Wolfenstein, but hadn't been quite as easily accessible. So, if you ever need a power boost when you're fighting on Mars, Doom has the answer. (Unfortunately, we don't believe this provides any extra protection for NASA's Mars rovers.)

6. Mortal Kombat's Reptile

The developers of Mortal Kombat made a battle against Reptile unbelievably hard for Mortal Kombat fans, including putting some randomness into whether doing what you were supposed to do to unlock the character would even work. Still, players happily pumped in extra quarters for the chance to face off against Reptile, a character with a look that mirrored that of characters Sub-Zero and Scorpion, just with a different color. Players had to achieve a Double Flawless victory on the Pit level, finish the match using their fatality move, and there also had to be a silhouette flying past the moon in the background — which only happened every sixth game.

Mortal Kombat: Reptile

7. The Legend of Zelda's Second Quest

The Legend of Zelda was a pretty challenging early adventure game, one of the first releases for the Nintendo home video game console. When you beat the game, you were given the option to go on a "Second Quest," which was a tweaked version of the game you just played except waaaaay harder. However, if you thought you were the coolest kid on the block and were so awesome you didn't need a warmup, you could name your character "ZELDA" (in one of the more obvious cheats in video game history) and skip ahead to that Second Quest from the start. You would then likely cry from how hard it was and start another new game with a different name.

8. NBA Jam's celebrity secret characters

A variety of celebrities from sports, music, and even politics were available by putting in various initials combined with buttons on the controller. These included then-President Bill Clinton, Al Gore, Warren Moon and more. That tradition has been continued in more recent NBA Jam games, with President Obama and others available for your video gaming pleasure.

9. GoldenEye's extra modes

There were a wide variety of cheat codes for GoldenEye, widely considered one of the all-time great first-person shooters. Sure, you could use codes to unlock different levels, but the reason these codes are remembered is because it gave you all sorts of new ways to play against your friends. The game also had an actual cheat menu that would appear if you accomplished one of a variety of goals, and from that menu you could cheat extra hard by using your controller to unlock things like a paintball mode, turbo mode, modes with both giant heads and teeny-tiny James Bonds and more.

10. Sonic The Hedgehog 2's Debug Mode

The Sonic debug mode is the perfect example of why so many games included cheats back in the day: They were often for the developers to be able to more easily play the games while looking for bugs and doing other testing. Sonic 2 let you get to an actual debug mode by playing various sounds from the level select screen (1, 9, 9, 2, 1, 1, 2, 4, for your reference), then pressing start and holding the A button. Developers later put them in for fun and intended them for the players to discover, but some of the early cheat codes were just meant for developers — but players proved more intrepid than they may have anticipated.

Sonic debug mode

11. Mike Tyson's Punch-Out: Go straight to Mike Tyson

There was actually a password mode in this game — before games had the option to save, plenty of games gave you codes that let you get back to where you were before. This is one of the examples from that darker time, where whether you played through opponents like Glass Joe and Bald Bull or not, you could try your changes against Lightning Mike (at least until the video game's license ran out and he was replaced in future editions with the way less exciting "Mr. Dream"). You better have had a pen and paper ready when your friend started yelling at you 007 373 5963 for you to use on your own copy of the game — no sharing. The game is hard enough that even Mike Tyson had some trouble fighting himself:

Mike Tyson vs. Mike Tyson

Let us know in the comments the classic video games — and the classic cheat codes and secrets — that inspired you.

This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org.




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New Deal: Award-Winning writing app, Scrivener for PC discounted 51% to $19.50





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Coronavirus: Doctors write to Premier League expressing concern over Project Restart

Club doctors are reported to have expressed concerns about the Premier League's Project Restart proposals, which aim to have clubs back training in small groups within the next two weeks.




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Oxy Takes $1.4B Writedown

Occidental Petroleum Corp. took a $1.4 billion writedown related to an investment in a pipeline affiliate.




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MoreThanMean: These tweets to female sportswriters are downright cruel

Exposing and discussing harassment is a way to send the message that it's not OK.



  • Arts & Culture

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Sarah Palin is writing a fitness book

Former Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin says new book will detail how to find equilibrium between comfort foods and healthy living.



  • Fitness & Well-Being

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Ruth Benerito, pioneering chemist who helped invent wrinkle-free cotton, dies at 97

This unknown American hero led the development of one of the most significant technological innovations of the 20th century.



  • Research & Innovations