arl Harlem figure skating gala pivots from ice to internet By Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 16:46:33 +0000 Unable to stage its big fundraiser because of the pandemic, Figure Skating in Harlem is going from the ice to the internet Full Article other
arl Early Saxon Reference 2 By iron-mitten.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 06 Apr 2020 11:15:00 +0000 I took these beautiful images from a Dark ages Facebook page for reference latter on with painting. Thank you Jack Sarge for posting them. Full Article Arthurian Dux Bellorum Early Saxon
arl Early superannuation withdrawals frozen as hacking fallout revealed - Daily Telegraph By news.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 11:30:00 GMT Early superannuation withdrawals frozen as hacking fallout revealed Daily TelegraphCalls for better superannuation protection Busselton Dunsborough MailAFP investigating 'sophisticated' theft of $120,000 from 150 super accounts Sydney Morning HeraldIs your super payout at risk? Thousands drained by fraudsters in COVID scam 7NEWS.com.auPolice confirm up to 150 victims of early super access fraud The New DailyView Full coverage on Google News Full Article
arl The Dundee Early Intervention Team By podcast.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Sun, 30 Jul 2017 23:00:00 +0000 The Dundee Early Intervention Team (DEIT) provides early intervention support to families. The team is a partnership of the four leading children's charities in Dundee – Aberlour, Children 1st, Action for Children and Barnardo's Scotland – the team works together with Dundee City Council, NHS Tayside and Dundee Voluntary Action. Practising a social pedagogy model, the team work alongside families to build their capacity to tackle challenges and make sustainable change. In 2017 Iriss worked with the Dundee Early Intervention Team to capture learning about the partnership model underpinning the team and to evidence the impact of its support on families. In this conversation, practitioners Natalie, Harriet, Jade, Bianca and Brian share their experiences of working with families as part of the Dundee Early Intervention Team. Transcript of episode Music Credit: Something Elated by Broke For Free Full Article
arl Jo McFarlane's journey to recovery By podcast.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Wed, 30 May 2018 23:00:00 +0000 Building the future: shaping our social work identity newly qualified social worker conference was held on 31 May 2018 in Edinburgh. Delivered with the University of Edinburgh (in partnership with the Higher Education Heads of Social Work Group), Iriss, Scottish Social Services Council, the Scottish Association of Social Workers, Social Work Scotland and the Scottish Government, it provided an opportunity for newly qualified social workers to come together to connect and reconnect. In this episode, we hear the moving story of Jo McFarlane, a writer, poet and public speaker. She provides an engaging story of her early life and journey to recovery, peppered with powerful, and often comic, poetry. Transcript of episode Music Credit: Make your dream a reality by Scott Holmes Full Article
arl Families as peer workers in early childhood intervention By podcast.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Mon, 29 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 Iriss.fm is delighted to broadcast an episode on the work of Plumtree, an Australian not-for-profit organisation that provides support for young children from birth to 8 years old with a developmental delay or disability and their families. Sylvana Mahmic (CEO) and Dr Melanie Heyworth (Peer Worker) tell the story of Now and Next, a project that has been successful at involving families as peer workers in early childhood intervention. Three key messages: Peer workers offer unique benefit to families of young children with disabilities that are not available through existing services, but which are complementary to them. Benefits include feelings of leadership, agency and community. Learning from mental health practice could be applied to the disability sector, so there was no need to spend time reinventing the wheel. It made it cost effective, quick and provided maximum benefit. Implementation of peer work into any existing organisation will face challenges and barriers, but these can be mitigated by pre-emptive organisational action. Transcript of episode Music Credit: Make your dream a reality by Scott Holmes Full Article
arl Dan Hughes on trauma, early child development and attachment By feeds.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Thu, 11 Feb 2016 11:44:20 +0000 Dan Hughes is a leading authority on dyadic developmental psychotherapy and has integrated recent research on the neurobiology of trauma, early child development and attachment. During one of his many trips to Scotland as a guest of Scottish Attachment in Action, Iriss was pleased to video record Dan explaining how the brain reacts to trauma and how an understanding of this process is helpful to foster and adoptive parents as well professionals such as residential care workers and teachers. read more Full Article attachment child development foster carers foster children looked after children psychotherapy
arl This Photoshop Battle of Trump Trying to Close a Pen Is A Christmas Gift 332 Days Early By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Aug 2019 07:00:00 -0700 Full Article christmas donald trump photoshop battle photoshop battles trump memes
arl Donald Trump Cats Aren't Nearly as Scary as the Man Himself By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Aug 2019 19:00:00 -0700 To #TrumpYourCat, you should brush your pet, then form the hair into a "toupee", and place it on top of their head. Oh, and you can thank Donald Purrump for this genius idea!And if you need some more Trump memes <-- those are simply tremendous Full Article funny cat memes murica donald trump trump trump memes Cats politics cat memes
arl #250: Nearly There and Back Again By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 07 Jul 2013 16:00:00 +0000 PotterCast is back with our yearly episode! ;) We're so sorry to have kept you waiting this long, but we hope you enjoy this look back at some of our favorite PotterCast moments, as well as some news of what's in store for Melissa, John, AND FRAK! Check back soon for PotterCast 250, live from LeakyCon 2013. Lots of love to all of you who have stuck with PotterCast until the very end. Episode 249.5 — Nearly There and Back Again Find the latest episode and explore PotterCast interviews, discussions and more at PotterCast.com Visit the-leaky-cauldron.org for the latest and greatest from Harry Potter's Wizard World. Full Article
arl Learning and Development Adviser (Early Years) Job, Edinburgh - s1jobs.com By feeds.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Fri, 26 Aug 2016 09:49:21 PDT View full details for Learning and Development Adviser (Early Years) job in Edinburgh on s1jobs.comSee it on Scoop.it, via Social services news Full Article
arl Early Years Practitioner - ABS06540 - Aberdeenshire Council | myjobscotland By feeds.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Mon, 29 Aug 2016 09:23:34 PDT Early Years Practitioner: Location: Banff; Salary: £7,541 - £8,192 per year; closing date: 12/09/2016 https://t.co/THFViQaVmiSee it on Scoop.it, via Social services news Full Article
arl SCVO launch third sector human rights campaign - Parliament & Government | The ALLIANCE By feeds.iriss.org.uk Published On :: Wed, 31 Aug 2016 09:57:23 PDT New campaign to promote human rights across the third sector.See it on Scoop.it, via Social services news Full Article
arl KunstlerCast 328 — Chatting with Charles Hugh Smith from the OfTwoMinds Blog By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 20:48:49 +0000 Support this Podcast by visiting Jim’s Patreon Page Charles Hugh Smith founded his blog, Of Two Minds, in 2005 after 17 years of free-lance journalism in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of Two Minds has grown to thousands of posts that have logged tens of millions of page views on his site and many others more » The post KunstlerCast 328 — Chatting with Charles Hugh Smith from the OfTwoMinds Blog appeared first on Kunstler. Full Article Podcast
arl 4 Steps of Cognitive Restructuring to Help You Think Clearly By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 15:00:03 +0000 Humans are guilty of having less than rational thoughts. We do it all the time. We might assume the worst is going to happen or jump to conclusions before we have all the information. Cognitive restructuring helps people become aware of their irrational thoughts so that they can correct them and replace them with more [...]Read More... Full Article
arl The Very Early Perimenopause: What We Can Learn from Dr. Jerilynn Prior’s Research By www.ourbodiesourselves.org Published On :: Mon, 25 Nov 2019 14:49:19 +0000 by Nina Coslov In my early 40s, I started noticing changes in my body. A once great sleeper, I was now waking at 2 a.m. – often with lots of energy and sometimes with anxiety. I’d be awake for about 3 hours before I could get back to sleep. Around the same time, premenstrual breast tenderness returned — something I hadn’t experienced since my 20s, before I had children. Not long after, I’d notice from time to time a pervasive edginess, a revving — an energetic ... More The post The Very Early Perimenopause: What We Can Learn from Dr. Jerilynn Prior’s Research appeared first on Our Bodies Ourselves. Full Article Menopause menstruation
arl NFPA’s Lorraine Carli named to National Fallen Firefighter Foundation Board of Directors By community.nfpa.org Published On :: 2020-01-08T21:35:37Z The National Fallen Firefighters Foundation (NFFF) recently announced the appointment of new members to their Board of Directors including the addition of Lorraine Carli, National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) vice president of Outreach and Full Article fire prevention fire service research national fallen firefighters foundation nfff firefighters home fire sprinkler coalition esfi phoenix society for burn survivors public safety educators electrical safety foundation hfc
arl NFL Player Earl Thomas And His Brother Are Weird AF By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 00:00:00 PDT By Dan Duddy Published: May 08th, 2020 Full Article
arl Episode 537 - Season Preview 1 with Ken Early By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 07 Aug 2019 20:01:32 GMT As is tradition, it's time for the first of our season preview podcasts with Ken Early of Second Captains. We chat about subscriptions, the new rules coming into the Premier League this season – in particular VAR and wonder about the impact it will have on things. Then there's discussion of each of the top five, including Man City, Man Utd, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal, before Ken reminds me we forgot Sp*rs. There's loads here, including worries about Arsenal's defence – all before we heard about the David Luiz news, so we'll cover that on the next show.Follow Ken @kenearlys and visit secondcaptains.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Full Article
arl Want to succeed? Look in the mirror: Stephen Warley and life skills as business skills By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Feb 2019 06:42:54 PST Stephen Warley of Life Skills That Matter believes that the key to being happy and successful is knowing yourself. Unfortunately, self-reflection is typically the LAST thing on most of our to-do lists! On today’s episode, Stephen talks to Kyle about how the best business skills you can develop as an independent worker are life skills, and how to make sure you’re being honest with yourself about who you are and what you want to do. Today’s links: https://lifeskillsthatmatter.com/author/stephen-warley/ https://twitter.com/stephenwarley https://lifeskillsthatmatter.com/accelerator/ Theme song by topmen.bandcamp.com! – Want to support the show? This episode is brought to you by Easel.ly, an infographic design service that transforms raw data into clear, interesting images. You can see their work on Clients From Hell! Think you’d be a great fit for the show? Let me know at twitter.com/KCarCFH Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or recommend us to a friend. It helps immensely. Download here! Full Article podcast
arl Current status: no power at home, so an early dinner out with... By ceejbot.tumblr.com Published On :: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 17:56:18 -0800 Current status: no power at home, so an early dinner out with David instead of our planned cooking. https://ift.tt/2T0Cx3j Full Article instagram photography life
arl Book Giveaway, Advice For Young Writers from Karla Valenti (MARIE CURIE & THE POWER OF PERSISTENCE) By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Mar 2020 15:40:21 +0000 GIVEAWAY (U.S. only): Karla is giving away a copy of Marie Curie And The Power Of Persistence, written by Karla Valenti and illustrated by Annalisa Beghelli! *** ENTER HERE *** Karla Arenas Valenti was born and raised in Mexico. Since then she has put down roots in a number of countries she now calls home: Japan, France, Germany, and the U.S. where she lives in the Chicagoland area with her husband and three kids. She writes picture books and middle grade novels. You can find out more about Karla at www.karlavalenti.com or connect with her on Facebook or Twitter @KV_writes. I asked Karla to describe her book, and here's what she replied: My Super Science Heroes is a picture book series for children ages 4-8. The series focuses on key scientists, but rather than defining those scientists by what they did (their achievements), we are choosing to highlight who they were (the traits that made those achievements possible). This distinction is important as it allows readers (young and old) to re-frame what it means to “succeed” - in other words, you do not need to be a genius or Nobel-prize winner in order to be a hero in your own life. Arguably, what makes someone a hero is how they make use of their own “super powers” in pursuit of their dreams. And what are these super powers? The first one we chose to highlight is persistence. Throughout her personal and professional life, Marie Curie encountered many societal and institutional limitations that threatened to block her progress. Rather than telling our young readers about these challenges, however, we chose to show them. Enter Mr. Opposition, a character designed to embody these counterforces and give Marie a chance to prove her persistence to all her fans and readers. In this way, Marie’s ultimate success and notable achievements are not presented as the inevitable result of a gifted mind. Rather, we are honoring the tremendous effort she exhibited in never giving up on her dreams, a super power indeed. Our next book focuses on the power of curiosity, exemplified by Alan Turing and his minion, Miss Enigma (due out Jan 2021). My Super Science Heroes is unlike any other children’s book series focusing on historical figures, and we hope it will inspire countless of young scientists (and non-scientists) as they develop their own super powers. Q: How did MARIE CURIE AND THE POWER OF PERSISTENCE get published? This is a story about the unexpected surprises that come our way when we are open to any (and sometimes unconventional) opportunities. I was living in Europe at the time, and a friend forwarded an open call for story submissions run by a non-profit science association. The Marie Curie Alumni Association (MCAA) was looking for a creative way to raise funds to support their science initiatives, so they launched a contest for picture book submissions. The topic was a story about Marie Curie, but told in a way that would excite young readers about science As a fiction writer, I was hesitant at first to submit a story on a non-fiction topic. However, I also viewed this as an opportunity to flex my creative wings, so I took the challenge and wrote a story about Marie Curie... the super hero. As I researched her life, it became clear that, while she certainly accomplished a great deal as a scientist, her most notable achievement was her unwavering persistence in facing a number of challenges throughout her life. Persistence! A skill highly valued in the scientific community (and one present in all of us). What if the book was about Marie Curie using her power of persistence to achieve great things in the scientific world? What if she had an evil nemesis who lived in a craggy cave deep underground, and whose sole purpose was preventing the spread of knowledge? What if he sent his minion, Mr. Opposition, to stop Marie in her heroic journey? Thus was born the My Super Science Heroes series. It was an unconventional premise, but I decided to submit the story. To my tremendous surprise, I won! Working with Micaela Crespo Quesada (a super scientist herself) and the MCAA association, we identified the perfect illustrator for the project, Annalisa Beghelli. Her artwork brilliantly captured the super hero themes we wanted to explore. In a true collaboration, the three of us worked to bring this project to life. Initially, the project was going to be funded exclusively through a global crowdsourcing campaign. Not only did we exceed our goal by 20%, but a couple weeks into the campaign, we received an offer by Kelly Barrales-Saylor at Sourcebooks for world rights. Fast forward to today as we celebrate the world publication on April 7th of Marie Curie and the Power of Persistence. Q. What advice do you have for young writers? In a perhaps not-so-ironic twist, the most valuable piece of advice I can offer is to believe in the power of persistence. And I hesitate to say this is only relevant to young writers (since I myself only learned this as a writer after many years). The journey I have taken to get to this point has not been a short (or always-joyful) one. Indeed, it has been more agonizing than not, more heart-breaking than uplifting, and certainly taken a lot longer than I expected. There have been plenty of opportunities for me to give up and walk away (and if I'm honest, there have been moments in my life where I've had to do that). However, I am fiercely proud of this story because it feels like a real badge of honor; a testament to the courage it takes to pick up your "pen" and keep putting words to paper, despite everything standing in your way. The truth is, we all have our own version of Mr. Opposition, and we all must do battle with the nemesis that intends to bring us down. But word by word, line by line, we can persist. That is no small thing. -- For more interviews, see my Inkygirl Interview Archive. Also see Advice For Young Writers and Illustrators, a compilation of tips generously offered by children's book creators I've interviewed over the years. Full Article Advice for young artists and young writers Inkygirl Interviews Three Questions nonfiction writing picture books
arl upcoming Snarlas shows By doriszineblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Sun, 15 Aug 2010 00:16:00 +0000 Here's where we're playing....Aug. 19 Pittsburgh with Surrender. at Zach's house. I'm not sure of the addressAug 20 (maybe)Athens OH 35 Brown St Sept 16 Baria KY, maybeSept 19 Ida work party, Tennesse (they need more people to come to this work party. check it out at www.workhardstayhard.comSept 21 Chatanooga - probably at SluggosSept 23 Asheville NC, Buccannen St house (I don't know how to spell it) Full Article snarlas
arl upcoming Snarlas shows By doriszineblog.blogspot.com Published On :: Thu, 19 May 2011 02:50:00 +0000 We'll be playing in Columbus May 24, with Pink Houses and Lose the Tude, at the Villa Villa Kula house.then on may 30 in Athens OH with Street Legal at Smiling SkullJune 4, Chattanooga TN at the Do You Hear We fest! Full Article shows
arl How to Cook Beans that are Tender, Creamy, and Nearly Perfect By feeds.101cookbooks.com Published On :: Sat, 25 Apr 2020 02:19:21 +0000 The best way I know to cook beans, and the one I always return to. A version of the much-loved Tuscan bean recipe - fagioli al fiasco. Traditionally, beans were baked overnight in a Chianti bottle placed near the embers of that night's fire. While not exactly authentic (no fire here), I do a riff on the general idea, using a low-temperature oven and enamel-lined pot. Continue reading How to Cook Beans that are Tender, Creamy, and Nearly Perfect on 101 Cookbooks Full Article 100+ Vegetarian Recipes 260+ Vegan Recipes Gluten Free Recipes Side Dish Recipes Whole Food Plant-Based Diet Recipes
arl Nearly 20,000 Georgia Teens Are Issued Driver's Licenses Without a Road Test By catless.ncl.ac.uk Published On :: Full Article
arl Britt Adamson named 2020 Searle Scholar for studies of genome editing By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 11:23:49 -0400 Britt Adamson, an assistant professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, has been named a 2020 Searle Scholar. The program supports bold research programs with the potential to discover fundamental insights and improve health. Full Article
arl EPA Selects Nine Projects in California to Receive Nearly $4 Million for Revitalization of Contaminated Properties By www.epa.gov Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 00:00:00 -0400 SAN FRANCISCO - Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced nine projects across California will receive a total of nearly $4 million to assess and clean up contaminated properties under the agency’s Brownfields Program. Full Article
arl Derbyshire 86 Chesterfield 768 hours what is the connection between hairdressers barbers and SpaceX Starlink By www.travelblog.org Published On :: The butterfly counts not months but moments and has time enough Rabindranath Tagore one of my favourites. I saw the first butterfly of the season today . A Cabbage White the scourge of gardeners who love their cabbages . The pretty white things lays Full Article
arl Charlottetown Confederation Bridge Cap Pele 113km Total 4962km By www.travelblog.org Published On :: SPAl final hasta las 10 no he salido del hostal ya que habia desayuno incluido. De ahi por la carretera transcanadiense directamente hasta el puente. Un seor puente 13 km de largo hubiese sido divertido recorrerlo en bici pero esta prohibido y Full Article
arl Marseille Arles Avignon in Southern France 9 and 10 Aug 2013 By www.travelblog.org Published On :: Marseille Arles Avignon in Southern France 9 and 10 Aug 2013 After driving towards Marseille pronounced Marsay just before lunch we hit the bumper to bumper traffic of the French Riviera in summer holidays again. We crawled along but finally got Full Article
arl Carlsbad Caverns By www.travelblog.org Published On :: Greetings from Carlsbad NM We made it here yesterday from El Paso Texas. It was an easy 160 mile day. We are staying at the Carlsbad RV Park just outside of Carlsbad. It is an OK park. There are lot's of oil worker staying here. Many are from Texas. It Full Article
arl Time for the emperors-in-waiting who run Facebook to just admit they're evil | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-06-30T17:30:00Z Facebook's emotion study reveals it is hopelessly disconnected from emotional reality: that people get upset when people they care about are unhappy• Alex Hern: The final straw for Facebook?This weekend we learned that Facebook had deliberately manipulated the emotional content of 689,003 users' news feeds as part of an experiment to see what kind of psychological impact it would have. For one week in January 2012, some users saw chiefly positive stories (kitten videos, brownie recipes and assorted LOLs), while others were force-fed despair (breakups, health woes and seal-clubbing holiday snaps). And guess what happened?"The results show emotional contagion," decided the scientists. Continue reading... Full Article Facebook Media Internet Social networking Technology
arl What is Drip and how, precisely, will it help the government ruin your life? | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-07-14T19:00:00Z The Data Retention and Investigatory Powers bill is the most tedious outrage ever, right down to the dreary acronym. But oh, the horrors it will bring …David Cameron cares about your safety. It's all he ever thinks about. It's his passion. He's passionate about it. Every time David Cameron thinks about how safe he'd like to keep you, passion overcomes him and he has to have a lie down. With his eyes shut. A bit like he's having a nap and doesn't care about your safety at all.Right now he's so committed to keeping you safe, he's rushing something called the Drip bill through the House of Commons. Drip stands for Data Retention and Investigatory Powers and critics are calling it yet another erosion of civil liberties and … see, I've lost you because it's just so bloody boring. Maybe it's just me, but whenever I hear about some fresh internet privacy outrage my brain enters screensaver mode and displays that looped news footage of mumblin' Edward Snowden and I automatically nod off only to be awoken shortly afterwards by the sound of my forehead colliding sharply with the table. Continue reading... Full Article Surveillance World news Privacy UK news
arl How can a party sell a policy when it can't even sell a decent keyring? | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-07-28T19:00:00Z Ukip has made thousands from merchandise on its online store. What could the other parties learn from it?It can't be easy trying to fund a political movement in the current climate, when politicians are about as popular as a wasp in a submarine. You'd have more luck organising a whip-round for President Assad. That's why politicians are forced to suck up to billionaire donors, who expect them to tailor their policies accordingly, thereby further widening the gulf between parties and the public.But wait. Not all parties are alike. The Daily Telegraph has revealed that, last year, Ukip made a whopping £80,000 from flogging branded merchandise to the public from its online store. Continue reading... Full Article Politics UK Independence party (Ukip) Labour Conservatives
arl Want to silence a two-year-old? Try teaching it to ride a motorbike | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-08-11T19:00:00Z I decided to introduce my son to video games. We soon found one he liked … and I mean really, really likedSo I decided to introduce my two-year-old son to the world of video games. Before you accuse me of hobbling my offspring's mind, I'd like to point out that a) television is 2,000 times worse, so shove that up your Night Garden and b) I also decided to counterbalance the gaming with exposure to high culture. For every 10 minutes of Fruit Ninja during daylight hours, he'd get 10 pages of a critically acclaimed novel at bedtime. We're currently halfway through The Magus by John Fowles, which he's enjoying immensely. He finds some passages so moving that his protracted sobs drown out my reading completely, and when I return to the beginning of the chapter to start again, he leaps up screaming, trying to snatch the book out of my hands with delight.Like any self-respecting 2014 toddler, he can swipe, pat and jab at games on a smartphone or tablet, but smartphone games aren't real games. They're interactive dumbshows designed to sedate suicidal commuters. And they're not just basic but insulting, often introducing themselves as free-to-play simply so they can extort money from you later in exchange for more levels or less terrible gameplay. Either that or they fund themselves with pop-up adverts that defile the screen like streaks on a toilet bowl. Continue reading... Full Article Games Children's tech Family Life and style Technology Culture
arl 2014 is so horrible, nothing can cheer us up. Not even Simon Cowell with a bucket on his head | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-08-25T19:00:00Z Russia v Ukraine, Isis, Boris Johnson, Cliff Richard and Ebola – there's not much to be cheerful about right now, though the ice bucket challenge is working overtimeAh. Right. Looks like I picked a bad week to draw inspiration from current affairs for this knockabout comedy column. The news is rarely a warehouse of carefree chuckles but at the moment it's like an apocalyptic playlist on perpetual shuffle, with one harrowing crisis overlapping another. Palestine, Libya, Syria … it's all horrifying and upsetting. Not a single nice thing has happened all year, except the recent stealth launch of Cadbury's Wispa Biscuits, and even "stealth launch of Wispa Biscuits" sounds like a terrible euphemism for breaking wind.The planet is currently playing host to countless alarming crises. There's the nail-biting tension of Russia v Ukraine, a depressing standoff overseen by facial-expression-avoider Vladimir Putin. I don't know if all the strings connecting Putin's face muscles to his brain were accidentally severed during a tragic smiling accident years ago, but I've seen brickwork convey more emotion. Continue reading... Full Article World news UK news Media Internet
arl Apple’s software updates are like changing the water in a fish tank. I’d rather let the fish die | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-09-22T17:47:06Z The all-new iPhones and Apple Watch can be easily avoided but there’s no escaping iOS 8The past few weeks haven’t been great for Apple. First they were implicated in the stolen celebrity nude photo disaster, which reminded everybody how easily clouds leak. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think the iPhone is generally marketed as a diabolical timewasting device with the potential to wreak a grotesque and devastating invasion of your personal privacy. They tend to focus more on all the cool colours it comes in.Then they launched the horrible-looking Apple Watch, which does everything an iPhone can do, but more expensively and pointlessly, and on a slightly different part of your body. Only an unhealthily devoted Apple fanatic could bear to wear a Apple Watch, and even that poor notional idiot would have to keep putting their iPhone down in order to operate the damn thing. It’ll scarcely be used for telling the time, just as the iPhone is scarcely used for making calls. It’s not a watch. It’s a gaudy wristband aimed at raising awareness of Chinese factory conditions. Or a handy visual tag that helps con artists instantly identify gullible rich idiots in a crowd. Continue reading... Full Article iPhone 6 Apple Watch Apple Computing Technology Mobile phones iPhone Smartphones
arl This awesome dissection of internet hyperbole will make you cry and change your life | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-10-06T19:00:10Z Exaggeration is the official language of the internet. Only the most strident statements have any impact. Oversteer and oversell, all the timeThe other day I was talking to a music fan who’d recently gone to see one of Kate Bush’s widely praised live appearances. Naturally I was keen to hear a first-hand account of this era-defining event, so I asked what it was like.“The first half was great,” she said. “But the second half got a bit boring.” Continue reading... Full Article Internet Technology YouTube Facebook Twitter Social networking Digital media Kate Bush Music Pop and rock Culture
arl Gamergate: the internet is the toughest game in town – if you’re playing as a woman | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-10-20T19:00:01Z It’s a stealth adventure with nowhere to hide and hundreds of respawning enemies waiting to attack you the moment you stand out in any wayI haven’t always been the kind of man who plays videogames. I used to be the kind of boy who played videogames. We’re inseparable, games and I. If you cut me, I’d bleed pixels. Or blood. Probably blood, come to think of it.Games get a bad press compared with, say, opera – even though they’re obviously better, because no opera has ever compelled an audience member to collect a giant mushroom and jump across some clouds. Nobody writes articles in which opera-lovers are mocked as adult babies who never grew out of make-believe and sing-song; obsessive misfits who flock to weird “opening nights” wearing elaborate “tuxedo” cosplay outfits. Continue reading... Full Article Technology Gamergate Games Internet Game culture Cyberbullying US news World news
arl Charlie Brooker | The fashion industry is responsible for everything that’s wrong with the world By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-11-03T20:00:02Z If the fashion industry truly cared about the future of our planet, it would issue a solitary line of unisex, one-size-fits-all smocks, then shut down for goodSo then. Alongside “eating a sandwich” and “holding up a copy of a newspaper”, we now have to add “wearing a T-shirt” to the growing list of Ordinary Things Ed Miliband Somehow Just Can’t Do. The other week he was pictured in Elle magazine wearing the Fawcett Society’s “This Is What a Feminist Looks Like” T-shirt. Last Sunday the Mail claimed those T-shirts are stitched together in a Mauritian sweatshop by women earning 62p an hour.A T-shirt. He can’t even wear a T-shirt without somehow condemning both himself and any surrounding witnesses to ridicule. What’s going to trip him up next? A doorknob? Next week he operates a doorknob so badly he fractures his wrist, and as the medics wheel him to the operating theatre, they accidentally knock an ageing war veteran off a waiting room chair, leaving him groaning in pain on the floor, at which point Miliband insists they stop his gurney so he can lean over and help the guy up, but he forgets about his fractured wrist, so as the 96-year-old decorated-war-hero-and-humbling-inspiration-to-us-all gingerly grabs his hand, Miliband abruptly screeches a barrage of agonised obscenities directly into his face, causing him to hit the floor again, fatally this time, in front of the world’s media, oh and also Miliband does a frightened little wee at the end, and they film that too. Continue reading... Full Article Fashion industry Politics Ed Miliband
arl A trafficked penguin, a creepy talking doll and trench warfare | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-11-24T20:00:04Z The John Lewis and Sainsbury’s ads have kickstarted an earlier-than-ever festive season in which we’ll shop or click our way to bankruptcy chasing 15% off the top Christmas products. But beware of My Friend Cayla …Hey, remember when Christmas used to last 12 days? Now it’s so bloated it’s virtually an epoch, lasting twice as long as the year it falls in. The early-warning signs keep changing: not so long ago the start of the holiday season was signified by the release of the Christmas edition of the Radio Times. Now it’s the annual unveiling of the John Lewis ad, which this year features a boy arranging for a trafficked overseas bird to be smuggled into the country inside a small container and presented like a gift-wrapped object to the laddish penguin mate who exists only in his troubled mind. They say psychopathic murderers often start their “careers” by doing ghastly things to animals: hopefully they’ll keep the storyline going year after year, as his illusory brain-penguin commands him to carry out increasingly hideous yuletide ceremonies, until eventually the advert consists of nothing but him appeasing the Penguin King by dancing in the moonlight wearing a necklace of ears and eyeballs, all of it seen through the sights of a police marksman positioned on the roof of a neighbour’s evacuated home.But this year, the John Lewis ad has been overshadowed by gargantuan supermarket and noted humanitarian anti-war campaigner J Sainsbury PLC, and its tear-jerking period piece in which a perfectly good war is ruined by a tragic outbreak of football. Continue reading... Full Article Christmas Life and style Retail industry
arl Goodbye, cruel 2014: we promise not to miss you once you’ve gone | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2014-12-22T20:28:37Z From flooding to Benefits Street, the rise of Ukip to the Apple Watch, the year was filled with huge, grim events. We could all use a lie-down over ChristmasSo 2014’s almost done, and unless you got married, or had your firstborn, or won a Subaru filled with Maltesers in a radio phone-in, it’s unlikely to be a year you’ll remember fondly. It was filled with huge, grim events. So is every year, of course, but in 2014 it seemed there were fewer light moments to offset the enveloping dread. And everyone seemed angry, all the time. A whole planet, gritting its teeth. Hundreds protesting. Thousands marching. Millions waiting to attach their internalised rage to a hashtag at a moment’s notice. We could all use a lie-down over Christmas.The year started badly for Britain when the sky decided to waterboard the lot of us. It rained incessantly throughout early January; big grey raindrops the size of cupboards. The government issued snorkels to anyone under 5ft 4in, while areas of Devon were submerged for so long the residents evolved gills and blowholes. Continue reading... Full Article
arl Never mind the 'selfie stick' – here are some REALLY useful inventions | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2015-01-05T20:00:06Z Products I’ve made up for the sheer giddy thrill of it include Total Farage Plus, which skilfully Photoshops the Ukip leader into whatever you’re looking atThis week it’s the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, an annual opportunity for tech companies to unveil their latest gizmos during January’s traditional slow news week, thereby picking up precious coverage that might otherwise be spent detailing something – anything – more important than an egg whisk with a USB port in the side.At the time of writing, the show is yet to kick off, although some of the offerings have already been unveiled – such as “Belty”, the world’s first “smart belt”, which monitors your waistline and tells you when it’s time to lose weight, just like a mirror or a close friend might. More excitingly, it adjusts to your girth (again, like a close friend might), and will tighten or loosen itself according to your current level of blubber. No word yet on whether it’s possible to pop a Belty round your neck and order it to squeeze you into the afterlife, but there’s no reason they can’t incorporate that feature in Belty 2.0, except maybe on basic ethical, moral and humanitarian grounds. Continue reading... Full Article CES 2015 CES Technology Nigel Farage
arl The new Mario is self aware. How long before he goes inside you to fix things? | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2015-01-19T20:00:02Z Researchers have created a version of Mario that experiences basic emotions – now he needs a purpose that affects the real world• It’s-a-me, Mario! And soon I’ll be playing my games without your help …January is traditionally a fairly sleepy month, current affairs-wise, but a horrified gawp at the news confirms that 2015 has already had one heck of a morning. Clearly it takes a lot to knock a garish underage sex allegation involving Prince Andrew off the news agenda, but the Parisian terror attacks managed it, partly because the horror of it all warranted such blanket coverage, but also because the resulting conversation about freedom of speech is taking up so many column inches, there’s scarcely room to run anything else. There hasn’t been this much furious debate about the merits of a cartoon since the introduction of Scrappy Doo.(Fun imaginary scenario: in a bid to revive their flagging ratings, ITV launch a live, feelgood Saturday night version of Celebrity Pictionary. But chaos ensues when Paddy McGuinness pulls the first card from the deck to discover it requires him to sketch the Prophet Muhammad.) Continue reading... Full Article Mario Artificial intelligence (AI) Super Mario Games Games consoles Game culture Computing Consciousness
arl The leaders’ debate: option paralysis and the wriggling opinion worm | Charlie Brooker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2015-04-06T19:00:10Z What sort of person can’t decide who to vote for, but can rate how much they like whatever they’re hearing out of five, and wants to sit there tapping a button accordingly?As the general election scuttles closer, the campaign grows more confusing by the moment, so it’s good that last week’s seven-way leaders’ debate brought some much-needed mayhem to the situation. Not so long ago we were bemoaning the lack of choice in a two-party system. Now we’ve got option paralysis.It had its moments. Nigel Farage complained about foreigners with HIV who enter Britain and immediately start wolfing down expensive medicine: greedy as well as sick. You’d think Farage might welcome immigrants with grave illnesses on the basis that they’re less likely to hang around as long, but apparently not. Say what you like about him – say it, write it down, daub it in 3ft-high cherry-red letters up the side of a prominent overpass on his regular commute if you must – but it’s undeniably refreshing to see a politician determined to speak his mind, indifferent to the absurd constraints of spin or basic human empathy. Never mind HIV sufferers – how much is Britain spending on refugees with cancer? Maybe he could put that statistic on a sandwich board and patrol the country in it, perhaps while ringing a bell and loudly commanding passersby to picture a nation under his command. Continue reading... Full Article Politics Leaders' debates General election 2015 Nigel Farage David Cameron Ed Miliband Voter apathy
arl Charlie Brooker: ‘The more horrible an idea, the funnier I find it’ By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2016-10-14T11:00:34Z As the anthology series Black Mirror returns, its creator explains what fuels the show’s twisted tales – and tells us where we’re going wrong with technologyA sadistic version of The X Factor where contestants perform for their own freedom. An immersive experience where criminals are subjected to the same terrors they inflicted on their victims, in front of a baying audience. A grotesque cartoon demagogue using TV and social media to obtain power. No, these aren’t scenes from the first term of a Donald Trump presidency, but something only marginally less traumatising, and infinitely more likely to happen: Charlie Brooker’s techy anthology series Black Mirror, a show its creator describes as made up of “deliciously horrible ‘what if’s”. Related: Black Mirror review – Charlie Brooker's splashy new series is still a sinister marvel Related: Modern tribes: the Pokémon Go aficionado Continue reading... Full Article Television Culture Television & radio Charlie Brooker Black Mirror Netflix Technology
arl Get ready for Crudstergram! Charlie Brooker's gadgets to save the world By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2019-06-01T05:00:59Z The Black Mirror creator invents exciting products to transform your life – from the workout that makes you feel like a saint to the world’s cleverest toilet I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but happiness is in sharp decline. Many people blame technology for our woes, and it’s not hard to see why. The internet is nothing but deranged screeching and fascist memes sitting atop a plateau of moldering desperation masquerading as ironic meaninglessness. No one has smiled in real life since 2011. But wait! Silicon Valley is waking up to the negative effect its products can have on us, and like the good Samaritans they are, they’re unveiling a whole new range of products aimed at making us feel good about ourselves. Here is an exclusive look at just a few of the cool gizmos and rad gadgets due to be unveiled at next year’s CES Consumer Electronics Show and featured in news reports, and then in shops, and then in your house before you even know it. Continue reading... Full Article Black Mirror Advertising Marketing & PR Media Television & radio Social media Culture Fitness Virtual reality Life and style Technology Comedy Charlie Brooker
arl Auto Executive Carlos Ghosn on His Risky Escape from Japan By www.spiegel.de Published On :: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 15:59:20 +0100 Former Renault-Nissan chairman and CEO Carlos Ghosn fled Japan in a dramatic escape just over a month ago. He is currently the subject of an Interpol search warrant. DER SPIEGEL met him in Beirut for an interview. Full Article
arl The science of Sundance: Digging into a theory the coronavirus was spreading early in Utah By www.sltrib.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 21:31:15 +0000 Full Article