Making It Illegal To Fail Science Students Who Argue Humans Co-Existed With Dinosaurs

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As American science students struggle to compete with the global competition, Oklahoma is moving forward with a law that could ban Biology teachers from failing students who argue that humans co-existed with dinosaurs. The state legislator’s committee in charge of education standards has approved a law that would forbid teachers from penalizing students who argue against widely accepted scientific theories, such as evolution and climate change.

“I proposed this bill because there are teachers and students who may be afraid of going against what they see in their textbooks,” said Republican State Representative Gus Blackwell who sponsored the Scientific Education and Academic Freedom Act, which can now go the state legislature for a vote.

Students are not exempt from being tested on textbook material, “but no student in any public school or institution shall be penalized in any way because the student may subscribe to a particular position on scientific theories,” reads the bill [PDF].

Not everyone is ecstatic about the bill, however. “An extremely high percentage of scientists will tell you that evolution doesn’t have scientific weaknesses,” said education director of the National Center for Science Education, Eric Meikle, to Mother Jones. “If every teacher, parent, and school board can decide what to teach on their own, you’re going to have chaos. You can’t deluge kids with every theory that’s ever been considered since the beginning of time.”

[Photo Credit: myfavoritedinosaur.com]

Web: http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/22/making-it-illegal-to-fail-science-students-who-argue-humans-co-existed-with-dinosaurs/

Segunda versión de Kinect llegará a Windows en 2014

Uno de los grandes anuncios que llegó junto a la consola XBOX One un par de días atrás, fue el del complemento Kinect 2.0 para reconocer el movimiento y la voz del jugador, tecnología que llega a su segunda versión y esta vez ofrece mayor precisión a la hora de hacer su tarea. Una variante del primer Kinect ya había llegado para PCs con sistema operativo Windows, por lo que Microsoft ahora anunció que Kinect 2.0 también dirá presente en la plataforma para computadoras tradicionales.

La compañía indicó que durante el año 2014 se lanzará el dispositivo, acompañado de las herramientas necesarias (SDK) para que los desarrolladores de software hagan aplicaciones propias, lo que supondrá el aprovechamiento de la tecnología y los sensores de Kinect 2.0 en programas de PC, abriendo las puertas a infinitas posibilidades en el amplio campo que ofrece Windows.

Entre las nuevas características que se podrán exprimir está la mayor fidelidad al momento de reconocer personas y la capacidad de captar movimientos sutiles de las extremidades, incluyendo expresiones faciales y hasta el pliegue de tu ropa. Existe además un campo de visibilidad ampliado para identificar varias personas al mismo tiempo, al mismo tiempo que un sensor infrarrojo permite al dispositivo funcionar incluso bajo condiciones de poca luz.

Link: Microsoft says new Kinect for Windows launching next year (The Verge)




Este artículo, fue publicado originalmente aquí: http://www.fayerwayer.com/2013/05/segunda-version-de-kinect-llegara-a-windows-en-2014/

Ahora podrás encontrar el amor en el metro de Praga

Dicen que el amor está en el aire, en internet y también podrá encontrarse en el subterráneo de Praga. La compañía Ropid anunció que planea implementar “vagones para solteros” en algunos de sus trenes a finales de este año.

Ahora para buscar pareja bastará subirse a uno de esos trenes y listo. De acuerdo a Filip Drapal, vocero de Ropid, la idea es invitar a la gente a que deje sus autos y comience a usar el transporte público, ya que hay cosas que puedes hacer ahí (como conocer al amor de tu vida).

Ropid comenzará a hacer pruebas para ver cuántos usuarios están interesados en el servicio. En caso de tener buena recepción, los vagones de solteros podrían implementarse en todos los trenes de la ciudad.

La próxima vez que visiten Europa recuerden darse una vuelta por Praga.

Link: Prague metro plans to launch love train for singles (via The Verge)




Este artículo, fue publicado originalmente aquí: http://www.fayerwayer.com/2013/05/ahora-podras-encontrar-el-amor-en-el-metro-de-praga/

Social Crowdfunding Platform Rally.org Expands To Europe With New Berlin Incubator And Donations In Euros, With Pounds Coming Soon

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Rally.org, the U.S.-based crowdfunding platform designed for socially-minded causes, is taking its mission to Europe. Today, the startup is opening an incubator in Berlin, its first outside of the U.S., and on a limited beta will start to process donations made on its proprietary payment platform in euros, with the intention of adding British pounds and other currencies in the very near future.

Rally.org — which, commendably, used its own platform to raise $7.9 million from the likes of Relay Ventures, Mike Maples of Floodgate Fund, Reid Hoffman of Greylock Partners, Kevin Rose of Google Ventures, Craig Shapiro of Collaborative Fund, Michael Birch of Bebo, Tim Ferriss and Eric Ries — recently passed 3 million people contributing to 23,000 campaigns on its platform, and the idea is to tap into more local social causes and fundraising activities in this part of the world to grow that base even more.

In an interview with TechCrunch, Rally.org co-founder and CEO Tom Serres says that the company chose Berlin for its incubator and head office partly because Rally.org had already opened a Rallypad co-working space of sorts in the city last year; and partly because it’s a very startup-friendly city economically (in other words, it doesn’t cost an arm and a leg to start a new company there). “We wanted a community, not just a product,” he said.

But the intention is to expand very soon to the UK, which Serres notes has the highest concentration in Europe of people who donate money to good causes. For Rally.org, a cause can be anything from a donation drive for a non-profit; to an environmental startup project aimed at improving, say, energy consumption; to someone looking to raise money for their education — not a small issue in Europe, where student fees are skyrocketing in many countries as states pull back spending in these recessionary times. (Rally takes a 5.75% commission on all final fundraises.)

While crowdfunding sites seem to be approaching a dime a dozen these days, Rally.org has a few points that distinguish it from the pack. Its emphasis on good causes is the obvious one. But the other may be the one that helps it grow: it has built its own payment platform — independent of PayPal, Amazon and the rest — that underpins the service, which is already capable of handling 17 different currencies, says Serres.

“My long term vision is to be the infrastructre of the next economy, the cause economy,” Serres told TechCrunch, describing a future where we make purchasing decisions based on making bigger statements and helping the world: think Tom’s Shoes and its idea of donating one pair to a needy child for each pair bought, expanded into all of your daily transactions. “The idea is: Everywhere I go I make a statement to the world.”

Serres points out every person who makes a contribution through Rally.org gets a virtual wallet, and the idea is to eventually make that wallet into something that consumers can use for more donations, as well as for purchases elsewhere.

For now, those posting campaigns on Rally.org will need to have German bank accounts to receive funds — although this will expand over time, Serres says. Companies based in the company’s Berlin incubator — Startup Weekend, music resource-sharing company Muzup, and social relocation community G1OBALS — will be the first Europeans to use the product. Another group is starting a campaign to preserve Berlin’s princesses garden, Prinzessinnengarten.

Site: http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/07/social-crowdfunding-platform-rally-org-expands-to-europe-with-new-berlin-incubator/

Google Encourages Going Green For Earth Day With “Nature’s Engineers” Micro Site

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Biomimicry is an engineering field that takes cues from nature to help solve and address human problems, and Google today launched a new website at its Google Green initiative that highlights some of the ways nature’s engineers can inspire and guide human behavior. The site uses gorgeous National Geographic images along with brief descriptions of how the natural antecedent relates to the human concept, and then provides Google-sourced tools to help people emulate that activity.

Is it basically an ad? Yes. Is it a smart one? Definitely. Google manages to pitch pretty much all of its major web- and app-based offerings and services in a single slide show, with direct integrations built in that make it possible to take immediate action based on the trends they choose to highlight. You can do a local search for recycled and upcycled decorating material, grab apps and movies on the subjects from Google Play, search for maps and join Google+ communities and more. My only complaint is that Google buries the science at the end of the site in linked academic articles for each animal or plant behavior, where those probably should have been at least linked somewhere in each well-designed spread right alongside the Google service advertisements.

Some might call this empty lip-service to Earth Day, which takes place today and probably would be better served by Google powering down a server farm or two for a few hours, but the concepts highlighted (including ride sharing, composting, energy conservation and diet modification) are solid ones and would have genuinely beneficial ecological effects if adopted by large portions of the community. Plus it’s an impressive example of web design in its own right, and a look at what Google can do with content marketing models which could be a key vector for it to exploit as the nature of online advertising continues to shift.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/04/22/google-encourages-going-green-for-earth-day-with-natures-engineers-micro-site/

Estudio: Adolescentes pierden entusiasmo por Facebook en EE.UU.

Un estudio realizado por Pew Internet en Estados Unidos afirma que varios adolescentes entre 12 y 17 años han “perdido entusiasmo” por Facebook, aun cuando se mantiene como la red social más utilizada en este grupo etario. De acuerdo al documento, los jóvenes están descontentos con el aumento de la cantidad de adultos en el sitio, se aburren de los amigos que comparten detalles poco interesantes, y se cansan del “drama” que ocurre en la red social.

Por otro lado, manejar el perfil y la reputación de uno mismo en la red es estresante, lo que contribuiría a este desencanto. Aun así, muchos sienten que es necesario mantenerse en Facebook para no perderse lo que está ocurriendo en su entorno, de tal modo que 94% de los adolescentes que usan redes sociales mantienen una cuenta en este sitio.

El uso de Twitter entre los jóvenes de todos modos subió de 16% en 2011 a 24% en 2012, según Pew. De acuerdo al documento, un adolescente típico tiene 79 seguidores en la red de microblogging. La tercera red más utilizada es Instagram, donde 11% de los entrevistados tiene una cuenta.

Pese a la pérdida de entusiasmo, Facebook se mantiene como la red social más utilizada por el grupo, donde un adolescente promedio cuenta con 300 amigos. Según el estudio, ha aumentado la cantidad de información que los jóvenes comparten sobre sí mismos en el sitio: 91% sube fotos de ellos, 71% indica la escuela a la que asiste, 71% dice en qué ciudad vive, 53% señala su correo electrónico y 20% entrega su número de celular.

Por otro lado, parece haber una buena conciencia sobre la privacidad, ya que el 60% de los usuarios adolescentes del sitio mantiene su perfil visible sólo para los amigos, y el 56% asegura que es fácil manejar su configuración de privacidad.

Link: Teens, social media and privacy (Pew Internet & American Life Project)




Este artículo, fue publicado originalmente aquí: http://www.fayerwayer.com/2013/05/estudio-adolescentes-pierden-entusiasmo-por-facebook-en-ee-uu/

QloudSync: A Dropbox Competitor Running On 100% Renewable Energy

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There is no shortage of cloud-based file storage and synchronization solutions: Dropbox, Box.net, Ubuntu One, and on and on and on. Most offer pretty much the same things. A few niche players offer something special, like Spideroak‘s approach to encryption, or ownCloud‘s host-it-yourself solution. QloudSync puts forward two interesting differentiators: it’s powered by 100% renewable energy, and it’s hosted in Iceland.

From a feature perspective, QloudSync isn’t anything new. File storage and synchronization. Share links with others. Stream music and video. The client apps are open source, and built atop SparkleShare.

QloudSync runs on GreenQloud‘s ComputeQloud and StorageQloud, which offer API compatibility with Amazon EC2 and S3. What is different about GreenQloud’s offerings, though, are that they run on renewable energy and claim to be carbon neutral, without the use of emissions offsets of any kind. Users of GreenQloud’s services can easily share their carbon savings to the social media outlet of their choice.

We see a great opportunity in utilizing Iceland’s abundant 100% renewable geothermal and hydro energy infrastructure, naturally cool climate and strategic location as a means to clean up IT and greatly reduce the industry’s carbon footprint.

GreenQloud is also making a strong play for the fact that they’re hosted in Iceland. According to them, your data “is safe from SOPA, PIPA, ACTA, Patriot act because StorageQloud runs from data centers in Iceland.” This doesn’t strike me as strong reason to use GreenQloud by itself, but it may be one of several that makes them a more attractive option in the sea of similar products.

If you’re at SXSW, stop by booth #1326 in the convention center and say hello to them.

Web: http://techcrunch.com/2013/03/11/qloudsync-a-dropbox-competitor-running-on-100-renewable-energy/

Up Close With The Next Big Home Commodity: LED Lighting

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Editor’s note: Sal Cangeloso is the editor of Geek.com and wrote a new book on an odd topic. It’s called LED Lighting: A Primer to Lighting the Future and it focuses on the upcoming explosion in LED manufacturing, offering a basic understanding of the technology and an interesting look at the history of LED lights.

You can buy LED Lighting: A Primer to Lighting the Future here and the first three commenters below get a copy of the book. Here is an excerpt from the first chapter of the book discussing the growth of lighting from old-timey incandescents to modern LED technology.

The incandescent bulb is a good place to start with any talk about lighting. This design has had tremendous longevity (over 130 years) and it makes for a cheap, versatile bulb. Unfortunately, this design is also power-hungry, inefficient, short-lived (with some exceptions), and fragile. They produce a minimum amount of lumens-per-watt, though they’ve made appreciable gains over the years, and are highly sensitive to power conditions. For example, a 5% reduction in voltage could double the life of a bulb while only decreasing light output by 20%.

One of the most notable strengths of the incandescent is the quality of the light it provides. This isn’t as easy to define as some of the other characteristics that will be covered, but it’s an important one when it comes to consumer adoption. After all, it’s nice to try to sell people on longevity and power savings, but if they think that the new bulbs are ugly or are too different from what they know, you’ll find them hoarding 75W and 100W incandescents before such bulbs are removed from the shelves.

Quality of light means that in order for people to be comfortable with the light these bulbs provide, the bulbs will need a color temperature that they find to be in an acceptable range, a high degree of color accuracy (usually measured by CRI), and a usable light pattern, to name a few qualities. The bigger point, as any early CFL or LED bulb buyer could tell you, is that if the bulbs don’t produce attractive light that people are comfortable being around, it won’t matter how long they last or how little power they consume.

Incandescents have good qualities, but ultimately their inefficiency means they are not a viable solution moving forward. Even modern incandescents can turn about 90% of the energy they take in into heat, which is obviously wasteful and inefficient in the extreme. Physicists might argue that this isn’t wasteful at all, and you might enjoy the heat they provide, but most of us want to leave the lighting to the lights and the heating to our furnaces. Before we demonize the long-standing bulb design, it’s worth noting that there is such a thing as efficient incandescence. While these are in fact more efficient versions of the incandescent bulb, they are still not at the level of top CFLs and LEDs. In fact, GE was working on a high-efficiency incandescent (HEI) for about 18 months, but gave up on it in order to focus its efforts on LED and organic LED (OLED) bulbs. HEIs were said to produce about 30 lm/W with the ultimate goal of doubling that amount.The halogen lamp is a type of incandescent that operates hotter and lasts longer, but its efficiency gains are minimal.

The much-maligned CFL solves some of the efficiency problems of incandescent bulbs, usually producing around 50 lm/W. Unfortunately, each bulb contains a small amount of mercury (about 4 milligrams per bulb), so disposal can be a problem, especially if the thin, usually helical, glass breaks. The bulbs have reasonably long lives, usually rated for 5,000 to 15,000 hours—but they don’t last nearly that long if they are used in short time spans as rapid cycling is bad for the bulbs. That means a CFL in a bathroom or closet might not last much longer than an incandescent bulb, despite what it says on the package. In fact, a CFL that runs for an average of 15 minutes at a time might last just 40% of its rated lifespan. Alternatively, a CFL that is used continuously from the first time it was turned on might last close to twice its expected lifespan.

CFLs saw a big jump in marketshare in 2007, capturing around23% of the market, but have been in decline over the last year or so, despite the bulbs being widely available, affordable to purchase, and much cheaper to operate than incandescents. Part of this is due to an increasing number of consumers learning about the CFL’s use of mercury, but current economic conditions also indicate that people have simply been looking for a more affordable option. In that respect, incandescents still cannot be beat.

One of the most important characteristics of LED lighting is that they are solid-state. “Solid-state” might be a term we normally associate with computer parts (as in the solid-state drive) but it’s not something the casual LED buyer will ever consider. The concept is quite simple: rather than generating light through burning or gas-discharge, LEDs use semiconductors. The is the most fundamental and important distinction that determines why LED lights have their unique characteristics and will be able to have such an impact on the lighting market. As seen in other industries, semiconductors improve at an exponential rate and have a way of taking over wherever they are used. Lighting should prove to be no different.

Of course, LEDs are just one type of solid-state lighting; there are also organic LEDs (OLEDs) and polymer LEDs (PLEDs). Right now, the LED is the main focus of SSL adoption and its future looks quite promising, thanks to the efficiency gains it brings to the market. OLEDs and their carbon-based semiconductors have potential, but high costs mean they won’t be a viable option as soon as standard LEDs.

The advent of solid-state lighting doesn’t just mean more efficiency. Just as with the introduction of high technology to other parts of our lives—from our phones, to our mail, to our televisions—light is now high-tech. In this case, it’s not the tech that makes the difference, it’s that this latest step means our lights could soon be gadgets. Today’s technology brings with it intelligence and connectivity, which makes way for lights that can be tracked, controlled remotely, and designed to work with other devices. While the humble incandescent was just a conduit for electricity and output both light and heat, a modern-day bulb can be and do much more.

What does this all mean for the LED lamp? Basically, the time is ripe for growth. LED adoption is low at the moment, but not because purchasing one won’t pay off. An LED bulb will pay for itself many times over thanks to its energy savings, but the high initial cost is just too much of a hurdle for many businesses and is unpalatable for even more consumers. As prices drop we’ll see a dramatic growth, just as CFLs grew when it was clear that they could lead to long-term savings and could, in fact, provide acceptable light for our kitchens and living rooms, not just offices.

Reference: http://techcrunch.com/2012/09/30/up-close-with-the-next-big-home-commodity-led-lighting/

“One More Time” de Daft Punk hecho con disqueteras, en homenaje al fallecido Romanthony

Esta semana se conoció la noticia del fallecimiento del cantante, productor y DJ, Anthony Moore, conocido por su nombre artístico Romanthony, pero más aún, por haber sido la voz del principal hit del dúo francés Daft Punk lanzado a fines del año 2000, el single One More Time.

La voz del cantante pasaba por cientos de filtros y efectos sin perder su timbre original, algo que convirtió a esta canción en un éxito mundial además de una referencia posterior para muchos músicos que comenzaron a utilizar ese mismo recurso de la voz robótica.

En homenaje a este artista, los dejamos con la versión de One More Time interpretada por seis disqueteras sincronizadas. El dúo Daft Punk acaba de lanzar su nuevo disco Random Access Memories generando una revolución en las redes sociales sobre la expectativa previa a su lanzamiento.

Click aqui para ver el video.




Este artículo, fue publicado originalmente aquí: http://www.fayerwayer.com/2013/05/one-more-time-de-daft-punk-hecho-con-disketteras-en-homenaje-al-fallecido-romanthony/

Google Asks Utilities To Make It Easier For Companies To Buy Renewable Energy

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Google has long had an interest in renewable energy and has now invested more than $1 billion of its own money in alternative energy projects. However, as the company notes in a blog post and white paper today, it’s not always easy for companies that want to buy renewable energy to do so, given that most utilities don’t yet offer a renewable power option yet. In its white paper, Google lays out a plan that would make it easier for more companies to buy green energy.

Currently, Google says, businesses have the option to install on-site generation (like the solar cells on its Mountain View headquarters’ roof), buy renewable energy certificates or to sign power purchase agreements. All of these approaches, however, Google argues, have significant downsides. On-site generation usually can’t produce enough energy to power a facility 24/7, for example, and renewable energy certificates don’t “provide assurance that the price paid for RECs is being used to support additional investment in new renewable power generation.”

For the most part, companies also have to accept that at least a part of their generation mix includes some carbon-intensive sources. Currently, if a company wants renewable power — and is willing to pay for it — it still can’t get it in most places because it’s simply not being offered.

The reason for this, Google argues, is that historically, utilities never designed their rate schedules around a specific category of power generation (though it’s worth noting that at least some utilities recently started offering this option). Instead, the focus was always purely on cost and reliability.

So how does Google plan to change this? The company wants utilities to offer companies like Google the choice to buy renewable energy through a new class of service. The service would be voluntary, provided only to those companies that request it but open to all customers that want it and meet basic criteria.” The cost of procuring the renewable energy would only be passed on to those customers who select this option and not impact anybody else.

You can read more about the exact details of the proposal here, and we have embedded the proposal below.

Google also plans to put this plan into action. As part of the planned $600 million expansion of its Lenoir, N.C. data center, the company has partnered with Duke Energy to develop a new program based on its ideas. Duke Energy still has to file this plan with the N.C. state commission, though, which Google says it will do within the next 90 days.

Google’s Renewable Energy Options Proposal



More: http://techcrunch.com/2013/04/19/google-utilities-green-energy/