Category: News

  • OtF Core: Ethical Futurism (from 2006)

    (This is the original Ethical Futurism piece I wrote for Futurismic in 2006; I intend to update and build on it, but I wanted to make sure the original could be found in its entirety here.)

    What does it mean to be an “ethical futurist?”

    I don’t mean just the basics of being an ethical human being, or even the particular ethical guidelines one might see for any kind of professional — disclosure of conflicts of interest, for example, or honesty in transactions. I mean the ethical conventions that would be essentially unique to futurists. What kinds of rules should apply to those of us who make a living (or a life’s goal) out of thinking about what may come?

    Futurists — including scenario planners, trend-spotters, foresight specialists, paradigm engineers, and the myriad other labels we use — have something of an odd professional role. We are akin to reporters, but we’re reporters of events that have not yet happened — and may not happen. We are analysts, but analysts of possibilities, not histories. We’re science fiction storytellers, but the stories we tell are less for entertainment than for enlightenment. And, much to our surprise, we may be much more influential than we expect.

    It’s not that no futurists have considered ethical issues before. Foresight professionals regularly grapple with the question of what kinds of ethical guidelines should govern futurism, in mailing lists, organizational debates, and academic papers. But — to my surprise — neither of the two main professional organizations for futurists, the World Future Society and the Association of Professional Futurists, have any lists, documents or debates on the subject available to the public. This doesn’t mean that futurists are inclined to behave unethically or amorally, but simply that there seems to be no overarching set of principles for the field, at least none open to the broader community in which futurists act.

    As I gave this some thought, it struck me that futurists are not alone in thinking about tomorrow professionally. Most business consultant types also concern themselves with what may come, with the results of corporate decisions and organizational choices. But the difference between that sort of business consulting and foresight consulting comes down to the difference between outcomes and consequences. Outcomes are the (immediate or longer-term) results of actions; consequences are how those actions connect to the choices and actions of others, and to the larger context of society, the environment, and the future itself.

    As I see it, then, where business professionals are responsible to the client and their various stakeholders, foresight professionals are responsible to the future.

    Here’s what I think that means:

    It means that the first duty of an ethical futurist is to act in the interests of the stakeholders yet to come — those who would suffer harm in the future from choices made in the present. This harm could come (in my view) in the form of fewer options or possibilities for development, less ecological diversity and environmental stability, and greater risks to the health and well-being of people and other species on the planet. Futurists, as those people who have chosen to become navigators for society — responsible for watching the path ahead — have a particular responsibility for safeguard that path, and to ensure that the people making strategic choices about actions and policies have the opportunity to do so wisely.

    From this, I would argue for the following set of ethical guidelines:

    An ethical futurist has a responsibility not to let the desires of a client (or audience, or collaborator) for a particular outcome blind him or her to the consequences of that goal, and will always informs the client of both the risks and rewards.

    An ethical futurist has the responsibility to understand, as fully as possible, the range of issues and systems connected to the question under consideration, to avoid missing critical potential consequences.

    An ethical futurist has the responsibility to acknowledge and make her or his client (audience, collaborators) cognizant of the uncertainty of forecasts, and to explain why some outcomes and consequences are more or less likely than others.

    An ethical futurist has the responsibility to offer unbiased analysis, based on an honest appraisal of sources, with as much transparency of process as possible.

    An ethical futurist has the responsibility to recognize the difference between short-term results and long-term processes, and to always keep an eye on the more distant possibilities.

    Futurists perform a quirky, but necessary, task in modern society: we function as the long-range scanners for a species evolved to pay close attention to short-range horizons. Some neurophysiologists argue that this comes from the simple act of throwing an object to hit a moving target. Chimpanzees and bonobos, even with DNA 98% identical to our own, are simply unable to do so, while most humans can (at least with a bit of experience). It turns out that the same cognitive structures that let us understand where a moving target will be may also help us recognize the broader relationship between action and result — or, more simply, how “if” becomes “then.”

    I’m not sure how many futurists recognize the weight of responsibility that rests on their shoulders; this is an occupation in which attention-deficit disorder is something of a professional requirement. But when we do our jobs well, we can play a pretty damn important role in shaping the course of human history. It’s incumbent upon us, then, to do our jobs with a sense of purpose and ethics.

  • Solar cell performs better with anti-reflective coating

    Solar panel performance is boosted with anti-reflective coating.  …

    …   “This same is true of conventional solar panels, which is why some industrial solar arrays are mechanized to slowly move throughout the day so their panels are perfectly aligned with the sun’s position in the sky. Without this automated movement, the panels would not be optimally positioned and would therefore absorb less sunlight. The tradeoff for this increased efficiency, however, is the energy needed to power the automation system, the cost of upkeeping this system, and the possibility of errors or misalignment.  Lin’s discovery could antiquate these automated solar arrays, as his antireflective coating absorbs sunlight evenly and equally from all angles.”   …

    Via RPI: Absorption of Sunlight.

  • Overly Litigious Company Claims Microsoft Xbox Infringes On Its Patents [Microsoft]

    A Las Vegas based company called Synchrome Technology has filed a lawsuit against Microsoft and DVD burner maker NEC Corporation for infringing on its patents: More »







  • “Law & Order” Looking For New Home At TNT

    Law & Order may be getting a new lease on life — on TNT, Variety reports.

    The police procedural — featuring Sam Waterson and S. Epatha Merkerson — ran for 20 seasons and spawned several spinoffs (Special Victims Unit, Criminal Intent, Trial By Jury) before the network axed the show last week. It is currently tied with Gunsmoke as television’s longest-running drama.

    NBC Universal is in talks with TNT about working out a licensing deal that would open the door for new episodes of the long-running crime drama to run on the cable network — which is already home to reruns of Law & Order.

    Last year, the networks reached a similar deal that paved the way for NBC’s gritty cult hit Southland to make the move to TNT after being booted from The Peacock.

    “The patient is not dead,” L&O creator Wolf said Tuesday. “It is in a medically induced coma, and we are hoping for a cure.”

    Wolf tells The New York Times that he is courting offers for the show from other networks, and there might even be a two-hour Law & Order TV movie in the works.

    A nationwide appeal to save the show has drawn more than 17,000 people to the Facebook group “Save Law & Order!”

    The New York City government is among the fans disappointed to see the series go: the show generates $79 million in business for the Big Apple each season.


  • HP joins Team AMD for release of more than a dozen notebooks

    HP is releasing more than a dozen new AMD-powered notebooks

    HP has boosted its range of laptops quite substantially, with its largest single introduction of AMD-powered notebook PCs to date. Fourteen new machines are on offer in total, pitched towards both business customers and home users. All of the models in HP’s new notebook range include updated AMD multicore processors. Among the new brood is a set of Phenom II Dual-Core N620 systems promising to offer users up to 69 per cent faster performance than previous models…
    Continue Reading HP joins Team AMD for release of more than a dozen notebooks

    Tags: ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,

    Related Articles:


  • Resistance (Book 1) by Carla Jablonski, illustrated by Leland Purvis, color by Hilary Sycamore

    Here’s something else that APAs and Jewish Americans have in common: we share the same heritage month! Yup, as of April 2006, May is not only our Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, but May is also Jewish American Heritage Month! Various stereotypes have long linked us together (i.e. Asians are the Jews of the East, etc. etc.), so how fitting to be headliners this month together …

    In celebration, here’s a quick but resonating read about a trio of brave, headstrong kids who decide they can and must make a difference in a war they don’t understand.

    It’s 1942 and most of France is occupied by the Nazi  German army. Paul and Marie Tessier long for news of their missing father. Their closest friend, Henri Levy, is Jewish, which puts him in grave danger . While the Tessier family remains loyal to the Levys, the rest of the nervous village can no longer be trusted. When the Nazis arrive, the Levy parents suddenly disappear. Paul and Marie decide to help their friend Henri at all costs … and find unexpected, necessary assistance with the local Resistance supporters.

    With a clear historical note to introduce the children’s story, Jablonski ensures that a frightening, chaotic time is carefully placed in context for even young readers. While the horror of the period is not ignored (a brutal murder occurs on a train journey), Jablonski and Purvis manage to balance the inevitable death and destruction with the age of their intended audience.

    That the cover is marked with “Book 1,” means more volumes are clearly planned. Here’s to looking forward to further evidence that even the youngest fighters can and did make memorable, worthy, heroic history.

    Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, European Tagged: Coming-of-age, Family, Friendship, Historical, Parent/child relationship, Siblings, War

  • Trevor Hoffman blows up again in the ninth

    We’ve had a few Trevor Hoffman(notes) fire drills in 2010, so a lot of this is going to be a review. Ninth-inning leads have been a nightmare for the Brewers through six weeks, but there isn’t an obvious solution to the problem.

    Hoffman’s latest blown save came Tuesday at Cincinnati and it was a horror show. He faced five men and didn’t retire any of them: Paul Janish(notes) singled; Scott Rolen(notes) lost a ball in the left field seats; Chris Heisey(notes) doubled; Brandon Phillips(notes) walked; and Joey Votto(notes) ended the game with a single. Hoffman’s now got a 13.15 ERA, five blown saves and three losses – and the Brewers have a major dilemma on their hands.

    Hoffman’s at 596 saves and there’s a countdown area in play at Miller Park – everyone’s pulling for The Hoff to get to 600. But how long can you stick with a 42-year-old reliever on fumes? Hoffman hasn’t been getting beaten on flukes – he’s already allowed seven homers over 13 innings – and he’s been scored on in 8-of-14 appearances. Bernie Brewer doesn’t have the stomach for this.

    Okay, so what other options are available for manager Ken Macha? Round up the usual suspects.

    LaTroy Hawkins(notes) is on the disabled list with a sore shoulder and his rehab is progressing at a deliberate pace. Nothing happening here.

    Todd Coffey(notes) has been the eighth-inning man with Hawkins out, and for the most part Coffey’s been solid – he had 10 straight scoreless appearances into the middle of May. Alas, the Phillies got him for a run Sunday and the Reds threw a five-spot at him Monday.

    Carlos Villanueva(notes) jumps off the page from a skills perspective – he’s rolled up 27 strikeouts against eight walks over 20.2 innings, and the league is hitting just .182 against him. He’s been used in the sixth and seventh inning for most of the year, so if you’re following the usage-pattern theory (he who pitches the eighth gets promoted to the ninth), you wouldn’t pick him over Coffey. Villanueva is 5-for-12 in his career on save chances, but most of those opportunities have come before the ninth, so let’s not overreact to that misleading stat.

    Left-hander Manny Parra(notes) might be an option down the road, though he was pressed into a start Tuesday with Doug Davis(notes) hitting the disabled list. Parra is striking out three men for every walk and he’s keeping the ball on the ground (59 percent). His 3.70 ERA is something of a fluke, driven by a .381 BABIP. Keep him in mind for later in the year.

    Rollie Fingers still has the mustache, but he’s 63. Not an option.

    Last but not least, let’s look down to the farm. Closer Chris Smith is a 29-year-old journeyman of sorts, but he’s been getting the job done (1.84 ERA, 13 saves, 20 strikeouts against four walks over 14.2 innings). Lefty Zach Braddock has been electric for most of the spring (27 whiffs in 15 innings), but he lost his way during a crazy eight-run appearance on May 9. There’s no evidence that the Brewers are going to grab either of these guys and immediately thrust them into the closer’s chair, but for deeper formats, they are names to be aware of.

    Throw your dart, pick out your name. Who’s your Tuesday pickup? What should Ken Macha do? Let’s get through this together.

  • Are you a citizen of the Roc Nation? Well, then your passport is these Skullcandy headphones

    Skullcandy has officially announced the availability of their Roc Nation Aviator headphones, the only headphones officially sanction by Jay Z. Jay Z is a rapper who raps about, among other things, his 99 problems, New York, and detritus under your ear.

    The headphones actually look quite cool and they’re completely portable. You also have a mic and 40mm drivers with 20-20K Hz frequency response and nylon braided cabling.

    Remember – Jay Z approved these headphones and did not, in fact, carve them in his small mountain workshop out of plastic the way Dr. Dre does for his beats. This is could be a bit of a problem for true audiophiles who require their headphones to be made completely by hand by the artist in question.


  • 25 Frightening Fast Food Futures [Photoshop Contest]

    For this week’s Photoshop Contest, you conceptualized the technologically appalling fast food industry of the future. And better yet? Frog Design took your ideas somewhat seriously, offering a class of criticism far beyond our pay rate. The winners: More »







  • Spy Shots: Aston Martin DB9/DBS nip/tuck spotted swirling ’round the ‘Ring

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2011 Aston Martin DB9/DBS – Click above for high-res image gallery

    A refreshed version of either the Aston Martin DB9 or DBS has been spotting working out at the Nurburgring, likely in preparation for a debut in Paris this September. Up front the lower fascia has been reshaped with a single wider lower opening while a pair of DBS-style air extractors are added to the hood. Both of those point to a bump in output, likely in the range of 10-20 horsepower although it could be considerably more if Aston Martin decides to add something like direct injection to the 6.0-liter V12.

    Obviously, it’s too early to speculate about gearbox changes, but since Aston Martin has indicated that it will be working with Daimler on some future projects, we wouldn’t be surprised to see the SL63’s multi-clutch-transmission supplant the hydraulically actuated manual.

    At the back the DB9/DBS gets clear taillamp lenses, a taller lip spoiler and a big diffuser to help keep the rear wheels stuck to the pavement at elevated speeds. Undoubtedly, there will also be interior upgrades with some new woods and hides and perhaps a better telematics system of some sort.

    Spy Shots: Aston Martin DB9/DBS nip/tuck spotted swirling ’round the ‘Ring originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 18 May 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • One Maine way to keep prescription meds out of the water supply

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Two years ago, an AP investigation found that America’s medicine habit had a boomerang effect. Discarded and excreted medicines — heart and mood drugs, tranquilizers and hormone treatments — that had been flushed down the toilet were turning back up in drinking water. (Yes, that’s how our managed water cycle works.)

    MedsThis invisible problem poses serious health risks. One person’s life-saving nitroglycerin might be another person’s life-threatening disease trigger. None of us want our neighbor’s meds, no matter how tiny the dose, in our morning coffee.

    But while it is easy to see how the problem gets started: Who doesn’t have a medicine cabinet with at least one under-used or unopened prescription medicine that just wasn’t required or didn’t work? It’s more difficult to conjure a solution. How can these medicines be collected and where can they be safely retired?

    Maine, the state with the oldest median-age population, and no doubt a treasure trove of packed medicine cabinets, has found one answer. It piloted a program in which residents can mail back unused meds to the state’s aging agency.

    The pilot project began back in 2007 with a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under its Aging Initiative.

    The state was motivated to try something new because of environmental concerns, but also because prescription drug abuse and related crime is a major problem, according to police authorities.

    The program, called Safe Medicine Disposal for Maine, launched with an education effort first aimed at senior citizens in several counties; telling them about the program and supplying them with return mailers. It partnered with police and health departments, the state environmental department and regional agencies on aging. The University of Maine, Community Medical Foundation for Patient Safety, the National Council on Patient Information and Education and the Rite Aid Corporation all provided support and expertise.

    Eventually, 150 pharmacies in all 16 of the state’s counties participated by distributing return envelopes.

    Volunteer pharmacists and pharmacy students cataloged the returned meds, under police supervision, to track what the program was collecting. This group also sorted the collected drugs into hazardous and non-hazardous substances. About 17 percent of the collected drugs fell into the “controlled drug” categories. They included narcotic pain relievers, tranquilizers and sedatives (which you definitely don’t need in the morning coffee). These drugs, about 250 pounds of them, along with all the other drugs were destroyed using a “high heat incineration” method approved for this type of disposal.

    The total take: 2,300 pounds of drugs were collected from 3,926 returned envelopes.

    Surveys showed that these drugs were no longer needed because the person using them had either been told to stop taking the medicine or had switched to a different one (27.3 percent); had died (19.6 percent), felt better and no longer needed to meds (18 percent) or had an allergic or other negative reaction (11.9 percent).

    The pilot program staff determined that without the program about 80 percent of these drugs would have been flushed down the toilet.

    (The government agencies that organized and participated ii the project: The Maine Drug Enforcement Agency, the Maine Department of Health and Human Services and its Offices of Adult Mental Health Services and Substance Abuse, the Maine Benzodiazepine Study Group, the Maine Department of Environmental Protection, the U.S. Postal Service, the Maine Department of Health, the Maine Office of the Attorney General, the U.S. District Attorney for Maine, and the University of Maine Center on Aging.)

  • Video: AutoCar drives the 2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI

    2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI reviewed by AutoCar

    As much as we’d like to have one in the U.S., Volkswagen has no plans to bring the 2011 Polo GTI hatchback to the stateside. Of course, that means we’ll just have to be satisfied with the Golf GTI, which is not necessarily a bad thing… but we’re pretty greedy. Not to mention, we are still in dire need of the Volkswagen Golf R.

    Click here to get pricing on the 2010 Volkswagen GTI.

    Hit the jump for the video.

    Click here for our review of the 2010 Volkswagen GTI.

    Refresher: Power for the 2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI comes from a 1.4L TSI engine that uses a supercharger from 0 to 3,000 rpm. After that a turbocharger cuts in to provide extra boost. The system puts out a total of 180-hp with a maximum torque of 184 lb-ft. Mated to a 7-speed twin-clutch DSG gearbox (or a 6-speed manual), the 2011 Polo GTI runs from 0-62 mph in 6.9 seconds with a top speed of 142 mph.

    2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI:

    AutoCar Reviews the 2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI:


  • Bill Gates Told Steve Jobs About the iPad in 2007 [Ipad]

    May 30, 2007. Watch Señor Bill Gates describing the future of computing, with Apple CEO Steve Jobs next to him: An iPad-like device being used alongside an iPhone-like device. Then watch Jobs saying that, actually, the future was the PC. More »







  • David Axelrod, Valerie Jarrett played role in Elena Kagan Supreme Court pick

    WASHINGTON—New details about who interviewed Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan before President Obama picked her emerged on Tuesday, with Chicagoans David Axelrod and Valerie Jarrett –White House senior advisors–playing a role in Kagan being picked.

    More information about the selection process was in an extensive questionnaire released Tuesday with the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    On April 7 Kagan–a former University of Chicago Law School professor– met White House senior advisor David Axelrod; on May 6 she met with Valerie Jarrett, also a senior advisor. Obama nominated her on May 9.

    She apparently did not meet with White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

    FOOTNOTE: Axelrod is a U. of C. grad; Jarrett is a former U. of C. board member.

  • Welcome, UC Berkeley Freshmen! Now Hand Over Your DNA Samples | Discoblog

    This fall, incoming students at UC Berkeley will find a little something extra in their welcome packages: cotton swabs. The university is hoping that students will swab a few cells from the insides of their cheeks and pass them over to the university for DNA testing. The university says this exercise will get students excited about the prospects of personalized medicine, in which genetic testing could allow doctors to tailor their treatments to individual patients. The administration stresses that students won’t be tested for their risks of serious diseases, but instead for three fairly mundane genes. USA Today reports:
    Geneticists will analyze each sample for three genes: metabolism of folate, tolerance of lactose and metabolism of alcohol, all relatively innocuous and perhaps useful in students’ daily lives. Students will be able to use that information to learn if they should eat more leafy green vegetables, steer clear of milk products or limit alcohol intake. Jasper Rine, the professor of Genetics and Development Biology who’s overseeing the project, swears he’s not trying to create a genetic database of thousands of undergraduates for any nefarious purpose. Really, what nefarious purpose could there possibly be? Anyway, the school can’t make lists of students who might be suitable for …


  • iPad isn’t for everyone, so deal with it

    By Joe Wilcox, Betanews

    Thirty-two days ago, I purchased Apple’s iPad, after proclaiming that I wouldn’t. A gadget like this one should be tested if repeatedly blogged about. I would have used a for-reviews loaner, but I’m on the same fraked list as Gizmodo. I bought my own. A month-or-so usage later, I agree with Tumblr and Instapaper developer Marco Arment, who asked about iPad yesterday: “What’s it for, really? Logically, it doesn’t make a lot of sense for most computer owners…most people will have trouble justifying the $500 entry price.”

    My problem is similar to Arment’s: I like the iPad, but can’t find a use for it. The tablet is too big to replace a cell phone and it’s not functional enough to displace my laptop (singletasking is one of the major reasons for that). I would never buy the butt-ugly Amazon Kindle or slow-as-cold-molasses Barnes and Noble Nook, yet I find iPad to be a so-so satisfactory substitute e-book reader. I managed to reread Orson Scott Card’s excellent Ender’s Game and am trudging through sequel Speaker for the Dead. But it’s reading for convenience, not joy.

    “A gadget just needs to be good at something that you need or want to do,” Arment writes. Yeah exactly. He has found a few good-at-somethings, but I assert nothing that he couldn’t do as well — or better — on a laptop. “It’s the perfect living-room computer that lives on the coffee table and can be used to quickly look up a fact, find a restaurant, check mail, browse news, and play a game,” he asserts. So is my smartphone, which doesn’t cost $499 to $829.

    The personal computer succeeded in part because it is versatile, multi-use, all-purpose device. The PC does many things fairly well. Ubiquity is why the PC is ubiquitous. But as I predicted, Apple’s tablet isn’t really good enough to replace PC or smartphone. Arment writes:

    Accepting that the iPad isn’t an all-purpose computing device is going to be a slow process for everyone, including Apple. They can’t quite explain what it’s for, either, which is why the launch marketing, software, and accessories are a bit scatterbrained. For instance, if you’re using a hardware keyboard with the iPad very often, you’d probably be much better served by a MacBook Air.

    So what is iPad good for then? Arment and I agree on something else. Eleven days ago my post “Usability expert faults iPad user interface, calls it ‘whacky’” dinged Apple’s tablet. But in iPad’s defense, I explained: “There also is UX, or user experience, which is as much emotive as it is functional…iPhone is more a joy to use [than Google Nexus One]. There’s something about UI design and tactile, responsiveness of the screen that make me feel good. I can say the same about using iPad.”

    Arment describes using iPad as “satisfying and delightful.” I totally agree. It’s the main reason I have resisted selling mine. Functionally, my iPad isn’t good enough at anything to justifying keeping it. But emotionally, I’m hooked. I find parting with iPad to be difficult. Sitting down to use the tablet, I suddenly get girlie giggly. It’s a happy experience. If you asked me why, I would say it has something to do with the the user interface’s beauty and how it responds to my touch. But that kind of intellectual evaluation just doesn’t nail down why.

    Yesterday, Nokia’s Joe Gallo tweeted: “Can anyone explain to me why this video is funny http://bit.ly/hoXKj.” Gallo referred to YouTube video “Charlie bit my finger — again!,” which has 191,352,797 views, as I write. I resisted laughing but couldn’t stop on second viewing. “By that last tweet, I meant, I was cracking up and had no idea why!” Gallo later tweeted. In assessing my response to iPad, I have similar reaction. I can’t put my finger on why (no pun intended) using iPad makes me happy.

    There are lots worse reasons for using a product than it makes you happy, and many product designers would kill to have that kind of customer problem. “Ah, our product gives you joy even though you can’t fathom a use for it, and you’re going to keep it even though you’ve got no use for it?”

    I’ll use iPad for awhile longer to test the apps and to see whether this happy thing wears off. I’ve already had several good offers to buy the Apple tablet. But my answers have been nos. Functionally, iPad isn’t for everyone, and it’s probably not for most people. Too many features overlap the smartphone below and laptop above. Nevertheless, here’s a question for potential buyers: How much joy can you get for $500 — iPad’s starting price? Stated another way, how much joy is worth spending $500?

    I giggle every time I turn the damn thing on. Who knows? Maybe someday I’ll find a real use for iPad. For now, a little joy is reason enough.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



    Add to digg
    Add to Google
    Add to Slashdot
    Add to Twitter
    Add to del.icio.us
    Add to Facebook
    Add to Technorati



  • That’s a very “rice” bra, Triumph

    Triumph International's Rice Bra kit

    A couple of times a year, Japan’s Triumph International unveils a themed undergarment based on a current trend or issue. Bringing women closer to agriculture is the company’s latest inspiration for crazy conceptual underwear, which takes form in the shape of the Rice Bra…
    Continue Reading That’s a very “rice” bra, Triumph

    Tags: ,
    ,
    ,
    ,

    Related Articles:


  • Announcing My Next Point of Inquiry Guest: Denialism Author Michael Specter | The Intersection

    I’m a bit late in doing this–I have already interviewed the guy, so you can’t pose online questions to him as with previous guests. They’ve already been asked! Still, I’m psyched that the next guest for the program is New Yorker staff writer, Denialism author, and Daily Show guest Michael Specter. Specter and I happen to have developed a bit of a dynamic/rapport over the past year, having done a recent panel together at the Cambridge Science Festival, as well as a Bloggingheads.tv episode and a Slate dialogue. Indeed, and as you’ll see, we’ve been arguing for some time about the meaning of a famous John Milton quotation…er, but to say more about that would be giving too much away. And we’ve also been arguing, in a pretty friendly way, about whether there is anything we can do about American irrationalism, whether the left is more guilty than the right–and much else. So listen for the show on Friday–and in the meantime, if you haven’t already, get yourself a copy of Denialism by clicking the book cover….


  • VIDEO: New Kin Ad Creeps Consumer Reports Out

    Theresa over at Consumer Reports Ad Watch took a gander at the latest Kin ad and is kinda skeeved out. In the ad for Microsoft’s new social networking phone targeted at teens, protagonist “Rosa” goes out to confront in person “Matty Goldberb” who’s been hitting on her on Facebook, despite their never meeting before and not knowing each other besides some “mutual friends” (according to Facebook).

    In the ad, the nebbish Matty G tells us how it’s cool online because you can sit “around half-naked” “for hours” and “pick up chicks.” Rosa asks him in-person about some flirtatious stuff he said online and then they go for a walk. And this is supposed to sell phones?

    While perhaps innocent on the face, it’s impossible to deny the sexual undertones or the implication of real-world encounters between young relatively anonymous strangers.

    Consumer Reports thinks it’s a bad idea to friend strangers and arrange to meet them in person alone —especially for teens.

    More videos for Microsoft’s Kin phones raise concern [Consumer Reports Electronics Blog]
    Microsoft’s Creepy Kin Ad Campaign [Consumer Reports]

    PREVIOUSLY:
    Star Of Microsoft Kin’s Sexty Ads Has Sext Parody Video History
    Microsoft Takes Back Its Naughty Ad For The Kin