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  • The Sword in the Stone at Montesiepi Chapel

    Tuscany, Italy | Relics and Reliquaries

    The legendary sword in the stone, often linked to king Arthur’s legend, does exist. Not in Avalon, of course, but in Italy. One can see it in the Montesiepi chapel, near Saint Galgano Abbey in Chiusdino, in Tuscany.

    Galgano Guidotti was born in 1148 near Chiusdino. After spending his youth as a brave knight, in 1180 Galgano decided to follow the words of Jesus and retired as a hermit near his hometown.

    He is said to have stuck his sword onto a rock in order to use it as a cross for his prayers. One year later Galgano died, and in 1185 Pope Lucius the 3rd declared him a saint.

    According to legend after Galgano’s death, countless people have tried to steal the sword. In the chapel you can see what are said to be the mummified hands of a thief that tried to remove the sword and was then suddenly slaughtered by wild wolfs.

    While the sword was considered a fake for years, recent studies examined the sword and the hands, and the dating results as well as metal and style of the sword all are consistent with the late 1100s – early 1200s. This may mean that the story on which the English sword and the stone is based on originated with Guidotti in Italy.

    These days the sword is protected by a Perspex screen to protect it from the attempts to remove it from the stone. So if the true-born king of England does indeed comes along he had better also be able to break through synthetic plastic, as well as remove the sword from the stone.

  • CHART OF THE DAY: The Stock Market Doesn’t Care About Homebuilders Anymore

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    Stock market investors don’t care about homebuilders anymore.

    For years, there was a surprising correlation between the National Association of Home Builders’ builder confidence and one-year lagging returns of the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock market index.

    A 2006 Fortune article pointed out that from 1995 through 2005, builder confidence was a near-perfect predictor of future stock market returns.

    But, as happens all too often, the Fortune story was a contrary indicator.

    The correlation it noted broke down in 2006. The home builders index had begun to dramatically decline in 2005, but a year later the S&P kept climbing.  Eventually, stocks did follow the home builder index downward but the timing and the degree of the declines no longer tracked.  

    As our chart of the day shows, the S&P-HMI correlation didn’t fare any better this year. The home builder index continued to decline in 2008, completely failing to predict the rally in the S&P in 2009. It’s as though stocks and housing have just decoupled.

    This year, the home builder index briefly ticked upward before falling again.  Unfortunately, this tells us nothing reliable about the stock market for 2010. (Unless, of course, this article is also a contrary indicator and the correlation comes roaring back next year.)

    chart of the day, home market index vs s&p 500


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  • The ultimate climate conspiracy …

    If I were an alien entity observing the earth, and I wanted to test humanity to the breaking point, I’d come up with a scheme that required China, India, America, Canada, Australia and the rest of the world to come together to solve a huge problem with uncertain consequences that unfolds relatively slowly and requires painful action from everyone on a time scale of years.

    A trans-galactic gambling scheme? An alien art form?

    Cue twilight zone music.

  • Gobble, Gobble, Cluck, Cluck

    by c. odinzoffturkey

    Dinner. What a happy family. All gathered around the table celebrating one of the U.S’s oldest traditions.  Thanksgiving. Mashed potatoes, green beans, stuffing, corn, cranberry sauce, yummy blueberry and apple pie and my good friend Bert the Turkey! Poor old Bert. He wasn’t even twenty yet in turkey years. Please don’t eat me! I’m too young to taste good! And if you do decide to eat me, remember, you are what you eat.

    Even though turkeys may seem healthy because grain and plants, you never know if I’m sick or not. I could have the bird flu! Or, I could have some type of lice on my feathers when you pluck me. So maybe you should pick a different turkey to smother and serve on the table. You know, I often do have a lot of gas, especially when I’m unconscious.  I might look like a perfect, juicy, very delicious turkey, but on the inside it’s a whole different story.

    Did you know that the turkey population is endangered? Yes, that’s why you shouldn’t eat us any more.  That’s one less turkey in the U.S. for you.  My people (the Turkeys) are the ones that help to reproduce. It’s like biting the hand that feeds you.  You should take pity on the turkeys. The turkeys have always been nice to the humans. The humans have been nice to us, until it was judgment day. Take your madness out on the chickens!

    How will you feel if a group of turkeys came to your house and killed you and got you ready for thanksgiving dinner hundreds of years ago?  You would probably be the one writing this paper right now, not me. You wouldn’t like getting killed just to be eaten.  I might taste good, but maybe so do you.  You people call it tradition, but I call it hunger.

    People say this tradition has been around for hundreds of years cine the pilgrims Well, I say start a new tradition.  Kill chickens for turkey’s sake! Roosters, swans, I don’t care! Anything but turkeys.  The tradition is getting too old. I miss Bert. Why?! Bert was the turkeyest friend that you could ever have. He was the best. But, back to my point.  No more turkey slaughter!

    Please don’t eat me! or any other turkey for that matter.  Turkeys can be a good pet—they don’t have to be a good tasty main dish for a family dinner. I’m asking nicely.  Please don’t eat turkeys anymore.

  • Tricks and Tools: Candy Making at Home Candy Making Tips From Lauren Pett of Rich Chocolates & Candies

    2009_12_16-rich-chocolates.jpgAre you making any holiday candy to give away as gifts or serve to guests? We’ve been inspired to experiment with some new candy recipes, but first we wanted to get some expert advice. So we turned to Lauren Pett of Rich Chocolates & Candies, part of Chicago’s Sweet Collective. Before you start your next batch, check out her tips below.

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  • Study: puzzle and edutainment games raise kids’ IQ

    While some studies put video games in a bad light, there are ones like this that actually encourage gaming. According to the study conducted by Dr. Silvia Bunge, a neuroscientist at UC Berkley, some video games help

  • The common core of human language – as shown in speech recognition systems

    Just one phrase in a wonder filled post on Google’s new Japanese speech recognition system

    …speech recognition systems are surprisingly similar across different languages…

    I bet some Google researcher has a multi-axial plot of the speech recognition attributes of the languages they work with. That will be a great graphic one day soon.

    The essay is required reading. How the hell does anyone learn to write Japanese? Yes, I know people do it, but, really, how?

    Most of all, this essay is a small measure of what Google does, and why I swear allegiance to the House of Google (3 on Gordon’s scale of evil). These are gray days in America, but we will return …

  • Is The Norwegian Krone The New Gold?

    The most recent “Weekly Charts” report from Variant Perception (no link) included the following summary of budget balances as a percentage of GDP for the world’s leading economies. Norway is notable as you can see in the chart….

    norway

     

    It reminded me of an e-mail Nick Gogerty sent me earlier this year, arguing that an investment in Norwegian Krone was a good “oblique position” and could be a winner. By “oblique position” he means one that “benefits from a macro event, but is a derivative or indirect recipient of that event

    Read the whole story at Reuters >>

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  • Invisible to Cops: Top 10 Least Ticketed Vehicles

    Filed under:

    The same company that studied which cars are most likely to get you a ticket also determining which cars are most impervious to the police. Compared to the norm, the most XX sedan will put you at 60 percent less risk of a ticket, while the most resistant-to-the-law sedan will make you 89 percent less likely to be pulled over. That will practically turn you into a covert operative as far as the law concerned.

    However, with four sedans, four SUVs, an MPV, and a pickup truck in the mix, you don’t have much chance of combining uninterrupted driving and looking good. Luckily the Jag XJ is on the list, and that’s good enough for us. Click the link to check out the rest of the cars too slippery for the long arm of Johnny law.

    [Source: AOL Autos]

    Invisible to Cops: Top 10 Least Ticketed Vehicles originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 16:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Edisons Last Breath at the Henry Ford Museum

    Michigan, US | Memento Mori

    Even great industrialists have heroes. Such was the case of Henry Ford and his idol Thomas Edison.

    Ford grew up on a rural un-electrified farm, and as a young man he followed Edison’s meteoric career as the inventor rose to become a national icon. Edison was Ford’s role model and as a young man Ford took a job at the Edison Illuminating Company working his way up to chief engineer.

    In 1896 Ford was thirty three and, though still working for Edison Co., had on his off-time, created his first experimental automobile the Ford Quadricycle. At an Edison company party in New York Ford got his first chance to meet his hero Edison, and even got the chance to explain his new automobile to the prolific inventor. Edison was impressed. Edison is said to have slammed his fist down and shouted “Young man, that’s the thing! You have it! Your car is self contained and carries its own power plant.” Edison himself had been working on the idea, but had only been considering electricity as the power source, so the idea of a gas engine was a new and somewhat novel one.

    The words comforted Ford tremendously, who immediately set out building a second prototype which was to become the Model-T. The two men became fast friends and would go on camping trips together along with naturalist John Burroughs, botanist Luther Burbank creator of the Russet Burbank potato, Harvey Firestone of Firestone tires and occasionally, President Harding.*

    When Edison became confined to a wheelchair Ford brought and extra one to his estate so they could race. At a commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the lightbulb Ford honored Edison, and when Edison spoke he ended his speech directed at Ford “”As to Henry Ford, words are inadequate to express my feelings. I can only say that in the fullest meaning of the term, he is my friend.” So it is no surprise that Ford wanted something to remember Edison by after he passed away in 1931.

    As the legend goes Ford asked Thomas Edison’s son Charles to sit by the dying inventor’s bedside and hold a test tube next to his father’s mouth to catch his final breath. Ford was a man with many eccentricities (as was Edison) including some interest in reanimation and spiritualism, and some say that he was attempting to capture Edison’s soul as it escaped his body in hopes of later reanimating the inventor.

    The truth of the story is somewhat less intense but bears a fairly close resemblance to the legend. While by no means did Charles hold up a test tube to Edison’s lips as he lay ding, there were indeed a series of eight test tubes very nearby his bed. In the words of his son Charles

    “Though he is mainly remembered for his work in electrical fields, his real love was chemistry. It is not strange, but symbolic, that those test tubes were close to him at the end. Immediately after his passing I asked Dr. Hubert S. Howe, his attending physician, to seal them with paraffin. He did. Later I gave one of them to Mr. Ford.”

    The test tube itself didn’t turn up until 1950 when it was cataloged in the Ford estate after Clara Ford’s passing, and then promptly lost again until 1978 when it was discovered “in its cardboard mailing tube along with the hat and shoes under one of the display cases in an exhibit entitled, “Henry Ford—A Personal History” in the Henry Ford Museum. It would then that the tube was labeled “Edison’s Last Breath?”

    There is a further mystery and irony of this ‘last breath’ test tube. It would seem as if Edison had quite a last breath indeed, as the Edison Estate holds a collection of 42 test tubes all supposedly containing Edison’s last breath.

    Regardless of the hoopla over the last breath, the test tube is quite touching in its meaning. Although both men were known for all sorts of poor behavior towards their loved ones, mistreatment of employees, between them at least, there was clearly a deep and profound mutual respect and admiration. The test tube a last gift of friendship, memory and inspiration from one inventor to another.

    The museum has many other wonder exhibits besides the Edison Breath test tube (which can be found just inside the door to the right) including the Wright brothers’ bicycle shop, Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion House, George Washington’s camp bed, and morbidly both the rocker in which Lincoln was shot and the car in JFK was assassinated.

    *There is a story that on one of these camping trips the men got into an accident on the way back. A farmer pulled the car from the mud with his old Model-T. Starting with Ford the men introduced themselves to the farmer as “the man who invented that tractor,””the man who made those tires,””the man who invented the lightbulb,”and as the president of the United States” to which the farmer replied by pointing to Burbank and saying “and who is he, Santa Claus?”

  • Hawaiian Christmas

    By Shaktoolik Staff

    “Mele Kalikimaka! Is the thing to say on a bright Hawaiian Christmas Day!” This is the song the Intermediate Elementary students of Shaktoolik sang and danced to at the Christmas program on Tuesday December 15. The class has been learning about the Hawaiian Islands for the last month. The students learned that there are seven main islands that make up Hawaii. They each researched and wrote reports on a Hawaiian fish, bird and animal. While writing their reports they were learning how to quote an author, create a citation and a reference which is one of their writing standards. After they finished their report each student partnered with a peer for editing and revisions. The student’s then presented their reports to the class. The class then used a rubric to score each students’ work. The class made a six foot long mural depicting all of their discoveries about Hawaii. For their dance the class used Puili sticks. These bamboo sticks are slit to make a rattle sound when hit against the body. Rachel Moore, 3rd grader, said her favorite part was learning the dance. “It’s fun to dress up like a Hawaiian” she said. The students have enjoyed learning about another culture and comparing it to their own. Their next adventure will take them to Mexico in January.

    Melekalikimaka_html_m3f8ba85e

    Intermediate Elementary students of Shaktoolik: Anikan Paniptchuk, Jeremiah Sookiayak, Travis Savetilik, Joshua Takak, Ashley Sookiayak, Brad Sampson, Rachel Moore, Levi Sagoonick, Leslie Sookiayak, Kiya Andrew, Everson Paniptchuk, Kacie Rock, Ethan Evan, and Crystal Katchatag.

  • New Teacher Cultural Inservice

    Strait talk_html_5292146

    By Lynda Bekoalok, Teacher, Shaktoolik

    On September 24-26 over 40 new teachers from BSSD assembled in Shaktoolik for a Cultural In-Service. The theme of the weekend was “Beyond the Horizons: When you’re on the horizon you can see in all directions. Connecting the past, present and future to attain success.”

    The weekend opened with students from Shaktoolik School saying the Pledge of Allegiance in Inupiaq, followed by the Upper Elementary students singing the song “High Hopes”. Then the entire student body of Shaktoolik performed a few Eskimo Dances lead by Mary Huntington.

    The speakers for the first evening were Superintendent Jim Hickerson and BSSD Board member Melvin Otton from Koyuk. They spoke of getting involved in the community and to get to know the elders in your village. The elders are a wealth of knowledge that can help someone new to the region become better acclimated to their surroundings. Several villages sent elders to be a part of the conference and to interact with their new teachers.

    Throughout the course of the weekend the teachers were trained in Sheltered English Instruction. Anne Swigard, Educational Training Specialists, LLC of Phoenix, AZ, taught the teachers how to better work with children that English is not their first language. In 15 hours she took them around the world to ten countries involving them in the teaching/learning process.

    On Friday evening many of the teachers were given a tour of the area by Gary Bekoalok. Gary took them to the old site of Shaktoolik and explained about the erosion. He then took them to the ancient village when the residents lived over 1,000 years ago in earth dugout dwellings. The visitors enjoyed getting out in the country and seeing the flora and fauna of the area.

    Saturday morning was a favorite of the participants. They were able to choose among four different sessions that were presented by area speakers. Annie Conger and Bernadette Alvanna-Stimpfle (Nome) and Nita Towarak (Unalakleet) spoke to the teachers about the history of Norton Sound. They spoke of the changes the area has seen in education and life in general. Jerry Ivanoff (Unalakleet) represented NSEDC and informed the group about the function of NSEDC and how they can help in education with things such as scholarships. Mary Huntington (Shaktoolik) and Yvonne Ivanoff (Unalakleet) lead a session called “From Student to Teacher”. They spoke about being students in bush Alaska and then becoming educators. Paul Ongtooguk, originally from Kotzebue now an instructor at UAA, gave the group some very valuable tips on teaching native children.

    On Saturday evening the community and the teachers enjoyed a native potluck in conjunction with the wedding reception of Floyd and Kristin O’Connor. After everyone enjoyed the wedding cake, entertainment was provided by the King Island Dancers, sponsored by NSEDC, BSNC and Kawerak. Many of the teachers remarked that they would like to learn more from all of the presenters. Hopefully it will be possible to hold such a conference again for teachers of the area.

  • Shiny Ornament Cookies

    Shiny Ornament Cookies

    I have to admit that sprinkles are still one of my favorite ways to decorate sugar cookies and butter cookies, but there are so many other ways to decorate them that I can’t just stick to the same old sprinkles every time I bake. Frostings and glazes are great to work with. It is even more fun to paint cookies.

    Cookie paint can be made with egg yolks and food coloring. Simply mix the two together to create the color you want and brush it on to an unbaked cookie. The egg yolk glaze bakes up to be incredibly shiny and vibrantly colored in the oven. The only downside – and I only say this because some butter cookies are not terribly sweet to begin with – is that unlike sprinkles, the egg yolk paint isn’t sweet and doesn’t add any kind of flavor to the cookie. That said, it’s a plus if your cookies don’t need any extra sugar on top!

    In the Christmas spirit, I make a rainbow of colors and painted this batch of Soft Cutout Christmas Cookies to look like ornaments. A round cookie cutter was ideal for creating the ornament shapes, and the colors were so bright that I could keep the designs simple. I put these on display near the Christmas Tree as we ate them.

    Shiny Ornament Cookies

    (more…)

  • Finally, iPhone Insurance (Sort of)

    A very common “feature” of many highly used iPhones are unsightly cracks in the screen. Since screen cracks are almost never covered by the iPhone warranty, an entire cottage industry has cropped up for iPhone screen repairs. Even Apple decided it wanted a piece of the pie, and now do (expensive) iPhone screen repairs. AT&T doesn’t offer any insurance for iPhones, but does for other smartphones. Obviously, this has to do with the high cost of repair combined with the likelihood of breakage. What’s a paranoid iPhone user to do?

    Mission: Repair, one of the leaders in iPhone service, is now offering a program which bridges the gap between iPhone repairs and iPhone insurance.

    The program, called a “Peace of Mind/Maintenance Performance Guarantee” will cover screen and other repairs to your iPhone. The terms and conditions are a bit lengthy and technically they can’t call it insurance or a warranty. Essentially, the program is a “pay in advance” system for iPhone screen repairs that in practice behaves like an insurance program.

    You pay $19.99 for one year or $29.99 for two years and if your screen breaks, they repair it at no charge. For a bit more they’ll cover almost everything but the screen ($34.99 1 year/54.99 2 years) or combine the two (54.99 1 year/79.99 2 years). Unlike AppleCare, this program will cover accidental screen damage as well as iPhones or iPods that are already out of warranty.

    Water damage is excluded and you have to ship your iPhone/iPod touch to them for inspection before signing up for the program in order to prove it is in good working condition (an iPhone App allowing you to test it yourself without sending the phone in to Mission: Repair is coming soon). The current requirement for advance shipping is a pain of course, but when I’ve had to do a repair before, I buy a cheap GoPhone and put my SIM card in there for a day. Additionally, users of the new program are required to install an iPhone screen protector and users are limited in the number of repairs per year. The closest equivalent is BestBuy’s $15 per month “BlackTie Protection” which covers pretty much everything. However, one only needs to pull out the calculator app to see that $180 is not a terribly good deal. AT&T’s insurance program for other phones is $60 a year, so Mission: Repair’s combined coverage program is competitive with AT&T’s offerings on other phones.

    I’m sure others will pick up on the idea, but I’m glad Mission: Repair is taking the lead! I know what I’ll be giving as stocking stuffers to my risk-averse iPhone and iPod touch friends this year.

    Photo courtesy of Flickr user christyxcore.


  • Openness? Transparency? Not When Biden Gets To Hang With Entertainment Industry Lobbyists: Press Kicked Out

    Well, this is just lovely. I added it as an update to the original post about Biden’s highly questionable, one-sided “piracy summit,” but it’s an issue that deserves an additional post. Reporter Ryan Reilly was attending the summit, and was Twittering what was going on, so we got to hear Biden say that piracy is “flat unadulterated theft” (apparently the Vice President of the US is unfamiliar with US law and the difference between infringement and theft, which is… um… scary). Then we heard that Attorney General Eric Holder was reinvigorating the Justice Department’s “task force” on copyright. Why? There’s still no indication of any actual harm (both the movie and music industries are growing). Then, Commerce Secretary Locke noted that anti-camcording efforts are an important part of the anti-piracy effort. Funny timing, given the recent fiasco over a young woman arrested for incidental capturing of snippets of New Moon.

    So it started out just great. And then? Well, then the press got kicked out. Seriously. Isn’t this the Obama administration that’s supposed to be all about openness and transparency and not giving in to industry lobbyists? So it gathers up a bunch of the highest ranking government officials, (and doesn’t invite any consumer advocates or tech industry representatives) puts those politicians in a room with industry bosses and lobbyists, claims that “all stakeholders” are present (seriously, that’s what Biden’s press release said), has those government officials make a few blatantly false or misleading claims, and then kicks out the press. Yikes. Update: Reilly has now published his article on the event, which includes a list of attendees.

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  • Has The Stock Market Finally Woken Up To The European Crackup And The Surging Dollar?

    punch bowl fruit

    Stocks weren’t down by that much today — the Dow was just down 50 — so there’s no reason to get too freaked out yet.

    But we wonder if just possibly the market is waking up to the new world that’s emerged in the last couple of weeks.

    Gold is at a 4-week low. Oil is below $70. The dollar is surging. Unemployment in the US is tapering. The Euro appears to be breaking up (it’s not yet, but it’s a fear that nobody was thinking about a month ago).

    Every single one of those things point to a reversal of the trends we’ve seen all year. And yet — financials not included (see: Goldman Sachs) the market didn’t really care.

    But the market finally seems to be giving some ground, so with Europe trembling, and the PPI rising faster than expected (suggesting, possibly that the Fed’s hand on inflation will be moved to act), could the stock market finally be taking a clue?

    We welcome your thoughts.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • London benefit event in solidarity with the arrested comrades of Athens ‘Resalto’ social centre, 16 December 2009

    London benefit in solidarity with Resalto social centre, Greece

    from various sources, 14 December 2009: The antiauthoritarian centre Resalto in Athens was raided by the police on the evening of December the 5th 2009… In response, the Town Hall of Keratsini was occupied by comrades, and was later raided as well. 22 comrades where arrested during the brutal break-in of the Resalto centre and where charged under the anti-terrorist law and another 42 afterwards in the Town Hall.

    The court imposed very strict bail conditions, the first ever so strict in recent Greek history, which included very high amounts of bail-money. Only for the 22 of Resalto the bail money amounts to 51.000 euros…” more

  • Is Monolith’s "Project Hades" F.E.A.R. 3?

    It’s been a while since Monolith released anything F.E.A.R.-related, but rumors suggest that they may be getting ready for another run-in with Alma.

  • Table Manners: How To Kick Guests Out of the Kitchen

    We recently asked for your advice for resident etiquette expert Helena, over at CHOW. She was wondering if and how you kick guests out of the kitchen so you can focus while you’re cooking. Well, her own take on the topic is up now at CHOW, and she refers back to some of your thoughts. Take a look!

    Hovering Kitchen Guest Conundrum at CHOW

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  • Happy Birthday Barberian

    :birthday: :birthday: :birthday: :birthday: :birthday:

    Happy Birthday

    :party: :party: