Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Dealzmodo: Windows 8 Upgrade, Dual Monitors, Bamboo Stylus, Storage

Dealzmodo: Windows 8 Upgrade, Dual Monitors, Bamboo Stylus, Storage

Most people will eventually upgrade to Windows 8, and today you can do so on the cheap. Grab the pro upgrade version on the cheap for $55 today from eBay. The eventual update from this to 8.1 will be free, in case there was any confusion there. [eBay]

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Source: http://gizmodo.com/dealzmodo-windows-8-upgrade-dual-monitors-bamboo-sty-883892975

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Amis, Rushdie and McEwan appear together in NY

NEW YORK (AP) ? Put Salman Rushdie, Martin Amis and Ian McEwan on a stage and expect a night of high art and school boy humor, of reading, writing and Christopher Hitchens.

And hysterical sex.

The three literary stars, all in their 60s and friends for more than half their lives, appeared together Monday night at the 92nd Street Y on Manhattan's Upper East Side. Amis and McEwan were there to read from their latest novels, both now out in paperback. Rushdie handled the introductions and the question and answer period that followed the readings.

They dressed for style and for leisure ? jackets, no ties ? and exchanged compliments, curse words and winks to the past. Rushdie mentioned an old game they liked to play, taking titles with the word "love" in them and substituting "hysterical sex," as in "Hysterical Sex Is a Many-Splendored Thing" or "Stop! In the Name of Hysterical Sex." Rushdie also made jokes about the Booker Prize (Rushdie and McEwan have won it; Amis has not) and about Amis' legacy as one of Britain's great angry young men, "ruining and disturbing" his country's fiction, as the old guard used to complain.

Amis read from a few sections of "Lionel Asbo," his dystopian take on 21st century Britain, and McEwan followed with a long passage from "Sweet Tooth," a spy novel and literary excursion. The audience questions, submitted on index cards, ranged from writerly matters such as the role of unreliable narrators in fiction (the distinguished gentlemen were all for unreliable narrators) to an incident back in the day when McEwan supposedly met a woman and immediately, crudely propositioned her.

His encounter was "not successful," McEwan assured the audience, and he "never tried that again."

Amis, a most accomplished womanizer in his time, added with a smirk: "I never did anything like that."

At the start, Rushdie had referred to a "missing fourth person," their departed friend Hitchens, who died of cancer in 2011. During the question and answer session, Rushdie noted that several cards filled out by audience members asked about the indomitable essayist and commentator and how the writers thought he would be remembered.

Amis observed that while Hitchens was known for his political commentary, he believed that Hitchens would endure as a "literary phenomenon," if only because Hitchens' politics were so "eccentric." (Hitchens was the rare author to have admiring words for both Karl Marx and the Iraq War). McEwan called Hitchens a "fantastic speaker" and "amazing in the art of conversation," and remembered how he spent his dying hours determined to complete a 3,000 word essay on the author G.K. Chesterton.

"That's what's so painful," McEwan said of Hitchens, adding that such a life and "combination of genes" were unlikely to be seen again.

Final question: Given the chance, which of their books would the writers like to change?

Amis said he wouldn't have minded another week to work on the novel "Time's Arrow," but otherwise disparaged the idea of revising old work. McEwan confessed that his first published book, the 1975 story collection "First Love, Last Rites," suffered from a love affair with commas. The author has been influenced, much too influenced, by the novels of Samuel Beckett and had fallen for the idea of using commas instead of periods to end sentences.

At the time, McEwan thought he had pulled off a triumph of "cunning," he explained.

"Now, it seems like the opposite of cunning."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/amis-rushdie-mcewan-appear-together-ny-062151120.html

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Millennials invest in real estate - Business Insider

Real estate brokers say millennials are buying homes ? and expensive homes ? like never before thanks to wealthy parents and the tech boom, Wall Street Journal's Lauren Schuker Blum reports. The younger generation also thinks houses are a safer investment than the stock market.

"In the last two months, half the folks I sold homes to were young entrepreneurial types ? and they were all buying homes for over a million dollars," Washington D.C.'s Michael Rankin of TTR Sotheby's International Realty tells WSJ. He says those kinds of buyers didn't exist a few years ago.?

Rankin and other real estate professionals are seeing more clients skipping starter homes and condos altogether for sprawling houses. The tech boom is largely to thank. "Brokers say many of the young buyers today have made money during the IPOs of technology companies such as Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, or they have profited by starting their own companies," Blum writes. She cites one Facebook employee who moved from a rented 800-square-foot apartment to a $7 million 9,000 square-foot-home. A former Facebooker, Rick Armbruso, who is now 33, purchased a $1.2 million, 2,000-square foot home 2.5 years ago.

For those who aren't independently wealthy, parents are stepping up to the plate. A luxury broker in Los Angeles tells WSJ she's seen "more parents buy home for their children in the last year than in [her] whole career."

The reason: There's a generation of wealth that didn't exist before in America. Baby Boomers made more money as a whole than their parents.

"For the first time since the pre-Depression, Gatsby era, we have a generation of kids whose parents made a great deal of money and are giving a great deal of it to their children," Harrson Group's Jim Taylor tells WSJ. He recently conducted a study about wealth in America with American Express Publishing. "Prior to this, very few families had money through inheritance. There is a living wealth transfer currently taking place that this country hasn't seen in decades."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/millenials-invest-in-real-estate-2013-7

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What Comes After Click: A Crash Course in Tangible User Interfaces

What Comes After Click: A Crash Course in Tangible User Interfaces

For three decades, most of us have interacted with computers in exactly the same way: We point with a mouse (or a finger!), click, and watch the screen. In one way, it's the most outdated element of human computer interaction around. But in another, it's the thing that's shaped every operating system and device designed since its invention. We're starting to leave it behind, though. Here's what's coming next.

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Source: http://gizmodo.com/what-comes-after-click-a-crash-course-in-tangible-user-815532137

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Netflix to run original TV series from Dreamworks

NEW YORK (AP) ? Netflix is going to start running original television series from Dreamworks Animation.

Financial terms were not disclosed.

Netflix Inc. says the multi-year agreement is its biggest deal ever for original first-run content and includes more than 300 hours of new programming. It expands on an existing relationship between the companies.

For Dreamworks, the transaction announced Monday is part of a major initiative to expand its television production and distribution worldwide.

Netflix has been adding original programming to its roster of movies, and debuted the original series "House of Cards" on Feb. 1. It has also increased its focus on children's programming in a move seen as taking a different tack than traditional premium pay TV channels such as HBO, Starz and Showtime, whose original shows are tailored more to adults.

In December Netflix announced it will offer Disney movies, starting with films released in 2016. It declined to make a similar deal for the rights to Sony movies starting in 2016, which was kept by Starz.

The new Dreamworks shows will be inspired by characters from its hit franchises like "Shrek" and "Kung Fu Panda" and upcoming feature films as well as the Classic Media library that Dreamworks Animation SKG Inc. bought last year. The television shows will be commercial free.

The first series is expected to begin airing in 2014 and will be shown in the 40 countries in which Netflix operates.

In February the companies announced their first ever Netflix original series for kids based on the film "Turbo" that is coming out in movie theaters next month. The original series, called "Turbo F.A.S.T.," will be shown starting in December.

Next year Netflix customers in the U.S. and Latin America will also have access to some of Dreamworks' newest films, including "The Croods" and "Turbo."

Netflix shares rose $12.29, or 5.7 percent, to $226.28 in morning trading. Dreamworks shares rose $1.69, or 7.4 percent, to $24.50.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/netflix-run-original-tv-series-dreamworks-103032177.html

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In Cambodia's jungles, a lost world is found

A team of archaeologists from Australia has found an ancient city buried for more than 1,000 years beneath Cambodia's soupy jungles.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 17, 2013

Tourists wait to see a sunrise at the famed Angkor Wat temple in Siem Reap province, Cambodia.

Heng Sinith/AP

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If at seems at times that our globe is already thoroughly mapped and explored, all its corridors charted and its mysteries explained, then the latest news out of Southeast Asia is solacing ? there are, it seems, still lost worlds to be discovered, combed out from beneath a millennium of accumulated jungle in remote Cambodia.

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A team of archaeologists from Australia has found an ancient city that has for more than 1,000 years escaped detection ? not even looters had found the mysterious place, buried in Cambodia?s otherwise heavily trafficked Siem Reap province, which sees about a million tourists each year, Australia's The Age reported.

Known as Mahendraparvata, the lost world is some 1,200-years old, about 350 years older than the Angkor Wat temple complex, also in Siem Reap. Like Angkor, it was part of the Hindu-Buddhist Khmer Empire that from about 800 A.D. to 1400 A.D. ruled?Southeast Asia, using slave labor to construct opulent, arrestingly beautiful stone temples.

Damian Evans, director of the University of Sydney's archaeological research center in Cambodia, and a small group of colleagues working in Cambodia?s northwestern corridor first mapped the area, Cambodia?s Phnom Kulen mountain, using airborne Lidar, a remote-sensing technology that uses lasers. The Lidar data revealed structures hidden beneath Technicolor green of rural Cambodia?s thick jungles, giving scientists the basic outline of the almost mythical place ??as well as the wish to know more.

Weeks later, guided by an ex-Khmer Rogue soldier familiar with the terrain, the team hacked their way to the remnants of this once-booming cosmopolis:?abandoned, overgrown temples, as well as evidence of roads and canals.

Scientists are unsure why Mahendraparyata was abandoned ??possibly, the area had suffered too much?environmental degradation to support the empire?s burgeoning population. Turned over to time, the royal city was worked to rubble as a millennium of industrious vegetation and monsoon rains did their worst. The mountain itself, once home to the peak of Cambodian culture, would go on to witness one of its worst moments, becoming a Khmer Rouge stronghold in the 1970s.

Throughout all that, the mountain has remained a spiritual place, host to tens of thousands of pilgrims each year.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/P7di9VT_xnw/In-Cambodia-s-jungles-a-lost-world-is-found

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