Location-Based Virtual Reality Startup Nomadic Raises $6 Million – Variety


Variety
Location-Based Virtual Reality Startup Nomadic Raises $6 Million
Variety
Bay Area-based virtual reality (VR) startup Nomadic has raised a $6 million round of seed funding led by Horizons Ventures, with participation from Maveron, Presence Capital, Vulcan Capital, and Verus International. Nomadic is focused on location-based ...
Nomadic nabs $6M for its modular VR system for retail spacesTechCrunch

all 3 news articles »

Follow this link:

Location-Based Virtual Reality Startup Nomadic Raises $6 Million - Variety

Virtual reality – Newton Kansan

By Chad FreyNewton Kansan

After spending the past year huddled over computers and inside of virtual reality and augmented reality headsets, Corey and Michele Janssens emerged last week to find that some of the worlds biggest electronics and computer companies and TV news and other media were anxious to talk to them.

Michele Janssens put her 20-year speech-language pathologist career in Newton on pause in 2016 to partner with her husband Corey on software he was developing that converts any 2-D content for film, TV, cameras and VR/AR into the highest quality stereo 3-D on the fly.

We got a warm reception, which is what we needed to see if we had what we thought we had and the best way to monetize it, said Michele Janssens. We have worked hard. We are a small organization right now in Kansas. We don't have contacts, and a lot of things a person would have going into this. We have had to hustle pretty hard to get where we are.

They work from their own basement, though they are getting attention from elsewhere. ViewVerge, the software they are developing, has generated calls from the likes of Samsung and landed them on an ABC TV station in San Francisco last week. They were also interviewed by Lori H. Schwartz for The Tech Cat Show on the VoiceAmerica Business Channel (VoiceAmerica.com).

According to a news release, their public coming-out party at the annual international Augmented World Expo in Santa Clara, California, attracted reps to their booth from the likes of Amazon Studios, Disney, Facebook and its VR company (Oculus VR), as well as Sony, Panasonic, Apple, Samsung, Microsoft, Dassault Systems, Intel and even Toyota.

They are planning a trip to a similar expo in China later this month, and have been invited back to San Diego later this year as conference speakers.

They hope to license their software to a major firm and are also open to investors. The VR/AR/MR market alone is projected by Digi Capital to grow to $108 billion by 2021.

Corey, a former Army UAV pilot (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) who served in Kosovo, Macedonia and other locations, is something of a Renaissance man -- he has created many paintings and other works of physical art and works on cars and home remodeling. Hes also a theoretical physicist and engineer whose conceptual prototypes for innovative computer processors, artificial muscles, propulsion and suspension systems and robotics resulted in leading a confidential think-tank for Microsoft for five years.

Corey has done a lot of things, Michelle said. He is one of those people that learns really quickly and puts things together in a way that is really special. All of that, and his different interest, led him to the Microsoft think tank.

The ViewVerge technology is a fully-automated process that takes a more natural and biological approach to create elements inherent in human 3-D vision.

The VR-360 headset immersion experience offers the biggest and most realistic impact when that world live-action or computer-generated is in full parallax stereo 3-D, delivering the deepest depth and separation.

Read this article:

Virtual reality - Newton Kansan

Ubisoft announces virtual reality thriller Transference – Gematsu

Ubisoft announces virtual reality thriller Transference

Due out in spring 2018.

Ubisoft, FunHouse, and SpectreVision announced Transference, a new virtual reality thriller due out in spring 2018, during its E3 2017 press conference. It will be available for PlayStation VR, HTC Vive, and Oculus Rift, as well as PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC.

Heres an overview of the game, via Ubisoft:

About

Transference is a psychological thriller and the first game collaboration between SpectreVision and Ubisoft. Bridging the gap between movies and games, we invite you to lose yourself in the destructive tale of a mans obsession as you explore his digitally recreated memories. Experience the limits of techno-psychology, and escape a maze-like puzzle concealing a corrupted truth. Get projected into the digital consciousness of troubled case subjects and maybe you will influence their fate.

The game will be available spring 2018 in VR and traditional platforms: PSVR, Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, PS4, Xbox One and PC.

Key Features

Watch the announcement trailer below.

Read the rest here:

Ubisoft announces virtual reality thriller Transference - Gematsu

Intel Gets Game On With E-Sports Partnerships, Virtual Reality, New Chips – Investor’s Business Daily

Intel is making a big push into the gamer market at this year's E3 conference in Los Angeles. (Intel)

On the eve of the big E3 video game conference in Los Angeles, chipmaker Intel (INTC) made a series of announcements aimed at the lucrative high-end PC gamer market.

Santa Clara, Calif.-basedIntel announced an expanded partnership with ESL, the world's largest e-sports company.Intel will serve as ESL's official technology partner and will provide the backbone for ESL's e-sports events, studios and broadcasting operations. All amateur and pro tournament PCs will run the latest Intel Core i7 processors and all of ESL's production hardware will run on a combination of Intel Core and Intel Xeon processors.

The two companies also announced the Intel Grand Slam for "Counter Strike: Global Offensive," which will award a bonus $1 million prize to the first team to win four "CS:GO" competitions by ESL and DreamHack in a 12-month period.

Intel also announced a partnership with Facebook (FB)-owned Oculus to launch a competitive virtual-reality gaming series called VR Challenger League. The gaming series will begin in July and features "The Unspoken" from Insomniac Games and "Echo Arena" from Ready At Dawn Studios.

The VR e-sports competition will take place online and at key events with players from around the world, with the finals taking place at the Intel Extreme Masters World Championship in Katowice, Poland, in 2018.

E-sports is a "cultural phenomenon" that is expected to grow to about 500 million fans worldwide by 2020, said Gregory Bryant, Intel senior vice president and general manager of the Client Computing Group.

IBD'S TAKE: For the latest news on the E3 conference, check out IBD's E3 news page. E3, short for Electronic Entertainment Expo, runs Tuesday through Thursday in downtown Los Angeles.

Also Monday, Intel announced the release schedule for itshigh-end Intel Core X-series processor family.

The four- to 10-core processors will be available for pre-order starting June 19 and will start shipping to consumers the following week. Availability for the rest of the chip family will soon follow.

The top-of-the-line Intel Core i9-7980X Extreme Edition processor is expected to start shipping in October. It will be the first desktop PC processor with 18 cores, allowing it to handle "all the megatasking demands of gaming, VR, content creation and more," Intel said.

Intel stock rose 2 cents to35.73on the stock market today.

RELATED:

Microsoft X Console, EA 'Star Wars' Game Grab Early E3 Buzz

Apple shares slipped nearly 4% Friday as the tech sector and Nasdaq companies took a beating.

6/09/2017 Apple stock tumbled on a news report that the wireless chips in its upcoming iPhone 8 handsets will have slower...

6/09/2017 Apple stock tumbled on a news report that the wireless...

Originally posted here:

Intel Gets Game On With E-Sports Partnerships, Virtual Reality, New Chips - Investor's Business Daily

Microsoft will counter cyberattacks on Windows 10 with AI from Hexadite – TechRepublic

Image: iStockphoto.com/Bannosuke

There is really no way to sugarcoat the situation. A war is going on between enterprises to whom you have entrusted your dataand a determined criminal element is intent on stealing it. The weapons used in this battle for data often act indiscriminately, leaving civilian casualties in their wake. It is ugly and messy and not likely to end in the foreseeable future.

This is why large software producers like Microsoft have been spending extraordinary resources on counter-weaponry, particularly when it comes to operating systems. The only way to combat the clever and ever-evolving cyberattacks is to match them with similar innovation. Microsoft's acquisition of Hexadite is the company's latest attempt to instill innovation and get in front of the next enterprise-level malware attack.

One of the most effective ways for criminals to breach enterprise security is with automation. An automated attack made with bots running on devices illegally controlled by cybercriminals can overwhelm even the most efficient and best staffed security response teams. It seems only practical that the best way to fight automation is with automation.

Hexadite has developed agentless intelligent security orchestration and an automation platform that enables enterprises to go from detecting a security breach or threat to remediating that threat in minutes. The platform uses artificial intelligence and automation to recognize the problem and then fix the problem without having to wait for the IT response team.

The Hexadite platform helps alleviate what has become a major concern for enterprises in their war against malicious cybercriminalstime. The number and frequency of attacks on major organizations often overwhelms the people assigned to combat them. An automated AI platform can read and counter common attacks, freeing IT security personnel to deal with other security threats and patch vulnerabilities.

Microsoft plans to incorporate Hexadite's platform into the Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (WDATP) system. Enterprises use the WDATP protocol to actively detect and remediate cyber threats to their networks running Windows 10 devices. Adding an automated AI platform should make the WDATP that more effective, and most important, timely.

In the battle over access to data, the enterprise, in general, is losing to the criminal element. In many cases, enterprise IT personnel are outgunned and overwhelmed by the weapons used by the opposing side. The only way to get the upper hand is by winning what has become, for all intents and purposes, an arms race.

By acquiring Hexadite and incorporating its innovative AI platform into existing Windows 10 security systems, Microsoft is looking to get a leg up on the cybercriminals and thwart their next attack. Automating an effective response to an automated attack is the only way enterprises can keep up with, and potentially get ahead of, the criminal element hellbent on getting access to their data. This is just the world we do business insad as that may be.

Have you and your team been overwhelmed by a cyberattack? Would automation and AI help? Share your thoughts and opinions with your peers at TechRepublic in the discussion thread below.

Read this article:

Microsoft will counter cyberattacks on Windows 10 with AI from Hexadite - TechRepublic

Nvidia’s Next Big Thing: The HGX-1 AI Platform – Seeking Alpha

Over the past three months, Nvidia's (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock has been upgraded by several financial services firms including Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), Citigroup (NYSE:C), and Bernstein, while some others have downgraded the stock, such as Pacific Crest. In an article published in December, last year, I said Nvidia's stock could scale new highs if the company's revenue continues to grow at a CAGR of 20% plus in the foreseeable future. At that time, the stock created a new high around $120, before correcting almost 20% afterwards.

I also cautioned investors that the stock could go through spine-chilling volatility, and that's exactly what is happening now. The commentaries of several sell-side analyst firms fueled the extent of volatility beyond what happens under normal circumstances. My medium-term target for the stock is $200+, albeit with continued volatility. The new catalyst for the stock will be the availability of its HGX-1 platform at the hyperscale space.

Nvidia: Revisiting the Bull Thesis

My investment thesis was based on the expectation that Nvidia's revenue will grow at a CAGR of 20% plus in the next three years. The primary revenue growth driver will be the expanding application of artificial intelligence (AI) and/or deep learning (DL) across various industries. Let's focus on Nvidia's competitive advantage in AI/DL.

Nvidia's DGX-1 platform is its trump card to lead the next generation of AI-wave leveraging the TensorFlow software library, originally developed by Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL)(NASDAQ:GOOG). Nvidia recently launched a partner program with hyperscale vendors, such as Foxconn, Inventec, Quanta and Wistron, for its HGX-1 AI reference platform. What's the difference between DGX-1 and HGX-1? Well, HGX-1 is the hyperscale version of the DGX-1 platform. The launch of the partnership program will have a strong and sustainable impact in the HPC (high performance computing) space via hyperscale players.

Investors need to understand how the advantages of TensorFlow coupled with Nvidia's HGX-1 reference architecture will boost its revenue in the foreseeable future, which Nvidia's stock at today's price around $150 hasn't factored in.

CUDA, HGX and TensorFlow

TensorFlow has become extremely popular since its inception in late 2015 by the Google Brain Team. Its appeal lies in its usage of data flow graphs for solving complex mathematical problems related to building efficient neural networks. Add to that its support for multiple GPUs and CPUs via a single API. This is the secret sauce behind the immense success of TensorFlow, out-competing other AI-related software libraries, such as torch, caffe and theano in terms of speeding up the training process of the neural networks.

Engineers at Nvidia were quick to understand TensorFlow's competitive advantage over other software libraries. While Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) was busy to make its MKL (math kernel library) more versatile via incorporating the Neon deep learning framework of Nervana, the startup which Intel acquired almost a year ago, Nvidia silently made its CUDA parallel computing software platform compatible with TensorFlow.

The DGX-1 platform, which is basically a parallel processing-based hardware accelerator with eight Nvidia Tesla P100 GPUs, is the platform that gave birth to HGX-1. Both DGX-1 and HGX-1 connect the eight Tesla P100 GPUs via NVLink interconnect. With the introduction of HGX-1 earlier this year and then making it available to end-users via different hyperscale vendors, Nvidia has opened the door for running different kinds of AI/DL workloads for various industries.

How HGX-1 would expand the scope of DGX-1 via taking the latter to the hyperscale space? Okay, before addressing the issue let's delve a bit deeper into how Nvidia's upcoming Tesla V100, i.e., Tesla powered by Volta GPU architecture, will help DGX-1 deliver much faster performance compared to other GPU-based systems. The Volta architecture will be made to support Tensor-based AI/DL operations, which implies the HGX-1 will also deliver Tensor-based performance boost at the hyperscale space.

HGX At Hyperscale: What Does It Really Mean?

What does HGX at the hyperscale space mean for investors? Simple. It means more revenue for Nvidia. Since hyperscale computing enables datacenters to deploy distributed computing environments across the globe via scaling only a few servers to lots of servers, Nvidia's GPUs will see a steady rise in adoption. However, that doesn't necessarily mean all the datacenters across the world will need to deploy the high end Tesla P100 or the upcoming Tesla V100 GPUs.

Only the hyperscale datacenters will need them. For the traditional datacenters, Nvidia's Pascal-powered midrange Quadro workstation GPUs will be enough. This essentially means HGX has the ability to boost the overall demand for Nvidia's server-grade GPUs. Nvidia's decision to launch the HGX partner program will help it grab a significant portion of the AI/DL market share from archrivals Intel and AMD (NASDAQ:AMD).

Intel is also trying to make MKL compatible with TensorFlow. However, the process isn't complete yet. I believe Intel has potential to compete with Nvidia in the parallel processing space. But due to its FPGA-dominated business model and late entrance in the AI/DL marketplace, it won't be able to become a real competitor of Nvidia just yet.

Unfortunately for Nvidia, though, AMD has made significant progress in the last six months. AMD, with its upcoming Radeon Instinct line of GPUs along with its upcoming Zen-based Naples CPUs (bundled with the SenseMI technology), could be Nvidia's real competitor, but for that to happen the OpenCL (open computing language) software library (which is the CUDA equivalent for AMD, and to some extent Intel) needs to support TensorFlow. Please refer to my article mentioned at the beginning to learn more about CUDA and OpenCL.

Valuation

Nvidia's trailing 12-month revenue is $7.5 billion. A CAGR growth rate of 20%, which is quite possible due its AI/DL leadership as analyzed above, will catapult its revenue closer to $13 billion in 2020. And since such an incredible growth is almost given, I won't be surprised if the Street offers a P/S multiple of 17/18x to its stock in the next six months. After a year, Nvidia's revenue will be around $9 billion at the CAGR rate mentioned above, and at ~15x P/S multiple the stock will get closer to or even slightly beyond the $200 level. So it's a strong possibility that the stock will cross the $200 mark in the next six to twelve months.

NVDA Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts

Final Words

Nvidia is a secular bull story. However, you need nerves of steel to be a part of the story. AI/DL was a concept even a few years ago, and has started to take the shape of an industry just now. I would recommend risk-tolerant investors to hold the stock as a long-term investment.

Disclosure: I am/we are long NVDA, GOOGL.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Read the original here:

Nvidia's Next Big Thing: The HGX-1 AI Platform - Seeking Alpha

5 Fintech Companies Using AI to Improve Business – Singularity Hub

Artificial intelligence may be all the craze in Silicon Valley, but on Wall Street, well, theres a lot of skepticism.

High-powered algorithms are not a new phenomenon in finance, and for this industry, the name of the game is efficiency and precision.

Quite frankly, finance executives want systems that, in one way or another, make money. Because of this, new wild and flashy AI systems that just make something smart wont fly.

The fintech companies that are successfully leveraging AI today are the ones that have found a very concrete way to apply the technology to an existing business problem. For example, technology such as specialized hardware, big data analytics, and machine learning algorithms are being used in fintech to augment tasks that people already perform.

At the Singularity University Exponential Finance Summit this week, Neil Jacobstein, faculty chair of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics at SU, shared some of the most interesting AI companies in fintech right now.

Not surprisingly, these companies each have a clear market application and reduce friction in the business problems they address.

Numerai is a new kind of hedge fund that is built by crowdsourcing knowledge through a massive network of hedge fundsthe system collects hundreds of thousands of financial models and individual predictions. With this information, Numerai is building their own financial models that incorporate the algorithms submitted through the crowdsourced community. Numerai has already secured funding from First Round Capital and Union Square Ventures, which is no small feat.

In 2010, AlphaSense launched its intelligent search engine, which uses AI, natural language processing algorithms, and advanced linguistic search tools to provide researchers with critical insights with serious accuracy and speed. Financial analysts can pose questions to AlphaSenses systems and get insights that are significantly more customized and accurate than a simple Google search would provide. Its a great example of an AI augmenting a critical task in finance: research.

Opera is helping companies turn their big data into predictive insights and business intelligence. The company uses pattern recognition to identify what they call signals, meaning actionable insights from data. Their signals help researchers understand conditions that may be happening in the market, or the world at large, so they can act quickly on these changes.

AppZen is a very practical solution to one of every executives most arduous taskssubmitting expense reports. The system uses AI to audit 100 percent of employee expenses and then generates an expense report in real time. Automating this process saves companies hours of lost productivity. AppZen also gives companies more confidence in their ability to flag suspicious charges. So, if youve been considering expensing that pricey night out with clients, dont, because AppZen will likely flag it.

CollectAI is a cloud-based software system thats shaking up the collection business. The system is able to mimic the voice and tone of a collection agent to gather important information over the phone about a collections case. With this information, CollectAI uses a self-learning algorithm to learn about the case, and then pulls knowledge from previous successful cases and applies those insights to decide how to best approach the situation at hand. The system gets better and better over time, which is pretty incredible.

Image Credit: Pond5

Continue reading here:

5 Fintech Companies Using AI to Improve Business - Singularity Hub

JoAnn Ruth Martin, Riverside, Calif. – Mason City Globe Gazette

October 27, 1936 - May 25, 2017

JoAnn Ruth Martin was born on October 27, 1936 in Lansing, Mich.

She died on May 25, 2017, after living a vibrant life filled with love and devotion to her husband, Saul Kent, and to friends, family, and charitable causes, particularly three organizations she founded, The Riverside Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA), The California DBSA, and The Detroit Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA).

Fiercely independent, JoAnn grew up in Lansing with her mother, Ruth; her father, Rial and her brother, Robert. JoAnn became a teacher and a musician, playing the piano and singing in venues around the country.

She had two children, Emily McCue of Mammoth, Calif., and Nathalie Martin of Albuquerque, N.M. She was married for several years to Don Martin, the father of her daughter, Nathalie.

In 1985, she met the love for her life, Saul Kent. The two shared many interests, including cryonics. JoAnn soon moved from Detroit to California to be with Saul.

In 1986, JoAnn and Saul bought a property in Riverside, Calif., where JoAnn's passion for music, gardening, painting, and architecture enabled her to create a beautiful setting that would be used over the next three decades to hold many events, beginning with the wedding of her daughter, Nathalie, in 1988.

JoAnn's generosity was well-known in the community and her loss will be felt in the lives of hundreds of people. Jo Ann founded the Riverside DBSA in the fall of 1987, and has graciously opened her home to the public for DBSA meetings, holiday barbecues and dinners ever since.

She has been a friend and great source of support for mental health clients and advocates throughout the years. Jo Ann felt that her own experience with mental illness gave her insight and allowed her to help others. Jo Ann was first diagnosed with manic depression in 1963, the same year JFK was killed.

JoAnn is survived by husband, Saul Kent; daughters, Emily McCue and Nathalie Martin, and many friends.

A memorial to celebrate the life of JoAnn Martin will be held at her home on June 24, 2017, at 2:00 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, donations in JoAnn's memory may be made to the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance, 55 E. Jackson Blvd., Suite 490, Chicago, IL, 60604.

Cards may be sent care of Nathalie Martin, 1117 Stanford N.E., Albuquerque, NM, 87106.

More:

JoAnn Ruth Martin, Riverside, Calif. - Mason City Globe Gazette

GUEST COLUMN: Should you take dietary supplements? – Wicked Local Easton

Nicole Long

Are dietary supplements worth buying?

Unfortunately, the answer is often No. Advertisements for dietary supplements frequently claim they will keep you from getting sick, or help you live longer. But according to the National Institute On Aging, Often there is little, if any, scientific support for these claims Some supplements can hurt you. Others are just a waste of money because they dont give you any health benefits.

There are many dietary supplements on the market today that are sold over the counter, including vitamins, minerals, fiber, amino acids, herbs, and hormones. Some products, like drinks or energy bars, have supplements added to them. The Food & Drug Administration (FDA) does not review these supplements before they reach the market, only if they believe a product is considered unsafe.

The best way to get vitamins or minerals is through the food you eat, not added supplements. If you feel you cant eat enough, ask your doctor if you need a multi-vitamin and/or mineral supplement. It does not have to be labeled for seniors, and it does not have to be a large, or mega dose vitamin. The theory if a little is good, a lot must be better, does not hold for supplements. Taking more than 100 percent of the daily value of a vitamin or mineral could be harmful, and your body may not be able to use the entire supplement, so you are wasting your money. People over the age of 50 may need supplements for certain purposes, such as vitamin B12, calcium, vitamin D, extra iron for women, and vitamin B6.

Antioxidants are natural substances found in food. There is no proof that large doses of antioxidants will prevent chronic diseases like diabetes, cataracts or heart disease. Rather than taking a supplement, try eating at least five servings per day of fruits and vegetables, or using vegetable oil and eat nuts (in moderation). These foods can give you the antioxidants you need.

There are also herbal supplements, like ginseng, Echinacea, or ginkgo biloba, which come from certain plants. When you use any herbal supplements, you are using them as a drug, and they can interfere with other medications you may already be taking. Some herbal supplements can cause high blood pressure, nausea, diarrhea, constipation, headaches, seizures, heart attacks, or stroke. Some supplements can increase the risk of bleeding or, if a person takes them before or after surgery, they can affect the persons response to anesthesia. Dietary supplements can also interact with certain prescription drugs in ways that might cause problems. Vitamin K, for example, can reduce the ability of certain blood thinners to prevent blood from clotting. Antioxidant supplements, like vitamins C and E, can reduce the effectiveness of some types of cancer chemotherapy.

Before you start taking a dietary supplement, talk with your doctor or a registered dietician. Do not go on the recommendation of a friend or an Internet site. Consider the source of any information you read: is it from a group that stands to make money from the sale of this product? If something worked for your neighbor, it does not mean that it will work for you. Dont take supplements in place of, or in combination with prescribed medications without your health care providers approval.

All products labeled as a dietary supplement carry a Supplement Facts panel that lists the contents, amount of active ingredients per serving, and other added ingredients (like fillers, binders, and flavorings). The manufacturer suggests the serving size, but you or your health care provider might decide that a different amount is more appropriate for you.

There is a federal Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS), part of the National Institutes of Health, which publishes fact sheets that give consumers an overview of individual vitamins, minerals and other dietary supplements. ODS says if you dont eat a nutritious variety of foods, some supplements might help you get adequate amounts of essential nutrients. However, supplements cant take the place of the variety of foods that are important to a healthy diet. You can contact ODS at (301) 435-2920, or visit their website at https://ods.od.nih.gov/HealthInformation/DS_WhatYouNeedToKnow.aspx

Nicole Long is the chief executive officer of Old Colony Elder Services (OCES). OCES serves greater Plymouth County and surrounding communities. OCES offers a number of programs to serve seniors, individuals with disabilities, their families and caregivers. For information call (508) 584-1561 or visit http://www.ocesma.org.

Original post:

GUEST COLUMN: Should you take dietary supplements? - Wicked Local Easton

‘I quit protein supplements for six weeks and put on muscle’ – BBC News


BBC News
'I quit protein supplements for six weeks and put on muscle'
BBC News
As well as going to the gym, he's been taking around 120 grams of synthetic protein or powder a day, on top of his meals. We challenged Ali to stop taking supplements for six weeks , and instead, have a similar amount through food spread out throughout ...

Go here to read the rest:

'I quit protein supplements for six weeks and put on muscle' - BBC News

Elio Motors Given An Extension To Bring Its Three-Wheeled Vehicle … – Jalopnik

This month, Elio Motors had a whopper of a deadline deadline: have a manufacturing facility developed in Shreveport, Louisiana, that employs at least 1,500 people, or face a significant financial penalty. Yet with $376 million needed to begin production on its three-wheeled vehicle, even the companys founder knew that was impossible.

According to recently filed Securities and Exchange Commission documents, Elio has managed to secure an extension to bring that dream to fruition, nonetheless.

Elio Motors filed its latest reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the

The development is the latest missive in Elios quest to bring the futuristic namesake vehicle to life. According to KSLA-12 in Louisiana, since last October, Elio hasnt paid their monthly tab to RACER Trustwhich provided a $23 million loan to facilitate its move to a shuttered General Motors plant in town. From KSLA-12:

As a result, Elio currently owes more than $1.7 million in back payments to RACER Trust. While the default interest rate of 18% will continue to add up until payments resume, the company now has another year to pay back the principal on the loan.

Nonetheless, the RACER Trust says that the decision to grant Elio an extension is justified. In a statement, RACER says a possibility remains for another prospect to utilize the space in Shreveport, as theres contractual flexibility to relocate Elio Motors to another facility in Caddo Parish.

Having evaluated the relevant factors the lack of interference with prospective economic redevelopment opportunities at the Shreveport plant; no economic risk to Caddo Parish; Elio Motors opportunity to make progress toward fulfilling its business goals and jobcreation pledge; and the LEDs letter of support RACER Trust has made what it considers to be the responsible decision to extend the job-creation deadline.

The SEC document says if Elio receives $25 million in funding by the end of July, then Elio must pay back RACER its overdue billnow totaled at $1.75 millionand on top of that, the default interest rate of 18 percent will begin to accrue starting in August. But now, Elio has an extra year to pay back the full loan.

So heres the question: Whos going to immediately float Elio $25 million?

View original post here:

Elio Motors Given An Extension To Bring Its Three-Wheeled Vehicle ... - Jalopnik

DFI Marketing uses new post-harvest technology with melon exports – The Packer

Fresno, Calif.-based DFI Marketing Inc. is using a new shelf-life extension technology for its melon exports to Asia.

The firm, with thousands of melon acres under management, said in a news release that it will use Hazel Melon by Chicago-based Hazel Technologies on all of its melon export containers to Asia this season.

Hazel Melon is a packaging insert, according to a news release.

After promising pilot trail results in 2016, Hazel Technology was funded by a $100,000 grant from the USDA Small Business Innovation Research program, according to the release.

After testing the Hazel Melon packets in our containers, we saw up to a 49% increase in marketable product after 30 days, a potential savings of as much as $10,000 per load, Ross Van Vlack, vice president of sales and marketing for DFI Marketing Inc., said in the release.

The Hazel Melon packets are simply placed in cartons and require no equipment, no water, no packing house changes, Van Vlack said in the release. We havent seen something that works this well in our many years in the melon industry.

Hazel Melon will be used at DFI for honeydew, cantaloupe, and mixed melons exports, according to the release. Hazel Technologies, according to the release, is working with growers in other fresh categories.

Patrick Flynn, co-founder of Hazel Technologies Inc., said June 8 the technology is a little different than the more common ethylene blocker shippers are used to seeing.

A key difference between the (ethylene filter) and the technology we are working on is that we are actually releasing active ingredients into carton, he said.

He described the technology as proactive compared to the reactive ethylene filter technology.

What we are doing is going out to get the ethylene as opposed to waiting for it, he said.

The technology improves shelf life and the uniformity of treatment in different parts of the carton, Flynn said.

Thats really important when you are talking about export arrivals because you want everything to arrive in uniform condition, he said.

The technology uses active ingredient 1-MCP, which is used extensively in the storage of apples and pears.

We are releasing it in a completely new way, over a long period of time, he said.

The release of the active ingredient, over a period of up to three weeks with a much lower concentration than the one-time apple/pear type treatment, effectively treats commodities like melons and other commodities like avocados effectively, he said.

See the original post:

DFI Marketing uses new post-harvest technology with melon exports - The Packer

A heartfelt and valuable –

Seoul has a new horizontal landmark -- "Seoullo 7017," an overpass-turned-park opened last month. While many think a landmark is a high rise, a low-rise horizontal landmark with an easy access to people is getting attention.

Seoullo 7017 seems to have demonstrated the zeitgeist of urban regeneration in that it is not about removal but regeneration, not a street but a pedestrian road, and not vertical but horizontal. It remains doubtful, however, whether it will give an impression other than curiosity to visitors because it has no story with it.

New Yorks High Line Park, which Seoullo 7017 modelled after, has a dramatic story behind it. It was originally a nine-meter high railroad for cargo trains running through Manhattan. The New York City decided to remove the hideous structure, and held a public hearing in 1999. Unexpectedly, some wanted to keep it at the hearing where two young men decided to preserve the facility, objecting to the idea to remove it.

They held many gatherings to increase supporters and raised funds. They filed a lawsuit to nullify the citys decision for removal and garnered support from officials based on the study that making it into a park is more profitable than removing it. They persuaded people who opposed the idea due to their property near the railroad by offering them a right to develop other area. The 9/11 attack in 2001 threw a curve ball to the movement. New Yorkers healed the sense of loss by joining the movement instead. Ten years later, the High Line Park finally opened in June 2009 despite many twists and turns. With a pin reading I saved the High Line, some 1,000 New Yorkers were pleased about the opening, saying, Dreams come true in New York.

If the High Line is made bottom-up, Seoullo 7017 is a top-down development project led by the government. The High Line movement was the result of a series of discussions Is it worth keeping it? If so, how can we use it? How can we cover the expenses and who will operate this? The 60 billion won (53 million dollars) Seoullo project was announced by Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon in September 2014 and completed in less than three years.

Winy Mass, a Dutch architect who designed the overpass park, said to Korean media, (Mayor Park said) he couldnt wait for a long time. He stressed the importance of execution. I was really surprised at the unimaginable speed. He added, It would have taken about a decade in other countries. Many things have been missed out to meet the deadline."

What the Dutch architect felt missing pale comparison to what Seoul citizens missed at the expense of the surprising speed. How many people would feel proud that they saved the overpass, watching Seoullo 7017? People would rather be curious about Mayor Parks plan for presidential election, saying former Seoul Mayor and former President Lee Myung-bak restored Chunggyecheon Stream and (incumbent Seoul Mayor) Park Won-soon Seoullo. Regeneration is more difficult than creating a new thing because it involves more stakeholders. Seoul citizens lost a chance to learn from how to reach an agreement by coordinating different views.

A good-looking landmark structure does not make a city competitive. The process makes the city more attractive when it becomes part of the lives of people and the completion of the landmark gives a sense of accomplishment to people. I would like to deliver a message from the High Line movement to Korean politicians who want to become famous by building a landmark within their term while not caring about taxpayers money. (A public project) can become more successful by giving credit to more people for the success.

Read the original:

A heartfelt and valuable -

Monterey Pop: The Event That Pioneered the Power of Music Festivals – Everfest

Monterey Pop Festival 1967 Movie Part 1

Even more than Woodstock, the Monterey Pop Festival which took place in California almost fifty years ago to the day reflected the themes of freedom, consciousness, and experimentation that defined the Summer of Love in 1967 and the countercultural movement from which it sprung. Moments like Jimi Hendrix lighting his guitar on fire while frying on acid, Otis Redding introducing Motown to a captivated, white audience, or The Grateful Dead jamming out for thirty minutes over their set limit in protest, will forever be hallmarks of rock and roll history, even Americana itself. The Monterey Pop Festival is the event that brought together disconnected communities from San Francisco, London, and Los Angeles, and crystallized them into a movement, launched the careers of legends, and captured the cultural zeitgeist.

Now, in 2017, the Monterey (International) Pop Festival has been revived. Taking place June 16-18, 2017, on the very fairgrounds where it made history fifty years ago, the fest features new names like Jack Johnson, Father John, Misty, and Jim James, alongside a smattering of holdovers from the original including Eric Burdon & The Animals, Booker T., and Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead. The return of Monterey Pop, this time as a branded modern festival enterprise, provides a poignant moment to look back at the human experiences of San Francisco and the Summer of Love, to see what it felt like to be in the midst of such a powerful movement, and ask if that energy can ever be recaptured. After all, its original incarnation harnessed a moment in time so perfectly that it pioneered the "you had to be there" vibe modern music festivals now strive to embody. That's a difficult je ne sais quoi to replicate.

We spoke with four people who were in the thick of Monterey Pop Festival in 1976: Elaine Mayes, a photographer whose pictures of the festival feature in her book It Happened in Monterey , Joel Selvin, who wrote extensively on the movement in his book Monterey Pop , Paul Ryan, a cinematographer who went on to capture footage for the seminal Maysles Brothers' documentary Gimme Shelter, and Marty Pinsker, for whom that weekend was a coming of age. What follows chronicles the legacies of The Summer of Love and the Monterey Pop Festival, in their own words.

San Francisco in the 1960s was very experimental. Not self-consciously so, but the rules of life had been suspended. People felt free to try things they never had before in terms of relationships, where they could go, what was possible. Paul Ryan

1966 was a very different world than 1967. One of the main elements was psychedelic drugs. It had an impact first with the musicians, and then with the audience. January of 1967, they had the Human Be-In in Golden Gate Park. Nobody took tickets, so nobody can say how many people were there, but probably between 60,000 and 100,000. The Human Be-In marked the beginning of national media exposure and the whole 'hippie scourge' being broadcast. One hundred thousand people showed up in Golden Gate Park...and they picked up after themselves! Nobody was arrested! Couldn't do that at a football game. It really sent a message. Joel Selvin

As a photographer in that era, the access to the music was extraordinary. Any Sunday in Golden Gate Park, you could walk out to find Jefferson Airplane playing, The Grateful Dead, Steve Miller. You could just walk up to the stage, there were no barriers, no police. It was just like your friends playing in the park. Paul Ryan

We all knew each other. There weren't any cell phones. There was barely even television! We didn't have any encumberments. That made a big difference. I lived in the neighborhood with Janis [Joplin]. We knew her, and we knew she was amazing before she happened outside of San Francisco. Jimi Hendrix was the same thing! Nobody knew who he was! Elaine Mayes

You walked into those concerts at The Fillmore or The Avalon it cost $3 to get in you went up the stairs, and it felt like entering a new realm. You felt that bond walking in the room. You knew how special it was, you knew that everybody else there knew it was that special. And you were all joined in that knowledge. The music was captivating and imaginative. Every week or two, there'd be some new band playing at a club, and you'd go over there on Tuesday night and there'd be 75 people and the band is Creedence Clearwater Revival. The weekend of the Monterey Pop Festival, The Who played The Fillmore the week before. The opening act, a group so new they didn't get their name on the poster...The Santana Blues Band. Even by June of 1967, there is no underground rock establishment. There's one tiny FM station in the country playing new music. The San Francisco bands never really performed outside of the Bay Area, and the bands from London were largely unknown outside of small scale in the U.S. Joel Selvin

The backdrop to Monterey was The Beatles putting out this album, Sgt. Peppers [Lonely Hearts Club Band], that really reeked of San Francisco. Everything was pointing to San Francisco in June of 1967. It was a summit meeting of immense proportions. Joel Selvin

My cousin was in town from L.A. and I traded him a tab of acid for a ride, even though we didnt have tickets. So we go over there in his beat up old Buick, just having the time of our lives. We get there, and its just a sea of people spilling out of the grounds thousands and thousands camping in the parking lot, having their own party. It was chaos, but we were loving it. We knew we had to get in somehow. Marty Pinsker

I was in the press pit taking photos. I had a magazine assignment. I didn't dare leave, even to go to the bathroom, because if you left, it was so crowded that you couldn't get back in! Elaine Mayes

I got a job shooting for Newsweek shooting stills. I was very close to the stage. They had these lights that were around the edge of the stage, bulbs. They were in the way of my photograph, so I unscrewed one. All of the sudden, one of the guys from the Pennebaker film ran over to yell at me about ruining their cues! Paul Ryan

The band everyone wanted to see was Jefferson Airplane. A couple weeks before the festival, they sprung 'Somebody to Love.' It was in the Top 5 the week of the festival. Me and my pal drove down on Saturday night and crashed the festival when people were leaving Jefferson Airplane. It was our intention to see Otis Redding. Joel Selvin

Otis Redding, without a doubt, struck me the most. That was true for everybody. He was just incredible. White people didn't know Motown then, not really. When he hit that stage, they couldn't keep people in their seats. Someone came out and said that if the audience didn't calm down they would have to close the concert down! It was quite a moment! Elaine Mayes

Everybody was impacted by Otis Redding. When he came on, with his bright green suit, and said Well, I guess this is a love crowd, huh? and then opened up with I've Been Loving You Too Long.' I don't think the crowd was prepared for the impact of his performance. And then there was Jimi Hendrix burning his guitar, which has become so iconic. On Sunday afternoon, while Ravi Shankar was playing, I walked out into the crowd and it was amazing to see that many people enjoying Indian music. They were totally transfixed. Paul Ryan

I remember the festival sent Peter Tork of the Monkees out to make a stage announcement in the middle of The Grateful Dead set. The announcement was: We hear rumors that The Beatles are gonna be here tonight. They're not! And Phil Lesh just took one look at that, just disgusted as he could have been, and then invited all the people who didn't have seats and were outside of the arena to come on in. And then they played one song for the rest of their set! Joel Selvin

I lost my cousin after we snuck in. He had found some girl and they were making out in the crowd. Somewhere between The Grateful Dead and Jimi Hendrix, it think I lost myself, man. I have a fuzzy memory of the whole thing. I just remember looking at peoples faces, looking around, it felt like something very special was happening, like it was an important moment. Eventually I hitched a ride back to the Bay. I didnt see my cousin again until two Christmases later! Marty Pinsker

From the perspective of the mainstream media, it wasn't a big thing. As it turned out, it was a much bigger thing than anybody anticipated. The people at the core of San Francisco started to realize their impact on the world in general. In that sense, there was a big change afterwards. Grace Slick was a friend of mine. We all knew each other and they had a little band, Great Society. Suddenly, there we were at Monterey, and Grace Slick is with Jefferson Airplane! What was just somebody around the corner [turned out to be] a superstar. Things grew from very humble beginnings. Nobody had any anticipation of it being that big. Paul Ryan

Monterey Pop Festival was a watershed moment in the whole rock culture movement. Although it had this outsized historical influence, it really was a small-scale event. The arena sat 8,500 people. There were another 5,000-8,000 people admitted to the festival grounds, and possibly as many as 15,000 hanging out outside the fences. The groups that came into that weekend on topThe Mamas and Papas, Jonny Rivers, The Associationthey were done by the end of the weekend. The ascendance of Big Brother and the Holding Company, Jimi Hendrix, Otis Redding, was assured. Joel Selvin

The Fantasy Fair was a watershed. Having a bunch of people smoking pot was a watershed. The Human Be-In was a watershed. All of it added up. And Monterey was probably the last time that it all seemed to work well. The East Coast was not part of this. When 1969 came along and people went to Woodstock, they had learned about it because of what happened in 1967, but by then, it was not the same anymore. Elaine Mayes

We knew [the original festival] was special. There was never anything like it before. But when you're in it, you're in it. You're not thinking about what's gonna happen in 50 years. Who even knew 50 years ago that what we were doing was going to matter later on? Elaine Mayes

Rock is an art form in decline. That's in the nature of art movements. You have an avant-garde that seeps ideas into the mainstream. Then you get this bell curve where people keep repeating ideas until you get diminishing returns. And it's been a long time since there were any important popular new ideas in music. I guess hip-hop was the last one, but even that has become formalized. And when an art form becomes formalized, it will no longer innovate. Joel Selvin

I went to the opening at the de Young Museum in San Francisco. They tried to put Haight-Ashbury and 1967 into a museum. But the idea of putting your experience into a museum is a tough call! As far as the new Monterey Festival: I think it's totally impossible to catch that moment again. It's not the same culture! You can't go back. There's always a thread, but you cant bring back the same moment. When I see things revived, I don't think they're the same. Elaine Mayes

There is no evidence that there's some creative renaissance that's going on in pop music reflected in the stage right now, or a popular groundswell that would take those tickets. The original was a really incredible convergence of history and place and personalities. I don't see that happening next month in Monterey. I have no doubt that it will be a pleasant jaunt, but I don't think any history will be made this time. They couldn't even do a second Monterey the year after the original...And they tried! Joel Selvin

Read more here:

Monterey Pop: The Event That Pioneered the Power of Music Festivals - Everfest

Interview: Roger Waters reflects on ‘Us and Them’ and tearing down the wall between us – AZCentral.com

Roger Waters performs.(Photo: Kate Izor)

It's been 45 years since Roger Waters wrote the lyrics to "Us and Them." His latest tour shares itsname with thathaunting meditation on the senselessness of war, andit also shares amessage that there is no us and them, no matter what the politicians tell you.

Waters checked in from a San Francisco hotel room and spoke for nearly 50 minutes, precious few of which he spent promoting his upcoming concert in Glendale or the album he'd released just six days earlier.

He's more about using the platform his art has afforded him to weigh in on the issues of the day,from Donald Trump to those who think musicians shouldn't be allowed to share their views on things like presidents and peace.

At one point, Waters seemed to feel he'd gone a bit too far off-topic while sharing his thoughts on the state of the world and America's place in that equation

"Anyway," he said, "were getting into deep, uncharted water."

Then, he reconsidered.

"Im sorry," he said. "Hang on. This is the water that we should be sailing through. This is the important stuff. This is what defines what kind of lives our children are going to lead."

This cover image provided by Columbia Records shows, "Is This The Life We Really Want," a new release by Roger Waters. (Columbia Records via AP)(Photo: AP)

And with that, we returned to discussing the themes andissues that have driven Waters' most compelling music from the early days of Pink Floyd through his latest concept album, whose title asks "Is This the Life We Really Want?"

It's a question Rogers answers midway through the album with a sneer.

"It surely must be so," he sings, "for this is a democracy and what we all say goes."

READ MORE:Should Bruce Springsteen and Ted Nugent shut up and play? Or are politics and music meant to be together?

There are no punches pulled here, no messages lost in translation, no reason to wonder who Waters could possibly mean when he snipes, "And every time a nincompoop becomes the president."

Waters eases us into the darkness, setting the tone withan openingtrack called "Deja Vu" that purposefully echoes Pink Floyd's "Mother" while playfully noting,"If I had been God / I would have rearranged the veins in the face to make them more resistant to alcohol and less prone to aging."

There are other darkly comic accents to be found. But the prevailing mood is far more serious than that, producer Nigel Godrich underscoring Waters' gravitas as he weighs in on drone strikes, bankers grown fat on the meat of the poor, the refugee crisis, terrorism and the heavy toll humanity has taken on this planet we all share.

Question: I saw your set at Desert Trip and I was truly blown away by the production. Was that any indication of what people can expect on the Us & Them Tour?

A: Yeah, it is, though clearly were indoors now, so its modified. Were still using the power station chimney gag, but indoors, we build it in the middle of the arena, over the heads of the crowd, so its kind of weirdly spectacular, I have to say (laughs).

So far, theres been a lot of wow going on where weve done it. But really, the wow is in its emotional factor. Its very committed emotionally, the show.

MORE MUSIC:Concerts of the week for Phoenix: Roger Waters, Enrique Iglesias and Pitbull

Q: And what is that emotion?

A: Well, the show is titled Us & Them, and its based on my contention that the divisiveness that we see in the contemporary political arrangements on this small planet are counter-productive to the sum of happiness that is available to human beings. Thats why I call the show Us & Them, because I believe there is no them. Theres only "us."

We need to figure out a way to organize ourselves more efficiently and make life better for our kids and even save life for our kids and their kids on this planet because at the moment were hellbent on destruction, driven as we are by commercial interests and this insatiable appetite that some of us have for profits and war.

Roger Waters at Desert Trip in 2016.(Photo: Kate Izor)

Its very political, the show. Its very rooted in the idea that we have a responsibility as human beings to care for one another and to give each other refuge in times of trouble.

So rather than railing against refugees and foreigners and telling each other how dangerous they are and how we must build walls to keep them out and spend even more money on armaments so we can fight imperial wars thousands of miles from home, we might, in my view, want to concentrate more of our resources on trying to figure out how to protect the "Crystal Clear Brooks" for future generations.

I know its a bit of a political speech but its how I feel and how a lot of people in this country feel. And a lot of people all over the world. These are the people who demonstrated on February the 14th, 2003, against the policy to invade Iraq. Twenty million people took to the streets.

And we have learned that they were right, and [Dick]Cheney and [Donald]Rumsfeld, [Paul]Wolfowitz, [George W. ] Bush and [Tony] Blair and all the other a--holes were wrong. In a big way. And their policies have proved to be dangerous beyond all reckoning. They are responsible for the situation that we find ourselves in now.

And pursuing the same ludicrous policy that is espoused in this thing they call the War on Terror is only going to exacerbate the problem. This is so plainly obvious.

But because a lot of people are hurting economically and being shafted by the very wealthy, its been possible here in the United States of America to organize them and persuade them that to elect a nincompoop like Donald Trump is actually in their best interest. When clearly it isnt.

We live in very volatile times. And it is super necessary that all of us resist this move toward the militarization and establishment of a more and more authoritarian regime, not just in the United States but in Europe and elsewhere.

Weve done seven shows so far and at all of them, not just in Denver or San Jose, but Kansas City (Mo.), Louisville (Ky.) and Tulsa (Okla.), which you would think were predominantly red markets, weve found a solid core of people who are ready to resist this movement towards living in a state of perpetual war.

They dont want it. So that has been very encouraging. And thats what this show is about.

Roger Waters performs "In the Flesh" at Cricket Pavilion in Phoenix October 3, 2006.(Photo: Michael Chow/The Republic)

Q: Do you find that that divisiveness, the dividing of people into warring teams of us and them, has been a through line in your work?

A: The fact that I dont believe in it, yeah. The title of the tour is from a song I wrote in 1972. And sadly, what I was writing about then, the problems are still with us. Which is not surprising. Its a nanosecond in cosmic timelines. A tiny amount of time has passed and evolution is a fascinating process but it does take a while.

And it takes us all time to figure out how to throw off the shackles of wage slavery that weve been living under since we came out of the caves and developed agrarian societies. But theres lots of great philosophy to read and the evidence that the ways societies organize themselves dont always work is all in front of us.

Like I say in one of the songs on the new album, It dont matter much wherever youre born / Little babies mean us no harm. Its my view that when were conceived, were largely innocent and we have to be taught extreme beliefs.

It doesnt matter if youre born somewhere in the extreme religious Bible Belt in the United States or some extreme Muslim environment. You can be taught to be an extremist by your parents or by the circumstances of your life. And its very dangerous.

But its very important that we dont think that there are not fanatical religious extremists here in the United States. There are. They call themselves Christians. But none of what they do has anything really to do with the teachings of Jesus Christ. It has to do with exceptionalism, the belief that they are somehow special.

Its the same with people who have extreme attachments to what they believe are the teachings of the prophet Muhammad. They are not the teachings of the prophet Muhammad. But things get twisted.

Hence the rapture in the Bible Belt in America that some Born Agains believe in. People will say, "hes talking out of his a--, he doesnt know what hes talking about," and theyre probably right(laughs). This is not an area of expertise.

Musician Roger Waters performs during Desert Trip at the Empire Polo Field on October 16, 2016 in Indio, California.(Photo: Kevin Winter, Getty Images)

But I have read enoughto know that they believe in the second coming and they believe that on that day they will all go to heaven and all the Jews will be killed and everyone else will die.

I read somewhere, and it may be a joke, that there are websites where people arrange to have their pets looked after for the six months after they go to heaven to be with Jesus and before the whole world disappears in a conflagration.

I can lie here laughing and giggling but its not really funny (laughs). Its f--king dangerous. Its insane to believe that there is such a thing as a God that has chosen you, these very few people that are important, and no one else matters. Its ridiculous. But anybody who is an exceptionalist doesnt believe its ridiculous.

They believe that theyre exceptional, whether its because theyve been chosen by God or because of their white skin or because theyre Nordic or German. It doesnt matter who you are. If you believe youre more important than everyone else, youre dangerous. Were all from North Africa. All of us.

Weve only been here for a very short period of time. Somewhere between 70 and 80,000 years is how long human beings have existed. And weve spread out over the planet.

Were all different shapes and sizes and colors because of the vagaries of weather in different parts of the world, because of Darwinism,because we inherit the physical attributes of our mother and father. Thats why we look slightly different. But were not.

Were all from the same tree and we owe an allegiance to one another. So we need to stand up and say No to the John McCains of this world,the Hillary Clintons and the Donald Trumps, to say No, you will not persuade us that the Russian people are our enemy.

And the reason they say that is to concentrate power and wealth in their hands. Particularly in the United States of America. The United States has such an opportunity to be a leader in the world and that opportunity has been frittered away.

It disgusts me, because this country has such potential to help us on our path toward embracing the good in ourselves and in others and to save the planet, which is being destroyed by industry and greed and idiots like the Donald saying global warming doesnt exist.

How is it possible that somebody who believes that could be elected president of the most powerful country on Earth? Its beyond belief.

But Ill tell you, Im still doing Another Brick in the Wall (Part II) and I still recruit children everywhere we go to sing the chorus. They appear in the show in orange prison jumpsuits,they rip them off and underneath, theyre wearing T-shirts with the word Resist written across the front.

Roger Waters at Desert Trip in 2016.(Photo: Kate Izor)

Last night in San Jose, the little kid standing next to me, he was about four feet tall, he grabbed hold of the word resist and was holding it out and shaking it at the crowd. I looked at him and I thought, "This is what we need, whole generations to resist what Eisenhower warned us about, the rise of the military industrial complex.

Eisenhower was so right. It has happened. And now Congress is going to endorse increasing military spending by the United States. Increasing! You already spend more in this country on killing brown people in foreign countries than the next eight most powerful military powers in the world put together, including China, Russia and the U.K.

What is wrong with that picture? Really? You want to be the Roman Empire and have legionnaires in every country in the world? Is that who Americans want to be? I dont think so.

You in this country have been fed a diet of American exceptionalism. Trump was a boil waiting to burst on the surface, but its deeply rooted, the whole U.S.A! U.S.A! bulls--t that has made you so unpopular all over the world. (laughs). Its soooo unattractive.

Q: At Desert Trip, you said you feel your art has given you a platform that you would not have otherwise have had and you intend to use it. Have you always felt that way or is that a philosophy you developed as your platform grew?

A: When I was 15 years old, I was the chairman of the Youth Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament in Cambridge. I would always have been somebody who would have had opinions political, moral, philosophical, maybe even musical. And I would always have expressed them.

But because of pop groups Ive been in and because Ive been successful writing songs and playing a banjo, my voice is more easily heard than if Id become an architect.

There are people who say Why doesnt he just play his music and shut up? I love Pink Floyd but I hate Rogers politics. Well screw you. I dont care what you think about my politics. And the idea that I shouldnt speak because Im a musician is absurd.

Its just as absurd as the idea that I shouldnt criticize Donald Trump or George Bush because Im not an American citizen. What, youre not allowed to criticize Adolf Hitler unless youre German? Its ridiculous. Everybody should be allowed to speak. Thats what the first amendment of your constitution is about.

Q: I was surprised at the number of people expressing outrage over the more overtly anti-Trump components of your Desert Trip performance. Have they listened to your records?

A: Everybody with an ounce of intelligence has to speak out. Donald Trump is the perfect example of exceptionalism gone crazy, laboring under the misconception that hes great. He believes himself to be sort of a pinnacle of human development.

Maybe he is. Maybe this is the peak to which humans can aspire, to be that shallow, vulgar, stupid, ignorant, racist, sexist pig. If that is what were aspiring to be, then somethinghas gone terribly wrong with the values that human beings might have developed over the last 78,000 years.

What about thoughtful, educated, loving, kind, compassionate, philosophical? What about some of those attributes? Not acquisitive, aggressive, money-grabbing and dumb beyond all imagination. This is what we admire? No. Hes an ignorant pig. A dreadful, dreadful person.

And its a huge tragedy for the United States that he managed to persuade an ill-educated electorate that he was going to do something for them. Hes only been president since January but already he has absolutely shown by everything that he has done that he doesnt give a s--t about them and he never did.

He has no interest in improving the lot of the American middle class. He is interested in feathering his own nest. Thats all he was ever interested in and its obvious. What, hes reducing corporate tax to 15 percent? Hes taking healthcare away from millions and millions of people. He doesnt care about any of those working people.

And it will be interesting to see what happens when the majority of them finally get it and go Whoa, weve been hoodwinked. And he did it all by getting us to turn on our fellow man, by telling us that the people responsible for our plight where our standard of living has been dropping while his has been soaring are theChinese and the Mexicans, the Muslims, the them.

Q: How do you think he was able to get those people to believe in him?

A: The middle class in the United States has been reduced to dire straits. There is no safety net, mainly because the regulations on Wall Street and big business have all been removed, mainly by Bill Clinton in the first instance.

So theyre absolutely at the mercy of the very rich. And the very rich have managed to get away with fleecing everybody. Since the Second World War, really.

The easiest way to get a population to follow you is by identifying somebody else as being the cause of all their problems. And thats what he did. First, it was the Mexicans and saying theyre all rapists. Then its the Muslims. The War on Terror has been a huge factor in all of this.

The war in Iraq was obviously a huge disaster and by far the most important fillip to the spread of extremism in the Middle East. Theres nothing like dropping bombs on people to turn them into radicals. First, go invade Iraq, kill everybody. Then start bombing them using American armaments all over the Middle East. You will create radicals.

One thing you will not do is reduce the numbers of people who want to retaliate against the United States of America. You cannot wipe them out. Youd have to kill every man, woman and child to stop the spread of the resentment. People who have studied this stuff understand that.

We armed Osama Bin Laden. We armed and created the Mujahideen in Afghanistan to fight against the left-wing government. The United States created an armed resistance to a legal government. And that created the environment for all of this. Its very hard to put that genie back in the bottle.

The interference in domestic policy of other countries has come back to biteus. Its standard practice for imperial powers to interfere in the affairs of other countries. You always try and help the rich guy to suppress the people who want what you espouse here, which is a democratic state where the needs of the many are taken care of.

Now the John McCains and the Hillary Clintons and Donald Trumps, they want to exacerbate that situation by more military in more places, more belligerence, more sword-waving, more accusing Russia of being the great enemy, more war, more walls, more no-fly zones, more exercise of power, more aircraft carriers, more troops.

Q: This new album shares a title with a poem you wrote in 2008, reflecting on the hope you saw in Obama. Did you think wed turned a corner when he won?

A: Yeah, like the rest of us. Or maybe not the rest of us. But most of us hoped that this would be a new awakening. And in some ways it was.

Youd elected somebody who was apparently humane, who wasnt one of the elite, who was black, which was fresh and unique, who was eloquent and thoughtful and who, I have to say, throughout his presidency behaved in a presidential manner.

But he also, in my view, was too careful. Im not gonna knock Obama because he did a lot of good. Obamacare, for instance, which he did manage to get through Congress, was a huge advance. But unfortunately, he believed in the militaristic foreign-policy bulls--t. He was a big supporter of drone attacks and targeted assassinations.

So he made a huge mistake, in my view, in believing that he could use drones to subjugate whole populations.

What hes done is hes created a land where the buzz of a drone in the sky has become central to the lives of millions of people who feel threatened, not just that theyre under surveillance but that at any minute they could be blown to bits.

If you read any of the literature coming out of environments like that, it is full of what that does to the children. They are traumatized every moment of their lives. They live in absolute fear.

There are 70,000 (Afghans) with no legs, walking around on prosthetic limbs whove been blown to bits by you. For what? So Lockheed can make more money to distribute to its shareholders? It certainly isnt to bring peace to anybody. And it certainly isnt to make Americans safer.

Being in Afghanistan at war for 15 or itll be 20, then 25, then 30 years, you think thats making you safer? Its demonstrable that it is not. There need to be sane voices in this story.

Noam Chomsky is a perfect example of a very, very wise man who is largely sidelined and dismissed as a crank because he is sane and wise and humane. And we should be listening to him, but we dont. Why?

Q: What do you think it is that keeps humanity embroiled in this tribal mentality, where its not only us AND them, its us at constant war with them?

Its convenient to the very wealthy and powerful people who make the decisions. It doesnt matter whether youre the king of Saudi Arabia or the people behind this presidency. You have discovered that the economic power that you have can be translated into military power and also the power to influence your people.

You control people by keeping them poor and attached to outdated religions and so on and so forth. Its all an exercise in control because you want power and money. So the world is being controlled by the greedy, inhumane impulses of a very few, very, very rich men and women.

Q: You end this album on a hopeful note. How do you stay hopeful?

A: I believe in the transcendental power of love. How John Lennon and 60s hippie bulls--t can you get? Well, he was right. Lennon was right. And Im right. There is a huge power in love. We all feel it.

If, for instance, you come to my show and while Im singing The Last Refugee, you feel a lump in your throat, or you turn and you look at your wife and shes got tears rolling down her cheeks,you are experiencing your ability to love.

And your ability to love eventually may trump, to use the stupid pun, your attachment to the idea of your own exceptionalism.

You cannot love others until you understand that you yourself are not exceptional, that they are just as important as you are and that everybody is dealt a different hand when theyre born and some of us need more help than others.

We have until now divided the world into the haves and have nots. Weve been very content to be part of the haves. And its been generally accepted that you dismiss the have nots.

View post:

Interview: Roger Waters reflects on 'Us and Them' and tearing down the wall between us - AZCentral.com

Juneteenth Festival set for Saturday in Meridian – Meridian Star

This year's annual Juneteenth Heritage Festival, recognizing the abolition of slaveryacross the South in 1865, will feature live music, food and children's activities Saturday in downtown Meridian.

Craig Houston, committee co-chair of the festival with Louis Sutton, said the event celebrates when Union soldiers arrived in Texas in 1865, nearly two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, and told the slaves they were free.

"When they heard, people just started dancing and celebrating," Houston said. "Juneteenth is the oldest celebration of the end of slavery."

Houston said gospel, R&B and blues artists - such as Just A Few Cats, Jeff Floyd, Vick Allen and Darius Ewing &The Groovaholix - will perform at Saturday's event in downtown Meridian's Singing Brakeman Park, on Front Street near the Union Train Station. Vendors, crafts and food will be available.

The event is typically held in thecity's historic African-American Business District on Fifth Street, butthe event had to be movedbecause of ongoing street work, Houston said.Hesaid he hopes the festival will returnto the historic district next year.

Advance tickets cost $10 and are available at Sam's Fashion, at 2301 Fifth Street. Tickets at the gate cost $15. The event opens to the public at 4 p.m. and the entertainment, which starts at 5 p.m., will last until midnight.

See original here:

Juneteenth Festival set for Saturday in Meridian - Meridian Star

World Day against Child Labour: Baby steps needed to eliminate child labour – The Express Tribune

An Afghan girl works at a fruit market in the Badami Bagh area of the city. PHOTO: ONLINE

LAHORE:Jail Road, which is usually chock-a-block full during the day, is accommodating locals who are out and about the town.

Under the streetlight, there is a makeshift caf where a 10-year-old child is serving tea. It is midnight and one can hear distinct voices repeating Chotay bhai, please bring one more cup of tea.

Supreme Court Lawyer Humayun Faiz Rasool said people around the world are observing World Day against Child Labour today. In Pakistan, however, most children do not even that they have rights. Child labour laws are being openly violated in the heart of the city, he lamented.

According to the Punjab Restriction on Employment of Children Ordinance 2016, the government has set parameters which do not provide cover to adolescents above 14. This is clearly against global laws, including the International Labour Organisation (ILO), United Nations Childrens Fund and UNICECO.

Our children are the worst examples of child labour laws, he said.

There are millions of children, who work as domestic help and the government has failed to implement labour laws, he said. The lawyer added the situation is unacceptable as most kids are subjected to physical and mental torture, sexual abuse or trafficking.

Labour Education Foundation (LEF) Coordinator Jalwat Ali agreed that children in Pakistan are living in the worst conditions.

The population of Ahmed Town an urban slum is almost 40,000, she said, adding around 5,000 children below the age of 12 earn to support their families. We cannot eliminate child labour without social reforms, abolition of poverty, proper social security system and implementation of the minimum wage system, she said.

In 2015, the Punjab government set a target to send all children to schools and abolish all child labour in Punjab. When contacted, Provincial Minister for Education Rana Mashud Ahmed Khan said due to some indifferences and lack of coordination with the federal government, Punjab could not achieve its target of sending all children to school.

The Punjab government has set a new goal and is committed to send all children to school by 2018, he said.

A country-wide labour movement called Red workers Front (RWF) has compiled data of child labour. RWF Coordinator Adam Pal said around 20 million children are working as labour in the country and 50% of them are below the age of 10.

Children in Pakistan work at brick kilns, weave carpets, work in glass bangle factories, apart from making leather and surgical instruments. They are even involved in coal mining, according to the US department of labour.

It is a wakeup call for all working classes as poverty, unemployment, hunger, destitution and ignorance has made the system rotten, he said. Only socialism can bring the needed change in the lives of working-class people.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 13th, 2017.

Continued here:

World Day against Child Labour: Baby steps needed to eliminate child labour - The Express Tribune

The Technology And Telecommunications Sectors And Trump’s Crucial Second 100 Days – Forbes


Forbes
The Technology And Telecommunications Sectors And Trump's Crucial Second 100 Days
Forbes
Is it possible to keep federal government regulators' hands off the technology sector? We're in the middle of president Donald Trump's second "100 Days," and there were a number of executive actions aimed at rolling back "job-killing regulations ...

Read more:

The Technology And Telecommunications Sectors And Trump's Crucial Second 100 Days - Forbes

Stocks fall further as technology sell-off continues – Los Angeles Times

U.S. stock indexes slipped again Monday as technology companies, which were near record highs last week, suffered a second day of sharp losses. Investors are changing course and selling some of the best-performing stocks of the year while buying shares of companies that have struggled.

Technology companies have surged in recent months, and Monday almost all of the losses came from the big companies that have led the way recently: Apple, Microsoft, Facebook and Alphabet, Google's parent company. Stocks fell hard in early trading, but they gradually recovered part of their losses as the day went on.

Julian Emanuel, an equity strategist for UBS, thinks technology stocks may fall a lot further and wind up 10% lower than they were last week. He said the tech firms should continue to do well, but the stocks have done so much better than the rest of the market in recent months that they are due for a downturn.

Any time that you have that degree of extreme sector outperformance, two things happen: The overall market tends to get a bit more volatile, and the leading group tends to underperform the laggards, he said.

Investors took a new look at some groups of companies that haven't done that well in 2017, including energy, telecommunications and real estate companies. Some of the best-performing stocks fell, including consumer-focused companies, healthcare companies, utilities and basic materials makers.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index slipped 2.38 points, or 0.1%, to 2,429.39. The Dow Jones industrial average, which closed at a record high Friday, fell 36.30 points, or 0.2%, to 21,235.67. The Nasdaq composite dropped 32.45 points, or 0.5%, to 6,175.46. The Russell 2000 index of small-company stocks slid 2.50 points, or 0.2%, to 1,419.21.

Apple dropped 2.5% to $145.32, Alphabet fell 0.9% to $961.81, Facebook fell 0.8% to $148.44, and Microsoft fell 0.8% to $69.78. Other 2017 top performers also tumbled: Activision Blizzard sank 2.2% to $56.76, Netflix dived 4.2% to $151.44, and semiconductor firm Skyworks Solutions declined 3% to $103.76.

Technology stocks have done far better than the rest of the market this year and were close to all-time highs before Friday's drop. The technology component of the S&P 500 index shed 2.7% Friday, erasing a month's worth of gains.

General Electric, meanwhile, made its biggest gain in almost two years after it said Chief Executive Jeffrey Immelt will step down after 16 years at the helm. John Flannery, the head of GE's healthcare division, will take over the post in August. Immelt will remain GE's chairman until the end of this year. In recent years GE has sold or split off numerous businesses, including its financial services division, and focused on new technologies as it returned to its roots as an industrial company.

GE stock climbed 3.6% to $28.94, its largest one-day jump since October 2015.

Trovagene jumped 20% to 97 cents after the San Diego developer of diagnostic technology announced a deal to provide AstraZeneca with a urine biomarker test and services for use in a study.

Benchmark U.S. crude rose 25 cents to $46.08 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, used to price international oils, rose 14 cents to $48.29 a barrel in London. Among energy companies, Exxon Mobil rose 1% to $82.93, and Chevron ticked up 1.5% to $108.04.

Energy companies are down 12% this year and phone companies have fallen almost 9%, but both climbed Monday. Verizon rose 1% to $47.19. Real estate companies have lagged the market this year, and they rose as well.

Stocks that took a rare downturn included Amazon, which fell 1.4% to $964.83, and drug and medical device maker Baxter International, which dropped 3% to $57.15.

The Federal Reserve is scheduled to meet Tuesday and Wednesday, and investors expect the central bank to raise interest rates for the third time since December.

Emanuel, of UBS, said that if the Fed takes an upbeat view of the economy, investors probably will keep selling technology stocks and put their money into consumer-focused companies, banks, and other industries that should benefit from continued economic growth. But if the Fed is more pessimistic, investors may look for yield and safer investments and buy bonds and high-dividend stocks instead.

Bond prices wobbled and turned lower. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.21% from 2.20%.

In other energy trading, wholesale gasoline slipped 1 cent to $1.49 a gallon. Heating oil fell less than 1 cent to $1.43 a gallon. Natural gas fell 2 cents to $3.02 per 1,000 cubic feet.

The dollar fell to 109.79 yen from 110.20 yen. The euro inched up to $1.1208 from $1.1195. The British pound continued to fall after Britains general election, sliding to $1.2657 from $1.12724. The elections outcome could affect Britain's bargaining position in its exit talks with the European Union.

Gold slipped $2.50 to $1,268.90 an ounce. Silver fell 28 cents to $16.94 an ounce. Copper fell 3 cents to $2.62 a pound.

Overseas stock markets also stumbled. France's CAC 40 dropped 1.1% and the Germany DAX shed 1%. Britain's FTSE 100 lost 0.2%. The benchmark Nikkei 225 in Japan fell 0.5% and South Korea's Kospi declined 1%. The Hang Seng of Hong Kong dropped 1.3%.

UPDATES:

2:05 p.m.: This article was updated with closing prices, context and analyst comment.

This article was originally published at 7:55 a.m.

More:

Stocks fall further as technology sell-off continues - Los Angeles Times

Decline in Technology Stocks Moderates in Monday’s Session – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Decline in Technology Stocks Moderates in Monday's Session
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
A decline in technology stocks moderated Monday and the shares of several chip makers turned higher, alleviating some concerns that last week's pullback could be the start of a deep rout. Nvidia Corp., the S&P 500's worst performer on Friday, Micron ...

Read the original post:

Decline in Technology Stocks Moderates in Monday's Session - Wall Street Journal (subscription)