Google Executive Breaks Record With Near-Space Skydive

Google Executive Alan Eustace descends from his record-breaking jump. (Credit: Paragon)

Two years ago this month, Felix Baumgartner broke a record with his near-space skydive in which he broke the sound barrier.

Alan Eustace, a Vice-President of Knowledge at Google Google, just broke it.

The funny thing is, though, is that in a project nearly three years in the making, it wasnt until the last minute that anyone knew he was going to.

As we were watching him go up today, somebody asked us what the record was, Paragon Space Development CEO Grant Anderson told me. We had to look it up! It was cool to break the record, but frankly it was not in the forefront of our minds at all.

Eustace first approached Paragon, which specializes in developing life support equipment for extreme environments, including space, in December of 2011. The goal apart from the fun of the stunt itself was to develop technologies that could be useful for more human exploration of the stratosphere and beyond.

The day of the flight began with a four-hour stint in an oxygen chamber, where Eustace had the nitrogen in his lung and tissues slowly washed out. Next Next up, he was prepared in the space suit, which is similar in design and material to the spacesuits used by astronauts on the International Space Station. (If it looks funny in the photos, thats because the life support system is on the front instead of the back in order to accommodate the parachute.

The spacesuit itself was absolutely necessary at the altitude Eustace flew to, the atmosphere is so thin that a human cant breathe. Also, the pressure is so low that even at the cool temperatures, the fluids in the body will begin to boil

The balloon that took Eustace to the stratosphere was then inflated with helium, and Eustace was hooked up in place to it. Unlike Felix Baumgartner, Eustace wasnt in a capsule. He was directly attached to a module held by the balloon.

Alan Eustace ascending to the stratosphere. (Credit: Paragon Space Development)

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Google Executive Breaks Record With Near-Space Skydive

Des Moines Register prepares for a very stressful newsroom restructuring

Editor Amalie Nash speaks on turnover, transformation, and a virtual reality adventure

Amalie Nash became editor of the Des Moines Register earlier this year, at a time of transition for Iowas largest daily. (Photo courtesy Amalie Nash)

Its a time of transition at theDes Moines Register. Along withother Gannett newspapers, Iowas largest daily has begun a process of newsroom reorganization that will bring some pain. New reporting jobs are being added even as other positions go away, but a number of longtime staffers will likely find themselves out of a job at the end of the processand some have reportedly alreadybowed out.

Not all of the changes underway at the Register are difficult, though. The paper has also made news recently with the announcement of anew partnershipwith Bloomberg Politics; a collaboration with papers across the state totrack political ad spending; a multi-tiered offensive in the battle for open records; and, perhaps most surprisingly, a foray into futurism with the Harvest of Change series, in which theRegisterpresented a virtual-reality tour of an Iowa farm designed to be viewed through the Oculus Rift headset.

At the center of all these changes has been Amalie Nash, theRegisters editor and vice president for audience engagement, who is still in her first year at the helm after coming over from theDetroit Free Press. A Michigan native, Nash took the Register job at what she noted was a transformational time for the paper and Gannett as a whole. I spoke to Nash late last week about the restructuring, theRegisters ongoing open-records battles, and the papers venture into the unsettled (and for this interviewer, unsettling) territory of virtual reality. An edited transcript is below.

I understand youve been doing interviews for your restructuring this weekin which every staffer has to reapply for positions in a reorganized newsroom. Whats the reaction been like in the newsroom to this tumultuous process?

Its certainly a difficult process for everyone. Weve had a range of emotions from across the room. You know, its a very stressful time, and were cognizant of that.

One of the takeaways weve seen is just how passionate our employees are about the Registerand about wanting to be part of the newsroom as were moving forward. And so weve heard a lot of really great stories from people about why they got into journalism, why theyre right for their roles; people are excited about some of the new roles that are going to be part of this restructuring. This is a difficult process and one that we think will position us to have future success, to be able to have some new areas of coverage and that sort of thing.

Youve saidthat youre beefing up reporting as part of the process, and yetits been reportedthat your newsrooms in Des Moines and at theIowa City Press-Citizenare going to be losing 18 positions between them. So how can you be both beefing up reporting and shrinking the newsroom?

We dont know exactly how many positions its going to be at this point because obviously theres a lot of financial modeling that goes into this. And so part of its going to depend on what the payroll is going to look like at the end of this. But there will be a loss of positions as a result of that, and thats coming in a couple of different areas.

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Des Moines Register prepares for a very stressful newsroom restructuring

From Protestant-Historicism to Jesuit-Dispensationalism – Futurism – Christianity Hijacked! – Video


From Protestant-Historicism to Jesuit-Dispensationalism - Futurism - Christianity Hijacked!
Also watch: Who is the biblical historical prophetic ANTICHRIST? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RCusXgHlTYQ One World Religion: Luther #39;s protest is over?

By: joggler66

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From Protestant-Historicism to Jesuit-Dispensationalism - Futurism - Christianity Hijacked! - Video

Wernher von Braun Predicted We'd Send Men to Mars No Sooner Than 2050s

Student researchers at MIT have concluded that given current technology, any colonists to Mars would die after about 68 days. Mars One, the company that hopes to put people on Mars by the 2025 (and film a reality TV show there, so you know they're legit) insists that the MIT researchers are wrong. But as any student of paleo-futurism would know, even the most optimistic space prognosticators of the past century would side with the MIT students.

To take just one example, let's look at the April 30, 1954 issue of Collier's magazine, which featured a splashy feature article dedicated to the future of exploring Mars. It was quite optimistic, and no doubt inspired countless kids to think that they might live in space stations by the time they were adults. But when it came to Mars, space pioneer (and former Nazi scientist) Wernher von Braun didn't mince words. It would be "a century or more" before humans set foot on the red planet.

From Collier's:

Will man ever go to Mars? I am sure he willbut it will be a century or more before he's ready. In that time scientists and engineers will learn more about the physical and mental rigors of interplanetary flightand about the unknown dangers of life on another planet. Some of that information may become available within the next 25 years or so, through the erection of a space station above the earth (where telescope viewings will not be blurred by the earth's atmosphere) and through the subsequent exploration of the moon, as described in previous issues of Collier's.

Any time people insist that we'll go to Mars in the near future, I always think about Wernher von Braun's 1954 predictions for manned trips to Mars. We often think of people in the 1950s and 60s as taking for granted the most outlandishly optimistic predictions for the future. But as we're continually reminded, people of the past weren't stupid. Or, at least, they were no more stupid than the people of today.

Images: Illustration of a Martian exploration by Fred Freeman, scanned from the April 30, 1954 issue of Collier's magazine; Spaceship to Mars by Chesley Bonestell, scanned from the April 30, 1954 issue of Collier's magazine

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Wernher von Braun Predicted We'd Send Men to Mars No Sooner Than 2050s

Tomomi Adachi Delivers Bizzare Evening in CFA Hall

Dan Fuchs/ArtsEditor

Every once in a while, you see something you simply cannot comprehend. Its not that its over your head, confusing, or made poorly. It just defies any sort ofexplanation.

Japanese composer Tomomi Adachi specializes in this brand of bizarre, avant-garde art. Surrealism, Dadaism, and futurism all blend in his work to create something totally brilliant and at the same time utterly nonsensical. Performing to a small audience at the CFA Hall on Thursday night, Adachi forced viewers to wrestle with their conceptions ofsound.

Adachis performance didnt even begin with him onstage. Sitting in front of a board covered with circuit boards and wires, Peter Blasser GRAD manipulated bass-heavy ambient tones by alternating wires in the two dozen or so boards. Dancer Ayako Kataoka, at times herself attached to wires, twirled and convulsed on stage, her movements seemingly altering the sounds. After several minutes, Adachi joined them, sampling sounds that came out of an amplified metal box full of wires, essentially a man-made electricguitar.

From there, Adachi jumped into his solo pieces, which were more conceptual. Its unclear what exactly inspired any of these pieces, but each had its own unique voice. The first, Torturing Twitter, was a spoken-word piece in which Adachi read, in real-time, five Twitter hashtag feeds: power, economy, war, cooking, and sex. Each feed was introduced gradually, and what began with tweets about President Obama eventually became a flood of porn. It was a fascinating, if not humorous, presentation of what people tweet about on a dailybasis.

The second piece, Another Ear Stretching, was by far the most interactive. A video of Adachi, projected on a screen, instructed viewers to move as ambient and natural sounds played. In essence, if we followed Adachis directions, we would manipulate the way that we heard the sounds. If we placed our hands against our ears, the sound became hollow and muffled. If we turned our heads to the right, the sound to the left became drownedout.

The third piece, which wasnt introduced with a title, was not dissimilar from the prelude, as Adachi once again used his strange string instrument to create dissonance. Here, as with the first piece, Adachi displayed an interest in found objects; the instrument of choice, while certainly functioning, seemed cobbled together with woodblocks andstrings.

Voice Sound Poetry Form Ended With X, a Dadaist sound poem, was one of the stranger pieces of the night. For about eight minutes, Adachi repeated patterns of nonsensical sounds. Some were vocal (eees and oohs), while others were more guttural, like the clicking of his tongue. In any case, the poem became an odd, ambient composition as the sounds blended into each other. The piece ran a tad long, but it was nonetheless an interesting way to examine the nature of rhythm andlanguage.

The final piece, Voice and Infrared Sensor Shirt, was the most exciting. Beginning with a sampling of ambient sound waves, Adachi then put on a collared shirt covered in microphones and sensors. At this point, his entire body became an instrument, each motion drastically affecting the sound. A tongue-click followed by an upward arm motion might play the sound in reverse. Another motion might raise the pitch. Even the act of putting on and taking off this sound-shirt produced specific, high-pitchedsounds.

This was, in short, a performance unlike anything else. Many of the performances forced us to interrogate our own understandings of sound. A piece like Another Ear Stretching revealed how our bodies play a role in the creation and intake of sound. Voice Sound Poetry Form Ended With X, by making poetry out of nonsense, made clear that words are simply constructions of other sounds. Everything here, however enigmatic, seemed to have an inherent purpose. It was one of the strangest nights of my life, but it was also one of the most thought-provoking. And therein lies Tomomi Adachis genius: his performances, though dense at first, stay with you. They crawl their way into your subconscious and make you wrestle with your environment. It was a performance that could only have been seen (or, indeed, heard) to bebelieved.

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Tomomi Adachi Delivers Bizzare Evening in CFA Hall

Raymond Loewy's NASA Designs Are The Space Future That Never Was

From 1967 until 1973 NASA employed the services of Raymond Loewy, a legendary figure in the design world. Loewy's firm produced over 3,000 designs for NASA during this time. And everything they produced for the space agency would fit perfectly in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey like the Loewy space taxi pictured above.

Loewy is best known for his work designing earthbound objects, from trains to the iconic Coke bottle to the livery that still decorates Air Force One. But during those six years, the employees at Loewy's design firm served as "habitability consultants" to NASA with the hope of making projects like America's first space station Skylab (in orbit from 1973-1979) more human-friendly. Not all of their ideas were terribly practical, but they helped define the space design agenda for decades to come.

Below, we see one of Loewy's full-scale mock-ups for an "artificial-G, shuttle-compatible space station interior" courtesy of NASA.

"Prior to Skylab, NASA designed its vehicles like aircraft cockpits, where providing basic life support was the guiding principle," the new book Milestones of Space edited by Michael J. Neufeld explains. "Engineers at the NASA Marshall Center in Hunstville, Alabama, saw no need for amenities; instead, they stressed functionality and reliability."

But people like NASA's George Mueller and the contractor Martin Marietta (who were actually responsible for bringing Loewy into the fold) understood that if regular humans who weren't fighter pilots and astronauts were to ever go into space, things would have to be designed a bit more posh.

The stated goal of bringing on Loewy was to "help insure the psycho-physiology, safety and comfort of the astronauts." And even though some of the designs were too wild for the time (many of them having to do with space constraints and practicalities) they helped NASA consider new ways to make humans more comfortable in the cold, alienating confines of space vehicles.

If you're a fan, you can read Loewy's 1973 report [pdf] to NASA on designs for space shuttles and stations. The images and ideas evoke the space age futurism of the late 1960s and 70s perhaps better than any other official report produced for NASA. Loewy's work helped bridge the gap between science fiction and science fact, bringing a mod-sensibility to the agency.

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Raymond Loewy's NASA Designs Are The Space Future That Never Was

Zaha! : Zaha Hadid, of All People, Will Design a Human Rights Institute

Controversial starchitect Zaha Hadid just unveiled renderings for the Sleuk Rith Institute in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, presenting a slight departure from her signature colorless blob futurism. Instead, the future home of some one million archival documents of the Khmer Rouge era will be five wooden towers inspired by ancient Cambodian temple sites.

The towers, to be built from locally-sourced timber, will be distinct spaces on the ground level. But the higher you go, the more the towers will "interlock" to encourage more interaction among different components of the institutionwhich in addition to the massive archive, will also include a media center, library, and graduate school, all dedicated to preventing human rights atrocities in the future.

In all it's an interesting project for Hadid, who's been embroiled in a string controversies of late. Her name has been dropped in connection to forced evictions in Azerbaijan (to make room for the construction of her Heydar Aliyev building), deplorable labor conditions in Qatar, and Olympic stadiums that are, in the words of petitioning architects, "overwhelmingly large for the context." That's not even mentioning the fact that she's got a lawsuit going against a critic. This is all to say thatwho knows?perhaps this project is an attempt to ameliorate her public image. Anyway, it looks pretty cool:

Renderings via ArchDaily

Renderings via ArchDaily

Renderings via ArchDaily

Renderings via ArchDaily

Renderings via ArchDaily

Zaha Hadid Designs Five Wooden Towers to House Cambodian Genocide Institute [ArchDaily] All Zaha! posts [Curbed National]

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Zaha! : Zaha Hadid, of All People, Will Design a Human Rights Institute

Search Engine Leap.It Wins Steve Case's $100K Startup Competition

Steve Case with Leap.it CEO and founder Mike Farmer. (Credit: Rise of the Rest)

In the afternoon of the first day of this weeks Big Kansas City technology entrepreneurship conference, billionaire and ex-CEO of AOL Steve Case listened to ten representatives from ten different startups talk about their companies. They had five minutes to give their pitch (no easy task, as the timer beeped mid-sentence on several occasions) and field questions from Case and a panel of judges.

The prize? A $100,000 investment from Case as part of his Rise of the Rest road tour. During this tour, Case is visiting five cities Detroit, Minneapolis, Des Moines, Kansas City, and St. Louis. At each stop, 10 startup companies compete for that $100,000 investment. The judges for the competition included Gary Shapiro of Consumer Electronics Association; Sarah Granger, an author and entrepreneur; Kimberly Bryant of Black Girls Code; and Robb Heineman, CEO of the soccer team Sporting Kansas City.

Kansas Citys competition was part of the Big Kansas City conference, focusing on technology startups and entrepreneurs. The offerings in the competition were a pretty diverse bunch, ranging from Keyzio, an app-based solution that aims to make buying and selling a house less expensive, to ShotTracker, a wearable that lets you know how well youre playing basketball; to FitBark, a wearable collar for your dog so you can monitor her health.

The winner of the competition and $100,000 investment was Leap.it. The companys goal is modest. They want to challenge Google in the search engine space.

Their key to doing this is by focusing on search results in a different way. For one, rather than a list of text links, Leap.it provides a much richer visual set of search results. Here, for example, is what you get when you type in Forbes:

Example of Leap.it search results.

The search engine is socially based. Search results depend on whats trending on Twitter and other networks, which are then integrated with web results.

Twitters great at real time stuff, founder and CEO Mike Farmer told me. But it doesnt provide context. By relating this to web objects, youre sort of overlaying this real-time stream. Like a map thats overlaid with real-time weather.

Leap.it users can also provide curated searches called perspectives a visually organized group of articles like Best Actors of the Past 50 Years or things to do in New York City or the best amusement park rides.

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Search Engine Leap.It Wins Steve Case's $100K Startup Competition

The Best Albums Of September 2014

When you get to October, its (sadly?) inevitable in this business to begin thinking about the best albums of the year. Theres plenty still to come, of course great albums, which will warrant considerable acclaim. But some minds are already set: whats been will factor in the year-end equation, and whats to be is likely to miss out.

Luckily for those already shaping their lists, September saw some truly special LPs make it into the wild. Here are just six favourites from the month but you can follow all of Clashs album reviews here.

Click the cover art to scroll through album sleeves

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Shellac Dude Incredible (Touch & Go, released September 15th)

From the twisting opening of the title track onwards, anyone with previous experience of Shellac is in no doubt as to the makers of this racket their primary characteristics are not front-page splashes, headline-generating wackiness, but expert musicianship honed over 22 years of togetherness, and more.

Read the full review

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Leonard Cohen Popular Problems (Columbia, released September 22nd)

Hes 80, but still sounds incredible. You can hear his age; he takes his time and his band gives him space, making this album, lucky number 13 for the Canadian singer, cool and utterly enchanting.

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The Best Albums Of September 2014

Lucie Greene Joins JWT as Worldwide Director of JWTIntelligence

NEW YORK, NY (PRWEB) October 09, 2014

JWT announced today the appointment of Lucie Greene as Worldwide Director of JWTIntelligence. Greene will be responsible for driving JWTs consumer insights and trends-focused initiatives, adding bench strength to the agencys trends unit, JWTIntelligence. She will join the agency in October and be based in New York while reporting to JWT Worldwide Planning Director Guy Murphy.

Joining JWT from LS:N Global, the forecasting division of leading London-based trends consultancy The Future Laboratory, Greene brings more than a decade of experience exploring emerging shifts in lifestyle and consumer behavior for both international publications and brands. During her time at The Future Laboratory as the editor of LS:N Global, Greene led a team of researchers that forecast trends for clients including Google, Marks & Spencer, LVMH, Westfield, H&M, Nike, Pernod Ricard and Este Lauder, among others.

Lucies experience is a strong complement to JWTs longstanding and highly respected trends unit. She will deepen our understanding of cultural shifts and drive innovation possibilities for our client brands, said Murphy.

Greene is a well-respected journalist and editor. Prior to joining The Future Laboratory she was a regular contributor to titles including The Financial Times, Womens Wear Daily, Vogue UK, Elle Decor UK and The Telegraph, and worked with clients including LVMH, Richemont Group and Space NK on branded content projects. She started out as a reporter for Womens Wear Daily and still contributes to the Financial Times.

During her time at The Future Laboratory, Greene presented for leading international organizations including Este Lauder, FitFlop, Virgin, Rolls-Royce, Ralph Lauren, and Soho House Group on trends, and led strategic content partnerships with Retail Week Live and Cosmetic Executive Women. She has also consulted as an expert on various bespoke projects for The Future Laboratorys consultancy division.

She has also been featured as an expert on trends and consumer insights on CNBC and Brand Republic television, and quoted by CNN as well as The New York Times, Bloomberg Businessweek, The Sunday Times, The Guardian UK and Newsweek, among others.

Commenting on the new role, Greene said, Im thrilled to be joining JWT at this exciting time. JWTIntelligence has established a culture of futurism, trends and consumer insight at JWT. Im looking forward to building on this even further, working with JWTs new and existing clients to create innovative, inspiring and future-facing platforms and strategies. JWT has always been regarded as a pioneer in its field and Im proud to be joining such an iconic company.

ABOUT JWT JWT is the worlds best-known marketing communications brand that has been inventing pioneering ideas for the past 150 years. Headquartered in New York, JWT is a true global network with more than 200 offices in over 90 countries, employing nearly 10,000 marketing professionals. JWT consistently ranks among the top agency networks in the world and continues a dominant presence in the industry by staying on the leading edgefrom producing the first-ever TV commercial in 1939 to developing award-winning branded content today. For more information, please visit http://www.jwt.com and follow us @JWT_Worldwide.

ABOUT JWTINTELLIGENCE JWTIntelligence is a center for provocative thinking that focuses on identifying shifts in the global zeitgeist. Its aim is to bring the outside into help inspire ideas beyond brand, category and consumer conventionsand to identify emerging opportunities so they can be leveraged for business gain. As a part of JWT, the worlds best-known marketing communications brand, JWTIntelligence has conducted trends research and analysis across categories and geographies for nearly a decade. For more information, please visit http://www.jwtintelligence.com and follow us @JWTIntelligence.

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Lucie Greene Joins JWT as Worldwide Director of JWTIntelligence

Listen: Toby Gale – 'Air Bones'

Ever off-kilter, Slugabeds sense of humour masks an ability to uncover raw but wildly unpredictable new talent.

The producers Activia Benz imprint acts as a hub for such producers, with new signing Toby Gale making ears glisten round these parts with his latest slo-mo, fluoro-enhanced synth jammer.

New cut Air Bones billed as their most twinkly lovely release yet has a gorgeous, near 16-Bit sense of nostalgia. Alongside this, though, theres a sci-fi futurism, a sense of the hyper-real to recall Night Slugs.

All slumped rhythms and choked samples, Air Bones continually billows outwards before collapsing under its own glitter-enhanced weight. Slugabed perhaps sums the track up best: [The EP] has a dreamy feel.Its a bit like when you ridethe horse around at nighttime on Ocarina of Timeand theres no one aroundand you feel very blissful.

Check out Air Bones below.

(via FACT)

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Listen: Toby Gale - 'Air Bones'