How can I invest in bitcoin? | Technology | The Guardian – The Guardian

If you are investing, does bitcoin have an intrinsic value, like gold? To me, bitcoins look more like tulip bulbs. Photograph: Benoit Tessier/Reuters

How can I invest in bitcoin? Id like to invest a few hundred pounds. Andy

There are at least three ways, though only one of them looks rational today. First, you could mine your own bitcoins. Second, you could buy some from an exchange. Third, you could buy shares in a fund that has invested in bitcoins.

Please note that answering your question is not a recommendation, and I am not qualified to give advice on investments. However, as electronic payments expert Dave Birch put it to me on Twitter: one doesnt invest in bitcoin, one gambles on bitcoin.

The problem is that people can make money by buying things that are essentially worthless, such as used postage stamps, Beanie Babies, and (historically) tulip bulbs. Tulipmania operated on the bigger fool theory, also known among stock traders as momentum investing. For example, tulip bulb prices may be insane but they keep going up. I may be a fool to buy them, but I expect a bigger fool to buy them from me. Simply replace buy low, sell high with buy high, sell higher. This works until you run out of fools.

However, you can buy things that dont depend on bigger fools appearing, such as land and gold. Their prices may vary dramatically, but over the long term, they retain real value. When tulip bulb prices were tumbling, everyone wanted to sell. When gold prices tumble, people with money look forward to an investment opportunity.

Bitcoin is a digital currency. If you want to buy a camera for 250, then you need a way to transfer 250 to the seller. In theory, it doesnt matter if you pay cash, write a cheque, email the money via PayPal or use bitcoin. In reality, you have to balance a range of factors including convenience, security and transaction costs. Id use a credit card, if possible, because bitcoin payments are not reversible and offer no consumer protection.

But if you are investing, does bitcoin have an intrinsic value, like gold? To me, bitcoins look more like tulip bulbs.

The price of a bitcoin may increase because, for example, it is attractive to technology enthusiasts, and because we are all reading stories about how people made or failed to make fortunes. But, like tulip bulbs, bitcoins could be worthless when the bubble bursts.

As Henry Blodget told CNBC: Look, this is a perfect asset for a speculative bubble. There is a finite supply. There is no intrinsic value. If anybody is persuading you that it should somehow be related to some GDP or gold put down the Kool-Aid and back away.

You could argue that banknotes dont have any intrinsic value either. However, banknotes are backed by governments that have a strong interest in keeping their value relatively stable. Governments dont (yet) care what happens to bitcoins.

Bitcoins are mined by people solving problems with computers. In the beginning, the best way to make money from bitcoins was to mine them with a home PC. However, bitcoin mining becomes more difficult the more miners there are. Today, you need specialised hardware, and you need to join a mining pool where large numbers of miners work together and share the results. Coins are not pure profit because of the cost of the hardware and the electricity consumed when mining. Also, you dont know what bitcoins will be worth when you start mining them.

However, there must be dozens of digital currencies besides bitcoin, and the CoinChoose website lists a Top 20. Well known alternatives include Ethereum, Litecoin, Dogecoin and Bytecoin. You might find one that is still worth mining, or that might represent a better gamble than bitcoin. CryptoCompare is another useful website.

Ethereum is interesting because its backed by an alliance that includes JP Morgan, Microsoft, Intel, Banco Santander, Credit Suisse Group, UBS and BP. Its designed to perform transactions very much faster than bitcoin, and its hashing system is decentralised by design. It favours individuals, not mining pools.

You can buy bitcoins from a bitcoin exchange or online broker, directly from another individual, or from an ATM. Coin ATM Radar lists about 50 bitcoin ATMs in London, many of them in convenience stores. As when buying foreign currencies, theres a fee, which can range from 3.1% to 17.6%. The website covers 56 countries and you can search for an ATM near you.

A bitcoin ATM usually takes cash from your bank card, though some only accept banknotes. It sends your digital currency (bitcoin, litecoin etc) to your wallet, which could be a smartphone app, or to your email address. Some ATMs can print paper wallets that you can scan later.

If you buy a digital currency from an exchange, it may well offer you an online wallet, but your money is at risk unless you have the keys. When the Mt Gox bitcoin exchange was hacked, around 850,000 bitcoins went missing. It was a $450m loss at the time, but at todays exchange rate, it would be $2bn.

There are dozens of different wallets for different purposes, with hot wallets on smartphones and cold storage wallets held offline on paper, on hardware devices (cards, thumbdrives etc) or on separate PCs. These are equivalent to your spending money and your savings account respectively.

You will need to research wallets. However, We Use Coins has a decent guide, and it recommends BitPays Copay to beginners. Its easy to use and it runs on iOS, Android, Windows and Windows Phone, MacOS and Linux. It can also handle shared accounts.

I used my Android phone to search for bitcoin wallet on Google Play, and gave up when it produced around 200 results. Copay was near the top. It only took two minutes to create a wallet, and it prompted me to make a backup: Watch out! If this device is replaced or this app is deleted, neither you nor BitPay can recover your funds without a backup.

It also warned me that Anyone with your backup phrase can access or spend your bitcoin. I dutifully wrote it down.

Once the wallet is set up, you can use the app to buy bitcoins from Coinbase in 33 countries, and from Glidera in the USA. It can take several days to buy or sell bitcoins via Coinbase.

Some investors presumably ones who do not have teenage children think bitcoin is for the tech-savvy, difficult to buy and perhaps even harder to store safely. This has given rise to funds that buy bitcoins or related assets such as mining companies. Last month, The Motley Fool described one ETF as The Worst Way to Buy Bitcoin. At the time, the story said, shares in the Bitcoin Investment Trust cost about twice as much as the bitcoins it owned, but typically they have traded at an average premium of 39% to underlying value of the bitcoin.

You could buy dollar bills for $1 each, so why would anyone pay $1.39 to invest in a $1 bill which is actually worth less than $1, because of the 2% annual management fee? Answer: the laws of supply and demand.

Other American investors were conned by a Ponzi scheme that offered shares in bitcoin mining machinery.

Stories like that could be signs of a bubble market, but if so, when and how it will end is impossible to say.

Have you got another question for Jack? Email it to Ask.Jack@theguardian.com

Go here to see the original:

How can I invest in bitcoin? | Technology | The Guardian - The Guardian

Three Comets singled out | Waupaca County Post – Waupaca County News

Miranda Brunner made the North Eastern Conference Honorable Mention softball team as a utility player. Greg Seubert Photo

June 29, 2017

By Greg Seubert

Three Waupaca softball players received all-conference recognition from the North Eastern Conference.

Junior Markie Ash, senior Victoria Nowak and junior Miranda Brunner made the Honorable Mention team as a catcher, infielder and utility player, respectively.

First Team

Pitcher: Payton Dorn*, junior, Freedom; MaKayla Neinas*, senior, Wrightstown; Samantha Birling, senior, Fox Valley Lutheran.

Catcher: Abby Bergholz, sophomore, Fox Valley Lutheran; Abby Chada, junior, Denmark.

Infielder: Madysen Thayse*, senior, Luxemburg-Casco; Leah Hansen, senior, Denmark; Danielle Nennig, senior, Wrightstown; Brooke Garrett, junior, Freedom.

Outfielder: Abby Cardew*, senior, Freedom; Jayden Laurent*, junior, Denmark; Dana Deterville*, senior, Luxemburg-Casco.

Designated player: Taylor Ullman, junior, Denmark.

Utility player: Morgan Witt, senior, Freedom.

Second Team

Pitcher: Grace Nys, sophomore, Denmark; Chloe Lambie, junior, Marinette.

Catcher: Virginia Misco, senior, Oconto Falls; Hannah Bearson, sophomore, Marinette.

Infielder: Calista Brockman, sophomore, Freedom; Katie Joten, freshman, Little Chute; Heather Renard, senior, Wrightstown; McKenzie Bebo, junior, Marinette; Brianna Prevost, junior, Luxemburg-Casco.

Outfielder: Hannah Wilson, senior, Fox Valley Lutheran; Lori Meyer, senior, Freedom; Mariah Tebon, senior, Luxemburg-Casco.

Designated player: Ally Dart, sophomore, Luxemburg-Casco.

Utility player: Morgann Jensen, senior, Fox Valley Lutheran.

Honorable Mention

Pitcher: Aubrie Hermsen, freshman, Little Chute; Sierra Shefchik, freshman, Luxemburg-Casco.

Catcher: Markie Ash, junior, Waupaca.

Infielder: Sadie Pankratz, senior, Oconto Falls; Megan Lonigro, junior, Little Chute; Taylor Guns, junior, Wrightstown; Taylor Wolchenske, junior, Denmark; Cassie Dart, senior, Luxemburg-Casco; Victoria Nowak, senior, Waupaca; Melany Lorge, freshman, Clintonville.

Outfielder: Bailey Mikkelson, freshman, Clintonville; Bailey Magnin, senior, Oconto Falls; Breanna Collins, junior, Denmark; Kyla Lesperance, senior, Marinette.

Utility player: Miranda Brunner, junior, Waupaca.

Player of the Year: Payton Dorn, junior, Freedom.

* Denotes unanimous selection

View original post here:

Three Comets singled out | Waupaca County Post - Waupaca County News

Bizarro comet challenging researchers – Phys.org – Phys.Org

June 29, 2017 Credit: University of Central Florida

Scientists pursue research through observation, experimentation and modeling. They strive for all of these pieces to fit together, but sometimes finding the unexpected is even more exciting.

That's what happened to University of Central Florida's astrophysicist Gal Sarid, who studies comets, asteroids and planetary formation and earlier this year was part of a team that published a study focused on the comet 174P/Echeclus. It didn't behave the way the team was expecting.

"This is another clue that Echeclus is a bizarre solar system object," said University of South Florida physics research Professor Maria Womack, who leads the team.

Comets streak across the sky and as they get closer to the sun look like bright fuzz balls with extended luminous trails in their wake. However, comets are actually bulky spheres of mixed ice and rock, many of them also rich in other frozen volatile compounds, such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, hydrogen cyanide and methanol.

Comets heat up as they get closer to the sun, losing their icy layers by sublimation and producing emission jets of water vapor, other gases and dust expelled from the comet nucleus, Sarid said. Once they move away from the sun, they cool off again. But some comets start showing emission activity while still very far from the sun, where heating is low.

That's what Sarid and Womack research as they study these kinds of distantly active comets. Womack and graduate student Kacper Wierzchos used the Arizona Radio Observatory Submillimeter telescope to observe Echeclus last year as it approached the sun. This work will be part of Wierzchos' doctoral dissertation in applied physics at USF. Sarid provided theoretical expertise for interpreting the observational results.

Echeclus is part of the population of objects called centaurs, which have orbits around the sun at distances between that of Jupiter and Neptune. It is also part of a special group within the centaurs, which sometimes exhibit comet-like activity. Previous research indicated that Echeclus might have been spewing carbon monoxide as its icy material changed phases.

The team found that the levels of carbon monoxide were nearly 40 times lower than typically expected from other comets at similar distances from the sun. This suggests that Echeclus and similar active Centaurs may be more fragile than other comets. Echeclus may have gone through a different physical process from most comets that caused it to lose a lot of its original carbon monoxide, or it may have had less of that substance to begin with.

Understanding the composition of comets and how they work will help researchers understand how our solar system was formed. It will also aid space explorers plan for their travels things to avoid and perhaps hidden resources found within the nucleus of comets that may be useful on deep space missions.

"These are minor bodies that we are studying, but they can provide major insights," Sarid said. "We believe they are rich in organics and could provide important hints of how life originated."

Sarid is determined to solve the puzzle. This week he hosts a group of comet experts at UCF to discuss the mysterious activity of Echeclus and other similar bodies. The idea for the workshop is to capitalize on the local expertise in observation, laboratory and theoretical work that is required to fully understand the mysteries of active comets at great distances from the sun. The inaugural Florida Distant Comets workshop was held a year ago at USF.

"I guess I've always liked challenges," Sarid said from his office at the Florida Space Institute at UCF, where he spends his days trying to decipher the models and mathematical equations related to his work.

Sarid has a Ph.D. in geophysics and planetary Sciences from Tel Aviv University in Israel and completed postdoctoral work at the Institute for Astronomy and the NASA Astrobiology Institute in Hawaii, followed by a second postdoctoral research appointment at Harvard University. He was a part of a team that used the telescopes in Hawaii for several years chasing comets and asteroids for NASA observing campaigns and space missions before joining UCF in 2014.

He teamed up with Womack in 2016 and on this most recent study provided theoretical expertise for interpreting the observational results. The National Science Foundation funds the project, under a grant awarded to USF, with Womack as the principal investigator and Sarid as a co-investigator.

They will continue to look at centaur-type comets and measure the level of their carbon monoxide emission and related activity.

Explore further: NEOWISE identifies greenhouse gases in comets

More information: K. Wierzchos et al. Carbon Monoxide in the Distantly Active Centaur (60558) 174P/Echeclus at 6 au, The Astronomical Journal (2017). DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/aa689c , https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.07660

M. Womack et al. CO and Other Volatiles in Distantly Active Comets, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (2017). DOI: 10.1088/1538-3873/129/973/031001 , https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.00051

After its launch in 2009, NASA's NEOWISE spacecraft observed 163 comets during the WISE/NEOWISE prime mission. This sample from the space telescope represents the largest infrared survey of comets to date. Data from the survey ...

ESA and NASA's Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO, saw a bright comet plunge towardthe sun on Aug. 3-4, 2016, at nearly 1.3 million miles per hour. Comets are chunks of ice and dust that orbit the sun, usually ...

(Phys.org)A team of researchers with the Center of Planetary Science (CPS) has finally solved the mystery of the "Wow!" signal from 1977. It was a comet, they report, one that that was unknown at the time of the signal ...

Though not visible to the naked eye or even with binoculars, the green-tailed Comet 45P/Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova (HMP) did not escape the gaze of the world-renowned Arecibo Observatory. Scientists from the University of Arizona's ...

A new study has revealed similarities and relationships between certain types of chemicals found on 30 different comets, which vary widely in their overall composition compared to one another. The research is part of ongoing ...

The true identity of centaurs, the small celestial bodies orbiting the sun between Jupiter and Neptune, is one of the enduring mysteries of astrophysics. Are they asteroids or comets? A new study of observations from NASA's ...

Japan has revealed ambitious plans to put an astronaut on the Moon around 2030 in new proposals from the country's space agency.

There are no mechanics on Mars, so the next best thing for NASA's Curiosity rover is careful driving.

Rocky planets are probably a whole lot more common in our galaxy than astronomers previously believedaccording to the latest release of Kepler Space Telescope data last weeka scenario that enhances the prospects for ...

(Phys.org)An international team of astronomers has identified a new extrasolar planet from the data provided by Kepler spacecraft's prolonged mission known as K2. The newly found exoworld, designated EPIC 228735255b, is ...

In our solar system, an asteroid orbits the sun in the opposite direction to the planets. Asteroid 2015 BZ509, also known as Bee-Zed, takes 12 years to make one complete orbit around the sun. This is the same orbital period ...

As NASA's Parker Solar Probe spacecraft begins its first historic encounter with the sun's corona in late 2018flying closer to our star than any other mission in historya revolutionary cooling system will keep its solar ...

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

Excerpt from:

Bizarro comet challenging researchers - Phys.org - Phys.Org

Trent Cull named Utica Comets head coach – Utica Observer Dispatch

Ben Birnell

UTICA Trent Cull knows the importance of one aspect of his job.

The 43-year-old coach and former player acknowledges helping the next generations best hockey players grow in an effort to make it to the National Hockey League has great significance to him.

As the Utica Comets newest head coach, Cull will get the opportunity to help shape some of the games top prospects in the American Hockey League. Cull was announced Wednesday as the replacement for Travis Green, who was promoted to the NHLs Vancouver Canucks in April after four seasons leading the Comets.

I feel that one of my strengths is developing players, said Cull, who recently helped the North Division rival Syracuse Crunch to a Calder Cup finals appearance as an assistant coach. I want to develop our team and our players because then were going to have a better team.

To have a kid sit in a chair in front of you and tell him hes going to the NHL, is probably the best feeling. Its almost like a proud father. (To have) a kid youve worked with for two days or five years and send them on their way and reach their goal their dream thats exciting.

So how will the Comets play on the ice? Cull said he wants to continue the detailed, hard-working structure associated with Greens teams, which made the playoffs twice in his four seasons, including a run to the Calder Cup finals in 2015.

I know I have some big shoes to fill, said Cull, who showed a confident and good-natured demeanor at a news conference Wednesday at the Utica Memorial Auditorium. Travis is a great coach.

Culls pro coaching experience comes as an assistant, spending eight of the last 11 seasons with Syracuse. He was also head coach of the junior Ontario Hockey Leagues Sudbury Wolves from 2010 to 2013, compiling a regular-season record of 94-88-11-11.

A former defenseman, Cull said he wants his teams to play with speed, but also be defensive-minded.

Obviously, were not going to be the Pittsburgh Penguins, but we want to play the game fast, Cull said. We want to be a team that plays hard. Hard is such a different word now than what has happened in the past. Its not about fighting, but it is about being firm. We want to make sure were playing the game with a little bit of a snarl.

The Syracuse rivalry aside, Cull has another link to the Mohawk Valley. He crossed paths briefly with Whitesboro native and Comets President Rob Esche while both were in the Phoenix Coyotes' system during the 1999-2000 season. The NHL organization was then affiliated with the Springfield Falcons.

In total, Cull spent his 10-year career playing in the AHL and the now-defunct International Hockey League. He totaled 435 regular-season AHL games with St. Johns, Springfield, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Houston and Syracuse, accumulating 70 points with 1,049 career penalty minutes. Cull was a member of Wilkes-Barre/Scrantons Calder Cup finals team in 2000-01.

For me, it just stinks when you dont win, Cull said. When you know youre good enough to win and (don't), its something to chew on for a while. I have to find a way to do that with the (Comets)."

Esche said Vancouver officials did their due diligence and were massively excited about adding Cull to the organization. Cull said he met with Green and Vancouver officials last weekend at the NHL draft in Chicago.

"He's just a remarkable guy," Esche said. "I think he's got a genuine passion for development. It doesn't matter even if you're in the NHL you're always developing. Every day is about getting better. ... You dont get to places (Green) and Trent have been without getting better every day.

Jason King, who joined the Comets last season as a full-time assistant, remains on the staff. Cull said another assistant will be added to replace Nolan Baumgartner, who joined Green in Vancouver. With Cull set to help at the Canucks prospects camp next week in the Vancouver area, he said another assistant will be among the topics discussed.

Cull said his experience with Utica is limited to visits to the Aud. He said he looks forward to establishing roots in the area with his wife, Marcia and their three young boys.

When you feel the vibe of (the Aud) you see everybody come and its almost like a family atmosphere, Cull said. It is just kind of a great pride around the rink.

For Vancouver having their team here, I think is a win-win. Im excited to be part of that. Not only the team here in the building, but being part of the fabric of the community. Were going to be around. I just look forward to the whole opportunity.

Follow @OD_Birnell on Twitter or call him at 315-792-5032.

The rest is here:

Trent Cull named Utica Comets head coach - Utica Observer Dispatch

Rivers Comets Corner – June 29, 2017 – myWestman.ca

Details Published on Thursday, June 29, 2017

By Justin Froese

Submitted

Two games and two wins for Rivers Comets this week, so we clinched a playoff berth and improved our record to 6-6 on the season.

Our first game took place Wednesday, June 21 as Comets travelled to Elkhorn to take on the Expos. Comets rode a stud, complete game pitching performance by Eric Truscott to a 5-3 win. Dustin Asham had a pair of hits to help lead the offence.

Game 2 was after a six-day layoff, but thankfully being put on ice didn't slow the offence down. On Tuesday, June 27 Cody Nolan pitched a complete game, striking out three to lead Comets to a 16-4 win over Reston Rockets. Dana McNish, Eric Truscott and Chris Hillis each had three hits; Justin Froese went 4-5 with a home run and three RBIs.

Theres one calendar week left until our regular season wraps up. Wednesday, June 28 we played our final home game against Elkhorn Expos before hitting the road Friday to take on Deloraine Royals on June 30. Our regular season finale is Monday, July 3 when we hit the road and take on the Red Sox in Hamiota.

For more recent Comets information, check out the Rivers Comets Baseball Club Facebook group!

See the article here:

Rivers Comets Corner - June 29, 2017 - myWestman.ca

12 best restaurants in Lima, Peru – CNN.com | CNN Travel – CNN

(CNN) Paris perhaps? Or maybe New York, Rome or Tokyo?

Naming the world's greatest gourmet city is the kind of confoundingly simple challenge that foodies could spend all night fighting over.

Yet now there is a new candidate for the title, one that until recently few associated with haute cuisine but which has been taking the gastronomical world by storm: Lima.

Since the turn of the millennium, the Peruvian capital has been the epicenter of an increasingly acclaimed culinary renaissance.

A generation of creative young chefs trained in some of the top culinary schools around the globe have returned to Peru to start applying their new skills and techniques to the Andean nation's vast reservoir of traditional recipes.

The proof is in the elegantly plated pudding.

Lima's top restaurants also have another advantage; while dining in such highly rated restaurants in Europe or North America might cost the equivalent of a monthly mortgage payment, here you can even get away with spending under $100 for a single meal.

The roots of Peru's gastronomic excellence are not hard to identify.

Its cuisine is a literal melting pot of flavors and traditions from every corner of the globe. The country has seen significant immigration from nations as varied as Spain, Italy, France, China and Japan.

Then there are the vital influences of the vibrant Afro-Peruvian community as well as distinct indigenous cultures from the coast, mountains and vast rainforest.

Adding to the mix is a spectacularly diverse natural pantry. Thanks to its tropical location and huge variation in altitude, Peru has just about every kind of ecosystem -- and food crop -- imaginable.

The Andes and Amazon are home to countless kinds of exotic, little known but utterly delicious herbs, fruit and vegetables while the frigid Humboldt Current means Peru's Pacific fisheries teem with myriad seafood species.

Here, we run down 12 of the best restaurants Lima has to offer.

Peruvian chef Virgilio Martinez's Lima restaurant Central earned the top spot at the recent Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants awards. The chef is famed for his beautifully creative dishes that showcase the diversity of Peru's ingredients.

Currently the undisputed brightest star in Peru's culinary universe, Central has been repeatedly ranked Latin America's best restaurant.

Chef Virgilio Martnez's philosophy reclaims the pre-Colombian tradition of barter and exchange between communities from the coast, mountains and rainforest, featuring ingredients from altitudes as high as 12,000 feet to below sea level, in other words fish and seafood.

From the high Andes, Martnez will serve guests a selection of Peruvian potatoes garnished with mua, a kind of Andean mint, and alpaca heart shavings.

At the other end of the altitudinal spectrum, who knew that scallops, spiced up with Peruvian rocoto peppers, could be turned into a crust with a meringue-like texture?

Booking will need to be made weeks, and possibly even months, in advance.

One of just a tiny handful of restaurants with the ultimate location on Lima's Malecon, the clifftop boulevard overlooking the Pacific, this restaurant is famed for its repertoire of hearty Peruvian "criollo" classics, the coastal tradition that blends Spanish and native influences.

Come hungry and ready to try traditional recipes such as aj de gallina, a kind of Peruvian chicken "korma," or beef huatia, a pre-Colombian technique involving slow cooking by burying the meat with large stones taken from a fire.

The legendary Astrid & Gaston has moved into a spacious 17th Century palacio decorated in modern, minimalist style.

No listing of Lima restaurants would be complete without Astrid & Gastn, the eatery that spearheaded Peru's gastronomic rebirth when it opened its doors in 1994.

The flagship project of chef Gastn Acurio and his German chocolatier wife Astrid Gutsche -- herself once named the world's best pastry chef -- who he met while studying in Paris's Cordon Bleu culinary school, is now housed in a spacious 17th Century palacio decorated in modern, minimalist style.

Acurio remains the father of contemporary Peruvian cuisine, having both championed the country's rich tradition of home cooking and been the first to tweak it with haute cuisine flourishes on an international stage.

Astrid & Gastn offers a tasting menu that is a tour de force as it takes diners on a brisk journey across Peru's exhilarating history and geography.

Another of Lima's highest-ranked restaurants, this one offers cuisine from Arequipa, Peru's picturesque third city nestled in the southern Andean foothills.

There, "picanterias," which typically only open for lunch, are a way of life, with dishes ranging from seafood to the decidedly meaty, especially chicharron, aka fried pork, a Peruvian classic.

Dishes to look out for include the beef ribs, a crab parihuela or stew, and the rocoto en chupe, a soup a little reminiscent of a chowder using one of Peru's hottest native chili peppers.

Describing Osso as an upscale steakhouse doesn't do the place justice. This specialist in all things beef actually started out as an exclusive butcher's shop.

Initially chef Renzo Garibaldi began inviting friends to enjoy a private grill around the carving table as he experimented with aging different cuts, some for up to three months.

With the enzymes breaking down the meat and imparting complex layers of flavor, he started getting requests from strangers keen to share the experience.

The chef's table remains open, although you may have to book months in advance. Garibaldi has also opened a second branch, in the central district of San Isidro, which will save foreign visitors the trek to his original eatery in La Molina, off the beaten track on the eastern fringes of Lima.

Osso may be the least authentically Peruvian restaurant on this list, but it might also just be the best place in South America to enjoy a steak.

Osso San Isidro, Av. Sto. Toribio 173 y Va, Av. Central 172, San Isidro, Lima; +51 1 4697438

A former lawyer, Rafael Osterling has become a culinary star with his eponymous restaurant.

The subject of much critical acclaim and some high-flying culinary rankings, chef Rafael Osterling is heading in a new direction.

That means that instead of providing a tasting menu of a dozen or more tiny but elaborately worked and often experimental portions, he's shooting to give diners a filling three-course meal, but one with all the flair you'd expect of a world-class chef.

The current menu includes very Peruvian items such as "tiradito," a kind of fish carpaccio, made with tuna and flavored with avocado and palm hearts, and duck (a staple along Peru's northern coast) braised with black beer and served with sweet rice.

This is the highly rated locale of Pedro Miguel Schiaffino, a chef particularly known for his use of exotic ingredients from the Amazon.

Malabar is also home to a bar that's been ranked in the world's top 10, should you be in the mood for an aperitif before your meal.

These days Schiaffino, like Osterling, is a little more focused on satisfying his customers than garnering critical plaudits, offering "casual cuisine, with a simple spirit and the warmth of home."

In practice that doesn't, however, mean anything less than spectacularly original fare, from smoked paiche, the largest fish in the Amazon, served with black chili sauce and yucca puree, to grilled octopus with lima beans and parmesan shavings.

La Mar: The best place to sample Peru's national dish -- ceviche.

If Peru has a national dish, then it's ceviche, the fresh seafood salad marinated in lemon juice and sold in specialist restaurants, cevicherias, even in the Andes.

No cevicheria is more famous than La Mar -- the name translates to "the high seas" -- the second flagship eatery of Gastn Acurio. Like all cevicherias, La Mar doesn't just offer a variety of ceviches, but also numerous other versions of Peru's many original fish and shellfish classics.

A bottle of white wine is a perfect accompaniment but the classic Peruvian way to eat ceviche is washed down with a local, very cold lager.

If ceviche has a doyen, then it is Javier Wong. He actually started this restaurant out of his garage, although these days you'll need to book weeks in advance for his informal lunch-only restaurant behind an unmarked door in an unfashionable neighborhood.

Wong prepares all the dishes himself and, unlike most, uses only a single fish, sole, for his stripped-down version of this Peruvian classic. He then adds slices of red onion, salt, black pepper, diced chilies and the lemon juice that cures the chunks of raw fish.

It's a sign of his true mastery how such a simple recipe can be so utterly delicious. He also cooks all kinds of other seafood delights too, without a recipe and frequently off-the-cuff depending on his mood.

Chez Wong, Enrique Len Garca 114, Distrito de Lima; +51 1 4706217

Trepanation, the cranial surgeries once practiced by the Paracas people along the southern coast, is the title of a dish in 1087.

This is a new project from a rising star of Peruvian cuisine, Palmiro Ocampo, whose CV includes a stint at Copenhagen's Noma, once ranked the world's best restaurant.

The tasting menu reveals the same avant-garde philosophy of his Danish mentors, rooted in the seasonality and sustainability of locally sourced ingredients while also revering Peru's own complex traditions.

You can also order a la carte. Dishes are experimental, elaborate yet also austere, and come with titles such as "el Trueque," a reference to the pre-Colombian tradition of barter that still survives in rural Peru, and even Trepanation, the cranial surgeries once practiced by the Paracas people along the southern coast.

The name means "welcome" in Japanese and this restaurant from chef Mitsuharu Tsumura is the apogee of Japanese-Peruvian, aka "Nikkei" cuisine.

This fusion dates back more than a century thanks to the Andean nation's large community of immigrants from the Land of the Rising Sun. Maido is, according to the 2017 San Pellegrino rankings, not just Latin America's second best restaurant but also number eight in the world.

The menu runs from conventionally exquisite Japanese sushi classics to original creations such as cau cau, a pre-Colombian potato stew, but served with sea snails.

Amaz's version of juanes (chicken, rice, olives and egg cooked together wrapped in leaf), a jungle staple.

This is Schiaffino's other restaurant, intended to be more economically accessible than Malabar. It's also explicitly dedicated to recipes and ingredients from across the Amazon basin.

Considering how vast and biodiverse it is, you might wonder how cuisine from the world's greatest tropical rainforest has managed to largely fly below most foodies' radar.

At Amaz, this is rectified with Schiaffino's sophisticated takes on all kinds of jungle staples, from juanes (chicken, rice, olives and egg cooked together wrapped in a giant leaf), to cecina and tacacho, aka smoked pork with a kind of hash brown dumpling made from plantains.

See the article here:

12 best restaurants in Lima, Peru - CNN.com | CNN Travel - CNN

London to open world’s fastest urban zip wire – CNN International

(CNN) London thrill-seekers will soon be able to see the city's famous skyline from a whole new angle -- thanks to a new zip line opening in July.

London's new urban zip wire is described as the "biggest, fastest of its kind."

The 225-meter (738.2-foot) descent will allow riders to travel at speeds of 50 miles per hour.

A similar inner-city zip wire was recently installed in Paris for two weeks in June.

"Giant zip lines and the greatest cityscape in the world -- it seemed such an obvious idea to put the two together," says Barry Shaverin, founder of Zip World London.

"And Archbishop's Park is one of London's best kept secrets -- we really want to help it get the attention it deserves."

Tickets -- 22.50 (roughly $29) for an individual adult -- are predicted to sell out fast.

The zip line will be up for 12 weeks from July 6, 2017 onwards.

In December 2016, a zip line across the Thames was installed by the London Fire Brigade.

Riders raised more than 1 million for Evelina London Children's Hospital.

Try if you dare, zip line over the Alps and then BASE jump your way to the ground. Definitely not for the faint-hearted.

Want to fly through the air elsewhere? Here are some of the coolest zip lines across the globe:

Adrenaline rushes in the Welsh countryside.

Zip World has three Welsh outposts -- all of which are worth a visit.

Zip World Penrhyn Quarry: Bethesda, Wales, United Kingdom LL57 4YG

Zip World Slate Caverns: Llechwedd Slate Caverns, Blaenau Ffestiniog, Wales, United Kingdom LL41 3NB

There are six zip lines at Icy Strait in Alaska.

Six zip lines propel riders above the rainforest at 60 mph -- combining an adrenaline rush with gorgeous scenery.

Icy Strait Alaska: 108 Cannery Road, Hoonah, Alaska, 99829 United States

Thrill seekers at the Eden Project can plummet across Cornwall at 50 mph.

Thrill-seekers plummet across Cornwall at 50 mph.

Eden Project: Bodelva, Cornwall, United Kingdom PL24 2SG

There are five different zip wire options at Hawaii's Skyline Eco-Adventures.

Riders travel across canyons with 90 foot/27 meter drops.

Skyline Eco-Adventures: 18303 Haleakala Hwy, Kula, HI 96790, United States

ZipOhio whizzes over the Hocking River.

Riders then swoop down towards the Hocking River.

Hocking Hill also offers an "X-Tour" -- a 2.5 to 3 hour, professionally guided tour, across the river and through caves.

ZipOhio: 19852 Ohio 664, Logan, Ohio 43138, United States

Nepal claims the world's steepest, longest and fastest zip wire.

Nepal's wire is not for the faint-hearted -- it also claims to be the world's fastest and longest.

For those who can brave the drop, ZipFlyer Nepal also offers stunning views across forest canopies.

ZipFlyer Nepal: Pokhara, Nepal.

Rainforest views: Sky Adventures in Costa Rica.

Riders are rewarded with spectacular bird's-eye views of the forest below.

Sky Adventures Arenal Park: Arenal Volcano Park 21007, Costa Rica

More here:

London to open world's fastest urban zip wire - CNN International

An Interview with Rick Rosner on Women and the Future (Part 1) – The Good Men Project (blog)

Editors note: Scott Douglas Jacobsen interviews his personal and professional friend Rick Rosner, who claims to have the worlds second highest IQ. Errol Morris interviewed him for the TV series First Person. This is an excerpt of that interview, originally some 100,000 words. Additional excerpted segments will appear here on The Good Men Project in the coming weeks.

Scott Douglas Jacobsen: Many, arguably most, women have greater difficulties than their male counterparts in equivalent circumstances.Their welfare means our welfare men and women (no need to enter the thorny, confused wasteland of arguments for social construction of gender rather than sex; one need not make a discipline out of truisms.).

Net global wellbeing for women improves slowly, but appears to increase in pace over the years millennia, centuries, and decades.Far better in some countries; decent in some countries; and far worse, even regressing, in others.Subjugation with denial of voting, driving, choice in marriage, choice in children, honour killings, andsevere practices of infibulation, clitoridectomy, or excision among the varied, creative means of femalegenital mutilation based in socio-cultural or religiouspractices; objectification with popular media violence and sexuality, internet memes and content, fashion culture to some extent, even matters of personal preference such as forced dress or coerced attire, or stereotyping of attitudinal and behavioral stances.All I ask of our brethren is that they will take their feet from off our necks and permit us to stand upright on the ground which God intended us to occupy.Sarah Moore Grimke said.

Everyone owes women.International obligations and goals dictate straightforward statements such as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) of the United Nations (UN) in addition to simple provision of first life.MDG 3, 4, and 5relate in direct accordance with this proclamation in an international context mind you.MDG 3 states everyones obligations, based on agreed upon goals, for promotion of gender equality and theempowerment of women. MDG 4 states everyones obligations for reduction ofinfant mortality rate. MDG 5 states everyones obligations towards improvement ofmaternalhealth.All MDGs proclaim completion by 2015.We do not appear to have sufficed in obligations up to the projected deadline of 2015 with respect to all of the MDGs in sum.

In addition to these provisions, we have the conditions set forth in theThe International Bill of Rights for WomenbyThe Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women(CEDAW) of the United Nations Development Funds (UNDF) consideration and mandate of the right of women to be free from discrimination and sets the core principles to protect this right. Wheredo you project the future of women in the next 5, 10, 25, 100 years, and further? In general and particular terms such as the trends and the concomitant subtrends, what about the MDGs and numerous other proclaimed goals to assist women especially in developing areas of the world?

Rick Rosner: Predicting gender relations beyond a century from now is somewhat easier than predicting the short-term. In the transhuman future, bodily form, including sex, will be changeable. People will take different forms. And when anyone can change sexes with relative ease, there will be less gender bias.

Lets talk about the transhuman future (100 to 300 years from now) in general, at least as its presented in science fiction that doesnt suck. Three main things are going on:

Theres pervasive networked computing. Everything has a computer in it, the computers all talk to each other, computing costs nothing, data flying everywhere. Structures are constantly being modified by swarms of AI builders. A lot of stuff happens very fast.

Your mind-space isnt permanently anchored to your body. Consciousness will be mathematically characterized, so itll be transferrable, mergeable, generally mess-withable.

People choose their level of involvement in this swirling AI chaos. Most people wont live at the frenzied pinnacle of tech its too much. There are communities at all different levels of tech.

Also, horrible stuff old and new happens from time to time bio-terror, nanotech trouble, economic imperialism, religious strife, etc.

For more about this kind of thing, read Charles Stross, Cory Doctorow, David Marusek, or Neal Stephenson.

So, two hundred years from now, gender wont be much of a limiting factor, except in weird throwback communities. In the meantime, idiots will continue to be idiots, but to a lesser extent the further we go into the future. No one whos not a retard is standing up for the idea of men being the natural dominators of everything. If it seems like were not making progress towards gender equality, it may be because theres a huge political/economic/media faction that draws money and power from the more unsavoury old-fashioned values, with its stance that anyone whos concerned about racism or sexism is nave and pursuing a hidden agenda to undermine American greatness.

Dumb beliefs that arent propped up by doctrine eventually fade away, and believing that men or any elite group is inherently superior is dumb, particularly now and into the future as any purportedly superior inherent abilities become less significant in relation to our augmented selves. Across the world, the best lazy, non-specifically targeted way to reduce gender bias is to open up the flow of information, serious and trivial (however you do that).

In the very short run, maybe the U.S. elects a female President. Doubt this will do that much to advance the cause of women, because Hillary Clinton has already been in the public eye for so long shes more a specific person than a representative of an entire gender. Is thinking that dumb? I dunno. I do know that her gender and who she is specifically will be cynically used against her. I hope that if elected, shes less conciliatory and more willing to call out BS than our current President.

In the U.S., theres currently some attention being paid to rape. Will the media attention to rape make rapey guys less rapey? I dunno. Will increaseattention to rape in India reduce instances there? I dunno. A couple general trends may slowly reduce the overall occurrence of sexual coercion and violence. One trend is the increased flow of information and the reduction of privacy cameras everywhere, everybody willing to talk about everything on social media, victims being more willing to report incidents, better understanding of what does and does not constitute consent. The other trend is the decreasing importance of sex. My baseline is the 70s, when I was hoping to lose my virginity. Sex was a huge deal because everything else sucked food, TV, no video games, no internet and people looked good skinny from jogging and cocaine and food not yet being engineered to be super-irresistible. Today, everybodys fat, and theres a lot of other fun stuff to do besides sex.

I think that some forms of sexual misbehaviour serial adultery, some workplace harassment will be seen as increasingly old-school as more and more people will take care of their desire for sexual variety via the vast ocean of internet porn. Of course, sexual misbehaviour isnt only about sex its also about exercising creepy power or a perverse need to be caught and punished so, unfortunately, that wont entirely go away. During the past century, sexual behaviour has changed drastically the types of sex that people regularly engage in, sex outside of marriage, tolerance for different sexual orientations, freely available pornography and sexual information, the decline in prostitution you could say, cheesily, that sex is out of the closet. And sex thats not secretive or taboo loses some of its power.

But I could be wrong. According to a 2007 study conducted at two U.S. public universities, one fifth of female college students studied suffered some degree of sexual assault.

A version of this post was originally published on In-SightJournal.com and is republished here with permission.

Get the best stories from The Good Men Project delivered straight to your inbox, here.

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Read this article:

An Interview with Rick Rosner on Women and the Future (Part 1) - The Good Men Project (blog)

Seven UW projects awarded use of Cheyenne supercomputer … – Gillette News Record

Seven projects, many of which have applications to Wyoming issues -- including identification of promising catalysts for carbon fuel and chemical production, cloud seeding to enhance precipitation and a study of the Blair-Wallis watershed -- were recently chosen to receive computational time and storage space on the supercomputer in Cheyenne.

University of Wyoming faculty members will head projects that will use the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center (NWSC). Each project was critically reviewed by an external panel of experts and evaluated on experimental design, computational effectiveness, efficiency of resource use and broader impacts such as how the project involves both UW and National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) researchers; strengthens UWs research capacity; enhances UWs computational programs; or involves research in a new or emerging field.

The Wyoming-NCAR Allocation Panel recently met to evaluate the large allocation requests for the use of computational resources at the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center, says Bryan Shader, UWs special assistant to the vice president for research and economic development, and a UW professor of mathematics. The projects were granted allocations totaling 65 million core hours. In addition, 6 million core hours were recently awarded to a new faculty member as part of his startup package.

These projects represent new explorations that could not be undertaken without the capabilities of Cheyenne, the recently installed supercomputer at the NWSC, Shader says. Improved computer technology is enabling the study of more complicated or nuanced phenomena.

Over the last year, 23 UW projects used the NWSC. This includes four new projects that were allocated a total of 72 million core hours starting in January 2016. These allocations and use rank UW as first in total allocation and total users; first in total computer charges; and first in active projects among the more than 100 North American universities using the NWSC.

Since the NWSCs opening in October 2012, allocations have been made to 53 UW research projects, including these latest seven.

Cheyenne Projects

A brief description of each of the projects, which begin July 1, is provided below:

-- Maohong Fan, a School of Energy Resources (SER) professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, leads the project, titled Application of Density Functional Theory in Low Carbon Fuel and Chemical Productions. This National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded project will use the Cheyenne supercomputer to identify the most promising catalysts for carbon dioxide or synthetic gas conversion from among a massive set of possibilities. The project should greatly accelerate the application of carbon dioxide conversion techniques that can be used to mitigate the environmental impacts of producing and using carbon-based fuels.

UW faculty members working on the project include: Urszula Norton, a UW associate professor of agroecology in the Department of Plant Sciences; Khaled Gasem, a professor of petroleum engineering; Hertanto Adidharma, an associate professor of petroleum engineering; and Gang Tan, an associate professor from the Department of Civil and Architectural Engineering. The research team also includes collaborators from Jackson State University, the University of Mississippi and the University of Delaware.

-- Jeff French, an assistant professor of atmospheric science, leads the project, titled Numerical Representation of Cloud and Precipitation Growth Processes and of the Effects of Glaciogenic Seeding on Orographic Clouds. Throughout much of the interior western United States, and in many arid regions around the globe, water supplies are derived from precipitation when moist air is lifted as it moves over mountain ranges. This precipitation, known as orographic precipitation, is often in the form of wintertime snowfall that feeds surface runoff and reservoirs, and replenishes subsurface aquifers.

Glaciogenic seeding of clouds -- that is, infusing clouds with chilled air or ice nuclei to encourage formation of ice particles -- is one technology that various Western communities have considered to glean additional water sources. Despite many studies of glaciogenic seeding, there are many important questions that remain unanswered. This project seeks to resolve some of these questions.

The project, called SNOWIE (Seeded and Natural Orographic Wintertime Clouds: the Idaho Experiment), is a collaborative research program aimed at addressing long-standing questions related to the initiation and growth of precipitation in orographic clouds. The project will apply new and advanced instrumentation, improved understanding of cloud dynamical and microphysical processes, and numerical modeling capabilities to evaluate the potential for orographic precipitation enhancement in ways not possible in decades past.

Besides French, UW researchers involved in the project are Bart Geerts, a UW professor of atmospheric science, and Wei Wu, a postdoctoral student. The project also includes collaborators from the University of Illinois and NCAR.

-- Zach Lebo, a UW assistant professor of atmospheric science, heads the project, titled Modification of Marine Boundary Layer Flow by Topography Along the Western United States Coastline, seeking to provide scientific understanding of how coastal terrain (specifically, that along the western U.S.) contributes to various phenomena in the jet stream that have been observed by a recent UW King Air research expedition.

Tom Parish, a UW professor of atmospheric science and head of the department, along with faculty from the University of Kansas, will collaborate on this NSF-funded project.

-- Xiaohong Liu, a UW professor of atmospheric science and the Wyoming Excellence Chair in Climate Modeling, will study the impacts of smoke aerosols on regional and global weather. The NSF project includes research collaborators from the Georgia Institute of Technology, Auburn University and the Department of Energys Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. It is known that large amounts of aerosols that result from forest fires can change the timing of formation of rain in clouds. This project will investigate how these aerosols affect the spatial distribution of precipitation and will require the new capabilities of the Cheyenne supercomputer.

-- Subhashis Mallick, an SER professor of geology and geophysics, will lead a project that will develop and use new algorithms to characterize the structural and petro-physical properties of a regions subsurface.

-- Wei Wang, a UW Ph.D. student in geology and geophysics, heads a project, titled Application of Full 3-D Waveform Tomography (F3DT) to Image Deep Critical Zone with Ambient-Noise Data. He will study the deep structure of the Blair-Wallis watershed, which is located between Laramie and Cheyenne.

This watershed is part of the Earths critical zone, which is the portion of the Earth that extends from the deepest reach of groundwater to the top of the vegetation. This zone sustains the majority of life on the Earth and, yet, fundamental questions -- such as What are the essential physical, chemical, hydrological and biological processes that control the formation and evolution of the critical zone? -- are still unanswered. The project will provide the data to enable researchers to make reliable inferences regarding how the critical zone evolves under climate, tectonic and anthropogenic events.

By the Numbers

The most recent recommended allocations total 65 million core hours, 147 terabytes of storage space, 75 terabytes of archival storage, and 33,000 hours on data analysis and visualization systems, Shader says.

To provide some perspective on what these numbers mean, Cheyenne can be thought of as 145,152 personal computers that are cleverly interconnected to perform as one computer. The computational time allocated is equivalent to the use of the entire supercomputer for 21 days, 24 hours a day. The 147 terabytes of storage would be enough to store the entire printed collection of the U.S. Library of Congress more than 20 times. Cheyenne consists of about 145,152 processors, also known as cores. An allocation of one core hour allows a project to run one of these processors for one hour, or 1,000 of these for 1/1,000th of an hour.

The supercomputer Cheyenne began operation in March. Its capability to perform 5.34 quadrillion calculations per second places it as the 20th most capable supercomputer in the world. It is more than 2.5 times more capable than its predecessor, Yellowstone.

The NWSC is the result of a partnership among the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, the operating entity for NCAR; UW; the state of Wyoming; Cheyenne LEADS; the Wyoming Business Council; and Black Hills Energy. The NWSC is operated by NCAR under sponsorship of the NSF.

The NWSC contains one of the worlds most powerful supercomputers dedicated to improving scientific understanding of climate change, severe weather, air quality and other vital atmospheric science and geoscience topics. The center also houses a premier data storage and archival facility that holds historical climate records and other information.

Originally posted here:

Seven UW projects awarded use of Cheyenne supercomputer ... - Gillette News Record

Watch a Supercomputer’s Fever Dream of the Chelyabinsk Asteroid Flameout – Motherboard


Motherboard
Watch a Supercomputer's Fever Dream of the Chelyabinsk Asteroid Flameout
Motherboard
On Thursday, NASA released one of the most detailed simulations of the asteroid's dramatic flameout to date (at top), created by the agency's Pleiades supercomputer at the Ames Research Center. The short sequence used the aerodynamics software Cart3D ...
Watch a Simulated Asteroid Hit the Atmosphere at 45000 Miles Per HourGizmodo
The terrifying simulation that reveals what happens when an asteroid hits Earth's atmosphere at 45000 miles per hourDaily Mail

all 85 news articles »

See the rest here:

Watch a Supercomputer's Fever Dream of the Chelyabinsk Asteroid Flameout - Motherboard

Ringan movie review: A warm and innocent quest for spirituality – Hindustan Times

Ringan Director: Makarand Mane Cast: Shashank Shende, Sahil Joshi Rating: 3/5

Debutante director Makarand Mane brings a story of hope, courage, and spirituality embedded within the daily struggles of a debt-ridden Maharashtrian farmer in his Marathi film Ringan or The Quest. The 2016 National Award-winning film hits theatres on Friday.

The release of Ringan is quite timely as protests by farmers demanding loan waiver and better prices for their produce have hit the heartland farming states of Maharashtra and neighbouring Madhya Pradesh. Thousands of farmers have killed themselves over the last decade - by drinking pesticides or hanging themselves from trees - after unseasonal rains and drought affected their incomes.

Ringan tells the story of Arjun (Shashank Shende), a poor farmer who is haunted by nightmares of suicide, and his seven-year-old son Abhimanyu (Sahil Joshi), who visit the temple of Lord Vithal in Pandharpur. While Abhimanyu is looking for his dead mother and believes she is living at Gods abode, Arjun is seeking monetary help and a job so he can get back his land from the money lender back home.

The movie opens with Arjuns nightmare where he is seen running across a barren land and reaches a tree full of people hanging from its branches. Mane makes deft use of silence in his film to establish the poverty, longing and faith of the destitute.

One of Shendes nightmares.

Shende plays the father with utmost honesty and brings every bit of the helplessness, hopelessness and grief of a single parent trying his best to make things better for his son. There is a sequence where he meets a saint near a temple and the two debate over the existence of God. Shende is immensely earnest when he snaps at the saint, Do not talk like the mystics when the latter tells him, He may or may not exist. It is all about belief. The simple and innocent faith of the poor despite facing unending suffering in his entire life is touching.

When Abhimanyus father decides to visit Pandharpur, his hopes rise yet again and he starts searching for his mother. When he sees his father approach prostitutes in the night, he believes it is his mother and goes looking for her later. There is no over-the-top melodramatic score or heavy dialogues to mar the chastity of the moment.

Ringan is not for the entertainment seeking crowd - it has the typical art movie feel. With a laid-back pace and indulgent use of silence and imagery, the film will be more palatable to those who love the art of cinema. Despite the pathos of drought-hit farmers, Ringan has a certain innocence that helps it leave a warm feeling.

Mane, who has also written the film, has ensured every single scene imparts gravitas to the narrative and brings home the emotions of his characters.

Ringan may not be a great movie and it does not preach higher-than-thou principles. The story is pretty average in isolation. However, the simplicity and authenticity of the film make it a heart-warming experience.

Interact with the author @swetakaushal

Follow @htshowbiz for more

Continued here:

Ringan movie review: A warm and innocent quest for spirituality - Hindustan Times

APEX Express Asian Americans and Spirituality – kpfa 94.1fm

Spirituality is an important source of both resistance and renewal. However,Asian and Asian Americans often compartmentalize themselves when engaging in spirituality especially within religious communities in the U.S. Gender, sexuality, and cultural histories are often erased to find belonging in spiritual communities. As a result, spirituality can be hard to access for Asian and Asian Americanscommunities when our full selves are not involved. We will be exploring the factors that contribute to these spiritual barriers and what our communities are doing to find places of healing and resistance.

More information on our guests and their work here:

Thanks to guest producers Ikino Kubo, Sarah Lee, and Samir Shrestha.

Community Calendar

Tomorrow from 9AM-5PM, Bay Resistance will be

This Saturday at 3 p.m., East Wind Books of Berkeley is hosting a lecture by Dr. Kelly Fong and Drl Clement Lai called

And save the date! On August 12, Network on Religion and Justice host their Rise Up day-long conference and community gathering focused on healing and resistance.

See the original post here:

APEX Express Asian Americans and Spirituality - kpfa 94.1fm

1st Annual Native Spirituality & Cultural Awareness Gathering – Portage Online

Celebrating diversity and building bridges between cultural islands are very important to the members of the Portage Folk Festival Association, who look forward to hosting their 1st annual, 4 day Native Spirituality and Cultural Awareness Gathering." This is an inclusive gathering, beginning Thursday evening June 29 and wrapping up July 2 at Enchanted Healing Oasis (ECHO), a large tree sanctuary off Hwy 331.

This property is an ecosystem, certified with Canadian Wildlife Federation. It is a food forest bearing cherries, apples, pears, plums, Russian grapes and sometimes apricots, with 100 different kinds of trees (many labelled), including trees from different parts of the world, so there is much to explore. There is also a marsh like body of water that supports wildlife, and a canoe is available to get close up.

Allan Smoke is from the Dakota nation and has been operating private sweat lodge ceremonies at ECHO since last year. Allan looks forward to sharing the experiences of his native culture with other ethnic cultures in the Portage community.

Each day will provide a gentle understanding of the need and purpose of Indigenous ceremonies in coming together and learning about traditional worldviews and how each of us are connected to everything we see. People of all backgrounds will be invited to immerse themselves in the diverse cultures of our land's First Peoples during the four-day event.

Spiritual awareness is about healing of who we are, as people of all races. The sweat lodge ceremonies begin with preparation before entering, and reflection following the experience. All will then seek their own area of solitude, or speak with elders available to guide and help people understand what is revealed in their experience. Note: it is possible to enter and exit the sweat lodge according to ones comfort level.

At any given time, activities will include Grandmother name giving by Marlene Edwards of Agassiz Youth Centre, traditional parenting by Wendy Mousseau of Child and Family Services from Langruth, the art of cooking by Crystal Meeches (bannock and tacos for sale), a womens drum group led by Debbie Parker of Friendship Centre, sharing circles, story telling, a dance demonstration and nature walks. The Great Dance, or Sundance, that will take place next year at ECHO for all races will also be presented. This is a place of no schedules or clocks, a time to be by the fire, by the water or in the forest.

All participants of the sacred ceremonies are asked to read the event details listed on the website.

Local dignitaries have been invited to show their support for cultural understanding and reconciliation at this cultural and spiritual event.

Check out http://www.portagefolk.com for directions and more info.

Donations are appreciated.

Here is the original post:

1st Annual Native Spirituality & Cultural Awareness Gathering - Portage Online

Why I ditched my frantic pursuit of enlightenment | The Young Witness – The Young Witness

26 Jun 2017, 8:05 a.m.

My so-called spiritual life was at risk of becoming my whole life, yet I was no closer to enlightenment.

Being "spiritual" is all the rage, which can only be for the greater good but not when our quest for wholeness is driven by a far more shallow desire to be in the cool gang. Photo: Stocksy

At one point I was juggling my meditation teacher, kinesiologist, hypnotherapist, psychotherapist and chiropractor (who also practises NLP). I had a clairvoyant's number in my phone and took a friend's recommendation on a "spiritual healer". I meditated twice a day, did a course onA Course in Miraclesand occasionally made it to yoga.

My tower of self-help books teetered precariously close to my pile of crystals atop my Angel Cards in a room that had been "cleansed" by burning sage. My so-called spiritual life was at risk of becoming my whole life, yet I was no closer to enlightenment.

It was a scatter-gun approach, hoping that one thing might pay off and deliver me eternal happiness.

Not that I would admit to any of that. That was a time when personal growth was seen as self-indulgent and flaky, putting your faith (and cash) in rogue charlatans, while you were taken for a blatant ride. Worse, it was an overt admission of vulnerability and fallibility that was no one's business but your own.

Oh, how we've evolved. It's chic to be conscious. Mindfulness and meditation are as much a part of many people's days as an acai chia berry smoothie after pre-dawn bikram.

Being "spiritual" is all the rage, which can only be for the greater good but not when our quest for wholeness is driven by a far more shallow desire to be in the cool gang.

In our mad rush down the path to enlightenment as we strive to fit in positive affirmations and mantras, while spreading the love and paying it forward we can lose sight of the end goal. The ashtanga and juice detoxes become more obligation than organic, and still we're not feeling the love.

And that's because we're looking in the wrong place.

"I have meditated, I have prayed, I have found Jesus, I have found him again," said author Danielle LaPorteon her recent packed-out Australian tour. "I have juiced, I have consciously uncoupled, I have sat at the feet of a Buddhist monk called Mark, and I have hashtagged it all."

LaPorte says we've become "hoarders of spiritual accoutrements", which she realised was getting her nowhere. She stopped meditating ("It was stressing me out") and yoga. She even ditched her $100,000 crystal collection and "took a permanent break from the esoteric", only to return with a fresh outlook. "I came back on my own terms, when it was no longer a chore."

LaPorte adds, "We buy into the lie of inadequacy, that someone outside of ourselves knows what's best for us."

Someone like Liz Gilbert. After sharing her story of personal transformation inEat Pray Love,shehad to issue a warning to readers not to try to replicate her experiences, as hordes of women were treating her memoir like a guidebook to happy endings.

"I've been reminding people that they don't need to get divorced and move to India, just because I did," she posted on Facebook. "For a journey of self-discovery to work, your path must be your own. Don't do what I did. Ask what I asked."

I admit, sheepishly, that I once sought out Gilbert's healer in Ubud, but bailedwhen I saw the queue of desperate seekers in the dusty heat, waiting not so patiently for their names to be called.

Vedic Meditation teacher Jo Amor says that we must carve our own path to inner peace and not rely on searching outside ourselves. "We believe if we can just acquire more stuff there will be this moment when we have everything we need and we'll be fulfilled. But this moment is never going to come.

"If we put the demand on the outside world for our happiness and spiritual fulfilment, then ultimately we will find we still have to come back to ourselves for that and all the while it was there."

I, too, have pared back on the frantic search for meaning. I still meditate and get to yoga if time permits, and I do love my kinesiologist. But not as if my life depends on it.

Jacinta Tynan. Photo: Nic Walker

More:

Why I ditched my frantic pursuit of enlightenment | The Young Witness - The Young Witness

3 Things Millennials Should Do to Achieve Success – HuffPost

What do most millennials think about when considering their career? They want a vocation they have a passion for. Weve all heard the saying, If you love your job, youll never work a day in your life. Rather than only working for money, many millennials want to do something they love and enjoy for the rest of their life -- and make a living from it. Ive been fortunate enough to create the life I wanted. As a millennial raised by hard-working parents who did whatever it took to put food on the table, I have always felt like their example created an opportunity for me to have a successful career doing something I enjoy with great passion. So, I took that opportunity.

After graduating from university, I spent a small stretch of time in the Future Executive program with the Hudsons Bay Company. It was a program that would groom me to one day run a big retail store like The Bay or Zellers (for my American friends, think Nordstrom). After four months, I realized that it just wasnt for me. The title of Future Executive had quickly lost its appeal. At the same point in time, my friend was starting a spring break company. He told me about his big dream of expanding it across Canada and asked me to join him in his venture.

When I approached my mother about leaving the program I was enrolled in to work in a spring break company, she was extremely worried, as any mother would be. I was reducing my salary from $50,000 a year to $30,000 a year, for one. Secondly, she thought I was chasing a quick thrill instead of rooting myself in a sustainable career.

I ended up making $100,000 a year and traveling the world. I worked on commission, so as the company grew, so did my salary. As a 24-year-old, getting to travel all over the Caribbean and Canada was my dream job. The best experience of it all, though, was being at the forefront of a rapidly growing company. From there, I learned many business skills that set me up to later build and run multimillion-dollar companies. The risk I had taken of leaving my better-paying job with a well-established company to join a startup with zero certainties led me to the place I am today. Do something you are passionate about at a young age. Take the chance while you dont have as many bills to pay and when you are lucky enough to live at home under the security of your parents. Youll gain experience, knowledge, and skills for your future. Take the risk. Youll only grow from there.

Outperform the Older Generation

Apologies to my older colleagues, but with the advancement of technology, the internet and just the general changing of the times, millennials have gained an advantage when it comes to the latest trends in technology. Take a closer look at your industry and find out how you can modernize what you bring to your role to create better results. As a 26-year-old, I started a construction company that quickly became successful. We ended up growing to $5 million a year in sales in just three years. Part of our success came from our ability to harness our expertise in online marketing to dominate the industry. This came at a crucial time when others in the construction industry barely knew how to use email, let alone set up a website, build a brand and digitally market their company. We generated millions of dollars worth of leads every month.

In addition, we built systems with CRMs that evolved into ERPs, which scaled our business to higher heights. Older industry professionals arent usually connoisseurs in this domain, and it's something that comes naturally and intuitively to younger generations since computers and technology were part of our childhood. This is our competitive advantage as millennials. So, the question you always have to ask yourself is, how can you outperform your competition by leveraging innovative techniques? Whether you're an entrepreneur or an employee working in a company, you can outshine your peers and competition by being innovative and using the ever-changing landscape of technological advancements to be one step ahead of those who came before you. Which brings me to my next and final tip:

Always Work on Building for the Future

Distractions plague the lives of many millennials. Social media plays a huge part in the sometimes endless amounts of distractions and stimuli of todays modern world. And, if not controlled, we can lose ourselves (and a lot of time) in it. We are oversaturated with images and breakthroughs in technology.

Unfortunately, time can never be rewound. We have to be cautious about the way in which we use it. Yes, its important to travel, update ourselves on the latest social media trends, get inspired by others on Instagram, hang out with friends and try to go to as many social gatherings as possible. But it isnt as important as setting up the rest of your life. Every moment spent scrolling and looking at what other people are doing is a moment that could be used as a step to build your own future. It isnt all about the future and its not all about living in the moment and forgetting that the future even exists. Its a balance and blend of both. Think big, think smart, and start building for the future.

Millennials have the opportunity and potential that will propel themselves to exactly where they want to be. Everything is at our fingertips. When you're young, you dont really have any impending overhead bills or too many commitments. You dont want to find yourself in your thirties or forties wishing and regretting the things you should or could have done. Success starts with one idea. The other 99 percent is execution.

Fares Elsabbagh is a passionate individual, with a sincere devotion to his business, family and friends. An advocate and believer in continuous learning and self-improvement, he finds himself on a journey of knowledge seeking and spiritual enlightenment.

The Morning Email

Wake up to the day's most important news.

View post:

3 Things Millennials Should Do to Achieve Success - HuffPost

Annual summer work program continues its amazing mission of charity – The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration)

The annual mission of charity taking place along the country roads and in the tiny towns in Preston County officially kicked off this week.

Most of the folks living in places like Kingwood, Albright, Tunnelton, Independence and Rowlesburg have grown accustomed to the annual summer work program organized through the Catholic Church of Preston County.

Hundreds of volunteers from New Jersey, New York, Maryland and Pennsylvania spend much of their summer repairing dozens of homes in almost every community in the county.

And it all began back in 1985 just after the horrible floods.

Known by many as the 1985 Election Day Flood, it hit West Virginia the hardest. More than 13,000 homes and businesses in the state were damaged or destroyed. Damage was estimated at nearly $700 million, making it West Virginias costliest flood. There were 38 deaths.

As most of the livable land in West Virginia is in a floodplain, the flooding caused heavy damage, wrecking many small towns and washing out miles of roadways.

Flooding was worst along the Cheat River. At Rowlesburg, the river crested at 36.9 feet, which remains the highest on record. The river destroyed 110 of the 132 houses in Albright and washed away a trailer park in Rowlesburg.

The flooding downed thousands of trees, which were carried into houses and recreation areas, causing additional damage. Agriculture losses were heavy as the floodwaters washed away the topsoil and left behind miles of debris.

A few hundred miles away, two 16-year-old New Jersey girls, Lynda Monk and Christine Grobert, watched a national television news report about the flooding. They were moved to lend a hand. But they didnt want to collect money; they wanted to physically help. So they gathered a group of seven others and traveled to Rowlesburg in June 1986 with their Catholic priest and two chaperones.

Soon, parishioners of Catholic churches from Pennsylvania and Maryland started visiting.

The program has since evolved into home repairs for low-income residents across the county through much of the summer. Work has included the installation, repair or replacement of roofs, floors, walls, porches, stairs, ramps, windows, doors, bathrooms, plumbing, siding and underpinning. Painting is also a big part of the work.

Each visiting parish raises its own funds for travel, food and lodging, as well as materials for the projects.

Preston County residents in need who own and live in their own homes apply for the program through the Catholic Church.

What makes this effort so special isnt so much how and why it all began. Its the fact that nearly 32 years after those horrible floods ravaged the Mountain State, the volunteers keep coming. They continue to find inspiration and spiritual enlightenment in helping needy families in Preston County.

All of us with the Preston County News & Journal would like to thank the Catholic Church of Preston County, the volunteers and especially Lynda Monk and Christine Grobert two incredible, selfless women who started it all.

Go here to see the original:

Annual summer work program continues its amazing mission of charity - The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration)

Will priests discuss George Pell at Sunday Mass? – The Age

Tens of thousands of Victorians will goto massthis weekend, just days after Australia's highest ranking Catholic was charged with historical sex abuse.

But how will Catholic priests address the allegations against Cardinal George Pell, if they address them at all?

Father Brendan Reed, from Our Lady of Good Counsel and All Hallows in Balwyn, said he would discuss the news, as "you can't pretend it's not happening".

"Ithinkpeoplewant to know what theirpriests are thinking when things like this come out in the public," he said.

"I'llbe saying thatI think we should have faith and trust in ourjudicialand legalsystem, that a just outcome is what everybodyis hoping for, for all parties concerned."

Father Reed said he would also point members of his parish to places where they can get support if they have suffered abuse.

"Many parishes arein the processof rolling out childsafetypolicies, so this would be a goodopportunity to let peopleknow what theyare," he said.

Get the latest news and updates emailed straight to your inbox.

"What you worry about at the end of the dayis the safety and care of those who will feel the pain of whatever they have felt in the past."

FatherKevin Dillon, priest at Geelong's St Mary of the Angels, has aired his thoughts in the weekly newsletter.

"People come to church andthey'repart of the church in order to getsolaceandcomfort, and it's a particularly tricky area as you'retalking about a court case," he said.

"It's a bit easier to write about it, you can measure your words in writing."

In the church's July 2 newsletter, which will be distributed at mass thisweekend, Father Dillon writes:"There can be a difference, difficult to articulate, between being 'surprised' and being 'shocked"',in relation to news of the charges.

"So the announcement on Thursday that Victoria Police have issued charges against the Cardinal might not have come as a surprise, but nonetheless have shocked many people - especially Catholics, and especially Catholics who love their Church," he wrote.

"The charges will proceed in the usual and appropriate way, with the presumption of innocence and an opportunity for both prosecution and defence cases to be heard.The hearing associated with the charges may well proceed quite slowly, as can often be the case.

"This will be demanding and harrowing for all concerned. But the hearing and associated publicity will also continue to generate the deep sadness (to say the least) felt by so many people (not only Catholics) over the past three or four decades."

He writes thatit would be understandable for some people of faith "to walkaway in anguish."

"They would be simply expressing their deep distress that the Church they have loved, and may still love, should be in such pain - and they themselves can't take any more pain," the priest wrote.

An assistantpriest from a church north of Melbourne, who asked not to be named, said he would stick to the gospel and wouldnot be touching the subject.

He said most of his parish were not interested in the news, and instead attended church for spiritual enlightenment.

Director of media and communications at the Catholic Archdiocese of MelbourneShane Healysaid parish priests had neither been gagged, nor instructed on what to say to their congregation at this weekend's services.

"A lot of people outside the Catholic faith, while they look in from the outside and would be appalled at some of the things they have seen over the years with the child abuse scandal, what they don't realise ... there is enormous great work going on in every parish, in every diocese," Mr Healy said.

"I think when it comes to this weekend, I am sure the many priests in the Archdiocese will be very, very keen to assure and make sure the people in their parishes understand that, yes, this is a difficult time, but they will be looking to be as good, as strong a pastor and a leader of the flock as they humanly can be."

Visit link:

Will priests discuss George Pell at Sunday Mass? - The Age

NASA keeps a close watch for bad bugs on space station – Economic Times

New York, June 29 (IANS) Scientists at NASA organise regular checks to ensure that the International Space Station (ISS) has one of the cleanest living environments and is free from bacteria and other micro-organisms, the space agency said.

"Once every three months, we sample from two locations in each module of the US segment of the station," Mark Ott, a microbiologist at NASA's Johnson Space Center, said in a statement.

Samples collected from surfaces and from the air are cultured on plates containing a growth medium, one specific for bacteria and the other for fungi. Those plates return to the ground and scientists identify each organism that grows on them.

The study, published in the journal of Microbiome, identified 11 strains of bacterium belonging to what microbiologists call the Bacillus anthracis, cereus, thuringiensis group, or Bacillus cereus group.

While this large family of microbes includes some bad bugs, Bacillus is extremely common on the Earth and around humans, so finding this type of bacteria on the space station is not unusual, the scientists said.

Using DNA hybridisation, researchers identified individual species in the samples and, while some were a close match to Bacillus anthracis type strains, they did not have the physical characteristics or the toxin-producing plasmids required to consider them a potential risk.

Further, drinking water on the ISS is treated similarly to the water we drink on earth to kill and keep micro-organisms from growing with regular monitoring on the station's drinking water systems.

"The astronauts' drinking water is, microbiologically speaking, cleaner than just about anything they drink on earth," Ott said.

In addition, the medical staff keeps a particularly sharp eye out for micro-organisms that pose a risk to the health of astronauts and when any turn up, the space station gets a more-thorough-than-usual cleaning.

"We should be investigating new and different ways of monitoring spacecraft for micro-organisms but we must be careful when we interpret the results," Ott added.

Continued research is being done to understand what organisms grow on the space station and how they affect an astronaut's health, the scientists said.

--IANS

tony/rt/ksk/vt

View post:

NASA keeps a close watch for bad bugs on space station - Economic Times

Mission Accomplished: CSUN’s CubeSat Launches from International Space Station and Contributes to NASA Research – CSUN Today

Not CSUNSat1.

This mini satellite has performed like a dutiful child this summer, calling home at least twice a day to California State University, Northridge and doing all of its homework.

After months of preparation and waiting, on April 18, electrical and computer engineering professors Sharlene Katz and James Flynn and their students cheered with relief as NASA launched CSUNSat1, the universitys first stellar explorer, to the International Space Station (ISS). The cube-shaped satellite is about the size of a shoebox and launched from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., aboard the OA-7 Cygnus spacecraft SS John Glenn, propelled by an Atlas V rocket.

It took four days to reach the space station, where astronauts unloaded and prepared the satellite and other payload for deployment. In mid-May, Katz and Flynn got word that NASA was ready to launch CSUNSat1 into orbit to start its mission. Then on May 18, the ISS crew deployed the mini satellite into low Earth orbit. Once it had safely cleared the massive space station, CSUNSat1 was allowed to power up and begin its mission operations and experiments.

Later that night, the satellite made its first pass over the CSUN ground station, designed and built from scratch (like the CubeSat itself) in the corner of an electrical engineering lab in Jacaranda Hall.

It was a tense and historic moment for CSUN. Katz and Flynn waited quietly in the ground station with several of the more than 70 students who have worked for four years to bring this project to life and to orbit. The device was designed in partnership with NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena to test the effectiveness of JPLs energy storage system to help explore deep space in extremely cold temperatures.

At 11:21 p.m., CSUNSat1 came up over the horizon, within range of the large, custom-built antenna on the roof of Jacaranda Hall. Katz, Flynn and their students and alumni held their breath. Then, they heard it: the first contact from the beacon, the long and short tones of International Morse Code. In addition to programming it to send data back to CSUN, the engineering team had built the satellite to broadcast its status every three minutes as it circles Earth, using Morse Code.

It is unfortunate that many CubeSats go up there, and theyre never heard from. You can imagine how those students and researchers must feel, Flynn said. Its like sending your child into the world, and it doesnt write home. You never know what happened to it. [When I heard the beacon], I felt like eight tons was off my shoulders. I was elated.

It [broadcasts] a letter B at the beginning of the beacon that tells us the experiment is ready to be run, added Katz, who noted that she and Flynn chose old-school Morse Code for the stellar traveler because it works when computerized data fails and because both professors happen to be fluent in Morse Code, thanks to a passion for ham radio in their teen years.

The satellite is orbiting 400 kilometers above the Earth, at Mach 22 22 times the speed of sound, which is at about 7.6 kilometers per second. This means that just a few minutes before it makes contact with the ground station in Northridge, its traveling over New Zealand.

CSUNSat1 sends data to CSUN as it passes over Northridge about six times each day. JPL assigned the team a list of tasks to complete, and by June 18 the group had checked off the entire list of experiments required for mission success including switching the CubeSat to operate from its experimental battery. The tests are key for deep-space technology, to help NASA develop a battery to aid in exploration out past planets such as Jupiter and Neptune without heaters, Flynn said. Current satellite batteries require heaters to function below freezing temperatures.

(L-R) Electrical and computer engineering professors Sharlene Katz and James Flynn; CSUNSat1 alumni Don Eckels 15 (Computer Science), now working at JPL, and Benjamin Plotkin 16 (Computer Science); and electrical engineering graduate student Rosy Davis cram into the small workshop room where they built and tested the CubeSat. June 14, 2017. Photo by Richard Chambers.

JPL and NASA expect to learn how a new form of storing energy will work in space, Flynn said. The current [satellites dont work below] freezing. But this system can do a North Dakota winter no problem, and create lots of power and store lots of power. NASA doesnt trust anything that hasnt flown. Our job is to test it in space. Once its successful in our spacecraft, theyd be willing to trust a mission to it.

The CubeSat uses solar panels to recharge its battery, and the experimental battery is designed to deliver a large surge of energy in a short period of time at very cold temperatures, Katz and Flynn said. Now that the satellite is in orbit, the students have gained even more priceless hands-on engineering experience, including overcoming variables such as radiation in the planets orbit.

CSUN was one of 14 universities selected for the orbital journey, by the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative. Prior to selection, Katz and Flynn received a $200,000 grant from NASA to fund the project, competing against more than a hundred other applicants for 13 grants.

The miniature satellite is designed for short-term use, and a short lifespan.

How long it will be up there is a little bit up to Mother Nature, Katz said. Its [lifetime is] six months to a year, according to NASA. It depends on the drag and decay.

But with this faithful child acing all of its experiments and tasks, it still has time for extra credit before it fades away.

JPL is already talking about having us do some additional experiments as an extended mission, Katz said.

The Morse Code beacon employed by the satellite makes it possible for anyone with a ham radio and interest to tune in and track CSUNSat1 as it orbits the Earth. Space and NASA enthusiasts around the globe from the Netherlands to Brazil have set up remote ground stations and are helping contribute to CSUNs research and data collected from the satellite. One amateur radio enthusiast in Indiana, for example, sends the students beacon reports each morning from the Midwest, Katz said.

To track CSUNSat1 and learn more about this and future projects, please visit http://www.csun.edu/cubesat/

CSUNSat1 alumnus Benjamin Plotkin 16 and electrical engineering graduate student Rosy Davis run the telemetry and mission control stations as they monitor the CubeSats pass over Northridge, on June 14, 2017. Photo by Richard Chambers.

Read more here:

Mission Accomplished: CSUN's CubeSat Launches from International Space Station and Contributes to NASA Research - CSUN Today

‘Transformers: The Last Knight’ Serves Up Real Space Technology – Space.com

By Elizabeth Howell, Space.com Contributor | June 29, 2017 02:38pm ET

Credit: Paramount

The most recent Transformers film, like its 2011 predecessor, incorporates real space technology into its action-packed chaos.

"Transformers: The Last Knight" grossed a franchise low of $73.2 million after its opening June 21, prompting some to worry if this bodes poorly for the franchise's future, according to the Hollywood Reporter. But as fans discuss what went so wrong with the concept, the real-world space gear that makes an appearance forms a small, bright point in the film.

The International Space Station and Hubble Space Telescope are among the familiar space names cited in "The Last Knight," and for the real space aficionados out there, the scriptwriters even throw in a joke about the space shuttle. While more details are in the following slides, we're keeping it spoiler-free for major plot points, so you can safely read on, even if you haven't seen the film.

Credit: Shutterstock

In "The Last Knight," images from the Hubble Space Telescope are used to track an imminent threat to the Earth. The images are shown briefly in a politician's office in Britain, on a television screen. The telescope has been in orbit since 1992 and is one of NASA's most famous observatories; data from the telescope has been used to determine that the universe's expansion rate is accelerating and to map galaxies from the early universe. Closer to home, Hubble has watched asteroid and comet activity, including when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 smacked into Jupiter in 1994. [Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9's Epic Crash with Jupiter in Pictures]

Credit: Nasa/Apollo 11

There's a brief shot showing the site of an Apollo moon landing, including an Apollo lunar module, a flag and a spaceship (from the Transformers universe) known as the Ark. As we found out in the 2011 film, "Transformers: Dark of the Moon," the Ark landed on the moon in 1961. In the Transformers universe, the Ark is investigated after the first astronauts on the moon landed during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969. The real Apollo 11 mission was a quick scientific reconnaissance of the moon rocks at the Sea of Tranquility, as well as a technological demonstration that humans could safely land and run a mission on the moon. The Apollo moon program concluded in 1972 after six successful landings and an aborted one (Apollo 13). [Lunar Legacy: 45 Apollo Moon Mission Photos]

Credit: NASA via Getty

Astronauts on the International Space Station see some Transformer technology in action in the new franchise film. On the space station, viewers first see the famed robotic Canadarm2, which is used to grapple cargo spacecraft and other large objects. There also is a view through the Cupola, a seven-window wraparound observatory that astronauts use in real life for photography and to do spacecraft berthings. The space station has been occupied by humans for nearly 17 years, since the arrival of Expedition 1 in 2000. Most crews today number six astronauts, with Americans, Russians and a range of crewmembers from other nations on board.

Credit: NASA via Getty

Most of the space action occurs at NASA''s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is best-known for its robotic exploration of the solar system through missions such as Cassini; finishing up a mission at Saturn; and New Horizons, which recently passed Pluto.

At JPL, an unnamed engineer (Tony Hale) sees a looming threat to Earth out in the cosmos. Trouble is, nobody believes him at first. Notably, NASA's "meatball" logo appears in the film, which shows that the agency reviewed the script and approved of the use of NASA insignia which isn't always granted: The movie "Life" had an alternate logo.

Credit: Jack Taylor/Getty

The European Space Agency (ESA) is featured several times in "The Last Knight," which is unusual for an American franchise film: Operations at an ESA control center are briefly shown, the Hubble images are credited as coming from ESA (a partner in Hubble) and an ESA image from an unidentified satellite is used to look at a thermal anomaly on Earth. In real life, ESA is an intergovernmental organization with 22 member states. After the United States and Russia, it is the third-largest partner on the International Space Station and has contributed several laboratories, launchers and cargo ships to the orbiting complex.

Credit: Kim Orr/NASA/JPL-Caltech

During "The Last Knight," a very quick video at JPL's Space Flight Operations Facility shows an animation of satellite data flowing into the Deep Space Network. The DSN is a network of three telescopes located in California, Spain and Australia that communicate with missions in deep space. It is perhaps most famous for staying in touch with the two Voyager spacecraft that (between the two missions) flew past Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2012, Voyager 1 sent data back to the DSN indicating that it was the first probe to reach interstellar space. (That fact took another year to be recognized, however.)

Credit: Paramount

One scene during "The Last Knight" likely takes place at a NASA headquarters executive's office: The shot is identified as taking place in Washington, D.C. and the office clearly has a NASA flag hanging in the background. During the scene, one person picks up a model of the space shuttle on top of an aircraft and asks how that combination could possibly fly. The improbable actually did happen dozens of times, however, as the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft an extensively modified Boeing 747 successfully and regularly flew the space shuttle from landings in California to the shuttle's processing facilities at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

After the program's completion in 2011, the SCA ferried the four remaining shuttles (Discovery, Endeavour, Atlantis and test shuttle Enterprise) to museums across the United States. Then, the two SCAs were retired; one was used for parts for NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), while the other was preserved intact for display at the Joe Davies Heritage Airpark in California. [Now Boarding: Inside NASA's Boeing 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft]

1 of 9

2 of 9

3 of 9

4 of 9

5 of 9

6 of 9

7 of 9

8 of 9

9 of 9

Elizabeth Howell is a contributing writer for Space.com who is one of the few Canadian journalists to report regularly on space exploration. She is pursuing a Ph.D. part-time in aerospace sciences (University of North Dakota) after completing an M.Sc. (space studies) at the same institution. She also holds a bachelor of journalism degree from Carleton University. Besides writing, Elizabeth teaches communications at the university and community college level. To see her latest projects, follow Elizabeth on Twitter at@HowellSpace.

See more here:

'Transformers: The Last Knight' Serves Up Real Space Technology - Space.com