The Surprising Space Ambitions in Colonial America – The Atlantic

Many turned out to watch Venus pass across the face of the sun, a tiny, black dot moving against a white-hot backdrop. Scholars organized watch parties up and down the East Coast, from Rhode Island to Delaware, ready to learn more about their place in the world. The observations were described in published papers, and they were praised by European observers, who were impressed by a new stage of maturity in the development of America.

The year was 1769, and American space exploration was beginning to take shape.

The pursuit of space exploration has long been as much about geopolitical power as about scientific discovery. The tug-of-war between the Americans and the Russians on their way to orbit in the 1950s and 1960s is perhaps historys best example of that, but its certainly not the first. Politicians, religious figures, and wealthy individuals have held up the study of the cosmos as a signal of great achievement since the colonial period and Americas early years, according to Alex MacDonald, an economist at NASA and the author of The Long Space Age: The Economic Origins of Space Exploration from Colonial America to the Cold War.

In his first address as president in 1825, John Quincy Adams called for the establishment of a national astronomical observatory. And while scarcely a year passes over our heads without bringing some new astronomical discovery to light, which we must fain to receive at second-hand from Europe, are we not cutting ourselves off from the means of returning light for light, while we have neither observatory nor observer upon our half of the globe, and the earth revolves in perpetual darkness to our unsearching eyes?

Dozens of astronomical observatories began popping up across the states in the 1830s and 1840s. The funding largely came not from the government, but from private individuals and communities seeking to signal their ambitions for exploring the heavens. These days, the investments in space exploration by billionaires seems like a departure from a long record dominated by NASA and government funding. In reality, its a revival of 19th-century dynamics.

I spoke with MacDonald about this extended history of space exploration in America and the role of private individuals in making it happen. Our conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Marina Koren: So, I had no idea that John Quincy Adams was so into space exploration.

MacDonald: Yeah, neither did I. John Quincy Adams was this fascinating character. He grew up with his father, the second U.S. president, traveling around the world. He spent time in Leiden, which is a European city famous for scientific research. He seems to have picked up an enthusiasm for science while there, and he took that into his presidency. In his first inaugural address to Congress, he essentially advocated for a federal astronomical observatory. He argued that because Europe had so many astronomical observatories and because the United States at that time did not, [building one] would show the world that America was prepared to contribute to the global scientific endeavor. He explicitly thought of this as a signal of the strength of this new union at the time.

Congress was not particularly pleased with the idea; they never actually supported his proposal when he was president, but he continued to advocate for the idea, and his advocacy ultimately ended up leading to the Smithsonian. John Quincy Adams argued that James Smithsons bequest [of his estate to the nation in 1835] should be used for a permanent endowment that will perpetually fund science in America.

Koren: It was kind of surreal to read John Quincy Adams pitch to Congress, because he literally talks about how the Russians are outpacing the Americans in astronomy. It sound as if, in his mind, there was a space race.

MacDonald: In his mind, there really was. And he looked to the Pulkovo Observatory outside of St. Petersburg. A lot of observatories had been established for the determination of longitude and practical matters, but Pulkovo had really been established in order to have a very large telescope that would hopefully find new discoveries. John Quincy Adams argued that the United States needed to follow this model.

And his advocacy actually inspired others. A guy with a marvelously 19th-century name of Ormsby MacKnight Mitchel ended up going to Cincinnatiwhich in the 1840s was the sixth-largest city in Americaand advocated, through a series of public lectures, the need for an astronomical observatory. He argued that because America had no czars like Russia did, that in America the people will have to take up the role of patrons of science. He advocated that Cincinnati should build the largest telescope in the world, which is a pretty ambitious notion. But the people actually responded strongly to this request. They end up importing the third-largest telescope in the world at the time, from Germany. And when they opened the observatory for the first time, John Quincy Adams made the last trek of his life for his last major speech to dedicate the observatory on what was renamed, and today is still called, Mount Adams.

Koren: The Cincinnati Observatory sounded to me like the product of a 19th -century Kickstarter. In exchange for contributing to the project, the public got certain perks, like membership to the citys astronomical society.

MacDonald: Long before we had the Kickstarter, we had the same notion that went by the name public subscription. This type of process was also used for monuments, so whenever you go to monuments, youll often see dozens of peoples names on it. Well, those were the Kickstarter backers of whatever monument that was. The Cincinnati Observatory established a public subscription model for astronomical observatories which was then used in other cities, in Boston, Albany, Detroit, and Pittsburgh. People came together to determine that they wanted their own telescope for the observation of the heavens.

And whats particularly interesting is that it wasnt so much that they were interested in supporting science. Often, they would fund an observatory but they wouldnt fund salaries for astronomers or instruments. What they were really interested in was this process of exploration. This actually led to a number of conflicts in some cities, such as in Albany. There was such conflict that the astronomers barricaded themselves into the observatory until the local constable had to be called out and threw them out. In Cincinnati and Boston, you also had these conflicts where the people who had paid for it essentially wanted to be able to use the telescope themselves, but the scientists wanted to be able to conduct long-term, careful research.

Koren: What was the strangest or most memorable story about this dynamic that you found?

MacDonald: One of the more unexpected stories was the case of the Georgetown Observatory, which was essentially funded by the Jesuit order. There was a Father at Georgetown in the 1840s who convinced one of the young students who was of particularly wealthy means to finance an astronomical observatory. And this information went back to the superior general of the Jesuit order in Rome, who was not very impressed because he worried that this was not exactly the right signal to send[funding] astronomy rather than, for example, supporting the poor. So they would send letters back to Georgetown saying, we dont suggest that you proceed with this project.

But Father James Curley, an Irish Jesuit, through some curious interpretation of the instructionsand utilizing the fact that it took weeks for letters to cross the Atlanticproceeded with the project anyway. He believed it was going to be a strong signal of the Jesuit order in America. What I liked about that story is that both parties were concerned about what signal the astronomical observatory sent. One believed that this would show commitment to education and science, and one worried it would show commitment to science above social means. Thats a particularly illustrative example of how this signaling role of space transcends even nations, and really is a function of human communities.

Koren: So lets zoom back out a bit. Today we hear a lot about space exploration moving more and more from the governments domain and into the private sector. But your main argument is that private citizens actually have a much longer history in space exploration.

MacDonald: We are used to this standard space-age narrative, which starts with Sputnik, the Apollo program, and the space race, when in reality, private support long predated significant programs like Apollo. Thats not to say that there wasnt public support as well. In fact, public support goes back to the origins of the country in a very small way. One of the first public appropriations for funds for science was actually by the Pennsylvania legislature, which appropriated funds in 1769 to support a number of expeditions related to the observation of the transit of Venus. And when the Declaration of Independence was first read out in Philadelphia, it was made from a raised platform that had been built as part of that observation.

But aside from small examples like that, if we look at the full history, from the colonial period to today, the vast majority of the time, it was the funds of individuals, civic societies, and philanthropic organizations, rather than public funding, that provided for astronomical observations and even for early liquid-fuel rocketry efforts. People like Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, James Lickthey were funding, in todays terms, billion-dollar projects. Theres a precedence for these modern private-sector examples that we have with Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk that date back long before even the origin of NASA.

Koren: Can you describe the desire for space exploration over this long arc, from colonial times to the space race?

MacDonald: Lets look at signaling, which is this concept used in economics and biology that states that credible information about the characteristics of an individual or group can be transmitted through costly action. We see the emergence of a public interest in space-related signals in the reaction to the work of a scientist named David Rittenhouse, who had designed the most complex orrery, a mechanical model of the solar system. He was held up by Thomas Jefferson as one of the three great Americans, along with Franklin and Washington, and his astronomical achievements were held up as a signal of the nation as whole. And that belief about the role of space exploration as a signal of strength continued all the way to the Cold War, because achievements in this field are hard. They signal something important about the technical and organizational capability of the nation.

Sputnik, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957, was interpreted by the world as a very strong signal. And its important to remember this was a period of significant asymmetric informationnot a lot of people knew a lot of details about what was actually going on in the Soviet Union, and if youre in the Soviet Union or the rest of the world, not a lot about what was going on in America. All you really have to go on was newspapers or radio communications, both of which could be really easily propagandized. But if you knew one thing about a countrythat the country had sent something into space and the other country had notyou knew something important about their technical capacity.

And so from Apollo on, advances in space have served as a signal of America's technical supremacy. I dont think that is a particularly new idea, but what is often forgotten is that the space race is one example of this signaling motivation that includes the transit of Venus expedition.

Koren: You write that the Apollo program should not be seen as the classic model of American space exploration, but rather as an anomaly. Why is that?

MacDonald: When I think about the Apollo program as being an anomaly, what I mean is that at the time, in the 1960s, geopolitical competition increased the demand for space exploration. Now, we dont have that, and we have much more access to information. The demand for space exploration as a signal is not as strong as it was. So whats happening is were seeing the rise of this other trend, which is the intrinsic motivation of individuals to contribute to space exploration coming back to the fore. And thats very much what Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk represent. So were always going to have, throughout history, moments when the signal value is strong and when its not, and part of the point of trying to draw that long space age narrative out is to show that even without that strong demand for a signal, space exploration continues regardless, because individuals have used billions of dollars of their own funding in the past to make progress in this field.

Koren: Who do you think should be paying for space exploration, or who has does it better over the course of history?

MacDonald: Its not a particular question of who does it better. The private sector in the history of space exploration has as many boondoggles and cost overruns and schedule overruns as the public sector. Its not necessarily about efficiency. Both are always needed. Space is never wholly public or wholly private.

Koren: So whats next?

MacDonald: The long space age can teach us that space agencies might do well to focus on missions that serve as effective signals of national interest and achievement. My personal favorite is thinking about orbital human missions to other planets. Theres always a lot of emphasis on human missions to surfaces, but in terms of the signaling potential, orbiting other worlds is a major step beyond anything weve done and significantly more affordable and achievable than human planetary surface missions.

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The Surprising Space Ambitions in Colonial America - The Atlantic

Relative Strength in Review: Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK) – Nelson Research

Relative strength is a momentum-investing technique that compares the performance of an asset to the overall market. Using specific calculations, traders and investors can target the healthiest performers as compared to the market, creating investment recommendations. Relative strength says that a stock whose price has been rising will continue on that trend. Investors using relative strength always have entry and exit strategies. Traders and investors using this technique try to buy securities that are showing signs of strength and then selling them as soon as they begin to appear weak. Relative strength can also be applied to more complex strategies. Investors use relative strength identify top performers within a group of potential investments, comparing the performance of each security directly to another security or to a specific benchmark index, such as the S&P 500. Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK)s 9-Day Relative Strength is35.12% and its 14-Day Relative Strength is 36.63%. Taking a longer view back, its 20-Day Relative Strength is39.15% and its 50-Day Relative Strength is39.15% and, finally, its 100-Day Relative Strength is 46.89%.

The Open is the start of trading on a securities exchange. The open indicates the start of an official business day for an exchange, meaning that transactions may begin for the day.

The different exchanges have different opening times. Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK) opened at $0.027. Its high for the day was $0.027, its low was $0.024 and last trade price was $0.0241.

Standard Deviation is a measure of the current average variability of return. A move of (plus or minus) 1 std deviation means a 33% odds for a major price move, whereas a move of (plus or minus) 3 std deviations means a 1% odds for a major price move. Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK)s Standard Deviation is -0.52.

Weighted Alpha is a measure of how much a stock has risen or fallen over a one-year period with a higher weighting for recent price activity. Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK)s Weighted Alpha is -80.75.

Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK)s TrendSpotter Opinion, the signal from Trendspotter, a Barchart trend analysis system that uses wave theory, market momentum & volatility in an attempt to find a general trend, is Sell.

Barchart Opinions show investors what a variety of popular trading systems are suggesting. These Opinions take up to 2 years worth of historical data and runs the prices through thirteen technical indicators.

After each calculation, a buy, sell or hold value for each study is assigned, depending on where the price is in reference to the interpretation of the study. Todays opinion, the overall signal based on where the price lies in reference to the common interpretation of all 13 studies, for Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK) is 72% Sell.

Relative Strength is part of technical analysis. Technical analysis is a trading tool used to judge securities as well as attempt to forecast their future moves by analyzing trading activity statistics like volume and price fluctuations.

Where fundamental analysts attempt to evaluate the intrinsic value of a security, technical analytics observe charts of price movements and forecast future price movements through various analytical tools to evaluate a securitys strength or weakness.

Technical analysts believe in the idea that price changes of a security and past trading activity are better indicators of that given securitys future price movements than simply the intrinsic value of said security. Technical analysis was created out of simple concepts learned from Dow Theory, the theory of trading market movements that originated from the early writings of Charles Dow.

The two basic assumptions of Dow Theory say analysis are: 1.) market price discounts all the factors that could influence a securitys price and: 2.) market price movements are not simply random but move in an identifiable pattern and that repeat over time.

The first assumption, that price discounts everything, means the market price of a commodity at any given point in time perfectly reflects all available information, and re represents the securitys true fair value. It is based on the idea the market price always reflects the sum total knowledge of the market.

The second basic assumption, the notion that price changes are not just random, leads to the belief that both short term and long term market trends can be identified, allowing traders to profit from investing when following the existing trend.

Technical analysis is used in order to forecast the price movement of all tradable instruments that are subject to the forces of supply and demand, including currency pairs, bonds, stocks, and futures.

Technical analysis can be viewed simply as the study of supply and demand as reflected in market price movements of securities. It is usually applied to price changes, though analysts may also track numbers other than price, such as open interest figures or trading volume.

Many technical indicators have been developed by analysts over the years in an attempt to forecast future price movements accurately. Some indicators are focused on determining the how strong a trend is and also the possibility of its continuation while other indicators focus on identifying current market trends, including resistance areas and support.

Commonly used technical indicators include moving averages, trendlines, and momentum indicators like the moving average convergence divergence (MACD) indicator.

Technical analysts apply these indicators to charts of differing timeframes.

Short-term traders may use charts covering one-minute timeframes to hourly or even four-hour timeframes, and traders analyzing more long-term price movements look over daily, weekly or monthly charts.

Disclaimer: The advice provided on this website is general advice only. It has been prepared without taking into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on this advice you should consider the appropriateness of the advice, having regard to your own objectives, financial situation and needs. Where quoted, past performance is not indicative of future performance.

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Relative Strength in Review: Nanotech Entertainment Inc. (NTEK) - Nelson Research

Constellation Software Inc. (CSU) Analysts See $7.37 EPS … – UtahHerald.com

June 27, 2017 - By Vivian Park

Analysts expect Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) to report $7.37 EPS on July, 26.They anticipate $1.91 EPS change or 34.98% from last quarters $5.46 EPS. T_CSUs profit would be $156.10 million giving it 24.15 P/E if the $7.37 EPS is correct. After having $5.90 EPS previously, Constellation Software Inc.s analysts see 24.92% EPS growth. It closed at $711.99 lastly. It is down 0.00% since June 27, 2016 and is . It has underperformed by 16.70% the S&P500.

NANOTECH ENTERTAINMENT INCORPORATED (OTCMKTS:NTEK) had an increase of 25.19% in short interest. NTEKs SI was 16,900 shares in June as released by FINRA. Its up 25.19% from 13,500 shares previously. It closed at $0.0241 lastly. It is down 0.00% since June 27, 2016 and is . It has underperformed by 16.70% the S&P500.

NanoTech Entertainment, Inc. operates as a maker and developer of technology, television content, consumer goods, mobile applications and consumer software. The company has market cap of $3.34 million. The Firm generates revenue form a mixture of licensing products to third-parties for manufacturing and distribution, as well as the manufacture and sale and rental of products directly to the consumer. It currently has negative earnings. The Companys business comprises three business units: Ultra Media Group , NanoTech Media (NMED) and 4K Studios (4K).

Among 4 analysts covering Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU), 1 have Buy rating, 0 Sell and 3 Hold. Therefore 25% are positive. Constellation Software Inc. had 37 analyst reports since July 31, 2015 according to SRatingsIntel. Scotia Capital maintained Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) rating on Thursday, October 27. Scotia Capital has Outperform rating and $595 target. National Bank Canada upgraded Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) on Friday, October 30 to Sector Perform rating. The stock of Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) earned Market Perform rating by BMO Capital Markets on Monday, May 1. The firm has Sector Outperform rating given on Friday, July 31 by Scotia Capital. The rating was downgraded by RBC Capital Markets to on Friday, October 16. RBC Capital Markets maintained Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) rating on Monday, January 4. RBC Capital Markets has Sector Perform rating and $575 target. The stock has Sector Perform rating by Scotia Capital on Friday, April 21. The stock of Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) has Outperform rating given on Monday, February 22 by RBC Capital Markets. The firm has Outperform rating by RBC Capital Markets given on Monday, April 3. The stock of Constellation Software Inc. (TSE:CSU) earned Outperform rating by RBC Capital Markets on Monday, January 16.

Constellation Software Inc. is engaged in the development, installation and customization of software. The company has market cap of $15.08 billion. The Firm acquires, manages and manufactures vertical market software businesses. It has a 49.86 P/E ratio. The Companys divisions include public sector and private sector.

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Constellation Software Inc. (CSU) Analysts See $7.37 EPS ... - UtahHerald.com

Psychedelics and Virtual Reality Make a Trendy but Illegal Therapy – Inverse

People have been altering their perceptions of reality for as long as there have been people, and in 2017, the newest and oldest tools for human transcendence are coming together: lately were eating psychedelic mushrooms to heighten or otherwise enhance our experience of virtual reality.

The relationship between people and psychedelic substances dates all the way back to prehistoric times. In his book Food of the Gods, notorious ethnobotanist and cultural critic Terence McKenna lays out his stoned ape theory of evolution, hypothesizing that hallucinogenic mushrooms were back in the day a staple food item, readily available from the ground. He suggests that these humble fungi acted as neurological lightning bolts, jumpstarting the brain development that saw Homo erectus turn into Homo sapien about 200,000 years ago.

McKennas suggestion is that psychedelics made the human mind modern. It makes at least a degree of sense: the digital, high-tech species that straps a virtual reality headset on its face was bound to first have a low-tech method for making the authentic world disappear. To put it reductively, you dont get to the Oculus Rift without going through a few magic mushrooms first.

Were alive at a time that we have access to both the new stuff and the old stuff, so what happens when these two perception-shifters tagteam each other? Whats it like to escape reality in analog and digital at the same time?

Alexandre Tomic, co-founder of Slotsmillion VR, the worlds first virtual reality casino, agreed to talk with Inverse on the record about combining psychedelics and VR.

My most recent psychedelic experience in virtual reality was about 9 months ago, says Tomic, who recalls using a virtual reality app by Google called Tilt Brush that lets users doodle in 3D space, and a horror video game.

I ordered mushrooms from a Dutch website, ate them dry, then played Tilt Brush and admired the magical colors. After that, I played Alien Isolation and screamed like a 17-year-old girl.

Tomic suggests that psychedelics work to make ones experience of virtual reality more real. The pixels are more prominent in virtual reality displays, so theres often a grid- or matrix-like effect as you play. Mushrooms make this effect stronger, resulting in more hallucinations you perceive the full environment as well as the grid that makes the environment possible. Super trippy.

Our present-day relationship with psychedelics doesnt much resemble that of our stoned ancestors. This category of drug were talking LSD, mushrooms, MDMA, and the like is federally classified as a Schedule 1 controlled substance, a family that includes heroin. Though psychedelics are federally criminalized, medical research professionals acknowledge them as bursting with potential for treating victims of trauma, PTSD, and other disorders.

See also: Why a soap company is investing millions to study MDMAs effects on PTSD

Psilocybin has been shown to be safe and non-addictive, says George Greer, medical director of the Heffter Research Institute. Greers organization has been the primary funding body for psilocybin research throughout Europe and the United States for more than 20 years, making a mission to study psilocybins applications for cancer distress and addiction with the highest standards of scientific research. Hes even done a Reddit AMA about his work.

Early results indicate that, when used with medical screening and therapeutic support, [psilocybin] could be more effective at treating some significant psychiatric diseases than existing pharmaceutical approaches, and without having to take a medication every day, Greer tells Inverse. A single treatment has improved symptoms for months.

Virtual reality has also demonstrated therapeutic efficacy since the early 1990s. Ralph Lamson of the Kaiser Permanente Psychiatric Group cured his own acrophobia with VR technology between 1994 and 1995, then set up a scientific study to try to do the same thing with 40 study participants; 38 of them showed significant improvement.

See also: The scientific difference between LSD and mushrooms

Because VR technology figuratively enables you to go anywhere and do anything, exposure therapy becomes completely safe. However scared you may be as a virtual spider crawls toward you, or as you peer over a steep virtual ledge, nothing inside of VR goggles can actually touch your body or harm you. The Heffter research team holds that psychedelics unexplored potential requires careful scientific study before they can be elevated to the status of mainstream medicine.

This careful scientific study is also being carried out by the Multidisciplinary Association of Psychedelic Studies, a Santa Cruz, California-based non-profit whose research focuses on 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine, better known as MDMA. This substance has the greatest promise for PTSD, and we believe that it has the greatest chance to be approved by the FDA soonest among all psychedelics, Brad Burge, communications director for MAPS, tells Inverse.

I think the use of VR to help cultivate a therapeutic setting could be quite valuable in the applications of psychedelic medicine, Merete Christiansen, executive associate at MAPS, tells Inverse.

Theres also the government: the Department of Defense has been actively funding virtual reality therapy research for soldiers returning from war. Theres no word yet about the DoD combining VR and MDMA, although research into using MDMA to treat post-traumatic stress disorder has a number of backers.

Tomic, the virtual reality casino operator, contextualizes his VR trips as an experiment in user interfaces.

We know when applications make information visual, that information speaks more directly to your brain. Mushrooms plus VR means we can create the interface to display this information, and give our brains the ability to see patterns that you couldnt see before, he tells Inverse. You become able to relate things that seems completely unrelated.

Virtual reality and psychedelic drugs both have associations with nonproductive, pleasure-seeking behavior, but Tomic says this mentality should not figure into your VR trips. He specifies that does this home by himself, in a work context. Im working on myself, not doing it recreationally. When youre young, you seek pleasure. When youre old, you seek happiness.

Pleasure is for losers, says the virtual reality casino entrepreneur.

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Psychedelics and Virtual Reality Make a Trendy but Illegal Therapy - Inverse

Open Your Mind This Weekend at Europe’s Largest Psychedelic Conference – VolteFace Magazine (blog)

Besides the academic programme, that which Im looking forward to most about BC17 is the part which we, as organisers, can take no credit for: the spirit of the place, the hive mind, the collective energy of a thousand turned-on, tuned-in psychedelic advocates from almost 50 countries. I love the feeling of being part of that. It takes my breath away every time. David King,Breaking Conventionco-founder

Breaking Convention: The 4th International Conference on Psychedelic Consciousnessis taking place between June 28 and July 2, 2017, at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich in London. This groundbreaking biennial event, with over 150 speakers and 1000 delegates, is the largest of its kind in Europe. Its thanks to events like this that society is finally coming round to the idea that psychedelic substances have a multitude of positive benefits. I spoke with the organisers about how it has grown since the first event in 2011, and what to expect from this years upcoming psychedelic extravaganza.

According to David Luke, Senior Lecturer of Psychology at Greenwich University and BC co-founder:

the first [convention] had an intense intellectually trailblazing feel to it, because the research had been stifled for so many decades and this was the first such major event. Since then it has grown, as has the energy of the events, but it feels less subversive now and more accepted and acceptable once we realised that the taboo against psychedelic research has all but faded away. The spirit now is less of one of possibility and more of one of actuality.

With the wilderness years before the Psychedelic Renaissance in mind, this BCs scientific speakers list is, literally, a dream come true. Tracks range from Plant Medicine, chaired by Danny Nemu to James Ruckers Ibogaine. Its fair to say the conferences former spirit of possibility that David Luke describes has been given the freedom to hop over into the ever-diversifying body of research itself.

According to psychiatrist and MDMA researcher Dr Ben Sessa, the top three scientific must-sees are: Neuroscientist Dr Robin Carhart-Harris of Imperial Colleges Psychedelic Research Programme, Rick Doblin of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) whose Phase 3 trials of MDMA as a treatment for PTSD are set to start in the USA later this year, and Heffter Research Institute founder Dave Nichols, who will be joining David Luke and David King for a session on DMT in the Human.

Its been a big year for many of the scientists speaking at BC, Ben enthuses:

Michael Bogenshutzs pilot study exploring psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for treating alcoholism was very exciting. Indeed, it has been an important part of me developing my own addictions study; exploring the role for MDMA-assisted psychotherapy in treating alcoholism. Similarly, the field of addictions continues to rise as an important recipient of psychedelic research which is a welcome return to the pre-ban 1950s, which is where LSD started its clinical life.

For anyone who needs a hand navigating BCs cosmos of clinical studies, Bens Psychedelicus Historicus symposia features a vibrant celebration of psychedelic psychiatry past and present, with a broad spectrum of 10 different speakers, covering the very oldest and the very newest representation of psychedelic research projects.

Venturing out from inside the fMRI scanner and sneaking a peek at the rest of the line-up, BC looks set to be equally invigorating and illuminating on the drug policy front, with Aimee Tollan chairing sessions on Diversity in Psychedelia and Sundays Drug Policy Discussion, featuring Chasing the Scream author Johann Hari, Steve Rolles of the Transform Drug Policy Foundation, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP)s Suzanne Sharkey and Voltefaces Head of Policy Henry Fisher.

Flying the flag for psychedelic culture, a cornucopia of psychedelic curiosities will be on show in a popup from the The Psychedelic Museum, curated by Andy Roberts, Nikki Wyrd, Julian Vayne and Robert Dickins. Roberts chairing the Bridging Worlds: Psychoactives in History track with talks from High Society author Mike Jay, Wendy Kline, Patrick Everitt and more.

Segueing from the past to the infinitesimally possible, Philosophy and Mysticism track chaired by Noumenautics author Peter Sjstedt-H promises exhilarating doses of mind-expansion, with speakers including Tim Hardwick, who also has a poem out in The Tripping Spriggan, the poetry anthology written especially to commemorate BC 2017.

All this psychedemia will take place in a cocoon of complementary creative enterprises, from interactive art installations to Cyberdelic Workshops to a stash of pioneering documentaries about psychedelic cultures around the world, many of them debuting in 2017.

If this all sounds suspiciously fun for a conference, thats because a sparkly guy-rope or two are intrinsic to BCs organisational frame:Ive had some experience in organising festivals as well as academic conferences, says David Luke. We all loved to go to festivals and experience creative expression at its freest. The psychedelic community is both expansive and inclusive it couldnt be anything else. You can take psychedelics out of the countercultural revolution but you cant take the revolutionary ingenuity out of psychedelic exploration, or the people who do it.

Bridging the gap beautifully between the science of psychedelics and the people who take them is Paul Austin, founder of the pioneering microdosing initiative, The Third Wave. Hell be letting us in on the secrets to sub-perceptual cognitive enhancement alongside fresh perspectives from David Luke and Ben Sessa in a session on the New Paradigms emerging as greater numbers of our society get turned on to psychedelics.

This conference is exactly like the psychedelic experience itself, says shaman and Getting Higher author Julian Vayne. Its a confluence of so many different ideas and energies, all brought together to create a truly unique event thats different every time. Its safe to say that whatever your mind-expanding predilections, youll find them at Breaking Convention. Ahoy!

You can get tickets for Breaking Convention via theirofficial website.

Rosalind Stone is Director of Development forDrugs and Me, Publicist forPsychedelic Pressand is a regular contributor to Volteface.She has also written for Psymposia, Talking Drugs, The Stylist and The Londonist. Tweets@RosalindSt0ne

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Open Your Mind This Weekend at Europe's Largest Psychedelic Conference - VolteFace Magazine (blog)

Medical Q&A: So-called smart drugs can turn out to be a dumb idea – Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Q: What are nootropic drugs, and do they really boost brainpower?

A: Cognition-enhancing drugs known as nootropics some prescription, some over-the-counter, others available on a worldwide gray market of private sellers are said to improve memory, attention, creativity and motivation.

The word "nootropic" was coined in 1972 by a Romanian scientist, Corneliu Giurgea, who combined the Greek words for "mind" and "bending." Caffeine and nicotine can be considered mild nootropics, while prescription Ritalin, Adderall and Provigil (modafinil, a drug for treating narcolepsy) lie at the far end of the spectrum when prescribed off-label as cognitive enhancers. Even microdosing of LSD is increasingly viewed as a means to greater productivity.

But when aficionados talk about nootropics, they usually refer to substances that have supposedly few side effects and low toxicity. Most often they mean piracetam, which Giurgea first synthesized in 1964 and which is approved for therapeutic use in dozens of countries for use in adults and the elderly. Not so in the United States, however, where officially it can be sold only for research purposes.

Piracetam is well studied and is credited by its users with boosting their memory, sharpening their focus, heightening their immune system, even bettering their personalities. But it's only one of many formulations in the racetam drug family. Newer ones include aniracetam, phenylpiracetam and oxiracetam. All are available online, where their efficacy and safety are debated and reviewed on message boards and in podcasts.

A number of companies now market nootropic "stacks," or formulas, some of which include piracetam, herbal remedies, amino acids and citicoline, a naturally occurring brain chemical that can be taken orally as a supplement, intravenously or as a shot.

Because they are sold as nutritional supplements and natural products that refrain from making health claims, they avoid close government scrutiny.

"Who doesn't want to maximize their cognitive ability?" asks Murali Doraiswamy, who has led several trials of cognitive enhancers at Duke University Health System and has been an adviser to pharmaceutical and supplement manufacturers as well as the Food and Drug Administration. He attributes the demand to an increasingly knowledge-based society that values mental quickness and agility above all else.

But while some studies have found short-term benefits, Doraiswamy says there is no evidence that what are commonly known as smart drugs of any type improve thinking or productivity over the long run.

"There's a sizable demand, but the hype around efficacy far exceeds available evidence," notes Doraiswamy, adding that, for healthy young people such as Silicon Valley go-getters, "it's a zero-sum game. That's because when you up one circuit in the brain, you're probably impairing another system."

Although piracetam has a history of "relatively few side effects," it has fallen far short of its initial promise for treating any of the illnesses associated with cognitive decline, according to Lon Schneider, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California. "We don't use it at all and never have."

As for newer nootropic drugs, there are unknown risks.

"Piracetam has been studied for decades," says cognitive neuroscientist Andrew Hill, the founder of a neurofeedback company in Los Angeles called Peak Brain Institute. But some of the newer compounds "are things that some random editor found in a scientific article, copied the formula down and sent it to China and had a bulk powder developed three months later that they're selling. Please don't take it, people!"

Sara Solovitch, The Washington Post

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Medical Q&A: So-called smart drugs can turn out to be a dumb idea - Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Luminosity Beach Festival 2017 || Livesets – EDM Identity (blog)

Relive Luminosity Beach Festival 2017 with your favorite artistslivesets!

LuminosityBeach Festival is arguably the biggesttrance-only show in the world. In fact, if you have been taking part in the trance scene for any given amount of time, then you already know that Luminosity is the one that you must attend if you are drawn to beats that are soaked in uplift, energy, and power, driven by melodies that drip with that insatiable trance emotion that inspire us to reach our hands to the heavens.

Each summer thousands of trance lovers make the pilgrimage to the beaches of Holland. This year was especially fantastic as the festival expanded from three stages to four and celebrated its tenth anniversaryin style! Luminosity is amazing in that it curates trance artists both big and small from all over the world. This year, the lineup was better than ever, boasting massive back-to-back sets and even a few fan favorite comebacks! As if four days of partying on the beach werent enough, the last day was also host to a massive after party that kept the beats pumping until six am!It was genuinely not to be missed, especially for any big trance fan.

If you couldnt attend, missed a set or two over the weekend, or just simply want to relive your favorite moments after the glow of Luminosity begins to fade away, these livesetswill bring the most incredibleLuminosity moments back to life and help to ease some of those post-festival blues! We will constantly be adding and updating this list as more surface, so keep this page bookmarked!

What was your favorite set from the weekend? Who surprised you the most? Let us know in the comments! Also feel free to join in on the conversation on Facebook!

If sets get taken down, please comment and let us know so we can begin the hunt for new posts and links around the internet!

SoundCloud | Mixcloud| YouTube| Facebook

SoundCloud | Mixcloud| YouTube| Facebook

SoundCloud | Mixcloud| YouTube| Facebook

SoundCloud | Mixcloud| YouTube| Facebook

Website | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube

Abisola has been listening to electronic music since high school. Though she enjoys a variety of sub-genres she mainly listens to Trance, House and Techno. Abisola has attended multiple events in the Southern California region and is beginning to expand to out-of-area and international festivals. She is a full-time school psychologist and also enjoys eating, traveling and video games.

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Luminosity Beach Festival 2017 || Livesets - EDM Identity (blog)

‘Pokmon Go’ Charged TM vs. Fast TM: What you need to know about the items added in the raid update – Mic

The new Pokmon Go gym update has shaken up the meta in pretty incredible ways, but the biggest change is raids massive collaborative battles where trainers work together to bring down powerful Pokmon. Raids give players the opportunity to catch strong Pokmon and acquire powerful items like the Golden Razz Berry and for the first time in Pokmon Go history TMs. If that's news to you, here's what it means.

Truly competitive players in Pokmon Go focus on two things when choosing their gym attackers and defenders: their IVs or Individual Values and their moveset. IVs require a lot of testing, but the Silph Road has a streamlined way to test them, and IVs don't change as you evolve your Pokmon. Good IVs stay that way.

The same isn't true of movesets, which change as you evolve. So there's a chance when you finally evolve that perfect-IV Dragonair into a Dragonite, you'll end up with a less-than-stellar moveset, making it harder to use in gym battling.

That's where TMs come in. TMs, short for technical machines, will, for the first time, allow you to change the moves your Pokmon know, according to Pokmon Go Hub. You'll obtain TMs from raids, and they'll come in two flavors, fast and charged. Fast TMs are available to any trainer level 15 or above, and charged TMs are available to any trainer level 25 or above.

TM comparison

As the names suggest, they'll either change the fast or charged move that your Pokmon currently knows when you use them. According to Pokmon Go Hub, you can use an unlimited number of TMs on your Pokmon until you get the moveset that you want. Hopefully this is the first step towards rebalancing battles so that more movesets are considered good. However we're content to settle for the guarantee that our Golden Magikarp won't be stuck with crunch forever once we evolve it.

Raids are here! See why they may be the key to legendary Pokmon. Find out how to determine how long it will take you to reach level 40, and see what we think of the Gen 2 Pokmon added to the game. Here are the kinds of Pokmon you get from 10-kilometer eggs, and here's where you can check out what you missed during the Water Festival and Solstice events. Find out more about the upcoming Chicago event and why you'll probably be able to catch Unown while you're there if you're not busy searching for rare evolutionary items, that is.

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'Pokmon Go' Charged TM vs. Fast TM: What you need to know about the items added in the raid update - Mic

Posted in Tms

Why am I expected to have children just because I’m a woman? – Irish Times

The endless stereotypes about women include the myths that we all dream of nurturing a child; although this stereotype is accurate for some women, it is not for all

Im sitting at a table with a bunch of women and a couple of men. The conversation is about children: how many we hope to have, baby names, would we rather a boy or a girl?

It goes around in a circle and everyone is excited to answer these questions. When its my turn to answer, Im not excited. Im a 20 year old journalism student in my second year of college. My whole life is ahead of me. So how many children do you want? I respond None.

The whole room goes quiet and awkward, until someone chimes in, You are young though, you will want them in the future. The next person is asked the same question, he is a man, he also says he does not want children, but this time there is no awkward silence, they accept his answer and move on.

Perhaps most women do dream of having children and of becoming a mother, but the fact is I dont. I want a career and I want that career to be my child, I dont see anything wrong with that.

Throughout my life, I have never wanted a child or fantasised about motherhood. Its not what I want out of life. I salute to the women who dream of becoming a mother and giving birth, for having the strength to deal with breastfeeding and the constant care of another, more vulnerable being.

I empathise with women who want to be a mothers and cant, but just because I dont desire children does not make me selfish. Many female celebrities get pitied for having a child-free life by choice. Successful women who have chosen a child-free life that they have been shamed for and it has only made them stronger in their decision.

Jennifer Aniston lives a child-free life and refuses to be pitied for it. I have worked too hard in this life and this career to be whittled down to a sad childless human, she told Marie Claire magazine.

Oprah Winfrey also chose not to have children, saying, If I had kids, my kids would hate me, because something in my life would have had to suffer, and it would probably have been them.

Helen Mirren waited to have kids and it never happened: It was not my destiny. I didnt care what people thought. It was only boring old men who would ask me. And whenever they went, What, no children? Well you better get on with it, old girl, Id say No! F**koff!. Nice one, Helen.

When they detect reluctance, parents say things like you have no idea what you are missing but that doesnt make sense. I see mothers everywhere and while I know its not the whole picture I get a clear sense of what it entails. Why would their lives change our minds? If we dont want what we see on the outside, why would we want what we see on the inside?

The endless stereotypes about women include the myths that we all dream of nurturing a child; although this stereotype is accurate for some women, it is not for all. In fact, there are many men who also suit this stereotype.

From a very young age, I have never seen a child in my future. I dont have a maternal bone in my body. I am going to college to get a degree to find a stimulating career path, one I do not want to give up or compromise on for a child. I shouldnt be expected to want a child because I have a uterus.

There are many reasons I dont want to be a parent. I never fully had a childhood myself having spent many of my early years looking after my autistic sister. To some degree, I have already experienced what being a mother is like and I can safely say its not for me.

I also worry that my child might have special needs and that as a result I would not be able to live the life I imagine for myself. My ambition in life is to have a full-time career not to be a full-time carer.

Seeing a woman who is resolutely childfree seems to seems to give people licence to call women selfish, self-absorbed, and shallow. There are many reasons these women do not want children. Pregnancy itself takes a serious toll on a persons life and it consumes the person. Fertility issues are often a reason as when faced with them, people can question the necessity of having kids.

There are a lot of expectations with having children: to be a perfect mother and to make perfect choices. Not everyone wants the pressure (I dont). And not all women are programmed with maternal instinct. Career ambitions can take priority and children do not fit into every lifestyle.

I have my reasons, but reasons should not be necessary. I shouldnt have to explain. Our choices about what we do with our bodies are deeply personal. We should stop pitying or putting down people who chose to have a child-free life.

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Why am I expected to have children just because I'm a woman? - Irish Times

Wednesday, June 28, 2017: Mueller will uncover the truth, ‘political … – Bangor Daily News

Millinocket hospital provides good care

Millinocket residents have recently been bombarded by mailings from an unknown author. The mailings speak of a malpractice lawsuit against the Millinocket Regional Hospital and how a pregnant woman was awarded $1.8 million from the suit.

While the story is true, Im not sure what the intent of these mailings are. They seem to imply that the residents of the Millinocket area should stop using Millinocket Regional Hospital as our health care provider. It seems this person is an advocate for closing down one of the only health resources we have left here in an area that has been devastated by an economic downturn.

To have this facility available in a town of 4,500 people is incredible. Is this person really asking us to drive 45 minutes to an hour for our health care? What about emergency care? Now these mailings have implied that the quality of health care is reduced because of the fact that Millinocket Regional Hospital uses physician assistants instead of real doctors. If Millinocket Regional Hospital has made a financial decision to use physician assistants instead of doctors for emergency room care, and that decision helps keep the hospital open, Im OK with that.

To imply that they are any less professional or knowledgeable is flat out wrong. Of the many occasions Ive visited the emergency room, both personally and with my business, Ive never had anything but the best of care, been seen promptly and dealt with true professionals.

Dean Rodrigue

Millinocket

Im certain Maine State Chamber of Commerce President Dana Connors knows that because two things happen at the same time doesnt mean one caused the other. The reasons someone moves to one locale over another are varied and complicated and often have nothing to do with taxes.

People are supposedly abandoning Connecticut in droves because of a tax increase on high income earners. And he believes the same will happen in Maine if the Legislature recognizes the will of the people and leaves in place the 3 percent surtax on annual income above $200,000 to fund the states share of public education at the 55 percent level, as mandated by the voters many years ago.

Connors plays the economic development card in his June 26 BDN OpEd, hoping well believe we can have that as a state without adequate investments in education.

Fewer than 10 percent of small businesses will be impacted by the surtax. If I made $250,000 as a small-business owner, I will owe an additional $1,500.

The prosperity we experienced as a country in the 1900s was due in large part to the investments our parents and grandparents made in education, infrastructure, research and development.

Business owners should be applauded for their hard work and their willingness to take risks. And they need to acknowledge that their success is due, at least in part, to the collective investments weve all made in structures and systems that support our commerce and our democracy.

We get what we pay for. Just ask Kansas.

Mary Ann Larson

Portland

The similarity of Vladimir Putins and Donald Trumps personalities is remarkable and explains how each requires loyalty beyond anything else.

Putin surrounds himself with long-term, mostly business allies, and Trump, his family. Such is oligarchy. Within a constitutional democracy such as ours, Trump is a rat in the larder.

I have confidence that our system can right itself, and the first step is an exterminator such as Special Counsel Robert Mueller. The truth will come out, notwithstanding a parallel reality that is not real. Otherwise, two party representative democracy is on the pale.

Philip C. Groce

Union

Not using derogatory and offensive names for women, Jews, Roman Catholics, Irish, Native Americans, African-Americans, Latinos, Asians, and Middle-Easterners isnt political correctness. Using respectful names is simply decent behavior.

But if thats what we call being PC, then I definitely take issue with William Duddys pronouncement in his June 24 BDN letter to the editor that multiculturalism and being PC are the worst things to have happened to the United States.

Being kinder and generous to different peoples is an excellent way for us all to be decent human beings to each other.

Joyce Cornwell

Lamoine

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Wednesday, June 28, 2017: Mueller will uncover the truth, 'political ... - Bangor Daily News

John McEnroe, Serena Williams and political correctness – Washington Examiner

Speaking to CBS in New York City on Tuesday, former tennis star John McEnroe refused to apologize for saying that Serena Williams would be ranked around 700th if she played on the male circuit.

Questioned by the CBS hosts, McEnroe was unrepentant. He had no intention of upsetting Serena Williams, he said, but nor did he regret his comments.

Still, what was more interesting in the interview was how the hosts embraced political correctness.

Under fire, McEnroe threw the contention back at Charlie Rose, asking him what rank he believed Serena would hold were she on the men's circuit. Rose is a tennis fan and knows the tour. But he couldn't bring himself to answer truthfully. Even when pushed, Rose stated, "She seemed pretty strong to me."

Next up, Gayle King challenged McEnroe. His comments, said Gayle, "belittle" female sporting accomplishments. Evidently angered by McEnroe's rebuttal, King asked McEnroe where he would rank on the men's tour. The 58-year-old responded, "about 1,200th in the world." It was a clever riposte. McEnroe suggested that Williams is a better player than him (she'd be 700th, he's 1,200th).

Regardless, the exchange was embarrassing. The CBS hosts clearly believed that they had a responsibility to slap down McEnroe's original comment. They were not there to question McEnroe, they were there to flay him. It didn't matter that McEnroe was right or wrong, but only that he be punished.

Of course, anyone who knows tennis knows that McEnroe is right. In the power of shots and endurance of the players, the male circuit is stronger than the women's. That's not a sexist comment. It's a fact of nature. As comparative serve speeds attest, facts are facts. It's as obvious as saying that a B-2 bomber carries more explosive power than a F-18 Super Hornet.

And it's not just the statistics of the court. Consider the relative daily attendance and TV viewing figures for major tennis tournaments. At Wimbledon, for example, figures for the gentlemen's semifinals or quarterfinals are greater than at the ladies' equivalent. The viewers know that the men's game is faster and stronger. And for that reason, many find it more compelling.

This doesn't take away from the accomplishment of the female players on the tour. From working at Wimbledon for seven years, I know firsthand the exceptional athleticism and skill that defines female tennis players. In the end, this is just a question of biology. And up against the male circuit, Serena Williams would not find the extraordinary success that she has attained. We should be able to admit that and be comfortable with it.

And we should be able to celebrate Serena Williams for being the best tennis player of her sex. She is a far better player on the women's tour than McEnroe ever was on the men's.

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John McEnroe, Serena Williams and political correctness - Washington Examiner

Yves Tumor’s New Music Video is a Creepy Story of Cloning & Biohacking – Out Magazine

Queer musician Yves Tumor's new film, for the frenetic track "Broke In," is a chilling exploration of cloning, biohacking, and being buried alive. For the project, Tumor tapped Berlin filmmakers Sam Dye and Bliss Resting to direct, with lyrics by UK musician Oxhy.

Its about feeling crushed by the city of London, walking around the streets and feeling no escape, feeling like the city youre from wants you out, Oxhy told Dazed. Needing release, but at the same time constantly remembering the violence that the desire for freedom as a male has meant, historically and currently.

Much of the film sees Oxhy covered in dirt, with just his eyes and his muddy teeth visible. The result is a highly jarring, unsettling film that includes images of great violence and oppression.

Oxhy is the real star of this film, said Dye and Resting.We put him through so much, its fantastic to have such dedicated people to work with. Always a star, no matter how much hes choking.

Tumor's debut album,Serpent Music, came out last year, and impressed us with its experimental, atmospheric approach to creating a queer soundscape. Tumor is based in Turin, Italy, and an affiliate of another highly important LGBTQ musician, Mykki Blanco.

Take a look at the video, below:

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Yves Tumor's New Music Video is a Creepy Story of Cloning & Biohacking - Out Magazine

This powerful new tool for cloning genes could speed up drug discovery – Boston Business Journal


Boston Business Journal
This powerful new tool for cloning genes could speed up drug discovery
Boston Business Journal
The technology "makes a 20,000-piece puzzle look like a 1,000-piece puzzle, said one of the researchers, Biju Parekkadan, a faculty member at Massachusetts General Hospital. Subscribe to get the full story. Already a subscriber? Sign in. Subscribe to ...

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This powerful new tool for cloning genes could speed up drug discovery - Boston Business Journal

Serena Williams’s Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider – Vanity Fair


Vanity Fair
Serena Williams's Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider
Vanity Fair
Serena Williams is one of the greatest athletes to ever hit a tennis court, and she's also steadily become a formidable force in fashion, both on and off the court. The Vanity Fair cover star is a front row mainstay at fashion shows all over the world ...

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Serena Williams's Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider - Vanity Fair

After Ailes and O’Reilly, Fox News’ Risky Evolution – Daily Beast

Nothing lasts forevernot even, apparently, the ratings and revenue primacy of the Fox News Channel, especially in the confounding Age of President Trump.

For the No. 1 cable news and opinion outlet, still immensely profitable at the start of its third decade for parent company 21st Century Fox (an estimated $1.65 billion in operating income for 2016), the media landscape has become a tricky territory laced with minefields and other perils.

The three moguls at the top of the empire, 86-year-old Rupert Murdoch and his fortysomething sons Lachlan and James, must figure out how to navigate this new world and ensure the survival of their golden-egg-laying goose.

Its a world that doesnt include Fox News creator, Roger Aileswho died in May at age 77, a mere 10 months after scandal forced him from the throneor its tent-pole prime-time personality, Bill OReillyanother scandal casualtywhile the channels evening programming schedule has necessarily undergone a hasty makeover.

And its a world in which conservative media rivals, such as Newsmax and One America, along with Sinclair Broadcasting, are increasingly in the mixand conspiracy-mongering outlets like Alex Joness Infowars and Trump-loving trolls like Mike Cernovich are gaining traction while mocking Fox News as a wholly owned subsidiary of the supposedly dying Republican establishment.

Fox News is on the way down, and Im on the way up, claimed Cernovich, an ardent Trumpkin who boasts nearly 300,000 followers on Twitter (including frequent retweeter Donald Trump Jr., who once suggested Cernovich be nominated for a Pulitzer Prize) and recently joined forces with Jones and Infowars to do regular reports such as his June 18 report that NBC is now trying to get the Murdoch brothers to do a contract buyout to bring Megyn Kelly back to Fox Newsan assertion that has no factual basis, according to an authoritative NBC News source. (The channel placed Cernovich, a favorite of the Trump White House and presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway, on its do-not-book list last year because hes an alleged date-rape apologist).

I dont watch Fox News, he told The Daily Beast. They dont move the needle for me.

While the right-leaning network has continued to post solid wins in the Nielsens, including in the recent May sweeps (on which advertising is sold), the latest numbers are also exposing once-unthinkable chinks in the armor.

Deprived of Ailes guidance and OReillys services, along with the defection in January of Megyn Kelly to NBC, Fox News is suddenly losing to liberal-leaning MSNBCs Rachel Maddow at 9 p.m., not just in the 25-to-54 advertising-friendly age demographic, but sometimes in total viewers.

Whats morein what has to be another troubling developmentMSNBCs other prime-time anchors, Chris Hayes at 8 p.m. and Lawrence ODonnell at 10 p.m., along with Brian Williams at 11 p.m., have occasionally beat their formerly unassailable competitors in that all-important demo.

They [Fox News] seem to be doing pretty well lately just in terms of the numbers, former CNN President Jonathan Klein told The Daily Beast. Theyre always going to be challenged in the demo, because theyve got a much older audience But any impact of losing Roger and Bill is going to be seen more in the long term than the short term.

So will the Murdochs stay the course? Or somehow try to alter it?

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Thats the dilemma, said a former top Fox News executive who asked not to be further identified. We stick with the status quo, because weve got to maintain this enormous revenue source and keep what we have, but were losing valuable assets along the way and there are strong indications that the brand is no longer as relevant as it once was. We probably need to look at retooling, but can we do that when the guy standing at the gate, Rupert, is saying, Not under my watch?

The ex-Fox News exec added: Ive seen a lot of companies maintain the posture of hoarding success until they dont have it anymore. And when they dont have it anymore, theyre in a position where theyre at the bottom of the ocean looking up, and then they almost always say, How did that happen?

Fox News exec Jay Wallace, whom Rupert Murdoch appointed president of news after longtime Ailes confidant and successor Bill Shine was forced out in early May (while Murdoch named Ailes loyalist Suzanne Scott president of opinion programming), is facing the challenge with a display of sangfroid.

Of course we knew there would be some softening with the loss of Bill OReilly, Wallace told Variety this month. The man was the tent-pole of our prime-time lineup. We knew there would be a little bit of a difference there. But overall, Fox News fans are committed to us. They watch us longer than any other network [per session]. They like our brand of storytelling and the way we report news. (The widely liked and respected Wallace was not made available for this article, and the elder Murdoch is reportedly in charge, often running the morning news meetings.)

Yet another looming threat is Sinclair Broadcast Groups pending $3.9 billion acquisition of Tribune Media and its WGN America cable station, which will likely position the merged media juggernaut to become a credible challenge to Fox News dominance among conservative and Donald Trump-loving viewers.

In the nightmare scenario for Fox News, OReilly, who was basic cables most popular personality until his abrupt April 19 departure, would host a show for the freshly reconfigured Sinclair powerhouse, maybe on WGN America opposite his 8 p.m. successor, Tucker Carlson Tonight.

WGN America is the crown jewel of the Tribune Media empire, the ex-Fox News exec said, noting that the cable station reaches some 73 million households, not that far off from Fox News 87 million as of February 2015, and could take advantage of cross-promotion and content-sharing with the post-merger Sinclairs more than 200 local TV stations.

That is a massive platform, and Fox has to be very concerned about it, said the exec. Sinclair should absolutely be looking at OReilly. The median age of his audience is 71, but they loyally watched Bill five nights a week, and hes still the biggest name in conservative media.

If Sinclair also managed to recruit Sean Hannity, the top-rated 10 p.m. anchor who publicly expressed displeasure and made veiled threats of resignation with the ousting of Bill Shine, I could see a real sort of devastating competition boil up, the exec said. It could be a major hit to this billion-dollar revenue machine that Fox News is.

Meanwhile, mushrooming scandals, sexual-harassment lawsuits, and negative publicity about Fox News allegedly misogynist and racially charged corporate culture could influence this Thursdays expected decision by Britains shaky Tory government on whether to permit 21st Century Fox to fulfill its long-held ambition to acquire the whole of Europes profitable Sky satellite television and online property.

James and Lachlan met recently in London with British regulators to make their case for their good intentions and sincere efforts at corporate house-cleaning. Its unclear what the effect on Fox News will be if the $14 billion acquisition is once again denied, much as it was seven years ago in the midst of a Murdoch newspapers phone-hacking scandal that outraged the British public, resulted in the shutdown of the popular News of the World tabloid, inspired hearings in Parliament, and rendered the transaction politically indefensible.

I wonder if, in a way, it would take the pressure off Fox News, and people can relax and stop proposing these little change elements and we can just be who we are, because theres nothing at stake anymore, said the former exec.

Like CNN and MSNBC, Fox News has benefited from the heightened news cycle and the sense of going to the mattresses, said Klein, co-founder and chief executive of TAPP Media, a personality-focused network of online video channels. Trump wants to portray criticism of him as a cultural war against conservatives, and Fox continues to treat the investigations as a war of ideas rather than an investigation of Trump himselfand to the degree that Fox viewers have bought that argument, Fox will continue to have a lot of viewers.

Klein added: Looking at the meteoric rise of MSNBC over the past year, which is mirroring Foxs approach on the left, its clear that unfortunately embitterment works these days, regardless of ones philosophical orientation.

As for Fox News, they may not do as well as they did when they had the biggest star in all of cable [OReilly] kicking off prime-time, Klein said, but Fox News is going to be finefor now.

Tim Graham, director of media analysis for the conservative Republican Media Research Center, told The Daily Beast: I wouldnt say to you, as a Fox watcher, that wow, they seem like theyve lost their vision. But there is an overwhelming concern among the right that the Murdoch boys are going to water this down to the point where its going to be Gergenizeda reference to CNN political analyst David Gergen, a former White House aide to three GOP presidents (Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Ronald Reagan) and one Democrat (Bill Clinton), who proudly calls himself a raging moderate.

Its going to be moderate to the point where its no longer addressing the things that people are worried about, Graham said, elaborating his fellow conservatives fears. The business mistake would be, Now heres a two-hour Fox News special on the climate threat.

Ailes, who was conspicuous in his distaste for the elite Manhattan social scene and proud of his working-class Ohio roots, liked to stoke internal suspicion of Lachlan, now 21st Century Foxs co-chairman, and James, the freshly minted CEO, when he was Fox Newss all-powerful emperor. Indeed, Ailes famously bested Lachlan in one of their behind-the-scenes turf battles, obtaining Ruperts assent to let him run Foxs broadcast television stations over Lachlans objections, and prompting the latters 2005 decade-long departure from the company then known as News Corporation.

It was not entirely unwelcome in January 2011, when Murdoch brother-in-law Matthew Freud, then married to Ruperts daughter Elisabeth, told The New York Times: I am by no means alone within the family or the company in being ashamed and sickened by Roger Ailess horrendous and sustained disregard of the journalistic standards that News Corporation, its founder, and every other global media business aspires to.

Said the former Fox News exec: There was a general feeling that the family held their noses and cashed the checks, but really had no love for Roger or Fox News. To a degree, Roger cultivated that. He sort of identified an enemy that it was good to battle against, and good for the morale of his inner circlefighting against the liberal rich kids.

Media Matters President Angelo Carusone, whose liberal watchdog organization has been a relentless critic of Fox News, said that with the exits of Ailes and his proxy, Shine, the channel has betrayed a notable lack of message consistency that would probably not have been tolerated under the previous regime.

While Fox & Friends in the morning and Hannity at night are reliable purveyors of pro-Trump propagandaand the president remains their most faithful and grateful audience member, frequently parroting their content on his Twitter feedthey are islands unto themselves, Carusone said.

On June 6, for instance, afternoon host Neil Cavuto let fly with an impassioned denunciation of Trumps attacks on the fake news media.

Mr. President, its not the fake-news media thats your problem its you, Cavuto raged. Its not just your tweetingits your scapegoating. Its your refusal to see that sometimes youre the one whos feeding your own beastand acting beastly with your own guys.

Cavuto continued: Mr. President, they didnt tweet disparaging comments about a London mayor in the middle of a murder spreeyou did. They didnt turn on a travel ban that you signedyou did. Youre right to say a lot of people are out to get you... but... the buck stops with you, Mr. President.

That was revolutionary, University of Virginia political science Professor Larry Sabato said about Cavutos anti-Trump apostasy.

Carusone, meanwhile, predicted Ailess invention will incrementally shed its ideological identity for something resembling a straight news operation, much as the channel recently stopped using Fair and Balanced, the dog whistle of a marketing slogan that let Fox News aging largely white-male viewers know that the channel was actually a retort to the liberal mainstream media. (I created a TV network for people 55 to dead, Ailes once boasted to The Nations Joan Walsh. Nobody believed it could be done, but I did it. Its for guys who sit on their couch with the remote all day and night.)

The way I would characterize it is, Fox News now is a laggard, and when Ailes was running the show they were vanguards. They imbued right-wing misinformation with a veneer of credibility, said Carusone, whose David Brock-founded group has been an irksome thorn in Fox News sidecharacterized by OReilly, for one, as the most vile, despicable human beings in the country.

My prediction is that Fox News will be unrecognizable in five years, Carusone said. From a business perspective, what they now have is an unsustainable, untenable position. There is no growth for them. They will lose out every day to the new emerging right-wing voices that are primarily distributed on digital platforms, and they will never be able to catch up. They will never be as creative. They will never have the same reach and relevance among the conservative audience. They lost their most valuable asset the moment they fired Bill OReilly. They pissed off their core audience.

A Fox News spokesperson said eye-rolling is the most appropriate response, given that the latest June and second-quarter ratings, released Tuesday, show the channel winning across the board for 186 consecutive months.

The ex-Fox News exec said: Theyve certainly lost an incredible tonnage with the loss of OReilly and, to an extent, Megyn. I think it would be foolhardy to think that it didnt have a pretty significant massive impact

And I dont think you can discount the family dynamic there. James and Lachlan would love to use the opportunity and use the crisis to shape and redefine. But Rupert is still very much in control of Fox News. Hes still running the show, day to day.

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After Ailes and O'Reilly, Fox News' Risky Evolution - Daily Beast

PES 2018 is a true evolution of the series – Videogamer.com

For the past couple of years Pro Evolution Soccer has been heralded as the top choice for those of us who live and breathe football. Its blistering pace and goalmouth action has trumped the fact that the Premier League champions are referred to as London FC instead of their official name of Jose Mourinho's Sad Face Football Club. I recently had the chance to play alittle bit of this year's forthcoming entry and my major takeaway was that the blistering pace wasn't quite so evident. But that's not necessarily a bad thing. At all, in fact.

PES 2018 is slower than recent Winning Elevens, requiring you to be a bit more measured and thoughtful in your approach. It's not like play is brought to a standstill, you're just given additional time to survey the action. Because I was initially playing it like PES 2017, I was leaving myself prone to counter attacks after making silly little errors. Going in gung ho left my team open in the middle of the park, giving the opposition the chance to tear through my back line. I would've felt quite comfortable dealing with that last year, but my Atletico Madrid side are football players, not contortionists Yannick Carrasco can't morph his body on the run just because I said so.

It's definitely alittle strange at first, and will take some getting used to. You're punished for apoorly thought out attack, or for mistiming aheader off of along goal kick, more than you have been before. Borussia Dortmund's Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang ran straight through my midfield and in on goal on one occasion after Barca's Sergio Busquets leaped for the knock on and failed miserably. Every breaking ball feels more important than it did in Pro Evolution Soccer 2017.

Players seem to open up the pitch more, too, offering you the option of aPaul Scholes-esque cross-field pass, or alooping through ball that cuts aback four in two. Your wingers track back when you lose possession, and defenders look alert as arival striker is making amarauding run straight for goal. Its a better balanced, and realistic portrayal of the game, without dulling it to asnail's pace and forgetting that it is, after all, avideo game.

Goalkeeper positioning still seems abit iffy, but it's hard to tell if that will mar the whole experience as it was apparent the developer had worked on it, even if the difference is ever so slight. However, in front of every dodgy 'keeper can be a solid defence, and in my few matches, I don't think Iscored over two goals in any one game. While I don't doubt the fact my rusty skills are partly to blame, the solid defences I faced can also take a bow.

If you're afan of the razzmatazz seen in the FIFA games, you'll be pleasantly surprised by PES 2018. While still not meeting the standards set by EA's long-running series when it comes to flashy on-screen graphics, its improved telly-like presentation is appreciated. And I can't say enough about the detail of the player models. Andres Iniesta's receding hairline has never looked better, and Philippe Coutinho's innocent demeanour is captured beautifully. I can't speak for some of lesser known Championship players as there was only aselect number of licensed teams available on the day, but what was on show was breathtaking. I sadly didn't get to hear the commentary during my time with the game, but I can only hope that when Alexis Sanchez has ashot that trickles wide in PES 2018 that we won't hear Drury scream his surname with ferocious gusto.

As well as straight up exhibition matches, Iwas able to get abit of hands-on time with the new 3v3 mode. Basically, six players can each control one individual among the 22 athletes competing over the 90 minutes, and will be marked on their tackling, passing, and dribbling ability. With six player indicators and grading boxes on the screen, it all looked very busy. I can see some PES fans having abit of messy fun with it, especially locally, but the amount of distractions on the TV reminded me more of an Assassin's Creed map than asporting contest at four o' clock on aSunday.

Even with that in mind, Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 is definitely, as the name would suggest, an evolution of the series. PES Productions has taken the thrilling PES 2017, and without losing what made that great, turned this year's title into something that resembles the sport more than it has before.

At this point it's obviously difficult to say if this new, slower style will play over countless hours, but I definitely left the preview event wanting to play it for longer. And that's always agood sign.

PES 2018 is out September 12 on PC, Xbox One, Xbox 360, PlayStation 4, and PlayStation 3.

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PES 2018 is a true evolution of the series - Videogamer.com

Scott Turner’s Purpose and Desire An Important New Voice in the Evolution Debate – Discovery Institute

The crisis of evolutionary biology is spoken of openly here and by scientists who are professed advocates of intelligent design. It is acknowledged in much more circumspect terms by other scientists who know they would be hounded and punished by colleagues for doing so in the public arena. You have to look carefully at what they admit in professional journals, when they think laypeople arent listening.

However, a forthcoming book by biologist J. Scott Turner, Purpose & Desire: What Makes Something Alive and Why Modern Darwinism Has Failed to Explain It, is a real shot across the bow. Dr. Turners last book, from Harvard University Press, was The Tinkerers Accomplice: How Design Emerges from Life Itself. The new book, from HarperOne, is aimed not at an academic audience but straight at the broadest thoughtful reading public.

Turner is a delightful, clear, and highly engaging writer, and he sets out his argument against smug Darwinism forthrightly. As he shows, biology itself is in crisis, having failed to grapple with the enigma of what life really is.

From the Preface:

[T]here sits at the heart of modern Darwinism an unresolved tautology that undermines its validity. We scientists might not be troubled by this, but we should be, not least because the failure to recognize it closes off modern evolutionism from many big problems it should be capable of answering: the origin of life, the origin of the gene, biological design, and the origins of cognition and consciousness, to name a few. Intentionality and purposefulness are important to all these unresolved big questions, and yet we are very quick to fence these off behind a wall of denial. Instead of a frank acknowledgment of purposefulness, intentionality, intelligence, and design, we refer to apparent design, apparent intentionality, apparent intelligence.

The latest biologist to come out swinging at Darwinism, Turner is not an ID proponent. He teaches at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.

And this is not a review you will be hearing more about Purpose & Desire, here and elsewhere, in weeks to come and more so when the book is published on September 12. Instead I want to invite you to take advantage of a great pre-order deal. See here for details. All you have to do is pre-order from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or other selected venders, and you get two free e-books, Fire-Maker: How Humans Were Designed to Harness Fire and Transform Our Planet, by Michael Denton, and Metamorphosis, which I edited as a companion to the Illustra Media documentary of the same name.

Its as simple as this: order, and then click on the button at the bottom to let us know your order number. The two free e-books are then yours. Needless to say, this deal is of limited duration, so dont dawdle about it!

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Scott Turner's Purpose and Desire An Important New Voice in the Evolution Debate - Discovery Institute

Blueye Robotics Is Pioneering the Underwater Drone – The Drive

While drones are increasingly affordable, they're also starting to be found in more places than just above our heads. We recently covered MIT's efforts to have drones not only traverse the sky but tread on land, and are now seeing a Norwegian company dipping their proverbial toesand literal dronesinto the oceans.

Blueye's Pioneer is a "remote operated vehicle" ROV) drone equipped to descend as far as 450 feet and record and stream 1080p videos at 30 frames per secondall while being remotely controlled through a videogame console controller or through your smartphone. It doesn't stop there, eitherthe Pioneer was specifically designed to be used in tandem with a virtual reality (VR) headset, which would allow users to immerse themselves into the experience as much as the Pioneer immerses itself into the seas.

With a purposefully lower price point than all other ROVs of its kind, as user-friendly as possible, and clocking in at a mere 18 pounds, the Pioneer will likely be the de facto underwater hobby drone to aim for. BlueyeCEOEric Dyrkoren said that this was exactly his goal bringing professional underwater drone tech to the people.

"We wanted to make this technology available to many more people, weve been focusing on the design, the control system, and the camera," said Dyrkoren. "Its like playing a video game. Its very easy to use and the video streaming is in real-time, we have very low-latency."

There's been a massive demand for the combination of drones and VR, and it seems like the Pioneer was birthed from not only a wish to make these underwater drones more affordable, but to capitalize on that niche of drones and gaming we're all so fond of.

According to TheNextWeb, the Pioneer can be simply chucked into the ocean and easily started therein. There's no need for a hub, a base, and it's been tested for resilience and quality assurance for quite some time now. The Pioneer was even deployed in the Arctic, to test its mettle in harsh conditions like below freezing temperate and choppy waters.

Preorders have already begun for the ROV. You can check the product out in further detail here, before the item starts shipping next year, according to Blueye's CEO. We'll definitely keep an eye on this thing, as it seems like the first, true hobby underwater drone that some of us could actually afford. Stay tuned.

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Blueye Robotics Is Pioneering the Underwater Drone - The Drive

4 Katy ISD robotics teams competing – Chron.com

Texas Robotics Invitational will be June 30-July 1 at Strake Jesuit.

Texas Robotics Invitational will be June 30-July 1 at Strake Jesuit.

4 Katy ISD robotics teams competing

Four robotics teams from Katy Independent School District high schools will be competing at the Texas Robotics Invitational (TRI) at Strake Jesuit College Preparatory, 8900 Bellaire Blvd., June 30-July 1.

They are among 38 high school teams from around the country who will compete with their 120-pound robots that they have designed and built.

Representing Katy ISD will be CRyptonite from Cinco Ranch High School, Nutz and Boltz from Morton Ranch High School, Robospartans from Seven Lakes High School and Steel Talons from Tompkins High School. The event will include matches and workshops. Free admission from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Visit http://spectrum3847.org/TRI for information.

Tournament organizer and Spectrum 3847 Coach Allen Gregory said, "TRI is one of the largest summer robot tournaments in Texas. We want families to come to learn that S-T-E-M is the key to unlocking the future and think about starting a robotics program in their schools. TRI showcases some of the top high school talent in the country. See enthusiastic high school students compete with their 120-pound robots in an action-packed matches."

TRI is an off-season event in Houston and is planned and organized by Spectrum FRC#3847 with the help of Houston area teams, and volunteers."

Spectrum FRC #3847 is made up of high school students from St. Agnes Academy and Strake Jesuit College Preparatory.

For more information on the TRI, contact Gregory at TRI@spectrum3847.org or 360-390-5244.

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4 Katy ISD robotics teams competing - Chron.com

Anki Delivers Powerful Robotics Programming Platform for Kids With Cozmo Code Lab – Markets Insider

SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwired - June 26, 2017) - In a technology-fueled world learning to code has quickly become a cherished skill, empowering kids to become creators of the technology that they use and enjoy. However, the current tools that are meant to inspire robotics programming offer a lackluster and disjointed experience, often lacking access to high-level functionalities that can help transform an aspiring child into a full-fledged programmer. Anki, the consumer robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) company, today announced Cozmo Code Lab. It's a simple and intuitive visual programming language that allows Cozmo owners to easily tap into his advanced robotics technology to program the physical robot. Dragging and dropping blocks into a sequence in Code Lab will trigger related actions from Cozmo in the physical world. Code Lab is available now to all Cozmo owners as a free software update to the Cozmo app.

"Everything we do at Anki is in an effort to advance the state of robotics, whether that is kids learning coding for the first time, or Ph.D. students solving complex computer vision challenges in a lab with Cozmo," said Boris Sofman, CEO and co-founder at Anki. "With the launch of Code Lab, Cozmo now helps kids develop the logic and reasoning skills that programming requires. Based on the Scratch Blocks project, a collaboration between MIT Media Lab and Google, we now have a powerful tool that gives anyone interested in learning to code a robot the opportunity to unleash their creativity. There's simply no consumer robotics platform available like Cozmo."

Delightfully Intuitive. Easy to Execute.

Cozmo Code Lab provides opportunities for thoughtful and logic-based play as kids are challenged to approach programming much like a real programmer. Writing sophisticated programs requires a programmer to define a set of rules to solve an issue. Code Lab challenges kids to find a solution to prescribed prompts by moving the blocks into an appropriate sequence. It also allows them to experiment with Cozmo to create whatever content they can imagine. Each block represents a specific action, movement, or animation including:

Code Lab for Cozmo is based on Scratch Blocks, a project of the MIT Media Lab, used by millions of people around the world. With Code Lab, Cozmo owners can start out with very simple programs, but then move into extremely sophisticated coding projects like creating entirely new games for the robot.

Check out Cozmo Code Lab Videos Hereand Here

About Cozmo

Cozmo refuses to sit tight and wait for the fun to begin. He's ready to play. The more Cozmo gets to know his human friend, the more skilled he becomes as new abilities and upgrades are unlocked. The free-to-download Cozmo app, which runs on compatible iOS, Android, and Kindle Fire devices, comes packed with gameplay content and constantly introduces new ways to play. Cozmo even brings his own toys to the game -- three interactive Power Cubes that he's willing to share. So whether he's playing with his Cubes or challenging his human friend to one of the many games he ships with, he's always ready for action. New Cozmo abilities and game modes are introduced via free software updates, which ensures that the relationship between Cozmo and his human friend stays fresh year-round.

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About Anki

Anki is harnessing robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) to deliver magical experiences that push the boundaries of the human experience. Founded in 2010 by three Carnegie Mellon Robotics Institute graduates, Anki creates consumer experiences using cutting-edge technology that was once confined to robotics labs and research institutes. For three years in a row, Fast Company has named Anki one of the top 10 most innovative companies in robotics. Sales of Anki OVERDRIVE and Cozmo have catapulted the company's products into the category of top four best-selling premium toys ($75+) of the 2016 holiday season, according to The NPD Group. For more information, visit http://www.anki.com.

Anki and Cozmo are trademarks of Anki, Inc.

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Anki Delivers Powerful Robotics Programming Platform for Kids With Cozmo Code Lab - Markets Insider