It’s Time for Congressman Issa to Come Down From the Roof and … – ACLU (blog)

On May 30, Rep. Darrell Issas San Diego County constituents saw a different side of the nine-term member of Congress.

Angry at peaceful protesters outside his district office building in Vista, California, the congressman took to the roof to express his frustration. Looking down upon the protesters, he phoned a local newspaper reporter to explain he was on the roof because the protesters wouldnt speak to him and blamed the reporter for being in cahoots with the protesters. On Twitter, however, Issa said he spent his morning talking to constituents and then popped upstairs to photograph them from the roof.

While Issas behavior was erratic, it isnt the most concerning aspect to this story. No member of Congress likes to see protests outside his window, but he should vocally defend protesters First Amendment right to do so. But Issas silence has been deafening, even though the city of Vista is trying very hard to crack down on the protests.

For the past few months, Ellen Montanari has organized weekly protests outside Issas office to voice concerns over Issas public policies, including Issas vote to repeal Obamacare. These days, people are eager to express their dissatisfaction with Issas performance and Montanaris protests have given them a platform to do it. So every Tuesday, the protesters show up for an hour-long peaceful rally outside of Issas office, and the city of Vista has taken notice.

Until recently, the protesters gathered on the public sidewalk next to his office building to exercise their First Amendment rights. But under the terms of the citys most recent permit, which is issued in 30-day increments, they have been relegated to a dirt path on the opposite side of the road. Taking direct aim at Montanari, the permit also makes her financially responsible for the behavior of all the protesters who show up.

The actions taken by the city are unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has ruled repeatedly that public sidewalks are one of the places where our First Amendment rights are at their most robust. A government restriction on sidewalk protests can be justified only by the most compelling and fact-based need and that reason can never include the government's desire that a protest be less visible or less critical.

Our First Amendment freedoms ensure that anger and political disagreement dont fester into violence.

On June 1, the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties issued a letter to the city of Vista seeking the removal of the unconstitutional restrictions in the permit granted to Ellen Montanari. In our letter, we made it clear that the city cannot ban protest from a public sidewalk or make Ms. Montanari responsible for the conduct of others. We also explained to the city that it cannot bill protesters for any law enforcement response and reminded it cannot ban the use of bullhorns or microphones by protesters. The ACLUs letter is now under review by the city attorney.

Contempt for the First Amendment, however, isnt confined to Vista. Since the election, 22 state legislatures have considered 31 anti-protest bills. Fourteen have been defeated, but 10 are pending and seven have passed including laws in South Dakota and Tennessee against blocking streets during demonstrations.

But the United States commitment to the First Amendment has been on the decline since before the election.

In July 2016, Maina Kiai, the United Nations special rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association, undertook an official mission to the U.S. to assess our countrys commitment to freedom of assembly and protest. When he completed his trip, he observed that Americans have good reason to be angry and frustrated at the moment.

But he then went on to explain that its our First Amendment freedoms that ensure that anger and political disagreement dont fester into violence. And it is at times like these when robust promotion of assembly and association rights are needed most, he said. These rights give people a peaceful avenue to speak out, engage in dialogue with their fellow citizens and authorities, air their grievances and hopefully settle them.

The local officials of Vista, California, should heed Kiais words and stop trying to block Ms. Montanari and other peaceful protesters from exercising the very rights that have made America an example to the world for over two centuries. And we should all hope Darrell Issa can find his way down from the roof and assure his constituents that he believes they have a right to protest even when hes the target.

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It's Time for Congressman Issa to Come Down From the Roof and ... - ACLU (blog)

Bryan Fischer Can’t Make Up His Mind About The Reach Of The First Amendment – Right Wing Watch

As we have noted several times before, American Family Radios Bryan Fischer holds an utterly incoherent view of the First Amendment that allows him to at times insist that it only applies to Congress while, at other times, insisting that it applies to all sorts of other government entities, depending solely on which side of an issue he supports.

Whenever Fischer wants to defend some possible violation of the Establishment Clause, he insists that the First Amendment only applies to Congress, but when he wants to complain about what he sees as a possible violation of the Free Exercise Clause, he insists that the First Amendment applies to all sorts of entities.

Fischer did so again yesterday when he posted a column blasting a federal judge who ruled that a cross in Pensacola, Florida, must be removed because it violates the First Amendment:

Pensacola couldnt violate the First Amendment even if it tried.

The First Amendment was not written by the Founders to restrain any entity other than Congress. The very first word in the First Amendment makes this abundantly clear. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

Now the First Amendment has never been amended. It still means exactly what it meant when the Founders wrote it. Only Congress can violate the First Amendment. It is constitutionally impossible for cities like Pensacola to violate the First Amendment since it wasnt even written to restrain them.

Fischers view regarding the reach of the First Amendment in this case, of course, directly contradicts the view he espoused in response to the case of Kelvin Cochran, who was fired from his position as fire chief in Atlanta a few years ago for distributing to employees a self-published book he had written that included attacks on homosexuality.

In that case, Fischer wrote a column titled Atlanta Mayor Shreds Entire First Amendment to Dump Fire Chief in which he blasted the city for violating the First Amendment:

In this process, Cochran has been stripped of every right that is cherished and protected under the First Amendment. His freedom of religion, gone. His freedom of speech, gone. His freedom of the press, gone. His freedom of association, gone. When I say that homosexuality is the enemy of freedom, the First Amendment, and virtually the entire Constitution, this is what Im talking about.

Cochran is considering legal action, as well he should. Either the First Amendment means what it says, in which case Cochran has an unassailable legal argument, or the Constitution doesnt mean anything at all.

Fischer, it seems, wants to have it both ways. When it suits his right-wing political agenda, he fumes that Christians are supposedly being stripped of every right that is cherished and protected under the First Amendment by one city, but when it comes to the issue of a cross on public land, he insists that a city cannot possibly violate the First Amendment even if it tried because the First Amendment does not apply to any entity other than Congress.

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Bryan Fischer Can't Make Up His Mind About The Reach Of The First Amendment - Right Wing Watch

The Burger King Ad That Activated Google Home Just Won A Prestigious Award – XDA Developers (blog)


XDA Developers (blog)
The Burger King Ad That Activated Google Home Just Won A Prestigious Award
XDA Developers (blog)
Probably also explains my affinity for the Tor Browser, the recently released Firefox Focus, etc.. The fact that some intrusion into my private space is inevitable is not sufficient justification for me to accept any and every intrusion. Yeah, I will ...

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The Burger King Ad That Activated Google Home Just Won A Prestigious Award - XDA Developers (blog)

Cryptocurrency Craze Sends GPU Prices … – extremetech.com

Back in 2013, during the height of the GPU bitcoin mining craze and before ASICs had taken over the market, prices forvideo cards reached absurd levels. This primarily impacted AMD, since GCN-based cards were vastly better at Bitcoin and Litecoin mining than their Nvidia counterparts, but the end result was awful for enthusiast gamers. GPUs that normally wouldve sold for $200 to $300 were, in some cases, commanding $600 to $800 price tags. Eventually the market cooled down as more customers shifted to ASICs, which both outperformed GPUs and offered a performance-per-watt metric no graphics card could match.

Now were seeing the same thing happen again only this time, its hitting both AMD and Nvidia cards. The GTX 1070 should be selling for around $330, and I can confirm Ive seen it around this price in the not-so-distant past. Today, Newegg shows the cheapest GTX 1070 at $459, as shown below:

But this isnt just an Nvidia problem; AMD is taking a beating as well. UpgradeYourTech keeps track of product SKUs over time, and maps how they change over weeks and months. Check out whats happened to the RX 580 since that card launched just a few months ago.

On June 6 of this year, the Asus ROG Strix RX 580 topped out at a whopping $849.99. Today, its a steal at just $658.90. At first glance, this might seem like a great thing for both AMD and Nvidia, since after all, higher GPU prices means more money, right?

Wrong.

Back in 2013 when Hawaii launched, cryptocurrency miners sent the price of AMDs entire GCN family into the stratosphere. AMD, however, hadnt changed its prices, which means AMD wasnt making a cent of the additional revenue that OEMs like Asus, MSI, Gigabyte, and Zotac were raking in. Now, if you were a serious cryptocurrency miner at the time, buying an expensive AMD GPU instead of an NV card might have made sense, given the enormous performance disparity between the two. One difference between then and now is that people are mining Etherium, not Bitcoin. My admittedly rough understanding is that NV cards are far more competitive now than they were at BTC mining back in 2013.

It may have made sense for miners to pay huge cost. But it made no sense at all for gamers. At the time, I theorized this could cause AMD trouble down the road. While it took several years to get concrete data on what happened to AMDs GPU sales, I was absolutely right.

AMDs graphics sales have begun to rebound, but the company has fallen hard the past five years. Figures like these made a deal with Intel easier to imagine.

If you go back and compare the peaks in AMDs saleswith the companys product launches, youll find theres a relationship between the two. (Higher sales figures sometimes lag product launch dates, depending on when a GPU debuted within the quarter.) But look at what happened in Q3 2013. The launch of Hawaii and the excellent R9 290 and R9 290X barely budged AMDs sales. In fact, sales went into a steep decline thereafter.

True, Nvidia responded with the GTX 780 Ti to counter the R9 290X, and yes, the reference R9 200 cards had loud default blowers. But third-party fan designs later solved that problem. It didnt matter. The cryptocurrency market had blown out AMDs addressable market, and by the time BTC mining had moved to ASICs, Nvidia had launched its GTX 900 series (Maxwell).

If you want to strike it rich mining Etherium, new GPUs may be a great investment but neither Nvidia nor AMD is likely to be happy about the long-term impact on their own businesses.

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Cryptocurrency Craze Sends GPU Prices ... - extremetech.com

TenX Figured out How to Make Cryptocurrency Spendable Immediately In Real Life – Inc.com

Entrepreneur's have officially gotten their hands in the cookie jar of the cryptocurrency world. And believe me that's a good thing.

TenX, who is launching their highly anticipated ICO this coming Saturday has figured out how to solve one of the biggest problems for people that are involved in cryptocurrency -- actually spending the currency.

The worlds of entrepreneurship, cryptocurrency and Initial Coin Offerings are officially merged and entrepreneurs are raising 10s of millions of dollars to fund their companies. Bancor, Status and Basic Attention Token were prime examples of tokens/startups who collectively raised millions of dollars through ICOs.

The problem TenX is solving and why their ICO will likely also do very well is that nobody can actually spend cryptocurrencies at 99% of businesses without having to wait days to exchange it through a centralized exchange bankinto Fiat (government issued currency), or jump through other major hoops.

TenX has built an iOS and Android app that serves as both a wallet and a decentralized fee free exchange, then adds a debit/credit card functionality on top of that to let you spend your cyrptocurrency anywhere you could use VISA or Mastercard. (They send you a physical card.) It also converts it to local currency, meaning it pretty much works in any country.

As of right now TenX's platform officially supports Ethereum, Bitcoin, and Dash, amongst others.

Vitalik Buterin the founder of Ethereum is also an official advisor to the company. Historically, any ICO that he has backed has done phenomenally well. Another big factor for ICOs that typically do well is when they already have their tech built. TenX has a fully functioning and tested iOS and Android version and is ready to get it out in the everyones hands.

The ICO is scheduled for June 24, 2017 at 9am New York Time. 1 Ether will be worth 350 PAY tokens. Here is a link to their full whitepaper.

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TenX Figured out How to Make Cryptocurrency Spendable Immediately In Real Life - Inc.com

Shortage of Graphics Cards Intensifies in Russia as Cryptocurrency … – newsBTC

It is rather interesting to see this trend extend to Russia. The country has always had an uneasy relationship with cryptocurrency.

There is still a large shortage of graphics cards in various parts of the world. Things are getting out of hand in Russia, that much is evident. A new article shows how cryptocurrency mining in the country is picking up. As a result, the shortage of video cards becomes a lot more apparent. It is unclear if this situation will grow worse over time. For the manufacturers, this is good news, though.

About two weeks ago, it became apparent cryptocurrency mining is intensifying all over the world. Given the recent price surges of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin, that is to be expected. Not everyone wants to buy specific hard to mine cryptocurrency. Instead, a lot of people are reverting to using graphics cards. This has become somewhat of a problem for the global supply of these products, though. Russia seems to be affected the most by this development right now.

As we have seen over the past few weeks, prices for graphics cards are skyrocketing. That is only normal, as demand is intensifying as well. In Russia, GPUs are up by as much as 80% in price. This affects both retail and second-hand prices. Some people are buying hundreds of graphics cards at once, which puts a lot of strain on the available supply. Manufacturers such as AMD and NVIDIA will not be too bothered about this sudden demand, though.

A lot of media outlets still think people buy graphics cards to mine Bitcoin. That is not the case, as GPUs have been incredibly inefficient for some time now. Instead, users will mine Ethereum, Litecoin, ZCash, or even Monero. All of these currencies can be mined easily with graphics cards. Users will still need a proper motherboard which supports as many graphics cards as possible, though. Setting up a GPU mining farm is not as easy as most people would think.

It is rather interesting to see this trend extend to Russia. The country has always had an uneasy relationship with cryptocurrency. Now that the country is keeping an open mind toward Bitcoin and consorts, mining is growing in popularity. It is good to see graphics cards getting more love, as they were rendered nearly obsolete not too long ago. Thanks to popular alternative currencies, this hardware gets a second lease on life.

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Shortage of Graphics Cards Intensifies in Russia as Cryptocurrency ... - newsBTC

This Ethereum flash crash shows how cryptocurrency markets are super risky – Mashable


Mashable
This Ethereum flash crash shows how cryptocurrency markets are super risky
Mashable
The price of ether, the cryptocurrency of the suddenly hot Ethereum platform, has since rebounded and is trading back at about $318. The crash, however, remains as a big reminder that this is a volatile, new market. Plenty of people have made small ...
Ethereum Plunge Highlights Crypto-Currency Fears - DailyFXDailyFX
Here's How Traders Lost Millions in the First Ethereum Flash CrashMotherboard
Cryptocurrency 'Ethereum' Crash By 99.9% Of Value, Not SurprisingEconoTimes
Proactive Investors UK -CNBC -Investopedia -The GDAX Blog
all 34 news articles »

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This Ethereum flash crash shows how cryptocurrency markets are super risky - Mashable

When the Bitcoin Bubble Bursts – Bloomberg

Financial markets are frothier than a millennial's 3-D latte. Investors are scrambling to throw money at Argentina, Vice Media and George Clooney's tequila. Only the crypto-currency craze seems to give us comfort there are worse bubbles out there.

One bitcoin is now worth

$2,677

The latest warning against digital currencies comes from Aberdeen Asset Management's top venture capitalist, Peter Denious. He blames a feeding frenzy of speculation for the explosion in prices and new coins.

"A lot of lessons will be learned and a lot of money will be lost, before a lot of money can be made," he told Bloomberg News. "It's a gold-rush mentality."

Bitcoin Boom

Crypto-currency craze is unsettling people but shows little sign of going into reverse

Source: Bloomberg data for Bitcoin Tracker, an open-end Exchange Traded Note incorporated in Sweden.

Denious is right to say that the market is speculative and unsustainable. Despite recent price wobbles, Bitcoin has almost tripled year-to-date, to $2,677. Its closest rival, Ether, is now worth more than 40 times its end-2016 level of $8.

This isn't because people are using crypto-currencies to buy homes or cars, or because regulators suddenly like them. It's seen as a way to make money.

Another Bubble?

BofA sees S&P 500's market cap relative to nominal GDP hitting all-time highs

Source: Bloomberg

It's hard, though, to separate the crypto craze from worries about regulated public markets and the real economy after a decade of ultra-cheap central-bank cash.

Everything's Fine

Volatility keeps getting crushed

Source: Bloomberg

Talk of a bubble permeates every aspect of today's financial markets. Bank of America research offered up several signs of "Wall Street excess" on Friday:

Bitcoin wasn't mentioned once. That makes it harder for the mud thrown at crypto-currencies to stick. Even Fidelity's CEO and John McAfee are mining bitcoins in this market.

The mind-boggling returns of crypto-currencies also reflect a desire to escape public market bubbles rather than just emulate them.

If bonds are the old world's safe haven, Bitcoin is the millennial generation's apocalypse insurance. Crypto-currencies are marketed as a direct expression of opposition to central-bank and government policy, far more so than gold.

Just as low yields push wealthy investors to take bigger risks -- like buying Argentinian debt -- some people see Bitcoin as an escape from financial repression and instability.

That's why Venezuela, where demand for digital coins is soaring amid triple-digit inflation, currency devaluation and political crisis, has one of the highest potentials for bitcoin adoption in the world, according to the London School of Economics. The other top country is -- you guessed it -- Argentina. Monetary experiments beget technological ones.

This doesn't mean that there are purely rational explanations for the actual price of crypto-currencies today, tomorrow or yesterday. If the bubble bursts, investors will have to lower their expectations as to what Bitcoin and its ilk can actually achieve without rampant speculation and illicit activity.

But the more worrying scenario is that political unease about central bankers and wealth inequality will help to funnel more money into crypto-currencies.

Societe Generale's Albert Edwards reckons citizens are close to turning on "unelected and virtually unaccountable central bankers" after years of economic crisis and stagnation.

Bitcoin's computer scientists don't deserve to be seen as a better alternative. But if the path out of the financial crisis takes a sudden turn for the worse, it may well be too late.

Both bubbles seem too closely connected for comfort.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story: Lionel Laurent in London at llaurent2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at eevans3@bloomberg.net

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When the Bitcoin Bubble Bursts - Bloomberg

Embracing Bitcoin – Seeking Alpha

I continually get news feeds streaming across my computer telling me how other countries are jumping on board with Bitcoin. But, I read in American financial sites that say to stay away from Bitcoin. The fact is, as a medium of exchange, Bitcoin has tremendous value and ability. As an investment class, Bitcoin continues to move higher, latest pauses on the road to $3k. Bitcoin, as an asset class is heading much higher based upon supply and demand. Articles are being printed showing that Bitcoin could eventually print $1 million dollars. While I can see Bitcoin $1 million dollars, I am going to focus on the crypto-currency's move into from four to five digits for now; that is far more easily accessible.

It is very easy for Americans to dismiss Bitcoin. By, and large, Americans think in only one type of currency; The U.S. Dollar. So, when I read articles on major financial website trashing Bitcoin, I have no problem trashing the articles; the disconnect with Bitcoin is more because of a lack of understanding. A perfect example of a country that is not only embracing Bitcoin is Japan. Japanese are embracing Bitcoin at a very rapid pace. Because of this, demand is pushing higher and higher, and so is price. I see this as being continuous. I see Bitcoin pushing past $3k and, in fact, eventually hitting $10,000.00 per coin with an eventual price target of $1 million for Bitcoin. This is the framework of why that is going to happen.

Whenever I sit down with anyone who asks me about Bitcoin, I always show anyone the daily chart from just the past year alone - below. I then tell them they should consider Bitcoin as an alternative and explain the reasons why. I go into the details about limited supply and no central bank as well as what is happening in the economies around the world. Again, Americans have a tough time with this simply because they cannot think outside of the U.S. Dollar box. Most Americans have never even traveled outside of the country; only 8% of Americans traveled outside of the United States in 2016.

Bitcoin is being embraced in Japan at an incredible pace. I have read several articles over the past two weeks alone where Japanese hotels, cash systems and other purveyors are adding Bitcoin into their economy. And, yet, in America, financial websites are warning to stay away from Bitcoin. I took this as a lack of education, if anything.

In Japan, the government has legalized Bitcoin - along with other countries. At the same time, the Bank of Japan is in the process of desperately trying to dilute their currency to create any kind of inflation possible. It is largely not working.

Here is a look at the central bank's "printing press" in action: As stated, their goal is to stimulate the Japanese economy and keep inflation at target, normal levels. They are not succeeding so far. Inflation at 0.4% on a year-over-year basis is not even worth bringing up; It is negligible. My bigger fear is that mountain of printing that the Bank has done.

In the meantime, savvy Japanese investors are scooping up Bitcoin at a rapid pace. Whereas Japanese Bitcoin exchanges were not even really a factor, since the first week of April when the government legalized Bitcoin, the Japanese exchanges are now neck-and-neck with America exchanges. This is just one of many countries where Bitcoin is not just a curiosity but is becoming a way of life and is being integrated into the economy at a rapid pace with 100s of thousands of pay stations and ATMs appearing.

Americans simply do not get Bitcoin and they may very well regret that later. There is a great deal of potential with Bitcoin as an alternative to banking; some 56 million Americans do not even have a bank account. Bitcoin, just like cash, does not have the extensive paperwork criteria like a bank account has. With some 56 million Americans not even having a bank account this is a significant opportunity.

Unlike the charts above showing the Japanese central bank attempting to dilute its currency, Bitcoin has not central bank. Instead, Bitcoin will only ever have 21,000,000 million coins. Because of that, the price of Bitcoin is going to continue to be pushed higher. In fact, unlike fiat currency, Bitcoin appreciates in value. The purchasing power of any fiat currency is always being eroded by a central bank, whereas Bitcoin's potential to continue to move higher. And, although this cartoon is a bit tongue-in-cheek, it is also very accurate: Compared to today, if you had invested $100 in Bitcoin in 2009, you would be worth about $75 million today. And, yet, there are people who trash the idea of Bitcoin simply because they do not understand the currency and what it does.

At the beginning of April, Bitcoin was trading at $900.00. It is now just above $2,650.00 and looks set to test the $3,000.00 level for the third time. That is a simple multiple of 3.5x in two months. If that happens again, even if it takes another 6 months to happen, or even 6 years, Bitcoin will rise to nearly $10,000. That is an impressive gain unmatched by other "stores of value" or asset classes. Whether the currency crosses the $3k level this time, I am not certain. But, I am certain it will push past eventually. It is a matter of when, and not if, given the limited supply and the potential widespread demand.

Bitcoin's limited quantity of coins is set. But, there are 7 billion potential users of the currency. The fundamentals continue to support Bitcoin moving higher and higher as more and more access is available. And, since this currency's track record is that it moves higher and higher, its appeal over fiat currency is gar greater.

I can very easily see a day when Bitcoin pushes past $10,000.00 per coin. And, I can see a day when there is another order of magnitude to the coin's value. Some savvy investors even see $500,000.00 per coin.

Bitcoin works because of the agreement that there is a price for it and its exchangeability for goods and services, or conversion into fiat currency. And, as more and more countries ensure Bitcoin is able to work unhinged, the demands for the currency will continue to move higher. That will push up price. It is an added value to the coin's appeal.

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a long position in COIN over the next 72 hours.

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

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Embracing Bitcoin - Seeking Alpha

Who Pays to Keep Bitcoin Running? – American Institute for Economic Research (blog)

When you hand someone a dollar bill, gold coin, or bushel of wheat, the transaction doesnt require much effort to execute. The seller holds a physical object, and apart from counterfeiting, knows that he or she has been paid. When you pay someone by credit card, money must be digitally transferred between accounts, but this is all done by a centralized company and requires only a trivial amount of computing power. But when you pay someone with a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin, computers in a decentralized network around the world must verify the transfer from one Bitcoin wallet to another. Executing the transaction therefore requires significant real resourcesenergy needed to run computers. Those who spend the time, energy and computing power to execute payments need to be compensated.

This compensation comes in two forms. The more well-known form of compensation is newly created bitcoinsthis is the reason we call those running the software miners. Miners currently earn 12.5 bitcoins for each block of transactions (about 1MB in size) verified, over $30,000 at todays prices. But the code behind Bitcoin is designed so that this reward is cut in half when the all-time number of transactions hit certain milestones (the reward was originally 50 bitcoins). This causes the number of new coins to slow down as they reach the predetermined limit of 21 million bitcoins. The limit isnt projected to be reached for 100 years, but this form of compensation for running the system will inevitably decline in importance.

Miners are also compensated by transaction fees in the form of small fractions of a bitcoin every time you or I make a transaction. Many people dont know about these feeswidely used wallet services like Coinbase have an algorithm to determine how much you pay. Like most things about Bitcoin, the transaction fee system is decentralized, market based, and a little hard for the beginner to understand. You choose the size of the transaction fee you will pay (or no fee at all), and miners decide based on that amount whether or not to include you in a verified block. Transactions with lower fees therefore risk taking a longer time for the system to verify.

Average transaction fees have increased at a staggering pace this year, from 35 cents on January 1 to almost $4.50 today. That works out to a little more than $10,000 on average per verified block. Much of this increase is due to competition as the system becomes more crowded with transactions. But over a longer time frame, this incentive will become more important as fewer new coins are mined. Predicting the future level of these fees is difficult and depends on variables such as future computing speed, energy costs, and the value of a bitcoin. But they will be essential to provide incentives to keep the system running.

Could high transaction fees provide an open door for a competitor to disrupt Bitcoin? Bitcoin makes the verification process even more difficult and energy consuming than it needs to be in order to get the economic incentives right and keep a lid on the number of new Bitcoins. If someone designed a digital currency that solved those problems while making verification more efficient, it could presumably save consumers millions in transaction fees. Such a scenario is yet another reason why hard and fast predictions about the future of Bitcoin are a fools errand.

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Who Pays to Keep Bitcoin Running? - American Institute for Economic Research (blog)

Meet Vitalik Buterin, the 23-year-old founder of bitcoin rival ethereum – CNBC

Here's a little history on the founder: Buterin was born in Moscow, according to a feature by Wired's Backchannel last year. At 6 years old, he moved with his family to Canada. He was considered a math genius from an early age and was placed in a gifted program in the third grade, the publication reports.

Buterin reportedly first grew interested in bitcoin when his father introduced him to the concept, and he soon became an expert in the emerging field. In 2011, he launched the cryptocurrency's eponymous magazine.

In May 2013, the 19-year-old programmer traveled to California to a cryptocurrency conference led by the Winklevoss twins. According to Backchannel:

Veterans of the dotcom era drew comparisons between cryptocurrencies and the dawn of the Internet. Booths showed off new hardware wallets, merchant payment platforms, and Bitcoin ATMs. And Buterin witnessed it all as a representative of Bitcoin Magazine. The San Jose event was Buterin's first glimpse at the living, breathing community cropping up around the cryptocurrency economy.

"That moment really crystallized it for me," he tells the publication about the experience. "It really convinced me that, 'Hey, this thing's real and it's worth taking a risk and jumping into.' So I did."

Buterin dropped out of the University of Waterloo and spent the rest of the year traveling around the world visiting with individuals working on bitcoin, according to Backchannel.

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Meet Vitalik Buterin, the 23-year-old founder of bitcoin rival ethereum - CNBC

Cramer: Bitcoin-ethereum craze boosts Nvidia and AMD, but it shouldn’t – CNBC

There are many reasons for investors to buy chipmakers Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, but the recent rush for an indirect way to play skyrocketing cryptocurrencies bitcoin and ethereum should not be one of them, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Friday.

"One of the reasons why AMD and Nvidia have been going up is their chips are used for mining, for cryptocurrency mining," Cramer told "Squawk on the Street." But he warned, "Do not play it for this is what I'm saying. But it is being played for that."

Bitcoin and ethereum miners use powerful graphics processing units or the computer chips on graphics cards to generate new cryptocurrency units, which can then be sold or held for future appreciation.

Cramer cited a recent note from RBC Capital Markets, which said the growing cryptocurrency mining market has contributed $100 million worth of GPU sales for Nvidia in the past 11 days alone. "AMD chips are the best ones for the ethereum platform," he added.

"Of course there are so many other uses for their chips, but a lot of retail people love bitcoin and are looking for a way to play it," Cramer said.

In the past 12 months, bitcoin has soared about 325 percent to around $2,703 per unit as of midmorning trading on Friday. Ethereum, the smaller bitcoin rival, has skyrocketed about 2,240 percent to around $328.

In the past month, as the cryptocurrency surges have been more widely reported, AMD shares have soared 33 percent and Nvidia stock has gained about 15 percent.

"You play Nvidia for artificial intelligence, for GPUs, for autonomous cars, and for gaming," he said. "You play AMD for gaming and they have a faster chip than Intel."

Buying the stocks for those reasons, not because of cryptocurrency mining, makes sense, Cramer concluded.

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Cramer: Bitcoin-ethereum craze boosts Nvidia and AMD, but it shouldn't - CNBC

Witches cast a spell on Comets as they tumble to defeat – Times & Star

Workington Comets were humiliated by Ipswich as they fell under the Witches spell in a 59-33 hammering.

Comets suffered their heaviest defeat since the sport returned to Workington on the road at Foxhall last season and it was another night to forget in Suffolk yesterday.

Craig Cook was brought back down to Earth when he wound up last from the gate and could only pass his team-mate Mason Campton as the Witches started with a 5-1 through Danny King and Kyle Newman.

It got worse for Comets as Ipswich went 12 points up as the heats continued.

It didn't get much better as the night went on although Cook and Campton gave any Comets fans still paying attention something to enjoy at least with a 5-1 in heat 11 and a Comets 4-2 followed in heat 12.

But the damage had long since been done and, although King destroyed the tapes in heat 13, Schlein beat Cook and Sarjeant for a 3-3 before the hosts wrapped up the meeting with a 4-2 and another 5-1 to leave Comets with plenty of food for thought.

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Witches cast a spell on Comets as they tumble to defeat - Times & Star

Sestito and Comets players avoid being drafted by expansion Golden Knights – Rome Sentinel

Published Jun 22, 2017 at 4:10pm

Pittsburgh Penguins left winger and Rome native Tom Sestito will remain a Penguin, at least for now.

Sestito was not selected by the Las Vegas Golden Knights in the National Hockey League expansion draft on Wednesday, meaning hes still a part of the Penguins organization for the time being.

Last season, he signed a one-year, two-way contract with Pittsburgh.

Also eligible for the expansion draft were Utica Comets forwards Alexandre Grenier, Borna Rendulic and New Hartford native Michael Zalewski; defenseman Andrey Pedan and goaltender Richard Bachman.

None of them were selected by the Golden Knights, who chose defenseman Luca Sbisa from the parent Vancouver Canucks.

The 27-year-old Sbisa has never played a game for the Comets.

The Golden Knights selected one player from each of the 30 NHL teams to create their roster.

Trades can still happen and the NHL free agency period begins on July 1 at noon.

In one of several trades made by the Golden Knights on Wednesday, Minnesota Wild rookie forward and Baldwinsville native Alex Tuch was sent to Vegas for a conditional 2017 or 2018 third-round NHL entry draft pick.

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Sestito and Comets players avoid being drafted by expansion Golden Knights - Rome Sentinel

The statistical likelihood that asteroids will destroy us all in 10 million years – Quartz

Scientists have spent decades debating whether asteroids and comets hit the Earth at regular intervals. At the same time, a few studies have found evidence that the large extinction events on Earth such as the one that wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago repeat themselves every 26 million to 30 million years. Given that theres good evidence that an asteroid triggered the dinosaur extinction, it makes sense to ask whether showers of asteroids could be to blame for regular extinction events.

The question is extremely important if we could prove that this is the case, then we might be able to predict and even prevent asteroids causing mass extinctions in the future. We have tried to find out the answer.

Today, there are approximately 190 impact craters from asteroids and comets on Earth. They range in size from only a few meters to more than 100km across. And they formed anywhere between a few years ago and more than two billion years ago. Only a few, like the famous Meteor crater in Arizona, are visible to the untrained eye, but scientists have learned to recognize impact craters even if they are covered by lakes, the ocean or thick layers of sediment.

But have these craters formed as a result of regular asteroid collisions? And if so, why? There have been many suggestions, but most prominently, some scientists have suggested that the sun has a companion star (called Nemesis) on a very wide orbit, which approaches the solar system every 26m to 30m years and thereby triggers showers of comets.

Nemesis would be a red/brown dwarf star a faint type of star orbiting the sun at a distance of about 1.5 light years. This is not an impossible idea, since the majority of stars actually belong to systems with more than one star. However, despite searching for it for decades, astronomers have failed to observe it, and think they can now exclude its existence.

Yet, the idea of periodic impacts persists. There are other suggestions. One idea is based on the observation that the sun moves up and down slightly as it orbits the galaxy, crossing the galactic disk every 30m years or so. Some have suggested that this could somehow trigger comet showers.

But is there any evidence that asteroid impacts occur at regular intervals? Most research so far has failed to show this. But that doesnt mean it isnt the case its tricky getting the statistics right. There are a lot of variables involved: craters disappear as they age, and some are never found in the first place as they are on the ocean floor. Rocks from some periods are easier to find than from others. And determining the ages of the craters is difficult.

A recent study claimed to have found evidence of periodicity. However, the crater age data it used included many craters with poorly known, or even incorrect and outdated ages. The methods used to determine age based on radioactive decay or looking at microscopic fossils with known ages are continuously improved by scientists. Therefore, today, the age of an impact event can be improved significantly from an initial analysis made, say, ten or 20 years ago.

Another problem involves impacts that have near identical ages with exactly the same uncertainty in age: known as clustered ages. The age of an impact crater may be, for example, 65.5 0.5m years while another is be 66.1 0.5m years. In this case, both craters might have the same true age of 65.8m years. Such craters have in some instances been produced by impacts of asteroids accompanied by small moons, or by asteroids that broke up in the Earths atmosphere.

The double impact craters they produce can make it look like they hit a time when there were lots of asteroid impacts, when actually the craters were formed in the same event. In some cases, clustered impact craters are spaced too far apart to be explained as double impacts. So how could we explain them? The occasional collision of asteroids in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter might trigger short-lived showers of asteroids impacting the Earth. Only a few of these showers are necessary to lead to the false impression of periodicity.

In contrast to previous studies, we restricted our statistical analysis to 22 impact craters with very well defined ages from the past 260 million years. In fact, these all have age uncertainties of less than 0.8%. We also accounted for impacts with clustered ages.

Our article, recently published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, shows that, to the best of our current knowledge, asteroid impacts do not happen at regular intervals they seem to occur randomly.

Of course, we cant be sure that there isnt any periodicity. But the good news is that, as more impact craters are dated with robust ages, the statistical analysis we did can be repeated over and over again if there is such a pattern, it should become visible at some point.

That means that there is presently no way to predict when a large asteroid collision may once again threaten life on Earth. But then when it comes to facing the apocalypse, maybe not knowing is not so bad after all.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Learn how to write for Quartz Ideas. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.

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The statistical likelihood that asteroids will destroy us all in 10 million years - Quartz

Comets act on racism claims – Coffs Coast Advocate

AN alleged case of racial vilification stemming from Tuesday night's local derby between Orara Valley and Coffs Harbour is now in the hands of Country Rugby League officials.

The Comets lodged an official complaint to Group 2 after young forward Liam Kelly-Wynne alleged a spectator at Coramba Sportsground referred to him as a monkey.

Group 2 president Warren Gilkinson said the issue was now being controlled by the CRL and that the case will be headed to the Anti- Discrimination Board in Newcastle.

Gilkinson said if the charges are found to have merit, he expects the spectator will be dealt with harshly.

"Not allowing racial vilification is part of the code of conduct for both the CRL and NRL," he said.

"We don't stand for discrimination in Group 2 or any abuse."

Coffs Harbour acted swiftly lodging its complaint and said it will support Kelly-Wynne 100% and that it doesn't tolerate racism.

Comets president Steve Gooley said the club appreciated the public apology issued by Orara Valley via social media.

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Comets act on racism claims - Coffs Coast Advocate

Is a city you can’t locate on a map about to become the world’s hottest travel destination? – Telegraph.co.uk

European cities are all about charm and character shimmering skylines are not really our style. North America do them pretty well - New York, LA, Toronto - and Asia has some beauties - think Singapore and Hong Kong - but Europe? Not so much.

There is one (almost) on our doorstep, however. And it's poised - rather unexpectedly - to be the next hot destinations for travellers in search of a more adventurous city break.

Introducing Astana. First up: can you find it on map? The answer is below.

It's E. Astana is the capital of Kazakhstan, the world's ninth largest country by area. Congratulations if you got it right.

Kazakhstans glittering capital is already regarded in niche travel circles for its captivating architecture, with the skyline increasingly filling with ambitious, space-age skyscrapers and monuments, including the 150-metre Bayterek Tower and the Palace of Peace and Reconciliation, designed by acclaimed British architect Norman Foster. But it is now taking a confident step towards showcasing its cityscape to the world.

The announcement that two major global hotel chains are setting up shop in the city - ahead of the imminent Expo 2017 world fair - suddenly make the central Asian city feel a little closer.

Sure, Kazakhstan is not on many British bucket lists, but the Ritz Carlton and St Regis think that might be about to change.

The former promises 157 rooms clad with exotic marble and luxurious woods in downtowns Talan Towers, while the latter, in Astana Central Park, will be home to 120 rooms in a palatial, neoclassical design. Marriott and Radisson already have properties in the city.

Remember the World Fair that gave London its Crystal Palace in 1851? The Expos (expositions) are the modern evolution of The Great Exhibition, but maintain the same purpose: to showcase to the world the strengths and prospects of the host city or nation.

The great and good have enjoyed expositions since Londons effort - New York, Chicago and Paris, to name a few - while the modern-day expos have taken in cities such as Brisbane, Barcelona and Hanover, not to mention Plovdiv in Bulgaria, Tsukuba in Japan, and Zaragoza in Spain.

The latter were all specialised expos focussing on a particular topic, such as sustainability or technology, as is Astanas, with future energy at the centre of the celebrations.

Kazakhstans president, Nursultan Nazarbayev, is keen for Expo 2017 to be the beginning of Astanas future. For it, he ordered the construction of the Khan Shatyr Entertainment Centre, also designed by Norman Foster and his firm, a miniature golf course, a river, a beach resort and a monorail.

A number of the worlds exposition have left indelible marks on their host cities - Brussels retains its Atomium, The Space needle still stands in Seattle, while Shanghais China pavilion, built for Expo 2010, is today the China Art Museum.

Dubai is next in line to host the next Expo in 2020, while Lodz in Poland is competing with Minneapolis, Rio and Buenos Aires for the following event.

Beyond the impressive architecture, Astana boasts a rich Soviet history. The citys old centre still harbours a Soviet atmosphere, according to the Kazakh tourist board. There is also an ornate theatre named after Russian author Maxim Gorky.

Visiting in 2008 for Telegraph Travel, James Mackintosh found the city on the cusp of change.

For all its grand pretensions, Astana retains something of the Russian and Soviet steppe trading post of its roots, he wrote. Traces of elegant, pastel-coloured, tsarist merchant mansions; the bustle of the dusty streets; the familiar Soviet grid-avenues lined with birch trees and ugly 1950s housing blocks; the cosy but elegant Russian drama theatre; the ubiquitous circus.

Placid, gold-toothed women sit all day at street stalls selling raspberries, cucumbers and varieties of forest berries in cut-off plastic bottles. Astana girls, miniskirted and flirtatious, Russian blondes and oriental-looking Kazakhs, cling giggling together like natural-born cousins.

At Line Brew, a Belgian pub quirkily designed as a Crusader castle, a Nordic-looking family and friends are swilling back lager. They speak Russian but this scene could be anywhere in Germany. They are Volga Germans, shunted by Stalin to this backwater many decades ago. Were at the heart of Central Asia but, the paradox is that much of the culture is European.

Air Astana, the nations flag carrier, flies direct to Astana International Airport from London Heathrow, with prices starting around 500 return for the seven hour service. Flying via Kiev with Ukraine International can cut 200 off the price, but will double the time. Likewise, flights via Moscow with Aeroflot.

Kazakhstan is the proud owner of some immense countryside, including the nations answer to the Grand Canyon, in the form of Charyn Canyon. There is also skiing at Shymbulak ski resort, 30 minutes from Almaty, while the hidden Lake Kaindy in the Tien Shan Mountains is a startling sight to behold.

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Is a city you can't locate on a map about to become the world's hottest travel destination? - Telegraph.co.uk

Climate concerns fuel more travel to fragile corners of the world – Chicago Tribune

Amid piles of dried chiles, straw baskets and ripe papaya, Jeevanti Chatuvina's wares represented by her sister modeling a gold-studded red sari, dramatic eyeliner and a perfectly coiffed chignon glamorized the weekly market found on the edge of a lagoon lush with mature mangroves about an hour's drive north of Colombo in Sri Lanka.

Her bridal beauty business, like the others at the pop-up, represents the economic link between protecting the mangroves as nurseries of the island's fish stocks, tsunami buffers and CO2 sinks and sustaining communities dependent on them.

"We can't do mangrove conservation without the people," said Anuradha "Anu" Wickramasinghe, co-founder of Sudeesa, a Sri Lanka nonprofit advocating for small-scale fishing and farming operations. It was his idea to provide business training and $100 micro-loans to some of the poorest women in coastal fishing communities in exchange for their protection of the vital ecosystem, applying a social fix to an environmental problem caused by logging, mass prawn farming and, in the northern areas, civil war. "They get training from us and seed money from Seacology."

This spring, I joined Seacology, the California-based environmental nonprofit, on one of its tours that showcase its projects. Mangrove restoration in Sri Lanka is its largest ever, with the organization donating $5 million over five years to protect more than 21,000 acres of coastal mangroves by bringing the micro-loan program to 15,000 rural women. Meeting the program's budding entrepreneurs and exploring solutions to environmental challenges with field experts were the highlights of an itinerary also filled with more tourist-friendly activities, like a walking tour of Colombo, visits to Hindu and Buddhist temples, and meals both traditional and trendy.

From the broken Paris climate pact to the collapsing ice shelf in Antarctica, climate issues have dominated recent headlines. Providing access to those front lines, the travel industry has mirrored eco-concerns with the growth of climate-focused trips.

Many of these trips are concentrated at the poles. In Greenland, for example, the number of tourists rose almost 24 percent in 2015. Last year, tourism grew by nearly 10 percent more than double the global average. American travelers represented one-third of the 34,539 travelers who visited Antarctica this past winter, according to the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators, by far the largest contingent (Chinese travelers come in second at 12 percent).

"The Arctic and the Antarctic are changing in dramatic ways, more so than anywhere on Earth," said Sven Lindblad, founder and CEO of Lindblad Expeditions, the pioneer of cruise travel to Antarctica and the Galapagos. "Clearly, there is a greater sense of urgency and interest on the part of travelers to see and understand these environments."

The travel industry contributes to carbon emissions, of course, but tour operators argue that exposure to threatened regions converts the curious to conservation. As oceanographer Jacques Cousteau once said, "People protect what they love."

"Our most significant contribution to the realm of sustainability is utilizing the experiences our travelers are having as 'Aha!' moments to come back and do more to protect the planet and our species,'" said Ted Martens, vice president of marketing and sustainability at Natural Habitat Adventures, a wildlife-focused tour company that offsets the carbon emissions of its operations by funding green technology projects.

Natural Habitat runs trips in partnership with the World Wildlife Fund that have generated $10 million since 2003 for WWF programs confronting deforestation in the Amazon and preserving orangutan habitats in Borneo, among others. Natural Habitat's six-day trips to see polar bears in Canada cost $6,195 (all rates are per person).

With World Wildlife Fund-Canada, Adventure Canada is offering an "Arctic Safari" from July 30 to Aug. 10 that explores Greenland's communities and ice fjords, from $5,995.

Some operators encourage citizen scientists to help researchers with their work. The nonprofit EarthWatch Institute runs "Climate Change at the Arctic's Edge" trips, in which travelers take water and tree core samples to measure the health of animals and plants (from $2,014 for seven days). EarthWatch Institute also offers teen-only departures.

Over the next two summers, Poseidon Expeditions will run trips to the North Pole featuring a citizen science program to collect data on sea ice thickness and melting (from $6,960 for 10 days). Data from the operator's first citizen science launch, in 2015, is already being used by the Arctic Research Consortium of the United States' Sea Ice Prediction Network.

Lindblad is celebrating its 50th anniversary in the Galapagos this summer with cruises aboard the 96-passenger National Geographic Endeavor II (10 days from $6,960) and the new National Geographic Global Explorers Program. The latter's educational activities include collecting plankton, recording wildlife sightings and earning an inflatable Zodiac boat "driver's license."

During the 2017/2018 Antarctic travel season, Abercrombie & Kent's Classic Antarctica departure Jan. 6 is devoted to "Understanding Climate Change" and features noted Antarctic researcher Dr. James McClintock (from $13,495 for 12 days).

Naturalist Richard Polatty, a veteran of 60 trips to Antarctica and guide for International Nature and Cultural Adventures (from $10,995 for 11 days), views familiarity as a source of support for the region.

"Antarctica is the author of global climate in some ways and is a very sensitive indicator of global climate change," he said.

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Climate concerns fuel more travel to fragile corners of the world - Chicago Tribune

Meet The Biohacking Pioneers Who Are Redesigning Their Own Bodies – Co.Design (blog)

By Meg Miller 3 minute Read

In 2012, 25-year-oldJames Young was in a rail accident in which he lost both his left arm and left leg. An avid video gamer, Young taught himself how to use a controller using only one hand and, occasionally, his teeth. At the 2016BodyHacking Con in Austin, Young debuted a $76,000 carbon-fiber arminspired by the video gameMetal Gear Solid. The high-tech limbhe designed not only gives Young the dexterity todo most of the things he could before his accident, it also charges his phone, displays his social media feeds, and features a mount for a miniature dronecontrolled froma panel onhis forearm.

[Photo: courtesy David Vintiner and Gem Fletcher]Young, who designed the limb along withprosthetic sculptor Sophie de Oliveira Barata, is 1of 30-odd subjects shot for an ongoing photo series by photographer David Vintiner and creative director Gem Fletcher. The series, Transhuman, documents a rapidly growing international movement of the same name. Spanning the fields ofmedicine, technology, philosophy, art,and academia, transhumanism looks at the ways technology canenhance the physical and psychological capabilities of humans beyond the natural limits of biology. Like Young, some within the movement are developing bionic limbs for differently abled bodies. Others experiment with machines to enhance their sense of sight or touch.

Fletcher and Vintiner discovered the transhumanism community through a meet-up that takes place in the basement of a University College London building. In 2015, the pair released partof the ongoing series, called Futurists, which captured many of the main figures in Londons transhumanism scene.

The latest series of images,Transhuman, expands the scope to subjects throughout Europe and the United States.The movement itself is in intense flux, Fletcher tell Co.Design. Its going through a period of rapid growth, so there are new people in the movement all the time. Its truly a shape-shifting subject matter.

[Photo: courtesy David Vintiner and Gem Fletcher]Fletcher andVintiners subjects frequently introduce them to others in the movement; Fletcher says that the community, though international, is relatively tight-knit and inclusive. Meet-ups like the one at UCL, or the BodyHacking conference Young attended in Texas, have made it easy for members to meeteach other. Some, like Aisen Caro, who invented a set of headphones that allows humans to experience echo-location, are scholars. (Caro is aPhD candidate in human informatics at Tsukuba University). Others, like the London-based F_T_R design studio, are inventing ways to blur the lines between the physical and digital worlds. F_T_Rs Skinterfaceproject is a full-body suit equipped with actuators that convey a sense of touch to the wearer while she is experiencing a virtual worldwhile wearing a VR headset, for example.

[Photo: courtesy David Vintiner and Gem Fletcher]Another technology featured in theTranshuman seriesis a fantastical-looking wearable called the Eyesect, designed by the interdisciplinary lab The Constitute. The Eyesect is an otherworldlyheadset that covers the users head completely, and comes equipped with two handheld cameras. The camera feeds what they are seeing onto a screen inside the headset, giving viewers a sense of 360-degree vision. You can move around the camera eyes, so that you have complete freedom to look up, down, forward, and backward all at the same time, says Fletcher. It gives humans the experience that lots of different animals have with this expansive spatial perception.

[Photo: courtesy David Vintiner and Gem Fletcher]Fletcher and Vintiner will continue the series, traveling next to Russia to shoot subjects there, and adding insome film and sound elements to the project as well. The movement is evolving at an exciting rate, says Fletcher, andmore people are gettinginvolved,particularly when it comes to biohacking. The most popular forms of small bodyhacks theyve seen are peopleexperimenting with DIY RFID (radio-frequency identification) implantsthat allow themtounlock doors or turn on lights with the swipe of a hand, for instance. Also popular in this community areimplantable biomagnets,whichallow people to interact with the world in new wayslike by picking up magnetic objects with the touch of a finger.

Its becoming more accessible, Fletcher says of the transhumanism movement. We keep seeing more and more people with chips or small implants. Its almost like the popularity ofpiercings in the 90s.

Meg Miller is an associate editor at Co.Design covering art, technology, and design.

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Meet The Biohacking Pioneers Who Are Redesigning Their Own Bodies - Co.Design (blog)

Super Bowl 51 Super Computer Picks | Odds Shark

If the OddsShark Super Computer becomes a sentient being, were all doomed. Its gone 9-1 against the spread and 8-2 straight up during the 2017 NFL postseason and will more than likely become our robot overlord sooner rather than later if it keeps improving at the rate it has. All Matrix theories aside, the computer is cleaning up and is back one more time this season for its Super Bowl 51 pick and its siding with the underdog Atlanta Falcons.

The computer has been riding the Falcons all through the playoffs and correctly predicted that theyd blow out both the Seahawks and Packers. This pick is a little different, however, as the Dirty Birds will now have to face the consensus best team in football for the right to lift the Lombardi Trophy.

With a predicted score line of 29.3-21.1 for the Falcons, the computer is very confident in Atlanta and I have to agree. I wrote about the three reasons why the Falcons are going to win the Super Bowl, so it appears the computer and I are wired quite similarly. Weve been on the same page on just about everything this postseason so maybe when the machines rise up, theyll keep me around as a pet or something.

Another significant note regarding that projected score is that it would not come anywhere close to breaching the record-setting total that opened at 58.5. The public is heavily on the side of the OVER and given how these two offenses have been playing, its hard to disagree.

A loss and failure to cover for the Patriots here would be just their fourth ATS loss of the season. Win or lose, that's an incredible record and if you've beenbacking them, congratulations you probably don't even need a win here.

Although the Falcons specific trends dont exactly shine a great light on Atlantas SB odds, the underdog has won and covered the last five years at the Super Bowl. I know thats not incredibly specific to either of these teams but itdefinitely paints a telling picture. Vegas sets lines very carefully to get the most money on the side they think will lose and opening the Patriots as a small favorite has definitely done that.

Over 60% of the public is on the Patriots and if the computers right, the majority of people betting on a side will be very disappointed when the dust settles on Super Bowl Sunday.

The computer has completely disregarded the Patriots' 4-0 SU and ATS record against the Falcons in their last four meetings and the Dirty Birds' 0-5 SU and ATS record in their last five games as underdogs in the playoffs.

For a more human breakdown of the biggest pro sporting event in North America, check out the following links and make sure to check out our YouTube channel for all our video content:

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Super Bowl 51 Super Computer Picks | Odds Shark