Holograms Aren’t The Stuff of Science Fiction Anymore – Singularity Hub

The world seems to be full of illusionsand were not talking about fake news from Macedonia.

Holograms appear to be all around us now. Long-dead rapper Tupac Shakur showed up at the 2012 edition of the Coachella music festival. Microsofts HoloLens seems akin to a wearables version of Star Treks holodeck, allowing its user to interact with 3D objects in an augmented reality. Startups like Edinburgh-based Holoxica can create digital 3D holograms of human organs for medical visualization purposes.

While some of these light shows are far from mere parlor tricks, none of these efforts are holograms in the sense depicted most famously in movies like Star Wars. True hologram technology is mostly still a science fiction fantasy, but earlier this year scientists revealed innovations to move the technology forward a few light years.

A study published online in Nature Photonics by a team of researchers in Korea has developed a 3D holographic display that they write performs more than 2,600 times better than existing technologies. Meanwhile, researchers led by a team in Australia claimed in the journal Optica to have invented a miniature device that creates the highest-quality holographic images to date. The papers were published within three days of each other last month.

Holography is a broad field, but at its most basic, it is a photographic technique that records the light scattered from an object. The light is then reproduced in a 3D format. Holography was first developed in the 1940s by the Hungarian-British physicist Dennis Gabor, who won the 1971 Nobel Prize in physics for his invention and development of the holographic method.

Most holograms are static images, but scientists are working on more dynamic systems to reproduce the huge amount of information embedded in a 3D image.

Take the work being done by researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

Our ability to produce dynamic, high-resolution hologramsthink Princess Leia pleading with Obi-Wan Kenobi for the Jedis helpis currently limited by whats called wavefront modulators. These devices, such as spatial light modulators or digital micromirror devices, can control the direction of light propagation.

An imaging system with a short focal length lens can only create a tiny image that has a wide viewing range. Conversely, a system with a long focal length can generate a larger image but with a very narrow viewing range. The best wavefront modulator technology has only been able to create an image that is one centimeter in size with a viewing angle of three degrees.

Its possible to do better by creating a complex and unwieldy system using multiple spatial light modulators, for example. But the team at KAIST came up with a simpler solution.

This problem can be solved by simply inserting a diffuser, explains YongKeun Park, a professor in the Physics Department at KAIST. Because a diffuser diffuses light, both the image size and viewing angle can be dramatically increased by a factor of a few thousands, according to Park.

But theres still one more problem to overcome: a diffuser scrambles light.

Thus, in order to utilize a diffuser as a holographic lens, one needs to calibrate the optical characteristics of each diffusor carefully, Park says by email. For this purpose, we use wavefront-shaping technique, which provides information about the relationship between impinging light onto a diffuser and outgoing light.

Parks team succeeded in producing an enhanced 3D holographic image with a viewing angle of 35 degrees in a volume of two centimeters in length, width, and height.

The enhancement of the scale, resolution, and viewing angles using our method is readily scalable, he notes. Since this method can be applicable to any existing wavefront modulator, it can further increase the image quality as a better wavefront modulator comes out in [the] market.

Near-term applications for the technology once it matures include head-up displays for an automobile or holographic projections of a smart phones user interface, Park says. [Holograms] will bring new experiences for us to get information from electronics devices, and they can be realized with a fewer number of pixels than 3D holographic display.

For true tech heads, physicist and science writer Chris Lee, writing for Ars Technica, provides an in-depth description on how the KAIST system works.

Meanwhile, physicists from the Australian National University unveiled a device consisting of millions of tiny silicon pillars, each up to 500 times thinner than a human hair. The transparent material is capable of complex manipulations of light, they write.

"Our ability to structure materials at the nanoscale level allows the device to achieve new optical properties that go beyond the properties of natural materials, says Sergey Kruk, co-lead on the research, in a press release from the university. The holograms that we made demonstrate the strong potential of this technology to be used in a range of applications."

The researchers say they were inspired by films such as Star Wars. We are working under the same physical principles that once inspired science fiction writers, Kruk says in a video interview.

Kruk says the new material could someday replace bulkier and heavier lenses and prisms used in other applications.

With our new material, we can create components with the same functionality but that would be essentially flat and lightweight, he says. This brings so many applications, starting from further shrinking down cameras in consumer smart phones, all the way up to space technologies by reducing the size and weight of complex optical systems of satellites.

Speaking of space exploration: What if the entire universe is a hologram? What does that mean for pseudo-holograms of Tupac Shakur? Not to mention the rest of us still-living 3D beings?

Theoretical physicists believe they have observed evidence supporting a relatively new theory in cosmology that says the known universe is the projection of a 2D reality. First floated in the 1990s, the idea is similar to that of ordinary holograms in which a 3D image is encoded in a 2D surface, such as in the hologram on a credit card.

Supporters of the theory argue that it can reconcile the two big theories in cosmology. Einstein's theory of general relativity explains almost everything large scale in the universe. Quantum physics is better at explaining the small stuff: atoms and subatomic particles. The findings for a holographic universe were published in the journalPhysical Review Letters.

The team used data gleaned from instruments capable of studying the cosmic microwave background. The CMB, as its known, is the afterglow of the Big Bang from nearly 14 billion years ago. Youve seen evidence of the CMB if youve ever noticed the white noise created on an un-tuned television.

The study found that some of the simplest quantum field theories could explain nearly all cosmological observations of the early universe. The work could reportedly lead to a functioning theory of quantum gravity, merging quantum mechanics with Einsteins theory of gravity.

The key to understanding quantum gravity is understanding field theory in one lower dimension, says lead author Niayesh Afshordi, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Waterloo, in a press release. "Holography is like a Rosetta Stone, translating between known theories of quantum fields without gravity and the uncharted territory of quantum gravity itself.

Heavy stuff no matter what dimension you come from.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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East Ascension holds off upset-minded McKilney 46-44 | High … – The Advocate

GONZALES The District 5-5A basketball showdown between McKinley and East Ascension was everything that was expected of the top two teams.

After a close first half, the teams traded runs in the final two quarters before East Ascension held on for a 46-44 win at the Spartans gym.

East Ascension (25-6, 9-0) had already wrapped up the district title but still has its eye on earning a top-four playoff seeding. McKinley (19-12, 5-4) can wrap up sole possession of second place with a win over Catholic High in its final district contest.

East Ascension coach Barry Whittington complimented his teams poise after the Spartans fell behind 38-30 to start the fourth quarter.

These kids have seen a lot, Whittington said. We had some close games we didnt win last year and we had some this year. Its helped us to not panic.

We managed the clock well at the end and that helped us a lot.

Cameron Wire led the Spartans with 15 points with support from LeAaron Cain (13) and Jimel London (10). McKinley also had a trio in double figures with Patrick Collier (12), Tyrese Radford (11) and Marcus Coleman (10).

McKinleys Josh Gofdeon scored the first basket of the fourth quarter giving the Panthers a 38-30 lead. EA responded with a 13-0 run over the next four minutes.

Cain scored six points and London added four during the run. The Spartans, who benefited from five McKinley turnovers during the run, led 43-38 after Londons driving basket with two minutes left.

McKinley got as close as 43-42 after Colemans 3-pointer and a free throw by Radford. Justin Harris then fed Wire for an inside basket to put EA up 45-42 with 30 second to go.

Gordon scored again to cut the Panthers deficit to one. London hit a free throw before Frederick Carrs attempt at atying basket was off the mark as time ran out.

A big thing was the 50-50 balls, McKinley coach Harold Boudreaux said. Youve got to get them. Another big part of the game was key turnovers. It was just a tough game.

East Ascension took a 24-23 halftime lead, but McKinley made five of its first six shots to start the third quarter. A.J. Lee and Radford each scored four points as McKinley took a 33-27 lead.

The Panthers lead grew to 36-27 with 1:20 left in the quarter. EAs Marques Anderson hit a free throw and Cole Hatcher beat the buzzer with an inside bucket as McKinleys lead was trimmed to 36-30 after three quarters.

The third quarter has been one of our better quarters, and we werent knocking down shots, Whittington said. We didnt have good body language or chemistry. We switched over to a full-court press and got some turnovers.

Boudreaux gave East Ascension credit for playing well all season.

Lets give it to East Ascension, he said. They were prepared tonight. Theyve got some good seniors and this is their year.

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East Ascension holds off upset-minded McKilney 46-44 | High ... - The Advocate

Heath Slater and The Ascension — Rental Car Broken Into (PHOTO) – Pro Wrestling Sheet (registration) (blog)


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WWE Superstars Heath Slater and the Ascension had a crappy day yesterday because some jerk broke into their rental car to jack their belongings.
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NASA spends $2mn on ‘advanced life support tech’ for deep space travel – RT

NASA has awarded $2 million to two companies for the development of technology that will help astronauts breathe safely in space for longer periods, potentially furthering long distance space exploration.

The projects aim to advance the use of oxygen recovery technology which will convert carbon dioxide back into oxygen. Its hoped it will help astronauts breathe a little easier in deep space during long missions.

The selected proposals came from Honeywell Aerospace based in Phoenix, Arizona and UMPQUA Research Co. from Myrtle Creek in Oregon.

On the International Space Station (ISS) currently only 50 percent of the carbon dioxide astronauts exhale is recovered and converted back into oxygen. To make up the shortfall NASA has been transporting oxygen to the ISS crew from Earth.

However, this fix becomes increasingly troublesome as astronauts travel deeper into space on longer missions. The new investment will attempt to solve that problem by getting 75 percent of the oxygen crew require back from their exhaled carbon dioxide.

The development of advanced life support technologies will allow NASA to establish improved capabilities for future deep space, long-duration, human exploration missions, said Steve Jurczyk of NASAs Space Technology Mission Directorate in Washington.

READ MORE:Mars 2020: Final three landing sites revealed (PHOTOS)

Honeywell Aerospace, a divisions of the Honeywell International conglomerate, is heavily involved in NASA space mission planning and development. It was established in 1914 and has been involved in numerous corporate and military developments including the Manhattan project. UMPQUA Research Co has previously built water disinfection and purification subsystems for the ISS, the Space Shuttle and other projects.

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Faster-charging, longer-lasting batteries: This startup thinks nanotech is the answer – ZDNet

HE3DA founder Jan Prochazka: "I paid for some experiments to test my theories, and they turned out to be correct."

A Czech company is building nanotechnology-based batteries that it says last longer, recharge quicker, and are more durable than current options. But expect to find them in an electric car or datacenter rather than in your smartphone.

With the rise in popularity of electric vehicles over the past couple of years, interest in new concepts for lithium-ion batteries has grown immensely.

One of those new concepts is a battery created by Prague-based HE3DA, which applies a construction method developed by Czech chemist and company founder Jan Prochazka. His company started its first automated production line in December.

The story of HE3DA, pronounced 'he-da', started when Prochazka left the R&D department of Altairnano, a large producer of Li-ion batteries in Reno, Nevada, in 2005.

"I worked on materials, but I only started work on the battery after I left," he tells ZDNet. "I had an idea about using nano particles to increase the surface of the electrodes and take away the issue of lithium-ion diffusion."

In conventional Li-ion batteries, the separators between the electrodes are 40 to 50 micrometers wide, he explains, while the electrodes themselves are also 50 micrometers wide.

"So literally, 50 percent of the actual battery consists of separators." He finally got to test his theories in 2007, he says. "I paid for some experiments to test my theories, and they turned out to be correct."

The initial goal was to create a battery that simply lasts longer and recharges more rapidly than the competition. But the main advantage turned out to be battery safety and lower production costs.

"I realised that a bit later on," Prochazka recalls. "The first intention was to build up the capacity, and the secondary goal was to up the charge on each electrode by 10,000 times."

That objective turned out to be a bit of a disappointment, as there was a discharge on some electrode areas. "So the concept was limited by that. But the safety and performance were still very good, and the production cost was about 1/20th of that of existing technologies," he says.

Prochazka explains that the timing also turned out to be just right, because interest in electric cars has been driving demand for larger Li-ion batteries.

"Had we made the same breakthrough 10 years ago, I doubt it would have sparked the same level of interest," he says.

"In 2005, the total global output of lithium-ion batteries was still only around 1.3GWh. In 2010, you saw that the development of electric mobility was starting to having an impact, but global production was still only a little over 5GWh. Another five years down the line, however, that figure has risen to 35GWh."

Because of that, Prochazka is not considering the market for smartphone batteries to be viable.

"Our market is in big batteries," he says. "The bigger, the better." The smallest battery HE3DA will be producing will be 1,000kWh, which is more than 1,000 times that of a standard smartphone battery. "Our technology is especially suited to a starting battery at around the same size of existing batteries, but with much higher power, namely 48V." A standard starting battery delivers around 12V.

Another market Prochazka is looking at, is the market for backup generators in datacenters.

"The battery has a response time of milliseconds on the grid, so it is very useful for emergency power. You can operate at a constant voltage. It is always ready to supply power, enough for the diesel generators to kick in. You won't lose any data," he says.

It has proven popular, with Prochazka getting a local investor on board in 2014, allowing him to build 250 prototypes. With recent additional investments, he has now been able to automate his first production line.

"The capacity remains small, though. We can produce around 5MWh per year," he says. "However, we're already sold out and we cannot meet the demands of the retail market. We're building a mass production line as fast as possible. Hopefully, mass production will commence by the end of this year or the first quarter of next year."

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This New Nanotech Coating Makes Fingerprints Disappear – Tech.Co

Say goodbye to those pesky fingerprints that blur your iPhone screen andsully your kitchen appliances: NBD Nanotechnologies has introduceda patented coating solution, InvisiPrint, that prevents fingerprint marks from showing upon glass and metal surfaces.While there are other products already out on the market that can clean fingerprints off of surfaces, there hasnt yet been one that prevents fingerprints altogether.

The complex formula is able to diffuse the oil from your finger onto the surface with which its making contact, allowing the light to pass through without being distorted by the fingerprint. This, to the naked eye, makes it seem like the fingerprint isnt even there.

This is another step forward in NBDs project to provide wettability solutions to everyday products. Wettability encompasses solutions that make plastic, glass, metal, and paint products repellant to water, dirt, oil, and chemicals. While these solutions are extremely useful in warding off unwanted liquids and chemicals, they represent something much more important: the trend toward nanotechnology.

Nanotechnology is a very broad term that involves the creation of devices or machines that attend to the nanometer scale. It allows for a whole range of technology opportunities due to the unique properties afforded at such a small scale.

A nanometer, for reference, is the size of a couple atoms or a small molecule. Nanotechnology takes place within the 1-100 nanometer range.

Nanotechnology is everywhere. Stain and wrinkle-resistant clothes, scratch-resistant paint, and transparent zinc oxide sunscreen all utilize some form of nanotechnology, be it nano-whiskers, nanoparticles, or nanotubes.By creating products that can manipulate the properties of an object on such a small level, companies can introduce a whole new universe of solutions that seem unattainable and can do it more sustainably and cheaply.

Were also seeing rapid improvement every year. Last year, a group of engineers successfully built a one nanometer long transistor for a computer chip, as opposed to the 15 nanometer transistor youd find in an Intel computer chip in 2009. This rapid improvement in nanotechnology means significant improvements with the everyday technology that we use.

It also means that a technological revolution is rapidly approaching. Nanotechnology is paving the way for unforeseen possibilities to become legitimate realities. Iron nanoparticles that clean poisonous water and tiny robots that travel through the digestive system to record information are concrete inventions that are only a marketing strategy away from being used on a mass scale.

As we look ahead into the future of nanotechnology, we need to prepare ourselves for a whole new era of innovation and realize that sweating the small stuff is going to make our lives a whole lot safer and easier.

Photo: Flickr / Milosz1

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Michael Flynn Resignation Tensions Inching US Closer to World War 3 – Lombardi Letter

America Is Closer to World War 3 asMichael Flynn ResignsasNational Security Advisor

On what must have been a stormy February 13 evening in the White House, President Donald Trumps National Security Advisor, Michael Flynn resigned. This is a troubling development that brings the world closer to World War 3. Flynn was to play a key role in improving relations between Russia and the United States.

Russia is a nuclear superpower and World War 3 can never be lifted from the calculus of U.S.Russia relations. Flynns resignation-worthy violation, by his own admission, was to have inadvertently given inaccurate information to vice president Mike Pence about his conversations with Russias ambassador to the U.S., Sergey Kislyak. (Source: Read the resignation letter of national security advisor Michael Flynn,Los Angeles Times, February 13, 2017.)

Never mind the allegations of the favors Hillary Clinton granted to Saudi Arabia. The mainstream media has had a grand old time with the Flynn resignation because it involves Russia. Americansand many other westernershave been brainwashed into considering Russia as an enemy. It used to be Republicans like Senator McCain who trumpeted the anti-Russia propaganda.

In the second Barack Obama term, the Democrats took over that role with aplomb. They also made a right mess of the situation in Syria. Obama was right not to intervene, but he was wrong by isolating Putin while tacitly encouraging the Saudis. Had he not done so, Trump would not have won the presidency and America would not be closer to WW3.

Apparently, President Trump knew about the allegations before. It was none other than Sally Yates who communicated to them to Trump collaborators. Yates happens to be the interim attorney who challenged Trumps entry restrictions for nationals of seven countries last week. Why, then, you might ask, did the administration not take action before?

The reason is that the events that led to the resignation of Flynn are complex. Trump was probably undecided whether to continue rewarding Flynn (the first major military figure to back Trump) or demand Flynnsresignation. Yet the trouble is just getting started, and the risk is that it could lead up to the next major conflict: WW3.

Republican and Democratic members on both Houses of Congress will demand answers. There are many Republicans who never backed Trump. The Flynn case, or Flynngate, is their call to action. The episode should not be discounted. It will throw the White House in disarray. In Watergate, there were tapes;in Flynngate, there are transcripts of the offending conversations.

Those transcripts are said to prove that Flynn discussed the sanctions with the Russians. But more than that, the situation suggests that within the Trump administration, there is disarray and too much competition. (Source: Upheaval is now standard operating inside the White House, The Washington Post, February 13, 2017.)

This makes White House insiders prone to clashes. Flynn was the gatekeeper for all major foreign policy and defense procedures. Trump might react to the criticismwhich he doesnt take wellby overturning his initial foreign policy inclinations. If I were Vladimir Putin, I would be worried now.

Trump will not sacrifice his presidency in the interests of better relations with Russia. There is bipartisan anti-Russian sentiment in U.S. Congress, and the mediaespecially the left-leaning mediahas been fueling it. Trump might find it useful to turn the screws on Russia. He could impose tighter sanctions, accusing Putin of direct interference in American affairs.

Trump would make Flynn the scapegoat and accuse Flynn of having deceived him. The proof will be in Trumps choice to replace Flynn as national security advisor. Some of the names being suggested have not hidden their concerns about Russia. Its doubtful they are advocates for World War 3, but they are not advocates for a passive stance either.

Moreover, Trump has a chance to make his foreign policy more coherent by changing his current detente inclination toward Putin. By letting go of that stance, it would make his threats against Iran more credible. Targeting Iran and scrapping the nuclear deal has been a key Trump goal, but Russia got in the way.

Russia and Iran have cooperated closely in various matters since at least the 1990s. They have been fighting ISIS together in Syria, sharing the purpose of keeping Bashar al-Assads secular regime in power. Fighting ISIS is a key goal for Trump. Once liberated from Russian constraint, Trump could attack Syria itself as Obama wanted to do in September 2013.

In so doing, he would run into Russian air and naval forces deployed in Syria. Meanwhile, an American vessel might be attacked by an Iranian gunboat or military support vessel heading for Yemen, where the U.S. is backing Irans enemy, Saudi Arabia, in an under-reported bloody conflict. Iran might respond with more attacks in the Persian Gulf.

Iran might even respond in Iraq, putting pressure on that countrys Shiite-dominated army and government to challenge America. Thus the triggers for a World War 3 episode, stemming directly from the Flynn resignation, are hardly far-fetched. They are all too real. And lets not forget that there is still a conflict in Ukraine pitting pro-Russia forces against pro-NATO ones.

The international situation is delicate. Without Flynn, who was so close to President Putin himself, as to sit beside him at a New Years Eve gala on December 31, 2015 in Moscow, has set off a foreign policy avalanche. One of the reasons that many Americans were concerned about Hillary Clinton was precisely her rabid anti-Russia stance.

Flynns departure may also weaken the shadow presence of Trump advisor Steve Bannon. Like Bannon, Flynn believes the greatest threat to America is Islamic fundamentalism. He believed, like many keen observers of the Middle East, that the policy of weakening Assadas Obama was doing and Hillary would have pursued even morewould increase dangers to U.S. interests.

The concern wasthat Hillary Clinton would obstruct Russias plans to sustain Assad in power. Clinton would have been tougher on Moscow than Obama was, generating the very scenarios described above. Trump now finds himself in this position. But hes angry and carries the spirit of vengeance fora betrayal, and his chance to make history.

Nothing unites America more than a war. Flynn may have pushed Trump to start WW3 in order to preserve the keys to the White House. Should Trump merely cool relations with Moscow over this incident, he will leave himself open to media questions and Congressional scrutiny. These are the sorts of processes that lead to impeachments.

For the time being, the post of national security advisor has been temporarily entrusted to former army general Keith Kellogg, a close associate of Flynn. But it is unlikely he will stay, because hes too close to Flynn. Vice Admiral Robert Harward, close to Secretary of Defense James Mattis, could be called to the post.

But theres also General David Petraeus. He was involved in a complicated and extramarital affair-loaded scandal (that should not bother Trump too much) but he has expressed concerns about Russia in the past. Petraeus worries that Russia is working hard to raise anti-NATO sentiment in Europe and that Putin threatens democracy. But now we have ended up with the threat of WW3.

Also Read:

World War 3: This Trigger Event Could Spark the Next World War

WW3 Could Be Underway and Russia Might Be Winning

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Michael Flynn Resignation Tensions Inching US Closer to World War 3 - Lombardi Letter

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Is Silicon Valley Onto Something With Its LSD Microdosing? – Newsweek

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

It may seem like a doomed attempt to mix business and pleasure. But a growing number of young professionals in Silicon Valley insist that taking small doses of psychedelic drugs simply makes them perform better at workbecoming more creative and focused. The practice, known as microdosing, involves taking minute quantities of drugs such as LSD, psilocybin (magic mushrooms) or mescaline (found in the Peyote cactus) every few days.

LSD is the most well-known psychedelic drug since its popularity in the heyday of 1960s counterculture. But perhaps somewhat surprisingly, Silicon Valley also has a long history of psychedelic drug use to boost creativity: technology stars Steve Jobs and Bill Gates both famously experimented with LSD.

At high doses, LSD powerfully alters perception, mood and a host of cognitive processes. LSD now appears to be one of the more commonly microdosed drugs. A microdose of LSD consists of about a tenth of a recreational dose (usually 10-20 micrograms), thatis usually not potent enough to cause hallucinations. Instead, it is reported to heighten alertness, energy and creativity.

Microdosing LSD also purportedly enhances overall wellbeing, helping to reduce stress and anxiety while improving sleep and leading to healthier habits. Although a widely reported phenomenon in the media, the lack of scientific studies on microdosing makes the prevalence near impossible to estimate. Reports suggest that what started off as an underground practice in Silicon Valley may be spreading rapidly to other workplaces.

It is currently unknown how such low doses of psychedelics act in the brain to produce these intriguing self-reported effects on creativity. Like all classic hallucinogens, LSD produces its potent mind-altering effects primarily by mimicking the effects of the brain chemical serotonin, thatregulates our mood. In particular, LSD activates 5-HT2A receptors in the pre-frontal cortex, thatincreases activity of the chemical glutamate in this region. Glutamate enables signals to be transmitted between nerve cells, and plays a role in learning and memory.

In humans, two distinct effects of recreational doses of LSD have been reported. Initially, people experience psychedelic and positive feelings of euphoria. This may be followed by a later phase characterized by paranoia or even a psychotic-like state. LSD at low doses may produce mood elevation and creativity, mediated by the serotonin-mimicking effects. Actions on both glutamate and serotonin may also act to improve learning and cognitive flexibility, necessary for creativity, in the workplace. These findings could partly help to explain the microdosing phenomenon.

Clinical research with psychedelics is currently undergoing a major revival after having been brought to a halt in the 1960s. One of the benefits of conducting research into psychedelics is their potential to help deepen our understanding of consciousness. In 2016, researchers from Imperial College London were the first to use brain scanning techniques to visualize how LSD alters the way the brain works. One key finding was that LSD had a disorganising influence on cortical activity, thatpermitted the brain to operate in a freer, less constrained manner than usual.

The results suggested that psychedelics increase communication between parts of the brain that are less likely to communicate with one another, and decrease communication between areas that frequently do. This likely underlies the profound altered state of consciousness that people often describe during an LSD experience. It is also related to what people sometimes call ego-dissolution,in which the normal sense of self is broken down. People instead often report a sense of reconnection with themselves, others and the natural world.

The discovery that LSD and other psychedelic drugs induce a flexible state of mind may explain their reported extraordinary therapeutic benefits. For example, psilocybin has shown benefits in the treatment of tobacco and alcohol addiction, obsessive compulsive disorder and treatment-resistant major depression.

In a small pilot study, LSD in combination with psychological therapy also led to a slight improvement in anxiety experienced by terminally ill cancer patients. Many of these psychiatric disorders are characterized by inflexible, habitual patterns of brain activity. By introducing a disordered state of mind, LSD and other psychedelics may help to break these inflexible patterns.

Similarly, the unconstrained brain state induced by psychedelics may also help explain the reported increases in creativity. From the late 1950s until the early 1970s, a whole host of studies sought to determine if classic psychedelics could be useful for enhancing creativity. In the most notable of these studies, researchers found that LSD and mescaline could aid in creative problem-solving when used in carefully controlled settings.

However, while these studies do provide some insight, they are mere anecdotal by modern research standards (they were not double blind or placebo-controlled). A more recent study found that use of classic psychedelics was robustly associated with greater creative problem-solving ability. Enhancing creativity has many potential applications in society. For example, it could be both used by commercial industry including advertising and in clinical settings, such as helping patients with autism.

Yet before rushing off to take hits of acid in the hopes of boosting our creativity at work, it should be remembered that microdosing with an illegal, unregulated drug is of course fraught with risks. Possession may get you put behind bars. Manufacture and supply of illegal drugs are not subject to rigorous regulatory controls. That means users can never be sure of what they are getting.

This makes determining the dose problematic. Those who microdose incorrectly risk having unwanted, full-blown trips or even experience unpleasant trips. There are even some reports of psychosis-like symptoms in certain vulnerable individuals who use LSD recreationally. However two recent U.S. population surveys found no link between using psychedelics and mental health conditions.

In an increasingly competitive world it is tempting to find a quick fix to help us achieve more, better and faster. Yet, is this right? As a society we should consider the reasons as to why healthy people choose to use drugs in the first place. A reliance on cognitive-enhancing technologies to cope with demanding working conditions may ultimately reduce the health and well-being of individuals. So we must take care to ensure that enhancement is not seen as a substitute for a healthy working environment.

It is therefore important that more research is done on the safety and efficacy of microdosing. In the meantime, physical exercise, education, social interaction, mindfulness and good quality sleep have all been shown to improve cognitive performance and overall well-being.

Barbara Sahakianisprofessor of clinical neuropsychology,Camilla d'Angeloisresearch assistant in psychiatry and George Savulich, is research associate in psychiatry at theUniversity of Cambridge.

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Is Silicon Valley Onto Something With Its LSD Microdosing? - Newsweek

Onnit Earth Grown Nutrients All-In-One Daily Greens Mix Review – BarBend (blog)

It seems like every supplement company is trying their hand at perfecting the greens powder, and today Imtrying the offering from one of the fitness industrys biggest giants, Onnit. On the nutrition side,Onnit is perhaps best known for their nootropics and MCT oil. How does their greens powder measure up? I tried out the lemon mint flavor of their Earth Grown Nutrients All in One Daily Greens Mix.

Soy-free and dairy-free, the product aims to approach health from five different angles: theres aPower Greens Blend which has the more traditional greens powder ingredients of wheatgrass, barley grass, alfalfa and some seaweeds. (This is intended to alkalizethe body.)

Then theres the Champion Blend of variousPeruvian fruits and vegetables that are meantto increase the antioxidant effect. Theres a Rainbow Blend of fruits and vegetables that are meant to provide numerous health benefits and delicious natural flavoring, a Detox Blend of milk thistle, olive leaf, and dandelion root intended to support the bodys normal detoxification processes, and the Gut Blend, a collection of enzymes and prebiotics.

Notably, the gut blend does not contain probiotics, though prebiotics are essentially considered food for probiotics (fiber is a prebiotic) and are linked to healthier gut flora.

The All in One Daily Greens Mix comes in lemon mint and black cherry flavor. I tried the lemon mint flavor, and it tasted a lot like unsweetened chamomile tea with a very mild hint of lemon.Its not sweet, its quite earthy, but its not overwhelmingly bitter like a lot of powders out there and there are no added sugars or artificial sweeteners. If you like the occasional cup of plain green tea, youll be fine with this.

I want to give this product the benefit of the doubt, but it falls prey to the markets tendency to claim a lot of very vague-sounding benefits without showing much evidence for it. The nutrition label is pretty short: it has 35 percent of the RDI of vitamin C, 22 percent of your iron (an impressively high amount), 12 percent of your fiber, 6percentof your calcium thats kind of it. I dont know if there are any other minerals magnesium, selenium, anything like that. I dont know how manyprebiotics it has or how effective the dose might be.

It claims to have a blend of power greens that alkalize my body but how much does it alkalize compared to, say, a cup of spinach? It says it contains five fruits and vegetables to help neturalize free radicals, which iswhat antioxidants do, but how many antioxidants does it have compared to a cup ofreal fruits and vegetables? I dont know. Give me a way to actually understandthe alleged benefits.I can appreciat that different greens powders might have different levels of different nutrients, but at least provide an average amount. Other greens powders do this; its not impossible.

Onnit does market their greens powder more honestly than a lot of its competitors it doesnt say this can replace all your other supplements and it doesnt say it can substitute forany amount of fruits and veggies. But it uses a lot of suspiciously ambiguous language, particularly designed to help you reach your daily green goal in one convenient and delicious drink mix.

If thats true, it should tell me how and to what degree it can substitute for fruits and vegetables. Many of the benefits of leafy greens come from the minerals, not the vitamins.As it is, I dont even know if it contains any minerals beyond calcium, iron, and sodium, how many antioxidants it has, or in what way it can boost digestion.

Its also pretty expensive, 35 dollars for 15 servings, or $2.30 a serving. Thats moreexpensive than most other supplements Ive seen so far, except for Athletic Greens, which is about $4.20 a serving. Compare that with $30 for 30 servings ofPharma Freaks Greens Freak($1/serve), Sunwarriors Ormus Super Greens at $50 for ninetyservings ($0.55/serve), and $52 for a hundred serves of Amazing Grasss Green Superfood ($0.52/serve).

Ingredients:4/5

Taste: 3.5/5

Effectiveness: 2/5

Price:1.5/5

Many folks report higher energy levels and better digestion when theyre taking this product, which is great and that could be true, or it could be a placebo effect. If I knew what micronutrients are actually present in this micronutrient supplement, then Id feel more comfortable recommending it.

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Onnit Earth Grown Nutrients All-In-One Daily Greens Mix Review - BarBend (blog)

TMS Jazz Band Puts on Red Hot Performance at Prudential Center … – TAPinto.net

NEWARK, NJ -- The Terrill Middle School Jazz Band rocked the main concourse of "The Rock" during the first intermission of Tuesday night's game between the Colorado Avalanche and the host New Jersey Devils.

The band, comprised of 7th and 8th graders,played rock classics including Louie, Louie by the Kingsmen, Jump by Van Halen, 25 or 6 to 4 by Chicago, In The Midnight Hour by Wilson Pickett, and A Hard Day's Night by The Beatles. (See video below.)

"They were great. Members of the Devils' brass came overto watch us," said John Gillick, Director of the Terrill Middle School Jazz Band."We'll definitely be coming back next year."

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On the ice, the Devils jumped out to a 1-0 first period lead on a goal by PavelZacha. Andy Greene and Kyle Palmieriadded tallies for the home team. Mark Barberio and Mikhail Grigorenko. Cory Schneider made 28 saves for the Devils in the victory.

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TMS Jazz Band Puts on Red Hot Performance at Prudential Center ... - TAPinto.net

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Talent management software (TMS) Market Report -Global Industry Analysis, Development, Scope, Share, Trends … – Satellite PR News (press release)

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The Talent management software (TMS) Market is expected to grow from $5,270.3 million in 2014 to $11,367.0 million by 2019, at an estimated Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 16.6% from 2014 to 2019.

The report Talent Management Software (TMS) Market by Solution (Talent Acquisition, Workforce Planning, Learning, Compensation, And Performance Management), By Services, By Deployment Mode, By Organization Size, By Verticals, and by Regions Trends and Forecasts to 2019 , analyses and studies the major market drivers, restraints, opportunities, and challenges in the emerging nations.

Browse detailed TOC, Tables, Figures, Charts and Companies mentioned in Talent management software (TMS) Market Report @ http://www.marketreportsworld.com/10152506

The Talent Management software (TMS) market is fast gaining traction primarily due to the increasing complexities and increasing trend of workforce mobility

TMS refers to the various solutions designed by using modern technology to plan, deliver, evaluate and manage an organization structure all the way from strategy formulation to employee learning. Talent management acts as an information system that manages company budget, tracks performance of the learners, resource hiring, training and development and overall functionality of organization.

The inexorable rise in mobile device users and shifting customer growth of web-based social media has generated new avenues in the market. These advancements are considered and resulted in technological developments such as mobile apps, social networking have facilitated businesses with better communication and functionality.

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The demand for cloud-based talent management software market is accelerating due to its cost-effective and easy deployment features. Hence, vendors in these markets are coming up with technologies and solutions to increase its adoption in Small and Medium Business (SMB) too. The market is quite competitive with the entry of niche players which provide innovative integration bridge for integrating various application and databases thereby increasing their market bargain capability among the large vendors.

North America holds the maximum market size whereas APAC is the major growing areas

Though there is notable traction of talent management software in large enterprise, emergence of SaaS delivery models has increased its usage in SMBs too. Still there are certain apprehensions restraining the growth in the talent management software market. The foremost point is lack of adequate knowledge of software which leads to misuse and secondly the budget constraint.

The report provides an in-depth analysis of the Talent management software (TMS) market

Across the Solution

Services types

Deployment modes

Organization sizes

Industry verticals

Regions

The Talent Management Software (TMS) market is also segmented by region into

North America (NA)

Europe, Asia-Pacific (APAC)

Middle East and Africa (MEA)

Latin America (LA).

The key players in the Talent Management Software (TMS) market Include

1. Oracle

2. IBM

3. Cornerstone ondemand

4. Lumesse

5. Peoplefluent

6. Skillsoft

7. Saba software

MNM expects that BFSI, IT and telecom and retail vertical will account for the largest market share throughout the forecast period. However, there are a few revenue pockets, namely healthcare, government, education, manufacturing and media and entertainment that will witness significant growth in this period.

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There are various assumptions that have been taken into consideration for the market sizing and forecasting exercise. A few of the global assumptions include political, economic, social, technological, and economic factors. The dollar fluctuations are expected to not seriously affect the forecasts in the emerging regions.

The Talent Management Software (TMS) market report will help the market leaders or new entrants in this market in the following ways:

1. This report segments the market into various sub-segments covering this market comprehensively. The report provides the closest approximations of the revenue numbers for the overall market and the sub-segments. The market numbers are further split across the different end users and regions.

2. This report will help in the better understanding of the competitors and gain more insights to better ones position in business. There is a separate section on competitive landscape, which includes competitor ecosystem, and mergers and acquisitions, partnerships, and agreements. Besides, there are company profiles of ten players in this market. In this section, market internals are provided that can put one ahead of the competitors.

3. The report also helps in understanding the overall growth of the market. It provides information on key market drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities.

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Political Correctness Is An Absolute Must | Time.com

Donald Trump, holding a photo of himself beside, as he might say, a "dog."Sara D. DavisGetty Images

The Republican Convention has barely begun, and the party has already made clear its primary political foe. Of course potshots will be taken at the "mainstream media," liberals and Hillary Clinton. But what did several of last night's convention speakersfrom Duck Dynasty 's Willie Robertson to Real World 's Sean Duffyregard as the real enemy? Political correctness.

You might have heard: America is plagued by "political correctness run amok." We were told this by Donald Trump's former campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, when he tried to defend his old boss for tweeting an anti-Semitic Internet meme depicting a Star of David atop a pile of cash. The origins of that meme were recently discovered to be a message board of neo-Nazis and white supremacists who presumably agree with Lewandowski. After all, they titled their message board, "Politically Incorrect."

We were told by Republicans, after the hideous, hate-fueled mass shooting by an ISIS-idolizing lunatic in Orlando, easy access to guns was not even partly to blame. Then what was? Political correctness! According to the logic of a top NRA official, who was widely parroted by Republican lawmakers, the Obama administrations political correctness prevented anything from being done about the shooters racist ramblings.

When the elephant ate its own tail, and members of his own party panned Trump for exploiting the tragedy with offensive and egomaniacal tweets, we were told the criticism was misplaced. The real culprit? We cant afford to be politically correct anymore, said Trump.

Political correctness has been a whipping boy of the right wing for decades, and lately Trump is cracking the whip with abandon. He recently told a group of evangelical leaders that they shouldnt pray for President Obama because We cant be politically correct and say we pray for all of our leaders, because all of your leaders are selling Christianity down the tubes. (Never mind that Trump places prayer within the scope of self-interested transactions.) Remember his response to Fox host Megyn Kelly when she asked him about his temperament after calling some women dogs and fat pigs? It was : I think the big problem this country has is being politically correct. After being skewered by all sides for racist comments about a federal judge? We have to stop being so politically correct in this country.

If you're like many Americans, you might have been persuaded political correctness is one of our country's primary problems. Trump badly wants you to believe this, but you'd be wrong to do so. Trump is effectively positioning himself as the anti-PC candidate. Whereas Hillary Clinton thinks and speaks in the strategicand sometimes subtlelanguage of diplomacy, Trump explicitly proposes himself as undiplomatic and politically incorrect. In doing so, he is cheapening and polarizing our political debates and, more important, he is making our country less safe.

You might think politicians speak in too much coded language, designed to cloak their true positions and to avoid offending everyone. But lets be clear: The opposite of political correctness is not unvarnished truth-telling. It is political expression that is careless toward the beliefs and attitudes different than ones own. In its more extreme fashion, it is incivility, indecency or vulgarity. These are the true alternatives to political correctness. These are the traits that Trump tacitly touts when he criticizes political correctness. And these are the essential attributes of Trumps candidacy.

This is not the first time our political discourse has been crass. When he traveled to the United States fifty years after the nation gained its independence, the French writer Alexis de Tocqueville noticed a vulgar turn of mind among American journalists. Journalists back in France often wrote in an eloquent and lofty manner but, according to Tocqueville, the typical American journalist made an open and coarse appeal to the passions of the populace; and he habitually abandons the principles of political science to assail the characters of individuals. Sound familiar? This vulgarity might have been characteristic of that eras journalists, who brazenly competed for readers and hadn't yet developed common standards of professionalism and ethics. But it wasnt characteristic of the types of Americans who sought the nations highest political office.

Trumps vulgarity is so vivid, in part, because it contrasts so starkly with Barack Obama's civility and cool-headedness. I predict that the more Trump debases our political climate with his brand of political incorrectness, the more we will come to appreciate the qualities our president embodies. Regular Obama critic David Brooks recently praised the president for his ethos of integrity, humanity, good manners and elegance. Yet when the president challenges us to disagree without being disagreeable and to be careful not to conflate an entire religion with the hateful ideology that seeks to exploit and debase that religion, we watch as his detractors accuse him of political correctness.

You probably heard the accusations: Obama is pussyfooting around the phrase radical Islam because hed rather protect the feelings of terrorists rather than the lives of Americans. Or something like that. On one hand, the intense scrutiny on the presidents language reveals a conspicuous lack of substantive criticism of the presidents foreign policy. As President Obama wondered aloud in a recent press conference, What exactly would using this label accomplish? Would it make ISIL less committed to killing more Americans? Would it bring in more allies? Is there a military strategy that is served by this? Of course not. It is, as the president said, a distraction a political talking point, not a strategy.

But on the other hand, we are wise to focus on the language used in the critically important issue of knowing who our enemies are and who they are not. This is an issue that has the greatest political consequences. It is a political issue on which we need to be correct . And yet in that press conference, the president himself dismissed political correctness, underscoring the concepts status as a universal pariah, even as he defended his terminology. Obama explained, the reason that I am careful about how I describe this threat has nothing to do with political correctness and everything to do with defeating extremism.

Just as no serious firefighter would actually fight fire with fire, we cant fight the extremist language of foreign adversaries (and the insecurity and simplemindedness that propel it) with our own extremist language, insecurity and simplemindedness. It would be geopolitically incorrect, if you will, to do so. It would alienate our allies and motivate our adversaries.

After all, as conservative foreign policy expert Eli Lake has pointed out , our biggest allies in the Middle East are people in countries, such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia, whose brand of Islam strikes American sensibilities as "radical." After special forces raided his compound, Osama bin Ladens notebooks revealed that al Qaeda recruiting activities were disabled because, according to Bin Laden, Obama administration officials have largely stopped using the phrase the war on terror in the context of not wanting to provoke Muslims. Nothing would help ISILs recruiting strategy more than an American president lumping togetherrather than drawing a distinction betweenterrorists and the worlds billion and a half Muslims.

Conservatives might tell us Obama is politically correct and Trump tells it like it is. But when it comes to the debate over the phrase radical Islam, Obama is playing chess and Trump is playing dodge ball. If politics is about strategy, political correctness is arming oneself with a sound strategy while political incorrectness is strategic recklessness.

Many on the left think conservatives demonize political correctness because they resent having to suppress their own prejudices. That might be true for some. But as someone who teaches a college class on political rhetoric, Ive come to appreciate that anti-PC attitudes are part of a longer tradition of suspicion toward carefully calibrated language. Throughout history, our species has tended to distrust people who have a knack for political oratory. Part of this stems from the fact that most people are not good public speakers at the same time most people have an affinity for people who are like them. This is something psychologists call homophily," and is the reason so many of us tend to want to vote for somebody we'd "like to have a beer with" rather than someone smarter than us.

Conservative politicians who criticize Obama and political correctness understand that eloquence is often perceived less as a mark of intelligence and personal style and more as a product of artifice and self-indulgence. This is why they can muster up the backhanded compliment that Obama is a good speaker or a gifted orator.

Why do we hate political correctness so much? Our suspicion of sensitive political language goes back to ancient Greece, when the sophists got a bad rap for going around Athens training wealthy kids to become more talented speakers so they could win votes or dodge prison time. Plato famously distrusted rhetoric, although his student Aristotle would rehabilitate its reputation as an essentially virtuous endeavor. Political correctness, in which public officials are careful to avoid language that alienates or offends, requires a certain type of expressive competence. In the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump has critiqued this expressive competence while being wholly unequipped with it.

But political correctness is a longstanding American tradition and a deeply rooted value. Our countrys founders placed a premium on the ability to persuasively articulate opposing viewpoints. They rejected government censorship precisely because they trusted individuals could and would regulate themselves in our proverbial free marketplace of ideas. They didnt prohibit offensive speech because they believed truth lost its vigor unless confronted with falsehoods, and tolerance lost its social acceptance unless it could stand in contrast with ugly prejudices. They knew the value of an idea laid in its ability to gain favor in debates, which should be, in Supreme Court Justice William Brennans words , uninhibited, robust, and wide-open. Trump can say what he will about Muslims and Mexicans, but thoughtful journalists and pundits can and should say what they will about Trump.

If you are one of the many Americans who think political correctness is a detriment to politically vibrant debates in this country, you have it all backwards: People who use politically correct language arent trying to stifle insensitive speech. Theyre simply trying to out-compete that speech in a free and open exchange.

Every time Trump says something thats ugly or false and then claims political correctness is the big problem this country has and something we cant afford, hes basically blaming this free marketplace itself. He's petulantly arguing with the umpire. Hes blaming you and methe publicfor exercising the freedom to decide which ideas are good or bad. In the end, many of you dont like or want what hes peddling. You reject his racist tirades and narcissistic antics. You support common-sense gun legislation which would help prevent another terrorist hate crime like the one that occurred in Orlando. You reject praying for political leaders based on those leaders' party affiliations. And you don't think women deserve to be compared to "pigs" or "dogs" by people seeking our country's highest office. I happen to think you're correct, politically.

Mark Hannah was a staffer on the John Kerry and Barack Obama presidential campaigns and is the author of the new book The Best Worst PresidentWhat the Right Gets Wrong About Barack Obama . He teaches at NYU and The New School.

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Political Correctness Is An Absolute Must | Time.com

Letter to the editor: Political correctness has influenced minds – Post Register

Letter to the editor: Political correctness has influenced minds
Post Register
Inherent in the output of some of the favored, perennial guest writers, is how much political correctness has influenced the minds of many. Much of the radicalism that has attended the election is based on programmed ignorance and/or misinformation in ...

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Letter to the editor: Political correctness has influenced minds - Post Register

Letter: Political correctness has endangered our safety | INFORUM – INFORUM

This organization thinks protesters against the Dakota Pipeline can save their "sacred" environment by polluting the land with garbage, burning tires and cars, and killing cattle. Enough said about that.

On the ACLU opinion of HB 1425, a bill for an act to protect the rights and privileges granted under the United States Constitution: First, Muslim is not a race, and Islam is not a religion. It is a political and military ideology. So spare me the discrimination talk.

The fact that the ACLU is against 1425 proves they have never read the Quran or any other Islamic text and know absolutely nothing about 1,400 years of Islamic history or Sharia.

The tactic of the Muslim Brotherhood (a subversive terror organization that supports Hamas) is Civilization Jihad (invasion through migration). Their strategy (goal) is replacing our laws with Sharia.

Every time we give in to Islam's demands such as providing a prayer room or taking pork off a menu, we are accepting Sharia. It has already started. In other words, by making our Constitution worthless, it takes fewer of them to change our country into an Islamic State.

Yes, the war in the Middle East is now on our own soil and we do not even realize it. Their biggest weapon is not terrorism, it is our ignorance.

The Muslim Brotherhood invented islamophobia spurred on by political correctness. Now we have a new sheriff in town and he is throwing political correctness in the garbage. I suggest the ACLU support HB 1425 or keep silent. See how similar ignorance is destroying Europe from within.

Willem lives in Moorhead.

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Letter: Political correctness has endangered our safety | INFORUM - INFORUM

Fossil discovery rewrites understanding of reproductive evolution … – Science Daily

Fossil discovery rewrites understanding of reproductive evolution ...
Science Daily
A remarkable 250-million-year-old 'terrible-headed lizard' fossil found in China shows an embryo inside the mother -- clear evidence for live birth. The fossil ...

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Fossil discovery rewrites understanding of reproductive evolution ... - Science Daily

Pokemon Go Adds 80 Generation 2 Pokemon, New Evolution Items This Week – IGN

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Niantic and The Pokemon Company have announced that more than 80 new Pokemon are headed to Pokemon Go this week.

The new Pokemon come from the Johto region, originally introduced in Pokemon Gold and Silver, and can be encountered in the wild starting this week. Niantic is also adding new Evolution items for evolving Pokemon, as well as new purchasable outfit and accessory options for customizing your trainer.

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New berries will also be introduced to aid in catching Pokemon. The new Nanab Berry will slow the movements of wild Pokemon, while the Pinap Berry will double the amount of candy earned from catching a Pokemon if the next ball thrown yields a successful catch. The new berries join the Razz Berriesthat were already in the game, which can be fed to a Pokemon to make them slightly easier to catch.

While a full list of new Pokemon isnt available yet, Niantic specifically mentioned that Chikorita, Cyndaquil, and Totodile will be among the new additions. The new Pokemon coming this week join the initial set of Pokemon from generation 2 introduced to Pokemon Go in December, which included Togepi, Togetic, Pichu, Elekid, Smoochum, Magby, Igglybuff, and Cleffa.

A few of the new Pokemon and new berry types on display.

Todays announcement arrives as the Pokemon Go Valentines Day event comes to a close, ending a week of double candy rewards and extended six-hour Lure Modules.

The news also ends months of speculation about the full Johto Pokedex appearing in Pokemon Go, following details datamined from previous updates. Additional features found from datamining, including shiny Pokemon variants, have not yet been officially announced.

For much more on Pokemon Go, see IGNs Pokemon Go wiki guide, including a list of original Pokemon that evolve in generation two.

Andrew is IGN's executive editor of news and currently has a full Pokedex for the United States and Europe. You can find him rambling about Persona and cute animals on Twitter.

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Pokemon Go Adds 80 Generation 2 Pokemon, New Evolution Items This Week - IGN

Humons presents an atypical dance evolution – Detroit Metro Times

El Club in Southwest Detroit is littered with glow sticks, blow-up palm trees, and balloons. A pair of DJs with skipper hats on are warming up the room with tech-house jams. A few people are already dancing. Unaware this was a themed party, I've got a tiny umbrella in my gin and tonic.

The vibes are warm and fresh, and for a minute, I forget we're in the middle of a Detroit winter. My friend picks up a balloon to volley across the room. The balloon says "Humons." We smile to each other and watch it bounce from human to human until it finds an empty, human-less zone. Both of us track its slow and graceful surrender to the floor while activity whirls around us. So far this is what the night is observing, human-watching girls dressed in smart '90s rave garb, and boys in sweaters, Hawaiian leis, and knit caps.

Washed in a zig-zagging row of bright white lights, two figures emerge onstage. My focus locks on the mic where the man behind the music stands in a royal blue bomber jacket, accompanied by a drummer, who wears a neon green cap on top of a mess of long curly hair. Starting from their single, "Underneath," the show progresses seamlessly, and by the end I'm elbowing my friend, going, "Who knew this would turn into a house show!"

Humons is the creation of Ardalan Sedghi aka Ardi. He's unassuming, with an honest face and an effortlessness about him. He's not trying to win your affection; he's here the same reason you are, to share something with the community he moves within. There's a feeling it was never his intention to get attention, yet here we are.

"I've been writing music since I was a young lad in middle school... that would be around 2003," Ardi says. "Humons started in 2013 and that is the first time I had set to write and release music with some sort of intention or coherent theme."

His setup is simple: a laptop for some backing tracks, a keyboard, a controller designated to a drum machine, and a small vocal effects box that's locked on the mic stand. Oh yeah, and there's the mic. Humons would be a complete one-man live operation if not for the addition of drummer Mike Higgins, which Ardi says, "definitely stepped the live show up a notch. I'm grateful to have his talent and energy onstage."

An eclectic mix of minimal electronic, pop, and experimental sonic animation born from a process and method that continues to evolve with each track Humons draws most of their influence from Detroit. "We are blessed with some of the world's best electronic music be it at Movement or at TV Lounge on any weekend," Ardi says.

At this El Club show, the material Humons is sharing is the recently released Spectrum EP most of which was recorded at Ardi's home studio, "aka my bedroom," he says, "but I did some additional recording at Assemble." The mixing and mastering for Spectrum EP were done at Assemble with producer/engineer Jon Zott (Tunde Olaniran, JRJR, BRNS, ect.). "He is absolutely great to work with," Ardi says of Zott. "He took the EP to the next level with his production prowess."

The album, while pristine in its original form, will be reimagined into a full package of remixes that will come out each week over the next five weeks. The first, a remix of "Underneath" by Detroit-based Mega Powers already dropped at the beginning of the month. Other Detroiters who will join the party are Jon Zott and Monty Luke. Elsewhere, there is Color War from New York and Diamondstein from Los Angeles. "It's a cool project for me," Ardi says, "not only because I'm a fan of what all of them are doing musically, but also because three of the five artists were involved with either Spectra EP itself or were a part of the EP release party."

Having lived in Detroit for the last five years, Ardi is cognizant of the limitations of such a city, as well as the undeniable benefits, which, at times feel like intangible energies rather than citable stats supporting the fact that Detroit is indeed growing from more of an artist "launching pad" to something of a viable "home" meaning that artists won't have to keep leaving to expand their reach, their creativity, their income. But maybe leaving is also part of a necessary process, an experience that any creative might eventually embark upon. One has to remain open, become cultured, grown in a scope that is not always accessible so far removed from the entertainment capitals of the world. We've all noticed a definite shift, growth, and rebirth in Detroit over the years, but I was curious of Ardi's thoughts on what has changed to alter the struggle. The fan base? Raise the ceiling? I had to ask.

"As with most places there's definitely pros and cons," Adri says. "It's easy to survive as an artist financially and there is a lot of hidden talent here, but it's hard to grow beyond a certain level because the industry hasn't been around for a while and there simply aren't that many folks living in the city to build a local following."

If that sounds like the same old problems, well they are, but Ardi seems confident that things are gaining important momentum.

"In the past, it's felt a bit isolated in terms of everybody just doing their own thing, but I think that's starting to change, especially with groups like Assemble Sound," he says. "I'm definitely hopeful about the music scene here, as we start building resources and connections helping our local talent develop into its potential."

That said, Ardi is playing it safe Humons isn't a full-time gig. "Both from a financial and a personal standpoint, I don't think it's the move for me right now," he says.

Not surprisingly, being able to support yourself as a full-time artist is one of those unicorns of the industry a fantasy for most, rare way of life for some those who have talent, luck, dedication, and an amazing work ethic on their side. That said, sometimes that part-time job is fuel too offers balance. We've always been a working-class city. Maybe that balance of jobby-job and artist is unique to what makes Detroit artists such an impressive breed as it's a lifestyle that begs respect rather than the opposite.

"I have been putting in more energy and time into it since about last October leading up to the release of Spectra EP," Ardi says. The opportunity was there to keep on keeping on a natural progression of well-timed successes and good live shows that has allowed Humons the pleasure of riding out that wave.

As for the future, Ardi isn't making any predictions, just figuring out his personal evolution as it goes. "I'm getting more and more interested in dance being a main goal as it relates to live shows," he says. "There is such a great energy that comes with a group of people dancing together."

This interest will likely translate to the next batch of songs he's writing alongside aforementioned co-producer Jon Zott and drummer Michael Higgins. This year they'll all be in the midst of creation, getting heady in the studio, having fun, vetting out ideas, and learning in the process.

"It's a good challenge," Ardi says, "and I think the result will be great with the live drums and synth takes." He hopes to have a new album available by the end of the year.

Other than that, Humons is working on designing some T-shirts. As to his long-term plans, he's keeping it pretty loose. Ardi doesn't imagine a typical music career for himself atypical is more of his flavor anyway, but his goal maintains a basic simplicity. "I want to keep writing music, getting better, playing live shows, and building an audience so that the music is being heard and enjoyed."

The tracks mentioned in this article can be found at soundcloud.com/ humons.

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Humons presents an atypical dance evolution - Detroit Metro Times

The Evolution of the Energy Capital of the World – Texas Monthly

February 14, 2017By John Nova Lomax

Houstons status as the Energy Capital of the World is indisputable. So much so, that its hard to even understand how it ascended to that levelitjust is. But if you roll back the clock to the beginning of the twentieth century, its future in black gold was hardly assured.

After all, the Spindletop gusher erupted in 1901 near Beaumont, about 85 miles to the east. Despite the Corsicana field and others elsewhere in Navarro County that preceded it, Spindletop was the true birthplace of the boom, and itwas quickly followed by others in Hardin County, near Beaumont.

With its Neches River port downtown and two other deepwater harbors in Sabine Pass and Port Arthur only a dozen or somiles away, Beaumont didnt need to dig a ship channel to bring in supplies or export crude. Indeed, for a couple of years after the Spindletop gusher, it looked like Beaumont was well on its way to establishing itself as the epicenter of Texass oil boom. Deflated Houston city leaders at the time acknowledged what to them was a sad fact: they resorted to billing Houston pathetically as nothing more than The Gateway to Beaumont.

And thats not to mention the other competitors that followed. Between 1901 and 1929, other boomtowns erupted all over Texas: Corsicana, Ranger, Borger, Odessa, Kilgore. So how did Houston become the vast megapolis that it is today while all the others sizzled briefly for a time and then settled back into large townor small city status?The answer: one mans shrewd business acumen and the multi-decade gargantuan feat of human willpower that is the Houston Ship Channel.

I am not of the opinion that any other city other than Beaumont had a shot at it, says Houston historian and author Mike Vance. To me the turning point was Jesse Jones basically buying a building and essentially giving it to the Texas Company.

In 1907, Jones emerged from a nationwide financial panic relatively unscathed. With rare cash in hand, the 33-year-old wheeler-dealer went on a building spree in Houston, erecting and then expanding the swanky Bristol Hotel, giving the Houston Chronicle a ten-story headquarters in exchange for a half-interest in the citys leading information source, and building another ten-story skyscraper on spec. Ultimately, he planned to use itto extract Joseph Cullinans Texas Companywhich you probably know now as Texacoout of the Golden Triangle and move it to what was then known as the Magnolia City.

Sweeter deals have seldom been tabled: Jones offered the Texas Company a brand-new building for a mere $2,000 a month. And Jones would have to offer such seductiveinducementsCullinan was, at the time, deeply entrenched in Beaumont.As Vance writes, by 1908, the Texas Company had tank farms and a refinery in the area, one linked by a pipeline to both the Sour Lake and Humble fields, not to mention an asphalt factory in Port Neches.

But in the end, Joness deal proved too enticing for Cullinan to pass up. Houston seems to me to be the coming center of the oil business, Cullinan had written to an associate in 1905. He was right. And largely thanks to him, Houston would never be the same.

[The Texas Company] was the big dog, and others followed, Vance says, noting that the Texas Companys move to Houston coincided with a couple of prosperous oil fields near Houston. The Humble field and the Goose Creek field were both bigger than what Beaumont had, and they were both right here in Harris County.

The Harris County fields goosed the industrys momentum. Soon modern-day Texacos forerunner would would be joined byHumble Oil (which eventually became Exxon), and many, many others.Out of Humble there were a lot more fortunes made, Vance says. It just got to be where you couldnt ignore Houston. All the Humble guys were here, and all the smaller companies. There were 89 oil companies in the Houston phone book 100 years ago. And then you had all the tool companies and pipeline companiesit was a gold rush mentality with a modern twist.

Cushy as the Jones deal was, its unlikely Cullinan would have bit had he not known that the Houston Ship Channel as we know it today would open in 1914, just a few years after he moved to Houston. (Vance points out that the 1914 date is somewhat arbitrary, and that Houstons port facilities were much farther along by 1908 than most people understand today.) Its evolution has brought to reality the then-outlandish claim of John and Augustus Allenthe brothers who founded the citythat Houston would one day command the trade of the largest and richest portions of the state and become the the great interior commercial emporium of Texas, even if it finally did so in an industry they couldnt conceive of in 1837.

From the John Nova Lomax Collection

Of all the Texas oil boomtowns, Houstonas the largest of them allwas best able to accommodate the stratospheric population growth that came in with the gushers. City services in the other towns were unable to keep pace with the throngs of fortune- and job-seekers streaming in daily. People lived in shacks or tents without sewage or running water. Staples were expensive.

Take Beaumont, for example, a town with more advantages than most of the other oilfield boomtowns. Its population of almost 10,000 made it practically a metropolis pre-Spindletop. Nevertheless, according to oil field historian H.P. Nichols (as quoted on podcast The Dollop), post-Spindletop Beaumont could only offer soupy drinking water that smelled like fish. Even worse, drinking it gave people what became known as a case of the Beaumonts.

If the name of your town becomes synonymous with diarrhea, thats a bad town, said one of the Dollops co-hosts. And to make matters worse, enterprising wheeler-dealers built outhouses and charged those suffering the Beaumonts the princely sum of 50 cents for a seat on those rickety thrones.

Geologist, legendary wildcatter and Beaumont native Michel Halbouty believed the city of his birth did as much to push the industry to Houston as Houston did to pull it west.Speaking bluntly toward the end of his long life, Halbouty told Upstream that Beaumont didnt have the know-how to do anything like that. Those people in Beaumont are half-deadand I was born in Beaumont. The people there didnt want [oil exploration]. Vance has a more calculated explanation for the reason that Beaumont isnt the Energy Capital of the World:Houston stole it from Beaumont.

Maybe that partially explains the piratical displays of Joseph Cullinan. Born in Pennsylvania and proud of his Irish ancestry, the Texas Company chieftain would hoist three flags each Saint Patricks Day: he flew an Irish tricolor at his Houston home, and raised a Jolly Roger (beneath the Irish and American flags) from atop the Petroleum Building downtown, as a warning that liberty is a right and not a privilege.

No more Houstonian words were ever spoken.

Tags: Energy, Houston

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The Evolution of the Energy Capital of the World - Texas Monthly

4 Possible Roadmaps For macOS and iOS Evolution – The Mac Observer (blog)

From time to time, weve seen scenarios about how the Mac/macOS and the iPad/iOS might evolve as personal computing platforms. We know about the declining sales of the iPad and Apples seeming inattention to the Mac line as whole in 2016. In turn, that has created some discussion about their respective future developments. John catalogs the likely and not-so-likely roadmaps for these products.

What looked like simple evolution has become not so simple.

Each of these plans below is someting Ive read or thought about.Theyre in no particular order, but I have assigned a prognosis for each plan. There may be other brilliant plans being cooked up by Apple, but I thought it would interesting to list the most often discussed evolutionary scenarios for macOS, iOS and possible integration. Here we go.

Plan A. Let it Be. Or: Survival of the fittest. The Intel-based Macs and iPads are allowed to continue as distinct products. They will evolve to work better and better together, and weve seen Apple do that already. But the products remain essentially as they are. Apple will, instead, depend on dramatic improvements in iOS/iPad technologies to stem the decline on iPad sales.

Eventually, an inflection point will come when the iPad can do everything the Mac does today. Then, the Mac, without touch capability, fades into history. Downside. Thousands of great macOS apps depend on Intel and Macs.

Reference: Let iPad be iPad: Why making it a traditional computer isnt the answer, by Rene Ritchie.

Likelihood: Low

Plan B. Here Comes the Sun. Or: Intel plus ARM. Slowly migrate macOS apps to run on ARM by including low-power but fast ARM processor in all new Macs. macOS and iOS, however, remain distinct. Gradually transition more and more tasks to ARM until an Intel CPU is hardly necessary in, say, five years. It helps reduce Apples dependence on Intel. A possible gateway to Plan D.

Reference: Apple Said to Work on Mac Chip That Would Lessen Intel Role, by Mark Gurman.

Likelihood: Moderate

Plan C. I Want to Hold Your Hand. Or: The Toaster Fridge. Single out MacBooks that have ARM in the lid and Intel under the keyboard. When connected, the system operates as macOS/Intel Mac with low power ARM functions. When the lid is detached, its an iPad. Desktop, Intel-based Macs will use and ARM for iOS simulator and other supporting operations. One problem is continued dependence on Intel CPUs. Another is cost, confusion and lack of elegance.

Likelihood: Low.

Plan D. Strawberry Fields Forever. macOS apps run in iOS. New, much larger iPads will have a Rosetta-like system with mouse and other needed frameworks added back in. macOS apps remain Intel-based, run on standard Macs, but can also run on large-display iPads. This continues until Macs and macOS apps fade into history, as with the old Classic apps.

This is an attractive option because it avoids a premature obsolescence of the Mac by allowing all those thousands of macOS apps to have new life on the platform of the future, the bigger iPads. It essentially competes with the ground-breaking notion of the Microsoft Surface Studio and buys time for the iPad to evolve. When the iPad reaches technical maturity and can do everything a Mac can, including the role as an iOS development platform, then the Mac can be left behind. In the meantime, macOS apps remain viable.

Likelihood: High. This is just the kind of technical brilliance Apple is known for. They did it before with the Classic to Mac OS X and the PowerPC to Intel transition. It combats the Surface Studio nicely. Apples dependence on Intel goes away.

So there you have it. My four roadmaps for the evolution of macOS and iOS apart or together. What do you think? Have I missed any attractive avenues? Or pitfalls?

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4 Possible Roadmaps For macOS and iOS Evolution - The Mac Observer (blog)

What Darwinists Don’t Tell You: Valentine’s Day Edition – Discovery Institute

Darwinism is replete with salesmanship, some of it thoroughly deceptive. Pushing the false dichotomy of evolution versus Young Earth Creationism, as if there were no alternative to these two, is one way that evolutionists bully and mislead non-scientists. Sadly, they are joined in this by some creationists.

Tom Bethell, author of Darwin's House of Cards: A Journalist's Odyssey Through the Darwin Debates, points out that from Darwin himself on up to today, advocates of the theory have habitually played down the conflict between their materialism, on one hand, and religious belief on the other.

Similarly, only the most perilously candid evolutionists are in your face about another straightforward inference from materialism: the denial of free will. Bethell again:

This bleak vision, the human being as meat machine, is on vivid display, though mixed with a clumsy childlike enthusiasm, in the writing of emeritus University of Chicago evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne. On Darwin Day, for instance, he chided me for the hope that evidence of design will overcome Darwinian censorship: "I'm sorry to say that, I think, Klinghoffer will go to his Maker (disassociated molecules) before a teleological view of life permeates evolutionary biology."

Imagine trying to sell "disassociated molecules" to the public, with their human intuitions, fears, and longings. Darwinists like Coyne or Dawkins, Bethell observes, are their own worst enemies.

To these thoughts, add our colleague Jonathan Witt's observation for Valentine's Day over at The Stream. From Darwinian materialism, he notes, a denial of the reality of love must follow:

Dissolve those things and there's no room for romantic love to be anything very exalted.

Biologist E.O. Wilson is just as blunt. When Darwinian science conquers all, we will view the human brain as just the "product of genetic evolution by natural selection." And the mind "will be more precisely explained as an epiphenomenon of the neuronal machinery of the brain."

But surely we can rescue things like art, religion and poetry, right? No, Wilson insists. Evolution teaches us that all of it was "produced by the genetic evolution of our nervous and sensory tissues."

Evolving Away Love

So what becomes of Valentine's Day, of all of those romantic longings and pledges to love, honor and protect, maybe even till death do us part? Yes, glands and instincts are involved. Only a gnostic would deny that, and Christianity threw Gnosticism out on its ear at the Incarnation and the Resurrection.

But Darwinian science goes further. It insists the stuff of Valentine's Day is all glands and instincts, and beneath those, all brain chemistry -- a soulless concoction of matter and energy stirred up in the alchemist's lab we call evolution.

Of course, it would have to be that way. A materialist understanding of evolution robs us of virtually everything that makes life rich and worth living, if we're honest about it with ourselves. What, really, is left? Eating? Animal rutting? Pursuing status or dominance in a manner hardly different from the way chimps and chickens do?

But Darwinists, devoted salesmen that they are, often seem freaked out about the implications of their theory, and so try to take those back, sometimes in the space between one paragraph and the next. Dennett, for one, preaches the illusion of consciousness. But just as we know that love is real and not only a matter of glands in action, and as we know that are our will is ultimately free, we also have a strong sense that our inner lives are genuine.

So here is neuroscientist Michael Gazzaniga giving a reverent review to Dennett's new book, From Bacteria to Bach and Back: The Evolution of Minds, in the Wall Street Journal and getting tangled up in the consciousness question. On one hand, says Gazzaniga:

But most Wall Street Journal readers are going to have a hard time with the idea of their "interior experience" as a trick their brain pulls on them. The notion is thus walked back by Dr. Gazzaniga in the very next paragraph:

Consciousness for Dennett is "an illusion," yet "He never doubted consciousness itself." He never doubted an illusion? I haven't read the book, but the review of it makes no sense.

Darwinism asks us to doubt, to deny, our own intuitions and experiences. Intelligent design cheerfully affirms them. The former, says Jonathan Witt, overwhelms resistance "by endlessly recycling evidence long discredited even by scientists in [Darwinists'] own ranks" (referring to the "icons of evolution" made famous by Jonathan Wells).

Meanwhile, intelligent design is not permitted to make its own scientific case. Or when it does so, ID scientists are put down by censors or drowned out by media spokesmen with endless chants of "creationist, creationist, creationist." What a mad world!

Image: smiltena -- stock.adobe.com.

I'm on Twitter. Follow me @d_klinghoffer.

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What Darwinists Don't Tell You: Valentine's Day Edition - Discovery Institute