The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: February 2017
Game developers show political solidarity with Humble Freedom Bundle – TechCrunch
Posted: February 14, 2017 at 11:13 am
TechCrunch | Game developers show political solidarity with Humble Freedom Bundle TechCrunch The Humble Bundle is a reliable source of good deals on games, usually organized around some theme or another. This week's bundle, however, is not only one of the best gaming deals of all time, but all proceeds are going to support charities that work ... New 'Humble Freedom Bundle' Donates Money To Civil Rights Groups, For Obvious Reasons The Humble Freedom Bundle will get you 40 games for the price of only one Humble Freedom Bundle Offers Great Games With All Proceeds Pledged to Charities |
View post:
Game developers show political solidarity with Humble Freedom Bundle - TechCrunch
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on Game developers show political solidarity with Humble Freedom Bundle – TechCrunch
For so many Americans, Obamacare offered career freedom. A repeal could take that away. – Vox
Posted: at 11:13 am
Health insurance and career opportunity are impossible to separate for Erin Hoover.
Hoover is a 37-year-old Florida State University student who will graduate with a doctorate in English literature this spring. She is also eight months pregnant.
Until recently, Hoover had a clear plan. She would have her baby in March, graduate in May, and begin adjunct work to build up her resume. She felt like she was on a good path; one of her poems was recently selected for the Best American Poetry anthology of 2016.
Adjunct positions typically dont offer health insurance, but that seemed fine. Hoover expected she and her baby would continue to get coverage through the Affordable Care Act, which she has relied on since 2014.
But the presidential election changed all that. Republicans have promised to repeal the health law, but havent yet shown what their replacement plan looks like. Hoover doesnt know if the programs she relies on now will be available. And she thinks that might reshape her impending job search. She is now considering going back to a career in public relations because it would offer benefits.
She is not thrilled at the idea.
I just spent five years getting this degree, she says. I was hoping to utilize it in a new job rather than the old job that I used to work in years ago.
I spend a lot of time talking to Obamacare enrollees like Hoover: people who struck out on their own left a job, started a business, went back to school after Obamacare. They felt empowered to do this because in the reformed individual market, insurers had to offer everyone coverage and couldnt charge sick people more.
And now, many of them are already beginning to rearrange their lives around the laws uncertain future.
There were 1.4 million self-employed people who relied on the marketplaces for coverage in 2014, recent research from the Treasury Department shows. That works out to one-fifth of all marketplace enrollees being people who work for themselves.
Vox has spoken to about a dozen of them, mostly members of a Facebook group we run for Obamacare enrollees. For them, the Affordable Care Act was an opening of opportunity: the possibility to try a new career path knowing that they didnt have to worry about where theyd get coverage. The possibility of repeal, they say, feels like a narrowing of choice.
Here, they describe the choices they were able to make because of Obamacare and how they are changing their lives now that the laws future is in jeopardy.
Some of the people we spoke with said theyd like to figure out a way to continue their careers, despite the uncertainty repeal brings. Theyre hoping that a Republican replacement plan might offer certain features they like about the Affordable Care Act, such as the requirement to cover everyone regardless of preexisting conditions.
But most, like Erin Hoover, were just worried.
I may have felt comfortable going without insurance myself, but I wont let my daughter go without care, she says. I am now being forced to choose between taking care of my family and following my professional ambition.
Are you an Obamacare enrollee? Help our reporting by telling us how the Affordable Care Act has changed your life, and join our Facebook community for conversation and updates.
See the rest here:
For so many Americans, Obamacare offered career freedom. A repeal could take that away. - Vox
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on For so many Americans, Obamacare offered career freedom. A repeal could take that away. – Vox
ACLU’s Religious Freedom Suit Against Trump Order: Gerrymandered to Target Muslims – Religion Dispatches
Posted: at 11:13 am
Attorneys representing the administration ofPresident Donald Trump already have their hands fullespecially after the Ninth Circuit on Thursday unanimously rejectedthe Justice Departments request to reinstate the Muslim Ban. But that isnt the only legal challenge looming for DOJ attorneys tasked with defending the presidents sweeping order.
The American Civil Liberties Unionon Tuesday filed a federal lawsuit contending that the presidents executive order violates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) and the First Amendments prohibition of a government establishment of religion.RDspoke with ACLU senior staff attorney Heather Weaver to better understandwhat makes this lawsuit different from the others already challenging the policy.
Weaver says the executive orders targeting of Muslims is so blatant that its nearly unprecedented. While the textneitherincludes Trumps pet phrase, radical Islamic terrorism, northe words Islam or Muslim, it doesnt have to. The administration constructed the terms of the executive order to disproportionately impact Muslim immigrants and refugees, Weaver explains.
The executive order is religiously gerrymandered to target Muslims, shesays. It most directly harms Muslim-Americans who were born or have family in any of the seven nations from which U.S. entry is now prohibited under the presidents order. Most of theindividual plaintiffs fall into this category, while others are naturalized American citizens or permanent residents who had permission to travel or approved family visas from one of the seven countries targeted. The actual harm facing these plaintiffs is particularly acute,the ACLUs suit contends.
In policy and practice,the executive order essentially conditions immigration decisions and benefits on an immigrants faith, Weaver explains.Its limiting [rights available to Muslim Americans and immigrants]because of their faith, and we would say that that is a burden on their faith, she says. Because essentially what it boils down to is: its pressuring them to abandon their faith so that they may obtain the benefits that theyre seeking.
Whether its refugee status, or a green card, or some sort of other adjustment to their status, the order limits the relief an individual or family can access based on their religion, Weaver says. Thats what the burden is here, and of course under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, if youre going to impose that type of burden on somebodys religious exercise, you have to have a compelling reason to do it, and it has to bethe least restrictive means. Thats a very high standard for the government to meet, as weve seen in some cases. And I think the government hasnt met that standard here, and I dont think they can meet that standard.
The ACLUs complaint methodically documents the historical context leading up to the orders implementation, including the numerous times then-candidate Trump stated his desireto ban Muslims from entering the U.S., and his recent on-camera admission that the order was intended to privilege Christians.
The federal government is essentially sending a message, not only that Islam and Muslims are disfavored, but its suggesting that theyre evil, or wish to do others harm, says Weaver.So whatever the message that the executive order conveys is, that is informed by everything that has led up to that executive order.
But thats not the only religious freedom complaint advanced in the suit, filed February 7th in U.S. District Courtof Maryland. Among the plaintiffs aretwo faith-based organizations that work to resettle and supportrefugees, allowing these plaintiffs toclaim a unique injury: that the order substantially burdens the free religious exercise of these U.S.-based nonprofits, which consider the work they do an extension of their sincerely held religious beliefs. The International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) and Jewish international refugee resettlement organization (HIAS) both contend that the executive order prevents them from living out their faith on several frontsa pointed, if indirect, rebuke to the administrations purported advocacy of religious freedom for all.
The order betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the concept of religious freedom as it functions in American society, Weaver says. She points to the multilayered irony that during the campaign Vice President Mike Pence condemned Trumps proposed ban on Muslims, and has his own reputation of using religious freedomas an excusefor state-sanctioned anti-LGBT discrimination.
According tothe ACLU, religious freedom does not include the ability to harm others, says Weaver.And thats an important line to draw in this sand, and I think that thats a boundary thats been missing from Vice President Pences understanding of religious liberty. Its religious freedom for me but not for thee.'
Weaver says this fundamentalmisunderstanding appears to begenuine, but that doesnt absolve the nations most powerful politicians from being held responsible for the harm done by this limited perspective.
When thats your understanding of religious freedom, you dont necessarily see it as hypocritical to be voted into office on that platform, and then one of your first acts is to target a religious minority, says Weaver. It is hypocriticalbut I dont that they think its hypocritical, to be clear.
Continued here:
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on ACLU’s Religious Freedom Suit Against Trump Order: Gerrymandered to Target Muslims – Religion Dispatches
Chief editors: Media not a channel for personal freedom of speech – YLE News
Posted: at 11:13 am
Commercial broadcaster MTV's Chief Editor Merja Yl-Anttila Image: Jyrki Valkama / Yle
The representative organisation of editors-in-chief in Finland, PTY, published a statement on Tuesday in response to public discourse that started in November about the responsibilities of a chief editors and their position in terms of freedom of speech.
PTY says in the statement that chief editors employ freedom of speech in their respective media, while journalists use their employers freedom of speech in their work. They are not entitled, however, to use the media channel for personal freedom of speech, the group says.
"I think its good to shed some light on certain gaps in the current discussion. Not everyone has an idea about what kinds of tasks a chief editor is charged with and which of these is linked to laws about freedom of expression," said Merja Yl-Anttila, first deputy of PTY and chief editor for the commercial news broadcaster MTV.
PTY maintains that decisions that a chief editor makes about news items do not limit journalists freedom of speech. Journalist employees publishing whatever they like under the name of the media company they are employed for is a different matter, however.
Yl-Anttila said the PTY statement is not intended to take a stand on any individual cases, and there's no specific reason the missive is being released just now.
"It is not aimed against or in defence of anyone," she said.
Chief editors want to remind people that they are responsible for the content their media channels produce, and this task cannot be relinquished to anyone outside the editorial team.
The PTY says editors-in-chief must also ensure that their units have conditions that are conducive to work by fighting off both external and internal pressure.
"When the report concerns a big, influential topic in terms of general society, there are many interested parties that might try to influence things, from various quarters. At this point, the chief editor is the last sea wall that provides wind protection for the staff to work in peace on difficult high-stress stories," says Yl-Anttila.
PTY points out that even the chief editors' employers cannot interfere in their work in any other way than by appointing or removing them from the post.
The organisation said that a responsible editor-in-chief encourages an open atmosphere in the newsroom, one in which criticism about the journalistic decisions of the management is permitted to be aired.
"The media team should be able to talk about these things. Trust is very important," says the MTV chief editor.
PTY calls on editors everywhere to be more transparent. Audiences should be better informed about how decision-making in news making works, and under what grounds the media produces the content that it does.
Opening the processes up will also help the audience to distinguish reliable news sources from fake news and other traffickers in 'alternative facts'.
"This is the kind of thing that should make all news teams take a hard look in the mirror. It would also enhance the credibility and reliability of what we do. Consider this a kind of friendly push in that direction," says Yl-Anttila.
13.2.
13.2.
13.2.
13.2.
13.2.
Read more here:
Chief editors: Media not a channel for personal freedom of speech - YLE News
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on Chief editors: Media not a channel for personal freedom of speech – YLE News
Evangelicals: Religious Freedom and Refugees Top Priorities for This Year – CBN News
Posted: at 11:13 am
A survey of evangelical leaders showed the most important public policy issues that evangelicals should focus on in 2017 are religious freedom and immigration/refugees.
The findings are from the year-end Evangelical Leaders Survey, a monthly poll of the board of directors of the National Association of Evangelicals.
"If the first weeks under the new administration are any indication, evangelical leaders accurately identified key policy issues and pressure points for the year," said Leith Anderson, NAE president.
"We have a great opportunity to stand for religious freedom for all, and on behalf of refugees and immigrants in our communities," he said.
Specifically, the survey showed 63 percent considered religious freedom the most important public policy issue for evangelicals to address this year.
"Evangelicals have been pushed back on our heels by accusations of hatred and bigotry," said Randall Bach, president of Open Bible Churches. "We cannot submit to such intimidation but should lovingly and assertively work toward policies and implementation of policies that respect and protect, rather than deteriorate First Amendment protections."
Recently, in the last week alone, more than 100,000 people signed an American Family Association petition, calling on President Donald Trump to make religious freedom a top priority by signing an executive order to protect that liberty.
"Religious freedom continues to be of paramount importance to many Americans," said AFA President Tim Wildmon. "With evangelical Christians being so instrumental in the election of Donald Trump, many have been buoyed by the great strides he has made so far, just weeks after the inauguration."
"AFA wants to ensure that the president and his administration will keep this crucial issue front and center, especially as many Americans have paid a hefty price for fighting for their religious liberties, such as losing their businesses, savings and more," he continued.
"Now, we urge President Trump to keep his momentum and his promise to protect people of faith from religious discrimination," Wildmon said.
Luke Goodrich, deputy general counsel for Becket, a non-profit law firm dedicated to defending religious freedom, said regardless of who's in power, that freedom is always at risk.
"The government is always tempted to trample on religious freedom, and not just at the federal level, but also at the state and local level," he told CBN News.
"And it's... critically important to remain vigilant, defending not just religious freedom for evangelicals and other Christians, but defending religious freedom for all because if one group doesn't have religious freedom, then nobody has religious freedom," he continued.
Goodrich said one very important religious freedom case before the U.S. Supreme Court that evangelicals need to follow is Trinity Lutheran Church v. Pauley. The church sued the state of Missouri, accusing it of discrimination related to a state grant program.
Another religious freedom case that he believes should be on the radar of evangelicals is Gaylor v. Lew.
"Freedom from Religion Foundation, an atheist organization, has challenged the parsonage allowance as unconstitutional," Goodrich explained. "And bottom line -- if their lawsuit succeeds, churches all across the country and ministers all across the country will face over $1 billion in new taxes every year."
Following religious freedom, 46 percent of the year-end Evangelical Leaders Survey respondents pointed to immigration/refugees as the top public policy issue.
Fast forward to now, and thousands of evangelical pastors and leaders have signed a letter asking President Trump to reconsider his controversial executive order on refugees.
Jenny Yang, Vice President of Policy and Advocacy on Refugee Resettlement for World Relief, said the increase in signers "demonstrates how many evangelical churches want to welcome refugees." World Relief works with churches to settle refugees across the country and coordinated the letter.
The executive order bans all persons from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S. for ninety days and suspends all refugee processing for 120 days. It bars refugees from Syria indefinitely.
"America is pretty much a nation of immigrants and their descendants," Anderson said. "More than any country in the world we should be known for our welcome and treatment of refugees and immigrants in our generation."
Not every Christian leader, though, has been a critic of the president's executive order.
Evangelist Franklin Graham, the son of Billy Graham, told The Huffington Post that it's "not a biblical command for the country to let everyone in who wants to come."
According to CNN, the Rev. Robert Jeffress, pastor of First Baptist Church of Dallas and a member of Trump's evangelical advisory board, said Christians endure more persecution than other faiths, and in line with the president's pledge, should receive preferential treatment.
Russell Moore, president of The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, advocated for an even-handed approach in a letter he wrote to the president.
"Achieving the right balance between compassion toward refugees one of the most vulnerable groups of people among us and protection of Americans is crucial if the United States is to remain a model for freedom around the world," Moore wrote.
"It is one thing to debate whether the vetting process is adequate. It is quite another to seek to potentially turn our backs on Syrian refugees permanently," he continued.
The Evangelical Leaders Survey also showed that leaders considered poverty, abortion, racial tension, court nominations, marriage/family and health care as other important public policy issues.
View original post here:
Evangelicals: Religious Freedom and Refugees Top Priorities for This Year - CBN News
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on Evangelicals: Religious Freedom and Refugees Top Priorities for This Year – CBN News
Remembering Minnesota’s Freedom Riders – MinnPost
Posted: at 11:13 am
Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society
The Minnesota Freedom Riders on July 26, 1961, after their return to Minnesota. Pictured are (left to right) Marvin Davidov, Zev Aelony, David Morton, Eugene Uphoff (with guitar), Claire O'Connor, and Robert Baum. Photographed by the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
The Freedom Rides of 1961 began with thirteen riders traveling on two buses through the South. Their goal was to end race segregation in interstate bus travel. The Rides grew to over fifty journeys and other actions, and attracted 436 Riders; six of them were from Minnesota.
On June 11, 1961, six young Minnesotans took a Greyhound bus from Memphis to Jackson, Mississippi. All were white, but at the Jackson bus terminal they went straight to the waiting room marked colored. Police arrested them at the lunch counter inside on a charge of breach of peace. After staying in jail overnight, they were tried, convicted, fined, and sentenced to four months in jail.
They were Freedom Riders, part of the project led by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), to take nonviolent action against racial segregation in the South. The Freedom Rides had their origin in the Journey of Reconciliation led by CORE and Bayard Rustin in 1947. Rustin and company took a bus journey through the Upper South, disobeying Jim Crow laws and customs.
Then cameBrown v. Board of Education(1954), the Montgomery bus boycott (1956), the Greensboro lunch counter sit-in (1960), and many similar events. In 1961, CORE, now led by James Farmer, decided to try again.
They started with an experiment: thirteen people traveling by bus from Washington, D.C. to New Orleans, May 417. In Alabama, that journey exploded, with the bus set afire, riders beaten, and mobs abetted by the local police. The violence did not produce the desired effect; instead, the Freedom Rides multiplied.
The Minnesota Freedom Riders were part of a second, expanded stage of the effort. Four were students at the University of Minnesota: Zev Aelony (the organizer and the one most deeply read in the theory and practice of non-violence), Claire OConnor, Robert Baum, and Eugene Uphoff. Marvin Davidov, twenty-nine, was beginning a long career as an activist. The sixth Minnesotan was David Morton, whom Aelony called the universitys resident beatnik.
CORE had made Jackson, a crucial Southern state capital, a special target. Fourteen groups of Freedom Riders had preceded the Minnesotans to Jacksonnine by bus, five more by air and rail. All 104 of those Riders had been arrested. They were foot soldiers in a battle of attrition between Freedom Ride leadership and the State of Mississippi. The organizers hoped to overwhelm local law enforcement with numbers. In this case, the authorities answered not with violence but with process: trials, maximum sentences, jail terms, appeals bonds, and court dates.
After a few days in jail, the Minnesota men were transferred to the state penitentiary at Parchman, a prison famous for its harshness. They were held at first in maximum security, two to a six-by-nine cell, with no exercise, no visitors, and only Bibles to read. When it was hot, there was no ventilation; on cool nights the guards chilled them with fans. When they sang, the wardens took away their mattresses. Later, as more Riders were arrested, prison authorities moved them to dormitories.
OConnor spent about two weeks in jail. She was then transferred to Parchmans womens section, where she endured verbal abuse and a body-cavity search. She was released on July 3, the Minnesota men on July 24. All appealed their convictions and posted appeal bonds to pursue the strategy of stressing the Mississippi justice system. To stress them back, the court in Jackson required all Riders (by now 186) to return for new trialstwo a day, starting August 15. A long standoff seemed likely.
For the organizers, salvation of a sort came on September 21, 1961, when the Interstate Commerce Commission issued an order forbidding race discrimination on interstate buses and supporting facilities. This was victory; but it came from Washington, not Jackson. The Freedom Rides shifted focus to North Carolina (where Baum and Morton participated briefly) and ended in early December.
The Minnesotans got on with their lives and educations. Uphoff eventually became a physician, OConnor a community organizer, Aelony a businessman, and Baum a University of Minnesota bus driver. Davidov continued working as a political activist. Morton, according to Davidov, became Minnesotas first hippie.
For more information on this topic, check outthe original entry on MNopedia.
See original here:
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on Remembering Minnesota’s Freedom Riders – MinnPost
Apple’s Eddy Cue says technology companies have a responsibility to combat fake news – Recode
Posted: at 11:13 am
Apples senior vice president of software and services, Eddy Cue, says that since most people are receiving their news online through devices, technology companies have a special responsibility to the people who depend on them to receive that news.
We wanted Apple News to be available to everyone, but we wanted to vet and be sure that the Apple News providers are legitimate, said Cue at the Code Media conference at the Ritz-Carlton in Dana Point, Calif., this evening. Were very concerned about all the clickbait and how that's driving a lot of the news coverage.
All of us in technology and services own a responsibility for it. We dont have all the answers by any means. We need to work on it, Cue said.
On Friday, Apple CEO Tim Cook said in an interview that fake news is killing peoples minds and called for a a massive campaign with technology companies to get to work to fix it.
Read the original here:
Apple's Eddy Cue says technology companies have a responsibility to combat fake news - Recode
Posted in Technology
Comments Off on Apple’s Eddy Cue says technology companies have a responsibility to combat fake news – Recode
Parents and technology How much is too much? – WGBA-TV
Posted: at 11:13 am
GREEN BAY -
Nearly every person, even children have smart phones. Most of the time, experts talk about kids spending too much time on their phones, but what about parents?
As parents we've all been there and felt guilty after spending too much time on our phones while the kids are around.
But there are things you can do to break free from the technology and create a happier family life.
Emily Yonke and her husband are both teachers. They are parents to two little boys. They understand how difficult it can be juggling kids, work and technology. Emily said she spends about an hour a day on the phone, talking with family or on social media.
After a while with Harrison, I started to realize I was on it too much, said Emily.
She noticed times where she wasn't in the moment. Its a guilt many parents feel, her husband did as well.
Why aren't we talking and winding down together? Why is it winding down on your phone? said Emily.
And the Yonkes aren't alone.
You say okay, is it good that for an hour every night, I'm like this on my phone when I have my children around me doing homework, asking me questions, and I'm totally tuning them out, said Dr. Lynn Wagner, an Integrated Lifestyle Physician with BayCare Clinic.
Dr. Wagner says she sees it every day, even in her own life.
I'll put my phone in the trunk, or make a pact when I get home, Ill silence my phone and not look at it, said Dr. Wagner.
She uses Facebook for her business and is constantly checking email from patients.
Dr. Wagner said technology can actually become an addiction.
The first thing they do when they wake up is go through their Facebook or social media, and check their e-mails, said Dr. Wagner.
Using your phone, being on social media -- the comments, the likes -- it gives you a high.
If you're happier on technology on Facebook, or social media platforms than you are in your own life, it should just be an awakening for you that something needs to change in your life, said Dr. Wagner.
So as parents -- even grandparents -- adults in general, what do we do?
It's not going away so I think it's learning how to work with it and make it work for you, said Dr. Wagner.
She explains the first step is do not feel guilty, it's okay. Then, take a look at your habits and then structure your time. Start small. Set aside maybe 30 minutes in the morning 30 at night and dedicate that time to your phone. Otherwise, its out of sight, out of mind.
That's exactly what they Younkes did.
We put them back in the office area over there just to not have it as a distraction with the children around, said Emily.
They came up with the rule about a month ago. Every night after work, their phones go in a box in the office.
At first, Emily says it was difficult.
We both break the habit once in a while, she said.
But now, it's normal and makes their family happier.
Being able to watch them and realize, they're more entertaining than technology is, said Emily.
Exactly what Dr. Wagner talks about -- life is more than technology.
Human connection is so critical for health, for well being, for having a long happy life, said Dr. Wagner.
Jena Richter Landers, a Social Media Specialist at UW-Green Bay also gave us some tips to cut out some technology. She suggests doing things the old school way. Instead of using your phone as an alarm, start using an alarm clock. That'll stop you from looking at your phone first thing in the morning and getting sucked in right off the bat.
She also said use a grocery list, instead of the notepad in your phone. That will stop you from picking up the device so frequently.
You can also delete apps so you physically have to open them in a browser and youll be aware of the choices youre making.
Landers also said you can take disconnected breaks while on vacation.
Read the rest here:
Posted in Technology
Comments Off on Parents and technology How much is too much? – WGBA-TV
A look at North Korea’s missile launches and technology – ABC News
Posted: at 11:13 am
In the wake of North Korea's most recent ballistic missile test the Pentagon is strongly condemning the North Korean program as "a clear grave threat to our national security."
North Korea has continued to test a variety of mid-range and long range ballistic missiles in defiance of United Nations Security Council resolutions barring the development of such technologies.
North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency described the missile launched Sunday as a Pukguksong-2 missile capable of carrying a nuclear weapon. While that claim cannot be proven, the test indicated that North Korea is making progress in using solid booster rockets to launch its newer missiles.
Though the missile was never determined to be a threat to the United States, Davis said the U.S. military has the means of defending itself and its allies from a North Korean missile threat.
Here is a look at North Korea's ballistic missile technologies and the progress they've made in recent years.
What was launched this weekend?
A U.S. official told ABC News that, this weekend, North Korea launched a solid rocket fueled KN-11 missile that is described as an intermediate range missile than can travel 1,400 nautical miles.
It was the first land-based test of a missile designed to be launched from a submarine. It was successfully tested in an underwater launch last year on August 23, though not from a submarine.
According to the official, the KN-11 missile was airborne for 14 minutes on a vertical trajectory and a distance of 310 miles into the Sea of Japan.
The two successful launches indicate North Korea is making progress in developing solid rocket fuel technology, a more stable propellant than the liquid rocket fuel North Korea has used in its other medium and long-range missiles.
The use of solid rocket fuels means North Korea will need less time to prepare making it difficult for American satellites to track potential launches.
Improving Missile Technology
Early this year North Korean leader Kim Jong Un announced that his country was close to testing an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). No such test has occurred yet, but the announcement marks North Korea's growing confidence in its missile programs. North Korea has stated publicly that its goal is to develop a miniaturized nuclear warhead small enough to be placed atop a ballistic missile capable of striking South Korea, Japan or the United States.
North Korea conducted 21 missile tests in 2016, the most significant being launch tests of the mobile launched Musudan mid-range missile and the KN-11 submarine launched missile.
The liquid fueled Mususdan was tested for the first time in 2016, but only one of eight launches was a success with the rest ending as spectacular failures.
The solid rocket fueled KN-11 is a missile designed to be launched from a submarine, but this weekend's test now shows the missile can also be launched from land. The success of the rocket fueled system advances North Korea's capabilities and could make future launches harder to detect.
The KN-08 and KN-14 missiles are larger mobile launched ICBM's potentially capable of reaching the continental United States, but North Korea has yet to test the missiles that have only been seen on parade in Pyongyang.
But North Korea has already demonstrated success in developing long-range rocket technology. Last February, the launch of an Unha 3 successful placed a satellite in orbit. American officials have said the satellite tests are used by North Korea to develop its long range ballistic capabilities.
Excerpt from:
A look at North Korea's missile launches and technology - ABC News
Posted in Technology
Comments Off on A look at North Korea’s missile launches and technology – ABC News
Is Magic Leap Lying About Its Acid Trip Technology? – Vanity Fair
Posted: at 11:13 am
Magic Leap C.E.O. Rony Abovitz.
By Brian Ach/Getty Images.
Despite raising more than $1 billion since its 2011 founding, augmented reality start-up Magic Leap still doesnt have much to show for itself. What the company promises, a concept called cinematic reality, described by C.E.O. Rony Abovitz as a combination of virtual reality and an acid trip, does sound magical. But unlike Microsofts virtual-reality headset, the Hololens, which is already available to developers for $3,000, Magic Leaps product is reportedly still years away from market. On Friday, Business Insider published a leaked photo of what appears to be a prototype of Magic Leaps technology, featuring a bulky backpack computer connected to a headset. The photo seemed to confirm an earlier report that Magic Leap is having a hard time shrinking down its technology to fit into a consumer-size device.
Magic Leap C.E.O. Rony Abovitz pushed back on the report over the weekend, explaining on his companys Web site that its technology is still in an early testing phase and promising fans that its eventual product will enable your digital and physical worlds to come together in a very personal, social, and magical way. The leaked photo, he claimed, did not show its prototype but rather a test rig used to collect spacial data for its machine learning.
Abovitzs explanation contradicts the report by Business Insider, whose source told the publication that the bulky, poorly constructed device shown in the leaked image was, in fact, the real wearable prototype, a more finished version of which would be shown to the Magic Leap board this week.
Magic Leap has long faced questions about its much-hyped technology and allegations that it has misled supporters and investors about its progress. Last year, former Magic Leap employees told The Information that Magic Leap had over-promised and would likely under-deliver. According to The Information, the technology behind Magic Leaps initial prototypenicknamed The Beast and described as a rectangular, shoulder-width box that people could look into and see computer-generated images projected over the real worldlikely wouldnt be used in whatever product the company releases commercially.
Not everyone is concerned that Magic Leap hasnt yet finalized its prototype, despite working on its device for about six years. Andreessen Horowitzs Benedict Evans, who says he has seen Magic Leaps technology, joined Abovitz on Twitter over the weekend to defend the start-up. There are a bunch of great people at great companies working on A.R., he tweeted. No one is shipping a final product yet. Evans, whose firm invested in Magic Leap during its Series B fund raise, also dismissed critics of Magic Leaps technology, and added that gloating about any negative news (real or fake) about a start-up is just as bad as uncritical praise. Maybe worse.
Andreessen Horowitz partner Kyle Russell also tweeted a picture of the iPhones prototype, to argue that even Apples flagship device appeared unsightly in the initial phases of its development process.
Unlike the iPhone, however, Magic Leap has been hyped for years by the tech press and by Magic Leaps own marketing team, without plans to launch any time soon. In 2015, the company published a marketing video on YouTube called Just Another Day in the Office, offering a mind-blowing, first-person demo to show off its tech. Magic Leap, which is valued at $4.5 billion, later conceded that its too-good-to-be-true video was just a collection of special effects, created by Weta Workshop, a team based in New Zealand. The video, former employees told The Information last year, was aspirational, and intended to mislead the public about the companys progress.
Sundar Pichai, Googles C.E.O., was born in Chennai, India, immigrating to the U.S. to attend Stanford in 1993.
Alphabet president and Google co-founder Sergey Brin was born in Moscow and lived in the Soviet Union until he was six, immigrating with his family to the United States in 1979.
Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX and Tesla, was born and raised in South Africa. He obtained Canadian citizenship in 1989 and briefly attended college at Queen's University in Ontario. He transferred to University of Pennsylvania, in part because such a move would allow him to get an H-1B visa and stay in the U.S. after college.
Safra Catz, who served as co-C.E.O. of Oracle, was born in Israel. She resigned from her executive role in December after joining Donald Trumps presidential transition team.
Trump supporter Peter Thiel, who has expressed support for the presidents executive action restricting immigration from several predominantly Muslim countries, is an immigrant himself. Before he co-founded PayPal and made one of the earliest large investments in Facebook, Thiel moved with his family from Germany, where he was born. In 2011, he also became a citizen of New Zealand, adding a third passport to his growing collection.
Born in Hyderabad, India, Microsoft C.E.O. Satya Nadella came to the U.S. to study computer science, joining Microsoft in 1992.
Garrett Camp helped co-found Uber. He was born in Alberta, Canada, and now resides in the Bay Area.
PreviousNext
Sundar Pichai, Googles C.E.O., was born in Chennai, India, immigrating to the U.S. to attend Stanford in 1993.
By Simon Dawson/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
Alphabet president and Google co-founder Sergey Brin was born in Moscow and lived in the Soviet Union until he was six, immigrating with his family to the United States in 1979.
By FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images.
Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX and Tesla, was born and raised in South Africa. He obtained Canadian citizenship in 1989 and briefly attended college at Queen's University in Ontario. He transferred to University of Pennsylvania, in part because such a move would allow him to get an H-1B visa and stay in the U.S. after college.
By Justin Chin/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
Safra Catz, who served as co-C.E.O. of Oracle, was born in Israel. She resigned from her executive role in December after joining Donald Trumps presidential transition team.
By David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
The founder of eBay, Pierre Omidyar, was born in France to Iranian parents. He immigrated to the U.S. in the 1970s.
By Ramin Talaie/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang moved from Taiwan to San Jose, California, in 1978, at the age of 10.
by Scott Olson/Getty Images.
Brothers John Collison and Patrick Collison, twenty-something college dropouts who emigrated from Ireland, co-founded Stripe, a $9.2 billion payments start-up.
By Jerome Favre/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
Adam Neumann, raised on an Israeli kibbutz, moved to the U.S. in 2001, after briefly serving in the Israeli army as a navy doctor. Now hes the chief executive of the $16.9 billion New York-based WeWork, which sublets space to individuals and companies.
by Noam Galai/Getty Images.
The co-founder and C.E.O. of health insurance start-up Oscar, Mario Schlosser, came to the United States from Germany as an international student, receiving his M.B.A. from Harvard.
By Kholood Eid/Bloomberg/Getty Images.
Trump supporter Peter Thiel, who has expressed support for the presidents executive action restricting immigration from several predominantly Muslim countries, is an immigrant himself. Before he co-founded PayPal and made one of the earliest large investments in Facebook, Thiel moved with his family from Germany, where he was born. In 2011, he also became a citizen of New Zealand, adding a third passport to his growing collection.
By Roger Askew/Rex/Shutterstock.
Born in Hyderabad, India, Microsoft C.E.O. Satya Nadella came to the U.S. to study computer science, joining Microsoft in 1992.
By Stephen Brashear/Getty Images.
Garrett Camp helped co-found Uber. He was born in Alberta, Canada, and now resides in the Bay Area.
By Justin Lane/EPA/Rex/Shutterstock.
Go here to see the original:
Is Magic Leap Lying About Its Acid Trip Technology? - Vanity Fair
Posted in Technology
Comments Off on Is Magic Leap Lying About Its Acid Trip Technology? – Vanity Fair







