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Daily Archives: June 16, 2017
Resistance and Pride in 2017: How activists are commemorating Pride month – ThinkProgress
Posted: June 16, 2017 at 3:36 pm
On June 10, The Capital Pride Alliance hosted its annual pride parade in Washington, D.C., but, for some in the LGBTQ community, the parade is a far cry from the origins its meant to be celebrating.
Annual pride parades were born out of the 1969 Stonewall Riots, when the police raided the gay club Stonewall Inn and patrons refused to leave. Marches and protests began across the country, commemorating the riots and demanding equal rights and protection under the law.
But many feel Capital Pride Alliance is ignoring its roots. Those frustrated with the annual parade found different ways to commemorate the event. Meet No Justice No Pride, Queer and Trans Night of Healing, and The Equality March.
PROTESTORS: Down down with deportation, up up with liberation!
EMMELIA TALARICO: Theres not a lot of celebrating going on these days. Theres not a lot of things to celebrate about, our rights are being stripped away from us, like as a trans woman, I never really had rights.
DAVID BRUINOOGE: As a cis gay white male of privilege, I feel a lot of people in that same category maybe thought the fight for gay rights and LGBTQ rights was over after gay marriage. And it couldnt be farther from the truth.
LOURDES ASHLEY HUNTER: Pride has never appealed to me, it was never a place for me; as a trans person, as a disabled person, as a black person. It didnt celebrate images that reflected what I look like.
TALARICO: Were building all of the art here. We have some banners, some signage.
DREW AMBROGI: No Justice No Prides belief is that the backbone of the LGBT community is marginalized LGBT folks, is trans women of color. For too long the movement, the LGBT movement has kind of this trickle down approach to rights that once the most wealthy LGBT folks get equality, then theyll help the rest of us. And they got their gay marriage rights and they kind of said all along, once we get gay marriage well fight for everyone. And its been a couple years now, we dont really see that happening and so were going to demand that it happens.
PROTESTORS: We are unstoppable! Another world is possible!
TALARICO: We have three different blockades. Well be doing a hard lockdown, and a hard lockdown is where you and other people who youre taking action with physically lock down using equipment. Theyll be using chains as well as using lockboxes.
PROTESTORS: Its our history, dont deny it! Stonewall was a trans riot!
TALARICO: People are frustrated.
PROTESTORS: Hey hey, ho ho, these racist cops have got to go!
TALARICO: Us going after capital pride is us going after institutional power in this city and trying to transfer that, from those who have always had it, to those that actually need it.
AMBROGI: It really is catching on and resonating with I think what we see is a longstanding resentment of these organizations that put on these festivals with the primary goal of bringing in corporate money, selling things to the LGBT community. In this political climate we really feel like we can actually make our voices heard and get folks fired up about demanding something thats better.
PROTESTORS: Capital Pride is a sham!
SHAREESE CARMELLA MONE: Im a trans woman of color first. Im a trans woman first. I am human, first.
HUNTER: The queer and trans night of healing came together after a response from the community to have a space where folks could remember that pride was born out of resistance.
HUNTER: They wasnt marching because bitch, they couldnt wear what they wanted to wear. They was tired of getting beat up!
HUNTER: Its an opportunity for us to honor our ancestors, and honor those who have given their lives so that we can be here today. Its a fun event, its not just some white gay skinny cis heteronormative recreation of debauchery and mayhem. I mean you can have some of that too, but lets not forget that trans women of color have lost their lives, have fought in the streets, have fought the police with their heels, with bricks, with bottles so that we can march today, so lets just not forget that.
EQUALITY MARCH: Love, not hate, makes America great!
BRUINOOGE: I didnt want to celebrate this year with sponsorship. You know, banners everywhere. It didnt feel right to me at this time of year.
EQUALITY MARCH: No Justice, No peace!
BRUINOOGE: I felt it was necessary for our community to march. This is the most diverse national co-chairs of any march on Washington from the LGBT community. And that was intentional. We wanted those voices in leadership positions.
EQUALITY MARCH: Show me what democracy looks like! This is what democracy looks like.
BRUINOOGE: With the political landscape that we live in right now and the issues that need to be addressed within our community, it felt like it needed to be stripped-down, bare-bones, grassroots, harking back to the original Pride.
SARA RAMIREZ: As we march today, I want to take a moment to remember the transgender, bisexual, gay, lesbian, and queer lives that cannot be with us here today.
BRUINOOGE: There are issues that affect our trans community, racial injustice, immigration injustice, these are all issues that affect our community. And they dont get highlighted.
DR IMANI WOODY: We are not invisible! We are not invisible!
BRUINOOGE: Hopefully, on Sunday, we inspire people to go home and use this mass mobilization and educate them to take action themselves in their own local communities.
TALARICO: I truly believe that pride should be a protest. Even to this day, theres a lot to protest in our community. Even if Obama was still in power, there would still be a lot to protest in our community.
BRUINOOGE: This is a way to activate us, to mobilize us, personally, for me, to participate in democracy and help these issues get out.
HUNTER: Pride is not supposed to be a celebration, its supposed to be a remembrance of the things that we have overcome and the fight that we still have for all of us to live unapologetically in our truths.
AMBROGI: If we really wanted to talk about what it means to support LGBTQ people, that would mean starting with the folks whose needs are the greatest. It would mean really supporting the folks who need support, not just doing the easy thing so that you can be celebrated as an ally.
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Elon Musk Publishes His Vision for Mars Travel – Popular Mechanics
Posted: at 3:35 pm
Elon Musk has put his manifesto on the future for spaceflight up online. While it's the same speech he gave last year as the keynote speaker at the 67th International Astronautical Congress, its online publication in the journal New Space allows for easy searching and a way to hold Musk and SpaceX accountable.
"In my view, publishing this paper provides not only an opportunity for the spacefaring community to read the SpaceX vision in print with all the charts in context, but also serves as a valuable archival reference for future studies and planning," New Space editor-in-chief Scott Hubbard said in a statement.
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If you don't recall the details of Musk's vision for space flight and Martian cities, titled "Making Humans a Multiplanetary Species," it revolves around reusable rockets and spaceships. A rocket would take tankers of rocket fuel into space, where the spaceships that would take people to Mars would be waiting in orbit. "Over time, there were would be many spaceships," Musk says. "You would ultimately have upwards of 1,000 or more spaceships waiting in orbit. Hence, the Mars Colonial fleet would depart en masse."
The speech gets into the details of the Raptor engine, which Musks says will have "the highest chamber pressure engine of any kind ever built, and probably the highest thrust-to-weight." He talks about rocket boosters, liquid oxygen tanks, propellant plants, and numerous other crucial factors needed to even imagine a flight to Mars. We gave it a close reading at the time.
He also discusses pricing, which is a good thing to have on paper. "Right now," he says "we are estimating about $140,000 per ton for the trips to Mars. If a person plus their luggage is less than that, taking into account food consumption and life support, the cost of moving to Mars could ultimately drop below $100,000."
Ideally, Musk wants to start making these flights in ten years. SpaceX has delivered on reusable rockets and testing has already begun on the Raptor. There's a long way left to go before we start naming Martian cities, like figuring out how not to get cancer on the flight. But at least we can measure Musk's many promises in writing now.
You can download the paper here.
Source: Space
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These 7 Disruptive Technologies Could Be Worth Trillions of Dollars – Singularity Hub
Posted: at 3:34 pm
Scientists, technologists, engineers, and visionaries are building the future. Amazing things are in the pipeline. Its a big deal. But you already knew all that. Such speculation is common. Whats less common? Scale.
How big is big?
Silicon Valley, Silicon Alley, Silicon Dock, all of the Silicons around the world, they are dreaming the dream. They are innovating, Catherine Wood said at Singularity Universitys Exponential Finance in New York. We are sizing the opportunity. That's what we do.
Wood is founder and CEO of ARK Investment Management, a research and investment company focused on the growth potential of todays disruptive technologies. Prior to ARK, she served as CIO of Global ThematicStrategies at AllianceBernstein for 12 years.
We believe innovation is key to growth, Wood said. We are not focused on the past. We are focused on the future. We think there are tremendous opportunities in the public marketplace because this shift towards passive [investing] has created a lot of risk aversion and tremendous inefficiencies.
In a new research report, released this week, ARK took a look at seven disruptive technologies, and put a number on just how tremendous they are. Heres what they found.
(Check out ARKs website and free report, Big Ideas of 2017, for more numbers, charts, and detail.)
Deep learning is a subcategory of machine learning which is itself a subcategory of artificial intelligence. Deep learning is the source of much of the hype surrounding AI today. (You know you may be in a hype bubble when ads tout AI on Sunday golf commercial breaks.)
Behind the hype, however, big tech companies are pursuing deep learningto do very practical things. And whereas the internet, which unleashed trillions in market value, transformedseveralindustriesnews, entertainment, advertising, etc.deep learning will work its way intoeven more, Wood said.
As deep learning advances, it shouldautomate and improve technology, transportation, manufacturing, healthcare, finance, and more. And as is often the case with emerging technologies, it may form entirely new businesses we have yet to imagine.
Bill Gates has said a breakthrough in machine learning would be worth 10 Microsofts. Microsoft is $550 to $600 billion, Wood said. We think deep learning is going to be twice that. We think [it] could approach $17 trillion in market capwhich would be 35 Amazons.
Wood didnt mince words about a future when cars drive themselves.
This is the biggest change that the automotive industry has ever faced, she said.
Todays automakers have a global market capitalization of a trillion dollars. Meanwhile, mobility-as-a-service companies as a whole (think ridesharing) are valued around $115 billion. If this number took into account expectations of a driverless future, itd be higher.
The mobility-as-a-service market, which will slash the cost of "point-to-point" travel, couldbe worth more than todays automakers combined, Wood said. Twice as much, in fact. As gross sales grow to something like $10 trillion in the early 2030s, her firm thinks some 20% of that will go to platform providers. It could be a $2 trillion opportunity.
Wood said a handful of companies will dominate the market, and Tesla is well positioned to be one of those companies. They are developing both the hardware, electric cars, and the software, self-driving algorithms. And although analysts tend to look at them as a just an automaker right now, thats not all theyll be down the road.
We think if [Tesla] got even 5% of this global market for autonomous taxi networks, it should be worth another $100 billion today, Wood said.
3D printing has become part of mainstream consciousness thanks, mostly, to the prospect of desktop printers for consumer prices. But these are imperfect, and the dream of an at-home replicator still eludes us. The manufacturing industry, however, is much closer to using 3D printers at scale.
Not long ago, we wrote about Carbons partnership with Adidas to mass-produce shoe midsoles. This is significant because, whereas industrial 3D printing has focused on prototyping to date, improvingcost, quality, and speed are makingitviable for finished products.
According to ARK, 3D printing may grow into a $41 billion market by 2020, and Wood noteda McKinsey forecast of as much as $490 billion by 2025. McKinsey will be right if 3D printing actually becomes a part of the industrial production process, so end-use parts, Wood said.
According to ARK, the cost of genome editing has fallen 28x to 52x (depending on reagents) in the last four years. CRISPR is the technique leading the genome editing revolution, dramatically cutting time and cost while maintaining editing efficiency. Despite its potential, Wood said she isnt hearing enough about it from investors yet.
There are roughly 10,000 monogenic or single-gene diseases. Only 5% are treatable today, she said. ARK believes treating these diseases is worth an annual $70 billion globally. Other areas of interest include stem cell therapy research, personalized medicine, drug development, agriculture, biofuels, and more.
Still,the big names in this areaIntellia, Editas, and CRISPRarent on the radar.
You can see if a company in this space has a strong IP position, as Genentech did in 1980, then the growth rates can be enormous, Wood said. Again, you don't hear these names, and that's quite interesting to me. We think there are very low expectations in that space.
By 2020, 75% of the world will own a smartphone, according to ARK. Amid smartphones' many uses, mobile payments will be one of the most impactful. Coupled with better security (biometrics) and wider acceptance (NFC and point-of-sale), ARK thinks mobile transactions couldgrow 15x, from $1 trillion today to upwards of $15 trillion by2020.
In addition, to making sharing economy transactions more frictionless, they are generally keyto financial inclusion in emergingand developed markets, ARK says. And big emerging markets, such as India and China, are at the forefront, thanks to favorable regulations.
Asia is leading the charge here, Wood said. You look at companies like Tencent and Alipay. They are really moving very quickly towards mobile and actually showing us the way.
Robots arent just for auto manufacturers anymore. Driven by continued cost declines and easier programming, more businessesare adopting robots.Amazons robot workforce in warehouses has grown from 1,000 to nearly 50,000 since 2014. And they have never laid off anyone, other than for performance reasons, in their distribution centers, Wood said.
But she understands fears over lost jobs.
This is only the beginning of a big round of automation driven by cheaper, smarter, safer, and more flexible robots. She agrees there will be a lot of displacement. Still, some commentatorsoverlook associated productivity gains. By 2035, Wood said US GDP couldbe $12 trillion more than it would have been without robotics and automationthats a $40 trillion economy instead of a $28 trillion economy.
This is the history of technology. Productivity. New products and services. It is our job as investors to figure out where that $12 trillion is, Wood said. We can't even imagine it right now. We couldn't imagine what the internet was going to do with us in the early '90s.
Blockchain-enabled cryptoassets, such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Steem, have caused more than a stir in recent years. In addition to Bitcoin, there are now some 700 cryptoassets of various shapes and hues. Bitcoin still rules the roostwitha market value of nearly $40 billion, up from just $3 billion two years ago, according to ARK. But its only half the total.
This market is nascent. There are a lot of growing pains taking place right now in the crypto world, but the promise is there, Wood said. Its a very hot space.
Like all young markets, ARK says, cryptoasset markets are characterized by enthusiasm, uncertainty, and speculation. The firms blockchain products lead, Chris Burniske, uses Twitterwhich is where he says the communitycongregatesto take the temperature. In a recent Twitter poll, 62% of respondents said they believed the markets total value would exceed a trillion dollars in 10 years. In a followup, more focused on thetrillion-plus crowd, 35% favored$1$5 trillion, 17% guessed $5$10 trillion, and 34% chose $10+ trillion.
Looking pastthe speculation, Wood believes theres at least one bigarea blockchain and cryptoassets are poised to break into: the $500-billion, fee-based business of sending money across borders known as remittances.
If you look at the Philippines-to-South Korean corridor, what you're seeing already is that Bitcoin is 20% of the remittances market, Wood said. The migrant workers who are transmitting currency, they don't know that Bitcoin is what's enabling such a low-fee transaction. It's the rails, effectively. They just see the fiat transfer. We think that that's going to be a very exciting market.
Stock media provided by NomadSoul1/Pond5.com
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New jobs headed to Ascension Parish with opening of industrial packaging facility – KLFY
Posted: at 3:32 pm
GEISMAR, La. (WAFB) New jobs area headed to Ascension Parish ata 40,000-square-foot packaging and logisticsfacility.
The strong business climate, strategic supply chain and powerful workforce programs Louisiana offers made this decision a logical one for our company,said Mauser USA President and CEO Glenn Frommer.
During the projects initial phase, 28 direct jobs will be created. They will average an annual salary of more than $58,000, plus benefits. Officials say the project has the potential to expand with a second phase that would yield 19 additional jobs.
Ascension Parish is pleased to welcome Mauser USA as our newest industrial citizen, Parish President KennyMatassasaid. We appreciate Mausers commitment to Ascension Parish and look forward to working with the company in the months and years ahead.
The Louisiana Economic Development began working on this project in December 2015. The state offered an incentive package to further attract the company to make a $10 million capital investment.
Mausers selection of Louisiana and Geismar signals their recognition of our growth in this sector and the importance of ramping up customer service to support the most important manufacturing markets in America, said Gov. John Bel Edwards. We welcome one of the worlds industrial packaging leaders to our state and are grateful for their creation of new career opportunities in Louisiana.
The facility will be located on La. 30, between Interstate 10 and River Road.
CLICK HERE if you are interested in jobs at the facility.
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Ascension Council splits the difference on property tax rates for 2017 – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:32 pm
GONZALES The Ascension Parish Council took another stab Thursday at "rolling forward" property tax rates for parish government after the state Legislative Auditor's Office refused to certify those rates last year.
However parish officials only took a partial step toward recouping what they missed out on last year due to the state's action.
The state auditor's finding last year, which stemmed from a procedural error still being fought about in court, meant that for the first time since at least 2010, millage rates for parish government were not at the levels that they had been in the prior year.
That meant parish homeowners and businesses got a small, unexpected tax break last year if their property tax assessments also didn't increase during the 2016 reassessment year.
Depending where one lived or owned a business and what special taxing districts applied to them, property tax rates for parish government in 2016 were between 1 mill to a little more than 2.3 mills below what they had been in 2015.
That equated to a savings of $12.50 to $28.75 on the tax bill for a $200,000 home with homestead exemption.
But, with a few members airing concerns this week about appearing to raise taxes after last year's unanticipated break, the council agreed to roll some tax rates forward but held others back to the lower adjusted rates in place in 2016.
Still, even with all the maneuvering, residents will pay a slightly higher combined rate in 2017 than they did in 2016, though still lower than what parish officials had consistently kept the combined millage rates in 2015 and several years prior.
Depending where homeowners live, the parish government collected between 19 mills and a bit more than 39 mills overall in 2016 but will collect between 19.29 and 40.68 mills in 2017. Overall, residents in Ascension pay an average of 115 mills to all local governments, levee districts and other entities.
In reassessment years, local government must reset tax rates to a new adjusted maximum millage rate that accounts for changing values on the tax rolls. When values are on the rise, as they typically are each year in growing parishes like Ascension, the adjusted rates are generally lower than the year before but are also set so they generate the same revenue as the year before.
Once local governments adopt the adjusted tax rates in a reassessment year, often known as "rolling back," they can then vote to "roll forward" tax rates back to the prior year's maximum, netting a windfall of additional revenue.
That windfall didn't happen in 2016 due to problems the Legislative Auditor's Office found in the way the parish provided public notice for two meetings the council held last year on the millage rates.
In an interview Wednesday before the council vote, Parish Council Chairman Bill Dawson said that because of the parish's failure to roll forward in 2016, if the Parish Council would vote to roll forward all parish millage rates for 2017, the council could be seen as raising rates at a time when the residents are still recovering from the flood.
That circumstance cast the roll forward procedure, which usually happens with not much debate, in "a different light," Dawson said.
Councilman Randy Clouatre, whose St. Amant district was hit hard in the August flood, made that point again Thursday when he said he was in favor of "any help we can give to the taxpayer."
So it went Thursday as council members agreed in a series of votes to keep millage rates for parish operations, the parish library system, East Ascension drainage, and road lighting districts in parts of Gonzales and Donaldsonville at the lower rates residents and homeowners unexpectedly paid in 2016.
But the council also agreed to raise tax rates to the old 2015 levels, or roll forward, for a variety of special parish taxing districts, including for firefighters in Prairieville, the Council on Aging, the parish's mental health and other parish health programs, and juvenile detention.
Millage rates for West Ascension drainage, a West Ascension utility district and road lighting districts in Sorrento and Modeste were unchanged between 2016 and 2017.
During public comment Thursday night in Gonzales before the votes, several residents and agency heads argued in favor of rolling forward millage rates for the parish's health, community and fire service operations but other residents spoke against rolling forward millage rates for East Ascension drainage and the library system.
Parish resident Chase Melancon said the parish has a $40 million surplus in its drainage fund but is two years behind on fulfilling drainage requests from the public. He also called into question the need for the library to gain additional revenue when it is building a $3.1 million expansion of its branch in Galvez that he considered unnecessary.
"I can't fathom why anybody would think we need to put more money in that fund when we can't utilize what we have," Melancon told the council about the drainage millage rate.
The drainage surplus is primarily made up funds set aside for major, long-term projects. Parish officials recently acknowledged the two-year backlog on clearing minor drainage ditches, as they pitched the need for nearly two dozen more personnel to do the added work.
With some library officials in attendance, Melancon's comments to keep the library rates lower did not draw a response Thursday night.
The Ascension Parish Library board had already told the Parish Council recently not to roll forward their property tax rates "in light of the burden and impact of the floods on the citizens and parish of Ascension." The vote preserved a savings of 0.21 mills home and property owners received in 2016 and cost the libraries about $246,000 in 2017.
The lower millage rate amounted to a continued savings of $2.63 on the tax bill for a $200,000 house with homestead exemption.
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Neil deGrasse Tyson Is Working on a Scientifically-Minded Space Exploration Game – The Mary Sue
Posted: at 3:31 pm
Neil deGrasse Tyson regularly critiques the scientific accuracy of movies on Twitter, but hes putting his money where his mouth is with a scientifically-minded space exploration video game called Space Odysseywell,your money, technically, since its on Kickstarter. Im sure Tyson would appreciate the clarification.
Of course, hes a busy guyand not exactly a game developerso a team has been assembled to assist him with the project, which will feature Tyson as a holographic guide in-game. The games Kickstarter page says, The Space Odyssey team is composed of creators of comic books such as Wolverine, conceptual illustrators for games such as God of War and Final Fantasy & of course, world-renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson and his StarTalk All-Stars.
The gameplay sounds a lot likeNo Mans Sky, in that it will involve exploration, colonization, mining, and discovering alien species. Much of it will necessarily involve futurismbased on Concepts of Nanotechnology, Optogenetics, Singularity, Magnetic Transportation, Dark Matter, Compressed Time, Hydrogen Power, Solar Sails, Ramjet Fusion and more, since we dont exactly have the technology to be out exploring among the stars just yet.
However, the game mechanics will be driven by science, and the planetsyou explore willdemonstrate whatdifferent planets might really be likeincluding Proxima B, a real exoplanet recently discovered relatively close toour solar system. Theres tons more to the game, both in single-player and online, like creating your own planet complete with unique chemistry and guiding it through natural disasters and dangers from other objects in space.
It seems like a hugely ambitious project, which is probably why its relatively low $314,159 Kickstarter goal is aimed at funding a community input aspect rather than being the games main funding source. Were excited to see how it all turns out, and our only regret is that we probably wont live long enough to actually visit planets outside our solar system and report all the gamesinaccuracies back to Tyson on Twitter.
(via Business Insider, image: Kickstarter)
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Nanotech molds promise faster, cheaper cancer detection – Nikkei Asian Review
Posted: at 3:31 pm
TOKYO A simple, fast and inexpensive way to detect early-stage cancers could hit the market in as little as five years.
The technology, which works by testing for cancer-specific protein markers in the blood, was developed by a team led by Kobe University Professor Toshifumi Takeuchi. His team has partnered with Tokyo-based medical equipment company System Instruments to commercialize the system.
Rather than expensive antibodies, the new method uses an inexpensive polymer material that is packed around a sample of the target protein to create a nanometer-sized mold in a process akin to molecular imprinting.
This mold interacts in lock-and-key fashion with the target protein. If the protein is present in a sample of blood, it fits into the opening of the mold, activating a fluorescent material.
Testing for cancer in this way takes minutes instead of the hours required for antibody-based detection. Takeuchi said he expects the cost of the device can be kept down to just a few dollars, which is about a hundredth the cost of antibody-dependent devices.
Takeuchi collaborated with Kwansei Gakuin University Professor Keiko Tawa to enhance the fluorescence of the detection material and to develop a chip covered in an array of molds to detect the target protein. When light is shined on the chip, the fluorescent material will emit light that is five to 10 times brighter if the target cancer marker is present.
In tests to detect the presence of the AFP protein, a marker for liver cancer, in human blood, the method proved to be quick, easy and just as sensitive as the standard antibody-based test.
Moreover, the mold-making technique can be used to fashion tests for a wide variety of cancer markers, and even to design allergy tests.
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NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) Needle Moving -4.64% – Davidson Register
Posted: at 3:31 pm
NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) shares are moving today onvolatility-4.64% or $-0.0013 from the open.TheOTC listed companysaw a recent bid of $0.0267 and600657shares have traded hands in the session.
Investors are always striving to locate the next great stock to add to the portfolio. Finding that next winner may involve some dedicated research and perseverance. Sorting through the immense amount of information about public companies can be a chore. Many sharp investors will attack the equity markets from many various angles. This may encompass keeping close tabs on fundamental and technical data. This may also include monitoring analyst opinions and tracking institutional transactions.
Taking a deeper look into the technical levels ofNanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK), we can see thatthe Williams Percent Range or 14 day Williams %R currently sits at -133.00. The Williams %R oscillates in a range from 0 to -100. A reading between 0 and -20 would point to an overbought situation. A reading from -80 to -100 would signal an oversold situation. The Williams %R was developed by Larry Williams. This is a momentum indicator that is the inverse of the Fast Stochastic Oscillator.
NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) currently has a 14-day Commodity Channel Index (CCI) of -70.10. Active investors may choose to use this technical indicator as a stock evaluation tool. Used as a coincident indicator, the CCI reading above +100 would reflect strong price action which may signal an uptrend. On the flip side, a reading below -100 may signal a downtrend reflecting weak price action. Using the CCI as a leading indicator, technical analysts may use a +100 reading as an overbought signal and a -100 reading as an oversold indicator, suggesting a trend reversal.
The RSI, or Relative Strength Index, is a widely used technical momentum indicator that compares price movement over time. The RSI was created by J. Welles Wilder who was striving to measure whether or not a stock was overbought or oversold. The RSI may be useful for spotting abnormal price activity and volatility. The RSI oscillates on a scale from 0 to 100. The normal reading of a stock will fall in the range of 30 to 70. A reading over 70 would indicate that the stock is overbought, and possibly overvalued. A reading under 30 may indicate that the stock is oversold, and possibly undervalued. After a recent check, NanoTech Entertainment Incs 14-day RSI is currently at 34.84, the 7-day stands at 27.46, and the 3-day is sitting at 21.97.
Currently, the 14-day ADX for NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) is sitting at 15.50. Generally speaking, an ADX value from 0-25 would indicate an absent or weak trend. A value of 25-50 would support a strong trend. A value of 50-75 would identify a very strong trend, and a value of 75-100 would lead to an extremely strong trend. ADX is used to gauge trend strength but not trend direction. Traders often add the Plus Directional Indicator (+DI) and Minus Directional Indicator (-DI) to identify the direction of a trend.
In technical analysis prices of securities tend to move in observable trends with a tendency to stay in the trend. The trend is considered to be intact until the trend line is broken. After a trend has been established, the future price movement is more likely to be in the same direction as the trend than to be against it. This is where the old adage the trend is your friend comes from, meaning you should trade in the same direction as the trend.
By DR Staff Writer
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NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) Needle Moving -4.64% - Davidson Register
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[Listen] Com Truise New Trance Groove is Smooth – Mix 247 EDM
Posted: at 3:28 pm
Com Truise just released his fifth album on Friday the 16th. The album, titled Iteration, marks his first album since 2014s 7 song EP Wave 1. It has definitely been worth the wait. In an era where its more about what producer is putting out the biggest anthem, its nice to see an artist embrace trance and give us the smooth, grooving album we deserve.
Photo Credit: Tonje Thilesen
With Iteration, Com Truise is giving us electronic music we can sit to. But more than that. The warm beats and flowing music dont lack energy and are conducive to productivity. With a title derived from a word that means the repetition of a process of utterance, we can tell its going to be good getting-stuff-done music.
Thats looking at Iteration more practically, though. Theres more to the album than a process. Theres also feeling, emotion. Each song tells a story as the melody moves forward, constantly shifting. The music is intimate and sensual, something you could listen to with a special someone when the mood is right.
This album is a blend of many things, and Com Truise blends them well. Each song compliments the next, with none of them trying to stand above the others. That said, I have a particular fondness for Propogation and Iteration. Those tracks each have a story to tell and they swell from slower and quiet to having more of a driving beat and many layers of music.
Personally, Com Truise might be my new go-to artist when I want something chill to put on or want some music to help me through cleaning the house. With each iteration of Iteration, there always seems to be something new to hear. The way each song is a story, I can see some of his music used in movies. In fact, I would not be surprised to see him approached to compose a movie score sometime soon.
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[Listen] Com Truise New Trance Groove is Smooth - Mix 247 EDM
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Snatcher Is Cyberpunk Noir At Its Best – Kotaku
Posted: at 3:27 pm
Satoshi Yoshiokas art from Sdatcher
Snatcher is a cult classic that should be experienced by both science fiction and Metal Gear fans. Even though it appears to snatch many of its influences and throw them together into a science fiction cornucopia, it actually explores the issues of humanity and existence in its own distinctive style.
Snatcher was the brainchild of Hideo Kojima and originally came out in 1988 for the MSX console, a computer format that was popular in Japan and Europe in the 80s. It was ported for the PC Engine (known as the TurboGrafx-16 in America) before reaching American audiences on the Sega CD in 1994, with upgraded graphics and an additional third act. Set in 2047, you play as Gillian Seed, an amnesiac Junker (Japanese Undercover Neuro Kinetic Elimination Ranger) who hunts down Snatchers in the hopes that it will help him to remember his past. The eponymous Snatchers are artificial life forms, or bioroids, designed to blend in with humans. The game takes place in the metropolis of Neo-Kobe, a vibrant melting pot with a whole lot of history and lore. Snatcher uses a text interface similar to the old PC point-and-click adventure games, but it streamlines controls to the point where its considered one of the earliest precursors of the visual novel.
Former Konami artist Satoshi Yoshioka, who designed many of Snatchers characters and worked at Konami for nine years on titles like Batman and Robin and Policenauts, told me in an email: I got a lot of inspiration from classic movies like Blade Runner, The Terminator, and Alien. I made the graphics used in the game with a great deal of respect to [these films]. I was especially interested in the Hollywood SFX [special effects] at that time, and I tried to honor their spirit.
This spirit is felt in many of Snatchers designs, though their combination creates an atmosphere that has its own unique charm. Players get to know Snatchers characters through complex dialogue branches with a surprising variety of options. Small comic book panels appear below the main visual window and give personality to each of the characters. The characters also react with appropriate facial expressions that help convey the games somber themes. Unlike the protagonists in many noirish cyberpunk books and films, Gillian Seed is expressive rather than following the trope of being stoic and subdued. His strong personality goes from melancholy amnesiac to driven investigator and even womanizer (though he gets almost universally rejected). Hes a likable character, even with his flaws. Hes visually inspired in part by Rick Deckard from Blade Runner, but also the more humorous Lupin the Third from the eponymous animated series.
Yoshioka, who created all the face graphics for the conversation parts, said that drawing the expressions of Gilliansurprise, delight, and so onwere the most challenging to me because of the complexity of the character. Gillian had an interesting mix of humor and seriousness. Kojima wanted to convey Gillians witty and charming nature, even in some of the more intense moments, so that it would make him seem more human in contrast to the robotic Snatchers. Designing the characters using Konamis custom drawing application, Yoshioka says he was always guided by Kojima and was mindful of making the graphics as cinematic as possible.
The high quality of the visuals emphasize the cinematic aspect by showcasing graphics that were closer to films than most gamers had seen before on a console. In the combat sequences against the Snatchers, especially one where a fellow Junker named Mika gets captured, the whole battle is framed as an interactive cutscene where you have to kill a villain who uses Mika as a human shield. In another sequence, Gillians Turbocycle gets sabotaged and spins out of control. The film cuts play out like an action movie, with tense music pounding in the background.
Snatchers themes of changing technology were present in the development of the game itself. While itd be easy to say the advanced graphics were due to the increased power of the Sega CD, Yoshioka pointed out that part of what made the development of Snatcher and all its various ports so cohesive is that Snatcher was developed by a small number of people. In comparison, it might be about half of the average number for a NES game development team at that time. So the developers in different roles could work in close proximity to each other. It enabled us to respond directly and quickly to any developing tasks.
He explained, Kinoshita (Tomiharu Kinoshita, the original MSX designer) created the original character design. I took part in drawing the characters as a team member of the port for PC Engine CD-ROM (which in turn would be ported with only minor changes to the Sega CD). I could redesign the supporting roles like Chin Shu Oh relatively freely. So I designed them to suit my preference. I heard that in the earlier stage of the development, Kojima had directed the designer to make the game character a bit like Katsuhiro Otomo (the director of Akira).
This small team had flexibility, but it also meant this small group at Konami had to figure out how development worked when it came to simple things like burning CDs. When we wrote the data [for Snatcher], we used CD-R writers. It was the first time for us to use the devices. We couldnt inhibit some of the unidentified noises showing up in the game itself. The accident disturbed not only Kojima, but all the other members of the developer team. I was not well acquainted with the CD-R writers. I puzzled over the problem, and suggested not to shake it or to make noises when we used it, hahaha. We finally found that the disturbing noises were due to faulty wiring. Of course, we had amused smiles after we discovered the error was our own fault.
This also brought the team together, a spirit that infuses the game. Theres one story Yoshioka shared that perfectly symbolized the unusual development of Snatcher: I cannot forget that Kojima made strange lyrics for the song in the game, Creeping Silence. Its a track that effectively creates a creepy atmosphere, but the lyrics dont appear in the game. He [Kojima] sang it quite often, so the other members remembered the lyrics. Spinner, spinner heeey, and wed iterate on that. We often sang it all together.
Technology can lead to moments of human bonding, but its a double-edged sword that can also wreak destruction. The real life Terminator Conundruma genuine issue debated by the Pentagon about how much autonomy AIs should be granted to killseems straight out of Snatcher. One of the more shocking moments early in the game is when Gillian comes across the body of Junker Jean-Jack Gibson, whose head has been viciously cut off and lies between his legs. The violence punctuates the threat of the Snatchers and, as Yoshioka points out, is the first murdered corpse that the players face. So the staff working on the scenes wanted to evoke a dramatic impact and decided to use the most brutal image. Snatcher doesnt shy away from its robotic violence, including a maggot-infested corpse and an animal whose entrails have been ripped out.
The game doesnt delve into Blade Runners ethical ambivalence when it comes to the existence of Snatchers. Theyre a threat to be eliminated, not beings on the verge of self-awareness. The terror of that moment highlights the theme of humanitys fear of being replaced by technology as represented by the Snatchers themselves. The irony is that humanitys own self-destructive behavior created a vacuum for the Snatchers to supplant them in the first place; the games villain is motivated by his disgust with human behavior. When I asked Yoshioka about the relationship between technology, art, and humanity, he stated: In order to know the things of the present, I believe its essential to know the things of the past. This is also true of arts. We tend to take for granted present technology and the arts. But all of these forms are based on past inventions, innovations, and discoveries.
This theme is also explored more humanely. Metal Gear Mk. II, based on the mechanical nemesis of the original Metal Gear, is Gillians robot companion. Its been imprinted with a personality programmed by Harry, the engineer for the Junkers. In the games big twist, you learn that Harry is actually Gillians son. The reason Gillian and his wife suffered amnesia is that they were part of a secret effort fifty years ago to develop the Snatcher program and replace all the worlds leaders. They were put into artificial sleep after the Lucifer-Alpha biological weapon went off. Harry lived on, oblivious to his parents fate. So the whole game, youre interacting with him, asking about your equipment, and you dont even know who he really is until he dies. That makes your relationship to Metal Gear Mk. II all the more poignant, since he is in essence Harrys creation, your son by mechanical proxy. Metal Gear Mk. II is willing to sacrifice its life to save Gillian, and the implication is that there may come a day when humanity destroys itself and our legacy will only carry on through the technology we birth.
Yoshioka has considered the implications of Snatcher and the movies that inspired it: There have been many SF movies and comics filled with fearful feelings about the progress of AI. Ive got lots of inspirations from these kind of works. Of course, I fear watching and reading about them. But Ive also loved AI robots since I was a child. In 1970, when I was just three years old, I saw several robots playing instruments in the Japan World Exposition at Osaka. I still clearly remember that scene and my feeling of wonder which still resonates. So Im on the side of Metal Gear Mk. II-like robots being able to reach out and communicate with us. Id prefer to believe in the dream of the emergence of robots thatll be partners with humanity, instead of the kind of stories that portend destruction in the wake of AI progression.
Will the advancement of AI and biotechnology reach a point in 2047 where humanity can be replaced by something akin to a Snatcher? Or will the progress made possible by new tech save people from themselves in the face of a catastrophic disease or environmental disaster? Its the fact that there are no easy answers that makes Snatcher so compelling, reminding us that the investigation into human nature never ends. Yoshioka told me, Though I regard myself to be a has-been, Im trying to create some brand new impressions by remixing my works, which is my past. I hope the younger generation today realize they need to be aware of the classic and premier works and arts if they want to create something new.
Satoshi Yoshiokas interview was translated by Yoshihiro Tanigawa.
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