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Daily Archives: June 24, 2017
Far-Right Protesters Will Return to Portland for "Freedom March" During Waterfront Blues Festival – Willamette Week
Posted: June 24, 2017 at 2:10 pm
After a quiet month on Portland's streets, far-right protesters are returning to this city at the end of the monthwith an march that could bump up against the opening night of the Waterfront Blues Festival.
The June 30 "Freedom March" is billed as a rally to "promote freedom and courage." It marks the first appearance of right-wing provocateurswho seek to "trigger" and brawl with left-wing foilssince a June 4 event where they squared off with antifascist groups and riot police.
The prospect of that event caused anxiety on Portland, since it came in the wake of a MAX train double slaying allegedly committed by a white supremacist who tagged along at the right-wing protests. But it proved largely uneventful. More than 2,000 liberal protesters did surround the group of about 250 "alt-right" supporters to call them "Nazis", but the groups remained separated by police.
Since then, the organizers of the Vancouver, Wash.-based "Patriot Prayer" movement have gone on something of a traveling roadshow, getting in fights with antifa in Seattle and getting their car tires slashed on the campus of Evergreen State College in Olympia. (Several right-wing "free speech" protesters affliated with this movement yelled insults at people attending Portland Pride last weekend, though they didn't conduct any organized counter-protest.)
The Seattle "March Against Sharia" was marked by several street donnybrooks that have become the best known feature of these political confrontations:
Joey Gibson, a 33-year-old Vancouver man who leads the Patriot Prayer group, tells WW he always expects violence at his eventsbecause antifa won't let him and his allies speak in peace. But he says the group will not stop marching in Portland despite the risk of skirmishes with counter-protesters.
"It's to silence us," he said. "That's not my fault. They do that to stop us."
Gibson says the group's plan is to "march in peace like Americans are supposed to."
The June 30 event appears far smaller in scope than the June 4 rally, which attracted celebrated figures from the extremist movement known as the "alt-right."
Joey Gibson speaks at a right-wing free speech rally in Terry Schrunk Plaza on June 4, 2017. (Tom Berridge)
But the march, scheduled for 6 pm near Portland City Hall, is likely to overlap with the first weekend of the Waterfront Blues Festival four blocks away in Tom McCall Waterfront Park. That could be a racially charged combination, since some of the people who march in the "free speech" events are known to wear the emblems of white supremacist and militia groups.
On the group's Facebook page, the march organizers have said they're aware of the potential conflict with a huge crowd.
"I understand about the Blues Festival," an event host wrote Wednesday. "After I meet with the right people I might change the meet up spot, no worries. Date and time will be still be the same. Meet up might be a block or two away."
Gibson says his group is expecting violence and planning for itthough he wouldn't say what the plan is. "We have to make sure we control ourselves and be good people," he says. "If we misbehave, we're driving people to the other side."
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Catholics urged to work for ‘holiness of freedom, freedom for holiness’ – Crux: Covering all things Catholic
Posted: at 2:10 pm
BALTIMORE, Maryland Speaking at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Fortnight for Freedom, the archbishop of Baltimore decried the ongoing persecution of Christians in the world, not only in the developing world but also in the polite persecution of the West.
When Henry VIII, as Englands reigning monarch, was declared a defender of the faith, the future must have seemed so bright to Thomas More and John Fisher, Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori said in a homily June 21.
He described an England which seemed to have been spared the painful divisions that racked the Catholic Church on the continent of Europe. Under Henry, he said, monastic life and learning were flourishing while ordinary Catholics showed their love and loyalty to the church.
Who could have imagined the severe test More, Fisher and English Catholicism would face in so short a time? Lori asked.
He was the homilist at the opening Mass of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Fortnight for Freedom, an annual observance highlighting the importance of religious liberty.
The Mass was celebrated on the vigil of the English martyrs shared feast day at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Baltimore.
The aforementioned saints of the 1500s were, respectively, the lord high chancellor and the bishop of Rochester, both of whom had enjoyed peace and security as they faithfully lived their vocations. They lost their heads for refusing their assent to Henry as the defender of the faith when he declared himself head of the church.
While the West has not recently executed anyone for refusing to give up their beliefs, the archbishop borrowed Pope Franciss phrase polite persecution to describe the burdens placed on schools, hospitals, employees, employers and other individuals and institutions that live and act according to their faith while navigating civil society.
Such fines, firings and threatened denials of accreditation indicate kinship, solidarity with those suffering overt persecution round the world, Lori said.
St. Thomas More and St. John Fisher fulfilled their mission of bearing witness to Christ in their time, their place, their circumstances, he said. Dear friends, weve gathered in prayer tonight asking to acquire in the power of the Holy Spirit, a greater measure of holiness, so that we too can use our freedom, not for ourselves and our own desires, but rather for Christ and the mission of spreading the Gospel far and wide.
In far too many parts of the world, Lori said the Catholic Churchs mission is conducted amid raging persecution. He cited a 2016 report from the University of Notre Dame, titled Under Caesars Sword, that chronicled the persecution of Christians in 25 countries around the world.
RELATED:Landmark study examines responses of Christians to religious persecution
He said the reality behind such statistics is seen in the suffering of Christians and other religious minorities including some Muslims, including Chaldean Christians beheaded in Iraq simply for professing their faith and Coptic Christians killed while praying in church on Palm Sunday.
To be sure, we Christians in the West do not experience severe repression, Lori said, but in recent years there have been serious curtailments of religious freedom with regard to sexuality, marriage, and the sanctity of life.
Lori noted that some have advised that Christians withdraw from the fray.
While he acknowledged the importance of rest and spiritual renewal, he once again turned to St. More and St. John Fisher, and urged Catholics to develop in their hearts the holiness of freedom and freedom for holiness an irrepressible spirit of freedom, courage and mission that no earthly power can take away from us.
Then we shall be truly free, the archbishop said. Then we shall be true missionary disciples.
Those gathered for the Mass included members of the Catholic Business Association, Legatus, the St. Thomas More Society and the Catholic Medical Association. Their presence illustrated their solidarity and involvement with the Fortnight for Freedom.
This kind of shows, to everybody, that we have to act on what we believe, said Dr. Okan Akay, who recently completed his residency in internal medicine and had his hands blessed by Lori following the Mass.
It strengthens us in our ability to provide healing for people without having to go against what we believe in, he told the Catholic Review, Baltimores archdiocesan news outlet.
Akay said there is increasing pressure in his line of work for those who would opt out of prescribing contraception or performing an abortion, for example. He was lightly mocked, he added with a shrug, for attending the annual March for Life in Washington.
Interestingly, it was an overt display of faith ashes on foreheads that initially drew Akay, a former Muslim, now a basilica parishioner, toward the Catholic Church.
The Fortnight for Freedom ends July 4. Lori will celebrate another Fortnight Mass July 3 in Orlando, Florida, for the Convocation of Catholic Leaders.
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Senate conservatives hope to have Obamacare impact similar to … – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 2:10 pm
Four conservative senators hoped Thursday to do what the Freedom Caucus did in the House: push a Republican healthcare bill to the right and save it from near-certain defeat.
Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky., Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Mike Lee, R-Utah and Ron Johnson, R-Wis., announced they would not be able to vote for the recently unveiled Senate healthcare bill, which was designed to at least partially repeal and replace Obamacare, in its present form.
"Senator Paul believes that conservatives need to be included at the negotiation table," said Paul's communications director, Sergio Gor. "Staying united will be important, similar to the Freedom Caucus."
In the House, conservatives managed to establish themselves as the main faction the president dealt with in healthcare negotiations. After the first version of the American Health Care Act proved unacceptable to conservatives, they forced through another version that passed the House.
When Obamacare originally passed Congress, liberal Democrats were forced to negotiate with centrists. They discarded the public option and other liberal priorities to pass a bill that included insurance market exchanges and Medicaid expansion.
"Freedom Caucus members are still reviewing the bill but have a number of concerns that they hope to see addressed in the amendment process" said a caucus source. "Sen. Ted Cruz, in particular, has a market-based consumer choice measure he's been working on that would garner broad support from the group."
"This is basically an amendment to Obamacare, not repeal of it. So much for campaign promises, right?" said FreedomWorks' public policy and legislative director Jason Pye. "I recall [Senate Majority Leader] Mitch McConnell saying he would repeal ObamaCare 'root and branch.' Yeah, this bill doesn't do that. We hope that Sens. Lee, Cruz, and Paul can guide the bill in a direction that lowers health insurance premiums."
Paul, who represents Kentucky in the U.S. Senate alongside McConnell, said much the same thing in his own remarks.
"It's gotta look like what we promised," Paul said Thursday afternoon. "I mean we promised I heard people, I traveled the country. I heard other Republicans say we are going to rip it out root and branch' thousands of times."
But it is not going to be easy. Centrist Republicans in the House were mostly able to vote against their chamber's Obamacare replacement, the American Health Care Act, once most Freedom Caucus members voted for it.
Republicans have a 24-seat majority in the House. There is only a 52-48 Republican Senate majority in the Senate. Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, are as important as any of the conservatives. These centrists want to fix Obamacare, not necessarily replace it.
Conservatives like Cruz are hoping for changes in the opposite direction. House conservatives insisted months ago that they wanted to get to yes on the House-passed bill, and it was centrists like the Tuesday Group, as opposed to conservatives, who were making it impossible.
"Ideally, we would like to vote for a bill that repeals Obamacare, yes," said Lee's communications director Conn Carroll.
This is similar to what Freedom Caucus members said before their bill finally passed the House. "The only thing we will be judged by is Do premiums come down?" Rep. Mark Meadows said in a meeting with the Washington Examiner.
The version of the bill that is being floated in the Senate jeopardizes centrist votes by allowing state-level waivers from major Obamacare coverage mandates, defunding Planned Parenthood and other well-known abortion providers and tweaking tax credits for consumers who need new health insurances.
Deleting any of these provisions carries the risk of losing conservative votes, after a number of them were won after major changes to the bill.
That hasn't stopped conservatives from either chamber of Congress from making demands.
"In general, the bill's going to have to look more like a repeal bill and less like we're keeping Obamacare" said Paul. "It has to look less like Obamacare lite."
President Trump, on the other hand, seems to be strengthening the centrists' position.
"I hope we are going to surprise you with a really good plan," he told a rally Wednesday evening. "I've been talking about a plan with heart. I said, Add some money to it!'"
That's not exactly music to conservatives' ears.
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Body-powered flexible technology – The Hindu
Posted: at 2:10 pm
The Hindu | Body-powered flexible technology The Hindu North Carolina State University researchers in the U.S. have invented a flexible body-heat powered energy harvester which can be used to make wearable technology that is powered by body heat alone. Earlier, there did exist energy harvesters that could ... |
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Technology helps parents locate missing daughter – Chron.com
Posted: at 2:10 pm
Dedra Sykes had a mother's intuition about her daughter, who disappeared almost two months ago.
She said she would see the teen again. She said technology would lead them to 14-year-old Jennifer Lee Willis. She predicted that the family would locate the girl before police.
Her mother wit proved accurate this week, when Jennifer was found by the family and taken to a hospital. Now they're working to help her recover from the weeks-long ordeal.
"We shouldn't have to find our own child," Sykes said.
The teen first vanished in April after she was punished for talking to strangers in an online chat room. Her parents found her the next day in their Hiram Clarke neighborhood on Houston's south side.
She was gone again on May 5, and the Houston Police Department classified her as a runaway.
Thanks to cloud photo storage, however, the family maintained hope that Jennifer was alive.
Photos and video the girl uploaded on her phone kept showing up on a tablet through a joint family account over the last seven weeks.
Her parents could see that she looked thinner, was wearing makeup and an adult hairstyle, with a long weave or wig and blonde highlights. Some of the videos suggested the teen, who has behavioral and mental health diagnoses, might have been exploited by adults.
Some of the uploaded content include geomapping that helped Jennifer's parents stay on her trail.
"They would only come up sometimes and when we would get to the locations, we would just miss her," Sykes said.
The latest photo popped up around 1 p.m. Thursday.
"She posted a picture and we pulled up the location," Sykes said.
They rushed to a budget motel off Beltway 8 between Westheimer and Richmond.
"There was a guy outside and we showed him her picture and he said she just left and went to the store," Sykes said. "She was right down the street."
Cautious, they hid in their vehicle to avoid tipping off their daughter.
Jennifer's father, Lee Allen Willis, a boxer-turned-personal trainer, speedwalked the less than half a mile from the motel to the convenience store in a Chevron gas station. He saw Jennifer at the Burger King inside, and they scuffled.
Her mother showed up moments later and called 911.
"The people in the store, they don't know what's happening," Sykes said. "He goes to try to help her and these people are trying to help Jennifer get away. It's like a little physical brawl. Then he showed them paperwork. Now we're in a dangerous situation because whoever has her, we don't know how bad they want to keep her. She was not alone. She was with some other girls."
As they waited for paramedics and police, Sykes said several people approached and threatened her.
"They asked me if that was her dad or a police informant," she said.
When a Houston police officer arrived, Sykes said, the officer focused on Jennifer and did not immediately interview the people at the motel room or others who made threats.
The officer handcuffed Jennifer and put her in the back of the police car for safekeeping before the trip to a hospital.
Sykes said she has lost faith in HPD and the people in charge of finding runaways or missing minors like Jennifer. The family got little assistance in tracking the digital fingerprints that could have led them to the teen sooner, she said.
HPD spokesman John Cannon, however, said the missing persons unit had been in frequent contact with Sykes and Willis, and that police followed up on the teen's posted videos and photos.
A lead missing persons investigator worked the case by interviewing Jennifer's school friend, also a neighbor, who said she "had been with her as recently as three weeks ago," but denied knowledge of the missing teen's whereabouts, Cannon said Friday.
Police said earlier this month they believed the teen may have been sneaking into her home to shower and eat when her parents and siblings were away.
Two-thirds of the 566 lost and missing people reported to HPD in April were children, according to a Chronicle review of missing persons reports. The month's cases included 157 missing juveniles, 231 runaway minors and 178 missing adults.
Most are located in short order, though Houston police don't maintain an active list of individual cases. A few never return home, lost to the streets or the morgue.
In Jennifer's case, her parents were the sleuths who solved the case by finding their daughter alive.
"We were giving them the leads," Sykes said. "They're still failing us. They need to be interrogating and finding out: Who are these people? There might be other young ladies in trouble over there."
Sykes is convinced her daughter was lured away from home, but is focused on getting her stabilized on medications she's gone without for weeks.
"This is a business. These little girls are being targeted," she said. "She was gone almost two months. She was in a motel room. You see all these grown men and grown women with her. She's only 14 years old."
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Rochester technology team looks for the next killer app – Bradenton Herald
Posted: at 2:10 pm
Rochester technology team looks for the next killer app Bradenton Herald A small Rochester technology team thinks the hot gee-whiz technology of augmented and virtual reality has the potential for lot more than just fun and games. Virtual reality refers to an immersive technology that usually uses a headset to create the ... |
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Can modern technology save rhinos from poachers? – Telegraph.co.uk
Posted: at 2:10 pm
More broadly, he has developed an intelligence network in the villages around the park, and pays for information leading to a conviction. He has forged alliances with the many private conservancies that border Kruger, effectively pushing its borders outwards. He has helped persuade South Africas government to impose substantially tougher penalties for poaching, and to open a permanent court in Krugers Skukuza headquarters whose judges understand whats at stake.
In neighbouring Mozambique, poaching was not even treated as a crime until 2014, but under international pressure its government has introduced stiff penalties, which are being enforced with varying degrees of rigour.
Joostes subordinates speak of him with admiration. He took us from having no direction and approach to the onslaught we were trying to deal with and guided our whole anti-poaching effort into a solid spear, Charles Thompson, the helicopter pilot, declared as we swept over Krugers seemingly infinite bush. Everyone was basically a nature lover and had never been in the military and he taught us how to fight in a guerrilla war.
His efforts have certainly slowed the carnage. Kruger lost a record 827 rhinos in 2014, 826 in 2015, and 662 last year, and the downward trend continues. The number of poachers arrested inside Kruger has risen from 123 in 2013 to 281 last year.
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Can modern technology save rhinos from poachers? - Telegraph.co.uk
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Surveillance technology could come under board scrutiny if city measure passes – STLtoday.com
Posted: at 2:10 pm
ST. LOUIS As more St. Louis neighborhoods seek to install surveillance cameras for the sake of public safety and crime prevention, some residents are concerned about protecting privacy.
Members of Privacy Watch STL and the ACLU are supporting a city proposal sponsored by Alderman Terry Kennedy, 18th Ward, that would require city entities to publicly present plans to the Board of Alderman outlining the acquisition, use and funding of surveillance technology.
Privacy Watch began working with the ACLU last year to address the use of street cameras .
Under Board Bill 66 introduced June 16, street cameras, body cameras, automatic license plate readers and biometric surveillance technology, including facial and voice recognition programs, would receive public scrutiny before board approval.
Technologies that have been used in St. Louis in the past include a cellphone tracking device, license plate readers, and a gunshot tracker called ShotSpotter.
Kennedy said Friday his measure is intended to begin a conversation about surveillance equipment approval processes and uses. It would require entities such as the Police Department, Streets Department and even neighborhood associations to explain how long information would be saved and why a particular area was being monitored. Individual homeowners are not mentioned in the bill.
Agencies would have to present data to ensure profiling is not happening as well, he said, and prove that the usage of (surveillance) on those demographics are justified not based on perceived fear.
The proposal calls for entities that already use surveillance tools such as cameras to present such information to the board within 120 days after the measure is enacted. The proposal is co-sponsored by Alderman John Collins Muhammad, 21st Ward.
Police said in April that 36 security cameras would be installed in six south St. Louis wards beginning in May. Because of the retroactive component of Kennedys measure, those cameras could be reviewed by the board.
The Post-Dispatch reported in March that there are 500 cameras throughout the city connected to the Real Time Crime Center. Police credit the cameras in hundreds of arrests and charges and the recovery of dozens of illegal firearms and stolen vehicles.
Critics condemn the thousands of dollars spent on cameras in St. Louis communities. For example, in 2010, the 21st Ward installed about $600,000 worth of equipment. Although critics admit that cameras may reduce property crimes, they say the technology has little effect on reducing violent and drug crimes.
Allison Reilly, St. Louis Amnesty Internationals representative to the privacy group, said members not only want to educate the public but also stop the overextension of surveillance.
Proponents of Kennedys plan say they worry about government infringement on peoples privacy and civil rights and how data acquired by police departments and regional centers could aid the federal government.
St. Louis resident Alicia Hernandez said shes concerned about the issue because of the number of immigrants who could be targeted.
Hernandez said she filed an open records request to learn about cameras that leaders in her ward planned to install.
Im worried about Trumps initiatives, Hernandez said of U.S. President Donald Trumps actions against immigrants.
Hernandez and others say they worry that surveillance tools, not limited to cameras, disproportionately target communities of color, immigrant communities and marginalized religious groups.
Police spokeswoman Schron Jackson said Friday that cameras are deployed in high-crime areas or during major events at the direction of district commanders.
The department does not reveal exact locations of cameras for security reasons, though a map depicting city cameras shows many situated downtown and along the central corridor to the Central West End and Delmar Loop area.
At this time , there is no formal approval process for the placement of cameras, Jackson said.
The department said most cameras are owned by private groups, with some by the Streets Department.
After a series of shootings in the Shaw neighborhood, for example, the nonprofit Shaw Security Initiative raised more than $20,000 through GoFundMe for street cameras at four different corners. The Shaw Neighborhood Improvement Association contributed $11,000 of ward money to the project.
The first camera could be installed at Shaw and Klemm avenues by the end of June. The intersection has greatly concerned residents because of crimes near there, including the 2014 shooting of VonDerrit Myers Jr.
Two cameras to be installed at the corners of Shaw Avenue and 39th Street and Magnolia and Tower Grove avenues will be powered by solar energy with a battery backup system that could run the camera up to three days under heavy cloud cover, according to the security initiatives website.
A fourth camera, paid with ward funds, would be installed by the city at the corner of Magnolia and Grand Boulevard. There is already a camera at Shaw and Grand.
Each camera system costs $6,400. Additional bills include a $200 fee and a monthly bill of $179 for AT&T cellular service for three years, the Shaw Security Initiative reports.
The cameras, which will record continuously, will use a cellular connection to transmit information to the citys Real Time Crime Center. Security group co-leader Larry Weinles said the system would only be used to connect the crime center to the cameras and would not be used to intercept cellphone signals in the area.
Other options, such as fiber optic cables and a router, proved to be too expensive or not secure.
The crime center will be able to access real time and recorded video. Recorded information will be stored in the camera for 96 hours, the community security group reports.
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RC Hospital considers robotic surgery technology – West Central Tribune
Posted: at 2:10 pm
Board members for the county-owned hospital have been exploring the possibility and are expected to make a decision next week, according to Blad.
If approved, Blad said officials believe the hospital would become the first critical access hospital in Minnesota to invest in the new technology.
Critical access is a designation given to certain rural hospitals by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
There is a "high price of admission" in terms of the investment needed to acquire the technology, according to Blad. He said the hospital has been discussing the possibility with a supplier and has been "able to get costs down significantly to where it is in the realm of reality.''
The hospital's general surgeon, Dr. Jared Slater, M.D., has experience with robotic-assisted technology while serving at the Mayo Clinic Health System in Rochester. His skills as a surgeon, and the hospital's modern surgical suites developed with the construction of the new hospital, are also very important in the hospital's ability to consider this technology, the CEO told the commissioners.
Blad said the new technology would benefit patients. The improved care made possible by the technology can result in shorter recovery times, he said.
The technology being eyed by the hospital is identical to that which Rice Memorial Hospital in Willmar recently adopted, he said. Rice began robotic-assisted surgery in 2015.
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Netflix Launches Groundbreaking Interactive Branching Technology – Madison.com
Posted: at 2:10 pm
When Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) CEO Reed Hastings appeared at Recode's Code Conference in May, he talked about the high success rate of the company's shows and the need to be more aggressive and more experimental. "I'm always pushing the content team," he said. "We have to take more risk; you have to try more crazy things."
Longtime investors in the video-streaming pioneer know that the company runs experiments involving its subscribers fairly regularly. Several meaningful changes to the service have been the result of such experiments. Netflix's post-play feature, which begins playing the next episode in a series once you've finished the current one, was the result of just such an experiment. Allowing subscribers to download content for offline viewing was another. Its most recent experiment could revolutionize the streaming concept it created.
In its latest move, Netflix will roll out its groundbreaking branching technology, in a bid to make programs interactive. Only the newest smart TV's, iOS devices, Roku boxes, and game consoles will work with the technology for now. Using a remote, touchscreen, or controller, viewers will have the option during the story to determine the next move the characters make in the program. Each choice leads to more potential choices down the line, producing myriad ways for the same story to unfold.
Netflix announced this week the first in a series of interactive branching narrative programs, beginning with children's content. The animated programPuss in Book: Trapped in an Epic Tale launched on June 20, and Buddy Thunderstruck: The Maybe Pile will make its debut on July 14. Stretch Armstrong: The Breakout will arrive next year.
Here's how Netflix sets the scene:
You sink into the sofa and fire up Netflix. You settle in to watch everyone's favorite swashbuckling feline, Puss in Boots. You chuckle as Puss in Boots finds himself in the story of Goldilocks with the Three Bears staring at him.
And then... you're asked to make a choice:
Should these bears be friends or foes?
Children will then decide how the story unfolds. In a blog, Carla Engelbrecht Fisher, the director of product innovation at Netflix, pointed out that children brought up with touchscreens are already engaging with them. "They're touching every screen," she says. "They think everything is interactive." This move, then, merely puts interactive television on equal footing with mobile apps and video games.
Filmmakers are excited by the concept of branching programs. Image source: Netflix.
Netflix enlisted the show's creators and conducted extensive research with kids and parents to ensure the best possible outcome, while using the overriding mantra "Wouldn't it be cool if... ?" Netflix approached DreamWorks Animation executive producer and writer Doug Langdale with the idea. "I didn't really know it was a possibility before," he stated. "As soon as it came up as something we could do, I desperately wanted to do it."
The programs took two years to develop, and the end result is 13 decision points in Puss in Book, resulting in a story that spans 18 to 39 minutes, depending on the choices made. The streaming giant is eager to learn how members engage with the experience, and to understand if they watch an episode multiple times, since each set of choices leads to a different adventure. If the initial trial with children's programs is successful, the trial will probably expand beyond animated kids' fare.
Netflix is known for taking chances on programs that wouldn't have otherwise seen the light of day, and that strategy is paying off. Netflix recently exceeded 100 million members, and it continues to look for ways to differentiate its content from competitors such asAmazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN). In its most recent quarter, Netflix surpassed $2.5 billion in quarterly streaming revenue for the first time. The company will want to continue to develop innovative content if it wants to retain the streaming crown. Hastings wants the content team to push the boundaries, and this endeavor seems to fit the bill.
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Netflix Launches Groundbreaking Interactive Branching Technology - Madison.com
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