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Monthly Archives: July 2017
Smart technology is changing lives in the disabled community – Daily Herald
Posted: July 14, 2017 at 5:05 am
Kevin Hoyt uses a smart doorbell to see whos standing on his front porch without having to go to the door. His wife, Melissa, will ask Amazon Alexa to turn off a light as shes rushing out of the house. Ten-year-old Bailey uses Alexa to play songs so she can practice dancing or will ask the devices how to spell a word, or to play tic-tac-toe with her. Sometimes, Melissa and 14-year-old Cameron will use Alexa to face off with sports trivia questions.
The Hoyts Saratoga Springs home isnt an abnormality in 2017 as families turn to smart technology to add a new layer of convenience to their lives. But for Kevin Hoyt, who became a paraplegic in 2015 after a fall, the tech means so much more.
It has been amazing, Kevin said. I can think of three or four things that have made a huge difference in my quality of life like my wheelchair, my ankle braces and the smart home tech. I absolutely put it on par with any medical equipment.
Smart technology allows users to connect and control the technology in their home by using their phone or even just their voice. For Kevin, it means being able to turn off a light or turn on a fan without having to get to a switch.
Mostly, it gives me more peace of mind that I can leave Kevin here on his own, Melissa said.
And after he started to use smart tech to increase his independence, Kevin knew he couldnt keep it to himself. So he founded Transition Tech Solutions, a business that performs smart home consulting and installation in Utah with a speciality in helping those with mobility issues.
Kevin was in his attic on New Years Day in 2015 when he fell, crashing through Sheetrock in his ceiling and falling into his living room.
I do remember crashing through the Sheetrock, right up in this corner, Kevin said, pointing to a spot on his ceiling, between the smoke detector and the peak. So I remember the sound of crashing through the Sheetrock and then smashing into the ground below. I totally remember all of that, and laying on my back with insulation in my throat.
Melissa called 9-1-1, urged Kevin not to move and tried to keep the kids calm while Kevin laid there in excruciating pain as an ambulance arrived.
To this day, they still dont know what caused him to fall.
He had damaged his spinal cord. He was in the hospital for five weeks after the fall as surgery followed and he learned he was now a paraplegic. Kevin went home in a wheelchair, not knowing what his future held.
The next few months were all about physical therapy and learning if he couldnt do something now, or just not yet.
So far, most things have been not yet, Kevin said.
Now, Kevin walks around his house using ankle braces and still has some sensation and motor abilities in his legs.
But those little motions, and physical therapy, are exhausting.
Theres a huge amount of work for very little return, which is OK, he said.
Everything takes work. Kevins morning routine now takes two and a half hours to complete, and walking is still difficult as he has to concentrate to send signals to his muscles.
Trying to walk down the hallway and have a conversation, I cant do both, he said.
He cant feel most of his legs, so Kevin uses his vision to keep his balance. It works pretty well, until that first winter after his injury hit, when the sun would go down early and suddenly getting to bed became a lot more dangerous.
I couldnt turn out the light and then get to bed, because Ill go down as soon as the light goes out, Kevin said.
So if Melissa wasnt home, hed either have one of the kids turn the lights off, or hed go to bed with the light on and Melissa would shut it off when she came home.
Kevin, a self-proclaimed Amazon junkie, was considering either hiring an electrician to wire a light switch by his bed or the possibility of carrying around a lantern when he saw smart light bulbs online. From there, the smart tech in their house boomed.
After the lights, the front door was a whole other problem. Without ankle braces, it takes Kevin a long time to reach his front door using a walker.
It used to be that I wouldnt even attempt to get to the door because they would be long gone by the time I got there, Kevin said. Now, I get the notification. I can answer, I can see who is at the door and I can talk to them on my phone.
He can even use his phone to immediately unlock the door and let someone in, or tell a mail carrier hell be at the door soon to sign for a package.
It is seriously amazing to be in my bed and not get wound up or feel anxious when somebody comes to the door, Kevin said.
Hes not the only one who uses the smart doorbell. The Hoyts said its popular with the neighborhood kids.
Everyone knows around here that we have a talking doorbell, Melissa said.
Its not just those with disabilities who are benefiting from the technology, but their caretakers as well.
Vivint Smart Home, a Provo-based company that provides smart home technology and services, started working with a test group of families of children with autism about three years ago. Parents of children with autism took a survey rating their stress levels before and after smart technology was installed in their home. After the technology was installed, the parents rated their stress levels at half of what they were at before, according to Holly Mero-Bench, director of Vivint Gives Back.
Vivint Gives Back specifically targeted families of children with autism spectrum disorder or other intellectual disabilities. The technology is discounted for families of individuals with intellectual disabilities.
Children with autism tend to wander, which can be terrifying for a parent when they discover their child is missing from their home. Vivint alarms, cameras and sensors can capture where a child went and alert parents when a child leaves a home.
Those individuals dont have a lot of boundaries and they are not afraid of things, Mero-Bench said. So we find that those children, they get out of the house, they slip out without their parents knowing, so the parents have to keep an eye on them literally 24/7.
Indoor cameras also give parents the ability to keep an eye on their children without having to be in the same room as them. Mero-Bench has heard parents say they can finally take more than just a quick shower because they can watch their children via their smart devices to assure theyre safe.
She said theyve also heard of families who have used camera footage to show video of seizures to doctors.
Sensors on interior doors can also alert caretakers when a door to a pantry or bathroom has been opened.
Parents can record their voice to play when a door is opened to urge a child not to go outside, or to say its not time to eat yet when the pantry is opened.
It kind of slows the kids down just a little bit, Mero-Bench said.
And for caretakers of people with intellectual disabilities, that brief head start can make all the difference in catching a family member before its too late.
Kevin was in the middle of an online MBA program at Colorado State University when he fell. Afterward, he doubted if hed return to school. He took a few semesters off before eventually starting classes again.
His programs last class required a capstone project where the students apply what theyve learned to a real business situation. The students pitched ideas, and then voted on their favorites. With one of the most popular projects, Kevin spent the next few months working with a team of students to build a business plan for a smart tech company catering to those with mobility challenges.
At graduation, Kevin stunned the crowd as he wheeled up in his chair, put a finger up to signal he needed a moment and then stood up amid a standing ovation to accept his diploma and continue walking across the stage.
The video of his walk reached more than 5 million people, becoming CSUs most popular Facebook post in its history.
A semiconductor manufacturing engineer by day, Kevin never intended to become an entrepreneur. But after discovering how the technology has changed his life, and seeing the hope other people hes met with disabilities have had when hes talked about it, he launched Transition Tech Solutions earlier this month on top of his full-time job.
I am astounded in the difference in quality of life it has made for me, and I am really independent and mobile for someone with a spinal cord injury, Kevin said.
The products the business installs dont require monthly fees. The business can install products like smart light bulbs and switches, smart speakers, video doorbells, garage door openers, ceiling fans, outlets and motion sensors.
And he doesnt think the tech stops at just giving independence to people with disabilities. Kevin said he can see the smart technology also aid retiring baby boomers and the elderly who are becoming less mobile.
For Melissa, it hasnt just been about adding additional convenience in the Hoyt home, but also about helping Kevin, who she was originally terrified to leave home alone, be more independent.
I know that he sometimes feels bad at so much that I do, Melissa said. I know that sometimes he feels like hes a burden when hes not. But this way, it makes him have less of that feeling.
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Smart technology is changing lives in the disabled community - Daily Herald
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Oklahoma blind man sees again with innovative technology – kfor.com
Posted: at 5:05 am
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OKLAHOMA - Matt Holman loves playing with his daughter, Charlie, his pride and joy, except he can't actually see her.
He's legally blind from a hereditary disorder called Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy.
"So, pretty much, my optic nerve just stops working. I have no central vision. I just have peripheral," Holman said.
But, it didn't take effect until he was an adult.
Holman was a wrestling star at Choctaw High School. Then, he got a wrestling scholarship to Oklahoma State University. He started having blurred vision and thought it may have been a concussion.
"When I went to the trainer he, 'you know, something's wrong,' so, we went to the doctor and I was already legally blind," Holman said.
At 20 years old, it sidelined his wrestling career and life as he knew it.
Now, at 38, he may be able to see again thanks to eSight Eyewear, new technology his cousin discovered.
"It was instant. They focused in, and immediately I was starting to see clearer," Holman said.
The glasses use a high definition camera that captures the user's view. It's a new technology released just this year by a Canadian based company.
"I like to call us a lifestyle technology company because it's a pair of glasses that could be used by anyone or works for the majority of those that are visually impaired," said Jeff Fenton, director of marketing for eSight Eyewear.
Holman was able to see his daughter for the first time.
"I remember it was the brightest blue I'd ever seen in my life, her eyes. The way she looked at me, every parent needs that. I could tell she loved me the way she looked at me," Holman said.
Insurance doesn't cover eSight Eyewear. It's expensive at $10,000, so Matt turned to the public and raised the money through an eSight crowdfunding page.
He said he can't wait to live a more normal life.
"First thing, I would love to see my family again. I want to see my friends again, and I want to see the people that it's going to be the first time ever, he said.
Click here for more information.
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Phone call at All-Star fan convention helped Jose Quintana trade progress – Chicago Tribune
Posted: at 5:05 am
White Sox general manager Rick Hahn was at the All-Star Game FanFest on Tuesday with his younger son when Cubs President Theo Epstein called.
Hahn, knowing the call was about the most anticipated trade in Chicago baseball this season, ducked behind an exhibit to talk specifics.
If only the exhibits had ears, the blockbuster trade might have been scooped before the Cubs and Sox issued the shocking announcements Thursday, though a pair of Reddit users apparently put the rumor out there Wednesday night. The Sox sent left-hander Jose Quintana to the Cubs for prospects Eloy Jimenez, Dylan Cease, Matt Rose and Bryant Flete.
The initiation of the deal came Sunday, when Hahn texted Epstein to let him know the negotiations for Quintana were likely to come to a head over the next few days. Hahn said he was direct that the deal had to begin with Jimenez and Cease.
"If they were interested, then now was the time to engage," Hahn said.
The pair reconnected Monday, spoke Tuesday about the Cubs' willingness to include their top two prospects and texted throughout the All-Star Game to figure out the final two pieces of the deal. It was finalized Wednesday night and announced Thursday morning.
It put to end seven months of speculation about where Quintana might end up.
Hahn said there were other deals for Quintana close in December, but they fell through. He also said the interest remained "very strong" through Wednesday, and the Sox were even in negotiations with a different team Saturday that prompted them to consider scratching Quintana for his final start before the All-Star break against the Rockies. But it wasn't close enough to pull him out.
Then the Cubs deal was finalized.
"In our opinion, in retrospect, this deal trumps anything we discussed last offseason," Hahn said.
Hahn said earlier this season that he was willing to do business with the Cubs, but speculation continued that he really wouldn't deal with the crosstown rival. Hahn said Thursday he found it "somewhat laughable" that the Sox would let such a deal lapse because of an interleague, intra-city rivalry.
"If we really felt motivated to take an inferior baseball deal, to not put this organization in the best possible spot to win multiple championships simply because of emotion, then we would be the wrong people running this club," Hahn said.
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Jim Irsay Surprised By Progress Of 2017 Colts – Colts.com
Posted: at 5:05 am
INDIANAPOLIS Jim Irsay is never one to hide feelings about his football team.
For the past couple of offseasons, Irsay has made it clear where improvements were needed.
Judging by Chris Ballards first offseason, one with a potential seven new defensive starters coming over to the Colts, the message has been heard by the teams new general manager.
I didnt think we would be this far along quite frankly, as we are. We have a ways to go. Im not saying we are there, but weve made a lot of progress.
Watching Ballards bevy of moves this offseason has given Irsay an extension of the January interview process.
Irsay wants fans to know their team is in good hands.
I just have to tell our fans that Chris Ballard is the real thing. Im telling you that theres many a team out there that wanted him. He wanted to be here.
Ballards presence in Indianapolis has led to some significant changes in personnel.
Like Irsay said, the total re-tooling of the Colts is not complete.
The faces have largely changed in Indianapolis, but the end goal for Irsay has not, and will not.
Ive said it before, we are into plural Lombardis. Thats what our goal is. Thats what we are pursuing. Ill be damned if we dont go out and get that. Ill be damned if we dont go out and get that.
The analysis from those producing content on Colts.com does not necessarily represent the thoughts of the Indianapolis Colts organization. Any conjecture, analysis or opinions formed by Colts.com content creators is not based on inside knowledge gained from team officials, players or staff.
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Tillerson leaves Gulf after crisis talks, no word on progress – Reuters
Posted: at 5:05 am
DOHA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson left Qatar on Thursday after a tour of Gulf Arab countries aimed at easing the worst regional dispute in years, saying he made proposals that would help in resolving the month-long crisis.
Tillerson met Qatar's emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, to discuss Doha's feud with four Arab states that cut ties with Qatar on June 5 over allegations it funds extremist groups and is allying with their arch-foe Iran. Qatar denies this.
"Well I think it was helpful for me to be here and actually talk to them about a way forward, first to listen and get a sense of how serious the situation is, how emotional some of these issues are," Tillerson told reporters after leaving Doha.
"But we tabled some documents with both sides while we were here which lays out some ways that we might move this forward," he added.
Tillerson had been flying between the two sides and Kuwait, which has been acting as the mediator between the feuding Gulf countries, in the last two days in an effort to ease a crisis that put the whole region on edge.
On Thursday he flew back to Doha where he met Qatari rulers for the second time in two days. He also met with Kuwaiti and Saudi officials.
Tillerson said he was not a direct mediator but supporting the emir of Kuwait's role in building bridges to end the crisis.
"In my view there's a changed sense of willingness to at least be open to talking to one another and that was not the case before I came," he said.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain accused Qatar of supporting the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist movement that has been the greatest challenge to Arab autocrats. The Brotherhood was a major player in the Arab spring revolts across the Middle East and North Africa.
Qatar hosts some of the movement's prominent figures, including the spiritual leader and Egypt-born Yusuf al-Qaradawi.
"As to the Muslim Brotherhood, we've had sticking points with these parties ourselves, the U.S., in terms of how we view the Muslim Brotherhood's activities," Tillerson said. "And there's a difference of view among these parties over the Muslim Brotherhood, and again in many ways it's not much different than the differences we have."
On Wednesday, Tillerson left the Saudi Red Sea city of Jeddah after talks with ministers from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt, the four countries which have imposed travel and commercial sanctions on Qatar.
He earlier signed a U.S.-Qatari accord on terrorism financing in an effort to help ease the crisis, but Qatar's opponents said it fell short of allaying their concerns.
"No wavering on the 13 demands" the headline of the Abu Dhabi government-linked al-Ittihad newspaper read on Thursday, referring to a list of demands the Arab states had put to Qatar.
Writing by Aziz El Yaakoubi and Sylvia Westall; Editing by Janet Lawrence and Leslie Adler
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Special session nears end without public progress on oil taxes – KTOO
Posted: at 5:05 am
Rep. Geran Tarr, D-Anchorage, speaks during a House Floor sessionin April. Tarr and the House majority havent agreed on an oil and gas tax bill with the Senate majority. (Photo by Skip Gray/360 North)
As of late afternoon Thursday, the Alaska Senate and House hadntmade any public progress on oil and gas tax legislation. They met Wednesday, but they still cant agree on how to replace the state system allowing companies to receive tax credits. Lawmakers only have two more days in the special session.
When oil companies that arent major producers spend money to develop new fields, they get tax credits from the state they can trade for cash. Its an incentive for companies that are smaller or newer to the state to do business here.
Both House and Senate members want to get rid of these cash credits. But House members want to delay replacing these credits. Senators want to allow companies to use the losses to reduce the taxes theyll have to pay in the future.
Sitka Republican Sen. Bert Stedman saidcompanies need to know what will happen when they spend in Alaska. He saidthat wont happen under the Houses revisions to the oil and gas tax bill, known as Version X.
If you want to put the industry in the freezer in Alaska literally, shut it down for expansion into these new, fairly colossal fields that have been targeted, this is how to do it, Stedman said. We need to take this Version X and quite frankly put it into the shredder.
Anchorage Democratic Rep. Geran Tarr saidthe state cant afford to give up a similar amount in future taxes than it currently hands out in cash credits. She saidthe money is needed to fill in the gap between what the state spends and what it raises in taxes, fees and oil royalties. Without any changes, she saidPermanent Fund dividends could be cut further.
Every dollar not earned through a reasonable oil tax puts more pressure on the use of the PFD for state government, she said.
Senators saidthe Legislature should make progress with what both sides can agree on: getting rid of cash credits.
Anchorage Republican Sen. Cathy Giessel saidthe state would be in worse shape financially if uncertainty leads to less oil production. That would meanfewer royalties flowing to the state.
We are focused on making sure that we continue production on the North Slope, because this royalty value is significant, she said.
Rep. Andy Josephson,an Anchorage Democrat, raised the possibility of putting setting an end dateon when companies can use or carry forward their losses from spending on oil-field development or leases to lower future taxes. He saidthat would put pressure on lawmakers to make more changes to the tax system.
We dont know how we can have that serious discussion without further discussion to carry-forward lease expenses, he said.
State Tax Division Director Ken Alper agreed with senators who expressed concern about the uncertainty potentially caused by the House bill.
It does create an uncertainty to not know what sort of value youre going to get for your spending, he said. And so I understand why there is some consternation from the Senate side and from some in industry as to why this House compromise bill might not be a completely viable solution.
But Alper saidtheres still room for compromise between the two chambers.
I encourage the two sides to continue to talk to find some sort of middle ground on the valuation of losses on what some will call cost recovery, so that we can all complete this project for 2017 and move on to whats next in passing a fiscal plan, Alper said.
The special session must end by Saturday.
Alaskas Energy Desks Rashah McChesney contributed to this report.
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I’d Be A Nihilist If I Weren’t A Hedonist – Patheos (blog)
Posted: at 5:02 am
When it comes to my personal life philosophy, I tend to start by going straight to nihilism. Right down to the dregs, and then I ask myself, Why cant I stay here?
And I think thats somewhat an important question to ask, for me. Not for everyone, but for me. Lets start out with a clean slate, and see what is left.
Maybe you think this is harder than it looks, and Id agree. First, the idea of a clean slate is, itself, one that we made up; its not clean itself. And the very thought that starting out with a clean slate is a good thing is a product of culture, environment, etc. Therein lies the great paradox of trying to find a clean slate the concept of a clean slate itself is not clean, and so youre doomed to failure from the outset.
But the concept is somewhat helpful, in that it forces me to continually answer the question, Why?
Why is it better to be selfless than selfish? Why is it better to be ambitious than lazy? I know people want you to be more selfless, and I know that, especially in Western culture, ambition and the amount you contribute is prized. But why? Why is that important?
Ive found it a rather interesting feature of my education that, at every turn, what I learned deconstructed the value of education in various ways. The more I learned about the structure behind our patterns of thought and our values, the more I saw that things I took for granted or set in stone as good or bad werent that simple; they were constructs, made-up concepts, that at several points in the history of their construction could have been built one way or the other, although, after several generations, we take them for granted.
The disconcerting thing about knowing this is that the things you once knew as objective fact become accidents of subjective preferences that largely depended on happenstance. So you become less confident about a lot of things, which makes you curious about what else you dont know. And so much of what we take advantage of reality seems so constructed that you get tempted to peak behind the curtain.
But there is no objective behind the curtain, Ive found theres always, it seems, one more construction, one more why youve jumped down the rabbit hole, and it seems like youre going to falling forever, and theres nothing, necessarily, to hold onto on the way down.
And so sometimes, in my case, I have to think, Whats next? What do I hold onto to keep from falling?
You might say, People.
Heres the thing, though: People are fickle. And I think they have a right to be. No person should be there just to prop me up, to make me feel good, to take the emotional burden that is my life. Help them? Sure, I can. Depend on them? No, I cant. And Im not saying I should be able to; they have their own lives, and I should respect that. And altruism isnt something to really hold onto, either, because its outside yourself; if you are altruistic for your own salvation, youre not being altruistic, and sooner or later thatll be exposed in an ugly way.
So, yeah. Maybe here you think Im selfish. Maybe you think that existential angst is silly that while Im here questioning things, youre working. Maybe you think less of me. Maybe, Maybe, Maybe
How to respond? I could say, F**k you, this is my life. That has a certain utility to it. But the fact is that even though it IS my life, your judgment is your judgment, and you can think of me as you see fit. You can judge me and say about me what you like. Its your life, its your right. Although it does make me uncomfortablewhich puts me right back into the existential angst
Why does it make me feel uncomfortable? Why do I care about what people think?
And you say, Stop caring about what people think. I dont, and it solves a ton of problems.
I find it hard to believe that people dont care what people think, although I think its awfully important to some people that other people THINK they dont care about what other people think. I think, honestly, that most people who say they dont care about what people think are either lying or are so privileged they dont have to worry about what others think in their position of power.
Maybe thats reflective of my own personal experience with trying not to care what people think, and at times thinking I succeeded. Anyways, my answer is no. I dont care enough about what you think to impress you by trying to show off that I dont care about what you think.
Anywayswere getting off topic. I was explaining how Im falling down this abyss of constructed subjectivity and the accidents of circumstance that lies behind objective values, trying to get to the bottom of it. How I was trying to argue all the way down to nihilism.
And there have been moments in my life whereI think I glimpse it. Its not the construct of the things its what makes me want the construct of the things.
That desire.
Yeah, I know thats all still constructed by circumstances and the brain and blah, blah, blah. Im not talking about that part. Im talking about the raw experience. That feeling. Everything else taken away, so far as I can see I want to live because I feel desire, and I love the experience of having a desire fulfilled. The classic answer to, Should I kill myself or get a cup of coffee, for me is simply that the coffee tastes better.
And so from that basis, that feeling, I build my entire moral system, because I want to. Its an openly selfish enterprise; I make no pretense about it being purely altruistic. And therein lies my hedonistic philosophy; I see morality as a thing I can help build to make as many people able to freely embrace their freely chosen desires as possible, simply because I love doing it. Same with social justice. Same with human relationships. These are all tools to help us achieve and realize desire, because my desire is AWESOME and fulfilling it feels great, and knowing that Im causing others to fulfill it feels even better.
Thats been my view increasingly over the last few years. Its the main reason I became an anti-theist and relaxed my own views on spirituality. I thought I wanted a perfect worldbut then I realized that I just wanted everyone to be as happy and openly accepted in the past, present, and future as possible, and religion was only a problem when it was in the way of that, and that fighting directly against religion wasnt really accomplishing my goal of encouraging or fostering happiness. So I shifted my position, a bit.
Its what I hold onto in the face of constant learning and constantly shifting constructions its what keeps me going. The reason Im not a nihilist. Maybe its different for you. Thats OK.
I just hope its what you want.
Finding my way through the darkness, guided by a beating heart
PS: I want to thank all 32 of my patrons who make posts like this possible.
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Hyundai has come a long way with its outstanding Ioniq Hybrid – Philly.com
Posted: at 5:02 am
In 1986, shortly after I started writing about cars, a Hyundai operative showed up at the Inquirer with the South Korean automakers first U.S. offering: the Excel Sedan. He came back to retrieve it a week later.
Well, how did you like it? he asked, brandishing a salesmans hopeful smile.
Well, I replied, when I tried to roll down the drivers window, the window crank came off in my hand.
The smile dropped to less than half mast. Suffice it to say that the Excel was a lousy car that almost nipped Hyundais American adventure in the bud.
After spending a recent week with Hyundais newly minted Ioniq Hybrid, I was struck by just what ancient history the Excel had become, and what a quantum leap Hyundai has taken.
The Ioniq I drove was nicely realized from the standpoint of both styling and workmanship.
It also boasted enough lovely, innovative engineering to give it EPA mileage numbers that crown it king of the hybrid hill. The base Blue model has EPAs of 59 city and 57 highway for a combined rating of 58. (The more upmarket Limited model I drove was 55 and 54 for a combined 55.) This surpasses the EPAs mustered by the Toyota Prius. The perennial hybrid gold standard is rated at 54 city, 50 highway, and 52 combined.
The Ioniq, a compact hatchback, will ultimately come in three flavors. The Hybrid and an all-electric model are already here. A plug-in hybrid follows later this year.
Like its corporate cousin, the Kia Niro, the Ioniq utilizes a 104-horsepower, 1.6-liter gas engine buttoned to a six-speed, dual-clutch automatic transmission. That exceptionally efficient engine it packs goodies such assodium-filled exhaust valves and direct injection shares the work with a 43-horse electric motor.
Under mild demand, the Ioniq can get along solely under the auspices of the electric motor. If your accelerator foot gets heavier, the engine is fired up and seamlessly joins the electric oarsman.
The Ioniq Hybrid is more fun to drive than its leisurely zero-to-60 time of 9.5 seconds might suggest. Its fully independent suspension makes this an agile car, and its responsive, accurate steering adds to the festivities.
The testers fun quotient was also enhanced by placing it in Sport mode. That keeps the engine on all the time, cracks the whip on the gear changing, stiffens the steering, and gives you a tachometer readout.
The Ioniq is handsome in a clean, civil fashion, and the fastback slope of the roof and rear window make the car resemblea stylish sedan more than a hatchback. It also contributes to the Ioniqs exceptional aerodynamics. The trade-off? The roof slope means tall, rear-seat passengers will find their heads encountering the headliner before the headrest. And the steeply raked, split liftgate window diminishes visibility.
The testers interior was comely in a spare way with a welcome Bauhaus need for form to follow function. Cargo space was a generous 26.5 cubic feet with the backseat up. The volume with the rear seat down was not available.
The Ioniq starts at an affordable $22,200. And that price includes an industry-exclusive lifetime warranty on that expensive hybrid battery. The more upscale Limited tester was very well-equipped for its price point ($27,500). Standard safety gear and hedonism included blind-spot detection with cross-traffic alert, lane-change assist, power sunroof, and leather seating. In addition to the battery guarantee, the Ioniq has exceptional warranties on the car itself (5 years/60,000 miles, bumper-to-bumper) and the power train (10 years/100,000 miles).
Base price: $27,500. As tested: $31,460. Standard equipment: 1.6-liter engine, electric motor, front drive, and an extensive array of safety gear and conveniences, including leather and a blind spot alert. Options: Includes a $3,000 package, which contains aids like automatic emergency braking, smart cruise control, lane departure warning, headlights with dynamic bending light function, rear parking sensors, and a navigation system. Fuel economy: 55 MPG city and 54 highway. Engine performance: Produces leisurely acceleration. Handling: Crisp. Ride comfort: Fine. Styling: Stylish but civil. Warranty: 5 years/60,000 miles bumper-to-bumper. Four Bens: Excellent
Published: July 14, 2017 5:00 AM EDT
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Hyundai has come a long way with its outstanding Ioniq Hybrid - Philly.com
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Moses Mendelssohn: Personally Observant Progenitor Of Reform Judaism – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com
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The son of Menachem Mendel, a Torah scribe, Moses Mendelssohn (son of Mendel) not only studied in yeshiva and became a promising rabbinic scholar, he also pursued secular learning, particularly languages and philosophy, studying the works of Locke and Leibniz and becoming friends with Immanuel Kant.
He published important philosophical essays in German and became known as the German Socrates; was awarded the prestigious status as a Jew under extraordinary protection by Frederick the Great (1750); and was awarded a prize by the Prussian Academy of Science for a treatise on Evidence in the Metaphysical Sciences (1763).
But he became best known for his personification of the conflict faced by the modern diasporan Jew seeking integration into broader secular society while maintaining a strong commitment to his Jewish identity.
Ironically, though Mendelssohn (1729 1826) was a great defender of traditional Judaism, he actually undermined it applying the intense rationalism test of the Haskalah (the Jewish Enlightenment). His philosophical approach ultimately proved incapable of spanning the chasm between the traditional Judaism from which he emerged and the world in which he now found himself; between his inferior civil status as a Jew and his emancipated status as a recognized and respected intellectual; and between his loyalty to halacha on the one hand and his rejection of various fundamental religious beliefs on the other.
The great irony of Mendelssohns life was that while he always remained a faithful Jew whose basic beliefs included the Sinaic revelation and the centrality of mitzvah observance to Jewish existence, his radical ideas led to assimilation and to the loss of Jewish identity on a massive scale, and he is perhaps best remembered today as a progenitor of Reform Judaism whose children converted to Christianity and in whose ideas the early Haskalah reformers found justification for secularism and emancipation at the expense of their Judaism.
The fact is, he never intended to reform Judaism but, rather, to harmonize traditional Jewish life with the new world of emancipation. Thus, the harshness of Jewish historys judgment upon him is more a reflection of his philosophical approach to Jews in contemporary society than a critique of his Torah observance or his dedication to halacha.
Mendelssohns belief in a wise and merciful God and in the immortality of the soul as eternal truths are the themes of his two major religious/philosophical works Morgenstunden (1785), in which he demonstrates the rationality of the belief that God exists, and Phaedon (1767), in which he argues for the eternal existence of the soul.
Where his beliefs proved antithetical, even heretical, to Jewish thought, however, is in the realm of free will, which he argued is logically impossible; his rejection of schar vonesh (strict divine reward and punishment); his embrace of ultimate rationalism and moral autonomy, such that any external law even if from Hashem himself must be subject to mans own conscience and morality (i.e., man is the sole arbiter of right and wrong); and his belief that divine revelation is no longer a necessary source for truth, since religious doctrines are based upon mans pure reason.
As opposed to Spinoza, who bitterly criticized Judaism as religious behaviorism that idolizes external action at the expense of inner devotion and who became famous for his rejection of Jewish law, Mendelssohn praised Judaism for being a revealed law rather than a revealed religion. He maintained that whereas a Jew is free to adopt the philosophical approach of his choice spiritual, rationalist, chassidic, kabbalistic, etc. his actions must always be consistent with Jewish law freedom in doctrine but strict conformity in action. Thus, for example, he translated the opening words of Maimonidess famous Thirteen Principles of Faith as I am firmly convinced rather than the traditional I believe . . .
Mendelssohn bravely and eloquently defended the principles of Judaism in the face of Christian conversionary polemics, most famously in his response to a challenge by Lavater, a leader of the Lutheran Church, to either disprove the truth of Christianity or convert to it. He response was his monumental work Jerusalem, or On Religious Power and Judaism, in which he argued that Judaism is not a religion that uses dogma to coerce thought and belief and that, as such, no Jewish institution should use its power, including particularly the power to excommunicate, to compel theological faith and practice.
The leading fighter for Jewish civil rights in Germany, he used his respect and renown to assist individual Jews and entire communities in disputes with the German authorities and he facilitated the revocation of many anti-Semitic laws.
The Orthodox view of Mendelssohn is perhaps best summarized by Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch, intellectual founder of the Torah im Derech Eretz school of contemporary Orthodoxy, who wrote in his Nineteen Letters:
And when the yoke from without began to be lifted, and the spirit breathed more freely, one eminently illustrious personality came upon the scene and influenced Jewish life to the present day. His freer intellectual development, indeed, owed much to the influence of forces extraneous to Judaism. In his personal life and practice an observant Jew, he showed his brethren throughout the world that a man could be strictly religious and yet enjoy the eminence and luster of a German Plato. But it was this and yet which proved decisive. His successors contented themselves with the zealous cultivation of Tanach on philological and aesthetic linesto the neglect of Judaism itself.
With the advent and growth of the Haskalah movement, the Jewish public became conversant with German literature, which led to significant dissatisfaction with traditional Judeo-German biblical translations. Moreover, most German biblical commentators had interpreted the Bible from a personal point of view rather than emphasizing pshat (making clear the actual textual meaning). Mendelssohn became the first to breach this divide when he compiled a literal German translation of the Pentateuch, important not only because it awakened in its readers an esthetic interest in literature but also because it led to the greater use of high German by German Jews.
Exhibited with this column is a page from an incredibly rare document, Mendelssohns original handwritten manuscript of his translation of Sefer Yirmiahu (Jeremiah), which was later published by Joseph Wolf and David Ottensosser (Frth, 1810). I have selected this particular page because it includes Jeremiah 2:2, one of most beautiful verses in all of the Prophets an expression of Hashems sublime love for the Jewish people which may be familiar to readers from the Rosh Hashanah Mussaf service (Gods name has been redacted from the document to prevent the creation of shaimos):
Go, and cry out in the ears of Jerusalem saying: So says Hashem, I remember for you the affection of your youth, the love of your betrothal, how you went after me in the wilderness, in an unsown land. Israel is holy to Hashem . . .
Its interesting to note Mendelssohns footnote explaining that Jeremiah 2:4 is the beginning of the Haftarah portion that is read on Shabbat Parshat Maasei. As with all his translation work, he strove to conscientiously reproduce the text to reflect the spirit of the original.
Though grounded in traditional exegesis, Mendelssohns biblical translations into German proved highly controversial. Immediately upon publication, his Pentateuch was severely criticized by mainstream rabbinical leaders, including Rav Ezekiel Landau. Fearing that the magnificence of the German language and Mendelssohns beautiful linguistic rendition of the Pentateuch would induce young Jews to first abandon the study of the Torah itself and then to forsake entirely the practice of Torah-true Judaism, the rabbis joined to issue a ban against the German Pentateuch of Moses of Dessau (June 1779).
Various writers and commentators who had been working on a German commentary to Mendelssohns translation including famed poet and grammarian Solomon Dubno were frightened by the vociferous rabbinic opposition and ceased their efforts. A determined Mendelssohn soldiered on himself to complete the Pentateuch commentary. He delegated some work to individuals unmoved by the rabbinical ban and ultimately completed the work, which he called Netivot Shalom (Paths of Peace) in March 1783. The translation was in High German, and he personally wrote a Hebrew introduction discussing the development and history of his Pentateuch and the rules of idiom and syntax he used in his translation.
Mendelssohns work led to the Biurist movement (from the Hebrew word biur, or commentary), which consisted of a class of Jewish biblical exegetes including Samuel Israel Mulder, who translated the Pentateuch and other biblical works into Dutch; I. Neufeld (Polish); J. L. Mandelstamm (Russian); Samuel David Luzzatto (Italian); and M. Rosenthal (Hungarian).
In America, Isaac Leeser translated the Bible into English according to the interpretations of the Biurists. (See my Jewish Press column Isaac Leeser: Father of Torah Judaism in America, January 27, 2017.)
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Dean of Yale Law School: Campus Free Speech Is Not Up for Debate – TIME
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Students at Middlebury College shouted down Charles Murray rather than listen to hiscontroversial ideas when he came to speak at their campus in MarchLisa RathkeAP
Gerken is the dean of Yale Law School and the Sol and Lillian Goldman Professor of Law
In this, the summer of our discontent, many college presidents are breathing a sigh of relief that they made it through a politically fraught spring without their campuses erupting. Nobody wants to be the next Middlebury or Claremont McKenna , where demonstrations disrupted controversial speakers.
Law deans, in sharp contrast, have reason to be cheery. Their campuses have been largely exempt from ugly free-speech incidents like these. Charles Murray , the controversial scholar whose speech drew violent reaction at Middlebury, has spoken at Yale Law School twice during the past few years. Students and faculty engaged with him, and students held a separate event to protest and discuss the implications of his work. But he spoke without interruption. That's exactly how a university is supposed to work.
There may be a reason why law students haven't resorted to the extreme tactics we've seen on college campuses: their training. Law school conditions you to know the difference between righteousness and self-righteousness. That's why lawyers know how to go to war without turning the other side into an enemy. People love to tell lawyer jokes, but maybe it's time for the rest of the country to take a lesson from the profession they love to hate.
In law schools we don't just teach our students to know the weaknesses in their own arguments. We demand that they imaginatively and sympathetically reconstruct the best argument on the other side. From the first day in class, students must defend an argument they don't believe or pretend to be a judge whose values they dislike. Every professor I know assigns cases that vindicate the side she favors--then brutally dismantles their reasoning. Lawyers learn to see the world as their opponents do, and nothing is more humbling than that. We teach students that even the grandest principles have limits. The day you really become a lawyer is the day you realize that the law doesn't--and shouldn't--match everything you believe. The litigation system is premised on the hope that truth will emerge if we ensure that everyone has a chance to have her say.
The rituals of respect shown inside and outside the courtroom come from this training. Those rituals are so powerful that they can trump even the deepest divides. As Kenneth Mack recounts in his book Representing the Race: The Creation of the Civil Rights Lawyer, Thurgood Marshall was able to do things in court that a black man could never do in any other forum, like subjecting a white woman to cross-examination. Marshall was able to practice even in small, segregated towns in rural Maryland during the early days of the civil rights movement. The reason was simple: despite their bigotry, members of the Maryland bar had decided to treat Marshall as a lawyer, first and foremost.
The values in which my profession is steeped were once values in politics as well. In 2008, I was one of the lawyers in the Obama campaign's "boiler room." Buses delivered the staff to Grant Park to watch Barack Obama accept the win. We arrived just as Senator John McCain was giving his concession speech on the Jumbotrons. The election was hard fought, and there was no love lost between the two campaigns. But even as the crowd around us jeered, the Obama staff practically stood at attention. It was like watching an army surrender--one of the most moving experiences I remember from that extraordinary campaign.
We need to return to what were once core values in politics and what remain core values in my profession. Make no mistake, we are in the midst of a war over values. We should fight, and fight hard, for what we believe. But even as we do battle, it's crucial to recognize the best in the other side and the worst in your own.
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Dean of Yale Law School: Campus Free Speech Is Not Up for Debate - TIME
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