Saturday, October 6, 2012

Giving 11-Year-Olds Nightmares Since 1992

1210_SBR_RLStein_ILLO

Illustration by Laura Terry.

Here?s how Devin O?Bannon, one of the protagonists in the newest Goosebumps novel, knows the pumpkin farm he?s staying at is haunted. After a night of bad dreams, he wakes, stretches, and lowers his feet to the floor. ?I expected to feel the hard floorboards,? he tells us. ?But instead, my bare feet sank into something warm and squishy,? a ?round puddle? of ?drippy orange-yellow goo.? Pumpkin guts! A loony rewrite of Kafka! Classic Goosebumps: funny, icky, and just a bit menacing.

R.L. Stine?s fiendishly popular children?s series arrived in 1992, with?Welcome to Dead House. By 1997, Stine had produced 93 of the kiddie horror books, to be followed by scores more in relaunches like?Goosebumps 2000,?Goosebumps HorrorLand,?and?Goosebumps Most Wanted.

The novels are still around, delivering mild chills to anyone who hasn?t been lured away by boy wizards and dreamy Byronic vampires. They have names like The Werewolf of Fever Swamp?and?Piano Lessons Can Be Murder. (Stine told me in an interview that he always begins with the title. His favorite to date is?Little Shop of Hamsters.) Once, they propagated through bookstores like an alien mold; now, the series is more like a dormant monster, sleeping quietly, biding its time. The books are still paragons of children?s horror, ghoulish cartoons aimed at the sweet spot between alarm and delight.

All horror is for kids. Adult horror is for kids in adult bodies and children?s horror is for kids in kids? bodies. The more meaningful difference between the two genres lies in what they do with the boogeymen they conjure up. Frightfests for children tame and temper our fears, while adult horror breaks through our mature defenses to inform us that the monster under the bed is real.

In Goosebumps books, the monster?s powers were so diminished by goofiness and snark that at times it seemed his true role was to initiate you into the lifelong practice of stress management. Skeletons kept losing appendages. Ghosts popped out of the closet with the predictability of a Jack-in-the-box. ?The strange, subtle thing about being a kid, though, was that you never quite trusted Stine?s reassurances. You feared that the playfulness, the safety nets, might vanish in an instant, leaving you alone in the dark. They never did, of course, but the possibility glowed over every page like a will-o-the-wisp. Enter adult horror, which deals in the primal terrors that surge most strongly in children?and yet does nothing to soften or gentle them.

This not-so-sweet spot is where Stine should be aiming with his new novel for grown-ups, Red Rain. But somewhere in his bid to seduce Goosebumps fans now in their 20s and 30s, he stumbles. The book yearns to be scary?not Goosebumps kinda-scary or wacky-scary but truly bloodcurdling?and it almost succeeds. At least, all the markers of terror are there: gore and a high body count and characters who try to scream but no sound came out. Yet something about Red Rain, a tale of eerily beautiful twin boys who shoot laser beams out of their eyes, fails to connect. It contains viscera, but is not visceral. Not only is Stine not writing for children, he has stopped writing for readers? susceptible inner child.

That?s a bad idea when your book has a premise that would appear ludicrous to most adults. (To be fair, few supernatural fantasies seem plausible to anyone over the age of 12.) It?s a worse one when the desire for maturity makes your prose grim and cheerless. Red Rain suffers from an overly grown-up sensibility: It feels too controlled, too fussy, too bogged down in detail. The dominant tone is elegiac rather than exciting: Passages linger over the aftermath of destruction?a house?s splintered remains, a charred body?rather than the unwinding blow of it. One character even sleeps through a hurricane, waking just in time to survey the wreckage. When she goes outside, she hears ?the pleas of the injured waiting to be rescued ? survivors discovering their dead ? sweating, cursing men digging, pawing, shoveling into the rubbled houses.?

The slog, the numbness, the taking stock of damage, the cleaning up. What anchors Red Rain in adult reality also defangs it. I would so love to see Stine abandon his newfound commitment to realism and coherence. If only he?d plunge us back into the chaos of childhood?but this time without the failsafes of his trademark goofiness.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=5ed15a6081224155bbcd846b5ea9ff99

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Chevy Volt EcoHub app tells drivers how little they pay to charge, goads them into staying green (video)

Chevy Volt EcoHub app tells drivers how little they're paying to charge video

GM's OnStar team would really like us to stay on the electric side of the Chevy Volt's powertrain as much as possible. That's the selling point, after all. Rather than simply preach green driving and hope for the best, the division is testing a new EcoHub app that reminds Volt drivers just how miserly their plug-in hybrids can be. Qualifying owners who opt in or subscribe to OnStar have the Volt's energy usage costs compared to their home's total electricity bill, showing how much cheaper it can be to avoid the gas pump. There's more if money isn't enough of a motivator -- the app also builds in a counter that estimates how much gas Volt drivers are saving nationwide. The eco-friendly ego boost is currently limited to Android users participating in Pecan Street's smart grid project in Austin, but long-term plans have the app reaching iOS and all Volt fans eager to justify their ride.

Continue reading Chevy Volt EcoHub app tells drivers how little they pay to charge, goads them into staying green (video)

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Thursday, October 4, 2012

Libya yet to work out US cooperation in Benghazi probe

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libya and the United States have yet to agree how a U.S. investigative team will cooperate in a probe into a deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, a senior Libyan official said on Tuesday.

FBI agents were sent to Libya after the September 11 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission and another facility in which the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans died. So far they have conducted interviews in Tripoli and have yet to go to Benghazi.

Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammed Abdel Aziz said the prosecutor general had given only verbal approval for a joint investigation.

"We are getting ready for the FBI team to go to Benghazi and meet with our team and start joint investigations together and also visit the site," he said.

"The FBI team is now in Tripoli. There are others who will come maybe soon to join the team ... Hopefully in the coming days we will reach an agreement as to how the (U.S.) team will work with the Libyan team ... We are now in the context of (awaiting) written permission."

Abdel Aziz was speaking after meeting U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Elizabeth Jones in Tripoli. "It is the right of the United States to be involved, exchange information and investigate what happened in Benghazi," Abdel Aziz said.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland sidestepped the question of whether an agreement had been reached with Libya, but said: "We have a commitment from the Libyan government to work together. There has been cooperation at the political level. There has to now be cooperation at the investigative level."

She said in State Department contacts with the FBI on Tuesday, "they expressed confidence that they'll be able to work well with the Libyans."

An FBI spokesman in Washington would only say that the investigation into the Benghazi attack was continuing, but would not comment on where the agents in Libya were located.

A U.S. lawmaker said security was a factor as to why the FBI team had yet not gone to Benghazi.

"Part of it was security posture, who was going to perform the security was part of it," House intelligence committee Chairman Mike Rogers told Reuters. "What worries me is that crime scene is so stale now and been well-trampled."

The head of Libya's Supreme Court, Kamal Dahan, who also met Jones on Tuesday, told reporters the two countries would cooperate but that Libya would lead the probe. Jones also met Prime Minister-elect Mustafa Abushagur.

The Obama administration has described the assault as a terrorist attack and announced a panel to investigate the events. Its work is separate from the FBI probe.

Libyan officials say eight people have been arrested so far in connection with the attack.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/libya-yet-us-cooperation-benghazi-probe-053340350.html

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Springfield Vermont News: VTel Wireless wins $2 million

Federal Communications Commission
News Media Information 202 / 418-0500
445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, D. C. 20554
Internet: http://www.fcc.gov
TTY: 1-888-835-5322

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:


October 3, 2012
Neil Grace, 202-418-0506
neil.grace@fcc.gov

FCC ANNOUNCES WINNERS OF AMERICA?S FIRST ?MOBILITY FUND? AUCTION: UP TO 83,000 NEW U.S. ROAD MILES ON WHICH MILLIONS OF AMERICANS LIVE, WORK, OR TRAVEL WILL GAIN ACCESS TO MOBILE INTERNET WITHIN 3 YEARS

Winning companies will begin build-out of advanced mobile infrastructure to 31 states with areas that currently lack access; New mobile Internet service areas will help U.S. maintain global leadership in mobile

(Washington, D.C.) - FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski today announced the winners of America?s first ?Mobility Fund? auction. This market-based policy innovation was part of the Commission?s once-in-a-generation reform of the Universal Service Program last year, which allocated $300 million in savings from cutting waste and inefficiency, to a new Mobility Fund aimed at closing gaps in mobile coverage across the U.S. The effort marks the first time in history the Commission has made universal mobile service an express universal service goal.

As a result of the auction, new mobile infrastructure deployment will begin in 31 states with areas that currently lack access to 3G or 4G mobile service. In total, up to 83,000 new U.S. road miles on which millions of Americans live, work, or travel will gain access to advanced mobile networks that significantly enhance opportunities for jobs, education, healthcare and public safety. As part of the auction rules, winning companies must complete projects within three years. They must also make their networks available to other providers for roaming so that as many consumers as possible can benefit from the new networks. Thirty-eight companies and subsidiaries participated in the auction, submitting nearly 900 bids. Winners ranged from larger national carriers like T-Mobile and U.S. Cellular to smaller carriers like Pine Belt Cellular, Inc. in Alabama, and VTel Wireless, Inc. in Vermont. The Commission expects millions more in private investment to complement the auction funding. A full list of winning companies is can be found here.

This auction is just the first step in the Commission?s new effort to provide support to accelerate mobile deployment. The Commission will provide an additional $50 million in one-time support to Tribal Lands and $500 million annually for ongoing support to mobile services in Phase II of Mobility Fund. This funding all comes from savings from last year?s Universal Service reforms.

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said,

?For too many, dead zones in mobile Internet coverage are too common ? and today?s winners will help the U.S. close those gaps. But today?s real winners are the American people, millions of whom will soon have greater access to the job, education and healthcare opportunities of America?s world-leading mobile economy. Over the last few years, the U.S. has regained global leadership in mobile innovation ? and today?s successful auction will help our nation maintain that leadership in the 21st century.?

CLICK HERE FOR AN INTERACTIVE MAP

OF THE AREAS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES THAT WILL RECEIVE SUPPORT TO ACCELERATE 3G AND 4G MOBILE COVERAGE.
The Mobility Fund auction used an innovative, market-based competition to distribute funding, the first
time such an auction had been run in the United States. Carriers competed against others across the
country, and winners were chosen based on the lowest cost-per-mile bids to extend coverage to unserved
roads. This will maximize the impact of the new funding to speed deployment to the greatest number of
unserved areas.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE PUBLIC NOTICE.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE FULL LIST OF WINNERS.

? FCC ?
For more news and information about the FCC please visit: www.fcc.gov

Source: http://springfieldvt.blogspot.com/2012/10/vtel-wireless-wins-2-million.html

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Amazon Kindle Paperwhite 3G


Once Barnes & Noble introduced the Nook Simple Touch With GlowLight , the first E Ink-based?ebook reader with edge lighting, it was only a matter of time before Amazon responded. Enter the Kindle Paperwhite 3G ($179 direct), an edge-lit version of last year's Kindle Touch. There's more to it than that, though. Thanks to the Paperwhite's effective lighting, improved fonts, near-perfect form factor, and robust ecosystem, it's a fantastic ebook reader.?We're withholding our Editors' Choice award for the 3G version because of its high price, and leaving that award with the Nook Simple Touch With GlowLight for now. While we haven't yet tested the $119 Wi-Fi-only Kindle Paperwhite yet, we're pretty confident that it's a better buy given its affordability.?

Design, Controls, and Cover
Let's step through the key changes first. The Kindle Paperwhite is now black, instead of dark gray like last year's Kindle Touch. It measures 6.7 by 4.6 by 0.36 inches (HWD) and weighs 7.8 ounces; the model without 3G weighs 7.5 ounces. It's a tenth of an inch shorter than last year's model on both sides, and it's a few hundredths of an inch thinner, but it weighs the same. The matte, soft-touch finish feels a little more sleek and expensive than the Nook Simple Touch's housing, which is more like low-grade industrial rubber in comparison. And the Paperwhite is significantly thinner than the Nook Simple Touch With GlowLight, although the latter remains almost an ounce lighter.

There are no hardware page turn buttons on the Kindle Paperwhite, like there are on the Nook Simple Touch. This may be a blessing, though, since the Nook's are tough to press, and forums are turning up reliability issues with the base Kindle's buttons. The Kindle Paperwhite also drops the Kindle Touch's home button; now it's just a printed logo, and the top edge of the bezel is blank.?There's still no AC adapter in the box; you only get a USB cable for charging, although an optional $19.99 AC adapter is available.?Another omission: the headphone jack, which used to let you listen to audiobooks, podcasts, and music, is gone. So if that matters to you, go with a Nook.

As far as connectivity is concerned, the Kindle Paperwhite and Paperwhite 3G both support 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi hotspots, with WEP, WPA, or WPA2 encryption enabled. The 3G model works over AT&T's data network as before, and also works on many overseas networks; I had no trouble with it during the review. You never pay for 3G access, but Amazon limits you to either shopping for and buying books, or accessing Wikipedia with it. The?Kindle Paperwhite 3G also connected to our WPA2-encrypted labs network without issue.?

Amazon's optional new Paperwhite Leather Cover ($39.99) deserves special mention. In addition to coming in six colors, it has a magnetic clasp that stays closed. Open or close the cover, and it wakes the reader or puts it back to sleep. And unlike Apple's magnetic Smart Cover for the iPad, the Paperwhite Leather Cover completely encases and protects the entire device?front and back. The new cover isn't as soft to the touch as last year's version, but the textured finish should prove much more resistant to scratches and fingerprints.

Paperwhite Display
The new Paperwhite display is a gem?for E Ink, that is. It still measures 6 inches diagonally, but with an improved pixel density of 212 pixels per inch. It's also a capacitive touch screen, instead of the older IR-based panel. It's more responsive to finger touches than the Kindle Touch, but since you're still waiting for the E Ink to refresh, you won't confuse the Kindle Paperwhite with a glass Android tablet screen. That said, page refreshes are faster and less obtrusive than ever.

So, about the new edge-lighting: It looks great. When placed side-by-side, the Kindle Paperwhite display is brighter and more even than the Nook Simple Touch With GlowLight's screen. Our camera analyst, Jim Fisher, shot each screen with a Nikon D600 which was set to spot meter on each reader's gray background. With ISO and aperture fixed, the shutter speed difference was 20 percent, with the Kindle winning out with the brighter screen.

You can choose from 24 levels of brightness, which in real life range from barely there, to use-your-Kindle-as-a-flashlight level. Some minor bleed from the LEDs along the bottom edge is visible, but there's less of it than there is on the top edge of the Nook Simple Touch With GlowLight. By almost every measure, the Paperwhite's screen is superior.

User Interface and Reading
Amazon finally improved the home screen as well. Instead of the old, boring, inflexible list of books and collections, the Paperwhite displays covers of recently read books and ones Amazon recommends to you. In lieu of the old Home button, there's a Home icon at the left corner of the reworked Kindle toolbar that brings you back to this screen at any point.

As with all recent Kindles, reading is a pleasure. For turning pages, the Kindle Paperwhite's screen is broken up into three zones. The bottom right zone is the largest; tap anywhere there while reading, and you'll advance a page. Tap the slimmer portion to the left, and you'll go back a page. Finally, tap anywhere near the top of the screen, and you'll bring up the Kindle toolbar.

There are now six font choices with eight size options, plus three settings each for line spacing and margin spacing. The new fonts are an improvement, and help bring the Kindle Paperwhite in line with the Nook and Sony Reader, both of which have offered better font choices for some time. There's also an improvement in sharpness, though it's not dramatic.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/2BtgxtBbZzs/0,2817,2410156,00.asp

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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Chained Wings

Chained Wings

Kids with wings; dosen't sound real, does it? Created straight from a test tube, these avian mutants have escaped the clutches of the whitecoats for more than 2 years. Now, the erasers are back, even more ruthless than ever.

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This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Chained Wings?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

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Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "Chained Wings"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

Cool story bro'. -Violet

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ItsViolet
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Can I claim Alexander (Blind one)

Luck is a lot like Fairies
~*~If you believe in it, then it's more likely to be real ~*~

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Hi Violet! I would love to reserve Jodelle Ferland's FC.

Sometimes your family can be the strangest of all.
Could you kill your best friend?
Dolls have just as much life as people do.
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Listen to Steve Jobs' Futuristic Remarks from 1983 International ...

Some would describe the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs as visionary. But just how forward thinking he and the company was early on might not have been realized to its fullest extent ? until now.

A recently uncovered 1983 speech puts Jobs at the?International Design Conference in Aspen. Marcel Brown with Life Liberty Tech points out the speech was highlighted earlier this year but cut off after Jobs? 20 minutes of prepared remarks, leaving a Q&A session ?lost.??Brown has recovered and digitized the full audio.

These unprepared remarks, Brown writes, show Jobs? ?incredible insight into his vision of future technology.?

Listen to Steve Jobs Futuristic Remarks from 1983 International Design Conference in Aspen

This cassette was given to Brown from a client who was an attendee of Jobs' 1983 speech. (Photo: Marcel Brown/Life Liberty Tech)

?This talks shows us just how incredibly ahead of his time he was,? Brown writes.

Listen to the full speech ? both the prepared 20 minutes plus the Q&A (Note: new audio starts at?21:30. The entire speech is 54:23.):

In the speech, Jobs says, ?Apple?s strategy is really simple.? He goes on to essentially describe the MacBook but notes that there were technical impossibilities?preventing their idea from coming to fruition at the time but envisioning?achieving?goals within the decade. ?So, we had three options,? he says.

?Option one was to do nothing. As I mentioned, we are all pretty young and patient, so that was not a good option.

?The second was to put a piece of garbage computer in a book. [...] our?competitors?are doing that so we don?t need to do that.

?The third option was to design the computer that we want to put in the book eventually, even though we can?t put in the book now. Right now, it fits in a bread box and is $10,000? it just so turns out, fortunately, there is a giant office market out there that is buying these things a lot faster than we can make them.?

Jobs goes on to say that the next thing they planned to do with this technology is find a way to put it in a shoebox (referencing the size) and sell it for $2,500.

Listen to Steve Jobs Futuristic Remarks from 1983 International Design Conference in Aspen

Steve Jobs, left, chairman of Apple Computers, John Sculley, center, president and CEO, and Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, unveil the new Apple IIc computer in San Francisco, April 24, 1984. (Photo: AP/Sal Veder)

?Finally, we?ll find a way to get it in a book and sell it for under $1,000.?

The birth of the MacBook went as Jobs described.

Here are a few of the futuristic highlights from the speech pulled out by Brown (Editor?s note: headers mentioning the current Apple technology were added to Brown?s highlights ):

  • iPhone: He confidently talks about the personal computer being a new medium of communication. Again, this is before networking was commonplace or there was any inkling of the Internet going mainstream. Yet he specifically talks about early e-mail systems and how it is re-shaping communication. He matter-of-factly states that when we have portable computers with radio links, people could be walking around anywhere and pick up their e-mail. Again, this is 1983, at least 20 years before the era of mobile computing.
  • Google Street View: He mentions an experiment done by MIT that sounds very much like a Google Street View application.
  • MacBook: He says Apple?s strategy is to ?put an incredibly great computer in a book that you can carry around with you that you can learn how to use in 20 minutes?. Does that sound like anything we are familiar with today?
  • iTunes and Apps:?He thought that the software industry needed something like a radio station so that people could sample software before they buy it. [...]?He foresees paying for software in an automated fashion over the phone lines with credit cards.
  • Siri:?Right at the end of the Q&A session, a question is asked about voice recognition, which he believed was the better part of a decade away from reality. Given the context of Siri today, it is interesting to hear him talk about the difficultly of recognizing language vs voice because language is contextually driven. He says, ?This stuff is hard?.

Brown obtained the whole of the speech from?John Celuch of Inland Design, who as an attendee of the conference was given a cassette recording of it at the time.

Check out Brown?s full post for more insights on the speech here.

Brown also writes that Celuch, who met Jobs at the conference, was given something to put into a ?time capsule,? which has yet to be dug up. Brown writes that he?ll provide more information on this in future articles.

Source: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/steve-jobs-makes-some-amazing-prediction-in-this-lost-portion-of-a-1983-speech/

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