Thursday, October 17, 2013

This Fake Upholstered Sofa Collects Rainwater For Green Spaces

This Fake Upholstered Sofa Collects Rainwater For Green Spaces


It turns out the myriad of benches dotting parks and green spaces can be doing so much more than just providing a place to sit or dispose of your gum. MARS Architects—a Shanghai-based firm—designed these wonderful bench alternatives that look like upholstered chesterfield couches, but are actually reservoirs for collecting rain that can later be used to water plants.

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Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-fake-upholstered-sofa-collects-rainwater-for-green-1447221684
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OKI B731dn


The OKI B731dn is the new flagship model of OKI's B700 line of mono laser-class printers, and is capable of printing a prodigious volume of documents for a mid-sized workgroup. Intended for mid-sized workgroups, it offers a high maximum monthly duty cycle, good standard and optional paper capacity, and solid output quality. One downside is that in our testing, it was slow for its price and rated speed.




The B731dn uses an LED-based print engine, which is essentially the same as a laser, except that it uses LEDs instead of a laser as a light source. The printer measures 16.1 by 17.1 by 19.6 inches (HWD), larger than you'd want to share a desk with, and weighs 59.5 pounds. The front panel houses 5-line backlit monochrome display and an alphanumeric keypad for password-protected printing. On the printer's side is a forward-facing slot for a USB thumb drive.





Paper Handling

The B731dn has good paper handling features and options, befitting its massive monthly duty cycle (280,000-page maximum, with a recommended maximum of 30,000 pages). Its standard paper capacity is 630 sheets, split between a 530-sheet main tray and a 100-sheet multipurpose tray, and it includes an automatic duplexer for printing on both sides of a sheet of paper. Maximum paper capacity is 3,100 sheets, when you add a second 530-sheet tray ($223.99 direct) and a 2,000-sheet feeder with casters ($700.99). Alternately, you can add up to 3 optional 530-sheet trays if you don't go with the feeder.



The B731dn offers Ethernet (including Gigabit Ethernet) and USB connectivity; I tested it on an Ethernet network with drivers installed on a PC running Windows Vista.


OKI B731dn



Speed and Output Quality

I timed the B731dn, rated at 55 pages per minute, on our business applications suite (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing), at an effective 9.4 pages per minute (ppm), essentially tied with the OKI B721dn's 9.5 ppm despite the latter being only rated at 49 pages per minute. (The rated speeds are based on text-only printing, while we test with a combination of text pages, graphics pages, and pages of mixed content.) It's also slower than its predecessor, the OKI B730dn, rated at 52 pages per minute, which I tested at 12 ppm in 2011; the B730dn is still being sold.



The B731dn was considerably slower than the Editors' Choice Dell B5460dn, rated at 62 pages per minute, which zipped through the same test at 18.7 ppm.
The Editors' Choice HP LaserJet Enterprise 600 Printer M601DN, rated at 45 pages per minute, turned in a speed of 13.4 ppm, while the HP LaserJet Enterprise 600 Printer M602DN, rated at 52 pages per minute, tested at 14.1 ppm.



Graphics output was typical of a mono laser, good enough for internal business use, but whether you'd distribute it as, say, PowerPoint handouts to a client you were seeking to impress depends on how picky you are. Very thin lines in one illustration did not show at all. The printer did poorly in an illustration that contains a gradient from very dark to very light tones, showing little distinction between them. Some backgrounds looked slightly blotchy.



Photo quality was also typical of mono lasers. The printer is capable of printing out recognizable images from Web pages, but whether you'd consider the output good enough for use in a client newsletter depends on how picky you are. There was frequent dithering in the form of graininess. In certain prints there was a loss of detail in bright areas. Two photos showed slight banding (a regular pattern of faint striations).



The OKI B731dn's running costs of 1.3 cents per page, based on price and yield figures provided by the company, are reasonably low; lower than the OKI B721dn's and HP M601dn's 1.7 cents per page and just higher than the HP M602dn's 1.2 cents per page.



The OKI B731dn brings a lot to the table: A prodigious monthly duty cycle, good standard and optional paper capacity, solid output quality, reasonably low running costs. But if you're in need of the high-volume printing that the B731dn affords, speed will likely be a factor, and in our testing it was slow for its price and rated speed. If that's not an obstacle, the B731 is a capable and otherwise well-rounded workhorse mono laser capable of anchoring a busy workgroup.


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Insert Coin semifinalist: GrowCubes help your produce flourish indoors



This NYC Resistor-designed food system provides just about everything you'll need to grow produce indoors, including rotating shelves that'll assure that plants get the best light possible and an aeroponic spray mist that cuts down on water by 90-percent, eliminates the need for soil and delivers nutrients directly to the plant. All of the above is automated, using a network of sensors and info downloaded from the internet and culled from a network of experts. Check out a video of the stackable cubes after the break, and be sure to watch GrowCubess' presentation at Expand next month.


You can see all of the Insert Coin semifinalists here.



Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/17/growcubes/?ncid=rss_truncated
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You’re Not the Worst Person In the World, The Shitstain Who Tormented Rebecca Sedwick Is




By Lex October 16, 2013 @ 5:56 PM




Zero tolerance policies have really fucked up childhood but good. When we were little snots, we all either were or knew the slightly bad kids in school, the ones who cut in lines or were the first kids to sneak cigarettes or talked back to the teacher. We also knew the one or two true psychopath dangerous kids you did not fuck with because you saw them pulling wings off live animals and talking about burning the world down. Now everybody who shows the slightest bit of grade school aggression is being lumped into the bully category, making it impossible to actually lobotomize deal with the nut job kids.


Like this unnamed 14-year old in Florida they arrested for bullying 12-year-old Rebecca Sedwick to the point she climbed up a concrete silo and jumped to her death. That doesn’t happen from snatching milk money or telling somebody their music sucks. That takes some sick and twisted doing over a long stretch of time. And this 14-year old did just that. Because some boy she liked also liked Rebecca. So she started calling Rebecca names on line, then moved to death threats, then started shoving her at school, forcing other girls to torment and assault the 12-year old. Rebecca’s parents moved her to another school. But did that stop middle school Stalin? Nope, she kept up the aggression and name calling and online pleas for Rebecca to kill herself, until Rebecca finally climbed the silo.



The police we wavering on whether to lock up this 14-year old gangster, until she went on Facebook and wrote:



Yes, I bullied Rebecca and she killed herself but I don’t give a fuck.



Yeah, maybe you should’ve check with legal counsel before posting that one. The Associated Press tried to get an interview with the bullies family, but…



At their mobile home, a barking pit bull stood guard and no one came outside despite shouts from reporters for an interview.



Maybe we could’ve just led with that little backdrop. This little defective slice deserves a trip to the Phantom Zone, though I suspect she’ll be released in the very near future to set upon her next destructive act. Maybe she’ll be one of those mall shooters whose neighbors and family claim never showed signs of crazy aggression before.




Source: http://www.wwtdd.com/2013/10/youre-not-the-worst-person-in-the-world-the-shitstain-who-tormented-rebecca-sedwick-is/
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Microsoft is updating all of its built-in Windows 8.1 apps--like Xbox Music, Mail, Calendar, People

Microsoft is updating all of its built-in Windows 8.1 apps—like Xbox Music, Mail, Calendar, People and all the rest—ahead of the operating system's release later today. Excited?

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SXSW Festival releases initial music lineup

(AP) — The South by Southwest Music Festival released its first list of artists for 2014 on Wednesday, featuring acts ranging from New Orleans rapper Vockah Redu to Texas country singer Rodney Crowell and Swedish rock band INVSN.

The first batch of 183 acts from 27 countries will only be the first of many, said Elizabeth Derczo, publicist for the six-day festival and music conference. South by Southwest was created to showcase up-and-coming acts, build industry contacts and include a handful of established talent.

In 2013, more than 25,000 people saw 2,278 acts during the festival that takes over downtown Austin every spring.

INVSN is one of the important European acts, featuring Dennis Lyxzen, lead singer of punk bands Refused and International Noise Conspiracy. INVSN is currently on a U.S. tour promoting their new self-titled album.

Other international acts include Germany's Hyenaz, Belgium's Sold Out and England's Glass Animals.

Dum Dum Girls drummer Sandra Vu brings her new genre-stretching band SISU to the festival. Other American bands include Brooklyn's Deidre and the Dark, Avi Buffalo from Los Angeles and Ohio's Jessica Lea Mayfield.

The festival also features fringe and experimental acts unlikely to ever make the charts or appear on TV. Austin's punk-rock drag queen Christeene is among the artists performing in 2014, mixing a homeless woman's appearance with explicit lyrics.

The music portion of South by Southwest lasts from March 11-16. South by Southwest also includes a film festival from March 7-15 and an interactive festival from March 7-11.

___

Online:

http://sxsw.com

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-16-SXSW%20Festival-Music/id-93e623ed9b1949918e9770e2c92b8a00
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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Top Ten: Track masters | Top Ten


Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull, Suzuka, 2013Sebastian Vettel’s[1] victory at Suzuka last weekend continued his sensational run in the Japanese Grand Prix. Vettel has now won on four of his five appearances at Suzuka, and is yet to finish off the podium or start from anywhere but pole position.


But Vettel is by no means the only driver to stamp his authority on a particular Grand Prix. Here are ten other drivers who have pulled something out of the bag at their favourite racetrack.


Michael Schumacher and Magny-Cours


Michael Schumacher[2] could warrant a list of his own, so great was his supremacy of Formula 1 in his Ferrari heyday. Incredibly, he won five or more races at ten different circuits during his Grand Prix career.


He took an astonishing eight victories at Magny-Cours between 1994 and 2006. The most memorable of which was undoubtedly his 2002 triumph, snatched from Raikkonen in the final laps. That allowed Schumacher to secure his record-equalling fifth world championship victory – and win the title earlier than anyone ever has.


Kimi Raikkonen and New Spa


Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari, Spa-Francorchamps, 2007Given that-Spa Francorchamps is considered the ultimate driving challenge on the F1 calendar, it says a lot for Kimi Raikkonen’s[3] talent that he has enjoyed such success in the Belgian Grand Prix.


Between 2004 and 2009 he took four victories in five races at Spa. Another victory looked possible in 2008 until he crashed out of a battle for the lead on the penultimate lap in slippery conditions.


Were it not for Raikkonen’s sabbatical in 2010 and 2011, and had the Belgian Grand Prix not been left off the calendar in 2003 and 2006, he might well have chalked up even more victories in the Ardennes.


Jim Clark and Old Spa


Long before Raikkonen was even born, another quiet man with an extraordinary talent was bossing a very different Spa. Jim Clark took four consecutive victories on the original 14 kilometre track, a terrifyingly quick and perilous blast through the Belgian countryside.


No one could touch Clark at Spa from 1962 to 1965. His 1963 victory was one of the greatest examples of his driving genius. On a typically rainy Spa day, Clark flew from eighth on the grid into a five-minute lead, lapping all but one of his competitors on his way to the chequered flag.


Yet he held no affection for the circuit, which had claimed the lives of fellow British racers Chris Bristow and Alan Stacey in a pair of appalling crashes at the 1960 race.


Jacky Ickx and the Nurburgring Nordschleife


Jacky Ickx’s astonishing grand prix debut at the Nordschleife in 1967 marked him out as a star of a the future. Driving an F2 car, Ickx set the third-fastest time in qualifying, beaten only by Denny Hulme[4] and Jim Clark’s F1 cars.


Under the rules of the time he had to start at the back with the other F2 cars but in the race quickly made his way up to fifth before retiring.


He went on to take two wins at the track despite not always enjoying the best machinery, and took four poles in five years.


Lewis Hamilton and the Hungaroring


Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, Hungaroring, 2013Lewis Hamilton’s first victory for Mercedes at the Hungarian Grand Prix earlier this year was his fourth at the Hungaroring, making him the joint most successful driver at the Budapest circuit along with Schumacher.


In fact, in the seven races Hamilton has started in Hungary, only once was he not in contention for victory. A puncture meant he was unable to capitalise on Felipe Massa’s[5] late retirement from the lead in 2008, while he was the architect of his downfall three years later, throwing away a likely win thanks to a run in with Paul di Resta and a poor tyre choice during a mid-race rain shower.


Hamilton also has an impressive record in Canada. He has won on three of his six visits to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve – including his first ever Grand Prix victory – and started from pole on four occasions.


Alain Prost and Jacarepagua


There were few complaints when the Brazilian Grand Prix was moved from the dull Jacerapagua circuit in Rio de Janeiro back to Sao Paulo’s Interlagos in 1990, but Alain Prost[6] can be forgiven for being disappointed with the switch.


The four-times had a superb record at Jacerapagua, winning half of the ten F1 races held on the circuit from 1982 to 1989. However the first of these was deeply controversial: Prost finished third on the road but was handed the win when Nelson Piquet[7] and Keke Rosberg were disqualified for being underweight.


The Jacerapagua circuit has since been consigned to the history books, as it was recently demolished to make way for a training ground to be used by athletes during the 2016 Olympic Games.


Mika Hakkinen and the Circuit de Catalunya


The Circuit de Catalunya is an ‘aero’ circuit and with Adrian Newey’s McLarens at his disposal Mika Hakkinen[8] took three wins on the trot – and narrowly missed out on a fourth.


Leading comfortably at the end of the 2001 race Hakkinen’s McLaren suffered a disastrous last-lap clutch failure.


With his victory in the 1997 European Grand Prix at Jerez also on his record, Hakkinen was more successful in Spain than any other country during his F1 career. Curiously, since he left the team McLaren have only won one of the subsequent 17 races held in Spain.


Nigel Mansell and Silverstone


Nigel Mansell, Williams, Silverstone, 1987Nigel Mansell[9] famously claimed that the support of the British fans shaved seconds off his lap time around Silverstone.


Given his record on home ground we should not be too quick to doubt him. After a debut Grand Prix victory at Brand Hatch in 1985, Mansell went on to take four victories for Williams at Silverstone between 1986 and 1992.


The most memorable triumph was his 1987 victory, in which he reeled in team mate Piquet and, ignoring the warnings from his fuel gauge, dived past his team mate to win. He ran out of fuel after crossing the finishing line, and was mobbed by delirious fans.


Nelson Piquet and Monza


Surely the most overlooked driver to have won three world championships, Nelson Piquet[10] was a top-drawer talent who won races and championships against the likes of Prost, Senna and Mansell.


Piquet revelled in power tracks and Monza was suited him to a tee. His record at the Italian Grand Prix was excellent: he won four races at Monza during the eighties while at Brabbham and Williams.


In 1987, en route to his third title, he scored an especially sweet victory, putting one over rival Brazilian star Senna, inheriting victory when the Lotus driver skidded off at the Parabolica late in the race.


Ayrton Senna and Monaco


Ayrton Senna, Toleman TG184, Monaco, 1984No circuit is more synonymous with the Ayrton Senna[11] legend than Monaco. From his famous charge through the field in a Toleman in 1984 to holding off a race long challenge by Mansell in his dominant Williams in 1992, many of the great Senna memories were forged on the streets of the principality.


The Brazilian star topped the Monaco podium six times between 1987 and 1993, his success only interrupted when he crashed out of a 50-second lead in 1988. Senna put that unhappy memory to bed with a run of five consecutive wins on the street circuit, and we’ll never know how long that record might have stretched if it were not for his tragic death at Imola in 1994.


Of course before Senna came along Graham Hill was ‘Mr Monaco’. Five victories on the harbour-side circuit between 1963 and 1969 accounted for more than a third of his career total of 14 race wins.


Over to you


Which other drivers do you consider masters of a particular track – in F1 and other motor sports? Have your say in the comments.


F1 top tens



Read more top tens[12]

Image © Red Bull/Getty, Daimler/Hoch Zwei, Williams/LAT, Ferrari/Ercole Colombo, Donington/Sutton



References

  1. ^ Sebastian Vettel (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  2. ^ Michael Schumacher (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  3. ^ Kimi Raikkonen (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  4. ^ Denny Hulme (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  5. ^ Felipe Massa (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  6. ^ Alain Prost (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  7. ^ Nelson Piquet (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  8. ^ Mika Hakkinen (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  9. ^ Nigel Mansell (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  10. ^ Nelson Piquet (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  11. ^ Ayrton Senna (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
  12. ^ Read more top tens (www.f1fanatic.co.uk)
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