Jumat, 21 Januari 2011

Urinal games help men aim straight


Tokyo urinals fitted with games enabling users to test power and accuracy
A Japanese entertainment company has combined men's obsession with video games with their perennial inability to aim straight to create a range of distractions in selected Tokyo urinals.
Sega has installed the Toylets in male lavatories at four bars and games arcades in the Japanese capital.
The games use pressure sensors attached to eye-level LCD screens that test users' accuracy as they answer the call of nature.
The four games include one in which the object is to spray the screen clean of graffiti. Another, Manneken Pis, named after the famous statue in Brussels, measures the volume of the urine stream.
Splashing Battle, meanwhile, pits one user against another – though thankfully not directly – by challenging him to produce a more powerful stream than the previous visitor.
In the fourth game, the North Wind and the Sun and Me, sensors control a digital wind blowing up a young woman's skirt. The greater the stream's intensity, the higher the skirt travels.
The games sit (or stand) well with Japan's open attitude to all matters micturition.
Children are raised on tales of ghosts who inhabit toilets, perhaps to encourage cleanliness, while girls are encouraged to keep on the good side of the female deity who supposedly resides in domestic WCs.
While many foreign visitors to Japan find themselves befuddled by hi-tech 'washlets' in upmarket hotels and restaurants, locals are accustomed to heated sets, multidirectional jets of warm air and water, and even face-saving 'perfume bursts'.
For the easily embarrassed, the toilet maker Toto offers Otohime (Sound Princess) – a gadget tailored for women's public lavatories that emits the sound of running water.
Sega said the Toylet games would be available only until the end of the month, and it had no plans to market them commercially.
Household versions would be unlikely to succeed. According to a 2009 survey by Toto, more than 33% of Japanese men prefer to urinate while sitting down.

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News - "Dark Knight Rises" Villains Revealed


A press release from Warner Bros. Pictures has just confirmed the two key members of Batman's Rogues Gallery that will appear in the much-anticipated upcoming 'The Dark Knight Rises' - Catwoman and Bane. Check it out below:


'Warner Bros. Pictures announced today that Anne Hathaway has been cast as Selina Kyle in Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight Rises.” She will be starring alongside Christian Bale, who returns in the title role of Bruce Wayne/Batman. Christopher Nolan stated, “I am thrilled to have the opportunity to work with Anne Hathaway, who will be a fantastic addition to our ensemble as we complete our story.”


In addition, Tom Hardy has been set to play Bane. Nolan said, “I am delighted to be working with Tom again and excited to watch him bring to life our new interpretation of one of Batman’s most formidable enemies.”


Nolan will direct the film from a screenplay he wrote with Jonathan Nolan, from a story by Christopher Nolan and David S. Goyer. Nolan will also produce the film with his longtime producing partner, Emma Thomas, and Charles Roven. “The Dark Knight Rises” is slated for release on July 20, 2012. The film will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.'





Study: Google “Favors” Itself Only 19% Of The Time

For the past year or so, there’s been a rising meme that Google is altering its search results in ways to favor itself over competitors. Now a new study is out showing the opposite. Google is far more likely not to show its own products in the first spot of its search results. The survey [...]



Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.

165 House Republicans endorse defunding USAID



As the budget battle inside the Republican Party
heats up, a large group of conservative House Republicans called Thursday for a drastic defunding of the U.S. Agency for International Development and a host
of other programs.



The Republican Study Committee (RSC), a loose
conglomeration of 165 self-identified conservative GOP House members, unveiled
their plan
Thursday that they argue could save $2.5 trillion
in federal spending over ten years. The proposal is centered around legislation
that would slash or eliminate federal funding for USAID, the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, the U.S. Trade Development Agency, the Woodrow Wilson Center, the
USDA Sugar Program, economic assistance to Egypt, and many other programs.



The RSC plan calls for $1.39 billion in annual savings from USAID. The USAID operating budget for fiscal 2010 was approximately $1.65 billion. The RSC spending plan summary was not clear if all the cuts would come from operations or from USAID administered programs.



The bill is being led by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), the RSC chairman, Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ), chairman of the RSC Budget and Spending Task
Force. Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) is
expected to offer a Senate version of the legislation.



The RSC plan also calls for Republicans to fulfill
their campaign promise
to trim $100 billion from the budget this year by returning "non-security"
discretionary spending to 2008 levels in the next funding bill for fiscal 2011,
which is needed to keep the government running when the temporary funding bill
expires March 4. It would also call for spending to be cut to 2006 levels and
then remain flat for the next ten years.



"The current continuing resolution (CR) will expire
on March 4th. Under your leadership during the campaign, House
Republicans boldly pledged to cut federal spending by $100 billion by returning
current spending back to FY2008 levels," read
a letter
circulated Jan 20 and addressed to House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH). "Despite the added
challenge of being four months into the current fiscal year, we still must keep
our $100 billion pledge to the American people."



The GOP plan to defund USAID goes even further than Majority
Whip Eric Cantor's suggestion
last October
to halt foreign aid to countries that
don't share U.S. interests, but Cantor gave a lukewarm endorsement to the RSC
plan Thursday.



"I applaud the
Republican Study Committee for proposing cuts in federal spending, and I look
forward to the discussion on reducing spending that our country so desperately
needs to have," Cantor said
in a statement
. "I look forward to these cuts and others being brought to
the floor for an up-or-down vote during consideration of the CR, and I support
that effort."



If the RSC plan was
ever implemented, which is doubtful, the State Department would be in the
firing line for huge cuts. Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen
(R-FL) announced,
on her first day as
chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, that she wanted to take an
axe to the State Department and foreign aid budgets. Her appropriations
counterpart, House Appropriations State and Foreign Ops subcommittee chairwoman
Kay Granger (R-TX) has
made
similar statements in the past.



Reached by The Cable Thursday, an aide to Granger
said, "Everything is on the table for potential cuts. We
appreciate the RSC's suggestions as a starting point and will consider their
ideas going forward."



Of course, "everything" suggests that the defense
budget, previously sacrosanct in the GOP, is now part of the debate over cuts.
That's one key area where the divisions inside the GOP caucus will come to
light, said Tom Donnelly, director
of the American Enterprise Institute's Center for Defense
Studies
.



The House GOP leadership is caught between those in
their caucus who want to slash and burn federal spending right now and those
who want to have a more protracted debate over spending priorities to make sure
key items like defense are protected, he said.



"The GOP House leaders have to take account of their
new members. They also understand that the Tea Party impulse is not something
they can manage, so they have to respond as well as lead and they can't
dictate. It's not like 1994, where Newt
Gingrich
was a colossus who could dictate the landscape. This is a bottom
up shift not a top down," Donnelly said.



The tensions inside the GOP caucus were on full
display Wednesday evening, when freshman South Carolina Tea Party Rep. Tim Scott successfully added an
amendment to the Republican's budget rule that removed flexibility in timing
for the budget cuts. Scott was able to change the language from demanding a
"transition" to 2008 levels to insisting that change be enacted right away, as
was advocated by GOP Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI).



The RSC plan is so drastic and extends its projected
cuts so far out into the future that its chances for implementation are slim to
none, Donnelly said. But the struggle inside the GOP on the issue is real.



"This debate will do a lot to define the nature of
what conservatism is, going forward -- whether it's a more libertarian or
Reaganite movement," he said. "The House Democrats are largely spectators at
this point."

Two Suns? Twin Stars Could Be Visible From Earth By 2012


Earth could be getting a second sun, at least temporarily.
Dr. Brad Carter, Senior Lecturer of Physics at the University of Southern Queensland, outlined the scenario to news.com.au. Betelgeuse, one of the night sky's brightest stars, is losing mass, indicating it is collapsing. It could run out of fuel and go super-nova at any time.
When that happens, for at least a few weeks, we'd see a second sun, Carter says.

Read More...

Duke Nukem Forever out on May 3, Honestly

After an eternity in development, Duke Nukem Forever is finally going to be released on May 3, 2011 in North America, developer Gearbox has revealed to Game Informer.

The long-awaited macho shooter will hit PC, Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. The worldwide release is slated for May 6. It definitely is. Honestly, they mean it this time.


'The moment fans all over the world have been waiting for is almost here,' said Christoph Hartmann, president of publisher 2K. 'May 3, 2011 marks Duke's return as he unleashes his brash and brutally honest wit on the world. His return is going to be epic and one that will make video gaming history!'


Duke Nukem Forever's had an infamously long and troubled development since being announced in 1997 by original developer and series creator 3D Realms<SPAN ...

Senator Al Franken: No joke, Comcast trying to whack Netflix









Sen. Al Franken (D-MN) has had it with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), who has just created 'essentially two Internets' with weak net neutrality rules and who this week signed off on the mega-merger of Comcast and NBC Universal. A common thread unites the two decisions: both highlight the 'growing threat of corporate control' over information.


Franken's remarks came yesterday during a speech to a Netroots Nation gathering in Minnesota. The former comedian and NBC employee (during his Saturday Night Live days) has made media consolidation and network neutrality two of his signature issues, and he hammered on both of them during his talk.


Calling net neutrality the 'free speech issue of our time,' Franken expressed his displeasure with the FCC's recent net neutrality rules. 'These rules are not strong enough,' he said, pointing out that paid prioritization was not banned and that wireless networks are allowed to discriminate at will.


The rules mark the 'first time the FCC has ever allowed discrimination on the Internet' and they 'will create essentially two Internets.'


When it comes to the Comcast merger, Franken was even more vocal. 'As you probably know, I hate this merger,' he told the group. Not only will it raise prices on TV subscriptions, it will give the combined entity incredible power to stifle competition from online sources like Netflix.


'I'm hearing that Comcast is already preparing to pull NBC Universal's programming from Netflix when it's next up for review,' Franken said. The cable industry is worried about the threat from cheaper options like Netflix; 'they aren't stupid and they want to shut it down.'


Franken even referenced the current controversy over Level 3's peering arrangements with Comcast (Level 3 just won a major contract from Netflix to deliver its content). Comcast's move to charge for this interconnection is, in Franken's view, 'a clear warning sign of what we can all expect if this deal goes through.'


As he was giving that speech, the merger did go through yesterday, signed off on by the FCC and the Department of Justice. As for what's next, Franken just sees a new wave of mega-consolidation in which AT&T tries to buy ABC/Disney while Verizon goes after CBS.


'Now is the time to decide if we want four or five companies owning and delivering all of our information and entertainment,' he said.





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