Jalopnik Rich Lambo Asshole To Cop: ‘My Shoes Are Worth More Than Your Wages’ | Vitals The Foods Tha

Jalopnik Rich Lambo Asshole To Cop: ‘My Shoes Are Worth More Than Your Wages’
| Vitals The Foods That Are Most Dangerous to Dogs, and Why
| io9 Aquaman and Cyborg Get Their Close-Ups in These Batman v Superman Behind-the-Scenes Photos
| Kotaku Japanese ‘Gore Erotica’ Is Slowly Catching On In The West [NSFW]
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Source: Gizmodo – Jalopnik Rich Lambo Asshole To Cop: ‘My Shoes Are Worth More Than Your Wages’ | Vitals The Foods Tha

Deadspin Why Are So Many MMA Fighters Truthers, Conspiracists, And Just Plain Weird?

Deadspin Why Are So Many MMA Fighters Truthers, Conspiracists, And Just Plain Weird?
| Jezebel It’s the End Times, Because Mika Brzezinski Might Be Doin’ It With Joe Scarborough
| Sploid Seeing How Sex Dolls Are Made Is Hauntingly Eerie (NSFW)
| Gawker Manhattan’s Only Gun Range Is a Right-Wing Safe Space
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Source: Kotaku – Deadspin Why Are So Many MMA Fighters Truthers, Conspiracists, And Just Plain Weird?

Awww: First Grade Teacher Lets Students Draw On Her Dress For Last Day Of School

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This is the dress first grade teacher Chris-ShaRee Castlebury let her students draw on for the last day of school (presumably not while being worn). Chris-ShaRee teaches at Pat Henry Elementary in Lawton, Oklahoma and thought the dress would be a nice creative exercise for the kids, as well as provide her with a beautiful keepsake to remember her students by. How sweet. I still remember my first grade teacher: Mrs. Eberly. She was so wonderful. So was my kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Dickerson. And my second and third grade teachers, Mrs. Hindman and Mrs. Cox. I have such fond memories of them all. My God, if they only knew how I turned out.

Keep going for several more shots.

Source: Geekologie – Awww: First Grade Teacher Lets Students Draw On Her Dress For Last Day Of School

Best Android Phones: Q2 2016

As we start wrapping up the last of our Q2 2016 buyers guides we finally come to the best Android smartphones guide. With CES and MWC having passed, we’ve now seen all the major Android smartphone players present their flagship smartphones for 2016. As usual, I’ll be moving down the price range, starting from the largest and most expensive phones, and ending with the best of Android’s mid range devices.


Best Android Phablets: Samsung Galaxy Note5 and Google Nexus 6P


Unchanged from our previous smartphone guide is the best Android phablet recommendation. This is primarily due to the fact that we see our top phablet choices refreshed in the fall, unlike standard flagship phones that tend to launch at the start of the year during CES and MWC. 


The Galaxy Note5 is Samsung’s flagship large screen smartphone, and it still comes out on top of the competition in all the key areas like camera, display, and performance. At a high level, the Galaxy Note5 has a 5.7″ 2560×1440 AMOLED display, Samsung’s Exynos 7420 SoC, 4GB of LPDDR4 memory, and a 16MP camera with OIS that also supports 4K video recording. Samsung created the phablet category, and they’ve continued to improve on the Note line with every iteration, leading to a well refined smartphone that is difficult to compete with.




Due to Samsung’s release schedule the Galaxy Note5 is actually a step behind the Galaxy S7 in some ways. Obviously the 5.1″ Galaxy S7 and 5.7″ Galaxy Note5 don’t compete directly, but Samsung does offer the Galaxy S7 Edge which has a 5.5″ curved display. You don’t get the S-Pen from the Note5, but you do get improvements in other areas, including a new camera and either Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820 or Samsung’s Exynos 8890 SoC depending on your region. 


Given that the market is always moving, it may be best to wait a few months for the next iteration of the Galaxy Note. For now, the Note5 is as good as it gets for large Android phones.




If you’re looking for something priced more affordably than the Galaxy Note5, or if you’re not a fan of Touchwiz, the Nexus 6P is a viable alternative. It’s Google’s flagship Nexus phone, and it’s made in partnership with Huawei. Like the Note5 it sports a 2560×1440 AMOLED display, but it’s powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 810 SoC which is paired with 3GB of LPDDR4 RAM and 32GB of NAND. 


Compared to the Note5 you do make some sacrifices with the Nexus 6P. Snapdragon 810’s problems are a known quantity at this point, and I’m honestly very hesitant to recommend a phone that uses it after seeing the improvements with Snapdragon 820 this year. In the case of the Nexus 6P, you’re getting what is likely the best Snapdragon 810 implementation in a phone, so there’s less throttling than with other smartphones using the same SoC. The Nexus 6P’s 12.3MP camera can take some really great photos, but you’re almost always forced to shoot in the slow HDR+ mode, and exposure can still be incorrect at times. The final compromise is storage performance, as the Nexus 6P’s eMMC NAND is simply not competitive with the UFS 2.0 solutions on the market.


While the Nexus 6P is a step behind the Note5 in many respects, the promise of software updates and unmodified Android software from Google is an important thing for many people. In addition, the price is also a step behind that of the Note5 as well, with the Nexus 6P starting at the equivalent of $499 USD in many markets. For me, this is what the true appeal of the Nexus 6P is, and in markets where the phone isn’t sold directly from Google at a relatively low price there may be better options available for users looking to get a phablet for a lower price than the latest generation of flagship phones.


Best High-End Android Smartphone: Galaxy S7 and HTC 10


As the most widely known line of Android flagship smartphones, I don’t think the Galaxy S series needs any introduction. This year marked the release of the Galaxy S7, the seventh flagship Android phone from Samsung if you’re ignore derivative smartphones like the Galaxy S Edge series. The Galaxy S7 represents Samsung making important changes to the design and feature set that they arrived at with the Galaxy S6. The design is very similar to the Galaxy S6, but Samsung has tweaked the curvature of the back, edges, and cover glass to make the phone significantly more ergonomic. The chassis does get thicker and heavier, which allowed for a significant reduction to the camera hump on the S6, as well as a larger battery.




As far as specs go, the Galaxy S7 comes in two versions. Both have 5.1″ 2560×1440 AMOLED displays, 32 or 64GB of UFS 2.0 NAND, 4GB of LPDDR4 memory, a 12MP Sony IMX260 camera with a f/1.7 aperture, and a 3000mAh battery. Depending on where you live you’ll either get Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820 or Samsung’s Exynos 8890 SoC, both of which use custom ARM cores. More specifically, the US, Japan, and China versions receive Snapdragon 820, while the rest of the world gets Exynos 8890.


Regardless of which Galaxy S7 you get; you’ll be getting the best hardware that Samsung has to offer. I was a fan of the Galaxy S6, and simply improving upon it for 2016 was a pretty surefire way to create a great successor. People who were upset by the loss of MicroSD support on the Galaxy S6 will also appreciate Samsung adding it back.


As for price, the Galaxy S7 starts at $669 for the 32GB model as an unlocked phone, with the price going up to $769 for 64GB.




The other phone worth discussing at the high end is the HTC 10. While we’re still working on our review of the HTC 10, I have no hesitation in saying that it is at least an equal to the Galaxy S7. However, determining whether it’s better for you is conditional on at least a few different factors.


To start, we can look at where the HTC 10 is better than the Galaxy S7. In terms of audio quality, design, OEM UI, and other areas like perceptual latency I would argue that HTC is just clearly ahead of Samsung. HTC also has proper USB 3.1 and USB-C support, which does make the device more future-proof than the Galaxy S7’s microUSB connector in that regard. The front facing camera is also just clearly better on the basis of having OIS and optics that can actually focus on a subject instead of being set to infinity at all times.


However, Samsung is clearly ahead in display and the camera is clearly the fastest I’ve ever seen in any phone, bar none. Samsung is also just clearly shipping better WiFi implementations right now in terms of antenna sensitivity and software implementation, along with IP68 water resistance and magstripe payments for the US and South Korea.


To further muddy the waters, there are areas where HTC and Samsung trade blows. While Samsung’s camera is clearly faster, HTC often has better detail in their images, especially at the center of the frame but the Galaxy S7 has better detail at the edge of the frame. Noise reduction tends to be a bit less heavy-handed and sharpening artifacts aren’t nearly as strong as it is on the Galaxy S7. HTC’s larger sensor also means that it’s possible to get actual dSLR-like bokeh with macro shots, which is honestly something that I’ve never seen before in any smartphone camera ever.


Overall, I think it’s pretty fair to say that the HTC 10 is a solid choice. If I had to pick between the two I would probably lean towards the HTC 10, but this is based upon personal priorities. I don’t think you can really go wrong between the two. The HTC 10 is currently 699 USD when bought unlocked through HTC with Carbon Gray and Glacial Silver with 32 GB of internal storage, which is a bit more than the Galaxy S7 but considering how smartphones are often used for 2-3 years now I don’t think 50 dollars should be a major point in favor or against a phone.


Best Mid-Range Android Smartphone: OnePlus 3


This section of the guide is one area that is changing from last quarter’s iteration. My previous recommendation for a mid-range smartphone was the Nexus 5X, which sits closer toward the upper end of the mid range. At $349 it presented a lot of value for your money, but since its release I believe it has been surpassed by another smartphone. For this quarter I think the best mid-range Android smartphone has to be the OnePlus 3.




I reviewed the OnePlus 3 recently, and the only major issue I could find with the phone was that the display accuracy was quite poor. It also doesn’t have the best video recording out there, but it’s not unusable by any means. Beyond those two problems, I felt the phone was quite good. The build quality is exceptional, the camera takes nice photos, and Snapdragon 820 provides huge performance gains over the OnePlus 2 which had a very poor Snapdragon 810 implementation. In addition to all that, OnePlus will be rolling out an update soon that includes an sRGB mode, and based on my measurements they’ve really hit their mark here, which means that display accuracy is no longer a concern for anyone who values it. The OnePlus 3 comes in only one configuration, which has 64GB of storage and is priced at $399.


While it has lost its spot as the top mid range Android phone, I think the Nexus 5X deserves an honorable mention, partially because the OnePlus 3 really stretches the definition of mid-range when it’s priced at $399. If you can find the Nexus 5X when the price drops below $300 it’s still a phone that’s worth considering, but I just think that the OnePlus 3 ends up being worth the extra $100 or so and will be a better investment in a smartphone to last the next two or three years.



Best Budget Android Smartphone: Huawei Honor 5X


I look at many mid range Android smartphones in my reviews. I’ve seen the state of the market go from a cesspool of horrible phones to a market of phones that actually provide a pretty great user experience for someone shopping on a more constrained budget. At one point Motorola was the champion in this space for users who didn’t live in regions serviced by Xiaomi. Unfortunately, they’ve made some missteps regarding software updates lately, and I think that their hardware decisions since they were purchased by Lenovo have been very poor to say the least. Because of that, my budget smartphone recommendation is still Huawei’s Honor 5X.




The Honor 5X is actually a phone from 2015, but it was brought to North America this year after a launch event at CES. I published my review of it earlier this year, and I said that for $199 it would be really difficult to find a better device. I think that still holds true, and the Honor 5X is a great all around device for $199. It has a 1920×1080 IPS display, 16GB of NAND, a 13MP rear-facing camera, and a 3000mAh battery. At the heart of the phone is Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 616 SoC paired with 2GB of LPDDR3 memory.


On top of having relatively good specs for a $199 phone, the Honor 5X goes above and beyond in two ways. The first is the chassis, which is primarily made of aluminum and looks a lot nicer than most of the mid range phones you’ll find. The second is the inclusion of a fingerprint scanner, which is a convenience that is often lost when moving down from the flagship smartphone market. Including the sensor is one thing, but the fact that it’s a really nice and simple to set up fingerprint scanner is a big advantage over competing phones that don’t even include one at all.


Obviously there are always exceptions. If Xiaomi operates in your market and works on your carrier you may find “better” devices from them. For a large number of buyers that simply isn’t an option, and at these price points importing a phone is going to be more trouble than it’s worth to get something that’s a bit faster or has a couple spec advantages. I think for most users looking for a mid range phone the Honor 5X really delivers, and bringing features like the fingerprint scanner and metal chassis from high end smartphones helps to position it above the competition. For $199, I don’t think you can go wrong with the Huawei Honor 5X.


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Source: AnandTech – Best Android Phones: Q2 2016

Antarctic ozone hole beginning to heal

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Source: Ars Technica – Antarctic ozone hole beginning to heal

The Day After Tomorrow Happened 30,000 Years Ago

Toward the end of the last ice age, Earth’s climate was a turbulent beast, warming up and chilling out again every 1,500 years. Research published today in Science links these abrupt temperature swings to changes ocean circulation, filling an important gap in our understanding of past climate change.

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Source: Gizmodo – The Day After Tomorrow Happened 30,000 Years Ago

Windows 10 Anniversary Update Launching August 2nd

While certainly not as big of an update as the original launch of Windows 10, the next major update now has a release date. August 2nd will be the date where all of the latest additions and features will be coming to Windows 10. The insider preview has been testing many of these for a while, providing feedback and bug reports to hopefully have a smooth launch.


There’s quite a few small changes coming, such changes to the Start Menu and lock screen, as well as new icons and locations for some of the settings to give it a better look and feel. Welcome changes will be things like being able to adjust music playback on the lock screen, as well as do some Cortana interaction without having to unlock the device.


One of the features that has been sorely lacking since launch though is extensions for the new browser, Edge. With the Anniversary Update, extensions will finally be available. There are a few extensions already in the preview builds, such as Adblock, Adblock Plus, Lastpass, Microsoft Translator, and a few more. The ability to use Lastpass is almost a make or break feature for me, so this is very much welcome. Extensions will be available through the store, and will be kept up to date through the store too.


First shown off at Build at the end of March, Microsoft is focusing even more on their pen support with Windows Ink. On a system with pen support, there will be an icon in the system tray to launch Windows Ink, where you can get quick access to pen-enabled apps, as well as discover more. They’ve added some excellent features for Windows Ink, including a digital ruler, and even the ability to set reminders by writing on notes. There seems to be a very vocal group that uses the inking quite a bit, and these changes should make that even more useful.



Windows Hello, which is the biometric authentication system which debuted with Windows 10, will also get some upgrades. Windows Hello support will be available in Microsoft Edge to allow Windows Hello login through the browser to supported sites and web apps. Hopefully this will be the first step on eliminating the password problem.



When this ships, Windows 10 will be about a year old, so it makes a lot of sense to start to deliver on some of the enterprise features promised when Windows 10 was first announced. The key one here is Windows Information Protection, formerly known as Enterprise Data Protection. This will help eliminate data leaks by securing devices, separating data, and preventing unauthorized users from opening the data. It’s a major feature for enterprises, and for those that want to read about it a bit more, they’ve posted a blog post about this update.



Gaming hasn’t been forgotten either, with Xbox Play Anywhere announced at E3, where you can buy a supported game once on either PC or Xbox, and play the same game with the same save files on either. There’s a lot more coming, and we’ll be looking into the changes further closer to the launch date.


Microsoft has also announced that the free upgrade offer 


Source: Microsoft



Source: AnandTech – Windows 10 Anniversary Update Launching August 2nd

Anyone Can Grow Their Own Food With This Discounted Miracle-Gro AeroGarden

You don’t need a yard, or even any gardening skills to grow your own food at home; you just need a Miracle-Gro Aerogarden. This fully-integrated, soil-free indoor garden can grow herbs, vegetables, and salad greens up to five times faster than regular soil, and $103 is the best price we’ve ever seen on the LCD screen-equipped Ultra model.

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Source: LifeHacker – Anyone Can Grow Their Own Food With This Discounted Miracle-Gro AeroGarden

Elizabeth Warren Says Apple, Amazon and Google Are Trying To 'Lock Out' Competition

Elizabeth Warren, an American academic and member of the Democratic Party, believes that Google, Apple, and Amazon are trying to use their size to “snuff out competition.” In a speech about the perils of “consolidation and concentration” throughout the economy, the Massachusetts senator singled out the three of tech’s biggest players. From a report:Warren had different beefs with Google, Apple and Amazon, but the common thread was that she accused each one of using its powerful platform to “lock out smaller guys and newer guys,” including some that compete with Google, Apple and Amazon. Google, she said, uses “its dominant search engine to harm rivals of its Google Plus user review feature;” Apple “has placed conditions on its rivals that make it difficult for them to offer competitive streaming services” that compete with Apple Music; and Amazon “uses its position as the dominant bookseller to steer consumers to books published by Amazon to the detriment of other publishers.””Google, Apple and Amazon have created disruptive technologies that changed the world, and … they deserve to be highly profitable and successful,” Warren said. “But the opportunity to compete must remain open for new entrants and smaller competitors that want their chance to change the world again.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Elizabeth Warren Says Apple, Amazon and Google Are Trying To ‘Lock Out’ Competition

Spotify Says Apple Is Blocking Its App

You know, this sounds like something Apple would pull, even if it was at the expense of its own customers. The sad thing is, if you want to have access to Apple’s App store, you have to play by their rules.

Spotify says Apple is making it harder for the streaming music company to compete by blocking a new version of its iPhone app. In a letter sent this week to Apple’s top lawyer, Spotify says Apple is “causing grave harm to Spotify and its customers” by rejecting an update to Spotify’s iOS app. The letter says Apple turned down a new version of the app while citing “business model rules” and demanded that Spotify use Apple’s billing system if “Spotify wants to use the app to acquire new customers and sell subscriptions.”

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Spotify Says Apple Is Blocking Its App

How Deep Learning Plays Critical Role in Military Problem-Solving

The GPU is the engine of modern AI, NVIDIA solution architect Jon Barker Barker told a broad audience from the defense, intelligence and homeland security communities at the recent annual GEOINT Symposium. (See “Accelerating AI with GPUs: A New Computing Model”) The event is hosted by the U.S Geospatial Intelligence Foundation, a nonprofit group promoting geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) work, such as mapping and charting.

Barker described how deep learning on embedded GPU systems can detect, classify and track objects in high-resolution aerial imagery with speeds and accuracy surpassing human ability. Enhancing military target recognition, infrastructure mapping, search-and-rescue missions and aid delivery during humanitarian crises gives the technology broad applicability, he said.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – How Deep Learning Plays Critical Role in Military Problem-Solving

'Scooby Snack' Added to Oxford English Dictionary, Presumably After Bribe of Scooby Snacks

There are two food groups in the Scooby-Doo universe. One is the giant sandwich, crafted from whatever ingredients can be found in a haunted kitchen. The other is the Scooby Snack, a treat with delicious powers of bribery and persuasion—and now, an official entry in the Oxford English Dictionary.

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Source: io9 – ‘Scooby Snack’ Added to Oxford English Dictionary, Presumably After Bribe of Scooby Snacks

Outerspace!: Rihanna's Music Video For The Official Song Of The New Star Wars Movie

rihanna-star-trek.jpg

This is Rihanna’s trippy music video for Sledgehammer (not to be confused with Peter Gabriel’s Sledgehammer, which is way trippier by at least 100X), the official song of the new Star Trek movie, Star Trek: Space And Stuff. It was the first music video shot entirely in IMAX. I bet it looks pretty good in IMAX, but it did not look that great on my netbook at 240p. It was just like, 12 big colorful squares. Highlights: outerspace, Rihanna dressed up like an alien, little spaceships, and the Starship Enterprise scene at the very end. My favorite part by far though was when the song was over.

Keep going for somebody’s artistic vision.

Source: Geekologie – Outerspace!: Rihanna’s Music Video For The Official Song Of The New Star Wars Movie

Man who went to court over his gun-toting drone now faces child porn charges

A still from a YouTube video of Austin Haughwout’s drone, armed with a handgun. (credit: Austin Haughwout)

Austin Haughwout thought he’d be facing a legal showdown with the Federal Aviation Administration over his armed drone, but now he’s got bigger legal problems.

The 19-year-old Connecticut man was arrested yesterday on child pornography charges. He also faces charges of enticing a minor and attempted sexual assault. The arrest warrant is sealed, but local police outlined the allegations against Haughwout to The Hartford Courant.

The arrest is a result of a “lengthy investigation” that has its origins in a violent incident from July 2015. That month, Haughwout went to the police department to turn himself in due to charges “stemming from a confrontation with officers at the town’s library,” the Courant reported. While he was being arrested, Haughwout engaged in “assaultive behavior with the officers that were taking him into custody.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Man who went to court over his gun-toting drone now faces child porn charges