A Million Bottles a Minute: World's Plastic Binge 'As Dangerous as Climate Change'

Should you ever travel to one of the many uninhibited islands that dot the most remote reaches of Earth’s oceans, chances are you’ll find plastic bottles littering the shore. The Guardian reports: A million plastic bottles are bought around the world every minute and the number will jump another 20 percent by 2021, creating an environmental crisis some campaigners predict will be as serious as climate change. New figures obtained by the Guardian reveal the surge in usage of plastic bottles, more than half a trillion of which will be sold annually by the end of the decade. The demand, equivalent to about 20,000 bottles being bought every second, is driven by an apparently insatiable desire for bottled water and the spread of a western, urbanised “on the go” culture to China and the Asia Pacific region. More than 480bn plastic drinking bottles were sold in 2016 across the world, up from about 300bn a decade ago. If placed end to end, they would extend more than halfway to the sun. By 2021 this will increase to 583.3bn, according to the most up-to-date estimates from Euromonitor International’s global packaging trends report. Most plastic bottles used for soft drinks and water are made from polyethylene terephthalate (Pet), which is highly recyclable. But as their use soars across the globe, efforts to collect and recycle the bottles to keep them from polluting the oceans, are failing to keep up.

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Source: Slashdot – A Million Bottles a Minute: World’s Plastic Binge ‘As Dangerous as Climate Change’

Thanks, Internet!: Shakira's 'Whatever, Whenever' Performed As A Heavy Metal Song

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This is a video of Norwegian vocalist and multi-instrument musician Leo Moracchioli performing Shakira’s 2001 hit ‘Whatever, Whenever’ in the style of a heavy metal song. It was weird to hear him scream “MY BREASTS ARE SMALL” out of nowhere though because those are not the full lyrics. The full lyrics are:

Lucky that my lips not only mumble

They spill kisses like a fountain
Lucky that my breasts are small and humble
So you don’t confuse them with mountains

Honestly, I didn’t even know those were the lyrics until I looked them up out of curiosity (which almost killed me). Still, if somebody confuses your breasts for actual mountains they’re probably blind and have a very poor sense of touch. Me? I would never do that. *closes eyes, reaches for breast* Oh yeah, that’s a breast alright. “That’s my elbow.” I wasn’t going to say anything but it did feel bony.

Keep going for the video, as well as the original for reference.

Source: Geekologie – Thanks, Internet!: Shakira’s ‘Whatever, Whenever’ Performed As A Heavy Metal Song

Vertu, Phone-Maker To the Rich, Says It's Broke

A British-based luxury phone maker which made its name selling $50,000 smartphones decked out in alligator leather and titanium and fitted with sapphire screens, has applied to the courts to be placed in administration after running of out money to pay staff and suppliers, (paywalled) reports British outlet The Times. In a witness statement filed in the High Court in London yesterday, the report adds, the company’s last remaining director Jean-Charles Charki, said that Vertu was insolvent and unable to meet its June 30 payroll obligations of about 500,000 euros. From an earlier report: According to a juicy new report in the Telegraph, employees are worried about the future of the company after noticing that production had been running at reduced capacity. Employees are apparently worried about their unpaid wages, as well as pension contributions taken out of their paychecks without being added into the company’s retirement fund. Sources inside the company also told the Telegraph that Vertu has unpaid debts with suppliers such as Qualcomm and Microsoft, and bills from waste management, pest control, and other property services.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Vertu, Phone-Maker To the Rich, Says It’s Broke

The Moto X4 may be the first non-Google phone to get Project Fi

There’s only been one problem with Project Fi’s well-received phone carrier network: too few phones. Until now, the only devices that work with it have been Google’s own Nexus and Pixel handsets. It looks like that’s about to change, though. Project…

Source: Engadget – The Moto X4 may be the first non-Google phone to get Project Fi

You're Thinking About the Dictionary All Wrong, Lexicographers Say

An anonymous reader shares a report on The Outline: It seems like ever since “bootylicious” was added to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) in 2004, dictionaries have been trying to play catch up to ever-evolving languages of slang, especially when it comes to words originating with African Americans and other communities of color. User-generated definitions found on websites like Urban Dictionary and Genius are also giving them some competition. But in fact, lexicographers have always intended the dictionary to be more of an archive than an authority. The purpose of the dictionary has always been to record how language is being used, but the internet has allowed publishers and lexicographers to communicate that purpose differently, explained Kory Stamper, lexicographer and author of Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries, to The Outline. “I think people assume that because dictionaries are dusty books that the language is this dusty book or that language is only what you find in the dictionary,” Stamper said. “And to be able to say, ‘No, language is always on the move and here’s how it’s moving,’ really mirrors the way that we can interact with people online.” Thanks to the internet, it’s now easier for lexicographers to access more written materials and take note of the ways people are using and producing language. And as a result, dictionaries are updated more frequently and more robustly than they were in the days of print-only source material. “Woke” was just one of 1200 new additions to the OED this quarter alone. But even with all the technology afforded to them, lexicographers still walk a fine line between including words that are well-known enough without being too obscure. “We joke around that when we add new words we want 50 percent of the people who see that new word to say, ‘Oh my gosh that’s not in the dictionary yet?'” said Stamper, who writes for Merriam-Webster. “And then we want the other half of people to go, ‘I don’t even know what this word is. Why are you adding it to the dictionary?'”

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Source: Slashdot – You’re Thinking About the Dictionary All Wrong, Lexicographers Say

Star Maps Capture The Night Sky On The Date And Location Of Your Choice

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These is an example of a custom Star Map available from The Night Sky. For $60 you can get an 18″ x 24″ poster of the location of the visible stars on any given night, from any location on earth. They’re perfect for memorializing a birthday, engagement, anniversary — you name it. “The day my cat died.” Sure! Love the concept but don’t have $60 to throw around? Buy one my much more affordable star maps! “This is just a blank piece of paper.” It was cloudy that night, no refunds.

Thanks to lizzy, who informed me she thought she was the sole adoptive mother of a star until she found out like two thousand other kids had adopted the same star. You got hoodwinked!

Source: Geekologie – Star Maps Capture The Night Sky On The Date And Location Of Your Choice

Palmer Luckey donates to software that brings Oculus games to Vive

Oculus co-founder Palmer Luckey has always railed against the idea of locking VR games to a single platform. Now, several months after leaving Facebook following controversy about his political donations to a pro-Trump group, Luckey is stepping back…

Source: Engadget – Palmer Luckey donates to software that brings Oculus games to Vive

Study paints a confused picture of how insecticides are affecting bees

Enlarge (credit: Congressman Ted Yoho)

There’s widespread agreement that bees around the world are in trouble. A few years back, domestic honey bee nests started experiencing mass die offs, and problems were found in wild bees as well. What’s hasn’t been clear is what the cause might be. Viruses, fungi, and pesticides have all been floated as possible causes, but definitive evidence has been hard to come by; a number of scientists have suggested that there might be multiple contributing factors.

Nevertheless, suspicions focused on a specific class of insecticides called neonicotinoids. The EU has already placed restrictions on their use, and it’s considering a near-total ban.

If you read the headlines this week, it would appear that a new study completely justifies that decision. Funded in part by two insecticide manufacturers, a team of independent researchers purportedly tied neonicotinoids to bee colony health. But a quick look at the underlying data shows that the situation is far more complex. And a second paper, with more robust results, supports the idea that these insecticides are merely one of a number of factors contributing to bees’ problems.

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Source: Ars Technica – Study paints a confused picture of how insecticides are affecting bees

The Age of Distributed Truth

Eugene Wei, head of video at Oculus (Formerly with Flipboard, Hulu, and Amazon) writes about how information gets distributed now, and things that were commonly known in specific circles are becoming more widely known. From his article: The internet gave everyone a megaphone, and these days that can feel like that Chinese proverb, you know the one. Perhaps the truth was better kept in the hands of a limited set of responsible stewards, but that age of the expert has passed, and that system had its own issues. As every Death Star reminds us each time they’re blown up, concentrating power in a small area has its own unique vulnerability. We live in the age of distributed truth, and it’s an environment in which fake news can spread like mold when in viral form. But the same applies to the truth, and if there’s one lesson on how to do your part in an age of distributed truth, it’s to speak the truth and to support those who do. It may be exhausting work — is it really necessary to point out the emperor is buck naked? — but it’s the best we can do for now. In this age, the silent majority is no majority at all.

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Source: Slashdot – The Age of Distributed Truth

AT&T: forced arbitration isn’t “forced” because no one has to buy service

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | ljhimages)

AT&T is denying that its contracts include “forced arbitration” clauses, even though customers must agree to the clauses in order to obtain Internet or TV service.

“At the outset, no AT&T customer is ever ‘forced’ to agree to arbitration,” AT&T Executive VP Tim McKone wrote in a letter to US senators today. “Customers accept their contracts with AT&T freely and voluntarily; no one ‘forces’ them to obtain AT&T wireless service, DirecTV programming, or other products and services.”

AT&T was responding to concerns raised by Sens. Al Franken (D-Minn.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and Edward Markey (D-Mass.), who previously alleged that AT&T’s use of forced arbitration clauses has helped the company charge higher prices than the ones it advertises to customers.

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Source: Ars Technica – AT&T: forced arbitration isn’t “forced” because no one has to buy service