Guy Chainsaw Carves Dragon Bench Out Of Single Piece Of Wood

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These are several shots of the dragon bench entirely chainsaw carved by Igor Loskutow, who works as a representative for power tool manufacturer Husqvarna and as a wood carving instructor. Pretty sweet looking bench, right? I’d sit on it. As a matter of fact, I’m thinking this bench would look perfect next to the water feature in my backyard. “That’s a mud pit, not a waterfall into a koi pond.” Shhhhhhh, that’s not what I told the realtor.

Keep going for a handful more shots including a cat who has no qualms curling up on a dragon for a nap.

Source: Geekologie – Guy Chainsaw Carves Dragon Bench Out Of Single Piece Of Wood

FDA Issues Recall of 465,000 St. Jude Pacemakers To Patch Security Holes

In what may be a first, patients with heart conditions that are using particular pacemaker brands will have to visit their doctors for firmware updates to keep their embedded devices safe from tampering. From a report: It seems such an odd concept at first, but with many kinds of pacemakers now “smarter,” with connections to mobile devices and diagnostic systems, the avenue has been carved for these medical devices to potentially be tampered with, should a threat actor choose. In particular, Abbott’s pacemakers, formerly of St. Jude Medical, have been “recalled” by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on a voluntary basis. The devices must be given a firmware update to protect them against a set of critical vulnerabilities, first reported by MedSec, which could drain pacemaker battery life, allow attackers to change programmed settings, or even change the beats and rhythm of the device. On Tuesday, the FDA issued a security advisory, warning that the pacemakers must be recalled — and as they are embedded within the chests of their users, this requires a home visit or trip to the hospital to have the software patch applied.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – FDA Issues Recall of 465,000 St. Jude Pacemakers To Patch Security Holes

ESPN College Football Analyst Quits Over Concerns For Player Safety 

Former NFL player Ed Cunningham has been working as a college football analyst since 1997, and was set to begin another season for ESPN and ABC. Today, Cunningham told the New York Times that he is walking away from his job because he can no longer condone the game’s health risks.

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Source: Gizmodo – ESPN College Football Analyst Quits Over Concerns For Player Safety 

The FDA Just Approved the First 'Living' Therapy to Treat Childhood Leukemia

On Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration approved a treatment that genetically modifies a patient’s own blood cells in order to attack childhood leukemia, a landmark decision opens the door for an era of FDA-sanctioned human gene modification.

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Source: Gizmodo – The FDA Just Approved the First ‘Living’ Therapy to Treat Childhood Leukemia

ASUS' Windows Mixed Reality headset may come with a premium price

After a teaser back in the spring, ASUS is ready to talk in-depth about its Windows Mixed Reality headset… and it’s clear that this is a premium design, with the price to match. The headgear (known as the ASUS Windows Mixed Reality Headset) isn’t…

Source: Engadget – ASUS’ Windows Mixed Reality headset may come with a premium price

Over 500 Years Later, Astronomers Solve an Explosive Stellar Mystery

On the night of March 11, 1437, Korean astronomers recorded a strange light low in the sky, in the tail of the constellation Scorpius. It must have been at least as bright as the North Star, Polaris, maybe even as bright as the stars of the Big Dipper. Fourteen days later, the light disappeared.

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Source: Gizmodo – Over 500 Years Later, Astronomers Solve an Explosive Stellar Mystery

Scientists Aren't Sure What Climate Change Did to Harvey

Hurricane Harvey and its remnants have quickly become one of the worst natural disasters in US history. The unprecedented duration and intensity of the storm has sparked a heated debate about how much climate change is to blame. The short answer is that we don’t really know, yet. But attempting to answer that question…

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Source: Gizmodo – Scientists Aren’t Sure What Climate Change Did to Harvey

Google Critic Ousted From Think Tank Funded by the Tech Giant

An anonymous reader writes: A researcher at a high-profile Washington, D.C.-think tank, which receives funding from Google, was pushed out after criticizing the company. In June, Barry Lynn, who was a scholar at New America, posted a statement praising the European Union’s record $2.7 billion fine against the company. Lynn ran a team, Open Markets, that researched competition policy and was increasingly critical of giants like Google and Amazon. Google executive chairman and former CEO Eric Schmidt, criticized Lynn’s statement to the think tank’s CEO, Anne-Marie Slaughter, according to The New York Times. Schmidt chaired New America until 2016. The think tank has received $21 million from Google and Schmidt’s family’s foundation since its founding in 1999. The statement reportedly disappeared from the think tank website but returned hours later. According to the Times, word of Schmidt’s displeasure spread across the think tank. Slaughter fired Lynn days later, saying in an email obtained by the Times that “the time has come for Open Markets and New America to part ways.” Slaughter told Lynn in an email that his firing was “in no way based on the content of your work,” but said he was “imperiling the institution as a whole.” Lynn told the Times he believed his dismissal was because he criticized Google.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Google Critic Ousted From Think Tank Funded by the Tech Giant

How Spammers Hijack Abandoned URLs to Spread SEO Garbage Across the Internet

“Was The Morningside Post website hacked?” a friend asked me. The site, which I once co-edited, seemed to have died, and returned as a zombie version of itself. About five months ago, my successors at TMP—the student-run news publication at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs—accidentally…

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Source: Gizmodo – How Spammers Hijack Abandoned URLs to Spread SEO Garbage Across the Internet

Mid-Air Paintball Collisions Shot In Ultra Slow Motion

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This is a video of the Slow Mo Guys filming pairs of paintballs exploding against one another in mid-air. Apparently it took some time to figure out just how to set up the guns so they’re perfectly aligned and shoot at the right time. I assumed they just would have done it old west duel style, but I assumed wrong. You know I was paintballing with some friends a while back and they convinced me to put my mask on and stand against a tree with an apple on my head to see who could shoot it off first but instead of aiming for the apple they all just shot my in the nuts and now my penis hurts whenever there’s a storm coming.

Keep going for the video, but feel free to skip around because there’s lots of exposition.

Source: Geekologie – Mid-Air Paintball Collisions Shot In Ultra Slow Motion

With 200+ mph track run, German students win fastest reported Hyperloop pod

August SpaceX Hyperloop competition. Credit: Jing Niu (video link)

Students from the University of Munich were winners again last Sunday night. Their team, called WARR, built a demo Hyperloop pod and sent it down a test track just outside of SpaceX’s headquarters, reaching more than 200 mph using its own homemade propulsion system and braking in time before the track’s end.

The speed was leagues better than the speed that WARR clocked during the last SpaceX Hyperloop competition in January (58 mph). At the time, WARR won its first award for having the fastest demo pod. On Sunday, the German team was able to best its official record by nearly 150 mph with some clever engineering.

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Source: Ars Technica – With 200+ mph track run, German students win fastest reported Hyperloop pod

Mission Control Keeps the Heart of the Space Community Beating During Harvey

This week, NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JSC)—home of the space agency’s Mission Control—became an island in a sea of floodwater. After staggering amounts of damage in Houston, today, Tropical Storm Harvey made landfall once again bringing torrential downpours to areas of Southeast Texas and Louisiana. Somehow, against…

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Source: Gizmodo – Mission Control Keeps the Heart of the Space Community Beating During Harvey

98.5% of unique net neutrality comments oppose Ajit Pai’s anti-Title II plan

Enlarge / Net neutrality supporters rally for Title II reclassification of broadband in front of the White House in November 2014. (credit: Stephen Melkisethian)

A study funded by Internet service providers has found something that Internet service providers really won’t like.

The overwhelming majority of people who wrote unique comments to the Federal Communications Commission want the FCC to keep its current net neutrality rules and classification of ISPs as common carriers under Title II of the Communications Act, according to the study released today.

The study (available here) was conducted by consulting firm Emprata and funded by Broadband for America, whose members include  AT&T, CenturyLink, Charter, CTIA-The Wireless Association, Comcast, NCTA–The Internet & Television Association, the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA), and USTelecom.

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Source: Ars Technica – 98.5% of unique net neutrality comments oppose Ajit Pai’s anti-Title II plan