A project out of MIT called Sensory Fiction relays characters' emotions through networked sensors and actuators worn by the reader. Will future books be yet another wearable technology?
Claire Keane

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A project out of MIT called Sensory Fiction relays characters' emotions through networked sensors and actuators worn by the reader. Will future books be yet another wearable technology?
As of right now it's perfectly legal to operate a drone for commercial reasons. That's according to a federal judge, in a ruling that notes the Federal..
Are drones not scary enough for you yet? How about this? A drone helicopter that spots you and identifies you as an intruder. It tells you to stop and put your hands behind your head. Instead, you keep coming. The drone then shoots you with barbed Taser darts that pump 80,000 volts into you. If you try to get up, it will continue pumping voltage into you until you submit and the authorities arrive.
Economist Bill Black discusses how the investment in education, healthcare, and infrastructure fueled Ecuador's economic "miracle" See more videos: http://th...
Why Los Angeles Is Giving Away 651,000 iPads
Published on Mar 31, 2014
April 1 (Bloomberg) --- It's called the Common Core Technology Project, a publicly funded plan to give every public school student in Los Angeles -- more than 651,000 students in 900 schools -- an iPad loaded with new digital curriculum. Bloomberg's Willow Bay takes a look at the ambitious, costly, and controversial move to take L.A. high tech.
No, single moms aren’t the problem. And neither are absentee dads.
1. Single moms are the problem. Only 9 percent of low-income, urban moms have been single throughout their child's first five years. Thirty-five percent were married to, or in a relationship with, the child's father for that entire time.*
2. Absent dads are the problem. Sixty percent of low-income dads see at least one of their children daily. Another 16 percent see their children weekly.*
3. Black dads are the problem. Among men who don't live with their children, black fathers are more likely than white or Hispanic dads to have a daily presence in their kids' lives.
4. Poor people are lazy. In 2004, there was at least one adult with a job in 60 percent of families on food stamps that had both kids and a nondisabled, working-age adult.
5. If you're not officially poor, you're doing okay. The federal poverty line for a family of two parents and two children in 2012 was $23,283. Basic needs cost at least twice that in 615 of America's cities and regions.
6. Go to college, get out of poverty. In 2012, about 1.1 million people who made less than $25,000 a year, worked full time, and were heads of household had a bachelor's degree.**
7. We're winning the war on poverty. The number of households with children living on less than $2 a day per person has grown 160 percent since 1996, to 1.65 million families in 2011.
8. The days of old ladies eating cat food are over. The share of elderly single women living in extreme poverty jumped 31 percent from 2011 to 2012.
9. The homeless are drunk street people. One in 45 kids in the United States experiences homelessness each year. In New York City alone, 22,000 children are homeless.
10. Handouts are bankrupting us. In 2012, total welfare funding was 0.47 percent of thefederal budget.
*Source: Analysis by Dr. Laura Tach at Cornell University.
Have you ever noticed the vaulted tile ceilings of the Oyster Bar inside the Grand Central Terminal? Have you ever walked under the polychrome tile arches and vaults of the Elephant House of the Bronx Zoo?
The Museum of the City of New York is revealing a secret kept for decades behind many iconic American public buildings.
At least 200 of New York’s most prominent Beaux-Arts landmarkswere built more than a century ago by a father-son team of masons from Spain.
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A toddler taken from his home and barred from speaking his mother tongue. A girl lured into her teacher’s room, where she was sexually abused. A teenage boy who endured beatings and humiliation and was haunted by the memories as an adult.
These are just a few among thousands of harrowing stories heard at Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission on the church-run, government-funded residential school system for indigenous peoples.
After nearly four years, visits to more than 300 communities and thousands of hours of heart-wrenching testimony, the final hearing came to an end in Edmonton on Sunday.
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A 20-year-old African-American man, Zikarious Jaquan Flint, is dead after he was shot yesterday afternoon by police on the campus of Columbus State University in Columbus, Georgia. Witnesses claim the campus police shot unarmed Flint in the back while he was running away from them. There are major discrepancies between the narrative released by the …
Baltimore Orioles star Adam Jones says fans threw a banana at him during Sunday's game, yet another indication that sports have a long way to go to win the battle against racism.
When shown photos of black men along with the word "educated," people are more likely to remember him as light-skinned.
Literature by black authors is rich with silver screen potential, and shows a diversity of that’s sorely missing.
New York City has always been changing. But recently, the city has seen a wave of luxury condos and artisanal cupcake boutiques uproot local delis and dive bars. To make sure we don't forget the city's past, two New York-based photographers, James...
Forced Breeding Breeding enslaved Africans was a profitable business in the United States for hundreds of years. Although forcing two strangers to engage in sexual intercourse was traumatizing to both genders, Black women endured a heavy burden of pregnancy, childbirth and child loss. Children created through forced breeding were marketed as highly desirable stock when …
Pat Garofalo It seems Minnesota state representative Garofalo thinks the NBA is just a league of violent would-be offenders who, if they were not busy playing basketball on the court, would engage in unlawful behavior. Garofalo sent out this tweet after watching a Minnesota Timberwolves game: Let’s be honest, 70% of teams in NBA could …
Yea a lot of people don’t know the face behind all the work when it comes to art… Plus I always write something in the hair so try and look hard for the words in the hair of the people I draw. I’m a normal person that enjoys boondocks and drawing. I had no idea that the pics I was so fearful of posting will get over 1000 notes! ;A; I kinda wanted to cry when I saw that… So I am putting then all together along with my smiling face to show my thanks. RB and comment if you like to.
This girl is seriously talented and pretty too ^_^
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I would love to buy those if you were ever interested in selling them…
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