Small business success requires constant evolution – NRF News (press release) (registration) (blog)


NRF News (press release) (registration) (blog)
Small business success requires constant evolution
NRF News (press release) (registration) (blog)
Cary Kelly opened her food retail business when her insatiable passion for cooking collided with a trend in olive oil stores. Kelly's store enjoyed early success as one of the first specialty food stores in the Washington, D.C., area; as competitors ...

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Small business success requires constant evolution - NRF News (press release) (registration) (blog)

Watch the Evolution Of Spider-Man Over 50 Years Of TV and Film – Nerdist

Its safe to say that were all a bit obsessed with a certain wall-crawling hero after the recent release of Spider-Man: Homecoming.The new film will add to the extensive and silly debates we love having about which actor was better in the role, which film got it right, andwith this being Spideys second MCU appearancehow weird it is that Peter Parker doesnt know what an AT-AT is in Civil War but is beyond excited to build the LEGO Death Star with Ned.

It may surprise some people to know that Spidey hasin some form or anotherbeen in our watchable entertainment lives for about 50 years now. And this super cut by Burger Fiction gives us a taste of every iteration whether friendly, spectacular, or amazing. To say that the various Spider-Men (Spider-Mans? Spiders-Men?) have changed over the decades would be the understatement of the year. His early appearances were surely a sign of the times, with an adult Spider-Man having a voice better suited for an episode ofMad Menthan a cartoon aimed at kids. Thankfully, his animated, live-action, and video game appearances have evolved along with his comic book counterparts. The days of a gruff authoritative voice fell by the wayside to make way for the younger wise-cracking web-swinger we all know and love.

Our only real criticism of Burger Fictions super cut is that they didnt give us more of that sweet, sweetElectric Company Spider-Man with Morgan Freeman. But dont worry, we can fix that.

Whats your favorite version of Spider-Man? Lets discuss in the comments below!

Image:Marvel Studios/Disney

Originally posted here:

Watch the Evolution Of Spider-Man Over 50 Years Of TV and Film - Nerdist

The evolution of a rivalry: Melee and Smash 4 – ESPN

The Evolution Championship Series will be featuring Smash 4 on Sunday finals day for the first time.

The annual schedule lineup announcement of the Evolution Championship Series elicited controversy and debate within the Smash community. For the first time in history, Super Smash Brothers for Wii U (Smash 4) would be featured on Sunday's finals day instead of Super Smash Brothers Melee.

People outside the community might be inclined to categorize Melee and Smash 4, the two most active games within the scene, as one collective entity: Smash. But people within the community will tell you that the games are loosely connected, with little crossover and few players playing both games competitively.

The Associated Press has settled one of esports' longest-lasting debates: no hyphen, no capital "s," just "esports." One of the editors who helped make the decision spoke with ESPN about how esports got its own entry in the stylebook.

Is it coaching, or is it cheating?

Six organizations have signed on to be part of the upcoming Overwatch League, including groups run by Robert Kraft and Fred Wilpon, and two endemic teams -- Immortals and NRG Esports -- will pay $20 million to join, sources told ESPN.

2 Related

To understand the rivalry, animosity and camaraderie between the two communities, one must first understand their history.

Melee was released in 2001 for the Gamecube and quickly grew a niche grassroots competitive community. Seven years later in 2008, Super Smash Bros Brawl was released for the Wii, set at a different pace than Melee.

Players looking for a highly technical, combo-rich game were disappointed in what the new game had to offer, and many of these players either quit Smash completely, or slowly drifted back into Melee. Project M, a modification of Brawl that changed the game mechanics so that it resembled Melee, featured a smaller community within the Smash infrastructure.

At the same time, Brawl attracted a whole new subset of players. Some notable players dabbled in both games at a high level, such as Jason "Mew2King" Zimmerman, but each game generally featured different pools of competitive players.

From an outsider's perspective, it's hard to recognize why there are distinct subcultures in a community that plays the "same" title game with similar characters. All the iterations feature iconic Nintendo characters such as Mario, Pikachu and Kirby. And yet, it wouldn't be surprising if you received a look of disdain if you asked a Melee player whether or not they played Brawl or vice versa.

Two-time Evo champion, Joseph "Mango" Marquez will tell you how important it is to win an Evo title as he aims for his third in 2017.

The Sunday finals of Evo is known for bringing together a massive audience, a passionate community known for chanting the letters "C-R-T" when a CRT TV appears on stage at the Mandalay Bay Event Center.

In 2016, Melee enjoyed a peak audience of over 200,000 viewers on Twitch, where Juan "Hungrybox" Debiedma defeated Adam "Armada" Lindgren in the grand finals for his first Evo victory. Hungrybox's clutch moment to reset the first set of grand finals won Moment of the Year on ESPN.

The night before, Elliot "Ally" Carroza-Oyarce duked it out against Takuto "Kamemushi" Ono in an exhilarating Mario vs. Mega Man finals for Smash 4. The matches were exciting, but the viewership peaked at roughly 71,000 viewers.

Melee generally does better in viewership compared to Smash 4, but it's undeniable that there is a large difference in exposure between a finals being hosted on Saturday versus a finals hosted on Sunday.

Between Evo 2013 and the Smash Brothers Documentary, Melee grew exponentially. As a growing majority, the Melee community developed an "elitist" reputation, often heckling players who played other Smash games. Disrespectful chants of "Melee" plagued the end of Brawl events. These chants overshadowed Nairoby "Nairo" Quesada's Brawl victory at Apex 2014, and ZeRo's Smash 4 victory at Apex 2015.

Along with the smaller Saturday finals, Smash 4 players competed in poor tournament conditions. The top players ended their Day 1 matches as late as 4 a.m. ET and started again at 8 a.m. the following day. The poor timing exhausted the players, and many questioned whether or not they wanted to attend Evo next year.

It wasn't always this divisive. In 2013, Evo announced a donation drive to fight against breast cancer and decide the eighth and final game in the lineup. Both Melee and Brawl enjoyed early momentum in the donation drive, but Brawl quickly fell behind Melee in donations.

Eventually, the Brawl and Project M communities decided to band together to support Melee, believing that Melee's appearance into Evo would benefit all Smash communities. Together, they formed the #oneunit movement, and contributed $94,683 for Melee to win the Breast Cancer donation drive and a slot into Evo 2013.

In 2017, Evo flipped the switch by giving Smash 4 the Sunday time slot instead of Melee. Smash 4 fans were elated to hear the announcement on Red Bull's stream. Their decision to include Smash 4 instead of Melee may have been to make up for last year's poor conditions.

The Smash community's reaction to the announcement was varied. Gonzalo "ZeRo" Barrios, a top Smash 4 player, expressed the importance of supporting Evo 2017 with this opportunity. Meanwhile, Melee community leaders such as Arian "The Crimson Blur" Fathieh expressed disappointment, stating that both games deserved the Sunday stage. Other Melee players such as Hugo "HugS" Gonzalez were quick to express their disappointment, but also encouraged the community to let go of past wounds.

Over time, the Smash community has seen the benefits of working together. Leaders from all Smash games collaborate to host larger events at nicer venues. Viewership is synergistic, meaning that if Smash 4 continues to do well, then Melee also sees an increase in viewership. The communities are cordial and respectful to one another. While players carry their own preferences in which game is "better," there is a growing respect for the talent and skill required to be successful in each game. Smash 4 players can be seen rooting for their favorite Melee players during finals, while more Melee players are starting to pay more attention to the Smash 4 scene. If there are any proud takeaways, the general Melee sentiment was to encourage the Smash 4 scene for its opportunity, and to redirect discourse towards the Evo event itself for including only one Smash game on Sunday.

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The evolution of a rivalry: Melee and Smash 4 - ESPN

Kansas City Royals: An Evolution in Fandom, My Journey – Kings of Kauffman

KANSAS CITY, MO - JUNE 25: A young Kansas City Royals' fan cheers for his team during a game against the Toronto Blue Jays in the eighth inning at Kauffman Stadium on June 25, 2017 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images)

Miscues harm Kansas City Royals in Saturdays contest in LA by Colby Wilson

Kansas City Royals swept by Dodgers behind dominant Kershaw performance by Colby Wilson

Most people like to focus on the Kansas City Royals World Series runs in 2014 and 2015. Why not, they were incredible. The truth is though things began to change the second half of 2013.

I was at the last Friday night home game of the season. Ervin Santana was on the bump. The Royals were still mathematically in the playoffs. Kauffman Stadium was rocking like I had never seen it. Amidst all the screaming and ruckus I did my best to soak it all in. At that point my obsession with Kansas City baseball was well grounded.

Over the past four seasons I have struggled with bandwagon fans. I had rooted year in and year out for what was some terrible teams. These new fans just rubbed me the wrong way. You know who I am talking about. Brand new clean and crisp t-shirts that scream This is my team, but when you ask them who their favorite player of the Allard Baird era was you get a blank stare.

I have come to understand that these fans have a place in every fan base. The young people who have become excited about this franchise are a good thing. Many will support the team into the future and eventually replace my generation. After all witnessing championships is exciting.

The question that my wife tries to understand is how did I end up this way? She knows how rough most years had been (100 losses in a season can be that way) and yet I kept buying merchandise of a team that was often the laughing stock of baseball. The drive behind that is the same reason it is 5 am and I am typing away at a keyboard.

Without going into too much detail, this has been a very difficult week. My brother had extremely unexpected heart surgery. It was sprinkled with complications, but he seems to be on the right side of things. When I first went to the hospital to see him on Monday, before knowing that around 15 hours of surgery would be in the very near future, I sat next to him and we talked baseball.

That is what this game does. It takes away the hardships, if only for a moment. I have been on autopilot most of the week. You know what though? A Royals sweep in Seattle helped to distract from the very serious reality that was going on.

As I was having trouble sleeping I began to think about the question that my wife has asked many times. Why did I become a Kansas City Royals fan?

I believe that when you truly commit yourself to something such as a sports franchise it is often not a conscience choice. It just sort of happens. My parents and some very dear family friends who live in the KC area took my brother and me to games since we were young.

I dont really remember my first game. I couldnt tell you who the Royals opponent was. What I can remember is that it was a night game. We sat in the upper deck. At the end of the game I did not want to walk down the steps, followed by the corridors, and eventually to wherever our vehicle was parked. So instead I pretended to be asleep. My dad picked me up and carried me the whole way. As we turned to go through the tunnel I cant tell you want was going on down on the field, but I can remember the lights.

My story is made up of several moments like this. Some may have become a bit exaggerated over the years, but for me it will always be how theyhappened. Like when it was the top of the ninth and it was clear that the Royals would beat the Chicago White Sox. We walked to the top of the old General Admission section to watch the end of the game. We did so to try and get a head start on the crowd who would soon exit. As we stood there what would happen? Frank Thomas hit a foul ball that, in this version, landed right in the seats we had vacated. I threw my glove down in frustration, life went on.

There was the time that George Brett hit an in the park homerun. Some of the details may not be correct, but I know for a fact we could see him in the dugout, after chugging around the bases, sucking on oxygen.

It was a rainy weeknight with perhaps a few thousand people in attendance as Felix Hernandez took the mound for the Mariners. Somehow yet again by the top of the ninth the Royals seemed sure of victory. With two outs Mike Sweeney stood on deck to pinch hit for Seattle. I hoped with everything in me that whoever it was at the plate would get on base so that I could see one of my favorite all time players step into the batters box another time. As Mike dug in there were several boos that I just couldnt understand.

Countless memories led me to this point. Watching Jim Abbott warming up in the bullpen; Luke Hochevar striking out 13 Texas Rangers to set a career high; Meeting Brian McRae as a rookie and again long after he retired.

Being able to talk candidly with Zack Grienke during a Royals Caravan stop at a YMCA on a Thursday afternoon where barely anyone showed up. There was the time I asked Billy Butler for a loan at another caravan. This was after he had signed a contract extension and he simply replied yeah like I havent heard that already. Getting to hear why John Buck changed his number to honor his brother.

True fandom is the random players who endear themselves to you. Thinking Tony Pena Jr. just might be able to be the next Ozzie Smith. Convincing yourself that Mike Wood has the ability to be in the front of a rotation. Ken Harvey was an All Star player! (Even though you knew he was the teams one required representative.)

Fair weather fans may come and go. That is alright. The diehards should still embrace them. They are part of the journey. They become an important character in the greatest of theater. While it is important to remember that the players are human beings, it is also okay to make them larger than life. When people tell you that it is just a game, especially in the face of tragedy, there is no reason you are required to believe them.

Want your voice heard? Join the Kings of Kauffman team!

After all why else would we name fantasy teams after these players, scream that info to Mark Teahen as he stood in right field, and watch him smile and shake his head? Long live the T-bags!

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Kansas City Royals: An Evolution in Fandom, My Journey - Kings of Kauffman

Crunch Time for See Noevo on Evolution – Patheos (blog)

See Noevo is a ubiquitous commenter here. Some of you will be so very frustrated that I have not banned him or curtailed his nonsense. You will probably know that I am not one for often doing that. As offensive as some positions might be, I do believe in the freedom of expressing them for the benefit of others, because they either hoist themselves by their own petard, or force myself and other commenters to adapt and change ourpositions accordingly. We shouldnt deny ugly views on account of them being distasteful, but on account of the arguments or evidence not showing those arguments to be warranted in being held. For someone like See Noevo, it is always the former.

Let us see the typical response and demand of See Noevo:

Ill show you how flatly dumb you are. Show me your very favorite scientific paper on ear evolution (or any other particular body part/system). ONE paper on ONE specific topic. Please provide the url so everyone else can read along.

Make it your very best shot, because youll only get one, dummy.

Anri responded and correctly and stated that you cannot pick a single brick in a scientific discipline that is a result of hundreds of years of cumulative data and research. In other words, Sees question is just wrong.

Why only one?

Science is not developed by single papers written by single science teams, but by years-long, painstaking testing and re0testing and re-testing of theories by multiple research teams. People who think that by finding fault with a single scientific paper they somehow invalidate the entire discipline of study are deeply confused as to how science works.

Im assuming thats what youre planning on doing, yes? Finding fault with the SINGLE THE ONLY CHANCE THE SINGLE THREADS BY WHICH EVOLUTION HANGS PAPER and thus somehow demonstrate the whole field is incorrect? Thats silly. And I suspect you know that.

(checks something)

Hah, thats why this conversation sounded familiar. I just poked through my previous comments because I knew I had called out another theist on this same thing, and asked them to provide their best fisking of a scientific paper. I was half-right. Ihaddone it before. But not withanothertheist. Withyou.

So Ill ask you the same thing I asked you then, when you claimed to have asked some armor-piercing questions the scientists were just helpless to answer:

Please explain to me why DNA-based paternity testing doesnt work, then. Ill find some citations explaining that they do, if youd like.

The last time, you scurried out of the thread without being able to demonstrate scientists ignorance of DNA testing. Very much like the way you scurried out of an earlier thread when presented with the bacterial resistance-increasing experiments. I am predicting that the result will be the same here that you will bluster a bit, and then evaporate from yet another thread with your tail lodged firmly between your hind legs. Prove me wrong. If you can.

And the irony of all of this is that See has been banned from a number of othersimilar sites (on Patheos, too?) for his trollish behaviour. I have put up with him in the interests of freedom of expression, but will not put up with repeated behaviour that shows no reaction to previous experiences or any signs of learning from prior mistakes. The above exchange is an exampleof this. But the irony, as hinted, is that See has decried being banned before, and yet he bans anyone from speaking to him who corners him. The cognitive dissonance in him is so strong that he cannot deal with people who show he might be wrong, so he buries his head in the sand, or wears his no fly list headphones La la la, Im not listening! It is quite amusing to watch, but when he gets pwned in an argument, he devolves to the following, which he soon did here with Anri:

Fine. Then find your very favorite scientific paper on ear evolution (or any other particular body part/system) THAT RESULTED FROM years-long, painstaking testing and re0testing and re-testing of theories by multiple research teams. Provide the current capper of the consensus. (By definition, there is only ONE capper.)

Hit me with it. .

So Ill ask you the same thing I asked you then, when you claimed to have asked some armor-piercing questions the scientists were just helpless to answer: Please explain to me why DNA-based paternity testing doesnt work, then.

You mean why theyre not 100% conclusive? Maybe because scientists dont understand DNA as well as theyd like to.

More on this response later. Anri responded:

(By definition, there is only ONE capper.)

Here we go with this again. A brick wall isnt made up of one brick. I listed a topic youd have to utterly dismantle to get anywhere close to falsifying evolutionary theory: tracking familial relationships through DNA. To disprove this, youd have to either wipe out a very large number of scientific papers, all done at different times, by different labs and different scientists, or show that the fundamental concept is flawed. If you can show why the tracking of familial relationships through DNA is flawed, get on with it. If you cant, admit it.

Oh, and you never did get around to answering the basic question: what did you ask when you did this before? You claimed to have dismantled scientific papers before, and when pressed, suddenly couldnt remember what the paper was, or what you asked, or anything about the incident at all. Which makes you sound like not only a liar, but an incompetent one.

You mean why theyre not 100% conclusive?

If you cant show me where someone claims they should be, or should be expected to be 100% conclusive, then you know this is a straw man. Which means bringing it up it just dishonest. More Lying for Jesus. Please stop doing that.

In fact, the fact that they are not 100% conclusive is an important part of their understanding of the process, and the results which is why the folks giving the results can not only tell you that they are not 100% conclusive, but how conclusive they are, and why.

And, again from Anri:

The problem was that when I went to the evolution wall and investigated any one brick, brick after brick, I found they werent solid things at all.

Sorry, I just dont believe you. I think youre lying. Again. I simply dont believe you cant produce a single example of all of these super-duper ways youve wiped the floor with the work of these various career scientists. If you had managed something anything vaguely like that, youd just simply show us. You cant show us anything of the sort, so I have to assume youre just still Lying for Jesus. Just like you did when you quote-mined me. Just like you did when you straw-manned relational DNA testing. Its a pattern with you, and its not hard to follow.

But, ok, you want an article to debunk, heres one example:

https://www.nature.com/natu

Give it a shot. Should be easy for you.

And the irony meter explodes in Sees banning of Anri:

Holy shi ite, what a one trick pony you are! The Lenski crap! AGAIN!?

Well, youre not going to try it again with me.

You tried to shoot that ONE silver bullet before, months ago. (As I recall, you may have even tried it twice.)

And it was a dud.

Youre done. Or at least WE are done.

Why do I bother writing this post? Well, to once and for all clear up fourthings, because he will no doubt repeat this errant behaviour as he has done time and time again:

Make it your very best shot, because youll only get one, dummy.

On the final point, he seems blissfully unaware of his rather precarious approach as it can just as easily be used against him

On the thirdpoint there, it is worth reminding you and him of this image:

And also some of the other posts I have done that were written partly in response to his lack of understanding about evolution:

Just for starters.

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Crunch Time for See Noevo on Evolution - Patheos (blog)

On Functional Coherence Another Serving of Oracle Soup – Discovery Institute

This is the fourth installment of my ongoing conversation with theistic evolutionist Hans Vodder aboutmy book Undeniable (for Parts 1 through 3, seehere, here, andhererespectively). Hans begins this part with the following:

Id say we might agree I still have misgivings about the probability calculations (see below). But even if correct, since God is free to beat the odds any way He likes (even by means of chance and natural selection), it seems possible that He could have produced things like fireflies and horses and humans within the regularities described by science.

But lets talk about oracle soup. Frankly, I wonder if its really a good analogy for the evolutionary explanation of life (Undeniable, p. 17). While its suggestive, oracle soup seems disanalogous to evolution in two important ways.

First, there is the matter of background knowledge. Oracle soup strikes us as implausible because we know what it means to make soup and write instructions. Based on our experience with soup kitchens and patent offices, we rightly believe you cant ordinarily get soup without a chef or written instructions without a writer. You might say we know the necessary and sufficient conditions for writing instructions in soup under ordinary circumstances, and oracle soup violates these.

However, we know very little by comparison concerning the necessary and sufficient conditions for the invention of biological organisms and their features (although I suspect there are plausible evolutionary scenarios for particular cases). Given this disparity in our background knowledge, it seems odd to suggest that the near-certain impossibility of oracle soup working would imply similar certainty with respect to the impossibility of evolution working.

So, the success of the comparison between oracle soup and evolution depends on the strength of similarity between biological organisms and written messages. But how apt is the comparison? We can calculate the odds for written messages relatively easily (see Chapter 9 of Undeniable), but calculating the odds for biological organisms requires treating them as combinatorial objects, and this move is at least somewhat controversial (and is thus my second point of disanalogy).

Given that our ability to make accurate calculations about biological organisms is crucial for the mathematical case against evolution, perhaps we should explore this further?

Even the possibility of agreement is a good thing, Hansand of course we agreed on some very important things before the conversation began.

Yes, lets continue to talk soup until weve understood each other well.

Oracle soup is an example, not an analogy. That is, I use it in Undeniable as one example from a category of things, with the aim of showing why none of the things in this category can originate accidentally.

The category is defined by what I call functional coherence: the hierarchical arrangement of parts needed for anything to produce a high-level functioneach part contributing in a coordinated way to the whole (p. 144). Figure 9.3 in the book (reproduced here) illustrates the idea by showing the functional dependencies of a hypothetical whole thing that uses parts within parts to perform its top-level function.

Reproduced from Undeniable;prepared by Anca Sandu and Brian Gage.

Yes, instructions written in soup are very different from life, but my argument is framed around this one similarity: they both exhibit extensive functional coherence. I used wide-ranging examples in the bookdigital photographs, the emergency invention that saved the Apollo 13 astronauts, the photosynthetic system in bacteria, etc.to show why blind processes cant stumble upon anything at all that exhibits this distinctive trait.

As I said before, the accurate calculations of probability you call for are unnecessary, Hans. For example, you and I agree that instructions cant appear by accident on the surface of alphabet soup despite having nothing like an accurate probability for this. The easy calculations I walk readers through in Chapter 9 give ridiculously generous upper-bound probabilities, which means the actual probabilities are much, much lower. Because these way-too-generous probabilities are themselves so low as to be effectively impossible, we know the same must be true of the actual probabilities.

The point of Chapter 9 is to show not just that some things are too rare to be stumbled upon by accident but, more significantly, why this must be true for all things that depend heavily on functional coherence. In a nutshell: every aspect of a hierarchical scheme like the one shown must be specially arranged, which means each is likely botched if left to chance. Getting the whole thing right by accident is therefore always fantastically improbable.

I think the controversy you refer to is more ideological than intellectual. In other words, if people could set aside their personal reasons for denying the design of life, I suspect the controversy would evaporate. Indeed, Richard Dawkins, who would very much like to disagree with me on ideological grounds, nevertheless captured the gist of what Im saying long ago:

You may throw cells together at random, over and over again for a billion years, and not once will you get a conglomeration that flies or swims or burrows or runs, or does anything, even badly, that could remotely be construed as working to keep itself alive.

So, to help us zero in on any remaining points of disagreement, Hans, I have two questions for you:

Photo credit: hollydc stock.adobe.com.

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On Functional Coherence Another Serving of Oracle Soup - Discovery Institute

Aesthetic Evolution In The Animal World : 13.7: Cosmos And Culture … – NPR

At the heart of Richard O. Prum's new book The Evolution of Beauty: How Darwin's Forgotten Theory of Mate Choice Shapes the Animal World and Us is a bold idea:

"... that animals are not merely subject to the extrinsic forces of ecological competition, predation, climate, geography, and so on that create natural selection. Rather, animals can play a distinct and vital role in their own evolution through their sexual and social choices."

Actually, this is Charles Darwin's idea his other idea. It's an idea so revolutionary that, unlike natural selection itself, it has been systematically misunderstood, or outright repressed, since Darwin first developed it in his other book The Descent of Man first published in 1871, 12 years after The Origin of Species.

What's so dangerous about what Prum calls "aesthetic evolution by mate choice?" Precisely the idea that it acknowledges, supposedly, real agency in the nonhuman world and that it is an agency that doesn't bottom out in facts about fitness and adaptation. It does so, Prum argues, because it's good science.

Now, it isn't exactly news to be informed that Darwin grappled with the problem of the diversity, indeed the gorgeous magnificence, of ornament in the biological world. It is well-known that he once wrote in a letter to a friend: "the sight of the feather in a peacock's tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick!" For the peacock's tail is, manifestly, of no adaptive value whatsoever. It is no aid to flight, no benefit in combat with another, no enhancement of the ability to secure food or provide concealment from predators. In short, it would seem to be one (of countless many) direct counterexamples to the proposition that biological traits are adaptations, that is, that they are selected to enhance survival value or the ability to bring offspring into the world.

The thing about the peacock's tail is that the peahen likes it. It's sexy. It's beautiful to her. It is attractive. And that's why peacocks who've got it, and are able to flaunt it, are in fact more likely to have offspring. So the trait is selected. Not for its adaptive value, but by the female of the species.

And that, Prum suggests, is a very radical idea, especially in Darwin's Victorian England, but even now in a world where patriarchy is still the order of the day.

This is why, Prum argues, evolutionists have tended either to downplay sexual selection or ground it in the logic of adaptation. Perhaps the best known strategy for doing this is to hold that the reason the peahen likes the peacock's tail is that the tail is actually a signal of the peacock's fitness: Only a peacock from a good family with disposable income is going to live long enough to afford the luxury of maladaptive ornamentation. Ornament is conspicuous consumption, on this view, and females like it, so the inevitable logic runs, because they are can't resist male power.

Oy vey! That is an ugly idea and not one that casts the men who are its proponents in a particularly nice light.

It also, according to Prum, completely misses Darwin's revolutionary idea: that the aesthetic delight animals take in each other in this case, that the female takes in the male of the species is arbitrary; it is grounded in nothing more than desire and its fulfillment. It is the conscious sensory experience of animals especially female animals and it is the choices they make as a result of these experiences that are one of the governing forces of natural evolution.

Now Prum is an ornithologist, not a polemicist, and this book is a delight to read also because of the knowledge and the love of learning and teaching that it puts on display. On one point, though, I am quite certain he goes too far. In the final pages of the book he proposes to take his account of aesthetic evolution and use it to show that what the animals are doing, and have been doing, and what Mozart, Manet, van Gogh and Czanne were doing, are all of a piece: art.

The basic problem with other attempts to biologize art by grounding it in natural selection is that they end up treating art, like the peacock's tail, as just another form of conspicuous consumption. And whatever else is true, Mozart, Manet and the rest are not bling, and even if part of why we like them is that there is social prestige attached to them, it's just wildly implausible that that is the basic source of their value.

But Prum's view, as we've already seen, is very different. As I have argued in a brief discussion of Prum in my book Strange Tools, according to Prum's view, beauty is the result of a co-evolutionary process: "Changes in mating preferences have transformed the tail and changes in the tail have transformed mating preferences." Prom extends this account to human art. According to Prum, the pleasures we take in art are directly and specifically bound up with art. Not because art generates a special sort of aesthetic feeling or sensation. But because our responses to art the pleasures we take in it are are bound up with art itself by processes of co-evolution. What we like shapes art and art, in turn, shapes and reshapes what we like. Art, like attractive ornament in the biological world, is the result of a co-evolutionary processes spanning evolutionary and cultural time scales. Art, as Prum puts it, is "a form of communication that co-evolves with its own evolution."

One of the strengths of this view is that it can do justice to radical change in aesthetic evaluation. The works of an artist think Andy Warhol, for example can become beautiful; for these works can contribute to the changing of the very criteria of evaluation by which we aesthetically assess this work itself. And Prum's account also does justice to fact that it is one thing to like something, and another to find it beautiful. Beauty finding something aesthetically pleasing isn't just a matter of liking it. For Prum can allow that our pleasures and preferences get refined through evolutionary recursion. Some pleasures like the pleasures we might take in an elegant mathematical proof, for example, or in the work of the late Beethoven are only available to those who stand on the scaffolding of past communication and agreements.

This is a very powerful proposal. It brings out the distinctively cognitive, that is to say, evaluative, character of the pleasures that art affords. We don't just respond to art, we judge it.

Now, I don't doubt for a minute that peahens take pleasure in what they see, when they see a handsome peacock. Indeed, the seeing itself gives them pleasure. And I have no objection to calling that pleasure aesthetic.

But is it really true that when we look at a work of art we enjoy pleasures of that kind? Not all art is "aesthetic" in this sense. And I don't just mean Warhol and Marcel Duchamp, or even Beethoven's late quartets. The experience of art is seldom tied, in the way the peahen's gaze is tied, to lust or desire for what you are looking at. I make take pleasure when I gaze upon a Poussin landscape, but it is a pleasure that depends, pretty obviously, on the fact that neither the painting, nor anyone or anything in it, is really there. Its importance to me only shows up through my detachment from it. And when Mozart's audiences delighted in the ways he foiled their expectations of how a piece of music was supposed to be organized, they were getting his joke, understand his thought, not just, as it were, languishing in pleasurable sounds.

But I also fear that Prum's theory, as a theory of art, ends up casting the net too wide: Every artifact or social activity or technology is constrained by what we like (evaluative response) even as it offers the opportunity for us to change and update those responses (co-evolution). But art is not merely a social activity or technology even if it masquerades as such. For art always disrupts business as normal and puts the fact that we find ourselves carrying out business as normal on display. Put bluntly: The value of art does not consist in a co-evolving fit or dialog between what we make and what like, but rather in the practice of investigating and questioning and challenging such processes.

I met Prum once, a few years before his book's publication. He heard me give a lecture and we sat next to each other discussing these questions at dinner afterwards. It was a delightful encounter. I fear, however, that he might have had me, or at least those like me, in mind when he writes:

"Some aesthetic philosophers, art historians, and artists may find the recognition of myriad new biotic art forms to be more of an annoyance, or even an outrage, than a contribution to their fields."

Maybe so. But, speaking for myself anyway, it would not be because I doubt the aesthetic richness of the natural world. Or because I see reason to deny the importance of the experience of pleasure and, indeed, of something like beauty, on the part of animals. Animals are truly, in Prum's sense, aesthetic agents.

The problem is not with Prum's insistence that we say "yes" to the aesthetic lives of animals I applaud that. The problem is that, as I read him, Prum ends up saying "no" to art.

Alva No is a philosopher at the University of California, Berkeley, where he writes and teaches about perception, consciousness and art. He is the author of several books, including his latest, Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2015). You can keep up with more of what Alva is thinking on Facebook and on Twitter: @alvanoe

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Aesthetic Evolution In The Animal World : 13.7: Cosmos And Culture ... - NPR

IoT Evolution World Week in Review: Inmarsat, Mouser, Telit – IoT Evolution World (blog)

Welcome to the IoT Evolution Week in Review, my friends. This week, weve been talking about Smart City deals, IoT development deals, the Big Deal IoT Evolution Expo and more. Lets get into it, shall we?

In our lead story, I wrote about a new Internet of Things (IoT) research study from Inmarsat, a major provider of global mobile satellite communications, in which the company reportedly has found that agritech businesses are helping many food producers to meet increasingly stringent import requirements by monitoring production, food hygiene, and sustainability through the use of IoT technology. This will accelerate the globalization of food production by enabling developing country food producers to export to developed economies, where these regulations originate from.

We are continuing our special series of Q&A interviews with the speaking faculty at the IoT Evolution Expo, coming up in Las Vegas July 17 to 20. This week, we spoke to James Turino, Phil Attfield, and Hiep Pham.

In a great guest post this week, our Special Correspondent Cynthia Artin gave us a look at the Future of IoT and how the industry will move into true real-time and data harnessing thanks to fine tuning of every element in the architecture, from the devices at the edge to gateways and networks, clouds and applications, all which must be programmed and secured, and made economically feasible, relative to the value "real time" delivers.

And now, the news: Cyient has announced that it has signed a business alliance agreement with Kii Corporation to invest in Smart City deployments.

Mouser Electronics is teaming up with celebrity engineer and former Mythbuster Grant Imahara for the Shaping Smarter Cities project, the newest series in the successful Empowering Innovation Together program.

Observables Inc. has created a connected service platform that connects, manages, monitors and controls new and legacy infrastructure devices on the network. These devices include alarm systems, computer networks, access control, smart home, and phone and video surveillance into a singular cloud and mobile dashboard for dealers, OEMs, makers, and end-users alike.

Telit, a global enabler of the Internet of Things (IoT), and OT-Morpho, a digital security & identification technology developer, will join forces and partner up to solve the challenges facing the mass adoption of IoT via todays traditional deployment methodology.

Over the last few years, I have seen some major trends forming across nearly every vertical in the consumer and industrial spaces, and these trends looked like they were pointing toward a future where the IoT would indeed be improving the lives and living conditions of people all over the world, and so I decided to begin writing a book in order to look for patterns in those trends. That book, published recently, is called IoT Time: Evolving Trends in the Internet of Things. In a new weekly series, well be previewing chapters for you to read in the hopes that youll like enough to read the whole thing.

On the IoT Time Podcast, I sat down with Christian Legare, Chairman, IPSO Alliance to talk about interoperability standards for IoT, defining network identity and the IoT Evolution Expo.

Theres plenty more to read, listen to and watch, so visit us on IoT Evolution World for all the IoT news, my friends. Now is the time to put into your calendar the next IoT Evolution Expo, to be held in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Also, please get in touch with us when you have stories. As always, if you have questions, comments, complaints or compliments, please send them to me, editorial director Ken Briodagh at kbriodagh@tmcnet.com or on Twitter @KenBriodagh.

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IoT Evolution World Week in Review: Inmarsat, Mouser, Telit - IoT Evolution World (blog)

Turkey To Remove Evolution from Biology Textbooks – The Merkle

The Turkish Education Ministry has decided to remove evolution from biology textbooks and the curriculum of 9th graders. This backwards move has been received very poorly by many, and it is an example of a world that seems increasingly hostile to science and facts.

The Head of the Ministrys curriculum board, Alpaslan Durmu, announced last Wednesday that Evolution will be removed from the biology books of 14 and 15 year old student in Turkey. He claimed that these students were too young to understand controversial topics.

Labeling the foundation for the development of more complex life on Earth over time as a controversial topic is an example of science deniers latest strategy to ignore facts and spread ignorance. Claiming that it is controversial makes facts vulnerable to opinion. We see this same move with climate skeptics, who can overlook overwhelming factual evidence disproving their opinion. They then have the gall to saythat facts are subjective and are even given podiums to speak from to infect otherwise sane minds.

I want to be perfectly clear, facts are not subjective or relative to anyones opinions. This is why I, and many others, are outraged by the Turkish governments decision to pull one of the most enlightening theories -Evolution- from biology books. To call it controversial is just salt in the wound, but also fuel to the fire.

This comes as Turkey is working on embedding more religious rhetoric and policy in their government. Most classes will see an overhaul to reflect more religious undertones. The President of Turkey is also consolidating much of his power. Both of these things are out of the norm for Turkey, which has been a historically secular and modern state.

Denial of facts and science are the quickest way send a nation back in time, for the worst. However, many are not taking this without a fight. They are just as upset with this as I am, and have even more reason to be since it is their nation. Many of the points I have already made are echoed in the comments sections of news reports and on the forums of popular websites.

While the deed appears to already have been done, it is important that critics of this move remain vocal and outspoken. Democracy, science, and knowledge only die when we allow them to do so. It is the duty of every human to resist when governments, businesses, and anyone else tells you that facts are opinions or that science is controversial.

I am pleased to see so many standing up against this and making their voices heard. Science and facts will always be more important to humanity as a whole than the opinions of misinformed and powerful people. Never let anyone make you question scientific Truth. There are many things that are relative and culturally constructed, but the only place where Truth -with a capital T- lives is in sciences and math. Known Truth should never be considered an opinion and learning it should never be seen as controversial.

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Turkey To Remove Evolution from Biology Textbooks - The Merkle

Carnegie Museum of Natural History gets grant to study mammal evolution – Tribune-Review

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Carnegie Museum of Natural History gets grant to study mammal evolution - Tribune-Review

Evolution, not revolution at McLaren – Arab News

The restructuring of McLaren into McLaren Group combining the technology group and automotive arm is a good example of long-term strategic thinking. Furthermore, it reasserts Arab leadership and management of their sovereign assets abroad. The McLaren Group is part-owned by sovereign wealth fund Bahrain Mumtalakat Holding Co. and TAG Group, which are set to remain majority shareholders. Sheikh Mohammed bin Essa Al-Khalifa of Bahrain will become executive chairman of the new group, valued at $3.1 billion, and pledged to follow a policy of evolution, not revolution. He succeeds Ron Dennis, the veteran chairman of 37 years who sold his holdings to the group and resigned. This move ensures stability and managed growth for McLaren after a period of uncertainty and speculation. Until recently, it was rumored that McLaren was heading to float on the stock exchange, following in the footsteps of Ferrari. This was followed by news of a possible takeover by Apple or Chinese companies. Dennis, 70, said after losing the CEO role at McLaren Technology that the grounds for his removal were entirely spurious and came after clashes with Mumtalakat and TAG over his views on outside investment and the future of the business. It seems that Dennis wanted revolution through a public offering of McLaren stock, of which he had about $350 million worth of shares (which he sold to Mumtalakat). However, the conservative sovereign fund and the TAG Group prefer caution and evolution. As majority holders in the new McLaren Group, they have asserted their authority and forged their calm way forward. McLaren has been successful with its car production arm and has achieved profits in the past few years. They have ambitious plans for the future and they have the talent, tools and technology to further their success. Adel Murad is a senior motoring and business journalist based in London.

The restructuring of McLaren into McLaren Group combining the technology group and automotive arm is a good example of long-term strategic thinking. Furthermore, it reasserts Arab leadership and management of their sovereign assets abroad. The McLaren Group is part-owned by sovereign wealth fund Bahrain Mumtalakat Holding Co. and TAG Group, which are set to remain majority shareholders. Sheikh Mohammed bin Essa Al-Khalifa of Bahrain will become executive chairman of the new group, valued at $3.1 billion, and pledged to follow a policy of evolution, not revolution. He succeeds Ron Dennis, the veteran chairman of 37 years who sold his holdings to the group and resigned. This move ensures stability and managed growth for McLaren after a period of uncertainty and speculation. Until recently, it was rumored that McLaren was heading to float on the stock exchange, following in the footsteps of Ferrari. This was followed by news of a possible takeover by Apple or Chinese companies. Dennis, 70, said after losing the CEO role at McLaren Technology that the grounds for his removal were entirely spurious and came after clashes with Mumtalakat and TAG over his views on outside investment and the future of the business. It seems that Dennis wanted revolution through a public offering of McLaren stock, of which he had about $350 million worth of shares (which he sold to Mumtalakat). However, the conservative sovereign fund and the TAG Group prefer caution and evolution. As majority holders in the new McLaren Group, they have asserted their authority and forged their calm way forward. McLaren has been successful with its car production arm and has achieved profits in the past few years. They have ambitious plans for the future and they have the talent, tools and technology to further their success. Adel Murad is a senior motoring and business journalist based in London.

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Evolution, not revolution at McLaren - Arab News

From trust falls to escape rooms: The evolution of corporate team building – Chicago Tribune

Corporate team building, which for years brought co-workers together in disdain for activities such as trust falls and ropes courses, has elevated its game.

Escape rooms, "Survivor"-style competitions and improv training are bringing a new level of excitement and perhaps effectiveness to the once-dreaded outings, meant to bond employees and fortify roles outside the confines of their daily cubicle-farm existence.

A recent excursion to a Chicago escape room by a team of 15 United Airlines employees proved challenging, surprising and successful in shaking up the status quo, with an intern leading his managers to freedom and participants energized in the process.

Whether a simulated jail break transfers to an improved workplace, however, remains an open question.

"It's not clear yet what are the benefits of it, other than people love it because it's something outside of work," said Eduardo Salas, an organizational psychology professor at Rice University in Houston. "But when they go back, the same conditions are there, so the long-term effects of team building are unknown."

Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune

United Airlines employees, including Lizzie Cristobal, standing right, and Rhonda Crenshaw, seated right, take part in a corporate team-building exercise June 29, 2017, as they work together to try to free themselves from an escape room at a PanIQ Room in Chicagos Fulton Market district.

United Airlines employees, including Lizzie Cristobal, standing right, and Rhonda Crenshaw, seated right, take part in a corporate team-building exercise June 29, 2017, as they work together to try to free themselves from an escape room at a PanIQ Room in Chicagos Fulton Market district. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)

A series of exercises meant to encourage cooperation, goodwill and, ultimately, increased productivity, team building has long been fodder for corporate satire. The quintessential team-building activity was the trust fall: closing your eyes and falling backward into the arms of your colleagues, secure in the knowledge that they have your back or not.

While team-building facilitators proliferated and business was brisk, the old-school outings rarely hit the mark, according to experts.

"It really didn't improve their performance," said Wendy Bedwell, an assistant professor of organizational psychology at the University of South Florida.

In recent years, team building has evolved in more creative and engaging ways, Bedwell said, amping up both the fun quotient and the potential benefits to the workplace. Activities include solving simulated crime scenes, building bicycles for charity and competing in "Survivor"-inspired challenges, among others.

Improv training is also popular as a corporate team-building activity, with Second City Works, the business consulting arm of the Chicago-based comedy troupe, a logical player in that arena.

"We've built a pretty significant business," Kelly Leonard, executive director of insights and applied improvisation at Second City Works, where a half-day team building workshop starts at about $12,000.

Escape rooms, however, have emerged as perhaps the go-to team-building activity. In a typical scenario, six teammates are locked in a themed room, where they must work together to find clues and solve puzzles to escape within 60 minutes.

The activity can be both intellectual and physical, and for those who are not claustrophobic, apparently a lot of fun. It also provides some actual team-building benefit, Bedwell said.

"Anything that really requires people to work together, think critically and solve a problem is going to have more of a benefit than just standing in a forest and falling backwards and having everyone catch you," Bedwell said.

PanIQ Room, a Hungarian company that opened a Chicago outlet in March 2016, is in the basement of an industrial three-story brick building in the Fulton Market district.

The facility consists of three rooms dubbed "Infection," "Prison" and, in homage to Chicago, "Mob," where participating groups generally pay between $129 and $189 for a one-hour escape.

Camille Wheeler, 36, of Mount Prospect, senior manager in contact center applications for United Airlines, recently funded a PanIQ Room outing for herself and 14 members of her team, who split into groups to tackle the three rooms simultaneously.

"I wanted to get the team out and do some team-building exercises in a new and different way," Wheeler said.

The groups dug into the task, connecting via walkie-talkies for occasional clues from the PanIQ Room managers, who monitored their respective efforts from a control room video screen.

Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune

United Airlines employees search for clues in a corporate team-building exercise June 29, 2017, as they work together to try to get out of an escape room at PanIQ Room in Chicagos Fulton Market district.

United Airlines employees search for clues in a corporate team-building exercise June 29, 2017, as they work together to try to get out of an escape room at PanIQ Room in Chicagos Fulton Market district. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)

Only one group emerged within the allotted time, escaping from the Infection room in about 45 minutes to trade high-fives and war stories.

Leading the way was Justin Booms, 30, an intern from Bloomington, Ind., who took command from his more tenured co-workers, having previously navigated a different escape room.

"Given my previous experience and with everybody thrown into the same boat, there's no hierarchy whoever sees something first can kind of lead," said Booms, who now lives in the Lincoln Square neighborhood.

With no customers scheduled for the next hour, Heidi Blanc-Blum, unit manager for PanIQ Room Chicago, gave the other two teams some extra time to escape, with both eventually making their way to freedom.

"Prison is really hard," declared Pam Hannan, of Palatine, a 22-year veteran of the applications team, upon emerging from her cell and plopping down on the lobby couch for a drink of water.

rchannick@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @RobertChannick

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From trust falls to escape rooms: The evolution of corporate team building - Chicago Tribune

Food Evolution: The GMO debate continues – Cosmos

The GMO food debate continues with Neil deGrasse Tysons new film, Food Evolution. The provocative yet upbeat feature documentary follows experts, activist, farmers and scientists around the world to delve further in to the ever-polarised debate on GMOs, food and their place in our society. Directed by Academy Award-nominated Scott Hamilton, Food Evolution separates the hype from the science to attempt to unravel the debate around food.

<="" i="">The GMO debate is a heated one driven by emotions, fear and distrust often in place of objective truth. Cosmos itself published a feature article back in 2014 about how we perceive the risk of GMOs based on feelings more than just facts alone. In a world more desperate than ever for safe and sustainable food, the team behind Food Evolution want to lay down the facts for a better informed public and a more secure future.

<="" i="">Food Evolution is screening at venues throughout America this month. You can also arrange a screening for your own organisation or event by getting in touch with their publicity team.

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Food Evolution: The GMO debate continues - Cosmos

Vantiv On Why Electronic Payments Are SMBs’ Next Natural Evolution – PYMNTS.com

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While there are many reasons why small merchants should be able to take digital and online payments including better conversion rates, wider exposure to a bigger audience and better data about consumers Dusty Gomez, SMB product leader at Vantiv, says it all comes down to one main idea: The consumer lifestyle is evolving to a point where customers are constantly on the go.

This is something that we have seen coming, but it is now having major effects in the market. Customers, no matter where they are shopping, expect things to happen quickly, Gomez said. The idea of going into a store and purchasing something is becoming increasingly daunting to the average customer.

Despite that reality and the undeniable waves of growth coming in commerce from mobile and digital channels SMBs remain somewhat stubbornly late in adopting when it comes to jumping into the digital-commerce revolution. The stats, Gomez noted, are daunting.

Forty-six percent of SMBs dont even have a website, let alone the capacity to take payments online, Gomez said. To me, that is staggering given the major shifts we have seen in consumer engagement demand.

From Vantivs point of view these changes arent anything new: This has been a building change in consumer behavior over the last 10 years, and SMBs can read the writing on the wall.

To stay relevant and compete with the Amazons of the world, they need to be able to offer this kind of technology. It is why the number one thing we are hearing from small merchants is that they need help taking payments on their website, Gomez said. They know it is important, but they have no idea how to do it.

And, she noted, in some cases they need to be walked through a process that, despite the opportunities involved, can also be filled with challenges.

Assuring Security

The good news and one of the better selling points of eCommerce, Gomez notedis that it can open a merchant up to a world of new customers outside their geographic area. That is a big and compelling opportunity. But the downside to that opportunity is risk: Merchants also now face the reality of international digital fraud.

On the heels of the EMV shift weve heard from merchants is just how much fraudsters have moved online. It is a very big concern, Gomez said. Our teams do a good job of helping educate merchants so they understand that online payments acceptance can be as free from fraud, with card data protected as well, as in-store payments. There are many ways to help merchants understand that online payment can be as secure, if not more secure, than an in-store payment.

Small merchants, she noted, dont have a full grasp on what things like tokenization really are or mean, which can be intimidating for merchants.

Its the same reason consumers can be scared to put their debit card in a wallet that sits on their phone. People dont want to be hacked. Merchants feel the same way, Gomez said.

The key, she noted, is not just building better tools Vantiv has a rather robust arsenal of anti-fraud and data security weaponry its about education. Educating merchants about those tools, and what they do, is important for merchants to understand their possible role in protecting them and evaluating the benefits and costs of investments.

Building for the Future

Payments have never been a simple world, but in the past it was fairly straightforward: Cash, check or card were pretty much the universe of options. These days, with an ever-increasing proliferation of payment options, merchants are having to think about payments and make more strategic decisions every day.

Thats something we see small merchants get intimidated by. They dont know if theyre accepting all the right options, or if they can accept them in-store and online. This is not simple. We want to simplify it. We want every merchant to be aware of all options so they consider the payment methods right for them. We want to take worry out of their hands.

Because the payments market is going to continue to evolve and what is around today wont be the same landscape merchants will be facing in 18 months, some players will have dropped out and new ones will emerge.

But from Vantivs point of view, the point of view of the merchants they serve, the point is keeping the decision process simple so moving to digital and electronic payments seems like a natural evolution and not an intimidating decision.

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Vantiv On Why Electronic Payments Are SMBs' Next Natural Evolution - PYMNTS.com

Florida’s evolution to complainer’s paradise for public schools – MyPalmBeachPost

News item: A new Florida law allows any resident, regardless of whether he or she has children in the public school system, to instigate a formal challenge to any textbook, library book, novel, or other kind of instructional material used in a public school.

The state law channels the residents complaint to an unbiased and qualified hearing officer who is empowered to determine whether the material is accurate, objective, balanced, noninflammatory, current, and suited to student needs and their ability to comprehend the material presented.

***

Dear Unbiased and Qualified Hearing Officer:

So my cousins nephews best friends daughter tells me theres nothing about Noahs Ark in her public school textbook for Earth Science. How can this be?

Instead of filling these kids minds with nonsense about sedimentary rocks from billions of years ago (when we know the earth is only 6,000 years old!) they should be taught how theyre all here today because the 600-year-old Noah loaded all the animals two-by-two on his big ark, and thereby preserved life on Earth.

I believe without the ark, your explanation of the world fails being balanced and noninflammatory.

Which is why me and the others in the prayer circle are planning to show up for the public hearing we are entitled to under the new Instructional Materials Act passed by legislature.

Just say when.

***

Dear Unbiased and Qualified Hearing Officer:

It has come to my attention that some public school libraries in this district contain the novel Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, a well-known socialist who visited the Soviet Union in 1947 and espoused biased opinions about capitalism.

By allowing students to read Steinbecks Grapes of Wrath you are exposing them to a work of art that shines a harsh light on American history and its ideals.

This is shameful, and obviously part of the school boards liberal agenda. Which is why me and others in my morning Einsteins Bagels discussion group hereby demand that unless you balance Steinbecks Grapes of Wrath in school libraries with Sean Hannitys inspiring book, Let Freedom Ring: Winning the War over Liberalism we will be requesting a public hearing.

Were not putting up with the school districts Saul Alinsky tactics!

***

Dear Unbiased and Qualified Hearing Officer:

As the owner of a piece of property I maintain in Florida for tax purposes and the proud lobbyist of our nations most historically important source of energy generation, I am dismayed to learn that public school children are being brainwashed by Earth Day every year.

Through course materials and something called the Florida Green School Network, public school students are being taught to feel less than enthusiastic about harnessing the awesome power of coal. We find the constant praise for renewable energy to be subjective, not objective, as your teaching standards are required to be.

Pounding the importance of solar, wind and other renewables into impressionable young minds while ignoring the vital contributions of clean coal, extracted from dynamited mountain tops, is both un-American and unbalanced.

Which is why my friends and I in the coal industry, are hereby demanding that all course materials relating to Earth Day be suspended until and unless Floridas public schools start celebrating a yearly and counter-balancing Clean Coal Day.

Please schedule a public hearing on this, preferably not during Black Lung Awareness Month.

***

Dear Unbiased and Qualified Hearing Officer:

So my neighbor tells me that his childs middle school has morning announcements that do the weather. And that one day in May, the student weather-person remarked that it was really hot outside, and that maybe its the climate change.

As you know, climate change is a hoax perpetrated by the Chinese on America. (See enclosed presidential tweet.)

Me and my friends on the InfoWars chat group feel that children in Floridas public schools may be exposed to school materials that support the view that climate change is real, which is obviously designed to turn them into sheeple during a government false flag operation.

Please investigate this immediately and schedule a public hearing at a time when none of us are working which just so happens to be anytime right now.

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In Our View: Evolution of Summer Jobs – The Columbian

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There is much value to be found in spending a summer scooping ice cream or stocking grocery store shelves or picking fruit. Generations of American teens have gleaned life lessons and work experience from traditional seasonal jobs, learning responsibility and money management and the all-important skill of customer service.

Anybody who has worked in the retail industry, for example, can share stories of unreasonable patrons and the difficulty of embracing the idea that the customer is always right a mantra that reportedly dates to 1909 and a London department store.

Yet, while we agree with the benefits of summer employment for teens, we also recognize the changing economy that has altered employment options for young workers. According to a recent report from the Associated Press, 57 percent of Americans ages 16 to 19 were employed in July 1986. That percentage remained above 50 percent until 2002, but by last year it had dipped to 36 percent.

One major factor is that jobs traditionally taken by teens often are filled by adults these days. Experts point to growth in the number of low-skilled immigrants, a population that works later in life, and increases to the minimum wage as factors that reduce seasonal employment for teens. Each of those boosts the number of adults seeking jobs formerly filled by young workers. A study by Drexel University found that in 2000-01, teens accounted for 12 percent of retail workers; by 2016, that number was 7 percent. In the restaurant and hotel industries, the percentage of teen employees fell from 21 percent to 16 percent.

Indeed, there is a tendency to lament this trend. As the Associated Press report details: Economists and labor market observers worry that falling teen employment will deprive them of valuable work experience and of opportunities to encounter people of different ethnic, social and cultural backgrounds. Locally, Sharon Pesut of Partners in Careers told The Columbian in May: Where those jobs used to be plentiful, those are now few and far between. The kids really need to do their research. Its not as simple as dropping off a r?sum? anymore.

At the same time, it is important to acknowledge that fewer and fewer teens are seeking summer jobs. No, this is not the result of a lazy generation that would rather sit on the couch and play video games; it is the result of a generation that is busier than ever. Teens are more inclined to seek summer educational opportunities, fill their schedules with sports, volunteer for r?sum?-building endeavors, travel with their families, or attend summer camps. As Derek Thompson wrote last month for The Atlantic: Education is to blame, rather than indolence. The percent of recent high-school graduates enrolled in college both two-year and four-year has grown by 25 percentage points.

Thompson also details a rise in unpaid internships, in which teens are working but are not counted among the labor force.

As with any economic trend, the issue of teen employment is complex, and it was exacerbated by the Great Recession of the past decade. The recovery has come largely in the sector of low-skilled, low-wage jobs, increasing the likelihood of adults filling jobs formerly open to youngsters.

Summer employment for teens is, indeed, valuable. But the loss of summer jobs does not necessarily reflect a loss of the American work ethic or a changing generation. Instead, it reflects unavoidable alterations in the nations economic structure.

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In Our View: Evolution of Summer Jobs - The Columbian

Evolution of Sexual Intimidation: Male Baboons Beat up Females to Increase Mating Success – Newsweek

Male baboons have been observed carrying out long-term abuse of their female partners as a means of control and to increase mating success.

The discoverythe result of a four-year research projectprovides more evidence to support the idea that sexual intimidation among humans has evolutionary roots, potentially helping explain why domestic abuse is so frequent in humans today.

Researchers from the Zoological Society of London, U.K., and CNRS in France monitored a population of chacma baboons in Namibia to find out whether male aggression towards females was a type of sexual coercion, where females were intimidated into mating rather than being directly forced to.

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"When I was in the field and observing the baboons, I often noticed that males were directing unprovoked attacks or chases toward females in oestrus [in heat]," study author Alice Baniel said in a statement. "They also maintained close proximity and formed a strong social bond with one particular cycling female, from the beginning of their cycle until the end.

Researchers monitored the baboons for attacks and sexual activity in the 20 minutes that followed and found there was no increase in mating directly after violent attacks, but further analysis revealed another trend. Their findings are published in the journal Current Biology.

A male baboon attacking a female. Scientists found males use long-term sexual intimidation to increase their mating success. Alecia Carter

Over four years, researchers found fertile females suffered more aggression from males than those that were pregnant or lactating. Male aggression was a major source of injury to fertile females. Males that were more aggressive towards one particular female were found to have had more mating success than those that were less aggressive.

Instead of forcing the females to mate after violence, the males appear to be using the attacks as a means of long-term sexual intimidation that, over time, encourages the female to stick with the male aggressor.

Elise Huchard, another author on the study, tells Newsweek the patterns seen appear to work as a mating strategy in two waysit discourages the female from leaving the proximity of the male, while also inciting her to accept his mating facilitation.

Similar long-term sexual intimidation has previously been observed in chimpanzees and may well be present in other primates. "Because sexual intimidationwhere aggression and matings are not clustered in timeis discreet, it may easily go unnoticed," Baniel said. "It may therefore be more common than previously appreciated in mammalian societies, and constrain female sexuality even in some species where they seem to enjoy relative freedom."

Female baboon with her newborn baby. Alice Baniel

Because both chimpanzees and baboons are relatives of humans, this behavior being present in all three could indicate it has a long evolutionary history, Baniel said.

Sexual intimidation was first described in chimpanzees a few years ago and now weve got evidence of sexual intimidation in baboons, Huchard says: This suggests sexual intimidation might be widespread in social primates, so it opens the possibility for an evolutionary origin of human sexual intimidation.

But its just a possibility. It doesnt mean it has an evolutionary basis. All we can say at the moment is that its now well documented in animalsanimals that are closely related, so its not impossible to think that human sexual intimidation has a long evolutionary history.

She says they will next need to find more evidence of this behavior in other mammals to pinpoint the systems involved. That would shed more light on human sexual intimidation and whether its an evolutionary trait, she says.

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Evolution of Sexual Intimidation: Male Baboons Beat up Females to Increase Mating Success - Newsweek

WhatsApp, Fifa and takeaways: the perpetual evolution of unveilings – The Guardian

Aston Villa announce the signing of John Terry, left, and Bryan Robson joins Manchester United in 1981. Composite: Getty Images, AVFC

These are familiar times at Aston Villa. They have, after all, started July by signing on a free transfer a medal-strewn Premier League legend in his late 30s, once considered perhaps the finest player in his position in the land but more recently used to openly pondering the possibility of retirement, and announced the arrival to the world in rather humiliating style.

So far, so 2001. It was 16 years ago next week that John Gregory invited reporters to Villa Park to meet his new goalkeeper, Peter Schmeichel. The Dane, at 37 a year older than John Terry is now, was scheduled to pose for photographers while holding the clubs new goalkeeping shirt in then-traditional style but when it was brought out, bearing his name and the No1, he took one look and turned away.

I think well have to chat about that, he told his new manager, choosing instead to brandish the standard outfield kit. Peter just wont wear grey, Gregory later explained. Hes like a boxer. Everything in his corner has got to be just right.

The kit manufacturers, Diadora, were bemused. I am amazed that one guy can dictate to the club what he wears, said their managing director, Andrew Ronnie. We worked with David James on the fabric, colour and design and everything was fine. We put a lot of effort into it. David was happy but then he left for West Ham. Peter joined and now we have a problem.

Perhaps this was the day that the foundations of the traditional transfer-unveiling ceremony started to crumble. A photo opportunity with the nearest item of club-branded merchandise will no longer do: modern footballers are complex characters with high wages and higher expectations, most of whom would not deign to look at a 9.99 acrylic weave scarf, let alone brandish it with pride for all posterity.

They also bring with them an expanding coterie of agents and advisers. Bryan Robson signed his first contract at Manchester United on the pitch shortly before the start of a match against Wolverhampton Wanderers in October 1981, perched upon a wobbly wooden folding chair with his new manager to his right, the chairman to his left and the club secretary stood behind, helpfully pointing to the bit that needed his signature. It is a scene that viewed today appears as outdated as Robsons tight perm; any modern restaging would require, at the very least, more chairs, better haircuts, a great deal more paperwork and several bad-tempered arguments about image rights.

Clubs have always used the very latest communication technology to announce new signings, it is just that between the 1890s and the 1990s it changed little, with teams frustratingly restricted to the use of newspapers, photographers and the occasional town crier. Suddenly, however, their horizons have expanded. Villa announced Terrys arrival by posting on Twitter a conversation on Snapchat, thereby simultaneously ticking two social-media boxes and keeping at arms length journalists who might overhear embarrassing conversations about the ugliness of their kit.

Last week Roma unveiled Lorenzo Pellegrini by posting a video of the player using his Roma-kitted virtual self to score a virtual goal on Fifa. Last month Liverpool published a video of a thumb scrolling through a Twitter stream of posts beseeching them to sign Mohamed Salah, which turned out to be Salahs very own digit. A few days later the world learned that Crystal Palace had finally found a new manager when they posted footage of white smoke emerging, Vatican-style, from the chimney of a local Caribbean takeaway.

The popular reaction has been to mock these clubs for their novelty efforts, but after generations of cut-and-paste shirt-brandishings any innovation is surely to be celebrated, even if we still look forward to someone coming up with a good one. For years it took no thought whatsoever to organise a player unveiling, and now clubs dedicate at least a few minutes consideration and a bit of video editing to it, which is a shuffle in the right direction.

The great advance will be to professionalise and, inevitably, commercialise the experience, treating sold-out stadiums and audiences of millions via global cinema simulcasts to choreography, showtunes, fireworks both literal and figurative, and inevitable guest appearances from David Guetta. What is for certain is that unlike the monochrome efforts of yesteryear, the unveilings of the future will be anything but grey, which is something Schmeichel, at least, will be grateful for.

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WhatsApp, Fifa and takeaways: the perpetual evolution of unveilings - The Guardian

Turkey Bans the Teaching of Evolution in Public Schools – Voice of America

Turkey has historically prided itself on being a secular state.

Amendments to the constitution during the 1920s and 1930s separated religion and government policy.

Since that time, debates about the role of religion in public life have continued in the Muslim-majority country.

Evolution in Turkish schools

In a recent decision, the government banned the teaching of evolution in high school.

This action means that Turkish students entering high school will no longer learn about the theory of evolution. The theory comes from the work of Charles Darwin, the famed British naturalist.

His ideas are considered to be the basis for the scientific study of life on Earth.

The government said its decision was not about teaching Islam. Instead, officials said high school students "don't have the necessary scientific background and information-based context to understand the theory of evolution.

Alpaslan Durmus is the head of the education ministry's curriculum board. Durmus said members of the board thought the theory should be taught to higher-level students.

"We tried to leave out some of the controversial issues from our students' agenda," Durmus added.

Critics of the decision

Critics of the decision say that Turkish children will not get the education they need.

Scholar Alaattin Dincer told VOA "The Turkish education system is very weak concerning the fundamental sciences. Both in domestic and international exams; be it math, physics, chemistry and biology, our students have very low passing grade percentages. It is actually terribly low."

Dincer added that the next generation of Turkish students should learn about evolution and Darwin. "If you raise them [students] without learning those subjects, how can you argue that we are a scientifically enlightened country that can produce the scientists of the future?" Dincer asked.

This week, Turkey's main teachers' union, Egitim Sen, said it was taking the issue to court.

Mehmet Balik is the chairperson of Egitim Sen. He criticized the decision to ban the teaching of evolution and a new policy that requires schools to have a prayer room. These actions "destroy the principle of secularism and the scientific principles of education," he said.

Other critics say the government's ban on teaching evolution is part of a plan by President Erdogan to push an Islamic identity onto Turkish society.

International perspectives on the teaching of evolution

Similar debates about the teaching of evolution have taken place in other countries, including the United States.

In the late 1990s, the state of Kansas famously banned the teaching of evolution in public schools. The School Board reversed its decision in early 2001 amid public criticism.

In the mid-2000s, at least 16 U.S. states were considering changes to the teaching of evolution in schools.

Religion and science

Although critics say religion and science are at odds, some Islamic theologians say evolution and Islam can exist together quite easily.

Ihsan Eliacik is a Muslim theologian. He told VOA, "If evolution is scientific truth that exists in nature, nobody can stand against itBesides, by my religious faith, scientific truth means religious truth. The two are not contradictory."

I'm Jonathan Evans.

Kevin Enochs reported on this story for VOA News. John Russell adapted the story with additional materials for Learning English. Hai Do was the editor. _____________________________________________________________

secular adj. not overtly or specifically religious

evolution n. the process by which changes in plants and animals happen over time

naturalist n. a person who studies plants and animals as they live in nature

curriculum -- n. the courses that are taught by a school, college, etc.

fundamental adj. forming or relating to the most important part of something

controversial adj. relating to or causing much discussion, disagreement, or argument: likely to produce controversy

theologian -- n. a person who is an expert on theology

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Turkey Bans the Teaching of Evolution in Public Schools - Voice of America

Evolution 8c+ by Will Bosi – UKC News (press release)

18 year old Will Bosi has achieved an incredibly fast redpoint of Jerry Moffatt's rarely repeated Evolution 8c+ at Raven Tor (Miller's Dale), on his third attempt - a feat matched by Alex Megos in 2016 (UKC interview).

Will is currently training in Sheffield ahead of the British Bouldering Championships with strong Slovenian company. He told UKC:

'The training has been good fun, but we took a day to show the Slovenians Hubble and the rest of the Peak. Evolution has always been on my tick list as it's such a classic. My main objective has been Mutation (so the extension), but I had to do the beginning to start with.'

Commenting on the speed of his ascent, Will surprised himself:

'I was expecting to get all the moves down fairly quickly since I feel at home on the crimpy territory, but I wasn't expecting such a quick send! Just because Evolution is renowned for razor blade crimps and I had huge respect for it before attempting. The climb is absolutely amazing and it suited my style really well.'

On his first attempt, Will worked the route quickly to scope out the moves and clips. He told UKC:

'I came down thinking I had a chance on the next go and I was psyched at how good the climbing is! My second attempt was very brief - I just pulled up the start to put the rope into the second draw and came down. Third go, I was in full redpoint mode and went for every move 100%. I just managed to stick the third last move with two fingers but found the strength to get the third finger on and finish the route.'

Will Bosi on his rapid repeat of Evolution 8c+

He added:

'It ended up being a very successful quick visit to The Tor - I love the place!'

Next up for Will is a shift in focus towards the competition season, with an occasional escape to the rock.

Will is sponsored by: Red Chili and Wild Country

Cripes the chaps just done 8c+ in 3 goes at a crag that takes most people 3 goes to find the hand holes, 3 goes to find the foot holes and 3 to try and connect them. ohh and rainshadow. He may have also be studying at... Ian Broome - 21:52 Wed

No. Hopefully Will and some of the other young talents though are changing that. This is a phenomenally fast repeat. Nic Sellars also made fairly light work of the route I think, though not this quick. Steve has also... stp - 15:45 Wed

Apart from Steve M, has British sport climbing really moved on from the Ben & Jerry show? Am I right in thinking that nearly all of Steve M's top routes (i.e. the 9's) have either not been repeated or not by a Brit?... Michael Hood - 14:52 Wed

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Evolution 8c+ by Will Bosi - UKC News (press release)