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The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: August 5, 2017
Evolution | Castle Clash Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia
Posted: August 5, 2017 at 6:23 am
IGG released a new features in the (Sept/Oct 2015) update, which enables Legendary 10 star Heroes to continue getting tougher and gain a new look.
Currently only Legendary Heroes can be evolved and although evolve, their HP per level does not.
AlsoHarpy Queen is subject to an anomalous drop in her HP base.
A Hero must fulfil all the evolutionary (evo) Hero requirements before a it can be evolved. When a Hero is ready to evolve it will appear in the Heroes Altar with the its Star Level shining and the Hero will have Evolve where you typically see the Upgrade button:
The initialmove speed will drop to the 4 Starspeed for evo1 and 5 Starspeed for evo2.
The returned books must be claimed from your mailbox within 7 days.
The following tables shows the minimum number of books that are returned for each level, what level these books can level a new hero to and for each level where the next 500k break starts on that level (add 500k steps to this number to find where the subsequent breaks start, ie for 183 the first break is 313,501 , so the next break will be at 313,501 + 500,000, the next at 313,501 + 2 x 500,000 etc).
Honor Badges are also used to increase the Star level of a hero, which raises it's maximum level capacity:
Use the "Base Evo Stats (Level Up)" shown in a Hero's "Info Box" (found at the top right of each Hero's page) to calculate a Hero's damage (DMG) and Hit/Health Points (HP) for a given HeroLevel:
Spirit Mage example withDamage: [669+] 378 (+13) andHitpoints:[10230+] 1680 (+90):
Evolved Heroes Star level evolve from level 1 with 3 +evolution generationStars.This means that the Hero's Stars will not increase until the evolved Hero reaches the relevant level to Star level, ie, level 80 to go above 4Stars, level 100 to goabove 5Stars.
EvolvedHeroesstill follow the standard stats formula with these exceptions:
This now means that calculating evolved stats includes theHero'sunique fixedbaseas well as newbase stats(be careful not to confusebasewithbase stats) which is typically shown in [x+] in theHero'sInfo Box" andStarswill not start to increase until theHeroreaches 4 or moreStars.
The evo1 heroes' stats have many advantages over their counterparts including starting out with a massive base making them up to around 3.0x - 1.88x HP and about 1.6x - 1.33x DMG than their counterparts. But this is partially offset byStarlevelingup increases not starting until theHeroreaches 5Stars.
Evo1 HP and Evo1 DMG are larger than its equivalent counterpart but the biggest increase is with HP with DMG being much smaller increase.
For HP, an evo1 hero at level 66e1-68e1 will typically be match the HP of its level 180 counterpart and 132e1-135e1 for DMG. But at 66e1-68e1 an evo1's hero DMG will still be well under will that of the level 180, but rather be close to that of level 104-110. It is not until an evo1 hero gets to level 132e1 that its DMG becomes a close match for its counterpart at level 180.
In battle simulations an evo1 level of between 100e1 and 120e1 typically matchesits level 180 counterpart. But this does vary from hero to hero with some heroes able to match at 100e1 and others only barely at 120e1.
- Hero must reach 10 Stars (at least level 180 )
- 1 Evolution Rune (can be obtained by spending 1000 Fame collected from Lost Battlefield)
- 1,000 Red Crystals
- 1 duplicate of the same Hero, you can provide the duplicate by 3 ways:
All Experience gained by the hero after reaching level 180 (10Stars)will be returned inBless Tome experience books (500,000 exp), typically rounded up to the nearest 500,000 exp.
- Hero must reach 10 Stars of the first Evolution system
- 5 Evolution Runes
- 2,000 Red Crystals
- 3 duplicates of the same Hero
If Hero has a higher level than 185, the Experience gained after reaching 185 will be returned in Bless Tome || experience books (500,000 exp).
Honor Badges aren't used for evolving heroes but they will be used to level them up.
Evolution Compare: Evo2 versus Evo1 @ level 185
Evo2 versus Evo1 at level 185: Comparing Evo2 (all levels) to Evo1 at level 185 to see differences in the evolution from evo1 level 185 to evo2.
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As told by friends and family, an insider’s dissection of the evolution of al-Qaeda – The Times of Israel
Posted: at 6:23 am
Over the past two decades, there have been a number of pivotal moments in which al-Qaedas ongoing war against the West has shifted the contours of global geopolitics. Most notably, the 9/11 attacks sent the war on terror into a whole new dimension first with the United States-led invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, and then with the subsequent invasion of Iraq in March 2003.
Despite intensive military counter-operations, western understanding of al-Qaeda has been severely limited, primarily because governments and intelligence agencies tend to control and simplify narratives. No longer. A new book discusses the history of al-Qaedas forces with an insiders perspective.
Written by British investigative journalists Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy, The Exile: The Stunning Inside Story of Osama Bin Laden and al-Qaeda in Flight recounts the groups evolution through unique access to Osama bin Ladens inner circle.
The book documents the gradual formation of the Islamic State by bin Ladens lieutenants and captures bin Ladens rising paranoia in his final years in the Abbottabad compound in Pakistan where he was finally killed by US special forces in May 2011.
Frustrated this story was not being relayed in its totality, both Clark and Levy traveled to a host of countries in search of more information to tell what they feel is the real story of al-Qaeda as it evolved into a leading global brand of international jihadism.
Authors of The Exile Cathy Scott-Clark (right) and Adrian Levy (Caroline Forbes/Courtesy)
To this end, Clark and Levy held meetings with al-Qaeda insiders, as well as with relatives and friends of those associated with the organization, in places like Yemen, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the Emirates, Kuwait, the United States, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.
The Exile by Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy (Courtesy)
Startling details emerge, such as how the Bush administration knew the whereabouts of bin Ladens family and al-Qaedas military and religious leaders, but rejected opportunities to capture them.
Details also surface relating to the development of the Central Intelligence Agencys (CIA) torture program in Cuba and Thailand, and the subsequent coining of the phrase forever prisoner, as does information relating to Irans secret shelter for bin Ladens family and al-Qaedas military council.
Its more than a fantasy the way the al-Qaeda narrative is constructed [in the west], says Levy, a senior correspondent at the Guardian newspaper in the United Kingdom. Its seen through a western-European-Caucasian police procedural, in the form of analysts, the CIA, or from European intelligence agencies.
I cant think of any other conflict where there is such an extraordinary act of control by western governments, the journalist adds.
Levy cites films like Zero Dark Thirty a slick blockbuster narrative that depicts the decade-long hunt for bin Laden as a perfect example of sanitized western propaganda at work.
Osama bin Ladens Abbottabad main house with front door visible. (Shaukat Qadir/courtesy)
What we are seeing is a Hollywood betrayal of this story, says Levy, which shows agents using torture successfully in an attempt to imbue the story with one single narrative.
This torture was conducted far away from US soil, often in secret locations, and thus was not obligated to human rights conventions or other international laws.
The book recalls, for instance, how on July 24, 2002, Attorney General John Ashcroft, who then served in the George W. Bush administration, verbally approved to the CIA the use of 10 interrogation techniques on terror suspects who were arrested without trial. These techniques included walling, cramped confinement, and the use of diapers.
The Exile pays special attention to the prison diaries of Abu Zubaydah.
Born Zayn al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn in Saudi Arabia, Zubaydah moved to the west Bank as a teenager. Rejecting his middle class upbringing, he shunned his parents dream of him becoming a doctor and instead traveled to Afghanistan to train with al-Qaeda recruits. He was captured in Faisalabad, Pakistan, on March 28, 2002, suffering severe bullet wounds in the process. And, he famously lost an eye while under CIA interrogation.
The interrogation techniques used on him by the CIA have included stress positions, sleep deprivation, and waterboarding, among other forms of torture.
Abu Zubaydah in 2017 with eye patch around his neck. (Courtesy)
As Levy recalls, the CIA has accused Zubaydah of being al-Qaedas number three, Osama bin Ladens lieutenant, and one of the main planners of 9/11.
The US government now admits that most of those allegations against Zubaydah remain unverified. Still, Zubaydah remains at Guantnamo Bay, in Cuba, without trial, where he is classed as a forever prisoner.
Zubaydahs lawyers managed to get hold of his torture diaries, Levy says, and its the first primary source by someone who has been through the capture rendition in the Guantnamo process. This is yet another example how this [controlled] narrative has been imposed on this very complex situation.
Its deeply frustrating with the recent attacks in Manchester and [London], that we now have less material available [about jihadis] than we did post 9/11, Levy adds.
Levy believes the key to really understanding jihadi fundamentalists like bin Laden and other al-Qaeda figures is not just to study their eschatological-fundamental-Islamic-vision of the world but to analyze their day-to-day domestic lives too.
One would have to emphasize the bin Laden family, the journalist posits. Primarily because its the story of an abusive father and a family in decay.
Osama bin Ladens son Omar and wife Zaina bin Laden while they were still together. (Courtesy)
Levy cites how a number of bin Ladens children, for example, were born autistic and with numerous other diseases which were essentially untreatable since the jihadi leader was against any kind of investment in medicine or science.
The journalist also explains how the eldest bin Laden daughter, Khadija, was married off in puberty to make pacts with other mujahed fighters. She then subsequently died in childbirth in Waziristan in 2007, despite the fact that she had been advised by doctors three years earlier to undergo a dilation procedure to cleanse her womb.
There is a real sense of [huge] human failings within the bin Laden family, says Levy.
The west, led by the United States, has attempted to purposely construct and control how bin Laden and the al-Qaeda story is portrayed in the mainstream media, but the narrative from the jihadi side has been just as carefully constructed.
Bin Laden understood the nature of digital terror, and was always shaping his image, explains Levy, whether it was the way he held his gun, the way he dressed, the shape of his beard, or the image of him as the messianic figure in the cave returning.
Osama bin Laden at Tora Bora, November, 1996. (Abdel Bari Atwan/courtesy)
One of the more intriguing narratives to emerge from Levy and Clarks book, however, is the revelation that the 9/11 plot to bring down the twin towers wasnt handed down through conventional means, by way of the al-Qaeda military or religious council.
[They] objected to the plans for 9/11 on the grounds that there would be too many civilian casualties, that it was an unjustified target, and that it would lead to the immediate dismantling of the Islamic emirate of Afghanistan, says Levy.
Since 9/11 we in the west have seen this in the framework of an al-Qaeda plot. But that is not what happened, he adds.
The journalists also document in their book how the two George W. Bush administrations widely misunderstood various countries roles across the Middle East especially in relation to how certain states harbor terrorists.
Pakistan, for example a country that the Bush administration viewed as a strategic partner in combating terrorism is what Levy calls a jihad factory.
Al-Qaeda objected to the plans for 9/11 on the grounds that there would be too many civilian casualties
There are elements of the jihad factory [in Pakistan] which are controlled by the deep state and then elements that are well beyond its control, Levy adds.
The 2003 Iraq War, however, is absolutely pivotal and critical to understanding the wests conflict with jihadi terrorism over the last 15 years, Levy believes.
After all, it was Iran, not Iraq, Levy says, that was harboring al-Qaeda terrorists in its country before the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
The Iraq War set back the normalization of relations between the US and Iran massively, the journalist says.
General Qassem Suleimani (right) with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran. (Courtesy)
Once Iran was named in George W. Bushs so called axis of evil speech, the country took a hardline approach to the west.
Iran was admitting that it had given finances, transit, and [support] to al-Qaeda, says Levy.
Its like a series of matryoshka dolls, and the echoes out from that are Syria and Libya
But because of the axis of evil speech, Iran went hardline. After this it chose not to hand over of the religious Shura, and the military and the religious council of al-Qaeda [to the west], Levy explains.
The Iraq War also upset the Shia-Sunni balance in Iraq, and subsequently led to the rise of IS.
Its like a series of matryoshka dolls, says Levy. And the echoes out from that are Syria and Libya. And that is how we have reached the point with the Manchester [and London attacks].
Throughout Clark and Levys book there are numerous quotes from al-Qaeda leaders about the need to constantly attack the Jewish state. Moreover, the United States and Israel are in many ways seen by fundamental jihadists almost as one single entity and viewed as the ultimate enemy together.
Still, while Israel is a target that al-Qaeda would gladly like to attack, there are subtle strands within this narrative that make sure its not that easy.
Illustrative: Salafi demonstrators in Gaza waving Islamic State flags during a demonstration that took place on January 19, 2015. (Courtesy MEMRI)
Levy argues, for instance, that much of the jihadi world that surrounds al-Qaeda is a hierarchy of nations.The Saudis and Egyptians are seen in this jihadi-worldview as the intellectuals. But the Palestinians, Levy explains, are not necessarily highly regarded in the jihadi world.
Levy recalls how Abdullah Yusuf Azzam, a Palestinian, who was known as the Godfather of Jihad in the Afghan conflict, ended up being up killed in a car bomb in 1989. Many suspect that he was killed by bin Laden.
Palestine and Palestinian politics arent given a lot of status within the mujahid and jihad world
Palestine and Palestinian politics arent given a lot of status within the mujahid and jihad world, Levy explains. And al-Qaeda have chosen different causes that were dictated by the ethnic makeup of the movement.
Levy also points out that al-Qaeda usually tend to carry out their operations in failed or failing states, such as Algeria, Libya, Syria, Iraq, as well as a host of other failed states across Africa, where fundamental Islam is growing all of the time.
So in that sense Israel could not be a worse location for al-Qaeda, says Levy. Its a small locked down country with a militarized zone with a hugely successful domestic and foreign intelligence force. And it would be spectacularly more difficult for al-Qaeda to set off something on the scale of 9/11 within Israel than it would be in, say, the United States.
Smoke rises in Egypts northern Sinai, as seen from the border of the Gaza Strip, amid fierce clashes between government forces and Islamic State-affiliated gunmen on July 1, 2015. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
Levy claims that a number of journalists within Israel have written about the so-called al-Qaeda-ization of the Palestinian cause. But he believes this is a misguided view.
There is not yet an al-Qaeda brand within the Palestinian national liberation struggle, Levy explains. If one is to talk about al-Qaeda in Israel, the key question to ask is who would the local partners be?
It is true, Levy concedes, that in Sinai al-Qaeda are relatively successful primarily because they have local partners in Egypt. And in Jordan the group has had some level of success, garnering some support.
If one is to talk about al-Qaeda in Israel, the key question to ask is who would the local partners be?
But having no partners, no history, the wrong rhetoric, and a fear of the military intelligence apparatus in Israel, makes it enormously difficult for al-Qaeda to carry out an attack in Israel, Levy says.
Its far more profitable for them to be in Manchester, Birmingham and London, Levy adds. They are sprawling cities with different rules. They have lots of local partners and huge diasporas. And it makes much more sense than Jerusalem does.
Clark and Levys book concludes just as bin Laden gets assassinated in 2011 by US special forces in Pakistan. However, the journalists are keen to point out that al-Qaedas narrative has not ended there.
While IS is certainly pervasive, the geographic reach of the organization has diminished, says Levy. Moreover, he adds, IS depends on the contagious nature of its idea. He says the main problem with IS is that it has no structure.
Armed police patrol near Manchester Arena following a deadly terror attack in Manchester, northwest England on May 23, 2017. (AFP/Oli SCARFF)
With the politics of the Middle East in complete free fall, its hard to say what direction all of this is going in, Levy posits.
Still, Al Qaeda is blossoming and is massively resurgent, he says, pointing out that the jihadi world has moved on from bin Laden.
Al-Qaeda is far more ambitious, in complete resurgence and a massive force to be considered, Levy concludes.
Children of al-Qaeda members in Tora Bora, 1996. (Abdel Bari Atwan/Courtesy)
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Santa Fe Opera thinks different with The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs – Toronto Star
Posted: at 6:23 am
Garrett Sorenson as Steve Wozniak and Edward Parks as Steve Jobs in Santa Fe Opera's The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.( KEN HOWARD FOR SANTA FE OPERA )
SANTA FE, N.M.Many of us want to change the world. Steve Jobs did. Or so, plausibly, claims the brochure for this seasons Santa Fe Opera, which has just premiered a full-length, one-act opera titled The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.
The creative entrepreneur who gave the world Apple hardware and software, yanking even the most reluctant of us into the computer age, may not seem the likeliest of subjects for tenors and sopranos. But Santa Fe Opera, currently under the direction of Charles MacKay, is no ordinary opera company.
Housed in a strikingly modern, mostly outdoor facility, nestled literally in the desert outside New Mexicos centuries-old capital city, this innovative enterprise has been, for decades, an incubator for emerging as well as established operatic talent.
Read more: Opera in New Mexico desert draws Canadian musicians
Igor Stravinsky turned up for its first season in 1957 to attend a production of his only full-length operatic work, The Rakes Progress. And as recently as two years ago, every seat was sold for its entire run before the curtain went up on the premiere of Jennifer Higdons Cold Mountain.
Even so, The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs represented a particular challenge, a first opera by an American composer who (like Higdon) is known largely for his instrumental music, based on the life of a recently deceased (2011) global superstar.
Although Mason Bates and his librettist Mark Campbell insisted that they were not about to produce a documentary theirs is an interpretation of the life and character of Jobs, without the co-operation of their subjects family or of his company neither can it be called a work of fiction.
The story begins in the garage of the Jobs family home in Los Altos, Calif., when Paul Jobs presents his son with a work bench for his 10th birthday.
Thereafter, the libretto moves forward and back through time, visiting pivotal moments in the grown-up boys career, all within Vita Tzykuns unit set, whose walls expand and contract to provide projection surfaces for changing locales.
The libretto is hardly hagiography. The Steve Jobs we meet appears driven, self-centred and only almost likeable when he finally faces his own mortality. In the title role, baritone Edward Parks may not even sound Jobs-like (the real person apparently spoke in a rather high-pitched tenor), but his characterization, complete with an Issey Miyake black turtleneck and Levis 510 jeans, is certainly credible.
Those who know the actual Jobs story, whether by reading Walter Isaacsons monumental biography or through the various other attempts to pin the butterfly, will recognize the cast of characters, from the girlfriend and child he abandoned to the best friend and partner (Steve Wozniak) he cruelly offended, all of whom are portrayed sympathetically under Kevin Newburys direction.
But of course, what matters most in an opera is its music and the music of Bates has turned out to be a clever amalgam of the live and the electronic (whirring electronica, in the composers own words), with Bates himself sitting at a console in the pit next to conductor Michael Christie.
This takes us back to the days of Haydn and Mozart, when composers routinely participated in performances of their own operas, yet it is no mere nostalgic stunt. Bates has sought to give his characters not identifying leitmotifs, in the Wagnerian manner, but individual sound worlds, using samples of what he calls Mac gear. To characterize Jobs spiritual adviser, a Buddhist monk, he even incorporates Tibetan prayer bowls and Chinese gongs.
The music is accessible and sufficiently transparent in its scoring that the words come through with surprising clarity (something that did not happen in the score for Cold Mountain). A major opera? Perhaps not but surely an effective one, with the power to bring an entire audience to its feet. An extra performance has already been added to its run.
The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs is running this season in repertory with four other, more traditional works: Handels Alcina, Donizettis Lucia di Lammermoor, Rimsky-Korsakovs The Golden Cockerel and Strausss Die Fledermaus. I attended performances of two of them.
Lucia di Lammermoor offered in the American soprano Brenda Rae one of the finest vocal actresses I have yet witnessed in the operas famous mad scene. And The Golden Cockerel sported a set by Gary McCann marvellously evocative of the constructivist designs to come out of post-Revolutionary Russia.
Reasons enough for a trip into the New Mexico desert? You bet.
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Virus evolution behind spike in flu cases – Newshub
Posted: at 6:23 am
Health experts say the recent spike in flu cases is nothing out of the ordinary.
Three times as many people went to hospitals with a winter illness in July compared to the year before.
Public health physician Dr Jill Sherwood told Newshub the virus is changing, and catching people off-guard - but it appears worse than it really is.
"Although it seems bad they're three times higher, we've actually still only got what we would term low seasonal activity - last year we had unusually low activity."
The flu virus that was circulating last year had not changed much in several years, she said.
"We had a lot of people who, either from vaccination or from having the illness in previous years, were immune."
District Health Boards are advising people to visit their general practitioners in the first instance.
Dr Sherwood advises people to wash their hands often, and stay home if unwell.
Newshub.
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The evolution on the hop grower/craft brewer relationship – Yakima Herald-Republic
Posted: at 6:23 am
Yakima Herald-Republic | The evolution on the hop grower/craft brewer relationship Yakima Herald-Republic The evolution on the hop grower/craft brewer relationship. Aug 4, 2017 Updated 7 hrs ago; () Steve Dresler, retired brewmaster of Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., talks about how the relationship between hop growers and craft brewers have changed over time. |
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‘These Honduran students changed my life’ – MyDaytonDailyNews
Posted: at 6:22 am
BEAVERCREEK
Seven High School students from Honduras participated in the FIRST Global Robotics Competition in Washington, D.C., with the help of Dayton-based nonprofit Shoulder to Shoulder.
RELATED: Marching band goes through intense camp
Shoulder to Shoulders 27-year mission has been to help bring sustainable health, nutrition and education services to the people of rural Honduras.
While in the U.S. the students also had the opportunity to spend time with students at Jacob Coy Middle School in Beavercreek as well as meet other local robotics teams.
The Honduran robotics team developed a connection with the Beavercreek students when Beavercreek middle school Spanish teacher Angel Allen had the opportunity to visit Honduras and tour the Good Shepherd Bilingual School as well as Santo Tomas Aquino High School, in Camasca, Honduras.
When Allen found out that the team would be in the U.S. for the competition she saw it as an opportunity for her own students.
These Honduran students changed my life. I was able to see how they are happy with so little. I want my Beavercreek students to find value out of the small things and recognize that you can create your own happiness, said Allen.
With the help of Shoulder to Shoulder, local fundraising and local families willing to host the students and their teachers the team was able to make the detour to Beavercreek.
Host mom Lynn Hay said that her daughter is part of Allens eighth-grade Spanish class and really wanted to participate as a host family.
My daughter got the opportunity to see life though their eyes. She got to know about them, their families, their culture and lifestyle. If you have kids, its definitely worth opening them up to experiences like this. They are so used their lifestyle, and all that matters is the next new phone. They dont know what its like to live when you are taking showers out of a bucket, said Hay.
Hay said she was so impressed with the Honduran students and all the barriers they had to overcome to get to the point that they were.
She said that they recounted a story about a representative from the robotics competition who traveled to Honduras for a week to give the team a bit of instruction on the competition kit.
He didnt speak Spanish so he had to communicate with them through an interpreter. He tried to explain how to use the controller by telling them it was just like using a PlayStation. The interpreter had to explain that these kids had never seen a PlayStation, said Hay.
The team traveled to Washington, D.C., on July 16-18 for the robotics competition. The Olympics-style robotics challenge invites one team from each country across the globe with the goal of inspiring a passion for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.
Each group of students is given a kit and is asked to solve a set of challenges using only the tools and parts provided to them.
Team student representative Melissa Lemus said that Shoulder to Shoulder not only helped them financially but also with encouragement. She said they had never done anything with robotics before and didnt think that they could do this.
At the competition in Washington, D.C., Lemus said that she was surprised how differently each team approached the project even though they all had the same materials to work with.
All and all she said that the experience was very positive one and was amazed by the opportunities this country had to offer. This is an experience that will stay with me and have a positive impact on the rest of my life, Lemus said.
Contact this contributing writer at Erica.Harrah@woh.rr.com.
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Students’ robots fly into 3M headquarters – Minnesota Public Radio News
Posted: at 6:21 am
A couple of dozen robots briefly took over the plaza at 3M's Maplewood headquarters Friday, as Minnesota high school robotics teams showed off their machines.
3M scientists, engineers and other employees serve as mentors to hundreds of students on local robotics teams.
Hans Mueller, a member of the Eagan High School robotics team, said his experience with the team and counsel from 3M workers put him on the path toward an industrial engineering degree.
"Here at 3M, I met with several employees throughout my experience in robotics, who helped me decide what I wanted to do," Mueller said. "So, it really enabled me to pick the career I want to go on to do."
3M provides more than $1 million a year in equipment and donations to robotics teams worldwide.
Inventor and entrepreneur Dean Kamen founded FIRST Robotics and was present for the event Friday. He said Minnesota is a national leader with some 200 robotics teams, but he wants to see more teams here and across the country.
"This is the only sport where every kid can turn pro and it should be the sport that every school has," Kamen said. "This sport leads to careers, life changing opportunities and we need to make it more available to more kids everywhere."
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The Problem with My Journal – HuffPost
Posted: at 6:21 am
A few yesterdays ago, I started to keep a journal. I have done that many times before. The difference is this attempt, which appears likely to continue, relies on a computer program. Called Day One, it is recommended in all the reviews. I cannot complain about it, with its prompts at specified intervals to me to jot down or, rather, to type on the facsimile of a keyboard displayed by a tiny screen what is on my mind.
Yet I am skeptical about my own enthusiasm. I do not wish to become a life logger. That practice, much maligned, involves wearing devices to document every moment: who did I meet and what was my mood before and after the encounter? It is related to the quantified self movement, which encourages analysis of those details, from the food that is ingested to everything that is egested and the hiccups and belches in between. The idea is to capture it all. Fitness trackers are the lite version. I admire Gordon Bell, the patient zero of lifelogging. You have to respect somebody willing to dedicate themselves to a project with such extremism. I just dont want to be him. Most of us do not have the discipline.
I confess that I am a half-hearted member of the cult of self-improvement. I am glad I took up running, but I try not to be obsessive about uploading every stroll on social media. The meme has become passe, if its not on Strava, then it didnt happen, referring to the leading platform for sharing the statistics about exercise. I once told a colleague that I attended the opera, which I do not like all that much, in order to be a cultured person. My motivation is not quite as instrumental as that, though the determination to better myself is genuine.
The reason I wonder about all the fuss is not the risk of narcissism or obsessive-compulsive planning disorder. It is the confusion of the photograph with the experience. The point of running, or attending the opera, is to be there. We already are too attached to our gadgets, and my wife implores me to be here now, as they used to suggest when society believed in consciousness raising. My journal habit promotes the opposite of that mantra of mindfulness. My life has been reduced to my feed.
People who know me do not mistake me for a spiritual individual. Even I, as committed as I am to scientific method, doubt that the digital can substitute for the physical. It can be a representation, even a convincing simulation, like a smell generated by a neurological disorder. It is nonetheless a dystopia, where we cannot distinguish between the illusion and the real. The risk is we will not care. We will be satisfied to sit in Platos Cave, watching the flickering shadows on the wall for the duration.
The transaction costs of keeping a digital journal are quite low, perhaps too much so. It intrinsically favors numbers (GPS coordinates for my location) over words (a paragraph about what the vista evoked). There are apps that automatically add entries. I installed one that downloads the weather each morning. Beyond that, there is a vast network of virtual self-reference that you can plug into. Other options take posts on Facebook, for example, and replicate them inside Day One. (It works in the other direction of course: you can export your scribblings for your friends to read.)
But the endless recording produces nothing more than a recording. Even if it is a perfect reproduction, it lacks any reflection. It is all outer life, not inner life. The journals of Pepys or Emerson or memoirs such as Annie Dillards Pilgrim at Tinker Creek are compelling to us, because they show us what is beneath the surface. As a law professor, I see analogies. The student who takes class notes, earnestly and furiously, typing up every remark is the student who is likely to lack comprehension. She is training herself to be a stenographer. Anyone who has read transcripts, who also was present for the trial, is aware of how limited they are, with literal accuracy that distorts events. The 1992 courtroom comedy movie My Cousin Vinny demonstrates this omission of nuance with an apparent confession that resulted from the failure to hear the nuance of ?
The omnipresence of my smartphone, and the addictive allure of filling in every blank time slot on the calendar page, causes me, and countless others, to compromise our integrity. That is what it is, when we give up our privacy. We turn ourselves over to the cloud. It is as if we are volunteering for surveillance. We yearn to belong to a community. We do so by offering snapshots of our meals to people who are strangers but for acceptance of an invitation to connect. Diaries are not secret anymore. They are our advertisements for our fifteen minutes of fame. There should be no shame in the solitude of our thoughts. We can keep to ourselves.
My data is as useful to others as it is to me. (The Day One folks make ample assurances in this regard.) I exchange my information for convenience: I will tell you what detergent I prefer, if you ship it just on time; from the brand of soap and a smattering of seemingly random data points, you infer my political affiliation. Corporations can buy the bits, aggregated and anonymized as well as with all the cookies that identify me, and, by piecing it together into a caricature of my persona as a consumer, in turn try to sell me what they have figured out I want, before I am aware of my desire. That was the dream of the late Steve Jobs. His genius was to make such prescience seem other than sinister. I am not sure I myself can benefit especially from the accounting of the mechanics of my life, unless I expend altogether too much time reviewing it. I am reminded of a joke by deadpan comedian Steven Wright, who said he had an actual map of the United States, full-size, scale 1:1. He doesnt unfold it very often.
Perhaps I should buy pen and paper. I am told handwriting is making a comeback.
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WannaCry Ransomware ‘Hero’ Arrested in Las Vegas on Hacking Charges – Casino.Org News
Posted: at 6:21 am
News Legal WannaCry Ransomware Hero Arrested in Las Vegas on Hacking Charges
Marcus Hutchins, the man who was hailed this past May as a hero for stopping the spread of WannaCry ransomware, will be in a Las Vegas courtroom on Friday afternoon, facing Department of Justice (DOJ) charges. Hutchins stands accused of being a co-conspirator in the creation of another malware system aimed at hacking bank accounts, which the DOJ alleges occurred for a year, between July of 2014 and 2015.
Marcus Hutchins, a computer security expert credited with stopping the WannaCry virus in May, was arrested Wednesday at McCarran Airport on charges he tried to distribute another type of malware. He will enter a plea in a Las Vegas courtroom on Friday afternoon. (Image: Bloomberg)
He was arrested in Las Vegas on Wednesday at McCarran International airport by FBI agents, as he waited to head back home to Britain after attending two global security conferences that ran in late July.
The 23-year-old is being charged with six counts, all involving his alleged involvement with the formation and propagation of Trojan Kronos, a software program that was aimed at infecting bank accounts. The bug is capable of stealing banking logins and other financial information.
Hutchins was charged along with another as-yet unnamed person, who the Justice Department accuses of uploading and selling the malware, but at least one cyber criminal defense attorney doesnt think the DOJ has a very compelling case.
Talking to the UKs Telegraph, American attorney Tor Ekeland described the situation this way:
By [arresting Hutchins], theyve made the internet less safe because nobody in their right mind is likely to help the US Government stop attacks now. Theyve sent a really bad message that even if you help stop a major malware attack and save people millions of dollars you could be arrested because someone you supposedly associated with supposedly sold malware for $2,000.
Ekeland added that while Hutchins could face as much as 40 years in prison for his actions, he doesnt think its likely.
I doubt it, it would be a bizarre outcome. Is it possible? It sure is, he noted to the Telegraph.
Hutchins was in the US attending conferences Black Hat and Def Con, two conventions for people interested in computer security. Seminars highlight any and all issues of interest to security and surveillance professionals, including, of course, cyber hacking, which has become the modern-day equivalent of the 18th centurys highwaymen.
Word of Hutchins arrest went viral and most who know him by his Twitter handle of @MalwareTechBlog were shocked, posting their disbelief via their own tweets on the social media site.
Andrew Mabbitt, founder of cyber firm Fidus Information Security, said on Twitterthat he and others were trying to find him a lawyer and would be starting an online crowdfunding account.
I refuse to believe the charges against @MalwareTechBlog, Mabbittsaid. He spent his career stopping malware, not writing it.
But a DOJ presser on the matter described a two-year investigation that had gathered evidence against Hutchins, including a tweet that he put out in July 13, 2014 soliciting others for a copy of the Kronos virus.
Could this Tweet by Hutchins from 2014 be his death knell? The DOJ says it is damning, but others claim it means nothing malicious. (Image: Twitter)
The indictment charges him with six counts, including one count of conspiracy to commit computer fraud and abuse, three counts of distributing and advertising an electronic communication interception device, one count of endeavoring to intercept electronic communications, and one count of attempting to access a computer without authorization.
Depending on Hutchins plea on Friday, he could remain in Las Vegas or be transferred to Wisconsin, which was where the DOJ made the charges, according to Ekeland. If the latter, the attorney (who is not representing Hutchins as we go to press) says it could take anywhere from a few months to as long as three years to come to trial. He adds that he doubts Hutchins will be allowed to post bail, given his foreign national status and the potential for flight risk.
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Late Choi Jin Shil’s Daughter Reveals Shocking Story About Abusive Grandmother – soompi
Posted: at 6:21 am
The late Choi Jin Shils daughter, Choi Joon Hee, uploaded a shocking post to Facebook on August 5. She revealed that she had been suffering abuse at the hands of her grandmother since her mothers death and requested help.
The full post reads as follows:
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Hello everyone, I am the late Choi Jin Shils daughter, Choi Joon Hee. The reason why I am uploading this today is to reveal what has really been going on in my seemingly good life.
I am currently in 8th grade. I thought my life fellinto shambles when my mom passed away but, in reality, it started going south when I was in 4th grade.
I thought that after my moms passing, I would live in misery. But I was the same as other elementary schoolers; I went to school everyday and watched Spongebob.
The only family I had left was my maternal grandmother, my brother, my grandaunt, and my paternal family. Something that I want to clarify first and foremost is that I was not living with my maternal grandmother (to be referred from now on as grandmother), but with my grandaunt.
My grandaunt is not directly related to me by blood, but raised me since I was born. However, my grandmother always favored my brother over me. My grandaunt was someone who cared about me and lived for only me for 15 years. My grandmother always disliked my grandaunt for some reason. I am not entirely sure why but, from what I heard, I think it is because she thought that my grandaunt was raising me for my inheritance. After 11 years of living together, my grandmother suddenly stopped letting my grandaunt see me starting fromwhen I was in 4th grade.
I was too young at the time, so I thought after 5 days, after 10 days, she would return. I had to sayfarewell tomy most beloved family members at 11 years of age, and a few days later, my grandmother stubbornly said, I cant bear to see you with that ***, so I told her to leave the house. Shes destroying your character. This was the first time I became severely depressed. I dug my face into my pillow so I wouldnt be heard by my grandmother and cried every night. I missed my grandaunt so much so I put her clothes, glasses, perfume, and socks on a big teddy bear and hugged it to sleep. However, my grandmother ruthlessly tossed that teddy bear on the floor and yelled at me. I was so scared and wondered what my grandaunt and I did wrong.
A few days later, I was so mentally shattered. Mustering all of the courage that I had, I secretly contacted my grandaunt via Kakaotalk. Luckily, she answered and just said that she was sorry for not being able to protect me. She told me that we could only meet again after I became a legal adult.
One day after taking a nap in the living room, my cell phone disappeared.
A few minutes later, my grandmother said, Do you think just because you have a passcode, I cant figure out what it is? I know youre contacting your grandaunt. From then on, she started routinely checking my phone. Whenever she was even the tiniest bit suspicious, she would take it away and not give it back to me.
A few weeks later, my chorus teacher, who knew of my situation, contacted my grandaunt and she came to visit me at my school. I had to pretend to be happy, but I really felt like crying.
I dont know how she found out, but my grandmother figured out a few days later that my grandaunt came to my school to visit me. My grandmother then proceeded to contact my teachers to make sure I did not meet with my grandaunt. My teachers knew what was happening, but couldnt do anything about it. This was the first time the word suicide crossed my mind.
My depression worsened in 5th grade. My grandmothers yelling and violence became more and more severe, and I naturally started todepend on my friends more. I started liking someone, so that helped me survive through this time. However, my grandmother said that I was crazy for guys and, after a very heated argument, started beating me with a clothes hanger. She then bit my hand and I still have a scar from that on my right hand.
Every day seemed like hell. I thought that dying would be more comfortable than this life. I wrote a will and tried to self-harm in every way that I could think of. I cut my wrist, strangled myself with a shower head, but I failed every time. I think there was at least a little will to live in me.
A few days later, my grandmother discovered the will and yelled at me for writing one. In that moment, I thought that my grandmother maybe cared about me to some degree. But, in reality, she yelled and hit me for not including her in the will.
When my brother, my grandmother, and I went to a trip to Northern Europe, my grandmother called me to her room and told me that my mom should not have given birth to me. She hit me with clothes hangers and strangled me.
What is even more absurd is that she would try to cover up her actionsby saying that she had to discipline me because I didnt listen to her at the time. Its like a violent bully at school trying to defend their actions by saying it was all a joke.
My grandmother then told me that she could not raise me anymore and gave me two choices. It was to go to the United States or to go to my grandaunt. She told me that if I went to my grandaunt, she will not give me any living expenses. I truly wanted to go to my grandaunt but, for my future, I chose to go to the States.
I received an achievement award for my mom some time later and prepared for my life abroad. I remember filming MBCs documentary Love at the time as well. I had to pretend to be happy, which was so difficult.
With little time left before my departure to the States, I met with Aunt [Hong] Jin Kyung and ate at Silla Hotel. I secretly gave her every sign that I could to tell her I didnt really want to go. She sided with me and expressed that it would be better if I stayed in Korea. Afterwards, my grandmother cursed and said, What is she to butt into other peoples lives?
Aunt [Lee] Young Ja then told some reporters in order to figure out a way to help me. My paternal relatives said that they will not take care of me because I dont even share the same last name.
When I moved to the United States, I thought I was going to stay at a family friends house but it was more like I was being adopted. What was more serious was that the family that I was staying with was not stable. I cant reveal much details about this but, since I was in a foreign country, I was even more scared.
I continued filming for the documentary in the States. I then realized that the school I was going to attend was run by a cult religion. I was so scared and was worried whether I was able to adjust to my new life.
I really thought there was no way I could proceed so I asked my grandmother if there was any way I could move back to Korea. She surprisingly complied and I returned to Korea.
However, misery didnt just end here.
After returning to Korea, I was blamed for everything. I wanted to reenter the elementary school that I attended before I left but it turned out that I had been expelled from the school, instead of transferred out.
I couldnt even go to school for a couple of months because of this. My grandmother wanted to send me to the international school that my brother was attending. I was mentally exhausted from studying a lot already, but the burden of having to prepare for admission into an international school addedeven greater pressure.
Every day was exhausting and tiring.
One Sunday morning, after sleeping late the night before from studying, my grandmother started accusing me of being a thief. She was preparing to go to church that morning, and realized that her eyeliner went missing. She accused me of being a thief from a young age and hurt me.
For the time being, I will write this much. This is August 5, 2017, 1:55 a.m. KST. Our entire house is a mess to the point wherethe police came to find us. I think I would feel so wrongedif I were to die without revealing this truth. Thank you for reading this long post. Please save me.
Many are currently sending words of encouragement to Choi Joon Hee on various SNS sites. Choi Jun Hee has since deleted the post from her social media account.
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Late Choi Jin Shil's Daughter Reveals Shocking Story About Abusive Grandmother - soompi
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