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Futuristic EV Concept Connects the Virtual and Real Worlds To Deliver an Epic Experience – autoevolution
Posted: December 3, 2021 at 5:18 am
The idea of a car connected to a digital world is not new. Audi already showcased the technology in the e-tron for the first time at the CES 2019. The way it works is by taking real data like speed, location, steering, and acceleration and matching it with an artificial setting.
That's what WayRay's Holograktor is doing as well. The company wanted to deliver something that would turn every ride into a personalized, immersive experience. Thus, it created an autonomous EV concept capable of learning the passenger's habits and preferences, including the usual routes taken.
Holograktor has a total of eight cameras mounted in key spots that allow for a combined 360-view. If you think that is a lot, the vehicle also sports eight ultrasonic sensors integrated into the front and read bumpers that provide a full picture of the surroundings.
The interior of the car is based on a 2+1 configuration. Since the front seats were designed with more space between them, it allows all occupants to easily see the holographic windshield. Speaking of its windshield, that's not the only gateway to the digital universe. The side window also connects the two worlds.
Through WayRay's proprietary Deep Reality Display technology, which creates multiple planes of virtual images and places them at variable distances based on real-world objects, passengers can enjoy a fully immersive experience.
The Metaverse, a shared virtual reality, combines data from social networks such as upcoming events, friends' locations, and suggestions to transform the world around users into an interactive and customized interface. So, while riding, people may organize their day or learn something new.
They can also customize the in-vehicle infotainment settings according to their liking using the joysticks. Passengers can set what they desire to virtually display around them by changing the True AR presets and apps.
One of the options available is the VR Remote Control service. With this feature, Holograktor can be controlled remotely from a small driving station by a single driver. Thanks to all of the sensors and cameras mounted on the actual automobile, the remote driver gets a first-person POV experience while wearing the VR headset.
Other features included in the Holograktor are the AirKnife system. It's a new technology that works with the air conditioning system to filter the air from potentially harmful bacteria. It acts as a barrier that cleans the air throughout the cabin.
There's no word on the car's speed or range. That's because WayRay focused on offering a new take on what the future of driverless cars might look like. For now, the Holograktor is just a concept. However, Sasha Selipanov, chief designer on the Holograktor project, mentioned that "we always had a production car as our goal." So, we might actually see the EV take shape in the future.
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This UNIQUE futuristic object is actually a playhouse! (PHOTOS) – Russia Beyond the Headlines
Posted: at 5:18 am
Sculptor Grigory Orekhov has created an egg-shaped playhouse for his daughter, which also serves as an ideal haven for adults.
A snow-white egg several meters high, standing in the middle of a green lush meadow. This is how sculptor Grigory Orekhov imagines an ideal playhouse for his daughter Agatha.
The concept for this glossy futuristic construction, which looks not unlike an UFO from a sci-fi movie, was born from a search for a childrens playhouse. My daughter has for many years been asking me for a playhouse, but ours is a family of perfectionists, so we cant buy just anything simply to close the matter, Orekhov says.
Playhouses available online seemed ugly and primitive to him and able to last only for a short period of time. He also wanted to make a house that is relevant for grow-ups. Then Orekhov turned to a theme that has been present in his work throughout his career - the ovoid (egg-shaped form).
The ovoid is a perfect architectural form in terms of proportions. It is self-sufficient, there is nothing superfluous in it. I [have] felt an unconscious fascination with it since I was a child. But, it is also an ancient religious symbol, the image of rebirth, of our inner world. I have a work called Ovoid 8, it vividly symbolizes this inner core of a human being, which it is so important not to break, to carry it through ones whole life and not to lose oneself, Orekhov says.
Orekhov created the first sculpture from the My Egg series in 2016. The playhouse too was born out of another of his projects, a quadrangular egg. But I did not conceive it as an art object. On the contrary, I wanted to turn an art object into a functional space, says the sculptor.
The house is made of hundreds of plywood slats stacked on top of each other and sanded. At the same time, its walls are not thicker than 30 mm. There is a window at the top, which also serves as a ventilation valve.
Inside, there is a bench with a soft pillow on one side and a table on the other.
Agatha paints a lot and this is a place where she does her art. Also, it is an interesting place for listening to music because the shape of the room creates an echo, he says.
It is also a refuge for any person who seeks privacy and a respite from the outside world, an allusion to the mothers womb. I myself sometimes feel like going there to read a book or surf the internet. The feeling is similar to what you get when you enter a church which has very little church paraphernalia - as in a place where you can think about elevated things. In our everyday lives, we are always in a hurry, we cannot stop and just think about the eternal. It is a space where you can find this Zen, Orekhov says.
The playhouse (which is located not far from Nikolina Gora outside Moscow) took a year and several hundred thousand rubles to build.
I was experimenting and it pushed the cost up. If I was to make several of these houses, technologically I would do it differently, to make it economically viable, he says, adding that he has been approached by a Spanish tourist company. They loved the house and wanted me to make a similar one for them for an exhibition. But it cannot be done in a few months and Agathas house cannot be transported. If there are a lot of requests, maybe I will make a series of these houses. Although my daughter is opposed to the idea, she believes that only she should have a house like this.
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Blaze It! Scientists Finally Discovered What Makes Weed Dank – Futurism
Posted: at 5:18 am
The distinctive aroma of cannabis has something in common with eggs, skunk spray, and hops, researchers have discovered.
AsScience News reports, a new study conducted by cannabis industry researchers found for the first time that weed does, in fact, contain sulfur and that a little goes a long, long way.
Using instruments that detect sulfur chemiluminescence, gas chromatography, and mass spectroscopy, chemists at the company Abstrax Tech whose business is producing the scent compounds known as terpenes that characterize fancy weed discovered that the smelliest strains do, in fact, contain sulfur.
Whats more, the researchers also found that the most common sulfur molecule found in loud bud is prenylthiol, the same compound that gives skunked beer its notorious Pep Le Pew-esque scent and taste. Other sulfuric molecules found in the Cannabis sativa that Abstrax studied included some that are structurally similar to garlic, the report noted.
While its unclear why nobody thought to look for sulfur in cannabis before, the relatively small amount found by Abstrax may have to do with it. Analytical chemist Iain Oswald, who worked on the study, told Science News that sulfur can be in very low concentrations on the flower, but still make a huge impact on the smell.
And smell psychologist Avery Gilbert, a person whose job title is as cool as this new finding and who also works with cannabis smells at the Colorado startup Headspace Sensory, told Science News that this research could both help mask the skunky scent of weed or amplify it, depending on the wants and needs of particular consumers.
The spectrum of cannabis odor is just amazing, Gilbert told Science News. I think it beats the pants off of wine.
More canna-science:Gene Sequencing Could Ensure You Get the Kind of Weed You Pay For
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They cancel Tom Hardy in China for discrimination and do not premiere Venom 2 – Market Research Telecast
Posted: at 5:12 am
There is still no news about the premiere of Venom Let There Be Carnage in China when it hit theaters around the world last October but in the eastern country there is still no possibility of seeing the tape in theaters. The reason? Rumors indicate that it would be a cancellation to Tom Hardy for a series of unfortunate statements the actor made at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival.
At that time, the interpreter was asked if Marlon brando it was an influence on him. So Hardy commented that he saw only one Hollywood legend movie: The Tea Rising in Shanghai, in which he plays Chinese, said and was celebrated by the journalists of the meeting. The truth is that the film actually talks about Japan and is titled The Teahouse of the August Moon.
The interviewer thanked the actor for his playful statements in a time so marked by public relations. Hardy doubled down: When China dominates everything in 15 years, we are all going to have to speak Cantonese. People are going to have to grow. There is a trillion dollars in debt and the beneficiary of all that is China.
There are more people in China than we have here. Who are we to meddle with what God wants? No man can stem the tide. It is simply about the collapse and rise of civilizations , went to the analysis politically incorrect from Tom Hardy that surely offended his fanbase in that eastern country.
The comments of Tom Hardy were described as Insulting to China in hundreds of Internet forums including the Bilibili video platform with a post that reached 1.5 million views. It is definitely discriminatory to call a Japanese character Chinese. I feel ofended. It is a shame. Goodbye, Tom Hardy , remarked a user among thousands of similar comments.
If the statements of Tom Hardy lead to Venom Let There Be Carnage is not released in China, it will be a major disappointment for Sony. Lets remember: the first installment of the symbiote raised more money in that country than in North America. 269 million dollars against 214 million of the green currency in the United States. Scandalous!
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It’s a beacon of hope and it’s a politicized issue. Merriam Webster’s 2021 word of the year is … – WKOW
Posted: at 5:12 am
Merriam-Webster just announced its Word of the Year. For some, it is a symbol of hope and health. For others, it's a representation of a politicized issue.
But as everyone can agree, the word is everywhere and it's controversial.
"Vaccine" is Merriam-Webster's Word of the Year. The word was selected based on lookup data, notable spikes, and year-over-year increases in searches.
"This is a word that has kind of two parallel but intersecting stories: one is a medical story, and one is a political story or a cultural story," said Peter Sokolowski, Merriam-Webster's editor-at-large.
This selection comes after "pandemic" was chosen in 2020, which informed top searches on the site and reshaped daily language, according to the company. The Oxford English Dictionary selected "vax" as their word of the year.
"Vaccine" was selected, according to Merriam-Webster, because it is a promising medical solution which became a major source of political division. New research into vaccines led the company to revise and expand its entry for "vaccine" in May. An entry for "immune response," in which cells behave as though a disease is present to train the body to fight it, was added separate from "immunity."
"The 'messenger RNA vaccine' was new to me, I had never heard of it, and unless you were a research scientist, you probably haven't," Sokolowski told CNN. "Therefore, the dictionary didn't even cover a definition."
On the site, lookups for "vaccine" shot up 601% over 2020, especially toward the latter part of the year when the first US shot was administered in December.
There was a 1,048% increase in site lookups this year compared to 2019. This August, lookups of "vaccine" jumped 535% due to widespread distribution in parts of the world and major stories about policy, approval and vaccination rates. In August, the Pfizer vaccine received full FDA approval.
It was also the time when New York and California instituted vaccine mandates for healthcare workers, as well as national announcements about booster shots for the general public, which led to debates about inequities in vaccine distribution.
And searches have remained stable through late fall, especially with talk about the Omicron variant and the efficacy of vaccines in stopping it.
"Vaccine" also has a compelling etymology, according to Sokolowski. The word derives from the Latin word "vaccinus," meaning "of or from a cow." The Latin for cow is "vacca." The word later entered French as "vaccin," then into English with today's spelling.
Sokolowski believes people will continue to look up the word in high numbers for perhaps years to come, as the term "vaccine" becomes a more regular feature of daily life.
One notable runner-up word was "insurrection," searches for which increased by 61,000% on January 7, the day after the January 6 siege on the US Capitol. Searches continued throughout the year with more arrests and congressional hearings. Sokolowski noted the word "embodied the shock of that day" because of its derivation from Latin, which originally had strong legal meaning.
According to Sokolowski, people turn to the dictionary in times of uncertainty and urgency. The dictionary is a way to achieve a consensus, which "doesn't mean that we agree with each other on the policies, but that we agree with the words that we use as carrying meaning and having a specific meaning."
Another runner-up was "perseverance," the name of NASA's latest Mars rover, which landed February 18. The name was chosen by a seventh-grader in Virginia who participated in an essay contest organized by NASA.
The word "woke" also made the top 10, which fascinated Sokolowski because of how quickly the definition changed. Five years ago, "woke" referred to "a kind of enlightened awareness," but it now serves as an "epithet to argue against the acknowledgment of what some would call progressive ideas or some would call revisionist history."
The word "guardian" shot up 3,142% this year mainly because Cleveland's MLB team changed its name from the Indians to the Guardians to remove a term many called culturally insensitive or politically incorrect.
"We are in a period of time when terms of identity, whether it's transgender identity, racial identity, ethnic identity, the pronouns that we use... are the object of a huge amount of concentrated attention in our language," Sokolowski acknowledged.
Other top words include infrastructure, cicada, meta, nomad, cisgender, and murraya -- a tropical tree and the winning word for the 2021 Scripps National Spelling Bee.
"In controversial times or uncertain times, there is this neutral and objective arbiter of meaning and that is the dictionary," Sokolowski contended. "That's why we revise constantly to make sure our dictionary is accurate, but it also means that there is a sort of constant."
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If you want to live in a Smurf house, I can help with colors J. – The Jewish News of Northern California
Posted: at 5:12 am
I love to play with colors, creating lively, unexpected schemes for clothing, flowers and home dcor. When I find the perfect shade, its mine for life. As soon as I enter my nail salon, the manicurist pulls out Hi-Voltage, a glorious magenta that garners compliments even when Im on a gurney.
My closet is filled with go-to-black, accented with fuchsia, electric blue and red, but when it comes to house paint colors, Ive learned to play it safe. My art teacher used to say, When in doubt, choose gray.
After our last remodel, I tested eight shades of gray on the living room walls, checking the paint day and night before settling on Dim Sum. A subtle blue with a hint of gray, Dim Sum has a HEX code (red-green-blue formulation) of D7DFE0 and an LRV (light reflectance value) of 72.75 percent. It bears no resemblance to anything you would want to eat. Who comes up with these names, anyway? Many dont even include the name of the color, namely Footie Pajamas (bluish pink) or Happy Yipee (golden yellow).
While choosing an interior color is tricky enough, exterior colors present another layer of complications. In sunshine and in shadow, they must work with the roofing, the driveway, the landscape and even the neighborhood.
Over the years, the wrong colors have put a hex on our homes, impeding our ability to unload them. When I lived in Walnut Creek, I chose a lovely shade called Redwood, transforming our house into the neighborhood IHOP. The turquoise shutters peeking through the bedroom window didnt help. Before selling the IHOP, we removed the shutters and repainted the interior Relocation Beige. Then I visited Dutch Boy and chose a delicious shade of blue for the exterior. Or so I thought, until my son, then a teenager, phoned me at work.
Mom, this house looks like a Smurf village! he hollered.
Amplified under sunlight, that stunning blue on the sample square metamorphosed into a cartoonish calamity. To make it work, wed have to wear goofy Phrygian caps. There goes the neighborhood. Instead, we took the paint cans back to Dutch Boy, where they were poured into an enormous vat and mixed with a couple of quarts of inky black at considerable expense.
Well, after those experiences with the IHOP and Smurf village, I had learned my lesson. In 2002, before the exterior of our house was last painted, I visited Home Depot, which offered paint-by-numbers palettes. After testing several combinations, we came up with a winning trio that we decided to replicate this year: cool gray with a hint of lavender for the stucco, charcoal gray for the trim and muted purple for the shutters, which happens to go splendidly with my nails.
Unfortunately, we couldnt find the old paint cans, and Home Depot no longer had the combo cards from 2002. On a whim, I clicked on Google Lens and took a picture of the house. At first, what came up was dead bed bugs. Then a closeup unveiled Cement Mortar Texture and Rough Gypsum. Not too much help.
Since the painter we hired uses Kelly-Moore, I visited the paint store and borrowed an 11-inch-long, 2-inch-thick color fan containing 1,600 shades. Then I ventured online and played with electronic palettes (kellymoore.com/mycolorstudio) until I was dizzy. Take the Plunge (a lavender-gray), Natural Pumice and the politically incorrect Gypsy Jewels create a striking palette. So do Breathless (another lavender-gray), Kettleman (charcoal gray) and Vintage Wine. I also couldnt resist Kundalini Bliss. How many samples should I test at $10 a quart?
I asked my husband for his input, but he wasnt about to duke it out with me over 1,600 possible colors. Just choose one or two favorites and give me veto power. Oh, by the way, check out the paint cans that I put on the back steps.
The labels are gone, but they look like the exact shades we used in 2002. Should we ask the paint store to replicate them, or should I continue playing with palettes? After all, Im having too much fun.
Time to take a Leap of Faith and lose myself in Blissful Meditation? But its late, and these sleepy shades of gray are making me yawn. Do I dare take a risk? A jolt of Hi-Voltage magenta would certainly enliven this subdued suburban street. Flashing my nails, I relay my decision to my husband.
Yes, he says emphatically. With chartreuse accents.
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If you want to live in a Smurf house, I can help with colors J. - The Jewish News of Northern California
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PERRY: ‘That’s the way it is in this town’ – A child’s guide to gun control in Aurora – Sentinel Colorado
Posted: at 5:12 am
Aurora police officials say three people were injured outside of Hinkley High School in Aurora Nov. 19. Its the second shooting in close proximity to a high school in five days. Photo by PHILIP B. POSTON/Sentinel Colorado
A quip from one of the teenage boys accused of wounding two Hinkley High School students, while shooting up the parking lot there about two weeks ago, illustrates Auroras problem.
When one of the boys involved in the apparent gang-related shooting was asked by police why he felt he needed to take a gun to a schoolyard scrap in the parking lot, he said, Its the way it is in this town, according to a police affidavit of the interview.
From the mouths of well-armed babes.
The boy clearly isnt alone in thinking that everybody needs a gun to go to school, to the store, to the park, to speed through a neighborhood, or harangue kids who speed through a neighborhood.
The Sentinel reported that 135 people were shot, wounded and didnt die in Aurora so far this year. Its a 136% increase in the number of non-fatal shootings since 2019, police say.
The vast majority of these shootings targeted young men and boys. On top of that, were the usual couple dozen of murders by gun that Aurora sees slightly wax and wane every year.
The Denver Posts Elise Schmelzer reported this summer that gun sales were over-the-top brisk in 2020, but that 2021 will eclipse even that number. The nearly half-million guns approved for sale by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation in 2020 were about 45% more than 2019, according to the Post.
This year?
Data from the CBI and FBI show that people in the state have already legally bought almost a half-million guns by the end of October. Residents statewide are buying guns at the rate of about 50,000 a month these days.
Its not just Aurora and Colorado. The FBI reports more than 25 million guns have been sold across the United States so far this year, a record number among record years going back for decades.
Armed to the teeth in a pandemic, what could go wrong?
We all know the answer to that. Even those who lie to themselves and others with the absurd chestnut, guns dont kill people, know the truth.
People dont effortlessly embed lethal metal slugs into peoples bodies, guns do.
Id be as misled or misleading as the gun whacks if I thought that rounding up some of the pistols and assault rifles would easily round down the number of people shot each week in Aurora and Denver.
The plague of gun violence is vastly complicated, because weve made it that way. Rather than deal with the obvious dilemma posed by exceedingly lethal and portable weapons accessible to children across the region and the nation, we politicize whats essentially a public safety problem, making it a wedge for Team Right to fight against Team Left.
We have no problems with safety caps on pain-killer bottles and sophisticated locks to keep thieves and even drunks from stealing our cars. But we pass out handguns to people as if they were no more treacherous than a wine opener.
Just how badly this can go wrong is in the headlines nearly every day now. In southeast Aurora last week, a former Greenwood Village cop and a group of teenagers got into an argument about dangerous driving in the neighborhood. A 17-year-old boy and the 36-year-old cop both pulled out guns and the boy was dead and the man injured in a matter of seconds.
Monday, another teenage boy, this time in Michigan, walks into his school with a gun his father bought four days earlier and opens fire on his fellow students, killing four, wounding seven more, and terrorizing the entire school and town.
The Sentinel and every other newspaper across the country is filled with stories just like that every day. An argument or critical moment appears and someone is injured or dead, about 200 times so far in Aurora this year.
One Aurora and two Denver city lawmakers are proposing an effort to create a regional gun buy-back, hoping to persuade people to give up whats killing all of us. By itself, such an effort would be beyond futile and probably heavily supported by the gun industry. Given that there are likely millions of guns in the glove boxes, purses, backpacks and suit-coat pockets in closets all across the state, such an event would be as effective as ridding the community of old pills in the medicine cabinet. There are many, many more to come.
Given that every single past effort to create serious gun control has failed fabulously at the capitols in Colorado and Washington, and everywhere else, its pretty clear were just going to have to suck it up.
There are far too many guns out there, way too easy for teenagers to get their hands on to think that we could persuade every parent in the region to buckle down on their kids to just say no to firearms.
More than one Colorado member of Congress and the state Legislature go to extravagant lengths to show off their firearm obsessions, normalizing the act of strapping on a hog leg anywhere in Colorado, just like people reach for umbrellas in places where it rains.
More security at schools and malls. A huge effort to get parents to act like parents. Campaigns and programs to give kids something to do besides drive around with guns. All those things will help. None of those things are the answer, however.
Only far, far fewer guns, tightly controlled, locked and monitored will change the fact that kids think they need a gun because, thats the way it is in this town.
Follow @EditorDavePerry on Twitter and Facebook or reach him at 303-750-7555 or [emailprotected]
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PERRY: 'That's the way it is in this town' - A child's guide to gun control in Aurora - Sentinel Colorado
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Gift Guide 2021: Best of DVD and Blu-ray television – Washington Times
Posted: at 5:12 am
Heres a selection of top gift ideas for the DVD, Blu-ray and 4K UHD-loving, TV binge-watcher in the family.
Smallville: The Complete Series 20th Anniversary Edition (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, not rated, 9,606 minutes, 1.78:1 aspect ratio, $179.99) The Emmy Award-winning drama that chronicled the life of a certain refugee from the doomed planet of Krypton, raised in a small town in the United States and taught to fight for truth, justice and the American way finally arrives in the high definition format after a decade wait.
As most fans know, the WB and subsequently renamed CW cable channel chronicled Clark Kents adventures for 10 seasons from 2001 to 2011, and lucky gift owners can now appreciate all 218 episodes on this 42-disc Blu-ray set.
Tom Welling stars as the pure of heart and often angst-ridden teen (a budding Man of Steel). Viewers are privy to his origin and early young adult years, living in a small town in Kansas and raised by Martha and Jonathan Kent (Annette OToole and John Schneider).
His adventures allowed him to meet many iconic characters from DC Comics extensive Superman canon.
That includes Clark meeting his first crush Lana Lang (Kristin Kreuk), his cousin Kara Zor-El aka Supergirl (Laura Vandervoort), the villain Doomsday (Sam Witwer) and eventually Daily Planet reporter Lois Lane (Erica Durance).
Most enlightening was Clarks complicated relationship with the millionaire founder of LuthorCorp., Lionel Luthor (John Glover), and his son Lex (Michael Rosenbaum). We all know how that turned out.
The show even took fans to the beginnings of a fledgling Justice League with Clark forming an alliance with Green Arrow (Justin Hartley), Impulse (Kyle Gallner), Aquaman (Alan Ritchson), Cyborg (Lee Thompson Young), Black Canary (Alaina Huffman) and Martian Manhunter (Phil Morris).
My biggest disappointment with the series is only seeing a short scene of Mr. Welling dressed as Superman and even a bigger aggravation was Warner Bros. not allowing him to star in a Superman movie.
However, and most notable, Smallville set the framework for the meteoric rise of the live-action superhero television series that followed on the CW network, making it one of the more pop art influential television shows in the history of the medium.
Best extras: Warner Bros. pulls together all of the bonus content from the 2011 complete series DVD set release as well as the Season 6 to 10 Blu-ray sets, within a cubed-shaped box and clamshell case for each season, to give fans more than 28 hours of production and series extended memories.
Highlights include almost two dozen optional commentary tracks and more than a dozen featurettes such as 30 minutes on introducing the Justice Society to the Smallville universe; a 26-minute look at the Green Arrow in comics; and a 23-minute roundtable discussion with four of the actors who have portrayed Jimmy Olsen over the years.
Viewers also get a pair of bonus discs in the DVD format (really, Warner could not release those as Blu-ray?) that were included in the 2011 set and offer goodies such as a 90-minute look at the history of DC Comics, an hourlong retrospective on the series to celebrate the 100th show and a 109-minute retrospective covering the entire series.
Another big extra is getting a coveted digital code to watch the show via the Vudu streaming service.
Sex and the City: The Complete Series (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, not rated, 2,691 minutes, 1.78:1 aspect ratio, $139.99) HBOs groundbreaking and multiple Emmy-winning, critically acclaimed series from the late 1990s covering the professional careers, relationships and romances of four best friends living in New York City finally gets a spectacular release in an 18-disc, high definition Blu-ray set.
Based on the bestselling book by Candace Bushnell, the show offered viewers over its six-season, 94-episode run a mix of comedy and drama tied to the world of writer Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker), public relations executive Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), lawyer Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) and overachiever Charlotte York (Kristin Davis).
Besides an homage to the fashion and style of the Big Apple, the series also refreshingly and unapologetically dived into highly sexual and modern social issues decidedly focused on from the female perspective.
For many, it will go down as one of the greatest television shows of all time.
Purists will note that Warner Bros. has reframed the presentation from its original square 1.33:1 presentations roots to the screen-filling 1.78:1 for modern monitors while still delivering strong visuals through the transformation.
Best extras: Viewers will first find two aptly named movies an extended cut of Sex and the City: The Movie (2008) and Sex and the City 2 (2010) that display a nice finishing touch.
Next, the extras, culled from the DVD sets, focus on 18 optional commentary tracks with writer and director Michael Patrick King; an almost hourlong, two-part HBO farewell to the show; and a vintage 48-minute panel discussion from the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival with Mr. Patrick King interviewing Miss Parker and then other writers of the show.
I Dream of Jeannie: The Complete Series (Mill Creek Entertainment, not rated, 3,470 minutes, 1.33:1 aspect ratio, $119.99) One of the iconic situation comedies from the earlier days of television debuts in the high definition format on a 12-disc set offering all five seasons of the show (the first in black and white) that originally appeared on NBC prime time between 1965 to 1970.
Viewers get all 139 episodes of a series that focused on the relationship between astronaut Capt. Anthony Tony Nelson (Larry Hagman) and a gorgeous 2,000-year-old genie (Barbara Eden) that he accidentally released from her bottle found when he was stranded on a desert island.
Smitten with her new master, the subservient genie gets him back home to Cape Kennedy, Florida, where the real shenanigans begin as they learn to live with one another and the love between the pair blossoms.
That means hiding her magical secret from others, including initially from Capt. Nelsons best friend, Col. Roger Healey (Bill Daly), and later from the bewildered psychiatrist Dr. Alfred Bellows (Hayden Rorke) and NASA superiors.
Despite the politically incorrect dose of sexism, the laughs hold up and are plentiful complemented by a groovy theme song; an opening cartoon from the Looney Tunes legend Friz Freleng; primitive special effects; and guest stars such as Sammy Davis Jr., Paul Lynde and Bob Denver (Gilligan making this a great gift for the television historian in the family.
Also, Mill Creek has done a great job delivering a very digitally clean version of the classic series.
Best extras: Viewers only get the 1985 made-for-TV reunion show I Dream of Jeannie 15 Years Later that has Jeannie happily married to Col. Nelson (Wayne Rogers replaced Larry Hagman, by the way) and living in suburbia with their teenage son.
Missing, and definitely necessary, is the optional commentary track with Miss Eden, Hagman and Daly recorded for the special 2008 DVD release.
And, come on Mill Creek, Miss Eden is still alive, and I bet that she would have been more than happy to reminisce about the role that made her a star.
Star Trek: The Complete Original Series 55th Anniversary Steelbook Collection (Paramount Home Entertainment, not rated, 4,062 minutes, 1.33:1 aspect ratio, $111.99) Paramount offers gift givers yet another variation to its high definition release of the first, and many argue the best, of the Star Trek television series with a 20-disc set collected in a trio of metallic cases.
Owners get the three seasons of Gene Roddenberrys groundbreaking, 1960s sci-fi television show with all 79 episodes, pristinely cleaned up and remastered to perfection. There is even an option to watch the shows with special effects shots enhanced using current technology.
That translates into a massive voyage to appreciate the early adventures of the crew of the USS Enterprise that included legends such as Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), Dr. Leonard Bones McCoy (DeForest Kelley), chief engineer Montgomery Scott (James Doohan), security officer Pavel Chekov (Walter Koenig), helmsman Hikaru Sulu (George Takei) and communications officer Lt. Nyota Uhura (Nichelle Nichols).
Best extras: All of the extras from the remastered rerelease of the show back in 2009 are included with a major highlight granting viewers access to Starfleet Commands database for the episodes Where No Man Has Gone Before, Run Amok and The Trouble with Tribbles.
This informative interactive provides a pop-up, picture-in-picture presentation with interviews and facts about the episode.
Equally important, from a historical perspective, owners get a wide range of featurettes and extras including an optional commentary track with the writer of The Trouble with Tribbles episode David Gerrold; the restored unaired alternate version of the pilot Where No Man Has Gone Before; and nine minutes from Roddenberry on the groundbreaking series.
The extras also feature versions of The Cage (the full-color episode with original special effects, full-color episode with remastered special effects, and an extended version with black-and-white footage).
And, just for fun, goodies include two additional episodes with Tribbles themes More Tribbles, More Troubles from Star Trek: The Animated Series, and Trials and Tribble-ations from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
Three separate installments of Billy Blackburns Treasure Chest: Rare Home Movies and Special Memories, by the often-used background performer, offer a collection of rare footage from the set.
However, the real reason for the die-hards to buy the set is for the packaging.
The steel cases are yellow (Season 1), blue (Season 2) and red (Season 3), and each front and back of the cases feature color photographs of characters from the shows.
Note: For those unaware, the Star Trek franchise continues in the live-action format today via the Paramount Plus streaming service. A great gift for those immersed in the Trekkie universe and unable to afford the monthly cost is the first three seasons of Star Trek: Discovery (not rated, 2,052 minutes, 2.39:1 aspect, $119.11) available in a 12-disc, high definition, Blu-ray set.
Set a decade before the emergence of the crew of the USS Enterprise, the adventures dive into the complex life of the nearly all-powerful Michael Burnham, a key member and science specialist of the USS Discovery.
She often flexes her brute instinct and savvy intellectual muscles while shedding a few tears as she saves the galaxy in multiple parallel universes and time-altering dimensions.
The show shines with storylines that incorporated Capt. Christopher Pike (the original commander of the USS Enterprise), a young Spock (Miss Burnhams foster brother), and a war between the Federation and the Klingons.
Viewers also get more than eight hours of extras that offer a detailed breakdown of the production through optional commentary tracks and featurettes on costuming, special effects, alien species, lore and set design.
Beverly Hills 90210: The Ultimate Series (Paramount Home Entertainment, not rated, 13,192 minutes, 1.33:1, 1.78:1 aspect ratio, $119.99) Fox Networks influential patriarch of prime-time, young adult soap operas gave rabid fans 10 seasons of friendship, steamy romance and angst-ridden adventures between 1990 to 2002.
All 290 episodes are now available in a massive 74-disc set packed in three clamshell cases and presented in the antiquated DVD format.
The series follows the complex lives of a group of buddies living in the upscale land of celebrity-encrusted Beverly Hills, California, as they evolve from high school to college students and eventual semi-responsible adults.
The show made teen idols and stars of Jason Priestley and Shannen Doherty as Brandon and Brenda Walsh, a pair of siblings from Minnesota attempting to acclimate to the new West Beverly High School.
They meet other rising stars including Luke Perry as Dylan McKay, Tori Spelling as Donna Martin, Jennie Garth as Kelly Taylor and Hilary Swank as Carly Reynolds.
Best extras: The set first includes the six-episode BH90210 featuring seven actors from the original show (including Mr. Priestly, Miss Doherty and Miss Spelling) existing in a fictionalized reality-type series as they work on rebooting the franchise.
Next, viewers get a smattering of extras from the previously released DVD sets highlighted by a trio of optional commentary tracks (none with the stars) and 43 minutes on filming the final episode.
A bonus disc is also included that features a 40-minute, 2003 reunion with the cast and a vintage behind-the-scenes featurette with the young actors from 1993.
CSI: NY, the Complete Series (Paramount Home Entertainment, not rated, 8,478 minutes, 1.78:1 aspect ratio, $118.99) Yet another spinoff of the successful CSI: Crime Scene Investigation franchise gave viewers a chance to watch a team of forensic scientists and police officers in action in the Big Apple for nine seasons on the CBS network between 2004 and 2013.
A spinoff from the successful CSI: Miami follows Detective Mac Taylor (Gary Sinise), a former Marine haunted after the loss of his wife in the 9/11 World Trade Towers attack, and his crime-solving investigators. They include assistants Stella Bonasera (Melina Kanakaredes) and Jo Danville (Sela Ward); Detectives Danny Messer (Carmine Giovinazzo), Don Flack (Eddie Cahill), Lindsay Monroe (Anna Belknap) and Aiden Bern (Vanessa Ferlito); and medical examiners Dr. Sheldon Hawkes (Hill Harper) and Dr. Sid Hammerback (Robert Joy).
They delve into cases offering the chance for an irresistible mix of murderer profiling, autopsy imagery, use of tech equipment and subplots tied to their soap-operatic lives.
Of course, guest stars abound during the series and eagle-eyed viewers will appreciate appearances by Ed Asner (The Mary Tyler Moore Show) in his Emmy-winning episode from the fifth season, Yahrzeit; Peter Fonda (Easy Rider); Edward Furlong (Terminator); Michael Clarke Duncan (The Green Mile); Kid Rock; Marlee Matlin (Children of a Lesser God); and Craig T. Nelson (Coach).
This boxed set contains all of the 197 episodes on 55 discs secured in three clamshell cases.
Besides delivering a love letter to the diverse locations and architectural wonders of New York City, the series theme song allows owners to listen to snippets of The Whos anthem Baba ORiley until their ears bleed.
Best extras: Offering more than nine hours of extras scattered across the discs, the set includes: 18 optional commentary tracks with select cast and crew; deleted scenes; and over four dozen featurettes ranging from 10 minutes with horror director Joe Dante (he directed the episode Boo), a 15-minute early look at the characters and even a trio of CSI crossover episodes.
Of course, the only caveat is watching the slick show in the antiqued DVD format.
Note: Budding crime-scene investigators will also appreciate owning the seven-season run of NCIS: New Orleans The Complete Series (Paramount Home Entertainment, not rated, 6,528 minutes, 1.78:1 aspect ratio, $118.99) offering 155 episodes spread out over 39 DVDs. The show starred Scott Bakula as Special Agent Dwayne King Cassius Pride and lots of dead bodies in the Big Easy.
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Gift Guide 2021: Best of DVD and Blu-ray television - Washington Times
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Bana and Rajwada collections: Dichotomization obscures the realities of caste and class – The Times of India Blog
Posted: at 5:12 am
A recent article focused on Fabindias casteist Bana and Rajwada collection raised some important issues that compel us to confront deeper questions about the history of the subcontinent and historiography itself. The article called upon FabIndia to reconsider using their supposedly problematic and provocative fashion labels of Rajwada and Bana the former meaning Royal and the latter being an honorific term used to address young Rajput males.
The author alleges the terms evoke negative memories for oppressed castes of Rajasthan and should therefore be renounced. He even recalls a specific memory where he was allegedly attacked by children belonging to the Kshatriya community for making casteist remarks. He implicates the entire Rajput community for the supposed actions of a few children children he admits to have supposedly incited with apparently harmless casteist taunts. Leaving this tale aside, the feudal protocols such as removing shoes when passing a Zamindars house also dictated the relationship between the Rajput Zamindar and the Rajput clan-retainers (commoners). However, feudal practices like not being permitted to ride horses is not to be taken lightly. These practices are not justifiable, but they were not limited to Kshatriya domains.
Such practices were also found in regions where monarchs or rulers were from non-Kshatriya communities such as Bharatpur, Patiala, or Rewari, places that were ruled by rulers from OBC communities such as Hindu Jaats, Sikh Jatts, and Ahirs, respectively. Anti-Dalit atrocities and oppressive practices are still found in these regions today, as they are everywhere else in the nation. However, it is still problematic to blame entire communities for the actions of some. Such generalizations form the basis of casteism and most self-styled crusaders miss the mark by indulging in this.
Additionally, conflating caste and class is very problematic. Rajputs are neither economically dominant nor prosperous, hence conflating zamindar Rajputs with common Rajputs (clan retainers) is as dishonest as clubbing a Jat or Ahir Zamindar with a Jat or Ahir commoner. Though most of Indias feudal lords and monarchs were Rajputs, the community in general formed the bulk of North Indias farmers. Royals and nobility from non-Kshatriya communities were also found across India, including in Rajasthan. There were Jat zamindars (Chaudharies and Mirdhas), Charan and Rajpurohit jagirdars and such casteist practices were prevalent in these regions as well as across the country. Rulers from OBC communities indulged in casteism as well.
Returning to the contention over honorific terms, claiming that terms like rajwada are problematic is a rather puzzling argument. This is an extreme example of cancel culture which will only create more social conflicts rather than solve them. If we are to follow this logic, we would also have to cancel Dalit stalwarts such as Santokh Singh Chaudhry for his familys adoption of the name Singh and Chaudhry both of which are related to Rajputs and feudalism. Indeed, terms like Sardar (which is colloquially used for turbaned Sikh men) would also be cancelled as it has its roots in feudal India as Rajput and Afghan nobles and retainers utilized it. Are we to gloss over the fact that many communities have engaged in adopting Rajputs symbols, names and titles as a means of empowerment and upliftment? The most prominent example being that of Sikhs who adopted Singh and Kaur from the Rajputs.
Cancelling words related to Rajwada would also require the author to change his first name to something else less provocative. Contrary to his claims, there is an agressive Rajputisation followed by most North Indian OBC SC ST communities, from Jats to Bhils. The admiration for Kshatriyas and their symbols has also engendered unprecedented levels of historical appropriation (e.g. new Gujjar claims on Chauhan and Pratihar Kshatriya dynasties, Ahir claims on Yadu Rajputs). For millions across the nation, Rajwadas contributions are inspirational, and many have been at the forefront of anti-casteism. Many of their socialist reforms that continue to irk casteists, such as reservations, have found their champions from among the Kshatriyas notably former PMs Chandra Shekhar and VP Singh. In fact, more Kshatriya elites have donated lands or advocated for redistribution of lands to OBCs and Dalits than any other segment (Brahmin, Bania or OBC zamindar elites) in Indian society.
Overall, the article rests upon a well-established bias among academics and media one that glosses over the fact people from all communities in India have, at some point in history, indulged in the same casteist behaviour. Here, the author is trying to specifically blame Rajputs for it. This is a gross misrepresentation of the structural nature of the caste system in which all sections of the society openly and commonly engaged in caste discrimination against Dalits. The anti-Dalit acts by OBCs was not a rare occurrence historically or contemporarily, by any measure. Broad brushstrokes that divide Indias historical society into a binary of oppressed and oppressor misrepresents Indian history and veils the true breadth of the caste system. Expanding the boundaries of what is considered politically incorrect to include terms related to Rajwada and Bana is a rather odd way of countering caste discrimination. This type of hyper-polarization will do little to address this serious issue. If words like Rajwada or Bana offend such self-styled crusaders, then they must also staunchly oppose Rajputisation and the aggressive appropriation of Rajput history undertaken by various OBC groups. On the contrary, some journalists have erroneously but actively supported Goojar claims on Samrat Prithviraj Chauhan and Mihirbhoj Pratihar as well as that of Ahirs appropriation of Yaduvanshis and Koeri appropriation of Kushwaha Rajputs.
These actions of converting medieval Rajput monarchs to OBC castes while cancelling the entire Rajput community of 70 million, across classes, as oppressive zamindars are inherently contradictory. It only serves to isolate a community and incite caste hatred against it. Is this not exactly what people opposed to the tag Jashn-e-Riwaz intended, albeit for a different community?
Views expressed above are the author's own.
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Bana and Rajwada collections: Dichotomization obscures the realities of caste and class - The Times of India Blog
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The triad of asthma, eczema, and allergies explained – Medical News Today
Posted: at 5:11 am
Eczema, asthma, and allergies sometimes occur together. Doctors call this the atopic triad. Eczema, common in babies and children, is a risk factor for later developing asthma and allergies.
All three conditions cause inflammation, which may help explain the link. Moreover, both eczema and allergies happen when the immune system secretes inflammatory chemicals.
In the case of allergies, the immune system overreacts to harmless substances, while eczema may cause a persons body to attack itself.
Doctors do not yet fully understand the atopic march, the tendency for eczema to develop into allergies and asthma. But the presence of one condition in the triad is a clear risk factor for another, which may help people with symptoms, their caregivers, and healthcare professionals anticipate symptoms and make treatment decisions.
In this article, we cover the link between eczema, asthma, and allergies and look at how to manage these conditions.
The atopic triad refers to the tendency of asthma, eczema, and allergies to occur together. The progression typically begins with eczema, followed by food allergies, and then the development of asthma and allergic rhinitis, which causes sneezing and a runny nose. Doctors also call this progression the atopic march.
Early research found that immunoglobulin E (IgE) plays a role in the triad. IgE is an antibody involved with the functions of the immune system, such as inflammation. While inflammation is important in these three conditions, we now know that IgE is not present in all cases of asthma, allergies, or eczema.
According to a 2018 paper, 20% of children with mild eczema develop asthma, while 60% with severe eczema develop asthma.
A 2021 study similarly linked eczema to the later development of peanut allergies, especially if the eczema is severe. The study included 321 babies. Peanut allergies developed in 18% of the babies with eczema, 19% with other food allergies, and 4% who had a relative with a peanut allergy. This suggests that eczema and other allergies better predict peanut allergies than genetics.
While people with one symptom in the triad are more likely to develop other symptoms, having one symptom does not guarantee the development of others. A 2014 cohort study of 9,801 children found that only about 7% of children with at least one symptom develop symptoms consistent with the atopic march.
Doctors do not fully understand the atopic march. Several underlying factors, such as genetic differences in immune response and inflammation, may help explain it.
Some evidence suggests that exposure to allergens through eczema-damaged skin may trigger immune system responses that lead to inflammation and allergies. Data from mice, for example, show that certain kinds of peanut exposure on the skin increase the risk of sensitivity to milk.
Environmental factors may also play a role. Children exposed to farm animals, for example, have a lower risk of atopic march, while antibiotics seem to increase the risk.
Because atopic march begins with eczema, doctors have focused on how eczema might influence the development of later symptoms. Some evidence suggests that early eczema treatment may help prevent subsequent allergies and asthma, perhaps by preventing exposure to allergens through a damaged skin barrier.
It is not possible to manage the three symptoms with a single treatment. Instead, treatment focuses on managing each symptom individually.
New research into biological therapies to treat these conditions is ongoing.
Keeping the skin well-moisturized is critical for people with eczema since the skins moisture barrier is damaged. This makes the skin dry out faster and more severely. Anti-inflammatory medication such as hydrocortisone can help. When itching is intense, a doctor may recommend antihistamines.
Identifying triggers can help reduce the frequency and severity of flares. This includes avoiding exposure to environmental allergens.
Learn more about treatment options for eczema here.
Avoiding allergens is critical for people with severe, life threatening allergies that cause anaphylaxis. For milder allergies, such as seasonal respiratory allergies, remaining indoors, using an air filter, and limiting contact with allergens may help.
Depending on the allergen, a person may undergo immunotherapy, or allergy shots, which helps desensitize the body. People with severe, life threatening allergies may need to carry an EpiPen for emergencies.
Learn more about allergy treatments here.
Treating asthma requires identifying and avoiding asthma triggers, which may include allergens. Some people have asthma attacks when they are stressed, so calming strategies like deep breathing and meditation can help.
During an asthma attack, a person may need to use an inhaler to take a corticosteroid. A person may need other medications for severe asthma. When an asthma attack does not relent, a person may need to go to the hospital.
Learn more about treatments for asthma here.
A different triad, Samters triad, suggests that people with asthma are more likely to develop nasal polyps and aspirin intolerance. Researchers do not know why this happens, but nonallergic hypersensitivity reactions may be to blame.
Samters triad involves inflammation like the atopic triad, but the inflammatory patterns are different. Samters triad does not involve IgE.
Aspirin and some other anti-inflammatory drugs inhibit the expression of the enzyme cyclooxygenase-1. People with Samters triad who take these drugs develop respiratory symptoms similar to an allergic reaction. Most also develop respiratory symptoms after drinking alcohol.
Although the triad of asthma, allergies, and eczema are distinct from Samters triad, people with asthma have a higher risk of this triad. And because people with allergies and eczema have a higher risk of asthma, they may also have an elevated risk for Samters triad.
A doctor can help with treating any of these conditions. People should speak with a doctor about symptoms of eczema, allergies, or asthma. It is especially important to seek help if symptoms are severe, such as if eczema cracks open and bleeds, allergies cause breathing difficulties, or asthma attacks are severe or frequent.
People undergoing treatment for these conditions should also contact a doctor if:
Asthma, allergies, and eczema all correlate with high levels of inflammation and disproportionate reactions to harmless substances. While most people who have one condition will not develop all three, they are much more likely to develop another triad disorder than those who do not have one.
Though these conditions tend to occur together, doctors cannot treat them as a single diagnosis. Instead, the presence of one component of the triad merely predicts that a person might develop another.
A knowledgeable doctor can help with properly diagnosing asthma, eczema, and allergies and appropriately treating them.
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The triad of asthma, eczema, and allergies explained - Medical News Today
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