2011

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"We'll be able to plug informations streams directly into the cortex."

The Guardian had a fun feature in its Sunday January 2 edition, which it entitled “25 Predictions for the Next 20 Years.” Their tea-leaf reading seems a little aggressive, but the challenge of prognosticating is to force yourself to not play it safe. Some of the predictions have intriguing headings like “Russia will become a global food superpower” and “Technology creates smarter clothes.” An excerpt from the entry called “We’ll be able to plug information streams directly into the cortex”:

“By 2030, we are likely to have developed no-frills brain-machine interfaces, allowing the paralysed to dance in their thought-controlled exoskeleton suits. I sincerely hope we will not still be interfacing with computers via keyboards, one forlorn letter at a time.

I’d like to imagine we’ll have robots to do our bidding. But I predicted that 20 years ago, when I was a sanguine boy leaving Star Wars, and the smartest robot we have now is the Roomba vacuum cleaner. So I won’t be surprised if I’m wrong in another 25 years. Artificial intelligence has proved itself an unexpectedly difficult problem.

Maybe we will understand what’s happening when we immerse our heads into the colourful night blender of dreams. We will have cracked the secret of human memory by realising that it was never about storing things, but about the relationships between things. Will we have reached the singularity – the point at which computers surpass human intelligence and perhaps give us our comeuppance? We’ll probably be able to plug information streams directly into the cortex for those who want it badly enough to risk the surgery. There will be smart drugs to enhance learning and memory and a flourishing black market among ambitious students to obtain them.”

Technology creates smarter clothes’

"They are great feeders for Reptiles such as Adult Bearded Dragons." (Image by Jan Tik.)

DUBIA ROACHES – $1 (ELMHURST)

Be adviced that Nymphs have not molted to ADULTS YET. Selling Female and male nymphs Only

I am selling over MALE Dubia nymphs roaches ranging from Medium to Large. They are great feeders for Reptiles such as Adult Bearded Dragons, Large Geckos, Invertebrates and many others.

They have a higher meat to shell ratio compared to crickets. They do not bite, make noise, and do not stink as much as crickets.

The Male dubias are $0.25 cents each.

For every order of 50 male nymphs receive 1 free female nymph.

selling FEMALE nymphs in size 3/4″ – 1″. These havent molted yet to females. So you will NOT receive old females that eventually is at the end of their cycle. You can breed your own.

Female Nymphs:

1-10 $2.50/E

11-20 $2.25/E

21-40 $2.00/E

41++ $1.75/E

Also selling Water crystal/gel which provide great source of water to your feeders. They are safe for all feeder insects. These do not have calcium.!

Why pay $5 in pet-store for a 16oz jar of water crystal when you can get much more for even less?

1 dry oz water crystal makes 1 gallon of water crystals. That’s 8 jars of 16oz.

I’m selling 1 dry oz water crystal for $3 each. That’s uber cheap.

If you buy 3 dry oz you get one (1) dry oz FREE.

All you have to do is have a jar fulled with water (prefer distill) and add water crystal in. 1 teaspoon makes 16 oz water crystal. You are getting Approximately 8 teaspoons.

If the water crystal is to watery just add more water crystal or drain it out. If too little water add more water. Its that simple. Takes approximately 2 hrs minimum to expand.

Please be advised not to dispose water crystal down the drain. It will clog.

Jar NOT INCLUDED

LOCAL PICK-UP ONLY!!!

Andy Warhol autographs Brooke Shields' tee at Fiorucci's NYC store. (Image by Franco Marabelli.)

When skinny jeans were still known as skin-tight, the New York disco scene of the ’70s had a favorite store, and it was Fiorucci’s on East 59th Street. A place to see and be seen, it was full of celebrities of all types, trying to acquire a pair of gold cowboy boots or some green combat clothes. Its creator, Elio Fiorucci, took a different path than most retailers of the era to arrive at his Studio 54–ready ensembles. An excerpt from an article by Priscilla Tucker about Fiorucci’s in the March 28, 1977 New York magazine:

“The secret of his success, says Fiorucci, is ‘to be able to listen to what the public has to say. I am a chronicler, like a journalist. I am a coordinator of situations.’

Toward this end he employs young people–‘They are my antennae’–and sends them all over the world, wherever they want to go, looking at the products of village life in Indonesia, shopping the outdoor markets of Colombia, bringing things back to be reproduced or modified in Fiorucci factories. Anything–clothes, tinware, soap, bicycles, pottery–that attracts his stylists turns up in the stores. Employees are free to innovate, hiring now a girl who makes flowers on the spot, now a couple with fabrics and a sewing machine, to whip up before your eyes made-to-order skirts for less than those on Fiorucci’s racks.

Fiorucci himself often hires on the spur of the moment just because he likes the way someone puts himself or herself together. He found Mariagrazia, who now manages both his Milan stores and his New York store, while she was working at Gucci. ‘The atmosphere at Gucci was not real,’ says Mariagrazia, who finds reality in dressing à la Fiorucci, in army pants with strands of flowers hanging down her T-shirt, her fuzzy hair bobbing as she directs the moving of the pastel jeans to the back of the store, the rosebud challis dresses downstairs, the sexy posters over by the free-espresso bar.”

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"He frequently talks of pistols, killing people, putting them under ground and other deeds of violence." (Image by Guillaume Duchenne.)

George Alger was an elderly Brooklyn landowner in the 1890s who was apparently a danger to himself and others. His household help was also quite unusual. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle painted a picture of the odd arrangement in the September 14, 1897 issue. An excerpt:

“With only a little girl 6 or 7 years of age and a one armed boy to look after him, George Alger, an old man and the owner of several pieces of real estate in Brooklyn and elsewhere. is living to-day at 184 Seventeenth street, despite the fact that there is a committee of his person who is supposed to look after him and see that he is properly cared for. Alger is an incompetent person, subject at times to fits of violence, and in the opinion of a referee who has recommended the sale of a portion of his property, should be confined in an institution.

Judge Hurd of the County Court handed down a decision to-day in which he severely condemns the manner in which Alger is allowed to live and points out the duties which ought to have been performed by the committee of his person.

Alger is a widower, his wife having died last April. The only relative he has is a sister, Mrs. Calista C. Gilbert, who resides in New Haven, Conn. Shortly after the death of Mrs. Alger, John Muir of 318 Twelfth street, was appointed a committee of the person and estate of the old man and since that time has administered his affairs.

Referee Elder in his report, recommended the sale for not less than $3,000 of a certain piece of property on Twelfth street, and the confinement of Alger in an institution, saying:

‘Mr. Muir’s committeeship, while careful, is necessarily one of almost an exclusive financial character. I learn that Mr. Alger at certain seasons of the year is a violent man and during all seasons of the year he frequently talks of pistols, killing people, putting them under ground and other deeds of violence. I do not think an insane man who indulges in such notions is safe at large. In passing upon the report of the referee, Justice Hurd said to-day:

‘There is sufficient shown to warrant the sale of the incompetent’s real estate. The committee is the committee of the person and estate; he is as much bound to provide suitable and proper support for the incompetent as he is to preserve his estate. He is bound to restrain Mr. Alger, if he is dangerous, as the referee reports, without the instruction of the court. The way in which the incompetent man is living–his meals cooked by a girl between 6 and 7 years of age, with a one-armed boy as attendant and messenger–is manifestly improper. The committee should correct it and see to it that a proper style of living is afforded. However disagreeable the committee may find his duties, he must nevertheless perform them for the best interest of his ward.'”

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This hippiesplotation documentary (alternative title: Something’s Happening) focuses on Hashberry and the Sunset Strip and features interviews with Muhammad Ali, General Hershey Bar and assorted “weirdies, beardies and whatsies.” Let us never discuss the past again.

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The anarchist bombs that rocked 23 Wall Street were contained in a horse-drawn cart.

Long before the terrorist bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993 or the horrors of 9/11, Wall Street was devastated by anarchist bombs. In 1920, the home of JP Morgan & Co., at 23 Wall Street, was the site of an explosion that left dozens dead and hundreds injured. No assailant was ever captured. An excerpt from a 2003 article by James Barron in the New York Times about the largely forgotten tragedy:

The fortresslike facade of the Morgan building was pocked with craters that remain deep enough to sink a palm into. The columns of what is now Federal Hall, across the street, were blackened. More than 30 people were killed and several hundred wounded, and the damage exceeded $2 million — more than $18.4 million in 2003 dollars.

‘The number of victims, large though it was, cannot convey the extent of the inferno produced by the explosion, the worst of its kind in American history,’ Paul Avrich, a professor of history at Queens College, wrote in reviewing the case more than a decade ago.

The investigators sniffing for clues long ago went from being detectives to historians. The police never charged anyone in the bombing, and it is a mostly forgotten moment in New York City history.

‘Nobody remembers,’ said Beverly Gage, whose book The Wall Street Explosion: Capitalism, Terrorism and the 1920 Bombing of New York, is to be published next year by Oxford University Press.”

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"One of my mentors told me that my real mistake was trying to replicate my work. He told me doing that was just setting myself up for disappointment."

I fell behind in my New Yorker reading in December, so I just got to this intriguing Jonah Lehrer article about a puzzling problem for scientific researchers: the inability to replicate their landmark findings in subsequent studies. It seems that researchers regularly avoid rechecking their results because they know future tests may call their findings into question. Does that mean that their original studies were unintentionally biased, subjective in some way that they don’t understand? The troubling occurrence is called the “decline effect.” One of the subjects Lehrer discusses the situation with is Jonathan Schooler, a highly self-aware psychology professor at the University of Santa Barbara. An excerpt:

“Jonathan Schooler was a young graduate student at the University of Washington in the nineteen-eighties when he discovered a surprising new fact about language and memory. At the time, it was widely believed that the act of describing our memories improved them. But, in a series of clever experiments, Schooler demonstrated that subjects shown a face and asked to describe it were much less likely to recognize the face when shown it later than those who had simply looked at it. Schooler called the phenomenon ‘verbal overshadowing.’

The study turned him into an academic star. Since its initial publication, in 1990, it has been cited more than four hundred times. Before long, Schooler had extended the model to a variety of other tasks, such as remembering the taste of a wine, identifying the best strawberry jam, and solving difficult creative puzzles. In each instance, asking people to put their perceptions into words led to dramatic decreases in performance.

But while Schooler was publishing these results in highly reputable journals, a secret worry gnawed at him: it was proving difficult to replicate his earlier findings. ‘I’d often still see an effect, but the effect just wouldn’t be as strong,’ he told me. ‘It was as if verbal overshadowing, my big new idea, was getting weaker.’ At first, he assumed that he’d made an error in experimental design or a statistical miscalculation. But he couldn’t find anything wrong with his research. He then concluded that his initial batch of research subjects must have been unusually susceptible to verbal overshadowing. (John Davis, similarly, has speculated that part of the drop-off in the effectiveness of antipsychotics can be attributed to using subjects who suffer from milder forms of psychosis which are less likely to show dramatic improvement.) ‘It wasn’t a very satisfying explanation,’ Schooler says. ‘One of my mentors told me that my real mistake was trying to replicate my work. He told me doing that was just setting myself up for disappointment.’”

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Canada: Good at ice hockey and Afflictor.

Canada retained its Afflictor Nation championship in December, sending more unique visitors to this idiotic site than any other foreign country.

The Top 5 “Winners”:

  1. Canada
  2. Great Britain
  3. Brazil
  4. Germany
  5. Netherlands

REBORN DOLL BABY – $299 (kearny)

LITTLE DREAMS NURSERY Introduces to you

EMILY

Created by Reborn Artist Ingrid Bellardi

For those of you who are new to the wonderful world of reborning, I have been creating little Dreams Nursery for 4 1/2 years now. My babies have been adopted by delighted Moms from all around the world. I am constantly striving to improve and grow at the artform of reborning that I love and am passsionately dedicated to.

~Reborn –november 20 th 2010-

~Length – 17 Inches~

~Weight – 3lb 3oz~

~Eyebrows – light brown

~hair – hoothing light brown

~Limbs – Full Length Arms and Legs~

~Cloth Body – Doe Suede – Flesh Colour~

The beginning

I was just so exited to reborn this beautiful sculpt. I trust to you viewing this baby, my true passion and exitement will shine through in this little girl. She is the sculpt called ”Emily” by the world reknowned and very talented artist, Marita Winters

She is now my darling little angel, Emily

beautiful ”real life” complexion was achieved through the use of Genesis heat-set paints. Her colors will never fade. I mix my own colours anew each time I start painting my angels.

The lifelike mottled effect of her skin was achieved through multiple layers of subtle shading over a period of time.Emily shading has been done a bit softer, with delicate light overtones to give her the colouring of an older baby.

It is my own technique that is constantly evolving as I strive to create the most lifelike babies possible.

Every little crease and fold of Emily head and limbs have been detailed, blushed and shaded to achieve realism.

Emily has got soft veins painted on her little face and limbs. Never too bold as to overshadow her amazing ”real life” complexion.

Body

Emily has been given a brand new cloth body, custom designed, and is in perfect proportion to her head and limbs. Her limbs are very easy to pose into a multitude of positions.

Her body has been filled with soft fiberfill that will never clott and glass pellets Emily body is soft and cuddly and has been realistically weighted. Once you pick her up, you just can’t put her down. Although she is a little heavier, she can be carried very comfortably on your hip as a toddler would.

Emily limbs have been filled with glass granules and have also been weighted to perfection.

Her head has been weighted with slightly larger glass pellets and needs a little support when she is picked up, just like a real baby.

Mouth & Eyes

Her lips have a lovely soft realistic color and matches her complexion perfectly.

Emily has a magnetic pacifier/dummy to sooth her when she gets lonely.

As with all babies, Emily has got tiny red and blue veins on her skin, with blue skintone showing through in all the right places.

Nails

Emily petit little nails were given a baby manicure and pedicure.

First I applied a matte sealer as a base and the tips were painted white.

Another 2 coats of matte sealer was then applied for durability.

Her nails now have a tender fresh clipped look.

What Emily will be taking home with her

all clothes in photos

~Magnetic dummy/pacifier~

~Fleecy Baby Blanket~

~Disposable Nappy~

Please note that Emily is not a toy but a Collectors Item.

Filed under “Really Bad Ideas” is this 1950s commercial in which a face cleanser proves its mettle by removing radioactive dirt from a model’s cheeks.

Fact: 53% of Afflictor readers are cats. The balance is made up by monkeys. (Image by Kormoran.)

Some search engine keyphrases bringing traffic to Afflictor this week:

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