Wednesday 31 December 2014

North Korea's Kim Jong Un open to 'highest-level' talks with South

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said in New Year's speech Thursday that he is open to more talks with Seoul or even a summit with his South Korean counterpart, but stressed North Korea will continue to strengthen its military amid an atmosphere of distrust and tension while trying to diversify its economy and raise the national standard of living.



Kim's call for improving inter-Korea relations comes as Pyongyang is facing heightened criticism over its human rights record and souring ties with Washington over allegations it was involved in the massive hacking attack on Sony Pictures, which has caused major economic damage to the company and clouded the release of "The Interview," a dark comedy that portrayed an assassination attempt on Kim. Read more...


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White Castle puts a veggie burger on the menu, but don't worry, it's still fattening

White-castle

NEW YORK — White Castle is offering a vegetarian version of its famous sliders, but they're not necessarily for dieters.


The hamburger chain says it will offer the Veggie Slider for $0.99 each for a limited time at its 400 locations in 12 states.


The sliders range between 150 and 270 calories, with customers able to choose from three sauces — honey mustard, ranch and sweet Thai. Regular beef sliders range between 140 and 220 calories, depending on the topping, according to White Castle's website.




This isn’t your garden variety Slider. Introducing White Castle’s new Veggie Sliderhttp://ift.tt/1AbKSRy


— White Castle (@WhiteCastle) December 30, 2014 Read more...



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Protests in New York continue amid New Year's Eve celebrations

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You might think New Year's Eve is a time for celebration, but for some it's another opportunity to continue the anti-police brutality protests that have spread across the U.S. in recent weeks


As thousands pack New York's Times Square, a group of protesters have gathered at Union Square, with signs in tow and intent on keeping the issue of police interactions with the community front and center




NOW: dozens of protesters gather in Union Sq ahead of NYE march; almost as many #NYPD readied w plastic cuffs standby http://ift.tt/1EMB5a2


— Joe Jackson (@joejackson) January 1, 2015 Read more...



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Video: Turning soda cans into liquid metal looks so fun

Video: Turning soda cans into liquid metal looks so fun


I'm not going to give my aluminum cans to recycling centers anymore. Instead, I'm going to melt them down to liquid metal and create awesome metal objects with them. All I need is a hair dryer and some charcoal to create this awesome mini metal foundry. It turns about 40 cans into a pound of aluminum.


Grant Thompson, the King of Random, shows you how to melt soda cans in the video below.





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Dancing YouTube prankster meets the NYPD, gets zero laughs

Beyond Apollo Welcomes Comet Lovejoy

Beyond Apollo Welcomes Comet Lovejoy

Toward the end of 2013, Comet ISON was all over the space & astronomy news. Then, alas, the poor snowball disintegrated into a spray of dust as it passed close by the Sun; another “comet of the century” gone fizzle. Lucky for us comet fans, there’s always another one lurking out there in the darkness, […]


The post Beyond Apollo Welcomes Comet Lovejoy appeared first on WIRED.




















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Watch a tiger jump impossibly high for meat in slow motion

Watch a tiger jump impossibly high for meat in slow motion


Holy crap. I'm pretty sure the fence separating the tigers from the humans does absolutely nothing because these tigers can easily out jump it. Look at them gracefully fly in the air and snatch the meat like a wide receiver catching a touchdown pass. These beasts are basically basically comic book superhero versions of regular cats.





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What's Your Favorite Twilight Zone Episode?

What's Your Favorite Twilight Zone Episode?


We're smack dab in the middle of SyFy's New Year Twilight Zone marathon. And I truly wish I had time to watch it all. But this annual tradition always gets me thinking about what episode is my favorite. I honestly don't know how to decide!


There's the classics like "To Serve Man" and "Eye of the Beholder" and "Time Enough At Last" that are still fun to watch even if you know the twist endings. And then there's the culturally important Cold War stories like "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" or "The Shelter." Even some less celebrated deep cuts like "The Old Man in the Cave" and "Mr. Dingle, The Strong" are contenders in my book. I really don't know what to pick as a favorite.


So what's your favorite episode? And while we're at it, what's your least favorite? That might be an easier choice for me: "Black Leather Jackets" is so painfully unsatisfying I'm half-convinced it must've been written on an incredibly tight deadline or something.


Happy New Year, everybody!




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Suicide bomber kills at least 24 at ceremony in Yemen

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A suicide bomber attacked a ceremony Wednesday hosted by Shiite rebels commemorating the birth of the Prophet Muhammad, killing at least 24 people and wounding 48 in a country plagued by militants, authorities said.


No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack on a cultural center in the city of Ibb, some 190 kilometers (120 miles) from the capital, Sanaa, though Yemen's local al-Qaida branch has carried out similar attacks in the past. Civilian officials, Shiite rebels, a famed poet and a leader of a political party all died in the attack, which left blood soaking the floor of an auditorium as men wailed to God. Read more...


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How to create the illusion of 3D using pencil and paper

How to create the illusion of 3D using pencil and paper


A pencil and a paper is all you need to draw these magical anamorphic black holes that will make your brain think that there is a whole different dimension under your table.





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All I Want Out of New Year's Eve Is a Swingin' Party

All I Want Out of New Year's Eve Is a Swingin' Party


I listened to "Swingin' Party" by Kindness more than any other song in 2014. It's not really party music, and it's certainly not swing music. (It's not about swinging either, perv.) But the chill, let's-hang-out-with-our-favorite-friends vibe is everything I want out of my New Year's Eve.


"Swingin' Party" was originally released by The Replacements in 1985, though it's been covered countless times. Kindness did their the glitchy version in 2009, and Lorde did a moody rendition in 2013. But one line stands out in all of them: "Bring your own lampshade / Somewhere there's a party."


That's what I want. I want to go to a house party with my favorite friends and a bunch of lampshades. Sounds weird and cool and much better than cramming into Times Square and peeing my pants. If I see a stranger at the party without a lampshade, well they can have mine because that's the New Year's spirit. We're all in this together. [Spotify, iTunes, Amazon]



Image via Flickr




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Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half

Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


A collection of cutaways of AK-47, Colt .45, tanks, Russian nuclear submarines, rocket launchers, grenades... a fascinating look into the guts of 12 iconic weapons.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Yankee 667M Andromeda: Russian submarine equipped with nuclear missiles.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


9k113 Konkurse: Russian anti-tank missile.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


RPG-18: Russian short-range, disposable light anti-tank rocket launcher.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Rheinmetall 35mm Oerlikon AHEAD airburst ammunition.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


British WWI 18-pounder shrapnel shell.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Mauser C96


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Colt 45.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


DM1 grenade.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Leopard I tank.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


M16.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Ak 47.


Cool photos of iconic weapons cut in half


Spanish Cetme: Licensed by the German weapon industry.






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TV's Twitter MVPs of 2014

Thewalkingdeadcomiccon

It's been a great year for TV lovers on Twitter


This year more than ever, die-hard TV fans who help their favorite shows RT and favorite their way into trending topics have seen networks embrace the hunger for interaction and deliver closer connections to the programs they love.


SEE ALSO: 18 new shows we can't wait to see in 2015


At least, that's what Andrew Adashek, the head of TV at Twitter, has seen, and, he tells Mashable, he couldn't be happier about it


With 2015 already underway in some parts of the world, Adashek looks back and forward in the Q&A below.


MASHABLE: When it comes to Twitter's relationship with television, what would you say was the biggest success in 2014?

Andrew Adashek, head of TV at Twitter: There's general successes but then there's also sort of more nuanced or specific stuff. In general, the things I'm seeing that are really compelling and interesting are that there are a lot of partners that are taking the things that they've learned over the last couple years and really applying them and doing some really innovative stuff. Whether it's scripted series like The Walking Dead, Pretty Little Liars, American Horror Story, Game of Thrones, Read more...


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The Science of How Champagne Gets Its Bubbles


Without its bubbles, champagne is ordinary white wine, unfit for sabering or smashing against new ships. So what gives sparkling wines their sparkle? A fascinating process called secondary fermentation.


Unlike most wines, champagne goes through an additional fermentation in the bottle. Sugar and additional yeast are added when the champagne is bottled, and the yeast then slowly starts converting the sugar to carbon dioxide. The American Chemistry Society's video has more about the science of champagne—just in case you're looking to impress someone at your New Year's Eve party. [ACS]






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Inside 'New Year's Rockin' Eve' live from Times Square

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Welcome 2015 and welcome to New York City.


Regardless of where you're welcoming the new year, all TVs will soon be tuned to watch the ball drop on 'New Year's Rockin' Eve,' the annual televised event centered around the ceremonial ball drop in New York City's Times Square



We'll be capturing the performances, celebrity interviews and those crazy enough to be waiting with us in Times Square in the cold.


Mashable's Luke Leonard and Elizabeth Pierson will be in Times Square documenting the action live and you can follow them on Twitter (@liz_pierson and @lukeeleonard) Read more...


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Brooklyn's Best NYE Tradition Ends Tonight 


If Times Square is too gaudy, crowded, and frankly insane for you, then there is another New York tradition worth your New Year's Eve—one that is, in fact, ending tonight. For the past fifty years, the Pratt Institute has set out its amazing collection of big old steam whistles out on the lawn of its Brooklyn campus. Tonight's your last chance to steam blast your way into the new year.


With the school closed for the holidays, Pratt's steam whistle New Year's Eve celebration is all-volunteer effort lead by the school's chief engineer, Conrad Milster. Milster been in charge of Pratt's collection for decades, salvaging steam whistles from trains, factories, ships (including the Normandie). He's even made a few of his own, including a calliope, an instrument akin to an organ but powered by steam (see video above.).


Merrymakers are free to go up to the whistles, pull on a rope, and let loose a blast that can be heard far and wide. In the 19th century, New Yorkers would have heard such a blast every time a ships and trains left or arrived.



Chief engineer Conrad Milster blows a steam whistle.


We're generally pretty anti-steampunk here at Gizmodo, but Pratt's steam whistle New Year's Eve celebration is the real deal historically. The Pratt Institute, now a design school, was originally founded to train engineers in 1887. It closed its engineering school in 1993.


Now, it's the end of an another era. Last year, the New York Times reported that Pratt was discontinuing the New Year's Eve tradition out of safety concerns. The school was allowing one last celebration in 2015. Milster considered making last year's celebration the last, but he seems to have been convinced to make one last hurrah.






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A North Carolina town drops a possum at midnight on New Year's Eve

A North Carolina town drops a possum at midnight on New Year's Eve


New Year's Eve countdown balls tend to be large, sparkly. What they tend not to be are arboreal marsupials. Not so for Brasstown, North Carolina. In the "possum capital of the south," possums are the traditional marker lowered into a cheering crowd to symbolize the end of the year.


For the past 20 years, Clay Logan, a former tree specialist for the U.S. Forest Service, current owner of store called Clay's Corner, and eternal enthusiast of lowering possums from heights, has held a "Possum Drop" on the last night of the year. Logan suspends a box containing a possum five meters from a rope thrown over a light pole. The custom-made box he uses has air holes and images of the American flag. Prior to the lowering, there are bluegrass performances and an annual reading of a poem about possums.


The unconventional mountain town event draws thousands of people. It has also drawn the fury of PETA, provoking three lawsuits from the animal rights group.


Logan has been able to orchestrate his event in recent years thanks to a statute that suspends county wildlife laws from December 26 to January 2. PETA has sued the state for creating a "zone of lawlessness" by passing this law. This year, a judge issued an injunction against the law, and Logan has to get a wildlife license to drop the possum.


He hasn't applied for one, but Logan is adamant that the possum drop will go down even without a live animal. A few years ago, Logan held the drop with a dead possum instead of the traditional live creature after legal threats from PETA, so there may be another corpse lowered this year.


"We may have possum stew or something if we find one dead," Logan told the Charlotte Observer. "No live possums, let's put it like that."


The Los Angeles Times covered Logan's troubles carrying on his annual event, interviewing people from both sides of the possum war:



Jeff Kerr, PETA's general counsel in Washington, said: "We're amazed that something as ill-conceived and cruel as dropping an opossum in a box is still taking place in the 21st century. This is pure terror for a small wild animal that's shy and avoids humans at all cost."


The opossums are subjected to "capture myopathy," Kerr said, a condition he said can kill the animals. Logan's opossums probably die shortly after being released, according to Kerr.


Informed of Kerr's comments, Logan shrugged. "That's his opinion."



Logan names each possum "O.P." It stands for "Old Possum." On his website, he emphasizes his insistence that the animals are not harmed:


A North Carolina town drops a possum at midnight on New Year's Eve


Another message follows, below links to commemorative Possum Drop t-shirts: "Note: The opossum is not actually "dropped", it is lowered with great care. We treat our little friend with respect, hold him in awe, and do not inflict any injury or traumatize God's creature of the night.


Image via Wikimedia Commons






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35 dead, 42 injured in Shanghai New Year's celebration stampede

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As Asia kicks off 2015, one New Year's celebration in Shanghai, China has resulted in 35 deaths and 42 injuries


China's CCTV America reports that the event, held in Chen Yi Square, near a waterfront area called the Bund, devolved into a stampede.


The sudden crowd movement happened around 11:35pm local time, according to the BBC. No official explanation of the tragic event has yet been offered



A number of Twitter users have photos of the stampede's aftermath:



#BREAKING Reports of 35 dead, 42 injured in a stampede in #Shanghai at NYE celebrationhttp://t.co/4C2GefzEqP http://ift.tt/1AcoN5f


— CCTV America (@CCTV_America) December 31, 2014 Read more...



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The Last Round-Up for 2014: Shatner takes on Twitter and the history of native ads

It’s time for the final round-up of 2014. I started doing these a few months ago and I really enjoy them, so I hope you enjoy reading them and have discovered some stories you might have missed. We’ll begin this session with a little news: William Shatner broke the news that Twitter was doing something […]



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What the Hell Is Champagne Sabering?

What the Hell Is Champagne Sabering?


The first time you see someone sabre a bottle of Champagne a series of thoughts run through your mind:



  • Why is that person waving a knife… or perhaps a sword?

  • What's that in their other hand? A bottle of Champagne! Where is this going…

  • Oh god. I'm about to get sprayed by Champagne at best, glass at worst?

  • That was cool.

  • What 'genius' decided that hacking the neck off a glass bottle of expensive highly pressurized liquid was a good idea?


So who was the 'genius' to first sabre a bottle of Champagne? You may have heard it was Napoléon Bonaparte who first put sword to bottle, back in the days following the French Revolution. Or perhaps it was the officers in his cavalry – celebrating some great victory by bashing open a bottle of bubbly atop a horse. Maybe you heard the alternate version of that story, that following a defeat in battle, a bitter solider cleaved the head off a Champagne bottle to drink away his misery. After all, it was Napoléon who (supposedly) said:



Champagne! In victory one deserves it; in defeat one needs it.



A more romantic twist involves those same officers and Madame Clicquot, the young widow who had inherited her husband's Champagne house when she was twenty-seven.


What the Hell Is Champagne Sabering?


Napoléon visiting the cellars Moët & Chandon in 1807 via Chateau Loisel


When a new ship is launched, we christen it by smashing a bottle of Champagne on its hull. We do this for good luck. Why? Because there's something in the bubbles that is truly magical, something does inspire us to celebrate. On that note let's explore the wonderful legends of Champagne Sabering.


The Hussars of The Napoleonic Wars


The Napoleonic Wars followed the French Revolution of 1789. Napoléon Bonaparte took power in France, a decade later. Within a few years he was fighting all across the European continent. The Hussars, light cavalry mounted on fast horses, were a symbol of the early, seeming invincibility of Napoléon's armies. These lavishly dressed young soldiers slung Pelisses – short fur-trimmed jackets – over their shoulders. They armed themselves with carbines, and more famously, brass hilted sabers.


What the Hell Is Champagne Sabering?


As these young soldiers rode home after a string of early victories, the legend goes that the townspeople would toss them bottles of Champagne. Still atop their horses, the hussars would have had difficulty opening the foil-wrapped cages and pulling out the corks. The solution? A swift stroke of the sabre blade to the neck of the bottle. Combine the mass conscription of the French populace (particularly young men) with the feverish dreams of empire that Napoléon's early victories inspired and the image of the dashing young Hussar slicing open a Champagne bottle astride his horse comes into focus.


The Widow Clicquot


What the Hell Is Champagne Sabering?


François Clicquot's family was involved in a number of businesses, including the production of Champagne. When he died six years later, Madame Clicquot, now Veuve or 'widow' Clicquot took control of the company. After some wrangling with her father-in-law, she secured a fresh investment that allowed her to focus solely on Champagne production. This decision proved to be an excellent one, as she turned out to be a skilled winemaker, though it took a number of years before she achieved true success. Under her guidance, the company developed the process of riddling, which is why the Champagne you drink today is crystal clear.


Her husband died in 1805, in the early years of the Napoleonic Wars. When Napoléon's soldiers came through Reims, in Champagne, they found a wealthy young widow who was running her own Champagne business. The story goes that she would entertain Napoléon's officers in her vineyard, handing out bottles of Champagne to the men as they mounted their horses and left for battle. The officers, hoping to catch the eye of the wealthy young widow, unsheathed their sabres, and still astride their horses, lopped the tops off the bottles.


Want to see how it's done? Just click play…





To read about champagne sabering, including its more romantic origins, continue reading over at VinePair.


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