Sunday, April 21, 2013

Twilio Extends Communications API Platform to the Japan Market

TwilioEarlier this month, Twilio announced that the company joined the Google Cloud Platform Partner Program and that the Twilio API had been integrated into the Google App Engine. Twilio (in partnership with KDDI Web Communications) has now announced the launch of Twilio for KWC, bringing the Twilio API to the Japanese developer community.

Twilio For KWC

Twilio for KDDI Web Communications (Twilio for KWC) includes the same functionality as the Twilio API making it possible for Japanese developers to build communication-driven web and mobile applications. Twilio For KWC also offers localized currency, documentation and resources. Noriyuke Koide, General Manager for the Twilio Division at KWC, says in the press release that:

?Twilio has a fantastic platform that allows developers and enterprises to build the future of communications. We are thrilled to extend Twilio?s API to our customers through our new Twilio For KWC offering.?

Developers in Japan who would like to start using Twilio For KWC can sign up for an account at the Japanese Division Twilio Website.

Source: http://blog.programmableweb.com/2013/04/19/twilio-extends-communications-api-platform-to-the-japan-market/

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Joel Madden & Nicole Richie Divorce Rumors Heat Up!

The Joel Madden and Nicole Richie divorce rumors are heating up. Is this the end of yet another celebrity couple? Life & Style as well as OK Magazine are both report that there is trouble in paradise for Joel and Nicole.?Sparking the stories are a couple of recent incidents. One is that Richie was just spotted on vacation with Jessica Alba and her family but Madden was not in attendance.To be fair she wasn’t with her kids either, so does that mean she is a bad mother? The answer to that is no, just in case you didn’t get the sarcasm. Another situation adding fuel to the fire is that when The Fashion Star mentor appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live she was not wearing her wedding ring, which is true and you can see that video below. Although both of the above facts may make it seem like things are not all roses at home, that does not mean these two are headed for divorce court. As I am sure you can imagine neither Richie nor Madden have spoken out regarding the latest round of rumors surrounding their marriage. Despite the fact that these two live a relatively private life, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/n8VRqnllEJk/

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Friday, April 19, 2013

In the City of Bikes

How biking mania put down deep roots in the Netherlands.

By Nick Romeo,?Contributor / April 17, 2013

In The City of Bikes: The Story of the Amsterdam Cyclist by Pete Jordan Harper Perennial 448 pages

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When Princess Wilhelmina of the Netherlands was 16, she tried to ride a bike around the grounds of the royal palace. Her mother, the queen regent, was appalled: Cycling was hardly a suitable pastime for a future monarch.

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Wilhelmina, undeterred, pleaded her case to the Raad van State, a body of statesmen that settled issues concerning the crown. The council ruled against the princess, and soon the American press got wind of the story. ?For what right-thinking girl of seventeen would hesitate between a throne and a bicycle?? the New York Tribune quipped.?

But Wilhelmina did not have to wait long to have her way. After she took the throne on her 18th birthday in 1898, one of her first acts as queen was to learn to ride a bike.

The Dutch mania for cycling is the subject of Pete Jordan?s new book, In the City of Bikes: The Story of the Amsterdam Cyclist. Jordan went to Amsterdam for a semester to study how American cities could learn from its bicycle-friendly urban planning. He became so enamored of the Dutch capital that he spent a decade researching and experiencing its bicycle culture. He has now written a charming and quirky book that mixes memoir and history to explain the unparalleled flourishing of bicycles in Amsterdam.

In the 1920s, when Americans owned one car for every six people, the Dutch owned only one car for every 185 people. The largest car manufacturer in the Netherlands produced fewer cars per year than a Ford plant made in an hour. Visitors to the Netherlands often marveled at the country?s epidemic of cyclists. Virginia Woolf, visiting in 1935, compared the bicyclists to ?flocks of starlings, gathering together, skimming in and out.??

For the first two decades of the 20th century, bicycles in the Netherlands were a luxury item. After World War I, hyperinflation made German bike producers eager to sell their bikes in exchange for the stable Dutch currency. Soon Holland was flooded with incredibly cheap bicycles. As fewer people rode the trams, fares rose, and even more people rode bicycles.

The social range of bicyclists shocked early visitors. They saw members of parliament, nuns, pregnant women, soldiers, doctors, and delivery boys on bikes. Almost a century later, Jordan reports a similarly broad range of riders. He is also dazzled by the number of activities the Dutch perform while cycling: everything from talking on cellphones to eating full meals, holding babies, and smoking marijuana.

In some of the book?s most gripping chapters, Jordan dwells on the importance of cycling during World War II. The clashes between the 5,600 troops of the two cyclist regiments and German tanks went just as you would expect, but bicycling also served subtler functions in the Dutch resistance. When the Germans tried to regulate the anarchic behavior of Dutch cyclists, flouting minor traffic rules became a charged means of defiance.

As the Germans became increasingly desperate for raw materials, they began seizing bikes at gunpoint and sending the frames to Germany to be melted for scrap metal. Even when all rubber imports for tires had stopped, the Dutch kept riding on wooden tires, flat tires, or the metal rims of the wheels. Couriers disguised as Red Cross nurses served as bike messengers for the resistance, and civilians learned to warn each other when the Germans were roaming the streets and seizing bikes. The phrase ?Give back my bike? became a symbol of postwar Dutch resentment that is still used today.

The number of cars increased in the 1950s, but by the 1970s various anarchist and pro-cycling groups fought back with demonstrations and vandalism. The oil embargo in the 1970s further decreased car use. Today, the Netherlands is one of the few countries in the world where it means something for a politician to identify as a pro-cycling candidate. Such candidates have successfully lobbied for restricted vehicular traffic, better bike paths, and more bike parking throughout the city.

Jordan resists the impulse to paint Amsterdam as a utopia for bicyclists. Rates of bike theft are astonishingly high; it?s not uncommon to have a bike stolen annually. Jordan also realizes that the cycling culture of Amsterdam isn?t something that can simply be exported to American or European cities. Many of the forces that allowed cycling to become so dominant ? from a pedaling queen to inflation between the World Wars to simple geography ? are impossible to legislate or re-create. Still, dwindling oil supplies could promote a cycling renaissance in many urban centers in the next few generations, and Jordan?s portrait of bicycle culture in Amsterdam gives a fascinating account of a viable alternative to dependence on cars.

Even in her old age, Queen Wilhelmina retained a love of cycling. In the 1950s, she shocked various VIPs who were attending a conference on the future of Europe. They arrived at her palace in a fleet of black Cadillacs, but the queen simply rode up on her bike, hopped off, and leaned it against a tree.

Nick Romeo is a Monitor contributor.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/fn_EDbocwo4/In-the-City-of-Bikes

Masters Leaderboard 2013

Gigabyte's Aivia Uranium Gaming Mouse Comes With Its Own Tiny Monitor

A beefed up computer ensures you can actually play the latest and greatest PC gaming titles, but if you want to compete online with even a marginal level of success, you're going to need to get yourself a kick-ass mouse as well. Gigabyte's new Aivia Uranium seems to fit the bill, particularly if you want to go wireless without having to swap batteries every few days. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/7P9eezZ-u50/gigabytes-aivia-uranium-gaming-mouse-comes-with-its-own-tiny-monitor

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

If they don?t eat their meat they won?t get any pudding (Unqualified Offerings)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/299729282?client_source=feed&format=rss

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New Prague Area Schools Early Childhood Family Education: You ...

Big feelings=big emotions.? At times children can get so upset and emotional that they don?t even know exactly what is happening to them.? They may feel out of control.? This happens to children often.? In order for children to be able to gain emotional composure they have to know what the feeling is behind the big emotion.? Once you have identified the feeling then you can get to the calming down piece.?

Mary Bartusek, Parent Educator

Source: http://newpragueareaschoolsecfe.blogspot.com/2013/04/you-have-to-name-it-to-tame-it.html

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Month of Nostalgic Video Game Reviews 2 ? Super Bonk ...

Howdy peeps and welcome to Day #16 of Month of Nostalgic Video Game Reviews 2! This is a blog series where I review video games from my childhood. Today?s game is one I came across randomly while on an aeroplane but never forgot, and the name of the game in question is Super Bonk!

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Super Bonk was a platforming game released in 1994 for the Super Nintendo and it is the fourth game in the series of Bonk games.

I?m not quite sure if this game has a story of any kind, I mean Bonk just appears in the game, smiles and goes about his business. He moves from place to place and there?s nothing indicating that there?s anything major going on in the plot department, and for a platforming game that?s standard fare.

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As for gameplay you take control Bonk and move through levels collecting smiley faces, butterflies and candy while avoiding hazards and enemies or you can choose to attack enemies if you?re feeling hardcore. Bonk can jump, attack with his head, climb walls, ascend waterfalls and swing off of poles. Bonk comes in three sizes; Little Bonk, Normal Bonk and BIG Bonk. Not only does his size vary but the transformations he takes on are numerous too. Giant crabs and huge ostriches are just two of them. The forms Bonk takes on give the game more variety. The stages give Bonk the chance to swim in giant heart arteries, float in lunar pyramids and fly through the solar system.

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Wow Super Bonk, such a weird-ass game! As I mentioned before I first game across this game while on a plane, I was actually going on holiday to Dominica and this game was one of the ones on offer. Both me and my sister played it and I can remember that the both of us were happy and stunned but what we played. There we were playing as this bold-headed cave boy who hit enemies with his head, collected candy that changed his size and ate meat that gave him crazy power-ups that changed his look completely. It was some funky stuff. I think what we were really taken back by was the massive meat power-up that turned his head into a heart-looking shape and if you were in big form you got a reptile bottom half and it looked so unnatural. The graphics were nice and colourful and very in line with some other games I?ve seen on the SNES at the time and the music has that classic 90s quality to it, some it sounds very cheesy and upbeat but it works for the game and some it I still remember from the time I was young.

After revisiting the game recently I?ve noticed that Super Bonk really does fall into the category of easier platforming games like the Kirby series. That?s not to diss Kirby or to say this game?s not tricky. There?s definitely fun and variety to be found here.

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So in conclusion Super Bonk was and still is a strange game. As a platformer it?s not too bad but its visual style and power-ups are some of the most bizarre and creepy things I have ever seen. But I think that?s what makes it so funny and memorable. Give this one a try if you wish to see a weirder side of gaming from the 90s haha.

Well there?s another game review done only 14 more to go! If you have experiences with this game or any of the following ones do comment below! I?ll see ya tomorrow with another nostalgic video game review yo! :D

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Source: http://hypersonic55.wordpress.com/2013/04/16/month-of-nostalgic-video-game-reviews-2-super-bonk/

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