A Musical Score Designed to Look Like a World Map

Composer James Plakovic’s scores aren’t just created to sound beautiful; on paper, they also take the shape of people, symbols, objects, or in some cases, world maps. His “World Beat Music,” spotted by Boing Boing, is a score that looks like a Mercator Projection map of the world. “What if you could make the world more harmonious through music,” Plakovic asks in the video above. “How would it sound?” Take a listen to the aural cartography and find out for yourself.

[h/t Boing Boing]

Teaser image courtesy iStock


November 16, 2016 – 1:00am

New German Program Makes Reusable Coffee Cups More Convenient

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That daily latte habit is bad for more than just your wallet. It’s also pretty terrible for the environment, unless you’re dedicated to bringing your own cup. Starbucks alone sells about 4 billion cups a year, and although the company has been working to make its cups recyclable, many coffee cups can’t be composted or recycled due to plastic linings. In Germany, about 2.8 billion to-go cups go right into the trash annually.

Coffee shops in Hamburg, Germany, are trying to combat the scourge of coffee trash by introducing a reusable cup program across cafes in the city, as CityLab reports. The Refill It! cup, created by the local coffee importer El Rojito, can be acquired at participating retailers for a deposit of just €1.50 (around $1.60). You can keep the cup if you want, refilling it at other coffee shops, or you can return it and get your deposit back at one of the participating cafes. That cafe will then wash out the reusable cup and allow someone else to take it. If you’re super worried about germs, you can purchase your own lid and felt sleeve.

The project started operating within 11 different coffee shops around the city on November 1.

Even if you don’t live in Hamburg, you can still do your part to save landfills from disposable coffee cups. Most cafes will happily make your drink in any reusable mug you bring, and many will give you a small discount for your trouble. If you’re not a fan of the tall thermos-style mug, KeepCup makes neat cups, shaped just like the one you’d get at the coffee shop, in plastic or glass.

[h/t CityLab]


November 15, 2016 – 3:00pm

Why Your Traditional Thanksgiving Should Include Oysters

filed under: Food, holidays
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iStock

If you want to throw a really traditional Thanksgiving dinner, you’ll need oysters. The mollusks would have been featured prominently on the holiday tables of the earliest American settlers—even if that beloved Thanksgiving turkey probably wasn’t. At the time, oysters were supremely popular additions to the table for coastal colonial settlements, though in some cases, they were seen as a hardship food more than a delicacy.

For one thing, oysters were an easy food source. In the Chesapeake Bay, they were so plentiful in the 17th and 18th centuries that ships had to be careful not to run aground on oyster beds, and one visitor in 1702 wrote that they could be pulled up with only a pair of tongs. Native Americans, too, ate plenty of oysters, occasionally harvesting them and feasting for days.

Early colonists ate so many oysters that the population of the mollusks dwindled to dangerously low levels by the 19th century, according to curriculum prepared by a Gettysburg University history professor. In these years, scarcity turned oysters into a luxury item for the wealthy, a situation that prevailed until the 1880s, when oyster production skyrocketed and prices dropped again [PDF]. If you lived on the coast, though, you were probably still downing the bivalves.

Beginning in the 1840s, canning and railroads brought the mollusks to inland regions. According to 1985’s The Celebrated Oysterhouse Cookbook, the middle of the 19th century found America in a “great oyster craze,” where “no evening of pleasure was complete without oysters; no host worthy of the name failed to serve ‘the luscious bivalves,’ as they were actually called, to his guests.”

At the turn of the century, oysters were still a Thanksgiving standard. They were on Thanksgiving menus everywhere from New York City’s Plaza Hotel to train dining cars, in the form of soup, cocktails, and stuffing.

In 1954, the Fish and Wildlife Service tried to promote Thanksgiving oysters to widespread use once again. It sent out a press release [PDF], entitled “Oysters—a Thanksgiving Tradition,” that included the agency’s own recipes for cocktail sauce, oyster bisque, and oyster stuffing.

In the modern era, Thanksgiving oysters have remained most popular in the South. Oyster stuffing is a classic dish in New Orleans, and chefs like Emeril Lagasse have their own signature recipes. If you’re not looking for a celebrity chef’s recipe, perhaps you want to try the Fish and Wildlife Service’s? Check it out below.

Oyster Stuffing

INGREDIENTS

1 pint oysters
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup butter
4 cups day-old bread cubes
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 teaspoon salt
Dash poultry seasoning
Dash pepper

Drain oysters, saving liquor, and chop. Cook celery and onion in butter until tender. Combine oysters, cooked vegetables, bread cubes, and seasonings, and mix thoroughly. If stuffing seems dry, moisten with oyster liquor. Makes enough for a four-pound chicken.

If you’re using a turkey, the FWS advises that the recipe above provides enough for about every 5 pounds of bird, so multiply accordingly.


November 14, 2016 – 1:30pm

Amazon to Refund Parents Whose Children Made In-App Purchases Without Permission

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PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images

In 2014, the Federal Trade Commission sued Amazon on behalf of millions of parents whose kids spent money on in-app purchases without permission, on the grounds that the tech company made it far too easy for children to run up unlimited charges without any kind of permission from the account holder. Now, a federal judge has ruled that Amazon needs to set up a payment plan for the eligible customers to begin in 2017, Reuters reports.

The FTC alleged that, beginning in 2011, Amazon’s lack of parental permission guards resulted in $86 million in unauthorized charges for mobile games targeted toward kids like “Ice Age Village,” and subsequent updates to the in-app purchase process did little to fix the issue. According to the FTC, “kids’ games often encourage children to acquire virtual items in ways that blur the lines between what costs virtual currency and what costs real money.” A 2012 update to the charge system limited the amount of money kids could spend without parental permission, but still allowed charges of up to $20 without any kind of approval from a parent’s account. Internal communications from Amazon show that employees knew the extent of the problem, and likened the situation to “near house on fire.”

A U.S. district judge in Seattle found the company liable in April 2016, and has now ordered the company to begin paying out eligible customers. Regulators had argued for a $26.5 million lump-sum payout, but the judge found those damages to be too high. Instead, the company will have to alert customers who are eligible starting next year, and begin reimbursing them in cash (not gift cards, as Amazon requested).

Amazon is not the first tech company to be held accountable for profits reaped from kids buying digital goods without their parents’ knowledge. Apple and Google have previously been targeted by the FTC over similar issues, and began paying refunds out in 2014.

[h/t Reuters]


November 14, 2016 – 11:15am

9 Handy Facts About the History of Handwriting

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While today we can get machines to write for us, for most of human history, writing was a manual endeavor. And there are people who are super passionate about keeping it that way. Some schools are building handwriting requirements into their curriculum, although even the positive research results on the benefits of handwriting over typing aren’t big enough to be super conclusive, and some studies find that cursive, in particular, probably isn’t any better than other methods of putting words to paper. But handwriting has a long and storied tradition in human history, and if only for that reason, it’s not going away anytime soon. Here are nine facts about handwriting through the ages, courtesy of Anne Trubek’s recently published book The History and Uncertain Future of Handwriting.

1. THE WORLD’S FIRST WRITING SYSTEM WAS TINY.

Cuneiform, the Sumerian writing system that emerged from Mesopotamia 5000 years ago, was usually etched into clay tablets that were often only a few inches wide. Trubek describes most of the Cuneiform tablets she handled at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York as being only half the size of her iPhone (though who knows if she has a 5 or a 6S). “Find the second portrait of Lincoln on the penny,” a Morgan Library curator told her. “You know, the one of his statue inside the Lincoln Memorial on the obverse? That’s how small the script can be.”

2. MEDIEVAL WRITING WAS REGIONAL.

After the fall of the Roman Empire, different scripts developed regionally as writers embellished and tweaked existing systems to create their own styles. However, this made books a little hard to read for those not educated in that exact script. All books were written in Latin, but the letters were so different that many scribes couldn’t read writing from other regions.

3. THERE IS AN ENTIRE FIELD DEVOTED TO READING HANDWRITING.

Don’t feel bad if you can’t decipher other people’s writing easily. “The truth is, most of us already cannot read 99 percent of the historic record,” Trubek writes. Paleographers study for years to specialize in particular scripts used in a certain time and certain context, such as medieval book scripts or 18th century legal documents. “In other words,” Trubek points out, “even someone whose life work is dedicated to reading cursive cannot read most cursive.”

4. CHARLEMAGNE WAS A STICKLER FOR HANDWRITING.

The emperor—who was largely illiterate himself—decreed in the 9th century that the same script be used across the Holy Roman Empire, an area that covered most of Western Europe. Called Carolingian minuscule, the uniform script dominated writing in France, Germany, Northern Italy, and England until the 11th century. The Gothic script we associate with medieval times today is a derivation of Carolingian minuscule that popped up during the 12th century. It was later revived in the 15th century, and became the basis for Western typography.

5. MONKS WERE NOT FANS OF PRINTING PRESSES.

The 15th century monk Johannes Trithemius defended the need for handwriting in his essay “In Praise of Scribes.” He claimed that while scripture could last a thousand years, the printed book was “thing of paper and in a short time will decay entirely.” Printing would make books unsightly and introduce spelling errors, and he predicted that history would judge “the manuscript book superior to the printed book.” It had nothing to do with him losing his once-steady job to a machine, no.

Indeed, Martin Luther complained of books much like people today complain about the quality of writing online, saying “the multitude of books is a great evil. There is no measure or limit to this form of writing.”

6. THE FIRST FONT WAS VERY SCRIPT-LIKE.

The first printed books were designed to look a whole lot like the manuscripts of that day, so as not to shock people with newfangled design. Johannes Gutenberg and his hired craftsmen hand-carved an elaborate Gothic script into 290 unique characters for the printing press, allowing the printer to recreate every letter in upper- and lowercase, as well as punctuation, so that the type looked just like what a scribe would make. The first letters of every section were even red, just like manuscript style dictated.

7. HISTORICALLY, HANDWRITING PROFESSIONALS WERE QUITE UPWARDLY MOBILE.

When printing put scribes out of work, they instead became teachers, tutoring and writing books on penmanship. These writing masters became wealthy professionals in a way that they had never been as simple scribes. When businesses and governments began hiring secretaries for the first time, who would take dictation and have a working knowledge of several different scripts, it became an unusually effective way to rise up the class ranks in medieval Europe. The papal secretary was the highest position a commoner could occupy in society.

8. IN THE 17TH CENTURY, HANDWRITING WAS PERSONALLY REVEALING

In the 16th and 17th centuries, different scripts became more than just a sign of where you learned. Specific scripts were established for classes and professions, and even for gender. Wealthy Europeans would use one script for their personal correspondence and another for their legal and business correspondence. A whole host of scripts in England were developed just for court use, making many documents completely illegible to anyone not trained in that specific style of writing.

9. PUNCTUATION WAS RARE UNTIL THE 18TH CENTURY.

Before literacy became widespread, spelling varied widely from person to person, and nothing was standardized. It became uniform over time, and the first dictionaries weren’t published until the 17th century. Even then, standardized spelling didn’t become regular for another century. Punctuation was even worse, remaining “largely nonexistent or nonstandardized,” according to Trubek, until the 18th century.


November 14, 2016 – 8:00am

Innovative Fork Design Unexpectedly Helps Users With Limited Mobility

filed under: design
Image credit: 
Knork

For people who have limited dexterity and other hand mobility issues, to those with broken arms and patients with tremors from Parkinson’s, the basic act of eating can be a trial. But in some cases, thoughtfully designed utensils can help. Some adaptive utensils have wider grips or are contoured to make them easier to use. However, in the case of Knork Flatware, the benefits for people with mobility issues were kind of accidental, as Fast Company reports.

Knork makes streamlined utensils designed to accommodate the way people actually eat—like sharp edges to allow you to cut with the side of a fork. They’re designed to be ergonomic, with comfortable platforms to place your fingers, and have a larger, balanced design to keep them from falling off plates. After launching, letters began pouring in from patients who couldn’t eat easily on their own with traditional utensils, saying that the forks were helping them eat one-handed and unassisted. And because they look like any other high-quality utensil that belongs on a white table cloth, patients don’t have to deal with feeling out of place using special needs forks and knives.

The company is launching a pilot study to analyze how patients use the flatware, and how design tweaks might improve the experience for them.

[h/t Fast Company]


November 14, 2016 – 1:00am

Watch Animals Defend Themselves by Puking

This week, the web series Gross Science really lives up to its name, highlighting all the animals that defend themselves against predators by vomiting everywhere. The video, spotted by Laughing Squid, discusses birds like the European roller, whose chicks spew a noxious-smelling orange bile when touched.

Grasshoppers can puke when they’re faced with predators, too, and it’s eating these bugs that gives the European roller its ability to vomit up chemicals foul enough to warn its parents that danger is near.

Other birds that utilize vomit to ward off danger include the fulmar, a sea bird that shoots a projectile stream of stomach oil at its enemies. The oil can hit targets up to 6 feet away, and is sticky enough to cling to feathers and prevent any birds on the receiving end from flying or floating.

And should you ever hang out with a camel, watch out for that spit. It’s not entirely saliva.

[h/t Laughing Squid]

Teaser image by David Grabovac via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 4.0


November 12, 2016 – 6:00am

Explore the Galápagos Islands in 360° HD Video

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If you haven’t yet caught it, you can catch a sneak peek at the latest Planet Earth series on YouTube, even if you don’t get the BBC, as The Verge reports. A 360° clip from the first episode of Planet Earth II, “Islands,” highlights the wonders of the Galápagos Islands in high definition.

Drag the video around to check out action on the volcanic rocks, marine iguanas basking in the sun, underwater footage of Galápagos fur seals, and even the crew readying their equipment. It’s available in 4K resolution, so go ahead and go full screen for this one.

[h/t The Verge]


November 11, 2016 – 2:30pm

Judge Rules to Allow Youth Lawsuit Over Climate Change to Go to Trial

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Torsten Blackwood – Pool/Getty Images

In 2015, a group of 21 young people filed a lawsuit against the federal government arguing that by failing to act on climate change, the government was infringing on the next generation’s Fifth Amendment right to life, liberty, and property. Now, a judge has ruled that their lawsuit can proceed to trial, denying the motions to dismiss by fossil fuel industry representatives [PDF].

In her opinion, U.S. District Court Judge Ann Aiken (Oregon District, Eugene Division) wrote, “Federal courts too often have been cautious and overly deferential in the arena of environmental law, and the world has suffered for it” [PDF].

James Hansen, a leading climate scientist who is also acting as a plaintiff in the case, elaborates in a press statement that “we must ask the Court to require the government to reduce fossil fuel emissions at a rate consistent with the science.”

The lawsuit, brought by kids between the ages of 9 and 20, comes at an especially significant time, considering President-elect Donald Trump’s false claim that climate change is a “Chinese hoax” (it is not) and his avowed plans to cancel last year’s international climate agreement and appoint a climate-change denier to head the Environmental Protection Agency.


November 11, 2016 – 1:00pm

Santa Monica Moves to Make All New Homes Net-Zero Energy

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Santa Monica, California might soon have some of the world’s most stringent energy-standards requirements for new home construction. ACurbed reports, an environmental measurement approved by the city council would require all new single-family homes to be net-zero, meaning the houses produce at least as much energy from renewable resources as they use each year.

These buildings are both highly efficient and feature renewable energy sources like wind power and solar panels. They’re typically highly insulated, make use of natural ventilation and shading techniques, and sometimes put appliances to work in multiple ways, such as using refrigerator exhaust to heat water.

The ordinance still has to be approved by the California Energy Commission, but the state has long had some of the tightest environmental standards in the country, and new building efficiency standards going into effect in 2017 require that all new construction of homes be net-zero by 2020, and new commercial construction achieve the same efficiency by 2030. 

Solar panel installation in Santa Monica. Image Credit: David McNew/Getty Images

“ZNE [or zero-net energy] construction, considered the gold standard for green buildings, is a major component that will help us reach our ambitious goal of carbon neutrality by 2050,” Santa Monica’s mayor, Tony Vazquez, said in a press statement.

It’s both an environmentally sustainable choice and an economically smart one. As the city’s chief sustainability officer, Dean Kubani, notes, “With the price of utility power continuing to rise, ZNE homeowners will avoid those escalating costs while benefiting from local renewable power for all of their energy needs.”

While no other city has such stringent requirements, California has already made progress on net-zero construction. Sacramento, for instance, has more net-zero buildings than any other place in the country. Though net-zero construction isn’t the norm yet, other cities will likely to move toward similar standards in the future.

[h/t Curbed]


November 10, 2016 – 5:00pm