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Texas Woman Wakes Up with British Accent

June 24, 2016 By Karen Jackson Leave a Comment

her majesty Queen Elizabeth of Britain

After a routine jaw surgery, a Texas woman gained the ability to speak with a British accent. The doctors have explained that Lisa Alamia is suffering from something called “Foreign Accent Syndrome,” a rare neurological disorder.

Lisa Alamia, a mother of three and 100 percent Texan, underwent a jaw surgery six months ago. The procedure was a routine one, doctors trying to fix her overbite. However, after waking up from surgery, Alamia started speaking with a perfect British accent.

At first, her children thought that she is joking with them, but after they had realized that she is not trying to mimic the accent, they were shocked by the sudden development.

“People who don’t know me, they’re like, ‘Hey, where you from?” Alamia declared. “I’m from Rosenberg. They’re like, ‘Where is that?’ I’m like, ‘Right here in Rosenberg.’ ‘Oh, you’re from here? How do you talk like that?’ So that’s where the whole story comes up.”

The doctor that was in charge of her case, Dr. Toby Yaltho, a neurologist at the Sugar Land Methodist Hospital in Houston stated that the syndrome is very rare, only affecting roughly 100 individuals in the last 100 years.

The first few months after Alamia developed her condition, she was ashamed to talk to strangers because she didn’t know how they would react to her accent. It even took her children a few weeks to get accustomed to her new voice.

Now, after receiving the full support of her family, the woman is more opened about her rare neurological disorder that gives her a perfect British accent.

Alamia even has fun stories about her newly acquired British accent. She says that she used to pronounce the word “tamales” exactly like a Hispanic person. Now, she just manages to slightly correct her pronunciation when uttering the word.

Moreover, she says that people get disoriented when she says “kitten.” Her Texan compatriots hear “kitten” when she’s actually saying that she is “kidding.”

“Foreign accent syndrome” is believed to be caused by a stroke, a head trauma, developmental problems, or migraines. The first case was recorded in 1907.

According to the researchers, the individuals affected by this neurological syndrome do not acquire fluency in the foreign language that they are mimicking, just the accent.

There was a single case registered in 2010 when a Croatian man woke from a profound coma and started speaking German fluently. However, that was an isolated case which still puzzles doctors worldwide.

Image source: Flickr

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: british accent, foreign language syndrome, Texas Woman Wakes Up with British Accent

Would You Like a KFC Battery Pack with Those Fries?

June 23, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

part of the the meal that offers a KFC battery pack

Fried Chicken tastes better when you have a fully charged smartphone.

Indian fast-food and smartphone lovers will have a pleasant surprise when they will visit Colonel Sanders’ restaurants. A couple of lucky few customers will receive a special edition KFC battery pack as part of the “Watt a Box” campaign.

Smartphones were designed to make the world a better place. They are making the life of the users significantly easier as they offer the same basic functions as a computer. Adding an increased number of free Wi-Fi networks, and you get a computer in your back pocket.

The problem with smartphones is that their battery lasts a short period. The more you use the device, especially for apps that require an Internet connection, the quicker the battery runs. As Murphy’s laws dictate, that usually happens when you need your smartphone the most.

To come to the aid of the battery-hungry customers, KFC has launched a limited campaign that tries to solve this universal problem. Some lucky customers will get the opportunity to charge their smartphones while enjoying a delicious fried chicken meal.

The “Watt a Box” initiative features a 5 in 1 meal box that contains, apart from the usual fries, fried chicken, crispy strips, and sauce, a power bank of 6,100 mAh.

Technically, 6,100 mAh is more than enough for charging two battery depleted phones. However, some customers that have already tried the KFC battery pack argue that the “extra ingredient” can only be used to charge one phone.

The KFC battery pack that comes with some of the 5 in 1 meals sold in Indian KFC restaurants is removable. The cost of such a meal is only 150 rupees (which is about $2.20, AU$3, or £1.50).

The exclusive gadget-friendly 5 in 1 box is unfortunately only available in some Mumbai and Delhi outlets. The campaign is short-lived, and KFC has not stated anything regarding a possible expansion of the program.

KFC managed to make this “element of utility” possible by partnering up with Blink Digital, a Mumbai digital agency. This is not the first time that the two companies partnered up. Last month, they launched a campaign named “Plate of Hope.” The project is meant to feed the underprivileged children in India in collaboration with World Food Program.

Image source: Wikipedia

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: do you want a KFC battery pack with those fries?, KFC battery pack, KFC offers a battery pack with its 5 in 1 meals

Twitter Introduces Engage App for Monitoring Feedback

June 22, 2016 By Michael Turner Leave a Comment

In many respects, Twitter feels like the Wild West of social networks: a disorganized flood of tweets from all kinds of sources. Users find it difficult to keep track of who’s following you and your activity, but it’s just as bad for brands and influencers.

Thankfully, Twitter has launched a companion app called Engage that can help address the fact that there are no tools to monitor and manage feedback and audience engagement.

But with the Engage app, users can get a big-picture sense of their followship with “real-time data and insights,” according to Matt Dennebaum, the Senior Product Manager at Twitter.

How does the app work, exactly? As Dennebaum wrote in a blog post, Engage surfaces your Twitter mentions – basically each time a follower tweets at your account – by sending you notifications.

engage app

At the same time, the companion app also provides users with a detailed dashboard of statistics that you can examine whenever. It will display the number of retweets, likes, mentions, and impressions that have occurred in a given time frame.

Plus, Engage features percentage changes and weekly totals so you know how you or your brand fared in the past seven days. And for those interested in the little details, Twitter’s new app also allows you to individually track the performance of images, GIFs, and videos.

“As creators, influencers, and public figures, you have a special connection with your followers on Twitter,” explained Dennebaum. “Through Tweets, you can share content and have conversations with fans and other influencers in real time — and now we’ve made it easier to manage those daily interactions and measure success.”

Engage has not been equipped with a Twitter timeline, but that’s its design. Instead of having yet another app filled with tens of thousands of tweets, you get a distillation: only the mentions you want and the statistics in the form of pure metrics.

By default, such a design has its downside: Engage is isolating, separating you from the Twitter fray. Instead, you’re simply broadcasting content and awaiting a feedback in the form of retweets and “likes.”

But given that many popular Twitter accounts already tend to be one-sided, Engage could be the app that formalizes the status quo.
Image Source: Quartz

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Engage App, follower count, monitor Twitter followship, Twitter statistics

Apple Settlement in E-book Lawsuit Sees $400 Million Payed to Consumers

June 21, 2016 By Michael Turner Leave a Comment

alt= man reading e-book on iPad

Did you buy an e-book from Amazon, Apple, Kobo, or Barnes & Noble between April 1, 2010, and May 21, 2012? If you did, you should expect a check or credit any time now.

If you haven’t made any e-book purchases over this period, we’re sorry, but you’re not getting a dime out of Apple’s payout to U.S. customers, as the long-running e-book price-fixing battle comes to its final stage.

Starting June 21, the tech giant will be ultimately forced to pay a $450 million settlement to millions of e-book customers who will start receiving payments in the form of checks and credits for losses.

The settlement incurred as a result of a reported price-fixing scheme that put Apple and a number of publishers on the spot; Macmillan, Hachette Book Group, Penguin, Simon and Schuster, and HarperCollins were also involved.

If you’re among the affected customers, expect to receive a $6.93 credit for every New York Times bestseller e-book you bought, and a $1.57 credit for each of the other e-books.

Attorneys described the refund process as “uniquely simple,” as payouts are automatically being sent to consumers’ accounts at big e-book retailers, such as Amazon, Apple, Kobo, and Barnes & Noble.

Refunded customers will also receive an email direct from the retailer informing them about the crediting of their account. But who is up to get a credit, and who’ll get a check?

Law firm Hagens Berman, the one who litigated the case with the Department of Justice said that “If e-book purchasers requested a check in lieu of a credit, they will receive a check. If purchasers received a credit during the first round of distribution of publisher settlements, and they did not opt out, they will automatically receive a credit.”

First accused in 2010 of fixing e-book prices, Apple was served with the class-action suit that led to this month’s payout only two years later.

The settlement – which involves $400 million shared between affected customers – has been described by Hagens Berman as “one of the most successful recoveries of damages in any antitrust lawsuit in the country.”

Of the remaining $50 million, $30 million will be used to cover legal fees, and $20 million will be split among the 33 states involved in the e-book lawsuit.

Even though the publishers settled several years ago, Apple kept on fighting the suit until this March, when the Supreme Court rejected its final appeal.
Image Source: Investopedia

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Apple e-book lawsuit, Apple pays $400 million to consumers, Apple settlement

Rare Eyeless Catfish Discovered In Texas Underwater Cave

June 19, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

eyeless fish

Even though it was known to live only in Mexico, researchers have found a very rare blind catfish species in a Texan underwater cave.

The fish, discovered back in May in a deep limestone cave at Amistad National Recreation Area near Del Rio, were recognized as the Mexican blindcat (scientifically known as the Prietella phreatophila).

Dean Hendrickson, an ichthyology curator at the University of Texas at Austin, is the one who identified and confirmed the small pair’s species; the marine creatures were then transported inside the San Antonio Zoo.

So how could this fish species travel from the Mexican parts of the Edwards-Trinity Aquifer to the American state? The discovery backs up a theory which believes the watery caves under the Rio Grande basin in Texas and Coahuila, the Northern Mexican state, are connected.

Even though rumors of white and blind catfishes being spotted in the area have been around since the 1960s, Hendrickson says this is the first time the species’ presence has been confirmed.

“I’ve seen more of these things than anybody, and these specimens look just the ones from Mexico,” he added. Back in 2015 was the first time, Jack Johnson, the resource manager of the Amistad National Park Service, saw the eyeless fish.

Since then, he partnered with a team of biologists to find more of the species. Growing up to 3 inches long, the endangered Mexican blindcat maintains a light pink hue and is slow-swimming. The color is given by the blood flow being visible through the translucent skin.

As it lives exclusively in groundwater and in caves, the blindcat fish does not need eyes, speed in motion, or pigmentation – not like it would do if it were a surface creature. This species is perfectly adapted to inhabit total darkness.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is protecting the blindcat fish as its habitat is threatened. The Edwards Aquifer sustaining the life of this unique fish faces challenges from excessive pumping of groundwater and contamination.

Due to the special conditions they live in, the fish have not been made available for public viewing; the zoo will keep in a special facility that can accommodate aquifer and cave species.
Image Source: Jewish Business News

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: blindcat fish, eyeless fish, fish living in underwater caves, underwater caves

Google Photos Finally Introduces Slideshow Feature

June 19, 2016 By Roxanne Briean Leave a Comment

alt= Google Photos app

In an attempt to make it easier for users to show off their vacation pictures during the next family reunion, Google has added a new slideshow option for its Photos app.

For now, the feature has only been made available for the Android app and on the desktop; iOS users will have to wait a while longer to get access.

Thanks to the slideshow feature, users can forget all about clicking on every image in the folder while they talk about the most recent trip they’ve been on. Thanks to the new capability, they simply have to open a folder, tap a photo, and choose the Slideshow option from the drop-down menu.

Halting the slideshow is as easy as it was to turn it on; you just tap on a photo. Google’s recommendation is that you improve the viewing experience by using the Chrome tab to the TV so that your friends and family can enjoy the photos on a larger screen.

However, Google still has to tweak some features; at the moment, users cannot tweak the speed of the slideshow. You can’t go faster through the pictures you took of the landscapes, and slower through your selfies (let’s be honest); Google says you have to wait equally for all.

The search giant is constantly upping the ante on its Photos app. Google has previously launched a very useful feature that automatically organizes the album so that users can skip the dreadful chore of having to do it themselves.

Among other wonderful quirks, Google Photos (it’s Assistant, to be more specific) can compile new albums from recently taken snapshots, and even offers you a selection of the best pictures in the set.

Tools like app adds and maps are also cool, allowing you to remember precisely where your photos were taken. If you want to add more meaning to your album, you’re also allowed to caption each photo before adding it to a folder.

There are more than 200 million people using Google Photos at the moment, and the app seems to be riding rather well in the increasingly competitive market. It’s not long before Google teaches its deep learning systems to detect the emotion you felt when you took a particular photo!
Image Source: The Next Web

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Chrome tab, detect emotion in pictures, google photos, Google Photos slideshow feature, organize photos

New Algorithm Can Help Predict Next ISIS Terror Attack

June 18, 2016 By Michael Turner Leave a Comment

alt= armed militant group

Being able to detect the signs that foreshadow terror attacks that could end with a death toll is vital in the battle to prevent these incidents from happening again.

One of the tools that terrorism experts and government agencies are learning to use is sift through social media posts to find clues. Some terror acts have been preceded by posts and online activities promoting the cause of militant groups.

The recent shooting at an Orlando gay nightclub on June 12, for example, is one of those cases; the terrorist, Omar Mateen, turned to Facebook to show his affiliation with the Islamic State beforehand.

In light of the fact that we are witnessing more and more terror acts, a physicist and his team hope to improve the potential of using social media in preventing the next one.

Neil Johnson from the University of Miami has come up with a mathematical model to identify the growth and organizational patterns of the ISIS terrorist group in the online, which may aid governmental agencies in thwarting future attacks.

For the research, the team focused on the social platform VKontake, or VK, and the potential terrorist activities that might take place there. The Russia-based social media website was chosen for the mathematical model because pro-ISIS pages don’t stand a chance on Facebook, which deletes them immediately.

With roughly 350 million users worldwide, VK allows multiple languages, which makes it ideal for ISIS to spread its propaganda among the Russian-speaking population.

The team searched for pro-ISIS posts from mid-2014 to August 2015, scouring through posts in multiple languages that include mentions of activities related to the militant group. Based on what they found, they eventually came up with an equation that unmasked the online habits of Islamic State sympathizers.

According to the paper featured in the journal Science, the groups that are pro-ISIS exhibit predictable behaviors before the attacks. An act of violence is often preceded by a sudden spike in the number of ISIS-supporting aggregates.

Even though they are occasionally deleted by online moderators, pro-ISIS groups manage to survive and sprout in new locations or on new servers. The computer algorithm developed by the University of Miami researchers showed that shutting down small groups can help disable the spread of the ISIS propaganda.
Image Source: Washington Times

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: ISIS terror group, online ISIS propaganda, terror acts, terrorist attacks

Two Gun-related Emoji Won’t Roll Out with Unicode 9.0

June 18, 2016 By Deborah Campbell Leave a Comment

alt = new Unicode emoji

The next emoji update is due soon – but two characters that were originally planned to roll out will be missing. According to the organization overseeing emoji, the “late stage” change in the number of new emoji may have had an unlikely source: Apple.

It seems that the tech giant used its influence with Unicode Consortium to prevent two new characters representing rifles from being on the roster of the upcoming Unicode 9.0 update.

BuzzFeed reports 74 emoji were slated to be introduced later this month, but two of them – a rifle and a “modern pentathlon” – were taken off the list. If you’re wondering why the symbols were even developed in the first place, it has to do with the upcoming Olympic Games.

This year, shotgun, rifle, and pistol shooting are all Olympic events, and pistol shooting will be included in the modern pentathlon. According to people familiar with the matter, Apple was the one to ask the removal of the two characters from the Unicode 9.0 update.

The request was made during a Unicode Consortium meeting in May, when Microsoft, who’s also a voting member, reportedly backed up Apple. However, it seems the decision to pull the two emoji was not a controversial one, anyway.

When Unicode confirmed the removal of the modern pentathlon rifle emoji last month, the organization did not elaborate why they were pulled out at such a “late stage” of the 9.0 update.

“These will not be recommended for emoji presentation by vendors when the final version of Unicode 9 is released next month,” is what the organization wrote in a blog post at the time.

Even though Apple has yet to comment on its objection to the emoji, there are some speculations; as BuzzFeed points out, the two emoji were already under harsh criticism from British gun control activists.

The Unicode Consortium is an independent organization, so technically, it could do whatever it wanted to. But because member companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Google are the ones implementing the characters on their platforms, they get to vote to approve the new ones.

Unicode’s 9.0 update will roll out June 21, and it will add 72 new emoji, such as bacon, avocado and selfie symbols.
Image Source: Local TV Witi

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: new emoji, Olympic events, rifle emoji, shotgun emoji, Unicode 9.0 update, Unicode Consortium

Bramble Cray Melomys Are Now Officially Extinct

June 17, 2016 By Nancy Young Leave a Comment

drawing of Bramble Cray melomys

Climate change is starting to make more and more victims. First, the coral reefs from Australia started to bleach, now, an entire species of mammals has disappeared forever. The Bramble Cray melomys are now officially extinct due to climate change caused by humans.

The Bramble Cray melomys were a species of small, brown rodents that lived on an island off the Papua New Guinea’s coast. Due to the fact that they were fragile beings dependent of their habit, the changing climate has dwindled their numbers up to the point of extinction.

Researchers believe that the Bramble Cray melomys were affected by flooding and ever-rising sea levels. According to a Queensland University biologist, Luke Leung, this is the first time that scientist documented a climate change-caused extinction.

Back in the 1970s, Bramble Cray melomys were flourishing on the tiny island. A census from that time showed a couple of hundred of individuals running around the small landmass. In 2011, after the island’s shape significantly changed due to climate change, another census found only 12 melomys.

The main problem is the fact that the island was consistently flooded by storm surges, leaving little to no space for the non-amphibious animals that populated it.

In 2014, Leung and his colleagues came back to look for the Bramble Cray melomys, but all they found was a smaller, partially flooded island with scarce vegetation. There were no signs of the melomys anywhere.

The rodents depended on the vegetation for shelter and food. When the local flora started dying out due to persistent floods, the mammals, who were probably not good swimmers of their own, starting dying out too.

Resit Akҫakaya, a Stony Brook University biologist, believes that the Bramble Cray melomys are not the only species to go extinct due to climate change. According to him, other mammals might have disappeared due to climate change without leaving a trace because there are still plenty of undiscovered species on the planet.

The current rate of extinction is suggesting that we are heading towards a mass extinction event. Usually, these occur at the end of an age and are followed by a boom of other species. Unfortunately, geologically speaking we are far from the end of our current age, but the changes that humans caused to the planet’s climate are causing all sorts of inexplicable phenomenon.

Image source: Wikipedia

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: bramble cray melomys, Bramble Cray Melomys Are Now Officially Extinct

Need an Exciting New Job? Why Not Mars?

June 16, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

Are you bored of your current position and in need of an exciting new job? Are you a scientist, teacher, engineer, explorer, surveyor, farmer, technician, or geologist? If the answer to both questions is yes, then you should take a look at the latest opening from NASA. If the answer is no, then you should take a look at the most recent job openings at NASA. Either way, everybody will be given a chance to help build a Martian colony.

Astronaut descending into  Martian crater

Some lucky few will get to be the first to explore the Red Planet.

With the European Space Agency, SpaceX, and a handful of other private contractors breathing down its neck, NASA is doing everything in its power to get to the Red Planet before anybody else.

To this extent, they have been investing a lot of resources not only in the development of a spacecraft that will take the first men to the planet but also in the study of the planet’s conditions.

Lately, researchers have been looking into dust storm patterns, atmosphere pressure, temperature variation, and other important factors that could affect the stay of the colonists.

This means that the Space Agency is serious about the 2023 manned mission. NASA is so sure that they will be ready by then, that they started advertising opened positions for colonists.

The new campaign is directed towards any person who wants an exciting new job on an alien planet. The colonists will be the builders of a new civilization, so the task is not easy, but it’s also one of the best jobs in the solar system.

astronaut farming on Mars

Others will get to see if Matt Damon’s potato experiment is accurate.

According to the posters that the Space Agency released, explorers, night shift workers, surveyors, farmers, teachers, technicians, and assemblers are needed for the future Red Planet colony.

The design of the new posters is very retro. The colors remin viewers of the glory days of advertising back in 1950 when the Marlboro Man was considered the peak of marketing techniques.

One of the posters is particularly nostalgia-based. Remember the famous Uncle Sam poster? The one that became a popular culture reference? NASA reinterpreted it and replaced the bearded man in a stars and stripes suit with an astronaut pointing at the viewer telling him or her that “We Need You.”

NASA astronaut

The NASA astronaut is the new Uncle Sam.

The marketing for the job openings is exquisite, but applicants must remember that the exciting new job comes with harsh conditions, a rare atmosphere, and an overall dusty situation.

Images Courtesy of: NASA

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: exciting new job, Mars mission, NASA is hiring, NASA job openings, want an exciting new job at NASA?

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