Monday, 28 March 2016

How Instagram's changes affect what you see


Instagram is rolling out new changes to its Photo feed that will affect what you see. Photographer Jasmine Stars explains. Sean Fujiwara
LOS ANGELES - Instagram, the no. 1 photo sharing app, is about to change the way it displays photos.
The Facebook owned firm is rolling out a new system that ditches the old way--chronological listings for an algorithm.  

In other words, now Instagram will show you photos it thinks you want to see.
Photographer Jasmine Star just wrote a terrific blog post about this, and explains in the accompanying video and audio what the changes mean to users and small business owners. The new system is being roller out to Instagram's 400 million monthly visitors.

Wednesday, 16 March 2016

'Beware the Ides of March' -- What does that mean?

'Beware the Ides of March' -- What does that mean?

According to historians, sixty senators planned and participated in the conspiracy to kill Caesar in 44 B.C.
Death marked a turning point in Roman history
Caesar was popular with the lower class people of Rome, who saw his death as an unwelcome decision made by the aristocratic class. With Caesar no longer leading, potential leaders waged war to fill the power vacuum.
The civil wars eventually culminated in the end of the Roman Republic and beginning of the Roman Empire.
'Beware the Ides of March' made famous by Shakespeare
In case you really did forget your high school English class, it's worth noting the phrase “Beware the Ides of March” was immortalized by William Shakespeare in his tragic masterpiece “Julius Caesar.”
In the play, a soothsayer warns Caesar to be careful on March 15, although the ruler ignores the mystic with tragic consequences.
Famous line based on historical events
It may come as a surprise to know the well-known phrase was actually inspired by real events.
According to Greek historian Plutarch, a seer really did warn Caesar that he would be at the very least injured by the Ides of March.
Caesar did not heed the warning.
On the day of his death, he saw the oracle and joked that he had made it to the Ides of March, to which the seer responded the day had not yet ended.
So why is it called the "Ides of March?"
The Romans kept track of days on its calendar by dividing each month up into three separate points marking the beginning, middle and end of the month. You may have guessed it but the Ides fall in the middle of the month, on the 15th of March, May, July and October and the 13th for the rest of the year.
The Ides were sacred and marked a monthly sacrifice to the Roman god Jupiter. Various other religious observances also took place on the Ides of March.
By Cox Media Group National Content Desk
Today marks the Ides of March, which may vaguely remind you of a high school English class. Here are some things to know about the 15th day of the month.
>> Read more trending stories
Day marks the assassination of Julius Caesar
Most famously on this date, some 2,060 years ago, Roman dictator Julius Caesar died in an assassination by senators at the Curia of Pompey.
Tensions had been simmering between senators and Caesar before his death, fueled by Caesar's continued consolidation of power. However, Caesar considered the senators his allies. Just a few years before his death, Caesar was named “dictator in perpetuity,” a move that further strained relations.
Other famous events on this day
Today isn't the anniversary of Caesar's death. Here are a few other famous events that have happened today in history:
  • 1972: Forty-four years ago (yes, that number is right) Francis Ford Coppola's three-hour crime epic "The Godfather" first played in theaters. Before "Jaws" came along in 1976, the film was the highest-grossing film ever made. It went on to win three Academy Awards, including one for Best Picture.
  • 1917: Czar Nicholas II was forced by the revolting Russian people to abdicate the throne after ruling the country for more than 20 years. The February Revolution -- so named because Russia used the Julian calendar at the time -- broke out just four days before the czar abdicated his throne.
  • 1767: Our seventh president, Andrew Jackson, was born on this day somewhere between the Carolinas near the end of the colonial era. His exact place of birth is disputed.

Saturday, 5 March 2016

Review: Zootopia Gives the Old Teachable Moment a Jolt of Life


There are enough under-the-radar subtleties, rendered with a refreshing lack of smart-aleckiness, to make 'Zootopia' feel current and fresh

The world of children’s lit is already so jam-packed with talking foxes and bunny rabbits providing teachable moments that it’s unimaginable we’d need any more of them. How many animal-kingdom civics lessons can a kid—let alone an adult—process before tuning out for good? The weird surprise of Disney’s Zootopia is that it gives the canon a jolt of life. Even if the movie’s overarching message to humans is an obvious one—people of all races need to learn to live in harmony—there are enough under-the-radar subtleties, rendered with a refreshing lack of smart-aleckiness, to make Zootopia feel current and fresh. It’s a modest, unassuming entertainment that’s motored by a sly sensibility.Ginnifer Goodwin provides the voice of Judy Hopps, a relentlessly perky little rabbit whose ambition is to be a cop. To those unschooled in theZootopia universe, that’s not as attainable a goal as it may sound: The story is set in an animal world where predator and prey have learned to live peacefully. No one eats, or even chases or bothers, anyone else. Even though you’d think this would be a world where anything is possible, and where anyone can be anything, there has never before been a policebunny. Still, Judy works hard and lands a spot on the police force—but Police Chief Bogo, a majestic water buffalo with a rolling, operatic voice (it belongs to Idris Elba), doubts her capabilities and assigns her to meter-maid duty. Though Judy is understandably miffed, she becomes the best meterbunny she can be. While hopping about issuing tickets, she makes the acquaintance of Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman), a fox in a jaunty short-sleeve shirt that shows off his pointy little reynard elbows.Nick is a hustler, a con-fox, and he takes great pleasure in duping the rookie Judy. But she’s bright enough to turn the tables on him, eventually forcing him to help her find a missing otter gentleman whose wife, Mrs. Otterton (Octavia Spencer), is frantic with worry. It turns out that monsieur otter’s disappearance is connected with a nefarious city-government plot to instill fear in Zootopia’s citizens by making predators aggressive and dangerous once again.
In more straightforward lingo: Zootopia is actually a movie about crooked, bigoted authority figures who recognize that the best way to stay in power is to make sure “white” animals live in constant fear of “black” ones. And if that’s not a sock-in-the jaw metaphor for contemporary life in most major American cities, what is? For a cute story about talking animals, Zootopia—directed by Byron Howard, Rich Moore and Jared Bush—is surprisingly pointed. Better yet, it doesn’t get mired in its lesson, moving along stealthily on little forest-critter feet. It’s also dotted with delightful touches: At the Zootopia Department of Motor Vehicles, the wait time is forever because the place is staffed by actual sloths—they stamp documents and snap photos with the alacrity of 90-year-old tai chi practitioners. Watching them can make you a little crazy, at least until you start laughing. And if that’s not gritty realism in cartoon form, I don’t know what is.