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VIDEO: Fossil fuels 'must go by 2100' - IPCC
Egypt jails 8 men for 3 years after same-sex wedding video goes viral
Eight men accused of participating in a same-sex wedding on a Nile riverboat in Egypt were handed a three-year prison term Saturday for committing "debauchery," state run media said.
Ahram Online reported that the Prosecutor-General Hisham Barakat viewed the one-minute video, said to be filmed in April, and concluded it was of two men getting married.
Eight men who were aboard the riverboat were detained in September after the minute-long video went viral on YouTube and other sites, Ahram Online said. They were jailed for broadcasting footage that "violates public decency," CNN said.
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EPIC 2014: recalling a decade-old imagining of the media’s future
Ten years ago this month, I saw an eight-minute video that I’ve never forgotten. It seared into my brain an imaginary corporate merger between two tech giants that never actually took place: Googlezon.
While the details of "EPIC 2014" were certainly off, its larger message about technology and media still rings true: the algorithms have won.
Back in the fall of 2004, I was a student at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Amazingly, hardly anyone was studying so-called "new media" at the time. We were all subdivided into "traditional" groups: newspaper, magazine, television, and radio. I was unusual in that I had an interest in tech reporting, but took classes from both the print and radio sides. While this approach is anathema to the way that journalism is taught today, each discipline was segregated—I never hung out with those weird TV kids.
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VIDEO: Tensions mount in Burkina Faso
VIDEO: Virgin 'astronaut': 'I'm still excited'
VIDEO: 'Civilian must head Burkina transition'
VIDEO: Virgin crash probe 'may take a year'
VIDEO: Ukraine separatists to hold polls
VIDEO: Imran Khan faces decision over protests
VIDEO: Virgin crash investigation begins
SpaceShipTwo crash: Virgin Galactic to assess what went wrong
Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson said that he plans to move forward with his company's plans to commercialize space travel just one day after SpaceShipTwo crashed in the Mojave desert on a test flight.
“We’ve always known that the road to space is extremely difficult - and that every new transportation system has to deal with bad days early in their history,” Branson wrote in a blog post on Saturday.
“Space is hard—but worth it,” he added.
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Potential planet formation in a triple star system
When Luke Skywalker stared off somberly toward the twin setting suns of his native planet Tatooine in Star Wars, he left some viewers with somber questions of their own. These questions had nothing to do with joining the rebellion. Instead, they were things like, "Could a planet like Tatooine actually exist? Can planets form in a system with more than one star?"
The formation of planets around their stars is a complicated business, and that’s when there’s only one star in the picture. Add two more stars and it can create problems for anything within their gravitational influence.
New observations of the triple star system GG Tau A addresses this issue, confirming theoretical models of planet formation in the process. The new data demonstrates that the system is capable of forming planets and suggests that planets may already be forming in GG Tau A.
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VIDEO: Edible insects create a buzz in Holland
How to manage accidental complexity in software projects?
This Q&A is part of a weekly series of posts highlighting common questions encountered by technophiles and answered by users at Stack Exchange, a free, community-powered network of 100+ Q&A sites.
davidk01 asks:
When Murray Gell-Mann was asked how Richard Feynman managed to solve so many hard problems Gell-Mann responded that Feynman had an algorithm:
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VIDEO: Stadium packed for footballer funeral
VIDEO: Australia bushfire 'out of control'
VIDEO: Kobane living conditions 'dire'
An infinite multiverse: A bad idea or inescapable?
Earlier this week, a cultural center in Red Hook, Brooklyn, played host to the sort of debate that's usually reserved for smoke-filled dorm rooms: do we live in a multiverse, and, if so, is there another you out there?
But rather than mind-altered undergrads, the debate took place among three physicists, one of whom happens to have a Nobel Prize sitting back home.
The debate was held at Pioneer Works, a nonprofit center that places artists' studios next to a space for scientists-in-residence, mixing in a high-tech microscopy company and 3D printers for good measure. It's mostly known for the classes it offers, which range from crafts like lock picking and programming to learning how to play a theremin. But Pioneer Works is starting a series on controversial scientific topics, and the multiverse is the first one it chose to tackle.
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