Hotel porn may be a dying stream of revenue for hotel operators, but it's still a headline maker.
Two professors from different faiths — a Muslim and a Christian — issued a letter to the hotel industry last week and asked hotels to stop selling pay-per-view porn.
It's not clear what exactly prompted the letter, given a growing number of travelers carry their own porn (and other content) with them instead of paying big bucks for a pay-per-view title that they can't expense to their company. Furthermore, in January 2011, Hotel Check-In broke news that is phasing out pay-per-view porn offerings as it shifts to newer entertainment platforms and porn-title revenues dry up.
Some excerpts from the letter, written by by Robert George and Shaykh Hamza Yusuf:
"We write to ask you to stop offering pornographic movies in your company's hotels. We make no proposal here to limit your legal freedom, nor do we threaten protests, boycotts, or anything of the sort. We simply ask you to do what is right as a matter of conscience.
We urge you to do away with pornography in your hotels because it is morally wrong to seek to profit from the suffering, degradation, or corruption of others. You are placing temptation in their path – temptation for the sake of profit. That is unjust. Moreover, the fact that something is chosen freely does not make it right."
AVN.com, which covers the adult entertainment industry, ran a piece about the letter that called the letter's arguments "horse#$@&."
"Their only concern is to control American citizens' sexuality in whatever form that may take, whether it's nudists bathing on a public beach or keeping people from hearing "dirty words" on radio..."
Hotel Check-In noticed this morning that the story's gradually spreading across the blogosphere.
This morning, London's Daily Mail picked it up and last night, CNN's religion blog ran it under the headline "Strange bedfellows unite for letter against porn."
Impact of letter?
CNN quotes Craig Gross, a pastor and the founder of XXXchurch.com, as saying the letter's an empty gesture with no power behind it.
"It has got to be one of the dumbest letters I have ever read," Gross told CNN. "It is like asking the Internet to stop selling porn. It sounds good and all, but it isn't going to happen."
Do you expect hotels to stop selling pay-per-view porn?
Two professors from different faiths — a Muslim and a Christian — issued a letter to the hotel industry last week and asked hotels to stop selling pay-per-view porn.
It's not clear what exactly prompted the letter, given a growing number of travelers carry their own porn (and other content) with them instead of paying big bucks for a pay-per-view title that they can't expense to their company. Furthermore, in January 2011, Hotel Check-In broke news that is phasing out pay-per-view porn offerings as it shifts to newer entertainment platforms and porn-title revenues dry up.
Some excerpts from the letter, written by by Robert George and Shaykh Hamza Yusuf:
"We write to ask you to stop offering pornographic movies in your company's hotels. We make no proposal here to limit your legal freedom, nor do we threaten protests, boycotts, or anything of the sort. We simply ask you to do what is right as a matter of conscience.
We urge you to do away with pornography in your hotels because it is morally wrong to seek to profit from the suffering, degradation, or corruption of others. You are placing temptation in their path – temptation for the sake of profit. That is unjust. Moreover, the fact that something is chosen freely does not make it right."
AVN.com, which covers the adult entertainment industry, ran a piece about the letter that called the letter's arguments "horse#$@&."
"Their only concern is to control American citizens' sexuality in whatever form that may take, whether it's nudists bathing on a public beach or keeping people from hearing "dirty words" on radio..."
Hotel Check-In noticed this morning that the story's gradually spreading across the blogosphere.
This morning, London's Daily Mail picked it up and last night, CNN's religion blog ran it under the headline "Strange bedfellows unite for letter against porn."
Impact of letter?
CNN quotes Craig Gross, a pastor and the founder of XXXchurch.com, as saying the letter's an empty gesture with no power behind it.
"It has got to be one of the dumbest letters I have ever read," Gross told CNN. "It is like asking the Internet to stop selling porn. It sounds good and all, but it isn't going to happen."
Do you expect hotels to stop selling pay-per-view porn?
One Million User IDs Stolen In Android Forums Hack
The Android forums at website Phandroid have been hacked this week, it's being reported. More than a million user IDs have been compromised, which includes information such as email addresses and passwords and other information--although the passwords were hashed, which should be some small degree of protection. The site believes that this was an attempt at garnering email addresses mainly, so that they can later be spammed or targeted in phishing hacks. It's advising all users to reset their passwords, and as in any hack where your email address may have been compromised it makes sense to be extra-vigilent for exploits.
Meanwhile the hack of Yahoo Voices, which earlier this week compromised details of some 400,000 users, seems to extend beyond Yahoo and the list of accounts the hackers released included Gmail, AOL, Hotmail and other login credentials.
Separately, graphics hardware maker Nvidia has also revealed that its user forums have also been recently hacked and that an extensive list of user information was acquired by hackers--again including email addresses and hashed password details.
A Twitter App For Nokia Series 40 Feature Phones
Twitter's been around as an app for smartphones for a while now, but now seems to be making a beeline for cheaper, smaller, feature phones. Nokia and Twitter have announced a partnership which would bring Twitter to the Nokia Store, making it accessible to the Nokia Series 40 family. Nokia's feature phones continue to be popular in certain markets in Asia and Africa. Twitter's other big feature phone partnership came earlier this week, when itannounced a collaboration with Taiwanese chip maker MediaTek to integrate Twitter even deeper into feature phones of all flavors.
London Police To Trial Crowdsourced Crowd Tracker During Olympics
The City of London police plan to use help from the smartphones of thousands to make the Olympics a safer, calmer experience for everyone. The police are testing an app that could help Olympics visitors navigate crowds in the country's capital city, and help authorities monitor crowds and respond speedily to an emergency. The app was built at the London School of Economics, with partners at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence and ETH Zurich. It contains emergency information like the location of tube stations, police stations, and a stream from the police Twitter feed. The crowd-tracking information on the app is gatherered by good old crowdsourcing means. When someone downloads the app and agrees to activate location tracking, their infromation is fed anonymously into a central server, showing crowd movements as heat maps. An iOS version has been submitted to the app store, the Telegraph reports, and an Android app is on the way.
Aereo Backer Barry Diller Sees The Service Expanding Country-wide
Barry Diller, jubilant after a New York judge ruled that the Aereo service he is funding is legal, has told Bloomberg that we can expect a countrywide expansion of the service in the coming months. Earlier this year, when Fast Company caught up with the CEO of Aereo Chet Kanojia, he was a little more circumspect about the company’s plans to grow, saying that they were “a bit secret,” but “mostly because they didn’t exist.” Admittedly, at the time, Aereo was being sued by a battalion of big-name media giants for their business model: redistributing the content that they were making, transmitting TV to iPads and iPhones in HD, for a flat monthly free. But then, we suppose, a little courtroom victory can change things.
The Android forums at website Phandroid have been hacked this week, it's being reported. More than a million user IDs have been compromised, which includes information such as email addresses and passwords and other information--although the passwords were hashed, which should be some small degree of protection. The site believes that this was an attempt at garnering email addresses mainly, so that they can later be spammed or targeted in phishing hacks. It's advising all users to reset their passwords, and as in any hack where your email address may have been compromised it makes sense to be extra-vigilent for exploits.
Meanwhile the hack of Yahoo Voices, which earlier this week compromised details of some 400,000 users, seems to extend beyond Yahoo and the list of accounts the hackers released included Gmail, AOL, Hotmail and other login credentials.
Separately, graphics hardware maker Nvidia has also revealed that its user forums have also been recently hacked and that an extensive list of user information was acquired by hackers--again including email addresses and hashed password details.
A Twitter App For Nokia Series 40 Feature Phones
Twitter's been around as an app for smartphones for a while now, but now seems to be making a beeline for cheaper, smaller, feature phones. Nokia and Twitter have announced a partnership which would bring Twitter to the Nokia Store, making it accessible to the Nokia Series 40 family. Nokia's feature phones continue to be popular in certain markets in Asia and Africa. Twitter's other big feature phone partnership came earlier this week, when itannounced a collaboration with Taiwanese chip maker MediaTek to integrate Twitter even deeper into feature phones of all flavors.
London Police To Trial Crowdsourced Crowd Tracker During Olympics
The City of London police plan to use help from the smartphones of thousands to make the Olympics a safer, calmer experience for everyone. The police are testing an app that could help Olympics visitors navigate crowds in the country's capital city, and help authorities monitor crowds and respond speedily to an emergency. The app was built at the London School of Economics, with partners at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence and ETH Zurich. It contains emergency information like the location of tube stations, police stations, and a stream from the police Twitter feed. The crowd-tracking information on the app is gatherered by good old crowdsourcing means. When someone downloads the app and agrees to activate location tracking, their infromation is fed anonymously into a central server, showing crowd movements as heat maps. An iOS version has been submitted to the app store, the Telegraph reports, and an Android app is on the way.
Aereo Backer Barry Diller Sees The Service Expanding Country-wide
Barry Diller, jubilant after a New York judge ruled that the Aereo service he is funding is legal, has told Bloomberg that we can expect a countrywide expansion of the service in the coming months. Earlier this year, when Fast Company caught up with the CEO of Aereo Chet Kanojia, he was a little more circumspect about the company’s plans to grow, saying that they were “a bit secret,” but “mostly because they didn’t exist.” Admittedly, at the time, Aereo was being sued by a battalion of big-name media giants for their business model: redistributing the content that they were making, transmitting TV to iPads and iPhones in HD, for a flat monthly free. But then, we suppose, a little courtroom victory can change things.
• AstraZeneca PLC (AZN)'s R&D Shake-up is Already Bearing Fruit More...
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A man in western Russia's Urals region tried to rob a bank with a toy pistol in a bid to save his money-losing business, the interior ministry said. The perpetrator entered a bank in Izhevsk city in Udmurtia republic, and forced everyone to lie on the floor by wielding what looked like a pistol, police said.
However, after a woman employee shrieked, the man made off without any money.
The man, who was detained later in the day, said he decided to rob the bank out of despair after running up a huge debt.
The bank had previously issued him a loan.
( IANS )
However, after a woman employee shrieked, the man made off without any money.
The man, who was detained later in the day, said he decided to rob the bank out of despair after running up a huge debt.
The bank had previously issued him a loan.
( IANS )
Shortly before the Harry Potter saga came to an end on movie screens a year ago, we were teased with more adventures about the young wizard through a website called Pottermore.
One million fans who were able to solve riddles and find a Magical Quill have had a chance to try out Pottermore for nearly a year. The rest of us - the magic-free Muggles - had to wait until it opened to the general public this spring. Even then, much of the attention was on the fact that Pottermore was making e-book versions of the Harry Potter novels available for the first time.
As the anniversary of the final movie approached - it opened in theatres a year ago this weekend - I gave the rest of Pottermore a try.
The free site takes you through the novels chapter by chapter as if you're playing a game. Starting with Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, you're given imagery and summaries of key plots and characters. You must look for picture frames and other items along the way to access certain content and move to the next chapter. Miss one, and you might find yourself unable to brew a potion later on.
As Harry is ready to attend Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, you even get your own wand, customised to your height, eye color and personality traits such as your biggest fear and source of pride.
Later, the Sorting Hat will place you in one of four houses at Hogwarts based on how you answer questions designed by author JK Rowling. You and others in your assigned house compete with others in periodic House Cup tournaments. The Slytherin house won the inaugural round and got early access to new content as its prize.
Along the way, Pottermore offers new tales from Rowling and insights into her thinking behind characters and plotlines. You also get excerpts from the books and encyclopedia-like entries on people, places and things. I was reminded that a put-outer is a device used to magically turn off street lights on Privet Drive.
Pottermore delivered for the most part, but what's available is limited.
Clips from the Harry Potter movies would have been nice, but Pottermore chose to focus on the reading experience. Even then, the site so far has only the first book and the first four chapters of the second one, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. The latter arrived just this week.
I've read all seven books and watched all eight movies, many of them multiple times. I was at a Borders book store at midnight when the final book came out in 2007 and paid several dollars extra to watch the final movie in 3D on a giant Imax screen last year. It's not a surprise that I found lots to enjoy in Pottermore.
Other adults should find much to like, too, but it's clear that kids are a big part of the target audience.
During the wand selection, for instance, you're asked whether you consider yourself short, average or tall - "for your age."
Many sites exclude kids under 13 because of additional consent requirements under a 1998 US law. Laudably, Pottermore doesn't do that. Instead, the kid must provide a parent's email address, and an email is sent to obtain permission. Nothing prevents a child from lying about his or her age or email address, though.
Pottermore does a good job of keeping child safety and privacy in mind. You're asked for your full name if you're at least 13, but it's not displayed - not even if you wanted it to be. Kids and adults alike must choose a username from a handful presented. You can't write your own, lest you include your real name or attributes such as your school or city.
You can add friends to your Pottermore network, the way you have a circle of friends on Facebook, but you must already know that friend's username. You can't look for friends by entering their email addresses, the way you can elsewhere. That hinders Pottermore's community experience, as I have no way of knowing whether any of my friends are already on Pottermore. But it also helps keep kids and strangers apart.
I do like that e-commerce is secondary at Pottermore. I had expected the site to continually blast me with offers for books, DVDs, mugs and posters. The shop only has e-books and audio books for starters, and you have to look hard for the link at the bottom. You can't even buy more coins to spend on virtual items; you have to find them as you move through the site.
Another nice touch: Pottermore is available in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish from the start. Japanese, Korean and others are coming soon. You can choose the American or British flavour of English. The name of the first book even changes to reflect the fact that the Sorcerer's Stone is known as the Philosopher's Stone in Britain.
As I journeyed through the early chapters, I found many of the tasks overly simplistic. Much of my time was spent moving a cursor around the page looking for objects to collect, such as an alarm clock and seaweed.
Part of the challenge is Pottermore's desire to cater to a diverse audience. Kids might find tasks too difficult, while adults might find them too simple. The site also tries to serve both first-time readers and those reading them for the umpteenth time. In order to not ruin tales that come later, Pottermore has to hold back on some of the extra content early on.
Pottermore started getting interesting in Chapter 5, when Harry visits Diagon Alley to buy books and supplies for his first year at Hogwarts.
But even then, Pottermore holds your hand. You're given 500 galleons to spend, but you must buy the required items first, before you can splurge on that unicorn horn (21 galleons, three times the price of a wand). How about teaching kids some tough lessons about budgeting by letting them make some mistakes?
That said, I had trouble finding my way through Gringotts Wizarding Bank, the financial centre run by goblins. I was overthinking the challenges and went back several chapters looking for a key to unlock a bank vault. There weren't any goblins around to point out that the large golden key hanging right above the keyhole was all I needed.
What I liked most about Pottermore were the writings from Rowling. I learned how Rowling named the street where Harry grew up (Privet Drive was derived from a suburban plant called privet bush, meant to evoke associations with suburbia and enclosure). I also learned that Rowling had to resist efforts by her publisher to change measurements to the metric system. And I read the fictional account of how Harry's mean aunt and uncle met and started dating.
I longed for more backstories.
I'm still on Chapter 6 of the first book as I write this, and I'm getting more intrigued as I move further along. There are some stores in Diagon Alley I can't enter yet and hints of opportunities to earn house points by brewing potions and dueling with other wizards.
Pottermore's CEO, Charlie Redmayne, told me that I can eventually expect different experiences on mobile devices and some targeted to certain audiences, so that long-time fans like me won't have to wait for first-time readers to catch up.
The site, which has had 35 million unique visitors worldwide so far, also wants to improve its community features. Redmayne wouldn't say how, though.
Ultimately, Pottermore wants people to keep coming back for new content and new social interactions, even after going through the basic story lines once or twice.
I felt a void after watching Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 last year. Even with the site's limitations, I'm glad Pottermore is around to offer more of Potter.
( Associated Press )
A 19-year-old Pakistani soldier, who had crossed over to this side of the Line of Control (LoC) in Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir, possibly on the lookout for his lady love, was on Friday repatriated by the Indian Army as a goodwill gesture.
There were varying reports on Arif Ali's intrusion. One said that he had fallen in love with a girl in Kerni village, which is located on the Zero line opposite to Pakistani posts.
According to the account, Ali took leave on the pretext of going home but crossed over, suspecting that the girl's parents might get her married to a relative in Poonch.
Another version was that he had crossed the LoC to seek asylum in India after being fed up with the attitude of his Pakistani seniors.
"We have repatriated the jawan back to Pakistani authorities as a goodwill gesture today," Brigade Commander Poonch Brigade, Brig M K Magoo, told reporters in Poonch.
The custody of Ali was transferred to the Pakistan Army at a flag meeting along the LoC in Chakan-Da-Bagh Crossing Point in Poonch district at 1010 hours.
The meeting was attended by Major Hamid Gul of 653 Mujahid Regiment from Pakistan and Major A Manhas on this side.
During questioning, the soldier claimed that he was mentally disturbed when he crossed over to the Indian side, Magoo said.
Ali, who is part of Pakistani Army's 25 Frontier Force (FF), and is posted at Saifullah along the LoC in PoK, was arrested in Kerni forward area in Poonch district by Indian troops on Thursday. He is a resident of Quetta.
Police sources said over Rs 13,000 in Pakistani currency along with two SIM cards, a leave certificate issued by the Frontier Force and a photo identity were found on him.
In October 2011, as a friendly gesture, Pakistan had allowed an Indian helicopter that had strayed across from Kargil to return to India within four hours.
There were varying reports on Arif Ali's intrusion. One said that he had fallen in love with a girl in Kerni village, which is located on the Zero line opposite to Pakistani posts.
According to the account, Ali took leave on the pretext of going home but crossed over, suspecting that the girl's parents might get her married to a relative in Poonch.
Another version was that he had crossed the LoC to seek asylum in India after being fed up with the attitude of his Pakistani seniors.
"We have repatriated the jawan back to Pakistani authorities as a goodwill gesture today," Brigade Commander Poonch Brigade, Brig M K Magoo, told reporters in Poonch.
The custody of Ali was transferred to the Pakistan Army at a flag meeting along the LoC in Chakan-Da-Bagh Crossing Point in Poonch district at 1010 hours.
The meeting was attended by Major Hamid Gul of 653 Mujahid Regiment from Pakistan and Major A Manhas on this side.
During questioning, the soldier claimed that he was mentally disturbed when he crossed over to the Indian side, Magoo said.
Ali, who is part of Pakistani Army's 25 Frontier Force (FF), and is posted at Saifullah along the LoC in PoK, was arrested in Kerni forward area in Poonch district by Indian troops on Thursday. He is a resident of Quetta.
Police sources said over Rs 13,000 in Pakistani currency along with two SIM cards, a leave certificate issued by the Frontier Force and a photo identity were found on him.
In October 2011, as a friendly gesture, Pakistan had allowed an Indian helicopter that had strayed across from Kargil to return to India within four hours.
Peregrine Pharmaceuticals ( NASDAQ: PPHM ) stock moving higher as traders accumulated stock to play its earnings which will be announced on July 16 2012 Monday after markets close. Traders are betting on some positive developments in the company as well as its continuing clinical trials of Bavituximab. Stock rallied more than 45 % in last three trading session and trading above $1 on friday.Traders might approach the trade with caution as stock has continued its upmove since last 3 trading session. Still small buy might be a good strategy to trade Peregrine Pharmaceuticals stock.
About Peregrine Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Peregrine Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Peregrine) is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company that develops and manufactures monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of cancer and viral infections. As of April 30, 2011, the Company had three Phase II clinical programs, including two oncology programs, as well as a hepatitis C virus (HCV) program. Peregrine’s pipeline of investigational monoclonal antibodies is based on two technology platforms, including phosphatidylserine (PS)-targeting antibodies and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)/histone-targeting antibodies. Bavituximab is its PS-targeting antibody. Cotara is the Company’s DNA/histone-targeting antibody-based on its Tumor Necrosis Therapy (TNT) technology platform. Peregrine’s wholly owned biomanufacturing subsidiary is Avid Bioservices, Inc., which provides integrated cGMP commercial and clinical manufacturing services for Peregrine and third-party clients.
About Peregrine Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Peregrine Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Peregrine) is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company that develops and manufactures monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of cancer and viral infections. As of April 30, 2011, the Company had three Phase II clinical programs, including two oncology programs, as well as a hepatitis C virus (HCV) program. Peregrine’s pipeline of investigational monoclonal antibodies is based on two technology platforms, including phosphatidylserine (PS)-targeting antibodies and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)/histone-targeting antibodies. Bavituximab is its PS-targeting antibody. Cotara is the Company’s DNA/histone-targeting antibody-based on its Tumor Necrosis Therapy (TNT) technology platform. Peregrine’s wholly owned biomanufacturing subsidiary is Avid Bioservices, Inc., which provides integrated cGMP commercial and clinical manufacturing services for Peregrine and third-party clients.
Australia's veteran paceman Brett Lee has announced his retirement from all forms of international cricket.
"It's official, I have retired from international cricket! Thanks for all your love and support. It's been an amazing 13 years," Lee said in his twitter account on Friday.
‘‘It has been a dream career, I guess, 13 years at the top. I couldn’t ask for much more,’’ Lee said to Channel Nine news earlier in the day.
"Thirteen years, Friday the 13th, it's appropriate for me to go," Lee said. ‘‘I woke up this morning after not much sleep and it’s the right time to go. It just came to me this morning and I just felt it’s the right time to leave the game. It’s been in the back of my mind for a few months," he added.
Though the Cricket Australia (CA) was keen for the 35-year-old speedster to continue until the upcoming World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka, Lee decided to leave the game he was not physically and mentally fit to take the challenge.
"I thought I would go over there and try and play the Twenty20 World Cup [in Sri Lanka in September], but [being] mentally and physically challenged, it would just not be worth it," Lee said. "In a team environment you have to have 100 per cent commitment, mentally and physically. And looking at the next few months I just didn't have that desire any more. It wouldn't be fair on me or the team. You get to a point in life when enough's enough."
Lee, however, will continue to play in the Big Bash League and Indian Premier League.
The 35-year-old paceman, who retired from Test cricket in February 2010 to prolong his limited-overs cricket, injured his calf muscle in the recently concluded one-day international series against England and returned home early, along with allrounder Shane Watson - who suffered the same injury.
Lee was not awarded a central contract in the latest round of agreements by the CA and he declined to continue his stint with New South Wales.
Lee, who had side strains, stress fractures and ankle problems throughout his career, took 310 wickets in 76 Tests and clinched 380 wickets from 221 ODIs. He also represented Kings XI Punjab and is now part of Kolkata Knight Riders’ squad in the IPL.
"It's official, I have retired from international cricket! Thanks for all your love and support. It's been an amazing 13 years," Lee said in his twitter account on Friday.
‘‘It has been a dream career, I guess, 13 years at the top. I couldn’t ask for much more,’’ Lee said to Channel Nine news earlier in the day.
"Thirteen years, Friday the 13th, it's appropriate for me to go," Lee said. ‘‘I woke up this morning after not much sleep and it’s the right time to go. It just came to me this morning and I just felt it’s the right time to leave the game. It’s been in the back of my mind for a few months," he added.
Though the Cricket Australia (CA) was keen for the 35-year-old speedster to continue until the upcoming World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka, Lee decided to leave the game he was not physically and mentally fit to take the challenge.
"I thought I would go over there and try and play the Twenty20 World Cup [in Sri Lanka in September], but [being] mentally and physically challenged, it would just not be worth it," Lee said. "In a team environment you have to have 100 per cent commitment, mentally and physically. And looking at the next few months I just didn't have that desire any more. It wouldn't be fair on me or the team. You get to a point in life when enough's enough."
Lee, however, will continue to play in the Big Bash League and Indian Premier League.
The 35-year-old paceman, who retired from Test cricket in February 2010 to prolong his limited-overs cricket, injured his calf muscle in the recently concluded one-day international series against England and returned home early, along with allrounder Shane Watson - who suffered the same injury.
Lee was not awarded a central contract in the latest round of agreements by the CA and he declined to continue his stint with New South Wales.
Lee, who had side strains, stress fractures and ankle problems throughout his career, took 310 wickets in 76 Tests and clinched 380 wickets from 221 ODIs. He also represented Kings XI Punjab and is now part of Kolkata Knight Riders’ squad in the IPL.
Who is Jilly Ballistic?
New York City's most well-known unknown street and subway artist.
New street art in New York shows the error messages that should pop up on posters for bad food and movies.
The best street art doesn’t just brighten an otherwise drab urban environment (though that’s always appreciated), it also comments on the environment itself. And new pieces popping up from New York street artist Jilly Ballistic are taking brilliant swipes at one of the more annoying aspects of city living: insipid advertising.
Using the universal trope of computer and phone alert windows, the pieces offer a bit of hard truth along with the hard sell of the advertisement. On a Budweiser ad, an iPhone alert window warns: "ERROR: Cannot refresh thirst. Please try another beverage." An ad for the new movie The Watch warns that it can’t open "due to lack of substance."
While Jilly Ballistic’s pieces might not actually convince anyone to not see, say, Step Up Revolution, due to critically low expectations (though the trailer seems to indicate that movie is, in fact, awesome), they at least provide a slight respite from the constant assault of marketing messages that bombard the captive audiences on the subway. Perhaps, after banning soda, Bloomberg can mandate warnings on all advertising.
Ag++, an Aluminum Case for iPhone 4 / 4S
The Ag++ Metal Case is an aluminum case for iPhone 4 and 4S. It is the result of innovative research where function merges with art and ergonomic blends with user-friendly. The Ag++ Metal Case was created with sustainable materials and is in full compliance with sustainable waste disposal practices.
Technical Details
Produced by Pineway Asia and distributed by Case Logic on the Asia-Pacific market, the Ag++ is shaped from a solid block of CNC aerospace aluminum which makes it ultra-shock absorbing and ultra-bend resistant. The Ag++ features minimalist design: simplified built-in accessories ensure light weight (only 16g) and small size while granting excellent mechanical, functional, and aesthetic qualities. It has a two-part casing and quick to install screw-lock system. Available in three different finishings: glossy, matte, and glossy/matte, in five different colors.
Ag++ Metal Case is produced by Pineway Asia Ltd. and distributed across Asia Pacific by Case Logic.
Pineway Asia Ltd. is the authorized sole distributor for Case Logic Mobile and Hardware in Asia Pacific.
Features
• Price: 49.99 USD
• Compatible: iPhone 4, iPhone 4S
•Company: Pineway Asia Ltd.
• Color: Silver, Gray, Silver-Gray, Silver-Orange, Silver-Blue
• Material: Aluminum
• Back Panel: Carbon Look (White and Black Color)
• Weight: 16g