Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Live video feeds from around the world.

Welcome to the EarthCam Network!
Through EarthCam's live webcams, you can experience the hustle and bustle of Times Square, be a party of the action in the heart of New Orleans, see the famous Abbey Road crossing in London and enjoy a beautiful sunset over the historic Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. Explore the world now with live views! Explore your planet LIVE NOW!

Tourism and Hospitality Industry click here to learn how to become an EarthCam Affiliate.
Featured Cams:
New York City
EarthCam and TGI Friday's bring you an HD, panoramic view of Times Square looking up, down, and across 7th Avenue and Broadway. See why Times Square is called the "Crossroads of the World!"
Liberty Island
EarthCam presents the most patriotic "selfie" on the internet! This exclusive camera gazes upon Lady Liberty from the torch, offering one-of-a-kind views of the crown, face, tablet and historic Fort Wood.
Paris
This streaming camera transports you from wherever you are to the Eiffel Tower enabling you to be there live. Paris seems to be on everyone's "get to" list but until then enjoy the live feel from this webcam.
Chicago
Enjoy many views of the Chicago skyline, Lake Shore Drive, the Museum Campus and the beautiful shore of Lake Michigan from the Field Museum of Natural History.
New York City
A great West Side New York City HD view overlooking the park up Gansevoort Street towards 20th Street. Images update every 15 minutes.
Las Vegas
Live from Viva Las Vegas Wedding Chapel, this is the camera that brings you right into each wedding ceremony. Watch the transformation from a traditional chapel to a themed Vegas style wedding location complete with theatrical costumes, sets and lighting.
New York City
EarthCam presents an impressive view of the dramatic and dynamic New York City skyline. From the Hyatt in Jersey City, this camera looks across the Hudson River and features stunning high-definition images of the new towers at the World Trade Center. Image update every 15 minutes.
New York City
Travel to Midtown Manhattan and enjoy HD views of the Chrysler Building, Empire State Building and 432 Park, a record-breaking construction project due for completion in 2015!
New York City
Join the EarthCam Community! EarthCam presents the best way to build your webcam site.
Worldwide
Discover the EarthCam network through the eyes of our fans! Explore the Hall of Fame to see the best images from our worldwide network of live streaming video and megapixel cameras. You can even share your favorites via Facebook and Twitter.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Nine Skills That Will Help Make Our Children Future-Ready


Nine Skills That Will Help Make Our Children Future-Ready

Leading futurist John B. Mahaffie looks at the personal and learning skills that will make our children successful in the future. 

Please bring to mind a child of today, a boy or girl who is eight, nine, or 10 years old. Cast their life forward 20 years. It will be the year 2034. That child will be about 30 years old, making his or her way in a job somewhere. But what sort of job? What do we know today about how to prepare that child for the future?

The chances are the jobs you know best today will be different or may not even exist in 2034. What may take their place is uncertain. We work as parents, community leaders, educators, and policymakers, every day, making decisions to prepare children for their distant future lives. But we are working, in part, blind.

We must discover all we can know about what that world will be like in the future, and try to guide our policies and educational efforts from that. Instead, too many of our efforts stand, at best, in today. We guess or assume things about the future with too little foresight. 

In this analysis, we look at: 1). What we know about our changing world and how it drives change in work, and 2). Personal and learning skills that will make our children successful in the future. This gives us not a design for new curricula, but a set of challenges to address as we build them.

What do we know with some clarity about the future?
Based on what is emerging and changing now, we can say that: 
·       Our lives and work lives will be swept by regular waves of change
·       More work will involve international connections and citizenship will gain a more global focus
·       More work will be multidisciplinary, involving new kinds of collaboration
·       Far more jobs will mean working intimately with digital machines and intelligent systems
·       More elements of work and life will use visual communications
·       The world will be battling sustainability issues in ways that will affect most workers
·       Citizenship responsibilities will only grow more complicated as societies confront new issues 

Nine skills children need for their future
Preparing for uncertainty raises the question up from the specific to the more general, from workplace skills we can define today to skills that prepare a child for an uncertain range of possible futures and for steady change. What are those things?

1. Love of Learning — With no certainty about the skills and knowledge we will need. A desire to learn will give an individual greater success. That comes from experiences as a child in which learning is challenging, interesting, rewarding, and fun, and sometimes includes what the child wants to learn.

2. Skill at learning — Learning to learn is a teachable skill and should be at the core of the school curriculum. This includes iterative efforts at instilling and advancing learning skills, and giving students the chance to reflect and learn about how they learn best.

3. Self-knowledge — Self-knowledge is thus a central skill. A critical part of it is humility, but another is self-confidence. The self-aware child will grow to be someone who can and wants to talk to all sorts of people. To listen well and to continue to learn.

4. People sense — Children may be naturally self-focused and thus in practice, selfish. There is a way out. We can work with them to understand the situations others are in, the points of view that other people have. The child who develops people sense will be a strong collaborator.

5. Communication — Communication includes spoken, written, and increasingly, visual communication, and will be fundamental to most kinds of work. This is strengthened by people sense, and in turn improves and strengthens skill at collaboration.

6. Worldliness — Not all education happens in school. Consider the advantages of the child who has been to the capital city and has seen what's there compared with the child who has never left the village. Or, to be fair, also the child who lives in the city and has never seen a farm or village.

7. Comfort with complexity — The world is not driven by simple cause and effect and big questions are not black or white. Our world is full of subtlety and complexity. Examining it and understanding it that way is essential for success in work and in life.

8. Goal setting — Successful people learn how to set goals and meet them. For the employer, this means they are productive. For the individual, this can mean personal success and advancement. 

9. Open minds — No success is possible if we don’t raise children to become adaptable, thoughtful, open-minded adults. Theirs will be a world of constant challenge and change, and being strong and prepared means being able to change.

Innovative programs around the world put a focus on at least some of these nine skills, often with curricula that emphasize experiential learning, collaboration, and a focus on the learner's own interests, needs, and motivation.  For example, many of the tenets of progressive education mesh with, or directly support, these critical skills and provide a philosophy and framework for addressing them even more.  International Baccalaureate programs include core concepts of holistic learning, intercultural awareness, and communication. In the US, the Common Core drives a focus on readying children, even at the elementary level to understand how they learn. 

But while this innovation continues, a "back to basics" push may overweigh interest in this kind of skills building. And that would mean a loss of the depth and strength we need to instill in young minds around the world.

What we can tell now about the long-term future indicates something clearly: literacy in old but also new forms and general education, are critical. But the pressures today for a focus on vocational education and on science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), could easily be overplayed, tipping the balance in our education systems too far from the core learning and learning to learn which will prepare students for the unknown. 

Let’s not allow deeper education to yield to the shorter-term needs of the workplace. Those jobs, which want to dictate curricula, right now may be gone and certainly will be changed within a few years. Specific job skill training is for the workplace. Education is for the schools.

Relax at Mount Fuji


















FIFA & Nicaragua






Fifa: Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini get eight-year bans

Fifa president Sepp Blatter and Uefa boss Michel Platini have been suspended for eight years from all football-related activities following an ethics investigation.
They were found guilty of breaches surrounding a £1.3m ($2m) "disloyal payment" made to Platini in 2011.
The Fifa ethics committee found Blatter and Platini had demonstrated an "abusive execution" of their positions.

Monday, December 21, 2015

The future of getting wasted, "Marijuana Grow Houses".














2016 election marijuana
(via chsarrow.com)
By Phillip Smith
Marijuana is going to be part of the political conversation between now and Election Day 2016. Support for legalization is now consistently polling above 50% nationwide, four states and DC have already voted to legalize it, and activists at least ten states are doing their best to make it an issue this time around.
In those states, they’re working to take marijuana legalization directly to the voters in the form of initiatives. Not all of those efforts will actually make the ballot — mass signature-gathering campaigns require not only enthusiasm but cold, hard cash to succeed — and not all of those that qualify will necessarily win, but in a handful of states, including the nation’s most populous, the prospects for passing legalization next year look quite good.
Presidential contenders are already finding the question of marijuana legalization unavoidable. They’re mostly finding the topic uncomfortable, with none — not even Rand Paul — embracing full-on legalization, most staking out middling positions, and some Republicans looking for traction by fervently opposing it. Just this week, Chris Christie vowed to undo legalization where it already exists if he is elected president.
It’s worth noting that it is the initiative process that is enabling the process of ending marijuana prohibition. Only half the states have it — mostly west of the Mississippi — but it is the use of citizen initiatives that led the way, first for medical marijuana and now with outright legalization.
In the face of overwhelming support for medical marijuana, state legislators proved remarkably recalcitrant. It took five years after California voters made it the first medical marijuana state for Hawaii to become the first state to pass it through the legislature. Even now, with nearly half the states having approved some form of medical marijuana, getting such bills through legislatures is excruciatingly difficult, and results in overly restrictive and ineffective state programs.
It’s been the same with legalization. Voters approved legalization via initiatives in Colorado and Washington in 2012 and Alaska, Oregon, and the District of Columbia last year. But even in states with majorities or pluralities in favor of legalization, legalization bills haven’t gotten passed.
Efforts are afoot at a number of statehouses, and one of them will eventually be the first to legislate legalization, maybe even next year — it’s not outside the realm of possibility. But for now, if legalization is going to continue to expand, it’s going to come thanks to the initiative states. In fact, marijuana policy reform is an issue on which elected officials have been so tin-eared and unresponsive to the will of the voters that their failure is an advertisement for the utility of direct democracy.
By the time the polls close on Election Day 2016, we could see the number of legalization states double and the number of Americans living free of pot prohibition quadruple to more than 60 million — or more. Attitudes on marijuana are shifting fast, and by this time next year, the prospects of even more states actually approving legalization could be even higher.
But right now, we have five states where the prospects of getting on the ballot and winning look good, three states where it looks iffy but could surprise, and two states where it looks like a long-shot next year.
Looking Good for Legalization:
Arizona
A June Rocky Mountain Poll from the Behavioral Research Center has support for legalization at 53%, and Arizonans could find themselves having to decide which competing legalization proposal they like best.
The Marijuana Policy Project-backed Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol would legalize the possession of up to an ounce of buds or five grams of concentrates, as well as allow for home grows of up to six plants per person, with a cap of 12 plants per household. The initiative also envisions a system of regulated marijuana commerce with a tax of 15%. Localities could bar marijuana businesses or even home growing, but only upon a popular vote.
The second initiative, from Arizonans for Mindful Regulation, would legalize the possession of up to an ounce of buds or concentrates, as well as allow for home grows of up to 12 plants — and home growers could keep the fruits of their harvests. The initiative envisions a system of regulated marijuana commerce with a 10% tax on retail sales. It would allow localities to regulate — but not ban — marijuana businesses.
Both campaigns are in the signature-gathering process. They will need 150,000 valid voter signatures to qualify for the 2016 ballot and they have until next July to get them.
California
A May PPIC poll had support for legalization at 54%, and Californians have a variety of initiatives to choose from. At leastsix legalization initiatives have already been cleared for signature-gathering by state officials, but everybody is still waiting for the other shoe to drop.
That would be the much anticipated initiative from the Coalition for Cannabis Policy Reform, which represents many of the major players in the state, as well as deep-pocketed outside players from all the major drug reform groups. The coalition’s initiative was delayed while it waited for the release of a report from Blue Ribbon Commission on Marijuana Policy, led by pro-legalization Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). That report came out last week, and the coalition says it expects to have its initiative ready within a few weeks.
The delays in getting the initiative out and the signature-gathering campaign underway are going to put pressure on the campaign. To qualify for the ballot, initiatives must come up with some 366,000 valid voter signatures, and that takes time, as well as money. Most of the other initiatives don’t have the money to make a serious run at signatures, but the coalition does. For all of the California legalization initiatives, the real hard deadline for signatures is February 4.
Maine
The most recent polling, a Public Policy Polling survey from 2013, had only a plurality (48% to 39%) favoring legalization, but that’s nearly two years old, and if Maine is following national trends, support should only have increased since then. Maine is winnable.
This is another state where a Marijuana Policy Project-backed initiative has competition from local activists. The MPP-affiliatedCampaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol would legalize possession of up to an ounce of buds and allow for six-plant home grows. It would also create a system of regulated marijuana commerce with a 10% tax above and beyond the state sales tax, and it would allow for marijuana social clubs as well as retail stores.
The competing initiative, from Legalize Maine, is a bit looser on possession and home grows, allowing up to 2.5 ounces and six mature and 12 immature plants. Unlike the MPP initiative, which would have the Alcohol Bureau regulate marijuana, this one would leave it to the Department of Agriculture. It would also allow for marijuana social clubs as well as pot shops and would impose a 10% flat sales tax.
Initiatives need 61,126 valid voter signatures to qualify for the ballot. The campaigns have until next spring to get them in.




Best Fitness Trends 2016


Start prepping your New Year's resolutions: The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) has announced its annual fitness trend forecast and, for the first time, exercise pros say wearable technology will be the number one trend in fitness in 2016. (Can't say we're exactly shocked by the news, consider how much the Shape staff loves their fitness trackers!)
The survey results, published today in the ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journalreveal that wearable tech overtook activities like body weight training (number one in 2015) and HIIT (number 1 in 2014) to claim the top spot.
"Tech devices are now central to our daily lives and have changed the way we plan and manage our workouts," said study author Walter R. Thompson, Ph.D. "Wearable devices also provide immediate feedback that can make the wearer more aware of their level of activity and can motivate the user to achieve their fitness goals." (Plus, there are these 5 Cool Ways to Use Your Fitness Tracker That You Probably Haven't Thought Of.)
Besides the addition of wearable tech, the ACSM's predictions (now in its tenth year) are pretty identical to the 2015 list—which makes sense since they're tracking trends they expect to stick around for awhile. However, two additional headlines appeared in the top 20: flexibility and mobility rollers, as well as smart phone exercise apps. (These are two trends we'redefinitely on board with. See the 5 Hot Spots to Roll Out Before Every Workout.)
The survey was completed by more than 2,800 health and fitness professionals worldwide who were given 40 potential trends as choices. Here's the whole list of the top 10 fitness trends for 2016.
1. Wearable technology. You probably didn't need a survey to tell you that fitness trackers, smart watches, heart rate monitors, and GPS tracking devices from brands like Jawbone, Fitbit, Apple Watch, Garmin, and more, will continue to be huge in 2016. Now, though, it's more than just counting steps. Learn how New Wearable Technology Could Replace Your Old FItness Tracker and check out these Workout Clothes That Double As Wearable Tech.
2. Bodyweight training. It's no secret we're fans of bodyweight training—the use of minimal equipment makes it a super convenient and affordable do-anywhere workout. And it's not limited to just push-ups and pull-ups—put a fresh spin on bodyweight exercises with this workout: Circuit Training Goes Old School for a Total-Body Burn.
3. High-intensity interval training (HIIT). HIIT describes any workout that alternates between intense bursts of activity and fixed periods of less-intense activity or even complete rest, and the entire workout can usually be performed is 30 minutes or less—just one of its many benefits! (Try this HIIT Workout that Tones in 30 Seconds.)
4. Strength training. Sure, you'll build muscle, but you'll also torch more body fat, burn more calories, and protect your bone health and muscle mass, making strength training a necessary component for any workout program. (These strength training execises areThe Perfect Total-Body Workout for Couples.)
5. Educated and experienced fitness professionals. This year, we saw the rise of the personal trainer slash celebrity, emphasizing the importance of national fitness certifications and credentials more than ever. 
6. Personal training. Whether you're looking to learn the ropes or reach a new fitness goal, personal trainers remain a smart way to get the most out of your gym time. (Find out The No. 1 Myth About Being a Personal Trainer.)
7. Functional fitness. Based on the idea that the workouts we do should mimic and support the activities of daily life, like bending down, picking things up, walking up stairs, and pulling or pushing open doors, this 'trend' makes so much sense. (These 7 Functional Fitness Exercises can help get you started.)
8. Fitness programs for older adults. Studies show that after 40, we begin to lose muscle mass and strength, so fitness programs that keep older adults healthy and active are crucial. We're happy to see that health and fitness professionals will continue to focus on creating age-appropriate and safe workout programs in 2016.
9. Exercise and weight loss. This may not seem like a trend per say, but in addition to exercise, nutrition continues to be a key component of weight-loss programs. (What's Better for Weight Loss: Diet or Exercise?)
10. Yoga. With new iterations like fat yoga and salty yoga popping up by what seems like the minute, yoga is more popular than ever. Although it's fallen a few spots on this year's list, it's no surprise that the activity—which includes Power Yoga, Yogalates, Bikram, Ashtanga, Vinyasa, Kripalu, Anurara, Kundalini, Sivananda, and others—remains in the top 10 trends for 2016. (Try these 14 Poses to Revamp Your Vinyasa Routine!)



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