Dead and Deader: The Insane History Of Deadpool

Almost everyone and their blind old grandmothers with guy names seem to be in love with Deadpool now. And who can rightfully blame them? The movie did a fantastic job of capturing the humor and madness of the comic book perfectly and brought it to new heights. But for all you fair weather friends of Deadpool, what do you REALLY know about the merc with the mouth? You see, there is a lot more to Deadpool than just what we saw on the screen. Truth is, his origin is more twisted than even a R-rated movie could capture. But you know who have it down? Looper, who made the video below.

As fantastic as the movie was, there were some aspects of the Deadpool story that clearly had to be omitted or left on the cutting room floor for various reasons. This video sort of assumes you are a fan of Deadpool through the recent movie and fills all the holes in between.

It also gives the reader some more key Deadpool 411 that may need to be carried over to his next cinematic outings (which we all know are coming, one already confirmed). It is just so sad Bea Arthur is not alive to see her soulmate shining so brightly right now. But you know she’s smiling down on him from heaven. He asked me to include this video as proof:

via Forever Geek
Dead and Deader: The Insane History Of Deadpool

Lightsaber Safety 101 Instructional Video

Lightsaber Safety 101 Instructional Video

Everyone wants their own lightsaber for chores around the house, shaving and what not, but you should always practice safety first. You shouldn’t get yourself a lightsaber until you watch this helpful and mandatory instructional video. Either that or get instructions from a little green man who lives in a swamp.

This fun video was created by Los Angeles filmmaker Andrew McMurry, producer Seth McMurry, and sound designer Matthew McMurry of Nukazooka. It will teach you how to handle a lightsaber properly. Don’t be like Larry. Be safe. Be smart. Once you know the dangers of the lightsaber, you can use this multi-purpose tool effectively.

via MightyMega
Lightsaber Safety 101 Instructional Video

Overcome Shyness with “Radical Implosion”

Shyness isn’t a lifelong personality trait. Learning to talk to strangers is a skill you can acquire. Want to know how Conan O’Brien and Will Ferrell got over their shyness? Using a technique called “radical implosion”.

Radical implosion is based on psychologist Albert Ellis’s shame-attacking exercise. The idea is to do something much more intimidating than whatever you’re afraid of. Once you get over that, your original problem seems easy, and the anxiety around it more manageable.

For example, Conan O’Brien started performing live comedy because that’s what frightened him most. To over his shyness, Will Ferrell would purposely do idiotic things in public, so people would laugh at him.

While their examples are extreme, the core idea is solid. If you’re afraid of talking to people at a party, go and talk to 50 strangers in a park first. Just see what happens. The party will probably be much easier.

3 Neat Tricks for Overcoming Social Anxiety | Inc.

via Lifehacker
Overcome Shyness with “Radical Implosion”

This Force Awakens Special Effects Reel Will Blow Your Mind


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The only thing more impressive than invisible visual effects of Star Wars: The Force Awakens is seeing the work that went into them. Industrial Light & Magic did Oscar-nominated effects work gets stripped totally naked in this brand new VFX breakdown.

This four-minute video pretty much goes from the beginning to the end of The Force Awakens and shows all the layers and details that went into many of the film’s biggest scenes. Things start simple; an actor and a set or maybe nothing at all. Then sections fly into the frame. Seeing the trench on Starkiller Base dropped in piece by piece, for example, is mind-blowing. Just try to imagine the amount of time that went into that work versus how fast it flickers before our eyes.

[YouTube]

via Gizmodo
This Force Awakens Special Effects Reel Will Blow Your Mind

The DIY Butcher Block and Pipe Workstation

Redditor ksmithbaylor built this gorgeous butcher block and steel pipe workstation, and we love it. Sure, it’s spacious and clean, but hats off to the DIY spirit, and for making it all work, work well, and look good. Here are some more photos of the finished setup.

The shot at the top is straight on, featuring all three of ksmithbaylor’s displays, connected to that Macbook Pro mounted in the back and above the others. As for the gear that powers this whole setup, here’s what the Imgur gallery (linked below) has to say:

Technology:

  • Late 2013 15" MacBook Pro, 2.6 GHz i7 processor, 16GB RAM, discrete graphics
  • 3x AOC 27" IPS monitors (not sure what model)
  • 87-key CODE keyboard (made by WASD) with Cherry MX Green switches
  • Apple Magic Trackpad 2
  • Blue Yeti microphone
  • Logitech speakers with subwoofer
  • Kingston 7-port powered USB hub
  • 2x Seagate 1TB portable hard drives
  • Xtand Pro laptop stand

The computer is running one monitor through a mini-DP to HDMI adapter, one through a mini-DP to VGA adapter (one of my HDMI cables broke), and one directly through the HDMI port. It’s able to drive three monitors plus the internal screen because of the discrete graphics card.

The microphone, keyboard, and two hard drives (not visible here) are all connected to a powered USB 3.0 hub (also not visible in this picture), which plugs into the USB port of the laptop. Connecting and disconnecting the laptop takes about 30 seconds.

Here’s a side-on photo of the whole setup:

And a closer look at the wraparound effect you get if you’re sitting there working, which I imagine must be immersive as all getout:

The whole gallery below has tons of photos of the build process, and all of the equipment, tools, and items ksmithbaylor used to assemble and build the whole thing, including that gorgeous butcher block desk surface, which was actually an IKEA score. Hit the link below to check it out, and while you’re at it, head over to Reddit and give the whole thing an upvote—if you’re curious about any of the specific components, you’ll find it in the original thread, or in the gallery description below.

If you have a workspace of your own to show off, share them with us by adding it to our Lifehacker Workspace Show and Tell Flickr pool. Make sure any photos you include are at least 1280×720. Keeping them to 16:9 helps, too! Include a little text about the stuff you used, how you came up with the design, and any other relevant details. If your clever organization and good design sense catches our eye, you might be the next featured workspace!

My custom butcher block pipe desk and battlestation | Imgur via Reddit

via Lifehacker
The DIY Butcher Block and Pipe Workstation

11 reasons we didn’t invest in your company

Like most VCs, we often review dozens of deals each week. We have developed a funnel that enables us to quickly eliminate those that do not fit our general investment criteria (e.g. industry, stage, model).

The deals that survive this initial culling process are subjected to much greater scrutiny and due diligence. This process includes a thorough review of the deck, financial statements and projections; discussions with the founders, customers and other investors; and a review of third-party information relevant to the company, its product and industry. Companies are eliminated from further consideration during various stages of this process and, in the end, we ultimately invest in a small percentage of the deals we review.

When we decide not to invest in a company, we always take the time to explain to the founders the reasons for our decision. The purpose of this article is to provide a review of the 11 most common reasons why we choose not to invest in companies in hopes that some founders will find it helpful in improving their chances of raising capital.

Lack of transparency/candor. If we detect that a founder is not being forthright, we immediately lose interest. Venture investing is based on relationships; being opaque makes for an inauspicious beginning of a relationship.

Nothing proprietary/defensible. If a company doesn’t have something that is proprietary that makes it defensible against potential competitors, then its success will lead to its downfall.

What do I mean by that? Without a moat, the company’s success is easily replicable. The more success it has, the more competitors it will attract. But if it has a secret sauce — which could include technology, processes, knowledge, relationships, etc. — its odds of sustained growth are far greater. And while first-mover advantage is helpful in the early stages, it usually doesn’t mean much in the long run (e.g. Myspace).

No proven, scalable paid marketing channels. We like to invest in companies where our capital can be used to fuel revenue growth. If a company has not yet identified cost-efficient marketing channels that are scalable, they are more likely to burn through our capital experimenting and testing to find them.

We prefer to invest in companies that have already done at least enough of this initial testing so they can use our investment to scale the channels that are working. And we have a strong preference for founders who intimately understand paid customer acquisition and don’t reply to our questions about growth by saying “We’re hiring a growth hacker.”

Don’t know your Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). We find there is a direct correlation between the depth of a founder’s knowledge of the company’s KPIs and the company’s success.

We want to see that founders are 100 percent dedicated to the company.

First, founders must demonstrate they understand which metrics are important to their business. Second, they must demonstrate they are properly measuring and calculating those metrics. Finally, they must know which levers to pull to affect each KPI and which KPIs need to be tweaked for the business to succeed.

Short runway. When we invest in a company, we like to see that it will have at least 12 months of post-close runway. Raising money requires a lot of time and effort and distracts founders from growing the business. We want the company to have adequate resources to enable the team to focus on growth without having to worry about quickly raising another round. Also, the next round becomes much easier to raise if a company has demonstrated 12 months of improving KPIs and growth.

To calculate post-close runway, founders must know the current cash burn and must have formulated detailed projections of how they will spend the funds they are raising and how much cash they will be burning each month post-close. This calculation can be done assuming: (1) zero revenue, (2) current revenue with zero growth or (3) reasonable revenue growth based on historical trends.

TAM is too small. We often see companies that have innovative, sometimes ingenious, solutions to a problem faced by a relatively small group. For a company to achieve exit velocity, it needs to be addressing a large enough market to make its upside revenue potential meaningful to an acquirer. If a company can’t demonstrate to us that the size of the market that its solutions address is reasonable (for us, that is usually north of a $1 billion-per-year market), we usually pass.

Pre-revenue or pre-ship. We find there is a disproportionate decrease in investment risk relative to the increase in valuation when a company makes its first sale. In other words, the risk decreases more than the valuation increases once a company graduates from pre-revenue to building and shipping a product for which someone is willing to pay. Thus, we think it prudent to invest after a company has made this first sale and has shown some early evidence of product-market fit.

No vision. We like to invest in companies whose founders have a clear vision for how to grow the company to 100x its current size. While getting there will certainly require the company to deviate from this vision, not having a vision makes it infinitely more difficult. A North Star keeps founders on track, even in the craziest storms.

Don’t intimately understand your competition. Companies often tell me “we have no competitors.” I generally find this difficult to believe and push back with “How is your target market currently solving the problem you intend to address? That’s your competition.”

Beyond this rudimentary knowledge, founders should thoroughly understand the solutions being offered by their competitors, which market segments they are addressing and how they are selling. A company’s potential customers will be comparing the company’s product against other available solutions, and sharp founders will have properly positioned the product for success.

Not being extremely knowledgeable about these other options and differentiating your product accordingly is a recipe for failure.

Lopsided founding team. Products need to be built and products need to be sold. These tasks require vastly different skill sets that are rarely possessed by the same people. We prefer to see a founding team with experience in a variety of disciplines, from engineering and development to sales and marketing.

Having all disciplines baked in from the founding of a company helps ensure that it creates both great products and products that can be sold. Yes, companies can hire talent in areas in which they are deficient, but then that deficient area is not really part of the company’s DNA. Plus, it’s always preferred if the folks managing the hired hands have experience in the relevant area.

No skin in the game. We want to see that founders are 100 percent dedicated to the company before we jump in. At a bare minimum, they need to be working full time on the business. Ideally, they have invested a relatively significant amount of their own money in the company, as well. Paul Graham wrote that once founders take steps such that it becomes “unthinkably humiliating to fail,” they quickly become “committed to fight to the death.” We agree.

This list is not exhaustive, but hopefully it gives founders a helpful checklist to make sure they are addressing some of the most common reasons why we (and probably other early-stage investors) pass on deals. And, by the way, if you’re doing all of these things right, we’d love to hear from you.

Featured Image: Martin Konopka / EyeEm/Getty Images

via TechCrunch
11 reasons we didn’t invest in your company

Liberty University Takes “Run-Hide-Fight” To The Next Level

“Run-Hide-Fight” is the current active shooter (I hate that term, and will use the more accurate “random mass murderer” from here on) response plan for civilians promoted by the Department of Homeland Security.

As you might expect from a federal government organization, fighting with a real weapon isn’t on DHS’s list of responses.

Unlike most colleges in the United States, Liberty University learned from the security failures of Virginia Tech, and instituted campus carry for faculty, staff, and students after that horrific massacre.

Unlike any other “Run-Hide-Fight” video in existence, this video from the Liberty University Police Department incorporates procedures that explain how the police want concealed carriers on campus to respond to a random mass murderer.

It’s an eye-opening video worth watching all the way through, and it’s encouraging that the LUPD has so thoroughly though the probability that if a random mass murderer does attack their school, that officers may encounter multiple concealed carriers before, during, and after engaging the random mass murderer. They have a plan and procedures to deal with armed people, and they won’t immediately start shooting at an armed person unless that person is acting as a threat.

I wish other law enforcement agencies (campus police or not) were as well trained.

It’s worth noting that as a private university, Liberty is free to make policy as they see fit, and they have clearly gone above and beyond what you can expect from most college and university law enforcement agencies.

The post Liberty University Takes “Run-Hide-Fight” To The Next Level appeared first on Bearing Arms.

via Bearing Arms
Liberty University Takes “Run-Hide-Fight” To The Next Level

Weekend Project: DIY Steel Target Hangers

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Recently, Joe Grine posted a story featuring the above Rogue Shooting Targets t-post target hangars. While they’re a great idea, I thought the price seemed a bit high. I tend to be a “do it myself” kind of guy, so with a shooting date coming up with Joe and a few other guys, I thought I’d add my steel plates to the range fun.

First off, I measured the end of a common T-post to see what the dimensions were so I could buy the proper sized square tubing. A quick stop at my local steel supplier was then in order. After finding the correct size, (I chose 2″ x 2″ square milled steel, .080 wall thickness). Then I gave a thought to how long it would take me with a hand operated hack saw to cut 10 pieces up.

Not liking that, I asked if the steel supply place would cut it up for me. Yup…at $1.75 per cut. So I gave them the green light. The next morning, I picked up ten three-inch pieces of cut up steel.

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Off to the local hardware store for some bolts and nuts. Four-inch long threaded 3/8″ diameter mild steel should do the trick.

Then to the drill press in my shop. X marks the spot for the holes.

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Put the bolts through the holes, tighten them, and this part is done.

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Next step: bend the bolts. No need for a torch, just a vice and a crescent wrench.

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So I did make one small mistake here. I bent one bolt a bit too far and I could feel it partially break. Next time I’m in town, I’ll just buy another bolt and bend it a little less.

I’m pleased with the end result…10 steel plate target hangars.

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You can see the broken bolt, fifth one up.

While Joe paid $37.50 per pair for his hangars, I’m into mine for considerably less. Total cost for ten hangers:

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Grand total: $31.73. Your mileage may vary depending on the cost of steel in your area.

It took me about an hour to make them. I suppose I could paint them and de-bur the edges to make them prettier. Also, this project would have only been $14.23 had I chosen to work up a sweat cutting these things by hand. So for those of you with a little more DIY attitude, that gets it down to $1.43 per hanger.

Now I’m all set for the range trip to Mt. Hood. This will be great preseason practice for long range shooting. I’m headed for the Hells Canyon wilderness area for first season elk. Stay tuned.

via The Truth About Guns
Weekend Project: DIY Steel Target Hangers