Edwards Submits Plans for Seven-Acre South Campus Development

All renderings/visuals provided by The Edwards Companies.Edwards Communities has submitted plans for the first phase of a seven-acre mixed-use development just south of the existing South Campus Gateway. Renderings and a site plan submitted to the University Area Review Board in December show four stories of apartments and a four-level parking garage filling the block between East Eighth and Ninth avenues […]
via ColumbusUnderground.com
Edwards Submits Plans for Seven-Acre South Campus Development

Your Incompetent Boss Is Making You Unhappy

HnT writes A new working paper shows strong support for what many have always suspected: your boss’s technical competence is the single strongest predictor of workers’ well-being, way ahead of other factors such as education, earnings, job tenure and public vs. private sector. On top of other studies which have already demonstrated that happy workers are more productive workers (e.g. this 2012 paper.), it does make you wonder how long organizations can afford to continue promoting incompetent bosses in today’s very dynamic and competitive business world.

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Your Incompetent Boss Is Making You Unhappy

Google Just Released Hundreds of Cool Icons That You Can Use For Free

Google Just Released Hundreds of Cool Icons That You Can Use For Free

As part of its Material Design project, Google has published a set of lovely icons, designed for use in mobile apps or whatever else you fancy using them for. And they’re free!

Just published to Github, there are 750 of the neatly designed icons. They’ll fit nicely in Android, but you could use the for anything, really. They’re available under a CC-BY-SA Creative Commons license, so you can do whatever you want with them. [Github via Kottke]

via Gizmodo
Google Just Released Hundreds of Cool Icons That You Can Use For Free

Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Proving that sometimes all it takes is a popular YouTube video to kickstart a successful business, Mark Rober, the guy who made the gaping hole in your gut costume using two iPads a few years ago, is back with even more easy but impressive costume ideas. And that includes a line of Halloween masks that come to life with nothing but a smartphone running a free app.

Last year the Digital Dudz line was improved with shirts featuring built-in velcro pockets that made it easy to insert a smartphone to bring the tee’s design to life. This year the pockets have been re-engineered to accept today’s larger more full-figured smartphones like the iPhone 6 Plus, and Marvel has given the thumbs up for a couple of Iron Man and Captain America designs that comic book fans are sure to go nuts over.

But it’s the addition of a line of rubber Halloween masks with animated features courtesy of your smartphone that should have the masses scrapping their stupid half-finished bent iPhone costumes.

Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Ranging in price from $45 to $60 with a free accompanying app, the masks are a relatively inexpensive way to get yourself a decent Halloween getup before October 31 rolls around. You can even wear them with t-shirts and jeans because people will be too transfixed on the masks’ awesome animated features—like roaming eyeballs, beating brains, or cyborg upgrades—to care what else you’ve got on. They’re perfect for grownups who still have a soft spot for Halloween, but don’t want people to know they just threw a costume together at the last minute. [Digital Dudz]

via Gizmodo
Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Where New York City’s Poop Goes

Where New York City's Poop Goes

In Greenpoint, Brooklyn, the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant borders Newtown Creek and Long Island City to its North. The facility opened in 1967 and, since then, has undergone several renovations and expansions—including its massive silver digester eggs—to accommodate NYC’s constant growth and evolution.

Oh and in case I wasn’t completely clear: It’s entirely full of shit.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Newtown Creek is the largest wastewater treatment plant in New York City, handling some 250 million gallons per day. Most of that wastewater comes from Greenpoint, Williamsburg, and downtown Manhattan through a unique combined sewer system.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Keeping out the trash

A combined sewer system means that street water and waste water from apartments wind up in the same sewer main. If that doesn’t sound like a great idea, that’s because it’s not, but a system like this is easier to build than one that separates the two. Unfortunately it also makes the process of cleaning New York’s expelled waste water more complicated than most cities. Because street water will end up in the pooptubes, garbage and other debris can cause damage to the treatment plants’ equipment. That’s where the sorting machinery comes in.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

To make sure larger chunks of non-poop trash don’t get into the plant, the system utilizes several gates and screens to make sure only wastewater is entering the facilities. Sewer Overflow Regulators block floating trash from getting in by routing unfiltered water through pipes that block floating items while letting water (and poop) flow through unabated at the bottom.

Whatever makes it past this first defense is fished out with Mechanical Bar Screens, pictured above. Just like the Overflow Regulators, these screens filter the water that’s flowing through the top part of a pipe. A huge mechanized scraper periodically wipes off the bits of trash that get stuck to the screens. Meanwhile, the poops and wastewater keep flowing onward below.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

After any trash is taken care of, the wastewater treatment process proper can begin. To start, the Newtown Creek facility utilizes things called degrittors and detritors. These machines essentially take solids (which is to say "poops") and smooshes them all together to take up a smaller amount of space in the waste water.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

From there, the Newtown Creek plant tries to replicate the process that waste would undergo when breaking down naturally, except in a massive and controlled environment. After solid wastes are consolidated, the water enters secondary treatment area, where aerobic bacteria eats away at the poop and turns it into sludge.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

After sludgification, the water reaches settling tanks that remove the sludge and floating scum. Water travels across a slight slope while unwanted poop particles rest along the bottom and get suctioned out. The sludge then travels back to the aeration tanks for a second pass while the water heads to a disinfection stage. In disinfection, concentrated bleach is poured in, after which the no-longer-poopy-poop juice is released into Newtown Creek as clear and fresh smelling water.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Tough shit

The Newtown Creek facility’s aeration tanks do a pretty good job of breaking down poop into sludge, but when the sludge can’t be broken down any further, it’s spun into a thicker solid and sent to one of the facility’s eight massive digester eggs.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Each egg basically acts as a stomach where poopsludge can be "digested" for 15 days. Inside the eggs are more anaerobic bacteria that further the process in a balmy 98 degree poopvironment. Just like in the human body, the breakdown of waste produces a methane gas byproduct, but this methane is used to power the plants boilers instead of going into farts.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Above the massive digester eggs is a walkway that wraps around the whole complex, providing a great view of northern Brooklyn, Long Island City and the Manhattan skyline from atop the tanks of shit. It’s a view you can see for yourself: the Newtown Facility is open for tours, and they’ll take you up on the eggs if you go.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Even these massive digester eggs can’t process everything though. After digestion there is inevitably some sludge waste that just can’t be broken down. This tough shit is transported to a separate facility by poopboats. Once there, its dewatered and turned into a thick, spongy solid and ultimately is delivered to a landfill.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Touring the facility from start to finish, I was struck by one thing in particular: The place doesn’t smell bad. Because emissions are mostly captured inside a set of tanks, the grounds smell at least as good as the rest of Brooklyn. I’m not completely sure how the open-air poop-sludge pools manage not to smell, but they don’t! It’s really impressive how little odor there is.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

Poop jokes aside, without facilities like Newtown Creek our waterways would be horrible. The Newton Creek plant and the people who man it manage to turn millions of peoples’ waste back into into clean, environmentally safe water. They don’t even mind it! What they do mind though is litter.

A small piece of trash that sneaks by the facility’s defenses can easily break the whole, complex system. When a machine breaks it can costs thousands, if not millions, of dollars. So think twice about what you throw down to toilet—and don’t litter in the street. Somebody has to deal with that shit.

Where New York City's Poop Goes

via Gizmodo
Where New York City’s Poop Goes