How Drinking Too Much Soda Can Affect Your Body

You probably know that soda isn’t the best thing for your body, but have you ever wondered what would happen if you didn’t drink anything else? These are the health hazards you might run into if you down too many cans of cola.

Having a can of your favorite soda every day isn’t going to kill you if that’s how you like to treat yourself. But if you replace drinking water with soda, you’re certainly not doing your body any favors. This video from the AsapScience YouTube channel shows exactly how soda negatively affects your body, and how drinking too much will lead to numerous health problems. Soda eats away the enamel on your teeth, adds extra calories to your diet that are easy to forget about, can age you at the same rate as a typical smoker (if you drink 600 ml of soda a day), and the high-fructose corn syrup used in most soft drinks isn’t easily metabolized by your body. Artificial sweeteners have their own set of problems as well, so swapping in diet sodas won’t help very much. You don’t have to give up soda entirely, but it’s not a bad idea to look into healthier alternatives so it’s not all you drink. And remember, if you’re thirsty, a glass of water is always your best bet.

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What If You Only Drank Soda? | YouTube


via Lifehacker
How Drinking Too Much Soda Can Affect Your Body

Adobe Lightroom CC 2015.4, Lightroom 6.4 and ACR 9.4 now available for download

Adobe has made updates available to its subscription and standalone Lightroom applications as well as Camera Raw. The updates bring with it a feature called ‘Boundary Warp,’ a tool that helps to straighten the curved edges of stitched panoramas so that the image is rectangular. Lightroom CC 2015.4, Lightroom 6.4 and ACR 9.4 bring support for Fujifilm’s newly announced X-system cameras, including the Fujifilm X-Pro2 and X70, as well as bug fixes – see the details below.


New Camera Support in Lightroom CC 2015.4 / 6.4

  • Fujifilm X70
  • Fujifilm X-E2S
  • Fujifilm X-Pro2
  • Leica M (Typ 262)
  • Leica X-U (Typ 113)
  • Panasonic DMC-ZS60 (DMC-TZ80, DMC-TZ81, DMC-TZ85)
  • Phase One IQ150
  • Sony ILCA-68 (A68)

Additional Updates in Lightroom CC 2015.4 / 6.4

  • Nikon 1 J4 Camera Matching Profile added
  • The panorama merging process should complete roughly twice as fast as Lightroom 6.3
  • Improved quality when applying Auto Straighten and Upright “Level” mode
  • A preference was added to the Mac to prevent accidental “speed swiping”
  • Metadata is added to merged panoramas to support Photoshop’s Adaptive Wide Angle filter
  • Customers can now set the location of where photos are stored when downloaded from Lightroom mobile or Lightroom web in the preference panel or contextually in the folder panel
  • Thumbnails update much quicker when copying and pasting settings in the grid view
  • Images load faster in the Library module when you are zoomed in and navigating images
  • Tethered support added for the Nikon D5500 and Nikon D7200

Fixed Bugs

  • Auto Sync of some settings failed when using smart previews
  • Lightroom would ignore model-specific custom default settings for some cameras, including some Leica and Sony models.
  • Crop resets to image bounds when adjusting rotation via slider
  • In Lights Out mode, an image would “disappear” if a customer uses the Undo functionality
  • SIGMA 50mm f1.4 ART lens was incorrectly identified as Zeiss Milvus 50mm f1.4
  • Soft Proofing RGB readout values differed for same file between 5.7.1 and 6.x
  • Import from iPhoto would result in all photos receiving a “pick” flag
  • Comments from Lightroom web come in to Lightroom on the desktop as already “read.”
  • Lightroom would not display the correct EXIF metadata for some video files generated by Canon, Fuji and Panasonic cameras
  • Vertical panoramas created using Merge could appear with the wrong orientation
  • The video cache did not respect the maximum size specified in the preferences
  • Customers experienced issues importing video files in some scenarios
  • Tethering Nikon cameras on Mac OS X 10.11 (El Capitan) did not work properly
  • Installation Instructions

New Camera Support in Camera Raw 9.4

  • Fujifilm X70
  • Fujifilm X-E2S
  • Fujifilm X-Pro2
  • Leica M (Typ 262)
  • Leica X-U (Typ 113)
  • Panasonic DMC-ZS60 (DMC-TZ80, DMC-TZ81, DMC-TZ85)
  • Phase One IQ150
  • Sony ILCA-68 (A68)

Additional Updates in Camera Raw 9.4

  • Nikon 1 J4 Camera matching profile support added
  • The panorama merging process should complete roughly twice as fast as ACR 6.3
  • Improved quality when applying Auto Straighten and Upright “Level” mode.
  • Metadata is added to merged panoramas to support Photoshop’s Adaptive Wide Angle filter
  • DNG Converter 9.4 now supports HiDPI displays on Mac

Fixed Bugs and Other Changes:

  • Fixed issue where vertical panoramas created using Merge could appear with the wrong orientation.
  • Addressed a bug that would ignore model-specific custom default settings for some cameras, including some Leica and Sony models.
  • Corrected occasional crash using Crop tool after a Merge operation completed.
  • Fixed an issue where state of HSL controls would be rendered incorrectly in GPU mode when applying Contrast or Saturation local control adjustments.
  • Addressed the issue of the SIGMA 50mm f1.4 ART lens incorrectly identified as Zeiss Milvus 50mm f1.4.

via Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
Adobe Lightroom CC 2015.4, Lightroom 6.4 and ACR 9.4 now available for download

New US single family home sales hit 10-month high

New US single-family home sales hit a 10 month high in December, another indication that the housing sector remains strong despite a slow down in the overall global economy. The Commerce Department said on Wednesday sales rose 10.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 544,000 units. Sales last month were likely helped along by unseasonably mild weather […]

The post New US single family home sales hit 10-month high appeared first on Business Pundit.

via Business Pundit
New US single family home sales hit 10-month high

New stem cell treatment could ‘cure’ type 1 diabetes

Researchers at MIT and Harvard figured out how to produce pancreatic beta cells — the ones that produce insulin — in large quantities back in 2014. The same intercollegiate team announced in the journal Nature on Monday that they’ve now managed to implant those cells into mice that have been genetically designed to suffer from Type 1 diabetes — without the cells being rejected. Even more impressive, the diabetic mice produced their own insulin during the 174-day study period, eliminating the need for daily injections. Instead, patients would simply need "booster" injections of beta cells once every few years.

This method "has the potential to provide diabetics with a new pancreas that is protected from the immune system," study co-author Daniel Anderson said in a statement, "which would allow them to control their blood sugar without taking drugs." Human trials are expected to begin within the next few years.

[Image Credit: Getty]

Via: Gizmodo

Source: Nature

via Engadget
New stem cell treatment could ‘cure’ type 1 diabetes

This Amazon Customer Service Story Will Freak You Out

This Amazon Customer Service Story Will Freak You Out

Over the weekend a story appeared on Medium that will make any Amazon user wince. According to customer Eric Springer, all a hacker needs to unlock your whole damn life is your name, email address, and a mailing address—and the mailing address doesn’t even have to be correct.

Here’s the story: Four months ago Springer received an email from Amazon thanking him for contacting customer service. How polite! The only problem was, Springer hadn’t actually contacted Amazon at all.

Springer was troubled by the auto-reply email response he received, so he reached out to Amazon and managed to get a hold of the transcript. He discovered that a social engineer—a hacker—was pretending to be him in order to gain access to critical account information on Amazon.

This Amazon Customer Service Story Will Freak You Out

The kicker is that the address provided to Amazon’s customer service wasn’t even Springer’s real home. It was a bogus address he used to register websites online. Yet with that confirmation, the hacker was able to get Springer’s real address. With Springer’s real residence, his email address, and his name, the hacker could do a good bit of damage.

Springer informed Amazon of the colossal failure on their part and the company promised to improve security. Eric assumed he was done with the mess—until he received another email from Amazon last week.

Again, he asked for the transcripts. And again, it showed that all a hacker needed to gain access was a name, email address, and mailing address. Eric’s only relief was seeing that the hacker failed to get a credit card number out of the overly helpful customer service representative. That’s an improvement from 2012, when hackers social engineered that information out of a customer service representative and gained access to the online life of Gizmodo-alum Mat Honan.

Curious to reproduce Eric’s story, Redditor bot-vladimir attempted the hack as well. They used the address of a nearby hotel and Amazon quickly handed over the redditor’s real address, much to bot-vladimir’s disappointment.

However in my own trial, I was met with much less success. I have an old address that’s publicly available online thanks to WhoIs, so I gave the hack a go. The Amazon Customer Service Representative seemed to pick up on my scam quickly and turned me down flat when I provided the old address. Then, after giving them my actual address, they refused to give out any more information until we had a chat on the phone.

So it seems success is entirely dependent on the customer service rep you happen to be speaking to. Mind you this is a fairly common target for social engineer hacks. The biggest vulnerability isn’t a password or an email address; it’s the gullibility of the person on the other end of the line.

The best way to protect yourself±besides avoiding the internet altogether—is to use a mailing address you’re okay with broadcasting across the internet. That could be your office, a local FedEx or UPS store, or an Amazon locker. Take the time to set up two-step verification too. That way hackers have at least one more hoop they have to get through before learning where you sleep at night.

We’ve reached out to Amazon for comment on the story and will update accordingly. For now this tale serves as a great reminder that even the best passwords and most carefully plotted online lives aren’t immune to a really savvy and determined social engineer.

[Medium via Reddit]


Contact the author at alex.cranz@gizmodo.com.

via Gizmodo
This Amazon Customer Service Story Will Freak You Out

MegaBOOM Lets You Make Exploding Targets Without Chemicals – SHOT Show 2016

While patrolling the aisles at SHOT Show 2016, I noticed the MegaBOOM display, and circled back for a closer look. I soon ascertained that MegaBOOM is an adapter, to which you attach plastic bottles – such as 2-liter or smaller soda bottles – which you then pressurize with air and shoot, to get a loud[…..]

The post MegaBOOM Lets You Make Exploding Targets Without Chemicals – SHOT Show 2016 appeared first on AllOutdoor.com.

via AllOutdoor.com
MegaBOOM Lets You Make Exploding Targets Without Chemicals – SHOT Show 2016

Body Cam Footage Leads To Federal Indictment Of Abusive Las Vegas Cop

Body cameras are working as intended. Of course, this is a very limited sampling and the fact that anything happened at all to the abusive cop was reliant on him being either too stupid or too arrogant to shut his body-worn camera off.

A former Las Vegas police officer was indicted by a federal grand jury Tuesday on felony charges of roughing up a woman he suspected was a prostitute.

Richard Scavone, 49, was charged with violating the civil rights of the woman when he used excessive force while arresting her in January 2015 and falsifying his report of the encounter to obstruct an FBI investigation, according to the Justice Department.

The woman was identified in the indictment only by her initials, A.O.

Scavone, who also faces a local misdemeanor battery charge in the incident, has been summoned to answer the two felony counts in federal court on Jan. 20. He is to appear in Las Vegas Justice Court that day, as well.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal’s depiction of the events ("roughed up") is far kinder than the DOJ’s press release.

According to the indictment, on Jan. 6, 2015, while acting as a police officer, Scavone allegedly assaulted “A.O.” resulting in bodily injury. The indictment alleges that Scavone grabbed the victim around the neck with his hand and threw A.O. to the ground; struck A.O. in the forehead with an open palm; twice slammed A.O.’s head onto the hood of his patrol vehicle; and slammed A.O. into the door of his patrol vehicle.

And that is far, far kinder than the Las Vegas Sun’s description of the incident from early 2015, when Scavone was only facing a misdemeanor battery charge.

Scavone said in a statement that the woman turned her back to officers, a statement police said was refuted by the corrections officer.

When she asked how she could put her palms together if he had her hands, Scavone threatened to "dump (her) on the floor" and handcuffed her, the report said.

He then told her to spread her feet, and when she replied, "My feet are straight," he grabbed the back of her neck and threw her on the ground, according to the report.

The woman cursed and told him to take her to jail, and Scavone struck her face with an open hand before grabbing her left shoulder and dragging her several feet away from his vehicle to get her on her stomach, the report said.

Scavone asked the woman if she was "finished fighting" him, the report said.

The corrections officer and Scavone picked the woman up and walked her back to the vehicle, where Scavone grabbed her elbow and reached for her necklace, police said.

When she turned away, he slammed her head twice on the patrol car, police said.

He reportedly told her not to pull away from him and reached inside her dress, pulling out a condom and a cellphone, the report said.

Scavone said in his statement he retrieved the items, which were in the area near her breast and armpit, at least partially for officer safety because they could have been weapons, police said.

The woman, who was not wearing a bra, told Scavone multiple times not to touch her breast, and Scavone pinched her right breast through her dress before removing an undisclosed item from inside the dress, police said.

Police did not find any weapons on the woman, the report said.

Scavone accused the woman of reaching for something, and he grabbed her ponytail and slammed her head on the patrol vehicle again, police said.

He pulled her ponytail as he pushed her head against the vehicle, and she screamed, the report said.

He led her to the back seat of the patrol vehicle while holding her ponytail and slammed her into the passenger window, police said.

"You resisted and fought me," he told the woman, according to the report.

The federal grand jury indictment is just that: a grand jury indictment. It doesn’t take much to convince a grand jury to hand down an indictment, but it is rather unusual to see one stick to a law enforcement officer. The video captured by his camera apparently played a significant part in the bringing of charges — something that will be applauded by accountability advocates and derided by police unions, etc. who still believe body cameras are nothing more than a nefarious conspiracy to punish cops for doing normal cop stuff.

The assault charge is one thing. It’s the falsification charge that’s going to hurt, if it sticks. According to the DOJ, Scavone lied in his use of force report. That’s netting him a federal obstruction charge which could add another 10-20 years to his sentence if convicted. The civil rights charges alone come with a potential 10-year sentence and $250,000 fine.

Without the footage captured by his own camera, it’s very likely Officer Scavone would still have his job and zero indictments. After all, the woman he apparently abused was suspected of being a prostitute. When it comes down to "her word against ours," a woman portrayed as a sex worker has no chance against an officer who had previously received a commendation for meritorious service. And contrary to the assertions of body camera critics, the department Scavone worked for doesn’t appear to be poring through its recordings in hopes of finding cops to bust.

Las Vegas police Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said it’s the first time his police department brought “criminal charges associated with the review of a body camera on an on-duty use of force incident.”

That the DOJ’s press release doesn’t mention the use of body camera footage in the indictment process is a little strange considering its push to spread this technology to law enforcement agencies around the nation. Of course, the DOJ is also instrumental in defending law enforcement officers against alleged civil rights violations. Sure, it investigates agencies with abusive histories, but it also works hard to ensure agencies remain legally immunized from the consequences of their actions and has mounted several efforts to keep Fourth Amendment protections to a minimum.

It’s often a house divided against itself, which may explain why this detail has been glossed over, even if the tech that turned a non-event (according to the officer’s police report) into a federal indictment is part of its overall plan to improve the nation’s policing.

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via Techdirt.
Body Cam Footage Leads To Federal Indictment Of Abusive Las Vegas Cop