• Online Censorship In Schools Is More Pervasive Than Expected, New Data Shows
    gizmodo.com
    Aleeza Siddique, 15, was in a Spanish class earlier this year in her Northern California high school when a lesson about newscasts got derailed by her schools internet filter. Her teacher told the class to open up their school-issued Chromebooks and explore a list of links he had curated from the Spanish language broadcast news giant Telemundo. The students tried, but every single link turned up the same page: a picture of a padlock. None of it was available to us, Aleeza said. The site was completely blocked.She said her teacher scrambled to pivot and fill the 90-minute class with other activities. From what she recalls, they went over vocabulary lists and independently clicked through online quizzes from Quizlet a decidedly less dynamic use of time.New data released this week by the D.C.-based Center for Democracy & Technology shows just how often some of that blocking happens nationwide. The nonprofit digital rights advocacy organization conducted its fifth annual nationally representative survey of middle and high school teachers and parents as well as high school students about a range of tech issues. About 70% of both teachers and students this year said web filters get in the way of students ability to complete their assignments. Virtually all schools use some type of web filter to comply with the Childrens Internet Protection Act, which requires districts taking advantage of the federal E-rate program for discounted internet and telecommunications equipment to keep kids from seeing graphic and obscene images online. A 2024 investigation by The Markup, which is now a part of CalMatters, discovered far more expansive blocking by school districts than federal law requires, some of it political, mirroring culture war battles over what students have access to in school libraries. That investigation found school districts blocking access to sex education and LGBTQ+ resources, including suicide prevention. It also found routine blocking of websites students seek out for academic research. And because school districts tend to set different restrictions for students and staff, teachers can be as frustrated by the filters as anyone because of how they complicate lesson planning. Web filtering is subjective and unchecked Elizabeth Laird, director of equity in civic technology for the center and lead author of the report, said The Markups reporting helped inspire additional survey questions to better understand how schools are using filters as a subjective and unchecked method of restricting students access to information.The scope of what is blocked is more pervasive and value-laden than I think we initially even knew to ask last year, Laird said. While past surveys have revealed how often students and teachers report disproportionate filtering of content related to reproductive health, LGBTQ+ issues and content about people of color, the center asked respondents this year if they thought content associated with or about immigrants was more likely to be blocked. About one-third of students said yes.Aleeza would have said yes, after her experience with Telemundo. The California teen said how often she runs into blocks depends on how much research shes trying to do and how much of it she has to do on her school computer. When she was taking a debate class, she ran into the blocks regularly while researching controversial topics. An article in Slate magazine about LGBTQ+ rights gave her a block screen, for example, because the entire news website is blocked. She said she avoids her school Chromebook as much as possible, doing homework on her personal laptop away from school Wi-Fi whenever she can. Fully three-quarters of teachers who responded to the recent survey said students use workarounds to access an unfiltered internet. Laird found this number striking. Web filters, then, are not keeping students from accessing the websites they want to access, and theyre getting in the way of completing schoolwork. It raises a fundamental question of whether this technology, in trying to prevent students from accessing harmful content, actually does more harm than good, Laird said.Nearly one-third of teachers surveyed by the Center for Democracy & Technology said their schools block content related to the LGBTQ+ community. About half said information about sexual orientation and reproductive health is blocked. And Black and Latino students were more likely to say content related to people of color is disproportionately blocked on their school devices. For students like Aleeza, the blocking is frustrating in practice as well as principle. The amount that theyre policing is actively interfering with our ability to have an education, she said. Often, she has no idea why a website triggers the block page. Aleeza said it feels arbitrary and thinks her school should be more transparent about what its blocking and why.We should have a right to know what were being protected from, she said. Audrey Baime, Olivia Brandeis, and Samantha Yee, all members of the CalMatters Youth Journalism Initiative, contributed reporting for this story. This article was originally published on The Markup and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
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  • House of the Rising Meadow / I/O architects
    www.archdaily.com
    House of the Rising Meadow / I/O architectsSave this picture! Assen EmilovHousesSofia, BulgariaArchitects: I/O architectsAreaArea of this architecture projectArea:685 mYearCompletion year of this architecture project Year: 2024 PhotographsPhotographs:Assen EmilovMore SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. The single family house is located in a historic neighbourhood from the 1920s, planned as a low density, small scale transition to the adjacent city park. The simple volume of the house is surrounded from three sides by small courtyards.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!The long and narrow grassy side part is essential in connecting the front entrance courtyard and the hidden, intimate back courtyard. In order to access the underground parking space the whole meadow could be raised in the air by a hydraulic system. The car parking and the inner courtyard are centered around a circle skylight. The size of the facade openings increases from the street towards the inner courtyard.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!The materiality follows iconic historic examples nearby while the scale is additionally decreased by lowering the line of the roof material and introducing mirrored glass volumes on the fourth floor. The master-bedroom and study room areas on the third and the fourth levels are interconnected through the void spaces in those glass volumes. On the first level the living room fills the entire footprint of the house open in every direction. The internal spaces are dominated by concrete floors and ceilings balanced by walnut and fine metal elements.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessAbout this officeI/O architectsOfficePublished on January 18, 2025Cite: "House of the Rising Meadow / I/O architects" 18 Jan 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1025874/house-of-the-rising-meadow-i-o-architects&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • Heads up: There is now a way to get Microsoft apps without a subscription
    www.popsci.com
    Stack CommerceShareWe may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more It is not an exaggeration to say that Excel runs my life. Its where I do my job, manage my budget, and I also just habitually make spreadsheets for everything from apartment hunting to fantasy football. Ive felt stuck with a Microsoft 365 subscription because I cant do without Excel, and I cant replace it with an alternative app because its what my job requires me to use.Thats why I was so pumped when I learned Microsoft now has a recent version of Office that you dont have to pay for every month. Microsoft Office Home works for Mac or PC, and you only pay for it once. Its also on sale. Instead of paying $149, its $119.97.Cheaper over timeOk, yeah, $120 is more expensive than any single month of Microsoft 365 will ever be, but you also only pay for it once. Thats still cheaper than just two years of Microsoft 365s cheapest possible plan ($72 a year).This license lets you install Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote onto one computer. It connects directly to your Microsoft account, too.And because these are the most recent updates, each app has all the new bells and whistles. That includes modern UI changes like ribbon navigation and AI-powered tools. Word has smart suggestions for writing, helping you craft polished documents quickly. Excels AI tools analyze your data and even generate visuals like charts and graphs to highlight trends.Its a major improvement if youre used to working with an old version of Excel or one of the cheap alternative apps.Get a lifetime license to Microsoft Office 2024 Home for Mac or PC for $119.97.StackSocial prices subject to change.Microsoft Office 2024 Home for Mac or PC: One-Time Purchase $119.97See Deal
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  • Long-lived entanglement of molecules in magic-wavelength optical tweezers
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 15 January 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-024-08365-1By engineering an exceptionally controlled environment using rotationally magic optical tweezers, long-lived entanglement between pairs of molecules using detectable hertz-scale interactions can be achieved.
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  • Roman emperor quiz: Test your knowledge on the rulers of the ancient empire
    www.livescience.com
    The Roman emperors were once the most famous people in the world, ruling over an empire that stretched between what are now Spain and the Middle East. But just how much do you know about these characters? Take our quiz to find out.
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  • Selfie Live Now! Animation WIP
    v.redd.it
    submitted by /u/StudioWrongOfficial [link] [comments]
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  • x.com
    Sadra Shariaty shared his process for sculpting a reptilian alien bust with Nomad Sculpt and ZBrush and texturing it in Substance 3D Painter, aiming for a faster, more efficient workflow.Read here: https://80.lv/articles/crafting-realistic-reptilian-looking-alien-with-nomad-sculpt-substance-3d/#substance3dpainter #nomadsculpt #zbrush
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  • PlayStation 4 And 5 Owners Can Watch Severance Season 2 For Free--Here's How
    www.gamespot.com
    Fans of Severance (or any of the binge-worthy titles currently streaming on Apple TV+) who also own a PlayStation are in for a treat: They can view the surreal, nail-biting office drama's latest season free of charge due to a new free trial program being offered by Apple.PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 owners can tune into Severance Season 2 (and other highly rated Apple TV+ shows, like Mythic Quest and Ted Lasso) without paying a dime by taking advantage of the extended free trial, which lasts for three months and can be canceled at any time.Clock in to a new season of Severance with a 3-month @AppleTV extended trial on PS5 and PS4: https://t.co/9zAWH9wda2 pic.twitter.com/96rG9wBPZJ PlayStation (@PlayStation) January 17, 2025 To begin the free trial, visit PlayStation's Apple TV+ offers page. To take part in the free trial, you'll need a PlayStation 4 or PlayStation 5, a PlayStation Network account, and an Apple account.Continue Reading at GameSpot
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  • Elden Ring Nightreign Could Be the Final Chance to Explore One Character
    gamerant.com
    FromSoftware has long been known for the cryptic and fairly inaccessible lore in its games, and that tradition continued in Elden Ring and its Shadow of the Erdtree DLC. Now, the same is to be expected of Elden Ring Nightreign, the upcoming cooperative Elden Ring spin-off that is breaking new ground for the Dark Souls developer. However, while cryptic lore and mysterious characters are a given for Elden Ring Nightreign, it can't miss what may be its final chance to explore one of Elden Ring's most unexplored characters.
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