Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Excitement Building in Super Tuesday States


TRUMP LEADS IN 8 OF 12 SUPER TUESDAY STATES

Excitement Building in Super Tuesday States

(CN) - Since getting underway on Feb. 1, the day the Iowa caucuses were held, the 2016 race for the White House has been upending expectations and dominating the nation"s print, broadcast and electronic media.Four contests have been held so far, with the New Hampshire and South Carolina primaries, and the Nevada caucuses following Iowa in rapid succession.But for all the air time and ink devoted to the highly spirited Democratic and Republican contests, a mere smidgen of the total delegations needed to secure the parties" respective presidential nominations have been fought over.That ends tomorrow -- Super Tuesday -- when a total 878 delegates will be on the line, about a quarter of the total needed to secure the ultimate prize.Both the Republicans and the Democrats will holding primaries in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont and Virginia.In addition, both parties will be holding caucuses in Colorado and Minnesota.Republicans will also be holding caucuses in Alaska and Wyoming, while the Democrats will hold a caucus in American Samoa.In the Republican race, Donald Trump is still generally polling far ahead of his nearest competitors, Sens. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.According to Real Clear Politics, which monitors to numerous in-state polls, Trump leads his competition by an average 14.5 percent in Virginia; 14.4 percent in Georgia; 27.5 percent in Massachusetts; 8.6 percent in Oklahoma; and 17.7 percent in Alabama.Trump also holds the lead in polls in Tennessee, Vermont and Alaska.Rubio is a slight favorite in one poll in Minnesota, and Cruz holds a small lead in an Arkansas poll.As might be expected, it is in Texas, the state with the most delegates in play, and the home state to Cruz, that the most is at stake.Cruz, an incumbent senator and the state"s former solicitor general, is still ahead of the billionaire real estate developer in the polls on his home turf, but Trump has been closing dramatically in recent days, and it could be a dead heat by the time the polls open Tuesday morning.Two weeks ago, Cruz led Trump by double digits. The average of the latest polls, as reported by Real Clear Politics, have the senator with a lead of just 9.6 percent.All of the polls have an average margin of error of plus-or-minus three percent.As for the Democrats, after her landslide victory in South Carolina of Saturday, a victory that inspired her opponent, Sen. Bernie Sanders, to admit, "we were decimated," Hillary Clinton is widely expected to sweep the Southeast.In fact, so dominate is Clinton in the polls that the Sanders campaign has reportedly pulled nearly all of its television advertising in the region and reallocated its assets to states where he is considered more competitive.Sanders best chances for victories Tuesday are in Colorado, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, and Vermont, where slightly less than 300 delegates are in play.Clinton, who is banking on strong support from black voters, as she did in South Carolina, is seen to have an overwhelming advantage in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia. Those states represent a total of 578 delegates.It"s important to note, however, that none of those states are winner-tales-all. Both candidates will walk away with some delegates from each and every contest, assuming they reach a threshold of 15 percent of votes cast.Still, if the vote goes as projected, Sanders will need to rebound with decisive wins in the primaries to be held between Super Tuesday and the end of the month.These include contests in Illinois, Kansas, Maine, Michigan and Pennsylvania.So what"s the temperature on the ground in the battleground states?Michael Joyce of the Texas Republican Party said the GOP is expecting a record turnout among their constituents on Tuesday.Although he declined to offer an assessment on how the respective candidates are doing in the Lone Star, explaining the party hadn"t done much in the way of internal polling, Joyce did say the party believes in Cruz."What I can tell you is [Texas GOP] chairman Tom Mechler believes that while anything is always possible, you should never underestimate Ted Cruz in Texas," Joyce said.He added, "There"s a lot of excitement around the race this year."In neighboring Oklahoma, Sarah Baker of the state Democratic Party, said as of Friday polls showed Clinton in the lead, but Sanders close behind and rising.In fact, a Monmouth University poll released Monday suggests Sanders has now pulled ahead in Oklahoma and now leads Clinton by five percent.There are 40 delegates in play in Oklahoma and three alternates.The 40 delegates include two undecided super delegates (the party"s chairman and a Democratic national committeeman) and two other super delegates (the party"s vice chair and a Democratic national committeewoman), who have come out in support of Sanders and Clinton, respectively.In Oklahoma, delegate allotments are determined based on the candidates" performance in each of the state"s five congressional district (for a total of 25 delegates); five "party leader or elected official" (PLEO) delegates that are divided based on statewide performance; and eight at-large delegates that are also divided based on statewide performance.While turnout on election day is always hard to guess, as of last week, Baker said, "it looks like we have a major surge in absentee ballot returns, even more than in 2008."A total of 3,451 absentee ballots had been returned by Democrats, while 143 had been returned by Independent voters.In 2008, Democrats returned 2,980 absentee ballots for the primary in total, "so even six days out, we"ve exceeded that," Baker said."We anticipate that Super Tuesday will have a larger turnout than 2012 and possibly even 2008," she said. "There"s an energy among younger voters in Oklahoma for both Sanders and Clinton, and we hope to see a spike in younger participation this year; but we"re just going to have to wait and see how that truly works out."That said, Baker conceded that "regular folks are split" over the primary election."Some are really excited, more than usual, and some are just ready for it all to be over," she said. "Everyone"s usually tired of all the political ads pretty quickly in general anyway, but with Oklahoma becoming a pseudo battleground state for both the Republicans and the Democrats, there"s just so much more of it this time."Republicans are fighting for the "endorsement" of Oklahoma to prove that they"re the most conservative and Democrats are fighting for the right to say they appeal to a bigger base than the "liberal elite,"" she said.Where things have been different among the so-called "regular" folks of Oklahoma is in their attendance of political rallies."The rallies that have happened in Oklahoma City are more and more made up of "regular" folks than political people," Baker said. "Granted there"s plenty of the political people who"ve been involved in years, but even in December when Hillary was in Tulsa there were a ton of new people that haven"t been plugged in before."We"re seeing a lot of that through the Sanders campaign as well," Baker said.But it"s not just the presidential election that"s motivating Oklahoma Democrats this year.Baker said part of the surge new participation can be attributed to a response to "all of the shenanigans that Oklahoma Republicans have been dishing out over the past few years.""We have budget failures, an implosion of the energy industry, earthquakes attributed to fracking ... refusal to accept the Medicaid expansion," she said. "Just today it was announced that the House leadership -- the Oklahoma legislature has a Republican supermajority -- is refusing to hear any bills authorized by Democrats on the House floor.""So Democrats in Oklahoma are more energized than they"ve been in a while, and we expect to see a shift in participation this year, not just for the Presidential election but for local and state elections as well," Baker said.Rachel Boyer, communications director for the Minnesota Democratic, Farmer and Labor Party, said she"s seeing a similar surge of excitement in her state, where 93 delegates and six alternates will be in play at the party"s caucus.Of that total, 50 delegates were elected at their Congressional District conventions and will be bound by the caucus results in their respective congressional district.Another 27 that were elected at the party"s state convention will be bound to support either Clinton or Sanders based on caucus results statewide.Boyer said though Minnesotans typically get excited about a big president contest and enjoy participating "in the resolution process," this year that appear to be even more engaged than usual."We expect turn out around 175,000 or higher," she said of Tuesday. "Each rally that"s been held in the state has seen a high turn-out, and our annual dinner, which featured both Secretary Clinton and Sen. Sanders, saw record attendance -- over 4,000 people."Katie Boyd, of the Minnesota Republican Party, gave a similar account of the race in the state for the Republican presidential nomination.""Regular folks are excited, energized," she said."This is the first time in several years that our presidential preference poll is binding, so every vote matters," Boyd said.As far back as November, when then-candidate Sen. Rand Paul visited the state, rallies held by the Republican candidates have drawn thousands of attendees, she said.Republicans are competing for 38 delegates, which will be allotted based on congressional district and statewide poll results."Twenty-four will be elected by congressional district -- three delegates each -- and bound according to their respective results, and 14 will be selected at the state convention and bound according to the statewide results," Boyd said.An interesting wrinkle in Minnesota is that Republican rules don"t allow for voting by absentee ballot. "Delegates can be nominated in absentia, via a written letter, but a vote must be cast in person," Boyd said.Returning to the subject of how keyed in people are to the election, Boyd said, "We are hearing from a lot of people who haven"t participated in caucuses in previous years.""It"s fantastic," she said.Another of the key races to watch on Tuesday night will be in Tennessee where 75 delegates are in play.Of these, 44 are district-level delegates, nine are unpledged "party leader or elected official" (PLEO) delegates, nine are pledged PLEO delegates, and 14 at-large delegates.However, one PLEO delegate is unable to participate in this year"s primary. Thus bringing the total to 75, said Sandra Seplveda of the Tennessee Democratic Party.Delegates are divided up proportionately based on the percentage of the primary vote won in that district by each candidate. Tennessee it yet another of the state in which candidates falling below a 15 percent will not be awarded any delegates or alternates.But that not expected to be an issue, Seplveda said."Whether they "Feel the Bern" or "Stand with Hillary," Democrats in Tennessee are more excited than they"ve been in years for these two qualified and exceptional candidates," she said."The two campaigns have been doing a wonderful job bringing out Democrats from all over the state," she said.Christina Amestoy, a spokeswoman for the Vermont Democratic Party, said according to the latest poll conducted by Vermont Public Radio and the Castleton Polling Institute, Sanders, the home state favorite, leads Clinton, 83.1 percent to 9 percent.Undecided voters make up 12.1 percent of those likely to head to the polls on Tuesday, and the remainder pledged their support to other, locally known candidates."The fact that Bernie is doing so well in Vermont is not a surprise - he has a strong home field advantage here," Amestoy said. "He has a very strong base of supporters from his time in office and generated a lot of excitement with his presidential bid."That being said," she continued, "the Clinton campaign does have a Vermont operation and has been out knocking on doors and distributing material. Clinton"s campaign will be making a strong push to try and ensure she reaches that 15 percent threshold."In the Republican race, Donald Trump has a commanding 2-1 in lead in the polls to his closest competitor, Sen. Marco Rubio. in the polls, Ted Cruz is third, with Kasich close behind him. Dr. Ben Carson is a distant fifth.Vermont has 26 delegates in total, 16 of which are ledged delegates, and 10 others that are unpledged or "super delegates." It is the 16 pledged delegates that up for grabs Tuesday night.In Vermont there are three categories of pledged delegates.The first is "district-level delegates." Vermont has 11 district level delegates. These delegates are allocated based on percentage of the vote that the candidate receives.The following five are divided among "party leader or elected official" (PLEO) delegates, and "at-large" delegates. These remaining five spots are elected by the 11 district-level delegates based on their pledged support so will go to the candidate who won the majority on Super Tuesday.Amestoy said absentee balloting has been vigorous in the state, as it was in 2008, the last time there was a contested Democratic race.According to the state board of elections, as of Friday, 15,200 Democratic absentee ballots had been collected, as had about 6,500 Republican ballots."Sanders" presence in the race is really helping to drive excitement," Amestoy said. "I think that Vermont is a very politically engaged state. We saw a lot of excitement around the 2008 elections and we"re seeing that same sort of engagement this time around. I think voters are really excited to turn out and have the chance to vote for a Vermonter."

Source: http://www.courthousenews.com/2016/02/29/excitement-building-in-super-tuesday-states.htm

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Gotham Stories: The Whole Frozen Affair Sets Up the Midseason Premiere


GOTHAM | Tribulations from "Wrath of the Villains: Mr. Freeze"

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Get prepped for Monday night"s return episode. By Eric Goldman

IGN has the exclusive debut of the complete Gotham Stories, the new motion comic from FOX, Warner Bros. TV and DC Entertainment that bridges the first and second halves of Gotham: Season 2.

If you"ve missed the previous installments, you"ll see the entire story here, as new player in town Mr. Freeze confronts Penguin, leading Oswald to turn to an unlikely place for help. Check out how the tale ends, leading into Monday night"s Gotham midseason premiere.

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We want to hear it.

The storyline for Gotham Stories was outlined by Gotham Producer/Writer Rebecca Cutter and Senior Writer/Producer, FOX On-Air Promo Creative, Bart Montgomery, with a script by Tony Bedard and artwork by Matt Haley. The series is produced by VP, FOX On-Air Promo Creative, Julio Cabral.

Gotham cast members Robin Lord Taylor (Penguin), Camren Bicondova (Cat), Nathan Darrow (Victor Fries), Ben McKenzie (Jim Gordon) and Donal Logue (Harvey Bullock) all lend their voices to Gotham Stories.

DC will also be creating a custom cover for a special collector print edition of the complete Gotham Stories.

Gotham returns with new episodes Monday, February 29th at 8:00pm ET/PT on FOX.

Eric Goldman is Executive Editor of IGN TV. You can follow him on Twitter at @TheEricGoldman, IGN at ericgoldman-ign and Facebook at Facebook.com/TheEricGoldman.

Source: http://www.ign.com/articles/2016/02/29/gotham-stories-the-whole-frozen-affair

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Ashley Graham Stuns in Revealing Oscar Dress After Cheryl Tiegs Apologizes for Calling Her "Unhealthy"


Plus-size? More Like My Size | Ashley Graham | TEDxBerkleeValencia

Ashley Graham wasn"t about to let Cheryl Tiegs" comments keep her from rocking the Oscar red carpet.

The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover girl stunned in a revealing red dress at the Vanity Fair Oscar party on Sunday night, just a few days after Tiegs apologized for calling the size 14-16 model "unhealthy."

WATCH: Cheryl Tiegs Blasts "Sports Illustrated" for Putting Ashley Graham on Swimsuit Cover: "Glamorizing" Full-Figured Women Is Not Healthy

"I don"t like that we"re talking about full-figured women because it"s glamorizing them because your waist should be smaller than 35 [inches]. That"s what Dr. Oz said, and I"m sticking to it," the 68-year-old former cover girl told E! News last week. "Her face is beautiful. But I don"t think it"s healthy in the long run."

After receiving backlash for her comments, Tiegs took to Twitter on Friday to offer "my sincere apologies to everyone I have hurt."

"I truly just want everyone to be healthy & happy," she added.

WATCH: "Sports Illustrated" Redefines Beauty by Naming Ashley Graham an Official Swimsuit Model

Graham hasn"t responded to the comments, but certainly seemed happy as she posed for pics in her stunning custom Bao Tranchi dress. On Monday morning, the 28-year-old model recapped her glam night on Twitter.

"Bao Tranchi custom dress last night had me feeling like I was wearing a piece of art!" she wrote, adding the hashtag "#beautybeyondsize."

WATCH: Ashley Graham Shows Off Sexy Pink Lingerie for "Love" Magazine"s Advent Calendar

Graham opened up to ET last August about the stigmas that come with being referred to as a "plus-sized" model.

"The things that I don"t necessarily like about it is all the negative stigmatisms that go with the word plus size -- you"re fat, you"re lazy, you have no drive, no determination, you"re constantly eating," she explained. "Honey, I work out. I work out three days a week. I lift. I do barre. I do it all. It"s the stereotypes. That"s what I really don"t like. I am me. Take it or leave it."

See more from the interview in the video below.

WATCH: Model Ashley Graham Isn"t a Fan of the Term "Plus Size": "I Am Me, Take It or Leave It"

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Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNGBkMDZFGEerQlw8ISUaFJGbtwUSw&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779053888837&ei=m1fVVuCsOoK_3gGqk4H4Bg&url=https://www.yahoo.com/tv/ashley-graham-stuns-revealing-oscar-001000390.html

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Monday, February 29, 2016

Analyze This: Why "Spotlight" Beat "The Revenant" And "The Big Short" To Win Best Picture


The Big Short | Trailer | Paramount Pictures UK

Mon Feb 29 09:00:00 EST 2016

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Well, that was exciting. Going into yesterdays Oscars, most prognosticators were predicting and expecting The Revenant to win Best Picture it was a huge hit, took the BAFTA and the DGA (the guild that most often lines up with Best Picture), and was widely expected to win Best Actor and Best Director, which it did. Those that werent backing Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritus film tended, like ourselves, to predict that The Big Short was best placed for the big prize, having taken the PGA Award.

But instead, in one of the more pleasing curveballs in recent Oscar memory, the Best Picture trophy went home to the makers of Spotlight, Tom McCarthys sober, understated drama about the Boston Globe reporters who helped reveal systematic cover-ups of child abuse in the Catholic Church in the city (and elsewhere). A few astute prognosticators had backed it (aided by its wins with the SAG), but not many, and given that before it won Best Picture last night, the film had only won one other award, even they must have been feeling shaky. So what happened? How did the dark horse triumph over its bigger competitors?

READ MORE: Oscars 2016: "Spotlight" Wins Best Picture, "The Revenant" Takes Best Director & Actor, "Mad Max: Fury Road" Wins 6

Its a complicated question, but the simplest answer is: the preferential ballot. Introduced in 2009, the new system asked voters not just to pick their favorites, but to rank all of the Best Picture nominees (this year, from 1-8). If a movie gets over half of the first-choice votes, it wins, simply enough. But if no film has a majority, the movie with the least number of first choice picks (lets say for sake of argument this year that it was Bridge Of Spies) is eliminated.

The accountants then take all the ballots that had Bridge Of Spies in first, and redistribute them according to the second-place votes. Assuming no movie is now over the 50% barrier, the movie with the next fewest votes (Brooklyn, say) is eliminated, and their votes redistributed (If a Brooklyn ballot had Bridge Of Spies in second, they go by their third place vote). And so on and so forth. This video by The Wraps Steve Pond probably helps explain things better with some visual aids.

In general, it means that unless theres a runaway favorite and thats increasingly unlikely in an extended Best Picture field the system is skewed against divisive fare, and favors those that are consensus favorites, movies that might not have got the most first place votes, but stacked up plenty of second and third place ones as well.

READ MORE: Interview: Tom McCarthy Talks "Spotlight," State Of Journalism, "The Wire" & More

It was the logic that saw me predicting The Big Short the PGA are the only guilds who use the preferential ballot system but in the end it was Spotlight that benefited. And its not difficult to wonder why. The Revenant turned off as many as it turned on: for every person that found it bravura and powerful, there was another that saw empty showboating and b****y violence. Some loved flippant, fleet-footed take on a dense subject presented in "The Big Short," while others found it labored and uneven. But Spotlight felt widely loved, or at least widely liked: even those who didnt find it the best of the year respected the films understated tone and quiet emotion.

There were likely other things that helped it build up the broadest group of support. Actors are the largest branch of the Academy, and Spotlight is a movie with a large ensemble cast full of actors actors, long-serving, oft-undervalued character actor types. That factor also helped win it the SAG ensemble prize, and likely this that helped it vault over The Revenant (mostly a one-man show), and The Big Short, which also deploys a large cast, but one arguably more driven by big-name movie stars.

Oscar voters also often like a subject that makes them feel good for voting about it, and Spotlight tackles an important one. Whereas Room might have felt too bleak for some voters, for instance, McCarthys film has the right amount of uplift at the end, showing a shocking conspiracy but ultimately seeing it bested, and demonstrating the change that came from it. Like Schindlers List or 12 Years A Slave, which also grapple with difficult subject matter, theyre also stories of hope amidst inhumanity, and that plays well with voters. And thus, the quiet triumph of "Spotlight" resonated more than the revenge driven narrative of The Revenant (however much its filmmakers talk about climate change and highlighting indigenous peoples, they felt attached to the story rather than inherently part of it), or the more ambivalent conclusion of The Big Short, which ends with the corrupt institution essentially prevailing, and our "heroes" getting very rich off the misery of others.

All this presumably saw Spotlight topping plenty of ballots, but also crucially coming second, third or fourth on those that preferred other nominees. Its the same thing that ultimately benefited Argo, The Kings Speech, The Artist and more: the important thing to remember is that the Best Picture winner isnt the most liked film, but the film thats liked the most.

This article is related to: Features, Features, Feature, Awards, Awards, Academy Awards, Academy Awards, Oscars, Spotlight, The Big Short, The Revenant

Source: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/analyze-this-why-spotlight-beat-the-revenant-and-the-big-short-to-win-best-picture-20160229

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Oscar snubs include "The Big Short," Sylvester Stallone and yes, "Star Wars: The Force Awakens"


THE BIG SHORT Movie CLIP # 1

"The Big Short" should have seen its stock rise higher.

As deserving as best picture winner "Spotlight" is for the honor, a good case could have been made to honor the dramedy about the 2008 financial crisis.

"SPOTLIGHT" WINS BEST PICTURE, LEO TAKES HOME FIRST OSCAR

Oscar-winning screenwriters Adam McKay and Charles Randolph managed to turn complex economic jargon and potentially unlikeable characters into an engaging, funny film. Academy voters should have invested themselves more heavily in a film that stands out for its originality.

Sylvester Stallone had been the heavy favorite going into the night for the best supporting actor nomination. But instead he was knocked out by underdog Mark Rylance"s witty, understated turn as a Russian spy in "Bridge of Spies."

10 BEST OSCAR MOMENTS

That"s a shame, because "Creed" works so well thanks to Stallone"s willingness to play his signature character, Rocky Balboa, with more vulnerability than we ever knew he could manage.

Actually, the biggest snub in the category happened a month and a half ago - back when the Oscar nominations first revealed that Idris Elba didn"t make the cut for his turn as a brutal African warlord in "Beasts of No Nation."

His omission may have been the most glaring example of the lack of diversity in the film business that inspired the #OscarsSoWhite movement. But just as likely it was a result of a different bias: industry insiders refusing to recognize a Netflix film when the streaming site is vexing traditional exhibitors.

CHRIS ROCKS BEST JOKES FROM OSCARS NIGHT

For the few who bothered to watch all five nominees in the live action short category, it"s (ahem) shocking that "Shok" didn"t win. It"s an emotionally devastating saga of two kids struggling to survive the Kosovo War that haunts viewers long past its 20-minute run time.

Not even this light-saber wielding nerd can argue that "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" deserved a best picture nomination, but it"s glaring that the biggest box office hit in North American history couldn"t even get one measly statuette.

JOE BIDEN PLEADS FOR END OF RAPE CULTURE AT OSCARS BEFORE INTRODUCING LADY GAGA

With all due respect to the artisans who fueled "Mad Max: Fury Road," wasn"t there at least a sound mixing or sound editing Oscar to be shared? And did the clever indie "Ex Machina" really have better visual effects than the ones produced by the programmers who piloted the Millennium Falcon back to the big screen?

It"s another sign that the Academy doesn"t always appreciate the popcorn-flavored tastes of the ticket-buyers who subsidize their movies.

Disney and director J.J. Abrams, however, can console themselves by counting every dollar of the $2 billion the latest installment of the most powerful sci-fi franchise in the universe has grossed worldwide to date.

Tags: oscars , the big short , sylvester stallone , star wars , star wars: the force awakens , mark rylance

Source: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/movies/oscar-snubs-include-big-short-sylvester-stallone-article-1.2547266

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How to control a Raspberry Pi using WhatsApp


NEW Raspberry Pi 3 - Quad-Core 1.2GHz, WiFi + Bluetooth!

Do you use the Raspberry Pi for a headless project, such as a media player, NAS server, seed box or security camera? If you do, then your Raspberry Pi is probably tucked away somewhere that"s not that easily accessible.

You can always log in to it remotely but how do you monitor it in real time? How do you know whether it"s overheating? Or running out of disk space? In this project, we"ll play G*d and make your Raspberry Pi self-aware, and give it the ability to communicate.

In more earthly terms, we"ll install the sendxmpp tool on the Raspberry Pi, which allows it to communicate via the popular XMPP messaging protocol. We will use this to send notifications to us via instant messages whenever a predetermined event is triggered.

First up, you"ll need to get a XMPP IM account for the Raspberry Pi. If you aren"t using a XMPP server already, you can register with any of the publicly listed XMPP servers. We"re using the Hot Chilli service, which gets a top-notch security rating from xmpp.net and allows you to register an account on the website itself.

Once you"ve registered an account for your Raspberry Pi, make sure you add it as a friend on your regular account, on which you want to receive notifications. Now log into the Raspberry Pi, update the repos and then download the sendxmpp tool with sudo apt-get install sendxmpp.

It"s a Perl script and will pull in the required Perl dependencies. When it"s installed, create a file named .sendxmpprc under your home directory with the credentials of the Raspberry Pi"s XMPP account, such as:

$ nano /.sendxmpprc

rpibot@jabber.hot-chilli.net my-secret-password

Remember to replace the username and password with the credentials for the account you registered for the Raspberry Pi. After saving the file, you can send a message with:

$ echo "Hi, this is Pi!" | sendxmpp -t geekybodhi@jabber.hotchilli.net

The above command sends a message from the Raspberry Pi to the XMPP ID specified with the -t option. Swap out the ID in the example above with your own XMPP ID. If you"re signed into your regular IM account, you"ll receive the greeting as a regular message from the Raspberry Pi"s XMPP account.

You can also pass output of Bash commands, such as:

$ echo "It is" $(date) | sendxmpp -t geekybodhi@jabber.hotchilli.net

This command sends the output of the date command. Here"s another example that"s a little more useful:

$ echo $(/opt/vc/bin/vcgencmd measure_temp) | sendxmpp -t

geekybodhi@jabber.hot-chilli.net

This command queries the temperature sensors on the Raspberry Pi using the utilities installed by the raspberrypi-firmwaretools package, which we then pipe to our regular IM user.

You can use this statement to monitor the Raspberry Pi and send you an alert over IM when the temperature crosses a preset threshold. Copy the contents of file called status.sh (click the link to see the code). Then set a crontab entry by running crontab -e and entering the following line:

*/5 * * * * /status.sh

Here we are asking the Raspberry Pi to run the status.sh script every five minutes. Remember to change the location of the status.sh file to the location on your Raspberry Pi.

So what"s in the status.sh script? The script stores the temperature of the Raspberry Pi in a variable named "temp" after stripping out the verbose text and the decimal, because Bash can only handle integers.

The script then checks whether the value is greater than 40C, and if it is, alerts us with a message. You can extend this script to keep track of the goings-on in the Raspberry Pi. eg you can ask it to send you alerts whenever it finds a particular message in a log file, or whenever the status of a daemon changes.

The sendxmpp script helps you keep track of the activities on the Raspberry Pi however, you can"t act on them without logging in to the Raspberry Pi. But what if this isn"t possible?

What if you get a temperature warning from the Raspberry Pi monitoring your home while you"re away at work? Wouldn"t it be great if you could control the Raspberry Pi via messages as well?

Source: http://www.techradar.com/how-to/computing/how-to-control-a-raspberry-pi-using-whatsapp-1315610

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"reThinking" The Big Short


The Big Short | Trailer | Paramount Pictures UK

The critically acclaimed, now Oscar-winning film The Big Short has helped form the impression among the American people that the private sector caused the financial crisis. But does this impression align with the facts? Is the 2008 crisis a relatively straightforward, moralistic tale of Wall Street greed and human foibles run amok? Or are government institutions and policies equally or more to blame?

I lay it all out for you in the below video, reThink The Big Short and the 2008 Financial Crisis. Take a look.

Source: http://www.aei.org/publication/rethinking-the-big-short/

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