city:boston

  • La projection Equal-Earth
    https://visionscarto.net/la-projection-equal-earth

    Titre : La projection Equal-Earth Auteurs : Bojan Šavrič, Bernhard Jenny et Tom Patterson Date de création : Août 2018 Mots-clés : #projections #d3.js Apparition : International Journal of Geographical Information Science Cette projection est née d’une frustration de cartographes. Fin mars 2017, les écoles publiques de Boston (Massachussetts) annonçaient vouloir sortir des représentations de Mercator pour les cartes du monde ; entreprise plus que louable, mais l’affaire était gâtée par le choix (...)

    #Collection_cartographique

    / #Projections

  • Slip ou boxer ? Les caleçons amples favorisent la production de spermatozoïdes, selon une étude
    https://www.20minutes.fr/sante/2319155-20180809-slip-boxer-calecons-amples-favorisent-production-spermato

    Sur 20 minute on découvre la spermatogenèse selon une « étude » récente !
    Ce qui est consternant c’est que l’article est orienté « si vous voulez devenir père ». La même étude donne tout autant le moyen de ne pas devenir père et ne pas ruiné le corps, la vie, la santé et la carrière des femmes.
    L’article est dans la rubrique « fertilité » alors que ca pouvait aussi bien être dans « contraception », et expliqué le principe du #RCT ou aborder le sujet de la contraception vis à vis du publique masculin qui en a grand grand grand besoin. Mais non, on ne va pas parler contraception aux homme, la seule chose qui interesse les hommes c’est comment pourrir la planete et la vie des femmes avec leur précieux jus de couilles.

    Le mot d’ordre : laisser respirer. Les hommes qui veulent devenir père feraient mieux de porter le caleçon plutôt que des sous-vêtements serrés, pour favoriser la production de spermatozoïdes, ont affirmé des chercheurs jeudi.

    Cette étude publiée par la revue Human Reproduction confirme, avec une plus grande rigueur que d’autres avant elle, ce que l’on soupçonnait déjà : plus les testicules respirent, mieux ils fonctionnent. « Les hommes qui portent des caleçons ont des concentrations en spermatozoïdes plus élevées que ceux qui portent des sous-vêtements plus moulants », a résumé la revue dans un communiqué.
    Les adeptes du caleçon avaient 33% de spermatozoïdes mobiles en plus

    Cette conclusion provient de spermogrammes réalisés par 656 hommes entre 2000 et 2017, dans le service d’assistance à la procréation du Massachusetts General Hospital à Boston (États-Unis).

    L’étude « est la première à dépasser l’accent mis traditionnellement sur la qualité du sperme et à comprendre des données sur une multitude d’indicateurs du fonctionnement testiculaire, tels que les hormones de la reproduction et les dégâts sur l’ADN du sperme », a avancé Human Reproduction.

    Les sujets de l’étude ont indiqué ce qu’ils portaient le plus souvent. Pour 53% c’était des caleçons, pour 47% des sous-vêtements plus serrés (boxer court ou boxer long, slip moulant ou autre). En ajustant avec d’autres facteurs pouvant influencer la qualité du sperme (état de santé, niveau d’activité physique, tabagisme, etc.), les adeptes du caleçon avaient 33% de spermatozoïdes mobiles en plus.
    Eviter pantalons moulants et ne pas passer trop de temps assis

    Par ailleurs, ceux qui portent des sous-vêtements serrés secrètent plus d’hormone folliculo-stimulante (FSH), qui stimule la production de spermatozoïdes. D’après les chercheurs, le corps compense ainsi une température trop élevée pour les testicules.

    « La production de sperme nécessite une température de 3 à 4°C inférieure à celle du reste du corps », a rappelé un professeur en médecine de la reproduction de l’université d’Édimbourg (Royaume-Uni), Richard Sharpe, cité par Science Media Centre. Lui et d’autres experts donnent d’autres conseils : éviter de porter des pantalons moulants, de passer trop de temps assis, et de prendre des bains très chauds.

    #natalisme #domination_masculine #contraception_masculine

  • https://mrairplaneman.bandcamp.com/track/slippery

    Margaret Garrett (chant-guitare) et Tara McManus (batterie-claviers) forment leur duo en 1996 à Boston. Un nom mystérieux qui fait référence à un titre de Howlin’ Wolf . Un clin d’œil appuyé à leur obsession pour le #rock’n’roll, obsession entretenue depuis leurs années de collégiennes. Elles commencent à jouer dans la rue et enregistrent leur premier album dès 2001. Vite repérées par John Peel (les fameuses Sessions), elles partagent la scène avec les White Stripes, The Strokes, tournent avec Morphine et travaillent avec Greg « Oblivian » Cartwright. Leur musique est adoptée par de multiples programmes TV (dont « The L World ») mais aussi par le cinéma.

    http://beastrecords.free.fr/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=281&Itemid=47
    https://mrairplaneman.bandcamp.com/track/cmon-dj


    https://mrairplaneman.bandcamp.com
    http://www.mrairplaneman.com
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=191&v=sWH1wKQ2_WQ

    #Mr.Airplane_Man #bandcamp #Beast_rds

  • #Boston weighs giving legal, non-US citizens voting rights | Boston.com
    https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2018/07/08/boston-weighs-giving-legal-non-us-citizens-voting-rights

    The City Council is holding a hearing Tuesday on the idea at the request of Council President Andrea Campbell. The council is considering ways to make city elections more inclusive, including allowing immigrants with legal status in the country the right to vote in municipal races.

    #vote #etats-unis

  • Trump et le refus migratoire en Amérique
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/trump-et-le-refus-migratoire-en-amerique

    Trump et le refus migratoire en Amérique

    Le refus migratoire incarné par Trump n’a rien de neuf. Les races refusées ont changé mais on a toujours refusé des immigrés en Amérique, même européens, surtout à partir de la fin du XIXème siècle, même si on n’a jamais su les arrêter…

    Les grands hommes s’en sont mêlés, comme Kipling qui se plaint à Boston de la baisse tendancielle du nombre de Wasps. Dans son journal, Henry James s’avère fasciné et effaré par le dynamisme de la jeune population juive fraîchement débarquée. Dans une nouvelle nommée la Rue, Lovecraft diabolise à sa manière géniale l’arrivée de nouveaux venus dans sa rue. Il dénonce leur physique répugnant et leurs idées politiques subversives ! Puis il pleure les temps anciens des pionniers blonds comme l’or.

    Mais rien ne vaut – pour comprendre ce mal du siècle (...)

    • Belle sélection américaine pour une si petite liste, mais ce sont les seuls que je n’arrive pas à écouter :

      Atlanta
      Future Mask Off
      Migos Bad and boujee
      Outkast Elevator (Me & You)
      Russ Do It Myself
      Boston
      Guru Lifesaver
      Breaux Bridge
      Buckshot Lefonque Music Evolution
      Brentwood
      EPMD Da Joint
      Chicago
      Saba LIFE
      Dallas
      #Erykah_Badu The Healer
      Detroit
      Clear Soul Forces Get no better
      Eminem The Real Slim Shady
      La Nouvelle-Orléans
      $uicideboy$ ft. Pouya South Side Suicide
      Mystikal Boucin’ Back Lexington
      CunninLynguists Lynguistics
      Los Angeles
      Cypress Hill Hits from the bong
      Dilated Peoples Trade Money
      Dr. Dre The next episode ft. Snoop Dogg
      Gavlyn We On
      Jonwayne These Words are Everything
      Jurassic 5 Quality Control
      Kendrick Lamar Humble
      N.W.A Straight outta Compton
      Snoop Dogg Who Am I (What’s my name) ?
      The Pharcyde Drop
      Miami
      Pouya Get Buck
      Minneapolis
      Atmosphere Painting
      New-York
      A tribe called quest Jazz (We’ve Got) Buggin’ Out
      Big L Put it on
      Jeru the Damaja Me or the Papes
      Mobb Deep Shook Ones Pt. II
      Notorious B.I.G Juicy
      The Underachievers Gold Soul Theory
      Wu-Tang Clan Da Mistery of Chessboxin’
      Newark
      Lords of the Underground Chief Rocka
      Pacewon Children sing
      Petersburg
      Das EFX They want EFX
      Philadelphie
      Doap Nixon Everything’s Changing
      Jedi Mind Tricks Design in Malice
      Pittsburgh
      Mac Miller Nikes on my feet
      Richmond
      Mad Skilzz Move Ya Body
      Sacramento
      Blackalicious Deception
      San Diego
      Surreal & the Sounds Providers Place to be
      San Francisco
      Kero One Fly Fly Away
      Seattle
      Boom Bap Project Who’s that ?
      Brothers From Another Day Drink
      SOL This Shit
      Stone Mountain
      Childish Gambino Redbone
      Washington DC
      Oddisee Own Appeal

      Limité mais permet des découvertes.

      Mark Mushiva - The Art of Dying (#Namibie)
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZZrp4TMAgQ

      Tehn Diamond - Happy (#Zimbabwe)
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5tjMAy5ySM

      #rap

    • « Global Hip-Hop » : 23 nouveaux morceaux ajoutés dans la base grâce à vos propositions ! Deux nouveaux pays (Mongolie et Madagascar) et 11 nouvelles villes, de Mississauga à Versailles en passant par Molfetta, Safi, Oulan-Bator ou Tananarive ?

  • Hidden portraits: rare photos of African American life get a spotlight | Art and design | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/jun/21/metropolitan-museum-art-african-american-portraits-exhibition

    In 1861, African American abolitionist Frederick Douglass took the stage at Boston’s Tremont Temple Baptist church and declared: “To the eye and spirit, pictures are just what poetry and music are to the ear and heart.”

    It was part of his speech Pictures and Progress, one of the most historic lectures on contemporary photography where Douglass talked about how photography could be a powerful force of positive self-representation to overcome racism during the second world war.

    #états-unis #photographie

  • Why Living in a Poor Neighborhood Can Change Your Biology - Issue 61 : Coordinates
    http://nautil.us/issue/61/coordinates/why-living-in-a-poor-neighborhood-can-change-your-biology-rp

    It was the most ambitious social experiment ever conducted by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. And one of the most surprising. In 1994, HUD randomly assigned 4,600 poor, mostly African-American families in Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York to one of three groups. One group received housing vouchers intended to help them move to low-poverty neighborhoods. Another group received vouchers without geographic restrictions. A final control group didn’t receive vouchers at all. Called “Moving to Opportunity,” the study was designed to answer a question that had divided social scientists and policymakers for decades: Did getting people off of welfare and other forms of social assistance depend on changing their social context?TOWN WITHOUT PITY: A (...)

  • Google Emerges as Early Winner From Europe’s New Data Privacy Law
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/eus-strict-new-privacy-law-is-sending-more-ad-money-to-google-1527759001

    Le RGPD est une forme de colbertisme adaptée à l’ère numérique : l’UE définit un nouveau terrain de jeu... mais les euls à apprendre à bien jouer sont les géants du web. Les autres parlent “d’intérêt légitime”, s’appuyant sur l’exception à la règle, alors même que cela ne marchera pas pour la pub. Cette manie de notre vieux continent de miser sur les passe-droit.

    Digital ad giants are gathering individuals’ consent for targeted ads at far higher rates than many competing online-ad services, early data show

    By

    Nick Kostov and

    Sam Schechner

    May 31, 2018 5:30 a.m. ET

    GDPR, the European Union’s new privacy law, is drawing advertising money toward Google’s online-ad services and away from competitors that are straining to show they’re complying with the sweeping regulation.

    The reason: the Alphabet Inc. GOOGL 1.74% ad giant is gathering individuals’ consent for targeted advertising at far higher rates than many competing online-ad services, early data show. That means the new law, the General Data Protection Regulation, is reinforcing—at least initially—the strength of the biggest online-ad players, led by Google and FacebookInc.

    Hundreds of companies along the chain of automated bidding and selling of digital ads—from ad buyers to websites that show ads—have been scrambling to comply with the law while continuing to target people based on the personal information such as web-browsing histories, offline purchases or demographic details.

    Since the law went into effect Friday, Google’s DoubleClick Bid Manager, or DBM, a major tool ad buyers use to purchase targeted online ads, has been directing some advertisers’ money toward Google’s own marketplace where digital-ad inventory can be bought and sold, and away from some smaller such ad exchanges and other vendors. That shift has hurt some smaller firms, where Google says it can’t verify whether people who see ads have given consent.

    Google is applying a relatively strict interpretation of how and where the new law requires consent, both on its own platforms and those of other firms. The stringent interpretation helps Google avoid GDPR’s harsh penalties and pushes the company to buy more ad inventory from its own exchange, where it is sure to have user consent for targeted advertising.

    Havas SA, one of the world’s largest buyers of ads, says it observed a low double-digit percentage increase in advertisers’ spending through DBM on Google’s own ad exchange on the first day the law went into effect, according to Hossein Houssaini, Havas’s global head of programmatic solutions.

    On the selling side, companies that help publishers sell ad inventory have seen declines in bids coming through their platforms from Google. Paris-based Smart says it has seen a roughly 50% drop. Amsterdam-based Improve Digital says it has experienced a similar fall-off for ads that rely on third-party vendors.

    “It’s still early, but we’ve seen an increase in volumes on Google’s platform and a decline overall,” said Luc Vignon of Regie 366, which sells advertising space for 12 groups of French regional newspapers and websites.

    A Google spokesman says it has been working on interim solutions to “minimize disruption.” Google says it is showing nonpersonalized ads on websites that can’t prove they have users’ full consent and will deploy other workarounds until it fully joins a third-party system for websites to transmit consent, run by IAB Europe, an online-ad trade group.

    Over the weekend, some bigger companies, including New York-based ad exchange AppNexus Inc. and French video-ad vendor Teads, said they have struck temporary deals assuring Google they have consent, so ad buyers could use DBM to purchase targeted ads from the companies again. The two companies said demand coming through their platforms from Google was almost back to normal this week after an initial disruption.

    Brian O’Kelley, AppNexus chief executive, said he thinks Google’s conservatism on the issue of consent is justified. “If you’re big, you can’t take privacy risks,” Mr. O’Kelley said, citing the potential for enormous fines under GDPR. “I’m terrified because I have a real business to protect. So I’m not going to take privacy risks here.”

    Google has been offering up about 15% fewer ads for bidding via its own ad exchange, but all of those ads have consent of end-users for targeting based on personal information, according to Dataxu Inc., a company that helps advertisers bid for ads.

    By contrast, Dataxu says competing ad exchanges haven’t seen their ad volume fall significantly, but as of Wednesday two-thirds of their spots weren’t transmitting the consent Google says is necessary for targeting, Dataxu says. That means rival exchanges often can’t sell ads targeted with personal information, which often cost four or five times as much as traditional ads.

    “It’s a huge advantage for Google’s ad exchange if they maintain their very high consent rate and the others don’t improve,” said Bill Simmons, co-founder and chief technology officer for Dataxu, based in Boston.

    Arndt Groth, president of mobile ad-exchange Smaato, said that with a smaller supply of targeted ads, their price is going up significantly. “It’s a pure supply-and-demand thing,” he said.

    Facebook, the second-largest player in the digital-ad ecosystem, doesn’t play the same role as Google, which interfaces with many other ad-tech companies to place and measure ads across the internet. Instead Facebook mostly sells ads directly and places them through its own audience network. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg last week indicated that his company has also had success gathering user consent for ad targeting under GDPR.

    “The vast majority of people choose to opt in,” to see targeted ads on Facebook based on their use of other websites and app, Mr. Zuckerberg said at a tech conference in Paris.

    Google and Facebook do face big legal risks from GDPR. Privacy activists filed lawsuitsagainst the companies in recent days, over issues including how freely given users’ consent actually is.

    Some online-ad companies say they have seen marketers shift ad money away from Google ad-buying tools to some smaller competitors that don’t demand explicit consent. That is possible because some publishers and companies, unlike Google, are relying on an alternate justification under GDPR called “legitimate interest,” which lets companies use personal information without asking for consent so long as they take other strict privacy measures.

    Regulators have said, however, that relying on legitimate interest for online tracking for marketing purposes may not pass legal muster—and Google has avoided it.

    “Others haven’t put as many restrictions on their buyers,” said Sebastiaan Moesman, chief executive at Improve Digital.

    Write to Nick Kostov at Nick.Kostov@wsj.com and Sam Schechner at sam.schechner@wsj.com

  • Des gravures d’Escher numérisées en haute résolution
    http://www.laboiteverte.fr/des-gravures-descher-numerisees-en-haute-resolution

    La Bibliothèque Publique de Boston a décidé d’ouvrir au public ses collections de gravures par M.C. Escher, célèbre pour ses perspectives impossibles, en les faisant numériser dans une excellente qualité.
    On peut ainsi zoomer très fortement et observer les traits, les textures et la précision de l’artiste.
    Plus de 80 images sont disponibles, sur le site Digital Commonwealth.

  • Losing the Serengeti: The Maasai Land that was to Run Forever | The Oakland Institute
    https://www.oaklandinstitute.org/tanzania-safari-businesses-maasai-losing-serengeti

    Losing the Serengeti: The Maasai Land that was to Run Forever is based on field research, never publicly-seen-before documents, and an in-depth investigation into Tanzania’s land laws. This report is the first to reveal the complicity between Tanzanian government officials and foreign companies as they use conservation laws to dispossess the Maasai, driving them into smaller and smaller areas and creating a stifling map of confinement.

    The report specifically exposes the devastating impact of two foreign companies on the lives and livelihoods of the Maasai villagers in the Loliondo area of the Ngorongoro District—Tanzania Conservation Ltd (TCL), a safari business operated by the owners of Boston-based high-end safari outfitter Thomson Safaris; and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)-based Ortello Business Corporation (OBC), which runs hunting excursions for the country’s royal family and their guests.

    According to local villagers, TCL has made their lives impossible by denying them access to water and land and cooperating with local police who have beaten and arrested the Maasai. Meanwhile, for 25 years, the OBC had an exclusive hunting license, during which time there were several violent evictions of the Maasai, many homes were burnt, and thousands of rare animals were killed. Although Tanzania’s Ministry of Natural Resources cancelled OBC’s license last year, the OBC remains active in the area, while the local villagers live in fear.

    #Serengeti #Maasaï #Tanzanie #évictions_forcées #terres #plaisirs_du_prince #safari #chasse

  • The Opioid that Made a Fortune for Its Maker — and for Its Prescribers - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/05/02/magazine/100000005878055.app.html

    For Insys, Chun was just the right kind of doctor to pursue. In the late 1990s, sales of prescription opioids began a steep climb. But by the time Subsys came to market in 2012, mounting regulatory scrutiny and changing medical opinion were thinning the ranks of prolific opioid prescribers. Chun was one of the holdouts, a true believer in treating pain with narcotics. He operated a busy practice, and 95 percent of the Medicare patients he saw in 2015 had at least one opioid script filled. Chun was also a top prescriber of a small class of painkillers whose active ingredient is fentanyl, which is 50 to 100 times as powerful as morphine. Burlakoff’s product was a new entry to that class. On a “target list,” derived from industry data that circulated internally at Insys, Chun was placed at No. 3. The word inside the company for a doctor like Chun was a “whale.”

    In the few months since Subsys was introduced, demand was not meeting expectations. Some of the sales staff had already been fired. If Burlakoff and Krane could persuade Chun to become a Subsys loyalist, it would be a coup for them and for the entire company. The drug was so expensive that a single clinic, led by a motivated doctor, could generate millions of dollars in revenue.

    Speaker programs are a widely used marketing tool in the pharmaceutical business. Drug makers enlist doctors to give paid talks about the benefits of a product to other potential prescribers, at a clinic or over dinner in a private room at a restaurant. But Krane and some fellow rookie reps were already getting a clear message from Burlakoff, she said, that his idea of a speaker program was something else, and they were concerned: It sounded a lot like a bribery scheme.

    But the new reps were right to be worried. The Insys speaker program was central to Insys’ rapid rise as a Wall Street darling, and it was also central to the onslaught of legal troubles that now surround the company. Most notable, seven former top executives, including Burlakoff and the billionaire founder of Insys, John Kapoor, now await trial on racketeering charges in federal court in Boston. The company itself, remarkably, is still operating.

    The reporting for this article involved interviews with, among other sources, seven former Insys employees, among them sales managers, sales reps and an insurance-authorization employee, some of whom have testified before a grand jury about what they witnessed. This account also draws on filings from a galaxy of Insys-related litigation: civil suits filed by state attorneys general, whistle-blower and shareholder suits and federal criminal cases. Some are pending, while others have led to settlements, plea deals and guilty verdicts.

    The opioid crisis, now the deadliest drug epidemic in American history, has evolved significantly over the course of the last two decades. What began as a sharp rise in prescription-drug overdoses has been eclipsed by a terrifying spike in deaths driven primarily by illicitly manufactured synthetic opioids and heroin, with overall opioid deaths climbing to 42,249 in 2016 from 33,091 in 2015. But prescription drugs and the marketing programs that fuel their sales remain an important contributor to the larger crisis. Heroin accounted for roughly 15,000 of the opioid deaths in 2016, for instance, but as many as four out of five heroin users started out by misusing prescription opioids.

    By the time Subsys arrived in 2012, the pharmaceutical industry had been battling authorities for years over its role in promoting the spread of addictive painkillers. The authorities were trying to confine opioids to a select population of pain patients who desperately needed them, but manufacturers were pushing legal boundaries — sometimes to the breaking point — to get their products out to a wider market.

    Even as legal penalties accrued, the industry thrived. In 2007, three senior executives of Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty in connection with a marketing effort that relied on misrepresenting the dangers of OxyContin, and the company agreed to pay a $600 million settlement. But Purdue continued booking more than $1 billion in annual sales on the drug. In 2008, Cephalon likewise entered a criminal plea and agreed to pay $425 million for promoting an opioid called Actiq and two other drugs “off-label” — that is, for unapproved uses. That did not stop Cephalon from being acquired three years later, for $6.8 billion.

    Subsys and Actiq belong to a class of fentanyl products called TIRF drugs. They are approved exclusively for the treatment of “breakthrough” cancer pain — flares of pain that break through the effects of the longer-acting opioids the cancer patient is already taking around the clock. TIRFs are niche products, but the niche can be lucrative because the drugs command such a high price. A single patient can produce six figures of revenue.

    Fentanyl is extremely powerful — illicitly manufactured variations, often spiked into heroin or pressed into counterfeit pills, have become the leading killers in the opioid crisis — and regulators have made special efforts to restrict prescription fentanyl products. In 2008, for instance, the F.D.A. rebuffed Cephalon’s application to expand the approved use for a TIRF called Fentora; in the company’s clinical trials, the subjects who did not have cancer demonstrated much more addictive behavior and propensity to substance abuse, which are “rarely seen in clinical trials,” F.D.A. officials concluded. An F.D.A. advisory committee reported that, during the trials, some of the Fentora was stolen. The agency later developed a special protocol for all TIRF drugs that required practitioners to undergo online training and certify that they understood the narrow approved use and the risks.

    Despite these government efforts, TIRF drugs were being widely prescribed to patients without cancer. Pain doctors, not oncologists, were the dominant players. This was common knowledge in the industry. Although it is illegal for a manufacturer to promote drugs for off-label use, it is perfectly legal for doctors to prescribe any drug off-label, on their own judgment. This allows drug makers like Insys to use a narrow F.D.A. approval as a “crowbar,” as a former employee put it, to reach a much broader group of people.

    That points to a major vulnerability in policing the opioid crisis: Doctors have a great deal of power. The F.D.A. regulates drug makers but not practitioners, who enjoy a wide latitude in prescribing that pharmaceutical companies can easily exploit. A respected doctor who advocates eloquently for wider prescribing can quickly become a “key opinion leader”; invited out on the lucrative lecture circuit. And any doctor who exercises a free hand with opioids can attract a flood of pain patients and income. Fellow doctors rarely blow the whistle, and some state medical boards exercise timid oversight, allowing unethical doctors to continue to operate. An assistant district attorney coping with opioids in upstate New York told me that it’s easy to identify a pill-mill doctor, but “it can take five years to get to that guy.” In the meantime, drug manufacturers are still seeing revenue, and that doctor is still seeing patients, one after another, day after day.

    Kapoor believed that he had the best product in its class. All the TIRF drugs — for transmucosal immediate-release fentanyl — deliver fentanyl through the mucous membranes lining the mouth or nose, but the specific method differs from product to product. Actiq, the first TIRF drug, is a lozenge on a stick. Cephalon’s follow-up, Fentora — the branded market leader when Subsys arrived — is a tablet meant to be held in the cheek as it dissolves. Subsys is a spray that the patient applies under the tongue. Spraying a fine mist at the permeable mouth floor makes for a rapid onset of action, trials showed.

    Once the F.D.A. gave final approval to Subsys in early 2012, the fate of Insys Therapeutics rested on selling it in the field. The industry still relies heavily on the old-fashioned way of making sales; drug manufacturers blanket the country with representatives who call on prescribers face to face, often coming to develop personal relationships with them over time.

    The speaker events themselves were often a sham, as top prescribers and reps have admitted in court. Frequently, they consisted of a nice dinner with the sales rep and perhaps the doctor’s support staff and friends, but no other licensed prescriber in attendance to learn about the drug. One doctor did cocaine in the bathroom of a New York City restaurant at his own event, according to a federal indictment. Some prescribers were paid four figures to “speak” to an audience of zero.

    One star rep in Florida, later promoted to upper management, told another rep that when she went in search of potential speakers, she didn’t restrict herself to the top names, because, after all, any doctor can write scripts, and “the company does not give a [expletive] where they come from.” (Some dentists and podiatrists prescribed Subsys.) She looked for people, she said, “that are just going through divorce, or doctors opening up a new clinic, doctors who are procedure-heavy. All those guys are money hungry.” If you float the idea of becoming a paid speaker “and there is a light in their eyes that goes off, you know that’s your guy,” she said. (These remarks, recorded by the rep on the other end of the line, emerged in a later investigation.)

    As a result of Insys’s approach to targeting doctors, its potent opioid was prescribed to patients it was never approved to treat — not occasionally, but tens of thousands of times. It is impossible to determine how many Subsys patients, under Kapoor, actually suffered from breakthrough cancer pain, but most estimates in court filings have put the number at roughly 20 percent. According to Iqvia data through September 2016, only 4 percent of all Subsys prescriptions were written by oncologists.

    Insys became the year’s best-performing initial public offering, on a gain of over 400 percent. That December, the company disclosed that it had received a subpoena from the Office of the Inspector General at Health and Human Services, an ominous sign. But a CNBC interviewer made no mention of it when he interviewed Babich a few weeks later. Instead he said, “Tell us what it is about Insys that has investors so excited.”

    In 2014, the doctors each averaged one prescription for a controlled substance roughly every four minutes, figuring on a 40-hour week. A typical pill mill makes its money from patients paying in cash for their appointments, but Ruan and Couch had a different model: A majority of their scripts were filled at a pharmacy adjacent to their clinic called C&R — for Couch and Ruan — where they took home most of the profits. The pharmacy sold more than $570,000 of Subsys in a single month, according to Perhacs’s criminal plea. Together the two men amassed a collection of 23 luxury cars.

    Over dinner, according to the Boston indictment, Kapoor and Babich struck a remarkable agreement with the pharmacists and the doctors, who were operating a clinic rife with opioid addiction among the staff: Insys would ship Subsys directly to C&R Pharmacy. An arrangement like this is “highly unusual” and a “red flag,” according to testimony from a D.E.A. investigator in a related trial. As part of the terms of the deal, the pharmacy would make more money on selling the drug, with no distributor in the loop. And there would be another anticipated benefit for all involved: Everyone could sell more Subsys without triggering an alert to the D.E.A.

    The local medical community felt the impact of the raid. Because refills are generally not allowed on controlled substances, patients typically visited the clinic every month. For days, dozens of them lined up outside in the morning, fruitlessly trying to get prescriptions from the remaining staff or at least retrieve their medical records to take elsewhere. But other providers were either booked up or would not take these patients. “Nobody was willing to give the amount of drugs they were on,” a nurse in the city said. Melissa Costello, who heads the emergency room at Mobile Infirmary, said her staff saw a surge of patients from the clinic in the ensuing weeks, at least a hundred, who were going through agonizing withdrawal.

    Two months after the raid in Mobile, Insys’ stock reached an all-time high.

    Insys itself is still producing Subsys, though sales have fallen considerably. (Overall demand for TIRFs has declined industrywide.) The company is now marketing what it calls the “first and only F.D.A.-approved liquid dronabinol,” a synthetic cannabinoid, and is developing several other new drugs. Some analysts like the look of the company’s pipeline of new drugs and rate the stock a “buy.” In a statement, the company said its new management team consists of “responsible and ethical business leaders” committed to effective compliance. Most of its more than 300 employees are new to the company since 2015, and its sales force is focused on physicians “whose prescribing patterns support our products’ approved indications,” the company said. Insys has ended its speaker program for Subsys.

    #Opioides #Pharmacie #Bande_de_salopards

  • Your Brain’s Music Circuit Has Been Discovered - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/-your-brains-music-circuit-has-been-discovered

    The discovery that certain neurons have “music selectivity” stirs questions about the role of music in human life. Illustration by Len SmallBefore Josh McDermott was a neuroscientist, he was a club DJ in Boston and Minneapolis. He saw first-hand how music could unite people in sound, rhythm, and emotion. “One of the reasons it was so fun to DJ is that, by playing different pieces of music, you can transform the vibe in a roomful of people,” he says. With his club days behind him, McDermott now ventures into the effects of sound and music in his lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he is an assistant professor in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. In 2015, he and a post-doctoral colleague, Sam Norman-Haignere, and Nancy Kanwisher, a professor of cognitive (...)

  • This Animation Was Created Using Old Photos from the Early 1900s

    http://petapixel.com/2016/04/06/animation-created-using-old-photos-early-1900s

    Le résultat est très intéressant !

    Here’s an amazing short film titled “The Old New World” by photographer and animator Alexey Zakharov of Moscow, Russia. Zakharov found old photos of US cities from the early 1900s and brought them to life.

    The photos show New York, Boston, Detroit, Washington, D.C., and Baltimore between 1900 and 1940, and were obtained from the website Shorpy.

    It’s a “photo-based animation project” that offers a “travel back in time with a little steampunk time machine,” Zakharov says. “The main part of this video was made with camera projection based on photos.”

    #photographie

  • Le #Boston Medical Center s’est équipé d’une ferme sur son toit

    Sur le toit de l’hôpital de la ville poussent salades, tomates et poivrons pour réduire l’empreinte carbone de l’établissement. Deux ruches ont également été installées.


    https://positivr.fr/centre-medical-de-boston-equipe-ferme-toit
    #jardins_urbains #urban_gardening #villes #urban_matter #USA #Etats-Unis #hôpital #agriculture_urbaine

  • Décès du Dr. Brazelton, le pédiatre qui a fait du #bébé #une_personne
    https://www.rtbf.be/info/societe/detail_deces-du-dr-brazelton-le-pediatre-qui-a-fait-du-bebe-une-personne?id=986

    « #Le_bébé_est_une_personne », un documentaire de 1984

    T. Berry #Brazelton occupe une place centrale dans « Le bébé est une personne », un documentaire de 1984 qui a eu un impact considérable sur les téléspectateurs, en bouleversant les rapports entre les mères et leurs enfants.

    Une échelle d’évaluation du comportement néonatal

    Après vingt ans de recherche, notamment sur les interactions précoces, le Dr. Brazelton avait établi en 1973 une échelle d’évaluation du comportement néonatal, nommée échelle de Brazelton, qui fait encore référence aujourd’hui. Le Dr. Brazelton a également pratiqué une quarantaine d’années à l’hôpital des enfants de Boston.

    Spécialiste de la psychanalyse du bébé, il avait une faculté extraordinaire pour accrocher le regard d’un nouveau-né, en le tenant très près de son visage.

    Capable de calmer ainsi instantanément un nourrisson agité, de l’endormir ou au contraire de l’éveiller, il a écrit une quarantaine d’ouvrages qui ont permis de changer le regard sur le nouveau-né et, par voie de conséquence, sur sa relation avec son entourage.

    Quelqu’un à qui j’ai le sentiment de devoir beaucoup.

    • Le côté « scietifique gourou » de la fiche ne rend pas hommage à ce que je crois lui devoir : les interactions avec les bébés sont déjà des communications et des échanges. Bien avant la parole, une vraie communication est possible. Le bébé communique vraiment et « n’hurle des besoins incompréhensibles » que si l’on ne dépasse pas la lobotimisation qui résulte de notre éducation à la communication rationnelle et maîtrisée, qu’elle soit corporelle, verbale, écrite... La vidéo « Le bébé est une personne » montre cela et s’étend sur bien d’autres approches. Mais celle de Brazelton nous a attirés spécialement de par son intelligence sensible. La lecture de plusieurs de ses bouquins ont fait de moi un papa plus investi et plus sensible dès avant la naissance de « mes bébés », devenus grands.

      #RIP

    • Dans les discussions entre pères à propos de la paternité, j’entendais souvent des choses du style « Avant 2 (ou 4 ou 6) ans, je n’en profitais pas vraiment... », etc. Perso je suis heureux de m’être senti père progressivement et dès avant la naissance, grâce à la merveilleuse maman d’abord, à ce documentaire qui était dans ma culture familiale, puis à Brazelton notamment...

      Quelques livres :
      https://www.babelio.com/livres/Brazelton-La-Naissance-dune-famille-ou-comment-se-tissent-l/39198
      https://www.babelio.com/livres/Brazelton-A-ce-soir/407632
      https://www.babelio.com/livres/Brazelton-Les-premiers-liens--lattachement-parents-bebes-v/67639
      https://www.babelio.com/livres/Brazelton-Ecoutez-votre-enfant/430111

      Il est possible que ces beaucoup aient un style et des contenus « datés » aujourd’hui. Brazelton avait été formé à une époque où les bébés étaient souvent vus ou traités comme des tubes digestifs à faire fructifier en attendant que leur humanité se fasse jour progresivement... On n’en n’est plus là aujourd’hui. Au début des années 1990, ces bouquins n’étaient pas une révolution mais, pour moi, un réel appui et une boite à outils humains pour ma confiance de père.

  • Fare Choices Survey of Ride-Hailing Passengers in Metro Boston – MAPC
    https://www.mapc.org/farechoices


    Annual household income of surveyed riders who substituted transit use, walking, or cycling.

    Wie de privaten Fahrtenvermittlern dem öffentlichen Nahverkehr schaden
    cf. https://seenthis.net/messages/673637

    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
    The ride-hailing industry, led by Uber and Lyft, has seen explosive growth in recent years. As more and more travelers choose these on-demand mobility services, they have the potential to transform regional travel patterns. These transformations may become even more profound if widespread adoption of autonomous vehicles makes on-demand mobility even less expensive and more efficient. Either way, it is likely that the use of ride-hailing today is but the tip of the iceberg, with an even greater expansion of these services to come.

    This transformation in personal mobility is likely to bring a host of changes: some positive, others less so. For public agencies, planning for that transformation is made difficult by the paucity of information about ride-hailing trips. Conventional transportation surveys have been slow to measure the change in behavior; and transportation network companies see their data as a valuable commodity and are unwilling to provide it to transportation planners.

    Public sector access to these data is essential. Only with a better understanding of this new mode of transportation can analysts develop better forecasts of travel behavior and infrastructure needs, measure the region’s progress toward a more sustainable future, and establish more efficient operations and management practices for existing roadways.

    In an effort to begin filling those gaps in our understanding of the ride-hailing industry and its users, MAPC surveyed nearly 1,000 ride-hailing passengers in late 2017 and asked about their demographics, the nature of their trip, and why they chose ride-hailing over other modes of transportation.

    Photo via Lyft
    The results confirmed many common assumptions about ride-hailing users; they also provided striking new insight into the ways that the services are changing travel behavior and affecting our existing transportation system. Not surprisingly, the survey found that most ride-hailing users are under the age of 35, that most of them use the service on a weekly basis, and that most don’t own a car. Less predictably, we found that reported rider incomes are similar to the region overall, and a substantial number of trips are made by people from households earning less than $38,000 per year. (And no, they’re not all students; most of those lower-income riders are in the workforce.)

    The survey results also provide some hard data about the types of trips made via ride-hailing. Most trips start or end at home, but nearly one-third (31%) are from one non-home location to another. Ride-hailing usage is distributed throughout the day; the evening hours from 7:00 P.M. to midnight see the greatest frequency of trips, but about 40% of weekday trips take place during the morning or afternoon commute periods. People also like to travel by themselves: only one-fifth of customers opt for a truly shared ride (e.g., UberPOOL), and the majority of travel is for a single passenger. Riders are willing to pay a substantial premium for the convenience and predictability of ride-hailing. Nearly two thirds of trips cost more than $10, and one in five costs more than $20.

    While the services are justifiably popular, their growing use may result in negative outcomes for traffic congestion, transit use, and active transportation. When asked how they would have made their current trip if ride-hailing hadn’t been an option, 12% said they would have walked or biked, and over two-fifths (42%) of respondents said they would have otherwise taken transit. Some of this “transit substitution” takes place during rush hours. Indeed, we estimate that 12% of all ride-hailing trips are substituting for a transit trip during the morning or afternoon commute periods; an additional 3% of riders during these times would have otherwise walked or biked. Overall, 15% of ride-hailing trips are adding cars to the region’s roadways during the morning or afternoon rush hours.

    Notably, we found that this “transit substitution” is more frequent among riders with a weekly or monthly transit pass. Those who ride transit more often are more likely to drop it for ride hailing, even while doing so at a huge cost differential, and even when they have already paid for the transit.

    Riders without a transit pass opting for ride-hailing, on the other hand, means less fare revenue for the MBTA. After accounting for transit pass availability and substitution options, we estimate that the average ride-hailing trip represents 35 cents of lost fare revenue for the MBTA. This lost revenue exceeds the amount of the legislatively mandated 20 cent surcharge on each ride. That surcharge itself represents a remarkably small fraction of trip costs. When compared to reported fares, the surcharge amounts to less than 2% of the cost for most rides. Because it is a fixed fee, long and expensive rides that may have the greatest impact on traffic congestion and air quality pay 1% or less.

    Photo by Anty Diluvian
    These findings begin to provide a better understanding of this evolving mobility option that will undoubtedly continue to change the way people travel around the region. Our results raise concerns about how users are becoming accustomed to on-demand mobility, and what that means for the future of the region’s transportation system. Even if future ride-hailing vehicles were fully electric and autonomous, the region’s roadways could not accommodate unchecked growth in single-occupant vehicle travel. It is essential to ensure that the region has a reliable and effective transit system that—from the rider’s perspective—is competitive with and complementary to on-demand mobility services. For transit to thrive, it must change, perhaps by incorporating the types of on-demand response and real-time information that riders value.

    Meanwhile, there is a great need to understand the effects of ride hailing and to ensure a balance of benefits and costs resulting from these commercial services. Ride hailing is already having substantial impacts on congestion and transit revenue, the costs of which are not recouped by the small surcharge. A higher fee would provide more resources to mitigate the negative effects of ride hailing without substantially affecting rider costs. Even more preferable would be a fee structure proportional to the impacts of each ride on the transportation system. To the extent possible, such fees should also be structured to incentivize shared trips, thereby reducing overall impacts on the transportation system while also accommodating ride-hailing preferences. Of course, effective policy requires better data about when, where, and why ride-hailing trips are taking place. Only by understanding the current adoption of ride-hailing and on-demand mobility can we plan for its successful and sustainable future.

    #Uber #ÖPNV

  • Atelier populaire d’#urbanisme

    L’Atelier Populaire d’Urbanisme de la Villeneuve est une initiative lancée à l’automne 2012 pour construire une alternative au projet de rénovation urbaine de l’urbaniste Yves Lion et de la ville de Grenoble alors dirigé par M.Destot.

    Ce projet décidé "d’en haut avait suscité beaucoup des oppositions de la part d’habitants qui refusaient la logique qui a mené à la démolition du 50 galerie de l’Arlequin, la construction d’un nouveau parking et le redécoupage du réseau routier. Un collectif contre la démolition, ensuite surnommé Vivre à la Villeneuve a lancé la mobilisation, dénoncé la fausse concertation et a lancé un appel à la ministre du logement pour la remise en cause du projet de rénovation urbaine.

    En 2013, à l’occasion du 40ème anniversaire de la Villeneuve et à l’initiative du collectif interassocati Villeneuve Debout, une multitude d’ateliers ont aboutit à la formulation d’un projet urbain stratégique et démocratique. Ce projet a montré qu’une autre approche de l’urbanisme est possible, issue « d’en bas », basée sur les intérêts des habitants, et qui visent les logiques de pouvoir d’agir des habitants.

    http://www.assoplanning.org

    #association_planning #grenoble #droit_à_la_ville #logement #Villeneuve #droit_au_logement #activisme_urban #urban_matter #villes #méthodes_participatives #savoirs_citoyens #savoirs_pratiques #savoirs_théoriques #community_organizing #advocacy_planning #désorganisation_sociale #empowerment

    Les liens et documents qui suivent dans ce fil de discussion sont tirés d’informations que j’ai entendu dans un cours donné par David Gabriel, co-auteur du livret « Les tours d’en face » (https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01261860/document)

    • #Saul_Alinsky

      Saul David Alinsky, né le 30 janvier 1909 à Chicago et mort le 12 juin 1972 à Carmel (Californie), est un écrivain et sociologue américain, considéré comme le fondateur du groupement d’organisateurs de communauté (community organizing) et le maître à penser de la gauche radicale américaine.


      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saul_Alinsky

      Un livre de Saul Alinsky: «#Rules_for_radicals»
      –-> ici des extraits choisis

    • #Jane_Jacobs

      Jane Jacobs (née Jane Butzner 4 mai 1916 à Scranton, Pennsylvanie - 25 avril 2006 à Toronto) est une auteure, une militante et une philosophe de l’architecture et de l’urbanisme. Ses théories ont sensiblement modifié l’urbanisme nord-américain.

      Jane Jacobs a passé son existence à étudier l’urbanisme. Ses études sont basées sur l’observation : elle commença par observer les villes, reporter ce qu’elle observe, puis créa des théories pour décrire ses observations. Elle a changé le cours de l’urbanisme dans de nombreuses villes nord-américaines, y compris Toronto.

      En 1944, elle épouse Robert Hyde Jacobs, avec qui elle a eu deux fils, James Kedzie (né en 1948) et Edward Decker (né en 1950) et une fille, Mary. En 1968, durant la guerre du Viêt Nam, elle quitte les États-Unis avec ses fils afin de leur éviter le service militaire et trouve refuge au Canada.

      En 1980, elle offre une perspective « urbanistique » sur l’indépendance du Québec dans son livre The Question of Separatism : Quebec and the Struggle over Sovereignty.


      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Jacobs

    • #Personnalisme

      Le personnalisme, ou #personnalisme_communautaire, est un courant d’idées fondé par #Emmanuel_Mounier autour de la revue Esprit et selon le fondateur, recherchant une troisième voie humaniste entre le capitalisme libéral et le marxisme. Le personnalisme « post-mounier » est une philosophie éthique dont la valeur fondamentale est le respect de la personne. Le principe moral fondamental du personnalisme peut se formuler ainsi : « Une action est bonne dans la mesure où elle respecte la personne humaine et contribue à son épanouissement ; dans le cas contraire, elle est mauvaise. »1

      Il a eu une influence importante sur les milieux intellectuels et politiques français des années 1930 aux années 1950. Il a influencé, entre autres, les milieux de l’éducation populaire et plus tard de l’éducation spécialisée2, et les libéraux-chrétiens notamment conservateurs dont Chantal Delsol.

      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personnalisme

    • Forum social des quartiers populaires :

      Le #FSQP sera un lieu d’échanges et de confrontations autour des expériences militantes dans les quartiers.
      Pour dépasser les discours abstraits, l’ambition est de déboucher sur des perspectives de luttes communes, tant au niveau national que local, autour des questions suivantes :

      > Apartheid urbain
      La politique de rénovation urbaine brasse des milliards d’euros sans réelle participation des habitant-e-s des quartiers. Quel pouvoir des habitant-e-s pour le futur de leur quartier ?

      > Education au rabais
      L’école joue mal son rôle d’accès au savoir dans nos quartiers. Elle devient un lieu de discrimination, de gardiennage et de sélection programmée vers des voies de garage. Quelle relation entre l’école et le quartier (élèves, parents, etc.) ?

      > Police-Justice
      Les multiples révoltes populaires contre les crimes policiers depuis une trentaine d’années révèlent la gestion policière et judiciaire des banlieues. Trop de jeunes sont destinés au parcours piégé : échec scolaire - police - justice - prison. Comment s’organiser face aux violences policières, une justice de caste et des prisons hors-la-loi ?

      > Engagement politique et social
      Les quartiers ne sont pas des déserts politiques. Il est nécessaire de confronter les différentes formes d’engagement et d’en faire un bilan (les limites du milieu associatif, la participation aux élections, les associations musulmanes, etc.). Vers un mouvement autonome des quartiers populaires ?

      > Chômage et précarité
      Les taux de chômage et de précarité (intérim permanent) atteignent des « records » dans les banlieues. Le fossé entre les syndicats et les cités marque l’abandon des classes populaires par la gauche. Quelles relations entre les quartiers et le mouvement ouvrier ?

      > Les anciens dans la cité
      La question de la vieillesse dans les banlieues n’est pas prise en compte dans les grands plans de solidarité nationaux. Quelles formes de solidarité et de mobilisation pour les anciens ?

      > Histoire et mémoire
      Malgré l’occultation par les institutions et les problèmes de transmission de la mémoire, l’histoire des luttes des quartiers et de l’immigration est riche d’expériences et d’enseignements. Comment transmettre nous-mêmes cette Histoire aux plus jeunes ?

      > Les musulmans entre criminalisation et engagement dans la cité
      Les musulmans subissent un climat islamophobe et des lois d’exception. Comment y faire face ? Quelle implication des organisations musulmanes dans les luttes sociales et politiques des quartiers ?

      > Cultures des quartiers
      Les banlieues sont des lieux de brassage, de solidarités et d’invention culturelle. Comment défendre et mettre en valeur cette richesse ?

      Nous avons décidé que la question des femmes et de leurs luttes sera transversale à l’ensemble des thèmes.


      http://fsqp.free.fr/archives-2007-2012

    • William Foote Whyte

      William Foote Whyte (né le 27 juin 1914 et mort le 16 juillet 2000), était un sociologue américain surtout connu pour son étude ethnologique de sociologie urbaine, Street Corner Society.

      Pionnier de l’#observation_participante, il vécut quatre ans dans une communauté italienne de Boston alors qu’il étudiait par ailleurs à Harvard dans le but d’analyser l’organisation sociale des gangs du North End.

      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Foote_Whyte

    • Street Corner Society. La structure sociale d’un quartier italo-américain

      Street Corner Society fait partie du petit nombre des classiques de la sociologie mondiale. Mais si la description saisissante que fait William Foote Whyte de la vie d’un quartier italien de Boston dans les années trente a connu un succès durable aux États-Unis, ce n’est pas seulement parce qu’il s’agit d’un modèle pour les recherches d’ethnologie urbaine. Reconnu bien au-delà des cercles universitaires, Street Corner Society est en effet de ces livres qui font passer un souffle d’air frais dans le territoire austère des sciences sociales.
      À l’écoute des humeurs de la rue, écrit dans une langue exempte de tout jargon et proche de la meilleure prose journalistique, cette fascinante immersion dans la vie d’un quartier, de ses sous-cultures et de ses systèmes d’allégeance a bouleversé les images convenues de la pauvreté urbaine et de l’identité communautaire. Référence majeure pour quiconque affronte les problèmes de l’observation participante en sociologie, Street Corner Society constitue également une lecture délectable pour le profane et un portrait savoureux de la comédie humaine dans sa version italo-américaine.

      http://www.editionsladecouverte.fr/catalogue/index-Street_Corner_Society-9782707152879.html

    • #Edward_Chambers

      Edward Thomas Chambers (April 2, 1930 – April 26, 2015) was the executive director of the Industrial Areas Foundation from 1972 to 2009, a community organizing group founded by Saul Alinsky.[1] Chambers was born in Clarion, Iowa to Thomas Chambers and Hazella Downing.[2] He is credited with developing systematic training of organizers and leaders of congregation-based community organizations, and establishing relational meetings (or “one-on-ones”) as a critical practice of organizers. He is the author of Roots for Radicals: Organizing for Power, Action, and Justice (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2003, ISBN 0-8264-1499-0.[3]). A memorial article in The New Yorker called him “community organizing’s unforgiving hero.” [4] He died of heart failure in Drimoleague, Ireland in 2015.[2]


      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_T._Chambers

      The Power of Relational Action

      In this booklet, Ed Chambers mulls about the building of relationships in public life that allow us to share our values, passions and interests with one another — what he calls “mixing human spirit.” He describes the art of the relational meeting or “one-to-one,” which he helped develop and which is now being used by clergy, leaders and organizers around the United States and in several other countries to build their congregations and community institutions and to take joint action for the common good.

      http://actapublications.com/the-power-of-relational-action

    • La production d’études comme instrument de mobilisation dans le cadre de la campagne pour un « revenu décent londonien » (London Living Wage)

      A recent campaign led by London Citizens - a coalition of churches, mosques, trade unions, schools and other associations - brought on the forefront the issue of low paid workers. The production of studies is the linchpin of this campaign for decent wages. It is more the process of making the studies, linked to the methods of community organizing, rather than the end product itself that has established the opportunity and feasibility of new wages policies. The urban study is here considered as a tool for mobilization. Its authors, its subjects and its addressees are the actors of the London Living Wage campaign.

      7Le travail des employés de London Citizens est basé sur la construction de relations avec les habitants membres des 160 groupes de l’alliance. Dans son contrat de travail, il est stipulé qu’un community organizer doit effectuer une moyenne hebdomadaire de quinze entretiens en face à face (appelés « #one_to_one »). Ces entretiens ne sont ni retranscris ni soumis à une analyse statistique mais ont pour but de construire une relation d’égal à égal avec chacun des membres de l’alliance. Ils permettent aux community organizers d’acquérir une connaissance des problèmes auxquels font face les citoyens de leur alliance. L’organisation a également pour but de former des leaders dans chaque groupe membre. Ces leaders sont encouragés à relayer ce travail de développement de relations au sein de leur institution. Ils sont par exemple invités à organiser des house meetings, des réunions dans leur domicile ou sur leur lieu de travail avec des amis, voisins ou collègues. Les leaders et les employés de London Citizens imaginent alors des idées de campagne en fonction des intérêts des personnes rencontrées. C’est toujours grâce à ces entretiens et réunions qu’ils peuvent ensuite tester ces idées avec d’autres personnes. Ce processus participatif est finalisé lors d’assemblées annuelles où les institutions membres votent, parmi les idées évaluées, les campagnes à mener dans l’année.

      http://journals.openedition.org/geocarrefour/8114?lang=en

    • #Theory_U

      Theory U is a change management method and the title of a book by #Otto_Scharmer.[1] During his doctoral studies at Witten/Herdecke University, Scharmer studied a similar method in classes taught by Friedrich (Fritz) Glasl, and he also interviewed Glasl.[2] Scharmer then took the basic principles of this method and extended it into a theory of learning and management, which he calls Theory U.[1] The principles of Theory U are suggested to help political leaders, civil servants, and managers break through past unproductive patterns of behavior that prevent them from empathizing with their clients’ perspectives and often lock them into ineffective patterns of decision making.[3][4]


      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_U

      La théorie U d’#Otto_Scharmer

      Ces 5 étapes visent à capter de nouveaux modes d’émergence et à rénover l’approche collaborative et la conduite de projet. La théorie U est donc un modèle de conduite du changement fondé sur la conscience de l’urgence pour la mise en place de solutions durables et globales. Les 9 environnements d’apprentisssage qu’il propose constituent une réponse concréte aux questions posées.

      http://4cristol.over-blog.com/article-la-theorie-u-d-otto-scharmer-98615598.html

    • L’ambition démocratique du community organizing

      La mise en place, depuis quelques années, des méthodes de community organizing peut-être envisagée comme une tentative de dépassement des limites du système représentatif. Par un rappel des ressorts de leur développement, aux États-Unis et en Grande-Bretagne, et par l’observation de leur mise en pratique au sein de l’Alliance citoyenne de l’agglomération grenobloise, cet article s’attache à montrer ce qui fait l’originalité de ces démarches : rapport pragmatique au pouvoir, mobilisation autour des « colères » des habitants, actions collectives centrées sur le conflit. Un regard sur l’objectif de prise d’autonomie des habitants, formulé par les fondateurs de l’alliance, permet d’inclure une analyse de la structure et des méthodes du community organizing sous l’angle des processus d’émancipation qu’elles sont susceptibles de favoriser.

      https://www.cairn.info/revue-mouvements-2015-3-p-168.htm

  • Child development experts urge Facebook to pull Messenger Kids app
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/jan/30/messenger-kids-facebook-mark-zuckerberg-app-child-development-experts-

    Open letter signed by more than 100 advocates warns of dangers social media poses to under 13s and asks Mark Zuckerberg to halt app More than 110 child-health advocates have called on Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg to pull the firm’s Messenger Kids app aimed at under 13s, warning of the dangers of social media for children. In an open letter led by the Boston-based Campaign for Commercial-Free Childhood, signed by doctors, educators and child health experts including baroness (...)

    #Facebook #Messenger #enfants #SocialNetwork #santé #MessengerKids

    ##santé

  • As Siberian Gas Awaits U.S. Landing, a Second Ship May Be Coming - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-25/as-siberian-gas-awaits-u-s-landing-a-second-ship-may-be-coming


    source: Bloomberg

    A second tanker carrying Russian natural gas may be on the way to the U.S., following in the footsteps of a ship now sitting near Boston Harbor with a similar cargo.

    The Gaselys tanker, which has been sitting for two days in the waters outside of Boston, carries liquefied natural gas originally produced in Siberia, according to vessel tracking data. The ship, poised to dock at Engie SA’s Everett import terminal, would be the first LNG shipment from anywhere other than Trinidad and Tobago in about three years.

    Now Engie is poised to pick up a second Russian cargo from northern France that may land in Massachusetts on Feb. 15, according to Kpler SAS, a cargo-tracking company. The tankers would arrive at a time when New England is paying a hefty premium for supplies as pipeline capacity limits flows of cheap shale gas from other parts of the country in the peak demand season.

    The tanker named Provalys was sailing to France’s Dunkirk terminal to pick up LNG on Friday and unload a small amount of it nearby in Belgium before heading across the Atlantic, the cargo tracker said. Engie couldn’t be immediately reached for comment about this shipment.

  • Facebook acquires biometric ID verification startup Confirm.io
    https://techcrunch.com/2018/01/23/facebook-confirm-io

    Facebook has confirmed to TechCrunch that it’s acquired… Confirm.io. The startup offered an API that let other companies quickly verify someone’s government-issued identification card, like a driver’s license, was authentic. The Boston-based startup will shut down as both its team and technology are rolled into Facebook, where it could help users who are locked out of their accounts. Confirm.io had raised at least $4 million from investors, including Cava Capital, since launching three years (...)

    #Facebook #biométrie #facial #Identité #Confirm.io #FaceID

    ##Identité

  • Why Did Facebook Just Buy This Company That Verifies Government-Issued IDs ?
    https://gizmodo.com/why-did-facebook-just-buy-this-company-that-verifies-go-1822355711

    Facebook has acquired Confirm.io, a startup that verified government-issued identification for third-party businesses. In addition to ID cards, Confirm.io’s service also handled biometrics and facial recognition data. The three-year-old, Boston-based company announced the acquisition on its site, stating that it will shut down as Facebook slurps it up into its empire. TechCrunch first confirmed the news with Facebook. Facebook sent Gizmodo the same statement that it shared with other (...)

    #Facebook #biométrie #facial #Confirm.io #FaceID

  • Francis Ngannou, pieds et poings déliés - Libération
    http://www.liberation.fr/sports/2018/01/18/francis-ngannou-pieds-et-poings-delies_1623490

    Venu du Cameroun, échappé à la rue, formé à Paris, le colosse du MMA combat pour le titre poids lourds, ce samedi à Boston .

    Francis Ngannou se souvient d’un exercice de logique au collège qui consistait à agencer le mieux possible des immeubles à l’intérieur d’une surface restreinte. Le professeur l’a soupçonné de triche. Son rendu paraissait trop carré pour être honnête. La lumière, dit-il, a jailli dans la foulée : au tableau, il a expliqué ses conclusions avec tellement d’aisance qu’il récolta un bonus : + 2. « Mais j’avais déjà reçu 19/20. » 21, donc. Il raconte la séquence avec une voix posée et rythmée, comme dans un documentaire nocturne sur les nuages ou les mouflons. Dans une autre vie, il se serait bien vu architecte.

    « Le Prédateur », son surnom, a réalisé son dernier gros coup le 2 décembre, aux Etats-Unis. Une minute et des poussières de spectacle, le temps de jauger, puis d’allonger un Néerlandais en mondovision. Uppercut du gauche, KO, dodo. Hourra. Francis Ngannou fait du MMA, mélange d’une demi-douzaine de sports de combat (pieds, poings, prises au sol), machine à cash et grenier d’histoires qui remplirait des bouquins de mille pages.

    La sienne oblige à écouter sans couper : des parents divorcés alors qu’il a 6 ans, une enfance pauvre et solitaire au Cameroun et une carrière scolaire terminée adolescent. Gamin, il fait déjà des boulots d’adulte au pied du mur. Tailleur de pierre, entre autres. En 2013, il émigre en France sans un rond, avec l’ambition de percer en boxe anglaise. Aucun palmarès, si ce n’est une petite expérience au pays. « Je m’étais mis une pression énorme sur les épaules : je voulais vraiment être un champion. » A Paris, il trouve rapidement une salle où mettre les gants. Son gabarit de menhir (1,95 m, 117 kilos) et ses facilités en « un contre un » fascinent. Des tauliers du lieu l’aident à se sortir de la rue - il est SDF. Didier Carmont, l’un d’eux : « On a fait ce que nous avions à faire, naturellement. Est-ce vraiment important d’entrer dans les détails ? Quand il est arrivé chez nous la première fois, il ne se lamentait pas, et très vite, il s’est senti à la maison. C’est un ami, j’ai l’impression de l’avoir toujours connu. » Puis : « C’est vrai qu’il a un physique. Mais il ne faudrait pas tomber dans le cliché de l’Africain naturellement puissant. On ne se sort pas de sa situation, on ne progresse pas aussi vite, sans intelligence. » Au fil des semaines, ses bienfaiteurs les plus au fait du milieu lui expliquent que le noble art est une impasse à court terme (une vieille bâtisse dont les coulisses sont des labyrinthes), mais que le MMA est un building illuminé, doté d’un ascenseur tout neuf (une multinationale en expansion). Il ne sait pas ce que c’est, mais se met au boulot. En quatre ans de pratique, le voilà presque tout en haut. Samedi, le Camerounais, 31 ans, combattra pour le titre des poids lourds face à l’Américain Stipe Miocic, actuel détenteur de la couronne.

    Christian M’Pumbu, son ami et compagnon d’entraînement, indique le coin de son œil avec l’index : à cet endroit précis, il a pris le panard du colosse, large comme un hors-bord. Un an plus tard, l’ancien champion de MMA, qui en a donc vu d’autres, en parle comme d’une séance de spiritisme. Pour le reste, il glisse deux précisions : « Avec ce qu’il a vécu, il y a des moments où il faut le laisser seul, où il ne veut pas trop parler. A vrai dire, ce n’est pas un grand bavard. » Et : « Je l’ai vu sur des photos aux Etats-Unis. Il avait des jumelles autour du cou… un vrai touriste. » Francis Ngannou vit en ce moment à Las Vegas. Ce qu’il en dit ? Pas grand-chose. « Je m’entraîne. Et sur mon temps libre ? Je m’entraîne encore. C’est mon travail à plein temps ! » En fonction des questions, c’est tout ou rien, soit le récit ou bien les trois petits points. Le Camerounais est un texte à trous, triste, nerveux et joli à la fois.

    A Paris, il a d’abord dormi dans un parking. « On m’a parlé du 115… De foyers et de chambres à partager avec d’autres. Des alcooliques, des gens dépressifs. Je ne voulais pas. Je n’étais pas là pour accepter la situation. Je voulais m’écarter de tout ce qui était négatif. » Les conseils ici et là le mènent à la MMA Factory, dans le XIIe arrondissement. Le lieu est géré par Fernand Lopez, l’entraîneur français le plus réputé, ingénieur de formation et, surtout, habile entrepreneur. Les qualités du petit nouveau lui sautent aux yeux. Il le prend en main et le façonne. Depuis, il ne le lâche plus.

    Parfois, « le Prédateur » décortique son sport en termes bibliques : « David peut battre Goliath. Le MMA comporte un nombre incalculable de techniques. Tu domines et là, ton adversaire te saisit la cheville, puis te fait une clé. C’est beau quand David peut gagner. » Et parfois, il le ramène sobrement à de la survie : « Si tu ne mets pas des coups, c’est ton adversaire qui le fera. »

    Le MMA : baston indécente dans une cage octogonale pour les uns, spectacle très technique pratiqué par des bonshommes surentraînés pour les autres. En France, les compétitions sont encore interdites (une exception), mais les entraînements et les streamings (l’Hexagone est dans le top 10 des consommateurs à l’échelle du monde) font des cartons. Hypocrisie.

    Francis Ngannou est originaire de Batié, petite commune de l’ouest du Cameroun où il retourne pour les vacances. Il a trois frères et une sœur. Le récit : « Enfant, j’allais de maison en maison, je changeais d’école tout le temps. J’étais pauvre. » Les trois petits points : son cercle, sa routine, son parcours entre l’Afrique et la France. Gosse, il s’amusait avec d’autres à imiter les prises de Jean-Claude Van Damme. « Je n’ai pas eu d’amis d’enfance, parce que je n’avais pas le bon profil. Qu’avais-je à offrir ? Parfois, j’avais envie de parler, mais il n’y avait personne. Je n’allais pas me torturer avec ça. Alors je me suis dit qu’on pouvait vivre sans amis. »

    Il se lance sur le tard dans la boxe anglaise. A 22 ans. Il dit que son premier combat au pays est aussi une affaire de fulgurance. Alors que son vis-à-vis le malmène, il se rebelle en repensant à son rêve : une couronne mondiale. Victoire dans l’anonymat, après une journée de manutention. « L’arbitre m’a arraché mon adversaire d’entre les mains. » Le Camerounais signe son premier contrat avec l’Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) en 2015. La Ligue américaine a la main sur le business du #MMA et l’image de ses combattants. A cette échelle, on parle d’un géant du divertissement qui vend des machines à coller des pains, des récits et des synopsis de biopic. Son rendez-vous de samedi, à Boston, lui assure d’office un chèque de 500 000 dollars. Didier Carmont : « Je suis certain qu’il a gardé la boxe dans un coin de sa tête. Un jour ou l’autre, il voudra y revenir. » Dans sa vie d’après, #Ngannou se verrait bien en hommes d’affaires. « J’impressionne souvent les gens en calcul mental. Enfant, à l’école, le prof demandait parfois combien faisait 5 moins 6.Tandis que tous les autres cherchaient, j’avais déjà trouvé. »
    Ramsès Kefi - photo : Laurent Troude pour Libération

    Francis Ngannou a été battu sur décision à Boston.
    #ufc #boxe #sports_de_combat

  • Before Self-Driving Cars Become Real, They Face These Challenges | WIRED
    https://www.wired.com/story/self-driving-cars-challenges

    OH, THE UNTAINTED optimism of 2014. In the spring of that year, the good Swedes at Volvo introduced Drive Me, a program to get regular Josefs, Frejas, Joeys, and Fayes into autonomous vehicles. By 2017, Volvo executives promised, the company would distribute 100 self-driving SUVs to families in Gothenburg, Sweden. The cars would be able to ferry their passengers through at least 30 miles of local roads, in everyday driving conditions—all on their own. “The technology, which will be called Autopilot, enables the driver to hand over the driving to the vehicle, which takes care of all driving functions,” said Erik Coelingh, a technical lead at Volvo.

    Now, in the waning weeks of 2017, Volvo has pushed back its plans. By four years. Automotive News reports the company now plans to put 100 people in self-driving cars by 2021, and “self-driving” might be a stretch. The guinea pigs will start off testing the sort of semi-autonomous features available to anyone willing to pony up for a new Volvo (or Tesla, Cadillac, Nissan, or Mercedes).

    “On the journey, some of the questions that we thought were really difficult to answer have been answered much faster than we expected,” Marcus Rothoff, the carmaker’s autonomous driving program director, told the publication. “And in some areas, we are finding that there were more issues to dig into and solve than we expected.” Namely, price. Rothoff said the company was loath to nail down the cost of its sensor set before it knew how it would work, so Volvo couldn’t quite determine what people would pay for the privilege in riding in or owning one. CEO Hakan Samuelsson has said self-driving functionality could add about $10,000 to the sticker price.

    Volvo’s retreat is just the latest example of a company cooling on optimistic self-driving car predictions. In 2012, Google CEO Sergey Brin said even normies would have access to autonomous vehicles in fewer than five years—nope. Those who shelled out an extra $3,000 for Tesla’s Enhanced Autopilot are no doubt disappointed by its non-appearance, nearly six months after its due date. New Ford CEO Jim Hackett recently moderated expectations for the automaker’s self-driving service, which his predecessor said in 2016 would be deployed at scale by 2021. “We are going to be in the market with products in that time frame,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle. “But the nature of the romanticism by everybody in the media about how this robot works is overextended right now.”

    The scale-backs haven’t dampened the enthusiasm for money-throwing. Venture capital firm CB Insights estimates self-driving car startups—ones building autonomous driving software, driver safety tools, and vehicle-to-vehicle communications, and stockpiling and crunching data while doing it—have sucked in more than $3 billion in funding this year.

    To track the evolution of any major technology, research firm Gartner’s “hype cycle” methodology is a handy guide. You start with an “innovation trigger,” the breakthrough, and soon hit the “peak of inflated expectations,” when the money flows and headlines blare.

    And then there’s the trough of disillusionment, when things start failing, falling short of expectations, and hoovering up less money than before. This is where the practical challenges and hard realities separate the vaporware from the world-changers. Self-driving, it seems, is entering the trough. Welcome to the hard part.

    Technical Difficulties
    “Autonomous technology is where computing was in the 60s, meaning that the technology is nascent, it’s not modular, and it is yet to be determined how the different parts will fit together,” says Shahin Farshchi, a partner at the venture capital firm Lux Capital, who once built hybrid electric vehicles for General Motors, and has invested in self-driving startup Zoox, as well as sensor-builder Aeva.)

    Turns out building a self-driving car takes more than strapping sensors and software onto a set of wheels. In an almost startlingly frank Medium post, Bryan Salesky, who heads up Ford-backed autonomous vehicle outfit Argo AI, laid out the hurdles facing his team.

    First, he says, came the sensor snags. Self-driving cars need at least three kinds to function—lidar, which can see clearly in 3-D; cameras, for color and detail; and radar, with can detect objects and their velocities at long distances. Lidar, in particular, doesn’t come cheap: A setup for one car can cost $75,000. Then the vehicles need to take the info from those pricey sensors and fuse it together, extracting what they need to operate in the world and discarding what they doesn’t.

    “Developing a system that can be manufactured and deployed at scale with cost-effective, maintainable hardware is… challenging,” Salesky writes. (Argo AI bought a lidar company called Princeton Lightwave in October.)

    Salesky cites other problems, minor technological quandaries that could prove disastrous once these cars are actually moving through 3-D space. Vehicles need to be able to see, interpret, and predict the behavior of human drivers, human cyclists, and human pedestrians—perhaps even communicate with them. The cars must understand when they’re in another vehicle’s blind spot and drive extra carefully. They have to know (and see, and hear) when a zooming ambulance needs more room.

    “Those who think fully self-driving vehicles will be ubiquitous on city streets months from now or even in a few years are not well connected to the state of the art or committed to the safe deployment of the technology,” Salesky writes.

    He’s not the only killjoy. “Technology developers are coming to appreciate that the last 1 percent is harder than the first 99 percent,” says Karl Iagnemma, CEO of Nutonomy, a Boston-based self-driving car company acquired by automotive supplier Delphi this fall. “Compared to last 1 percent, the first 99 percent is a walk in the park.”

    The smart companies, Iagnemma says, are coming up with comprehensive ways to deal with tricky edge cases, not patching them over with the software equivalent of tape and chewing gum. But that takes time.

    Money Worries
    Intel estimates self-driving cars could add $7 trillion to the economy by 2050, $2 trillion in the US alone—and that’s not counting the impact the tech could have on trucking or other fields. So it’s curious that no one seems quite sure how to make money off this stuff yet. “The emphasis has shifted as much to the product and the business model as pure technology development,” says Iagnemma.

    Those building the things have long insisted you’ll first interact with a self-driving car through a taxi-like service. The tech is too expensive, and will at first be too dependent on weather conditions, topography, and high-quality mapping, to sell straight to consumers. But they haven’t sorted out the user experience part of this equation. Waymo is set to launch a limited, actually driver-free service in Phoenix, Arizona, next year, and says it has come up with a way for passengers to communicate they want to pull over. But the company didn’t let reporters test the functionality during a test drive at its test facility this fall, so you’ll have to take its word for it.

    Other questions loom: How do you find your vehicle? Ensure that you’re in the right one? Tell it that you’re having an emergency, or that you’ve had a little accident inside and need a cleanup ASAP? Bigger picture: How does a company even start to recoup its huge research and development budget? How much does it charge per ride? What happens when there’s a crash? Who’s liable, and how much do they have to pay in insurance?

    One path forward, money-wise, seems to be shaking hands with enemies. Companies including Waymo, GM, Lyft, Uber, and Intel, and even seemingly extinction-bound players like the car rental firm Avis, have formed partnerships with potential rivals, sharing data and services in the quest to build a real autonomous vehicle, and the infrastructure that will support it.

    Still, if you ask an autonomous car developer whether it should be going at it alone—trying to build out sensors, mapping, perception, testing capabilities, plus the car itself—expect a shrug. While a few big carmakers like General Motors clearly seem to think vertical integration is the path to a win (it bought the self-driving outfit Cruise Automation last year, and lidar company Strobe in October), startups providing à la carte services continue to believe they are part of the future. “There are plenty of people quietly making money supplying to automakers,” says Forrest Iandola, the CEO of the perception company DeepScale, citing the success of more traditional automotive suppliers like Bridgestone.

    Other companies seize upon niche markets in the self-driving space, betting specific demographics will help them make cash. The self-driving shuttle company Voyage has targeted retirement communities. Optimus Ride, an MIT spinoff, recently announced a pilot project in a new developed community just outside of Boston, and says it’s focused on building software with riders with disabilities in mind.

    “We think that kind off approach, providing mobility to those who are not able-bodied, is actually going to create a product that’s much more robust in the end,” says CEO Ryan Chin. Those companies are raising money. (Optimus Ride just came off an $18 million Series A funding round, bringing its cash pull to $23.25 million.) But are theirs viable strategies to survive in the increasingly crowded self-driving space?

    The Climb
    OK, so you won’t get a fully autonomous car in your driveway anytime soon. Here’s what you can expect, in the next decade or so: Self-driving cars probably won’t operate where you live, unless you’re the denizen of a very particular neighborhood in a big city like San Francisco, New York, or Phoenix. These cars will stick to specific, meticulously mapped areas. If, by luck, you stumble on an autonomous taxi, it will probably force you to meet it somewhere it can safely and legally pull over, instead of working to track you down and assuming hazard lights grant it immunity wherever it stops. You might share that ride with another person or three, à la UberPool.

    The cars will be impressive, but not infallible. They won’t know how to deal with all road situations and weather conditions. And you might get some human help. Nissan, for example, is among the companies working on a stopgap called teleoperations, using remote human operators to guide AVs when they get stuck or stumped.

    And if you’re not lucky enough to catch a ride, you may well forget about self-driving cars for a few years. You might joke with your friends about how silly you were to believe the hype. But the work will go on quietly, in the background. The news will quiet down as developers dedicate themselves to precise problems, tackling the demons in the details.

    The good news is that there seems to be enough momentum to carry this new industry out of the trough and onto what Gartner calls the plateau of productivity. Not everyone who started the journey will make the climb. But those who do, battered and a bit bloody, may just find the cash up there is green, the robots good, and the view stupendous.

    #Uber #disruption