da Particle Physics Turns to Quantum Computing for Solutions to Tomorrow's Big-Data Problems By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Jan 2020 11:15:22 EST Giant-scale physics experiments are increasingly reliant on big data and complex algorithms fed into powerful computers, and managing this multiplying mass of data presents its own unique challenges. To better prepare for this data deluge posed by next-generation upgrades and new experiments, physicists are turning to the fledgling field of quantum computing. Full Article
da The Big Questions: Sally Dawson on the Higgs Boson By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Jan 2020 13:25:05 EST The Big Questions series features perspectives from the five recipients of the Department of Energy Office of Science's 2019 Distinguished Scientists Fellows Award describing their research and what they plan to do with the award. Sally Dawson is a senior scientist at DOE's Brookhaven National Laboratory. Full Article
da A day in the life of an X-ray laser coach By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Jan 2020 18:25:48 EST SLAC scientist Siqi Li works on new methods to allow researchers using LCLS, our X-ray laser, to observe the motion of electrons or do high-resolution imaging. When she's not working to create more efficient and advanced X-ray lasers, Li likes to unwind with yoga. Full Article
da Speaker: Lockdown? Day? Whatever the fuck day it is … By publicaddress.net Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 10:04:00 +1200 I live in Stockport, just outside Manchester. It's 10 minutes by train away, but I’m not sure if the trains are running – and in any case I’ve not actually been in my office in Central Manchester since February 20.That got complex. I was in Iraq for work and came home in early March with a virus. Just not that virus but they wouldn’t test me because Iraq (you know, right next door to Iran) wasn’t on the WHO list.So. Context. We live in a suburban semi-detatched house with a garden (big for Edgeley). There’s me. Matt the husband.… Full Article
da Your Pet Tributes'Saffron Badaffron Woof Woof Prescott' By www.pet-loss-matters.com Published On :: Sun, 21 Jul 2013 11:41:20 -0400 Saffron, you were the most perfect being that I could ever envision. You were my sunshine. I miss you beyond words, my little Spoopa Roopa. How can we Full Article
da Wednesday Puzzle By www.thebigquestions.com Published On :: Wed, 08 Apr 2020 16:29:48 +0000 Feeling isolated? Perhaps a crossword puzzle will help. Click on the image to do the crossword puzzle on line, or click here for a printable pdf. If you do the puzzle on line, you can click the “submit” button to bring up a form where you can enter your name and submit your solution. I […] Full Article Puzzles
da Xdebug Update: April 2020 - Derick Rethans By derickrethans.nl Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 08:58:00 +0000 Xdebug Update: April 2020 London, UK Tuesday, May 5th 2020, 09:58 BST Another monthly update where I explain what happened with Xdebug development in this past month. These will be published on the first Tuesday after the 5th of each month. Patreon supporters will get it earlier, on the first of each month. You can become a patron to support my work on Xdebug. If you are leading a team or company, then it is also possible to support Xdebug through a subscription. In March, I worked on Xdebug for about 60 hours, on the following things: Xdebug 2.9.5 The 2.9.5 release addresses a few bugs. One of them was a follow on from the issue where Xdebug would crash when another extension would run code in PHP's Request Init stage, but only on a second or later request in the same PHP process. As this is not something that's easy to catch with PHP's testing framework that Xdebug uses, this issue slipped through the cracks. The release fixes another bug, where throwing an exception from within a destructor would crash Xdebug. The fix for this was merely making sure that PHP's internal state is still available: - if (!(ZEND_CALL_INFO(EG(current_execute_data)) & ZEND_CALL_HAS_SYMBOL_TABLE)) { + if (EG(current_execute_data) && !(ZEND_CALL_INFO(EG(current_execute_data)) & ZEND_CALL_HAS_SYMBOL_TABLE)) { Beyond these two crashes, the release also addressed an issue where Xdebug did not always correct catch where executable code could exist for code coverage analyses. Over the last decade, PHP has been getting more and more optimised, with more internal engine instructions. Unfortunately that sometimes means that these are not hooked into by Xdebug, to see whether there could be a line of code that would make use of these opcodes. As this is often very dependent on how developers lay out their code, these issues are often found by them. Luckily, these issues are trivially fixed, as long as I have access to just the file containing that code. I then analyse it with vld to see which opcode (PHP engine instruction) I have missed. Xdebug 3 and Xdebug Cloud Most of my time was spend on getting Xdebug Cloud to a state where I can invite select developers to alpha test it. This includes allowing for Xdebug to connect to Xdebug Cloud. There is currently a branch available, but it still lacks the addition of SSL encryption, which is a requirement for allowing safe transport of debug information. The communications between an IDE and Xdebug through Xdebug Cloud is working, with a few things related to detecting disconnections more reliably still outstanding. As Xdebug Cloud needs integration in debugging clients (such as PhpStorm, and other IDEs), I have been extending the dbgpProxy tool to act as intermediate link between existing IDEs and Xdebug Cloud without IDEs having to change anything. This work is still ongoing, and is not documented yet, but I hope to finish that in the next week. Once that and SSL support in the Xdebug to Xdebug Cloud communication has been finalized, I will reach out to subscribers of the Xdebug Cloud newsletter to see if anybody is interested in trying it out. Business Supporter Scheme and Funding In April, no new supporters signed up. If you, or your company, would also like to support Xdebug, head over to the support page! Besides business support, I also maintain a Patreon page and a profile on GitHub sponsors. Podcast The PHP Internals News continues its second season. Episodes in the last month included a discussion on PHP 8's JIT engine and increasing complexity, Truncated by Planet PHP, read more at the original (another 720 bytes) Full Article
da Daily Deal: The 2020 Ultimate Work From Home Starter Kit By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Wed, 6 May 2020 10:50:41 PDT The 2020 Ultimate Work From Home Starter Kit has 16 courses designed to help you do your best while you work from home. There are courses on how to start your own business, how to become a freelancer or copywriter, and how to do affiliate marketing. Other courses focus on how to increase your productivity, how to lead virtual meetings, how to work with virtual teams, and more. It's on sale for $40. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team. Full Article
da Secret Service Sends FOIA Requester A Redacted Version Of A Public DOJ Press Release By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 03:35:56 PDT The government loves its secrets. It loves them so much it does stupid things to, say, "secure the nation..." or "protect the integrity of deliberative processes" or whatever the fuck. We should not trust the government's reasoning when it chooses to redact information from documents it releases to FOIA requesters. These assertions should always be challenged because the government's track record on redactions is objectively awful. Here's the latest case-in-point: Emma Best -- someone the government feels is a "vexatious" FOIA filer -- just received a completely stupid set of redactions from the Secret Service. Best requested documents mentioning darknet market Hansa, which was shut down (along with Alpha Bay) following an investigation by US and Dutch law enforcement agencies. The documents returned to Best contained redactions. This is unsurprising given the nature of the investigation. What's surprising is what the Secret Service decided to redact. As Best pointed out on Twitter, the Secret Service decided public press releases by the DOJ were too sensitive to be released to the general public. Secret Service is now redacting press releases under b5 (deliberative process). Compare the redacted press releases from @SecretService with the unredacted versions posted to @TheJusticeDept's website. https://t.co/qsfoS9q6o7 Reform b5 now. #FOIA pic.twitter.com/57CKvW5R8Y — Emma Best ????️???? ???? (Mx. Yzptlk) (@NatSecGeek) April 27, 2020 Here's one of the redactions [PDF] the Secret Service applied to a press release that can be found unaltered and unedited at the Justice Department's publicly-accessible website: And here's what the Secret Service excised, under the bullshit theory that a publicly-released press statement is somehow an "inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letter which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency." “This is likely one of the most important criminal investigations of the year – taking down the largest dark net marketplace in history,” said Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “Make no mistake, the forces of law and justice face a new challenge from the criminals and transnational criminal organizations who think they can commit their crimes with impunity using the dark net. The dark net is not a place to hide. The Department will continue to find, arrest, prosecute, convict, and incarcerate criminals, drug traffickers and their enablers wherever they are. We will use every tool we have to stop criminals from exploiting vulnerable people and sending so many Americans to an early grave. I believe that because of this operation, the American people are safer – safer from the threat of identity fraud and malware, and safer from deadly drugs.” Um. Is Jeff Sessions being Yezhoved by the Secret Service? Does the agency consider him to be enough of a persona non grata after his firing by Trump to be excised from the Secret Services' official recollection of this dark web takedown? This insane conspiracy theory I just made up makes as much sense as anything the Secret Service could offer in explanation for this redaction. The redaction removed nothing but the sort of swaggering statement Attorney Generals always make after a huge bust. Needless to say, Emma Best is challenging the Secret Service's redactions. Pithily. I am appealing the integrity of the redactions, as you withheld public press releases under b5, which is grossly inappropriate. Yeah. That's an understatement. The Secret Service has no business redacting publicly-available info. Even if this was a clerical error, it's so bad it's insulting. And that's why you can't trust the government on things like this: when it's not being malicious, it's being stupid. Full Article
da Daily Deal: LingvaNex Translator By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 11:09:01 PDT Lingvanex Translator was created with the mission to enable people to read, write, and speak different languages anywhere in the world. It can translate text, voice, images, websites, and documents. It works on a wide range of platforms including iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, and more so you can start translating media in more than 112 languages. It's on sale for $80. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team. Full Article
da No, Congress Can't Fix The Broken US Broadband Market In A Mad Dash During A Pandemic By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 11:14:01 PDT COVID-19 has shone a very bright light on the importance of widely available, affordable broadband. Nearly 42 million Americans lack access to any broadband whatsoever--double FCC estimates. And millions more can't afford service thanks to a lack of competition among very powerful, government pampered telecom monopolies. As usual, with political pressure mounting to "do something," DC's solution is going to be to throw more money at the problem: "The plan unveiled Thursday would inject $80 billion over five years into expansion of broadband infrastructure into neglected rural, suburban and urban areas, with an emphasis on communities with high levels of poverty. It includes measures to promote rapid building of internet systems, such as low-interest financing for infrastructure projects." To be clear, subsidies often do help shore up broadband availability at coverage. The problem is that the United States government, largely captured by telecom giants with a vested interest in protecting regional monopolies, utterly sucks at it. Despite ample pretense to the contrary, nobody in the US government actually knows where broadband is currently available. Data supplied by ISPs has never been rigorously fact-checked by a government fearful of upsetting deep-pocketed campaign contributors (and valued NSA partners). As a result, our very expensive ($350 million at last count) FCC broadband coverage map creates a picture of availability and speed that's complete fantasy. It's theater designed to disguise the fact that US broadband is mediocre on every broadband metric that matters. Especially cost. While there has been some effort to fix the mapping problem via recent legislation, the FCC still needs several years (and more money) to do so. And while you'd think this would be more obvious, you can't fix a problem you can't even effectively measure. There's also not much indication that the $80 billion, while potentially well intentioned, would actually get where it needs to go. Especially right now, when federal oversight is effectively nonexistent. You may or may not have noticed this, but US telecom is a corrupt, monopolized mess. Giants like AT&T and Comcast all but own state and federal legislatures and, in many instances, literally write the law. Feckless regulators bend over backward to avoid upsetting deep-pocketed campaign contributors. So when subsidies are doled out, they very often don't end up where regulators and lawmakers intended. There's an endless ocean of examples where these giants took billions in taxpayer subsidies to deploy fiber networks that are never fully delivered. If you were to do meaningful audit (which we've never done because again we're not willing to adequately track the problem or stand up to dominant incumbent corporations) you'd very likely find that American taxpayers already paid for fiber to every home several times over. That's not to say is that there aren't things Congress could do to help the disconnected during COVID-19. Libraries for example have been begging the FCC for the ability to offer expanded WiFi hotspot access (via mobile school buses) to disconnected communities without running afoul of FCC ERate rules. But while the FCC said libraries can leave existing WiFi on without penalty, it has been mute about whether they can extend coverage outside of library property. Why? As a captured agency, the FCC doesn't like anything that could potentially result in Comcast or AT&T making less money. None of this is to say that we shouldn't subsidize broadband deployment once we get a handle on the mapping problem. But it's a fantasy to think we're going to immediately fix a 30 year old problem with an additional $80 billion in a mad dash during a pandemic. US broadband dysfunction was built up over decades. It's the product of corruption and rot that COVID-19 is exposing at every level of the US government. The only way to fix it is to stand up to industry, initiate meaningful reform, adopt policies that drive competition to market, and jettison feckless lawmakers and regulators whose dominant motivation is in protecting AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, and Spectrum revenues. Maybe the pandemic finally provides the incentive to actually do that, but until the US does, these subsidization efforts are largely theater. Full Article
da Daily Deal: The 2020 Excel Certification School Bundle By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 10:48:33 PDT Microsoft Excel is one of the most widely used applications in business. It’s the backbone for almost all companies. Why? Because Excel helps you accomplish tasks and solve problems more quickly. The better you are at Excel, the faster you can complete tasks and the more complex problems you can solve. That's what exactly the 2020 Excel Certification School Bundle is going to help you do. With 300 lessons and projects to follow along, you'll develop basic to more advanced skills and knowledge that is greater than most Excel users. It's on sale for $50. Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team. Full Article
da What A Coincidence! Same Day Senator Burr Dumped His Stock, So Did His Brother-in-Law! By www.techdirt.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 13:37:01 PDT Senator Richard Burr's potential insider trading issues, for which he's being investigated, may have gotten quite a bit worse this week. A new report notes that on the same day Burr sold off a "significant percentage" of his stock holdings (while also telling the public not to worry about COVID-19), it turns out his brother-in-law just coincidentally decided to dump a bunch of stock too. Amazing! Sen. Richard Burr was not the only member of his family to sell off a significant portion of his stock holdings in February, ahead of the market crash spurred by coronavirus fears. On the same day Burr sold, his brother-in-law also dumped tens of thousands of dollars worth of shares. The market fell by more than 30% in the subsequent month. Burr’s brother-in-law, Gerald Fauth, who has a post on the National Mediation Board, sold between $97,000 and $280,000 worth of shares in six companies — including several that have been hit particularly hard in the market swoon and economic downturn. Could this actually be a coincidence? Sure. Maybe. But the timing (the very same day...) does seem notable. As the ProPublica report notes, Fauth "is not a frequent stock trader." Burr insists that his sales were based on public information, though it's difficult to see how he could simply ignore the classified briefings he got concerning the rising pandemic issues, and base decisions entirely on public information. Indeed, this is why government officials should be required to hand off any equities like this to a blind trust where they have no visibility into how it's traded. Even if this is all legal (which is not certain either way yet...), it again reinforces the belief that the powerful live by different rules and are able to game the system for personal advantage, even as they're supposed to be serving the public interest. Full Article
da “‘The days of your life’ refers to in-game time…” By nielsenhayden.com Published On :: 2020-04-09T19:44:14-05:00 Blacow* speaks of four players: the Wargamer, the Power-Gamer, the Role-Player, and the Story-Teller. The Wargamer, what does he say?... Full Article
da Three Paper Thursday: Sanitisers and Mitigators By www.lightbluetouchpaper.org Published On :: Thu, 02 Apr 2020 13:41:13 +0000 In this reboot of the Three Paper Thursdays, back after a hiatus of almost eight years, I consider the many different ways in which programs can be sanitised to detect, or mitigated to prevent the use of, the many programmer errors that can introduce security vulerabilities in low-level languages such as C and C++. We … Continue reading Three Paper Thursday: Sanitisers and Mitigators → Full Article Three Paper Thursday
da Three Paper Thursday: The role of intermediaries, platforms, and infrastructures in governing crime and abuse By www.lightbluetouchpaper.org Published On :: Thu, 09 Apr 2020 09:00:00 +0000 The platforms, providers, and infrastructures which together make up the contemporary Internet play an increasingly central role in the business of governing human societies. Although the software engineers, administrators, business professionals, and other staff working at these organisations may not have the institutional powers of state organisations such as law enforcement or the civil service, … Continue reading Three Paper Thursday: The role of intermediaries, platforms, and infrastructures in governing crime and abuse → Full Article Three Paper Thursday
da Three Paper Thursday: Adversarial Machine Learning, Humans and everything in between By www.lightbluetouchpaper.org Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 14:41:35 +0000 Recent advancements in Machine Learning (ML) have taught us two main lessons: a large proportion of things that humans do can actually be automated, and that a substantial part of this automation can be done with minimal human supervision. One no longer needs to select features for models to use; in many cases people are … Continue reading Three Paper Thursday: Adversarial Machine Learning, Humans and everything in between → Full Article Three Paper Thursday
da Three Paper Thursday: Attacking the Bitcoin Peer-to-Peer Network By www.lightbluetouchpaper.org Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 08:00:00 +0000 People have tried to develop many different attack vectors on cryptocurrencies, from codebase flaws, cryptographic algorithms, mining processes, consensus protocols and block propagation mechanisms to the underlying network layer. Most attacks could be patched quickly by modifying the source code, but preventing attacks that exploit the network layer remains a non-trivial problem as the network … Continue reading Three Paper Thursday: Attacking the Bitcoin Peer-to-Peer Network → Full Article Three Paper Thursday
da Three Paper Thursday: Exploring the Impact of Online Crime Victimization By www.lightbluetouchpaper.org Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 13:26:03 +0000 Just as in other types of victimization, victims of cybercrime can experience serious consequences, emotional or not. First of all, a repeat victim of a cyber-attack might face serious financial or emotional hardship. These victims are also more likely to require medical attention as a consequence of online fraud victimization. This means repeat victims have a … Continue reading Three Paper Thursday: Exploring the Impact of Online Crime Victimization → Full Article Academic papers Cybercrime Security psychology Three Paper Thursday
da Three Paper Thursday: What’s Intel SGX Good For? By www.lightbluetouchpaper.org Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 11:22:07 +0000 Software Guard eXtensions (SGX) represents Intel’s latest foray into trusted computing. Initially intended as a means to secure cloud computation, it has since been employed for DRM and secure key storage in production systems. SGX differs from its competitors such as TrustZone in its focus on reducing the volume of trusted code in its “secure … Continue reading Three Paper Thursday: What’s Intel SGX Good For? → Full Article Three Paper Thursday Trusted hardware
da #440991 - Shahi Tukda Urdu Recipe By www.tastespotting.com Published On :: Shahi Tukda literally means a “royal piece” when translated from Urdu. A royal and rich dessert that’s super easy and different from the usual style?craving more? check out TasteSpotting Full Article
da #441013 - Vegan Almond Dark Chocolate Recipe By www.tastespotting.com Published On :: This amazing Vegan Almond Dark Chocolate is the best dessert for all chocolate lovers, that you must try!craving more? check out TasteSpotting Full Article
da Data centre reveals it modeled interiors on <i>The Hunt for Red October</i> sets By go.theregister.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 03:30:32 GMT Australia bit barn outfit NEXTDC adds classic film reference to usual mix of resilience, connectivity and security Australian serial entrepreneur Bevan Slattery has revealed that he told the architects of a data centre he funded to make it resemble the sets used in classic submarine flick The Hunt for Red October.… Full Article
da Australian contact-tracing app sent no data to contact-tracers for at least ten days after hurried launch By go.theregister.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 06:02:06 GMT Doesn't play well on iPhones, but bureaucrats rushed it out rather than wait months for perfection. Meanwhile serious bug reports have emerged Australia’s “COVIDSafe” contact-tracing app was rushed to market in the knowledge it would perform poorly on some devices and without agreements in place to let actual contact-tracers use the data it collects. As a result, no collected data has been used in at least 10 days since its launch.… Full Article
da Dad to kids: I've decided you don't get to take over the family business. Kids to Dad: Who wants to run Samsung anyway? By go.theregister.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 06:29:06 GMT Lee Jae-yong ends dynastic control and will even let staff join a union Samsung's heir has said that he will not pass down management of the South Korean conglomerate to his children, ending three generations dynastic rule.… Full Article
da O2 be a fly on the wall during BT and Vodafone's video calls: Telefónica's UK biz, Virgin Media officially merge By go.theregister.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 13:30:04 GMT Multinationals' UK arms pair up to take on Voda and former state-owned telco Telcos Telefónica and Liberty Global today confirmed plans to join their O2 UK and Virgin Media subsidiaries into one combined entity in a deal analysts branded a "blockbuster merger".… Full Article
da Go on, hit Reply All. We dare you. We double dare you. Because Office 365 will defeat your server-slamming ways By go.theregister.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 01:12:06 GMT Even Exchange’s marketing bod reckons tests of new Reply-All-stopper could be a career-defining moment Microsoft may just have made Reply All storms a thing of the past, by adding a suitable blocker to Exchange in Office 365 environments.… Full Article
da If you miss the happier times of the 2000s, just look up today's SCADA gear which still has Stuxnet-style holes By go.theregister.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:56:08 GMT Schneider Electric patches vulns after Trustwave raises alarm Two Schneider Electric SCADA products had vulnerabilities similar to the ones exploited in the Iran-bothering Stuxnet worm, an infosec outfit has claimed.… Full Article
da 01/11/15 - Until the day she died By www.tinyghosts.com Published On :: Mon, 12 Jan 2015 Full Article
da 10/23/16 - A hundred times a day By www.tinyghosts.com Published On :: Monday, 24 Oct 2016 Full Article
da 08/27/17 - Every day is a new day By www.tinyghosts.com Published On :: Monday, 28 Aug 2017 Full Article
da 11/05/17 - This day would come By www.tinyghosts.com Published On :: Monday, 06 Nov 2017 Full Article
da 4/21/19 - A date for my execution By www.tinyghosts.com Published On :: Monday, 22 Apr 2019 Full Article
da The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening Original Soundtrack By www.gamemp3s.net Published On :: Wed, 25 Mar 2020 20:59:36 +0000 -Album Details- Title: The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening Original Soundtrack Publisher: Nippon Columbia Catalog Number: COCX-41117~20 Release Date: March 18th, 2020 Ripped by: Razakin -Info- Soundtracks to the new Switch and the way better Game Boy versions of Link’s Awakening. Enjoy. Purchase Link(s) CDJapan Full Article new releases
da Review of Aliens Versus Predator (Windows) By www.mobygames.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 22:44:43 +0000 A review by Medio DeCritici (165). A 2020 Review - Aliens Versus Predator (PC, 1999) Full Article
da Review of Aliens vs Predator (Windows) By www.mobygames.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 22:47:03 +0000 A review by Medio DeCritici (165). A 2020 Review - Aliens vs. Predator (PC, 2010) Full Article
da Padawan, n. By www.oed.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 00:00:00 -0400 OED Word of the Day: Padawan, n. In the fictional universe of the Star Wars films: an apprentice Jedi. In extended and allusive use: a youthful, naive, or untrained person Full Article
da Featured - Biotech update: Life Tech layoffs sign of the times? By www.labspaces.net Published On :: Mon, 22 Aug 2011 16:49:08 -0500 Last week the biotech community in San Diego suffered a tough blow as many positions were eliminated as part of a plan to save $20 million dollars in the hopes that Life Tech will please their investors. People who lost jobs included veterans with the company, many who were loyal and hard-working to the almighty borg of biotechs, sacrificing their nights, vacations, and weekend; (read more) Source: Suzy - Discipline: BioTech Full Article
da Last Day to Enter Video Contest! Show Us Your Kid’s Newfound Independence! By www.freerangekids.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 06:02:51 +0000 I realize that sounds kinda nuts — why are we asking PARENTS to show us their KIDS being independent? Who, after all, is better at making videos? Mom or little Ava (who’s 5)? But legally we can’t ask anyone under 13 to do anything. So go document your children doing something new on their own, […] Full Article Miscellaneous
da The Life-Changing Power of Daydreaming for Kids By www.freerangekids.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 15:29:49 +0000 “When I was 17, I was in a serious accident and had to be home for months. Looking out at our boring backyard, I daydreamed a plan for my life. It became a blueprint.” So writes Holly Korbey in a lovely piece at Let Grow. There are different kinds of daydreaming, of course, and some don’t […] Full Article Miscellaneous
da Far Cooler and More Memorable Than Most Mother’s Day Cards: A Questionnaire for Kids & Moms to Fill Out By www.freerangekids.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 17:21:29 +0000 What expression does — did — your mom use all the time? What skill did you learn from her? What does (or did) she encourage you to do? These are great questions for any mom and child, whether the kid is 5 or 50. And if you click here, you can print out a very […] Full Article Miscellaneous
da It’s Not Too Late — Free Printable Mother’s Day Cards / Cool Activities By www.freerangekids.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 17:30:24 +0000 These “cards” are really an excuse for kids to interview their moms and shower them with the ultimate gifts: attention to mom’s quirky uniqueness, gratitude, and offers of help! Here you go — click here! (Mother’s Day is SUNDAY!) Full Article Miscellaneous