I will be on Vincent Browne tonight at 11 pm along with minister for European propaganda Lucinda Creighton.
— Luke ming flanagan (@lukeming) September 18, 2012
I will be on Vincent Browne tonight at 11 pm along with minister for European propaganda Lucinda Creighton.
— Luke ming flanagan (@lukeming) September 18, 2012

Currently over three quarters of the way to Kickstarter funding, the LIFX lightbulb can be adjusted to any colour, available intensity and on/off schedule without extra wiring or switches.
You replace your existing light bulbs with LIFX, wifi-enabled LED bulbs (which the manufacturer claims last up to 25 years), download an iPhone/Android App and start tweaking the ambiance. You can even synch the lights to music tracks on your smartphone.
Pledge purchase price of between $50 and $70 per bulb.
Many people assume that the floor to ceiling windows in the toilets of the plush Boom Boom Room nightclub in New York City are reflective on the outside.
They’re not.
You’re sitting on the toilet in a New York hotel minding your own business, when all of a sudden someone standing outside on the street waves at you. And they are taking photos. Restroom users at the Boom Boom Room club on the 18th floor of the the Standard Hotel are completely visible from the street below as they do their business, thanks to 10-foot, floor-to-ceiling windows. The toilet-sitters get wondrous skyline views.
Everyone else sees the whole of the moon.
With the great appetite that currently exists for secularizing our schools, you might be interested to look at how the government is treating the children in one Educate Together school in Carrigaline, Co Cork. It’s a modern day hedgeschool.
Since it was founded in 2008, this has been a school without a school. The first group of students were educated in the local soccer club, with lunch breaks in the bar. More recently the school was based in a building designed as a pre-school in a Celtic Tiger estate. Last year, they outgrew this and moved the older children to some rooms in an
industrial estate a couple of miles away, where they play in a cordoned off section of the car park.
This additional “facility” is on the left in this street view.They are across the car park from a tyre depot and a fire safety training place (which sometimes holds exercises in the car park). The school has a site and planning permission for an actual school, but the government doesn’t see it as a priority. A Campaign has begun for a permanent building.
Anyone?
It’s no Red Devil but…
Simultaneously cold and hot, Steve’s popsicles will give you a delicious if confusing experience. They’re made of just cucumbers, peppers, sugar and lime juice.
Via Neatorama
Extreme sports viralist Devin Graham and friends take to the canal with wakeboards and a jeep.
As you do.
Dearbhail McDonald (top left), legal affairs editor of the Irish Independent, and Brenda Power (top right), columnist with the Irish Daily Mail and Sunday Times, and presenter of the RTE Radio One’s The Media Show, were on Frontline last night with Pat Kenny.
They discussed the fallout of the Irish Daily Star re-printing images of a topless Kate Middleton, the Duchess of Cambridge. The Irish Independent is a sister paper of the Irish Daily Star.
Pat was in rare form.
Pat Kenny: “Brenda, first of all, to publish or not to publish. If you were in the editor’s chair what would you have done?”
Brenda Power: “Well, personally, I probably wouldn’t have published those pictures, Pat, because I think they’re tasteless and I think they’re unpleasant. And, from a female point of view, it’s embarrassing and you can see it’s embarrassing for a young woman to have those photographs published. However, I would defend to the death Michael O’Kane’s right to publish them, without a threat of redundancy and closure hanging over this newspaper tonight.”
Kenny: “You say ‘publish anyway, irrespective of taste and decency’, is that it?”
Power: “No, but I mean I prefer an editor who was thought, who gave some thought to what his readers wanted, to what his audience wanted, to the sort of products that he was producing, which is a tabloid, than one who is looking over his shoulder to be aware of what his rich proprietor wanted for his agenda, to suit his agenda. And that seems to be the rock that Mick O’Kane [Irish Daily Star editor, now suspended] has perished on. He didn’t do that.”
Kenny: “Now Dearbhail, you’re not going to speak on behalf of Independent News and Media at all.”
Dearbhail McDonald: “Well I think the Independent News and Media has had its say. It had its say in an editorial in the Irish Independent on Saturday, the paper which I write for. And it had its say this evening, when it decided, along with the other joint shareholder, Northern and Shell, to suspend Michael O’Kane, pending a full inquiry. So INM has had its say. For my own part, as a female, as a journalist who believes that there are stories that require breaches of privacy, sometimes gross invasions of privacy, to justify stories. And I say it as someone, you know, who has an ordinary view on it. I think the decision to publish those pictures was wrong. Had I been in the editor’s hot seat, I wouldn’t have published them. I think they breached good taste, decency. And I think they also breached the privacy of that young couple. Separate though, what we’re dealing with, there are two separate issues. One is the decision to publish. The second is the separate, but related, issue of Richard Desmond, a man who has made millions out of such worthy tomes as Horny Housewives, Asian Babes, and whatever else you’re having. What we’re dealing now with is an Irish newspaper and now with Alan Shatter’s absolute outrageous suggestion that he would bring in a Privacy Law on the back of this incident. What we’re now seeing is an Irish paper, in the Irish media industry, possibly becoming collateral damage just because Richard Desmond is protecting his commercial interests. Because this is what, this is the important context. You’re dealing with a post-Leveson landscape in the UK. And you’re also dealing with the fact that his Express newspapers, the core, the key, the jewel in the crown of that, is the Daily Express which is a pro-Royalist, pro-Monarchist newspaper. And I think it would be grossly amiss of any Government, and this is why I don’t believe that Alan Shatter’s views should be tolerated this evening. To allow Irish privacy laws to be determined by the British monarch.”
Kenny: “Come to that in a moment. But the newspapers own code of practice, actually I think it’s 5.5, says that you should not intrude on people in a private space without their express permission, expect where it is in the public interest to do so. So a drug dealer, a paedophile, maybe there are cases where you can make. For a young couple on holiday, there is no case that can be made. Or is there, Brenda?”
Power: “Well, the case that Mick O’Kane made originally was that if a paparazzo could zone in on the future queen of England, then maybe a sniper could do. Very volatile times in the Middle East as we know. The Libyan, or the American ambassador to Libya was assassinated last week and that row over that stupid film has spread to the diplomatic missions for the British and the French.”
McDonald: “So let’s show her breasts in full glory just to prove a point, Brenda?
Power: “No, hang on a second, I know people get annoyed when you make this argument but there are some terms and conditions that come with the role she has. And there is nowhere on earth, and that woman should know it by now, that she can strip down to her knickers in public. She was within full view of a public road, in view of a public road…”

A pic taken yesterday in Cincinnati by Politico reporter Donovan Slack, originally (and gleefully) assumed by Fox News to be a man taking a whizz up the grassy knoll behind Obama, turns out to be a secret service agent on duty.
That’s how they stand, facing away from the president.
Handy enough if you get caught short.