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A voiceless trailer for Kuttsukiboshi – the third anime project coming from the indie company Primastea (after Isshoni Sleeping / Training with Hinako), planned as a two-part OVA. “Part I” is directed, written and animated by Naoya Ishikawa (Binchou-tan, Docchimo Maid), with music by Shunsuke Morita, and centers around two girls’ “risky” summer vacation together, yuri style. The first DVD should be released this August 16, however “Part II” is only planned for summer 2011. www.kuttsukiboshi.com

Link: [Primastea] Kuttsukiboshi Trailer (Anime 2010/2011)

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http://www.youtube.com/v/sULClfSF4oQ?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

☆Director.Gilmore An anime music video to Wannabe.I Got Lazy Towards The End “-______- Anime Used ——————— Kannagi Love Hina The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya Rosario+Vampire Capu2 Sailor Moon Koi Koi Seven Doki Doki School Hours Songs – Artist ————- Wannabe – Spice Girls

View original post here: Anime Music Video – Wannabe

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http://www.youtube.com/v/EEpjRowTCMw?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

Song – Injection by Rise Against Animes used 1. Tenjho Tenge 2. Tsukikage Ran 3. Girls Bravo 4. Samurai Champloo 5. Jubei Chan 2 Just some of my favorite fights from various animes i’ve seen. Let me know what you guys think

See the original post: Anime Fight AMV

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Computer Engineer Barbie

Rebecca Zook is an online female math tutor who has been helping students get math into their brains for seven years. She blogs about learning at Triangle Suitcase.

Over half a million votes were cast to decide Barbie’s newest career. But even though Computer Engineer Barbie was developed in consultation with the Society of Women Engineers and the National Academy of Engineering, the new doll’s appearance has sparked controversy.

While some have embraced coder Barbie, others have attacked the concept, saying that her pink laptop, sparkly leggings, and trendy glasses are “too feminine” to be realistic.

The critics imply that real coders aren’t feminine, and feminine coders aren’t real. But women shouldn’t feel like they have to stop being feminine to work in technology.


The First Computer Programmer Was a Fashionista


Ada Lovelace Image

That’s right. The first coder was a lady. Ada Lovelace, over a century ahead of her time, is widely considered to be the first computer programmer. She was the first person to conceptualize and articulate what computers were capable of doing, and the first to foresee that computers could create artificial intelligence, generate graphics, and create music.

So, is Barbie’s outfit really that unrealistic? If the very first person to conceptualize a computer did so while wearing a girly up-do and a frilly gown, why can’t someone write great code while wearing pink platform crocs and a t-shirt that spells “BARBIE” in binary?


Women and Tech Today


This false dichotomy — that you have to choose between being feminine and “looking the part” of a mathematician or scientist — might be part of what turns girls off from math and science in the first place.

Or maybe girls don’t aim for careers in math and science because they don’t see role models. Even Ada Lovelace had role models. Her mom, the “Princess of Parallelograms,” loved math and gave Lovelace a very intensive math education. And Lovelace was also mentored by legendary female science writer and polymath Mary Somerville.

Or maybe girls are afraid of being the only woman in their technology courses or workplaces. If that’s the case, their concerns are certainly warranted. Not only are fewer women entering the information technology field, but more women are leaving the field mid-career.

A recent Harvard Business Review report, The Athena Factor, notes that “52% of highly qualified females working for SET [science, engineering, and technology] companies quit their jobs, driven out by hostile work environments and extreme job pressures.” These women report that they lack mentors and feel intense isolation in the workplace.


Coder Barbie and the Future


In 2010, maybe Computer Engineer Barbie would feel uncomfortable writing code on a pink laptop that matched her glasses in a workplace where she was outnumbered by men 25-to-1. But perhaps we should aspire to create a world where Computer Engineer Barbie and her gloriously pink accessories could realistically exist. Allowing a vision of an ultra-feminine computer engineer might, even subconsciously, open girls — and the rest of society — up to the possibility.

As a female math tutor, I used to feel the need to “tone down” my feminine style. I’d wear black slacks when working with my students for fear of appearing “unprofessional.” But then I decided to show my true fashion colors and wear my homemade dresses and sparkly barrettes when tutoring.

Since then, some kids have been openly relieved when they met me and found I didn’t look like their stereotype of a math tutor. The “math geek” stereotype in their brains was more intimidating and less fun than the real-life tutor wearing fuzzy pink boots.

You don’t have to choose between looking feminine and being good at math, science, and engineering. We need all kinds of people, all kinds of minds, and all kinds of geeks to solve our technology problems.

Opinion: Why Computer Engineer Barbie is Good for Women in Tech

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Casey Neistat uses charts and graphs and a hot female friend to explain the unexplainable phenomenon that is Chatroulette.

Related: Landline’s profile of Chatroulette’s own Shirtless Bird-face Donkey Man.

[theawl.]

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