Gaming 27 - The PlayStation Ryvita
Posted on 15th Jun 2011 at 07:41 by Podcast with 8 comments
IBM researchers have developed a programming trick that makes it possible to more reliably store large amounts of data using a promising new technology called phase-change memory. The company hopes to start integrating this storage technology into commercial products, such as servers that process data for the cloud, in about five years.
Like flash memory, commonly found in cell phones, phase-change memory is nonvolatile. That means it doesn't require any power to store the data. And it can be accessed rapidly for fast boot-ups in computers and more efficient operation in general. Phase-change memory has a speed advantage over flash, and Micron and Samsung are about to bring out products that will compete with flash in some mobile applications.
These initial products will use memory cells that store one bit each. But for phase-change memory to be cost-competitive for broader applications, it will need to achieve higher density, storing multiple bits per cell. Greater density is necessary for IBM to achieve its goal of developing phase-change memory for high-performance systems such as servers that process and store Internet data much faster.
The IBM work announced today offers a solution. In the past, researchers haven't been able to make a device that uses multiple bits per cell that works reliably over months and years. That's because of the properties of the phase-change materials used to store the data. Scientists at IBM Research in Zurich have developed a software trick that allows them to compensate for this.
Each cell in these data-storage arrays is made up of a small spot of phase-change materials sandwiched between two electrodes. By applying a voltage across the electrodes, the material can be switched to any number of states along a continuum from totally unstructured to highly crystalline. The memory is read out by using another electrical pulse to measure the resistance of the material, which is much lower in the crystalline state.
To make multibit memory cells, the IBM group picked four different levels of electrical resistance. The trouble is that over time, the electrons in the phase-change cells tend to drift around, and the resistance changes, corrupting the data. The IBM group has shown that they can encode the data in such a way that when it's read out, they can correct for drift-based errors and get the right data.
The IBM group has shown that error-correcting code can be used to reliably read out data from a 200,000-cell phase-change memory array after a period of six months. "That's not gigabits, like flash, but it's impressive," says Eric Pop, professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "They're using a clever encoding scheme that seems to prolong the life and reliability of phase-change memory."
For commercial products, that reliability timescale needs to come up to 10 years, says Victor Zhirnov, director of special projects at the Semiconductor Research Corporation. IBM says it can get there. "Electrical drift in these materials is mostly problematic in the first microseconds and minutes after programming," says Harris Pozidis, manager of memory and probe technologies at IBM Research in Zurich. The problem of drift can be statistically accounted for in the IBM coding scheme over whatever timeframe is necessary, says Pozidis, because it occurs at a known rate.
But phase-change memory won't be broadly adapted until power consumption can be checked, says Zhirnov. It still takes much too much energy to flip the bits in these arrays. That's due to the way the electrodes are designed, and many researchers are working on the problem. This spring, Pop's group at the University of Illinois demonstrated storage arrays that use carbon nanotubes to encode phase-change memory cells with 100 times less power.
Source: http://feeds.technologyreview.com/click.phdo?i=8faa1df702cd50a586f5f4ad09e316a2
the chipmunks seattle public schools worldstarhiphop the game season 4 episode 1 freddie mitchell simon chipmunk lebron james twitter jimmer fredette thomas tew rum issaquah school district
Although high blood pressure can be monitored, and treated effectively, with a number of drugs, a quarter of the people with the condition don't even know they have it, according to the American Heart Association. Of those who know they have high blood pressure, only two-thirds get treatment, and fewer than half have it under control.
Now a new wireless monitor from Hewlett-Packard and a Singapore company called Healthstats aims to make it much easier for patients and doctors to monitor blood pressure. The device, which has the size and look of a wristwatch, can monitor pressure continuously?which provides a much more accurate picture than infrequent readings in the doctor's office. Until now, the only way to do such continuous monitoring has been with a cumbersome inflatable cuff for the arm or wrist.
The new monitor comes with related software designed to keep patients and doctors informed of the wearer's vital signs, including blood pressure. Data is transmitted from the device to the user's cell phone, and then to the cloud, where clinicians can review it. Patients and their doctors can view 24-hour graphs of blood pressure, and the system can sound alerts when it detects abnormalities in pressure or other measures.
The research is part of a growing effort to use wireless monitors to capture round-the-clock medical data outside of the hospital. Physicians hope such devices will inspire patients to better monitor their own health, and help uncover difficult-to-diagnose conditions, such as nighttime hypertension.
Unlike standard equipment, the Healthstats device relies on a sensor that rests against an artery in the wrist and detects the shape of the pressure wave as blood flows through it. (The device is first calibrated with a standard blood pressure monitor.) "Together with algorithms we have developed, the indices can be processed to get heart rate, diastolic and systolic pressure, and other measures," says Ting Choon Meng, a physician and Healthstats CEO.
Source: http://feeds.technologyreview.com/click.phdo?i=d222837bd7b2afede2a7104c85f5eeab
scelestious stephanie seymour and son david nelson the chipmunks seattle public schools worldstarhiphop the game season 4 episode 1 freddie mitchell simon chipmunk lebron james twitter
IBM researchers have announced a breakthrough in a new kind of memory, known as phase-change memory (PCM), that allows them to reliably store multiple bits of data per cell for extended periods of time at speeds several times faster than today's flash chips. Though the company is not the first to demonstrate multi-bit cell phase change memory, it managed to sidestep a persisting problem called "drift" that otherwise causes data errors the longer data is stored.
PCM works by storing data in small cells of chalcogenide, a special compound that can change physical states between crystalline and amorphous with the application of heat. It is "RAM-like" in the sense that bits can be changed individually, not only in blocks as required by NAND and NOR, yet it is non-volatile so power isn't required to keep the data in memory. This also means PCM will be much more efficient as it doesn't need continuous power to function.
Yet one of the problems with multi-bit PCM is that, over time, the electrons in the phase-change cells tend to 'drift around', which causes the resistance levels in the chip circuitry to change and leads to data read errors.
To overcome that issue, IBM researchers applied an advanced modulation coding technique that can correct for drift-based errors, and demonstrated the results by reliably reading out data from a 200,000-cell phase-change memory array several months after being stored. Of course, that reliability timescale needs to come up to several years before PCM can be commercialized, but IBM believes is on track to have the technology ready for use in servers by 2016.
Other companies working on making phase-change memory viable include Numonyx, Intel's memory joint venture with STMicroelectonics that was acquired by Micron. The company began marketing a PCM product last year under the Omneo brand, promising write speeds 300 times faster than flash along with ten times more write endurance.
Source: http://www.techspot.com/news/44485-ibm-announces-phase-change-memory-breakthrough.html
most popular thanksgiving side dish the game bet lights out nyc school closings scelestious stephanie seymour and son david nelson the chipmunks seattle public schools worldstarhiphop
Apple?s App Store is now home to over 100,000 iPad-exclusive applications, reaching the milestone in 453 days from when the original iPad launched on April 3 2010, Macstories reveals.
It?s a massive number for Apple, a company that is seen by many to lead the mobile industry into the world of smartphone applications, particularly as none of its rivals come anywhere near the same total.
The iPad has enjoyed the lion?s share of the tablet market, holding around a 90% worldwide share, despite repeated attempts by rival vendors to launch their own ?iPad Killers?. Apple?s competition has largely consisted of Android tablet devices, powered by Google?s Froyo, Gingerbread and Honeycomb firmware releases ? the latest of which has under dedicated 1,000 applications. RIM released its PlayBook in June, which again only accounts for a handful of apps.
The app count was spotted on Macstories founder Federico Viticci?s iPad 2, at the time accounting for 100,161 applications on the App Store. In the 450 days since the iPad launched, it stands today with nearly 200 times as many apps as its rivals.

In case you were wondering how long it took for the iPhone to reach 100,000 apps ? the App Store launched on July 10, 2008 and reached the same milestone in 482 days.
Granted the iPad launched when apps were gaining massive traction across the industry, but its still a mightily impressive feat. Apple will of course look towards the next hundred thousand apps, possibly opening up a way for developers to integrate with the platform with web apps, whilst its competitors play catch up.
Source: http://thenextweb.com/apple/2011/06/30/apples-app-store-now-home-to-100000-ipad-applications/
worldstarhiphop the game season 4 episode 1 freddie mitchell simon chipmunk lebron james twitter jimmer fredette thomas tew rum issaquah school district the game tv show lasso of truth
A number of announcements have been made this month which could be very important for the future of wireless services, and specifically for broadband, in the UK.
BT and UK Broadband made announcements covering (literally) opposite ends of the spectrum, with BT extending its whitespace trial and UK Broadband (who currently offer WiMAX wireless broadband services) announcing that it will offer LTE (Long Term Evolution or 4G) services and wholesale LTE services to existing mobile operators. This week, Microsoft launched a whitespace trial starting in Cambridge with BT, BSkyB and the BBC.
Whitespace technology will allow rural communities to get wireless broadband where there?s no real chance of getting any kind of wired service. LTE, meanwhile, is on every mobile network operator?s (MNO) roadmap, it offers faster broadband speeds than current 3G, however the networks can hardly cope with current 3G traffic levels on the limited spectrum they have today, so they?re all counting on the new spectrum that communications regulator Ofcom is meant to be auctioning next year. UK Broadband?s offering may offer the MNOs a quick fix to locally increase capacity in urban ?hot zones?.
Radio spectrum is a valuable commodity and in the UK most of it has already been allocated (noting the exceptions which Ofcom will hopefully auction off soon). It?s a crowded space with much of the spectrum being allocated to the government?s Ministry of Defence, and other sections going to commercial TV and radio, mobile communications and even some space reserved for public use such the 2.4GHz band which anyone can use for services such as WiFi or Bluetooth.
The radio spectrum is allocated by Ofcom, and all of the UK spectrum is covered by licenses, some of these (like TV broadcast licenses or the 3G licenses) have generated billions of pounds of revenue for the UK government. Even spectrum like the 2.4GHz band (which is free to use) is covered by a license, but Ofcom publishes a generic agreement that all vendors manufacturing systems must adhere too. Even mobile phone handsets require a license, it?s just that they?re covered by the mobile network.
As an aside, the UK has one of the most punitive regulatory environments when it comes to radio, which stems from when it was invented. It was much easier to prosecute a spy for having a radio transmitter or receiver which wasn?t licensed than to actually prove they were spying.
Ofcom planned to auction the 800MHz and 2.6GHz bands in 2007, unfortunately they?ve been plagued with legal battles so the auctions keep getting delayed. Both bands are valuable as 800MHz is good for wireless broadband and can cover large distances while 2.6GHz can carry a lot of data but is only useful for short-range cells, the big advantage is that they?re both GSM/3G bands so mobile phones and dongles can use them directly.
Though legal wrangles may still delay the auctions significantly, Ofcom announced earlier this year that it will allow spectrum trading so the networks can sell off all or parts of their allocations to other operators which might head off some of the legal complaints.
BT?s whitespace trial is interesting as this technology looks for gaps in existing spectrum and uses those gaps to send information through. In the past, transmitters and receivers weren?t particularly accurate (think big glowing valves) and bands were generally broken down into channels ? there would be deliberate gaps left between channels so the channels didn?t ?bleed? over into each other. Now modern equipment is much more accurate so a lot of these ?guard? bands are sitting there doing nothing, no longer needed.
There is also lots of spectrum that isn?t used in particular areas dues to specific frequency planning issues. If a transmitter and receiver know what?s being used around them, they can fill in the gaps and use that spectrum without interfering with anything else. It?s these areas of unused spectrum that?s known as ?whitespace?.
BT?s trial uses spectrum between 400 and 800MHz and is taking place on the Isle of Bute (off Scotland). Whitespace isn?t much use in congested areas like big cities, because there are just too many things going on, but for remote areas (where wired broadband is never likely to be rolled-out to due to the poor economics or just environmental conditions) it?s a perfect solution. The signals are sub 1GHz therefore propagate well and interference is likely to be minimal so BT can roll-out wireless broadband to remote areas (covering a large area with minimal infrastructure).
The trials running in Cambridge will also use the same technology and has some big players that can make a difference and produce consumer equipment. Sky already runs a broadband network and it could use whitespace to offer wireless services.
At the other end of the spectrum, UK Broadband (a subsidiary of Hong Kong based PPCW) have a national set of licenses in the 3.5/3.6GHz bands (they acquired Pipex Wireless last year so there is no competition in these bands). Originally, both UK Broadband and Pipex were offering WiMAX wireless broadband services, but neither managed any substantial roll-outs or gained a large customer base.
Now UK Broadband has said it will offer LTE (Long-term Evolution) services and offer a wholesale service to existing 3G operators and MVNOs (?virtual operators?) such as Virgin Media. The MVNOs tend to suffer, especially for data services, as their mobile services are piggy-backed onto an existing operator such as 3UK or EverythingEverywhere. Thus any capacity problems the operator has, the MVNO is likely to be affected by further.
Though 3.5/3.6GHz cells wont cover large areas they are good for localised infrastructure and each cell can provide high bandwidth/capacities for data which means they?re perfect for adding capacity to existing networks. Though 2.6GHz would also be good for this, the 3.5/3.6GHz bands are available now and UK Broadband say they can roll-out an LTE network by 2012 thus negating any worries about auction delays.
There?s still a catch, as LTE services don?t generally operate at 3.5/3.6GHz so UK Broadband will need to get a vendor to specifically manufacture cells and consumer equipment. So your phone is unlikely to work on this new LTE network, but a dongle could easily be developed that can use the normal LTE bands (ie. 2G and 3G) and the new UK Broadband ones, thus off-loading high-capacity data requirements in cities and other areas from the existing 3G cells which will make the networks better for everyone.
So, between BT (and partners) and UK Broadband the solution to remote broadband and localised high-capacity data cells might be found.
Source: http://thenextweb.com/uk/2011/06/30/how-whitespace-and-lte-could-solve-the-uks-broadband-woes/
nyc school closings scelestious stephanie seymour and son david nelson the chipmunks seattle public schools worldstarhiphop the game season 4 episode 1 freddie mitchell simon chipmunk
Apple?s App Store is now home to over 100,000 iPad-exclusive applications, reaching the milestone in 453 days from when the original iPad launched on April 3 2010, Macstories reveals.
It?s a massive number for Apple, a company that is seen by many to lead the mobile industry into the world of smartphone applications, particularly as none of its rivals come anywhere near the same total.
The iPad has enjoyed the lion?s share of the tablet market, holding around a 90% worldwide share, despite repeated attempts by rival vendors to launch their own ?iPad Killers?. Apple?s competition has largely consisted of Android tablet devices, powered by Google?s Froyo, Gingerbread and Honeycomb firmware releases ? the latest of which has under dedicated 1,000 applications. RIM released its PlayBook in June, which again only accounts for a handful of apps.
The app count was spotted on Macstories founder Federico Viticci?s iPad 2, at the time accounting for 100,161 applications on the App Store. In the 450 days since the iPad launched, it stands today with nearly 200 times as many apps as its rivals.

In case you were wondering how long it took for the iPhone to reach 100,000 apps ? the App Store launched on July 10, 2008 and reached the same milestone in 482 days.
Granted the iPad launched when apps were gaining massive traction across the industry, but its still a mightily impressive feat. Apple will of course look towards the next hundred thousand apps, possibly opening up a way for developers to integrate with the platform with web apps, whilst its competitors play catch up.
Source: http://thenextweb.com/apple/2011/06/30/apples-app-store-now-home-to-100000-ipad-applications/
the game bet lights out nyc school closings scelestious stephanie seymour and son david nelson the chipmunks seattle public schools worldstarhiphop the game season 4 episode 1
IBM researchers have developed a programming trick that makes it possible to more reliably store large amounts of data using a promising new technology called phase-change memory. The company hopes to start integrating this storage technology into commercial products, such as servers that process data for the cloud, in about five years.
Like flash memory, commonly found in cell phones, phase-change memory is nonvolatile. That means it doesn't require any power to store the data. And it can be accessed rapidly for fast boot-ups in computers and more efficient operation in general. Phase-change memory has a speed advantage over flash, and Micron and Samsung are about to bring out products that will compete with flash in some mobile applications.
These initial products will use memory cells that store one bit each. But for phase-change memory to be cost-competitive for broader applications, it will need to achieve higher density, storing multiple bits per cell. Greater density is necessary for IBM to achieve its goal of developing phase-change memory for high-performance systems such as servers that process and store Internet data much faster.
The IBM work announced today offers a solution. In the past, researchers haven't been able to make a device that uses multiple bits per cell that works reliably over months and years. That's because of the properties of the phase-change materials used to store the data. Scientists at IBM Research in Zurich have developed a software trick that allows them to compensate for this.
Each cell in these data-storage arrays is made up of a small spot of phase-change materials sandwiched between two electrodes. By applying a voltage across the electrodes, the material can be switched to any number of states along a continuum from totally unstructured to highly crystalline. The memory is read out by using another electrical pulse to measure the resistance of the material, which is much lower in the crystalline state.
To make multibit memory cells, the IBM group picked four different levels of electrical resistance. The trouble is that over time, the electrons in the phase-change cells tend to drift around, and the resistance changes, corrupting the data. The IBM group has shown that they can encode the data in such a way that when it's read out, they can correct for drift-based errors and get the right data.
The IBM group has shown that error-correcting code can be used to reliably read out data from a 200,000-cell phase-change memory array after a period of six months. "That's not gigabits, like flash, but it's impressive," says Eric Pop, professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "They're using a clever encoding scheme that seems to prolong the life and reliability of phase-change memory."
For commercial products, that reliability timescale needs to come up to 10 years, says Victor Zhirnov, director of special projects at the Semiconductor Research Corporation. IBM says it can get there. "Electrical drift in these materials is mostly problematic in the first microseconds and minutes after programming," says Harris Pozidis, manager of memory and probe technologies at IBM Research in Zurich. The problem of drift can be statistically accounted for in the IBM coding scheme over whatever timeframe is necessary, says Pozidis, because it occurs at a known rate.
But phase-change memory won't be broadly adapted until power consumption can be checked, says Zhirnov. It still takes much too much energy to flip the bits in these arrays. That's due to the way the electrodes are designed, and many researchers are working on the problem. This spring, Pop's group at the University of Illinois demonstrated storage arrays that use carbon nanotubes to encode phase-change memory cells with 100 times less power.
Source: http://feeds.technologyreview.com/click.phdo?i=8faa1df702cd50a586f5f4ad09e316a2
issaquah school district the game tv show lasso of truth terrence j most popular thanksgiving side dish the game bet lights out nyc school closings scelestious stephanie seymour and son
With Apple reportedly tying up much of the available production capacity in Taiwanese plants, the Cupertino-based company has reporting turned more aggressive with its ordering strategy to prepare for its peak season by placing orders for up to 14 million iPad 2?s in the third quarter.
Digitimes reports that Apple will almost double the numbers of orders from the second quarter, boosting available numbers from 7-9 million units between April and July.
To prepare for the higher shipments, Apple has started stockpiling iPad 2 component inventory to minimise the risk of component shortages when its devices go into production.
Component suppliers including LG Display, Catcher Technology, TPK Holdings and Radiant Opto-Electronics Corporation are set to profit from the orders, the report suggests.
simon chipmunk lebron james twitter jimmer fredette thomas tew rum issaquah school district the game tv show lasso of truth terrence j most popular thanksgiving side dish the game bet
Posted on 15th Jun 2011 at 07:41 by Podcast with 8 comments
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/bit-tech/blog/~3/twVcw9pIGrE/
david nelson the chipmunks seattle public schools worldstarhiphop the game season 4 episode 1 freddie mitchell simon chipmunk lebron james twitter jimmer fredette thomas tew rum
Declaring that an agreement is not possible without painful steps on both sides, Mr. Obama said that his party had already accepted the need for substantial spending cuts in programs it had long championed, and that Republicans must agree to end tax breaks for oil and gas companies, hedge funds and other corporate interests.
In a 67-minute news conference, Mr. Obama cast the budget battle as a tug of war between the interests of the rich ? like owners of corporate jets, who he said get generous tax breaks ? and those of the middle class, the elderly and children.
Directly challenging Republican leaders, Mr. Obama said, ?Everybody else has been willing to move off their maximalist position ? they need to do the same.?
At the same time, Mr. Obama, under assault from Republicans on the campaign trail for an unemployment rate that remains above 9 percent, asked voters to understand that the economic recovery would take time but said that Washington, even in its current financial straits, could still do more to help. He expressed support for extending a reduction in payroll taxes for an extra year, providing loans for road and bridge-building and approving trade pacts that could help spur exports.
While the president expressed hope for a budget deal before the government?s borrowing authority expires in early August, he scolded Republican lawmakers for putting off hard decisions until the 11th hour, saying that his daughters did not procrastinate that way with their schoolwork.
?Malia and Sasha generally finish their homework a day ahead of time,? the president said, in a tone of rising exasperation. ?They don?t wait until the night before. They?re not pulling all-nighters.?
The House speaker, John A. Boehner, flatly rejected Mr. Obama?s call for new tax revenues, saying the ?president?s remarks ignore legislative and economic reality.?
In a toughly worded statement, Mr. Boehner said the House would vote to raise the debt limit, as the White House has demanded, only if the administration agreed to a deal that contained deep spending cuts and no tax increases.
?The American people know tax hikes destroy jobs,? Mr. Boehner said. ?They also know Washington has been on a spending binge for many years, and they will only tolerate a debt-limit increase if we stop it.?
Mr. Obama?s news conference, his first extended exchange with reporters since March, also touched on Libya, on which he offered a brisk defense of his decision not to seek Congressional authorization for the NATO-led air campaign, and on same-sex marriage, which he stopped just short of endorsing as a legal right.
But the president?s combative remarks on the budget commanded most of the attention, signaling that he had fully entered the fray. On Monday, he took over stalled talks led by Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., meeting with Senate Republicans and Democrats, and on Wednesday he met with the Democrats.
So far, the president?s involvement seems mainly to have dramatized the gulf between the White House and the Republicans on fiscal priorities.
By all accounts, the round of negotiations steered by Mr. Biden made significant progress in identifying spending cuts and revenue-generating items. But with the Aug. 2 deadline looming for the expiration of the government?s borrowing authority, the partisan maneuvering on both sides has increased.
Senate Republicans have talked about a short-term increase in the debt ceiling, betting that the White House will accept spending cuts, with no tax increases, rather than face two votes on the issue before the 2012 election. Mr. Obama is taking aim at tax policies that benefit the rich as a way to pressure Republicans. Asserting that chief executives and hedge fund managers are paying the lowest tax rates since the 1950s, before he was born, the president, casting the issue in populist terms that some conservatives said veered into class warfare, said they could afford to pay more.
?You?ll still be able to ride on your corporate jet,? Mr. Obama said. ?You?ll just have to pay a little more.?
Under Democratic proposals, owners of corporate jets would have to write off the aircrafts? cost in fewer years, which would generate an estimated $3 billion for the Treasury over a decade. Hedge funds and private equity investors would pay higher capital gains tax on their earnings. Phasing out tax deductions and credits for oil and gas companies could raise nearly $40 billion, economists said.
Even if all these changes to the tax code were accepted, they would still amount to only a sliver of the $4 trillion in savings that Mr. Obama has said he wants to achieve. But refusing to increase revenues, he asserted, would necessitate cuts in programs that award college scholarships, finance the National Weather Service and medical research, and improve food safety.
?I?ve said to some of the Republican leaders: you go talk to your constituents, the Republican constituents, and ask them, are they willing to compromise their kids? safety so that some corporate-jet owner continues to get a tax break?? Mr. Obama said. ?I?m pretty sure what the answer would be.?
Citing the hours of meetings he and Mr. Biden had held with leaders from both parties, Mr. Obama seemed particularly piqued by Republican criticism that he had failed to show leadership. Noting that the House is in recess this week, and the Senate is scheduled to be gone next week, he said he had been hunkered down in the White House, ?doing Afghanistan and Bin Laden and Greek crisis.? If Congress was serious about a deal, he said, it should cancel its breaks.
There were signs on Capitol Hill that his words had struck a nerve. Nine Republican senators announced that they would object to a recess during the Fourth of July week. Late Wednesday it appeared that Democratic leaders would go along and keep the Senate in session next week.
Wary of spooking financial markets, Mr. Obama stopped short of saying that Aug. 2 was a drop-dead date for a deal. But he dismissed those who argue that the government can ignore the debt limit by paying some bills and not others.
?This is the equivalent of me saying, ?You know what, I will choose to pay my mortgage, but I?m not going to pay my car note,? ? Mr. Obama said. ?Or, ?I?m going to pay my car note, but not my student loan.? ?
Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=d8bde6942421167d107d269738189492
the game tv show lasso of truth terrence j most popular thanksgiving side dish the game bet lights out nyc school closings scelestious stephanie seymour and son david nelson