LinkedIn adds events to make it easier to network IRL

LinkedIn wants to make it easier to meet up IRL.

The company is launching a new events feature, which lets users arrange offline meet-ups to compete with platforms like Meetup. 

SEE ALSO: The new Surface lineup shows Microsoft has mastered playing it safe

The feature is pretty similar to Facebook events. You create an event, fill in the relevant details such as the time, location, and a brief description. From there, you can invite people you’re connected with on LinkedIn and share it in your feed. 

When you’re invited to an event, the invitation will appear in the same tab where you see new connection requests. And everyone who marks themselves as attending can chat with one another on the event’s main page.

LinkedIn's new Events feature.

Image: linkedin

LinkedIn's new Events feature.

Image: Linkedin

Overall, the feature is pretty limited. For starters, it’s only available in New York and San Francisco as part of an initial pilot program. There’s also no way to create private events or much of a discovery process to connect you with events you might be interested in. LinkedIn says it plans to add these features and expand to all users “in the next few months.”

Basic though it is, the feature makes a lot sense. It’s actually kind of surprising the self-described largest professional network didn’t have any kind of native events feature before now. Instead, people would either have to use workarounds like group messaging, or link to outside platforms like Meetup.

“We have seen behavior where people are using the platform to organize meet-ups and they will add a bunch of folks to the comments and tag them and hose folks will in turn invite more,” says LinkedIn product manager Ashu Dubey.

It’s also another sign the company is increasingly focused on enabling connections offline. Last year, LinkedIn began experimenting with Snapchat-like video filters for live events. That feature still hasn’t had a significant expansion, but it was one of the first signs the company was dipping its toe into features pegged to real-life events. 

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B/REAL: All-Star Athletes + Real-Life Heroes = Life-Changing Moments

Looking for good news? You’ve come to the right place. Introducing B/REAL, an inspiring new series from Bleacher Report: all-star athletes + real-life heroes = life-changing moments.


From more than a thousand stories you might remember, B/Real Chair of the Board Carmelo Anthony connected with five unforgettable Americans. Then he called some friends.


Scroll down to watch short films on each member of the B/Real Class of 2018…and discover how we’ve pushed it forward to go viral for good.

TRASHAUN WILLIS: COURT OF DREAMS

You think that guy on the Seahawks is impressive? This kid plays QB, linebacker…and he can dunk—with one arm. Stay tuned to watch what happens when Chris Paul pulls up in the middle of Iowa. (And click here to learn more about Trashaun >>)

BREHANNA DANIELS: RACE ON

This former college hooper found herself at a crossroads…until she became NASCAR’s first black female pit-crew member. In this week’s surprise, Candace Parker shows out at the track. (And click here to learn more about Brehanna >>)

JASON SEAMAN: ACTIVE TEACHER

He was just teaching seventh-grade science. Then this football coach stopped a school shooting. He took three bullets for his students…but didn’t take the credit. Now he tells his story to B/REAL for the first time. Plus: Alvin Kamara comes over to watch the game. (And click here to learn more about Jason >>)

ALEXANDRIA BUCHANAN: FORWARD PROGRESS

The QB on this varsity team is a girl? Exactly. Follow the journey of one of America’s only female starting quarterbacks. And, wait for it: Drew Brees enlists basketball friends on the football field.

ZACK DOBSON: SECOND TO NONE

COMING SOON

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Sri Lanka president ‘dissolves parliament’ amid deepening crisis

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena fired his prime minister on October 26 [File: Kirill Kudryavtsev/Reuters]
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena fired his prime minister on October 26 [File: Kirill Kudryavtsev/Reuters]

Colombo, Sri Lanka – Sri Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena has signed an order dissolving the country’s parliament, according to two sources, amid a worsening constitutional crisis triggered by the sacking of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe last month.

The move on Friday will pave the way for snap elections in January, a source close to Sirisena told Al Jazeera.

“The president has signed the gazette notification and it will be published very soon,” the source said. 

“The elections commission can call for nominations within 14 days, and elections are likely to be held in the first week of January.”

A second source close to Sirisena said the president had no choice but to dissolve parliament because of Wickremesinghe’s refusal to step down.

Since being abruptly fired on October 26, Wickremesinghe has remained holed up in the prime ministerial residence while also demanding a parliamentary vote to prove his majority.

More to follow…

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera News

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Trump: George Conway ‘trying to get publicity for himself’ with Whitaker op-ed


Donald Trump.

President Donald Trump talks to the media before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House. | Evan Vucci/AP photo

President Donald Trump on Friday criticized George Conway, husband of presidential adviser Kellyanne Conway, for writing in a New York Times op-ed that it is “unconstitutional” to make Matt Whitaker the interim replacement for Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

The president quickly drew criticism for appointing Whitaker, Sessions’ chief of staff, as acting attorney general following the abrupt ouster of his predecessor. Democrats have cited comments Whitaker has made, including claims that special counsel Robert Mueller overstepped his bounds, to call for his recusal from supervising the probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Story Continued Below

George Conway, who has an often-adversarial relationship with the White House, argued in his op-ed Thursday that because Whitaker reports directly to the president — making him a “principal officer” — he needs confirmation by the Senate to fill the role. Whitaker went through the confirmation process more than a decade ago when he served as a U.S. attorney, but he did not require Senate approval for his prior post at the Justice Department.

Talking to reporters Friday, Trump said the op-ed was a selfish move by the man he referred to as “Mr. Kellyanne Conway.”

“He’s just trying to get publicity for himself,” Trump said. Asked whether the op-ed was wrong, he replied: “Why don’t you ask Kellyanne that question, all right?”

“I really don’t know the guy,” Trump added.

George Conway has opposed rhetoric from the administration in the past, such as Trump’s claim that Mueller’s appointment was unconstitutional. His op-ed, penned with former acting solicitor Neal Katyal, doubled down on that claim.

“What makes an officer a principal officer is that he or she reports only to the president. No one else in government is that person’s boss. But Mr. Mueller reports to Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general. So, Mr. Mueller is what is known as an inferior officer, not a principal one, and his appointment without Senate approval was valid,” Conway and Katyal wrote.

“Whitaker’s installation makes a mockery of our Constitution and our founders’ ideals,” the authors wrote.

It is unclear who will replace Sessions on a permanent basis. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has emerged as one possibility, though Trump said Friday they have not discussed the job.

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This robotic cowboy is making cattle herding much safer

Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fvideo uploaders%2fdistribution thumb%2fimage%2f86986%2f98afcd36 06f6 4da0 a75d e591ad6a2a75

Maria Dermentzi

Robotic cattle drivers do exist and they are being deployed across Cargill’s plants in the U.S. and Canada. The company hopes that the robotic cowboys will improve safety in its facilities because there will be no need for staff to be in close proximity to the animals. Employees are standing on a catwalk above the pen, and they are using joysticks to operate the robotic drivers.

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Watch this stop-motion music video made using 2,250 photos

By Xavier Piedra

Normally, stop motion kinda creeps me out (claymation, especially), but in this case I’m just shocked by how impressive this video is.     

This video from Canadian band Said The Whale takes stop motion to a new level, featuring a grand total of 2,250 photos and zero (they claim) special effects.

Beyond the impressive video, the song “UnAmerican” is pretty catchy, too. Give it a watch.

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Magic Johnson, Lakers Learning Quickly Who Runs LeBron’s Teams

LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 07:  LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts reacts during a 114-110 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves at Staples Center on November 7, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Harry How/Getty Images

The Lakers‘ universe always spins a little faster than most, as the glitz and glamour and championship banners hover over all basketball affairs at Staples Center. Now, though, it’s reached a new speed.

The LeBron James effect has achieved full throttle.

It’s nothing new, really. But when the scrutiny his presence brings attaches itself to the storied basketball franchise in Hollywood, it carries more weight. It’s not even Thanksgiving yet, and already the Lakers have endured a season’s worth of fireworks: losses in five of their first seven games, the fisticuffs with the Houston Rockets and the ensuing suspensions, and now, the full force of team president Magic Johnson’s hard-driving brand of impatience on third-year coach Luke Walton.

It should be no consolation to Walton that he’s already outlasted the Lakers’ last three coaches after Phil Jackson. Mike Brown, Mike D’Antoni and Byron Scott didn’t have to pilot a Lakers ship filled with cargo as powerful and sensitive as James.

As was the case in Cleveland (twice), and to a lesser extent in Miami, we are once again all witnesses to the most influential basketball player on the planet at the height of his powers.

Nobody in basketball has more clout—or makes people behave more irrationally—than LeBron.

“As he should,” a Western Conference general manager told Bleacher Report of James’ willingness to wield power. “Cleveland has the same roster with the same coach [until Tyronn Lue was fired] and went from best to worst in the East. The Lakers haven’t sniffed the playoffs in [five] years and will make it this year in the West with a deeply flawed roster.”

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - OCTOBER 10:  LeBron James #23 and Lance Stephenson #6 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrate after James made a shot against the Golden State Warriors and was fouled during their preseason game at T-Mobile Arena on October 10, 2018 in Las

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

As Johnson asserted to a trio of people from the Los Angeles Times in the days after his momentarily private upbraiding of Walton last week, a coaching change in L.A. is unlikely during the season. League sources confirmed that stance to B/R on Thursday. The appearance of a Johnson overreaction to the LeBron factor would be “too obvious,” one of the people said. Agreed. It would be a bad look for both of them.

Walton is in a much safer place than, say, David Blatt was in James’ second tour of duty in Cleveland. (“LeBron didn’t like Blatt,” one of the people said, “so that’s different.”) Even Blatt lasted one-and-a-half seasons with LeBron. How could Walton, who was part of two championship teams with the Lakers as a player, have a shorter leash?

James, in his 16th season, is far too calculating and self-aware these days to have blood on his hands in a coaching change. But everyone realizes that expectations for any franchise he’s a part of—even the Lakers—change the moment he walks through the door. So, too, does everyone’s behavior.

In fact, as the Lakers improved to 3-1 since the Magic-Walton summit last Tuesday, James’ influence expanded beyond his immediate sphere. It’s far-reaching, to say the least.

Yes, that was Tyson Chandler who swatted two key tapout offensive rebounds away from the rim in the closing minutes of the Lakers’ 114-110 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday night. (These were the same Timberwolves, by the way, whose 124-120 victory over the Lakers on Oct. 29 precipitated the whole Magic-Walton thing in the first place.)

That Chandler ended up on the Lakers was no surprise. It’s how soon and how it happened that were notable.

Typically, the NBA buyout market doesn’t heat up until the February trade deadline. In Chandler’s case with the Phoenix Suns, that would’ve been the expected timeline. The ship had long since sailed on the idea that Chandler would be a part of any sort of championship pursuit in Phoenix, but at least he could serve as a role model and mentor to No. 1 overall pick Deandre Ayton.

And that was the plan…until LeBron called in a favor.

LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 7:  Tyson Chandler #5 and LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers exchange handshakes against the Minnesota Timberwolves on November 7, 2018 at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowled

Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

It’s no coincidence that the facilitator was Suns vice president of basketball operations James Jones, a close friend and longtime teammate of James.

“They could have bought him out at the trade deadline and gotten great leadership and mentoring for two-thirds of the season,” a rival executive told B/R. “But LeBron wanted him now.”

Usually, LeBron gets what LeBron wants. It’s a privilege he’s earned. It’s also something that everyone in Lakerland must understand.

Especially Johnson.

According to the L.A. Times‘ account of the meeting last Tuesday, Johnson was “in a rage” and “shouting and cursing at Walton.” His insistence before the season that he and GM Rob Pelinka would be patient went out the window in a hurry.

Did Magic forget that the Lakers won 35 games last season and missed the playoffs for the fifth straight year? After essentially swapping out Julius Randle, Brook Lopez and Isaiah Thomas for Rajon Rondo, Lance Stephenson, JaVale McGee, Michael Beasley and, oh yeah, LeBron, L.A.’s Vegas over/under win projection magically ballooned to 48.5, per OddsShark.

From Walton’s standpoint, it’s also notable that history has not been kind to head coaches who’ve tried to transition from rebuilding to win-now mode at the snap of a finger. Just ask Jeff Hornacek how things worked out in Phoenix when he took over the Suns, who were supposed to tank in 2013-14 and instead won 48 games. The gears shifted, and expectations were prematurely elevated. The Suns chased major free agents, lavished $52 million on the injury-prone Chandler and regressed the next season to 39 victories. Hornacek was out of a job halfway through 2015-16.

The opposite is true, too. Lue went from three straight Finals trips with LeBron to a 0-6 start and a pink slip without him. Is any of it fair? Hardly. It comes with the job in the NBA. And when the job involves coaching a team led by LeBron, the NBA’s one-man dynasty, it goes from unfair to untenable.

CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 29: LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers and head coach Tyronn Lue talk while playing the Indiana Pacers in Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals during the 2018 NBA Playoffs at Quicken Loans Arena on April 29, 20

Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

That brings us back to Johnson’s role in all of this, which he may or may not fully grasp in these early stages. Team LeBron doesn’t just want power; it wants all the power.

Magic’s, too.

What would happen if the Lakers fired Walton and hired a coach who was represented by the same agency, Klutch Sports, which is headed by James’ agent, Rich Paul?

“If Rich gets the coach,” one league source said, “it’s over.”

This scenario almost played out when the Cavs fired Blatt in January 2016. According to Adrian Wojnarowski, of Yahoo Sports at the time, James and his camp wanted the team to hire Mark Jackson, whom Klutch represented. Jackson currently does not have representation, according to a person close to the ABC/ESPN announcer.

“Remember, these are the exact reasons there is a rule to prevent agents from representing both coaches and players,” the league source said, referring to the National Basketball Players Association regulations that have been rarely enforced over the years. “One agent could have control of an organization.”

Or in this case, one player. It’s something Magic should be mindful of the next time he decides to flex his muscles. As powerful and popular as he is, there are limits to his influence. There’s a new sheriff in Tinseltown, and he wears No. 23, not 32.

Ken Berger covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @KBergNBA.

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Trump restricts asylum at the US-Mexico border

US President Donald Trump signed a proclamation on Friday suspending the entry of migrants through the US southern border between ports of entry for 90 days.

The proclamation, taken together with a regulation issued by the Trump administration on Thursday, will bar migrants who cross the US border with Mexico between official ports from receiving asylum in the United States.

Trump’s proclamation does not apply to unaccompanied children, officials said.

“What we are attempting to do is trying to funnel … asylum claims through the ports of entry where we are better resourced, have better capabilities and better manpower and staffing to actually handle those claims in an expeditious and efficient manner,” a senior administration official told reporters in a news briefing on Thursday, on condition of anonymity.

The new rules is Trump’s administration’s latest move to limit the eligibility of individuals for asylum in the United States as part of its “zero tolerance” policy.

Earlier this year, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions implemented rules that made it harder for individuals fleeing gang violence or domestic abuse to apply for asylum.

‘Immoral and inhumane’

The new restrictions are expected to be challenged in court. Rights groups call rules unconstitutional and a violation of international law.

“These restrictions are illegal – asylum is a legal right regardless of how someone enters the country,” RAICES, an immigrant legal services organisation in Texas, said in a statement. “They hurt thousands of women and children … who have been denied a future already by US foreign policy” the organisation added. “It is immoral and inhumane.”

A man suspected of crossing into the United States between official ports of entry along the Rio Grande near Granjeno, Texas, is held by US Customs and Border Patrol agents [File: Eric Gay/AP Photo]

The National Immigration Law Center tweeted that “once again, Trump seeks to divide us by preying upon people in most need of help.”

Trump first announced his intention to limit asylum last week. More than 5,000 US troops have already been deployed to the border, and Trump said the number could rise to 15,000. The president has also said massive tent cities are being built to house asylum seekers indefinitely until their claims are processed.

Friday’s proclamation comes less than three days after the midterm elections in which Republicans maintained their hold on the Senate, but lost control of the House to the Democrats.

Caravan plans to apply for asylum at official port

During the election, Trump sought to sow fear over a caravan of Central American migrants and asylum seekers currently trekking north through Mexico. 

The initial wave of the caravan left Honduras a month ago, and thousands more have followed. The caravan’s participants have told Al Jazeera they are fleeing violence, including political persecution, and harsh economic situations.

The US president railed against the caravan in the lead up to the election, telling the refugees and migrants they would not be welcomed in the United States.

The caravan has remained undeterred, and participants said they plan on applying for asylum at an official port of entry.

Honduras migrants walk to the U.S as they approach Zacapa, about 70 miles northeast of Guatemala City, Wednesday [File: Oliver de Ros/Reuters] 

More than 100 people set out Friday morning from Mexico City for Tijuana. Others with the initial wave are deciding which route to take north, according to journalists travelling with the caravan. 

Last week, a group of parents travelling with their children in the caravan, filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, saying the president “continues to abuse the law, including constitutional rights to deter Central Americans from exercising their lawful right to seek asylum in the United States”.

This Mexican community is coming together to help the #CentralAmericanCaravan. pic.twitter.com/6vdNvWZwDH

— AJ+ (@ajplus) November 7, 2018

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MacBook Air teardown: What a difference three years make

Now that Apple’s new MacBook Air has hit the stores, repair specialists iFixit have immediately cracked it open to see what’s inside. 

And frankly, if you’ve seen some of the teardowns of recent MacBooks, you won’t see too many surprises here. The new Air is a tightly packed machine that requires lots of specialized tools and patience to open and repair. 

SEE ALSO: Apple unveils new MacBook Air with Retina Display

But if we compare apples to apples — that is, the new MacBook Air with the last version of MacBook Air, which launched in 2015 — the differences are substantial. Check them out below: The new Air is on the left. 

On the left, the 2018 MacBook Air. On the right, the 2015 MacBook Air.

On the left, the 2018 MacBook Air. On the right, the 2015 MacBook Air.

Image: ifixit/Mashable composite

The Air of yesteryear was practically all battery: It had a 54Wh cell, while the new one only has a 49.9Wh cell. Despite this fact, both Airs have the same (advertised) 12 hours of battery life — talk about improvements in energy management. 

The new Air also has a ton of new tech, including a better, larger trackpad as well as Apple’s T2 chip with a fingerprint scanner. 

On iFixit’s repairability scale, the 2018 Air scores just a hair worse than the 2015 Air: 3/10 vs. 4/10. As another reminder of how things have changed in three years, on the 2015 Air you could theoretically change/upgrade the flash-based storage; on the new model, that’s no longer possible.

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Actors voice ‘The Office’ scene as ‘SpongeBob SquarePants’ characters

The actors behind some of SpongeBob SquarePants‘ most iconic characters read lines from The Office, creating the mashup you didn’t know you needed.

On the latest episode of the Nerdist YouTube series Talkin’ Toons, voice actors Rob Paulsen and Clancy Brown read lines from a scene in The Office using the voices of SpongeBob SquarePants characters. Paulsen read Dwight K. Shrute’s lines with Carl Wheezer’s voice, while Clancy read Michael Scott’s lines with the voice of Mr. Crabs. 

The result: an extremely ridiculous and enjoyable combination of two of television’s most beloved series. 

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