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Here are the actual tubes one company plans to use to make the real Hyperloop

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hyperloop

One of the companies planning to build a Hyperloop test track has begun receiving its first set of test tubes.

Hyperloop Technologies, which is located in the arts district of downtown L.A., posted images of the tubes to its Twitter account

It's worth mentioning that the company has no affiliation with Elon Musk, who orignially proposed the Hyperloop idea. 

It also has no affiliation with Hyperloop Transportation Technologies, which is another company that also plans to build a test track and recently secured land in Quays Valley, California to build its track. It plans to break ground as soon as next year. 

In 2013, Musk published a paper on how the high-speed transportation technology would work. Basically, the Hyperloop involves people traveling in pods through steel tubes at speeds that could top 700 miles per hour. 

After Musk revealed his idea, several entrepreneurs took interest and began their own companies to start working on testing the technology. 

Check out pictures of Hyperloop Technologies' progress below. 

 

 

SEE ALSO: These maps break down the cities that would benefit most from a Hyperloop system

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NOW WATCH: The Best Features Of Elon Musk's Hyperloop


These are the 30 most expensive cities in the world for expats

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Juba

The capital of South Sudan, Juba, has been named the most expensive city for expatriates.

That's according to the annual ranking by global consulting firm ECA International. 

This ranking was calculated by looking at inflation and exchange rates, and comparing the prices of a number of items and services like-for-like, to see exactly how expensive it would be to maintain the same standard of living in the new country.

The ranking is intended to help companies estimate the costs of employees living abroad of international assignment. For a city like Zurich, Switzerland, the high cost of living in the city and the unfavorable exchange rate are the biggest factors contributing to its high ranking.

However, for a city like Juba — which is in the poorer, newly formed country of South Sudan — the markup on the items an international employee might request or need is a lot higher. There has also been a flood of foreign aid groups, international diplomats establishing embassies, and oil companies bringing in international workers, driving the prices of these imported goods up. Juba has shot up to the number one spot after sitting at number nine on last year's list.

Here's ECA's full list:

Most expensive countries for expats

SEE ALSO: The 10 most visited cities in the world

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Greece's 'bad boy billionaire' is asking $35 million for this palatial Beverly Hills mansion

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Beverly Hills Greek Billionaire

Alki David, the Greek Coca Cola bottling heir who has earned the title of "bad boy billionaire," is tired of his Italian-style villa in Beverly Hills.  

The listing says the price is available on request, but The Los Angeles Times reports that David is asking $35 million for the property. 

The two-story home packs six bedrooms, 11 bathrooms, and more sitting rooms than you can count. 

Marc Noah of Sotheby's International Real Estate has the listing. 

An Italian-style villa with 16,000 square feet of living space is now for sale in Beverly Hills.



The mansion is listed for a reported $35 million and comes with a private gated driveway.



As you enter the grand foyer, a horse sculpture greets you. (The house has various horse-themed rooms.)



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Bale secures famous Wales win, Italy held

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Wales midfielder Gareth Bale (2R) celebrates scoring the opening goal as Belgium's goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois (L) and midfielder Radja Nainggolan (2-L) react, in Cardiff on June 12, 2015

Paris (AFP) - Wales took a huge step towards ending their long wait to return to a major tournament finals as Gareth Bale's strike secured a 1-0 win over Belgium in Cardiff in Euro 2016 qualifying on Friday.

With his new Real Madrid coach Rafael Benitez watching from the stands at a rocking Cardiff City Stadium, Bale chested the ball down and swept home in the 25th minute following an error by Belgium midfielder Radja Nainggolan to put Wales in front.

Chris Coleman's side then soaked up the pressure put on them by a supremely talented Belgium team who currently sit second only to Germany in the FIFA rankings.

The result means Wales remain unbeaten in qualifying Group B and they now top the section, three points clear of the second-placed Belgians. 

More importantly, with only the top two in each group certain to qualify automatically for next year's finals in France, they are five points clear of third-placed Israel, whose own hopes were dealt a blow in a 3-1 defeat to Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Wales, who have never been to a European Championship, appear poised to finally qualify for a major tournament for the first time since the 1958 World Cup, with four matches still to play in the autumn, the next being away to Cyprus in September.

"We prepared well and worked hard together and we showed that. We played some good football, battled in every area and I think we deserved the win in the end," Bale told Sky Sports.

Bosnia boosted their own hopes of snatching at least third place, which brings with it a chance to reach the finals via a play-off at the very least, by coming from behind to beat Israel in Zenica.

Tal Ben Haim -- not to be confused with the former Chelsea defender of the same name who was also in the Israel line-up -- put the visitors ahead late in the first half.

However, Bosnia turned the game on its head thanks to an Edin Visca brace either side of a penalty by the Manchester City striker Edin Dzeko.

Meanwhile, Cyprus also remain in the hunt after coming from behind to win 3-1 away to minnows Andorra, Nestor Mytidis scoring a hat-trick after Dossa Junior's own goal put the home team ahead in the Pyrenees.

 

- Mandzukic hero and villain -

 

In Group H, beaten Euro 2012 finalists Italy came from behind to draw 1-1 in Croatia in a game played behind closed doors in Split as a consequence of violent clashes and rocket-throwing incidents when the nations met in Milan last November.

Atletico Madrid's Mario Mandzukic was the chief protagonist, having a penalty saved by Gianluigi Buffon before giving Croatia an 11th-minute lead.

But Mandzukic then conceded a penalty at the other end which Antonio Candreva chipped in, and the draw allowed both sides to remain unbeaten after six matches.

Croatia, who had captain Darijo Srna sent off late on, are top of the group, two points clear of Italy, with Norway a further two points back in third after a goalless draw at home to Azerbaijan.

In the group's other game, Bulgaria claimed their first win, Ivelin Popov's strike securing a 1-0 win in Malta.

 

- Iceland, Dutch win -

 

Nowhere is the qualifying campaign more fascinating than in Group A, in which Iceland are well placed to advance to their first major finals and the Netherlands continue to lag in third place.

In Reykjavik, Iceland came from behind to beat the Czech Republic 2-1 and move above their opponents into first place in the section.

Borek Dockal gave the Czechs the lead, but captain Aron Gunnarsson of Cardiff City equalised and Kolbeinn Sigthorsson of Ajax then struck a 76th-minute winner.

After a dreadful start to their campaign, Guus Hiddink's Dutch are now just three points behind the Czechs after second-half goals by PSV Eindhoven duo Georginio Wijnaldum and Luciano Narsingh clinched a 2-0 win in Latvia.

Turkey, who are fourth, beat Kazakhstan 1-0 thanks to a late goal from Atltico Madrid's Arda Turan.

Qualifying continues on Saturday, when standout fixtures include the Republic of Ireland hosting Scotland and Germany facing Gibraltar in Group D. 

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Prison worker accused of helping two murderers escape has been arrested

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Joyce Mitchell

Joyce Mitchell, the woman who reportedly confessed to helping two convicted murderers escape from the Clinton Correctional Facility in New York has been arrested and is awaiting arraignment.

Mitchell will face felony charges for her part in the escape, which has become one of longest prison breakouts on record.

Business Insider's Pamela Engel earlier reported that the 51-year-old Mitchell  told investigators she smuggled contraband into the prison — reportedly used later to help Richard Matt, 48, and David Sweat, 34, complete an elaborate escape.

The breakout apparently took the two inmates through the innermost parts of Clinton Correctional Facility and led them to freedom nearly one week ago.

Mitchell also reportedly planned to drive the men away from the prison after they broke out, but backed out at the last minute.

The search for Matt and Sweat continued Friday. Investigators have focused their search in a rural area, not far from the prison in upstate New York.

The Associated Press cites New York State police who say Mitchell will be arraigned on first degree promoting prison contraband and fourth degree criminal facilitation — both of which are felonies.

SEE ALSO: Everything we know about the elaborate maximum-security prison break in New York

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NOW WATCH: This Mexican teen was forcibly sent to the US after being mistaken for a Texas woman's abducted daughter

Yes, you can actually get away with wearing shorts to the office

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Thom Browne

Congratulations on making it to another casual Friday in your casual office!

We understand this is your time to push the envelope with professional style, and we want you to look great.

With the heat on, you may be eying your shorts in the morning, wondering if you can make that move, questioning if you'll instantly become "that guy who wore shorts that one time."

Here's how to bare your legs at your nine-to-five without losing your dignity.

Be Absolutely Sure

Around this time of year, a lot of companies will send out memos regarding office dress codes.

These will sometimes have a bolded line from your human resources coordinator that's explicit about what's up below the waist.

Obviously, if it says no shorts, you can stop reading now.

Don't break the HR law. If it's not explicitly spelled out, read your field of cubicles and consult with your coworkers with good taste. If after that, you're in the clear, please continue.

Assess Your Day

If you've got a big meeting coming up with some clients, your bosses, or any big wigs, you should just play it safe. Stick with pants, man.

Though your typical work day may allow for some breezy shorts, you want to bring your A-game when you're expected to. Save the shorts for an easy day.

Make 'Em Nice

The main reason shorts are discouraged from the workplace is because they're super-casual and can easily read unprofessional. And they're right to be!

If they're cargo shorts with frayed bottoms, that is. Go for something tailored that feel more like short pants than shorts. Leave the cargo pockets out, and make sure they hit just above your knees. No fraying!

Wear a Collar

We're very into shorts with T-shirts, and T-shirts with pants, but when you double up on the casual factor, you're in weekend territory. A collared shirt is the only acceptable above the waist move for professional shorts. We'd leave the polo shirt and shorts combo at home though, as this isn't the country club. Tucking is up to you, but it will look a little more elegant if you do. If you really want to class it up, throw on a light cardigan or a jacket (like godfather of shorts Thom Browne).

Avoid Sneakers

This is the same concept as the T-shirts. Throwing a pair of sneakers on, even a very minimal and luxe pair—makes everything entirely too chill. Strap on your double monks, slip into your drivers, or a pair of loafers. Leather and suede only.

Treat Your Legs Like Your Face

We presume you take pretty good care of your face. You keep it nice and clean, groomed, and as blemish-free as possible. If you're going to show your legs to the world, you should think of them the same way. Should you be covered in bruises from mountain-biking, suffering from some dry skin, or rolling with tan lines, maybe this isn't the move for you. Remember, you're trying to present an overall nice package.

Steer Clear of Prints and Patterns, Everywhere

Your shorts should be solid, and they should be dark, too. But you should be avoiding loud prints everywhere else, too. You're not on vacation, dude! Prints can be artfully mixed with suits just fine, but we suggest keeping everything relatively simple with shorts. Something subtle is okay, but anything more reads very "leisure time." That's for after 5:00 P.M..

SEE ALSO: How to dress like a professional on hot summer days

DON'T FORGET: Follow Business Insider's Lifestyle page on Facebook!

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NOW WATCH: The most important thing Hugh Hefner taught me about business

The Oakland A's have been incredibly unlucky this season

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The Oakland A's have been a surprising disappointment this season, sitting at 25-37, a whopping 9.5 games out of first place in the AL West. But the A's have actually been the unluckiest team in baseball so far, as stats actually suggest they should have a winning record and be right in the thick of the playoff hunt.

The chart below is a comparison of a team's actual record to their expected record based on how many runs each team has scored and allowed*. Each of the teams listed below has a record that is at least one win greater than expected or at least one win fewer than expected. The 11 teams not listed are within one win of where they should be.

The results show that the A's should actually have a record of 32-30, which would have them just 2.5 games out of first place. The Blue Jays have also been more unlucky than most with an expected record of 36-25, which would be good enough for first place in the AL East by 2.0 games. At the other end, the White Sox have been the luckiest team in baseball with an actual record that is 4-5 wins better than it should be.

MLB Luck Chart

* Using the difference between the number of runs scored and the number of runs given up, we calculated each team's Pythagorean Win Percentage which tells us how many games a team typically wins based on their run differential.

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NOW WATCH: 12 awesome facts about WWE superstar Brock Lesnar

Australian navy accused of paying people smugglers to turn boats back to Indonesian waters

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Boat carrying 260 Srilankan asylum seekers (2009)

Reports that the Australian navy paid off the crew of a boat full of asylum-seekers to turn back to Indonesian waters have surfaced, and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott is not denying them, the BBC reports.

Australian immigration and foreign ministers have denied the allegations, but Abbott's refusal to do so has left Indonesia's foreign ministry "very concerned."

The Prime Minister also mentioned that Australia was getting "very creative" when it comes to keeping migrants from reaching the country.

"We have used a whole range of measures to stop the boats, because that's what the Australian people elected us to do," Abbott said. He continued to say that the government would stop the boats "by hook or by crook".

Indonesia's police said this week that they detained the crew of a boat that told them an Australian navy ship intercepted them and paid them each $3,900 to turn back.

"I saw the money with my own eyes," the local police chief told AFP. "This is the first time I'd heard [of] Australian authorities making payments to boat crew." Passengers had similar accounts. 

Australia immigration flyerIndonesia foreign ministry is taking the matter very seriously and are now investigating the claims.

"This is endangering life. They were in the middle of the sea, but were pushed back," foreign ministry spokesman Arrmanatha Nasir said.

Over the last year, Abbott introduced hard-line policies to stop immigrants from reaching Australia.

The measures have been critiqued by the UN and other international organizations. Rights groups have also accused Australia of violating international law "by returning possible refugees to the country where they were being persecuted."

Professor of International Law at the Australian National University Don Rothwellm, said that if Australian navy actually handed money to the boat crew, they could be accused of people smuggling.

"If a state such as Australia is making that payment that would be seen as tantamount to people smuggling,"Rothwellm told ABC.

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NOW WATCH: 70 people were injured while filming this movie with 100 untamed lions


The head of the new 'YouTube built for gamers' dishes on why it's not just copying Amazon's Twitch

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Ryan Wyatt

YouTube dove much deeper into the gaming world Friday with the announcement of a new gamer-focused site and app. 

Although YouTube has long been chock-full of gaming videos, YouTube Gaming puts all that content in one place, giving over 25,000 games their own branded channels, and, more importantly, giving users a new, simpler way to stream their gameplay live. 

With the new live-streaming feature, YouTube Gaming joins the ranks of the hugely popular gaming site Twitch.tv, which Amazon acquired for nearly $1 billion last year (Google reportedly tried to buy it, too).

Twitch hosts both live-streamed and video-on-demand (VoD) content, but its real-time broadcasts are what users flock to. At the time it was acquired, Twitch accounted for more than 40% of all live video streaming traffic online

Because YouTube Gaming will soon take on live-streaming — the site launches this summer — it's easy to pin the launch as YouTube trying to demolish Twitch

But Ryan Wyatt, YouTube's head of global gaming content, told Business Insider that he thinks the "YouTube vs Twitch" narrative is overblown. 

"I think it’s sensationalized because it’s a fun story to write, talking about YouTube vs. the only other significant gaming platform," he says. "But I don’t look at it that way."

One of the things that sets YouTube Gaming apart, he says, is the breadth of content it will include.  

YouTube Gaming For example, popular YouTuber Rosanna Pansino does cooking videos, but when she makes something like Mario Kart cake pops, that will show up on the Mario channel on YouTube Gaming.

"Gaming content can be scripted animation, live-streaming, original programming, eSports, people doing cosplay for a champion in a game, and more," he says. "We want to be all inclusive to everything that fits under 'Gaming,' broadly."

Sure, YouTube is launching new live-streaming features, but Wyatt thinks the most valuable part of the new gaming app is that it will be bolstered by all the other videos users have uploaded over the years.  

"You’re going to be able to go to League of Legends game page and see all the great content that’s there," he says. "VoD, eSports, live-streams, the top-five plays. There’s no place on the Internet where you can do that, other than the YouTube Gaming app."

Twitch, for its part, didn't seem particularly worried about new competition either.

 "I loved it," Wyatt says at Twitch's social media response. "I thought it was funny. They’ve got a good sense of humor. We all laughed."

SEE ALSO: Google is starting a new company to improve cities

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NOW WATCH: Here's what happens when you drop an Apple Watch face down on cement

Brilliant management advice from Google's former CEO on how to build a $300 billion company (GOOG)

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Google Chairman Eric Schmidt

To be successful in the technology-driven internet age, a company has to attract "smart creative" employees and then create an environment where they can thrive. 

At least that's the argument that Google's Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg make in "How Google Works."

In the book, executive chairman and former CEO Schmidt and former SVP of product Rosenberg outline what they learned while building Google into a company now worth hundreds of billions of dollars

The duo created a fun, illustrated presentation to highlight the main principles of the book.

Google gave us permission to republish those slides here.







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The 24 hottest honeymoon destinations right now

Jim Grant thinks you should short Under Armour because of 'dad bods' (UA)

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under armour

Jim Grant has the next best idea on Under Armour.

And it is about "dad bods."

The dad-bod look is a sort of middle ground between a man in good shape and one with a small beer belly. It has become "popular" after a 19-year-old college student wrote a "premiere dad bod 101"post that went viral.

And according to market legend Grant, this probably isn't good news for athletic-apparel brands like Under Armour.

ValueWalk's Jacob Wolinsky tweeted what looks like an excerpt of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, in which Grant lays out the thesis.

Here's what Grant had to say:

Trends seemingly come out of nowhere. Who can account for it? A UA short seller advises Lorenz that the "sneakerhead" market (an eBay-hosted emporium of athletic footwear) has "rolled over." A Clemson University student named Mackenzie Pearson writing in the Clemson Odyssey, coined the term "dad bod" and started a national celebration of the kind of guy who's not scared of a cheat meal, because he eats just about anything and everything." The untoned "dad body" is not Plank's core demographic.

With a $17.4 billion market cap, UA is a large, liquid stock. With a short interest of 7.8% of the float, it is not a crowded short. The insiders are selling $87.4 million's worth of stock at an average price of $76.23 in the year to date. Why shouldn't you?

And here's that tweet:

The stock is up 45% over the past 12 months.

SEE ALSO: Science proves that the trendy 'dad bod' that girls are going crazy over is for real

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NOW WATCH: 9 Surprising Facts About Under Armour — The Hottest Sportswear Company In The World

How a day 'water tasting' with a water sommelier cured my skepticism about fancy hydration

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Water (13 of 20)“I bet you are thinking I’m a little bit crazy,” says Martin Riese, as he cracks open a tall glass cylinder of crystal-clear water. A wide toothy smile breaks across the German's face. “That’s totally normal."

Riese is the water sommelier for the Patina Group in Los Angeles and has been certified as such by the German Water Trade Association since 2010. He and I are sitting in the sunny dining room of the Ray’s and Stark Bar, a restaurant tucked into the courtyard of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The restaurant has a “water menu” of more than 40 pages and dozens of water choices, each detailing its mineral content, “taste,” and place of origin.

Water (8 of 20)

In front of us are five distinctly shaped bottles of water, which sell for between $8 and $20. It’s not quite the price of a quality vintage wine from Napa Valley, but for a product that most people expect to be free, it can have some sticker shock.

“When people look through my water menu, their minds are blown,” Riese says. “They realize that water has value … Sometimes they see that I have a bottle for $20 and they think I’m insane.”

Water (1 of 20)

Riese begins his water presentation by paying homage to the artistic scene in Los Angeles.

“I believe everyone on this planet has something to offer. Here, there are amazing painters and artists. Painting is their gift. I cannot paint at all. I have a special palette,” he says.

He is passionate about his subject and it shows. Riese has been tasting water since he was a 4-year-old boy in northern Germany. His parents, who worked in hospitality, often took him to vacation hot spots all across Europe. His first concern was always tasting the water from the tap.

"It was fascinating to me that everyone said it’s all tap water and none of it tasted the same to me. I couldn’t understand why everyone called it the same thing,” Riese says.

What he was tasting was the different total dissolved solids (TDS) level in each tap water. All waters have TDS levels ranging from the very low (between 10 and 40) to the very high (up to 7,000). Those with high TDS levels have a large amount of minerals like potassium, calcium, and magnesium in the water. It can have a huge effect on taste. Generally, waters with higher TDS levels are saltier, harsher, and “harder.”

Water (6 of 20) copy

Riese serves only spring and minerals waters that have been filtered by a natural aquifer, giving each water its own flavor, character, and mineral content, determined by geology, soil, and the climate of the place that it's from.

Mass-produced waters like Dasani and Aquafina  — which are not on the water menu — are purified waters, meaning they have been filtered to remove most impurities and minerals. While Riese admits they perfectly fine to drink, he thinks they all taste the same. He finds that boring.

"A good water should come from nature, not a factory,” Riese says.

The first water he opens is a familiar bottle — Voss. I've had Voss a few times, though I have to admit I am woefully underinformed on different water types. I had long assumed that Fiji and Voss were more expensive than Poland Spring simply because of their unique bottle shape.

Water (9 of 20)

The Voss bottle is cold but not too cold. According to Riese, it is at the perfect drinking temperature: 59 degrees Fahrenheit. Just cold enough to be refreshing but not so cold that it will give you a stomach ache.

Voss comes from Norway and is made from glacier water, which is very pure, Riese tells me. 

My skepticism is running high because, frankly, my first sip tastes like any other cold, refreshing water. Riese says there’s a reason for that. Glacier waters tend to have a very low TDS. Voss’s TDS is 40, about the same as most purified bottled waters. In addition, he says, it’s very hard to taste a difference until you have something to compare it to.

Water (19 of 20)

Water (12 of 20)

He brings a bottle of Iskilde close. It is smooth and oblong like a bottle one might find filled with a miniature ship. Iskilde water comes from an artesian spring in a conservation area in Denmark. The spring was discovered by a retired insurance broker and his wife, who had wanted to build a house on the property. Before approving the land for a well, the Danish government required the couple to have the water on the property tested by a lab. The water turned out to have oxygen that was more than 8,000 years old and a unique blend of minerals, having passed through 150 feet of alternating layers of quartz sand and clay.

As Riese pours the Iskilde into the glass, I notice that glass looks like it is filled with sparkling water. While it doesn’t look quite like seltzer, there are tons of bubbles. Riese fills me into why: Iskilde isn’t a carbonated water, but it does have an exceptionally high oxygen content because it passes through an air bubble in the ground on its way to the spring. When the water is poured out of the bottle, the oxygen dissipates as the pressure from the bottle goes away, leading to the bubbles.

Water (20 of 20)

I’m not Jesus. I can’t turn water into wine. I’m more like David Copperfield. I can do magic with water,” Riese says with a laugh.

So what does 8,000-year-old Danish spring water taste like? Pretty good, it turns out. The taste is earthy when compared to Voss, which tastes acidic when I go back to drink it. The texture between the two is the most noticeable difference. If Voss could be likened to skim milk in texture, Iskilde is more like 2% milk.

The TDS level in Iskilde is 400, 10 times the mineral content of Voss.

I marvel at the two glasses, switching back and forth between the two to keep trying to taste the difference. Riese explains that most people don’t think about the taste of water because it requires so much effort.

“When we taste things, we actually rely on three senses: taste, sight, and smell. Water is tough because you can only rely on taste. It hopefully has no color or odor,” Riese says. 

I have to admit, I wouldn't have thought twice about the difference between the two if I weren't sitting there doing a "water tasting." But when you focus on tasting the flavor, the difference in taste is undoubtedly there.

Water (14 of 20)

The next water bottle has an attractive angular shape and a label that looks trendy. It’s called Beverly Hills 9OH20 and, of course, it’s Riese’s personal brand. If this is where your BS-meter goes haywire, don’t worry. Mine did, as well. But considering the previous water revelation, I give him the benefit of the doubt.

9OH20 comes from a spring in the Sierra Nevada mountains, and is then combined with a “special chemical formulation” of minerals "to craft the perfect pairing water.” The water’s special formulation — some combination of magnesium, silica, calcium, and potassium — is supposed to accentuate the taste of wines, spices, cheeses, and other foods.

"Water changes the taste of wine because you drink it right next to it," Riese explains. "A water that is perfectly balanced can actually lower the tannins in the wine so that you will taste more fruit components. That was the concept behind 9OH20. I’ve crafted a water with the ability to lower acidity and spice levels.”

Water (15 of 20)

I’m not taking him at his word. I tell him to get some foods to try with the water. He has his waiter bring over fresh blue cheese and a red chili paste. I try each and then chase it with a sip of the water. He tells me 9OH20 should make the taste “open up,” whatever that means. While I don’t notice anything different with the blue cheese, the chili paste is noticeably more aromatic and not as painfully spicy after drinking the water. According to Riese, that’s because the water has silica, which helps the palette deal with the spice.

Water (16 of 20)

The next water is Vichy Catalan, the No. 1 consumed sparkling water in the country. It has a TDS level of more than 3,000.

According to Riese, Vichy Catalan is a popular water in Spain because of the country’s climate. People lose a lot of minerals when they are sweating, and Spaniards drink Vichy to replenish those minerals. In addition, Vichy’s high mineral levels give it a very salty taste, which pairs well with the rich and salty foods of Spain.

Indeed, when I try Vichy, I find that it has a very sharp, salty flavor, but whether the flavor is sharper than that of any other sparkling water like Pellegrino, I have no idea. 

Water (18 of 20)

The last water is very special, Riese says. He only has 10 bottles of it, which he uses exclusively for tastings. The bottle is squat with a golden top and golden writing on the side — Roi. It comes from the Rogaška Spa and Health center in Slovenia and has long been used as a medication water, renowned because it has the highest concentration of magnesium of any water in the world. The company behind ROI explicitly states on its website that its water is a health product and is not intended to “quench thirst.”

I soon find out why. Roi’s TDS is 7,400, which is “insane,” according to Riese. When I try it, I find it has a very strong bitter, metallic taste that I immediately associate with tonic water. While the taste is interesting, I doubt I would ever drink it for fun. I wouldn't say the taste is exactly unpleasant, but it’s certainly off-putting.

Riese acknowledges this, saying he would never recommend it to be drunk with a meal. Instead, he says that Roi is best for two things — with your predinner cocktail or after a night of drinking. It works predinner because the high mineral content prepares your stomach for a meal and helps with digestion. It works after a night of drinking because the high mineral content replenishes the nutrients lost while drinking. The carbonation also settles upset stomachs. I would love to put it to the test, but, unfortunately, Roi isn’t currently distributed in the US. The next time I’m in Slovenia I’ll have to give it a try.

Riese sits back satisfied. I taste each of the waters again to make sure I wasn’t going crazy. Each tastes distinct. He asks me which one I prefer. I point to the Iskilde without hesitation, surprising even myself. It had just the right balance of minerals. As if to emphasize his point, Riese points to different tables around the Ray’s and Stark Bar, each with a different brand of sparkling water.

“You were skeptical? That’s okay, I was skeptical too," Riese says. "I was skeptical that [the water menu] would work, but I like variety. It looks to me like other people like variety too.” 

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Reddit banned a community dedicated to hating fat people and now users are furious

Macy's, JC Penney, and Best Buy are making a huge mistake that's hurting sales

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Woman Clothes Shopping

American shoppers have become addicted to checking consumer reviews on everything they buy.

But stores have failed to find a way to make reviews readily available in stores, and that's killing business for many traditional retailers such as Macy's, JC Penney, and Best Buy.

"Social feedback and validation has become an embedded step in our daily consumption — no longer an afterthought but simply part of how we buy," Doug Stephens, author of the blog The Retail Prophet, writes. "And yet when we walk into most retail environments we are entering digital deserts, barren of any meaningful content at all."

Shoppers need to be able to pick up a product and instantly have access to user reviews and other relevant information. If it's a piece of clothing, for example, it would helpful to see how other customers have styled it.

This problem doesn't just affect sellers of big-ticket items such as flat-screen TVs. Most people today wouldn't even consider renting a movie without checking reviews, Stephens says.

Many traditional retailers have added digital displays in their stores, but they serve little utility.

"If we're lucky we get a digital screen or two dropped into the store looping irrelevant imagery," Stephens writes. "If we're not so lucky, [all] we get is a price sticker, a label, and a full-time employee with a part-time interest in helping us."

Retail consultant Mark Hurst lamented this problem back in 2012, when he tried to buy a skillet at Williams-Sonoma and ended up ordering one from Amazon. He described the experience on his blog:

Several of the pots have no label below them. Others have no price. And, this being a retail store, there were no customer reviews. I also had no way to compare Le Creuset to other brands, and no way to understand which product type — copper? cast iron? steel? anodized? — would work best for me.

And I was standing alone. No one at any time approached to offer help, even though I was circling the cookware section. (This might have just been a momentary lapse, as I've seen helpful staff on other visits.) Overall the store lacked information on its products — call it a 'data desert' — which led me to pull out my iPhone and open the Amazon app.

Within two minutes I had read a half-dozen customer reviews and compared prices. The skillet was a good choice, and as it turned out, Amazon was $10 cheaper and offered free shipping. A couple of taps later I had ordered the skillet from Amazon — and avoided standing in a checkout line."

Some stores, including Nordstrom, are using social media to better merchandise their products.

Nordstrom has been using Pinterest to find out which products are most popular and marks those products with a red tag in stores so customers can easily find them.

But stores need to go even further, Stephens says, if they want to survive.

SEE ALSO: Ex-Trader Joe's president reveals how the most popular grocery store items have changed

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NOW WATCH: 5 Ways Retailers Trick You Into Spending More Money


Tech CEO says this is the first thing you should do when you start a new job

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StumbleUpon CEO Mark Bartels

It's easy to have vague goals. It's hard to define them.

But according to StumbleUpon CEO Mark Bartels, mapping out a concrete timeline for yourself should be one of the first things you do when you start a new gig. 

"We talk about budgets, we talk about planning your finances," he points out. "But what a lot of people don't do is plan out the next 12 to 18 or 24 months of their careers." That lack of planning can be costly, both professionally and existentially.

He's seen it happen, he says: people join a company without an agenda, and "2 to 3 years go by, they come up for air, and they ask themselves, 'well, what am I still doing here?'" 

Having an agenda provides a metric for evaluating your success. "When I see seasoned execs join a company," Bartels says, "a lot of times they have 12-month plan, and they're constantly checking back in and saying 'have I achieved what I set out to do?'"

That's the other key: a plan only helps if you use it.

It's not as simple as it sounds, and to figure out your own roadmap, Bartels recommends starting with the company's. He encourages new hires to get information — a lot of information. "Ask for a redacted board deck, ask for a product roadmap, ask for a 24-month plan," he says. That's especially critical if you're working in the startup world, he says, where financials aren't public, and information tends to be tightly controlled.

"It's at 60,000 feet," he acknowledges, but that's the point. Having a strong handle on the big picture is your first metric for figuring out how you're going to contribute to that vision — and get what you want out of the job.

"I see a lot of people committing to 12 to 24 months, and after 36 months, they come back to me and say, 'now I want to grow,'" Bartels says. That's not wrong. The mistake is waiting 3 years to get started.

SEE ALSO: This exercise might be critical to your success

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The US is considering a move to deter Russia not seen since the Cold War

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NATO US Latvia

The Pentagon is poised to store battle tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, and other heavy weapons for as many as 5,000 troops in several Baltic and Eastern European countries to deter any possible further Russian aggression in Europe, The New York Times reported on Saturday.

Citing US and allied officials, the newspaper said that if approved the proposal would mark the first time since the Cold War that Washington has stationed heavy military equipment in the newer NATO member states in Eastern Europe that were once part of the Soviet sphere of influence.

"It's like taking NATO back to the future," Julianne Smith, a former defense and White House official who is now a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security and a vice president at the consulting firm Beacon Global Strategies, told The Times.

russia vs nato_07

The proposal calls for enough equipment for about 150 soldiers to be stored in Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, and enough for about 750 soldiers to be stored in Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, and possibly Hungary, according to The Times.

Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter and the White House still have to approve the proposal, which will likely encounter significant political hurdles, The Times reports, primarily the hesitance to provoke Russia with a military buildup.

"This is a very meaningful shift in policy," James G. Stavridis, a retired admiral and the former supreme allied commander of NATO, told the newspaper. "It provides a reasonable level of reassurance to jittery allies, although nothing is as good as troops stationed full-time on the ground, of course."

Estonia Estonian Soldiers NATO

Despite not calling for boots on the ground in the Baltics, experts say the plan would be effective nonetheless.

"Tanks on the ground, even if they haven't people in them, make for a significant marker," Mark Galeotti, a professor at New York University and expert on Russia's military and security services, told The Times.

After Russia invaded Crimea last year, the US Army promised to expand the amount of military equipment it stored at the Grafenwöhr training range in southeastern Germany. NATO also adopted temporary plans to increase air patrolling and training exercises in Eastern Europe.

Recognizing that Russia's aggression in Ukraine is unlikely to diminish anytime soon, however, NATO has proposed a more permanent plan in the hopes of sending a stronger message to the Kremlin.

"This is essentially about politics," Professor Galeotti said. "This is about telling Russia that you're getting closer to a real red line."

ukraine

SEE ALSO: Russian-backed separatists are sowing chaos in a crucial Ukrainian steel city

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NOW WATCH: Russia reveals new high-tech weapon vehicles in a rehearsal for the country's biggest military parade

An Earth, Wind, and Fire song inspired one of the most terrifying scenes from 'Jurassic Park'

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Jurassic Park T Rex

Steven Spielberg has a habit of building up a lot of suspense to his monsters and creatures before actually showing them.

In "Jaws," the shark doesn't pop his head out of the water until the film's third act. The aliens of "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" don't appear until the film's final moments. 

Spielberg used the same trick for the T. rex in "Jurassic Park," to terrifying effect. Before making its first appearance, the giant dinosaur is heard through roars and grunts and, most memorably, a plastic cup of water, which vibrates as the predator stomps along and draws near:

Jurassic Park Cups GIFThe ingenious shot came to Spielberg while listening to an Earth, Wind, and Fire song with the bass "turned up full volume" in his car. The identity of the song remains unknown.

A behind-the-scenes featurette from Universal, which can be found on the "Jurassic Park" Blu-ray, shows some of the original storyboards for the iconic shot:

Jurassic Park Cup Storyboard

Jurassic Park Storyboard"I was at work and Steven calls into the office and he goes, 'I'm in the car. Earth, Wind, and Fire is playing, and my mirror is shaking! That's what we need to do!'" Dinosaur effects supervisor Michael Lantieri said in a making-of featurette on the "Jurassic Park" Blu-ray. "He goes, 'We need to shake the mirror, and then I wanna do something with the water.'"

Jurassic Park Mirror GIFIt took a lot of work to make Spielberg's vision come to life. 

"The mirror shaking was easy ... put a little vibrating motor in and shook it." Lantieri said. "But the water was another story. It was a very difficult thing to do. You couldn't do it. " 

So Lantieri gathered everybody he could find to try to figure out how to make that water shake. 

Interestingly enough, it was music that first inspired this shot and music that eventually brought it to life. Lantieri decided to experiment with his guitar.

"I set a glass and started playing notes on a guitar and got to a right frequency ... a right note ... and it did exactly what I wanted it to do." Lantieri said.

To replicate that for the shot, they "fed a guitar string through the car, down to the ground, and then I had a guy lay under the car and pluck the guitar string," Lantieri said in an interview from an early "Jurassic Park" DVD.

Jurassic Park Cup GIF"One of the things that Steven is so good at is finding images that represent the story, the emotion, that the audience is supposed to be experiencing," cinematographer Dean Cundey said in the same behind-the-scenes video.

But to find that right image, you might need to hear a good tune first.

Watch the behind-the-scenes clip below via Universal:

  

SEE ALSO: The velociraptors in the 'Jurassic Park' movies are nothing like their real-life counterparts

AND: THEN & NOW: The cast of 'Jurassic Park' 22 years later

AND: Here's how the 'Jurassic World' dinosaurs looked in real life

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Why money is suddenly leaving the emerging markets

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xi modi waving

This week was terrible for emerging markets.

Investors pulled $9.3 billion from emerging-market funds — the most since the financial crisis of 2008.

It almost feels a little like 2013, when the Fed warned of the ending of its quantitative easing bond-buying program and emerging markets suffered a massive outflow of funds back into US bonds in what's now called the "taper tantrum."

Some experts anticipate we could relive that move once the Fed begins raising US interest rates.

But not quite yet.

Ankur Patel, chief investment officer at R-Squared Macro, says there are a number of factors that played into this week's shock, and the Fed is only one of them. Those include:

1. China

The majority of this week's outflows (about 70%, according to Patel) came from one country: China.

That's most likely due to the global-index compiler MSCI's decision not to include Chinese shares in its benchmark index this week.

Billions of passive money dollars would have been "forced" to buy Chinese shares if they had been included, according to the Financial Times.

2. The World Bank

Also earlier this week, the World Bank downgraded its 2015 growth outlook for global markets, including emerging markets. It warned that emerging markets, which had helped drive global recovery for years following the financial crisis, are now facing a "structural slowdown."

"Anytime there’s a big multinational agency that has a downgrade ... it certainly has a role to play," said Patel, be it the World Bank, IMF, or OECD.

3. German bunds

Another important factor was the jump in bond yields in developed markets, particularly the German bund, this week.

Earlier in the year, the German 10-year bund had hit an extreme low and has been on the rebound ever since. The European Central Bank had essentially been flooding the market with euros by buying up German bunds, and asset managers were investing their euros all around the world, including in emerging-market assets.

But as that trend begins to reverse, and investors begin to cash out, "all this liquidity moved back into just plain cash — plain euros," Patel said.

4. Currencies

Lastly, as a Goldman Sachs note put it, "currency is a major culprit."

The strong US dollar has essentially led to a depreciation of emerging-market currencies. According to Patel, it's like a negative wealth effect.

EM investors "experience a loss of capital because their currency’s now worth considerably less," he said. "And to maintain their purchasing power, they’re being forced to sell some of the liquid assets, which happen to be some of their equity and bond holdings."

That, he says, is what we're seeing in the flows data. And it's not just an emerging-market problem, Patel notes. As the dollar rises, all currencies have been depreciating against it. But it is especially hard on the EM currencies.

Not yet Taper Tantrum Round 2.

Patel says it's "a little too soon" to be calling the next "taper tantrum."

"As of this moment, the taper tantrum thing is still just one of the smaller factors — it’s not a full-blown phenomenon," he said.

But he did admit that while recent market jitters have stemmed from technical things, there could be a negative contagion effect down the road.

SEE ALSO: Emerging markets have one last chance to shape up

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NOW WATCH: This guy absolutely loses it as he bungee jumps off a tower in China's beautiful Qing Long Canyon

Schuerrle nets treble as Germany thrash Gibraltar

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Germany's midfielder Andre Schurrle celebrates a goal during the Euro 2016 group D qualifying match Gibraltar vs Germany at the Algarve stadium in Faro, Portugal on June 13, 2015

Faro (Portugal) (AFP) - Andre Schuerrle scored a hat-trick as Germany eased to a 7-0 win over minnows Gibraltar in Euro 2016 qualifying on Saturday.

In a game played in Faro in Portugal's Algarve, the World Cup holders answered coach Joachim Loew's calls to improve on the finishing that had let them down in their 2-1 friendly defeat at home to the United States on Wednesday.

And the win keeps Germany in second place in qualifying Group D, a point behind leaders Poland and two points above Scotland in third position.

Their evening did not start well, Bayern Munich midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger having a penalty saved by Gibraltar goalkeeper Jordan Perez in the 10th minute.

The breakthrough eventually arrived courtesy of Wolfsburg forward Schuerrle in the 28th minute before the massive gulf between the sides was finally laid bare in the second half.

Max Kruse, the Borussia Moenchengladbach forward who will be a team-mate of Schuerrle's at Wolfsburg next season, replaced Mario Goetze late in the first half and made it 2-0 two minutes after the restart.

Ilkay Gundogan and Karim Bellarabi added further goals before the hour mark and Schuerrle netted twice more to complete his hat-trick, leaving Loew relaxed enough to concentrate on filing his fingernails in his seat in the dugout.

Kruse added his second of the evening to make it 7-0 with nine minutes left, leaving Germany well placed before a double-header of games at home to Poland and away to Scotland that is likely to prove decisive.

Gibraltar have now lost all six matches in their first ever qualifying campaign for a major tournament, scoring just once and conceding 34 goals.

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