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Kickstarter is adding the ability to collect money indefinitely – The Verge

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The crowdfunding platform will let supporters contribute to campaigns even after they’ve officially ended.

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In this photo illustration a Kickstarter logo seen displayed...

a:hover]:text-gray-63 [&>a:hover]:shadow-underline-black dark:[&>a:hover]:text-gray-bd dark:[&>a:hover]:shadow-underline-gray [&>a]:shadow-underline-gray-63 dark:[&>a]:text-gray-bd dark:[&>a]:shadow-underline-gray”>Photo Illustration by Mateusz Slodkowski / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images

Creators fundraising for projects on Kickstarter will soon be able to collect money even after their campaign ends.

Currently, Kickstarter projects can last anywhere from one to 60 days, and creators hoping to continue fundraising after meeting their goal have had to go off-platform to keep raising money.

The new late pledge feature will allow crowdfunding campaigns to collect money indefinitely if the creator chooses. Late pledges could also be helpful for fans who learn about projects after the fundraising window has closed but want to support the creator. Creators who are offering something in exchange for a certain level of monetary support — a digital download of an album or physical items, for example — will need to end late pledges for that tier as they begin fulfillment. Kickstarter says it recommends ending late pledges if the campaign hasn’t received a new pledge in 30 days.

Other crowdfunding platforms have tried similar funding models. Indiegogo introduced a “forever funding” model nearly a decade ago, allowing creators to continue collecting money past a campaign’s end date. Now, Indiegogo campaigns automatically continue collecting funds after the campaign closes, with creators getting disbursements each month as money keeps trickling in. (Some creators who began on Kickstarter eventually moved to Indiegogo so they could keep raising money to sustain their work.)

The company says it is testing late pledges with a small number of users, with a wider rollout to all creators in the next few months. Once a creator turns off late pledges, they won’t be able to revert back.

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80 mobile phones recovered as man faces 55 counts of robbery – The Zimbabwe Mail


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SHURUGWi – A Shurugwi suspect notorious for using machetes to rob residents of cellphones and other gadgets is facing 55 counts of robbery in a development in which residents hope that the spate of crimes that terrorized the mining town will come to an end.

Tawanda Roy Ndlovu of village 1 under Chief Ntabeni, Zhombe appeared before Shurugwi Magistrate Sithabile Zungula while three of his accomplices are still at large.

He is pleading guilty to the charges.

The gang operated in areas like Gakaka along Zvishavane road, Bonsor, Nash 1, Dombojena, Surprise and all suburbs surrounding Shurugwi town.

Police indicate that the gang also robbed people of cash clothes and groceries from tucks shops. Some of the properties were recovered.

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Fixin’ to be flexitarian: Scrap fish and invasive species can liven up vegetables – Science Daily

Most of us have a tough time eating enough veggies. According to the World Economic Forum only one in 10 people in the EU are getting the five portions of fruit and vegetables a day that are recommended both for the sake of health and climate. Which is natural, according to Ole G. Mouritsen, professor emeritus of gastrophysics and culinary food innovation at the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Food Science. According to Mouritsen, vegetables just don’t taste all that good on their own:

“Most people don’t change the way they eat just for the sake of the climate. To really get things going, I think that every meal needs to be prepared to satisfy our sense of taste. And, when many people have a hard time eating enough vegetables, it’s because vegetables lack the sweetness and umami that we’ve been evolutionarily encoded to crave.”

So, if we are to realize a green transition of our eating habits with diets that are far more plant-based, it might be a good idea to liven up vegetable dishes with more umami — the basic, brothy taste typically associated with meat. Here, Professor Mouritsen believes that the sea is a low-hanging fruit. Not only does the sea abound with protein, vitamins, minerals and healthy fats, but also in much-coveted umami.

“We overlook the most readily available, and in many cases, most sustainable food sources with umami taste in them — namely fish, seaweed, shellfish, molluscs and other seafoods. If the right species are chosen, we can use them as climate- and environmentally-friendly protein sources that are also effective umami flavourants for vegetables,” says Ole G. Mouritsen.

Using math to quantify umami

In a new scientific research article, Mouritsen uses a mathematical equation to help calculate the power of umami in a wide range of seafoods and demonstrate their great taste potential.

“Umami can be plugged into a formula because we know exactly how the taste receptors in our taste buds pick up on umami at the molecular level. There is a synergistic effect when two substances, glutamate and nucleotides, are present in a food at the same time. Glutamate imparts the basic umami taste, which is then enhanced many times over by nucleotides. This synergy is reflected in the equation,” says Mouritsen, whose background is in theoretical physics.

The equation looks like this: EUC = u + u × ΣN γ(N)v(N)

EUC stands for Equivalent Umami Concentration, which is the umami concentration in a food expressed in mg/100 g.

The list of seafoods with large concentrations of umami is long. It includes everything from fish like cod and mackerel, to shellfish and molluscs like shrimp and octopus, to the roe of alaska pollock and blue mussel, to various types of seaweed and on to processed seafood products like anchovy paste and fish sauce.

“There are many possibilities. And while some people will probably debate the formula’s accuracy, it doesn’t matter. Whether the umami concentration in shrimp, for example, is 9,000 or 13,000 mg/100 g is not critical, as each is much greater than 30 mg/100 g, which is the taste threshold for umami,” Mouritsen points out.

Working wonders with the right sauces and dressings

Only a few drops or grams of blue foods are usually needed to elevate vegetable dishes to something that satisfies our inherited umami craving.

“Fish sauce and shrimp paste are obvious choices that some may already have in their kitchens or be familiar with from Asian cuisine. You can easily make sauces, dressings and marinades with them that elevate the taste above the threshold which brings out the umami in a vegetable dish,” says Ole G. Mouritsen.

While it is easy for people preparing food in their kitchens at home to take part, it is first and foremost the professionals that Ole G. Mouritsen seeks to enlist.

“I’ve worked with chefs who have no problem preparing dishes where there is no compromise in taste, even when only a few grams of animal protein are present. It’s a question of knowledge. And as scientists, we have a duty to share our knowledge,” says the professor, who adds:

“Globally, many millions of meals are prepared daily outside the home — in canteens, hospitals, by meal delivery and recipe box services, in restaurants and in other contexts. It’s the chefs, nutrition assistants and other culinary artisans who make the meals that, with the right knowledge, can move things forward.”

We should be flexitarian

Professor Mouritsen believes that flexitarian diets are a more viable option than today’s focus on replicating meat products using plants:

“I think we need to be more flexitarian. We need to get used to having a lot more vegetables and much less animal-derived fare on our plates. But in terms of taste, nothing should be absent. Therefore, my vision is that we add something from the animal kingdom that really boosts taste, so that we can make do with very small amounts — but enough to provide flavours that vegetables can’t,” says Mouritsen. He continues:

“Here, it is obvious to use raw materials from the sea that can be sustainably made the most of. This includes species that are not overfished, species that are wasted as bycatch, or species that are not consumed by humans.”

He emphasizes that it should be up to other professionals to determine which species are sustainable to use. While many fish species are overfished and a great deal of fish farming is environmentally harmful, the production of ‘blue foods’ sourced in marine and other aquatic environments is often far more sustainable than the production of land-based meat and plant protein, which often require large inputs of water and energy.

WHERE UMAMI COMES FROM

There are only a few instances in which animal sources can be avoided when out to produce umami without fermentation. One exception is mushrooms, the other is a range of algae — including some of the larger seaweed species. Furthermore, umami is found in a few ripe fruits, such as tomato.

Mouritsen provides a scientific explanation for the abundance of umami in the animal kingdom:

“Just as there is a scientific reason for why plants lack umami, there is also a reason why the animal kingdom is the best supplier of umami and umami synergy. The substances that create umami are something that muscles use and are therefore absent in plants. When nucleic acids — the substances responsible for energy in muscles — are broken down, they produce substances called nucleotides. When these are combined with substances from proteins, such as glutamate, umami synergy is created.”

SEAFOOD IS ‘BRAIN FOOD’

Seafood offers yet another distinct advantage over entirely plant-based diets according to Professor Mouritsen:

“Many of the essential nutrients in seafood are not found in plants — including vitamin B12. And one of the most important are polyunsaturated fats, which are created by algae, way down at the bottom of the food chain. Fish, shellfish and molluscs absorb these fats by eating animals that eat other animals that have eaten algae. These fats are very important for our nervous system and brain.” MAKE UMAMI LIKE THE ANCIENT GREEKS

Many people know fish sauce from Asian cuisines, where it is used to endow dishes with umami. But Europe too once had a tradition of using fish sauce to impart extra flavor. Garum was used in nearly all ancient Greek and Roman dishes. It was often mixed with other ingredients, including honey. This garum was known as meligarum and consists of:

  • 1 part fish sauce
  • 2 parts honey
  • 2 parts citrus juice

One quick use of meligarum is as a dressing or marinade for pointed cabbage or broccoli.

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Man gets one month in jail for sideswiping car – Chronicle

Man gets one month in jail for sideswiping car


Online Reporter 

A DRIVER who side swiped a stationary car, leading to its driver dying from injuries and fleeing the scene, will spend a month in jail for the crime.

The man, 41 year old Simbarashe Tsiga from Harare, appeared before Norton Magistrates court on charges of culpable homicide.

In a statement, the National Prosecuting Authority of Zimbabwe (NPAZ) said according to the Prosecution, in the early hours of February 25 this year Tsiga was driving a white Volkswagen along Harare-Bulawayo road.

“As he approached the 30 km peg along the road he lost control of his vehicle and side swiped a Nissan March hatchback which was stationary on the outer lane of the road. As a result of the impact the driver of the Nissan March was seriously injured,” read the statement.

The NPAZ said Tsiga managed to escape and flee the accident scene when his vehicle caught fire, burst and burnt to ashes.

“The injured driver was rushed to Norton hospital but was declared dead upon admission.

“The accused pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a fine of US$300 to be paid by the 30th of May, failing which the accused person will serve 30 days in prison. A further six months imprisonment were wholly suspended on the condition that the accused person does not within the next 5 years commit a similar offence,” read the statement.

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