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Tag: Lexington

  • Livability Rates Lexington, KY a Top 100 Place to Live

    Livability Rates Lexington, KY a Top 100 Place to Live

    Lexington, KY may be known for bluegrass, bourbon, thoroughbreds and UK sports, but it is also in the top 100 best places to live.

    Livability, in partnership with Ipsos, conducted a survey of 1,000 adults across the US to determine what makes up the most desirable traits in a community. The company then ranked over 1,000 cities, ranging from 20,000 to 1,000,000 inhabitants, using 50 different data points.

    Lexington, KY came in at 57 on the list, driven by its dynamic nature and strong entrepreneurial ecosystem. Another major factor is Lexington’s central location, being within a day’s drive of two-thirds of the US population.

    “This year’s list is a testament to loving where you live, in a time where more of us than ever can live anywhere we want,” says Cara Sanders, Livability.com managing editor. “These past two years have shown us how important it is that the places we live meet our needs and offer up affordability, opportunity and plenty of amenities. If we can work from anywhere, then these 100 cities are places you would want to live and make remote workers’ needs a top priority.”

  • Ceiling Fan Business Makes a Big Ass of Itself

    Big Ass Fans, in Lexington, Kentucky, knows that their business is normally the sort of thing that exists in an industrial park somewhere, ships out to retailers, and doesn’t make much of a splash, name-wise. Think about it. What is the brand name of any ceiling fan in your home? Most ceiling fan companies just aren’t household names.

    Big Ass Fans plays a different game. They design, manufacture, and sell the world’s largest fans. They are a $122-million company, and employ over 500 people.

    When Carey Smith started the company in 1999, it had one of the usual, run-of-the-mill fan company names, HVLS Fan Co. The product HVLS put out is unique in and of itself. The company’s industrial ceiling fans are large, slower speed, and rather than using typical fan blades, use air foils.

    In 2002, after months of hearing his own customers refer to his product as “big-ass fans,” Smith made the daring name switch. Once Big Ass Fans put a mural on the side of their street-side building, sent out mailers, and started advertising open employment positions under that name, people started to take notice.

    The company was slated to post some large display advertising in Lexington’s Bluegrass Airport ahead of a major tourist event. The airport pulled the plug on the Big Ass ad. They have since reconciled, but things were touch and go for a while.

    The joke behind the name is the company’s mascot, Fanny the Donkey. You can’t drive through Lexington without seeing at least one t-shirt, ball cap, or bumper sticker emblazoned with the Big Ass name and/or Fanny logo.

    But the humor does seem to miss some folks.

    The company has actually recently had a name change, moving from “Big Ass Fans” to “Big Ass Solutions”. The name change reflects the launch of the Big Ass Light Group, which includes the new Big Ass High Bay LED light fixture for industrial and commercial spaces.

    The company is more than just a daring, risqué name, though. Smith is not running a ceiling fan company that churns out the same product as every other fan builder — same basic almost-interchangeable equipment, with different colors and designs on the blades and pull chain.

    Big Ass has innovated in the home ceiling fan market, including the SenseME model of their Haiku fan, marketed as “The World’s First Smart Ass Fan”. It features an on-board computer and array of sensors.

    Smith boasts that the SenseME model allows you to:

    * Forget the switch: SenseME knows when you enter or leave a room and turns Haiku on and off automatically.
    * Forget the chains: SenseME monitors the room’s temperature and humidity, adjusting Haiku’s speed when conditions change.
    * Forget discomfort: SenseME learns your comfort preferences, tailoring those speed adjustments to what you find comfortable.

    Big Ass Solutions, starting with Big Ass Fans and moving now into Big Ass Light Group, is making a name for itself with its product. The name is just part of the fun.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Dead Man Wakes Up Before Embalming

    Imagine the surprise on the face of the mortician when a man who was just about to undergo embalming, woke up and started kicking in his body bag.

    It happened in Lexington, Mississippi when Wednesday night, Walter Williams, 78, appeared dead, and the coroner pronounced him dead at 10:30 pm. Unfortunately, he spent the night in that body bag, because it wasn’t until Thursday morning that he let the world know he was alive.

    Just as the funeral workers were getting ready to embalm him, he started kicking inside the bag, as if he knew what was about to happen.

    Porter and Sons Funeral Home staff rushed Mr. Williams, a former farmer and school worker, to the hospital after they realized he wasn’t dead. The manager of the funeral home said: “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

    When the coroner spoke to TV channel WAPTV he confirmed he had checked Mr Williams pulse and found no heartbeat, declaring him dead at 10.30pm on Wednesday.

    He also stated that William’s pacemaker may have stopped working and then re-started, which could explain his pulse stopping.

    “I asked the coroner what happened, and the only thing he could say is that it’s a miracle,” Holmes County Sheriff Willie March said.

    “It’s a miracle,” Williams’ nephew Eddie Hester said in an interview. “I don’t know how long he’s gonna be here, but right now he’s here, and the whole family is glad.”

    Williams was reportedly in the hospital breathing without the help of a respirator, but is too weak to talk, his nephew said.

    Image via YouTube

  • Lexington Fire Department Tweets Detailed Account of Student “Riots”

    The Lexington “riots” were the talk of the town–and beyond–this past weekend as Kentucky fans students took the street to, as the lead image indicates, apparently break stuff to show how much they enjoyed beating the Louisville Cardinals. We’ve already discussed the the fun stuff that went on, and now, some more details.

    Not only did the media latch onto the wild behavior, as USAToday points, the official Twitter account for the Lexington Professional Firefighters IAFF Local 526 provided readers with blow-by-blow details of the debauchery, which reads like a war correspondent’s diary:

    Mark Blankenship of Lex. Fire Dept. says too many fires to count, no arson arrests but several for disorderly conduct #bbn(image) 1 day ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    ?@HLpublicsafety: About 9:45 p.m., cops started sweeping state street by walking in formation. Revelers are dispersing. #bbn?(image) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    ?@HLpublicsafety: Crowd has flipped another car in 100 block of State Street. About two dozen students are on top of it.?(image) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    ?@HLpublicsafety: Big police bus headed to State Street #bbn?(image) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Police have cleared the overturned car of people. Behind the line of officers clearing the crowd is a police officer with a video camera.(image) 1 day ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    ?@HLpublicsafety: Overturned car on State Street has now been set on fire.?(image) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    ?@HLpublicsafety: Scanner: Police can use pepperball spray if students on State Street keep throwing bottles. #bbn?(image) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Police say they’re filming crowds with undercover officers, and from helicopter, will review film in future to make more arrests #bbn(image) 1 day ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    ?@HLpublicsafety: Police have set up perimter around burning car b/c fire engine ran out of water, have to wait for another #bbn?(image) 1 day ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    As you can see, it looks like a good time was had by all parties. The thing is, if Kentucky does indeed beat Kansas tonight, therefore, winning the National Championship, Saturday will probably seem tame compared to what’s potentially to come. All in the name of a basketball game. One wishes these youngsters would be so outspoken against things like SOPA and other human rights interests. Such passion, directed at something worthwhile, could start the wheels of change moving in the right direction.

    As it stands, Kentucky students look like a bunch of bored kids looking for any excuse to break stuff.

  • University of Kentucky School Trains Future Diplomats with iPads

    University of Kentucky School Trains Future Diplomats with iPads

    The Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce at the University of Kentucky (UK) here in Lexington, has taken up an initiative to provide students with iPads for the duration of their degree cycle.

    The school’s website says, "This initiative will be ‘soup to nuts,’ encompassing student recruitment, admissions, seminars, graduation, and everything in between. We aim to completely integrate the iPad into our program, transforming the student learning experience, enhancing overall school operations, and preparing graduates to advance diplomacy and international business in the digital age."

    The initiative began from some inspiration that came from a screening at the school of the HBO documentary "For Neda", which focused on the Iranian woman who was shot during a protest, and whose death was captured in images, which went viral online as a result of modern technology. 

    Ambassador Carey Cavanaugh, who is the Director of the school, wrote in a blog post, "Unfortunately, digital tools and skills are anything but standard diplomatic fare.  Throughout my 22-year Foreign Service career I was appalled at the State Department’s slow adoption of new technology…"

    "As Apple’s latest creation captured the world’s imagination, I began to weigh how the iPad might be used to enhance teaching international affairs at the masters degree level," he wrote. "In particular, could using the device help provide a cohort of future leaders who would enter the public, private, and non-profit sectors equipped with the expertise needed to advance what Secretary Clinton has deemed “21st Century Statecraft?”  I also thought that graduates who had sharpened their technological skills using iPads might create a kind of demand pull as they enter the workforce and lobby that they must continue using the device to maintain their productivity.  Learning with iPads might help address both shortcomings: ensure graduates enter international careers equipped with the knowledge and tech skills that are increasingly an essential component of their tool kit; and help pave the way for greater acceptance of such mobile devices in official government settings."

    iPad Comes to UK

    Cavanaugh decided to contact Apple, who ended up sending its Southeast Area Director for Education into town to discuss his ideas. This turned into the school becoming the first professional one to have all its students, faculty, and staff using an iPad for a complete degree cycle, and a trial that Cavanaugh hopes will become a blueprint for other schools to follow. 

    Dr. Robert Farley, an assistant professor at the school, specializing in national security and intelligence, says he’s looking forward to answering questions like: Does the iPad significantly enhance productivity, is the iPad uniquely useful in the classroom, or in the associated extra-curricular activities of the school, how does the iPad affect the classroom setting itself, and does it help tear down the wall between student and instructor that the laptop has created?

    Apple is providing support throughout the 18-month trial period, and will assist with program development and strategy, train students, faculty and staff, and help get them access to developers when necessary.