Their Coffee Is World-Renowned. Now More Guatemalans Are Actually Drinking It

A barista at El Injerto coffee shop in Guatemala City pours water into a chemex. Guatemala has long been known for its coffee, but a culture of artisanal coffee has only recently taken root here.

Anna-Catherine Brigida


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Anna-Catherine Brigida

A barista at El Injerto coffee shop in Guatemala City pours water into a chemex. Guatemala has long been known for its coffee, but a culture of artisanal coffee has only recently taken root here.

Anna-Catherine Brigida

The El Injerto coffee shop, with its silver stools, brick-and-chalkboard walls and The Weeknd’s “I Feel It Coming” playing softly in the background, resembles many cafes in Brooklyn or Los Angeles. But it is in Guatemala City, where paying $5 for a cup of coffee has not always been so common.

Coffee has been one of Guatemala’s most important export crops since at least the early 1800s. Only in the past few years have Guatemalans have started to consume their own world-renowned product on a larger scale.

“The growth has been exponential in the last five to eight years,” says Evelio Francisco Alvarado, general manager of Guatemala’s National Coffee Association, known by its Spanish acronym, Anacafe. “This growth has stemmed from the increase in coffee shops not only in the capital, but also in other parts of the country.”

Anacafe reports that 10 percent of the coffee produced in Guatemala now stays in the country. Just a decade ago, nearly 100 percent of Guatemalan coffee was exported to places such as the U.S., Europe and Japan.

The rise of independent coffee shops

That began to change in 2009, the same year that the Aguirre family opened El Injerto with a goal of allowing Guatemalans to enjoy their own nation’s coffee. The family has owned a plantation of the same name since 1874, producing coffee in Huehuetenango, a province in the western highlands more than 200 miles from the capital.

For more than a century, most of El Injerto’s coffee left the country. Now, about 10 percent of the coffee produced on the plantation stays within the Central American nation, served at one of a handful of El Injerto coffee shops in the capital and surrounding area.

“Our idea is to continue leaving more coffee here in Guatemala, and export less,” says Paulina Aguirre, manager of the El Injerto cafe. She works in the family business with her father Arturo and siblings Arturo Jr. and Maria Gabriela.

Most of this growing consumption happens at independent coffee shops that only buy from Guatemalan producers and use artisanal preparation methods. That includes Rojo Cerezo, one of the first independent coffee shops in Guatemala City’s Cuatro Grados Norte neighborhood, which now has the highest concentration of coffee shops in the city.

Rogelio Dávila opened the coffee shop in 2013 to help continue to spread coffee culture among his fellow Guatemalans. After working as a barista in other coffee chains, he was also looking for more freedom to select his own coffee from different regions of Guatemala and to experiment with new preparation methods. Plus, he wanted to create a more personal atmosphere where he could share what he had learned about coffee with his customers.

A cappuccino at the family-owned El Injerto coffee shop, which was opened with a goal of allowing Guatemalans to enjoy their own nation’s coffee.

Anna-Catherine Brigida


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Anna-Catherine Brigida

A cappuccino at the family-owned El Injerto coffee shop, which was opened with a goal of allowing Guatemalans to enjoy their own nation’s coffee.

Anna-Catherine Brigida

“I’ve always liked the idea of coffee,” says Dávila, who only serves coffee bought in his own country. “I believe that the concept of coffee is not just trying a cup of coffee, but the whole atmosphere.”

As one of the first artisanal coffee shops in the area, Rojo Cerezo’s approach to coffee wasn’t immediately accepted. Some customers complained that the coffee took too long to prepare. That has shifted as the coffee shop has grown in popularity.

“Before, I was like any Guatemalan: misinformed,” says 21-year-old Rony Hernandez, a frequent customer at Rojo Cerezo. “You think that you know about coffee when you start to have a cappuccino, or when you know what an Americano is, but to really appreciate a good coffee, you need artisanal methods.”

‘Third-wave’ methods

Hernandez started coming to Rojo Cerezo about a year ago, and has been converted into a lover of so-called “third-wave” methods, which go beyond brewing in a coffee pot or using an espresso machine.

Instead, artisanal coffee is prepared using a wider variety of methods, some which have existed for years but have just recently become widespread. A barista pours water into a dripper, which is a funnel atop a flat base, or a chemex, an hourglass-shaped container with an open top for the filter. Also popular in third-wave preparation is the vacuum coffee method, which uses a siphon pot. Heat is placed beneath the lower, glass ball-shaped section of the pot. As it heats up, the water is pushed into the top cylindrical portion. The heat is then removed and brewed coffee falls back down into the ball.

“Now I prefer to appreciate the tones of the coffee, and the artisanal methods, and what they’ve taught me about how the process works, whether it’s the weight of the coffee, the type of grain, where it comes from, the amount of water, the temperature — all of these processes and details,” he says.

There are now more than a dozen independent coffee shops in the Cuatro Grados Norte neighborhood, but the trend reaches beyond the capital city. They are now popping up all over the country.

In December 2016, Pedro Martínez opened Café Sol in the colonial city of Antigua after working for five years as a barista in the Guatemalan coffee chain &Café. He became interested in the third wave of coffee, using YouTube and blogs to learn these methods.

He credits the increasing amount of information shared online with the country’s coffee boom, because it has made “coffee culture” more accessible for people like him who want to learn, but don’t know anyone who can teach them.

“When we were little, I remember there was always a jar of instant coffee in the house, and we never worried about whether it was good quality. We just liked it,” he says.

That is no longer the case in Guatemala, where baristas and coffee-shop owners like Martínez are spreading their knowledge. Guatemalans have always been proud of their coffee, but now they are finally able to understand why.

“Coffee is very symbolic for the country and its culture,” Martínez says. “Guatemala has great coffee, so why don’t we drink it ourselves?”

Anna-Cat Brigida is a freelance writer covering politics, immigration and culture in Mexico and Central America. More of her work can be found here. You can also follow her on Twitter at @AnnaCat_Brigida.

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Brady Center sues bump stock maker Slide Fire

A gun control group has filed suit against a bump stock manufacturer seeking damages and counseling for the survivors of a mass shooting in Las Vegas earlier this month.

Gunman Stephen Paddock had 12 rifles mounted with bump stocks when he fired from his 32nd floor suite in the Mandalay Hotel at the street-level Route 91 Harvest Festival, before killing himself.

The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence filed the class action suit against Slide Fire Solutions “on behalf of all concert goers who suffered emotional distress as a result of the shooting that killed 58 people and wounded hundreds on Oct. 1.”

“This horrific assault did not occur, could not occur, and would not have occurred with a conventional handgun, rifle or shotgun, of the sort used by law-abiding responsible gun owners for hunting or self-defense,” the complaint alleges.

Slide Fire did not return messages from CNNMoney.

The lawsuit, which was filed in Clark County District Court, asks that defendants pay for counseling costs and other treatments for emotional distress suffered by the victims. It also asks for punitive damages, but doesn’t mention a monetary amount.

Bump stocks, which were invented by Jeremiah Cottle of Slide Fire Solutions and approved by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in 2010, are legal in most places.

They are not regulated with the same level of intensity as fully automatic machine guns, which cost tens of thousands of dollars and are subject to the National Firearms Act.

Slide Fire, which was selling bump stocks for up to $400 before suspending sales, did not return messages from CNNMoney.

Bump stocks speed up the rate of semi-automatic fire to mimic fully automatic fire, by harnessing the recoil of the rifle to shoot the gun faster than manual trigger-pulling would allow.

The lawsuit specifically names Slide Fire as the inventor and patent owner of Paddock’s bump stocks, but may include other manufacturers and sellers who might have supplied Paddock. The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department has not identified the maker of the bump stocks used in Las Vegas.

One other company makes them. Fostech Outdoors of Seymour, Indiana says it licenses Slide Fire’s patented technology to make its Bumpski stocks.

Related: Bump stocks have been selling out since Vegas massacre

Fostech did not return messages from CNNMoney. Both companies announced on their web sites that they have temporarily suspended sales of bump stocks.

Slide Fire said it has suspended new orders “to provide the best service with those already placed.” Fostech said it was suspending sales “until manufacturing can catch up with demand.”

Related: Bump stocks mimic machine gun fire, and they’re legal

Bump stocks have been selling out at gun shops around the country since the Mandalay Bay massacre. Some retailers say that sales are driven by the fear of consumers that gun control legislation will ban bump stocks.

Legislators of both parties have suggested tighter controls or outright bans on bump stocks. In an unusual move, the National Rifle Association, which generally opposed all gun control, has said bump stocks should be subject to “additional regulations.”

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PUBG, CS: GO Esports Shows Coming To Hulu

Four esports series will stream exclusively on Hulu later this fall. Each will be produced by the ESL and will range from shorter podcast-style discussions to more in-depth documentaries.

The series are Player v. Player, a talk show; Bootcamp, which follows competitive CS: GO team The Immortals; Defining Moments, on which experts will analyze a different topic each week; and ESL Replay, which will recap four CS: GO, Dota 2, and PUBG tournaments from October through December.

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Hulu will release episodes of each series on a weekly schedule. The ESL describes each show in more detail (series length and episode runtimes via Variety):

  • "Player v. Player is a gamified debate show with casters and esports influencers facing off over the hottest topics in esports. Panelists accrue points while debating both newsy and big picture topics for ultimate bragging rights, with a final challenge over a classic video game." (10 30-minute episodes)
  • "Bootcamp is a weekly docu-series following The Immortals, a top CS:GO team, as they rebuild their roster leading up to IEM Oakland, one of the premiere esports events in North America that takes place on November 18-19 at Oracle Arena." (six 30-minutes episodes)
  • "Defining Moments will cover many of the top games and fan the flames of ongoing debates about these plays….The series will feature in-depth interviews with game designers, teammates, fans, rivals, even sports scientists assessing reaction speed–anyone who can add to the story of defining moments in esports." (six 30-minute episodes)
  • "ESL Replay is a fast-paced, condensed, documentary-style recap of the most memorable moments from four of the biggest multi-day esports tournaments in the world." Via Variety, the tournaments include Dota 2 in Hamburg in late October, CS: GO and PUBG in Oakland in November, and CS: GO in Denmark in December. (four 60-minute episodes)

Esports have made headlines for other big partnerships recently, from an MLB team owner buying an Overwatch League franchise to Jennifer Lopez investing in pro gaming.

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Alexa’s Search by Lyrics Is One of the Echo’s Best Lesser-Known Features

In case you didn’t know, Alexa can help you find that one song with those one lyrics that go sort of like “blah blah blah” or whatever.

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All you have to do is say, “Alexa, play the song that goes [insert the few lyrics you know here],” and she’ll find it easy-peasy. Pretty handy when you’ve got an enjoyable earworm inside your brain and you just can’t seem to remember what that song is called. This feature isn’t exactly new or anything, but it is something every Alexa owner should know.

Right now Amazon is showing off the most requested songs by lyrics via Alexa. These tracks either have catchy choruses, unforgettable, standout lyrics, or have confusing titles that don’t seem to line up with the lyrics Alexa owners are trying to find on their own (for example, the top track, “HandClap” by the Fitz and the Tantrums). You can check out the complete track list, in order, down below.

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Boeing just made a big bet on drones and electric planes

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Artist’s conception of Aurora’s eVTOL, a prototype of a plane Uber hopes to use to offer flying car service in Dallas and Dubai starting in 2020.


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On Thursday, the aviation giant Boeing announced that it is acquiring Aurora Flight Sciences. The lesser-known company specializes in cutting-edge aviation technologies, including electric airplanes, vertical-take-off-and-landing (VTOL) airplanes, and unmanned aerial vehicles. Buying the company will help Boeing to beef up its capabilities in these areas, which are expected to be big growth areas for the aviation industry in the coming years.

While Aurora is much smaller than Boeing, it’s not exactly a startup. Founded in 1989, the company has headquarters in Virginia and manufacturing facilities in West Virginia and Mississippi. It makes a few of its own airplanes, manufactures components like wings and doors, and also does cutting-edge design work.

The company does work for NASA, the US military, and private customers. One of its highest-profile private customers is Uber, which has tapped Aurora to build aircraft for Uber Elevate, the intra-city “flying car” Uber hopes to launch in Dallas and Dubai in 2020 (though we’re skeptical they’ll achieve that self-imposed deadline).

Boeing is making the acquisition at a time when the aviation industry appears to be on the verge of big technological shifts driven by better batteries, motors, and software.

One big shift is vertical-takeoff-and-landing (VTOL) aircraft. Because electric motors are much lighter than conventional aircraft engines, there’s greater flexibility to design aircraft with a variety of propellers positioned around an aircraft. That opens up the possibility for new aircraft designs, including designs with some downward-facing propellers that allow aircraft to take off and land straight up. Using multiple electric motors can also lead to aircraft that are significantly quieter than conventional airplanes or helicopters, opening the possibility of using them in closer proximity to populated areas.

Uber envisions a future in which metropolitan areas are dotted with “vertiports”—tiny airports where small VTOL airplanes take off and land. In Uber’s vision of the future a decade from now, someone traveling from San Francisco to San Jose—a trip that can take two hours in traffic—might take a short self-driving Uber car ride to a vertiport, hop on a self-driving VTOL airplane, take a 15-minute flight to a San Jose vertiport, and then catch a second self-driving taxi to her destination. Uber estimates such a flight will initially cost $130, but it could become as cheap as $20 in the long run.

Less ambitious goals include enabling more affordable short-haul flights between regional airports. Not only can short-range electric airplane flights be more energy-efficient, but self-flying airplane technology may eventually eliminate the need for pilots on small, short-range flights. This would allow the flights to be even cheaper and could revitalize smaller airports where operating large conventional commercial airplanes doesn’t make sense.

Obviously, the specifics here are a matter of speculation, but there’s little doubt that the next decade or two will see significant changes in the industry. Buying Aurora helps to ensure that Boeing will be able to play in all these markets.

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Hijacking Computers to Mine Cryptocurrency Is All the Rage

Have you visited Showtime’s website recently? If so, you may be a cryptocurrency miner. An observant Twitter user was the first to sound an alarm last month that the source code for the Showtime Anytime website contained a tool that was secretly hijacking visitors’ computers to mine Monero, a Bitcoin–like digital currency focused on anonymity.

It’s still not clear how the tool got there, and Showtime quickly removed it after it was pointed out. But if it was the work of hackers, the episode is actually part of a larger trend: security experts have seen a spike in cyberattacks this year that are aimed at stealing computer power for mining operations. Mining is a computationally intensive process that computers comprising a cryptocurrency network complete to verify the transaction record, called the blockchain, and receive digital coins in return (see “What Bitcoin Is, and Why It Matters”).

Lately the same mining tool that appeared on Showtime’s website has been showing up all over the Internet. Released just last month by a company called Coinhive, the tool is supposed to give website owners a way to make money without displaying ads. But malware authors seem to be among its most voracious early adopters. In the past few weeks, researchers have discovered the software hiding in Chrome extensions, hacked WordPress sites, and even in the arsenal of a notorious “malvertising” hacker group.

Coinhive’s miner isn’t the only one out there, and hackers are using a variety of approaches to hijack computers. Kaspersky Lab recently reported finding cryptocurrency mining tools on 1.65 million of its clients’ computers so far this year—well above last year’s pace.

The researchers also recently detected several large botnets set up to profit from cryptocurrency mining, making a “conservative” estimate that such operations could generate up to $30,000 a month. Beyond that, they’ve seen “growing numbers” of attempts to install mining tools on servers owned by organizations. According to IBM’s X-Force security team, cryptocurrency mining attacks aimed at enterprise networks jumped sixfold between January and August.

The researchers say that hackers are especially attracted to relatively new alternatives to Bitcoin, particularly Monero and zCash. That’s probably in part because these currencies have cryptographic features that make transactions untraceable by law enforcement (see “Criminals Thought Bitcoin Was the Perfect Hiding Place, but They Thought Wrong”). It’s also because hackers can generate more profits mining these newer currencies than they can with Bitcoin. Bitcoin-mining malware was extremely popular two or three years ago, but the currency’s popularity has, by design, made it more difficult to mine, warding off this kind of attack. Hackers are now embracing newer, easier-to-mine currencies.

Malware containing cryptocurrency mining tools can be relatively straightforward to detect using antivirus software, says Justin Fier, cyber intelligence lead for the security firm Darktrace. But illegal mining operations set up by insiders, which can be much more difficult to detect, are also on the rise, he says—often carried out by employees with high-level network privileges and the technical skills needed to turn their company’s computing infrastructure into a currency mint.

In one instance, Fier’s team, which relies on machine learning to detect anomalous activity inside networks, noticed an employee at a major telecom company using a company computer in an unauthorized way to communicate with his home machine. Further investigation revealed that he had planned to turn his company’s server room into a mining pool.

So long as there is a potential payday involved, such inside jobs are likely to remain high on the list of cybersecurity challenges that companies face. As for keeping hacked websites from hijacking your personal computer? In an ironic twist, some ad blockers are now banning Coinhive.

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Blind-Assistance App “Be My Eyes” Is Now on Android

Be My Eyes, an app that lets sighted people remotely help blind people with visual tasks, is now available on Android, after two years on iOS.

The app is free, anonymous, and available 24/7. Anyone can join as a volunteer or end user. There’s no commitment when joining, so for sighted people, this is a great way to make the world better just a few minutes at a time. Its creators report over 270 thousand help sessions, with over 500 thousand sighted users helping 38 thousand blind ones.

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One caveat: Because anyone can join, blind users should avoid revealing sensitive data like credit card numbers to strangers.

Be My Eyes for Android | Google Play

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