Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Police: Gaza militants fire rocket into Israel

JERUSALEM (AP) ? A rocket fired from the Gaza Strip struck Israel on Tuesday as tensions are mounting in the region weeks ahead of President Barack Obama's visit.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said remains of the rocket were found south of the city of Ashkelon, in southern Israel. The attack caused damage to a road but no injuries, he said. It was the first such projectile from the Palestinian territory to hit Israel since Israel-Gaza hostilities last November.

The rocket fire came one day after Israeli troops injured two Palestinian teenagers near a holy site close to Bethlehem, during one of the many demonstrations Palestinians in the West Bank have staged in recent days.

Initially, West Bank street protests broke out in support of Palestinians held in Israeli jails, particularly in support of four inmates on lengthy hunger strikes. Then, over the weekend, a Palestinian prisoner who was not on hunger strike died under disputed circumstances, prompting more demonstrations.

Israeli and Palestinian officials have traded barbs, each side saying the other is trying to exploit the latest unrest for political gains.

A statement from the Palestinian president's office said President Mahmoud Abbas instructed Palestinian security officials Monday night to preserve security and order in the West Bank, but placed the blame on Israel for "dragging the area into violence and chaos."

Adnan Damiri, the spokesman of the Palestinian security apparatus, said Palestinian officials were committed to prevent fighting, saying that his forces had recently detained members of the militant Hamas group who were planning "violent confrontations."

"The only one(s) seeking violence in West Bank is Netanyahu and Hamas, but we will not be dragged to that," said Damiri. "Our struggle will always be peaceful."

The clashes come weeks before Obama is scheduled to arrive in Israel and the West Bank, his first presidential visit to the region. U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. has asked Israeli and Palestinian officials to exercise "maximum restraint" at this time of high tension in the West Bank.

"All parties should seriously consider the consequences of their actions, particularly at this very difficult moment," Ventrell said Monday.

An Israeli military official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with military policy, said protestors gathered Monday and hurled "improvised hand grenades" towards a holy site in the Bethlehem area, endangering Israeli worshippers inside.

Soldiers responded by firing at the legs of a Palestinian throwing grenades, lightly wounding him. Later, soldiers fired rubber bullets at demonstrators, seriously injuring one Palestinian who was then rushed to an Israeli hospital, the official said.

Palestinian medical officials said two Palestinian youths, one 13 years old and one 16, were seriously wounded by live fire. Palestinian medic Abdelhaleem Jaarah said the 16-year-old, Odai Sarhan, was hit in the head and rushed to Hadassah hospital in Jerusalem.

Etti Dvir, spokeswoman for Hadassah hospital in Jerusalem, said doctors operated overnight on the boy and that he was in critical condition.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-gaza-militants-fire-rocket-israel-055058642.html

bethenny frankel sacramento kings alex jones the bachelor Google Docs Huell Howser Justin Bieber Smoking Weed

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Obama warns of risks over budget cut uncertainty

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama on Monday said looming automatic spending cuts are already affecting the economy, while a top administration official warned that the nation's borders would be less secure if billions of dollars are yanked from the budget Friday.

"The uncertainty is already having an effect," Obama said. "Companies are preparing layoff notices. Families are preparing to cut back on expenses. The longer these cuts are in place, the bigger the impact will become."

Despite the urgent rhetoric, there was no indication the White House and congressional Republicans were actively negotiating a deal to avoid the so-called sequester ahead of the end of the week deadline. The last known conversation between Obama and GOP leaders was last week and there have been no in-person meetings between the parties this year.

With Congress back from a weeklong recess, House Speaker John Boehner showed little willingness to move off his long-held position that the sequester be offset through targeted spending cuts, not the package of cuts and tax increases Obama supports.

"Mr. President, you got your tax increase," Boehner said, referring to the tax rate increases that took effect on Jan. 1. "It's time to cut spending here in Washington."

The $85 billion budget-cutting mechanism could affect everything from commercial flights to classrooms to meat inspections. Domestic and defense spending alike would be trimmed, leading to furloughs for hundreds of thousands of government workers and contractors.

The White House continued laying out in stark terms what the cuts would mean for government services, dispatching Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to warn of the implications for critical security functions.

"I don't think we can maintain the same level of security at all places around the country with sequester as without sequester," said Napolitano, adding that the impact would be "'like a rolling ball. It will keep growing."

Napolitano focused in particular on the impact to the border, saying her agency would be forced to furlough 5,000 patrol agents. She tamped down the notion that budget cuts would make the nation more vulnerable to terrorism, but said the sequester would make it "awfully, awfully tough" to minimize that risk.

Also Monday, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said visiting hours would be cut at all 398 national parks, just as they prepare for an influx of spring and summer visitors.

Elsewhere in the government, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said the cuts would harm the readiness of U.S. fighting forces. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said travelers could see delayed flights. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said 70,000 fewer children from low-income families would have access to Head Start programs. And furloughed meat inspectors could leave plants idled.

Obama will seek to build public support for his call to offset the sequester with a combination of targeted cuts and tax revenues Tuesday when he travels to Newport News, Va., a community that would be impacted by the defense cuts.

The sequester was designed as an unpalatable fallback, meant to take effect only if a congressional super-committee failed to come up with at least $1 trillion in savings from benefit programs.

Many of the nation's governors, who are gathered in Washington for their annual meeting, voiced frustration over the impending cuts, saying Washington's inability to strike a deal had created widespread uncertainty in the economy and hampered economic recovery in their states.

"The president needs to show leadership," said Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a Republican considered a potential 2016 presidential contender, following a meeting with Obama. "The reality is it can be done. This administration has an insatiable appetite for new revenue."

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a favorite of her party's conservative wing, pointed her anger at both Democrats and Republicans.

"No one should be playing golf. No one should be taking vacations," Haley said, taking a shot at Obama's recent golf outing and Congress' latest recess. "What they need to do is do what these governors do every day. We stay until we get it done."

Democratic Gov. Dannel Malloy of Connecticut concurred.

"They need to get out of that box that sits under the dome and understand that this has real implications in people's lives," he said. "Work with the president, find a way to get it done ? or if you want, just turn it over to us governors, and we'll negotiate."

The governors, emerging from a closed-door meeting with Obama Monday, said the president had assured them the administration is pursuing solutions, but offered no assurances that officials would find a way ahead out ahead of the deadline.

___

Associated Press writers Ken Thomas, Steve Peoples and Josh Lederman contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-warns-risks-over-budget-cut-uncertainty-214308559--finance.html

Ryan Lanza Facebook usa today foxnews yahoo news cnn news Connecticut shooting Nancy Lanza

Web Advertising's Identity Crisis | Digiday

Interactive Advertising Bureau CEO Randall Rothenberg gave an at times stirring exhortation to the group?s membership, and the broader industry, to look beyond the efficiencies of direct response ads and finally make the Internet safe for brand building. The irony is the biggest chunk of his audience was those who are firmly in the direct-response business.

For all the talk of new video display ad standards and the rise of ?native? advertising, the IAB?s annual meeting at times looked like a direct-marketing convention. After all, Web advertising is still primarily a response channel. One industry veteran, noting how the promised consolidation of ad tech never happened, predicted the industry would mostly remain the preserve of direct marketers. Driving home that point: a town hall on ?native? advertising had plenty of open seats; the one on programmatic ad buying was overflowing.

Rothenberg notes the risk of an ?efficiency spiral,? where margins are compressed on all sides and value creation is minimal. For all the talk of shifting TV money, the Web remains still a response medium, as much as it was when the click was first put on a banner back in 1994.

?I worry we?re entering a new dark ages of advertising,? Rothenberg said. ?What if we are merely bringing bad science to our industry.?

A useful warning, but mostly an interlude before talk of ?zetabytes? of data. The ad industry seems to have gone from mostly ignoring data, in favor of gut, to absolutely fetishizing it. The more data, the better. Yet ask closely what repeatable outcomes that surfeit of data can provide, and you?ll hear ?it?s early.? The truth is most online data is worthless after 30 days. And the idea that brands and agencies have handle on actually using that data is laughable. One ad tech exec noted to me that even storing and sorting it remain out of the reach of most brands. And agencies? They don?t sniff most of their clients? data.

That doesn?t stop ad tech players from braggin how much data they process. The banner ad industrial complex is fueled by data, much of it collected through cookies. One industry leader sounded a cautionary note when discussing the move by Mozilla to block third-party cookies. This exec predicted Microsoft, ever the fast follower, would soon do that same. It could throw much of the data collection the industry relies on into doubt. The industry doesn?t seem worried. The discussion of privacy implications of the era of ?big data? was shunted off to the last session on the last day of the meeting.

Source: http://www.digiday.com/publishers/web-advertisings-identity-crisis/

death race buffet rule carlos santana dodgers triple play baa samoyed kenny powers

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Marian Wright Edelman: What Killed President Kennedy and Trayvon Martin?

February 26 will mark one year since 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was killed by a gun wielded by self-appointed neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman after he saw Trayvon walking home from a 7-Eleven with a bag of Skittles and bottle of Arizona iced tea.

Black children, youths, and families know first-hand that the killing of Black children by gun violence is not new but a relentlessly unreported and under-reported plague that has been disproportionately snuffing out Black child lives for a very long time. Fifteen percent of children and teens are Black but 45 percent of all children and youths killed by guns in 2010 were Black. Black boys 15 to 19 years old were 28 times more likely than White boys the same age to be killed in a gun homicide.

Shortly after President Kennedy?s assassination, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote that it was time for our nation to do some soul-searching, and while the question ?Who killed President Kennedy?? was important, answering the question ?What killed President Kennedy?? was even more critical. Dr. King believed the answer was that ?our late president was assassinated by a morally inclement climate?: ?It is a climate filled with heavy torrents of false accusation, jostling winds of hatred, and raging storms of violence. It is a climate where men cannot disagree without being disagreeable, and where they express dissent through violence and murder. It is the same climate that murdered Medgar Evers in Mississippi and six innocent Negro children in Birmingham, Alabama.? Dr. King further noted that the undercurrents of hatred and violence that made up this morally inclement climate were fueled by our cultural embrace of guns: ?By our readiness to allow arms to be purchased at will and fired at whim, by allowing our movie and television screens to teach our children that the hero is one who masters the art of shooting and the technique of killing, by allowing all these developments, we have created an atmosphere in which violence and hatred have become popular pastimes.?

The same winds of hatred, storms of violence, and easy access to and glorification of guns that Dr. King believed killed President Kennedy would soon also kill Dr. King. Fifty years after Dr. King described our morally inclement climate, the outward signs of racial intolerance and hatred have undoubtedly diminished but there are still far too many reminders of the dangers lurking everywhere that devastate us all ? like Trayvon?s senseless death for walking home while Black. Between 1963, when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, and 2010, nearly 60,000 Black children and teens were killed by guns, over 1,200 every year for 48 years. This is 17 times the number of reported lynchings of Black Americans of all ages since 1882 but we have not had an equivalent Black community anti-lynching movement to save our children from gun violence.

While there are troubling undertones of racial suspicion and fear in Trayvon Martin?s killing which must be addressed as justice is sought, the fact is that most Black young people murdered by guns are killed by Black shooters ? just as most White children and teens murdered by guns are killed by White shooters. Sadly the tragedies of Tucson, Aurora, Newtown and elsewhere made clear that none of us are safe anywhere or immune to the pervasive threat of gun violence.

We are all in the same boat and must act together to stop the plague of violence. Gun safety laws that only apply in one city or state can?t fully stop our national epidemic of gun proliferation and violence any better than we can stop a flu epidemic by vaccinating one family. We must struggle together to stop gun violence and to change the morally inclement climate that Dr. King warned about if we are going to protect all of our nation?s children everywhere.

?

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marian-wright-edelman/what-killed-president-ken_b_2746658.html?utm_hp_ref=denver&ir=Denver

heartbreak hotel don cornelius whitney houston i will always love you breaking news whitney houston carmen whitney houston last performance cpac straw poll

CSU women?s basketball loss at New Mexico follows familiar script

By Haleigh Hamblin
February 23, 2013

012413 WBBGame as 172x250 CSU womens basketball loss at New Mexico follows familiar script

Saturday night must have felt like deja vu for the CSU women?s basketball team.

Traveling to the Pit to take on 13-11 New Mexico, the Rams came in on a 2 game win streak against Air Force and UNLV.

It seemed like it was just yesterday that CSU played New Mexico at home and fell to double digits in the second half in January.The Rams fell 56-71 New Mexico in Albuquerque, which dropped their record to 9-16 overall and 5-7 in the Mountain West.

In both games against the Lobos, the Rams fell after a strong first five minutes and were unable to counter the deficit in the second half.

CSU trailed 9-10 with 15:53 left in the first half, but New Mexico went on a 9-3 run over the next two and a half minutes to establish some breathing room.

Looking for a comeback with 3:45 left in the second half, CSU could not overcome the 65-50 deficit and ended up 15 points down.

New Mexico made 48.2 percent of its shots from the field compared to the Rams? 35.4 percent.

?I thought we answered really well,? CSU coach Ryun Williams said. ?They were shooting like crazy.?

Sophomore Antiesha Brown lead the Lobos with 16 points on the night on 6-11 shooting.

Giving a lot of credit to New Mexico and their explosive drives on offense, CSU looks forward to their next against on the road against Mountain West second place Fresno State.

?We didn?t score consistently in the second half,? Williams said. ?I am proud of the team? need to work on offense and defense in the upcoming game.?

Freshman Caitlin Duffy scored 17 points to bounce back from a nine point showing in the team?s initial meeting. She hit four of eight shots from behind the arc and had three rebounds.

?I wish I could have hit a few more,? Duffy said. ?Towards the end of the season it is nice to grow and make those extra shots, but it is a lot better to win.?

New Mexico now moves to a 14-11 overall record and 6-6 in the Mountain West, controlling the fourth spot in the league standings.

Next, CSU will travel to Fresno State to take on the second place team in the MW.

?Tough teams and need a tough mentality,? junior Sam Martin said. ?Need to look past this.?

About Haleigh Hamblin

Collegian writer Haleigh Hamblin is majoring in Journalism and Technical Communications with a minor in Political Science. She can be reached at news@collegian.com

Source: http://www.collegian.com/2013/02/23/csu-womens-basketball-loss-at-new-mexico-follows-familiar-script/

Ebates lotto Illinois Lottery texas lottery Dell Levis Fireman Ed

Hiring A Homework Tutor For Your Kids

Homework plays a major role in learner's life. It is given by teachers to ensure students can reinforce what they have learned in class, or it can possibly be used to prepare them for the next day's lessons. It is intended to be done outside the classroom, mainly in your home. However, there are numerous factors that may affect their drive in doing their homework. If kids are not guided accordingly, they may develop a bad habit of not doing their homework, thus, affecting their school performance..

There are times that students need assistance in doing their homework, particularly if the subject is too complex.. Parents should take full responsibility for helping their kids in every assignment, and make sure that the kids grasp it. It is unavoidable that sometimes, parents will not be able to keep up with their kids' after school responsibilities because they are also working. There are also instances when parents can be a little quick-tempered when assisting their kids complete their homework. So what should parents do to see to it that their kids are guided correctly?.

A homework tutor is the answer. Homework tutors exist to help students complete their homework and prepare them for the next day's class. They can also help your kids in developing good study habits that will improve their school performance. Homework tutors are experts in their fields and they can employ different approaches that will match your child's learning style and pace. They can also address your youngster's other school needs like projects or exam preparation. Homework tutors are there to help students complete their homework and prepare them for the next day's class. Homework tutors are experts in their fields and they can employ different approaches that will match your child's learning style and pace..

Searching for a qualified Homework Tutor is crucial. Remember that your kid's school success will rely on the tutor. You need to screen the applicants and pick the one that you think will help draw out your child's full potential. Consider their professional experiences, but most importantly, their personality. You need a tutor with high credentials, but who will also interact positively with your child. You can conduct interviews in order to get to know the applicants better before making your final decision on the tutor you will hire. Screening the tutors will give you assurance that your child is in good hands..

All parents want the very best for their children. Acquiring a homework tutor can definitely improve your child's performance at school, and even develop their study habits. Now you don't need to worry whether your child is doing their homework or studying for exams because you have hired an expert who will monitor your child's after school homework activities. A Homework Tutor can certainly make your child successful in school, and can help in making your family stronger..

For more information about how to hire a good Homework Tutor, check out the Good Grades Guide. I'm sure you'll like it!

Source: http://articles.submityourarticle.com/hiring-a-homework-tutor-for-your-kids-317953

the jerk lake havasu halo 4 jewel san francisco earthquake san francisco earthquake terminator salvation

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Nokia to fight rivals with cheaper models-sources

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Nokia is shifting the focus of its turnaround strategy to regaining domination of cheaper handsets after a stuttering campaign to catch up with Apple and Samsung in high-end smartphones.

Company sources said it would introduce cut-price basic phones to compete with the likes of Huawei and ZTE and a new, lower-price model of its Lumia smartphone on Monday at the Mobile World Congress convention in Barcelona.

Nokia, once the industry's undisputed leader, is struggling to close the yawning gap with Apple's iPhones and Samsung's Galaxy smartphones and is also losing share in the low-end market which still accounts for the bulk of its sales.

Sales of basic phones fell over 20 percent in 2012 to 9.4 billion euros.

While some media reports have said that Nokia will announce a tablet in Barcelona, the company is not yet ready to unveil one, one of the sources said.

DOUBLE STRATEGY

"What they have to do is increase share in the growing smartphone part and also defend market share in the other," said Swedbank analyst Hakan Wranne.

He said a lower-priced Lumia would help boost its mid-tier offering, an increasingly important market as more consumers in developing markets demand access to Facebook and other social media sites from their mobile phones.

"In order to not continue to lose share in the overall market Nokia has to put forward competitive low-end smartphones.

"What's happening now is that the U.S. and Europe, the big smartphone markets, are really approaching saturation where customers will be upgrading to another smartphone or just replacing one that's broken. That's not a growth market."

Lumia smartphones, which use Windows software, were widely seen as make-or-break models for Nokia due to their high margins.

The company has concentrated on developing the range in the past two years, launching a top-of-the-range 920 model last November. But it has been slow to take off, and investors have said Nokia's dwindling cash position means it may soon need to change course if sales do not pick up in the coming quarters.

Most Lumia phones cost over $200, and the 920 can retail at over $600 without a carrier contract in the United States and some European markets.

By contrast, the average selling price of Nokia's mobile phones was 31 euros in 2012, down from 35 euros a year earlier.

SMARTPHONE SQUEEZE

Nokia's market share in the smartphone business is still only around 5 percent. According to Gartner, Apple and Samsung held a 52 percent share in the smartphone market in the fourth quarter.

Nokia sold 4.4 million Lumia devices in the fourth quarter, and analysts say it must more double those sales and offer more mid-range models to convince investors its smartphone strategy is working and it can survive.

Nokia has already been expanding its line-up of Asha models, which offer some access to the Internet but with fewer features than high-end smartphones, to bolster its share in developing markets such as China and India.

Customers of such mid-tier phones often upgrade to more advanced phones, while sticking with the same brand or operating system, analysts said.

(Editing by David Cowell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nokia-sell-cheaper-phones-counter-low-end-rivals-110732588--finance.html

cpac straw poll i will always love you whitney cummings maine caucus whitney houston has died whitney houston death the vow

LB Te'o tackles questions on hoax at NFL Combine

CBS Eye iconEyeOn

Football

By Will Brinson | Senior Blogger

INDIANAPOLIS -- It's hard to resist cracking jokes at the expense of Manti Te'o, but it's even harder not to be impressed with the job he did handling the biggest crowd in combine history when he stepped to the podium on Saturday.

The full details of Te'o's story are already out there. He didn't have to navigate any tricky storylines. All he had to do was be honest and boring for about 15 minutes and then get the hell out of Dodge. He managed to do just that and helped push his narrative back onto the football field.

"The incident, I said all I needed to say about that," Te'o said. "How I'm handling it going forward is focusing on the moment, focusing on football and the combine. Not everyone gets the opportunity to be here."

A ride to the 2013 NFL Combine isn't free for Te'o. It involves a barrage of questions from various NFL teams interested in his services. There are a whopping 20 teams, Te'o confirmed Saturday, that will be speaking with him.

He's talked to the Texans and the Packers and said there are 18 more to go, all of whom will be inquiring about his Catfishing incident.

"Quite a few teams asked me about it," Te'o said. "Some go to certain lengths. Some just ask me, give me a brief overview of it."

But did anyone not ask about the Lennay Kekua story?

"No," Te'o said after laughing at that, though. "They all asked me about it. Just tell me the facts. They want to hear it from me. Just tell them basically what happened."

That's all he can do and that's all he did Saturday. How would he describe the media scene for his press conference?

"This is crazy."

Would he do things differently if he could go back in time?

"Obviously."

Is he dating anyone in real life right now?

Yes, that was an actual question. And, no, Te'o isn't involved with anyone in the mortal realm at this point in his life. How could he be? Te'o's life is a zoo at this point, with him noting several difficult incidents involving the scrutiny of his situation.

"The toughest moment was a phone call I got from my sister when she told me they had to sneak my own family in their home," Te'o said. "That had to be the hardest part."

Ugh. Te'o said he still gets double takes when he's walking around the grocery store but he's gotten past being embarrassed publicly about the incident and said he "wouldn't be standing here" if he was still embarrassed.

He claimed to learn valuable lessons -- "keep your circle small," find out "who is in your corner and who is not" -- and hopes for the biggest payoff of them all by nailing the press conference Saturday.

"Hopefully after this I answered the things I have to answer and we can move on with football."

Tags: Te'o,Manti, 2013 NFL Combine, NFL Combine, Will Brinson, Green Bay Packers, Houston Texans, NFL

?

" } //console.log(customStrings.signIn); callFBApi = function() { var accessToken; var uid; CBSi.injectJS('//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js#xfbml=1', 'facebook-jssdk'); FB.init({ appId : '297742330311988', oauth : true }); FB.login(function(response) { if (response.authResponse) { uid = response.authResponse.userID; accessToken = response.authResponse.accessToken; //CBSi.log("== FB APP DATA ==", response); FB.api('/me', function(social) { //CBSi.log("== FB USER DATA ==", social); log_in_socially(social.name, social.username, 'fb'); }); } }); }; log_in_socially = function(dn, userid, site) { $.ajax({ url: "/data/common/livefyre/lf_social_login", dataType: 'json', data: { lfdn: dn, lfuser: userid, ssite: site } }).done(function(profile) { //CBSi.log("== Social Login ==",profile,site); if (profile.error) { //CBSi.log("Social login failed with error: ", profile); return null; } else { document.cookie = "lf_social_login="+ profile.socialsess +"; expires=0; path=/"; profile.socialsess = '1'; userObj = profile; user_profile = profile; doLivefyreAuth(profile); } }); }; callTwitterApi = function() { window.open('/common/livefyre/V3/via_twitter','twitterOauth','width=600,height=500,menu=0,status=0'); }; function doLivefyreAuth(cval) { //console.log("== Attempting LF Login ==",cval); var isLoggedIn = 1; if (cval) { try { fyre.conv.login(cval.token); } catch (e) { isLoggedIn = 0; } } if (cval.socialsess == 1){ change_avatars(); } } changeDOM = function() { // DOM hacks. Change the UI for the dropdown box //console.log("== Running Dom Hacks =="); if (isLoggedIn == 1){ //console.log("== Checking Match =="); if (hasProfile == 0) { CBSi.log("== adding get comment link =="); // They need a screen name //$('.lf_auth_section a.lf_user_loggedout').html('Get a Screen Name to Comment').addClass('loginLink'); $('.fyre .fyre-user-loggedout').hide(); $('#getScreenName').show(); var screenNameContent = 'Get a Screen Name to Comment'; $('#getScreenName').html(screenNameContent); } else { if (typeof userObj.profile.profile_url != 'undefined'){ if (userObj.profile.profile_url) { //CBSi.log("== adding login profile links =="); $('.fyre .fyre-box-wrapper a.fyre-user-profile-link').attr('href',userObj.profile.profile_url); $('li.fyre-edit-profile-link').html('Edit Profile'); } } } } changedDom = 1; //console.log("== finished dom hacks =="); }; function updateCommentCounts(element,count){ //CBSi.log("== updating comment counts =="); if (count == 1){ $(element).html('' + count + ' ??| ?Comment'); $(element).show(); $('.commentsCountLabel').html('comment'); } else{ $(element).html('' + count + ' ??| ?Comments'); $(element).show(); $('.commentsCountLabel').html('comments'); } $('.commentsCount').html(count); } function removeLfError(){ $('#cbsLfError').remove(); } var authDelegate = new fyre.conv.RemoteAuthDelegate(); authDelegate.login = function (handlers){ if (isLoggedIn Please log in above to post a comment.'); handlers.failure(); } else{ removeLfError(); handlers.success(); } }; function updateAuthorLinks(){ $('.fyre-comment-username').each(function() { $(this).click(function() { window.location.href = $(this).attr('href'); }); }); $('.fyre-comment-author').each(function() { $(this).click(function() { window.location.href = $(this).attr('href'); }); }); } function updateOneLineComments(){ //console.log("Checking Comments"); $(".fyre-comment-wrapper").each(function() { if ($(this).find(".fyre-comment").css('display') != 'none'){ var commentText = $(this).find(".fyre-comment").html(); var loopCtr = 0; // for IE8 while ( (commentText .indexOf("

") !== -1) && (loopCtr ",''); commentText = commentText.replace("

",''); loopCtr++; } //for other browsers while ( (commentText .indexOf("

") !== -1) && (loopCtr ",''); commentText = commentText.replace("

",''); loopCtr++; } //console.log(commentText); $(this).find(".fyre-comment").css('display','none'); $(this).find(".fyre-comment-head").append(commentText); } //console.log("Checking Height"); cntHeight = $(this).find(".fyre-comment-head").height(); if (cntHeight > 0){ //console.log("Setting Height"); cntHeight = -1 * ((cntHeight / 2) + 12); $(this).find(".fyre-flag-link").css('top',cntHeight); } }); } function change_avatars(){ var image_url = user_profile.profile.image_url; var username = user_profile.profile.display_name; if (image_url.length > 0){ $('.fyre-user-avatar').each(function() { var alt = $(this).attr('alt'); //console.log(alt); if (alt == username){ //console.log("changing src"); $(this).attr('src',image_url); } }); $('.fyre-user-avatar-25').each(function() { var alt = $(this).attr('alt'); if (alt == username){ $(this).attr('src',image_url); } }); $('.fyre-listener-avatars a img').each(function() { var alt = $(this).attr('alt'); if (alt == username){ $(this).attr('src',image_url); } }); } } function change_profile_link(){ var fyre_profile_link = $(".fyre .fyre-box-list .fyre-edit-profile-link a").attr("href"); //console.log("Link Data: " + fyre_profile_link); if (fyre_profile_link != null){ //console.log("Changing link for profile"); $(".fyre .fyre-box-list .fyre-edit-profile-link").click(function() { open_profile(fyre_profile_link); }); } } function open_profile(profile_link_url){ window.open(profile_link_url); } $(document).ready( function () { // Log in the user if we got a token for them // Change the DOM after login since things get re-rendered //console.log("== LF Calling Load =="); var conv = fyre.conv.load({"network": "cbssports.fyre.co", 'strings': customStrings, authDelegate: authDelegate}, lf_config, function(widget) { //console.log("== LF in Load =="); widget.on('initialRenderComplete', function () { //console.log("== LF Render Complete =="); $('#lf_comments_label').show(); loggedin = readCookie('pid'); CBSi.log(loggedin); if ((typeof loggedin == "string") && (loggedin.match(/^L:/))) { isLoggedIn = 1; if (typeof userObj.token != 'undefined'){ if (userObj.token) { hasProfile = 1; doLivefyreAuth(userObj); } } changeDOM(); } updateCommentCounts('.commentsBubble',$('.fyre-stream-stats .fyre-comment-count span').html()); updateAuthorLinks(); setTimeout(function(){},2000); setTimeout(function(){change_profile_link()},2000); }); widget.on('userLoggedIn', function () { //CBSi.log("== LF Logging In User =="); changeDOM(); removeLfError(); if ((typeof user_profile.socialsess != "undefined") && (user_profile.socialsess == 1)){ change_avatars(); } //console.log("Logged in changing comment format"); setTimeout(function(){change_profile_link()},2000); }); widget.on('userLoggedOut', function () { //CBSi.log("== LF Logging Out User =="); document.cookie = "lf_social_login=; expires=0; path=/" }); widget.on('commentCountUpdated', function (countData) { //CBSi.log("== LF Comment Added =="); updateCommentCounts('.commentsBubble',countData); }); widget.on('commentPosted', function (countData) { updateAuthorLinks(); }); }); });

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/cbssportsline/nfl_news/~3/7fI8G1vfqC0/manti-teo-wins-back-support-during-2013-nfl-combine-press-conference

Torrey Smith Brother fiona apple awkward awkward CJ Spiller tracy morgan Chase.com

Theological Introduction to the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: www.nextag.com --- Friday, February 22, 2013
Rating: No user ratings Price Range: $53 ...

Source: http://prf.hn/click/foreign_identifier%3A2828/destination%3Ahttp%3A//xml.nextag.com/goto.jsp%3Fp=2828&search=articles&syndctx=AQAeXfGxJ3IhnjMy3McBXxitBgHv_z5iK5M8O96DFA8FtA~~&url=%252FTheological-Introduction-to-the-1234213440%252

corned beef recipe time change rpi dst friends with kids pacific standard time northern mariana islands

Friday, February 22, 2013

Oh Oscars, we love you, we hate you

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Oh, Oscars. We love you, we hate you. You're the king of all awards shows, but you still bring with you all the problems of any awards show.

Gary Hershorn / Reuters

Oh, Oscars. We love you, we hate you.

Maybe we're just jealous. Jealous because we worked really hard on that TPS report last spring, and yet were neither paid millions of dollars for it nor invited to a glamorous televised ceremony a year later to be praised for it. But then again, we didn't have our fashion choices mocked by a thousand bloggers, or have our disappointed face made into a meme when we lost to Jim from Accounting.

WHAT WE LOVE ABOUT THE OSCARS:

1. The fashion
Yes, it's getting weirder all the time, but still, stars clean up for the Academy Awards in a classier way than they do the other awards shows. Jennifer Lopez's famous?cleavage-splitting, double-taped green dress? She wore that to the 2000 Grammys. Grace Kelly's breathtaking ice-blue satin Edith Head gown? She wore that to the 1955 Oscars. Advantage: Oscars.

2. The In Memoriam segment
Hollywood's been around long enough now that some of our favorite players have left us for that great stage-door canteen in the sky. In 2012 alone, we lost Whitney Houston, Ernest Borgnine, Andy Griffith, Jack Klugman, Nora Ephron and so many more. Seeing them, even so briefly, as the screens of the In Memoriam segment flash by, gives us a last chance to remember the joy they brought to our lives.

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Liz Taylor was included in the 2012 In Memoriam segment.

Amy Sancetta / AP file

Angelina Jolie's leg went to the 2012 Oscars.

3. The random storylines that pop up
The Oscar producers try to make everything run like clockwork, but humans are human, and delightfully so. People mess up. ?Angelina Jolie weirdly juts her leg out of her gown on the red carpet and the world doubles over with laughter. Sacha Baron Cohen dumps fake Kim Jong-il ashes on Ryan Seacrest and Seacrest lets his professional facade down for a second and looks legitimately ticked off. It's all the weirder for happening at the Oscars, that rehearsed-to-within-an-inch-of-its-life gala, kind of like when the snooty lady at church tucks her dress in her pantyhose by mistake.

WHAT WE HATE ABOUT THE OSCARS:

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

James Franco and Anne Hathaway were criticized for their 2011 Oscar hosting attempt.

1. The hosts
This year, it's "Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane, so we're holding out hope things could be lively and even entertaining. But in the past, many Oscar hosts have been snore-worthy. No one dares push the envelope as Ricky Gervais did at the Golden Globes, and the less said about James Franco and Anne Hathaway's 2011 attempt, the better.

2. The listy speeches
The best speeches come when the winner appears to speak from the heart, even if their remarks are prepared. Share a sweet little anecdote about the film, or how you practiced for this day as a kid by delivering your speech into a bottle of Love's Baby Soft, and you'll find the audience rapt. But recite a list of everyone from your eight managers to your dog-sitter to your pool boy, and we're wishing we could yank that statuette back from you and give it to someone else.

3. The Academy's voting habits
The stereotypes about Academy voters being old and boring and in love with their own industry still hold up. "The Artist" was a fine film, but did Hollywood reward it so heartily in 2012 for its high quality, or for being about Hollywood? Was 2006's "Crash" really the best film of that year? And who can't sing, or at least hum, "Blame Canada" from the 1999 ?"South Park" movie? Yet it lost the best original song Oscar to a bland Phil Collins love song from Disney's "Tarzan." Who's responsible for that outrage? We blame Canada.

Love the Oscars? Hate the Oscars? Tell us why on Facebook.

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/21/17033132-oh-oscars-we-love-your-fashion-but-hate-your-listy-speechmaking?lite

polar bear plunge lovelace antioch the grey review demi moore 911 call ipo jim rome

United says removing Boeing 787 from flight plans

(Reuters) - United Continental Holdings said on Thursday it was taking Boeing Co's grounded 787 Dreamliner out of its flying plans through June 5, except for a Denver-to-Tokyo route scheduled for a tentative launch in May.

Meanwhile, Japanese investigators studying fuel leaks on the 787 found a problem with the paint on equipment controlling the fuel-tank valve, the Nikkei news service reported, citing people familiar with the details.

United's decision to mostly exclude the 787 from its schedule until June comes as other airlines that have 787s are setting schedules for coming months while still uncertain about when the plane will be able to resume service.

The Dreamliner fleet has been grounded for the past five weeks after batteries burned on two planes in January. Boeing is due to meet with the head of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration on Friday to present measures designed to prevent such failures, a source told Reuters, even though the root cause of the problem has not been determined.

United spokeswoman Christen David said in a statement on Thursday that the carrier's Denver to Tokyo Narita International route, originally set to start March 31, had been postponed to May 12. The launch would ultimately depend on a successful resolution of the safety incidents that have grounded the 787. Other service with the 787 won't resume until after June 5, David said.

"We are taking the 787 out of our schedule through June 5, except for Denver-Narita, which will tentatively launch on May 12," United's statement said.

Boeing was not immediately available for comment.

United's statement doesn't mean that the 787 won't be ready to fly again before June 5, said Carter Leake, an analyst at BB&T Capital Markets.

Rather, it means United won't put the jet into service before then. If the plane is available sooner, but United can't use it on its scheduled routes, Boeing likely would have to pay United compensation that Leake estimates at about $800,000 a month, based on lease rates.

"This does not tell you that Boeing's plane is grounded until June," he said. "It tells you that Boeing's costs to United could be as if it's grounded until June."

A "superbox" to contain the battery or some other fix "might come sooner, but United is not paying" to have the jet until after June 5, he addded.

In a similar move, Poland's national airline LOT said last week that it would not use the 787 before October and that it is seeking compensation from Boeing.

United is the only U.S. carrier currently operating the 787 and has six of the planes, worth $207 million apiece at list prices. Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways have most of the 50 jets delivered to airlines so far.

Meanwhile, Japan's Nikkei newspaper, citing sources, reported in its February 22 morning edition that Transport Ministry investigators found deficiencies in how electrical-insulating paint was applied to a driving mechanism that opens and closes the 787's fuel-tank valve. The ministry also found foreign matter stuck on a switch on the mechanism.

The ministry is discussing the cause and measures to prevent recurrences with the U.S. FAA and Boeing, the Nikkei report added.

In addition to the battery problem, investigators have been looking into a case in which a Japan Airlines 787 leaked fuel while taxiing to the runway for take-off at Boston's Logan International Airport in January.

(Reporting by Karen Jacobs; Additional reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Bernard Orr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/united-says-removing-boeing-787-flight-plans-194435472--finance.html

Super Bowl 2013 Commercials Evasi0n NFL.com Superdome Iron Man 3 Trailer Super Bowl 2013 Ray Rice

Money News: Wash Post's Samuelson: Unemployment High Due to ...

Before starting off on the Tea Party?s craziness, I would like you to examine some images from two nearly identical tragedies that occurred over a hundred years and several thousand miles apart. Later in the post I hope to make a connection between these twin horrors and the strange metamorphosis of the American right. Please bear with me.

Compare this Reuters photograph of the Tazreen Fashions Fire, Bangladesh ? 2012 with the photograph below of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire:

The great mystery of American politics, a mystery which no one in the world can fathom, not even most Americans, is why so much money, hot air and spittle is being spent on literally paralyzing the American political system and making it impossible, not just to negotiate solutions, but to even have an intelligent conversation about solving the problems facing everyone, everywhere today. For that is what the Tea Party is really about: making first thought, then negotiation, and finally action impossible.

What is all this sound and fury covering up?

In my opinion it has much to do with where contemporary globalization is leading, the forces that it is setting in motion, which for historically minded Americans could elicit a bit of d?j? vu.

It seems to me that the globalization of today is in many ways similar on a world scale to the explosion of growth, power and sophistication of the US economy in the period after the Civil War, commonly called ?The Gilded Age?. This was the period of the ?robber barons? and viewed nostalgically by many of the American right as a paradise of anarcho-capitalism. This was a period of immense growth and innovation, but also one of enormous inequality, suffering and exploitation and financial crisis, all of it interpenetrated by an ubiquitous political corruption as the enormous new wealth so recently created set about purchasing and deforming to its benefit the institutions of American government: federal, state and local.

The excesses of the Gilded Age gave birth to a mass reform movement in the United States called, ?Progressivism?. This movement, in a titanic struggle, bridging decades, among other things brought into effect: the regulation of interstate commerce, the breaking up of the monopolies known as ?trusts?, laws regulating the purity of food and drugs, the rise of labor unions, laws eliminating child labor and in 1913, even progressive income tax, something which still causes intense indignation on the American ultra-right.

I would maintain that today the ?Gilded Age? is happening on a global scale. The same viral growth and innovation; the same inequality, suffering and exploitation and financial crisis and similar corruption as rootless, multinational corporations evade much needed tax money and corrupt the political systems where they find themselves, world wide. And today we can add the more recent concerns for climate change and renewable energy.

Action and reaction, just as in the late 19th and early 20th centuries the grotesque abuses of the system brought forth a muscular reform movement to tame the beasts of the Gilded Age, today the feeling is growing all over the world that this new Gilded Age must also be brought under some sort of rational control and regulation. As the center of the world economic system, any general reform and regulation of globalization logically must begin in the United States of America.

That is what the one-percent are afraid of and that is why they fund and promote the paralysis of the American political system.

Just to show you the symmetry between the urge to reform one hundred years ago and to reform today, I?d ask you to take the trouble to read two texts, they are like the tiny samples taken to analyze DNA.

I?m sure you have heard about the terrible fire in a garment factory in Bangladesh a few days ago,which took the lives of over a hundred workers trapped in the blaze, (the color photo at the top of the page shows the aftermath) so the first text I?d like you to read, is about that tragedy:

(?) On the third floor, where firefighters later recovered 69 bodies, Ms. Pakhi was stitching sweater jackets for C&A, a European chain. On the fifth floor, workers were making Faded Glory shorts for Walmart. Ten bodies were recovered there. On the sixth floor, a man named Hashinur Rahman put down his work making True Desire lingerie for Sears and eventually helped save scores of others. Inside one factory office, labor activists found order forms and drawings for a licensee of the United States Marine Corps that makes commercial apparel with the Marines? logo. In all, 112 workers were killed in a blaze last month that has exposed a glaring disconnect among global clothing brands, the monitoring system used to protect workers and the factories actually filling the orders. After the fire, Walmart, Sears and other retailers made the same startling admission: They say they did not know that Tazreen Fashions was making their clothing.(?) David Hasanat, the chairman of the Viyellatex Group, one of the country?s most highly regarded garment manufacturers, pointed out that global apparel retailers often depend on hundreds of factories to fill orders. Given the scale of work, retailers frequently place orders through suppliers and other middlemen who, in turn, steer work to factories that deliver low costs ? a practice he said is hardly unknown to Western retailers and clothing brands. The order for Walmart?s Faded Glory shorts, documents show, was subcontracted from Simco Bangladesh Ltd., a local garment maker. ?It is an open secret to allow factories to do that,? Mr. Hasanat said. ?End of the day, for them it is the price that matters.? New York Times

A little over a hundred years ago something almost identical happened in the USA. You probably know about it, but read the following text to refresh your memory and to compare it with the Bangladesh tragedy:

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York City on March 25, 1911, was the deadliest industrial disaster in the history of the city of New York and resulted in the fourth highest loss of life from an industrial accident in U.S. history. It was also the second deadliest disaster in New York City ? after the burning of the General Slocum on June 15, 1904 ? until the destruction of the World Trade Center 90 years later. The fire caused the deaths of 146 garment workers, who died from the fire, smoke inhalation, or falling or jumping to their deaths. Most of the victims were recent Jewish and Italian immigrant women aged sixteen to twenty-three; of the victims whose ages are known, the oldest victim was Providenza Panno at 43, and the youngest were 14-year-olds Kate Leone and ?Sara? Rosaria Maltese. Because the managers had locked the doors to the stairwells and exits ? a common practice at the time to prevent pilferage and unauthorized breaks ? many of the workers who could not escape the burning building jumped from the eighth, ninth, and tenth floors to the streets below. The fire led to legislation requiring improved factory safety standards and helped spur the growth of the International Ladies? Garment Workers? Union, which fought for better working conditions for sweatshop workers. (emphasis mine)Wikipedia

The only real difference between the two fires is that today the money is not bringing poor immigrant women to America to do the sewing, they are sending the sewing out to poor women in their home countries.

The text I put into bold type, the reforms the Triangle fire produced, is the key, the symbol, to explain the energy and funds behind the Tea Party?s mostly successful struggle against rational thought in the USA today.

It is easy to imagine that we will be seeing more and more incidents like these sweatshop fires, some of them may cause thousands of deaths, pollute the atmosphere or spread disease in much the same way that the financial crisis that began in the USA has spread around the world. Today, unless the world cooperates to regulate, what goes around, comes around.

Now it happens that there is only one state in the whole world that is still, for the moment at least, potentially powerful enough to be able to bring this situation under some sort of control at home and abroad, and this state is in theory a democracy that is elected by its citizens to serve them.

That state is, of course, the United States of America.

Now, for the state apparatus of the United States of America to bring the situation under control in America and to a great extent around the world, all the branches of the state, executive, legislative and judiciary would have to be in nearly total alignment, as they were during World War Two.

Keeping that from happening, paralyzing the political system, with racism and paranoia so that unity is entirely unthinkable except around ?supporting our troops? to defend the ?homeland? against the threat of ?terrorism? is what the Tea Party movement and every move of Fox and Kochs is about.

So that is what it is really all about: it is about not legislating and not getting things done? to paralyze the government of the United States of America at a critical time in its history and the history of the world at large. To prevent the system from flushing itself out and regenerating itself. To cut the wires of the burglar alarms so they can sack the house, the house of everyone in the world, in peace. Their peace.

Cross posted from: http://seaton-newslinks.blogspot.com

Tags: Submit Your News??Politics??Conspiracy??Spontaneous??Confessions??
Author: David Seaton
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/firedoglake/fdl/~3/1tteSQFSey8/

Check out these interesting topics:

Source: http://www.birchindigo.com/money-news-wash-posts-samuelson-unemployment-high-due-to-risk-averse-society/

joe johnson scientology Wimbledon 2012 TV Schedule fourth of july Jason Terry IFE Fireworks 2012 4th Of July

Thursday, February 21, 2013

App Test Platform TestFlight Comes To Android In Private Beta, Says 300K Apps Uploaded On iOS

testflight logoOver the past couple of years, TestFlight has become the standard choice for giving beta testers (and tech bloggers) early access to iOS apps. Today the service is launching for Android developers too ? including cross-platform developers who already use TestFlight on iOS. As an iPhone owner, I'm less familiar with the Android app ecosystem, but I have heard that there isn't as big a need for something like TestFlight. In an email interview, co-founder Ben Satterfield acknowledged that "over the air distribution on Android isn't a pain point like it is on iOS," but he said that TestFlight has received more than 10,000 requests for Android support from developers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IW4LTkVv1M4/

kyle williams florida debate rand paul mark kirk florida gop debate freddie mac kristin cavallari

China behind cyberattacks on US firms Report

Australian News.Net Tuesday 19th February, 2013

A 60-page report released Tuesday by Mandiant says that a Shanghai-based group of hackers designated by the company as APT-1 "is likely government-sponsored and one of the most persistent of China's cyber threat actors".

APT-1 activities appear to coincide with those of People's Liberation Army Unit 61398, whose headquarters are in the Pudong district of Shanghai, Mandiant said.

Though the company has been unable to directly trace APT-1 hackers to the Unit 61398 building, it believes there can be no other explanation for why so many attacks are launched from the same, relatively small area.

The attacks have been on the rise for two years, according to Mandiant, adding that cyber-strikes on least 20 sectors have been identified, from military contractors to chemical plants and including telecommunications companies.

"Hacking attacks are transnational and anonymous. Determining their origins are extremely difficult. We don't know how the evidence in this so-called report can be tenable," a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said Tuesday.

"Arbitrary criticism based on rudimentary data is irresponsible, unprofessional and not helpful in resolving the issue," Hong Lei said.

--IANS/EFE

rd

Source: http://www.australiannews.net/index.php/sid/212690778/scat/4a8b544d0e80ba53

brian mcknight sbux nfldraft asante samuel salton sea arizona immigration law aubrey huff

What does Sony have in store for the next PlayStation?

Featured

PlayStation 4 Controller

After months of rumor and speculation, Sony has revealed its new game machine ? the PlayStation 4 ? as well as a new controller with a touch... Read more

Sony will take the wraps off a brand new video game machine today. Or at least, everyone expects the electronics giant to unveil the successor to the PlayStation 3 when it kicks off the mysterious and yet-to-be-explained event it's hosting at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City this evening.

Sony has invited the world's gaming press to attend what it is calling a "PlayStation Event" (which it teased earlier this month with a vague video). The event starts at 6 p.m. Eastern and the NBC News games team will be on hand to cover whatever happens.

Sony has long been rumored to be working on the next PlayStation, codenamed Orbis. (Some are calling this the "PlayStation 4," but of course, Sony has not confirmed the device, let alone the name.) But if the company does indeed show off its new machine this evening, it will signal the start of a whole new video games arms race.

Sure, Nintendo revealed its new home game machine ? the Wii U ? late last year, but it is Sony and Microsoft who are widely expected to go head-to-head in the coming years with powerful home consoles that leverage the Internet and online gaming in new ways. Microsoft is rumored to be working on the successor to the Xbox 360 (codenamed Durango). Perhaps in answer to Sony's opening volley, Microsoft is expected to unveil its own new console in the coming weeks or months.

As anticipation for Sony's PlayStation event has grown, so have the rumors and leaks reportedly revealing the specifications for this mysterious machine. Here's a quick look at what Sony could have in store for us if the information making the rounds proves to be accurate:

The next PlayStation will come in two models
Sony will unveil two PS models priced at $429 and $529, reports gaming news site Kotaku.com, which got the information from a "reliable source." The source also says that Sony will launch the console in November ? information that aligns with previous rumors and leaks.

You'll be able to control the next PlayStation with your phone or tablet
That same source also told Kotaku that players will be able to control the PlayStation with a smartphone or tablet. That is, you'll be able to use your phone to chat online with PS friends and to buy games which will then be downloaded to the console (the latter of which which sounds a bit like Microsoft's Xbox 360-interfacing SmartGlass app).

The next PlayStation will head to the cloud
Last year Sony bought cloud gaming service Gaikai so it doesn't exactly come as a surprise to hear rumors that Sony will use their new console to stream video games to your home.

Kotaku and a source that goes by the name Superannuation report that Sony has registered several domains based around the phrase "PlayStation Cloud." Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal has reported that its own sources say the PlayStation 4 will stream games as a way to allow people to play PlayStation 3 games on the new machine.

The next PlayStation will come with a new controller
Last year we learned that Sony had patented a controller that splits into two. But the most recent rumors suggest that Sony will, instead, reveal a new game controller with a built-in touch-screen. Photos supposedly showing the redesigned controller have even been making the rounds. But whether they are prototypes, the final model or even legitimate remains to be seen.

The next PlayStation will record and share your gameplay
Edge has reported that its sources say the next Sony game machine will continually record the most recent 15 minutes of onscreen gaming for players to edit and then broadcast if they want. They also report that the redesigned controller will have a new "Share" button so players can share screenshots and video clips online.

The next PlayStation will be more powerful than the next Xbox
With Sony expected to go head-to-head with Microsoft, one of the big questions is which new machine will out-muscle the other. Though powerful specs are not the only thing that determines success in a video games arms race, it'll certainly be interesting to see which console has the beefier guts. And so far, rumors indicate that Sony will dominate in the power department with 50 percent more raw computational power than Microsoft's forthcoming machine.

Of course, we'll find out just how accurate some of these rumors and leaks are later today. Sony will be livestreaming its event right here starting at 3 p.m. PT/6 p.m. ET. Our own NBC News games team will be on hand at the event in New York as well. So stay tuned here to InGame where we will be bringing you the PlayStation news as it happens.

Winda Benedetti writes about video games for NBC News. You can follow her tweets about games and other things on Twitter here @WindaBenedetti and you can follow her on Google+. Meanwhile, be sure to check out the IN-GAME FACEBOOK PAGE to discuss the day's gaming news and reviews.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/ingame/what-does-sony-have-store-next-playstation-1C8435299

Alfonso Ribeiro adam sandler College Football Scoreboard nfl scores nfl scores Devon Walker Tom Cruise

Friday, February 15, 2013

We Finally Got an Umbrella Insurance Policy - Bargaineering

Umbrella InsuranceBack in 2006, in the first few years of running Bargaineering, I asked you all whether I needed an umbrella insurance policy. Practically everyone said yes. I even went as far as asking GEICO for a quote on a $1 million dollar umbrella insurance policy, which would?ve cost me $124 a year ? or about on par with renter?s insurance.

It?s so cheap, probably because it?s not used very often. You have so many other insurances ?in the way? that you don?t get to the umbrella policy unless things get pretty bad. Then again, that?s why you get insurance. It?s to protect you from the ?pretty bad? stuff right?

So last week, after consulting with a financial adviser and going over the things that I might want to look into, I asked my State Farm agent for a quote. The price for $1 million of coverage was $142 a year. Add an additional million and it?s just another $71. It?s more than what GEICO quoted me six years ago but we also get $65 off our auto insurance for a net increase, on two million, of $148. I don?t know if GEICO included a multi-line discount in their original quote so this might not be an apples to apples comparison.

I?m not one to be easily swayed by the fear argument (since it took me six years to get a policy that took five minutes to implement) but one thing did resonate with me from the last post ? monkeyjoe saying ?All it takes is one bad accident on a slippery day for your wages to be garnished for the rest of your life.?

Given the cost and the protection it affords, it?s a lot like renter?s insurance. You could live happily without it, as many renter?s do, but all it takes is one unlucky scenario and you?ll wish you had it. I?ll just chalk it up to good luck that I didn?t need it the last six years? and will smile on my good fortune if I don?t need it for another fifty. :)

Do you have umbrella insurance? If you do, what pushed you to get it? If not, why not

(Photo: Loca Luna / Anna Gay)

{ 9 comments, please add your thoughts now! }

Related Posts

Source: http://www.bargaineering.com/articles/finally-umbrella-insurance-policy.html

gasland college football recruiting bjork national signing day 2012 landon collins dorial green beckham mike kelly

Napolitano Sponsors Bill to Provide Mental Health Services in ...

A bill, sponsored by Rep. Grace Napolitano, D-Calif., along with 45 original cosponsors, is proposing to fund on-site school-based mental health services for youth.

Napolitano, Glendora?s Congressional representative in the 32nd District, has championed mental health services, citing mental illness as a major issue in today?s gun violence.

The Mental Health in Schools Act would create a competitive grant program in providing $200,000,000 in competitive grants of up to $1 million each that would allow school districts to hire mental health professionals for school sites.

?Mental wellness is just as important as physical wellness, and we must reduce stigma to ensure the quality of life of our youngsters, our families, our communities, and our returning service members,? Napolitano said in a written statement. ?It is okay to seek help. We must secure and protect the federal funding needed to carry out affordable mental health services and programs for all Americans. Government recognition for the need of mental health services is long overdue.?

Source: http://glendora.patch.com/articles/napolitano-sponsors-bill-to-provide-mental-health-services-in-schools

kyle orton ncaa tournament schedule black and tan dwight howard trade ncaa bracket 2012 2012 ncaa bracket john carlson

Fix for the Microsoft Exchange bug in iOS 6.1 coming soon according to Apple

Fix for the Microsoft Exchange bug in iOS 6.1 coming soon according to AppleApple has announced that it is working on a fix for the Microsoft Exchange bug that has been widely reported by users upgrading to iOS 6.1. The bug which is causing severe headaches for system administrators is said to be caused by a user responding to an exception to a recurring calendar event. This exception is a change to a single instance of a repeating calendar event.

When you respond to an exception to a recurring calendar event with a Microsoft Exchange account on a device running iOS 6.1, the device may begin to generate excessive communication with Microsoft Exchange Server. You may notice increased network activity or reduced battery life on the iOS device. This extra network activity will be shown in the logs on Exchange Server and it may lead to the server blocking the iOS device. This can occur with iOS 6.1 and Microsoft Exchange 2010 SP1 or later, or Microsoft Exchange Online (Office365).

Microsoft released a support article earlier in the week giving iOS 6.1 users with an Exchange account three options to try. The final two options included throttling iOS 6 user?s access to the server or even blocking them from the Exchange Server altogether. It is good to hear that Apple will have a solution coming through although there is no time frame given for the update.

Source: Apple Support Article

Source: http://www.imore.com/fix-microsoft-exchange-bug-ios-61-coming-soon-according-apple

christina aguilera etta james funeral sundance film festival the flintstones etta james ufc on fox evans vs davis fast times at ridgemont high

Brown-and-white whistling owl ID'd as new species

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) ? Researchers looking for a nocturnal bird in Indonesia accidentally identified a new species of owl ? one that has a distinct whistling song and is believed to exist nowhere else in the world.

The Rinjani Scops owl was first identified in 2003 and has since been spotted only on Lombok island, about 25 kilometers (15 miles) from the popular resort island of Bali. The findings were published Wednesday in the online journal PLOS ONE.

The small owl, with brown and white feathers and big golden eyes, had been confused with a similar-looking species for more than a century. But scientists from Sweden and the U.S., who were visiting the island doing separate research on another nocturnal bird, both recorded the Rinjani Scops owl's vocalizations. They noticed that its whistled note was entirely different from other songs, including that of the widespread Moluccan Scops owl, or Otus magicus.

"I am surprised that the true identity of this bird has remained hidden from the scientific world for so long," George Sangster, lead author from the Swedish Museum of Natural History, said in an email. "The Rihnjani Scops owl is quite common and can be found on various parts of the island. It is also very vocal, so it is hard to miss."

He said the discovery was not published for 10 years due to the work needed to verify the finding.

The researchers reviewed all previous work and museum specimens dating to 1896. They found a report mentioning the Rinjani Scops owl's tone, which differs from the barking cry of the Moluccan Scops owl. However, plumage, size and shape were primarily used to identify species until the late 1970s when vocalizations were added. Lombok also remained less visited by bird researchers than other parts of Indonesia, which may explain why it took longer for the Rinjani Scops owl to be identified.

"Now that there is a beautiful owl known only from this island, we hope that more bird watchers will visit Lombok," Sangster said. "Ornithologists have long patted themselves on the back, believing that the taxonomy of birds is 'almost complete.' With each new discovery, this becomes less credible. It underscores that even after 150 years of scientific study we still do not know all the birds in the Indo-Malayan region."

More fieldwork was conducted to determine that the Rinjani Scops owl ? named Otus jolandae after Sangster's wife who first discovered the species with him ? was not found elsewhere. However, Sangster said more investigation is need to completely rule out the bird's existence in extreme western Sumbawa, a neighboring island.

The owl has long been known by Indonesian bird experts, but they too believed it was part of the more widespread species.

"We are proud of this new discovery as it has added another endemic species in Indonesia," said Yoppy Hidayanto, coordinator of Burung Indonesia, a bird conservation group in Bogor, West Java. "There are still so many things that could be explored about birds in Indonesia."

The new owl's English name comes from Mount Rinjani, Indonesia's second-highest volcano, located on Lombok.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brown-white-whistling-owl-idd-species-021033834.html

north korea missile launch modesto st louis weather guinea bissau google stock google stock china gdp