Thursday, May 23, 2013

The Xbox One hears all, sees all, and steals Google's dreams. But does it also leave the door open for Apple?

Xbox One

While Apple has iAd and aggregates traffic data, for the most part they've thus far been content to merely take our money, give us shiny boxes, and not really bother much about who we are and what we do. Not all companies make their money off of massive hardware margins, however. Google, for their part, wants to catalog the world's information. They want to bring you info before you know you need it. They want to build the Star Trek computer. That kind of omniscient service requires an omnipresent awareness that needs to know as much about who and what you are as possible. Microsoft has been transitioning from software powerhouse to services alternative for years now, and with the newly-announced Xbox One, they're arguably about to take over the living room. With Google on one end and Microsoft on the other, will Apple become an oasis for the more privacy conscious among us?

A picture of you

Google Now

Google's presence is felt just about everywhere. Google is the dominant search engine on desktops and in mobile. Google builds the operating system that powers an increasing percentage of smartphones. Google offers an email service and a social networking service and instant messaging so much more. Google has fingers in every pot they can reach, though how far they've successfully plunged said fingers varies. When it comes to the living room, however, where Google's fingertips have just barely grazed the surface of the stock, but with the Xbox One, Microsoft is ladling out the soup like it's their job. And with the that ladle is getting even bigger.

To build that omniscient Star Trek computer, Google needs buckets and buckets of data about you. They get a lot of that just by your using Google's services. Your search queries are tabulated and your email contents are collated, and your friend patterns are analyzed. Even just using Google services through a desktop yields a tremendous amount of data about your being. If you're using Google services on your mobile device, such as an Android device or by using Google Now on an iPhone, Google learns even more about you, including where you go, how long you stay there, what you search for on the go, and more. Of course, those settings can be switched off, but the default behavior is for Google to know.

Google's picture of you can be stunningly accurate and prescient.

Google takes all of this data and builds a picture what it thinks you as a person look like. With some massaging of that data - telling Google that, no, I am in fact not interested in more on that topic, it was just a search for article research, thanks - Google's picture of you can be stunningly accurate and prescient. I carry both an iPhone and an Android device (specifically, a Nexus 4) on a regular basis, I use Gmail for work and personal, I search with Google dozens of times a day, and so forth. Google Now has built an interesting picture of me. It knows when I'm going to be flying, it knows when to offer up nearby restaurants and what I'm likely to like, it knows how far it is to my house and how long it will take thanks to traffic, and it knows that the weekends are the most likely time I'm going to go to the theater, and when I do I'm likely to check out the latest science fiction or mindless action flick.

But the behavioral tracking offered by a smartphone only extends to when I use it (excepting location tracking when I'm just carrying it around, of course). To be as omniscient as Google aims to be, more data is required. There's never enough data to accomplish what Google wants to accomplish. That means Google needs to know more about you. By and large what Google knows about us are things that we either tell Google directly (by way of our searches) and what we let Google know (Gmail, smartphone location tracking, etc).

Google's getting more personal with experiments like Google Glass, but even that requires that you be wearing the device for it to be collecting more information. And really right now the Glass experiment seems to be more focusing on delivering content directly to your eyeball than pushing more data about yourself to the Google cloud. That could change eventually, but it's not the reality of Glass right now. Frankly, as with many Google projects, the end game with Glass isn't exactly clear for us, and we aren't certain it's clear for Google either.

Your couch, the beachhead

Xbox One

Where Google has failed to make its mark, though, is beyond the smartphone and the desktop. The holy grail in Google's hardware trifecta isn't Glass - it's the living room. Google has tried time and again to make Google TV a success, but they've run into tremendous roadblocks of poor consumer awareness (and thus adoption) and severe interoperability problems that plague any effort to unify home entertainment with a single device.

Microsoft, for all their troubles, has actually established a covert beachhead in the living room hardware space with their Xbox game consoles. Being the cash-rich technology behemoth with long-term vision that they are, Microsoft has been more than willing to play the long game when it comes to living room technology. To wit, in less than ten years Microsoft's Xbox has become an accepted part of many home entertainment set-ups, getting favorable comparisons to long-time gaming companies like Sony and Nintendo. It cost them many billions of dollars to get it rolling, but now the Xbox is a gaming force with which one must contend.

With Microsoft's just announced and coming-later-this-year Xbox One, they're pushing up off the beach and into full home entertainment domination. It's an impressive piece of hardware - essentially it's a powerful and optimized gaming computer for your home theater stack - with some interesting features. The Xbox One features an HDMI pass-through so you can plug in your home cable box and control it (with IR blasters - joy) and a Blu-Ray drive. Games can be downloaded or purchased in stores, but purchasing in stores is more just like buying a gift card to download it later.

The Xbox One is the omnipresent surveyor of your living room. It sees all and hears all.

But most interesting is the new Kinect sensor. The depth-sensing, body-tracking sensor bar is even more accurate and detailed than before, going so far as being able to detect the movement of your wrists and your heartbeat from a distance. But what's possibly more interesting is that it's always on. If you walk up to your TV and say "Xbox on," Kinect is already listening, it hears you, and it boots up the Xbox. The Kinect camera uses facial recognition to determine who just told it to turn on, and can log you into your account and have all of your games and media at the ready. The Xbox One is the omnipresent surveyor of your living room. It sees all and hears all.

That can sound pretty scary, and in reality Microsoft isn't likely to use this for nefarious purposes. Being evil with all that data can destroy consumer trust in your product, and the dollars all that data was supposed to be used to pry from wallets will go elsewhere. But the ramifications of having an always-on camera and microphone in your living room, and having that attached to a device that knows what you're watching and is connected to the web, can be far-reaching.

See all, hear all, know all

Xbox One Kinect Sensor

This kind of all-aware technology can offer a massive trove of data on your habits and preferences that a company like Microsoft or Google - or Apple, for that matter - would kill to have their hands on. While Google will use it to better target advertising and maybe sell you some content from the Google Play store, Microsoft and Apple aren't so invested in the advertising game (though they do have fingers dabbling the surface of those pots, so they're not entirely innocent here). Microsoft and Apple are more interested in selling you content - books and movies and television shows and games and music.

Having computers and tablets and smartphones and corresponding software and services ecosystems can go a long way towards building that picture of who you are, what you like, and what you're apt to buy. On a micro scale, Netflix used that kind of data from the viewing habits of their users to construct the House of Cards series to be perfectly-suited to what the average Netflix user is likely to watch, and likely to watch a lot.

They want to take all the data they can to build a picture of you. The end goal for all three is to offer products that better suit your needs.

On the macro scale, Microsoft, Apple, and Google want to take all the data they can to build a picture of you. The end goal for all three is to offer products that better suit your needs, and thus are more likely to remove dollars from your wallet. Google just so happens to be the only one that's really upfront about their ambitions here, with a bravado and willingness to toe up to and even occasionally cross the creepy line in the goal of better serving you. That creepy line act can induce some uncomfortable feelings, however, but that's the price of dealing with Google, it seems.

But the living room has remained elusive to Google and Apple. Google has tried hard and failed to gain a foothold on that beach. Apple treats it like a hobby, offering up just the Apple TV. It's a fine device, but it's merely a portal to content you either already own or have to seek out. Microsoft owns a wide swath of that beach, and with the Xbox One they're going to be able to push deeper into uncharted and unclaimed territory.

If anything, Microsoft has the persistence to pull it off, and things are coming together as far as the Microsoft ecosystem is concerned. Windows 8 may not have been the blockbuster success that Microsoft was hoping for (and Windows RT has been an outright failure thanks to poor messaging and, well, conceiving), and Windows Phone has failed to make a real splash outside of the already tech-aware segment. But Xbox and the living room, Microsoft has succeeded beyond what anybody predicted possible a decade ago when the original black box launched.

Be, know, do

Xbox One Kinect tracking breakdown

Whether or not the push for environmental awareness from Google and Microsoft is a good thing or bad thing is up for debate, and it all comes down to how its used and your own personal comfort levels with such uses. In the end, it's all going to be geared towards making money, either by directly selling you goods, building a service that's so customized to your needs that switching becomes an unfathomable task and insurmountable barrier, or by selling that data to advertisers to offer you the service at no cost.

You've got to pick your poison with the awareness that the company's awareness of you comes entirely with the goal of lining their own pockets. It's capitalism. And through better data comes better products. There's a reason House of Cards has been such a smash hit for the Netflix crowd, and it's because the data showed Netflix exactly what they needed to make it a smash.

Microsoft, Google, and Apple are all driving to build that next smash hit, be it a gaming console that knows everything about your entertainment habits and preferences and can offer up games, movies, and music that suits your tastes; a predictive cloud service with an awareness of where you are, who you're with, and what you're doing so it can make suggestions of where to eat, when to leave to be on time, and what you'll need to know before you get there; or an integrated software ecosystem that shares and manages your data and has your media ready at a tap.

Whether or not this crosses the creepy line is your own personal call. When it comes to these sort of predictive services, Apple is behind the ball, at least with their publicly-announced products. Where Siri has slowly evolved as a personal assistant at your beck and call, Google's Now has become a personal assistant that's eager to answer your question before you've even asked it. Microsoft's voice controls aren't quite as advanced as Siri and their predictive services fall far short of what Google offers. But they've conquered the beach of the living room and are poised to learn more about you than you might ever have realized. And that's not necessarily a bad thing.

The price of privacy

If Google or Microsoft's services appeal to you, if you're willing to trade analytics on the web and in your pocket, and eyes and ears in your living room, then you'll have a long and enjoyable future ahead of you, filled with amazing technology like Google Now and Xbox One.

If ads following you around the web, and around the world, bother you, however, if devices monitoring your viewing habits and potentially your every word and movement creeps you out, then currently Apple offers the only real, mainstream alternative. And mostly, only, because right now Apple doesn't care. Their core businesses aren't predicated on us or our data.

For some people, personal information is a much cheaper currency than money. For others, privacy is very nearly priceless. We're lucky to have choice in the market, and we're even luckier that we can make that choice an informed one.

Do you have any concerns about next-generation technology like Google Glass or Xbox One? Let me know, and let me know if you think Apple will keep positioning themselves as a more privacy-concious alternative!

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/oDXGcn2mliI/story01.htm

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Family sentenced in scheme to smuggle Chinese immigrants

It was a high-dollar human smuggling scheme that spanned the globe.

Immigrants from the Fujian Province of China were smuggled to Mexico and then to Rio Grande Valley and on to Houston.

Each immigrant paid tens of thousands of dollars all of it that lined the pockets of at least four smugglers from Harlingen.

It?s not clear how much the group made during their five years of operation but an undercover operation by U.S. Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) agents shut them down in May 2012.

Three members of a Harlingen family have now been sent to federal prison for their roles in the scheme.

Family Business

Court records show that Oscar Omar Gomez and his sisters ran a profitable human smuggling operation.

According to a plea agreement, Gomez and his sisters Irma Gomez and Iliana Elizabeth Gomez where the Rio Grande Valley connection in global human smuggling scheme.

Illegal immigrants from the Fujian Province in southern coastal China were taken to Mexico and then smuggled across the Rio Grande River.

Both Irma and Iliana Gomez admitted to operating stash houses in Harlingen where immigrants waited to go on to Houston.

Court records show that Oscar Gomez was living in Mexico to avoid an outstanding warrant but would direct the operations by telephone.

Undercover Operation

Federal court records show that HSI agents infiltrated the human smuggling organization back in 2011.

During one incident, a group of seven illegal immigrants from China were taken from the Valley to the parking lot of a Home Depot in Houston.

It?s at that Home Depot where co-defendant Fernando Alejandre admitted to taking custody of the immigrants.

Alejandre admitted in a plea agreement that his job was make sure the Chinese immigrants would get to their final destinations in the East Coast.

Oscar Gomez allegedly once told the undercover HSI agent that he was looking for a way to use Central America and bypass Mexico in the scheme.

Sentencing

All four pleaded guilty to their roles in the scheme but Oscar, Iliana and Irma Gomez all appeared for sentencing before U.S. District Court Judge Hilda Tagle on Friday.

Judge Tagle sentenced Oscar Gomez to 3 years and five months in federal prison.

Irma Gomez was sentenced to 2 years and 7 months in federal prison while Iliana Elizabeth Gomez got 1 years and 10 months.

Alejandre was supposed to be sentenced on Friday but the hearing was postponed until June 26th.

Source: http://www.valleycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=900882

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This Printer Spits Out 10 Meters of Solar Panel Every Minute

Australia is on the cusp of a solar energy revolution. First, a recent study suggests that the country could power its entire national domestic infrastructure using only solar (while slashing the price of home electricity by 70 percent). Now, the University of Melbourne has introduced a new organic PV cell printer that rolls out a functional binder page-sized sheet of solar panel every two seconds, making the production of all those cells cheaper and a whole lot faster.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/HjbOuJVuxSk/this-printer-spits-out-10-meters-of-solar-panel-every-m-508966042

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Hezbollah suffers big losses in Syria battle: activists

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Dominic Evans

AMMAN/BEIRUT (Reuters) - About 30 Lebanese Hezbollah fighters and 20 Syrian soldiers and militiamen loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have been killed in the fiercest fighting this year in the rebel stronghold of Qusair, Syrian activists said on Monday.

Sunday's reported death toll was the highest for Hezbollah in a single day's conflict in Syria, highlighting the increasing intervention by the guerrilla group originally set up by Iran in the 1980s to fight Israeli occupation troops in south Lebanon.

If confirmed, the Hezbollah losses also reflect the extent to which Syria is becoming a proxy conflict between Shi'ite Iran and Gulf Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which back Assad's mostly Sunni enemies.

Western countries and Russia, an ally of Damascus, back opposing sides in this regional free-for-all which is also sucking in Israel. Three times this year Israeli planes have bombed presumed Iranian weapons destined for Hezbollah.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country was "preparing for every scenario" in Syria and held out the prospect of more Israeli strikes on Syria to stop Hezbollah and other opponents of Israel obtaining advanced weapons.

Israel has not confirmed or denied reports by Western and Israeli intelligence sources that its raids targeted Iranian missiles stored near Damascus that it believed were awaiting delivery to Hezbollah, which fought a war with Israel in 2006.

FOG OF WAR

Syrian opposition sources and state media gave widely differing accounts of Sunday's ferocious clashes in Qusair, long used by rebels as a supply route from the nearby Lebanese border to the provincial capital Homs.

Hezbollah has not commented but in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley on Monday several funeral processions could be seen. Pictures of dead fighters were plastered on to cars and mourners waved yellow Hezbollah flags.

Several ambulances were seen on the main Bekaa Valley highway and residents said hospitals had appealed for blood to treat the wounded brought back to Lebanon.

The air and tank assault on the strategic town of 30,000 people appeared to be part of a campaign by Assad's forces to consolidate their grip on Damascus and secure links between the capital and government strongholds in the Alawite coastal heartland via the contested central city of Homs.

The government campaign has coincided with efforts by the United States and Russia, despite their differences on Syria, to organize peace talks to end a conflict now in its third year in which more than 80,000 people have been killed.

A total of 100 combatants from both sides were killed in Sunday's offensive, according to opposition sources, including the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Troops have already retaken several villages around Qusair and have attacked increasingly isolated rebel units in Homs.

"If Qusair falls, God forbid, the opposition in Homs city will be in grave danger," said an activist who called himself Abu Jaafar al-Mugharbil.

State news agency SANA said the army had "restored security and stability to most Qusair neighborhoods" and was "chasing the remnants of the terrorists in the northern district".

Syrian television also showed footage of what it said was an Israeli military Jeep which it said the rebels had been using and which showed the extent of their foreign backing. An Israeli military spokeswoman said the vehicle was decommissioned a decade ago and dismissed the footage as "poor propaganda".

Opposition activists said rebels in Qusair, about 10 km (six miles) from the Lebanese border, had pushed back most of the attacking forces to their original positions in the east of the town and to the south on Sunday, destroying at least four Syrian army tanks and five light Hezbollah vehicles.

The Western-backed leadership of the Free Syrian Army, the loose umbrella group trying to oversee hundreds of disparate rebel brigades, said the Qusair fighters had thwarted Hezbollah with military operations it dubbed "Walls of Death".

Syrian government restrictions on access for independent media make it hard to verify such videos and accounts.

"NO DIALOGUE WITH TERRORISTS"

The fighting raged as Western nations are seeking to step up pressure on Assad - Britain and France want the European Union to allow arms deliveries to rebels - while preparing for the peace talks brokered by Russia and the United States next month.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said "no option is off the table" over the possible arming of rebels if the Syrian government does not negotiate seriously at the proposed talks.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, whose country has shielded Syria from U.N. Security Council action, said Syrian opposition representatives must take part without precondition, apparently referring to their demands for Assad's exit before they come to the table.

Assad has scorned the idea that the conference expected to convene in Geneva could end a war that is fuelling instability and deepening Sunni-Shi'ite rifts across the Middle East.

"They think a political conference will halt terrorists in the country. That is unrealistic," he told the Argentine newspaper Clarin, in a reference to Syria's mainly Sunni rebels.

Assad ruled out "dialogue with terrorists", but it was not clear from his remarks whether he would agree to send delegates to a conference that may in any case falter before it starts due to disagreements between its two main sponsors and their allies.

The fractured Syrian opposition is to discuss the proposed peace conference at a meeting due to start in Istanbul on Thursday, during which it will also appoint a new leadership.

Attacks by troops and militias loyal to Assad, who inherited power in Syria from his father in 2000, have put rebels under pressure in several of their strongholds in recent weeks.

Assad, from Syria's minority Alawite sect, has been battling an uprising which began with peaceful protests in March 2011. His violent response eventually prompted rebels to take up arms.

Hezbollah has supported Assad throughout the crisis but for months denied reports it was fighting alongside Assad's troops.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the Hezbollah casualties on Sunday at 28 dead and more than 70 wounded, while 48 rebel fighters and four civilians were also killed.

Tareq Murei, an activist in Qusair, said six more people were killed on Monday as Syrian army artillery and Hezbollah rocket launchers bombarded rebel-held parts of the town.

Video footage purportedly showed a Syrian tank on fire at a street corner in the town. In another video a warplane was shown flying over the town amid the sound of explosions.

Lebanese security sources said at least 12 Hezbollah fighters were killed in Qusair on Sunday. Seven were to be buried in the Lebanese town of Baalbek and nearby villages on Monday, they said.

(Additional reporting by Erika Solomon in Hermel and Dan Williams in Jerusalem; Writing by Dominic Evans,; Editing by Samia Nakhoul, Alistair Lyon and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hezbollah-suffers-big-losses-syria-battle-activists-132000073.html

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Rapper Chief Keef arrested at hotel near Atlanta

(AP) ? Police in suburban Atlanta say rapper Chief Keef, whose name is Keith Cozart, has been arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.

Dunwoody police spokesman Timothy Fecht says officers arrested Cozart after responding to a call about illegal drug activity at the Le M?ridien hotel just north of Atlanta Monday afternoon. Fecht says officers saw smoke and smelled marijuana wafting from a room.

It wasn't immediately clear what Cozart was doing in Georgia. Representatives at his booking agency said they didn't have contact info for an attorney for the 17-year-old Chicago native and didn't know much about the incident.

Cozart was arrested in January and spent about two months in juvenile detention for violating probation on a weapons conviction. He had received probation for pointing a gun at police in 2012.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-05-21-Chief%20Keef-Arrested/id-b356df4a61fb4b3b912da4e0254c4d24

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nIcE Tv}}}} WWE Extreme Rules 2013 Live : Watch Triple H vs Brock ...

Triple H & Brock Lesnar will face each other in Steel Cage Match of Extreme Rules 2013 aired on Sunday May 19, 2013.

Schedule:
Date: Sunday May 19, 2013
Time: 8PMET or 5PMPT
Venue Scottrade Center
City St. Louis, Missouri
Brock Lesnar vs Triple H (Steel Cage Match)

Watch Live on PPV

Triple H narrowly avoided early retirement at the hands of Brock Lesnar at WrestleMania, but if The Game thought his trouble with Lesnar would end at The Grandest Stage of Them All, he had another thing coming.
Having split two notoriously high-impact battles at SummerSlam and WrestleMania, The King of Kings and ?The Beast Incarnate? will settle the score once and for all at Extreme Rules, and the rubber match will be held in the most inhospitable of environments: the steel cage.

Source: http://www.articlessquad.com/nice-tv-wwe-extreme-rules-2013-live-watch-triple-h-vs-brock-lesnar-steel-cage-match-streaming-online/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=nice-tv-wwe-extreme-rules-2013-live-watch-triple-h-vs-brock-lesnar-steel-cage-match-streaming-online

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Bloggers Table : Shimmer and Azure, Taj Vivanta Yeshwantpur | Sin ...

Sometime ago Taj Vivanta Yeshwantpur invited some of us bloggers for an evening with cocktails and Mediterranean food at Shimmer and Azure, I was so looking forward to the evening with company like Swaps, Swati, Natasha, Neha, Suma and some more friends that came along and food from Azure it was a promising evening.? We started the evening at Shimmer which true to its name was well shimmery :)

Such a lovely sight isn't it?

Such a lovely sight isn?t it?

The making of Oliveto

The making of Oliveto

We were given a demo of three cocktails and encouraged to go behind the bar counter and try our hands at it and yes I did try my hand at making one of them.

and the drink itself

and the drink itself

The first drink we started with was Oliveto a combination of Olive oil , lemon and egg whites along with Gin before it started getting made we were fearing it will be mayo like after we had that drink I thought may be mayo would have been better. Seriously if the balance of the flavors would have been anywhere close to any balance at all it may have tasted like a good cocktail alas what we got tastedjust like mausambi juice in a weird way

The next drink up for the demo was Watermelon and Basil Bramble which I was hoping will redeem some of the disappointment we had from Oliveto but unfortunately we weren?t so lucky, this drink too was way off the balance mark and it was so strange that two glasses were being passed between several people with no one wanting to finish the drink at all and yes that was anotAzure Bloggers Table1her thing I found a little strange, when you invite people for a review you don?t hand over a glass and ask the guests to share. I would have been fine with less of the drink, may be they should have served in shot glasses if they had a conDSC_0132 1straint on the number of drinks they want to serve the guests but somehow the idea of handing over the glasses to us and asking us to taste from the same didn?t go down too well with me.

The last drink Rosemary delight unfortunately couldn?t change my mind about Shimmer either inspite of the fact that it looked oh so pretty

With a heavy heart and great expectations from Azure (since I have eaten there once before and quite enjoyed the food and in general I love Mediterranean food) we moved to the first floor DSC_0145 1hoping the food will make us forget the experience at the bar but I guess we had all left our lucky stars back home that day since the usually good Azure fair was below average in most accounts. I think the only two dishes that stood out for me that day were the sea food broth, where the flavours were fabulous and the shrimps and the clams in it perfectly cooked. The other dish which I have a strong and good memory from that day is the?Plum tomato confit, artichoke and cured buffalo mozzarella with french dressing. I have to say this Azure Bloggers Table4was the dish of the day for me, one of the best confits I have had and the tomatoes were so nicely cooked that there was a discussion on the table on just how they managed it and what have they done to it, unfortunately it wasn?t my dish but I did steal a few bites from Swaps who was sitting right next to me

The beef carpaccio with onion jam and truffle oil was a beautifully plated dish with a good onion jam apart from this in the starters I liked the Falafel

the dips

the dips

which was crispy and crunchy, Maqaali which I found severely lacking in flavors infact I don?t think I understood the dish at all , the Shawarma came inside the pitas and was a bit too dry for my liking, chicken liver on buttered brioche had a good sauce but the liver was chewy, the panko crusted chicken was a dish that didn?t make any impression on me, according to me it?s a dish that has been placed there to please kids which is perfectly fine. I can actually imagine my? 5 yr old son eating it with great relish.

There were also the quintessential Mediterranean dips namely tahini, hummus and?baba ganoush, my heart actually pAzure Bloggers Table6ains to say that none of the dips were really outstanding. Yes they weren?t bad but a place which calls itself a Mediterranean joint you certainly expect better.

By the time the journey to main course had started I was very disheartened Azure Bloggers Table7and was so hoping for the dish that will blow me away a dish that will change my mind into writing a stellar review (I hate writing bad reviews), I ordered Baked Prawns and its a sad day when you leave one of the three jumbo prawns that you have been served because they are overcooked and rubbery and I really struggled to finish the two and did because I was really hungry and didn?t want to go back home and cook again. Sadly the fate of others on the table was similar, I saw people leaving lamb chops and tenderloins because either the meat was over cooked or raw. Another dish I was really looking forward to was the?Tajine but as soon as I got to know that it was only served in the tajine vessel I actually felt cheated, I am wondering how the person who ordered it felt.

And with this we moved to the last course of the day, the course I am so so critical about yes I am talking about the dessert. By this MiaOnWheels1time I had no hopes what so ever and the fact that Swaps told that their baklava was not so stellar last time she came just killed whatever little hopes I had and I have to give it to her because she called that baklava not so stellar according to my view it was BAD. The beauty of baklava for me is the gorgeous layers of phyllo pastry with the crunch of nuts and a fair amount of ghee/butter. Its the explosion of textures and flavors in every bite that makes baklava what it is.? Sadly this had none of it, to be fair to them it had a lot of nuts may be a little more than what usually is there in a baklava but if I had to eat nuts I would fry them in ghee and eat. The warm chocolate fallen cake with organic vanilla ice cream was certainly a little bit of save face for them. It was a decent chocolate cake but it was the ice cream both which came with the cake and which was served as gelato which fell on its face. First I don?t think they were different ice creams atleast there wasn?t any taste of flavor difference between them which is strange since one was the vanilla and other was red wine gelato and two they had big ice crystals in them. So disappointing

In the end with a very heavy heart I have to say that the day had more misses than hits and there were only a couple of items that left mark in my mind such a pity that they had a bad day on the day they had invited bloggers for an evening there. I sincerely hope this was just one off day and they get their act together fast

DSC_0136 1

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Source: http://sinamontales.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/bloggers-table-shimmer-and-azure-taj-vivanta-yeshwantpur/

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Kevin Haskin: Rookie Pruett makes splash at HPT | CJOnline.com

At one point of the NHRA Kansas Nationals, a rookie in the Top Fuel division looked the part.

Leah Pruett could not right her dragster, which inexplicably swerved into another driver?s lane at Heartland Park Topeka during a qualifying round Friday. Pruett came perilously close to a brush with Steve Torrence?s parachute.

The moment was scary, yes. But devastating? Not at all.

Pruett came back and proved why she turned pro, advancing to the semifinal round in the Top Fuel bracket Sunday. The finish was her best to date after winning just one round in four previous NHRA events this season.

?To do well here, keep it straight and beat them all on the light has definitely boosted our confidence,?? said Pruett, ?as well as my confidence with the team that we can make these 50-minute turnarounds.

?The top-tier teams running on $50 million a year can barely get that done, and here we are with a very good crew, though it?s part-time and not working with all the equipment.??

The transition from the Pro Modified division was a leap Pruett, 24, hoped to make earlier. She obtained her Nitro license when she was 21, while connected with Don Schumacher Racing. She did not get a shot then, however, and needed to make an impression driving at the Pro Modified level.

The Dote family, based in Monroe, Ohio, was watching. Involved in racing since 1984, it too wanted to make a jump and compete in the pro division.

The family began fielding a Top Fuel team four years ago. When it noticed Pruett and contacted her prior to this season, she seemed like the ideal face for the operation.

?I think because we built it from scratch, we kind of wanted a driver who was new,?? said Connie Dote, who co-owns the team with her husband, Mike. ?Bringing in someone with rookie status makes it mean more.??

Especially after Pruett bounced back and topped Antron Brown and Doug Kalitta in the first two elimination rounds Sunday after qualifying 11th. She got those wins, remember, after the qualifying scare that happened Friday.

?She jumped right back in the car and said, ?I?m ready,? ?? Dote said. ?Right there you knew she?s a champion. Anything that needs to be handled, she can handle it.??

The odd twist to that incident was that Pruett?s fiancee, Gary Pritchett, is car chief for Torrence?s crew. During the turnaround prior to Sunday?s semifinals, Torrence swung by the Pruett pit to offer any assistance.

?I didn?t see who was standing on my side at the starting line, but I had a feeling we had a lot of people rooting for us,?? Pruett said.

Her upset bid ended in that semifinal run against Tony Schumacher when Pruett?s car caught fire, and she limped to the finish line.

Still, the encouraging finish might have caught a potential sponsor?s eye. If not, Pruett will not be deterred. Part of her responsibilities with the team, which is running a limited NHRA schedule, includes digging into any marketing angles.

The attractive Californian has the savvy to work that side of things, as well as on her engine.

?There?s a philosophy I kind of look at. I?m on the racing track, and I?m racing a Tony Schumacher, a Brittany Force or a Larry Dixon. We?re all on the same race track, but the path we took to get there was totally different,?? Pruett said.

?Once we get in that car, you might have been taking a nap, drinking a smoothie and combing your hair, or you might have been taking out a rear end and fueling it up and sweating your butt off. ... I?m trying to play both sides. I?m trying to find that money to be that championship-caliber team, but I?ve got to do the work to be in that ride.??

Devotion to the job is constant for Pruett?s crew, which is headed by Doug Kuch.

?He put everything together,?? Dote said. ?He?s been the backbone and built it himself.??

Now, Pruett is trying to add more power, by both driving, and selling, the Top Fuel car.

?This is a very cohesive operation,?? Pruett said. ?I can understand what?s happening inside the motor or the clutch. Just driving the car these days doesn?t get you to where you want to be. I wanted to be here and I am. I really enjoy this team.??

Source: http://cjonline.com/sports/auto-racing/2013-05-19/kevin-haskin-rookie-pruett-makes-splash-hpt

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A record Powerball jackpot isn't a record to celebrate

The record Powerball jackpot is only the latest trick by states addicted to gambling revenues to lure nongamblers. Online gaming is also on the horizon, with the first legal website for games of chance now running in Nevada.

By the Monitor's Editorial Board / May 17, 2013

In Nevada, Gov. Brian Sandoval, surrounded by state lawmakers, signs a law Feb. 21 legalizing online gambling in the state.

AP Photo

Enlarge

When the 43-state Powerball lottery jackpot hit a record at $600 million Friday, many Americans who would otherwise not gamble rushed out to buy the $2 tickets. ?Just on the off-chance,? many probably said.

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Last year, the multi-state Mega Millions lottery also hit a record at $656 million. It, too, lured nongamblers to buy its $1 tickets. ?What?s the harm?? many said.

These record lotteries aren?t a fluke. States with lotteries have become so addicted to this revenue that they purposely look for new ways to create a gambling addiction among more residents. The eye-popping jackpots, made even larger as more states pool the winnings into larger sums, somehow bedazzle people to dream of instant wealth on a Donald Trump scale.

Meanwhile, many of these gamblers ignore the very long odds ? about 1 in 175 million. And some get hooked ? for years, draining personal savings and upsetting relationships.

The ultra-lotteries aren?t the only example of a worsening addiction among states to this ?free? revenue. At least 10 states are weighing laws to allow online gaming, an easy, fast-paced, and private form of gambling that a 1999 federal study referred to as ?crack cocaine? for enabling new addicts. Oddly, the gaming industry refers to online gaming as a ?killer app.?

Last month, the United States saw the opening of the first legal website for betting on a game of chance (poker). Naturally, it was in Nevada and was available only to adults within the state. New Jersey may follow later this year with its own intrastate Internet gambling. Perhaps as many as 17 states could have Internet gambling by 2017, according to one analysis.

The impetus is a 2001 Obama Justice Department ruling that a federal law against Internet gambling doesn?t apply within each state. In addition, the gambling lobby is pushing states to get ready for Congress possibly allowing online gaming. Some states? want to become a base for what they hope will be a nationwide boom in gambling via smartphones and other personal devices.

A study by Morgan Stanley Research predicts that online gambling revenues in the US will be $9.3 billion by 2020, or about the current revenues in Atlantic City and Las Vegas casinos. ?More and more states are likely to legalize online gambling in the coming years, particularly once Nevada and New Jersey are successful in raising [gaming] taxes,? the study stated.

The industry claims it has the technology to ensure online gambling will stay within each state. Children will also somehow be barred from participating. Such digital hubris has yet to be tested by the best of hackers.

In addition, the Justice ruling may allow states to connect up and share online gambling, much like the mega-lotteries, effectively creating a national system without technically being ?interstate.?

You can see where this addiction of states is going. Those who deal with problem or addictive gamblers ? who make up 4-6 percent of gamers ? are rightly worried. They cite studies showing the social costs from gambling addiction outweigh the revenue for states. They also point out that most states now have ?instant wins? for lottery consumers. Last year, more than half of the estimated $68 billion in lottery revenues came from these instant tickets.

Driving more Americans to gamble is a losing game. Gambling perpetuates the notion of luck as a source of happiness, which isn?t exactly what is needed for an economy in need of people focused on hard work, education, and ingenuity. Gambling isn?t a productive enterprise.

Before the news media play up the next record-setting mega-lottery like Powerball, they may want to add these kinds of caveats in their reporting. It could deter people from rushing to the corner store to buy a lottery ticket.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/499fyjWgJ4c/A-record-Powerball-jackpot-isn-t-a-record-to-celebrate

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Denmark wins Eurovision on ABBA's turf with folksy ballad

By Mia Shanley

MALMO, Sweden (Reuters) - Denmark's Emmelie de Forest won Eurovision on Saturday before an international TV audience of around 125 million, clinching the coveted crown of euro-pop with a folksy ballad backed by a wall of fire, flutes and drums.

The barefoot 20-year-old blonde stole the show as predicted by bookmakers with "Only Teardrops" in a final that saw 26 countries battle it out in the southern Swedish city of Malmo for the top prize in glitzy European pop music.

"I could feel the fans and all the energy in the arena," de Forest said after the event, adding that she was particularly proud to win in Sweden as her late father was Swedish and a Eurovision fan.

"It's a once in a lifetime experience. I'm just the happiest girl in the world," she said.

Denmark, which has won the contest twice before - most recently in 2000 with the Olsen Brothers' "Fly on the Wings of Love" - was clearly in the lead even after just half of the votes were cast.

The show's host, Swedish comedian Petra Mede, went ahead and announced the country's win before the final votes were read out, with the red and white Danish flag flashing on her gown in a classic over-the-top Eurovision moment.

Azerbaijan took second place in the competition with "Hold Me", followed by third place for Ukraine with "Gravity".

"How many times can we win and lose? How many times can we break the rules between us? Only teardrops," the Danish performer sang, beaming ear-to-ear as she repeated her winning song to the audience against a fiery backdrop.

Her victory means the contest will move just across the bridge to Denmark next year, keeping the contest in the Nordics for a second year running after Sweden's Loreen won last year's contest in Azerbaijan with her dance track "Euphoria".

"It's nice to give the prize to someone else. I have had such a fantastic year," Loreen told Reuters.

Singers from Russia to Romania competed as Eurovision returned to the homeland of ABBA, the Swedish band it propelled to global superstardom.

There was no shortage of ABBA nostalgia Saturday night.

Former ABBA members Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus composed the opening act together with Swedish DJ Avicii, and the Swedish singer Sarah Dawn Finer belted out the ABBA classic "The Winner Takes It All" before votes were revealed.

Though Sweden opted to tighten the budget for this year's show after oil-rich Azerbaijan spent lavishly in 2012, pop fans around the world still got their usual three-hour dose of heavy-duty kitsch.

Famed as much for the costumes and characters on stage as its - sometimes - catchy tunes, Eurovision's line-up included a 2.4-metre (7-foot-10-inch) tall Ukrainian who carried singer Zlata Ognevich, and a girl-on-girl kiss in Finland's "Marry Me", which drew media controversy.

SPIRIT OF UNITY

Thousands of Danes gathered in front of city hall in downtown Copenhagen, waving flags, drinking beer and forming a conga line that snaked throughout the square.

"Tonight we won the Eurovision Song Contest. Amazing. It's amazing!" said Emil Espersen, wearing a red-sequined jacket.

Eurovision, one of the world's longest-running television programs, was started in the 1950s to help foster a spirit of unity after World War Two.

In an attempt to ensure that musical quality takes precedence over geographically motivated bloc voting from television viewers, professional judges now account for 50 percent of a performer's score.

The other half comes from the number of telephone and SMS votes each contestant receives, with fans unable to vote for their own country's entry.

Earlier on Saturday, Eurovision fans packed into downtown Malmo's squares and parks on an unusually hot, sunny day, with music blaring and boats cruising the canals.

"It's the festival feel, the fun, the unity - everyone's out to have a bit of fun," said Eurovision fan David Sherrit, who flew in from Britain. "The music is quite awful, but we really come here because it's great fun and you can have a laugh at yourself and each other."

In its nearly six-decade history, Eurovision has been a launching pad for the likes of Celine Dion, Julio Iglesias and Olivia Newton-John. ABBA won the contest with "Waterloo" in 1974.

(Additional reporting by Ilze Filks and Mette Fraende in Copenhagen; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/denmark-wins-eurovision-abbas-turf-folksy-ballad-010136147.html

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Gary Stevens, Oxbow Jockey, Rides To 3rd Preakness Win (VIDEO/PHOTO)

  • Oxbow, ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, wins the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • Oxbow, second from right, ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, leads field to the first turn during the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Oxbow won the race. Orb, right, the Kentucky Derby winner, finished fourth. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Oxbow, ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, wins the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Garry Jones)

  • Orb, Joel Rosario

    Orb, with jockey Joel Rosario aboard, gallops back to the paddock after the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Oxbow won the race, Orb, the Kentucky Derby winner, finished fourth. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Garry Jones)

  • Oxbow (6), ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, wins the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race ahead of Itsmyluckyday (9), ridden by John Velazquez, and Mylute, ridden by Rosie Napravnik at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore.(AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Itsmyluckyday, second from left, ridden by John Velazquez, finished second; and Mylute, ridden by Rosie Napravnik finished third. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Oxbow (6), ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, leads Itsmyluckyday (9), ridden by John Velazquez, and Mylute, ridden by Rosie Napravnik to win the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race ahead of at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Oxbow, Gary Stevens

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Oxbow, Gary Stevens

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Itsmyluckyday, third from left, ridden by John Velazquez, finished second; and Mylute, left, ridden by Rosie Napravnik finished third. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Gary Stevens

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates after riding Oxbow to win the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Itsmyluckyday, second from left, ridden by John Velazquez, finished second; and Mylute, left, ridden by Rosie Napravnik finished third. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Oxbow, Gary Stevens

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Orb, Joel Rosario

    Orb, with jockey Joel Rosario aboard, gallops back to the paddock after the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Oxbow won the race, Orb, the Kentucky Derby winner, finished fourth. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens, left, embraces trainer D. Wayne Lukas in the winner's circle after Oxbow won the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Garry Jones)

  • Oxbow, Gary Stevens

    Oxbow, right, with jockey Gary Stevens aboard, leads the field to the finish line to win the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Oxbow, bottom right, with jockey Gary Stevens aboard, leads the field to the finish line to win the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens, left, clenches his fist aboard Oxbow, as outrider Clark Kelly guides them to the winner's circle after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Garry Jones)

  • Gary Stevens, Oxbow, Clark Kelly

    Jockey Gary Stevens, left, clenches his fist aboard Oxbow, as outrider Clark Kelly guides them to the winner's circle after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Oxbow, ridden by jockey Gary Stevens, wins the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Gary Stevens, Oxbow, D. Wayne Lukas

    Jockey Gary Stevens, aboard Oxbow, celebrates with trainer D. Wayne Lukas after winning the Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Orb, Joel Rosario

    Orb, with jockey Joel Rosario aboard, gallops back to the paddock after the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Oxbow won the race, Orb, the Kentucky Derby winner, finished fourth. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • In this image taken with a specialty lens, Jockey Gary Stevens, foreground, celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Gary Stevens, Oxbow

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Orb, second from right, the Kentucky Derby winner, finished fourth. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Gary Stevens, Oxbow

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • In this image made taken a fisheye lens, the field breaks from the starting gate for the Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Oxbow, fourth from right, won the race. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • In this image made taken a fisheye lens, the field breaks from the starting gate for the Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Oxbow, fourth from right, won the race. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Oxbow, Gary Stevens

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens kisses his daughter Maddie Stevens in the winner's circle after riding Oxbow to win the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Oxbow, Gary Stevens

    Jockey Gary Stevens celebrates aboard Oxbow after winning the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens gives thumbs up after riding Oxbow to win 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens holds up a trophy in the winner's circle after riding Oxbow to win the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Jockey Gary Stevens, left, looks on as and trainer D. Wayne Lukas holds up a trophy in the winner's circle after Oxbow won the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Workermen paint the weather vane in the color of the racing silks worn by jockey Gary Stevens after Oxbow won 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • Oxbow's trainer D. Wayne Lukas, second from left, holds up a trophy after Oxbow won the 138th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. Jockey Gary Stevens is at left. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

  • John Howard

    Spectator John Howard carries betting receipts in his straw hat at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes horse race. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Spectators mill about near the track at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the Preakness Stakes horse race. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Bill Norris

    Spectator Bill Norris sports a horse-themed bow tie at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes horse race. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Lisa Scotti, of Baltimore, reads hhere program before the sixth race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. The 138th Preakness Stakes horse race takes place Saturday. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • Kathryn Gaudreau

    Spectator Kathryn Gaudreau tries to stay dry under a poncho as rain falls at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes horse race. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • A spectator wears a poncho as rain falls during a horse race at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes horse race. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Moon Philly, Jeremy Rose

    Moon Philly, with jockey Jeremy Rose aboard, makes his way out of the paddock to race in the Allaire Dupont Distaff Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the Preakness Stakes horse race. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • A spectator stands in the paddock at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • Spectators chat in the paddock at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Saturday, May 18, 2013, before the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

  • A racing fan checks her tickets at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. The 138th Preakness Stakes horse race takes place Saturday. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Lindsey Bowman, of Louisville, Ky., wears a big hat as she walks along the concourse at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. The 138th Preakness Stakes horse race takes place Saturday. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Racing fans wait for the next horse race at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday, May 18, 2013, in Baltimore. The 138th Preakness Stakes horse race takes place Saturday. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/18/gary-stevens-oxbow-jockey-preakness_n_3300099.html

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    Candice Glover to Release Album in July

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/candice-glover-to-release-album-in-july/

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    Steve Jobs widow: How is Laurene Powell Jobs spending her wealth?

    For most of her 20-year marriage to Steve Jobs, Laurene Powell Jobs was content to be a behind-the-scenes philanthropist.

    But a desire to change US immigration laws is bringing her into the media spotlight - albeit in a carefully managed way.

    Ms. Powell Jobs has a net worth of about $11.5 billion, according to Bloomberg. Her husband, the Apple co-founder, wasn't a big philanthropist. And before his death, he did not join the "Giving Pledge," the organization started by Warren E. Buffett and Bill Gates to encourage the world's wealthiest to donate at least half their wealth to charity. The site lists 114 people who have taken the pledge. Powell Jobs has not signed either.

    But she has been a quiet donor of her time and money to many causes, especially to education.

    RECOMMENDED: Meet the nine richest self-made women

    In 1997, she started College Track, a non-profit organization that helps low-income students get into college, and graduate from college. The after-school program reaches kids starting the summer before high school and works with them throughout college. The program includes tutoring, extra-curricular activities and leadership classes. According to the website, 90 percent of the nearly 1,200 children who have participated in College Track programs have graduated from high school.

    It was through her work at College Track that Powell Jobs got on the track to immigration reform. Some of the students in California in the program came into the US at a young age illegally. Now, as high school graduates, they are ineligible for state or federal college assistance. And that has led Powell Jobs to take a more public and active stance on the immigration.

    ?This continues to be a purgatory that they find themselves in,? Powell Jobs told The New York TImes recently. ?It is one of these issues that seems discordant with what our country stands for.?

    When the DREAM Act ? which would have offered a path to citizenship for children living in the US illegally ? failed to pass Congress, Powell Jobs began to flex her political and economic muscle. Through her Emerson Collective (which invests in education start-ups and gives education grants), she commissioned a film by Academy Award-winning filmmaker (Waiting for 'Superman,' An Inconvenient Truth) Davis Guggenheim. She's shown the 30-minute film ("The Dream is Now") to key members of Congress and launched a web site where it can be viewed.

    Powell Jobs recently gave an interview to The Wall Street Journal, on the condition that the only topic she would discuss was immigration.

    "Her profile is rising only of necessity and passion to change the system," said Ron Conway, a start-up investor who is a friend. "I don't think she necessarily wants to be in Washington all the time. I think it is based on the necessity of the issue." Conway told The Wall Street Journal that he saw her as "a catalyst, not a lobbyist."

    RECOMMENDED: Meet the nine richest self-made women

    Related stories

    Read this story at csmonitor.com

    Become a part of the Monitor community

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/steve-jobs-widow-laurene-powell-jobs-spending-her-134127035.html

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    Saturday, May 18, 2013

    Nate Silver sits atop this year's Fast Company business list



    >>> look, i've been down this road before. i'm not what kerry says i am. ask david. he'll tell you.

    >> by kerry you mean kerry matheson.

    >> yes.

    >> what does she think you are?

    >> a terrorist.

    >> and you're not?

    >> no, i'm not.

    >> you should know that everything you say in here will be used against you in your trial. you should also know that you're facing a possible death sentence.

    >> i want a lawyer.

    >> life is full of disappointments.

    >> i want a [ bleep ] lawyer.

    >> that was a seen from showtime's "homeland" the co-creator of the hit drama and wide range of other innovators from music to design and technology are featured in " fast company 's" list of the 100 most creative in business. with us the editor of " fast company " bob safian. bob, thank you so much for being with us.

    >> thanks for having me here.

    >> that was the work of somebody on your list. tell us about it.

    >> yeah.

    >> the list is about the most creative people in business in all different areas, right?

    >> right.

    >> television is one of the areas, although it's not the only one.

    >> you call it the brainiac box, now.

    >> the television, listen we know ratings on a lot of shows, or there's talk about not as many people watching certain kinds of tv, but what we notice is that shows that are distinctive, that have -- are attracting audiences of scale with really creative and special kinds of programming, they're doing very well just as you guys are.

    >> donny, once a vast wasteland .

    >> yeah.

    >> once a vast wasteland and they call it the brainiac box.

    >> tv is in its golden year. because the cable networks are operating the way broadcast networks as far as the level of production and more creative freedom they can have a huge hit with 2 million or 3 million viewers. they can program to much more sophisticated palettes where the broadcast networks need 8 to 10 to 12 mill son you have channel after channel the amcs of the world with "mad men".

    >> " breaking bad ".

    >> better than any movies out there.

    >> look at number one here, reverend al, personal friend of mine , nate silver .

    >> nate silver .

    >> personal friend.

    >> personal friend of mine . we're close. nate silver number one, dominated talk in 2012 .

    >> and the rise of big data and all the things that people think come from data, one of the things i love about nate, he recognizes the numbers alone don't solve -- don't give all the answers.

    >> right.

    >> you have to be creative .

    >> as his sports predictions prove. there was a 98.6378% chance he was going to win this year.

    >> well, you know, he looks at numbers in the way that no one else does and that's what makes nate --

    >> he picks the right numbers. there's so many bad numbers out there. last year there were so many numbers, and he picked the right polls.

    >> i think these are the -- served the themes that people are missing in general about data. people think data is going to give everyone the right answers and you have to look at it the right way.

    >> your friend number two sam sung --

    >> the chief designer of samsung .

    >> dong-hoon chang.

    >> because samsung has come out of nowhere to challenge apple in terms of the design and lgn and the lust for their products.

    >> and their phone, seen more and more people with them.

    >> do you like the one you don't have to touch it anymore.

    >> i like it -- i'm trying to get my work e-mail on it so i can use it --

    >> she's trying to fall in love with samsung .

    >> eats my lunch for me.

    >> that's right.

    >> it will eat my meals for me.

    >> reverend, what kind of phone do you have?

    >> i have an iphone.

    >> yeah.

    >> i want to talk about --

    >> doesn't eat my lunch.

    >> you don't eat anymore. you're shrinking, man. you need to read "obsessed" by mika brzezinski .

    >> i have been obsessed by reading "obsessed".

    >> the definition of creativity, the fact you can talk about nate silver , shows creativitity can be applied to anything. not just about creative things. it can be crunching numbers can be done creatively.

    >> you're talking about politics and things going on in washington and how things stop. business for good or bad is the vehicle for change and progress in our world right now. creativity is coming out of there. that's what we're trying to encourage and highlight.

    >> and we've talked about, obviously, tv, we need to talk about number 8 , brian canston remarkable actor in " breaking bad " but sometimes the greatest ideas, most of the times, the greatest ideas are the most simple ideas. talk about number 10 , water.

    >> i'm sorry?

    >> number 10 , chat irty, water.

    >> charity water.

    >> number 10 . this guy --

    >> scott harrison had such a remarkable concept.

    >> simple idea.

    >> so simple. water something we take for granted but is a tremendous danger and costs lives all across the world. he's gotten people excited about bringing water to places that don't have it. welt and other things and being able in real time to see the -- how your money is being used in these communities.

    >> and the key is, he brings clean water to places like africa that don't have access to clean well water and the simplicity is what's so dramatic.

    >> very, very cool list.

    >> who else is on the list?

    >> stands out to you?

    >> part of this list, it's an all new list every year. we never repeat anyone on the list. there's new people. a doctor named carl june using hiv virus strains to find cures for leukemia. right. you know, the team of women who did the daily dunking of oreo, the daily oreo things that were on the social media , the head of social media for facebook in india. it's a wide range of people. and i love this list because i get so excited about the range of creativity and new ideas coming out from an inventor in sierra leone to the chief designer in south korea .

    >> you talk about a guy who, quote, kicked apple's butt, google maps .

    >> closing in, continues to involve apple. trying to like heck to make themselves ket competitive in that map space.

    >> i keep driving into lakes.

    >> who's missing?

    >> louis.

    >> phil griffin says he's the future of tv.

    >> maybe next year we'll keep our eye.

    >> i like that.

    >> " fast company 's" 100 most creative business people , make sure you get it.

    >> bob safian, this is great. by the way, unlike those shameless hacks at "gq," i bet there are no pictures of kate upton in here.

    >> well, i'm not so sure.

    >> no, no. is there? nate silver .

    >> bob woodward is coming up straight ahead. more " morning joe " in just a moment. [

    Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2c0dfccc/l/0Lvideo0Bmsnbc0Bmsn0N0Cid0C5191450A3/story01.htm

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