সোমবার, ২৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Western states report comeback of cattle rustling (Reuters)

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) ? Cattle rustlers, casting aside saddle and spurs for modern horsepower, are roaming the West with four-wheel drive and GPS technology in a resurgence of livestock thievery considered a hanging offense on the old frontier.

State livestock officials said the increase in cattle crimes was linked to the slumping economy, soaring beef prices and the advent of handheld global positioning systems that allow rustlers to more easily navigate the wide-open range.

They said contemporary thieves may find it more convenient and lucrative to pick off a couple cows, worth as much as $2,000 a head, than to rob a convenience store.

"When the market is extremely high, the bad guys come out," Idaho State Brand Inspector Larry Hayhurst said.

Hayhurst said the incidence of cattle gone missing under suspicious circumstances in Idaho during the past three months had already surpassed the 250 such reports he received for all of last year. That coincides with spikes in cattle thefts in Colorado, Montana, Nevada, Wyoming and elsewhere.

Regionwide tallies for rustling are hard to come by because no uniform reporting system or central database exists.

However, Western state livestock agencies have put the value of cattle deemed lost, stolen, strayed or in questionable ownership in recent years in the tens of millions of dollars.

In Montana alone, investigators have recovered more than 7,300 stolen or missing cattle worth nearly $8 million during the past three years, numbers believed to account for just a fraction of the problem, officials said.

"What you see as far as figures from livestock departments is a drop in the bucket from what's been going on," said Kim Baker, president of the Montana Cattlemen's Association.

RIDING THE BRAND

For ranchers in the open-range states of the West, the livestock brand -- a symbol of ownership imprinted on the animal's hide -- is considered a cow's only return address.

Brands provide vital clues for Western agricultural inspectors who are required to verify ownership of livestock when it is sold, shipped for slaughter or transported over certain distances.

But in a region where several hundred brand inspectors oversee millions of cows on rangelands stretching across some of the nation's most rugged and remote terrain, there are many ways to beat the system, said Rick Wahlert, veteran brand inspector with the Colorado Agriculture Department.

Today's rustlers bear little resemblance to the varmints of yore, whose crimes prompted the formation in the western United States of cattle associations that paid a bounty to bring cow thieves to justice.

For starters, rustlers are now equipped with trucks and trailers that allow them to easily haul cattle to distant slaughterhouses and auction barns where re-branded animals may draw less suspicion.

Western livestock owners who turn their cows out in the spring on sprawling grazing allotments they lease from the federal government expect to lose up to 3 percent of their stock to injuries, illnesses and predators.

But any such losses, or any missing animals suspected of having been stolen, typically go unnoticed until late fall, when ranchers gather in their herds and sort out which animals will be kept for breeding, put up for sale or go to slaughter.

Moreover, cattle can end up categorized as lost or missing, rather than stolen, even though evidence may suggest theft, said Terry Fankhauser, vice president of the Colorado Cattlemen's Association.

"We're ruling out alien abduction," he said.

BREEDING ISSUES

Theft costs ranchers dearly in an industry that generates billions of dollars in revenues a year in Western states.

The losses are not tallied in dollars alone. Producers build up their herds while selecting for preferred traits over the course of generations, said Wyatt Prescott, vice president of the Idaho Cattle Association.

"Cows are professional mothers," he said. "It's their job to get bred every year, calve successfully and bring that calf home in the fall. You go through a lot trying to replace that cow."

The recent comeback in cattle rustling has stockmen on edge across the region.

After 200 cattle went missing last year in a four-county area of western Idaho, Tom Blessinger, a rancher north of Boise, said he was writing down the license plate numbers of any unfamiliar vehicles he sees.

"That's a lot of meat," he said. "This isn't a case of the cowboy with the good horse and the dog. This is too many."

Authorities in Montana and Nevada last month broke up a multi-state cattle-rustling ring in an investigation expected to bring criminal charges against suspects in Oregon, Nevada and Washington state, said Blaine Northrop, enforcement supervisor with the Nevada Department of Agriculture. The livestock bust has so far netted 61 head of cattle.

Officials said livestock thieves typically know how to handle animals and how to elude the industry's safeguards.

"Just anybody off the street can't walk in and steal a cow," Idaho's Prescott said.

Once snatched, cows are hard to get back. Recovery rates for stolen cattle can be as low as 10 percent.

Two years after the fact, authorities are still searching for rustlers who stole 21 cows and an equal number of calves from the Cross Ranch in northwestern Montana, and owner Mary Cross said her operation continues to suffer the effects of the thefts.

"It takes the profit right out," she said.

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Cynthia Johnston)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111127/us_nm/us_cattle_rustling

chelsea handler amber rose alexander the great act alabama football 21 jump street 19 kids and counting

রবিবার, ২৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Hamas: Palestinians to skip interim government (AP)

RAMALLAH, West Bank ? The Palestinians' rival leaders have quietly decided to keep their respective governments in the West Bank and Gaza in place until elections, a senior Hamas figure told The Associated Press. This proposal would remove a major obstacle to efforts to reconcile the factions: the need to form an interim unity government.

A representative of Hamas' rival, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, denied however that such a deal was struck.

The understanding was reached between Western-backed Abbas and Khaled Mashaal, chief of the Islamic militant Hamas, during one-on-one talks last week, said the Hamas figure.

He spoke on condition of anonymity, because he said the two leaders decided not to make the arrangement public.

Another top Hamas official, Moussa Abu Marzouk said that it was at least possible to skip an interim government and head straight to elections, tentatively scheduled for May.

However, Abbas envoy Azzam al-Ahmed on Saturday denied the two leaders reached such an understanding. "There is no possibility of holding elections without a unity government," he said.

Keeping the existing governments in place would help Abbas avoid a Western backlash in the run-up to elections. Western powers fear a unity government, even one composed of technocrats without clear political affiliation, would be heavily influenced by the Islamic militant Hamas.

It also would mean that Salam Fayyad, an internationally respected economist, remains in charge in the West Bank for the time being and continue to ensure that donor countries keep funding Abbas' Palestinian Authority. Hamas will keep running Gaza, the territory it seized from Abbas by force in 2007.

Shelving the unity government would also remove a major sticking point in Hamas-Abbas negotiations. The unity deal, approved in principle in May, has stalled in part over who should lead the interim unity government. Hamas adamantly opposed Abbas' preference for appointing Fayyad, arguing he is too close to the West.

At Thursday's meeting, Abbas told Mashaal that that the two-government status quo was "convenient for both sides and any change might be costly," according to the Hamas figure. The Hamas figure said he was briefed by Mashaal, who welcomed the idea.

Al-Ahmed, the Abbas envoy, said negotiators from both sides would meet again next month to try to form a unity government. Abu Marzouk confirmed that such talks are planned.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111127/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_palestinians_reconciliation

gold rush alaska gold rush alaska the addams family blue bloods temple grandin texas rangers marie osmond

Anti-H.I.V. Gel Trial Is Canceled in Africa

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Researchers were disappointed, because an earlier trial of the treatment, a microbicide gel, appeared to work well.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c3617c3e9bff2dd971aa1212794847ea

scarecrow festival scarecrow festival texas longhorns texas longhorns oklahoma state football oklahoma state football case mccoy

শনিবার, ২৬ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

VTech Kidizoom Camera

The VTech Kidizoom Camera ($39.99 list) is a 1.3-megapixel point and shoot camera designed for small children. Its orange exterior is ruggedized to take the occasional drop from the tabletop to the floor, and while it looks like a toy, it will take decent if unspectacular pictures. It has plenty of fun sound effects, a few games, and enough on board storage to hold 1,000 pictures. While I think more kids will want to use a hand me down phone as a camera these days, the Kidizoom is a good introduction to using a "real" camera.

The Kidizoom looks like its predecessor from a few years ago, also named Kidizoom. It's got a rugged camera body with two large molded handgrips on the sides, and two viewfinder ports so a child can frame her picture with both eyes instead of using one. Both features make it easier for the child who is using a camera for the first time. The exterior is covered with grippy plastic, and it's well made, flexible plastic that's likely to shrug off the occasional drop to a concrete floor. The shutter button is right where you'd expect it, and the fixed focus lens means there's no focus lag to worry about. The new version of the Kidizoom has dedicated zoom in/out buttons on the right handgrip, which necessitates using the LCD viewfinder instead of the optical ones. The camera has a 4x digital zoom, standard for a camera in this price range.

The camera has a 1.3-Megapixel sensor, which is decent for quick snapshots, though a hand-me-down phonecam may have more pixels in its sensor. The pictures came out fine, with similar quality to phonecam snapshots. The Kidizoom's small LCD display was bright, but it could've been a little larger (there's a lot of blank plastic on the back of the camera). My four-year-old son didn't complain too much though, it's sufficient for the task at hand as well as for playing the three built in games. The LCD is also handy for framing the pre-loaded templates and filters that add a little whimsy to the digital pics.

The camera uses two AA batteries, and you'll want to replace them as soon as you open the packaging. Vtech's description on the side of the box state that the included (carbon zinc) batteries are meant for in-store demos rather than full time use. The camera's non-alkaline batteries soon discharge during normal use. For best results, seek out and install lithium powered AA batteries. The camera can also use rechargeable NiMH AA batteries.

More Toy Reviews:
??? More Black Friday, Holiday Shoppers Finding Deals Online
??? The Hottest Tech Toys for Kids
??? Light Strike Assault Striker D.C.R-012
??? VTech Kidizoom Camera
??? LeapFrog Tag Reading System
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/TblrlbDuCCs/0,2817,2396774,00.asp

columbus day mark davis bank holidays bank holidays john galt john galt post office hours

China factory sector shrinks most in 32 months (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? China's factory sector shrank the most in 32 months in November on signs of domestic economic weakness, a preliminary PMI survey showed, reviving worries that China may be slipping toward a hard landing and fuelling fears of a global recession.

The steep fall in the HSBC flash purchasing managers' index (PMI) to 48 in November from 51 in October largely reflected domestic weakness as both output and new orders shrank even as export orders continued to grow.

The flash PMI, the earliest readout of China's industrial activity, was the lowest since March 2009 and suggests the factory sector contracted during the month. A PMI reading of 50 demarcates expansion from contraction.

The PMI unnerved financial markets already roiled by the euro zone debt crisis and a downward revision in U.S. economic growth and underscored expectations that Beijing will lean more on policies to support growth than ones to fight inflation.

"They are not going to want this to go too far," said Tim Condon, head of Asia research at ING in Singapore. "I'm not sure if it (PMI) is a tipping point but I think it adds to the evidence."

Beijing has already announced some selective steps, geared to small business, to support the economy. HSBC said evidence in the PMI of a sharp drop in inflationary pressures meant Beijing had room for more selective measures if need be.

"There remains no need to panic," HSBC economist Qu Hongbin said. "Easing inflation provides room for more easing measures, which will keep China on track for a soft landing."

The sub-indexes for input and output prices dropped around 10 points each to below 50 to lows last seen in April 2009.

HSBC said the output sub-index tumbled to a 32-month low of 46.7, a steep drop from October's final reading of 51.4 and new orders suffered the biggest drop in 1-1/2 years to sink well below 50.

Qu said the PMI data suggested industrial output growth in China will moderate in coming months to an annual rate of 11-12 percent, a pace not seen since 2009 when China was pulling out of the global financial crisis. Output has averaged close to 14 percent this year.

The final PMI reading for November may be slightly higher than the flash number, a comparison of the data shows.

HSBC has reported a flash PMI, which captures up to 90 percent of total responses, since February.

On five occasions, the final PMI reading was higher than the flash reading; twice it was lower and the other two months it was unchanged.

Kevin Lai, senior economist at Daiwa in Hong Kong, said the PMI data showed China's industrial production had started to contract on a month-on-month basis.

"We see a 25 percent probability of a hard landing in the first quarter of next year," he said, meaning growth of less than 8 percent.

GLOBAL GROWTH COOLS

The Australian dollar fell to a six-week low after the data on concern that demand growth from Australia's biggest trading partner and export market will ease.

Asia shares outside of Japan dropped more than 2 percent and U.S. S&P stock futures lost further ground as China's PMI added to the risk of a global recession.

A downward revision to U.S. third-quarter growth data on Tuesday had already put markets under pressure.

Vice Premier Wang Qishan is convinced the world is heading into a major downturn, saying at the weekend that a "chronic" global recession was "certain", the most dire reading from a senior Chinese policymaker to date.

Similar flash PMI surveys for the euro zone released later on Wednesday reinforced recession fears by showing the bloc's private sector contracted for a third month in November.

The World Bank forecast on Tuesday that growth in the world's biggest economy after the United States would slip to 9.0 percent in 2011 and then to 8.4 percent in 2012, adding "the risks are tilted to the downside.

China's export growth hit an eight-month low in October as industrial output grew at its weakest in a year. Up to a third of Hong Kong's 50,000 or so factories in China could downsize of shut by the end of this year, the Federation of Hong Kong Industries said this month.

The exuberant Chinese property market is also coming off the boil, a factor HSBC said had weighed on the PMI. Average home prices ticked lower in October for the first time this year and property sales fell.

"Worse is yet to come," Conita Hung, head of equity research of Delta Asia Financial Group, said after the data. "Companies involved in shipping, exports and even banking and finance will be affected."

Most analysts argue that China will keep to a policy Beijing has dubbed "fine tuning", under which it offers support to parts of the economy.

These measures have included support for small businesses. In the latest move, the central bank effectively cut reserve requirements for five rural banks in eastern Zhejiang province -- a cradle of private enterprise -- sources with knowledge of the matter said.

Broader measures, such as a rate cut, are not warranted unless the downturn becomes much more serious.

"We're not witnessing a collapse yet," said Connie Tse, an economist at Forecast in Singapore. "Policymakers are going to rely on selective fine-tuning measures."

BANK RESERVE CUT POSSIBLE

More aggressive policy easing measures are not needed because China's exposure to western demand is less now than it was during the 2008-2009 downturn and its dependence on exports for growth is lower, Qu at HSBC said.

The underlying strength of the industrial sector is also stronger, he suggested.

"It's not like 2008," Ting Lu of Bank of America/Merrill Lynch said.

"This is not as bad. There's no need for China to be in a hurry to roll out measures. The central bank needs to become more flexible and watch the unfolding crisis. It's not the time for them to change policy stance."

Still, like some other analysts, Condon said the selective measures could spread to broader measures in the months ahead as the economy weakens, so a cut in nationwide bank reserve requirements, currently a record high of 21.5 percent for big banks, may be on the cards within three months.

Wang Hu, an economist of Guotai Junan Securities in Shanghai, agreed but said a bank reserve cut could come by the end of the year.

Chinese policymakers will also be wary of easing policy too quickly for fear of reigniting inflation after a long battle.

Consumer inflation dropped from a three-year high in July of 6.5 percent to 5.5 percent in October, raising hopes the peak has passed.

"Inflation risks are still on the radar," said Tse. "It'll be premature for the PBOC to loosen on the macro front."

(Additional reporting by Kevin Yao and Langi Chiang in Beijing, Donny Kwok in Hong Kong, Masayuki Kitano in Singapore, Cecile Lefort in Sydney; Writing by Neil Fullick; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/ts_nm/us_china_pmi_hsbc

occupy chicago ron white ron white alcs alcs miguel cabrera pay it forward

শুক্রবার, ২৫ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Obama acknowledges tough economy this Thanksgiving (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama is urging Americans facing tough economic times this Thanksgiving to believe in the nation's ability to overcome its challenges.

In a taped Thanksgiving message, Obama says the partisanship and gridlock in Washington may make people question whether unity is possible. But he insists the nation's problems can be solved if all Americans do their part.

Obama is also encouraging Americans to remember the men and women of the military who are spending the holiday serving overseas. And he thanks those who are taking time out of their Thanksgiving celebrations to serve in soup kitchens and shelters.

The president will celebrate Thanksgiving with family at the White House.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_thanksgiving

duggars danny woodhead forgetting sarah marshall jets tom brady aaron hernandez aaron hernandez

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৪ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Las Vegas charities ask needy for IDs before giveaways (Reuters)

LAS VEGAS (Reuters) ? Some Las Vegas charities giving away turkeys and toys this season have started asking families to show state identification cards to get a slice of holiday cheer.

The charities say the controversial move to require Social Security, state identification cards, or birth certificates, was needed to prevent fraud born of desperation in a state at the centre of the country's financial crisis.

"If you would take a look at the number of kids that got toys (at charities during Christmas) in this valley, it would exceed the number of kids in the valley," said Major Robert Lloyd, director of the Salvation Army of Clark County.

"We're really anxious to preserve the magic of Christmas for children, but we need to screen the adults," Lloyd said, adding that some families were either "double dipping" or coming in from out of state to get donations.

Charities cited instances of parents reselling donated bicycles blocks from a charity that gave them away, or families getting several holiday turkeys. Some adults, they said, were showing up for handouts with children from other families.

These are some of the issues Las Vegas-area nonprofit organizations said they were trying to avoid as they geared up for the holiday season in a state especially hard hit by the bursting of the housing bubble.

Unemployment in the state was the highest in the nation in October at 13.4 percent, and Nevada continued to have the country's highest state foreclosure rate.

Critics of the ID policy say undocumented immigrants, as well as some homeless people who may be less likely to have identification on hand, and who may be needy, may be left out.

The critics, fearing the rules could have an exclusionary effect, noted immigration laws such as one passed in Alabama they said could unintentionally limit city parks or pools to those who can prove they are legally in the United States.

But the nonprofits said charities must adopt such practices in response to the unexpected results of an ailing economy, and that overall giving still outweighed any unintended consequences.

CHANGE HIT AS RECESSION KICKED IN

Fuilala Riley, chief operations officer for HELP of Southern Nevada, one of the key nonprofits involved in holiday season giveaways, said she and other colleagues started noticing a change in the crowds seeking help about four years ago, just as the recession kicked in.

She said charities began seeing cars arriving for giveaways with licence plates from neighbouring California, and "hundreds of families" came with larger than usual numbers of children.

"There is so much more need than ever before," Riley said. "Unfortunately ... people are desperate and are doing things they wouldn't normally do."

Her agency started asking families for Social Security cards and birth certificates for their children about four years ago to prove they were related. The Nevada ID was added this year. The goal was "to circumvent what we saw as fraud," she said.

But the policy has come under criticism, especially after an e-mail sent to members of a local chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association detailed information on the holiday giveaways, including the ID policy.

"I've never seen nonprofits asking for papers to give out a turkey. Am I over-reacting?" one association member wrote to her colleagues, adding she was appalled by the requirement.

Peter Ashman, a former head of the chapter, said he had called the county representative who circulated this season's charity information and requirements, and was told the ID rule was the policy of the charity groups, not the county.

"She hadn't thought about the consequences of the policy," he said of the representative. A county spokesman confirmed the policy had been decided by the charities.

The nonprofits involved -- the Salvation Army, HELP of Southern Nevada and Lutheran Social Services -- said they could be flexible if a needy family or person came to their doorsteps without identification during the holiday season.

They said they would help those who had lost their IDs, a common problem among the homeless, to obtain replacements.

(Reporting by Timothy Pratt; Editing by Cynthia Johnston)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/od_uk_nm/oukoe_uk_charities_nevada_fraud

ny giants la galaxy la galaxy david blaine kevin smith kevin smith jordy nelson

World stocks muted after poor German debt auction (AP)

BANGKOK ? Asian stock markets edged higher Thursday as speculation that China might ease its monetary policy soothed fears that the German economy ? Europe's strongest ? may be succumbing to the continent's debt crisis.

Benchmark oil hovered above $96 per barrel while the dollar fell against the euro and the yen.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng posted a 0.4 percent gain at 17,934.22. South Korea's Kospi rose 0.8 percent to 1,797.68. Benchmarks in Singapore, mainland China and Taiwan also rose.

Japan's Nikkei 225, reopening after a one-day public holiday, fell 1.3 percent to 8,208.47. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.2 percent to 4,044.20. Shares in India, Malaysia and Indonesia also fell.

Speculation that China's central bank was aiming to ease its tight monetary policy helped spur a wave of buying in Hong Kong, analysts said. But the official Xinhua News Agency said Thursday the move ? lowering reserve requirements for six rural banks in eastern Zhejiang ? was administrative rather than a policy shift. The banks' reserve requirements had been raised a year earlier after they failed to lend enough to farming businesses.

There have been signs that China's campaign of interest rate hikes and credit controls to tame stubbornly high inflation has been working, giving it leeway to ease monetary policy as the world economy stumbles.

"The positive catalyst today is the expectation that the China tightening cycle might loosen," said Jackson Wong, vice president at Tanrich Securities in Hong Kong. "I do think the rebound is pretty short term."

The chatter over Beijing's monetary policy helped push up Chinese banking shares. Hong Kong-listed Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. jumped 3.3 percent and Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, the country's biggest commercial lender, rose 1.9 percent.

But heavy industrial shares, which are closely tied to economic growth, fell as worries about a global economic slowdown grew. Japan's Komatsu Ltd., a world leader in construction machinery, lost 3.8 percent. India Tata's Steel fell 2.6 percent.

Global markets were spooked Wednesday by the poor results at an auction of German debt, which met with only 60 percent demand. Germany's Financial Agency blamed "the extraordinarily nervous market environment."

The weak buying suggests that Europe's crisis might be infecting strong nations that are crucial to keeping the euro currency afloat. Germany bears much of the burden of bailing out weaker neighbors such as Greece and Portugal.

Analysts at Credit Agricole CIB said the European debt crisis remains "the major concern for the markets" and that the German debt auction signals the spread of "the contagion to hard core economies" in the region.

Borrowing costs for Italy and Spain rose from levels that already were considered dangerously high. Europe lacks the resources to bail out those countries, its third- and fourth-biggest economies.

In the U.S., the government released a mixed batch of economic reports. Slightly more people applied for unemployment benefits last week, a sign that layoffs continue.

Consumer spending was sluggish but incomes rose a bit more than expected. Orders for long-lasting manufactured products fell for a second month and business investment dropped off.

The Dow fell 2.1 percent to close at 11,257.55. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 2.2 percent to 1,161.79. The Nasdaq fell 2.4 percent to 2,460.08.

U.S. markets will be closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday and will have shortened hours on Friday.

Benchmark crude for January delivery was up 37 cents at $96.54 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell $1.84 to settle at $96.17 in New York on Wednesday.

In currency trading, the euro rose to $1.3373 from $1.3326 late Wednesday in New York. The dollar dropped to 77.09 yen from 77.35 yen.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

mississippi personhood herman cain press conference joe frazier dead joe frazier dead topamax lexapro

বুধবার, ২৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Mediator appointed in Dodgers-Fox Sports dispute (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? The Los Angeles Dodgers bankruptcy case judge appointed a mediator to try and sort out the dispute between the baseball team and Fox Sports regarding the sale of the team's television telecast rights.

Judge Kevin Gross on Monday appointed retired federal judge Joseph Farnan Jr. as the mediator, court documents show.

The parties will share the payment of the mediator's fees and expenses and the mediation will start on November 28 in Los Angeles, California.

At the end of the process, the mediator will file a report stating whether the matter has been resolved or not, providing any further details, the documents show.

On Monday, the judge had canceled Tuesday's hearing on whether to dismiss the team's bankruptcy filing. [ID:nN1E7AK1M2]

Fox Sports, part of News Corp, which has a contract to broadcast the team's games through 2013, on Friday had asked the bankruptcy court to consider dismissing the bankruptcy case.

It argued that the team's bankruptcy was not valid and was an attempt to invalidate Fox's TV-rights contract.

The Dodgers, meanwhile, has struck a deal with Major League Baseball in which it has agreed to sell the team -- including the media rights -- and it wants to begin those negotiations immediately rather than wait for the contract to expire.

The hearing, which is scheduled for November 30, in which the debtors are looking for approval for the sales procedures for the team, will go ahead, barring an order from the court.

The Dodgers filed for bankruptcy in June as its owner Frank McCourt struggled to meet the payroll.

The case is In re: Los Angeles Dodgers LLC, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 11-12010.

(Reporting by Tanya Agrawal in Bangalore; Editing by Maju Samuel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enindustry/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/media_nm/us_dodgers

breast cancer walk breast cancer walk detroit tigers major league major league mlk memorial mlk memorial

মঙ্গলবার, ২২ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Switched On: Between a Nook and a hard place

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.
In the 1988 comedy Coming to America, a blatant McDonald's rip-off named McDowell's draws the legal ire of the empire built by Ray Kroc. In explaining his pathetic defense that includes noting that McDowell's uses golden arcs instead of golden arches, the eatery's manager notes that while both the Big Mac and his Big Mick both include the 1970s jingle-immortalized ingredients of two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles and onions, the McDowell's flagship burger bun has, in fact, no sesame seeds.

This state of differentiation isn't a far cry from what characterized some of the earliest 10-inch Honeycomb devices -- a few fractions of an inch of thickness, a higher-quality display, a full-sized USB port, an hour or two of running time and some bundled apps constituted how many of the tablets asserted their competitiveness. Of course, there was the ASUS Eee Pad Transformer with its keyboard add-on and its follow up, the Eee Pad Slider, which finally brought an integrated one. But whether it's been from a lack of of options for manufacturers or disadvantages of the overall Honeycomb approach, larger Android tablets have made limited inroads versus the similarly sized iPad and are now going after it more aggressively on price.

Continue reading Switched On: Between a Nook and a hard place

Switched On: Between a Nook and a hard place originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Nov 2011 17:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/c-jLa8Jh2wI/

marine corps veterans day 2011 veterans day 2011 country music awards cnbc debate family circus spanier

Gingrich Leads GOP Field in Positive Intensity (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/165266948?client_source=feed&format=rss

oklahoma news atomic clock earthquake map giants geoffrey mutai wes welker brandon jacobs

Gmail (for iPhone)


You can already use Gmail on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch, so why would you want a standalone Gmail app from Google? Speed, better search functions, and color-coded threading are three possible answers.

The Gmail app for iOS (free, for iOS 4 and later) made by Google gives users another choice for managing email. It allows iPhone users to decide what they value in an email app. Do you value search capability over text displayed at readable sizes? Is it more important for your various email accounts to be managed in one app, as Mail arranges them, or would you rather have a dedicated app just for Gmail that looks more like Gmail on the web, with color-coded threading?

In short, the app does some things well, but it's largely a matter of preference whether it's right for you. One deciding factor may be that you can't log into multiple Gmail accounts at once. You have to sign in and out. Apple's Mail app, however, does support multiple Gmail accounts.

If you happened to snag the Gmail app ?when it was prematurely released on November 2?it was removed merely hours after its debut?you'll have to log out and log back in, or completely uninstall and reinstall the app to ensure you have the fully functioning new version of the app.

The new app for iOS 4 and later does have better search capabilities than the Mail app synchronized to your Gmail account, which is not a surprise, given that we're talking about Google, the first name in computer search.

Mail vs. Gmail
The Gmail app has a Facebookian design, in that a collapsible menu pane appears to the left of the central interface. Toggle the menu open, and it nudges its way into view, taking up not quite half of the screen real estate. Here, you can find the requisite Gmail folders, such as Important, Sent, and Drafts, as well as all the custom folders you've made. A new feature, the Priority Inbox, helps you tag and navigate to the most important messages. There's a menu listing for Chats, although it's not an active messaging service; it's just a folder (which appears in your Web-based Gmail account, too) where your chat dialogs are saved if you enable a setting). When you preview messages, the majority of text in the Gmail app appears in light gray type, indicating read messages. The only time you'll see bold or black is for unread mail. Compared to the bold, black lettering of cascading point sizes used in the Mail app, Gmail's text is much harder to read.

Related StoryCheck out?The Best iPhone Apps

Open a message, and each person on the thread appears in a different color, using the same color-coding scheme seen in the Gmail website. Whoever initiates a new email has their name in green; the first respondent shows up in purple; the third is red; and so on. The message itself is in whatever color text the sender uses (usually black, with blue for hyperlinks), although other information, such as the sender details in a forwarded message, appear in the harder-to-read light gray.

In terms of search performance, the Gmail app outperforms Mail easily, because it searches your entire mailbox, whereas the Mail app restricts you from searching beyond the folder that's open (usually, it's Inbox). The Mail app gives you results letter-by-letter as it finds matches, in part because it's only searching a limited subsection of your entire mailbox. Gmail waits until you've typed all your letters and hit "Search" before embarking on the hunt to match the terms anywhere in your mail.

Which Gmail iPhone App to Use?
Both the Gmail iOS app and the native Mail app connected to a Gmail account do a fine job of getting your messages to you when you're not in front of a full-sized computer. Which one you choose is largely a matter of preference, although I think the decisive factor for many people is that the Gmail app doesn't support multiple accounts simultaneously. If search is of the utmost essence, though, you'll definitely appreciate the Gmail app. The same goes for those who love color-coded threading in messages. If you've been happy to date with Mail's performance and appreciate larger type and bold fonts in your previews, however, there is no need to get used to a new interface.

iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touches already support Gmail very well. The new app from Google just adds another choice for how you can access it. Seeing as its free, why not load both and use the one that best suits your needs at the moment?

More iPhone Apps Reviews:?
??? Gmail (for iPhone)
??? Ask.com (for iPhone)
??? Cards (for iPhone)
??? Skype 3.5 (for iPhone)
??? Dragon Go! (for iPhone)
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/8ml3Hv0pD8A/0,2817,2395783,00.asp

fire island fire island diaspora social network aaron rodgers weather houston weather houston diaspora

Solar Eclipse This Friday Could Wow Small Audience (SPACE.com)

This Friday (Nov. 25), a rather large partial eclipse of the sun will be on view ? but only for a relatively small audience.

This will be the fourth time that a new moon will orbit between the sun and Earth to cause a solar eclipse in 2011, just one eclipse shy of the maximum for the number of solar eclipses in a given year.?

The first eclipse on Jan. 4 coincided with sunrise across Europe.

Some Alaskans and Canadians shared a view of a partially obscured sun on the afternoon of June 1. [Photos: The First Solar Eclipse of 2011]

And perhaps just a few penguins experienced a very slight eclipse a month later off Lutzlow-Holm Bay on the coast of Antarctica.

On Friday, the moon's penumbral, or outer, shadow will brush the southern belly of the Earth, initially touching down in the South Atlantic Ocean, about 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) a southwest of Cape Town, but only managing to encompass the southern and western portion of South Africa, completely missing Lesotho and barely grazing the border of Namibia. The sun will be seen rising with a dent in its upper right rim.

The axis of the Earth's shadow, containing the cone of darkness known as the umbra, from where we could see a total solar eclipse, misses Earth entirely, passing at its nearest, only about 0.05 of the Earth's radius, or about 210 miles (340 km) out in space.

So the depth of this partial eclipse is greater than the three others that preceded it. At greatest eclipse, 90.5 percent of the sun's diameter will be covered as seen from the place nearest to the shadow axis, at a point in the Bellingshausen Sea along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula.

Here, the sun will be seen to dip to the southern horizon at the "midnight" of its 24-hour southern late spring day, and as it slowly ascends still very low to the south-southeast horizon it turns into a delicate boat-shaped crescent in eclipse; the horizon along which the dazzling boat goes rocking is that of "The Ice" (a nickname for Antarctica, being "on the ice").

As the penumbra slides under the bottom of the Earth, the partial eclipse is visible in varying extent across the icy land continent and just as it begins to slide back out into space it (just barely) manages to pass over Tasmania as well as portions of New Zealand's South Island. In fact, the last contact of the shadow with Earth occurs just to the west of the South Island, in the Tasman Sea.

Coming attractions

If you have already obtained a calendar for 2012, be sure to put a big red circle around May 20.?

That is the date of the next solar eclipse and it promises to be a spectacular event.? It will be an annular ("ring") eclipse that will be visible from parts of eight western U.S. states during the late-afternoon hours.?

For those living in parts of New Mexico and west Texas, the setting sun will be transformed into a blazing "ring of fire," in some cases lasting for more than five minutes. And across much of North America, the exception being those near and along the Atlantic Coast, the sun will appear partially eclipsed.?

Across the Pacific for parts of China and Japan, the annular eclipse will also be visible (Tokyo is directly in the eclipse track), although for Asia, being positioned to the left (west) of the International Date Line, this event will take place on the morning of May 21.?

Needless to say, in contrast to next Friday, next May's solar eclipse will have a huge viewing audience.?

?

Editor's note: If you snap a photo or video of the eclipse and want to share it with SPACE.com for a story or gallery, please email Clara Moskowitz at cmoskowitz@space.com and Denise Chow at dchow@space.com.

Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111121/sc_space/solareclipsethisfridaycouldwowsmallaudience

andy rooney dies bank transfer day daylight savings 2011 day light savings day light savings us geological survey us geological survey

সোমবার, ২১ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Video: Cramer's Game Plan

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45362448#45362448

mario manningham mario manningham holes houston texans houston texans courageous courageous

Is The End Of The World Really Night?

The Guardian:

Judging by the run of successful natural disaster films in the past few years, people are fascinated by the idea of the end of the world. In Danny Boyle's 28 Days Later, a virus ravaged the UK and beyond; an asteroid was the world-ending threat in Deep Impact and Armageddon; and climate change got a starring role in The Day After Tomorrow.

Read the whole story: The Guardian

'; 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/2011/11/19/is-the-end-of-the-world-really-nigh_n_1103520.html

conficker rock and roll hall of fame zach braff kevin federline mega millions amy smart michael jackson dead

রবিবার, ২০ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Myanmar first 'pariah' to take up Obama engagement

U.S. President Barack Obama stands with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as he announces that she will travel to Myanmar, on the sidelines of the ASEAN and East Asia summit in Nusa Dua, on the island of Bali, Indonesia, Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

U.S. President Barack Obama stands with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as he announces that she will travel to Myanmar, on the sidelines of the ASEAN and East Asia summit in Nusa Dua, on the island of Bali, Indonesia, Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

U.S. President Barack Obama stands with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as he announces that she will travel to Myanmar, on the sidelines of the ASEAN and East Asia summit in Nusa Dua, on the island of Bali, Indonesia, Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

U.S. President Barack Obama opens the door for Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton after he announced that she will travel to Myanmar, on the sidelines of the ASEAN and East Asia summit in Nusa Dua, on the island of Bali, Indonesia, Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama finally found a taker Friday for his Inauguration speech offer to extend a hand to rogue states "if you are willing to unclench your fist."

The U.S. sees Myanmar as responding to the 3-year-old offer of engagement, a major shift for the former military-run dictatorship long under China's protection and influence. Sealing better relations, Obama announced he would send Hillary Rodham Clinton for what would be the first visit by a U.S. secretary of state in more than 50 years.

China immediately responded with a veiled warning to its smaller, weaker ally not to get too close to Washington.

Obama said of Myanmar, "After years of darkness, we've seen flickers of progress in these last several weeks." He announced Clinton's trip in Bali, Indonesia, on the sidelines of a summit of East Asian leaders, including Myanmar's President Thein Sein.

The U.S. president noted the release of political prisoners, the easing of media restrictions, a tentative opening of the political system and a dialogue between the government and pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, whose political party has agreed to register and participate in elections.

For Myanmar, also known as Burma, better relations with the United States may mean much-needed investment and market opportunities. It is also likely to boost Myanmar's credibility with its neighbors in Southeast Asia, many of whom view China as a growing threat.

Obama's trip to Asia this week was dominated by questions about China's changing world role, both as an economic power and an increasingly assertive military one. In Bali, Obama heard directly from participants in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations about worries over the South China Sea, where Beijing is increasingly asserting disputed territorial claims.

Reform in Myanmar will not come overnight or easily, and many remain skeptical about a commitment to democratization. After decades of repression and isolation under the military regime that ruled for more than half a century, leaders there seem eager to come in from the cold. Clinton will test that proposition during her Dec. 1-2 trip to Yangon, formerly known as Rangoon, and Myanmar's capital, Naypidaw, officials said.

Myanmar has been harshly criticized and penalized by the U.S. and its allies for widespread human rights abuses, and remains a target of sanctions.

U.S. officials denied suggestions that engagement with Myanmar is related to countering Chinese influence. Yet China reacted with apparent suspicion after questioning the appropriateness of greater military cooperation between the United States and Australia earlier in the week.

"We are willing to see the U.S. and other Western countries improve contacts with Myanmar and make better relations," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said at Friday's daily media briefing in Beijing. "At the same time, we hope that both the domestic and foreign policies of Myanmar are conducive for the peace and stability of Myanmar."

The Obama administration hopes the Clinton trip will encourage broader change by a newly elected civilian government that appears to be hedging its geopolitical bets by opening up to the West.

The cautious outreach to Myanmar also makes good on Obama's promise that he would try to talk with adversaries or disagreeable regimes when it was in the U.S. national interest. That realpolitik approach was aimed primarily at containing potential nuclear threats from North Korea or Iran, but made little headway with either of those governments.

Myanmar is in an uncertain middle passage ? no longer under full control of a junta but far from a free society.

Although he stressed that Myanmar needs to do much more, Obama called its first moves "the most important steps toward reform in Burma that we've seen in years" and worthy of recognition in the form of a visit by his top diplomat. Further rewards, including upgraded diplomatic relations with the return of a U.S. ambassador ? Washington has been represented by a charge d'affaires since 1990 ? could follow as could an easing of some of wide-ranging travel and financial U.S. sanctions if further progress is made, officials said.

The U.S. has been laying the groundwork for Clinton's visit for months, beginning with a visit in September by the administration's special Burma envoy, Derek Mitchell, who returned in October and again earlier this month with the administration's top human rights diplomat, Michael Posner.

In every encounter, they stressed Obama's readiness to respond to positive changes such as freeing imprisoned members of Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy and other dissidents and ending sporadic but fierce violence against ethnic minorities in the north and the east, the officials said. Alleged cooperation on sensitive weaponry with North Korea is also a cause for concern, they said.

A surprise move by Thein Sein in late September to halt work on a controversial $3.6 billion China-backed dam project because it went "against the will of the people" and the release last month of as many as 250 of Myanmar's more than estimated 2,000 political detainees encouraged the administration and sped up planning for Clinton's visit.

The final decision came after Obama spoke to Suu Kyi ? a fellow Nobel peace laureate ? on his way to Indonesia from Australia, officials said. She encouraged U.S. engagement with the successor to a regime that imprisoned her and launched crackdowns on pro-democracy protesters that left hundreds, maybe thousands dead in 1988 and again in 2007, and refused to hand power to her party when it overwhelmingly won elections in 1990.

U.S. officials said Suu Kyi told Obama it is "valuable and important" for the U.S. and Myanmar to have direct and clear communication and that she would welcome a Clinton visit as part of the effort to enhance dialogue between her party and the government.

___

Ben Feller reported from Indonesia.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-18-US-Myanmar/id-be9d692c94af4dc6816eceb4916ed861

go ask alice go ask alice nflx john mccarthy john mccarthy lumpectomy robin williams

Ravens beat Bengals 31-24 to take over 1st place (AP)

BALTIMORE ? An uncharacteristic performance by the Baltimore Ravens defense was offset by an uncommonly effective outing by Joe Flacco and the team's oft-criticized offense.

Flacco threw for 270 yards and two touchdowns, rookie Torrey Smith had six catches for 165 yards, and Baltimore moved into first place in the AFC North with a nerve-racking 31-24 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.

Playing without middle linebacker Ray Lewis for the first time in 58 games, the Ravens (7-3) nearly blew a 17-point lead in the final 14 minutes, yielded 483 yards and let rookie quarterback Andy Dalton throw for 373.

But Baltimore got 104 yards rushing and two touchdowns from Ray Rice, and the defense made big plays when it counted most. After Rice was stuffed on a third-and-1 with just over two minutes left, he remained confident.

"I just looked at the clock and I said, `Our defense will get it done,'" he recalled. "That's the faith I have in our guys."

Even without Lewis, who watched from the sideline after being placed on the inactive list with a toe injury. The Ravens' spiritual leader and leading tackler saw his unit pick off three passes and turn in a game-saving goal-line stand in the final minute.

Down 31-24, Cincinnati reached the Baltimore 7 before Terrell Suggs collared Dalton, who was called for intentional grounding. On fourth-and-goal, Dalton was sacked by Pernell McPhee.

The Bengals (6-4) needed seven points because on the previous series, an apparent 9-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Jermaine Gresham was overturned by a replay that determined the receiver didn't hold onto the ball at the end of a juggling catch. The Bengals settled for a field goal with 5:32 remaining.

"When the receiver went to the ground, he had the ball in his right hand," referee Ron Winter said. "The ball touched the ground and his hand came off the ball."

Baltimore is locked in a first-place tie with Pittsburgh in the AFC North, but the Ravens own the tiebreaker by virtue of their two wins over the Steelers.

"No. 1 in the division, that's huge," Suggs said. "Now we're the master of our destiny."

The Ravens won in part because of Smith, whose 165 yards were third-most by a receiver in Ravens history. He might have had more if Adam Jones didn't grab hold of Smith's long dreadlocks at the end of a 28-yard completion in the second quarter.

Jones was initially flagged for a horse-collar tackle, but officials corrected themselves and did not mark off any yardage because it's legal to tackle a runner by pulling his hair.

Even though it wasn't a banner day for the Baltimore defense, its three interceptions set up two touchdowns.

"Whenever we can get turnovers, it definitely makes everybody's job easier," cornerback Cary Williams said. "It's just being able to capitalize on opportunities, and we did that today."

Dalton went 24 for 45 with a touchdown. Cincinnati was without standout rookie wide receiver A.J. Green, who hurt his right knee a week earlier in a loss to Pittsburgh.

But the Bengals gave Baltimore all it could handle.

"We've won six games to this point and we'll win some more," coach Marvin Lewis said. "We've just got to circle the wagons, lick our wounds and go."

One week earlier, the Bengals came up short in rallying from a 14-0 deficit against Pittsburgh. It was more of the same against the Ravens.

"It comes down to the fourth quarter. That's how every game's been for us," Dalton said. "We've got to start faster. We can't wait around until the end of the game to pick it up, come out and get back in it. It's definitely going to be a focus for us."

Baltimore took a 24-14 lead on a 2-yard run by Rice late in the third quarter. The score came after Ravens rookie cornerback Jimmy Smith picked off a pass and returned it 16 yards before fumbling. The loose ball was recovered at the Cincinnati 2 by teammate Brendon Ayanbadejo in a pile that included Winter.

The Bengals' following possession ended with an interception by Lardarius Webb. On the next play, Torrey Smith split the Bengals' two-deep zone and caught a 38-yard touchdown pass in the back of the end zone to make it 31-14.

The Bengals responded with a five-play, 80-yard drive capped by a 49-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Andre Caldwell, who slipped behind Jimmy Smith down the right sideline.

But the Ravens held on, rebounding after a 22-17 loss at Seattle last week. Baltimore has won 12 straight following a defeat.

"It's good to bounce back," Suggs said, "but let's not take any more steps back."

The Bengals punted six times in the first half, two short of their season high for an entire game. Cincinnati's offense managed only 143 yards before halftime, 47 of those on one play.

On the Bengals' second possession, wide receiver Jerome Simpson made a juggling catch for a 47-yard gain to set up a 7-yard touchdown run by Cedric Benson.

The Ravens didn't get past midfield until early in the second quarter, following a 15-yard punt by Kevin Huber. Starting at its 45, Baltimore picked up a first down before Flacco tossed a short pass to Anquan Boldin, who ran the final 20 yards for a 35-yard touchdown.

NOTES: Former Ravens kicker Matt Stover was inducted into the team's Ring of Honor during a halftime ceremony. ... Ravens LB Jarret Johnson made his 74th consecutive start, breaking the franchise record previously held by Michael McCrary and Jamie Sharper. ... Baltimore has won seven straight at home and 15 of 16.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_sp_fo_ga_su/fbn_bengals_ravens

rhodes scholarship thanksgiving appetizers greg jennings super committee arkansas razorbacks arkansas football adrian peterson

Balanced Budget Vote Beckons (TIME)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/163603667?client_source=feed&format=rss

tucson weather peyton hillis cl p cl p andy rooney andy rooney groupon ipo

শনিবার, ১৯ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

US budget woes could hit European missile defense (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A breakdown in high-stakes budget talks in Congress could threaten plans for a missile defense shield in Europe.

Negotiators have shown little sign they will be able to meet next week's deadline for reducing the deficit by $1.2 trillion. If they fail to agree, a new law mandates cuts throughout the federal government, including a big slice of the defense budget.

While it is not known what military spending would be cut, an expensive program aimed primarily at defending Europe is unlikely to be spared.

The U.S. sees the missile defense system, aimed at countering a threat from Iran, as part of its contribution to the NATO military alliance. With the United States complaining it makes a disproportionately large contribution to NATO, missile defense could be especially vulnerable to budget-cutters.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111119/ap_on_go_co/us_us_europe_military_spending

tiki barber minnesota vikings packers vs vikings packers vs vikings

You'll Never Watch TV Alone Again

Want to know whether Modern Family or your favorite TV show will be back next season? Check out that program?s presence in the social media arena, according to the Social TV Summit held Wednesday in New York City. Networks and the marketers that advertise on them are beginning to salivate over the information social media reveal about television audiences. As a result, programs that don?t lend themselves to Facebook apps, Twitter exchanges or other online audience interaction are likely to find themselves on the chopping block.

TV networks have taken to dividing their audience into two new segments. The first is the younger ?lean-forward? crowd that watches programs with laptop, iPad or smart phone in hand, ready to more actively participate in the buzz around a show. The second is the ?lean-back? audience used to watching TV the same way it was for most folks in the 20th century?in digital isolation, with remote control in hand. Sitting posture aside, TV networks are catching on that many viewers want more interaction with each other and the programs themselves.

Facebook?s collaboration with USA Network to promote Psych is a case study in social TV?s success, according to Facebook. Prior to the current season of Psych, USA and Facebook created an interactive social media mystery game tie-in called #HashTagKiller that let the audience help the show?s main characters solve a mystery over a seven-week period (the season?s first seven episodes). Players could log directly onto the game site or access the site through Facebook, where they would be privy to a Twitter-like news feed containing clues to solving the #HashTagKiller case and interact with the show?s characters. The game follows the Psych Vision iPhone and iPad apps that USA launched last year for the show and allowed audience members to interact online, view unaired content and earn loyalty points.

Psych?s October 12 season premier attracted 3 million viewers, up 8 percent from the previous season?s opener. Although neither USA nor Facebook can link causation between the show?s social media buzz and the ratings boost, ?there is a correlation,? Kay Madati, Facebook?s entertainment strategy lead of global customer marketing, said at Wednesday?s event. ?Lots of things affect TV ratings, but there is something go on.? Fox Broadcasting has likewise been successful with its ?Biggest Fan? competition to promote Glee.

New ways of integrating TV and social media continue to emerge. Yahoo?s purchase of IntoNow earlier this year widens the audience for that company?s SoundPrint software, designed to identify a TV program just by listening to ambient sound in a room via the internal microphone on an Apple or Google Android mobile device. Essentially, SoundPrint checks three-second sound bytes it hears against a Yahoo database of TV sound bytes (140 million minutes? worth, the company claims). Once the show is identified, Yahoo can notify your friends as to what you?re watching, deliver news related to the show and its topic, and enable real-time banter via Facebook and Twitter.

Other efforts to integrate TV and the Web are also underway, including one from M.I.T. Media Lab spin-off Bluefin Labs. Bluefin?s software browses social media sites in search of comments about TV programs and reports back on those comments to help advertisers and TV show producers better understand their audiences.

Image courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=4874ae06f9bba387ff4fee79ee3e11af

nyc marathon nyc marathon brian williams coriolis effect coriolis effect giants patriots yolo

শুক্রবার, ১৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

The Multiverse: Where Do We Go?

You can't force canon into the Multiverse. All you can do is get so many people to agree that it happened (to their characters) that it almost becomes canon. And even then, its only true to those people.

I'm doing this right now, in an epic plot. D'yknow how long I've spent on this plot? Better half of this year just building up to an event that I expect will only be recognised by a handful of good roleplayers.

And that's good enough for me.

You can't expect every single person in the Multiverse to go 'Oh look, an epic powered barfight broke out and nearly destroyed the Multiverse. I should comment on this'. Making a recognisable event takes time, effort and skill, and even then it will only be immediately recognised by those immediately affected.

So if you want the Multiverse nearly being destroyed by everyone, you will have to include everyone in an epic and lengthy roleplay. It is the only way, I have found, to get actual recognition.

Edit: Substance is created by the players. If the players do not create substance, there is none. But even a good player can make a mistake and do something that's a little hard to just accept as 'it happened'.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/DmYyvWRQPoA/viewtopic.php

joshua komisarjevsky russell simmons russell simmons joseph kony joseph kony 9 9 9 delmon young

Obama boosts U.S. military in Australia, reassures China (Reuters)

CANBERRA (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Wednesday unveiled plans to deepen the U.S. military presence in the Asia-Pacific, with 2,500 U.S. marines operating out of a de facto base in northern Australia.

China, already worried the United States is caging it in, immediately questioned whether strengthening military alliances would help the region when economic woes put a premium on cooperation.

"With my visit to the region, I am making it clear that the United States is stepping up its commitment to the entire Asia-Pacific region," Obama told a joint news conference with Gillard in Canberra.

From next year, U.S. troops and aircraft will operate out of the tropical city of Darwin, only 820 kms (500 miles) from Indonesia, able to respond quickly to any humanitarian and security issues in Southeast Asia, where disputes over sovereignty of the South China Sea are causing rising tensions.

"It is appropriate for us to make sure...that the security architecture for the region is updated for the 21st century and this initiative is going to allow us to do that," Obama said.

He stressed that it was not an attempt to isolate China which is concerned that Washington is trying to encircle it with bases in Japan and South Korea and now troops in Australia.

"The notion that we fear China is mistaken. The notion that we are looking to exclude China is mistaken," he said, adding China was not being excluded from the planned Transpacific Partnership (TTP) on trade.

"We welcome a rising, peaceful China."

But China's rising power means it must take on greater responsibilities to ensure free trade and security in the region, he added.

"It's important for them to play by the rules of the road and, in fact, help underwrite the rules that have allowed so much remarkable economic progress," he said.

PEARL HARBOUR OF AUSTRALIA

The U.S. deployment to Australia, the largest since World War Two, will start next year with a company of 200-250 marines in Darwin, the "Pearl Harbour of Australia," Gillard said.

More bombs were dropped on Darwin during a surprise Japanese raid than on Pearl Harbour, Hawaii.

A total of 2,500 U.S. troops would eventually rotate through the port city. The United States will bring in ships, aircraft and vehicles, as well as increase military training.

Asked about the proposed deepening of U.S.-Australian military cooperation, Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said China stood for "peaceful development and cooperation."

"We also believe that the external policies of countries in the region should develop along these lines," Liu told a regular news briefing in Beijing.

Liu added that "whether strengthening and expanding a military alliance is in the common interests of the region's countries and the international community is worthy of discussion," especially amid a gloomy international economic situation and with each country seeking cooperation.

But some Asian nations are likely to welcome the U.S. move as a counterbalance to China's growing military power, especially its expanding maritime operations, and a reassurance that Washington will not scale back its engagement in the region due to a stretched U.S. military budget.

"The United States hopes to militarily strengthen alliance relations with Japan in the north and with Australia in the south, with the clear intention of counter-balancing China," Su Hao, the director of the Asia-Pacific Researcher Center at the Foreign Affairs University in Beijing, told the Global Times, a popular Chinese newspaper.

OBAMA TO RAISE SOUTH CHINA SEA

The winding down of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq has opened the door to greater U.S. attention to simmering tension over the South China Sea, a shipping lane for more than $5 trillion in annual trade that the United States wants to keep open.

Obama plans to raise maritime security in the South China Sea at a regional summit on Bali this week, defying China's desire to keep the sensitive topic off the agenda.

China claims the entire maritime region, a vital commercial shipping route rich in oil, minerals and fishery resources. It insists that any disputes be resolved through bilateral talks and says Washington has no business getting involved.

"The United States is also trying to get involved in a number of regional maritime disputes, some of which concern China's sovereignty and territorial integrity," a commentary from China's official Xinhua news agency said.

Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei hold rivals claims to at least parts of the sea and tension occasionally flares up into maritime stand-offs.

Obama will make an "anchor speech" outlining the U.S. vision for the Asia-Pacific to the Australian parliament on Thursday before a whistle stop in Darwin. He then flies to the Indonesian island of Bali for the East Asia summit.

(Additional reporting by Michael Perry and Jim Regan in Sydney and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Jonathan Thatcher)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111116/ts_nm/us_usa_australia

verizon wireless oregon ducks football the league the ides of march yankees espn magazine espn magazine

How the brain perceives shades of gray

ScienceDaily (Nov. 15, 2011) ? How the brain perceives color is one of its more impressive tricks. It is able to keep a stable perception of an object's color as lighting conditions change.

Sarah Allred, an assistant professor of psychology at Rutgers-Camden, has teamed up with psychologists from the University of Pennsylvania on groundbreaking research that provides new insight into how this works.

Allred conducted the research with Alan L. Gilchrist, a professor of psychology at Rutgers-Newark, and professor David H. Brainard and post-doctoral fellow Ana Radonjic, both of the University of Pennsylvania. Their research will be published in the journal Current Biology.

"Although we recognize easily the colors of objects in many different environments, this is a difficult problem for the brain," Allred says. "For example, consider just the gray scale that goes from black to white. A white piece of paper in bright sunlight reflects thousands of times more light to the eye than a white piece of paper indoors, but both pieces of paper look white. How does the brain do this?"

The process of seeing an object begins when light reflected off that object hits the light-sensitive structures in the eye. The perception of an object's lightness (in terms of color shade) depends on the object's reflectance. Objects that appear lighter reflect a larger percentage of light than those that appear darker.

Allred says the brain processes perceptual differences between black and white objects even when illumination of the object changes. If the brain did not do this, it would fail to distinguish color shade in different light.

In general, white objects reflect about 90 percent of the light that hits them, and black objects reflect about three percent, a ratio of 30-to-1, she explains.

"However, if you look at the intensities of light that enter the eye from a typical scene, like a field of lilies, that ratio is much higher, usually somewhere between 10,000-to-1 and a million-to-1," Allred says.

This happens because in addition to having objects with different reflectance, real "scenes" also have different levels of illumination. One example might be a shadowed area under a tree. Allred and her research colleagues wanted to determine how the brain maps a large range of light intensity onto a much smaller reflectance range.

One long-time hypothesis is that the brain segments scenes into different regions of illumination and then uses ratio coding to decide what looks white.

To test if this hypothesis was true, the researchers conducted an experiment where participants viewed images that had a very large range of light intensities. Participants were asked to look at a 5x5 checkerboard composed of grayscale squares with random intensities spanning the 10,000-to-1 range. They were asked to report what shades of gray a target square looked like by selecting a match from a standardized gray scale.

If the visual system relied only on ratios to determine surface lightness, then the ratio of checkerboard intensities the participants reported should have had the same ratio as that of the black and white samples on the reflectance scale, about 100-to-1.

Instead, the researchers found that this ratio could be as much as 50 times higher, more than 5,000-to-1.

"This research is important because we have falsified the ratio hypothesis, which is currently the most widely invoked explanation of how we perceive lightness," Allred says. "We also were able to reject several similar models of lightness. We were able to do this because we measured lightness in such high-range and relatively complex images."

She continues, "In addition, even though we used behavioral rather than physiological measures, our results provide insight into the neural mechanisms that must underlie the behavioral results."

A Philadelphia resident, Allred received her undergraduate degree from Brigham Young University and her graduate degree from the University of Washington. She is also conducting research on color memory and perception through a five-year grant from the National Science Foundation.

Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:

Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Rutgers University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ana Radonji?, Sarah?R. Allred, Alan?L. Gilchrist, David?H. Brainard. The Dynamic Range of Human Lightness Perception. Current Biology, 2011; DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2011.10.013

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/3bgtFAHmbic/111115133233.htm

pancreatic cancer symptoms apple stock aspergers apple computer pancreatic cancer steve jobs aapl stock