Sunday, June 30, 2013

PFT: Pats offering free exchanges on Hernandez jerseys

"FOX & Friends" All American Concert Series - Rodney AtkinsGetty Images

Geraldo Rivera and Rush Limbaugh are using the Aaron Hernandez case to tell their audiences that the NFL is contributing to a decaying American culture.

Rivera appeared on FOX News and said that the NFL and player agents should do more to keep players like Hernandez out of trouble.

?I don?t know why the league who recruits these kids from the inner city, how they don?t have minders, how the agents who are collecting 10 percent of $40 million, where are they in all of this?? Rivera said. ?Why aren?t they mentoring these young men who are fatherless, many of them ? Ray Lewis and all of the rest. Michael Vick. Uh, you can count them. There?s a ton of them. They sign them because they?re superb athletes and do nothing to preserve their character and put them on the right road toward manhood. It?s really pathetic.?

Rivera gets a few things wrong here: Hernandez isn?t from the inner city, he?s from a middle-class subdivision in Bristol, Connecticut. Hernandez?s father died when he was 16, but it?s wrong to call him ?fatherless,? as Hernandez often spoke about the close relationship he had with his father. Also, Hernandez?s agent didn?t get ?10 percent of $40 million,? as NFL agents can get a maximum of 3 percent of a player?s income, and $40 million represents the total value of the contract Hernandez signed last year ? most of which he will never see.

And, of course, the NFL does do plenty to try to encourage players to conduct themselves like professionals not only on the field but off, starting with the rookie symposium and continuing with player development programs that are available to every player during and after their careers. The NFL?s track record isn?t perfect, but how could any employer be 100 percent sure that none of its employees get into trouble away from work?

Those problems aside, Limbaugh piggybacked on Rivera?s comments. Limbaugh has long criticized what he sees as ties between the NFL and gangs, saying in 2007, ?The NFL all too often looks like a game between the Bloods and the Crips.? Limbaugh indicated that he thinks it?s unfair that he was criticized for those comments while Rivera will probably get a free pass, but Limbaugh added that he thinks the Hernandez case demonstrates the problem with a gang culture in the NFL.

?This guy is a star player in the National Football League, a star player for the New England Patriots. This has the potential to blow the lid open on the NFL and gangs and the whole concept,? Limbaugh said.

Rivera also decided that he wanted to bring Tim Tebow into the story and compare the two former teammates.

?Ironically a college classmate at the University of Florida of Tim Tebow ? ironic, why? Because Tim Tebow, probably the most religious, straight-shooting ballplayer in the league,? Rivera said. ?And Aaron Hernandez, a kid, an ex-hoodlum. You can take the kid out of the hood you can?t take the hood out of the kid. He was a Bristol Blood, he was a gang banger.?

Unfortunately for Rivera, The Onion beat him to trying to turn the Hernandez story into a Tebow story.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/28/pats-offering-free-exchanges-on-hernandez-jerseys/related/

mila kunis hugo chavez jamie lynn spears Chavez Dead Hugo Chavez Dead Bonnie Franklin sinkhole

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Video: Prep Your Retirement Portfolio

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

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52344902/

Nba.com Tim Samaras speech jammer Jean Stapleton Matt Smith Summer Jam 2013 the killing

Special Report: GM takes on the Toyota Republic

By Norihiko Shirouzu

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia is Toyota country. After more than 40 years here, Toyota Motor Corp and affiliates including Daihatsu have 450 dealerships and a 54 percent share of the market.

General Motors Co has been here even longer - but has just 34 dealers and less than one percent of the market.

"We started in Indonesia in 1938. We have been so successful, we have seven-tenths of a point of market share in 75 years. Are you (kidding) me?" Tim Lee, head of GM's international operations, said in an interview. "That is not constancy of purpose."

Despite that daunting gap, Indonesia is too tempting a market for GM and other automakers to ignore. Emerging markets account for half the vehicles sold worldwide, and industry estimates put that figure at two-thirds by 2020, when global demand is expected to reach 100 million cars annually.

And Indonesia - along with Brazil, Russia, India, South Africa and China - has become one of the hottest emerging markets of all. The country of 240 million people bought one million cars last year, and sales by some estimates are expected to double over the next three years. The McKinsey Global Institute says an additional 90 million people will join Indonesia's consumer class by 2030 when the country could overtake Britain to become the seventh-largest economy.

That's focusing minds at GM, the world's second-largest carmaker after Toyota.

GM for decades failed to come up with the right vehicles for Indonesia, which prefers simple "people mover" vans. Now, it is finally coming out with a competitive multi-purpose vehicle, the Chevrolet Spin. It has restarted an assembly plant it shuttered in 2005, and is trying to grow its sales and dealership network.

GM Chief Executive Dan Akerson said he thinks GM could grab a 7- to 10-percent share of Indonesia's automobile market within a decade.

"I think it's a good goal," Akerson told Reuters in an interview in Detroit. "Why give Japanese automakers a free safe haven?"

Toyota and its sister brand Daihatsu are not taking the GM threat lightly.

Fearing GM may try to poach its dealers, Toyota-Astra Motor - a sales joint venture between the Japanese auto giant and Indonesian conglomerate PT Astra International - last year asked many of its more than 260 dealers to sign loyalty pledges. Daihatsu-Astra Motor, a joint venture between Daihatsu and Astra, resorted to a similar initiative.

Toyota and its group companies in turn pledged to spend an additional $1.2 billion in manufacturing capacity and other capital investments in Indonesia. That's the carrot. As a stick, the Toyota team threatened to revoke the franchises of any dealer who does business with GM or other competitors.

Game on in Indonesia.

To lead its campaign in Indonesia, GM has tapped Marcos Purty, a 41-year-old back-slapping executive from the Detroit suburb of Pontiac.

"Now we've got a car, built here and aimed at 40 percent of the market," Purty says of the no-frills Spin multi-purpose vehicle. "We're finally up to bat, and we really want to make a big dent."

KING KIJANG

GM has a history of false starts and setbacks in Indonesia. Especially damaging was its failure in the early 2000s to forge an alliance with Astra, the most powerful local player.

Chevrolets began appearing on Indonesian roads in the 1920s when the country was a Dutch colony. GM began assembling cars here in 1938 at a plant in North Jakarta before giving up the factory in the mid-1950s, even as demand for cheap, durable vehicles began perking up in post-war Southeast Asia.

GM and other Western automakers did little to meet that demand, leaving the market to Toyota. Together with its partners, Toyota Group now sells half a million cars annually in Indonesia. Toshiyuki Shiga, chief operating officer of rival Nissan Motor Co., calls Indonesia a "Toyota Republic."

In 1971, Toyota started assembling Corollas and Land Cruisers at the Astra-owned Gaya Motor plant in North Jakarta - the very same place GM abandoned. Business really took off in 1977 when it launched the Kijang. Designed specifically for Indonesia, the multi-purpose vehicle has come to define motoring in Indonesia.

Originally it was offered as a pickup and minivan. It could be customized as a rugged people- and cargo-mover, with bench seats in the back that can hold up to a dozen passengers. The vehicle is used in many towns and cities as public transportation.

After 40 years, the Kijang remains a cash cow for Toyota. Its current incarnation, the Kijang Innova, last year generated sales of 71,364 cars; its distant SUV cousin, Fortuner, which shares vehicle underpinnings with the Innova, posted sales of 20,135 in 2012. Collectively they accounted for 8 percent of Indonesia's auto market last year.

By the time GM finally returned in 1993 - when Indonesia and other "tiger economies" were creating the Asian growth miracle - Toyota had a formidable grip on the market.

That year, GM formed a joint venture with a local partner, Garmak Motor. It assembled Opel cars, with kits brought in from Europe, at a plant in East Jakarta - the site where Spin vans are rolling off the line today. In 1995, it added another Opel car, as well as a "strategic" vehicle developed specifically for Indonesia: a right-hand-drive version of the Chevrolet Blazer sport-utility vehicle.

The Opels sold dismally - Indonesia has never had much demand for sedans. The Blazer also was a dud. Not only was it expensive at 200 million to 230 million rupiahs ($20,500 - $23,500), but it also lacked a crucial attribute for any Asian utility vehicle: a third-row seat. It was no match for the Kijang, whose most expensive model in 1998 sold for half the Blazer's price of 128 million rupiah. Toyota sold an average of 36,000 Kijangs a year during the latter half of the 1990s.

By contrast, GM sold 3,500 Blazers in 1997, the model's peak year. By 2001 volume had sagged to just 640 units. The Blazer had become a symbol of GM's flameout in Indonesia.

YEARS OF INSTABILITY

Actually, nobody was doing well in Indonesia then. The 1997-98 Asian financial crisis triggered food riots in Indonesia that toppled strongman President Suharto. Indonesia endured years of political instability, Islamic militancy and economic stagnation before righting itself in the middle of last decade.

The 1998 riots forced GM's expat employees to flee to nearby Singapore, and at that point, the company could have packed up.

"We decided we did not want to go out of business and sell the property because we always thought there was tremendous potential in Indonesia," recalled Bill Botwick, then GM's head of operations in the country.

Botwick returned to Jakarta within a week of the turmoil with a plan to look for a partner. He courted Isuzu Motors Ltd, one of GM's alliance partners back then, and Toyota's partner Astra, which had a sales and manufacturing partnership with Isuzu.

In the process, GM co-developed a three-row Asian utility vehicle with Prijono Sugiarto, who was then in charge of Astra's non-Toyota businesses, and is now its CEO. They used the Blazer's underpinnings for the new car and made it cheaper, with locally available Isuzu components.

GM launched the vehicle, the Chevrolet Blazer Montera, in 1999. Priced at 160 million rupiah ($16,370) in 2000, it was still no match for the Kijang, which chalked up 70,000 sales in 2000 versus just 3,660 Monteras that year.

Botwick then approached Sugiarto with a plan to beef up GM's sales network, proposing Astra join a three-way venture with GM and Isuzu. The talks went nowhere.

"It's very hard to negotiate when there are two parties. It's even harder when there are there are three," Botwick says.

So GM decided to forego partners and build its own network.

In fact, GM had no choice but to go it alone. Astra has no desire to team up with anybody other than Toyota and its affiliates, which now include Isuzu. "We're happily married to Toyota," Sugiarto told Reuters.

REBUILDING THE BRAND

Purty, GM's current Indonesia manager, is the man in charge of building the network and rebuilding the brand.

Purty, whose mother worked as a test-driver at GM's proving ground in Michigan, joined GM in 1994 as a production supervisor at a plant in Pontiac after getting an engineering degree. He has since supervised several factories - in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the Canadian town of Oshawa, Adelaide, Australia and now Jakarta.

One of his first moves was to beef up the limited product lineup for Chevrolet, the only brand GM sells in Indonesia. He added four new vehicles last year: the Colorado pickup truck, the midsize Trailblazer SUV, the Captiva compact SUV, and the Aveo mini-hatchback.

But the standard bearer, the car meant to make Chevrolet more than just a niche brand in Indonesia, is the Spin - with its three rows of seats, the kind of car that rules the Indonesian road. GM began production in April with plans for 40,000 cars a year initially. GM aims to make the car affordable by procuring parts locally. The Spin starts at 139.7 million rupiahs ($14,360).

To sell that many cars, GM needs a bigger sales network. It is planning as many as 50 stores by the end of this year from the current 34.

Purty's strategy is to try to convince dealerships affiliated with the Toyota Group to sell Chevrolets as a separate business. Purty's sales chief, Cheesing Cheong, says GM Indonesia had five Toyota dealers in its Chevy network before their arrival two years ago and has since added two more and is in discussions with several more.

But that door may already be slamming shut.

TOYOTA'S COUNTERPUNCH

Astra executives in charge of the Indonesian Toyota and Daihatsu units say last year they asked their dealers to swear loyalty to Astra and Toyota Group - in some cases with signed agreements.

Those agreements gave "amnesty" for any past roles as dealers of non-Toyota Group brands, but "we asked them to be loyal," says Johnny Darmawan, head of Toyota-Astra Motor.

"Competition was not so bad before, but now we have very tough competition from newcomers like GM."

Violators could lose their stores, Darmawan warned. "Going forward, I don't want to see any more defections. If we find out anybody is being disloyal, we reserve the right to revoke his contract," he says.

Akiko Machimoto, a Singapore-based Toyota spokeswoman, declined to comment.

Such loyalty pacts are almost unheard of in countries such as the United States, where local laws tend to protect dealers and franchise-holders. But under Indonesian law, Astra could enforce dealer loyalty through contracts demanding exclusivity, a knowledgeable industry source said.

Toyota has other strengths in the coming battles for Indonesia's car market. Its partner, Astra, is deeply embedded in Indonesia's powerful automobile lobby, Gaikindo. Gaikindo's board chairman is Sudirman, head of the Astra-Daihatsu joint venture. (Like many Indonesians, he goes by one name). Astra-Toyota chief Johnny Darmawan is one of Gaikindo's six key directors.

"Gaikindo is synonymous with Astra Group," said a Japanese diplomat. "Indonesia's lawmakers and policymakers would not do anything to hurt Astra's interest."

Another big edge is its after-sale service - spare parts, maintenance and repair. That is a critical battlefront in winning the trust of customers, especially in an emerging market where buyers worry about breaking down without access to spare parts and service. Here, Toyota and Daihatsu's strength lies in part in their willingness to bend internal rules.

In mature markets, automakers encourage dealers and recognized repair shops to use only "genuine," or certified, parts in repairs and maintenance. In an emerging market, where full-fledged motorization is just beginning and people are only just well-off enough to buy their first car, that may be hard to do.

Toyota's Jakarta-based executive Mamoru Akiyama says many Toyota parts shops are independently owned and operated, and so it is hard to control day-to-day practices. It is "conceivable in some cases," he said, that some of those stores stock non-genuine Toyota parts.

"JUST DON'T LIE"

In fact, Toyota's unofficial policy of tolerating non-genuine components was adopted in the late 1980s, when Koji Hasegawa was running Toyota's Indonesian operations. The now-retired Toyota executive said it stemmed from his encounter with a driver in Sumatra, whose truck broke down after a suspension spring coil failed. The driver was an oil field contractor and told Hasegawa he didn't always have enough cash on hand to afford a genuine spring coil.

The driver said he knew the genuine part would give him a year's worth of use but could not afford it. Instead, he bought an uncertified part that gave him three to four months of use at a third of the cost.

"He was buying repair in a clever installment system he devised," Hasegawa says.

In what he describes as strictly unofficial communications, Hasegawa told Toyota dealers they need not strictly comply with company policy.

"I told dealers: Just don't lie to the customer, and explain the risks involved, including the fact that use of a non-certified parts voids warranty of the vehicle."

GM insiders see little possibility of adopting that kind of policy because of its limited retail network. No parts producer would try to design and manufacture generic spare parts for Chevrolet cars simply because there just isn't enough volume.

GM says it markets only genuine, certified components through the company's 34 Chevy stores and the 280 parts and repair shops it officially does business with.

GM's strategy is to increase the number of parts available by searching for locally available uncertified parts - and then send in its engineers to elevate the quality so they can be sold as GM-approved parts.

It's all part of the company's strategy to convince Indonesian consumers that GM is in for the long haul.

Nearly two years after helping restart GM's Indonesia business, Purty still feels like the kid in a framed poster he bought years ago: behind 14-0 in a baseball game and still smiling.

"Not discouraged? The kid in the poster says:'why should I be? It's only the first inning, and we haven't been up to bat yet!'

"That's exactly how I feel," says Purty of his uneven contest with Japanese automakers.

(Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu. Additional reporting by Janeman Latul in Jakarta and Ben Klayman in Detroit. Editing by Bill Tarrant)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/special-report-gm-takes-toyota-republic-010801599.html

march madness Masters Leaderboard 2013 How Animals Eat Their Food Aereo Masters 2013 Lone Star College 42

Friday, June 28, 2013

Judge: Hobby Lobby won't have to pay fines

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) ? A federal judge says Hobby Lobby and a sister company will not be subject to daily fines for refusing certain birth-control for workers.

U.S. District Judge Joe Heaton on Friday set a hearing for July 19 on claims by Hobby Lobby and the Mardel Christian bookstore chain that they should not have to provide some types of birth control, as required under the federal health care overhaul.

The companies faced fines totaling $1.3 million daily beginning Monday. But Heaton ordered the federal government to not impose a penalty.

An appeals court said Thursday the companies could fight the new law on religious grounds but Heaton first had to reconsider an injunction request. Heaton said Hobby Lobby showed it would suffer consequences and that an injunction was in the public interest

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-28-Hobby%20Lobby-Birth%20Control/id-55ae55a805b445cc9dbcb67422602383

jefferson county colorado extenze tenacious d steve smith zou bisou bisou tim tebow press conference tebow press conference

Courteney Cox Is off the Market! Who's Her New Man?

From onscreen co-stars to offscreen couple!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/courteney-cox-dating-cougar-town-co-star-brian-van-holt/1-a-540152?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acourteney-cox-dating-cougar-town-co-star-brian-van-holt-540152

pat summitt real housewives of atlanta colton bo ryan the last waltz earth day activities mel gibson

PFT: Ex-Brown Walcott pleads not guilty

Troy Vincent

During the week of the NFL?s Rookie Symposium, where life lessons are taught to the incoming class of rookies, there hasn?t been a shortage of conversation.

But the conversation keeps coming back to one guy, Aaron Hernandez.

Troy Vincent, the NFL?s senior vice president of player engagement, said it?s a topic that?s impossible to avoid.

?You know, there?s this pink elephant in the room .?.?. the Hernandez situation,? Vincent told players, via Rick Maese of the Washington Post. ?The media has every right to ask you a question about that situation. And you have every right not to engage in that conversation. It is what it is. ?

As part of the opening session for NFC rookies Wednesday night, a group of second-year players were on hand to tell the new guys about the transition. But the topic of Hernandez was never far away.

?A lot of people are afraid of the words, ?Oh man, you different,??? Colts tight end Dwayne Allen said. ?You damn right I?m different. You damn right I?m different. I got a lot more money in my pocket, and a lot more sense. That?s the way you got to go about it.

?If you just turn on your TV to ESPN, this is a brotherhood. This is a brotherhood. One of our brothers in trouble right now. It really hurts me, man. But one of our brothers is in trouble right now because he didn?t want to be different. You got to make a choice right now. .?.?.

?You?re not the same dude you was when you grew up. You different now. That doesn?t mean you can?t hang out with your boys, do things you used to do with your boys. You still do those, but you got to be smart about it, smart about your decisions, man.?

At that point the room of rookies fell silent.

With the Hernandez situation unfolding in front of them ? along with former Browns linebacker Ausar Walcott being arrested for attempted murder and Cowboys defensive tackle Josh Brent going back to jail for failing drug tests while awaiting trial for killing a teammate in a drunk driving crash ??the league doesn?t need many words.

They have examples, hopefully too many of them for the point to be missed.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/27/ausar-walcott-pleads-not-guilty-to-attempted-murder/related/

tryptophan BestBuy.com Kohls Black Friday www.walmart.com Macho Camacho Rise of the Guardians Pumpkin Pie

Obama says shouldn't have to talk to Xi, Putin about Snowden case

DAKAR (Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Thursday he had not spoken to Chinese President Xi Jinping or Russian President Vladimir Putin about the U.S. request to extradite former American spy agency contractor Edward Snowden because he "shouldn't have to".

Speaking at a press conference in Senegal, where Obama started a three-country tour of Africa, the U.S. president said normal legal channels should be sufficient to handle Washington's request that Snowden, who left Hong Kong for Russia, be returned.

"I have not called President Xi personally or President Putin personally and the reason is...number one, I shouldn't have to," Obama said.

"Number two, we've got a whole lot of business that we do with China and Russia, and I'm not going to have one case of a suspect who we're trying to extradite suddenly being elevated to the point where I've got to start doing wheeling and dealing and trading on a whole host of other issues," Obama said.

(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Daniel Flynn and David Lewis)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-says-shouldnt-talk-xi-putin-snowden-case-121300425.html

2013 NFL Mock Draft paleo diet paleo diet earth day Luis Suarez Earth Day 2013 westboro baptist church

One Simple Hook to Solve a Million Problems

One Simple Hook to Solve a Million Problems

You know that phrase "don't mess with a good thing?" Sometimes you come across a product that's so simple, and so-self evident about it that it's perfect. I feel that way about the Unihook by designer Pat Kim.

So, sure, it's just a hook made from stainless steel you hang your belongings from. But it's strong, it doesn't need a stud, and it just looks nice. Look at that little splash of color it has. Plus, hooks are handy! You probably use them for your wet towels, your umbrellas, your bathrobes, your jewelry, and a bunch of other stuff it's not polite to mention in public.

The Unihook site doesn't list a price, but for ordering information email info@patkimdesign.com. If it weren't for simple organizational tools like this, some of us would probably lose our minds. [Pat Kim Design]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/one-simple-hook-to-solve-a-million-problems-601727055

E3 Schedule Gamespot rafael nadal cicely tyson falling skies johnny depp John Zawahri

Thursday, June 27, 2013

LinkedIn Celebrates 3 Million Company Pages ... - Marketing Pilgrim

linked in company 1LinkedIn started out as a place for career-minded individuals to network with other individuals but over the years it?s turned into the world?s biggest social network for everything business. They?ve added forums, mentor blogs, the ability to share videos and presentations. They also moved from the individual to the company with Company Pages.

According to their celebratory infographic, LinkedIn now has more than 3 million Company Pages, 500,000 of which were created in the past 12 months. Those pages represent 148 different industries and they range from think tanks to railroad companies and everything in between, beside, above and below. Dig around on LinkedIn and you can find The League of Paranormal Investigators, Inc, The Flipside Circus, and Tiny Paper Cranes ? a non-profit that makes origami birds for charity.

When LinkedIn says they have something for everyone, they?re not kidding.

Here?s my favorite slice from the infographic ? Ninja Style!

linkedin company 2

This slice makes me wonder about how much a company name effects business. Are you more likely to hire a company with the word Ninja or Samurai in the name or less likely? What about Pirate? How do you feel about weird names or unpronounceable names? You can say it?s all about results, but come on. . . when you?re scanning LinkedIn or Google you can?t help but be drawn in or put off by a company name.

Let?s look at one more slice:

linkedin company 3

I?m going to go out on a limb and say that you?re not using LinkedIn Company Pages to their fullest extent. Why am I saying this? Because there aren?t enough hours in the day to keep up every social media account you own. I get that. So here?s where you need to make a decision. If you?re a business to business company, spend more time on LinkedIn this week and less on Facebook. Post an interview with someone in your company. Add a video. Add a slide presentation.

Need inspiration? Mashable has the most engaged company page on LinkedIn. They?re a content site, so it?s easier for them to upload articles on a regular basis but I?d bet you have content on your hard-drive that you can use, too.? Look through your files and pick out two pieces of content that would be of interest to someone in your industry and post them.

With social media, what you get out of it is only as good as what you put in so make it a point to put in more on LinkedIn this week. It might help you find that one connection you need to take your business to the next level.

?

Source: http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2013/06/linkedin-celebrates-3-million-company-pages-infographic.html

Doc Rivers Under the Dome Naked and Afraid Demi Lovato Patrice Bergeron Adrien Broner Anna Kendrick

Te reo M?ori choice for Windows 8, Office 2013, and the Internet ...

For ten years Microsoft has been collaborating with Te Taura Whiri i te Reo M?ori (the M?ori Language Commission) and language experts to bring free te reo M?ori interfaces to the technology that millions of Kiwis use every day.

In preparation for M?ori Language Week 2013, Microsoft has announced today that the choice to use te reo M?ori in Windows 8, Office 2013, Outlook.com, and Internet Explorer 10 is available now.

Screenshot of Windows 8 Start Screen in te reo Maori

?We are thrilled to continue our support for te reo M?ori,? says Paul Muckleston, Managing Director of Microsoft New Zealand Limited. ?We are grateful for the hard work that so many people have done to make it possible to weave this taonga into the very latest of tablet, smartphone, PC, and cloud technologies.?

?We are also announcing our support for a new initiative that can bring free te reo M?ori translations to the Internet with the Microsoft Translator Hub in the future,? says Muckleston.

?Microsoft?s ongoing commitment to te reo M?ori deserves to be celebrated,? says Glenis Philip Barbara, Chief Executive of Te Taura Whiri i te Reo M?ori. ?Microsoft has worked with translators to develop and polish top notch translations for more than 100,000 phrases and they provide a truly immersive experience. It is exciting to see our language so comprehensively supported in the Microsoft products that are widely used in our community.?

Glenis adds that support for te reo M?ori in technology is essential for investing in tamariki by offering an interface from their school years. This allows youth to be immersed in te reo for life.?

New support for te reo M?ori in Microsoft products includes the following.

  • In Windows 8, te reo M?ori can be applied to the desktop and the modern touch-friendly interface, as well as the included apps for Mail, Calendar, People, Weather, Maps, Games, Music, Finance, News, Defender (the included free anti-virus software) and more.?
  • The new Internet Explorer 10 web browser for Windows 7 and Windows 8 can also be used with te reo M?ori menus and options.?
  • With Office 2013, te reo M?ori can be applied to Outlook 2013, Word 2013, Excel 2013, PowerPoint 2013, and OneNote 2013. The free online email service Outlook.com also has the option to be used in te reo M?ori.
  • Windows Phone 8 now offers te reo M?ori support for the Regional Settings (this will display things like the time and date in te reo M?ori).

All of these te reo M?ori options are available today at no extra cost, through a simple change in the Language Settings (Windows 8 and Internet Explorer 10, Outlook.com, and Windows Phone 8), or with a free download (Office 2013 from http://aka.ms/Office2013inTeReo). Previous versions of Windows and Office are also supported.

Anne Taylor, Customer Marketing Manager at Microsoft New Zealand Limited, has been a champion of te reo M?ori within Microsoft from the outset. She says the work involved in the development of this M?ori language support would not have been possible without many people working towards a common goal. Individual contributors include Haami Piripi, Huhana Rokx, Sharon Armstrong, Wiha Raki-Hawea, Lee Smith, Te Haumihiata Mason, Te Taka Keegan, Tom Roa, Roger Lewis, Wareko Te ?ngina, Eva Mahara, Hohepa MacDougall, John Moorfield, and Dave Moskovitz.

Taylor says, ?On behalf of Microsoft, I would like to thank everyone who has helped to make te reo come to life in a technological context, and Te Taura Whiri i te Reo M?ori for their encouragement and recognition of the work that has been done.?

?We encourage everyone to try these te reo M?ori interfaces for themselves,? says Anne. ?Our vision is that everyone can immerse themselves in te reo M?ori when they use our technology, to keep the language vibrant with the community leaders who know it well, and to revitalise and grow language use among children and learners.?

Waikato University Senior Lecturer in Computer Science, Dr Te Taka Keegan, has worked closely with Microsoft to develop the te reo M?ori interfaces. He says there is a need for greater access to technology to facilitate the use of the language on an everyday basis.??

Dr Keegan says, ?Microsoft?s 10 years of work has laid a foundation for te reo M?ori in the technology environment and highlighted how te reo M?ori can be used in modern contexts.?

?The impact of Microsoft's work is far reaching, giving future generations of M?ori language speakers the expectation that their computing and technology can, and more importantly should, be available in te reo M?ori.?

Building on this work, Microsoft New Zealand Limited announced today that it would support the establishment of a new charitable foundation for te reo M?ori language experts and advocates to bring free te reo M?ori translations to the Internet.

?Microsoft has been researching technology that allows computers to learn how to translate from one language to another for more than a decade,? says Muckleston. ?Microsoft technology powers the free translation tool at www.bing.com/translator/ that can translate any text or website, the translations that people see in Facebook and various consumer apps, and in software that is used by professional translators to help them be more productive.?

Microsoft?s translation service has the potential to make translations to and from te reo M?ori much more accessible to anyone through the Internet, says Pare Keiha, Dean of Te Ara Poutama, Pro-Vice Chancellor M?ori at AUT University. ?Being part of the process of building a new translation service for te reo M?ori will be a wonderful experience for language students.?

He is also excited about the future possibilities. ?If we can bring this ambitious project to fruition over the coming years, professional translators will be able to use the service in their work,? says Keiha. ?It will save a lot of time, so that more things can be translated into te reo M?ori. And anyone will be able to tap into the service to get the gist of what is being said in te reo. Microsoft is taking a neutral approach so there is no restriction on which smart devices can be used to access the service.?

?Microsoft has been consulting with te reo M?ori experts over the last year about the concept of bringing this instant translation technology to everyone. Based on the words of support and encouragement we have received, we would like to work with M?ori on this voyage to translation support in these tools for te reo M?ori,? says Muckleston. ?This won?t happen overnight, and it will take a lot of hard work by Microsoft and many volunteers ? but we think it is important to start on this ambitious project now so that te reo M?ori in the technological environment can be used more widely in the future.?

The first step will be for the community to use a free tool called the Microsoft Translator Hub to immerse the computer learning technology in te reo M?ori, so that the software can learn the vocabulary and grammar of the language. This requires a large collection of works that are available in te reo M?ori and in English or another supported language.

Muckleston says, ?Microsoft offers the Translator Hub as a free service for language enthusiasts and experts to chart their own pathways towards building sophisticated machine translation engines for their own use. It?s a self-service tool that allows people to include everyone in their community who can help to build the engine.?

?Most of the work will be done by enthusiasts and volunteers, and it will be important to recognise their work,? explains Muckleston. ?Microsoft will also give the project a boost with an initial funding grant for a researcher to collect translated works and add them to the Translator Hub to get things underway.?

Based on discussions with te reo M?ori experts, Microsoft is aware that the approach that will receive the widest support in New Zealand is for an independent charitable foundation, governed and controlled by M?ori, to collect and hold the body of translated works so that it can be used not only for the Microsoft Translator Hub project, but also for other projects that will enrich the language in the future.

?We recognise that collecting these valuable translated works from community and Government stakeholders is something that needs to be handled responsibly,? says Muckleston. ?The body of translated works that will be collected will be a cultural treasure in itself, and it is too valuable to be locked into any one company?s service. We understand that it needs to be readily available for other initiatives to study the language and improve access for the entire community.?

?Microsoft?s approach puts M?ori firmly in control of the body of translated works, and the Microsoft Translator Hub project itself,? explains Evelyn Tobin MNZM, JP, and Director, K?tare Enterprises Ltd. ?This is important, because it means M?ori own the process, and the critical decisions. I encourage everyone who is interested in revitalising te reo M?ori to come forward and support this work.?

Leading New Zealand law firm Chapman Tripp has offered to help with the establishment work of the foundation on a pro bono basis.

?Our firm supports the enrichment of te reo M?ori and we are excited to be part of this project,? says Justin Graham, Senior Associate at Chapman Tripp. ?As someone who is learning te reo myself, I feel this is an important project for New Zealand, and I am delighted to be able to volunteer my time alongside people who are recognised as leaders in te reo.?

Language experts Evelyn Tobin, Pare Keiha, and Te Taka Keegan have been nominated as initial trustees for the foundation, and there is an open invitation for iwi nominees, language enthusiasts, and representatives of the Te Taura Whiri i te Reo M?ori to participate.

The charitable foundation is due to be launched soon, which will open up this project to contributions from the public. If you are interested to find out more about the project, if you have feedback for us on the proposal, or if you would like to be part of it, please get in touch with us at TeReoMaori@microsoft.com.

To find out more about Microsoft?s commitment to languages please visit the Microsoft Local Language Program website at http://www.microsoft.com/LLP/. To find out more about Microsoft?s work on language technology please visit http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/mt/.

Article by Waldo Kuipers, Corporate Affairs Manager, Microsoft New Zealand Limited

Source: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/nzgovtech/archive/2013/06/26/te-reo-maori-choice-for-windows-8-office-2013-and-the-internet.aspx

mila kunis hugo chavez jamie lynn spears Chavez Dead Hugo Chavez Dead Bonnie Franklin sinkhole

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

How to spend a bit of money on your website for huge returns ...

counting changePhoto Credit: Megan

Windfalls are an amazing thing. Whether it?s a found $50 bill crumpled in a purse, an unexpected tax refund, or that contract money finally?coming through, this is a chance to treat yourself? or to invest in your business.

Sure, it?s tempting to nab that big screen TV you?ve been eyeing, but short of paying off debts, there?s no better way to spend your dough than on your future as a successful business owner. ?Whether you received a little or a lot, there are sensible and intelligent ways to use that bonus to propel you forward into your CEO-centric future!

?

Found an extra $100?

Even if your windfall is modest, it can set in motion your online business goals. $100 buys you a handful of fantastic business books, which can help you create the roadmap you?ll need to follow to launch your online company. The Little Black Book of Online Business: 1001 Insider Resources Every Business Owner Needs is an excellent selection (and just $17.50 at Amazon!). It outlines strategies for all manner of online business ventures, from a successful eBay store launch to a full-scale comprehensive business. The Complete Idiot?s Guide to Starting a Web-Based Business is also a popular option, and is loaded with clever ideas to get your idea to market. And at just $13.41 at Amazon, you have over $85 bucks left to build your resource library!

You can also spend your cash on smaller software purchases you need to create and maintain your business. If it?s time to update your website, as an example, you can find some of the most well-designed and professional WordPress and Joomla templates for under $50.

$500 in the change jar?

If you have a bit more dough on hand: $500 gets you valuable time with a professional SEO consultant, or funds the creation of some well-written, fantastic content to help launch and market your big idea. You can also hire a content writer to compose all the copy for your website too. If you require design updates to your website, this amount can fund minor formatting and artistic updates. You also have the money to finally design your dream logo at a site like our sister company?99 Designs, which charges just $299 and supplies up to 99 logo designs in less than a week. $500 can fund a full scale business proposal from a well-skilled writer as well, or if you already have a site up and running, you can spend it on a modest ad buy.

?

A $1,000+ Payday?

Ready to drop $1,000 or more? Then the sky?s the limit. $1k can actually buy you a functioning, burgeoning web business on?Flippa. Look for a website that?s already earning a modest monthly income; target roughly $75 a month. Find a business that has steady and growth-oriented traffic, solid content and design, and covers a niche that you understand and enjoy. Then dedicate yourself to making this business the best in its niche!

If you already maintain an online business, a thousand bucks can help propel your marketing efforts. You can fund an explainer video, hire an internet marketing adviser, or use it to purchase a much needed computer upgrade. This amount can also fund development improvements for your site, such as adding sophisticated shopping cart capabilities or implementing complex plugins. Now?s also the time to make an offer on a domain you?ve been coveting ? many domain holders are happy to let unused domains go for low four-figures.

By resisting the temptation to spend your cash on superfluous items and gadgets, and focusing on your company instead, you take one step closer to fulfilling your dream of independence, financial stability, and that ultimate goal: never working for someone else again.

2 Flares 2 Facebook 0 Google+ 0 LinkedIn 0 Reddit 0 2 Flares ?

Source: http://flippa.com/blog/i-have-100-500-1000-to-spend-on-my-website-what-should-i-do/

google glasses kim kardashian and kanye west henrik stenson jobs act greg mortenson jim marshall died 2013 toyota avalon

Obama Reveals Bold New Climate Change Plan

President Barack Obama unveiled an ambitious new plan today (June 25) to curtail U.S. greenhouse gas emissions as part of a far-reaching climate change strategy that he said, "should send a strong signal to the world that America intends to take bold action to reduce carbon pollution."

Obama outlined the policy objectives ? which focus on reducing the amount of carbon pollution in the United States, preparing communities to withstand the effects of a warming planet, and leading global efforts to fight climate change ? in a speech this afternoon at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

"The question is not whether we need to act," Obama said in his address. "The overwhelming judgment of science ? of chemistry and physics and millions of measurements ? has put all that to rest. So the question now is whether we will have the courage to act before it's too late."??

As part of the plan, Obama said he will direct the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to set standards for greenhouse gas emissions for new and existing power plants, which currently contribute 40 percent of the country's carbon emissions. These measures reinforce the president's earlier pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 17 percent below 2005 levels by the year 2020. [8 Ways Global Warming Is Already Changing the World]

"About 40 percent of our carbon pollution comes from power plants, but there are no federal limits to the amount of carbon pollution those plants can pump into our air," Obama said. "It's not right, it's not safe, and it needs to stop."

Obama also emphasized efforts to develop and deploy clean energy alternatives, and stated his intent to expand renewable energy projects on public land.

The president's previous goal of establishing 10 gigawatts of renewable energy on public land by the end of 2012 was met by the Department of the Interior (DOI) ahead of schedule. In today's newly announced plan, Obama directs the DOI to permit enough wind and solar energy projects on public land to power more than 6 million homes by 2020.

While the president did not deliver a judgment today on the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which would transport heavy oil from Canadian oil sands in Alberta to Gulf Coast refineries, Obama maintained that the project's environmental impact will be heavily considered in the decision-making process.

"Allowing the Keystone pipeline to be built would require a finding that doing so would be in our nation's interest, and our national interest will be served if this project does not significantly exacerbate the problem of carbon pollution," Obama said. "The net effects of the pipeline's impact on our climate will be absolutely critical to determining whether this project is allowed to go forward."

Yet, even mentioning the Keystone pipeline in today's address could be a signal of the administration's stance on the controversial project, said Victor Flatt, a professor of environmental law at the University of North Carolina School of Law in Chapel Hill, and director of the school's Center for Law, Environment, Adaptation, and Resources.

"I do think it tips their hand, and yet it does that while also distracting the president from what other people are going to consider a political decision," Flatt told LiveScience. "It's trying to couch it in terms that are not political, and basing it on scientific judgment of whether it will make climate change worse, which is what will, and should, drive the State Department's decision."

In today's speech, the president also took aim at climate change deniers, calling them "doomsayers," who will invariably claim that federal environmental regulations will come at the expense of jobs and a growing economy.

Instead, Obama said a low-carbon, clean air economy can be an engine of growth for decades to come, and that maintaining the health of the economy and preserving the wellbeing of the planet for future generations should not be mutually exclusive goals. [Images of Melt: Earth's Vanishing Ice]

"The problem with all these tired excuses for inaction is that it suggests a fundamental lack of faith in American business and American ingenuity," Obama said.

The announcement of a sweeping plan to address climate change already signifies an important shift in the political landscape, said Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate?Change Communication at Yale University in New Haven, Conn.

"It was, by far, the most comprehensive speech he's ever given on the issue," Leiserowitz told LiveScience. "Just the fact that he gave this speech is a major shift, especially for an administration that, for a number of years, has really avoided the topic."

Identifying a clear roadmap for reducing greenhouse gas emissions should provide the necessary assurances to companies and industry members that investing in sustainable energy is a priority, said Frank Lowenstein, Climate Adaptation Strategy Leader for The Nature Conservancy's Global Freshwater Team,

"A call to action and a clear direction is something the public, business community, and the world is hungry for," Lowenstein said.

According to senior White House officials, the president's plan relies on existing executive authority, which means none of the proposed measures require approval from Congress, where a number of climate change initiatives have stalled or been defeated in the past.

"For too long, the barricade of special interests in Washington has stopped Congress from acting against carbon pollution," Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) said in a statement. ?President Obama knows that we can?t wait to address this issue. We?re already paying the costs of climate change. Our oceans are warmer, more acidic, and rising; our seasons are shifting; and the dice are loaded for more frequent and more severe extreme weather events."

Still, the president stressed that even with these measures in place, the effects of climate change cannot be slowed, or reversed, overnight. As such, to prepare communities for the possibility of more frequent and severe weather events, Obama announced plans to help cities and towns become more resilient to the realities of a warming planet, which includes developing robust infrastructure to withstand storms and floods.

"Those who are already feeling the effects of climate change don't have time to deny it. They're dealing with it," Obama said, pausing frequently throughout his speech to wipe away perspiration from the sweltering summer heat in the nation's capital.

If addressing climate change is properly recognized as a priority, the president said the actions taken by the United States and the global community will "have a profound impact on the world we leave behind."

"We will have the satisfaction of knowing that the world we leave to our children will be better off for what we did," Obama said. "That's what we're fighting for. If we remember that, I'm absolutely sure we'll succeed."

Follow Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow. Follow LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-reveals-bold-climate-change-plan-204447003.html

UFC 160 criminal minds London attack Doodle 4 Google Sergio Garcia kellie pickler miranda kerr

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Man With A 'Battery Operated Brain'

He calls himself the "human with the battery operated brain" because he does, in fact, have electrodes in his head, put there by his New Zealand doctors.

Andrew Johnson (also known as "Cyber AJ") a few months ago was a young, 39 year old, early-onset Parkinsonian who tremored constantly. His hands shook. His neck crimped. His body was stiff. He had balance problems, voice problems, trouble speaking. He can make those problems disappear now by hitting a switch. It's amazing to see. This video begins with him looking totally normal; he talks a bit, then, when he's ready, he pushes the "off" button, and the disease comes roaring back. Instantly.

This procedure, called "deep brain stimulation" is now used all over the world. When neurons in the brain start firing in ways that cause shakes and tics, it is sometimes possible, says neurosurgeon Andres Lozano, to control those tics by adding or subtracting electricity.

So what we've been able to do is to pinpoint where these disturbances are in the brain and we've been able to intervene within the circuits in the brain ... We do that with electricity. We use electricity to dictate how they fire and we try to block their behavior using electricity.

Over the years, these implants can pinpoint the errant neurons with increasing accuracy adding or subtracting electricity as needed. In Andrew's case, the implants turned him from a "39 year old trapped in an 89 year old body" to what passes for normal guy ? at least when the current is on. As he says on his blog, youngandshaky.com, the surgery went fast.

I only had a small patch of hair removed from my head and chest and the wires pulled down and plugged into the neuro-stimulator which was implanted in my chest. Straight after the surgery I was in obscene amounts of pain (in my head) but double the normal dose of morphine soon put paid to that. While I was in recovery (incidentally longer than the time it took to do the surgery) there were lots of people milling around talking and getting ready to go to lunch etc. I am sure they were talking quietly but to me the slightest whisper was like a dagger to the skull and I remember thinking they better be quiet soon or I was going to get out of that bed and make them. That's if moving without falling to the floor in a crumpled heap was a possibility. The effects of the morphine soon kicked in and I started to feel halfway human again, albeit now a human with a battery operated brain. Cyber-AJ on the loose!

A few days later, after the staff had adjusted his monitor to compensate for his brain dysfunction, so that his body could move without shaking, (those settings will change; Parkinson's is a progressive disease), Andrew Johnson was released.

[T]he effects of being powered up are almost instantaneous. I have required several tweaks and medication adjustments but that is to be expected. I do feel a great deal better, certainly not to the point I was pre-Parkinson's but 100% better than I have felt in recent years. So from that perspective it has been a dream come true as I explained to a good friend Andy McDowell who came to visit me in hospital.

Andy McDowell also has Parkinson's, and he's written a poem about it to explain the disease to his children. "The only positive thing about this [expletive deleted] disease is meeting fantastic people like Andy and his wife Kate," says AJ. Here's the poem, "Smaller, A Poem About Parkinson's Disease", read by Andy's daughter Lily.

Thanks to blogger Jason Kottke for pointing me to AJ's story.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2013/06/25/195521917/the-man-with-a-battery-operated-brain?ft=1&f=1007

bridge to nowhere primary results dale earnhardt jr michigan primary daytona 500 winner cleveland plain dealer john scott

Win A Case For The Unreleased Redesigned iPad

case-2So I just got an iPad case in the mail. It's for the iPad 5. That model is not out yet. But you can have this case anyway. Of course I have no way of knowing if this will, for an absolute fact, fit the next iPad, but the chances are good.?At best, you'll win a case for the next iPad. Or, likewise, you could win a fun conversation piece.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/k1S9m8Gt35w/

Macys Thanksgiving Day Parade 2012 Turkey Cooking Times Butterball mashed potatoes Apple Black Friday how to cook a turkey emma stone

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 series to hit US on July 7th, prices start at $199

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 series to hit US on July 7th, prices start at $199

Not to be forgotten amid other new Samsung products, the company has announced that its complete Galaxy Tab 3 lineup will arrive in the US next month. The tablet family launches in the states on July 7th, with all three screen sizes (7, 8 and 10.1 inches) going on sale at Samsung.com, Amazon, Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Office Depot and other brick-and-mortar retailers. As a refresher, the entry-level Galaxy Tab 3 7.0 is priced at $199 and sports a dual-core 1.2GHz processor, 8GB of storage (plus microSD expansion), and a 7-inch 1,024 x 600 TFT display. There's Android Jelly Bean (4.1) from the outset, as well as Samsung's various apps and built-in hubs.

In addition to having a larger screen, the Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 ($299) bumps up other specifications, with a more potent Exynos 1.5GHz dual-core processor and higher-resolution (1,280 x 800) TFT display. It's got the very latest Android build (4.2), as well as a rear-facing 5-megapixel camera capable of 720p video capture. Storage is also doubled to 16GB, with extra space available through microSD, and 1.5GB of RAM to keep apps running smoothly.

Finally, there's the Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 ($399), which packs an Intel Z2560 processor (1.6GHz dual-core) and the same resolution as the Tab 3 8.0, albeit stretched a little further. It also matches the smaller model on storage and camera specs, although RAM has inexplicably dropped to just a single gig. The larger model does include a built-in IR blaster, however, as well as Samsung's WatchON TV recommendation service. All three WiFi-only models will arrive in white and a previously leaked gold brown hue. Pre-orders start tomorrow.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/24/samsung-galaxy-tab-3-7-0-8-0-and-10-1-release-date-pricing/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

the replacements how to hard boil eggs new nfl uniforms derbyshire the matrix oceans 11 ferris state hockey

Leap Motion Controller Hands-On: The Future Is Magic

Leap Motion Controller Hands-On: The Future Is Magic

Greasy fingers are the bane of touchscreens, obscuring the display behind snail trails of oil and streaks of grime. Forget that mess. Leap Motion has promised hands-free PC navigation for months now, and after some hands-on time we can confirm that the future is here, and it's amazing.

As a brief refresher, the Leap Motion Controller tracks your hand and finger movements in three-dimensional space, allowing users to recreate multitouch input without actually touching anything. You just wave your hands and wiggle your fingers in the air over it and boom, your computer responds.

Leap Motion Controller Hands-On: The Future Is Magic

It will be available for Windows 7 and 8, as well as Mac OS X 10.6 and above, when the $80 device hits store shelves on July 29th (though if you pre-ordered, it's out on the 22nd). It won't be available for mobile to start but the company is looking into potentially integrating the technology with a number of OEMs.

With a few waves of your hands, both native applications?from web browsers to Google Earth?and system navigations respond instantly to your commands. The company is also developing Airspace, an online hub for LeapMotion-enabled applications.

Leap Motion Controller Hands-On: The Future Is Magic

"Everything you can do with a touch-based system, like Windows 8, can now be accomplished with LeapMotion technology. We want our users to have a magical experience, with easy and natural movements in the air leading to amazing interactions. This is the foundation for our approach to existing systems," David Holz, co-founder and CTO of LeapMotion, said in a press statement. "But this is only the beginning. The potential for our 3D interaction technology is really unleashed by applications built specifically for LeapMotion, helping drive the future of computing."

Leap Motion Controller Hands-On: The Future Is Magic

I had the opportunity to try out the Leap Motion last week, and great googly moogly this thing is amazeballs. It tracks both hands?their position, angle, rotation, orientation, everything?in real time, as well as the positions and movements of all three joints in all ten fingers. The controller registers everything within a roughly foot-tall, 18-inch-wide dome-shaped area surrounding the controller and is wildly accurate, picking up even miniscule finger twitches. During the demo, used Google Earth to fly around Lower Manhattan like I was the kid from Flight of the Navigator, I played a 3D variation of Brick Breaker using my index fingers as paddles to punch, poke, and prod the ball around the arena, and I navigated around both OS X and Windows 8 systems by swiping my hands through the air.

It was strange, initially, getting used to moving the cursor without grabbing a mouse or tapping the screen but it only takes a second to get the hang of the process. The controller can also be set to use either basic controls (taps, swipes, and other common input commands) or more advanced gestures, which helps ease you into it as well.

Granted, I played with this device for all of 15 minutes in a controlled environment (LeapMotion's SF office) but that was a glorious quarter hour; I felt like Tony Stark using the Jarvis UI. July 29th can't come soon enough.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/leap-motion-controller-hands-on-the-future-is-magic-530869578

gwen stefani overeem laron landry mary j blige burger king islands 2013 nissan altima masters par 3 contest

Monday, June 24, 2013

U.S. Talks Tough on Leaker (WSJ)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/314961507?client_source=feed&format=rss

overboard east of eden weather radio indiana autoimmune disease news channel 9 insanity workout

Summer solstice 2013: Longest day, best Mercury-spotting

This year's summer solstice,?Friday (June 21) at 1:04 a.m. EDT (0504 GMT), also features a rare chance to see Mercury, the planet usually obscured by the sun's glare.

By Geoff Gaherty,?Starry Night Education / Space.com / June 20, 2013

Land of the Midnight Sun: The sun sets just before 1 a.m. on June 16, 2013, in Anchorage, Alaska. Daylight in Anchorage will peak on Friday, June 21, with 19 hours, 21 minutes on the summer solstice.

Dan Joling / AP

Enlarge

Don?t miss your chance to see Mercury in the night sky as the northern summer kicks off.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The last few weeks have provided an unusually fine opportunity for stargazers to spot the elusive?planet Mercury?because the planet has been in close proximity to brilliant Venus, and, earlier, Jupiter as well. However, the opportunity is now coming to a close as Mercury passes its maximum elongation from the sun today (June 20) and begins its rapid drop towards the horizon, passing between Earth and the sun on July 9.?

For the next few nights, Mercury will be a tiny speck just below Venus. It is closest to Venus on July 20, slightly less than two degrees away, but will also be very close one night earlier or later.

The best time to see Mercury is about half an hour after local sunset. Any earlier, and it will be lost in the sky's glare but much later and it will be too low to see. It is most easily spotted with binoculars, but once you've located it, the planet should be relatively easy to see with the naked eye.

This week also marks the?summer solstice, on Friday (June 21) at 1:04 a.m. EDT (0504 GMT). The sun will reach its most northern declination, marking the middle of summer in the Northern Hemisphere and the middle of winter in the Southern Hemisphere.

Because the sun is as far north as it can get, it is above the horizon in the Northern Hemisphere as long as is possible. At local noon, it will be as high in the sky as it can get. These two factors combine to create the maximum solar heating possible in the hemisphere.

In the Southern Hemisphere, the opposite is true. The day is as short as it can get, and the sun is low in the northern sky, giving little warmth.

If June 21 is the "midsummer" or "midwinter" day, why is it that we always think of the seasons as beginning on this day? It's because it takes time for the sun to have its effect, causing the seasons to lag behind the sun, making the hottest days of summer (or the coldest days of winter) come a month or two after the solstice.

The solstices have always been important dates for humans. Most calendars mark the beginning of the year close to the winter solstice. Determining the exact date of the solstice was important to fix the calendar, and structures like?Stonehenge?in England were built to make accurate measurements of the sun?s rising and setting points.

Editor's note: If you snap an amazing photo of Mercury in the night sky, or any other celestial object, and you'd like to share for a possible story or image gallery, please send images and comments, including location information, to Managing Editor Tariq Malik at?spacephotos@space.com.

This article was provided to SPACE.com by?Starry Night Education, the leader in space science curriculum solutions. Follow Starry Night on Twitter?@StarryNightEdu. Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebookand?Google+. Original article on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013?SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/sU-bP7S-q1A/Summer-solstice-2013-Longest-day-best-Mercury-spotting

West Texas American Airlines Carlos Arredondo Pat Summerall Martin Richard friends awkward

Book: Wallenberg also helped armed resistance

STOCKHOLM (AP) ? Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who saved thousands of Jews from Nazi-occupied Hungary, may also have had a secret military mission during World War II, a new book claims.

Citing documents from Hungarian archives, Swedish-Hungarian writer Gellert Kovacs says Wallenberg, whose fate remains shrouded in mystery, had closer links with Hungary's non-Communist resistance movement than previously thought.

That, Kovacs said, could shed new light on why the Soviets arrested Wallenberg in Budapest in 1945 and why supposedly neutral Sweden remained so passive following his disappearance.

"For me it is very clear that it was also Wallenberg's mission to act as some kind of coordinator between the resistance forces and the Allies," Kovacs told The Associated Press.

Other researchers investigating Wallenberg's fate called the information significant, but said it wasn't enough to conclude that Wallenberg gave military support to Hungarian resistance fighters.

It's well known that Wallenberg's work as Sweden's envoy in Budapest was a cover for a humanitarian mission as secret emissary of the U.S. War Refugee Board, created in an attempt to stem the annihilation of Europe's Jews. He saved at least 20,000 Jews in Budapest by giving them Swedish travel documents or moving them to safe houses.

In his book, whose Swedish title could be translated as "Dark skies over Budapest," Kovacs says documents he found in Hungary's military history archives show how a member of the resistance movement communicated the position of Nazi Germany's ships in the Danube river to the allies via radio equipment in the Swedish embassy. British planes based on Malta then bombed the ships.

While there is no documentation that links those activities directly to Wallenberg, Kovacs says his research shows Wallenberg had frequent contacts with leaders of the non-communist resistance movement including Kalman Zsabka and Zoltan Miko. Swedish assistance to the Hungarian resistance movement in military operations with the allies would have run counter to Sweden's neutrality.

Previous research has also shown Wallenberg was in contact with high-ranking resistance leader Geza Soos.

Part of Kovcac's work is based on research by Hungarian historian Jozsef Gazsi during the Cold War. Gazsi interviewed several former members of the resistance movement who said they had met Wallenberg. One of them, Ferenc Kalmanffy, even said that Wallenberg had given them "hand-grenades, pistols and some machine guns," according to Hungarian documents that Kovacs cites in his book.

Susanne Berger, a long-time Wallenberg researcher, called that information significant.

"This is clearly a military political activity and that really stirs up a whole new hornet's nest," she told AP.

"The sources and contents Gellert cites obviously have to be critically evaluated, but I see nothing in this material that would indicate that the alleged actions could not be true," she added.

Swedish author Ingrid Carlberg, who published a biography of Wallenberg last year, said Kovac's book "paints an entirely new and very interesting picture" of the resistance movement's use of radio equipment in the Swedish embassy.

However, she said those activities were probably set in motion by the first secretary at the Swedish legation, Per Anger, who she said worked closely with the leader of the resistance group that used the radio equipment.

Wallenberg vanished after being arrested by the Red Army. The Soviets initially denied he was in their custody, but then said in 1957 that he died of a heart attack in prison on July 17, 1947.

If Wallenberg's activities in Hungary extended beyond humanitarian work, that would make it easier to understand why the Soviets kept him in custody, Kovacs said.

"From their point of view it's entirely rational," he said. "They probably believed he had important information and saw him as a threat."

The information also provides a broader context to Sweden's passive reaction to Wallenberg's disappearance, Kovacs said.

Sweden has been widely criticized for prioritizing its relations with the Soviet Union over finding out what happened to Wallenberg.

"He breached all existing diplomatic conventions. If he had made it back I think he would have been scolded by the Foreign Ministry and he would never have gotten another job there," Kovacs said about Wallenberg. "I think this is the biggest reason why the foreign ministry was so feeble in the first years. They felt Wallenberg put the embassy at risk."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/book-wallenberg-helped-armed-resistance-100118900.html

herniated disc luke scott tom benson royals nicole richie lyme disease symptoms esperanza spalding

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Source: Snapchat Snaps Up $80M From IVP At An $800M Valuation

Screen Shot 2013-06-22 at 11.42.55 PMIt's the second day of summer, and Snapchat has raised an $80 million Series B round at an $800 million pre-money valuation, according to a source. The phat Series B round was led by Institutional Venture Partners,?according to multiple sources, after being sought after by many other top-tier Valley VCs.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Bu5jBlKBuVY/

Yom Kippur 2012 Aaron Paul packers Dancing With The Stars All Stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt space shuttle Torrey Smith Brother