Saturday, June 29, 2013

South Africa's Mandela 'improving' as Obama flies in

By Peroshni Govender and Jeff Mason

PRETORIA/JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's ailing anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela is doing much better in hospital, his ex-wife Winnie said on Friday, as U.S. President Barack Obama arrived for a visit that will pay homage to a man he calls his "personal hero".

The faltering health of the first black president of South Africa, a revered symbol of racial reconciliation, has drawn world attention since the 94-year-old was rushed to hospital with a recurring lung infection nearly three weeks ago.

Earlier this week, the government said Mandela's frail condition had turned critical, but since Thursday President Jacob Zuma has reported that his health is improving.

"I'm not a doctor, but I can say that from what he was a few days ago, there is great improvement," Mandela's ex-wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, told reporters outside Mandela's former home in the Johannesburg township of Soweto.

But, she added, he remained "clinically unwell".

Aboard Air Force One prior to arriving in South Africa, Obama paid tribute to Mandela for the way he led his nation out of apartheid after years of struggle, but said he did not need a "photo op" with the former president.

"Right now, our main concern is with his wellbeing, his comfort, and with the family's wellbeing and comfort," he told reporters before the U.S. presidential aircraft touched down on Friday evening at Waterkloof air force base in Pretoria.

During his weekend trip to Johannesburg, Pretoria and Cape Town, his second stop of a three-nation Africa tour, Obama is scheduled on Sunday to visit Robben Island, where Mandela passed 18 of the 27 years he spent in apartheid prisons.

White House officials have said they will defer to the Mandela family on whether a visit to the hospital to see Madiba, as he is affectionately known, would be appropriate.

LESSONS OF MANDELA

Obama told reporters his message in South Africa would draw from the lessons of Mandela's life.

"If we focus on what Africa as a continent can do together and what these countries can do when they're unified, as opposed to when they're divided by tribe or race or religion, then Africa's rise will continue," he said.

White House officials said Obama would hold a "town hall meeting" on Saturday with youth leaders in Soweto, the Johannesburg township known for 1976 student protests against apartheid.

Obama, in office since 2009, is making his first substantial visit to Africa following a short trip to Ghana at the beginning of his first term.

While well-wishers and journalists crowded outside the hospital in the capital Pretoria where Mandela is being treated, a few blocks away, hundreds of demonstrators protested against Obama's visit, some burning U.S. flags.

Nearly 1,000 trade unionists, Muslim activists and South African Communist Party members marched to the U.S. Embassy shouting slogans denouncing Obama's foreign policy as "arrogant and oppressive".

Muslim activists held prayers in a car park outside the embassy. Leader Imam Sayeed Mohammed told the group: "We hope that Mandela feels better and that Obama can learn from him."

South African critics of Obama have focused in particular on his support for U.S. drone strikes overseas, which they say have killed hundreds of innocent civilians, and his failure to fulfill a pledge to close the U.S. military detention center at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba housing terrorism suspects.

"TWO GREAT MEN"

Protesters said the first African-American president should not try to link himself to the anti-apartheid figure.

"Mandela valued human life ... Mandela would condemn drone attacks and civilian deaths, Mandela cannot be his hero, he cannot be on that list," said Yousha Tayob.

Not far away at the Pretoria heart hospital, some of the people paying tribute to Mandela had words of praise for Obama, who met Mandela in 2005 when he was still a U.S. senator.

Nigerian painter Sanusi Olatunji, 31, had brought portraits of both Mandela and Obama to the wall of the hospital, where flowers, tribute notes and gifts for Madiba, as Mandela is affectionately known, have been piling up.

"These are the two great men of my lifetime," he said.

As Mandela's health has deteriorated this year, the realization has grown among South Africa's 53 million people that the man who forged their multi-racial "Rainbow Nation" from the ashes of apartheid may be nearing his end.

The possibility of his dying has already generated controversy among the extended Mandela clan.

A dispute between two factions over where the family grave should be went to court on Friday when his eldest daughter and more than a dozen other relatives sought an injunction against Mandela's grandson, Mandla.

The state broadcaster SABC said a court had ordered Mandla to return the remains of three of Mandela's children from the village of Mvezo, where the anti-apartheid icon was born and where Mandla is now an influential tribal chief, to their former graves in Qunu, the village 20 km (13 miles) away where Mandela spent most of his childhood.

Mandla, 39, has built a memorial center in Mvezo that many have interpreted as an attempt to ensure Mandela is buried there.

(Additional reporting by Mark Felsenthal aboard Air Force One and Ed Cropley in Johannesburg; Writing by Jon Herskovitz and Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-protesters-rally-near-hospital-treating-mandela-110724050.html

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Texas: 500 executions in three decades

On Wednesday, Kimberly McCarthy became the 500th person executed by the state of Texas since the death penalty was reinstated more than three decades ago. McCarthy had been convicted of killing Dorothy Booth and stealing her diamond ring.?

By Staff,?Reuters / June 26, 2013

Donna Aldred, left, and daughter, Leslie Lambert, right, listen during a news conference after the execution of Kimberly McCarthy Wednesday in Huntsville, Texas. McCarthy was convicted of killing Aldred's mother, Dorothy Booth.

AP Photo/David J. Phillip

Enlarge

Texas?on Wednesday executed by lethal injection a woman convicted of stabbing her elderly neighbor to death in 1997, the first U.S. execution of a woman in nearly three years, the?Texas Department of Criminal Justice?said.

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Kimberly McCarthy, 52, was pronounced dead at 6:37 p.m. CDT (2337 GMT) at a?Texas?state prison, the department said. She was convicted of killing?Dorothy Booth, 71, in 1997, cutting off her ring finger and stealing a diamond ring that she then pawned.

McCarthy was the eighth person executed in?Texas?this year and the 500th put to death in the state since the?United States?restored capital punishment in 1976, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Executions of women remain rare in the?United States. Of the 1,338 inmates executed since the death penalty's reinstatement, only 13 have been women. Before McCarthy, the last woman executed was?Teresa Lewis?by?Virginia?in September 2010.

(Reporting by Lisa Maria Garza; Editing by Dina Kyriakidou and Eric Beech)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/t_YV9EV0iMI/Texas-500-executions-in-three-decades

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Friday, June 28, 2013

LA police: Video shows suspect in ambush shooting

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck released surveillance video Wednesday in hopes that the public can identify a man they says is a suspect in the shooting of two detectives.

The black-and-white video shows the man carrying what authorities believe to be the revolver used to wound two detectives who were ambushed outside the LAPD's Wilshire station early Tuesday.

Hundreds of officers sealed off 25 blocks of the busy Mid-City area for hours and detained 10 people but never found the gunman.

The manhunt was followed by an apparently unrelated shooting hours later, when two officers were shot during a probation check at a Willowbrook home. After an all-night standoff, the suspected gunman was found dead Wednesday.

The attacks happened hours apart and sent police swarming to Los Angeles neighborhoods, disrupting thousands of people. They appeared to be unrelated, police Cmdr. Andrew Smith said.

In the latest assault, authorities conducting a routine probation check were searching the Willowbrook home at about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday when a man inside shot an LAPD gang officer in the face and grazed the leg of a probation officer, Smith said.

The officer underwent surgery and was recovering in hospital intensive care, Smith said.

At least five officers exchanged shots with the gunman, and police sealed off the unincorporated county area about 10 miles south of downtown.

Neighboring homes were evacuated while officers tried to contact the gunman without success.

Police fired tear gas into the home and used a robot to examine it before a SWAT team finally entered and found a man dead in the attic shortly before 9 a.m. Wednesday, Smith said.

The man, whose identity wasn't immediately released, had several gunshot wounds, but it was unclear whether he died from police bullets or killed himself, Smith said. It also was unclear how long he'd been dead.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/la-police-video-shows-suspect-ambush-shooting-214119313.html

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PFT: NFL issues statement on Hernandez arrest

Jets Bills FootballAP

In most NFL stadiums, which have modern seats or decent weather, the league?s new bag policy represents an inconvenience for the sake of security.

In Buffalo, long-time fans are worried about freezing their butts off, literally.

Seat cushions fall under the league?s ban, and for those in Ralph Wilson Stadium (particularly those in the bleachers) that?s a huge factor.

?I think it?s terrible,? 96-year-old Bills fan Ray Deibel said, via Gene Warner of the Buffalo News. ?The seats are cold, and the cushion gives you some insulation. I can?t imagine them banning cushions for the seats.?

Informed that the seat cushions were now prohibited because of terrorist concerns, Deibel responded exactly the way you?d expect a 96-year-old Bills fan to respond.

?Oh jeepers,? he said. ?I?m all for the inspections, including the body scanning, and the delay in getting into the stadium is worthwhile for safety. But I think that?s ridiculous to ban seat cushions.?

Bills fans can still bring their own foam pads or portable seat backs, but nothing with covers or pockets.

?I don?t like it,? said Doug Pagano, apparently a counter-terrorism expert. ?I don?t think these terrorists are going to put their bombs in seat cushions.

?There are a lot of risks involved in life. You can?t prevent everything. Just because one guy has a bomb in his shoes, why should millions of people have to take off their shoes at airports? You can?t prevent all risks. I think the NFL is going a little bit overboard.?

While that might be true ? and the teams would certainly be happy to sell you a brand new seat cushion on each visit ? it?s also the kind of change that?s not turning around.

Bills fans will just have to brace themselves and their backsides, or just watch the game on their warm, soft couches.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/26/nfl-issues-statement-on-aaron-hernandez-arrest/related/

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I'm David McRaney, and This Is How I Work

We talk a lot about perception, reasoning, and bias here at Lifehacker, so it makes sense that David McRaney is one of our favorite writers. (We've covered his thoughts on everything from wine to internet fights.) At his blog You Are Not So Smart?and in the book of the same title?David focuses on why humans are so "unaware of how unaware we are." His newest book, You Are Now Less Dumb, expands on these ideas of self-delusion and offers ways to overcome the brain's natural tendencies. We caught up with David to talk about his writing habits, favorite gadgets, secret talents, and more.

Location: About an hour-and-a-half away from New Orleans in a college town in Mississippi called Hattiesburg.
Current gig: Author of You Are Now Less Dumb, out July 30, published by Gotham. Think of it as a self-hurt book with a heart of gold. Writer and producer of things that appear at YouAreNotSoSmart.com. Digital media director, one of several, with Raycom Media. Current mobile device: iPhone 5
Current computer: 27-inch iMac; 15-inch Macbook Pro
One word that best describes how you work: Modularly

What apps/software/tools can't you live without?

I write everything in Google Drive in Chrome, including this sentence, and then move it into other programs like Scrivener and Word when it comes time for for those things to be polished. I love the stripped-down interface and the security of knowing it's saved in the cloud and will probably be accessible for as long as Google supports it.

I'm David McRaney, and This Is How I Work

This is probably not the best way to go about doing things, but both of my books passed through a chain of programs chapter by chapter: Drive to Scrivener to Word to Dropbox. Drive for the bulk of the writing, Scrivener to shape it into a book, and Word for coordinating with an editor through the track changes feature. I offloaded a new copy of the manuscript to Dropbox every night after each writing session too, just in case. Dropbox saved me when a tornado destroyed my house and neighborhood during the final days of editing the new book. I was able to set up a laptop the next morning, download it, and finish the manuscript while rain poured into my office across a tree that had skewered my roof. (Pictured at left.)

I toss dozens of things into Evernote every day?comments, quotes, full articles, instructions, urls?everything. I love being able to search it later when I remember reading something a while back that would go great with something recently discovered. I also have a ScanSnap S1300i that I use to scan into Evernote just about every flat thing that enters my house.

I capture interviews over Skype with Audio Hijack Pro and use Levelator, Audacity, and Garage Band to make them sound nice.

Off screen, my most valuable tool is access to a university library system. I routinely depend on it to print out heaps of studies which I go through with my other favorite offline tool, a Bic four-color pen.

I use Prezi to create my lecture presentations. It?s actually fun to use, and audiences love it.

And, of course, Wordpress has changed my life.

What's your workspace like?

It depends on what phase I?m in during a writing project. When I?m still trying to figure out what I?m going to do next or I?m arranging things very early on, I like to stay out of my office. I use a laptop and a legal pad on my deck or at a bar or a coffee shop in the beginning since distractions don?t matter to me at that point. In that phase I also prefer reading books on the Kindle app on an iPad so I can highlight text and get back to it later from my desktop. For most other research I print out the original documents, like studies and essays and letters, and read those at lunch or in the afternoons on a couch, circling things that I find interesting and making notes in red ink right in the margins.

I'm David McRaney, and This Is How I Work

Pictured above: David's workspace.

Eventually, I?ll take all my notes, research, highlights, and everything to my home office, a spare bedroom, where I?ll basically move in and hunker down. I like feeling secluded and surrounded by the work. I also have an acoustic bass and an acoustic guitar attached to the walls. I?ll take one down and play it if I can?t seem to get started. After a few minutes of that, I?m usually ready to write. There is a couch and television behind me so I can play video games when I feel like I?ve lost my flow. I set a timer for one hour, start playing a game, and then go back to the computer when it goes off.

Next to my desk I have a nice, big table with lots and lots of space all around me to stack papers and books and cups and plates. The walls in there are soundproofed, and for podcasting and voiceover work I use a Shure SM7B microphone on a boom arm plugged into a Behringer XENYX 1202FX which is piped into my computer via a Behringer UCA202 audio interface.

What's your best time-saving trick?

My voicemail message tells people that I don?t check voicemail and asks them to please email me instead. I haven?t checked voicemail for more than five years now. Also, when I?m on-task and run across things online that seem interesting but aren?t related to what I am doing, I send those things to Pocket. Every Saturday morning I sit and read all the things I?ve saved that week, and if those things end up blowing my mind or seem like material for future projects, I send them to Evernote to be saved in the appropriate research folder.

What's your favorite to-do list manager?

I?ve tried lots of things over the years, but for most things that must be done soon I use a reporter?s notebook or a tiny yellow legal pad. For appointments, I use Google Calendar as the backend for my Apple calendar. For deadlines I use Countdown+. I sometimes use Siri to remind to do things, but I?m pretty bad about letting reminder apps become buckets for storing things I?ll never get around to doing. I also have a waterproof notepad and pencil stuck to my shower?s wall. I rip those pages off when it gets full and put them on my desk.

Besides your phone and computer, what gadget can't you live without?

I love my Gerber Shortcut, which I keep on my keychain, and my Gerber Descent II pocket knife. (The knife is discontinued, but they have a new version that is still available.) For recording interviews away from a computer, you can?t beat the Zoom H4N.

What everyday thing are you better at than anyone else?

I?m pretty sure I make the best alfredo sauce in North America. Nutmeg, my friends, the secret is nutmeg.

What do you listen to while you work?

I have a Spotify playlist just for writing and another one for editing. I try to stick to music that either has no lyrics or lyrics in a language I can?t understand.

What are you currently reading?

I?m rereading Carl Zimmer?s Parasite Rex and just started Detroit: An American Autopsy by Charlie LeDuff.

Are you more of an introvert or an extrovert?

I?m great at faking extroversion, but I?m absolutely excellent at slinking away into long stretches of hermitage.

I'm David McRaney, and This Is How I Work

Pictured above: Stacks of research for David's newest book.

What's your sleep routine like?

I try to go to sleep by midnight, because but no matter when I go bed or what chemicals I put into my body, I will wake up without an alarm clock at 6:30 AM every day. It?s a terrible superpower.

Fill in the blank: I'd love to see _______ answer these same questions.

Jon Ronson, David Eagleman, and Richard Wiseman.

What's the best advice you've ever received?

I don?t think he meant it as advice on how to live your life, but I?ve used it as such. When I was a teenager, I worked for my father who was an electrical contractor. He ran a crew of men who dug a lot of deep holes and long trenches and then put cables and pipes into those holes and trenches. I wanted to prove to him that I could earn a paycheck and work hard, so I started out wildly attacking the ground with my shovel, leaping on the back of the blade, taking giant bites of earth and so on. He saw me working like that one day and took the shovel from me. He said, ?Dig smarter, not harder.? He then showed me how to go slow and steady and to take a manageable amount of dirt from the ground with each pass. If I had kept using my method, it would have looked more impressive to my peers if they had happened to see me working, but I would have tired out long before the job was finished.

Is there anything else you'd like to add?

Read as much as you can, and when you come across a sentence or a paragraph that stuns you for whatever reason, write it down. Save those words. Go back to them when you feel lost. Read them out loud to someone you love. Commit them to memory if you can. Make them a part of you. Here?s one of my favorites from my collection:

"The perception of truth evolves through small revelations. Old truths decay in the same way. The revelations are rarely thunderous. They are mites you can barely hear, working behind the wood. They are corns of wheat, bits of string. They piggyback our dreams, or wait in the dirt until the day we hit hit face-first. We accrete truth like silt. It hones us like wind over sandstone." -Michael Perry from Off Main Street

The How I Work series asks heroes, experts, and flat-out productive people to share their shortcuts, workspaces, routines, and more. Every Wednesday we'll feature a new guest and the gadgets, apps, tips, and tricks that keep them going. Have someone you want to see featured, or questions you think we should ask? Email Tessa.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/zKm3UiC0ePc/im-david-mcraney-and-this-is-how-i-work-584512834

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Windows 8.1 Is Getting Native 3D Printer Support

Windows 8.1 Is Getting Native 3D Printer Support

Microsoft is adding native support for 3D printers to Windows 8.1. That means you don't have to jump through any hoops to 3D print an item?if your computer is hooked up to a 3D printer, you can just hit print.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/bursglnFmWQ/windows-8-1-is-getting-native-3d-printer-support-585571287

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Endgame at hand for immigration bill in Senate

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Senate is poised to push landmark immigration legislation across a few final hurdles ahead of passage as early as Thursday of the bill opening the door to U.S. citizenship for millions.

The legislation cleared an early procedural hurdle this week with room to spare, and more test votes were due Wednesday. The White House-backed bill would pour billions into border security and offer a path to citizenship to some 11 million immigrants now in the United States illegally.

"A permanent, commonsense solution to our dysfunctional system is really in sight," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Wednesday on the Senate floor. "It is my hope that our colleagues in the House will follow the Senate's lead and work to pass bipartisan reform and do it now."

Opponents weren't convinced.

"It continues to promote false promises that the border would be truly secure," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa.

Prospects were anything but clear in the GOP-controlled House, where many conservatives oppose citizenship or even legalization for people in this country illegally. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, reiterated Wednesday that he has no plans to hold a vote on the Senate-passed immigration bill.

"We are not going to take up the Senate bill," the speaker told fellow Republicans in a meeting Wednesday morning, according to Rep. John Fleming, R-La.

The House Judiciary Committee was to vote Wednesday on legislation requiring employers to verify their workers' legal status. It's the third in a series of single-issue immigration bills the committee has voted on as it takes a piecemeal approach to overhauling the nation's immigration system, in contrast with the Senate's comprehensive bill.

In the Senate, after the addition of $38 billion in provisions strengthening border security, doubling the size of the border patrol, and completing hundreds of miles of fencing, the legislation looked likely to command support from around 14 Republicans on final passage. That's more than enough to ensure the 60-vote margin needed for passage, as all 52 Democrats and the two independents who usually vote with them look likely to stick together.

As time drew short to cut any last-minute deals before final action on the bill, there was still some hope of negotiating a few final amendments that could bring even more Republicans on board.

Sen. Rob. Portman, R-Ohio, was pushing an amendment to strengthen an electronic employment verification program made mandatory in the bill. "I can't vote for (the bill) without it," Portman said.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., sought changes to a new agriculture workers program that he said makes it too easy for farm workers to get permanent U.S. residency.

But the measures sought by Portman and Chambliss are being opposed by some immigrant advocacy groups, and some Senate Democrats believe the bill has enough Republican support as is without pursuing more changes.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/endgame-hand-immigration-bill-senate-071512552.html

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Finance Ministry seeks punishment for Ponzi scheme participation ...

Published time: June 26, 2013 12:56 MMM 2011 office at Rechnoy Vokzal subway station, Moscow. (RIA Novosti)

The Russian government is considering a set of amendments to the Criminal Code that establish preventive measures against Ponzi schemes, including jail terms for active participants.

The amendments have been drafted by the Finance Ministry and were submitted to the government at the end of last week, Business daily Kommersant reported, claiming its journalists received the full text of the draft.

The document suggests that the Criminal Code is amended with a separate article called ?Illegal activity to obtain monetary funds?. Under this article organizers of Ponzi schemes and their active participants (those who attracted over 1.5 million roubles ($46,000)) could face up to seven years in prison. Other participants in the scam and people who promote it could be fined up to 15,000 roubles ($460).

The bill defines a Ponzi scheme (that are called ?financial pyramids? in Russian) as ?activities to attract monetary funds or other assets from physical persons with repayment of income from earlier attracted funds in cases when organizers are not engaged in investment or any other legal business?.? It also reads that such activity poses a great threat to social stability in the country.

So far, only Russia?s major law enforcement agency ? the Investigative Committee ? has voiced an objection to the bill saying that it contradicts the current Civil Code that reads that there can be no restrictions for attracting citizens? means in the form of loans.

Usually Ponzi scheme organizers are charged with fraud, but this could only happen after the scheme crashes and the cheated investors can act as an aggrieved party in court. The new bill allows for preventive measures.

According to law enforcers over 400,000 Russians have been duped by Ponzi schemes since 2008 and the combined losses amount to over 40 billion roubles ($1.25 billion) . The situation was even more dire in the 1990s ? back then just one swindler Sergey Mavrodi? managed to defraud 1.5 million people. Mavrodi was put on trial and after a period on the run was put in prison and served a four-and-a-half year term.

He attempted to get back into Ponzi schemes in 2011 and 2012 and this prompted Russian authorities to order a special law preventing such activities.

Currently Mavrodi is again on trial over large-scale fraud, and faces up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to 1 million roubles (over $31,000).

Source: http://rt.com/politics/punishment-ponzi-participation-scheme-258/

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Fujifilm X-M1 mirrorless ILC ships in July with 16.3-megapixel APS-C sensor, $700 price tag

Fujifilm XM1 mirrorless ILC ships in July with 163megapixel APSC sensor, $700 price tag

In January of 2012, Fujifilm first detailed its APS-C X-Trans CMOS sensor -- the company promised superior image quality, thanks to a design that omitted an optical low-pass filter, and it delivered, in the form of the X-Pro1. That camera's relatively massive footprint and $1,700 price tag limited its appeal, however, though Fujifilm unveiled a smaller, and much more affordable variant, the X-E1, several months later. Now the saga continues. Today, the Japanese manufacturer is announcing an X-Trans-equipped model for the masses. The X-M1 includes the same 16.3-megapixel sensor as both the X-Pro1 and X-E1, yet it's housed in a lightweight body that's due to ship next month for just $700.

The X-M1 tips the scale at 11.6 ounces, including the battery and memory card, but without a lens attached. As for optics, the ILC will be available as part of a kit with a brand new f/3.5-5.6 16-50mm (24-76mm equivalent) lens with optical image stabilization for $800, and will be compatible with the existing XF and XC lineup, including a variety of prime and zoom options. There's a 3-inch 920k-dot tilting LCD (but no EVF), a built-in flash, dedicated mode dial and on-board WiFi, letting you transfer images and movies to Android and iOS devices via a dedicated app. The EXR Processor II enables the camera to start up in 0.5 seconds, with a 0.05-second shutter lag and a maximum burst shot speed of 5.6 fps for 30 consecutive frames. The cam sports a fairly standard sensitivity range of ISO 100-25,600. The X-M1 is set to hit stores in July with black and silver finishes for $700, or $800 with the lens. A brown version (body only) will also be available come August for $700.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/FzypGpb1swc/

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What It Took 20 Years on Wall Street to Learn

I was always attracted to numbers.

In middle school my baseball card collection spilled into a second drawer, driven by my love of the statistics on the back.? I would spend hours sitting on the floor searching for trends and hidden meaning in the batting averages. The players? pictures and ?personal detail? mattered little.

In high school I bought a telescope so I could track the moons of Jupiter. I kept a tiny notebook where I wrote details and figured out the patterns.

Numbers were comforting and relaxing. When assigned the odd problems for math homework I would do the evens as well, sucked in by the rhythm of the task.

In grad school I would jokingly tell people in bars that getting a PhD in Math required me adding immense numbers. I said that for my thesis I was adding together numbers so long that to write them down required a thousand yards of paper.

When telling this I saw myself joyfully working my way down a scroll the size of ten city blocks adding and adding and adding. The image made me happy.

After my PhD I went to Wall Street. Finance was becoming quantified and people who could find patterns and understand data were valuable. I was now being paid well for my love of numbers.

I spent the first few years there building huge spreadsheets and trying to explain what I thought the numbers said about the possible future.

Soon they suggested I gamble money based on my reading of numbers. I was decent at it. I could look at a country?s numbers, its GDP, its Current Account Deficit, its Primary Surplus, its Debt/GDP, its Nominal Rates, and so on, and tell you what I thought would happen. Russia will default. The US will grow. Indonesia will devalue its currency.

I did all this and really didn?t deal much with the people. I mean I thought I did. I went on international business trips. I ate in restaurants. I went out for beers at night. I talked to taxi drivers and bellhops and flight attendants. I spoke with others like me. We went to conferences where we argued and nodded at smart things being said.

Still I never got to know the people who were being affected the most. Wall Street really didn?t think it was the correct way to spend it resources. Business trips were about meeting politicians, economists, and investors. We sat at tables and sipped our drinks, discussing numbers.

We consoled ourselves: People are not logical, not at the individual level. At the aggregate level they were, or so we thought.

During one trip to Brazil, in the middle of one of its financial crises, I spent three days straight in an office tower watching computer screens. I would leave each night taking a taxi to the hotel.

That Friday I left early. The markets were in panic and little good seemed to be in the future. As I walked to the mall I was surprised: Why is everyone just being normal? Where is the hysteria that I saw on the market screens?

Instead I saw an average day, filled with small dramas: A mother upset with her kid who wanted ice cream. A young couple holding hands, both with shiny braces on their teeth. A cluster of old men on a bench looking judgmental.

I left Brazil that Friday night and flew home in first class. I went back to my job in New York and back to the comfort of my numbers.

After fifteen years trading on Wall Street I transferred to a job where all I did was look at numbers: Trading for the bank with their money. I didn?t even have to talk to anyone. Wall Street had shifted from using phones to using chat rooms. It was all just numbers and words on a screen.

In 2007 a financial crisis hit that affected me in a direct way. My company, Citibank, escaped bankruptcy only because of a government bailout.

It is also when I started photographing New York. I would go on long walks, to escape the crisis. For the first time in my life I let decisions be guided by unquantifiable things like empathy and curiosity rather than probability.

I let events and people take me wherever they did. It led me to some of New York?s poorest neighborhoods.

Three years later I was spending almost all of my free time in Hunts Point, the Bronx, photographing and writing the stories of addicts.? I was finally looking beyond the numbers and interacting with people on a visceral level.

I was hearing gut-wrenching stories, going into crack houses, helping addicts shoot up, and watching as friends die. I was seeing just how messy life is, filled with ambiguity and unsolvable problems. I was also seeing how amazingly resilient people could be, how happiness can be found amidst pain.

I would still spend my days looking at numbers but they did not hold the same thrill as before. They seemed shallow and lifeless.

They had also been wrong. Deadly wrong. Wall Street?s faith in numbers had proven to be disastrous. That structured world had been co-opted and hijacked by greed and ego.

The world had handed numbers people the keys and we had almost driven the car off the cliff.

A year ago I left my job to focus on photography and stories.

Recently I came home from a day in the Bronx, exhausted by the cumulative effect of a thousand little dramas. I opened my computer and looked at my twitter stream. My old world reappeared. I read smart commentary on places like Brazil. I scrolled through tweet after tweet, all shouting the story of the day.

It was all logical and rational and clever. Everyone was throwing different numbers around to show they were right.

Few were telling the messy and complex stories of the struggles to navigate the illogical and absurd reality of life, about the consequences of the news on, you know, people.

One smart columnist, Matt Yglesias, was arguing why the death of 1,129 people in a clothing factory in Bangladesh was understandable and ?OK.? Poor countries need lax labor laws before they can be rich . . . It went something like that.

The author had fallen so far down the wormhole of numbers and clever arguments that he had forgotten humans were involved. Like Wall Street and I had forgotten that it was humans we were loaning money to and that it was humans who we were foreclosing on and it was humans whose governments were defaulting.

I wanted to tweet back. ?Go to Bangladesh. Talk to one of the children of the dead. Hell, don?t just talk to one. Spend two weeks listening.?

He hadn?t gone to Bangladesh. He had just read a few headlines from a competing columnist and decided to argue based on that.

After much thought I tweeted to him, ?you are an idiot.?

Since I was a kid numbers have won. They took over baseball with the advent of moneyball. They have taken over finance and are starting to take over politics.

That is not necessarily a bad thing. Rational arguments can trump emotions.? Yet it can and has gone too far. We have become so intent on maximizing some efficiency function that we need to be reminded that the tiny data points being argued about are people with stories and tragedies and moments of joy

Yes it is trite, but it?s remarkable how much damage is done when we forget.

Postscript

In January of this year on of my subjects, Millie, passed away. Her unclaimed body was tagged #97 (the 97th death in the Bronx during 2013) and shipped from Lincoln Hospital to the New York Medical Examiner?s office. After two months she was buried in a trench on Hart Island by the department of Correction.

She and the close to 900,000 others buried on Hart Island have no tombstones or a place for relatives to remember or lay flowers.? Millie?s death notice was the gossip on the streets. Her life story, growing up in Puerto Rico the daughter of addicts, of twenty years of prostitution, homelessness, and drug abuse will not register beyond a close circle of friends.

I am thankful and fortunate that over the last two years I got to know her as Yafna Garcia, not just the 97th death in the Bronx of 2013.

Related:

How to Lose $3 Million in 1 Second
The Real?and Simple?Equation That Killed Wall Street
Too Big to Succeed
Why It?s Smart to Be Reckless on Wall Street

Source: http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/2013/06/25/what-it-took-20-years-on-wall-street-to-learn/

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Banks brace for cyberwarfare drill Quantum Dawn 2

Banks brace for cyberwarfare drill Quantum Dawn 2

Come June 28th, Wall Street outfits including the likes of Citigroup and Bank of America will be under siege -- from fake hackers, that is. Representatives from a total of 40 companies along with the Federal Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission, US departments of Treasury and Homeland Security will take part in Quantum Dawn 2: a simulated cyberattack on faux trading and information systems. Led by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, the drill will test the ability of participants to cooperate via email and phone to suss out what's going on and hatch a plan. The exercise will momentarily pause so that those involved can decide on a course of action, and then it'll speed up and model the effects of the decision over a longer period of time. With the recent flurry of hacking incidents and international finger pointing, something tells us this won't be the last we hear of drills like Quantum Dawn.

[Image credit: MoneyBlogNewz, Flickr]

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/18/bank-cyberwarfare-drill-quantum-dawn-2/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Monday, June 17, 2013

Field chases Mickelson, Horschel in US Open 3rd rd

ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) ? Any remaining doubts that the compact Merion Golf Club would pose a challenge for the world's top golfers surely were erased once the third round of the U.S. Open began Saturday afternoon.

Of the first 39 holes played, there was only one birdie ? by Masters champion Adam Scott at the par-3 11th. Leaders Phil Mickelson and Billy Horschel would tee off later, the only players in the field with a score under par on a tough and tight little course that's finally drying out from a week of rain.

The second round wrapped up earlier in the day, and no one could catch Mickelson or Horschel, who both stood at 1-under 139 at the halfway point of the championship. Justin Rose, Steve Stricker and Luke Donald were one stroke behind the leaders.

Tiger Woods was tied for 13th at 3 over, still in the hunt as long as he can deal with the pain from a troublesome left elbow ? as well as Merion's wicked rough and flummoxing greens that more than compensate for shorter-than-usual yardage for a U.S. Open.

"It's hard with the wind and the pin locations," Woods said after his second-round 70. "They're really tough. ... We didn't think they were going to be as severe as they are."

The average score through two rounds on the par-70 course was 74.7. The cut line was 8 over, saving both defending champion Webb Simpson (5 over) and Scott (7 over) and keeping alive, albeit faintly, hopes for a Grand Slam. The third round was played in threesomes teeing off at Nos. 1 and 11 in a tournament that fell behind schedule when storms moved through the Philadelphia area on Thursday.

Ian Poulter had a chance to join the leaders as he finished his second round, but he had a bad lie in a bunker at No. 16 and his approach rolled off the back edge of the green at the 18th. The two bogeys sank him from even par to 2 over after his round of 71.

"I'm three off the lead in the U.S. Open," Poulter said. "And that's the difference of one hole. You can make birdie and someone can make double. I'm right in position and right there where I want to be. It's going to be a fun weekend."

The top of the leaderboard was a study in contrast. Mickelson has won four majors. Horschel has won once on the PGA Tour, and that was less than two months ago.

Mickelson displayed his usual take-a-chance flair Friday. His round of 72 was the full package of par saves and makeable birdie putts that all went awry ? until he finally sank one from 20 feet at the 18th, the hardest hole on the course, to tie him with Horschel seconds after the horn sounded to suspend play for the day.

"On 18, when you don't really expect to get one, I put the ball in a good spot and was able to roll one in," Mickelson said.

Horschel's path was much more straight-forward. He merely put the ball on the green in regulation 18 times out of 18, a stellar achievement for a regular tour event, much less a major championship. His 3-under 67 was the best round of the day.

"I wasn't in the zone, I was just focused on what I tried to do," said Horschel, who missed the cut in his only previous U.S. Open appearance, as a teenager in 2006. "I didn't know I hit every green until I walked off 18. It's a cool thing."

Yeah, pretty cool, considering he was one of only six players to shoot a red number in the second round at Merion.

Nearly half the field was still on the course when play was called due to darkness. Groups are allowed to complete the hole they're playing after the horn sounds, so Mickelson's birdie at 18 was the golf equivalent of hiking the football before time runs out and getting to complete the down. In fact, his group was so eager to finish the round that they negotiated with the group ahead for playing partner Keegan Bradley to hit his tee shot early at 18.

"We need to hit one tee shot so we could finish," Mickelson said. "They moved out of the way, and Keegan hit a tee shot and they went back and finished the hole. ... It's nice when guys like that help out."

Horschel's surge shouldn't be much of a surprise. He's having a breakout year, with six finishes in the top 10 on the PGA Tour, including his victory at the Zurich Classic in late April.

"I've acquired some patience, not as much as I wish I had," said the 26-year-old from Jacksonville Beach, Fla.

Still, he's no Mickelson. The most recent personal buzz about Lefty was his decision to attend his daughter's eighth-grade graduation ceremony on the eve of the Open, then fly cross-country overnight to play his first round Thursday on little sleep.

Horschel? Well, his official PGA Tour bio says that he "read all four Twilight books in two weeks and is a believer in Bigfoot and UFOs."

He's also said he's steadied his game with the help of sports psychologist Fran Pirozzolo, who helped convince Horschel to think of the U.S. Open as "another tournament."

"I know it's a big event. I know it's a historical event," Horschel said. "But one thing that me and Fran have worked on is limiting the distractions."

___

Follow Joseph White on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/field-chases-mickelson-horschel-us-open-3rd-rd-181546242.html

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Sunday, June 16, 2013

South Africa's Mandela 'recovering very well', grandson says

By Yvonne Bell

QUNU, South Africa (Reuters) - Former South African president and anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela is recovering well from a lung infection which has kept him in a serious condition in hospital for a week, his grandson said on Saturday.

The comment by Mandla Mandela was the latest indication that the health of his 94-year-old grandfather, South Africa's first black president, was showing signs of improvement. Mandela has been receiving visits from family members after he was rushed to hospital a week ago with a recurrence of lung problems.

"Madiba is recovering very well and looks good," Mandla Mandela said in Qunu, a village in the Eastern Cape province where Mandela was born and spent his early years.

Speaking in Xhosa at a funeral of another relative, Mandla used the clan name 'Madiba' by which Mandela is popularly known.

"I thank the nation and the world for the prayers for Madiba, and the doctors and the office of the ANC for keeping the family updated," he said.

South Africa's government said on Thursday that Mandela was continuing to recover but his condition remained serious.

Mandela's hospitalization is his fourth since December and has reinforced growing awareness among South Africa's 53 million people that they will one day have to say goodbye to the father of the "Rainbow Nation" created from the ashes of apartheid.

Mandela has a history of lung problems dating back to his time at the windswept Robben Island prison camp near Cape Town. He was released in 1990 after 27 years behind bars and went on to serve as president from 1994 to 1999.

(Reporting by Yvonne Bell; Writing by Olivia Kumwenda; Editing by Pascal Fletcher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africas-mandela-recovering-very-well-says-grandson-112239870.html

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Ryan Hunter-Reay wins at Milwaukee again

WEST ALLIS, Wis. (AP) ? Ryan Hunter-Reay continued Andretti Autosport's domination at the Milwaukee Mile, winning the IndyCar event Saturday for the second year in a row.

Hunter-Reay became the first driver to win back-to-back races at the Mile since Tony Kanaan in 2006 and 2007 when he was driving for ? you guessed it, Andretti.

Andretti drivers have won five of the last nine races at the mile oval and nearly had a perfect day Saturday in a race that is promoted by Michael Andretti's marketing company. Hunter-Reay got the win, E.J. Viso finished fourth and James Hinchcliffe was fifth.

The only blemish was pole-sitter Marco Andretti, who led the first 62 laps before his day fell apart with a mechanical issue.

For Hunter-Reay, it was the second win of the season for the defending IndyCar Series champion. This one came at the site of the track he used to jumpstart last year's title run ? Hunter-Reay reeled off three consecutive wins starting with Milwaukee last season to climb into the championship race.

This year, though, he got to celebrate an early Father's Day gift with son, Ryden.

"Those last few laps I was thinking, 'Man, I've got to do this for him,' " Hunter-Reay said. "It's so special, he's 6-months-old, getting to have my little guy here in Victory Lane is the best Father's Day gift."

IndyCar Series points leader Helio Castroneves was second and followed by Penske Racing teammate Will Power as Chevrolet swept the podium. It was the first podium finish this season for Power, who hasn't won a race since Brazil last year.

He made a bold attempt to pass Castroneves for second in the closing laps before cautiously backing off a touch. Power said after the race he had to consider the big picture and that his teammate is the current points leader while racing for position.

Scott Dixon was sixth in the highest finishing Honda and was followed by Takuma Sato, who dominated the early section of the race but was shuffled out of contention because of pit cycles. Still, it was the best finish for an A.J. Foyt Racing entry at Milwaukee since Foyt himself was fifth in 1988.

Dario Franchitti, Justin Wilson and Kanaan rounded out the top 10.

Marco Andretti wound up 20th and was passed by teammate Hunter-Reay for second in the IndyCar standings.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ryan-hunter-reay-wins-milwaukee-again-224100378.html

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Egypt Cuts Ties With Syria: Mohamed Morsi Orders Closing Of Damascus Embassy In Cairo, Urges Hezbollah To Stay Out


By Tom Perry
CAIRO, June 15 (Reuters) - Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi said he had cut all diplomatic ties with Damascus on Saturday and called for a no-fly zone over Syria, pitching the most populous Arab state firmly against President Bashar al-Assad.
Addressing a rally called by Sunni Muslim clerics in Cairo, the Sunni Islamist head of state said: "We decided today to entirely break off relations with Syria and with the current Syrian regime."
He also warned Assad's allies in the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shi'ite militia Hezbollah to pull back from fighting in Syria.
"We stand against Hezbollah in its aggression against the Syrian people," Mursi said. "Hezbollah must leave Syria - these are serious words. There is no space or place for Hezbollah in Syria."
Mursi, who faces growing discontent at home over the economy and over fears that he will pursue an Islamist social agenda, said he was organising an urgent summit of Arab and other Islamic states to discuss the situation in Syria, where the United States has in recent days decided to take steps to arm the rebels.
Mursi, who spoke at a packed 20,000-capacity stadium and waved Syrian and Egyptian flags after his entrance, also urged world powers not to hesitate to enforce a no-fly zone over Syria. The crowd of his supporters chanted: "From the free revolutionaries of Egypt: We will stamp on you, Bashar!"
Western diplomats said on Friday that Washington was considering a limited no-fly zone over parts of Syria. But the White House noted later that it would be far harder and costlier to set up one up there than it was in Libya, and said the United States had no national interest in pursuing that option.
Russia, an ally of Assad and fierce opponent of outside military intervention in Syria, said any attempt to impose a no-fly zone using F-16 fighter jets and Patriots based in Jordan would be illegal.
Egypt's U.S.-funded and -trained army is among the most powerful in the Middle East and effectively ran the country before the Arab Spring revolution of 2011 led to elections that saw Mursi, of the Muslim Brotherhood, take power a year ago.
There has been no suggestion, however, that Egyptian forces should get involved in the fighting in Syria.
Mursi said Syria was the target of "a campaign of extermination and planned ethnic cleansing fed by regional and international states", partly in reference to Iran, though he did not name the Shi'ite Islamic Republic.
Mursi said: "The Egyptian people supports the struggle of the Syrian people, materially and morally, and Egypt, its nation, leadership ... and army, will not abandon the Syrian people until it achieves its rights and dignity."
The Brotherhood has joined calls this week from Sunni Muslim religious organisations for a jihad against Assad and his Shi'ite allies. Egypt has not taken an active role in arming the Syrian rebels, but an aide to Mursi said this week that Cairo would not stand in the way of Egyptians who wanted to fight in Syria. (Additional reporting by Ali Abdellati; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Morsi also called on Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group to leave Syria, where the Iranian-backed Shiite group has been fighting alongside troops loyal to embattled President Bashar Assad against the mostly Sunni rebels.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/15/egypt-cuts-ties-with-syri_n_3447517.html

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Saturday, June 8, 2013

The Progressive Dinner Date | Heart Love Weddings

Everyone?s familiar with a progressive dinner party, right? If not, let me give you a little summary. You gather a group of friends and/or family (couples or whole families, 3-4 ideally). Each group is given one ?piece? of the meal ? drinks and appetizers, soup and/or salad, main course, and dessert. See how the 3-4 groups work really well? It?s kind of like a traveling pot luck. (I think the ladies on Desperate Housewives did this. There was a murder involved? I?d try and avoid that if possible.) This concept also works best if you all live in the same neighborhood or at least only a couple miles apart. You get it, right? Sound like fun? It is! So I was thinking?you could totally turn this concept into a really fun date night!!!

Chili's margaritas, the progressive dinner date, great date night ideas, date night fun

Chili?s Margaritas

Here?s how I would plan it:

First, I would choose an area that has several of your favorite restaurants. We have a really cool college town, Northampton, MA, not too far from us that has an awesome assortment of restaurants. Italian, Mexican, Japanese, so much ?good eats? in one place ? oh my!! You can either plan ahead or just go with the flow. In Northampton, you can park your car and then start walking. Pick your first restaurant and enjoy a drink ? relax! You?ve got the whole evening ahead of you. Next, you find a restaurant for soup or salad (an appetizer is ok too). Salad al fresco during the beautiful summer evenings, soup in the cooler months next to a cozy fire. Moving on to the main course, find a restaurant that doesn?t serve ginormous meals because you must leave room for dessert :) Although I suppose you could always take leftovers home? Dessert can be over the top, like a flambe or an awesome hot fudge sundae for two!!

Carrabba's pasta, the progressive dinner date, great date night ideas, date night fun

Carrabba?s Pasta

Some variations could be starting at home with a drink, like this awesome Cranberry Vodka Spritzer. Head out to your first stop, a restaurant that serves an amazing soup, salad or appetizer. Then you?re off to the main course and topping it off with dessert. You could also start by going out and then ending the night with dessert at home, like this decadent Nutella Chocolate Torte. Don?t forget the bubbly on the side!! Remember, you?re home now ;)

Applebee's Triple Chocolate Meltdown, the progressive dinner date, great date night ideas, date night fun

Applebee?s Triple Chocolate Meltdown

No matter how you start or end the evening, enjoy the whole evening!! Put your phones on silent (unless of course you have wee ones that are with a sitter ? I know you want to be available if need be) and be in the moment with the love of your life. And you know, this would even be a fun girls? night out or bachelorette party!! Just saying? ;)

Have you started thinking about your progressive dinner date? Where will you go? Will it be for a special occasion or just celebrating everyday love? We like both options!!

Enjoy!

xoxo

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Source: http://www.heartloveweddings.com/2013/06/the-progressive-dinner-date/

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