Monday, 31 October 2011

Weekly Rewind: Steve Jobs' secrets revealed, Nokia's last stand, HP PCs live on (Digital Trends)

Netflix-Reed-Hastings

Didn?t have time to keep up with every ripple in the technology pond this week? We?ve got you covered. Here are some of the most noteworthy stories from last week.

Nokia bets big on Mango-powered Lumia 800, 710

This week, Finnish phone-maker Nokia launched the Lumia 800 and 710 ? the company?s first two phones powered by Windows Phone 7.5. The new phones have impressive specs and feature Nokia-exclusive apps like turn-by-turn navigation, a public transportation guide, an ESPN hub, and a radio-like music service, but they won?t even arrive in the U.S. until 2012. As Jeffrey Van Camp spells out, that means Nokia will have to act fast to stay relevant. We?ve got photos of the new Nokia phones, which come in a variety of color, right here.?

Steve Jobs: Angry, opinionated, brilliant

The tech world is still buzzing about Steve Jobs this week thanks to a new, hugely successful biography written (with cooperation from Jobs) by author Walter Isaacson. The late Apple innovator was also featured on CBS? 60 Minutes in a two-part segment that gives fans a little more insight into the life of the man who brought the company back from the dead. We also found out what the biggest revelations are in the newly-released biography, including thoughts about rivals like Bill Gates and a desire to keep third-party apps off of the iPhone.?

IBM takes on a new CEO?

IBM?s current CEO Sam Palmisano will be retiring at the end of this year, and the company has decided to take on Senior Vice President (and IBM veteran since 1981) Virginia Rometty. The company recently surpassed Microsoft as the second most valuable technology company in the world, and according to sources, much of that success has been due to Rommetty?s contributions.?

Netflix continues its downfall

This week we found out that Netflix lost 800,000 subscribers in Q3, despite a jump in the company?s revenue. Customers have been dissatisfied with the company?s recent changes and fumbles, and it?s showing in the numbers. It?s anticipated that the company will go into the red in Q4 to pay for international expansion. The company?s CEO also recently detailed new Netflix strategies that seem oddly similar to those of rival HBO.?

Rest assured, HP is still making PCs

Back in August, rumblings?from HP?s former CEO Leo Apotheker that the company was considering selling off the Personal Systems Group (HP PCs as we know them) in favor of other areas of business. This week we heard back from current CEO Meg Whitman that despite those considerations, HP will continue making PCs for the time being.?

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

More from Digital Trends

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111029/tc_digitaltrends/weeklyrewindstevejobssecretsrevealednokiaslaststandhppcsliveon

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Sunday, 30 October 2011

Obama uses congressional report on US income gap to press for passage of stalled jobs bill (Star Tribune)

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PFT: Bengals activate Pacman Jones

Kris DielmanAP

During both Friday afternoon?s PFT Live and Friday night?s NBC SportsTalk on VERSUS (at the tail end of our show-starting ?10 things to know? for the coming weekend of NFL action), I devoted some time to the circumstances surrounding the concussion sustained last Sunday by Chargers guard Kris Dielman.? Far more troubling than the fact that Dielman suffered a seizure on the flight home from New York after a loss to the Jets is the fact that Dielman exhibited enough signs of wooziness and disorientation to mandate an immediate evaluation.

For those of you who have the game stored on a DVR or access to NFL.com?s Game Rewind service, fast forward to 12:30 of the fourth quarter.? On that play, Dielman pulls from his left guard position toward the right side of the line, dropping his head to block Jets linebacker Calvin Pace.? Dielman then reels away from the block, takes several steps, and lands on the ground.? He stumbles to his feet, and Jim Nantz of CBS points out that Dielman is ?a little shaky and wobbly.?

Umpire Tony Michalek pauses to look at Dielman as he tries to get up.? Michalek puts his whistle in his mouth, apparently considering whether to call an injury timeout.? But then Michalek, possibly after hearing Dielman say that he?s OK, focuses on the task of spotting the ball for the next play.

Dielman waves toward the sideline, and he seems to regain his wits.? So he stays in the game, even though in hindsight he definitely should have been removed.

?We are reviewing it with the club, its medical staff and the NFLPA,? NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told PFT via email on Friday regarding the situation. ?The player was not diagnosed with a concussion until after the game.?

The point, of course, is that he wasn?t diagnosed with a concussion until after the game because he wasn?t checked for a concussion until after the game.? And if the league?s much-publicized (but in some cases possibly ignored) ?WHEN IN DOUBT, LEAVE THEM OUT? memo from last month means what it says, players must be removed from play whenever there is ?any suspicion? that the player has suffered a concussion.

?Guys get bounced around pretty good,? coach Norv Turner said Friday, per the Associated Press.? ?It?s tough to see everybody from the sideline, or even from upstairs or a TV screen what a guy?s condition is.? Our guys understand that if they aren?t able to go, they need to get out.? I think it was handled the way we?d try to understand any injury situation.?

Turner, with all due respect, is wrong.? And here?s why.? The CBS cameras showed that Dielman was wobbling and disoriented, even though he successfully pulled himself together, as players who don?t want to exit games often do.? That should have been enough reason to remove him from the field and evaluate him.

But there?s no system for making that happen, even though there should be.? The league, if truly serious about the problem of concussions, must have a safety official in the replay booth, scanning the field, the sidelines, the replays, and all other available evidence for signs that any player may have suffered a head injury.? The safety official should then buzz down to an independent neurologist, who will remove the player from action and keep him out until the player is cleared.

We invite the NFL or anyone else to advance a persuasive argument against this approach.? We have a feeling that we?ll be waiting for a while.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/28/bengals-activate-pacman-jones/related

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Saturday, 29 October 2011

Economy grows at fastest pace in a year

Reed Saxon / AP

A woman with a child loads purchases from a Target store into her car in Culver City, Calif. Consumer spending helped lift the economy's growth rate to the highest in a year in the third quarter.

By msnbc.com staff and wires

The economy's pace picked up?in the third quarter, but it's still not fast enough to make a dent in unemployment.

U.S. economic growth increased at its fastest in a year in the third quarter as consumers and businesses set aside fears about the recovery and stepped up spending, creating momentum that could carry into the final three months of the year.

Though part of the increase came from the reversal of temporary factors that had restrained growth, the expansion was a welcome relief for an economy that looked on the brink of recession just weeks ago.

It also provided?a small respite for President Barack Obama, whose approval rating?has plummeted in part because of the weak recovery,?from the parade of bad news on the economy. Still, even the White House admitted that faster growth was needed.

"We are .... at a fragile moment in the world economy, and cannot afford to do anything to undermine our economic recovery," acting chief White House economist Katharine Abraham said in a statement.

"This report also underscores the need to put in place a balanced approach to deficit reduction that phases in budget cuts, instills confidence, and allows us to live within our means without short-changing future growth," she said?

U.S. gross domestic product expanded at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said in its first estimateon Thursday. That was a big acceleration from the 1.3 percent pace in the April-June quarter and matched economists' expectations.

"The probability of a double-dip has diminished quite a bit," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University in the Channel Islands. He made the comments before the release of the report.

Consumer spending in the last quarter was the strongest since the fourth quarter of 2010, while business investment spending was the fastest in more than a year. Even though consumer spending was stronger, businesses were slow in stocking up their warehouses.

The peppier spending and a slower pace of inventory accumulation by businesses will lay a base for a solid fourth quarter, but a slowdown in Europe and the exhaustion of pent-up U.S. demand could leave a weak spot early in 2012.

And the recovery's pace is still too weak to lower a jobless rate that has been stuck above 9 percent for five straight months.

"It's telling us that expectations that we'd have a better second half than the first half are being fulfilled. There's nothing spectacular about 2.5 percent growth, but it's more than double what we had in the first half of the year, and nearly double what we had in the second quarter,"?NomuraSecurities chief economist David Resler told Reuters.?

"This validates the economy is still growing, but probably not thriving, that's the bottom line," he added.
?

Fearless spending
A jump in gasoline prices had weighed on consumer spending earlier in the year, and supply disruptions from Japan's earthquake had curbed auto production. Motor vehicle output has surged as those supply constraints have eased.

In addition, car sales, which were held back by the lack of popular models, have also shown renewed strength.

As a result, consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of U.S. economic activity, grew at a 2.4 percent rate after slowing to a 0.7 percent pace in the second quarter.

The relative vigor comes even though consumer confidence has hit levels last seen during the worst of the 2007-09 recession.

Similarly, while some business surveys have pointed to a contraction in factory output, there is little sign corporate America is cutting back spending. Indeed, recent data has suggested business spending is picking up. Business spending rose at a 16.3 percent pace as companies splurged on equipment and software, and invested in nonresidential structures.

Inventories rose only $5.4 billion in the third quarter, the smallest gain since the fourth quarter of 2009, after increasing $39.1 billion in the second quarter. Inventories subtracted 1.08 percentage points from GDP growth. Excluding the drag from inventories, the economy grew at a 3.6 percent pace - pointing to underlying strength in domestic demand -- after expanding 1.6 percent in the April-June period.

Apart from consumer and business spending, growth in the third quarter was also supported by a smaller U.S. trade deficit, and the careful management of business inventories bodes well for fourth-quarter production.

Spending on residential construction rose at a modest 2.4 percent pace after growing at a 4.2 percent rate in the second quarter. Government spending was flat, reflecting continued budget cuts by state and local governments. However, the pace of decline in state and local government spending is moderating.

The GDP report also showed a moderation in inflation pressures, with the personal consumption price index (PCE) rising at a 2.4 percent rate in the third quarter, slowing from the April-June quarter's 3.3 percent pace. Core PCE, which excludes food and energy, rose at a 2.1 percent rate after increasing 2.3 percent in the second quarter.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/27/8505152-economy-grew-fastest-in-a-year-as-summer-waned

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Friday, 28 October 2011

Boeing Dreamliner lands in Hong Kong after 1st commercial flight (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? The Boeing Co 787 Dreamliner took its first paying passengers aloft on Wednesday, showing off a carbon-composite design its maker says is lighter, more economical to fly and more comfortable than its metal rivals currently plying the airways.

The special charter flight by the twin-engined jet landed in Hong Kong Wednesday afternoon after a delayed takeoff from Tokyo and came after years of delays as Boeing engineers dealt with glitches and parts delays, leaving some $16 billion of inventory at Boeing's plants.

Boeing's technological flagship is little faster than the 707, the first commercial jet it built more than half a century ago. Yet the first owner of the 787, All Nippon Airways Co, is just fine with the idea of delivering its passengers in same amount of time they always have.

Instead, ANA wants to get them there cheaper and happier, a formula that other carriers see as the key to surviving in a cutthroat global air travel market rattled by the rise of budget carriers.

"For carriers with high operating margins, the 787 is critical for gaining a cost competitiveness," said Masaharu Hirokane, an analyst at Nomura Holding in Tokyo. "For ANA to be a launch customer is a plus," he added.

The Dreamliner was originally conceived in 2001 as the "Sonic Cruiser," designed for a bygone era of aviation that quickly morphed into one filled with bankruptcies and soaring fuel costs. It was a design that promised the first serious speed increase since the advent of the now defunct Concorde.

Most jetliners cruise at around eight-tenths the speed of sound. The Sonic Cruiser promised mach 0.98, lopping hours off long-haul flights between Tokyo and New York. The apparent end of cheap oil, with prices close to $100 a barrel, forced Boeing and other airlines to change course.

Thus was born the Dreamliner. With Boeing's rival, Airbus, also focused on lowering its cost-per-passenger mile, the prospects for more speed any time soon are dim.

COMFORTABLE WITH PRODUCTION TARGET

Scott Fancher, Boeing's head of the 787 program, said on Wednesday that the company is comfortable with the production targets for its 787 Dreamliner. The company hopes to build 10 per month by 2013.

"We are comfortable we have an executable plan," Fancher told reporters in Tokyo ahead of the plane's first flight.

With its mostly carbon-composite body, Boeing's technological flagship offers a 20 percent improvement in fuel efficiency. Its cabin builders promise a flight with ambient lighting engineered to lull passengers to sleep and higher air pressure that will make the interior feel like 6,000 feet rather than the 8,000 feet passengers feel on other jetliners.

The aircraft's success or failure will depend much on Japan, the only major aviation market where Boeing clearly dominates its European rival.

More than a third of the Dreamliner is built by Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Fuji Heavy Industries.

Of Boeing's backlog of 821 orders for the Dreamliner, nearly a tenth of them are from Japan.

ANA expects its 55 aircraft by March 2018 and has so far stuck with Boeing despite three years of delays. That is a welcome commitment for Boeing after China Eastern Airlines on October 17 terminated an order for 24 Dreamliners rather than wait for production to pick up speed.

Air New Zealand voiced concerns over possible further delays last week. The carrier said it is seeking compensation from Boeing.

The plane builder on September 26 said it expects to break-even on the plane this decade. Boeing releases its latest earnings results in the United States on Wednesday.

Enthusiasm in Japan for Boeing has been undimmed by the delayed Dreamliner.

The 100 seats available to paying passengers on the flight sold out as soon as they went on sale, with 25,505 people scrambling online for the scarce tickets. A pair of tickets that ANA offered on the Yahoo auction site for charity sold for 890,000 yen ($11,693.601).

($1 = 76.110 Japanese yen)

(Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Matt Driskill and Miyoung Kim)

(Corrects spelling of Boeing executive's name)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111026/bs_nm/us_dreamliner

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Thursday, 27 October 2011

Sprint trying to fix iPhone 4S speed issue

Apple

By Suzanne Choney

Sprint iPhone 4S customers say they're still getting slow data speeds with their new phones, and the wireless carrier, which has spent big bucks to bring the phone to customers, is reportedly working on a solution with Apple.

User complaints are being shared on various websites, and on several threads on Sprint's Community Forum, including these: "iPhone 4S on 3G data network too slow to be useful" and "iPhone now on the slowest network. post your zip if you have slow data coverage."

An internal Sprint email to employees says Apple and Sprint are working to solve the "confirmed nationwide issue" about the slow data speed, according to The Next Web:

There was no information about what the cause of the issues are or what the expected resolution date might be. The email did contain a reference to a ?Service Settings? update, which sounds like it could be referring to the carrier settings file that contains access point info for the carriers.

When we asked Sprint about the problem last week, a representative for the carrier said it was "carefully monitoring the performance of the 3G network. We are looking into a small number of reports of slow data speeds when using the iPhone 4S, however there are also reports showing that Sprint's network is the fastest."

The Sprint rep was talking specifically about a report in Gizmodo, which gave the carrier respectable marks.

Our friends at Laptop recently gave Sprint's iPhone 4S speed mixed grades, compared to AT&T and Verizon Wireless:

The AT&T version of the iPhone is the only one that supports speeds up to 14.4 Mbps on the carrier's HSPA network, while the Verizon and Sprint versions are tied to older and slower EV-DO networks. So it wasn't a surprise that AT&T turned in the fastest download and upload speeds in our three testing locations using the Speedtest.net app.

The AT&T iPhone 4S?pulled?off an overall average rate of 970 Kbps for downloads, and 270 Kbps for uploads.?By comparison, Verizon only mustered 380 Kbps on the download and Sprint was even slower at 280 Kbps. Verizon's iPhone 4S consistently offered the slowest upload speeds, with an average of 100 Kbps versus a not-much-better 170 Kbps for Sprint.?

We've asked both Sprint and Apple to comment on their attempts to fix the problem, and will update this post if we hear back.

But comments like those of "jd_pruitt" on Sprint's forums are typical of some of the frustrations:

... when listening to Pandora the stream would stop for a few minutes and start again. Browsing is noticeably slower from my former carrier AT&T. Translation: Yeah, it's pretty lame.

Related stories:

Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on Facebook,?and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/26/8493848-sprint-trying-to-fix-iphone-4s-speed-issue

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Wednesday, 26 October 2011

NYPD checking up on Muslims who change their names

FILE - In this Oct. 6, 2011, file photo, NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly listens during his testimony about NYPD intelligence operations to the New York City Council public safety committee in New York. Three months ago, one of the CIA?s most experienced clandestine operatives started work inside the New York Police Department. His title is special assistant to the deputy commissioner of intelligence. Since The Associated Press revealed the assignment in August, federal and city officials have offered differing explanations for why this CIA officer, a seasoned operative who handled foreign agents and ran complex operations in Jordan and Pakistan, was assigned to a municipal police department. Kelly said the CIA operative provides his officers "with information, usually coming from perhaps overseas." He said the CIA operative provides "technical information" to the NYPD but "doesn?t have access to any of our investigative files." (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 6, 2011, file photo, NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly listens during his testimony about NYPD intelligence operations to the New York City Council public safety committee in New York. Three months ago, one of the CIA?s most experienced clandestine operatives started work inside the New York Police Department. His title is special assistant to the deputy commissioner of intelligence. Since The Associated Press revealed the assignment in August, federal and city officials have offered differing explanations for why this CIA officer, a seasoned operative who handled foreign agents and ran complex operations in Jordan and Pakistan, was assigned to a municipal police department. Kelly said the CIA operative provides his officers "with information, usually coming from perhaps overseas." He said the CIA operative provides "technical information" to the NYPD but "doesn?t have access to any of our investigative files." (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)

NEW YORK (AP) ? For generations, immigrants have shed their ancestral identities and taken new, Americanized names as they found their place in the melting pot. For Muslims in New York, that rite of assimilation is now seen by police as a possible red flag in the hunt for terrorists.

The New York Police Department monitors everyone in the city who changes his or her name, according to interviews and internal police documents obtained by The Associated Press. For those whose names sound Arabic or might be from Muslim countries, police run comprehensive background checks that include reviewing travel records, criminal histories, business licenses and immigration documents.

All this is recorded in police databases for supervisors, who review the names and select a handful of people for police to visit.

The program was conceived as a tripwire for police in the difficult hunt for homegrown terrorists, where there are no widely agreed upon warning signs. Like other NYPD intelligence programs created in the past decade, this one involved monitoring behavior protected by the First Amendment.

Since August, an Associated Press investigation has revealed a vast NYPD intelligence-collecting effort targeting Muslims following the terror attacks of September 2001. Police have conducted surveillance of entire Muslim neighborhoods, chronicling daily life including where people eat, pray and get their hair cut. Police infiltrated dozens of mosques and Muslim student groups and investigated hundreds more.

Monitoring name changes illustrates how the threat of terrorism now casts suspicion over what historically has been part of America's story. For centuries, foreigners have changed their names in New York, often to lose any stigma attached with their surname.

The Roosevelts were once the van Rosenvelts. Fashion designer Ralph Lauren was born Ralph Lifshitz. Donald Trump's grandfather changed the family name from Drumpf.

David Cohen, the NYPD's intelligence chief, worried that would-be terrorists could use their new names to lie low in New York, current and former officials recalled. Reviewing name changes was intended to identify people who either Americanized their names or took Arabic names for the first time, said the officials, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the program.

NYPD spokesman Paul Browne did not respond to messages left over two days asking about the legal justification for the program and whether it had identified any terrorists.

The goal was to find a way to spot terrorists like Daood Gilani and Carlos Bledsoe before they attacked.

Gilani, a Chicago man, changed his name to the unremarkable David Coleman Headley to avoid suspicion as he helped plan the 2008 terrorist shooting spree in Mumbai, India. Bledsoe, of Tennessee, changed his name to Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad in 2007 and, two years later, killed one soldier and wounded another in a shooting at a recruiting station in Little Rock, Ark.

Sometime around 2008, state court officials began sending the NYPD information about new name changes, said Ron Younkins, the court's chief of operations. The court regularly sends updates to police, he said. The information is all public, and he said the court was not aware of how police used it.

The NYPD program began as a purely analytical exercise, according to documents and interviews. Police reviewed the names received from the court and selected some for background checks that included city, state and federal criminal databases as well as federal immigration and Treasury Department databases that identified foreign travel.

Early on, police added people with American names to the list so that if details of the program ever leaked out, the department would not be accused of profiling, according to one person briefed on the program.

On one police document from that period, two of every three people who were investigated had changed their names to or from something that could be read as Arabic-sounding.

All the names that were investigated, even those whose background checks came up empty, were cataloged so police could refer to them in the future.

The legal justification for the program is unclear from the documents obtained by the AP. Because of its history of spying on anti-war protesters and political activists, the NYPD has long been required to follow a federal court order when gathering intelligence. That order allows the department to conduct background checks only when police have information about possible criminal activity, and only as part of "prompt and extremely limited" checking of leads.

The NYPD's rules also prohibit opening investigations based solely on activities protected by the First Amendment. Federal courts have held that people have a right to change their names and, in the case of religious conversion, that right is protected by the First Amendment.

After the AP's investigation into the NYPD's activities, some U.S. lawmakers, including Reps. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., and Rush Holt, D-N.J., have said the NYPD programs are blatant racial profiling and have asked the Justice Department to investigate. Two Democrats on congressional intelligence committees said they were troubled by the CIA's involvement in these programs. Additionally, seven New York Democratic state senators called for the state attorney general to investigate the NYPD's spying on Muslim neighborhoods. And last month, the CIA announced an inspector general investigation into the agency's partnership with the NYPD.

The NYPD is not alone in its monitoring of Muslim neighborhoods. The FBI has its own ethnic mapping program that singled out Muslim communities, and agents have been criticized for targeting mosques.

The name change program is an example of how, while the NYPD says it operates under the same rules as the FBI, police have at times gone beyond what is allowed by the federal government. The FBI would not be allowed to run a similar program because of First Amendment and privacy concerns and because the goal is too vague and the program too broad, according to FBI rules and interviews with federal officials.

Police expanded their efforts in late 2009, according to documents and interviews. After analysts ran background checks, police began selecting a handful of people to visit and interview.

Internally, some police groused about the program. Many people who were approached didn't want to talk and police couldn't force them to.

A Pakistani cab driver, for instance, told police he did not want to talk to them about why he took Sheikh as a new last name, documents show.

Police also knew that a would-be terrorist who Americanized his name in hopes of lying low was unlikely to confess as much to detectives. In fact, of those who agreed to talk at all, many said they Americanized their names because they were being harassed or were having problems getting a job and thought a new name would help.

But as with other intelligence programs at the NYPD, Cohen hoped it would send a message to would-be bombers that police were watching, current and former officials said.

As it expanded, the program began to target Muslims even more directly, drawing criticism from Stuart Parker, an in-house NYPD lawyer, who said there had to be standards for who was being interviewed, a person involved in the discussions recalled. In response, police interviewed people with Arabic-sounding names but only if their background checks matched specific criteria.

The names of those who were interviewed, even those who chose not to speak with police, were recorded in police reports stored in the department's database, according to documents and interviews, while names of those who received only background checks were kept in a separate file in the Intelligence Division.

Donna Gabaccia, director of the Immigration History Research Center at the University of Minnesota, said that for many families, name changes are important aspects of the American story. Despite the stories that officials at Ellis Island Americanized the names of people arriving in the U.S., most immigrants changed their names themselves to avoid ridicule and discrimination or just to fit in, she said.

The NYPD program, she said, turned that story on its head.

"In the past, you changed your name in response to stigmatization," she said. "And now, you change your name and you are stigmatized. There's just something very sad about this."

As for converts to Islam, the religion does not require them to take Arabic names but many do as a way to publicly identify their faith, said Jonathan Brown, a Georgetown University professor of Islamic studies.

Taking an Arabic name might be a sign that someone is more religious, Brown said, but it doesn't necessarily suggest someone is more radical. He said law enforcement nationwide has often confused the two points in the fight against terrorism.

"It's just an example of the silly, conveyor-belt approach they have, where anyone who gets more religious is by definition more dangerous," Brown said.

Sarah Feinstein-Borenstein, a 75-year-old Jewish woman who lives on Manhattan's Upper West Side, was surprised to learn that she was among the Americans drawn into the NYPD program in its infancy. She hyphenated her last name in 2009. Police investigated and recorded her information in a police intelligence file because of it.

"It's rather shocking to me," she said. "I think they would have better things to do. It's is a waste of my tax money."

Feinstein-Borenstein was born in Egypt and lived there until the Suez Crisis in 1956. With a French mother and a Jewish religion, she and her family were labeled "undesirable" and were kicked out. She came to the U.S. in 1963.

"If you live long enough," she said, "you see everything."

___

Contact the Washington investigative team at DCInvestigations(at)ap.org

Read AP's previous stories and documents about the NYPD at: http://www.ap.org/nypd

Follow Apuzzo and Goldman at http://twitter.org/mattapuzzo and http://twitter.org/goldmandc

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-26-NYPD%20Intelligence/id-9cc034f1d87343389acf2d2686c3c316

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Friday, 21 October 2011

Steve Ballmer: "You need to be a computer scientist to use Android" (Digital Trends)

steve-ballmer-web-2-conference

Steve Ballmer is not known for holding back and at the Web 2.0 Summit on Tuesday, the Microsoft CEO tossed out some decent one-liners. Attacking Google search, Android, Yahoo, and touting the company?s recent purchase of Skype, Ballmer let loose, as he often does.?Below are some select quotes.?

On Android:??You don?t need to be a computer scientist to use a Windows Phone. I think you do to use an Android Phone?It is hard for me to be excited about the Android phones.?

On Apple: ?Apple is a good competitor, but a different one?Both [an iPhone and a Windows phone] are going to feel very good in your hand and both going to look very beautiful physically?. but when you grab a Windows phone and use it? your information is front and centre? and you don?t have to scroll through seas of icons and blah blah blah.?A Windows phone gets things done.?

On rumors of Microsoft making its own hardware: ?We are [only] focused on enabling hardware innovation?We have been very successful enabling hardware innovation and will continue to do so.?

On Bing:??Today I?d issue you all a challenge to go take any search you want and try it out on Bing and Google! Seventy percent of the time you probably won?t care, 15 percent you?ll like us better, 15 percent you?ll like other guy better!?

On Microsoft?s failed bid for Yahoo in 2008:??Sometimes you are lucky. Ask any CEO who might have bought something before the market crashed (in 2008)? Hallelujah! Putting everything else aside, the market fell apart?. Sometimes you?re lucky.?

On competing with Google in cloud services: ??All in, baby!. We are winning, winning, winning, winning.??

On Google+ and social: ?There are a variety of different things that fall under the social banner. We?re adding what I?d call ?connectivity to people? into our core products, The acquisition of Skype is big step down that path toward connecting with other people.??

The?quotes in this article were compiled from the Telegraph, InformationWeek, CNET, and?Internet Evolution.?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111019/tc_digitaltrends/steveballmeryouneedtobeacomputerscientisttouseandroid

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Thursday, 20 October 2011

Obama looks to South in bid to help keep his job (AP)

JAMESTOWN, N.C. ? Three years after his surprising wins in Southern states, President Barack Obama's re-election campaign is doubling down in the region, hoping to turn changing demographics into electoral wins and offset potential losses in traditional swing states next year.

Obama's Southern strategy is at the heart of his three-day bus trip this week through North Carolina and Virginia. In 2008 he became the first Democratic presidential candidate to win in those Republican strongholds in a generation.

With 28 electoral votes between them, wins in North Carolina and Virginia could help Obama make up for defeats in Rust Belt states like Ohio and Indiana, which he won in 2008 but could be hard-pressed to carry next year.

The president's bus tour started Monday in Asheville, N.C., whose mountains have attracted retirees from the Northeast, and took Obama through rural swaths of the Blue Ridge Mountains. He spent the night in Greensboro, where four black students launched a sit-in at a Woolworth's lunch counter to protest segregation in 1960, a year before Obama was born.

On Tuesday, Obama was making stops in rural Emporia, Va., and Hampton, Va., where the region's large number of black voters helped him carry the state three years ago. Obama and first lady Michelle Obama were discussing veterans' issues on Wednesday at Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Hampton, Va.

Both states have seen economic and demographic changes that could alter the politics. North Carolina's economy has shifted from textiles and tobacco to banking and research, while Virginia's population has boomed in the state's northern suburbs outside Washington, D.C., with the expansion of large defense contractors and firms tied to the federal government.

Along his bus tour, Obama was making unscheduled stops at restaurants and general stores, giving him a chance to engage in the type of personal politics that is so prevalent in presidential campaigns but hard to come by in the White House.

Obama was the first Democrat to carry Virginia since Lyndon Johnson in 1964 and the first to win North Carolina since Jimmy Carter in 1976.

Yet picking up states in the South again could be difficult. Obama's poll numbers in North Carolina and Virginia are down, in line with national trends. A recent Elon University poll put the president's approval rating in North Carolina at 42 percent, and a Quinnipiac University poll had it at 45 percent in Virginia.

That has Obama's campaign putting both states near the top of its priority list and opening three offices in North Carolina and one in Virginia, with more to come. The Democratic Party will hold its convention in Charlotte, N.C., next summer, and North Carolina and Virginia are already showing up frequently on Obama's travel itinerary, a trend that is expected to continue through the election.

"My intention is to win North Carolina again like we did last time," Obama said in an interview Monday with Charlotte TV station WCNC. "It will be close because obviously folks are frustrated with the challenges that we still face in the economy."

Obama's Southern strategy extends beyond the two states.

His campaign plans to compete heavily in Florida, the ultra-swing state that decided the 2000 election, and campaign officials consider Georgia a place where they could challenge Republicans on their turf. Obama lost Georgia by 5 percentage points in 2008, but Democrats see potential in the influx of black and Hispanic voters in suburban areas outside Atlanta.

"It won't be easy," said Mike Berlon, chairman of the Georgia Democratic Party. "But we are working to register new voters and we think the demographics are on our side."

Southern Democrats suffered big losses in last year's midterm elections. Twenty Democrats in Congress from across the region lost their seats and Republicans seized control of chambers in North Carolina, Louisiana and Virginia. Republicans picked up 17 state House seats, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Republicans view the strategy as a sign of larger problems for Obama's team in the Upper Midwest and Rust Belt, which Obama swept in 2008, and in Western states won by Obama, like Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico.

"He's in a world of hurt in the Great Lakes. There's no doubt about it. They're right to look for places that might offset that. But they don't have a happy hunting ground," said Ed Gillespie, a former Republican National Committee chairman. "They need to shore up the Southwest and Southeast ? Virginia and North Carolina ? in hopes of offsetting losses they're going to sustain in the Great Lakes."

Republicans have called the bus tour nothing more than an early jump on the 2012 campaign. "Going down there on the taxpayer's dime, calling it not a campaign event and then attacking Republicans is probably the worst overreach I've observed in the years that I've been in the Congress," Sen. John McCain of Arizona, Obama's 2008 Republican opponent, told reporters Tuesday.

Democratic presidential candidates have had trouble in the South since Carter swept his home region to win the White House in 1976. Bill Clinton won his home state of Arkansas, along with Louisiana and Tennessee during his two presidential campaigns ? he also carried Georgia in 1992 and Florida in 1996 ? but Al Gore and John Kerry both came up empty in the South.

In 2008, Obama blitzed North Carolina with millions of dollars of television ads, a large staff and an emphasis on early voting. He boosted turnout among black voters and took advantage of demographic shifts in the state, especially in a stretch from Charlotte to Raleigh along Interstate 85 where many retirees from northern states have moved.

In Virginia, Obama was helped by a strong turnout among young people, broad support from Hispanics and black voters and increases over Kerry's performance in every region of the state's western slice. The state is quickly becoming one of the nation's most competitive states in politics, with statewide campaigns typically won and lost in fast-growing areas outside the suburbs of Northern Virginia; in the region surrounding Richmond, the state's capital; and in the Virginia Beach area, which includes large pockets of black voters.

Dave Beattie, a Florida-based Democratic pollster who has worked on campaigns throughout the South, said Obama will need to maximize turnout among black and Hispanic voters, excite the Democratic base but also "show the voters in the middle that don't like politics that he's really working for them."

Obama will lavish more attention to the weeks ahead. Next month, he is paying homage to something many Tar Heels hold dear ? the University of North Carolina men's basketball team. The president plans to attend the Carrier Classic on the USS Carl Vinson in San Diego, where North Carolina will face Michigan State.

___

Thomas reported from Washington.

Associated Press writers Shannon McCaffrey in Atlanta and Donna Cassata in Washington and Jennifer Agiesta, deputy polling director for The Associated Press, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111018/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_southern_strategy

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Fashion guru gets the boot on 'Dancing' (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Carson Kressley can go back to evaluating wardrobes and other style choices.

The fashion guru was booted off "Dancing With the Stars" on Tuesday night, leaving seven other contestants. It wasn't unexpected, given that the judges of ABC's competition had given him the lowest scores for his 1980s-themed routine a night earlier.

Kressley, who made his name with the show "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy," dressed in a cheerleader's outfit that he probably would have disdained on his own show for his routine with partner Anna Trebunskaya.

He thanked everyone involved with "Dancing with the Stars" before making his exit.

"This has been pure joy for me," he said. "I hope I can just make people smile and laugh and have a good time."

Host Tom Bergeron joked about the injustice of a gay personality bounced from the one week before it is to feature music from Broadway. Singer Kelly Clarkson performed on Tuesday's results show.

The two remaining contestants who came closest to being sent home on Tuesday were actor David Arquette and soccer star Hope Solo.

Others left in the game are actor J.R. Martinez, reality TV personality Rob Kardashian, activist Chaz Bono and TV hosts Ricki Lake and Nancy Grace.

"Dancing" has proven to be a durable commodity for ABC. Its two episodes last week were second only to the CBS drama "NCIS" in the Nielsen ratings. The weekly "Good Morning America" featured interview with the kicked-off contestant has helped boost that show in its competition with NBC's "Today."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111019/ap_en_tv/us_tv_dancing_with_the_stars

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Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Thailand flooding hits Western Digital operations

(AP) ? Computer hard drive maker Western Digital Corp. said Monday that flooding damage to its Thailand locations will have a significant impact on its operations and its ability to meet customer demand in the December quarter.

The Irvine, Calif., company said it has extended its suspension of operations in Thailand, as rising water flooded its manufacturing site in the Bang Pa-in Industrial Park and submerged some equipment. It also said flooding is threatening operations in the Navanakorn Industrial Park. Both facilities are about 27 miles north of Bangkok.

Western Digital makes hard drives, network drives and other storage products. It said company locations in Malaysia, Singapore and the United States are fully operational.

Thai officials have said hundreds of people have died and more than 260,000 have lost jobs as 6,533 businesses nationwide had to close due flooding last week. Several major industrial parks have been inundated, which has disrupted supply chains, especially in the automotive and electronic industries.

Western Digital shares fell $1.60, or 6 percent, to $26.74 in midday trading Monday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2011-10-17-US-Western-Digital-Thailand-Flooding/id-7f5b35ab00104b8080913632482ce0f5

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US rivers and streams saturated with carbon

US rivers and streams saturated with carbon [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 17-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David DeFusco
david.defusco@yale.edu
203-436-4842
Yale University

New Haven, Conn. Rivers and streams in the United States are releasing enough carbon into the atmosphere to fuel 3.4 million car trips to the moon, according to Yale researchers in Nature Geoscience. Their findings could change the way scientists model the movement of carbon between land, water and the atmosphere.

"These rivers breathe a lot of carbon," said David Butman, a doctoral student and co-author of a study with Pete Raymond, professor of ecosystem ecology, both at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies. "They are a source of CO2, just like we breathe CO2 and like smokestacks emit CO2, and this has never been systematically estimated from a region as large as the United States."

The researchers assert that a significant amount of carbon contained in land, which first is absorbed by plants and forests through the air, is leaking into streams and rivers and then released into the atmosphere before reaching coastal waterways.

"What we are able to show is that there is a source of atmospheric CO2 from streams and rivers, and that it is significant enough for terrestrial modelers to take note of it," said Butman.

They analyzed samples taken by the United States Geological Survey from over 4,000 rivers and streams throughout the United States, and incorporated highly detailed geospatial data to model the flux of carbon dioxide from water. This release of carbon, said Butman, is the same as a car burning 40 billion gallons of gasoline.

The paper, titled "Significant Efflux of Carbon Dioxide from Streams and Rivers in the United States," also indicates that as the climate heats up there will be more rain and snow, and that an increase in precipitation will result in even more terrestrial carbon flowing into rivers and streams and being released into the atmosphere.

"This would mean that any estimate between carbon uptake in the biosphere and carbon being released through respiration in the biosphere will be even less likely to balance and must include the carbon in streams and rivers," he said.

The researchers note in the paper that currently it is impossible to determine exactly how to include this flux in regional carbon budgets, because the influence of human activity on the release of CO2 into streams and rivers is still unknown.

###

The research was funded by NASA, the National Science Foundation, the United States Geological Survey and the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


US rivers and streams saturated with carbon [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 17-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David DeFusco
david.defusco@yale.edu
203-436-4842
Yale University

New Haven, Conn. Rivers and streams in the United States are releasing enough carbon into the atmosphere to fuel 3.4 million car trips to the moon, according to Yale researchers in Nature Geoscience. Their findings could change the way scientists model the movement of carbon between land, water and the atmosphere.

"These rivers breathe a lot of carbon," said David Butman, a doctoral student and co-author of a study with Pete Raymond, professor of ecosystem ecology, both at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies. "They are a source of CO2, just like we breathe CO2 and like smokestacks emit CO2, and this has never been systematically estimated from a region as large as the United States."

The researchers assert that a significant amount of carbon contained in land, which first is absorbed by plants and forests through the air, is leaking into streams and rivers and then released into the atmosphere before reaching coastal waterways.

"What we are able to show is that there is a source of atmospheric CO2 from streams and rivers, and that it is significant enough for terrestrial modelers to take note of it," said Butman.

They analyzed samples taken by the United States Geological Survey from over 4,000 rivers and streams throughout the United States, and incorporated highly detailed geospatial data to model the flux of carbon dioxide from water. This release of carbon, said Butman, is the same as a car burning 40 billion gallons of gasoline.

The paper, titled "Significant Efflux of Carbon Dioxide from Streams and Rivers in the United States," also indicates that as the climate heats up there will be more rain and snow, and that an increase in precipitation will result in even more terrestrial carbon flowing into rivers and streams and being released into the atmosphere.

"This would mean that any estimate between carbon uptake in the biosphere and carbon being released through respiration in the biosphere will be even less likely to balance and must include the carbon in streams and rivers," he said.

The researchers note in the paper that currently it is impossible to determine exactly how to include this flux in regional carbon budgets, because the influence of human activity on the release of CO2 into streams and rivers is still unknown.

###

The research was funded by NASA, the National Science Foundation, the United States Geological Survey and the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-10/yu-ura101711.php

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Monday, 17 October 2011

Gwen Stefani: My Sons? Sense of Style Can Be ?Horrifying?

"I like them to be creative and have fun. I'd love to be part of it - don't get me wrong," Stefani, 42, says of dressing her boys. "Sometimes they'll get dressed and it's horrifying. But they often come out in outfits that are awesome."

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/HPJB0lLhEzU/

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Chinese fighter jet nose-dives into field at show

A Chinese air force jet crashed at an air show Friday, leaving one of the pilots missing and presumed dead.

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Footage aired by China Central Television showed the jet sputtering and then nose-diving into a field outside the northern city of Xi'an as one of the pilots ejected from the cockpit and landed beneath an open parachute.

Only one parachute was seen opening, and the plane burst into flames upon crashing.

The other pilot's seat appeared not to have ejected.

Trapped
The pilot who ejected suffered only minor injuries, but his comrade appeared to have been trapped in the doomed plane, the official Xinhua News Agency said, citing eyewitnesses and air show organizer, He Liang.

"One pilot parachuted out of the plane and is alive, the search for another pilot is ongoing," the China International General Aviation Convention told the AFP news agency in a statement. "There were no casualties on the ground."

The plane crashed more than a mile from the nearest onlookers.

Xinhua said the plane was a two-seater JH-7 "Flying Leopard" fighter-bomber, but AFP cited a report that it was a Xiaolong or "Fierce Dragon" fighter jet.

AFP said U.S. aerobatic teams along with others from Hungary, Sweden, and Lithuania were invited to take part in the three-day show.

The crash is being investigated and it wasn't clear if mechanical problems or pilot error was to blame.

The plane is powered by two highly reliable license-built Spey Mk202 engines and it was considered unlikely that both would have stalled at the same time.

The Chinese-made JH-7 entered service in 2004 and is a mainstay of the country's air force and naval aviation, with more than 100 built.

At least one of the planes crashed previously ? during a China-Russian joint exercise in 2009, killing both pilots.

China rarely released information about military accidents, but the public nature of the crash and the rapid spread of images of it happening on the Internet made it impossible to keep secret.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44902049/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

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Sunday, 16 October 2011

Sherri Shepherd-Lamar Sally Wedding: 10 Things You Don't Know

You might already know that Sherri Shepherd wasn't wearing underwear beneath her custom Rivini bridal gown when she married TV writer Lamar Sally on Aug. 13.

You might also know that, at her wedding, which was filmed for a TV special on Style Network, her mic pack slipped down the back of her dress. It had to be retrieved by lifting the dress and Shepherd cried out, "No I have no panties on!" (One of her bridesmaids thought she was shouting "My pancreas! My pancreas!")

So it may come as a surprise that there are still some things you probably don't know about "The View" co-host's recent wedding, as we found out recently when we sat down with her. Below, Shepherd's best-kept wedding-day secrets.

"The View" airs weekdays at 11 am EST on ABC, and you can also see Shepherd as host of GSN's "The Newlywed Game" weeknights at 6:30 pm EST.

1. I left a lot to the planners
Sal had never been married before, so he was more of the person that was into the details. I was more, 'Tell me where I'm supposed to show up and what time and can I have a pretty dress?'

2. The only thing I wanted was the bridal party dance
I said, 'Elizabeth, you are going to do a robot solo.' Rehearsing for that dance was probably the only time they thought they were seeing s side of Sherri they'd never before. I was like, 'You all buckle down and get this damn dance because it's going viral and I refuse to do any less than that.'

3. The best moment with my husband was working on the dance
The man is supposed to lead. Sal kept saying, 'You're not letting me lead!' And I said, 'I don?t know how to follow a man!' Elizabeth said, 'What a metaphor for your marriage.' That was the best time because in the end I allowed him to lead me, and it worked out very well. But it was a tough thing getting there.

4. My bridesmaids had me up until 3 in the morning the night before
My bridesmaids and I were in our pajamas and they were telling me how much they loved me. It was like they were saying vows to me. They gave me a jar full of handwritten notes with advice and they said, 'Pull out these notes for when you're feeling like, 'Why did I get married?''

5. For my first wedding, I rented my wedding gown
We did it at one of those old clubhouses that old people meet at. It smelled like feet. They bought in about 20 cans of Glade air freshener before everyone came in. This wedding to Sal was really my dream wedding. It had all the bells and whistles, every element I've ever wanted.

6. I didn't want anyone near me who would make me cry
For my first wedding, I cried all the way down the aisle. My fake eyelash came off. My nose was red. My eyes were swollen. I'm not one of those pretty criers. This time I said I want wedding pictures before the wedding and I don?t want anybody around me to make me cry. Sal's mother wanted to give me her wedding ring, and it was this touching moment right before I was supposed to walk out the door. I thought, 'You've got to be kidding me, this emotional moment now?' I held it in, I blinked a whole bunch and I mouthed to my bridesmaids 'Get her out of here.'

7. Celibacy was harder on me
Sal used to play football. He's got discipline. He shut it down. We went to Grenada before we got married, and I was horny as a loon and I'm chasing him around the hotel room saying, 'We can make a mistake!' And he was like, 'Jesus is in Grenada too!' Many, many times I was like, 'Why did I say this?'

8. My son, Jeffrey, walked me down the aisle
When a dad walks his daughter down the aisle, it?s symbolic. I did that the first time. But I have been grown a long time taking care of myself. I felt it was really important that when Sal turned around, not only was he was getting me but that he was getting that six-year-old as well. When my son took my hand and put it in Sal's, it was saying, "I'm trusting you to protect my mommy, and me.'"

9. My shoes were six inches
My husband is 6'6 and I'm 5'1: that's a big height difference. My heels were almost 6 inches. I was in so much pain by the end of the night, bunions hurting, corns hurting, heels hurting, calluses everywhere.

10. I got vajazzled, but the crystals didn't stay on that well
I loved it. They put little Swarovski crystals on what I call my little sister. I got it done about three weeks before the wedding. It was in the shape of a little bowtie. By the time it got to Sal, it looked like a broke down butterfly. But that was my little gift to him.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/13/sherri-shepherds-marriage-_n_1009390.html

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Video: Cain mistakes flavor

Mastectomy and the single girl: A bucket list for boobs

Most people rage at the universe when they're diagnosed with breast cancer. Me? I scheduled a pin-up shoot. While my family focused on saving my life, to me, it was all about my boobs. I liked them, and, as a single woman, I felt they still came in handy.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/44909289#44909289

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Saturday, 15 October 2011

Perry: domestic energy production linked to jobs

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks at GOP forum in Indianapolis, Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks at GOP forum in Indianapolis, Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2011. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

(AP) ? Republican presidential hopeful Rick Perry is promising to expand energy production on federal lands, curb regulation and create some 1.2 million jobs in the process.

"The quickest way to give our economy a shot in the arm is to deploy American ingenuity to tap American energy," the Texas governor planned to say Friday during the first policy speech of his White House run. "But we can only do that if environmental bureaucrats are told to stand down."

Perry's speech comes as his campaign tries to move beyond some early bumps and his momentum seems to have slowed. Shaky debate performances took away some of his shine, and as voters got to know details of his record they seemed to sour on yet another GOP contender who was, at one point, an instant front-runner.

Perry hoped to steady the course of his campaign in a speech at a Pittsburgh-area steel plant. While echoing the popular-with-Republicans call for increased drilling on federal lands, he also cast voters' choice in 2012 as a referendum on President Barack Obama.

"When it comes to energy, the president would kill domestic jobs through aggressive regulations while I would unleash 1.2 million American jobs through safe-and-aggressive energy exploration at home," Perry said. "President Obama would keep us more dependent on hostile sources of foreign energy, while my plan would make us more secure by tapping America's true energy potential."

Perry entered the presidential campaign in August and has spent much of the time since then talking in generalities and discussing his time as governor of Texas, which added jobs amid the recession. He touts his decade leading Texas and credits the state's low level of regulation for helping it fare better than most.

Yet Perry's rivals have been relentless in calling for specifics.

Mitt Romney, who released a 160-page economic policy proposal, has hammered Perry particularly hard. Romney's aides released a 114-page document titled "Rick Perry's Plan To Get America Working Again." Inside, there were 103 blank pages.

"Mitt has had six years to be working on a plan," Perry said earlier this week when asked during a debate when he would offer specifics. "I have been in this for about eight weeks."

Perry's plan was certain to find fans among many conservatives, whose support he must recapture if his presidential plan is to succeed.

In his plan, Perry called for:

? Allowing increased energy production on federal land, including Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

? Increasing off-shore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.

? Reviewing the Environmental Protect Agency's air quality regulations and take away its oversight of greenhouse gas emission regulation.

? Forcing advocacy groups to sue the government by taking away agencies' ability to compromise.

? Maintaining a ban on drilling in Florida's Everglades.

With a nod to a capital locked in partisan fights, Perry promised Congress would play only a small part in his plan.

"It can be implemented quicker and free of Washington gridlock because most of it does not require congressional action," Perry said. "Through a series of executive orders and other executive actions we will begin the process of creating jobs soon after the inauguration of a new president."

Those jobs top voters' concerns. Against a backdrop of unemployment at 9.1 percent last month, Republicans seeking their party's nomination have framed almost every policy speech through an economic recovery.

Romney delivered a speech on Thursday in Washington state, accusing China of stealing American inventions, playing to voters' economic fears amid worries about another recession. And on Monday, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman rolled out a foreign policy speech that described scaled back U.S. involvement abroad to help the country focus its energies at home.

Perry's speech was set to follow that dire tone, urging voters choosing a Republican president in 2012 to try a new approach.

"The central issue facing Americans is a lack of jobs. Fourteen million Americans are without work. One in six Americans cannot find a full-time job. Forty-five million Americans are on food stamps. And 48 percent of American households have at least one resident receiving government benefits," Perry said. "Though our president has labeled Americans as soft, I believe our people have toughed it out the best they can."

___

Associated Press writer Kasie Hunt in Redmond, Wash., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-10-14-Perry-Energy/id-d8f8412864ee4b28b9e2f19be107b881

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MP3 players 'shrink' our personal space

ScienceDaily (Oct. 12, 2011) ? How close could a stranger come to you before you start feeling uncomfortable? Usually, people start feeling uneasy when unfamiliar people come within an arm's reach. But take the subway (underground rail) during rush hour and you have no choice but to get up close and personal with complete strangers.

Researchers at Royal Holloway, University of London wanted to find out whether there is a way to make this intrusion more tolerable. Their results, published in the journal PLoS One, reveal that listening to music through headphones can change people's margins of personal space.

Dr Manos Tsakiris, from the Department of Psychology at Royal Holloway, said: "This distance we try to maintain between ourselves and others is a comfort zone surrounding our bodies. Everyone knows where the boundaries of their personal space are even though they may not consciously dictate them. Of course personal space can be modified for example in a number of relationships including family members and romantic partners, but on a busy tube or bus you can find complete strangers encroaching in this space."

The study, led by Dr Tsakiris and Dr Ana Tajadura-Jim?nez from Royal Holloway, involved asking volunteers to listen to positive or negative emotion-inducing music through headphones or through speakers. At the same time, a stranger started walking towards them and the participants were asked to say "stop" when they started feeling uncomfortable.

The results showed that when participants were listening to music that evoked positive emotions through headphones, they let the stranger come closer to them, indicating a change in their own personal space. Dr Tajadura-Jim?nez explains: "Listening to music that induces positive emotions delivered through headphones shifts the margins of personal space. Our personal space "shrinks," allowing others to get closer to us."

Dr Tsakiris added: "So next time you are ready to board a packed train, turn on your mp3 player and let others come close to you without fear of feeling invaded."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by University of Royal Holloway London.

Journal Reference:

  1. Ana Tajadura-Jim?nez, Galini Pantelidou, Pawel Rebacz, Daniel V?stfj?ll, Manos Tsakiris. I-Space: The Effects of Emotional Valence and Source of Music on Interpersonal Distance. PLoS ONE, 2011; 6 (10): e26083 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026083

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/2E1VQdpPsTI/111013085117.htm

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