Thursday, October 24, 2013

NASA shoots lasers at the moon, sets new data transmission record

Lasers are indisputably awesome, and NASA just made them a little more so by zapping a record-breaking 622 Mb of data per second between the moon and earth as a part of its Lunar Laser Communications Demonstration (LLCD). Pulsed laser beams were shot from ground control at the White Sands Test ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/HuzMlOOqdaM/
Related Topics: Keke Palmer   dexter   big brother spoilers   Andrea Sneiderman   Hugh Douglas  

Michelle Williams and Dianna Agron: Whitney Gala Glam

Stepping out for a night in support of the arts, Michelle Williams and Dianna Agron were in attendance at the Whitney Museum of American Art Gala & Studio Party in New York City on Wednesday (October 23).


Both actresses looked gorgeous and elegant in black frocks as they made their way down the arrivals carpet at Skylight at Moynihan Station.


Per the popular Big Apple museum's website, the Whitney Museum houses one of the world's foremost collections of modern and contemporary American art.


It offers educational programs, family events, lectures and readings, as well as a free daily tours.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/michelle-williams/michelle-williams-and-dianna-agron-whitney-gala-glam-948566
Category: Tomas Hertl   politico   oakland raiders   FIFA 14   Lauren Silverman  

Inside A Google Ventures Design Sprint




Design isn’t something you would normally associate with a VC firm. But as more firms are adding value-added services, Google Ventures has created an all-star team of designers from Google, Mozilla and more to help portfolio startups create beautiful and easy-to-use products. In particular, Google offers its portfolio startups the opportunity to participate in a Design Sprint, which is an intensive, visual bootcamp around a design problem for portfolio companies.


We were able to embed ourselves in one of these recent sprints, in which a few members of the Google Ventures Design team were helping CircleUp, a startup that connects investors with retail and consumer companies that wouldn’t attract traditional venture funding. The entire process, which would normally take six months for a startup to work through, is compressed to five days (hence the word “sprint”), and starts with the design team spending time with the startup’s product and engineering teams to understand the problem and challenge.





  1. Google Venture's Design







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Day two is spent drawing out and sketching a number of solutions, day three is when the team decides which idea is best for the user, and day four is spent developing a prototype. Lastly, GV’s design team and the startup expose the design to potential users to understand what works with the design and what needs to be changed. As GV Design Partner Jake Knapp explains, this thinking and structure is based on a strategy developed by IDEO and Stanford’s d.school.


Screen Shot 2013-10-23 at 3.02.39 PM


As we witnessed with CircleUp’s sprint, the entire process is interactive, visual and effective, ending with real prototypes that have been tested by real users. The room where the Design Sprint takes place looks like a real research and testing lab, complete with pictures, Post-its and voting stickers all over the walls, as well as a giant timer clock.


With CircleUp, we sat down with Knapp, who previously worked on design for Google Search, Chrome, Ads, Gmail, Apps, Google+, Security, Commerce and the 2011 Google-wide redesign, as well as Braden Kowitz, the first designer to join GV who also led design for Google Buzz, Gmail, Apps for Business and more.


CircleUp founder Ryan Caldbeck tells us that GV taught his team how to think differently about design and come to conclusions that could have taken months. And Caldbeck tells us that the company adopted the eventual product that came out of the sprint, adding, “Ninety percent of what we used came from the process we went through with the GV Design Studio. The design sprint helped us completely redesign our core page, which helps investors evaluate private companies on CircleUp.”


In total, the Google Ventures Design Studio has done 27 design sprints for portfolio companies so far this year and 28 user research sprints. Last year they did about 30 design sprints and about 30 research sprints. It’s clearly a unique service that most other VC firms do not supply.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/b8cjMQCdt_c/
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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Arcade Fire In The Throes Of Transformation





Arcade Fire on Saturday night in Bushwick. Win Butler on the left, Richard Reed Parry on the right.



Courtesy of Sachyn Mital


Arcade Fire on Saturday night in Bushwick. Win Butler on the left, Richard Reed Parry on the right.


Courtesy of Sachyn Mital


Saturday's hottest ticket in New York City was to see a band nobody's heard of. The Reflektors burned through a fan-only presale, and tickets hit the secondary market at prices high as $5,000 — a hefty sum to see any band, much less a band yet to release its first album, in Bushwick's warehousiest corridors. That's like half a year's rent for that neighborhood. But the hype was real. Based only on the "Is-this-really-happening?" disbelief stretching the faces of all the superfans and industry types in the audience, you'd think they were about to see a band that would never play a skuzzy converted depot in east Brooklyn: U2 or Bruce Springsteen, or, I don't know, Arcade Fire.


The thing about the musicians on stage was that they looked a lot like Arcade Fire. Despite his Jack White-like red shirt and white tie, the bassist's flaming red hair drew Richard Reed Parry comparisons. And they sounded like Arcade Fire, too. They even covered "Sprawl II." And that's because — (no) surprise! — The Reflektors was Arcade Fire. That cat was never really in the bag. After a little tongue-in-cheek stage banter ("We started three years ago. We were nervous to play New York because we heard you're standoffish!"), a gold-suited Win Butler and his band ran through a set of mostly unheard tracks from their upcoming album Reflektor, masquerading as a brand new band riding the promotional cycle for its first album.


But the group that played at 299 Meserole this weekend, no matter what you called them, was clearly neither a set of wide-eyed naïfs dropping their first 12", nor the band that made sneaking out of your parents house feel like toppling the Berlin Wall. The musicians were belied by more than their popularity; never mind that most in attendance — who embraced the show's "formal" dress code with thrifted tuxes, reflective masks or fratty banana suits — only got access to buying these tickets after pre-ordering Reflektor. They're also darker, and maybe a more disillusioned, too. "We're so excited to play CMJ," Butler called out sarcastically. "Thank you so much to all the industry types who offered to sign our band!"


But the plucky effrontery that has underpinned all Arcade Fire's work to date is crumbling. The band has told stories about struggling under somebody's thumb since its 2003 debut album Funeral. Songs like "Wake Up" and "Crown of Love" captured an anthemic emotional power, half hope and half rebellion, unmatched by the group's successors and copycats. The songs bloomed around refrains that felt bigger than any stadium they eventually filled. But this is less so on Reflektor. The new songs Arcade Fire played Saturday were full of new (mostly rhythmic) ideas coming to the fore and many old (mostly romantic) identifiers fading away.


Some saw that change coming when Arcade Fire announced that James Murphy, the David Bowie-obsessed former face of LCD Soundsystem and head of disco-punk label DFA, was announced as Reflektor's producer. He introduced the band at the show. Others heard it in the album's dynamic, Bowie-featuring first single, which abandoned that operatic Springsteenian populism for pop reflective of the transformations undertaken by their arena-sized predecessors the Talking Heads and U2 (there's that similarity again).



That change got its first full public display in Bushwick. Take "We Exist," for one. Four years ago an Arcade Fire song with titles that way might've sounded like "Born to Run," but when that "Hang On To Your Love"/"Your Cover's Blown" bassline crept out beneath the venue's Murphy-esque disco balls and reflective hanging polygons, it left no ambiguities about the type of music Arcade Fire is now interested in making. Fans of the group should have been safe assuming they'd get the standard fare of marching violinists yowling to the rafters, but instead were blindsided by Sade. With strings marginalized and two miscellaneous percussionists in tow, this group looked and sounded more like Stop Making Sense than In the Aeroplane Over the Sea.


This departure is not a totally clean break from their last work, 2010's Grammy-winning, Twitter-enraging The Suburbs. There were of course the type of joyful moments Arcade Fire is known for (see the swelling "Supersymmetry"), and brand new sounds, like the Princely backup vocals of "It's Never Over (Orpheus)" and the murky rave-up "Here Comes the Night Time." But taking the stage in the throes of a transformation didn't always work in Arcade Fire's favor. The band sometimes sounded uninspired performing new songs they'd written in their old style (like the underwhelming "Joan of Arc") or those that didn't do Butler's heady aspiration to sound like "a mash up of Studio 54 and Hatian voodoo" real justice (the chopped reggaeton of "Flashbulb Eyes"). Some old favorites even looked limp in their new duds (like the beloved "Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)"), while others ("Haiti") sound suddenly prophetic of where the band has touched down.


Gone is the jubilation of the Arcade Fire of days past. The crowd occasionally felt awkward inside the band's new big beat, and responded to Butler's post-encore announcement that there would be no more Reflektors, or Arcade Fire, tonight but rather a DJ set from James Murphy for those who wanted to "dance all night," with more than a smattering of boos. But the band itself is dancing toward something that'll lead it outside the sounds their old crowd formed around. Seeing that live was alone worth the price of admission.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2013/10/23/240251629/arcade-fire-in-the-throes-of-transformation?ft=1&f=1039
Category: TSLA   veep   rose byrne   emmy winners   george zimmerman  

'Terrible tragedy': Popular Mass. teacher slain


DANVERS, Mass. (AP) — A 14-year-old high school student described by classmates as soft-spoken and pleasant was accused of killing a well-liked math teacher, whose body was found in the woods behind the school.

Law enforcement officials recovered the remains of 24-year-old Danvers High School teacher Colleen Ritzer early Wednesday, Essex District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett said. The teen, Philip Chism, was arraigned Wednesday in Salem on a murder charge and ordered held without bail.

Ritzer was reported missing late Tuesday night after she didn't come home from work or answer her cellphone. Investigators found blood in a second-floor school bathroom and soon located her body, Blodgett said. He did not say how Ritzer died.

"She was a very, very respected, loved teacher," Blodgett said, calling the killing a "terrible tragedy."

The boy also was reported missing Tuesday after not coming home from school. He was spotted walking along a road in neighboring Topsfield at about 12:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Investigators said in court documents that the arrest was made based on statements by the suspect and corroborating evidence at multiple scenes. They said they also recovered video surveillance.

At his arraignment in adult court Wednesday afternoon, Chism's defense attorney argued for the proceeding to be closed and her client to be allowed to stay hidden because of his age. The judge denied the request. The attorney declined to comment outside court.

Ritzer had a Twitter account where she gave homework assignments, encouraged students and described herself as a "math teacher often too excited about the topics I'm teaching."

She was a 2011 graduate of Assumption College in Worcester, a school spokeswoman said Wednesday. She graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor of arts degree in math, a minor in psychology and a secondary education concentration, according to the college's 2011 commencement program.

Chris Weimert, 17, was a student in Ritzer's geometry class last year. He said she had taught at the school for two years and was a warm, welcoming person who would stand outside her classroom and say hello to students she didn't teach.

"She was the nicest teacher anyone could ever have. She always had a warm smile on her face," he said.

Weimert said the suspect, who he knew from seeing him around school, "seemed like a good kid." He said, "It really threw the whole town of Danvers a curve ball."

Kyle Cahill, a junior, said he knows Chism from the soccer team. He said the 14-year-old moved to Massachusetts from Tennessee before the school year began and was a top goal scorer on the school's junior varsity team.

He called him a quiet, nice kid.

"He wasn't violent at all. He was really the opposite of aggressive," Cahill said.

Cahill said there was a soccer team dinner Tuesday night that the accused teen skipped, and team members were wondering where he was.

"We're all just a family. It just amazes me really," he said. "I'm just stunned."

Ryan Kelleher, a senior who also plays soccer, said the arrest of the soft-spoken Chism didn't make sense to him.

"From what I know about him and seeing him every day, it just doesn't add up that he would do such a thing, unless this was all an act to fool somebody," the 17-year-old said.

Kelleher took Ritzer's algebra class last year and said hello to her on Tuesday in the hallway. He said students related to the young teacher, who liked to wear jeans and UGG boots just like the students.

Ritzer lived at home with her 20-year-old brother and her sister, a high school senior. The close-knit family was often outside, barbecuing, spending time together and enjoying each other's company, neighbors said.

Mary Duffy has lived next door to the Ritzers in the comfortable, suburban neighborhood in Andover since the family moved there more than two decades ago. She had known Colleen Ritzer from the time she was a baby and said the Ritzers' oldest child had just one ambition in life: to be a high school math teacher.

"All I ever heard is that she loved her job," Duffy said.

Ritzer's uncle Dale Webster provided a brief written statement in which the family asked for privacy.

"At this time, we are mourning the tragic death or our amazing, beautiful daughter and sister," the statement read. "Everyone that knew and loved Colleen knew of her passion for teaching and how she mentored each and every one of her students."

There was no reason to believe anyone else was involved and there was no public safety danger, authorities said.

All public schools in Danvers, about 20 miles north of Boston, were closed Wednesday.

The high school's students were planning a candlelight vigil Wednesday evening.

Ritzer is the second teacher allegedly killed by a student in the U.S. this week. A Sparks, Nev., middle school teacher was allegedly shot by a 12-year-old student on Monday.

___

Associated Press writer Lynne Tuohy in Andover contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mass-teacher-slain-14-old-student-charged-134046256.html
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A Toddler Remains HIV-Free, Raising Hope For Babies Worldwide





HIV-positive babies rest in an orphanage in Nairobi, Kenya. Treatment right after birth may make it possible for HIV-positive newborns to fight off the virus.



Brent Stirton/Getty Images


HIV-positive babies rest in an orphanage in Nairobi, Kenya. Treatment right after birth may make it possible for HIV-positive newborns to fight off the virus.


Brent Stirton/Getty Images


A 3-year-old girl born in Mississippi with HIV acquired from her mother during pregnancy remains free of detectable virus at least 18 months after she stopped taking antiviral pills.


New results on this child, published online by the New England Journal of Medicine, appear to green-light a study in the advanced planning stages in which researchers around the world will try to replicate her successful treatment in other infected newborns.


And it means that the Mississippi girl still can be considered possibly or even probably cured of HIV infection — only the second person in the world with that lucky distinction. The first is Timothy Ray Brown, a 47-year-old American man apparently cured by a bone marrow transplant he received in Berlin a half-dozen years ago.


This new report addresses many of the questions raised earlier this year when disclosure of the Mississippi child's case was called a possible game-changer in the long search for an HIV cure.


"There was some very healthy skepticism," Dr. Katherine Luzuriaga, a professor at the University of Massachusetts in Worcester, tells Shots. She's part of the team that has been exhaustively testing the toddler's blood and considering every possible explanation for her apparently HIV-free state.


Luzuriaga is confident the latest tests prove that the child was truly infected with HIV at the time of her birth — not merely carrying remnants of free-floating virus or infected blood cells transferred before birth from her mother, as some skeptics wondered.



The UMass researcher says there's no way the child's mother could have contributed enough of her own blood plasma to the newborn to account for the high levels of HIV detected in the child's blood shortly after birth.


Similarly, Luzuriaga says, new calculations show that the mother "would have had to transfer a huge number of [HIV-infected] white blood cells to the baby in order for us to get the [viral] signal that we got early on."


Clinching the question as far as the researchers are concerned is the infant's response to anti-HIV drugs that she began receiving shortly after birth. The remarkable earliness of her treatment is a crucial feature that makes this child different from almost any other.


"There's a very characteristic clearance curve of viruses once we start babies on treatment," Luzuriaga says. "The decay of viruses we see in this baby is exactly what we saw in early treatment trials from 20 years ago when we initiated anti-retroviral therapy and shut off viral replication. That's a very different decay curve than you would expect if it were just free virus transferred to the baby."


It might be helpful to recap the unusual, if not unique, features of the Mississippi case.


Her mother did not receive prenatal care, so she was not identified as HIV-infected before delivery. If she had been, she would have received drugs that are highly effective in preventing mother-to-child transmission of the virus.


While the mother was in labor, she got HIV testing, as is routine for women without prenatal care. When that came up positive, Dr. Hannah Gay, a pediatrician at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, was ready to test the newborn for infection and start anti-retroviral medicines within 30 hours of birth.


The treatment quickly cleared the virus from the baby's blood. Normally such children would stay on antiviral drugs for a lifetime. But in this case the mother – whose life circumstances were reportedly chaotic – stopped giving the child the medication between 15 and 18 months after birth.


Gay and her colleagues caught up to the child when she was 23 months old and were astonished to discover she was apparently still virus-free despite being off treatment. Five rounds of state-of-the-art testing — at UMass, Johns Hopkins, federal research labs and the University of California San Diego — failed to reveal any trace of the virus in her blood.


That led to last spring's report and widely reported hope that the child had been cured of HIV.


But Dr. Scott Hammer, an HIV researcher at Columbia University in New York, is not quite convinced. "Is the child cured of HIV infection? The best answer at this moment is a definitive 'maybe,' " Hammer writes in a New England Journal editorial that accompanied the report.


The reason is that a couple of tests done when the child was about 2 years old found indications that her system may contain pieces of RNA or DNA from HIV. This hints that some of the nucleic acid building blocks of the virus are hanging around within her blood cells.


There's no evidence these "proviral" remnants are capable of assembling themselves into whole viruses that can make copies of themselves. But researchers are concerned about that possibility and how it might be headed off.


"The question is whether those viral nucleic acids have the ability at some point to replicate and allow a rebound of the virus," Luzuriaga acknowledges. "That's why it's important to continue to test the baby over time." She says that means years.


But for now, the signs from the Mississippi child's case are encouraging enough to have generated an ambitious global human experiment that Luzuriaga says is in final planning stages.


Women who present in labor without having had prenatal care will be tested for HIV and, if positive, their infants will be intensively treated within a couple of days of birth, as the Mississippi child was. Then they'll be followed with the most sensitive tests to determine if the virus has been eradicated.


If certain criteria are met, researchers plan to decide whether it would be safe to discontinue HIV treatment deliberately and follow the children closely to see if the virus returns. (If it did, treatment would be restarted.)


If the experiment succeeds, it would be a huge advance in the prevention of childhood HIV and AIDS in many parts of the world. More than 9 out of 10 of the world's 3.4 million HIV-infected children live in sub-Saharan Africa, where many women deliver without having had prenatal care or HIV treatment. Around 900 children are newly infected every day.


Meanwhile, researchers pursuing an HIV cure will convene next month in San Francisco to consider various strategies — for adults as well as children. One other recent glimmer of hope was provided this summer by Boston researchers who reported that two HIV-infected men with lymphoma remain virus-free without treatment for several months after stopping antiviral treatment.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/10/23/240272831/a-toddler-remains-hiv-free-raising-hope-for-babies-worldwide?ft=1&f=1030
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APPLE prepares to underwhelm -- WINDOWS 8.1 gets a do-over -- MS tries SURFACE again -- POGUE jumps to Yahoo -- FOX NEWS fakes it


October 22, 2013 06:00 PDT | 09:00 EDT | 13:00 UTC


Not a TechBrief subscriber? Sign up for a free subscription.


>> HAPPENING TODAY: In case you don't realize how fast Apple's iPad business has gone down the tubes, by Henry Blodget: "On October 22nd, Apple is finally launching new iPads. This launch can't come soon enough... despite the launch of a cheaper iPad last year -- the iPad Mini -- the growth of Apple's iPad sales has hit a wall." Business Insider
>>>> Why you're still going to buy Apple's ho-hum iPad upgrade ReadWrite
>>>> iPad 2 remains Apple's most popular tablet, iPhone 5c demand growing Apple Insider


>> ME TOO: Nokia launches tablet, joins large-screen smartphone race, by Matt Smith: "Nokia unveiled its first tablet and two large-screen smartphones... at the annual Nokia World event in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday. The Lumia 2520 tablet, along with its Lumia 1520 and 1620 phablets, are among the last products the Finnish company developed to compete with Apple and Samsung before deciding to sell its handset business to Microsoft. The new Lumias use Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system and will face tough competition from large-screen smartphones from Samsung and Apple, which is also expected to unveil slimmer, faster iPads on Tuesday." Reuters
>>>> Nokia unveils 10.1-inch Lumia 2520, a $499 Windows RT 8.1 tablet coming this fall with LTE and a $150 Power Keyboard TNW
>>>> With a 6-inch display, Nokia's new Lumia 1520 is now the largest Windows Phone $749 list GeekWire
>>>> Nokia updates low-end Asha line with clear cases -- and for the first time, 3G $69, $89, and up VentureBeat
>>>> Nokia Lumia sales reportedly hit record-high numbers last quarter The Verge


>> ORANGE IS THE NEW GREEN: Netflix tops 40 million customers total, more paid US subscribers than HBO, by Richard Lawler: "New original series Orange is the New Black has been a hit and while Netflix still isn't releasing viewing numbers, it says the show will end the year 'as our most watched original series ever.' Yes, bigger than House of Cards." Engadget
>>>> Netflix soars as Hastings seeks to damp 'Euphoria' Bloomberg


>> MICROSOFT MISCHIEF: Microsoft grabbing mobile content to make Windows Phone 'WebApps', by John Callahan: "Just one week ago, Microsoft's Windows Phone head Joe Belfiore said in an interview that the company's mobile OS still lacks a number of major apps in its ecosystem. Now there's word that the company is taking a rather proactive move to add apps to the Windows Phone Store by lifting content from a number of popular mobile web sites and turning them into 'WebApps'." Neowin
>>>> Flipboard coming to Windows Phone 8 and Lumia 2520 tablet Engadget
>>>> Instagram coming to Windows Phone in 'coming weeks' VentureBeat
>>>> Maxthon Cloud Browser comes to Windows Phone PCWorld


>> CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR: They're here! Surface 2, Surface Pro 2 and new accessories now on sale, by Steve Clarke: "Knowledgeable staff are on hand at all Microsoft retail store locations to answer questions and help with Surface setup, so customers have a great out-of-box experience and walk out the door with a product personalized for them." Microsoft Blog
>>>> Problems with Windows/RT 8.1 update continue InfoWorld
>>>> Why does Windows have terrible battery life? Coding Horror


>> CRIMES & MISDEMEANORS: Apple's iCloud cracked: Lack of two-factor authentication allows remote data download, by Violet Blue: "Notorious Russian hacker Vladimir Katalov released findings showing Apple's iCloud vulnerable to unauthorized download access, with iCloud data stored on Microsoft and Amazon servers." ZDNet


>> FORENSICS 101: 6 IT outsourcing lessons learned from Healthcare.gov's troubled launch, by By Stephanie Overby: "The troubled launch of the U.S. federal government's healthcare information exchange is a high-profile example of outsourced IT gone wrong. The $400 million project, which was supposed to be a one-stop online shop for Americans seeking health insurance, made headlines for its bugs and glitches...deadline after deadline was missed on the multi-contractor project for a variety of reasons -- from government agencies slow to issue their specifications to last minute changes to the Healthcare.gov's primary features." CIO
>>>> Release to the open source community the source code to healthcare.gov We the People
>>>> Obama on HealthCare.gov glitches: 'nobody's madder than me' GigaOM


>> TINY SILVER LINING: BlackBerry announces 5 million downloads of BBM for iOS and Android only 8 hours after release, by Mike Beasley: "The app is also now the #1 free app on the iTunes App Store. That number could actually be much higher, as the 5 million applies only to the number of users whose accounts have been activated for use." 9to5Mac
>>>> BBM for Android, BlackBerry's last gasp at relevance CITEWorld


>> DEPARTURE LOUNGE: With David Pogue hire, Yahoo joins journalism investment boom, by Ryan Tate: "Pogue says he's leaving the New York Times after 13 years as the paper's highly visible tech reviewer to lead the forthcoming Yahoo site, where he'll contribute videos and blog posts. Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer called the venture 'a major expansion of consumer tech coverage on Yahoo.'" Wired
>>>> Goodbye -- and hello A Note from Pogue


>> Google acquires Android performance startup FlexyCore for a reported $23 million TechCrunch


>> Windows RT 8.1 update again available for download Softpedia


>> Yahoo is ordered to start using Microsoft Search in Hong Kong and Taiwan TechCrunch


>> Top websites secretly track your device fingerprint IEEE Spectrum


>> LG hints at pending Chrome OS devices with trademark filings TechHive


>> SAP's shift to cloud may just be paying off GigaOM


>> Bitcoin has gone on an insane surge Business Insider


>> Unaccredited investors may finally get the go-ahead to fund startups this week AllThingsD


>> Video discovery service Telly (formerly TwitVid) raises $3.4M VentureBeat


>> Sqrrl snags $5.2M to commercialize the NSA's Accumulo database GigaOM


>> CryptoSeal VPN shuts down rather than risk NSA demands for crypto keys Ars Technica


>> Has Big Tech got too big for its boots? Dan Gillmor/The Guardian


>> The world wants to break up with America's internet Motherboard


>> How Knight Capital's buggy software made it lose $172,222 a second for 45 minutes Python Sweetness


>> Dear Startups: Stop asking me math puzzles to figure out if I can code Today Emma Learned


>> More woe for Amazon in Germany as antitrust watchdog investigates its 3rd party pricing practices TechCrunch


>> Fox News reportedly used fake commenter accounts to rebut critical blog posts Media Matters


>> The End of Files -- the biggest revolution in computer usability since the GUI? Brett Geoghegan/Blue Sheep Thinking


>> TWEET O' THE DAY:  Thank god I have the newest, fastest iPhone so I can mindlessly check the same three apps 500 times a day. @KevinFarzad


FEED ME, SEYMOUR: Comments? Questions? Tips? Shoot mail to Trent or Woody. Follow @gegax or @woodyleonhard.


Pass it on. Tweet us!


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Source: http://images.infoworld.com/t/technology-business/apple-prepares-underwhelm-windows-81-gets-do-over-ms-tries-surface-again-pogue-jumps-yahoo-fox-news-fak?source=rss_business_intelligence
Category: Toy Story of Terror   breaking bad   emmy winners   USA VS Mexico   Million Second Quiz  

NGOs Call US Drone Program Illegal In Damning Reports

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Two reports out today criticize the U.S. counterterrorism drone program and claim that the attacks kill many more civilians than the U.S. has acknowledged. The group Human Rights Watch studied six cases in Yemen. Amnesty International examined drone strikes in Pakistan during the past year and a half. Both groups accuse the U.S. of violating international law and call on the U.S. to make the secret drone program more transparent to the public.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/LrsD0PMnMlU/story.php
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Engadget's 2014 Best of CES Awards: Eligibility criteria and how to nominate


Engadget's 2014 Best of CES Awards Eligibility criteria and how to nominate


In case you missed the news earlier this year, Engadget is heading up the 2014 Best of CES Awards! We always look forward to kicking off the year at the country's biggest tech convention, and we're extra stoked to be taking on the role of curating the show's best innovations. In the months leading up to CES 2014, we'll be giving you additional insight into our voting process -- and giving you a chance to cast your own vote for best product -- but first and foremost let's talk submissions. Whether you're an interested company or simply a reader curious about our criteria, you'll find all the info you need below the break.


All interested companies that meet our requirements can submit products for consideration. To be eligible, a product must meet the following criteria:


  • Product must be introduced for the first time at CES 2014.

  • Product must fall under at least one of our 14 awards categories (excluding People's Choice).

  • All companies with submitted products must be exhibitors or otherwise have an official presence at CES 2014.

Submissions will stay open until 11:59pm EST on the evening of January 5th, before Press Day kicks off on January 6th. Once the submissions list is verified according to the above criteria, a team of Engadget editors will evaluate the products in question, both by viewing them on the floor at CES and thoroughly reviewing the company-provided product information.


All Engadget editors may also nominate products across all categories (excluding People's Choice), and these nominations will be evaluated according to the same standards as all other submissions. We will be judging products according to the following criteria:


  • Innovation

  • Design

  • Market appeal

  • Functionality

Once all submissions have been reviewed, a team of senior Engadget editors will meet to go through all submitted products, narrowing down the list to 2-4 products per category based on discussion and debate. (We expect this will be a long night!) On January 8th, 2014, we will announce our finalists in a post on Engadget.


After we've announced our Best of CES Awards finalists, our team of senior editors will once again meet to evaluate the entire slate and narrow the selection down to one standout pick per category. All of the winners will be announced on January 9th, 2014 on the Engadget stage live from CES. We'll also run a post announcing all the award winners, and showcase them within the Winners section of the Awards hub.


How to submit your product for CES Awards consideration


Once you've determined your nomination meets the eligibility requirements, send your submission email to bestofces@engadget.com with your full pitch. Please include the following required items for a product to be considered:


  • Product name

  • Company name

  • Product description

  • Which of the 14 Awards category/categories your nomination should be considered for -- companies can submit their products for more than one category.

Whenever possible, companies should submit the following materials as well:


  • Photos

  • Spec sheet(s)

  • Press release(s)

  • Release date

  • Price

Of course, we understand product information may be limited in the lead-up to CES, but the more resources you can provide up front, the better. You can also supplement your initial submission with additional materials once they become available, in one or more follow-up emails to bestofces@engadget.com. We will be honoring all NDAs for embargoed products, so be sure to include any required documentation either alongside your submission, or in advance of your full pitch.


The 14 eligible award categories are as follows:


  • Best Startup: The startup showing great sophistication and innovation while also demonstrating a clear path to real-world availability. Eureka Park will be a focus.

  • Best Digital Health and Fitness Product: A product exhibiting the most innovative use of technology to improve users' health and well-being. Example products include smart scales and activity monitors.

  • Best Automotive Electronics Product: Technology related to the ever-advancing science of getting from here to there. Example products include infotainment systems and advances in self-driving technology.

  • Best Audio Product: Technology for overall audio enjoyment. Example products include headphones and media players, along with music-playing apps and services.

  • Best Video Product: This award focuses on home entertainment, with example products including displays, projectors and tuners.

  • Best Software: A piece of software that stands out from the rest.

  • Best Emerging Technology: The product, service or innovation that is blazing a trail in a new category that is rapidly increasing in significance.

  • Best Mobile Technology: The smartphone or tablet that most impresses with its combination of specifications, design and overall ability.

  • Best Gaming Product: The product that best moves forward the broad field of gaming. Example products include game-specific tablets and PCs, videogame consoles, controllers and gaming services.

  • Best Offbeat Product: The product that turns heads on the International CES showfloor without necessarily fitting into any defined product category. This product may not be the best of the best at the show, but it will be one of the most talked-about.

  • Best Kid-Friendly Product: The best device, technology or service intended for younger gadget-lovers.

  • Best Maker-Friendly Technology: This product is geared toward the DIY/maker community. Examples include 3D printers and Arduino-like processing units.

  • Best PC Award: The best laptop or desktop, judged based on its design and specifications.

  • Best of the Best Award: The device, service or technology in any category that stands clearly above the rest, judged based on its innovation and design quality.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/23/best-of-ces-awards-how-to-nominate/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Niall Horan Hijacks An Aircraft! Check Out The Impressive Stunt Here!!





tumblr msi401rnty1snljzto1 500


Copy to ground control, the Irish are coming!!


Niall Horan is just making all sorts of commotions on the interwebs this Tuesday!


First by proposing to Katy Perry and then hijacking an airplane with no word on where he's planning on taking the aircraft.


Maybe he's going to scoop up his lady love right underneath John Mayer's nose!


HA!


The One Direction cutie snapped a photo of himself and two other co-pilots controlling the plane:







Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-22-one-direction-niall-horan-hijack-plane-around-the-world-flying-cute-funny-irish-adorable-band
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Poland archbishop slammed over sex abuse comments

FILE - In this March 18, 2004 file picture the leader of Poland’s Catholic church, Archbishop Jozef Michalik, addresses a news conference at the building of Poland’s Episcopate in Warsaw, Poland, after being elected the head of the Polish Episcopal Conference, succeeding the retiring Cardinal Jozef Glemp. Michalik recently came under fierce criticism for appearing to suggest that children are partly to blame for being sexually abused by priests. ( AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)







FILE - In this March 18, 2004 file picture the leader of Poland’s Catholic church, Archbishop Jozef Michalik, addresses a news conference at the building of Poland’s Episcopate in Warsaw, Poland, after being elected the head of the Polish Episcopal Conference, succeeding the retiring Cardinal Jozef Glemp. Michalik recently came under fierce criticism for appearing to suggest that children are partly to blame for being sexually abused by priests. ( AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)







FILE - In this Aug. 17, 2012 file picture the leader of Poland’s Catholic church, Archbishop Jozef Michalik , smiles after signing a milestone document that calls on Poles and Russians to forgive each other past wrongs at the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Poland,. Michalik recently came under fierce criticism for appearing to suggest that children are partly to blame for being sexually abused by priests. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)







(AP) — The leader of Poland's Catholic Church has come under a wave of condemnation by appearing to suggest that children are partly to blame for being sexually abused by priests.

Archbishop Jozef Michalik, head of Poland's influential Episcopate, was commenting this month on revelations about Polish pedophile priests. A child from a troubled family, Michalik told reporters, "seeks closeness with others and may get lost and may get the other person involved, too."

The words triggered an immediate uproar — one that Michalik tried to stamp out the same day by apologizing and saying he had been misunderstood. He had not, he said, meant to suggest that child victims were in any way responsible.

But the damage was done.

Ordinary citizens joined prominent politicians in expressing outrage, and intense debate continues more than two weeks later. The media pointed out that Michalik had supported a parish priest convicted in 2004 of child sex abuse, and one of the priest's victims said she was horrified by Michalik's latest remarks.

"Archbishop Michalik's words make us feel fear and revulsion," Ewa Orlowska said.

The archbishop's comments forced the Episcopate's spokesman, the Rev. Jozef Kloch, to state that Poland's church has "zero tolerance" for pedophilia but that it needs to learn how to approach and talk about the matter. The controversy has since led bishops under Michalik to apologize for "priests who have harmed children."

It all comes amid a tide of allegations that Poland's church is sweeping cases of sex abuse under the carpet, putting it at odds with Vatican efforts since 2001 to punish abusers. The scrutiny has also further undermined the church's status in Poland as a moral and political leader — cemented by Polish-born Pope John Paul II through his critical role in inspiring the fight against communism. The church's defenders say that priests are being singled out for condemnation when teachers and sports coaches have also been caught sexually abusing kids.

John Paul himself came under criticism for a reluctance to heed accusations against priests. While the Vatican in 2001 ordered bishops to submit cases of alleged pedophilia to the Holy See's review, it was largely the initiative of then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. After the church sex abuse scandal erupted in 2002 in the United States, Ratzinger pressed for faster ways to permanently remove abusers from the church.

The crackdown against pedophile priests gained intensity once Ratzinger became Benedict XVI. In 2011, Benedict instructed bishops' conferences around the world to submit their own guidelines for keeping molesters out of the priesthood and to protect children.

Poland's Episcopate has issued guidelines for the church's punishment of priests and support for the victims. But it sees no need to report priests to state investigators and says that the financial compensation rests with the wrongdoer, not with the church. That approach may soon be tested by a man who is readying Poland's first sex abuse lawsuit against the church.

In several countries, including the U.S., Canada and Australia, the church has been paying millions in compensation over sex abuse cases.

Michalik also recently raised eyebrows by saying that the roots of pedophilia lay in pornography and divorce, both of which are "painful and long-lasting wounds."

The debate started last month after Dominican Republic investigators revealed child sex abuse allegations against two Polish clergymen: Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski, the Vatican's ambassador, and Rev. Wojciech Gil, a parish priest. Wesolowski has been forcibly removed by the Vatican. Gil has denied sex abuse and suggested that Dominican drug mafia is taking revenge on him for his educational work.

Some 27 Polish priests have been tried for sex abuse since 2001, but most cases ended in suspended prison term — indicating a general leniency for the church in Poland, where religion is taught in schools and senior church officials attend state ceremonies.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-23-EU-Poland-Church-Sex-Abuse/id-b1949ffcf5694c90a7a66d621a38c6a2
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Kim Zolciak, Wife of Injured Kroy Biermann, Reaches Out to Kristin Cavallari After Jay Cutler's Injury


When Jay Cutler sustained a severe groin injury on Sunday, Oct. 20 on the field as the Chicago Bears quarterback, no one was more concerned than his wife Kristin Cavallari. But one woman could easily relate to Cavallari's struggles -- fellow football wife Kim Zolciak


PHOTOS: Celebrity wives and girlfriends of NFL players


The former Real Housewives of Atlanta star, 35, married Atlanta Falcons defensive end Kroy Biermann in 2011, and was distraught when her hubby tore his achilles tendon in a game on Sept. 16. The 28-year-old football player will be out for the rest of the season and recently underwent surgery. He is now recuperating with the help of his ever-growing family (Zolciak is pregnant with twins). 


PHOTOS: Real Housewives weddings


On Oct. 21, Zolciak reached out to Cavallari on Twitter saying, "Praying for a speedy recovery for your Hubby @KristinCav sucks having them injured," to which the former Hills star replied, "Thank u @Kimzolciak we wish your hubby the best too :( xo." 


These blond mamas seems to have a lot in common apart from their injured husbands. They both earned slightly notorious reputations on reality TV, and have since calmed down and settled into motherhood.


PHOTOS: The Hills cast, then and now


Cavallari recently revealed that she and Cutler, 30, have been trying to get pregnant a second time after giving birth to son Camden in August 2012. Zolciak's twins are due around Christmas, bringing her brood up to six. She had sons KJ, 2, and Kash, 14 months, with Biermann and daughters Brielle, 16, and Ariana, 11, in a previous relationship.  


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/kim-zolciak-wife-kroy-biermann-reaches-out-kristin-cavallari-after-jay-cutlers-injury-20132210
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Judge declines to halt 'Obamacare' insurance subsidies


By David Ingram and Kevin Drawbaugh


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Foes of President Barack Obama's healthcare law lost a bid on Tuesday to put an immediate stop to a key part of the law - the insurance subsidies in the 34 U.S. states that declined to establish their own online marketplaces.


At a court hearing, U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C., declined to grant a preliminary injunction sought by a group of individuals and small businesses that in a lawsuit call the subsidies unlawful.


Friedman ruled their lawsuit could move forward and said he would rule on its overall merits by mid-February, rejecting an argument from the Obama administration that the suit was too speculative to be considered.


The latest round of legal challenges to the Affordable Care Act, also known as "Obamacare," focuses on whether the 2010 law allows for subsidies in all states or only in states that have set up exchanges.


Only 16 states and the District of Columbia chose to set up the online marketplaces where people without private health insurance can shop for it, forcing the federal government to create them in the remaining states.


Subsidies, in the form of tax credits, are available to people with annual incomes of up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level, or $94,200 for a family of four. The Obama administration views the subsidies as essential if the law is going to work, because otherwise many people could not afford private insurance.


The suit was brought by a mix of individuals and businesses from Texas, Kansas, Missouri, Tennessee, West Virginia and Virginia. The plaintiffs argue the subsidies are unlawful and impose a burden by forcing them to purchase the insurance or else pay a penalty.


SEEKING AN EXEMPTION


David Klemencic, who does flooring work in West Virginia, is one of the plaintiffs. In court papers, he said he cannot afford insurance and wishes to forgo coverage entirely in 2014, using an exemption in the healthcare law for people with low income.


But the availability of the tax credits means he is not eligible for the exemption, his lawyers said, so he must either buy subsidized insurance at about $18 a month or pay a penalty equal to about $12 a month.


In rejecting a preliminary injunction, Friedman said there was no need for such an emergency measure because Klemencic has until the end of March to apply for an exemption from Obamacare, by which time the lawsuit may be over.


"As long as we get a decision in a timely manner, that's what we've been looking for," Michael Carvin, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, told reporters after the hearing. Carvin was among the lawyers who appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court in 2012 to argue that the healthcare law should be struck down entirely.


Two similar lawsuits are pending in federal courts in Oklahoma and Indiana. Neither has reached a final ruling.


Complicating the situation for the Obama administration is the wording of the law, parts of which were drafted in haste in 2010 as the legislation wound through Congress.


The law says subsidies may be given "through an exchange established by the state," not through one set up by the federal government, a point that the suit emphasizes.


The administration says the subsidies should be available to people in every state because Congress intended the online exchanges to be uniform.


At the core of this claim is what Congress intended when it wrote the law, not expecting that some states would fail to set up an exchange or would, as in the case of Texas and other Republican-controlled states, refuse to do so out of political opposition to Obamacare.


The case is Halbig v. Sebelius, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 1:13-cv-623.


(Additional reporting by Patrick Temple-West and Terry Baynes; Editing by Howard Goller and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/judge-declines-halt-obamacare-insurance-subsidies-183920540--sector.html
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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Original iPad mini marked down to $299

iPad mini 2 price

As a part of the launch of the Retina iPad mini, Apple announced that the original iPad mini is getting a price cut down to $299, and the new iPad mini 2 will be taking the $399 spot.

$299 is a sweet spot for many tablet shoppers, and it's good to see a relatively new iPad finding its way down the price ladder that low. Anyone considering snagging one as a holiday gift?

Keep an eye on our event coverage from today!


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/vWBVg1jY7Sk/story01.htm
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Airblaster's Gone Wild: Montana Part 1



Posted by: Evan Litsios / added: 10.22.2013 / Back to What Up


The Airblaster crew put together this Gone Wild video series to show how they get down on their snowboards. This installment takes the gang to Lost Trail Resort in Montana, where Tucker Andrews, Ben Lynch, and Tyler Carlton rip the terrain with percision and gusto. Get with the program and have some fun!



Airblaster: Gone Wild - Montana Part 1 from METHOD on Vimeo.





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Source: http://www.frqncy.com/news/2013/10/22/airblasters-gone-wild-montana-part-1?utm_campaign=blog_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_source=feed_reader
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Builders of Obama's health website saw red flags

President Barack Obama gestures while speaking in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, on the initial rollout of the health care overhaul. Obama acknowledged that the widespread problems with his health care law's rollout are unacceptable, as the administration scrambles to fix the cascade of computer issues. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







President Barack Obama gestures while speaking in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, on the initial rollout of the health care overhaul. Obama acknowledged that the widespread problems with his health care law's rollout are unacceptable, as the administration scrambles to fix the cascade of computer issues. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







President Barack Obama, standing with supporters of his health care law, speaks in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, on the initial rollout of the health care overhaul. Obama acknowledged that the widespread problems with his health care law's rollout are unacceptable, as the administration scrambles to fix the cascade of computer issues. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







President Barack Obama gestures while speaking in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, on the initial rollout of the health care overhaul. Obama acknowledged that the widespread problems with his health care law's rollout are unacceptable, as the administration scrambles to fix the cascade of computer issues. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)







White House press secretary Jay Carney introduces Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Jason Furman who spoke about the economy post government shutdown at the daily press briefing at the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013. Furman said the addition of 148,000 jobs in September is a sign of "solid" growth but forecasts worsening in October because of the 16-day partial government shutdown. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







(AP) — Crammed into conference rooms with pizza for dinner, some programmers building the Obama administration's showcase health insurance website were growing increasingly stressed. Some worked past 10 p.m., energy drinks in hand. Others rewrote computer code over and over to meet what they considered last-minute requests for changes from the government or other contractors.

As questions mount over the website's failure, insider interviews and a review of technical specifications by The Associated Press found a mind-numbingly complex system put together by harried programmers who pushed out a final product that congressional investigators said was tested by the government and not private developers with more expertise.

The details about problems with the website's design emerged as the White House revealed that President Barack Obama's longtime adviser Jeffrey Zients is taking on to provide management advice to help fix the system. White House press secretary Jay Carney says Zients will be on a short-term assignment at the Health and Human Services Department before he's due to take over as director of Obama's National Economic Council Jan. 1.

Carney cited Zeints' expertise as a longtime management consultant and his "proven track record" since coming to the White House in 2009, both as interim budget director and as chief performance officer, when he headed an effort to streamline government and cut costs. "We're engaged in an all-out effort to improve the online experience," Carney said.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in a post on HealthCare.gov that her agency is also bringing in more experts and specialists from government and industry, including top Silicon Valley companies.

"This new infusion of talent will bring a powerful array of subject matter expertise and skills, including extensive experience scaling major IT systems," she said. "This effort is being marshaled as part of a cross-functional team that is working aggressively to diagnose parts of HealthCare.gov that are experiencing problems, learn from successful states, prioritize issues, and fix them."

Project developers for the health care website who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity — because they feared they would otherwise be fired — said they raised doubts among themselves whether the website could be ready in time. They complained openly to each other about what they considered tight and unrealistic deadlines. One was nearly brought to tears over the stress of finishing on time, one developer said. Website builders saw red flags for months.

A review of internal architectural diagrams obtained by the AP revealed the system's complexity. Insurance applicants have a host of personal information verified, including income and immigration status. The system connects to other federal computer networks, including ones at the Social Security Administration, IRS, Veterans Administration, Office of Personnel Management and the Peace Corps.

Obama on Monday acknowledged technical problems that he described as "kinks in the system." But in remarks at a Rose Garden event, Obama offered no explanation for the failure except to note that high traffic to the website caused some of the slowdowns. He said it had been visited nearly 20 million times — fewer monthly visits so far than many commercial websites, such as PayPal, AOL, Wikipedia or Pinterest.

"The problem has been that the website that's supposed to make it easy to apply for and purchase the insurance is not working the way it should for everybody," Obama said. "There's no sugarcoating it. The website has been too slow. People have been getting stuck during the application process. And I think it's fair to say that nobody is more frustrated by that than I am."

The online system was envisioned as a simple way for people without health insurance to comparison-shop among competing plans offered in their state, pick their preferred level of coverage and cost and sign up. For many, it's not worked out that way so far.

Just weeks before the launch of HealthCare.gov on Oct. 1, one programmer said, colleagues huddled in conference rooms trying to patch "bugs," or deficiencies in computer code. Unresolved problems led to visitors experiencing cryptic error messages or enduring long waits trying to sign up.

Congressional investigators have concluded that the government's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, not private software developers, tested the exchange's computer systems during the final weeks. That task, known as integration testing, is usually handled by software companies because it ferrets out problems before the public sees the final product.

The government spent at least $394 million in contracts to build the federal health care exchange and the data hub. Those contracts included major awards to Virginia-based CGI Federal Inc., Maryland-based Quality Software Services Inc. and Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.

CGI Federal said in a statement Monday it was working with the government and other contractors "around the clock" to improve the system, which it called "complex, ambitious and unprecedented."

The schematics from late 2012 show how officials designated a "data services hub" — a traffic cop for managing information — in lieu of a design that would have allowed state exchanges to connect directly to government servers when verifying an applicant's information. On Sunday, the Health and Human Services Department said the data hub was working but not meeting public expectations: "We are committed to doing better."

Administration officials so far have refused to say how many people actually have managed to enroll in insurance during the three weeks since the new marketplaces became available. Without enrollment numbers, it's impossible to know whether the program is on track to reach projections from the Congressional Budget Office that 7 million people would gain coverage during the first year the exchanges were available.

Instead, officials have selectively cited figures that put the insurance exchanges in a positive light. They say more than 19 million people have logged on to the federal website and nearly 500,000 have filled out applications for insurance through both the federal and state-run sites.

The flood of computer problems since the website went online has been deeply embarrassing for the White House. The snags have called into question whether the administration is capable of implementing the complex policy and why senior administration officials — including the president — appear to have been unaware of the scope of the problems when the exchange sites opened.

Even as the president spoke at the Rose Garden, more problems were coming to light. The administration acknowledged that a planned upgrade to the website had been postponed indefinitely and that online Spanish-language signups would remain unavailable, despite a promise to Hispanic groups that the capability would start this week. And the government tweaked the website's home page so visitors can now view phone numbers to apply the old-fashioned way or window-shop for insurance rates without registering first.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee was expected to conduct an oversight hearing Thursday, probably without Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testifying. She could testify on Capitol Hill on the subject as early as next week.

Uninsured Americans have until about mid-February to sign up for coverage if they are to meet the law's requirement that they be insured by the end of March. If they don't, they will face a penalty. The administration says it's working to address the timing issue to provide more flexibility.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., plans to introduce legislation to delay that requirement because: "It's not fair to punish people for not buying something that's not available," Rubio told "CBS This Morning" on Tuesday.

On Monday, the White House advised people frustrated by the online tangle that they can enroll by calling 1-800-318-2596 in a process that should take 25 minutes for an individual or 45 minutes for a family. Assistance is also available in communities from helpers who can be found at LocalHelp.HealthCare.gov.

___

Associated Press writer Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this report.

___

Follow Jack Gillum on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jackgillum or Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-10-22-US-Obama-Health-Care/id-5400bca23f1f4bfc9924f14cfb18c3c8
Category: randall cobb   breast cancer awareness   Covered California   Miley Cyrus Wrecking Ball   Flossie  

Nokia debuts its first Windows tablet, two 'phablets,' and three cheap phones


Nokia has added a tablet and two large-screen smartphones to its Lumia family, and is once again counting on its camera technology to attract buyers.


The Lumia 2520 tablet -- which runs Microsoft's much-criticized Windows RT operating system, has a 10-inch HD screen and is powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 processor. It has a 6.7-megapixel camera that can take pictures in low light conditions, unlike those on other tablets, according to Nokia. The screen is also bright enough to be read in sunlight, the company said.


Nokia has developed a keyboard with an integrated battery that can add up to five hours of extra life after the integrated 8000 mAh battery has given up. Unlike Microsoft's Surface 2 tablet, whch was released today, the Lumia 2520 has LTE as well as Wi-Fi.


Additionally, the Lumia 2520 includes Storyteller, a Nokia-developed app that combines images and videos as a story on a map, as well as Nokia Video Director, which offers the ability to edit videos shot on the tablet.


The Nokia Lumia 2520 will cost about $499 before taxes and subsidies, and will start shipping in the U.S., the U.K. and Finland before the end of the year. Additional countries to follow shortly after, Nokia said.


"Nokia is fully aware of the challenge it faces in tablets. The 2520 will be a difficult sell owing to the challenges of Windows RT, but Nokia is rightly playing to its strengths," said Geoff Blaber, director of devices and platforms at CCS Insight.


The Lumia 1320 and Lumia 1520 smartphones, revealed today as well, both run Windows Phone 8 and have 6-inch screens. The 1520 is the high-end model, with a full HD screen, LTE, and a quad-core Snapdragon 800 processor. The device has 32GB of storage, which can be expanded by another 64GB using a MicroSD card slot, something that has been missing from recent Nokia smartphones.


Nokia is leaning on its camera technology to differentiate its products from rivals. The Lumia 1520 has a 20-megapixel camera with optical image stabilization. Nokia has also developed a new app called Camera that lets users access settings more easily, the company said.


The Lumia 1520 will start shipping this quarter in Hong Kong, Singapore, the U.S., China, the U.K., France, Germany, and Finland. The price will be $749, before taxes and subsidies.


The Lumia 1320 will cost $339 before taxes and subsidies, but only has a dual-core processor and 720p screen resolution. It also has a simpler 5-megapixel camera, but users can still access the Internet using LTE. Nokia expects to start shipping it in the first quarter of 2014 in China and Vietnam, followed by other Asian markets, India, and Europe.


The lower price will make the smartphone a good fit for the Chinese market, said Pete Cunningham, a principal analyst at Canalys.


Both devices will run a new version of Windows Phone 8 called General Distribution Release 3, to which Nokia has added enhancements such as its Camera app. The software will also be offered to users of existing Lumia devices via an update called Black.


Instagram and Vine will soon be available on Lumia devices too, Nokia announced. App availability is still Windows Phone's Achilles heel, but the availability of those two third-party apps is a step in the right direction.


With these two large-screen smartphones, often called "phablets" due to being halfway in size between a smartphone and a tablet, Nokia is entering a competitive market, up against devices including the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and the HTC One Max.


Nokia also hopes to better compete with low-end Android devices with three new Asha phones, including the Asha 503 with 3G for US$99.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/nokia-debuts-its-first-windows-tablet-two-phablets-and-three-cheap-phones-229250?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_
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