Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Flash support coming to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich before 2012 (Appolicious)

The next big update for Google?s Android mobile operating system doesn?t support Adobe Flash, but it will in the future, an Adobe representative has confirmed.

TechCrunch has the story. Adobe confirmed to tech site Pocket-lint that Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich has Flash support coming, and will be available by the end of the year. Rumors were circulating that Flash would be coming to the latest version of Google?s industry dominating operating system, and now it?s official ? but there?s some waiting to be done.

Getting Flash supported by some mobile devices has been a struggle for Adobe. Android has supported the software, used largely on the Internet and in other applications such as games, but Apple?s iOS mobile operating system doesn?t. Apple argues that Flash takes a serious toll on its devices? battery life, among other issues, which is why you can?t get Flash website to work on an iPhone or iPad?s version of the mobile Safari web browser.

Despite coming to Ice Cream Sandwich, however, mobile Flash is pretty much dead in the water. Adobe said not long ago that it won?t continue to develop the software; it seems that the ICS update is basically Flash?s last hurrah on smartphones and tablets before Adobe starts to refocus its resources elsewhere. As TechCrunch reports, Adobe apparently found that it wouldn?t ever be able to get mobile Flash on as many devices as it hoped. While Flash players reside on some 99 percent of PCs, on mobile devices the numbers are considerably less.

Add that to the fact that Apple adamantly refuses to consider Flash for its devices and Adobe found itself in a situation in which to push Flash would mean that web developers would be creating mobile web experiences that worked for some devices and not others. With Apple out of the game, taking its considerable market share with it, it seemed that Adobe found trying to push mobile Flash to be an uphill, losing battle.

For owners of Samsung?s Galaxy Nexus smartphone, the first device to carry Google?s ICS, Flash isn?t going to be forthcoming just yet, however. Like iOS users, there?s no Flash support on ICS as it stands and no older version of the software that ICS users can download in the meantime. For now, Galaxy Nexus users have to wait for Adobe to put together the patch before they can use Flash at all.

Meanwhile, Adobe plans to switch its support to HTML5 for the kinds of things that Flash does now, so expect to see a lot more support for that in the future on all mobile devices, not just Android ones.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_androidapps_com_articles10272_flash_support_coming_to_android_4_0_ice_cream_sandwich_before_2012/43676117/SIG=13j74ub7i/*http%3A//www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/10272-flash-support-coming-to-android-4-0-ice-cream-sandwich-before-2012

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Video: Panda census a bear of a task



>>> finally tonight, they're cute, they're cuddly, they're adorable and they're endangered. but in order to increase the panda population, first you have to figure out how many actually live in the wild. how do you do that? with a panda census, of course. and nbc's adrian mog is on the trail.

>> reporter: they're unique, a national treasure native only to a small part of china, an area the size of connecticut. they're also one of the most endangered animals in the world, so much so that china holds a panda census every ten years. this time, it kicks off in sichuan , one of three provinces the giant panda makes its own. here, 70 trackers will spend the next two years surveying the bears' natural habitat . we followed one of them on his assignment up a steep and slippery mountain slope. he took part in the last census. he said new technology like the gps device has helped cut down his time in the field by a third. look, bamboo. giant pandas love this, so we must be getting close. but we didn't see any wild pandas. they're too rare. only 1600 according to the last census. nevertheless, there is still information to be gathered. what people normally care about is the number of pandas, says this scientist. but we also care about the conditions of their habitat. with this data, we can draw more effective conservation policies. the biggest threat to the panda is still humans. sichuan , one of the most populous provinces, is urbanizing rapidly. but the panda, especially in captivity, is also threatened by its own mating habits. so scientists focus their efforts on breeding centers. earlier this year, a landmark birth of a dozen cubs. it was a milestone with the number of pandas in captivity around the world reached 300, says this scientist at a breeding center. researchers hope the new census will reveal another milestone, that breeding programs and conservation efforts have been on the right track, producing more national treasures. adrian mog, nbc news, sichuan , china.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45377810/

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Monday, 21 November 2011

New York Occupy Wall Street protests face challenges (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? With just a few protesters huddled against the cold winds at Zuccotti Park on Friday, city officials are hoping protests which have taken place here for the past two months have run their course.

"There are problems in the country," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said on his weekly radio show. "You can make yourself heard, which I think has been done. Now it's time to get back and build the economy and create the good paying jobs that people need."

Having been evicted in the early hours of Tuesday morning by New York police and no longer allowed to camp at the park, just a handful of occupiers huddled together against brisk autumn winds in a largely empty space.

Most demonstrators may have just had protest hangovers, after a series of marches on Thursday that slowed traffic in the financial district and led to some scuffles with police and more than 200 arrests.

Organizers insist they are sticking around.

"A lot of us went to bed last night thinking we had the best day of the movement," said protest spokesman Ed Needham. "We all thought, we still believe, this is still the unfolding of a new chapter."

With no organized network of housing for scores of protesters who traveled to New York from other cities, the movement is confronting fundamental questions of where to gather and where to sleep.

"It's hard to say where it's going right now," said John Carhart, 28, of New Jersey.

He said organizers were hoping to find an indoor space before the end of the year, "so people will have a place to put their belongings and a place to sleep that's not outside."

A few local churches are housing some of those left homeless by the evictions from Zuccotti Park. The protesters are allowed to return and congregate in the park, but they cannot sleep or lie down, and few have returned.

Caiti Lattimer said she and others like her who live in New York are hosting those from out of town. But she acknowledged that the coming Thanksgiving holiday may thin the ranks.

"People are going home for Thanksgiving," she said. "But there are still people who ... will remain."

Organizers declined to elaborate on the movement's next move, saying discussions and plans are ongoing.

But protesters at meetings late Thursday night said conversations about the group's future ranged from plans to occupy homes foreclosed by banks to boycotting major chain stores during the upcoming holidays.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111118/us_nm/us_usa_protests_newyork

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Sunday, 20 November 2011

Alberta RCMP investigate abuse allegations at bible college

CALGARY ? RCMP are investigating allegations of abuse dating back several decades at a Central Alberta Bible college.

Mounties in Three Hills, Alta., began probing the allegations this week after administrators at Prairie Bible Institute in Three Hills directed the RCMP to rumours swirling on the Internet.

RCMP Sgt. Tim Taniguchi told the Calgary Herald Friday night that the investigation is very new, but the allegations are not.

"It's an historical abuse case, but I am not sure of the circumstances of the abuse," said Taniguchi. "It's with the RCMP and the local detachment is looking into it."

It's a difficult time at the Christian college, said Linda Brinks, a member of its board.

"Nobody wants to hear that maybe hurtful things happened to anybody and any time and there's a sense of grief that there's people out there maybe carrying pain around and have for a long time," said Brinks, who has been appointed by the board as a contact person for the public and other potential abuse victims.

Brinks would not speak to the number of possible victims, although one website that is dedicated to getting to the bottom of the allegations says there are as many as 80 cases and the abuse includes physical, emotional and sexual allegations.

"Our desire is to be as open and transparent as possible and we're not desiring to cover anything up, but so far they are just allegations," Brinks said Friday.

She said school officials are confident in the investigation.

"The RCMP are the right people right to now investigate," she said. "We trust that anyone who is still hurting will get some closure in their life whether through pressing criminal charges or through dialogue with the school. We hope the investigation will provide answers to questions about who was abused and who was guilty of it."

President Mark Maxwell posted a letter on the institute's website stating the alleged incidents date back several decades.

"The individuals purportedly involved are no longer at Prairie," reads the letter, dated Tuesday, Nov. 15. "Nevertheless, we feel it is appropriate to respond and to emphasize our commitment to seeking truth and transparency."

The president said in an interview he's not aware of any criminal activity in the school's history, but he believes the online allegations seem "real enough" to warrant concern about the school's past.

"I want to know the truth," said Maxwell, who has been the school's president for about a year and a half. "I want to know who's been injured. I want to know who did it, and help bring that to resolution."

Catherine Darnell, 56, started the Facebook group in September for alumni of PBI, located 125 kilometres northeast of Calgary. Darnell says that as a child, she suffered sexual, physical and emotional abuse from staff at the non-denominational Protestant school, which for many years was known for its strictness and insularity.

"(I started the group) to open up dialogue regarding abuse and hopefully to get people to come forward if they've been impacted," said Darnell, who now lives outside Fergus, Ont. She says her abusers are now dead.

Linda Fossen, a Prairie alumnus who has written about being abused by her father, who was a student at the school, says she has heard from more than 80 victims, mostly staff kids who were sexually abused.

Earlier this week, Fossen, who now lives in Florida, filed her own a complaint about the abuse with Three Hills RCMP.

In addition to the Facebook page, Fossen keeps a website in which she has posted all the correspondence she has exchanged with school officials.

In one posting dated Nov. 11 she told Maxwell "the game was over" and she was going to make the allegations public.

"Like Penn State University has found, there is a day of reckoning," she wrote. "The day for Prairie Bible Institute survivors has come."

The RCMP's Taniguchi said Friday he didn't have any information on the number of victims.

Last week, Maxwell put the content of the Facebook group on a flash drive and walked it across the street to the Three Hills RCMP detachment. The school put a statement on its website Tuesday saying it had invited RCMP to investigate and would co-operate fully, an effort to "achieve healing and reconciliation" if abuse has occurred.

The move has prompted more fiery discussion on the Facebook page in question. Fossen believes giving the Facebook page to police is "a veiled attempt at intimidating the survivors, because now everyone knows their information is subject to being downloaded."

Throughout the debate, some people commenting have cautioned against discussing such weighty matters in a public forum where anybody can listen in. "I think it's had some good impact and some bad," said Darnell of the group. "There's been a lot of very upsetting comments made about individuals . . . I think it's caused a lot of people to feel revictimized, all the more reason to shut down. On the other hand, it just brought it out into the open."

Brinks said she is available to speak with anyone who feels they were victimized at the school.

"My role is to be a contact person for anyone who might want to tell their story," she said. "Maybe there's people out there who never had a chance to make it right and I grieve for those still suffering from something that happened so long ago."

It remains unclear to what extent abuse occurred at Prairie, and Maxwell says the school needs more facts to go on. "I'm looking at it going, If there's real stuff here, we have to get to it. If there's no real stuff, then the people that are saying all this (on Facebook) need to be called on that," said Maxwell.

Both Darnell and Fossen want Prairie to involve a Virigina-based organization that deals with child abuse in church groups, but the school has balked at that option. "The biggest reason not to go there is they're not Canadians, so they don't know Canadian law," said Maxwell.

The institute, founded by L.E. Maxwell, first opened on Oct. 9, 1922. Since then, the Christian post-secondary institute has expanded to include Canada's oldest Bible College, Prairie Bible College, known for its missionary training program, as well as the Prairie College of Applied Arts & Technology and the Prairie School of Mission Aviation.

According to its website, the bible-based institute has helped prepare over 17,000 students to become "faithful servants of Jesus Christ," many who have worked in more than 114 countries worldwide. Its mission is to serve the Church and "live according to the biblical standards laid down by Jesus Christ."

Calgary Herald

dtetley@calgaryherald.com

? Copyright (c) Postmedia News

Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F229/~3/aw3NYgB_cGc/story.html

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Saturday, 19 November 2011

Should the Supreme Court's 'ObamaCare' arguments be televised? (The Week)

New York ? C-SPAN wants the court to break precedent and let Americans see 2012's historic court drama for themselves. Will the justices object?

The Supreme Court has long resisted efforts to televise its proceedings, with Justice David Souter declaring in 1996 that if TV cameras ever enter the courtroom, they'll "roll over my dead body." Well, Souter has retired, and the Supreme Court's decision to rule next year on?the fate of the Affordable Care Act?? a.k.a. "ObamaCare" ? has renewed calls for televised arguments. On Tuesday, C-SPAN chief Brian Lamb made a formal request, arguing that the justices should let cameras in because this case affects "every American's life, our economy, and certainly will be an issue in the upcoming presidential campaign." Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) echoed C-SPAN's request. Are the 5 1/2 hours of "ObamaCare" hearings the right time to debut SCOTUS TV?

Televising the hearings is a no-brainer: This change is long overdue,?says former Sen. Arlen Specter (R?D-Pa.) in The Philadelphia Inquirer. Other branches of government routinely broadcast their deliberations. "Televised congressional hearings, especially on Supreme Court nominations, have already drawn extensive audiences" and helped educate the nation. Plus, the Supreme Court itself has recognized in the past "that the Constitution guarantees judicial proceedings that are open to the media as well as the public." If the justices won't let the cameras roll, Congress should force their hands.
"TV could boost Supreme Court's ratings"

This transparency is years too late: Transparency would have been far more beneficial "back when all Americans should have had a stake in the debate," says Doug Powers at Michelle Malkin's blog, when "ObamaCare" was being written behind closed doors, and Nancy Pelosi had the attitude that "you have to pass it to find out what's in it." Now, sadly, "the opinion of anybody who isn't wearing a SCOTUS robe" doesn't really matter.
"Nancy Pelosi: The ObamaCare SCOTUS arguments should be transparent?"

The cameras could actually help the justices: There are lots of legal reasons to bring in the cameras, and "the arguments against them have largely dwindled away," says Emily Badger at Miller-McCune. Still, the "most compelling argument... may be that the court itself could benefit from cameras." If the ACA ruling splits the court 5-4, the justices have every reason to share their deliberations with the nation, so Americans can rest assured that this is a legal dispute, not a political one.
"Making a case for televising the Supreme Court"

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Friday, 18 November 2011

Texas judge says warrantless cellphone tracking violates Fourth Amendment, saga continues

Rev up the bureaucratic turbines, because a judge in Texas has determined that warrantless cellphone tracking is indeed unconstitutional. In a brief decision issued earlier this month, US District Judge Lynn N. Hughes of the Southern District of Texas argued that seizing cellphone records without a search warrant constitutes a violation of the Fourth Amendment. "The records would show the date, time, called number, and location of the telephone when the call was made," Judge Hughes wrote in the ruling, linked below. "These data are constitutionally protected from this intrusion." The decision comes in response to an earlier ruling issued last year by Magistrate Judge Stephen Smith, also of the Southern District of Texas. In that case, Judge Smith argued against unwarranted wiretapping on similarly constitutional grounds, pointing out that with today's tracking technology, every aspect of a suspect's life could be "imperceptibly captured, compiled, and retrieved from a digital dossier somewhere in a computer cloud."

The federal government appealed Judge Smith's ruling on the grounds that the Fourth Amendment would not apply to cellphone tracking, because "a customer has no privacy interest in business records held by a cell phone provider, as they are not the customer's private papers." Judge Hughes' decision, however, effectively overrules this appeal. "When the government requests records from cellular services, data disclosing the location of the telephone at the time of particular calls may be acquired only by a warrant issued on probable cause," Judge Hughes wrote. "The standard under [today's law] is below that required by the Constitution." The law in question, of course, is the Stored Communications Act -- a law bundled under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, which allows investigators to obtain electronic records without a warrant. This month's decision implicitly calls for this law to be reconsidered or revised, though it's certainly not the only ruling to challenge it, and it likely won't be the last, either.

Texas judge says warrantless cellphone tracking violates Fourth Amendment, saga continues originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Nov 2011 10:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

"We welcome a rising, peaceful China."

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

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

PEARL HARBOUR OF AUSTRALIA

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

OBAMA TO RAISE SOUTH CHINA SEA

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Amazon Kindle Fire review roundup

The Kindle Fire hits shelves this week. So how does the first-ever Amazon tablet stack up??

Amazon announced today that its Kindle Fire tablet, which was expected to launch tomorrow, will actually launch today. Surprise! According to Amazon exec Dave Limp, the Fire is already a hit: "Based on customer response," Limp wrote in a press release, "we?re building millions more than we?d planned." So how does the Kindle Fire stack up? Well, let's go to the reviews.?

Skip to next paragraph

The opening shot

"The Kindle Fire is stuck between e-ink minimalism and gleaming iPad decadence," writes Sam Biddle of Gizmodo. "That could either make it the goofy middle child in the tablet family, or a singular wunderkind. But the Fire will not be overlooked. Apple: Be afraid."

The hardware

"The Fire is a simple, black thing with nothing in the way of styling pretenses," writes Tim Stevens of Engadget. "In fact, one could say it has nothing in the way of styling whatsoever.?Flip it over and you'll see the word 'Kindle' subtly embossed across the back, only really visible if you hold the tablet at an angle in some light. Otherwise the matte, rubberized back absorbs too much and you can't spot that one bit of styling indulgence the designers allowed themselves here. There's an extremely subtle 'Amazon' print below too and, beyond some scribbles from the FCC, that's it."

The hardware, part 2

"It's a 7-inch tablet, which means that it's half as big as an iPad, and way closer in size to a paperback book,"?writes?Wilson Rothman of MSNBC. "It could be a little easier to grip, but Amazon went minimalist here, rather than opting for some weird-looking ergonomics. Because of the size, reading is easier than on an iPad, though kids' entertainment and other engrossing interactive content isn't as fun. And because the Fire is widescreen, unlike the more 4x3 iPad, videos look almost as big as they do on Apple's much larger device. As far as screen quality goes, it's on par with the iPad. In other words, as an opening move, hardware-wise, Amazon's getting it right."

The interface

"Amazon has done something very interesting with the Fire," writes Joshua Topolsky of the Washington Post. "The device uses a version of Google?s Android operating system that is forked from the main version that Google releases to partners. That means that the Fire ships without Gmail, Google Maps, or more importantly, the Android Market app store.?It?s not always perfect, but generally the company has managed to create a wholly original version of Android." Meanwhile, Topolsky adds, "Amazon has obscured some of the navigational elements of Android, like the 'back'?and 'home' buttons, which can sometimes make it hard to quickly move around the device."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/g75tBneqvvQ/Amazon-Kindle-Fire-review-roundup

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March to the middle (hamptonroads)

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Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Effort to recall Wis. governor kicks off Tuesday (Providence Journal)

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Asia stocks rise as Europe stabilizes, Japan grows (AP)

BANGKOK ? Asian stocks rose sharply Monday after Japan's economy grew for the first time in four quarters and Europe moved closer to resolving a debt crisis that threatens to hurl the region into recession.

The Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo rose 1.2 percent to 8,617.03. Hong Kong's Hang Seng surged 2.2 percent to 19,552.55 and South Korea's Kospi added 2 percent to 1,901.05. Benchmarks in Singapore, Australia, and mainland China were also higher.

Hopeful signs emerged over the weekend from Italy after Premier Silvio Berlusconi reluctantly bowed to market pressure and resigned. His successor, economist Mario Monti, faces the monumental task of enacting profound reforms aimed at preventing Italy from defaulting on its huge debts.

Unlike Greece, Portugal and Ireland ? which have received emergency financial help from international lenders ? Italy is considered much too big to bail out. Its next government must push through austerity measures to deal with euro1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) in debt.

Investment confidence was also boosted after Japan released data showing its economy ? horrifically shaken from a record earthquake in March ? had surged in the latest quarter.

The economy surged 6 percent in the latest quarter, the first expansion for the world's No. 3 economy in four quarters. It comes as Japan claws its way out of a crisis stemming from an earthquake and tsunami that decimated factories across the country's northeast on March 11.

Since then, the country has steadily restored its factories, helping the economy rebound despite the threats of a financial crisis in Europe, slowing global economy and a strong yen.

In Greece, there was good news Friday, as former central banker Lucas Papademos was sworn in as interim prime minister following a political crisis that jeopardized the country's ability to continue receiving emergency loans.

Papademos must now get his government to agree to a debt deal that will net the country billions of euros in acutely needed rescue money ? provided that it enacts painful austerity measures including tax hikes and sharp cuts in public spending.

Without the rescue money, Greece's faces insolvency and a massive default on its debts ? an event that experts believe would set off a regional banking crisis and eventually blow up into an all-out European recession.

On Wall Street, stocks surged Friday after Italy and Greece moved closer to getting their financial crises under control.

The Dow Jones industrial average jumped or 2.2 percent to 12,153.68. The S&P 500 rose 1.9 percent to 1,263.85. The Nasdaq composite rose or 2 percent to 2,678.75.

Uncertainty still hangs over financial markets, however, as traders await U.S. economic data. Reports on October retail sales, inflation and housing data are due this week, starting Tuesday.

Despite its 2.5 percent growth rate last quarter, the U.S. economy remains fragile. The Federal Reserve recently lowered its economic outlook for 2012. The central bank predicted that the economy will grow at a rate of about 2.7 percent next year. That is a full percentage point below a forecast from June, and below the 3 to 5 percent annual growth rate that is considered healthy.

Benchmark crude for December delivery was up 9 cents at $99.08 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $1.21 to settle at $98.99 in New York on Friday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

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Monday, 14 November 2011

Arab League votes to suspend Syria over killings (AP)

CAIRO ? In a surprisingly sharp move, the Arab League voted Saturday to suspend Syria over the country's bloody crackdown on an eight-month uprising and stepped up calls on the army to stop killing civilians.

The decision was a humiliating blow to a regime that prides itself as a bastion of Arab nationalism, but it was unlikely to immediately end a wave of violence that the U.N. estimates has killed more than 3,500 people since mid-March.

"Syria is a dear country for all of us and it pains us to make this decision," Qatar's Foreign Minister Hamad bin Jassim told reporters. "We hope there will be a brave move from Syria to stop the violence and begin a real dialogue toward real reform."

In Damascus, pro-regime demonstrators threw eggs and tomatoes at the Qatari Embassy to protest the vote.

The 22-member Arab League will monitor the situation and revisit the decision in a meeting Wednesday in the Moroccan capital, Rabat, bin Jassim said, a move that appeared to give Syrian President Bashar Assad time to avert the suspension.

But Syria has been unwilling to heed previous calls to end the violence. Saturday's vote came after Damascus failed to carry out a Nov. 2 peace deal brokered by the Arab League that called on Syria to halt the attacks and pull tanks out of cities.

More than 250 Syrian civilians have been killed so far this month, including 12 on Saturday in attacks in the restive city of Homs, the Damascus suburbs and elsewhere, according to activist groups.

President Barack Obama praised the Arab League, highlighting what he called the group's leadership in seeking to end attacks on peaceful protesters. "These significant steps expose the increasing diplomatic isolation of a regime that has systematically violated human rights and repressed peaceful protests," he said in a statement.

Arab League diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters, said that if Syria does not adhere to its demands, the organization will work to unify the disparate Syrian opposition into a coalition similar to that of Libya's National Transitional Council. A next step would be to recognize the opposition as the sole representative of the Syrian people in a move that would symbolically isolate Assad's regime even further.

In his statement, bin Jassim called on all factions to meet later this week to unify their message as a step toward dialogue with the Syrian government, but many within the opposition refuse to negotiate with the regime.

Still, there is little to stop Assad now from calling upon the scorched-earth tactics that have kept his family in power for more than four decades. A longtime pariah, Syria grew accustomed to shrugging off the world's reproach long before the regime started shooting unarmed protesters eight months ago.

An international military intervention has been all but ruled out, given the quagmire in Libya and the lack of any strong opposition leader in Syria to rally behind. International sanctions, some of which target Assad personally, have failed to persuade him to ease his crackdown.

Syria also retains the iron support of Shiite Muslim-led Iran, which wants to keep Damascus in its fold in a mostly Sunni Muslim region dominated by Arab suspicions of Tehran's aims. Should Assad's regime fall, it could rob Iran of a loyal Arab partner.

The vote was a strong message from Syria's Arab neighbors and showed growing impatience with Damascus.

Neil Sammonds, a Syria researcher for Amnesty International, said the unified Arab showing will put more pressure on the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions despite objections by Syrian allies Russia and China. Only Syria, Lebanon and Yemen voted against the Arab League suspension of Syria, with Iraq abstaining.

"This will help put the diplomatic pressure on the Security Council to act, to show Russia and China that they are out of step with the region and the rest of world," Sammonds said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said international pressure would continue to build "until the brutal Assad regime heeds the calls of its own people and the world community."

Saer el-Nashif, who was among the Syrian opposition leaders meeting with Arab League diplomats in Cairo several times in recent weeks, praised Saturday's vote and said he hopes it leads to a Security Council decision.

Arab nations are also eager to avoid seeing another leader toppled violently, as happened to Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, who was captured and killed last month. An Arab League decision had paved the way for the U.N.-mandated no-fly zone and NATO airstrikes that eventually brought down Gadhafi, but bin Jassim stressed international intervention was not on the agenda in Syria.

"None of us is talking about this kind of decision," he said.

Syria, which blames the bloodshed on extremists acting out a foreign agenda to destabilize the regime, slammed Saturday's vote as "illegal" under Arab League charter rules.

Its Arab League envoy, Youssef Ahmed, said Damascus was calling on the "armed opposition abroad to lay down arms, surrender, stop the violence and accept a national dialogue."

Diplomats who attended the meeting said the Syrian ambassador accused the Qatari foreign minister of carrying out a U.S. agenda, and the Qatari official replied that the league was doing this for the good of the Syrian people.

The bloodshed has spiked dramatically in recent weeks amid signs that more protesters are taking up arms to protect themselves, changing the face of what has been a largely peaceful movement. Many fear the change plays directly into the hands of the regime by giving the military a pretext to crack down with increasing force.

Despite growing international isolation, Assad appears to have a firm grip on power.

Assad and his father, who ruled Syria before him, stacked key security and military posts with members of their minority Alawite sect, ensuring loyalty by melding the fate of the army and the regime. As a result, the army leadership will likely protect the regime at all costs, for fear it will be persecuted if the country's Sunni majority gains the upper hand. Most of the army defectors so far appear to be lower-level Sunni conscripts.

The government has largely sealed off the country from foreign journalists and prevented independent reporting, making it difficult to confirm events on the ground. Key sources of information are amateur videos posted online and details gathered by witnesses and activist groups who then contact the media, often at great personal risk.

___

Associated Press writer Hadeel al-Shalchi contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111113/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_syria

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Sunday, 13 November 2011

Funeral planned for Heavy D at historic NY church

In this Oct. 1, 2011 photo, rapper Heavy D, also known as Dwight Arrington Myers, performs during the BET Hip Hop Awards in Atlanta. A representative confirmed Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011 that the singer and former leader of Heavy D & the Boyz died. He was 44. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

In this Oct. 1, 2011 photo, rapper Heavy D, also known as Dwight Arrington Myers, performs during the BET Hip Hop Awards in Atlanta. A representative confirmed Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011 that the singer and former leader of Heavy D & the Boyz died. He was 44. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

In this Oct. 1, 2011 photo, rapper Heavy D, also known as Dwight Arrington Myers, performs during the BET Hip Hop Awards in Atlanta. A representative confirmed Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011 that the singer and former leader of Heavy D & the Boyz died. He was 44. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

In this Oct. 1, 2011 photo, rapper Heavy D, also known as Dwight Arrington Myers, performs during the BET Hip Hop Awards in Atlanta. A representative confirmed Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011 that the singer and former leader of Heavy D & the Boyz died. He was 44. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

(AP) ? A private funeral for rap legend Heavy D will be held at a historic black Baptist church in a northern suburb of New York City.

Grace Baptist Church of Mount Vernon announced Friday that the funeral for Heavy D had been scheduled for Nov. 18.

The New York-born rapper died at a Los Angeles hospital Tuesday after collapsing outside his home. He was 44.

Dwight Arrington Myer was the titular member of Heavy D and the Boyz, which had hits with "Now That We Found Love," ''Who's the Man" and "Somebody for Me."

He was one of the genre's top stars in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Grace Baptist Church's website says its congregation was founded by five black women in 1888.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-11-11-Heavy%20D-Funeral/id-f44daabbcf4542b7a5f08485dd20322d

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True Reverse Perspective


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Video of the Week #16, November 10th, 2011

From: The Cosmic Magnifying Lens by Davide Castelvecchi at Degrees of Freedom.

Original source: True Reverse Perspective from JMS on Vimeo. There is quite a lot of additional information there.

This animation by London-based video artist Jeremy Mooney-Somers represents the technique that artists have codified as reverse perspective, also known as Byzantine perspective. While in ordinary perspective lines converge to a point ?at infinity,? in reverse perspective, sometimes seen in Byzantine icons, they converge to a point in front of the scene depicted. This work represents an excellent representation.

Bora ZivkovicAbout the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=ec874e1a850282b89d359dd2b18537de

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Friday, 11 November 2011

BJP not in favour of govt bailout for Kingfisher (Reuters)

NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? The Bharatiya Janata Party, is opposed to any move by the government to bail out debt-ridden Kingfisher Airlines that cancelled flights to minimise losses and urgently needs cash to escape a collapse.

"If Kingfisher is not in a position to run on a financially viable basis then it should find its own way ... There is no case for a government bailout," Yashwant Sinha, a senior BJP leader and former finance minister, told TV channels on Friday.

Earlier in the day, civil aviation minister Vayalar Ravi had said he would talk to Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee to get Kingfisher assistance from banks.

Ravi said he had advised Mallya to speak with the finance minister as the airline was not able to get its debt recast. Kingfisher has a debt of 60 billion rupees including a large chunk from state-controlled banks.

In April, state-run lenders State Bank of India, private lender ICICI Bank and a few other lenders converted about 12 billion rupees of loans into equity in Kingfisher as part of a debt recast.

Shares of the cash-strapped carrier slumped to a life low on Friday as the airline continued to cancel flights and newspapers reported leasing companies were planning to take planes back and pilots were leaving.

The shares closed down 9.45 percent lower at 19.65 rupees.

(Reporting by Sanjeev Choudhary; Editing by Harish Nambiar)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111111/india_nm/india604710

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Attackers blow up Egypt gas line, halting exports (AP)

EL-ARISH, Egypt ? Attackers set off explosives along a gas pipeline in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula that transports fuel to neighboring Israel and Jordan early on Thursday, Egypt's state news agency MENA reported.

It was the seventh attack on the pipeline since the popular uprising ousted longtime Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak in February.

The report on MENA said unidentified assailants placed explosive charges in two separate places on the line that transports natural gas near the north Sinai town of el-Arish, causing blasts and huge fires. The explosions forced a shutdown and halted exports to Jordan and Israel.

But later, a Sinai security official said there was only one explosion Thursday on the pipeline. He said the attackers blew a hole in an underground part of the pipeline, causing less damage than in past attacks, which mostly targeted pumping stations.

The official said no one saw the attackers, though police were searching the site for clues. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Previous bombings have been blamed on al-Qaida-inspired militants who have stepped up activity in the Sinai, taking advantage of a security vacuum caused by scant police forces in the post-Mubarak era.

Gas exports through the pipeline resumed about a month ago after damage from previous bombings was repaired.

Also in Sinai, Egyptian security officials said Thursday they arrested 36 Eritreans trying to illegally cross into Israel, among them six children and nearly 20 women.

The security officials said the African migrants were hiding just north of the Egyptian border city of Taba with Bedouin smugglers. The migrants paid $40,000 dollars to the smugglers to sneak them into Israel, the officials said.

More than 30,000 Africans searching for jobs or asylum have crossed into Israel since 2005, most of them illegally, according to Israeli government estimates.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111110/ap_on_bi_ge/ml_egypt_gas_pipeline_explosion

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Thursday, 10 November 2011

Change not a big factor in state and local races (The Arizona Republic)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/160093489?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Afghan official: Up to 70 militants killed in east (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? An Afghan official says between 60 to 70 insurgents have been killed after they attacked bases used by NATO and Afghan forces in the eastern Paktika province.

Mokhlis Afghan, the spokesman for the provincial governor, says insurgents moved from the Afghan-Pakistan border on Tuesday night and attacked the bases in Barmal district.

He says Afghan and NATO forces quickly launched a counter attack and called in coalition aircraft. He says the fighting left up to 70 insurgents dead.

NATO says the militants attacked the bases with small arms and rocket-propelled grenades, but no NATO service members were killed or wounded in the attack.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111109/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

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Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Europe split on financial trading tax (AP)

BRUSSELS ? Europe's economic heavyweights Germany and France ran into strong resistance Tuesday in their drive to impose a tax on financial transactions, indicating that introducing the levy even in the 17-country eurozone will be difficult.

On top of long-standing opponents like the U.K. and Sweden, which do not use the euro, the proposal also received a lukewarm reaction from traditional allies like the Netherlands, Luxembourg and most smaller eurozone nations.

They fear that introducing even a small tax on transactions in bonds, shares and derivatives could drive banks and other financial institutions out of the European Union if other financial hubs don't follow suit.

Italy meanwhile voiced fears that raising the costs of transactions could hurt banks at a time they are already under severe pressure and even drive up countries' borrowing costs as their bonds would be traded less on the open market.

EU finance ministers on Tuesday for the first time debated a proposal from the European Commission, the EU's executive, of a small levy on financial transactions, which the Commission says could raise as much as euro57 billion ($78 billion).

While all 27 EU countries backed the principle that the financial sector should share the burden of paying for the financial crisis, there is little, to no support, for a transaction tax in other financial centers such as the U.S., China, or Singapore.

"If we could agree a financial transaction tax globally that would be a good thing but that's not going to happen," George Osborne, the British finance minister, said.

Osborne also warned that the cost of the tax would ultimately be borne by firms' clients such as citizens investing in pension funds and banks' customers.

Others meanwhile argued that Europe, or even the eurozone, could not wait for the rest of the world to get on board.

"That's just an excuse for doing nothing," said German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble. "We will wait 20 years before doing anything if we wait for the last island on this planet."

Another sparring point is what the money raised by the tax should be used for. The Commission wants to bolster the EU's own budget, while Germany and France hope to use it to plug their own funding gaps, with some small proportion going to fund development aid.

"The same money is being spent four times over," Osborne told his colleagues.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111108/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_taxing_financial_trades

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Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Spotted: Kelly Ripa and Her Lil? Lunch Dates

Kelly Ripa heads to lunch with Lola Grace, 10, Joaquin Antonio, 8?, and husband Mark Consuelos's parents on Sunday in Soho.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/_2X6f4s6L2U/

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Berlusconi denies speculation he is quitting

Italy became the latest target in Europe's financial crisis Monday, as soaring borrowing rates intensified pressure on Premier Silvio Berlusconi to resign and let a new government reform the country's spendthrift ways.

Berlusconi batted away reports that he was considering stepping down in favor of early elections, saying they were "without foundation."

But the prospect of financial disaster was real because of Italy's huge debts and slow growth. Unlike Greece, Ireland and Portugal ? the three countries that Europe has already bailed out ? Italy's economy could be too large to rescue.

Investors want the government to quickly pass measures to boost growth and cut debt. But defections from Berlusconi's coalition government mean he no longer commands enough loyalty to pass the reforms.

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Increasingly, Berlusconi is himself being seen as the problem.

If Berlusconi should resign or lose a confidence vote, President Giorgio Napolitano would decide whether to call early elections, or name a government of technocrats rather than politicians. The most widely discussed name to lead a technical government is Mario Monti, the former EU competition commissioner who once blocked General Electric's takeover of Honeywell.

Story: Greek PM, opposition leader reach deal

The opposition center-left has long demanded the resignation of Berlusconi, citing sex scandals, criminal prosecutions and legislative priorities it says are aimed at protecting his own business interests rather than those of the country. However, it has failed to come up with a leader who can energize the base and create a credible program, leaving the opposition divided and rudderless.

The ultimate fear is that Italy cannot pay for its ?1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) debt and need international help. Europe would struggle with a bailout that large, meaning a default that could break up the 17-nation eurozone and drag down the global economy.

During a G-20 summit last week, Berlusconi had to ask the International Monetary Fund to monitor the country's reform efforts, a humiliating step for the eurozone's third-largest economy.

The yield on Italy's 10-year bonds jumped another 0.42 of a percentage point Monday to 6.67 percent, its highest level since the euro was established in 1999. That is drawing uncomfortably near the 7 percent threshold that forced both Ireland and Portugal to accept bailouts. As yields rise, governments must devote more of their national budgets simply to paying interest costs, creating a vicious circle of debt.

When traders thought early Monday that Berlusconi might resign, those borrowing rates eased. But later in the day, when it was clear the 75-year-old would not leave willingly, rates shot up again, reflecting market fears that he is not the leader who can turn Italy around.

"The leader and his country are in danger of taking the rest of Europe, if not the world, into economic hell," said Louise Cooper, markets analyst at BGC Partners.

Stocks worldwide recovered from big losses, while U.S. stock indexes edged lower Monday, gyrations driven by speculation over Berlusconi's future.

The European Central Bank said Monday that it stepped up its program to buy government bonds last week, spending ?9.5 billion ($13 billion). It has been buying bonds for weeks to keep a lid on borrowing costs to help prevent Italy and Spain from succumbing to the debt crisis.

Berlusconi had lunch Monday with his children and friends at his villa near Milan, sparking Italian news media to speculate he was devising an exit strategy. But the lunch is a long family tradition and his Facebook page said "the reports of my resignation are without foundation."

Public administration minister Renato Brunetta, a Berlusconi loyalist, acknowledged Monday that the government has a "numbers problem" in parliament and if a majority is lacking then "everybody goes home." Interior Minister Roberto Maroni agreed, adding "it is useless to persist."

James Walston, professor of political science at the American University of Rome, said Berlusconi's time is quickly running out, even though elections are not due until 2013.

"He could go tomorrow. He could go next week. The sort of pressure that he is under, coming from his own people, will make it sooner than later," he said.

But Berlusconi has remained defiant, insisting he still commands enough support in Parliament.

"I don't understand how rumors of my resignation are circulating," Berlusconi was quoted as saying Monday by Libero newspaper.

Only the loss of a confidence vote can force a government to resign. Opposition leader Pierluigi Bersani said lawmakers are planning exactly that. Political analysts say a vote could come as early as Tuesday, when parliament is expected to approve the state's balance sheets ? a routine measure that failed by one vote last month.

Other analysts say should Berlusconi step down, he would seek to have his right-hand man, Gianni Letta, named to succeed him as premier until early elections can be organized. It is not known whether the Italian president, Napolitano, would agree to that.

If the opposition doesn't call a vote of confidence this week in an effort to unseat him, Berlusconi has pledged to call one himself to prove his majority stands, possibly next week, on reforms and other stopgap measures to lower Italy's debt ? now near 120 percent of GDP ? and revive the dormant economy.

The reform measures include a plan to sell government assets ? expected to raise ?5 billion ($6.9 billion) a year for three years ? and tax breaks to reduce youth unemployment of 29 percent and to get women back into the work force in a country where just 48 percent of women have jobs. The legislation would also allow stores to stay open on Sundays and open up closed professions.

Berlusconi has also pledged to raise the retirement age to 67 for all to match European trends, despite the fierce resistance of his allies in the Northern League, on whom Berlusconi relies to govern. They have proven at times difficult allies, exerting a strong independent streak and challenging Berlusconi on key policies. The leader, Umberto Bossi, also has on several occasions expressed doubts about Berlusconi's ability to complete the current mandate.

The leader of Italy's largest labor confederation, meanwhile, predicted 2012 will be a "terrifying" year for the economy even if Berlusconi leaves power. CGIL leader Susanna Camusso also slammed Berlusconi's anti-crisis plan as containing virtually nothing to spark economic growth.

"I hope there will be (early elections), and that they will be soon for the good of the country," she told The Associated Press on Monday.

Mario Draghi, an Italian who just took over as European Central Bank president, said last week that since joining the euro, Italy has enjoyed unnaturally low interest rates for years because its monetary policy has been linked to that of stronger economies like Germany.

"For a long time spreads between sovereign bonds in the euro area were very narrow," he said. "They did not reflect the different realities of different countries."

In contrast, German borrowing costs hit a record low Monday, as investors fled to their bonds as a safe haven in Europe.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45188323/ns/world_news/

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