Thursday, February 28, 2013

Marissa Mayer Has Made a Terrible Mistake

Marissa Mayer, CEO of Yahoo Marissa Mayer, CEO of Yahoo

Photo by Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images

It was nearly a decade ago that I stopped going into the office every day. I worked at a competing Web magazine at the time, and my bosses didn?t really care how I worked, as long as I got stuff done. At first, like many people, I began working from home because I was lazy. By skipping my hourlong commute, I gave myself more time to sleep in and goof off. And without anyone watching over me, the goofing off was sure to be epic.

But I quickly realized that, counter to my intentions, working at home made me more productive. Without office distractions?listening to other people?s phone calls, bantering with the receptionist, figuring out where and with whom to go to lunch?I could report and write much faster. Telecommuting also freed me from pointless office commitments. For instance, I could call in to meetings, mute my line, and then do more important things with my time.

When I tell people that I work at home, they usually assume one of two things?that I?m un- or underemployed and just biding my time until I get a real job, or that I possess a monkish, single-minded devotion to work that they suggest is required for successful telecommuting. Neither is true. Instead, I?ve realized that, once you learn how to do it, working at home is superior in almost every way. It allows me to be better at my job and at my life?to be a more productive employee and a not-terrible husband and dad.

Working at home isn?t for everyone. As a writer, I work according to what Y Combinator?s Paul Graham calls the ?maker?s schedule.? My job requires long stretches of distraction-free time, and my output, on any particular day, is sensitive to my mood and environment. Working at home gives me the freedom to adjust these variables to maximum effect: Sometimes I find that I write better if I start a column after dinner, while other times I hit a wall during the middle of the day, take an hour off to get a snack and jump in the shower, and then come back to produce a magnificent column about pajamas.

You might work differently. Maybe your mind is best primed by conversations with your co-workers about Downton Abbey. That?s fine. The point?and this is hardly groundbreaking?is that different people work differently. Any organization whose success depends on maximizing its workers? productivity ought to allow their employees some degree of flexibility.

That brings us to Yahoo?s ridiculous new ban on working from home. Last week, All Things D?s Kara Swisher reported that Marissa Mayer, the beleaguered Web company?s new CEO, will force Yahoo?s few hundred remote workers to relocate to its offices. In a memo Swisher obtained, the company?s human-resources chief allows workers to ?occasionally? stay home to ?wait for the cable guy,? but otherwise requires people?I?m sorry, ?Yahoos??to submit to ?the interactions and experiences that are only possible in our offices.? Because this was an HR memo and therefore freed from any requirement to be truthful, it went on to declare that ?speed and quality are often sacrificed when we work from home.? It added: ?We need to be one Yahoo!, and that starts with physically being together.? (I asked Yahoo to explain the policy to me, and a spokeswoman responded with this brief statement: ?We don't discuss internal matters. This isn't a broad industry view on working from home?this is about what is right for Yahoo!, right now.")

Mayer is going to regret this decision. It?s myopic, unfriendly, and so boneheaded that I worry it?s the product of spending too much time at the office. (She did, after all, build a nursery next to her office to house her new baby). It?s not just that the policy completely elides the virtues of working from home. Numerous studies have found that people can be more productive when they?re allowed to work away from the office. One, released this month by researchers at Stanford, showed that when Chinese call-center employees were allowed to work from home, their performance increased by 13 percent. Considering such gains, it?s likely that Yahoo?s new ban will force remote workers to alter their work lives in a way that will lower their productivity. It will also put Yahoo at odds with just about every other tech company in Silicon Valley?firms that don?t impose such rules on working from home, and with whom Yahoo competes for talent.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=8446949d4b89226bcd4a50259bfe949b

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Ship noise makes crabs get crabby

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

A study published today in Biology Letters found that ship noise affects crab metabolism, with largest crabs faring worst, and found little evidence that crabs acclimatise to noise over time.

The team from the Universities of Bristol and Exeter found that crabs exposed to recordings of ship noise showed an increase in metabolic rate, indicating elevated stress. In the real world this could have implications for growth and, if the metabolic cost of noise causes crabs to spend more time foraging to compensate, could also increase the risk of predation.

Researcher Matt Wale from Bristol's School of Biological Sciences describes the study: "We used controlled experiments to consider how shore crabs of different sizes respond to both single and repeated exposure to playback of ship noise. Ship noise is the most common source of noise in the aquatic environment."

Explains Dr Andy Radford, Reader in Behavioural Ecology at Bristol: "We found that the metabolic rate of crabs exposed to ship noise was higher than those experiencing ambient harbour noise, and that larger individuals were affected most strongly. This is the first indication that there might be different responses to noise depending on the size of an individual."

If commercially important crabs and lobsters are affected by noise, these findings have implications for fisheries in busy shipping areas where large individuals may be losing out. Conversely, if reducing noise reduces metabolic costs, then quietening aquaculture facilities may lead to higher yields.

Dr Steve Simpson from the University of Exeter warned: "Since larger crabs are affected more strongly by noise this could have implications for fisheries in noisy areas. Also, many crustacean species, particularly prawns, are grown in aquaculture, so if acoustic disturbance has a metabolic cost then operational noise in farms may impact on growth, and quieter farms may be more profitable."

###

University of Bristol: http://www.bristol.ac.uk

Thanks to University of Bristol for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 55 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127041/Ship_noise_makes_crabs_get_crabby

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Carbon Fiber Flask: At Least Your Booze Will Survive the Apocalypse

When World War III finally starts and the planet is decimated by nuclear bombs, facing a post-apocalyptic future will be a lot easier with a swig from this seemingly indestructible flask. Designed by Oakley working with The Macallan, The Flask—as it's called—is made from such Tonka-tough materials as carbon fiber, food-grade steel, and aerospace-grade aluminum. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/z-XKadpIxnQ/carbon-fiber-flask-at-least-your-booze-will-survive-the-apocalypse

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Researchers explore PKC role in lung disease

Tuesday, February 26, 2013
A JGP study examines the role of PKC in airway smooth muscle contraction and raises the possibility that this enzyme could be a therapeutic target for treating asthma, COPD, and other lung diseases. The diagram shown summarizes the pathways regulating airway smooth muscle contraction. Credit: Dixon, R.E., and L.F. Santana. 2013. J. Gen. Physiol. appear in The Journal of General Physiology, provide new insight into the mechanisms involved in regulating luminal diameter of small airways and reveal PKC as a potential target for drug therapies.

The researchers used phase-contrast video microscopy, confocal microscopy, Western blot analysis, and pharmacological activators and inhibitors to investigate the role of PKC in airway SMC contraction in mouse lung slices. Their results suggest that activation of PKC in small airways promotes an influx of calcium into SMC and subsequent intracellular release of calcium ions to generate low frequency SMC twitching. PKC activation also induces a strong calcium ion sensitization of contraction, eliciting a stronger contractile response to stimuli that increase free intracellular calcium. Consequently, PKC activation downstream of various molecules, such as thrombin, that are present in the airways in conjunction with inflammatory lung diseases, could sensitize the airway SMCs to contractile stimuli and contribute to the airway hyper responsiveness that is characteristic of asthma and COPD.

###

Rockefeller University Press: http://www.rupress.org/

Thanks to Rockefeller University Press for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 34 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127020/Researchers_explore_PKC_role_in_lung_disease_

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On sequester, Boehner tells Senate to get "off their ass" (cbsnews)

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Amazon's latest employee patent won't pay you for unsatisfactory work

Amazon's latest employee patent won't pay you for unsatisfactory work

Jeff Bezos seems like a nice guy with big dreams (and a bigger wallet), but some Amazon patents make us worry that there's a sour cherry at the heart of all that whipped cream. The retailer has been awarded a patent entitled "Facilitating improvement in the results of human performance of tasks," but is actually concerned with not paying digital employees if their services are deemed to be unsatisfactory. Those whose efforts are judged and found wanting have the option of taking a reduced cut of the original fee, or getting computer-aided feedback on how to improve and snag the rest. While we hope this one remains locked inside a Seattle filing cabinet, we can just see how Judge Judy's going to react when people take Mechanical Turk disputes public.

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Source: USPTO

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/26/amazon-employee-tracking-performance-patent/

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Deepwater Horizon oil spill trial begins. How much will BP pay?

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill trial got underway Monday. Oil giant BP could face anywhere between $5 billion and $18 billion in fines for its role in the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.?

By David J. Unger,?Correspondent / February 25, 2013

An oil-soaked bird struggles against the oil-slicked side of the HOS Iron Horse supply vessel at the site of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Louisiana. Under the Clean Water Act, BP could face fines totaling as much as $18 billion.

Gerald Herbert/AP/File

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A multibillion dollar trial began Monday to determine the?culpability?of BP and its contractors in the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

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The key question: How much is BP to blame for the explosion that took the lives of 11 people and spewed an estimated?4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico ? and, thus, how much will it have to pay in civil penalties?

The trial, which could last for months, will pit rival claims of culpability as BP tries to offload responsibility for the Deepwater Horizon disaster onto its onetime partners, Transocean and Halliburton. At stake: up to $18 billion in fines. Prosecutors will have to prove not only that BP made mistakes but it acted with gross negligence.?

"Despite BP's attempts to shift the blame to other parties," Justice Department attorney Mike Underhill said in opening statements, "by far the primary fault for this disaster belongs to BP."

Bobby Brown Sentenced To 55 Days In Jail For DUI

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Pink showed off her killer abs while on the beach with her family in Miami, Fla., on Feb. 25.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Lisa Rinna went makeup-free while out and about in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 25.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Gabrielle Union was spotted at Burger King picking up their new smooth roast coffee in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 25.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Anne Hathaway posed with her husband Adam Shulman as she carried her Oscar for best supporting actress at the 2013 Vanity Fair Oscar Party on Feb. 24 in Hollywood, Calif.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Britney Spears wowed at the Elton John AIDS Foundation Academy Awards Party held at The Pacific Design Center in Los Angeles, Calif.,on Feb. 24.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Best Actress winner Jennifer Lawrence posed in the press room at the Oscars on Feb. 24 in Hollywood, Calif.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux posed together on the red carpet at the Oscars on Feb. 24 in Hollywood, Calif.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Kristen Stewart walked (or hobbled on) the red carpet at the 2013 Oscars on Feb. 24 in Hollywood, Calif. The "Twilight" star was on crutches after injuring her foot a few days ago.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    "Vampire Diaries" star Kat Graham enjoyed a sweet treat in Atlanta, Ga., on Feb. 24, while sporting the U by Kotex Generation Know bracelet (symbolizing her pledge to learn about girls health).

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Zoe Saldana wore Dolce&Gabbana to the Film Independent Spirit Awards on Feb. 23 in Santa Monica, Calif.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Kim Kardashian heads to the gym in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 23.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Kendra Wilkinson danced the night away at OK! Magazine's Pre-Oscar party in celebration of the 85th Academy Awards Ceremony. Celebrities, including Kendra, Kristin Cavallari and Taylor Armstrong came out to Hollywood?s newest hotspot, Emerson Theatre in Hollywood, Calif., on Feb. 22.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Katie Holmes took a stroll in chilly New York City on Feb. 22. We're loving her pink pants!

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Vanessa Hudgens attended the "Spring Breakers" photocall held at Villamagna hotel in Madrid, Spain on Feb. 21.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Mila Kunis was seen texting on her phone while taking a break from filming "The Angriest Man in Brooklyn" in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 20.

  • Celebrity Photos: Celebrity 2013

    Amy Adams and her fiance Darren Le Gallo hit the gym together in West Hollywood, Calif., on Feb. 20.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Hayden Panettiere hung out near the beach with her on-again boyfriend Wladimir Klitschko in Miami, Fla., on Feb. 19. Hayden played with an adorable new puppy while Wladimir went paddle-boarding.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Josh Duhamel and Julianne Hough promoted their new film "Safe Haven" during a photocall in London on Feb. 19.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Michelle Williams was accompanied by a friend as she arrived ahead of her appearance on the "Late Show with David Letterman" in New York City on Feb. 19.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    The Duchess of Cambridge, aka Kate Middleton, showed off her baby bump as she arrived at the Hope House in South London on Feb. 19.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Bethenny Frankel got a surfing lesson while on vacation at North Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, on Feb. 19. Later, she stripped down to her bikini and flaunted her incredible body.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Britney Spears took her new puppy to a pet hospital in Thousand Oaks, Calif., on Feb. 18.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Tori Spelling packed her trunk after a quick trip to the market to pick up Dole Fruit Crisps in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 18.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Nicole Kidman dazzled as she arrived to the premiere of her new film "Stoker" held in London on Feb. 17.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Cee Lo Green made an appearance at the Pool After Dark at Harrah?s Resort in Atlantic City, N.J., on Feb. 16.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Julia Roberts and her husband Daniel Moder headed out for lunch with friends in Santa Monica, Calif., on Feb. 16.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Cameron Diaz laughed and watched kids play in a park with a friend before buying flowers at a local flower shop in New York City on Feb. 15.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Jessica Chastain greeted fans as she traveled through LAX in Los Angeles, Calif. The "Zero Dark Thirty" star could be seen signing autographs and posing for pictures as she made her way through the airport.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Nicolas Cage and Emma Stone posed together at 'The Croods' photocall during the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival on Feb. 15.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Jessica Simpson was spotted leaving The Ivy with her fiance Eric Johnson in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 14. Her bump is back!

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Brooklyn Decker and pro football player Ray Rice kicked-off Gillette's World's Largest Shave and Kiss Event, where hundreds of men attempted to break the record for the world's largest shaving lesson, in NYC on Feb. 14. Check out those abs!

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Miley Cyrus attended the Rachel Zoe Fall 2013 fashion show during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week at The Studio at Lincoln Center in NYC on Feb. 13.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Jennifer Aniston flashed a smile on the set of the "Untitled Elmore Leonard Project" in Stamford, Conn., on Feb. 12.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Sienna Miller and her daughter Marlowe were spotted out and about in New York City on Feb. 12.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Heidi Klum wore leather pants and high heels to film scenes for "Germany's Next Top Model" in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Feb. 12.

  • Celebrity News: February 2013

    Alec Baldwin and his wife Hilaria are expecting their first child, they announced Feb. 12.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Vanessa Hudgens, AnnaSophia Robb and Victoria Justice posed together at the Alice + Olivia by Stacey Bendet Presentation Fall 2013 Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week on Feb. 11 in NYC.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Khlo? Kardashian Odom made a beauty run in Los Angeles, Calif., for Clear Scalp & Hair Beauty Therapy to start the 7 Day Challenge for stronger, more beautiful hair on Feb. 11.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Uma Thurman attended the Autumn/Winter 2013 Donna Karan show during New York Fashion Week on Feb. 11.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Carrie Underwood, winner of Best Country Solo Performance, posed in the press room at the 55th Annual Grammy Awards at Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 10.

  • Celebrity Photos: Febraury 2013

    Rihanna performed during the 55th Annual Grammy Awards at Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 10.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Jessica Biel, Beyonce, Jay-Z and Solange Knowles cheered on Justin Timberlake as he performed at the 55th Annual Grammy Awards at Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif., on Feb. 10.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Anne Hathaway, winner of the Supporting Actress award, posed in the press room at the EE British Academy Film Awards at The Royal Opera House in London on Feb. 10.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Kim Kardashian and Kanye West visited the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janerio on Feb. 9.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Kristen Chenoweth wore Robert Rodriguez Collection to the Project Runway Finale Runway Show in New York City on Feb. 8.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Julianna Margulies hosted a LEGO DUPLO Read! Build! Play! event in New York City on Feb. 8, where she led a story reading and play session for over 40 children ages 1-5 to help drive awareness for early child literacy.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Donald Faison & EA Mobile gave guests at the Electronics Arts office in Los Angeles, Calif., a private preview for their new game Real Racing 3 on Feb. 7.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Kendall, Kris and Kylie Jenner walked the runway for The Heart Truth's Red Dress Collection during Fall 2013 Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week at Hammerstein Ballroom on Feb. 6 in New York City.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Emmy Rossum attended the Los Angeles premiere of 'Beautiful Creatures' held at the TCL Chinese Theater on Feb. 6.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Karina Smirnoff and Kelly Bensimon stuck a pose at the Aquafina Pure Challenge Design Contest at the Empire Hotel in New York City on Feb. 6.

  • Celebrity Photos: February 2013

    Josh Duhamel and Julianne Hough attended the "Safe Haven" premiere held at The TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, Calif., on Feb. 5.

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/26/bobby-brown-sentenced_n_2769679.html

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    Pound Foolish: Exposing The Dark Side Of The Personal Finance ...

    At a time when we have more personal finance advice than ever before, why are so many Americans in bad financial shape, and why do we say money is our number one worry in surveys?

    Helaine Olen, who has written about personal finance for the New York Times, the Washington Post, and many other publications, wanted answers. So she investigated the world of financial advisors, TV personalities, academics, brokers, and regulators.

    What she found was faddish advice, rampant conflicts of interest, and a Horatio Alger narrative that holds individuals completely responsible for their own failings and lets crooks conveniently off the hook.

    It?s all recounted in Olen?s entertaining book?Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry.

    She spoke to MintLife?s Matthew Amster-Burton about bad investments, free steak, and the limits of preaching personal responsibility.

    MintLife:?You used to write the Money Makeover series for the Los Angeles Times. I love reading the financial makeover in my local newspaper, but I?ve always wondered what would happen if you went back and visited these people 10 years later.

    What did you find when you did that?

    Olen:?I found generally that people who were in decent shape remained in decent shape. The people who weren?t mostly were not.

    That being said, there were a couple of caveats. One is what happened to California real estate. Some of my subjects had bought property, you know, in very high-end areas. Keep in mind that this is a Los Angeles-based feature.

    So, my subjects who had bought property in places like West LA before the run-up, and held on and didn?t take second mortgages and the like, ultimately did okay.

    Some of my people really did suffer serious setbacks. One in particular I?m thinking of was on track to retire a multi-millionaire. Part of this was because he was a pilot for one of the airlines.

    MintLife:?Right.

    Olen:?We all know what happened to the airlines after 9/11, and his was one that had gone into bankruptcy. So his salary was cut by 40% and his pension was cut by more than half, and he started investing in real estate to make up the losses.

    His original house, i.e., the one in the nice area of Los Angeles that he owned, has continued to do well for him. The stuff he invested in, not so well.

    MintLife:?Nearly everything written about personal finance?I?m certainly guilty of this myself?is about how if you make the right decisions, you?re going to turn out okay.

    It?s as if the last five years didn?t happen, because you still hear exactly the same things over and over.

    Olen:?I would say almost the last 30 years. It?s not a problem that started in 2007.

    MintLife:?True.

    Olen:?This is a problem that really begins in the 1970s and early 1980s when two very powerful currents meet each other. One is the start of income stagnation and income inequality, which of course leads to wealth inequality.

    And the second is the do-it-yourself system, what academics like to call responsibilization or financialization.

    We went from a world where a lot of people had pensions to where almost no one had pensions. And you were supposed to be in charge of this at a time where increasing numbers of factors were going against you.

    We just started doing this cheerleading, right? It makes sense for a number of years because of the great bull market of the 20th century, from 1982 to roughly 2000.

    So we all think we?re geniuses, right?

    We?re putting money into the stock market and it?s going up. And we start to believe this contradiction that our stock gains are both inevitable and they?re a result of our own genius.

    MintLife:?I run into this all the time. I talk to people who say, ?I bought Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) at just the right time. I can do this, why can?t everyone??

    In most cases it?s because they?re not talking about their losses.

    Olen:?Right. That?s what I would say. Tell me about eToys in 1999.

    MintLife:?A lot of the book talks about the need for, I guess I would call it, common sense regulation.

    And every time I write about something like the dangers of equity indexed annuities, or leveraged ETFs, or even student loan reform, I often hear, ?Look, in the right hands these are useful tools, just like a sharp knife is a useful tool. If we regulate them, we?re going to damage innovation, damage the economy.?

    Olen:?The first thing you have to understand is we?re dealing with thirty years of a powerful ideology that regulation is bad in a free market. Lack of regulation in this area is a disgrace.

    Are these useful tools for some people? Absolutely.

    Can people get into real trouble with them? Absolutely.

    This stuff is sold to people as a way of protecting themselves, when in fact it does no such thing.

    It?s like giving somebody a sharp knife to butter bread. It?s not going to work out well for an awful lot of people. Equity indexed annuities are, for most people, not a great idea.

    If they were such a great idea, then why are the commissions so high on selling them?

    No positions in stocks mentioned.

    Source: http://www.minyanville.com/trading-and-investing/personal-finance/articles/Pound-Foolish253A-Exposing-the-Dark-Side/2/26/2013/id/48381

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    Razer Edge Windows 8 gaming tablet up for pre-order March 1st ...

    Razer?s Edge tablet is a 10 inch Windows 8 tablet aimed at gamers. It has the guts of a mid-range PC gaming laptop, including an Intel Ivy Bridge processor and discrete graphics. Razer will also offer optional accessories including a game controller that add buttons and D-pads on the sides of the tablet.

    Razer introduced the Edge at CES in January, and now the company says it will be available for pre-order starting March 1st for $999 and up.

    Razer Edge

    At that price you get a model with an Intel Core i5 processor, a 1366 x 768 pixel display, 64GB of storage, and NVDIA GeForce GT640M graphics.

    Razer will also offer optional upgrades including a Core i7 processor and 128GB or 256GB solid state disks.

    Razer will offer three different optional accessories for the gaming tablet:

    Prices for the tablet alone can go as high as $1449 if you get a top-of-the-line model, which may seem like a lot of money for a tablet that gets about 3 hours of battery life during normal use and half that while playing demanding PC games.

    But the Razer Edge is the first tablet of its type that?s actually capable of playing many of the latest PC games with graphics quality set to medium.

    The Razer Edge is sort of like a Microsoft Surface Pro, and it?s priced like one. But while Microsoft?s $999 tablet comes with a digital pen and a pressure-sensitive screen, the Razer Edge comes with discrete graphics. If the Surface Pro is aimed at business and artistic applications, the Razer Edge is designed from the ground up for gaming.

    via SlashGear

    If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to our RSS feed, follow us on Twitter, or "like" us on Facebook. Thanks for visiting!

    • TypeTablet
    • Form factorSlate
    • Screen size10.1 inches
    • Screen resolution1366 x 768
    • Bundled OSWindows (8)
    • Processor speed1.7 GHz
    • System RAM4 GB
    • Released01/08/2013
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    Source: http://liliputing.com/2013/02/razer-edge-windows-8-gaming-tablet-up-for-pre-order-march-1st.html

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    The State of Free Speech on Campus: Pomona College - The ...

    February 25, 2013

    by Samantha Harris

    Today, FIRE brings you the next installment in our blog series on the state of free speech at America's top 10 liberal arts colleges, as ranked by U.S. News & World Report. Up today:?Pomona College, one of the five undergraduate colleges that are part of the Claremont Colleges consortium in California.

    Overall, Pomona College's speech codes are not as restrictive as some of the other schools in this blog series. Further, it's important to note that some of the more restrictive policies are not specific to Pomona but rather are applicable to all of the Claremont Colleges, meaning that it may take a bit more legwork to get the necessary changes made.

    Although Pomona is private, its students are assured the right to free speech both by the university's own policies?which promise that the college "respects the rights of free speech and peaceable assembly and supports their exercise"?and by California law, which applies the First Amendment to private, secular colleges and universities. California's "Leonard Law" (California Education Code ? 94367, named for its author, former California State Senator Bill Leonard) provides that "[n]o private postsecondary educational institution shall make or enforce any rule subjecting any student to disciplinary sanctions solely on the basis of conduct that is speech or other communication that, when engaged in outside the campus or facility of a private postsecondary institution, is protected from governmental restriction by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Section 2 of Article 1 of the California Constitution."

    So now, let's take a look at the ways in which Pomona's policies (or in some cases, the systemwide policies of the Claremont Colleges) infringe upon students' expressive rights.

    First, the "Five-College Poster and Banner Approval Policy" provides that "organizations are expected to refrain from using racial, gender or ethnic slurs, stereotypic depiction, or similar references in all advertising material" and also that "No advertising may contain explicit or implicit, written or pictorial references to alcohol beverages or drugs." While the first clause is most likely aimed at preventing the types of offensive party invitations that have gotten so many students in trouble around the country over the years, there are two problems with this. First, even highly offensive material is protected under the First Amendment and should be protected on any campus that claims to protect its students' right to free expression. In Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment protects even an extraordinarily offensive parody?in that case, a cartoon suggesting that the Reverend Jerry Falwell lost his virginity in a drunken encounter with his mother in an outhouse. The First Amendment protects offensive material, farce, profanity, and exaggeration. After all, these methods of communication are frequently used to make important political points. No campus that claims to take seriously the free speech rights of students can retaliate against a student merely for using offensive words.?

    Second, the wording of the policy is broad enough that it could squelch far more than the kind of speech at which it was presumably intended. People could easily argue that a flyer advertising a debate or speaker on a controversial issue contains a "stereotypic depiction" that renders the advertisement impermissible. For example, remember the uproar caused by a flyer at Cal Poly advertising a speech by an African-American social critic who authored a book entitled It's OK to Leave the Plantation. Or look back at Gonzaga University's attempt to discipline a student group for posting a flyer advertising a speech by the author of the book Why the Left Hates America. (In both cases, the challenged flyers contained the titles of the controversial books).

    The portion of the posting policy prohibiting any reference to alcohol or drugs is also too broad. The policy, taken literally, prohibits the advertisement of Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous meetings, as well as the advertisement of debates on pertinent topics such as marijuana policy reform or the sentencing disparity between offenders in possession of crack cocaine versus powdered cocaine. The fact that the university might claim it does not use the policy to prohibit those types of advertisements is irrelevant; the fact is that the policy, on its face, prohibits an entire category of constitutionally protected speech. It is incumbent upon the university to get the policies right?it should not be left to the students or to FIRE to point out these fairly obvious problems.

    Also of concern are two separate policies at Pomona prohibiting the electronic transmission of any "abusive" messages or images. The term "abusive" is so vague that it is impossible for students to know exactly what is prohibited, and this broad ban could potentially encompass protected speech. The term could refer only to the kind of severe and repetitive abuse that rises to the level of actual harassment (which would not be protected regardless), but it could also refer to a harshly worded argument that occurs in the course of a heated debate (which almost certainly would be protected). ?

    The Supreme Court held in Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U.S. 104, 108 (1972), that a law must "give a person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited, so that he may act accordingly," otherwise the law is unconstitutionally vague. The Court went on to state that "where a vague statute 'abut[s] upon sensitive areas of basic First Amendment freedoms,' it 'operates to inhibit the exercise of [those] freedoms.' Uncertain meanings inevitably lead citizens to 'steer far wider of the unlawful zone ... than if the boundaries of the forbidden areas were clearly marked.'" Grayned, 408 U.S. at 109 (internal citations omitted). This is what is known as an impermissible "chilling effect" on free speech.

    Finally, all five undergraduate Claremont Colleges maintain variations on a systemwide "Hate Crimes and Bias-Related Incidents Protocol" that also has the potential to chill protected speech on campus. Pomona's version of this protocol defines "bias related incidents" as "expressions of hostility against another person (or group) because of that person's (or group's) race, color, religion, ancestry, age, national origin, disability, gender or sexual orientation, or because the perpetrator perceives that the other person (or group) has one or more of those characteristics." Although the policy acknowledges (correctly) that some bias incidents "may be protected speech," it does not go far enough in making clear that protected speech will not be subject to punishment. As a result, the policy may have a serious chilling effect on free speech. For an example of how this policy could be changed, take a look at the bias reporting policy at the "green light" University of Virginia, which explicitly states that "[t]his definition is used for reporting and statistical purposes only. It carries no independent sanctioning weight or authority" and that?

    Some bias-motivated or otherwise disrespectful acts may be constitutionally protected speech and thus not subject to University disciplinary action or formal investigation. Indeed, as our founder Thomas Jefferson once wrote, "For here we are not afraid . . . to tolerate error so long as reason is free to combat it." However, we should do all that we can to foster a good dialogue on what is appropriate in our community of peers.?

    In order to avoid infringing on students' free speech rights, Pomona's policy must make similarly clear that protected speech will never be subject to investigation or discipline.

    Pomona College fares quite well compared to many of its peers when it comes to speech codes on campus, but it still has a bit of work to do in order to earn a green light rating from FIRE. As with all colleges and universities, we would be happy to help Pomona improve its policies.

    Source: http://thefire.org/article/15475.html

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    Tuesday, February 26, 2013

    timothyecarhart: Treat malware as biology to know it better

    Hal Hodson, technology reporter

    Classifying different kinds of malware is notoriously hard, but crucial if computer defences are to keep up with the ever-evolving ecosystem of malicious programs. Treating computer viruses as biological puzzle could help computer scientists get a better handle on the wide world of malware.?

    Ajit Narayanan and Yi Chen at the Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand, converted the signatures of 120 worms and viruses into an amino acid representation. The signatures are more usually presented in hexadecimals - a base-16 numbering system which uses the digits 0 to 9 as well as the letters a to f - but the amino acid "alphabet" is better suited to machine-learning techniques that can analyse a piece of code to figure out whether it matches a known malware signature.

    Generally, malware experts identify and calculate the signatures of new malware, but it can be hard for them keep up. While machine learning can help, it is limited because the hexadecimal signatures can be different lengths: Narayanan's team found that using machine learning to help classify the hexadecimal malware signatures resulted in accuracy no better than flipping a coin.

    But some techniques used in bioinformatics for comparing amino acid sequences take differing lengths into account. After applying these to malware, Narayanan's average accuracy for classifying the signatures automatically using machine learning rose to 85 per cent.

    Biology might help in other ways too. Narayanan notes that if further study shows malware evolution follows some of the same rules as amino acids and proteins, our knowledge of biological systems could be used to help fight it.

    Journal reference: arXiv:1302.3668

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    Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/28ee8ddf/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Conepercent0C20A130C0A20Cmalware0Ebiology0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

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    Source: http://timothyecarhart.blogspot.com/2013/02/treat-malware-as-biology-to-know-it.html

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    SciArt on Google+

    A couple of years ago, when the massive and amazing all-in-one scienceblogging.org was launching, the organizers asked if I thought there were enough artists blogging about science-related artwork to make an RSS feed that would update a few times a day or week, that could collect science-based artists under one roof. I said sure, and launched the Science Artists Feed.

    It?s a couple of years on, and I?m happy to say the Science Artists Feed has grown to over 170 blogs, and updates with tremendous speed. ?In the past, I?ve highlighted posts that caught my eye in the Scumble series of posts. The Feed became a great way for me and others to keep our eyes on what was happening in the most innovative rapidly-changing field of art today.

    Times change. RSS feeds still play a vital role. But communication and engagement have largely moved around.

    Group blogs and blogs featuring science-based art ? blogs like ART Evolved, Mad Art Lab, Street Anatomy, SONSI, here on Symbiartic and many more ? keep changing and growing while featuring a bewildering array of artists. Artists on the cutting edge of our understanding of everything from dinosaurs to microbes to nebulae.

    I have been dissatisfied with the Science Artists Feed for a while. While I think it?s useful, and it?s amazing that each month I still receive a couple of requests to join, it really wasn?t a community. So last December, we at Symbiartic started the Google+ SciArt Circle Community.

    Click the image to see the Community!

    The community has grown pretty quickly, and we?re continuing to moderate new members though the posts are publicly visible.

    From the description:

    This community invites creators to post their own artwork and links, or bloggers writing interviews and review of science-art to post their own links.

    This is a public community so everyone may enjoy the content posted by artists. To join, make sure we know you are a creator! Fill out your profile.

    Imagery enables insight and transforms understanding. Your science-related visual art is welcome here!

    One of my goals with the community is to avoid ?gee-whiz? link spam. It?s all too easy to fill up the community with content of the ??I saw this cool science-artsy thing on the internet one time? ?-type. By encouraging the creators to post their own work, we have a more enriching discussions about how they made it and why. Here are a few examples from the community page:

    ?

    Mieke Roth's Ultimate Croc Anatomy Project

    Mieke Roth has been keeping us updated about her Ultimate Croc Anatomy Project. Watch for more about this on Symbiartic soon and check out her IndieGoGo page! ?Donate now for this ambitious project to generate a 3D crocodile, inside and out.

    ?

    SciArt Hangout!

    Parasitologist and artist Tommy Leung (Symbiartic interview here) has been hosting regular SciArt Hangouts on weekends ? join the Community to keep up to date or follow Tommy on Twitter @The_Episiarch.

    ?

    New work by Louise Hughes.

    Artists such as Louise Hughes have been sharing new galleryshow openings and events.

    ?

    The community is lively, varied, and friendly. I can?t wait to see what new connections and collaborations develop here. ?Come check it out on Google+!

    Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=68f6ca254799fd42965feaa721d04f19

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    Return of sectarian threats in Iraq raises alarm

    BAGHDAD (AP) ? The fliers began turning up at Sunni households in the Iraqi capital's Jihad neighborhood last week bearing a chilling message: Get out now or face "great agony" soon.

    The leaflets were signed by the Mukhtar Army, a new Shiite militant group with ties to Iran's Revolutionary Guard. "The zero hour has come. So leave along with your families. ... You are the enemy," the messages warned.

    Such overt threats all but disappeared as the darkest days of outright sectarian fighting waned in 2008 and Iraq stepped back from the brink of civil war. Their re-emergence now ? nearly a decade after the U.S.-led invasion ? is a worrying sign that rising sectarian tensions are again gnawing away at Iraqi society.

    Iraqis increasingly fear that militants on both sides of the country's sectarian divide are gearing up for a new round of violence that could undo the fragile gains Iraq has made in recent years.

    Members of the country's Sunni minority have been staging mass rallies for two months, with some calling for the toppling of a Shiite-led government they feel discriminates against them and is too closely allied with neighboring Iran. Sunni extremists have been stepping up large-scale attacks on predominantly Shiite targets, and concerns are growing that the brutal and increasingly sectarian fighting in Syria could spill across the border.

    Many Sunnis who received the Jihad neighborhood messages are taking the warnings at face value and considering making a move.

    "Residents are panicking. All of us are obsessed with these fliers," said Waleed Nadhim, a Sunni mobile phone shop owner who lives in the neighborhood. The 33-year-old father plans to leave the area because he doesn't have faith in the police to keep his family safe. "In a lawless country like Iraq, nobody can ignore threats like this."

    Iraqi security forces have beefed up their presence in and around Jihad. The middle-class community, nestled along a road to the airport in southwest Baghdad, was home to Sunni civil servants and security officials under Saddam Hussein's regime, though many Shiites now live there too.

    The Shiites, who are emboldened by a government and security forces dominated by their sect, have made their presence felt in Jihad in recent years. A Sunni mosque bears graffiti hailing a revered Shiite saint. A billboard on a major road shows firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr flanked by a fighter gripping a machine gun.

    Jihad was one of the earliest flashpoints in Baghdad's descent into sectarian bloodshed. In July 2006, the neighborhood witnessed a brazen massacre that left as many as 41 residents dead and marked an escalation in Iraq's sectarian bloodletting. In that incident, Shiite militiamen set up checkpoints to stop morning commuters, singled out Sunnis based on their names and systematically executed them in front of their Shiite neighbors.

    Residents now fear the events in southwest Baghdad could be the spark for a new round of tit-for-tat killing. Two weeks ago, a Sunni and a Shiite were each killed in separate attacks in Sadiyah, next to Jihad, said a 30-year-old Sunni government employee living in the area who gave her name only as Umm Abdullah al-Taie, or mother of Abdullah.

    "Nobody dares to go out after dark," she said. "People have started to hear sectarian alarm bells ringing again."

    The Mukhtar Army whose named appeared on the threatening leaflets was formed by Wathiq al-Batat, a onetime senior official in the Hezbollah Brigades. He announced the creation of the new militant group earlier this month.

    Hezbollah in Iraq is believed to be funded and trained by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard and was among the Shiite militias that targeted U.S. military bases months before their December 2011 withdrawal.

    Al-Batat told Iraq's al-Sharqiya channel that he formed the Mukhtar Army to confront Sunnis who might attempt to topple the government in the same way that Syrian rebels are trying to overthrow Bashar Assad's Iranian-backed regime in neighboring Syria. He said the group is advised by Iran's hard-line Quds Force, which oversees external operations of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. He declined to say whether the group received any further support from Tehran.

    Little is known about Mukhtar Army's size or capabilities. Abdullah al-Rikabi, a spokesman for the group, boasted it has 1 million members and described al-Batat as loyal to Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government has issued an arrest warrant against al-Batat, though he still walks free. In a speech Saturday, the Shiite premier vowed to prosecute anyone who seeks to incite sectarian strife.

    The Mukhtar Army denies being behind the threats, which some Shiites believe are a ruse to tar their sect and inflame sectarian divisions.

    "We have nothing to do with the fliers," said al-Rikabi, the group's spokesman. He accused members of Saddam's now-outlawed Baath party and al-Qaida of making the threats in an effort to ignite civil war.

    Even though they are busy hunting down the group's leader, Iraqi authorities have their doubts about the Shiite militia's involvement in the leaflets too.

    Two senior security officials said intelligence agents have obtained an al-Qaida hit list containing detailed names and residential information about people ? both Sunnis and Shiites ? living in mixed areas. They believe the group plans to target residents one by one, alternating by sect, in an effort to spread panic and suggest an atmosphere of retaliatory killings.

    They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose information about security operations.

    Threatening fliers from both Sunni and Shiite militias aimed at members of the opposite sect also have begun turning up in Baqouba, a former al-Qaida stronghold north of Baghdad that has a history of sectarian violence, according to Diyala provincial council member Sadiq al-Hussein.

    For those living in areas where the threats turned up, their source matters less than what they portend.

    Jafaar al-Fatlawi, a Shiite government employee who lives in the Jihad neighborhood, said he has started carrying a pistol with him just to answer the door and takes his family to spend the night with relatives elsewhere in the city.

    "Everybody in the neighborhood expects sectarian fighting to erupt any minute," he said. "Our security forces weren't able to stop the sectarian war before and now they'll fail again."

    ___

    Associated Press writer Sameer N. Yacoub contributed reporting.

    ___

    Follow Adam Schreck on Twitter at http://twitter.com/adamschreck

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/return-sectarian-threats-iraq-raises-alarm-064831443.html

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    Investing Lessons from the Masters- Warren Buffett

    Warren Buffett is probably the pin up boy for value investing. And he?s become fabulously wealthy in the process . But what can you learn from Buffett?s style of investing??

    ?

    Who is Buffett?

    Aside from being one of the top 3 or 4 wealthiest people in the world, Buffett is one of the founders of Berkshire Hathaway a listed investment company on the NYSE. He is famous for turning an initial stake of $105,000 into a $30B + fortune.

    How does he invest?

    Buffett is a classic contrarian investor focussed on extracting value from companies with strong competitive advantages that are out of favor with investors. He focusses on the best businesses, whether or not they pay dividends, that he plans to hold forever. In fact, Buffett is famous is famous for saying that in his view, the best time to sell is never.

    Buffett?s approach to investing is focussed on first identifying a durable competitive advantage typically created by the production of a unique product or service with high barriers to entry. This is best illustrated in the case of an investment like the Coca Cola (KO). Coca Cola ?has been selling a variety of soft drink beverages for years. It has strongly protected, unique Intellectual Property. Coca Cola has produced sustained consistent earnings growth over many years.

    Buffett loves to buy on bad news. He is famous for moving in on companies that have strong competitive advantages that went through some tough times that made them out of favor with the general markets. Businesses fall out of favor with the stock market for a variety of reasons including stock market corrections, recession, individual business problems or unforseen black swan events such as war, natural disasters, acts of terrorism etc.

    Classic Warren Buffett Plays

    Geico. In an effort to boost profitability, Geico decided to ensure any and all comers at one point, including those that were more accident prone. As a result of a relaxation in insurance underwriting provisions, Geico had started to experience an increase in insurance losses which placed in a tough spot at one point in the mid 1970?s. Sensing an opportunity, Buffett made an investment in the business which returned 40x before he subsequently bought out the company in full in the 1990?s

    American Express ? American Express was involved in an insurance scandal, known as the ?salad oil scandal? in the 1960?s where they ?verified? the existence of salad oil in a oil tanker. Unfortunately for American Express, this salad oil did not exist in fact. American Express was on the hook for this loss to the tine of $60M, which sent investors running away from the stock. Of course, the existence of the loss had nothing to do with the underlying strengths of the company and so Buffet made his move with an investment that has substantially appreciated over time.

    Goldman Sachs ? During the crisis of 2008-2009, investors were fleeing the banks in the fear that every one of them was carrying some sort of toxic asset on their books. Goldman Sachs, was similarly affected by a lack of investor confidence in the fear that it may have been holding some toxic credit derivative assets in its portfolio. As investors sold down the stock, Buffett again moved in with a $5B investment of preferred stock and warrants that allowed him to purchase stock in the company should the price rise above a certain level. The investment paid Buffett an annual dividend of $500M a year. It was so successful for Buffett that Goldman Sachs actually repurchased the preferred shares in 2011.

    Buffett had similar plays in effect with Bank of America and General Electric at various times during the financial crisis

    What does he hold now?

    Buffet still has holdings in a variety of companies with strong competitive advantages. His holdings include companies such as Coca Cola, American Express, Wells Fargo, IBM, GE, Walmart, Visa, Bank of America, Johnson & Johnson and Moody?s.

    What can you learn from Buffett?

    Invest in strong businesses ? Buffett gravitates toward strong business with sustainable competitive advantages. He doesn?t look to buy junk, even if its on sale.

    Don?t fear negative circumstances ? Buffet welcomes bad news. whether its general bad news in the economy or company specific bad news. Rather than running away from it, some of Buffett?s best performing investments came during bad times in the economy or for a stock.

    You make money from bear markets, you realize the returns in bull markets ? Many of the Buffett plays discussed above were made during bear markets, either market specific or stock specific. While Buffett?s play was made during bear markets, he realized the value of this play several years later when opinion turned in favor of a specific stock or in the economy (and when companies like GE, Goldman Sachs tried to repurchase his loans!).

    There are many books that have been written on Buffett and his investment methodology. One of my favorites is The New Buffetology by Mary Buffett if you are interested in reading more.

    ?

    Source: http://www.financiallyintegrated.com/investing/investing-lessons-from-the-masters-warren-buffett/

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    How To Increase Your Online Business With YouTube | Internet and ...

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

    Source: http://internetandbusinessesonlinearticl.blogspot.com/2013/02/how-to-increase-your-online-business.html

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    OPTiM's Optia Android screensharing and remote control app hands-on

    OPTiM's Optia Android screensharing handson

    For anybody who has had to support a friend or loved one through an emotional cellphone crisis, rejoice: your savior in the form of OPTiM's Optia smartphone-to-smartphone remote control has arrived. The premise here is that using a friend based system with invites users can add contacts to the app -- think parents, grandparents -- on their Android handset then simply ask for help or offer to help that friend. The recipient clicks yes, and the remote control session begins.

    OPTiM's man at the booth, Taiga, took us through the entire process from adding somebody to your set then connecting and finally controlling the phone. The entire ordeal was fairly quick and smooth considering the congestion of the halls here at Mobile World Congress. We'd bet over WiFi or even LTE the experience would be nothing but smoother. Control of the session gives the helper completes access including home button, back, settings and so forth. Scrolling across screens and apps works exactly as it would on your own device, albeit slower -- but even on a poor cellular connection performance is very good. This is a must have app for anybody that regularly helps others or needs help themselves. The best bit? It is currently completely $free on the Play store. Video tour of it all in action is just below the break.

    Filed under: ,

    Comments

    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/25/optims-optia-android-screensharing-hands-on/

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    Oxfam slates AB Foods on development impact, praises Nestle

    ZURICH (Reuters) - Associated British Foods scored lowest among 10 of the top food and beverage companies assessed for their social and environmental impact on poor countries, development group Oxfam said on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, Nestle and Unilever ranked highest for their policies on seven areas assessed by Oxfam as critical to sustainable agriculture: women, small-scale farmers, farm workers, water, land, climate change and transparency.

    Oxfam said in the report that Nestle and Unilever had done more to tackle social and environmental risks within their supply chains than companies it ranked less favourably including AB Foods and Kellogg Co.

    Big food and beverage companies have come under increasing scrutiny in recent years over their sourcing of raw materials, courting criticism on issues ranging from child labour on cocoa farms to the impact of palm oil plantations on rain forests.

    Oxfam said it had launched the "Behind the Brands" campaign to try to assess "ubiquitous" declarations of sustainability made by food and beverage companies as well as a proliferation of corporate social responsibility programmes.

    "There are enormous gaps in terms of basic transparency which makes it very difficult to hold these companies to account," Raymond Offenheiser, President of Oxfam America, told a phone conference for journalists.

    "The goal is not to criticise these companies for poor performance but encourage a 'race to the top'."

    Oxfam ranked Nestle first, Unilever second, Coca-Cola third, PepsiCo fourth, Mars fifth, Danone and Mondelez International joint sixth, Kellogg Co and General Mills join eighth, and AB Foods in 10th place. (www.oxfam.org/behindthebrands)

    AB Foods, whose brands include Twinings tea, Ryvita crackers and Ovaltine cocoa drink, rejected its ranking.

    "We treat local producers, communities and the environment with the utmost respect," an AB Foods spokesman said.

    "The company has worked hard for many years, over a wide geography, at all levels of the supply chain to ensure its suppliers meet the highest ethical standards."

    Jane Nelson, director of the Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative at Harvard Kennedy School, said the 10 companies Oxfam had studied had already made major progress in improving their impact on poor farmers.

    "These 10 are among the most respected and best managed companies in the world," she told the Oxfam call. "They are well ahead of other companies in the agricultural system."

    Among positive developments, Oxfam highlighted the fact that all of the companies, bar Coca-Cola, have signed up to more sustainable policies on palm oil. It also praised Unilever's target to halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.

    (Editing by David Cowell)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oxfam-slates-ab-foods-development-impact-praises-nestle-000335212--sector.html

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    Ang Lee's win for 'Life of Pi' thrills Taiwanese

    Ang Lee poses with his award for best directing for "Life of Pi" during the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

    Ang Lee poses with his award for best directing for "Life of Pi" during the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

    Presenters Jane Fonda, right, and Michael Douglas present the award for best directing to Ang Lee for "Life of Pi," left, during the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

    TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) ? A second Academy Award for best director has thrust Taiwan native Ang Lee into the top ranks of world filmmakers and made him a national hero on this diplomatically isolated island.

    Lee's victory at Hollywood's annual Oscar extravaganza on Sunday for the fantasy epic "Life of Pi" followed his 2005 win for "Brokeback Mountain." Garnering additional awards for visual effects, cinematography and original score, "Life of Pi" pulled down four Oscars, the most of any film this year.

    News of Lee's triumph electrified Taiwanese, many of whom watched a live broadcast early Monday. It was not only the surprise nature of the directorial award ? "Lincoln" director Steven Spielberg was considered the category's clear frontrunner ? but the intense pride they felt at a native son making it big in the world at large.

    Since losing most of its diplomatic allies to China in the 1970s and 1980s ? the two sides split in a civil war more than six decades ago ? Taiwan has been on the outer fringes of the international community. It is now recognized by only 23 countries ? mostly impoverished and devoid of influence ? and outside of information technology circles, its global footprint is small.

    Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou saw Lee's triumph as at least a temporary reversal of those fortunes, thanking Lee for "pushing Taiwan toward the world."

    "Taiwanese are proud of you," Ma said in a congratulatory message.

    Making Lee's Oscar win even sweeter was Taiwan's key role in the production of "Life of Pi," which tells the story of a shipwrecked Indian boy sharing his small boat with a ferocious tiger. A majority of the film was shot at a specially constructed water tank in the central city of Taichung, and Taiwanese took many of the most important jobs in seeing the film to completion.

    Taiwanese production team member Mike Yang said Lee had the total devotion of the Taichung crew.

    "If he wanted us to make the wave bigger or the movement of the animated tiger more detailed, we were willing to cooperate, and not because he was Ang Lee but because he commanded?respect," Yang said.

    Born in the southern Taiwanese city of Pingtung in 1954, Lee went to the U.S. in 1979 to study filmmaking at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. He burst into international prominence with "Sense and Sensibility" in 1995 and was nominated for best director for "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," which won the 2001 Oscar for best foreign language film.

    Taiwan's film industry has been in the doldrums for more than two decades. Once seen as a world trendsetter for its subtle presentation of human interactions, it now languishes well behind other Asian cinemas, including those in South Korea and Hong Kong.

    Lee also has a strong following in China, which claims Taiwan as part of its territory, and Chinese movie critic Meng Yuankai congratulated Lee on his win. "It's pride for the ethnic Chinese group. Can't wait for the next production," he said in his Sina Weibo account.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-25-AS-Taiwan-Ang-Lee/id-5e8e96a3e9d84ca19ca65ae91fe5458c

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    South Africa: will Pistorius train while on bail?

    In this photo taken Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius appears in court during his bail hearing in Pretoria, South Africa, for the shooting death of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp. A spokeswoman for Oscar Pistorius says he has reported to authorities under the bail terms in the murder case against him in Preoria, Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

    In this photo taken Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius appears in court during his bail hearing in Pretoria, South Africa, for the shooting death of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp. A spokeswoman for Oscar Pistorius says he has reported to authorities under the bail terms in the murder case against him in Preoria, Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

    Olympic athlete, Oscar Pistorius , in court Friday Feb. 22, 2013 in Pretoria, South Africa, for his bail hearing charged with the shooting death of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp. The defense and prosecution both completed their arguments with the magistrate soon to rule if the double-amputee athlete can be freed before trial or if he must stay behind bars pending trial. (AP Photo)

    (AP) ? Oscar Pistorius on Monday informed South African authorities that he wants to resume athletic training while on bail for the murder case against him, a government official said.

    A spokeswoman for the Olympic runner, however, denied that he was making immediate plans to return to the track while awaiting trial for the Feb. 14 shooting death of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.

    "Absolutely not," said spokeswoman Janine Hills. "He is currently in mourning and his focus is not on his sports."

    The double-amputee Paralympian discussed bail terms with his probation officer and a correctional official at the Pretoria Magistrate's Court in the capital, according to correctional officials. The guidelines will determine his daily routine until his next court appearance on June 4.

    "It's his wish to continue to practice," James Smalberger, chief deputy commissioner of the department of correctional services, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

    Smalberger said the issue came up because authorities need to know his movements whenever he leaves the home where he is staying.

    The timing of any resumption of training was uncertain.

    Pistorius' longtime coach, Ampie Louw, declined to comment on any training plans for the runner, referring questions to a spokeswoman for the athlete's family.

    Louw had said when the runner was in detention that he wanted to put him back into training in the event that he was granted bail. But he had also said Pistorius could be "heartbroken" and unwilling to immediately run again.

    Pistorius, who was released on bail Friday, is staying at the house of his uncle, Arnold, in the affluent suburb of Waterkloof in Pretoria. He faces life imprisonment if convicted.

    Pistorius is charged with premeditated murder in the killing of Steenkamp, in the early hours of Valentine's Day. Prosecutors say the pair had an argument before Steenkamp was killed; Pistorius says he mistook her for an intruder and shot her accidentally.

    Smalberger said officials will visit Pistorius at his uncle's home at least four times a month, and that the runner indicated his interest in training again. More planning must occur before the start of any training.

    "We want a training program from his coach so that we have backup for his movements," Smalberger said.

    "He's not under house arrest, but his movements need to be known to us so that we don't pitch there and he's not there," he said. "We agree on 'free time' normally during the course of the day, and in the evening we expect him to be home."

    Pistorius' 2013 season had been geared towards the Aug. 10-18 World Championships in Moscow, where the South African 4x400 relay team will be trying for another medal to add to the silver it won at the 2011 edition.

    Chief Magistrate Desmond Nair had set bail at 1 million rand ($113,000). The 26-year-old track star was also ordered to hand over his passports, turn in any guns he owns and keep away from his upscale home in a gated community in Pretoria, the scene of the crime.

    He cannot leave the district of Pretoria without his probation officer's permission and is not allowed to consume drugs or alcohol, the magistrate said.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-25-Pistorius-Shooting/id-1c2373a64b104c5cac49e21c091d2f2e

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