Sunday, June 30, 2013

Sam Mendes' Charlie And The Chocolate Factory Musical Open For ...

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory premiered this week on London?s West End, and it looks like a DELICIOUS staging!

While director Sam Mendes might be more used to working with Bond girls lately, he manages to bring out the sexy villainry of these OOMPA LOOMPAS!!!

Okay, not really. But we still can't WAIT to see this show!

Check it outttttttttt (above)!

Tags: broadway babies, charlie and the chocolate factory, etc., london, oompa loompa, opening, play, sam mendes, theatre, trailer, west end

Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-06-29-charlie-and-the-chocolate-factory-opens-on-the-west-end

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Aaron Hernandez Motive: Keeping Odin Lloyd Quiet About Previous Murders?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/aaron-hernandez-motive-keeping-odin-lloyd-quiet-about-previous-m/

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

U.S. asked Ecuador to deny Snowden asylum, leader says

By Brian Ellsworth

QUITO (Reuters) - Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa said on Saturday the United States had asked him not to grant asylum for former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden in a "cordial" telephone conversation he held with U.S. Vice President Joe Biden.

Correa said he vowed to respect Washington's opinion in evaluating the request. The Andean nation says it cannot begin processing Snowden's request unless he reaches Ecuador or one of its embassies.

Snowden, who is wanted by the United States for leaking details about U.S. communications surveillance programs, is believed to still be at the Sheremetyevo airport in Moscow after leaving Hong Kong.

Praising Biden's good manners in contrast to "brats" in the U.S. Congress who had threatened to cut Ecuador's trade benefits over the Snowden issue, Correa said during his weekly television broadcast: "He communicated a very courteous request from the United States that we reject the (asylum) request."

Biden initiated the phone call, Correa said.

"When he (Snowden) arrives on Ecuadorean soil, if he arrives ... of course, the first opinions we will seek are those of the United States," Correa said.

A senior White House official traveling with President Barack Obama in Africa on Saturday confirmed the conversation had taken place.

The case has been a major embarrassment for the Obama administration, which is now facing withering criticism around the world for the espionage program known as Prism that Snowden revealed.

A German magazine on Saturday, citing secret documents, reported that the United States bugged European Union offices and gained access to EU internal computer networks, which will likely add to the furor over U.S. spying efforts.

Correa has for years been at loggerheads with Washington on issues ranging from the war on drugs to a long-running environmental dispute with U.S. oil giant Chevron.

A leftist economist who received a doctorate from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, Correa denied he was seeking to perturb relations and said he had "lived the happiest days of my life" in the United States.

But he said the United States has not heeded Ecuador's request to extradite citizens sought by the law, including bankers he said have already been sentenced.

"There's a clear double standard here. If the United States is pursuing someone, other countries have to hand them over," Correa said. "But there are so many fugitives from our justice system (in the United States) ... and they don't return them."

TRAVEL DOCUMENT CONFUSION

Correa said Ecuador's London consulate issued Snowden an unauthorized safe-passage document, potentially as a result of communication with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is living in the London embassy after receiving asylum last year.

Assange said on Monday that Snowden had received refugee papers from the Ecuador government to secure him safe passage as he fled Hong Kong for Russia. Correa's government had originally denied this.

A "safe-pass" document published by U.S. Spanish-language media network Univision which circulated widely online purported to offer Snowden safe passage for the purpose of political asylum. The United States has revoked his passport.

"The truth is that the consul (overstepped) his role and will face sanction," Correa said during the broadcast.

The decision was "probably in communication with Julian Assange and out of desperation that Mr. Snowden was going to be captured, but this was without the authorization of the Ecuadorean government."

Correa's critics have in recent days accused him of letting Assange take charge of crucial foreign policy matters.

Assange, who is wanted in Sweden for questioning over sexual assault allegations, has not been able to leave the London embassy because Britain will not give him safe passage.

Snowden's lack of a valid travel document appears to be one of the primary obstacles to his leaving the transit area of the Moscow international airport. Without a passport, he cannot board a commercial flight or move through airport immigration, according to diplomacy experts.

Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino declined on Thursday to comment on whether Ecuador would send a government plane to pick Snowden up. But Correa has indicated he does not have plans to provide Snowden with transport to an embassy.

Correa scoffed at reports that he himself had been aware that the document was issued or was involved in the decision.

"They think I'm so dumb that I ordered our consul in London to write a safe passage document for a U.S. citizen traveling from Hong Kong to Russia. That's simply absurd," he said.

(Additional reporting by Mark Felsenthal in Johannesburg; Editing by Daniel Wallis, Vicki Allen and Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biden-spoke-ecuadors-correa-snowden-white-house-180538899.html

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PasswordBox


When you're planning to introduce a new product, it makes sense to review competing products, taking note of their best features and of any features that seem to be missing. The creators of the PasswordBox password manager seem to have done just that. Quite a few of PasswordBox's feature resemble those of top competitors, but it adds features not found in any of them.

Quite a few password managers use a freemium marketing model. LastPass 2.0 Premium includes significant features not found in the free LastPass 2.0. You can use Dashlane 2.0 and Keeper 5.0 for free on one device, but syncing multiple devices requires a paid subscription.

PasswordBox's freemium model is quite simple. The free edition is completely full-featured, but you can only store 25 passwords. After that you need to pay for a subscription, $12 per year. Note that you can import passwords from any one of several competitors, even if it pushes your total past 25. Don't want to pay? You can "go pro" by successfully referring five friends, and when you do, you get a lifetime license, not just a single year. That's quite a deal!

Getting Started
PasswordBox installs in a flash as an extension for Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, or Safari. Just click the toolbar button to pull down its main window. To help get you started, the program presents a collection of popular websites for which it has already created login templates. Click one of the buttons, enter your username and password, and you've created a one-click login for that site.

Like Dashlane, PasswordBox has a built-in system to walk new users through the product's features. As you accomplish each task, it gets crossed out. In order to reach 100 percent, you must add a password, try a one-click login from PasswordBox, and add a total of eight passwords. You also have to send an invitation to at least one friend, and identify a trusted person to receive your passwords in the event of your death; more about that feature later.

When you've accomplished all the setup tasks, the notification bar vanishes, just as in Dashlane. If you need further instruction in how to use the program, you'll find a collection of short video tutorials accessible from the Settings page, as well as built-in help and FAQs.

There is one setting you'll probably want to change. Once you open your browser and launch PasswordBox, it stays unlocked until you shut down the browser. It does have an auto-lock feature, but it's disabled by default. I'd recommend setting it to lock after a fairly short amount of idle time. Note that the corresponding feature in Keeper is always enabled, and the longest timeout you can set is ten minutes.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/B6GD54-3leE/0,2817,2421087,00.asp

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"Airports see more sincere kisses than wedding halls. The walls of hospitals have heard more prayers..."

Airports see more sincere kisses than wedding halls. The walls of hospitals have heard more prayers than the walls of churches.
274,841 notes
Posted on Friday, 28 June
Reblogged from: dolll-face
Posted by: another-troubled-soul
Source: (via floatingmemories)

(Source: another-troubled-soul)


Source: http://lostin-mywonderland.tumblr.com/post/54151720838

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Boston bombing suspect indicted

Dzokhar Tsarnaev was indicted on 30 charges related to the Boston Marathon bombings. (FBI via Getty Images)

Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev allegedly left a written confession in a boat where he was captured by law enforcement officials in April, writing, ?I don?t like killing innocent people,? but suggesting it was ?allowed? because of U.S. actions abroad.

?The U.S. Government is killing our innocent civilians. I can?t stand to see such evil go unpunished. We Muslims are one body, you hurt one, you hurt us all,? Tsarnaev allegedly wrote. ?Stop killing our innocent people, we will stop.?

The details were revealed in a 30-count indictment by a federal grand jury on Thursday that charges Tsarnaev, 19, with using weapons of mass destruction in the April 15 bombings and killing four people.

Authorities say Tsnarnaev and his older brother, Tamerlan, planted two pressure-cooker bombs near the marathon?s finish line. The bombs, which were detonated within seconds of each other, killed three people and injured more than 260. The indictment says the bombs were constructed in a manner "designed to shred flesh, shatter bone and cause extreme pain and suffering, as well as death."

Tsarnaev was also indicted in the April 18 death of MIT police Officer Sean Collier, who was shot while Tsarnaev and his brother were on the run from police. According to the indictment, the brothers were heavily armed while attempting to escape, having in their possession five IEDs, a handgun, ammunition, a machete and a hunting knife.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev was killed after a shootout with police on April 19 in Watertown, Mass., outside Boston. The indictment offered new details on his death, saying it came after the brothers were trying to "shoot, bomb, kill or disable" police officers trying to apprehend them. Tamerlan was tackled by three police officers when his younger brother ran back to a Mercedes-Benz they had stolen earlier and "drove it directly at the three officers." One of the officers tried to "drag" the older brother out of the way, but Dzhokhar Tsarnaev ran over him "seriously injuring him and contributing to his death."

Tsarnaev was captured later that day, hiding in a boat parked in a nearby backyard. He's currently being held in a federal prison outside Boston.

According to the indictment, Tsarnaev downloaded several pieces of extremist Islamic propaganda from the Internet before the bombings, including a book that warned Muslims not to give allegiance to governments who invade foreign lands. The book featured a forward from Anwar al-Awlaki, an American-born Muslim cleric who became a senior operative in al-Qaida and was killed in a 2011 U.S. drone strike in Yemen.

According to the U.S. attorney's office in Boston, 17 of the charges against Tsarnaev could bring the death penalty or life in prison. He's scheduled to be arraigned on July 10 at the U.S. District Court in Boston.

Liz Goodwin contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/news/boston-marathon-bombing-suspect-dzhokhar-tsarnaev-indicted-185408539.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

WD Arkeia R120s and R220s Network Backup Appliances Debut


New Fourth Generation?Delivers Higher Performance, Doubled Disk Capacity, and Improved Ease-of-Use

By Western Digital

WD?, a Western Digital (NASDAQ:?WDC) company and world leader in digital storage solutions, today unveiled the fourth generation of?WD Arkeia? network backup appliances, delivering an all-in-one backup and disaster recovery solution for small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs).

The new line up consists of four rack-mount appliance models with larger internal disk capacities, faster processors, increased memory, and integrated solid state drives (SSDs) to shorten backup time and accelerate data recovery. The bundled WD Arkeia v10.1 software delivers new support for ?seed and feed? technology to support hybrid cloud backups. This allows companies to move backups offsite via network replication rather than shipment of tapes.

?In announcing their fourth generation of purpose-built network backup appliances, WD Arkeia is delivering comprehensive SMB backup solutions that go beyond simple raw capacity increases,? said?Liz Conner, senior research analyst, IDC. ?WD Arkeia offers easy-to-use data protection that takes the guess work out of purchasing, configuring and managing data backup & recovery, while also embedding features such as deduplication and hybrid cloud backup for small- and medium-sized businesses or remote offices.?

WD Launches Fourth Generation WD Arkeia Network Backup Appliances.

?WD is committed to providing the growing SMB marketplace with a comprehensive suite of storage solutions,? said?Jim Welsh, executive vice president and general manager of WD?s branded business unit. With unique features, these next-generation WD Arkeia network backup appliances offer solutions providers and their customers a simple, smart way to protect their data.

Fourth-Generation Performance and Ease-of-Use

Fourth-generation WD Arkeia backup appliances deliver performance and ease-of-use at an affordable price for SMBs. These new appliances extend the upper range of WD Arkeia appliances and complement available lower-range appliances. WD Arkeia R120s and R220s, both with optional LTO4 tape drives, integrate dual-core Atom and quad-core Xeon processors, respectively.? Existing appliances deliver disk capacities from 2 TB to 12 TB and will also bundle WD Arkeia v10.1. The new fourth-generation appliances offer:

  • Increased Backup and Recovery Speed: New features include integrated LTO5 tape drives, processor upgrades to a maximum of 2 hex-core Intel? Xeon?, integrated SSDs on select models, and memory up to 96 GB to allow for increased data backup and recovery speeds of both files and disk images. WD Arkeia?s patented Progressive Deduplication? technology accelerates backups by compressing data at source computers before transfer over local area networks (LANs) or wide area networks (WANs).
  • Higher Storage Capacity: Storage capacity doubles from the third generation, with raw capacity now ranging up to 48 TB, configured in RAID-6.
  • Improved Ease-of-Use: Version 10.1 of WD Arkeia software, delivered with the new generation, includes an on-boarding wizard to streamline the appliance setup process.
  • Storage Reliability: All new WD Arkeia appliances feature WD enterprise-class WD RE? hard drives for maximum data integrity.
  • Simplified Tape-free, Offsite Storage: Version 10.1 of WD Arkeia software extends support for hybrid cloud backup capabilities to the full line of WD Arkeia appliances. ?Seed and feed? capabilities allow administrators to supplement network replication of backup sets offsite by using USB-connected hard drives to transfer initial and large backup sets and also to size WAN bandwidth for the replication of nightly incremental backups.

Pricing and Availability

WD Arkeia fourth generation network backup appliances ? models RA4300, RA4300T, RA5300, RA6300 ? will be available inJuly 2013?through select DMR?s and WD-authorized value-added resellers (VARs) in the US,?Canada, and?Europe. ?Manufacturer?s Suggested Retail Price, including hardware and software, begins at?$9,990 USD.? WD Arkeia network backup appliances are covered by one year of unlimited access to technical support, one year of software updates, and a one-year limited hardware warranty.

About WD Arkeia Software and Appliances

WD Arkeia backup appliances are fast, easy-to-use, and affordable solutions for data backup and disaster recovery. The award-winning WD Arkeia solutions safeguard more than 100,000 networks for 7,000 customers in 70 countries.

About WD

WD, a Western Digital company, is a long-time innovator and storage industry leader. As a storage technology pacesetter, the company produces reliable, high-performance hard disk drives and solid state drives. These drives are deployed by OEMs and integrators in desktop and mobile computers, enterprise computing systems, embedded systems and consumer electronics applications, as well as by the company in providing its own storage products. WD?s leading storage devices and systems, networking products, media players and software solutions empower people around the world to easily save, store, protect, share and experience their content on multiple devices. WD was established in 1970 and is headquartered in?Irvine, Calif.?For more information, please visit the company?s website at?www.wd.com.

Western Digital Corp. (NASDAQ:?WDC),?Irvine, Calif., is a global provider of products and services that empower people to create, manage, experience and preserve digital content. Its companies design and manufacture storage devices, networking equipment and home entertainment products under the WD, HGST and G-Technology brands. Visit the Investor section of the company?s website (www.westerndigital.com) to access a variety of financial and investor information.

This news release contains forward-looking statements, including statements relating to the expected availability date for the WD Arkeia fourth generation network backup appliances in?July 2013?in the US,?Canada, and?Europe. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements, including changes in markets, demand, global economic or political conditions and or other risks detailed from time-to-time in our Securities and Exchange Commission filings and reports, including, but not limited to, our most recent quarterly report on Form 10-Q and our annual report on Form 10-K, to which your attention is directed. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak as of the date hereof, and WD undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances.

Western Digital, WD, and the WD logo are registered trademarks of Western Digital Technologies, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries; WD Arkeia is a trademark of Western Digital Technologies, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. Intel and Xeon are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and other countries.?Other marks may be mentioned herein that belong to other companies. All other brand and product names mentioned herein are the property of their respective companies. As used for storage capacity, one terabyte (TB) = one trillion bytes. Total accessible capacity varies depending on operating environment.


Source: http://benchmarkreviews.com/990/wd-arkeia-r120s-and-r220s-network-backup-appliances-debut/

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Windows 8.1 RT looks just like regular Windows 8.1, performance hasn't changed

Windows 8.1 RT looks just like regular Windows 8.1, performance hasn't changed

When we got hands-on with the Windows 8.1 preview earlier this week, it was on a Surface Pro -- i.e., an x86 system running full Windows. Until today, though, we hadn't had a chance to try the software on a device running Windows RT. Well, fortunately for us, Microsoft has a row full of freshly updated Surface RT units on display here at Build, so we took the opportunity poke around a little. As you'd expect, Windows RT 8.1 has all the trappings of the full Windows version, including an always-there Start button and new apps like Food & Drink and Health & Fitness. What's sort of interesting is that you can boot to the desktop here as well, just as you would on Windows 8.1. (We say "interesting" because, well, how urgently do you need the desktop on RT anyway?) The desktop also still comes with Office apps pinned to the Taskbar, in case you were wondering.

Performance seems much the same as before, particularly because we were handling last year's Surface RT, which still ships with a Tegra 3 SoC. Browsing and loading tabs in IE11 feels snappy but then again, IE11 was supposed to be a tick faster than IE10. Overall, navigating the OS can still feel slightly sluggish, but the build we tried is at least stable. Other than that, it looks like we'll have to wait for some new ARM chips before we can revisit performance in Windows RT. We'll also be back to take a look at the forthcoming RT Outlook app, which we haven't seen yet. Until then, don't expect us to write another 4,000 words on the subject.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aTwjN1yVLxw/

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Leaked Details Of Facebook's New Chat Rooms Feature

Facebook Chat RoomsFacebook has built a new feature codenamed Host Chat that lets people set up chat rooms their friends can join without an invitation, a source familiar with the feature tells us. I've contacted Facebook and it confirms it has begun testing this feature in the wild. Reminiscent of the old AOL chat rooms, it could get Facebook users to meet friends of friends and spend more time on the site.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7MAGanu0fDM/

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'Pac-Man' as a first-person shooter is absolutely terrifying

Video games

June 24, 2013 at 5:19 PM ET

A new first-person version of the classic arcade game "Pac-Man" shows what it's like to step inside the yellow pellet-muncher's shoes, and the results are terrifying.

Kongregate

A new first-person version of the classic arcade game "Pac-Man" shows what it's like to step inside the yellow pellet-muncher's shoes, and the results are terrifying.

Ever wonder what it would feel like to really step into Pac-Man's shoes, or whatever it is that helps the guy move forward and gobble up all those pellets?

Sure, running around with a relentless case of the munchies and occasionally swallowing your worst enemies whole might seem like a lot of fun, but wouldn't wandering around a dark "Tron"-like maze where the only other things to interact with are a bunch of silent ghosts that just stare at you until they somehow kill you with little more than a touch sound absolutely terrifying? As the popular Web comic "Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal" put it, if you really think about the story of "Pac-Man," "it's like Kafka wrote a Lovecraft story."

That's certainly what playing "FPS-Man" feels like. Created by the British-based developer Tom Davies while he was learning how to use the Unity game engine, "FPS-Man" is a harrowing take on the classic arcade game.

"FPS-Man" plays less like the cartoonish hunt for cherries and pellets that we all know and love from the arcade cabinets of yore and more like Theseus trying to hunt down the Minotaur and escape the maze. Think those scenes from the first "Alien" movie when they're all trying to survive by tracking a tiny dot across a screen, except suddenly its giant-eyed ghosts that are jumping out at you. Luckily, the game spares you any gore whenever the ghosts catch Pac-Man.

Hopefully given the timing of "FPS-Man's" release, this means that survival horror spin on the arcade classic will soon appear on next-generation consoles ? or better yet, a virtual reality platform like the Oculus Rift or the Omni treadmill. Because what could be more fun (or terrifying) than having to run away from dead-eyed ghosts as your own personal Pac-Man?

In the meantime, you can play "FPS-Man" for free on the website Kongregate.

? via Fast Company

Yannick LeJacq is a contributing writer for NBC News who has also covered technology and games for Kill Screen, The Wall Street Journal and The Atlantic. You can follow him on Twitter at @YannickLeJacq and reach him by email at: ylejacq@gmail.com.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2dde6c78/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cpac0Eman0Efirst0Eperson0Eshooter0Eabsolutely0Eterrifying0E6C10A433572/story01.htm

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

'Hyperconnectivity' Seen in Brains of Children With Autism - Health ...

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, June 26 (HealthDay News) ? Children with autism may have higher-than-normal connectivity between certain areas of the brain, suggests a small study that hints brain imaging might some day be used to diagnose the developmental disorder.

The findings come from MRI brain scans of 20 children with autism spectrum disorders and 20 children without autism. Researchers found that those with an autism spectrum disorder showed ?hyperconnectivity? along five major brain networks.

The results, reported in the June 26 online issue of JAMA Psychiatry, suggest that the brain?s ?functional organization? differs between kids with and without autism.

?The way different areas within those brain networks ?talk? to each other is quite different in children with autism, compared with typically developing children,? said senior researcher Vinod Menon, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.

One network, called the salience network, showed the most hyperconnectivity ? which basically means a greater-than-normal number of brain areas are activated at the same time. The salience network helps the brain decide which part of our environment deserves our attention at any given moment.

Menon?s team found that the more hyperconnectivity kids with autism had in the salience network, the more severe their ?restrictive? and repetitive behaviors.

Those types of behaviors ? such as being completely engrossed in a single interest, or needing to follow precise daily routines ? are among the hallmarks of autism.

It?s not clear that the hyperconnectivity actually causes those repetitive behaviors, but that is what the new findings ?hint,? Menon said.

Another possibility, he added, is that hyperconnectivity is involved in the exceptional skills seen in some kids with an autism diagnosis ? like being a whiz with numbers. For now, though, that?s an ?open question,? Menon said.

Autism spectrum disorders, which affect about one in 88 U.S. kids, are a group of developmental disorders that range widely in severity. Some people have mild problems socializing but have normal to above-normal intelligence; others have profound difficulties relating to others, speak very little and may have intellectual impairment as well.

An expert not involved in the current study said it could be a ?starting point? for developing an objective way to help diagnose autism spectrum disorders, which is currently done by observing children?s behavior. This often delays diagnosis.

But there are still a lot of questions, said Daniel Smith, senior director of discovery neuroscience for the advocacy group Autism Speaks.

One is whether the same brain activity patterns are seen in young children with autism spectrum disorders ? the age at which you would want to diagnose them. The kids in this study were between 7 and 12 years old.

The children on the autism spectrum were also all ?high-functioning? ? with normal IQs and language skills, but had problems with socializing and having conversations. So, studies need to include children with more severe autism, Smith and Menon said.

Right now, that?s tricky, Menon pointed out. Kids need to be able to lie still for the MRI scans, which may be impossible for children with more severe forms of autism; Menon said he hopes the continually improving technology will help in that regard.

No one knows what causes autism, but experts believe that genetic vulnerability and some mix of environmental factors are at work.

Last week, the same Stanford team found that children with an autism spectrum disorder showed weaker connections between certain other brain areas ? namely, areas that process the human voice and those involved in feelings of ?reward.?

They speculated that these children may get less pleasure from the sound of the human voice, and that might help explain some of their communication difficulties.

?I think there will turn out to be an interplay between hyperconnectivity and hypoconnectivity? in the brains of children with an autism spectrum disorder, Menon said.

The hope, he said, is that these early findings will eventually lead to reliable ?biomarkers? of autism. Doctors then may be able to use brain scans to improve diagnosis at an earlier age. But that will take more time and study.

One of the ?next critical steps? is to study young children, Menon said. ?Our findings will help guide those studies.?

More information

Autism Speaks has more on autism spectrum disorders.

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/06/26/hyperconnectivity-seen-in-brains-of-children-with-autism/

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Dear Prudence: Horribly Neglected Pet

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Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/video/dear_prudence/2013/06/dear_prudence_video_horribly_neglected_pet.html

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The Fugue Playing Behind Obama?s Climate Speech ? Or Swampland in Florida? (Balloon Juice)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/315089053?client_source=feed&format=rss

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A Real-Life Iron Man Suit That Could Be as Comfortable as Pajamas

Tony Stark used exotic composites, metal alloys, and other Hollywood-only make-believe materials to build his armor-plated Iron Man suit. But researchers at Harvard University's Wyss Institute, constrained by the limitations of reality, took a different approach with a muscle-enhancing exoskeleton that could one day be as comfy to wear as your favorite pair of jeans.

Working with a $2.6 million grant from DARPA's Warrior Web Program, the Harvard researchers have been developing their suit as a way to give soldiers enhanced stamina in the field. Using a series of air bladders and engineered fabrics to strengthen, support, and assist muscles, the 17-pound suit?not including the air pump backpack?can actually make a soldier about three times as strong. However, there are no rigid parts to strengthen bones, so lifting something extremely heavy would still be dangerous.

But as a way to help a soldier march longer and farther, even over challenging terrain, the suit could one day be perfected to the point where it could be worn under a standard uniform, only coming to life as it was needed. Side note: does anyone else think DARPA is actually just developing a real life superhero? [Wyss Institute via NBC News]

A Real-Life Iron Man Suit That Could Be as Comfortable as Pajamas

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-real-life-iron-man-suit-that-could-be-as-comfortable-576953643

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Students' device aims to avert repeated breast cancer surgeries

June 25, 2013 ? When a breast tumor is detected, many women opt to have a lumpectomy, which is surgery designed to remove the diseased tissue while preserving the breast. But during this procedure, doctors cannot learn right away whether all of the cancerous tissue has been removed, with no microscopic signs that cancer cells were left behind. Because of this delay, one in five of these women -- up to 66,000 patients annually in the U.S. alone -- must return for a second surgery to remove remaining cancer. These follow-up operations boost healthcare costs and can lead to delays in receiving other treatments such as radiation and chemotherapy.

To reduce the need for these second surgeries, four Johns Hopkins graduate students have designed a device to allow pathologists to quickly inspect excised breast tissue within 20 minutes, while the patient is still in the operating room. If this inspection indicates that the tumor was not fully removed, additional tissue can then be removed during the same operation. Eliminating the need for a second operation could also curb some of the additional anxiety these patients face.

The device is still in its prototype stage, but the students say their goal is to give breast cancer patients the same rapid review that commonly occurs when tumors are removed from elsewhere in the body. The students learned about the second-surgery dilemma while observing medical procedures last summer as part of a year-long biomedical engineering master's degree program. In this program, students learn to design new medical tools and products that address urgent healthcare needs.

"We spoke to breast cancer surgeons," said Hector Neira of Silver Spring, Md., one of the student inventors. "They told us that they are desperate for something that will allow them to remove the tumor in its entirety the first time, so that the patient doesn't have to come back for a second surgery."

So far, the team's system has been tested on animal tissue and human breast samples from a tissue bank, but it has not yet been used on patients. Over the past year, however, the students' device design and market analysis have earned them more than $40,000 in college business plan prize money. In the recent Design Day event for Johns Hopkins biomedical engineering students, the team received the top People's Choice award. And, although all of the student inventors received their master's diplomas in May, two have received funding to remain at Johns Hopkins and continue refining the project over the coming year.

Although the financial support and recognition is helpful, "that's not our ultimate goal," said Anjana Sinha of Princeton, N.J., another one of the student inventors. "We're not doing it for the money. We want to improve healthcare practices and raise the standard of care for these breast cancer patients. Why can't they get the same type of quick results that people with other types of cancer receive?"

When most tumors, such as those in the liver, are removed, the pathology staff can quickly flash-freeze the tissue and slice off paper-thin samples for microscopic examination. If the pathologist sees that cancer cells extend to the outer edge or margin of a sample, the surgeon is advised to remove more tissue from the patient. But breast tissue poses a problem: it possesses a high fat content and does not freeze well, causing the samples to smear, form gaps and become unsuitable for a quick review. Instead, breast tissue must be preserved and analyzed in a more time-consuming process that requires the patient to return to the operating room if the first surgery appears to have left cancer cells behind.

To solve this problem, the graduate students brainstormed for an engineering solution. Their most promising and practical idea was a device that applies an adhesive film to the breast tissue before it is sliced. The film holds the delicate tissue together, preventing damage to the samples during the slicing process. The result, the students said, is a sample that can be clearly reviewed by a pathologist within 20 minutes of its removal, potentially eliminating the need for a second operation on another day.

The low-cost system includes a reusable applicator and a proprietary disposable film. The students said the need for their product is significant, citing the estimated 330,000 lumpectomies that are performed annually in the United States alone.

"I think the students have been incredibly creative in their development of this concept, and they are addressing a very real need in the field of breast cancer surgery," said Melissa Camp, a Johns Hopkins assistant professor of surgery who worked with the team. "Accurate assessment of margin status during the initial operation will lead to fewer re-operations, and this will be beneficial for patients in many respects. I look forward to their continued work!"

At Johns Hopkins, the pathology device was developed under the supervision of the university's Center for Bioengineering Innovation and Design. The center teams students with faculty researchers, physicians and others who help them understand healthcare needs and guide them as they propose solutions, then build and test prototypes. CBID operates within the Department of Biomedical Engineering, which is shared by the university's School of Medicine and its Whiting School of Engineering.

Along with Neira and Sinha, the student inventors of the breast cancer device were Qing Xiang Yee of Singapore and Vaishakhi Mayya of India. Sinha and Mayya will remain at Johns Hopkins during the coming year to continue working on the project with David Shin of Seattle, another recent graduate of the CBID master's program. The students also will continue collaborating with advisers from the School of Medicine, including Ashley Cimino-Mathews, an assistant professor of surgical pathology, and James Shin, a surgical pathology research specialist. Jason Benkoski, a senior materials scientist from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, will serve as a technical adviser to the team. The Wallace H. Coulter Foundation is providing funding for these students to continue working on the project this year.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/W03UTDCZgwA/130625161900.htm

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New poll shows growing Arab trust in regional press

A poll by Northwestern in Qatar, due out tomorrow, shows growing trust in regional news outlets across the Arab world.

By Ariel Zirulnick,?Staff writer / June 17, 2013

Palestinian journalists are seen through a glass window at the offices of the Arabic news channel Al Jazeera in the West Bank city of Ramallah July 2009. Arabs say the quality of their regional media is on the rise, led by Al Jazeera, which is making inroads in the US as its profile soars, a new poll shows.

Fadi Arouri/Reuters/File

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Although American trust in media has plummeted according to poll after poll, Arabs say the quality of their regional media is on the rise, led by Al Jazeera, which is making inroads in the US as its profile soars.?

Skip to next paragraph Ariel Zirulnick

Middle East Editor

Ariel Zirulnick is the Monitor's Middle East editor, overseeing regional coverage both for CSMonitor.com and the weekly magazine. She is also a contributor to the international desk's terrorism and security blog.?

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According to a sweeping Arab world public opinion survey by Northwestern University in Qatar that will be released tomorrow, 61 percent of respondents said that the "quality of reporting in the Arab world" has improved in the last two years. But while regional media basks in goodwill, less than half of respondents (48 percent) consider their own country's media credible and only 43 percent say the media can report without interference.

Twenty-six percent of respondents ranked Al Jazeera as their top news source. Broadcaster Al Arabiya trailed at 15 percent. After that, news consumption fragments to a handful of international and local news organizations.?

Northwestern in Qatar's first major regional survey since opening its doors in 2008, polled roughly 1,250 people each in eight countries (Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and the United Arab Emirates) on issues of the Internet and the media in the Arab world. The findings will be presented at the International Communications Association conference in London tomorrow. (Editor's note: The paragraph has been edited to make clear that 1,250 people were surveyed in each of the eight countries.)

Northwestern in Qatar receives funding from the Qatar Foundation, founded by Qatar's ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, who also funds Al Jazeera.

Everette Dennis, dean and CEO of Northwestern in Qatar, said that he has seen the regional media improve by leaps. Major broadcast networks like Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya are "doing a more detailed job of covering their own region" and "Some of the newspapers that were more kept cats or very cautious, subsidized media, are doing a better job, a more transparent job."

What propelled them forward may have been the arrival of hordes of members of the international media during the Arab uprisings, which exposed regional and local journalists to high-quality coverage on a part of the world they knew well, Mr. Dennis says.

"When you see outsiders doing a better job covering your region than yourself, that's embarrassing," he says.?

Puff pieces

Even before then business magazines, which used to be filled with press releases and "self-serving puffery" had become more critical, he says.?The wealthier Arab countries are becoming much more a part of the global economy, but they couldn't be there if their business publications were not publishing more accurate information, he says.?

The survey also shed light on the region's complicated opinions on freedom of expression.?Sixty-one percent of respondents agreed with the statement "It is okay for people to express their ideas on the Internet, even if they are unpopular," but?less than half (46 percent) think they should be able to criticize their government online.?

While people in the region may agree with freedom of expression on the internet in the abstract, practically speaking many support greater regulation. Half (51%) of the participants in the study believe there is not enough awareness of the ?laws, regulations and moralities that control one?s activities on the internet?, and, perhaps consequently, half (50%) also feel the internet in their country should be more tightly regulated than it is now.

Perhaps even more telling, only 16% overall disagree that the internet in their country should be more tightly regulated, ranging from a low of 7 percent disagreement in Egypt to a high of just 25 percent disagreeing in Bahrain. These low levels of disagreement suggest that there is no strong opposition to internet regulation in any of the eight countries under study.

"There is a paradox between?people saying they wanted almost absolute freedom of expression online ... and at the same time saying there ought to be regulation in some instances," says Dennis.?

While poll respondents often favor something in the abstract, when it is brought down to a personal level the answer often changes, he says. And it comes down to more than that in this region, he says.?

"The meaning is much deeper in the Arab world," he says. "I?think it's a tension between tradition and modernity."

"The younger, presumably more modern people do tend to favor almost unlimited expression online. They say ?Let it rip.? ? Their?parents, people who are older, tend to say yes, there should be a lot more freedom, but not in the case of criticizing Islam, for example.?

The survey did not include followup questions that allowed the university to get at the root of the contradictions; Dennis says they plan to explore it in a future survey.

An interactive website with the full survey results can be found at?menamediasurvey.northwestern.edu.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/WLJB5AKdRm0/New-poll-shows-growing-Arab-trust-in-regional-press

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Syria says rebels will take years to match army's strength

BEIRUT (Reuters) - A decision by Western and Arab countries to arm rebels fighting to topple Syria's President Bashar al-Assad poses a danger to peace talks, the Syrian foreign minister said on Monday.

Walid al-Moualem told a news conference in Damascus that the opposition had little hope of matching the Syrian army's strength despite a pledge by the states that make up the "Friends of Syria" to increase military support to the rebels.

"If they expect or fantasize that they can create a balance of power, I think they will need to wait years for that to happen," he said during the televised news conference.

Western and Arab countries as well as Turkey, who have thrown their weight behind the opposition, said their decision to arm the rebels was to rebalance the conflict in which more than 93,000 people have been killed, most of them civilians.

Assad is seen as having gained momentum, seizing a strategic town near the Lebanese border which helps him cement control between the capital Damascus and his stronghold on the Mediterranean coast.

Moualem said that a move towards openly giving military support to the rebels would encourage terrorism and that radical Islamist groups linked to al Qaeda would benefit the most.

"The decision in Doha is dangerous...because it aims to prolong the crisis, to extend the violence and the killing, and to encourage the terrorists to carry out their crimes," he said.

The United States and Russia are planning a peace conference in Geneva between the opposition and Assad's government.

"Arming the opposition will obstruct Geneva. Arming the opposition will kill more of our people," Moualem said. "We head to Geneva not to hand over power to another side.

"Whoever on the other side imagines this, I advise them not to go to Geneva."

The government was willing to discuss forming a broad-based government of national unity in Geneva, he added.

The Syrian conflict began as peaceful protests against four decades of Assad family rule, but descended into a civil war that has drawn in foreign fighters to both sides of the fight, increasing regional ethnic and sectarian tensions.

Syria's opposition, led mostly by the Sunni Muslim majority, has attracted foreign Islamist fighters. Shi'ites from Iraq and Lebanon have joined the fight on the side of Assad, who is from the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam.

Moualem said Syria wanted a ceasefire in order to hold talks at Geneva.

"We are insistent that if Geneva is held there must be a ceasefire, and we are ready to study mechanisms for observing it on the basis that neighboring states abide, by halting training, arming and financing and sending them to Syrian territory," he said.

In Brussels, a European Union report said the bloc should support a political settlement but also ease sanctions to help people in rebel-held areas, following steps to exempt the rebels from oil and banking sanctions.

The report from the EU's executive Commission and foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton also said the two-year-old Syrian conflict and a refugee exodus were putting severe strain on Syria's neighbors, threatening the internal stability of Lebanon and Jordan,

Having taken in more than half a million refugees, Lebanon authorities were unable to cope alone, the report said.

"It is imperative to shield the country from the efforts of some of the local and regional actors to wage the Syrian struggle on Lebanese soil," it said.

Lebanon has suffered growing violence at home as the conflict turns into a proxy war along sectarian lines. Lebanon's Hezbollah Shi'ite militia has joined the war on Assad's side.

(Reporting by Erika Solomon; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-says-rebels-years-match-armys-strength-123228650.html

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Monday, June 17, 2013

Crews battle hot spots in Colo. wildfire

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) -- Firefighters are getting a better handle on the most destructive wildfire ever in Colorado, but they're still struggling against hot spots that could threaten homes that have been spared by the massive blaze.

Teams got help Sunday from the weather as steady rain moved through the densely wooded Black Forest near Colorado Springs in the afternoon.

"Every bit of rain helps the crews mop up. It's just adding another nail in the coffin," fire spokesman Brandon Hampton said.

Nearly 500 homes have been burned by the 22-square-mile fire, which is 65 percent contained. Crews hope to have it fully under control by Thursday.

With evacuees anxious to return, crews are digging up and extinguishing hot spots, labor-intensive work that's needed because extremely dry grass and trees could quickly ignite.

Even though the fire was no longer active enough on Sunday to produce a large smoke plume, El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa said it wasn't safe for people to return home until roads and downed power lines were repaired.

Additionally, the death of two unidentified people trying to flee the fire was still being investigated. Maketa said he was in no rush to have people return to an area that, at least for now, was still being considered a crime scene.

"I'm not going to compromise the evidence by allowing people in too soon," he said.

Some evacuees outside the burn area have been allowed back home. Those with property in the burn area have returned with escorts to check on their property or to pick up items, but Maketa said some were then refusing to leave once they were done. He urged fire victims to cooperate or risk being arrested.

Trudy Dawson, 59, was at work when the fire broke out Tuesday and quickly spread in record-breaking heat and strong winds. Her 25-year-old daughter, Jordan, who was on her way from Denver to visit, spotted the smoke, called her mother and went to the house.

With only 30 minutes to evacuate, she only had time to find a family cat and to open a corral gate so the horses could flee.

Jordan and two adult siblings went to the property the next day with a sheriff's escort and found the horses, unhurt, standing in their corral.

"It was just skeletons of vehicles and ash everywhere. It's haunting. It looks like it's right out of a horror movie," Jordan Dawson said.

It's unknown what sparked the blaze, but investigators believe it was human-caused and have asked for help from the state and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as they sift through the ash.

It's only a few miles away from the state's second most destructive wildfire, the Waldo Canyon Fire, which burned last summer.

The memory of that fire may have made residents especially appreciative of firefighters. About 1,000 people turned out to line the road and cheer firefighters as they returned from lines Saturday night, fire spokesman Brandon Hampton said.

Some of the aircraft used to fight the Black Forest Fire and other Front Range fires have been moved to fight a nearly 500-acre wildfire near Rifle Falls State Park in western Colorado. That fire erupted Friday from a smoldering lightning strike the day before, spokesman Pat Thrasher said. The residents of 12 homes were ordered to leave along with campers in the park as well as Rifle Mountain Park and the nearby White River National Forest.

Crews were closer to containing other wildfires that broke out around the same time as Black Forest. In Canon City, 50 miles to the southwest, a fire that destroyed 48 buildings at Royal Gorge Bridge & Park was 85 percent contained and the park's scenic railroad was running again. A lightning-sparked fire in Rocky Mountain National Park had burned nearly 500 acres and was 60 percent contained.

In New Mexico, crews were trying to protect homes in a historic mining town from a 35-square mile wildfire that had prompted 26 people to leave their homes.

___

Associated Press writer Colleen Slevin contributed to this report from Denver.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/crews-battle-hot-spots-colo-111621619.html

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Kim Kardashian Baby: Doing Great! Beautiful!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/kim-kardashian-baby-doing-great-beautiful/

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Science plan lands 'star' researcher

A ?50m project to attract world-class scientists and their teams to Wales has made its first appointment.

Prof Yves Barde, from Switzerland, is renowned for his research into the way proteins in the brain work and their role in illnesses such as depression.

Prof Barde, currently at the University of Basel, will take up his post at Cardiff University in September.

It said science was an international business and "we're importing one of the most important stars."

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

By working with others in his field, Prof Barde will be able to help Cardiff University tackle some of the biggest health challenges of our time?

End Quote Prof Colin Riordan Vice chancellor, Cardiff University

He was appointed under the Welsh government's five-year Ser Cymru (Stars of Wales) project to expand universities' research capabilities in the fields of life sciences, advanced engineering, and low carbon energy and the environment.

Prof Barde received international acclaim in 1989 with the discovery of a gene which creates a protein - brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) - which is involved in number of brain processes including memory.

He has explored the the role of BDNF plays in healthy brain function along with dysfunction.

Recently his team at the University of Basel focused on how some drugs can increase BDNF levels in specific areas of the brain.

The research helped in the development of new drugs, including the first oral treatment of multiple sclerosis.

Prof Barde says he hopes to develop his current research interests of using stem cells to understand how the brain works and also to explore mental health illnesses such as depression.

He said: "Some of the work I'll be undertaking in Cardiff will be about understanding the meaning of the link between the nervous system and neurological diseases which currently remains pretty mysterious, particularly in the case of depression.

"But alongside several outstanding research groups at Cardiff University, I will also aim to advance research using embryonic stem cells and reprogrammed somatic cells to advance understanding of neuronal dysfunction.

"This is a really exciting time for me, and for advances in neurobiology and for science in Wales."

Cardiff University is already widely recognised for research into stem cells.

The university's chancellor and Nobel Prize winner, Sir Martin Evans, was the first scientist to identify embryonic stem cells.

Prof Yves Barde's appointment is part of the Welsh government's five-year Stars of Wales (Ser Cymru) project

These are cells which are taken from an embryo and which can develop into many other types of cells that can then be adapted for a wide variety of medical purposes.

There is some opposition to this research on moral or ethical grounds although the research has proved to be highly valuable in understanding many diseases.

Cardiff University vice-chancellor Prof Colin Riordan believes the appointment will build on the university's strengths.

"It is a testament to the university's existing strengths in neuroscience and stem cell research that we are able to attract a scientist of Prof Barde's calibre.

"By working with others in his field, Prof Barde will be able to help Cardiff University tackle some of the biggest health challenges of our time."

Prof Ole Petersen, director of the university's school of biosciences, told BBC Wales: "I'm delighted about this great prospect of fostering world-beating research.

'Dynamic'

"Science is an international business. We see throughout Europe that countries with the most internationalised science do the best science.

"And we're importing one of the most important stars."

Economy and Science Minister Edwina Hart said: "A strong science research capability is vital to improving our economic well-being and securing a prosperous, healthy and sustainable future for Wales.

"We already have a lot to be proud of in science and innovation in Wales but the Ser Cymru programme will help us build on that to develop a dynamic and strong base in Wales."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-22920609#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Experts: NSA lawsuits could break new legal ground - Jennifer ...

The American Civil Liberties Union says this time will be different.

That doesn?t mean the group is ready to guarantee its latest lawsuit, filed last week over the constitutionality of the Obama administration?s phone surveillance program, will translate into a splashy win for civil liberties advocates.

Continue Reading

But experts say the new case is unlikely to face the same headaches that have sunk many of the group?s previous suits. They also say it?s possible that the government?s own defense could wind up undermining its efforts to keep details of its data-gathering programs under wraps.

And even absent a win, they say, the ACLU could still drag enough previously classified information into the public domain to make the case worthwhile.

(PHOTOS: Pols, pundits weigh in on NSA report)

The suit filed Tuesday argues that the phone-tracking system detailed in The Guardian violates freedom of speech and privacy rights, with the ACLU arguing on its own behalf as a Verizon customer. The group wants the National Security Agency?s surveillance program stopped and all its records to be purged.

The case is aimed at the Supreme Court, where it would pose a challenge to a 1979 ruling that found no expectation of privacy when sharing information with a third party and would build on some of the doubts the court expressed in 2012 about that decision?s relevance in the current technological era.

?If this [NSA phone surveillance] came up to the Supreme Court with this Supreme Court, they would declare it unconstitutional,? Laura Murphy, director of the ACLU?s Washington legislative office, said Thursday at an event hosted by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who is considering signing on to the group?s suit.

(Also on POLITICO: As Snowden speaks out, Obama goes silent)

Some outside experts are less certain. Geoffrey Stone, a University of Chicago law professor who worked at the school with President Barack Obama, said the ACLU?s position is ?reasonable,? but he doesn?t see the court issuing a ruling that shuts down the phone surveillance program.

And based strictly on existing Supreme Court case law, says George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr, the group?s arguments are ?weak.?

But even skeptics of the ACLU?s chances concede the potential for progress. Edward Snowden?s leaks to The Guardian and The Washington Post may not lead to a wholesale dismantling of the NSA?s dragnet surveillance efforts ? but the revelations could force the high court to reevaluate its interpretations of privacy law.

(See full Edward Snowden coverage)

And this time around, says Kerr, ?the ACLU?s goal is probably to get discovery? ? to force the government to declassify more information about the programs ? ?not to win.?

The ACLU isn?t the only group to have taken legal action since the revelation of details of the phone-tracking and PRISM programs: Snowden?s leaks have translated into renewed support for legal efforts across the political spectrum.

Freedom Watch, a group led by former Justice Department official Larry Klayman, has filed two class action suits: one over phone surveillance and a second over PRISM, the NSA?s system of surveillance of the Internet activities of non-U.S. citizens abroad.

Source: http://www.politico.com/story/2013/06/aclu-lawsuit-nsa-prism-surveillance-92840.html

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Vintage computers and video games consoles... which did you own ...


With all the hype surrounding the new Xbox and Playstation launches, it made me wonder what games, machines and other stuff that the people here loved in the past.

My first computer was a used Commodore Plus/4 which was a gift from my cousins in Glasgow when I was 7. I never really got into using it as it didn't come with instructions and my parents were no help to me as they were even less knowledgeable about it than I was.

For Christmas 1989, I got a Sinclair ZX Spectrum +2A. It was a leading UK 8 bit computer (which I got because the stores had no NESs due to technical issues causing a lot of returns) and while it had pretty shabby graphics, it was a pretty quick little machine and had a huge library of great games and a fantastic scene around it with good magazines and a strong user base.

I worked my way through a variety of 8 and 16 bit machines including the SNES, which was a fantastic machine, although I actually only got it late on in the lifespan of the machine but that meant loads of cheap games were around.

I had wanted an Amiga for several years and although I did eventually get an Amiga 1200, it was only long after the boom period of the Amiga and it was pretty obsolete and only good as a retro gaming device. The Amiga was a fantastic computer, with a huge list of good games and was ahead of the PC in terms of abilities for a few years and it was only later that the Amiga was caught up on, especially as Commodore headed towards bankruptcy.

I did get a Playstation pretty early on, although I made the stupid blunder of thinking the N64 was going to be a far better machine and held off for that before changing my mind and getting the Playstation after all as I wasn't nearly as impressed by the N64 as I had hoped. The Playstation was a fantastic console that had a huge catalogue of titles and was the dominant format for quite some time.

I then moved on, via a brief period of having the Dreamcast as my main machine after getting one on a great offer, where they were being sold new for only ?50 in Game with a game, to the Xbox.

The Xbox was technically far superior to the Playstation 2 and there were huge shortages of that machine and with the fact that Xbox got off to a pretty slow start and was cut way down on price, it made sense to get one at Christmas 2002, the first Christmas of Xbox and it was a good decision. The Xbox was a real powerhouse of console gaming and was an impressive piece of kit. It also was a logical progression from Dreamcast, which Microsoft had had involvement in and several Sega titles appeared early in the life of Xbox, including two of the bundled games I got with my machine, Sega GT 2002 and Jet Set Radio Future.

I intially planned to move on to Playstation 3, letting Xbox 360 slip away initially before deciding to go with the 360 after all. I did eventually get the PS3 too though, although the 360 seems a slightly better experience for me to be honest. I had a PSP and now have a Vita too.

On the way through, I picked up a lot of other systems, many of them retro systems.

This is a catalogue of the systems I have or had...

Sega - Master System, Game Gear, Mega Drive (Genesis), Saturn, Dreamcast
Nintendo - NES, SNES, N64
Commodore - Amiga 1200 (actually a later Escom made model), Plus /4 (swopped with sister for other stuff)
Amstrad - PCW 16
Atari - 2600
Microsoft - Xbox (gave to neighbour's son), Xbox 360
Sinclair - ZX Spectrum +2A and +2B (the same model with tiny technical differences but different to the first +2 as it was based on the +3 not the 12
Sony - Playstation 1 (x2) & 3 Super Slim, PSP (gave to neighbour's son) and PS Vita

As for games, I'm a huge fan of sports games and I've loved a lot of versions of FIFA (the most popular football (soccer) game around), Madden and various wrestling games. I also enjoy a lot of strategy titles and platform games, especially stuff like Rainbow Islands, a crazy platformer with very cute graphics where you jump around firing rainbows and collecting stuff. Very Marioesque. I love racing games too with the Gran Turismo and Forza Motorsport games very high on my list of favourites.

I'm a huge fan of emulators and I play a hell of a lot of emulated games on PC, with Amiga and Spectrum titles amongst the ones I play the most.

One great thing about playing Amiga games is that I am familiar with most of the earlier games as they often were also released for the Spectrum, my own format at the time and I can easily adapt to playing the more colourful and faster Amiga versions pretty quickly. The one stinker is that Ocean (who produced LOADS of big name games at the time) often produced slightly poor Amiga versions of some games, while their Spectrum games were almost all classics. This leads to the odd situations of Spectrum versions of some games being better than the Amiga version despite it being similar to comparing an Gameboy to a SNES in terms of abilities.

Source: http://www.606studios.com/bendisboard/showthread.php?222116-Vintage-computers-and-video-games-consoles-which-did-you-own-and-love

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Sunday, June 16, 2013

Obama takes economic, foreign policy agenda to UK

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama is taking a security, foreign policy and economic agenda to Northern Ireland for a meeting with heads of the leading industrial nations.

He's looking for consensus on Syria while pushing for common ground on trade, economic growth and tax policies.

Obama is set to depart Washington on Sunday night and arrive in Belfast on Monday, ahead of the Group of eight summit, and give a speech focused on Northern Ireland's reconciliation.

Aides say the president plans to call on young people to sustain the peace.

He's then scheduled to attend a two-day summit in at a resort with leaders from Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Russia, and Japan.

Obama also plans to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The president's trip will end Wednesday in Berlin.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-takes-economic-foreign-policy-agenda-uk-165632315.html

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