Thursday, February 28, 2013

Why It's Smart to Be Reckless on Wall Street

Here is a guaranteed way to get paid well if you work on Wall Street. Find a best friend at a competing bank or hedge fund and take opposite sides of the same large bet. In one year?s time one of you will have a huge profit and get paid well. The other person will have lost and perhaps be fired. The sum of both your profits will be zero, but the sum of what you get paid will be positive. Split the pay.

This scheme is one of the more fanciful ways to exploit Wall Street?s compensation structure that pays absurdly well in the good years and just okay in the bad years. Losing money never means having to give anything back.

That asymmetry in pay (money for profits, flat for losses) is the engine behind many of Wall Street?s mistakes. It rewards short-term gains without regard to long-term consequences. The results? The over-reliance on excessive leverage, banks that are loaded with opaque financial products, and trading models that are flawed.

Regulation is largely toothless if banks and their employees have the financial incentive to be reckless.

How does Wall Street pay its employees? At the end of each year traders are paid a base salary and a bonus. The bonus, which fluctuates wildly, is usually a percentage of a trader?s profit. Some companies even pay a contractual amount, often between ten and fifteen percent. The average bonus of all employees is about three hundred thousand dollars but payments of $1 to $15 million are common. If traders lose they still get their base, often around two hundred thousand dollars. If their loss is great enough, they are fired. They never have to return money.

The incentives are clear. If you make a bunch of money you get personally wealthy. If you lose then you just go home and look for a new job.

Losing lots of money is hardly the career ender that outsiders imagine. If traders lose big then they will get fired, but they will now have experience. If one loses really big then one has almost a badge of honor. One could not be allowed to lose $1 billion unless one was really important.

Wall Street is littered with traders who have ?blown up? at multiple establishments or funds. There are enough to fill up a town about the size of, well, West Hampton.

Here is a more conventional blueprint to personal wealth via Wall Street.

Join a business that has an established track record. Start small, building up a few solid years of making decent profits. Do this for six or seven years. It?s called ?milking the franchise.? Soon you will have respect and, most of all, expanded limits on what you can trade. Wait for a year when everyone is bullish. Then swing big. Really big. Don?t take judicious risk; take the most risk the firm will allow you. Follow the momentum, piling into trades others are doing.

If you win, since you followed the herd, Wall Street will be flush with cash and you will get paid well, tens of millions well. If you lose you may get fired, but since everyone lost they will understand.

This strategy is certainly not in the long-term interest of the firm, but it?s the smartest strategy to benefit the trader.

The closest other field of employment to Wall Street in compensation is professional sports. They also pay large yearly contracts meant to encourage employees to increase their performances. Sometimes those employees fail miserably, hurting their team.

Banks are not sports teams though. They are institutions that occupy a special place in the economy and are given special status, and as such, have an obligation to ensure their long-term health. The only harm if the Yankees overpay for a pitcher (and they always do) is distraught Yankees fans. If banks lose, especially ones with $2 trillion in assets, we all lose.

The incentives at these banks should consequently be structured to discourage, not encourage, short-term speculation and risk taking, with the primary goal of guaranteeing the bank?s solvency. Rather than pay employees based on how much they made the prior 365 days, pay should be based on their entire careers, with the bulk of compensation coming in a form that can be taken away with future losses.

Independent hedge funds can pay however they want. It is up to the investors to decide how they want to compensate their money manager and few funds are large enough to be ?too big to fail.?

Here is a third scheme. Sell insurance on a rare event, something with a payoff around one in a hundred. Sell lots of it and convince regulators that it?s a one in a thousand event so you can account for the premium as a profit. You now have a steady revenue stream, which will pay your company well.

What if it?s actually a far more common event, something like one in ten? You will lose huge eventually. Your company, if it did enough of this trade, will go bankrupt. You however will have had three to four good years and can walk away.

Far fetched?

This is exactly what happened from 2002 until 2008. The one in a hundred event was US housing prices dropping 30% or more. Who did this: Bear-Stearns, AIG, Lehman Bothers, Merrill Lynch, and others. The insurance they sold: Buying and structuring esoteric mortgage bonds.

How did it work? If housing prices rose or stayed flat or fell slightly, the bonds paid a small premium, about a quarter of a percent. If however, housing fell dramatically, then the bonds plummeted.

From 2003 to 2007 housing prices rose. Wall Street took in record profits as the bonds paid. Bonuses paid to traders and executives were also records, with senior traders and managers receiving bonuses between $3 million and $10 million in 2006.

In the middle of 2007 things turned. The housing market did collapse over 30%, triggering huge drops in the bonds. Who lost? Well the banks did, many going broke and requiring a government bailout. The traders and managers who did these trades did well personally. Many were fired, but with enough money to never work again, having collected compensation of roughly $15 million over that period.

Many were later rehired, by hedge funds, to buy the securities at cheap prices after the banks disgorged them.

Were they doing anything illegal? Hard to say. They were doing what Wall Street incentivised them to do.

This also leads to misconceptions about most employees on Wall Street. Few actually abuse the system, contrary to their personal self-interest. Still there is a minority who do, stigmatizing the industry. It often works out wonderfully for them and awfully for the rest.

In 2000 a young PhD in mathematics approached me about a job before eventually landing at a European bank in research. In 2004 he started proprietary trading, where traders bet with the bank?s money. Pay was 15% of the profits. In 2005 he bought obscure and high-yielding corporate bonds, which generated profits of $40 million. He took home $6 million. In 2006 he made $80 million and took home $12 million. In 2007 the world turned and the group was disbanded as losses mounted. He was dismissed, and his trades eventually lost the firm close to $300 million.

What was his PhD thesis about? Game theory, or using math to find the optimal solution to complex systems.

Late last year he sent me an email. ?Chris, why are you still working??

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=2203ac7cdb44cd49d2d62153ce3eb2f3

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Scoring Q and Drinking Brew, Part 3: How To Enjoy BBQ ... - Grill Grrrl

Blake Marcum is a Memphis Barbecue Network Judge, Competes on a Competition BBQ Team, and craft beer lover. Here is is latest installment to his column ?Scoring Q and Drinking Brew?:

I would like to thank my readers (both of you) for pointing out that I posted Lesson 4 before Lesson 3 in this blog. I would love to blame it on the fact that I?m a huge Tarantino film buff and I had just watched Pulp Fiction and thought writing out of order would be an avant-garde tribute to my fellow Tennessean. Upon further thought, I will just blame it on that.

Without further ado?

Lesson 3: How to enjoy BBQ when you?re NOT at a competition

One of the most frequent questions friends ask me is whether or not I can enjoy restaurant BBQ since I?ve been competing and judging for so long. When picking restaurants they want BBQ often and I?m always more than willing to go along, but the comments always come.

?I bet this isn?t as good as what you?re used to,? is the most common comment. No, it isn?t. But I?m blessed to cook with smokers that cost thousands of dollars and to have put almost a decade of research into how to cook BBQ the right way.

Even though I?m a competitor and judge, I do NOT want to be the pretentious guy that constantly looks down on a good BBQ meal from a local establishment. I love going to BBQ restaurants. Barbeque is wonderful food, occasionally even when done horribly wrong, so it?s wonderful when you find places that do it incredibly right. I want to enjoy my meal and mop up every last drop of sauce that is left on my plate with a piece of bread and enjoy every savory bit of flavor I can wrestle from the plate.

Memphis BBQ Company

?We?re gonna need a bigger boat,? might be a common comment for anyone ordering a full slab of baby back ribs and sides at the Memphis BBQ Company in Horn Lake, MS.

?We?re gonna need a bigger boat,? might be a common comment for anyone ordering a full slab of baby back ribs and sides at the Memphis BBQ Company in Horn Lake, MS.

I know some BBQ competitors and judges that never go out for BBQ. That just shows me that their brain is working against them and holding them back from enjoying some good food. This is a quick guide for how to shut down your brain and enjoy the BBQ.

1. Variety is the key to happiness.
When I go to a BBQ restaurant the first thing I look for or ask for is whether or not they offer a combo plate. I always want to try the ribs, but if they let me pair a few ribs with some pulled pork and/or some brisket, I?m a very happy camper. This makes sure that if I don?t enjoy one of their meats, I?ve still got a 50-66% chance of enjoying the rest of my meal.

BBQ Sampler at Gridley?s II in Bartlett, TN had ribs served on top of pulled pork and brisket. It was like digging for BBQ treasure.

BBQ Sampler at Gridley?s II in Bartlett, TN had ribs served on top of pulled pork and brisket. It was like digging for BBQ treasure.

BBQ Sampler at Gridley?s II in Bartlett, TN had ribs served on top of pulled pork and brisket. It was like digging for BBQ treasure.

2. Look for Creativity.
You?re at a restaurant that has a BBQ creation on the menu, but you didn?t notice any smoke outside the building when you approached or see anyone licking their plate clean. But there it is, on the menu. After checking your friends menu to make sure it wasn?t some large typo and asking the server to verify, you decide to order it. It may be bad, but it may be good. Be courageous friends. It may be worth the risk.

BBQ Brisket tacos at Local Gastropub in Memphis, TN.

BBQ Brisket tacos at Local Gastropub in Memphis, TN.

3. Don?t be THAT guy.

You?re with your friends (if you still have any) and they?re all enjoying their meal. They do NOT want to hear about ho

w the membrane was not removed from the ribs and would never do well in competition. They are not in a BBQ seminar. Unless you are asked directly by someone, don?t try and rule the table with your BBQ knowledge. Just do your best to keep excess sauce off your shirt and talk about sports or movies? or beer. Delicious beer? mmmmm.

The Beer Pantry at my Home. Be jealous, be very jealous.

The Beer Pantry at my Home. Be jealous, be very jealous.

If you keep an open mind and keep your training and experience out of the way, you can be rewarded with a variety of different approaches to BBQ. Not all of them are going to be great. But there are some hidden gems waiting to be found and enjoyed.

waffles and ham_photo 5 or 6

Pulled pork waffles with a raspberry BBQ sauce and coleslaw, found at The University of Tennessee during the Kentucky game. The Volunteers won the game. I won the BBQ jackpot of the day.

Remember to stay out of your own way, keep an eye out for a cloud full of smoke coming out of an old shack, and always have cash on hand. Doing those things along with my other tips, can pave the way to some great BBQ. Also look for reviews or blogs about BBQ places in your area. One of my favorites is http://memhisque.blogspot.com written by my friend Craig who is on a quest to enjoy every barbecue and soul food restaurant in the mid-south area. I always check out his reviews before making my way to a new BBQ spot. Reviews like his can give you the times to order, tips on what to order, and let you in on some key details to make sure to enjoy when you?re there.

For information on how to become a trained or certified judge, go to the Memphis Barbecue Network?s page at www.mbnbbq.com or the Kansas City Barbeque Society?s page at www.kcbs.us for information about upcoming judging classes.

If you have any questions, ideas you would like me to write about, or comments, feel free to email me at ScoringQ@gmail.com

Source: http://grillgrrrl.com/2013/02/scoring-q-and-drinking-brew-part-3-how-to-enjoy-bbq-when-youre-not-at-a-competition/

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Silver nanoparticles may adversely affect environment, researchers demonstrate

Feb. 27, 2013 ? In experiments mimicking a natural environment, Duke University researchers have demonstrated that the silver nanoparticles used in many consumer products can have an adverse effect on plants and microorganisms.

Fifty days after scientists applied a single low dose of silver nanoparticles, the experimental environments produced about a third less biomass in some plants and microbes.

These preliminary findings are important, the researchers said, because little is known about the environmental effects of silver nanoparticles, which are found in textiles, clothing, children's toys and pacifiers, disinfectants and toothpaste.

"No one really knows what the effects of these particles are in the environment," said Benjamin Colman, a post-doctoral fellow in Duke's biology department and a member of the Center for the Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology (CEINT).

"We're trying to come up with the data that can be used to help regulators determine the risks to the environment from silver nanoparticle exposures," Colman said.

Previous studies have involved high concentrations of the nanoparticles in a laboratory setting, which the researchers point out, doesn't represent "real-world" conditions.

"Results from laboratory studies are difficult to extrapolate to ecosystems, where exposures likely will be at low concentrations and there is a diversity of organisms," Colman said.

Silver nanoparticles are used in consumer products because they can kill bacteria, inhibiting unwanted odors. They work through a variety of mechanisms, including generating free radicals of oxygen which can cause DNA damage to microbial membranes without harming human cells.

The main route by which these particles enter the environment is as a by-product of sewage treatment plants. The nanoparticles are too small to be filtered out, so they and other materials end up in the resulting wastewater treatment "sludge," which is then spread on the land surface as a fertilizer.

For their studies, the researchers created mesocosms, which are small, human-made structures containing different plants and microorganisms meant to represent the environment. They applied sludge with low doses of silver nanoparticles in some of the mesocosms, then compared plants and microorganisms from treated and untreated mesocosms after 50 days.

The study appeared online Feb. 27 in the journal PLOS One.

The researchers found that one of the plants studied, a common annual grass known as Microstegium vimeneum, had 32 percent less biomass in the mesocosms treated with the nanoparticles. Microbes were also affected by the nanoparticles, Colman said. One enzyme associated with helping microbes deal with external stresses was 52 percent less active, while another enzyme that helps regulate processes within the cell was 27 percent less active. The overall biomass of the microbes was also 35 percent lower, he said.

"Our field studies show adverse responses of plants and microorganisms following a single low dose of silver nanoparticles applied by a sewage biosolid," Colman said. "An estimated 60 percent of the average 5.6 million tons of biosolids produced each year is applied to the land for various reasons, and this practice represents an important and understudied route of exposure of natural ecosystems to engineered nanoparticles."

"Our results show that silver nanoparticles in the biosolids, added at concentrations that would be expected, caused ecosystem-level impacts," Colman said. "Specifically, the nanoparticles led to an increase in nitrous oxide fluxes, changes in microbial community composition, biomass, and extracellular enzyme activity, as well as species-specific effects on the above-ground vegetation."

The researchers plan to continue to study longer-term effects of silver nanoparticles and to examine another ubiquitous nanoparticle -- titanium dioxide.

CEINT's research is funded by the National Science Foundation and the Environmental Protection Agency.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Duke University. The original article was written by Richard Merritt.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Benjamin P. Colman, Christina L. Arnaout, Sarah Anciaux, Claudia K. Gunsch, Michael F. Hochella, Bojeong Kim, Gregory V. Lowry, Bonnie M. McGill, Brian C. Reinsch, Curtis J. Richardson, Jason M. Unrine, Justin P. Wright, Liyan Yin, Emily S. Bernhardt. Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (2): e57189 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057189

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/EctQTz5Sylw/130227183528.htm

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Y Combinator-Backed Balanced Adds Bank Payments To Its Peer-To-Peer Payments Platform

Balanced_Logo_FinalPayments startup Balanced has been growing quickly over the past several months, with 30 percent monthly transaction volume growth since August. Due to popular demand, the latest update to Balanced?s payments platform will make it easier for users to have payments deducted out of their bank accounts, rather than paid by credit or debit card.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/uxh-fB8gS1g/

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MLS MatchDay updated for 2013 with new interface, tablet support

MLS MatchDay

The 2013 MLS season kicks off in just three days, and the MLS MatchDay app has been updated right on time with a new interface and full tablet support. Last year's update was functional but certainly not easy to use or perfectly designed. For 2013, they've pulled out all the stops and gone with a complete redesign that should keep Android users happy for the whole season. The interface has taken on a holo design, shedding the legacy menu button and adding a slide-in panel to improve navigation. There are also now more granular notification settings, so you can see when lineups are available, to get condensed match stats, and breaking news alerts.

The new update also added tablet support, which takes advantage of the larger screen to display news articles in a newspaper-style format rather than a list, and offer more navigation options on individual team and match pages. Over and above the new interface, you can now watch matches directly on your devices with MLS Live, as well as see Goal of the Week videos.

Stick around after the break and see the new phone UI, along with a few comparisons to what the new app does on a 7-inch tablet. Then head to the Play Store link at the top of this post to get the app.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Cu09MWbf6C0/story01.htm

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Farview Ski Team: Skiing strong into spring!

farview teamFor the past four years, Farview Park has been home to one of the only neighborhood ski teams in Minneapolis.

Made possible through the collaboration of Minnesota winters and the Loppet Foundation, the Farview Ski Team meets biweekly for practice in Theodore Wirth Park.
"I wasn't sure how they were going to like it at first," said Louis Oatis, who has been supervising the youth in the program since the beginning. Oatis meets the skiers at Farview and then takes them to Wirth where they strap on their poles and ski freely on the hills into the wintry nights.

Youth from Farview Park have been involved in the Loppet Foundation ski and bike program for four years. Initially the team was formed to train for the City of Lakes Tri-Loppet, an event where the youth learned to canoe, mountain bike and trail run. As the seasons changed, the Loppet Foundation talked with Oatis about carrying the summer program through the winter with cross-country skiing.

"I told them I knew a few kids that were not into basketball or football. This was something new to try," said Oatis.

Largely, Scott Kyser, who has seen the athletes develop throughout the years, has coached the team.

"Scott knows the kids and the kids know him. They love him," said Oatis chuckling. "He teaches them technique; how to go up and down the hills, and stop. They are really beginning to know the ins and outs of the sport."

IMG 0638Even as temperatures dip near zero, the Farview Ski Team shows up ready to rock the trails.

"They keep coming back," said Oatis. "I think they feel unique about it. Skiing is something not a lot of people can do. They know that it is a commitment to be on this team. It's great because for those that stick with it, they get the hang of skiing, they seem to enjoy it more."

The Loppet Foundation provides team jackets, which Oatis distributes for practices and races.

Babette Kamba said that she found out about the Farview Ski Team through Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Winter Program Guide. Although living closer to Harrison, Farview was the only north Minneapolis park with a ski team, so she brings her son to Wirth weekly to meet the team for practice.

"It is rare to have such positive winter experiences," said Kamba. "I want him to have these life long skills.We live close to Wirth and it is a way to be healthy in the winter."

Oatis said several of the youth talk about skiing in high school. The Loppet Foundation is hoping that by planting more ski teams in north Minneapolis schools and parks, this uniquely urban winter sport can be learned and embraced by more youth. "It's a way to be active in the winter," said Oatis, who has also learned to ski as a result of the program.

With recent fresh coats of snow, the Farview Ski Team will keep skiing well into spring.

Source: http://www.insightnews.com/sports/10343--farview-ski-team-skiing-strong-into-spring

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A look at the deadliest hot air balloon accidents

Tuesday's crash of a hot air balloon near Egypt's ancient city of Luxor, killing 19 tourists, surpasses what ballooning experts believed to have been the deadliest accident in the sport's 200-year history, a 1989 crash in Australia that left 13 dead.

Some of the worst accidents involving recreational hot air balloons:

? Feb. 26, 2013: A hot air balloon flying over Luxor, in southern Egypt, caught fire and plunged 300 meters (1,000 feet) to the ground, crashing into a sugar cane field and killing at least 19 foreign tourists.

? Aug. 23, 2012: Six people died and 26 were injured when a hot air balloon carrying 32 people, mostly tourists including some children, caught fire and crashed near the Slovenian capital of Ljubljana.

? Jan. 07, 2012: A hot air balloon struck power lines near Carterton, New Zealand and exploded, crashing to the ground and killing all 11 people on board.

? Oct. 14, 2009: Four Dutch tourists were killed in Guangxi, China, after pilots lost control and their hot air balloon burst into flames and crashed.

? Aug. 26, 2001: Six people including a child were killed when their hot air balloon touched a power line at Verrens-Arvey, in southwestern France.

? June 17, 1999: Four passengers were killed when their hot air balloon hit a power line near Ibbenburen, Germany.

? Jan. 31, 1996: Five people died in the Bernese Alps, Switzerland when their hot air balloon crashed into a mountainside at a height of 2,400 meters (8,000 feet).

? Aug. 8, 1993: Six people were killed when their balloon hit a power line near Aspen, Colorado, tearing off the basket and sending it plunging 30 meters (100 feet) to the ground.

? Dec. 11, 1990: Four people died near downtown Columbus, Ohio, after their hot air balloon hit a television tower and deflated.

? Oct. 6, 1990: Four people were killed in a balloon crash at Gaenserndorf, near Vienna.

? Aug. 13, 1989: Thirteen people were killed when their hot air balloon collided with another over the Australian outback near the town of Alice Springs. The two balloons were flying at an altitude of 600 meters (2,000 feet) when one plunged to the ground after the collision.

? Oct. 3, 1982: An explosion on board a hot air balloon carrying 9 people at a festival in Albuquerque, New Mexico killed four people and injured five.

? Aug. 6, 1981: Five people were killed and one seriously injured when a hot air balloon caught fire after touching electrical wires and crashed in a suburb of Chicago.

? 1785: Two Frenchmen attempting to cross the English Channel in a hot-air balloon were killed when their balloon caught fire and crashed, in possibly the first fatal aviation accident.

Sources: AP reporting and news reports. Compiled by AP News Researcher Jennifer Farrar.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/look-deadliest-hot-air-balloon-accidents-174018300.html

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Are tablet computers a 'costly distraction' for police? - Public Service

26 February 2013 The way in which the Metropolitan Police spends millions of pounds on iPad style tablet computers and other technology like fingerprint scanners and smartphones is to come under the scrutiny of London Assembly members.

A new review launched by the London Assembly's Budget and Performance Committee is to ask whether the Met should be spending money on technology like this to help officers work more effectively, or whether this spending is a "costly distraction".

The committee will examine the Met's technology strategy and how it can find technology savings of ?42m in 2014-15 and ?60m in the following year.

Assembly members want to explore how the force will use 30,000 new mobile devices to cut the time officers spend on paperwork, and whether this will free them up to spend more time on the beat.

"The Met is facing budget cuts of 20 per cent over the next three years and it is inevitable that technology spending is going to feel the squeeze, but it is clearly also the case that judicious investment in technology could improve productivity and be an aid to change," said committee chairman John Biggs.

"Whether it's backroom ICT support or the use of innovative new devices like smartphones or fingerprint scanners, the Met will need to ensure that it's getting the best value for money.

"We all know that big IT projects often have a habit of getting out of control and falling victim to unforeseen glitches, compatibility problems and ballooning costs.

"Our review is all about ensuring that the Met avoids the pitfalls and gets the most out of the technology budget, because at the end of the day, better deals and smarter systems could mean a more efficient police force and more officers out on the streets."

In its review, the committee is expected to consider whether some contracts can be renegotiated or even cancelled. Presently the force spends ?325m a year on technology, with a third of this spend committed to one deal with Capgemini that is due to end in 2015.

Source: http://www.publicservice.co.uk/news_story.asp?id=22281

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'Larger than life' civil rights icon honored with statue in Capitol (CNN)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/287885918?client_source=feed&format=rss

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The Engadget Interview: Qualcomm's Rob Chandhok on the Internet of things at MWC 2013

The Engadget Interview Qualcomm's Rob Chandhok on the Internet of things at MWC2013

Few people understand the Internet of things better than Rob Chandhok -- president of Internet services at Qualcomm -- and we had the chance to sit down with him in Barcelona after our interview with Raj Talluri. We chatted about AllJoyn, a set of open source services which the company just revamped to incorporate a simple notification protocol -- an "SMS for things" -- small and durable enough to be useful for the life on an appliance, like a fridge or a washer. This provides a universal mechanism for notification and control, such as WiFi on-boarding, for example. He also mentioned AllJoyn audio, a streaming protocol that Qualcomm and DoubleTwist collaborated on. We then discussed various approaches and network topologies for building the Internet of things, such as IPv6-connected products with cloud-based logic vs. devices on local area networks that interact with the Internet via gateways (something that's prevalent in modern home automation). Check out the full interview video after the break.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/27/the-engadget-interview-qualcomms-rob-chandhok-on-the-internet/

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Indigo is a cloud-based, cross-platform personal assistant for Android and Windows Phone 8 (hands-on)

Indigo is a cloud-based, cross-platform personal assistant for Android and Windows Phone 8 (hands-on)

The idea of a personal assistant needs no introduction: you already know Siri, and those of you fortunate to own a Jelly Bean handset (or at least a hacked ICS one) have the privilege of using Google Now So there's very little we haven't seen here. And yet, we were inclined to take a look at Indigo, a new personal assistant for Android and Windows Phone 8 that launched yesterday, and will be available as a free download in the coming weeks. Meet us past the break to find out why.

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Source: Indigo

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/26/indigo-personal-assistant-hands-on/

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Kerry regales Berliners with tales of divided city

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaks at a ?Youth Connect: Berlin? event in Berlin on Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. Berlin is the second stop in Kerry?s first trip overseas as secretary. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaks at a ?Youth Connect: Berlin? event in Berlin on Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. Berlin is the second stop in Kerry?s first trip overseas as secretary. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry shakes hands with the children of U.S. Embassy staff at the Embassy in Berlin on Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. Berlin is the second stop in Kerry?s first trip overseas as secretary. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

BERLIN (AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told young Germans on Tuesday of his adventures as a 12-year-old son of an American diplomat in divided postwar Berlin, and urged them to be true to their ideals and values as Europe struggles to emerge from economic doldrums and deal with the threat of terrorism.

Speaking at a town hall meeting Tuesday, Kerry spoke a few sentences of passable German to the delight of a crowd in a packed Internet cafe before regaling the audience with tales of his boyhood in Berlin in 1954.

He recalled a clandestine bicycle ride into communist East Berlin. "I saw the difference between east and west. I saw the people wearing darker clothing. There were fewer cars. I didn't feel the energy or the movement."

When he returned home, Kerry said, his father "got very upset with me and said: 'You could have created an international incident. I could have lost my job.' So I lost my passport, and I was grounded and I never made another trip like that."

Today, Kerry said: "I never forgot and now it's vanished. Now, so many other countries have followed with this spirit of giving life to people's individual hopes and aspirations."

Kerry urged Germans to be tolerant of all points of view and noted that in America "you have a right to be stupid." He said tolerance of unpopular, offensive or otherwise objectionable views was a virtue and "something worth fighting for."

Kerry also took the opportunity to plug a New England clothing line after one audience member complimented him on his pink tie. A graduate of the noted St. Paul's School in New Hampshire and Yale University, Kerry extolled the sartorial virtues of Vineyard Vines, a Connecticut purveyor of ? in its own description ? "preppy" clothes that has a pink whale for a logo.

"I don't own any stock in the company," he said to laughter.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-26-EU-Kerry-Germany/id-e95390bbcd6d497899982fc11475f28b

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Snowstorm closes Kansas City airport, cuts power to 40,000

Another major snowstorm knocked out power from Texas to Missouri, and closed schools across the Midwest. The good news? It could alleviate drought conditions plaguing the region.

By Bill Draper,?AP / February 26, 2013

Amarillo, Texas emergency personnel assist a stranded motorist on the I-40 service road Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. A blizzard packing 50 mph wind gusts and more than 11 inches of snow closed Interstate 40 and many major highways in the Panhandle.

(AP Photo/The Amarillo Globe News,Michael Schumacher)

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?The second major snowstorm in a week battered the nation's midsection Tuesday, dropping a half-foot or more of snow across Missouri and Kansas and cutting power to thousands. Gusting winds blew drifts more than 2 feet high and created treacherous driving conditions for those who dared the morning commute.

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About 40,000 people in northwest Missouri and northeast Kansas awoke to no power as heavy, wet snow weighed on power lines. Kansas City, Mo., was in a state of emergency as blinding snowfall ? made worst by sustained gusts estimated at 30 mph or higher ? made car and truck traffic too dangerous. About 8 inches of new snow had fallen on parts of the Kansas City metro area as the sun rose Tuesday.

Flights in and out of Kansas City International Airport were canceled, schools, government offices and businesses across the region were closed. City buses were getting stuck.

Numerous accidents were reported in the area, and Mayor Sly James declared the emergency in an unwanted encore to a major snowstorm that dumped nearly a foot of snow on his city just five days earlier. He urged residents to stay home, given that the new storm was expected to dump nearly a foot of new snow on the city.

"This one has the potential to be quite serious," James said.

A strong low pressure system fueled the storm, which also included heavy rain and thunderstorms in eastern Oklahoma and Texas.

The storm knocked power out to thousands of homes in Texas and Oklahoma and was blamed for the death of a 21-year-old man whose SUV hit an icy patch on Interstate 70 in northwestern Kansas and overturned Monday. In Oklahoma, a person was killed after 15 inches of snow brought down part of a roof in the northwest town of Woodward.

In the Texas Panhandle, wind gusts up to 75 mph and heavy snow had made all roads impassable and created whiteout conditions, said Paul Braun, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Transportation. A hurricane-force gust of 75 mph was recorded at the Amarillo, Texas, airport. The city saw the biggest snowfall total in Texas with 17 inches.

Motorists were stranded throughout the Texas Panhandle, with the NWS in Lubbock reporting as many as 100 vehicles at a standstill on Interstate 27.

Schools and major highways in the Texas Panhandle remained closed for a second day Tuesday. State officials said they hoped that stretches of Interstate 40 near the Oklahoma border, which have been closed since Monday morning, would reopen by Tuesday afternoon. Whiteout conditions further impeded efforts to clear roads of more than a foot of snow in western Oklahoma early Tuesday.

Texas Tech's men's basketball team stayed overnight at a hotel in Manhattan, Kan., after playing Kansas State on Monday night, rather try to drive back to Lubbock. Also late Monday, officials with Oklahoma State University announced it would be closed Tuesday due to the weather.

The American Red Cross opened a shelter Monday night in Woodward, Okla., for stranded travelers. It also told its volunteers and workers in Kansas City to be prepared to help in the case of power outages or large numbers of stranded travelers.

Area hospitals closed outpatient and urgent care centers, and the University of Missouri canceled classes for Tuesday. The Missouri Department of Transportation issued a "no travel" advisory asking people to stay off affected highways except in case of a dire emergency.

Meteorologist Mike Umscheid of the National Weather Service office in Dodge City, Kan., said this latest storm combined with the storm last week will help alleviate the drought conditions that have plagued farmers and ranchers across the Midwest, and could be especially helpful to the winter wheat crop planted last fall.

But getting two back-to-back storms of this magnitude doesn't mean the drought is finished.

"If we get one more storm like this with widespread 2 inches of moisture, we will continue to chip away at the drought, but to claim the drought is over or ending is way too premature," Umscheid said.

_____

Associated Press writers Betsy Blaney in Lubbock, Texas, Nomaan Merchant in Dallas, Jill Zeman Bleed and Kelly P. Kissel in Little Rock, Ark., Daniel Holtmeyer in Oklahoma City, Steve Paulson in Denver, Paul Davenport in Albuquerque, N.M., and Roxana Hegeman in Wichita, Kan., contributed to this report.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/akGrMeMvVgA/Snowstorm-closes-Kansas-City-airport-cuts-power-to-40-000

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Mars May Be Habitable Today, Scientists Say

LOS ANGELES ? While Mars was likely a more hospitable place in its wetter, warmer past, the Red Planet may still be capable of supporting microbial life today, some scientists say.

Ongoing research in Mars-like places such as Antarctica and Chile's Atacama Desert shows that microbes can eke out a living in extremely cold and dry environments, several researchers stressed at "The Present-Day Habitability of Mars" conference held here at the University of California Los Angeles this month.

And not all parts of the Red Planet's surface may be arid currently ? at least not all the time. Evidence is building that liquid water might flow seasonally at some Martian sites, potentially providing a haven for life as we know it.

"We certainly can't rule out the possibility that it's habitable today," said Alfred McEwen of the University of Arizona, principal investigator for the HiRise camera aboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft. [The Search for Life on Mars: A Photo Timeline]

Surface water on Mars?

McEwen discussed some intriguing observations by HiRise, which suggest that briny water may flow down steep Martian slopes during the local spring and summer.

Sixteen such sites have been identified to date, mostly on the slopes of the huge Valles Marineris canyon complex, McEwen said. The tracks seem to repeat seasonally as the syrupy fluids descend along weather-worn pathways.

While the brines may originate underground, Caltech's Edwin Kite noted, there is an increasing suspicion that a process known as deliquescence ? in which moisture present in the atmosphere is gathered by compounds on the ground, allowing it to become a liquid ? may be responsible.

Astrobiologists are keen to learn more about these brines, for not much is known about them at the moment.

"Briny water on Mars may or may not be habitable to microbes, either from Earth or from Mars," McEwen said.

Hardy microbes

Martian life may be able to survive even in places where water doesn't seep and flow, some scientists stressed.

For example, microbes here on Earth make a living in the Atacama and the dry valleys of Antarctica, both of which are extremely cold and arid, said Chris McKay of NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif.

Antarctic sites also receive seasonally high ultraviolet radiation doses thanks to a hole in the ozone layer that tends to develop every August through November. This provides yet another parallel to Mars, whose thin atmosphere and lack of a protective magnetic field make the planet more radiation-bombarded than Earth.

In the Antarctic dry valleys, McKay said, organisms dwell within rocks, just deep enough to be shielded from the worst of the UV but close enough to the surface to receive the benefits of photosynthesis. Something similar might be happening on Mars today, if life ever evolved there.

McKay also discussed deliquescence, which in the Atacama allows salts to gather enough water to support the existence of life.

McKay offered some advice to NASA's Mars rover Curiosity, which landed in August to determine whether Mars could ever have supported microbial life: "Watch for salt along the road!"

A possible energy source

A number of presenters spent some time talking about perchlorate, a chlorine-containing chemical that NASA's Phoenix lander spotted near the Martian north pole in 2008.

McKay and other researchers think perchlorate may be the reason that NASA's twin Viking landers didn't detect any organic compounds ? the carbon-containing building blocks of life as we know it ? on the Red Planet back in the 1970s.

The Vikings vaporized Martian soil and looked for any organics boiling off. They found nothing but a few chlorine compounds that were attributed to contamination. But after Phoenix's perchlorate find, McKay and some other researchers performed an experiment.

They added perchlorate to some desert dirt from Chile known to contain organics. They heated the soil up and found the same chlorine compounds the Vikings did, suggesting that organics may have been present in the Vikings' samples but were broken down by the combination of heat and perchlorate.

While this backstory is interesting in its own right, perchlorate is also relevant to the possible habitability of present-day Mars.

"Perchlorate, it turns out, is a potent chemoautotrophic energy source," said Carol Stoker, also of NASA Ames, noting that the chemical could potentially sustain microbes in the dark Martian subsurface, where photosynthesis is not an option.

And some Earth microbes use perchlorate for food, so that could be happening on Mars as well, scientists have pointed out.

"The Present-Day Habitability of Mars" took place Feb. 4-5 and was co-hosted by the NASA Astrobiology institute and the UK Centre for Astrobiology. Archived videos of conference presentations are available here.

Follow SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mars-may-habitable-today-scientists-212454782.html

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California couple vanishes during cycling trip in Peru

(Reuters) - Authorities in Peru have launched a search for a California couple reported missing while on a cycling trip through the Andean country in an area where U.S. citizens have been warned of kidnapping risks, U.S. Embassy officials in Lima said on Monday.

Families of the couple, Garrett Hand and Jamie Neal, said they last heard from the pair on January 25, a day before they were expected to arrive in Lima after a journey of several hundred miles from Cusco, in the country's mountainous interior southeast of the capital, the embassy said in a statement.

"Embassy officers are ... in close contact with Peruvian authorities who are working diligently to find Mr. Hand and Ms. Neal," said the statement, furnished to Reuters by information officer Leslie Nunez Goodman.

The couple, both 25, were longtime friends who began dating last spring or summer and lived together in Oakland, California, east of San Francisco, said Neal's boss, Jeff Jerge, who owns a Bay-area bicycle shop, the Pedaler, where she works.

Hand had worked summers as a fisherman in Alaska, he said.

"My worries are pretty great," Jerge told Reuters. "They had been corresponding (from their trip) fairly regularly, and it ceased that day (January 25)," he said, adding that no money has been withdrawn from either of their bank accounts since then. He said he worried they had been abducted.

Their disappearance coincides with a travel advisory issued by the U.S. Embassy on February 13 warning of foreign tourists near Cusco and the ancient Incan city of Machu Picchu of a potential kidnapping threat.

The warning was widely interpreted as being linked to efforts by a remnant band of Maoist Shining Path rebels to repel a government push to regain control of jungle valleys in the Cusco region that are rife with coca cultivation and cocaine trafficking.

But the embassy statement about the missing couple said diplomats knew of "no connection between the disappearance of these two U.S. citizens" and the travel advisory issued in February.

The embassy statement that the couple were last been heard from on January 25 en route from Cusco to Lima appeared to be at odds with accounts of Peruvian police and the Arcoiris ecological community in the Amazonian region of Iquitos, located hundreds of miles northeast of the capital.

Arcoiris told Reuters the couple had stayed there for five days before departing by boat on an upriver journey to Ecuador on February 16, three weeks after their families said they received their last communication from the pair.

Hand and Neal originally had intended to bicycle from the San Francisco Bay area to South America through Mexico, but friends concerned about security in Mexico persuaded the couple to fly to South America and start their trip there instead, Jerge said.

Another co-worker at the bike shop, Ron Hammer, said the pair, who were studying Spanish in preparation for their trip, had mostly been camping by tent during their journey and on occasion stayed with extended family of people they knew in South America.

Family members and friends of the pair have begun collecting money to offer as a reward, and were seeking to get flyers with pictures of the couple and information about them distributed in Peru.

(Additional reporting by Mitra Taj in Lima; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-couple-vanishes-during-cycling-trip-peru-000934306.html

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Dog Sledding Holidays: What To Expect

If youve ever dreamed of exploring the Arctic, dog sledding holidays provide a fantastic way to do so. There are few experiences as exhilarating as being drawn across the snow on a sled pulled by a team of huskies, and few landscapes as pristine and enchanting as the ones youll traverse while doing so. To help you get in the right frame of mind for such a trip, read on.

What Youll See

The details of your surroundings will, of course, depend on where you choose to go for your dog sledding holidays, but all the potential destinations share an incredible natural beauty. There are the soaring mountains and gleaming lakes of the Yukon, where bears, moose and caribou roam, and pike and trout dart through the waters while hawks, bald eagles and golden eagles soar overhead. North America also offers a plethora of other great locations, from stunning forest scenery in Prince Albert National Park to the sweeping beauty of Algonquin Park. In Europe, the icy wonders and ancient traditions of Lapland await, as well as the icebergs and remote settlements of Greenland.

What Youll Learn

Learning new things is one of the joys of travel, and this is especially true in this case. While the sights that surround you as you make your way across the snow on dog sledding holidays are enough of a magical new experience in themselves, there is also wonder and new knowledge to be gained from the activity itself. Youll learn more about the abilities, personalities and needs of the dogs, which are in many cases Siberian Huskies, although other breeds such as the Alaskan Malamute and the Mahikan are used in some places; each breed will have its own unique but equally interesting characteristics. You might also learn about the history of dog sledding, which predates our era by thousands of years, and about the principles of mushing which comes from the French order traditionally given to the dogs to start moving: Marche!

How to Prepare

While those who have previously embarked on dog sledding holidays will likely agree that they are a fantastic experience from start to finish, it can not be denied that some preparation is necessary to meet the conditions that you will be experiencing. The destinations for such holidays are some of the worlds coldest, so knowing how to protect yourself from the elements is important. When packing, be sure to include plenty of warm clothes, as well as a weatherproof outer layer and good boots. Synthetic fabrics are better than cotton, which retains moisture and can make the wearer cold. Specialist equipment and advice will usually be provided by your holiday operator, but dont forget the smaller essentials such as sunglasses and sunscreen, as the snow can reflect a considerable amount of sunlight.

Philippa Westwood is Marketing Manager at Windows on the Wild, a specialist of wildlife watching tours and dog sledding holidays. Destinations include Canada, Lapland and Sweden where dog sledding holidays can take you on adventurous experiences across the world.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/-Dog-Sledding-Holidays--What-To-Expect/4455003

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AAA Mich.: Gas prices fall 8 cents from last week

DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -- AAA Michigan says gasoline prices have fallen 8 cents during the past week to a statewide average of about $3.83 per gallon.

The auto club says Monday the average is about 14 cents per gallon more than last year at this time and follows six weeks of increases.

Of the cities it surveys, AAA Michigan says the cheapest price for self-serve unleaded fuel is in the Flint area, where it's about $3.76 a gallon. The highest average is in the Marquette area at about $3.87.

Dearborn-based AAA Michigan surveys 2,800 Michigan gas stations daily.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/aaa-mich-gas-prices-fall-141939680.html

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Obama urged to back tough arms trade treaty at U.N. talks

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Three dozen arms control and human rights groups have written to U.S. President Barack Obama ahead of new arms-trade negotiations at the United Nations next month, urging him to back a tough treaty that would end loopholes in international weapons sales.

Arms control campaigners say one person every minute dies worldwide as a result of armed violence and a convention is needed to prevent the unregulated and illicit flow of weapons into conflict zones and fueling wars and atrocities.

The U.N. General Assembly voted in December to restart negotiations in mid-March on what could become the first international treaty to regulate the $70 billion global arms trade after a drafting conference in July collapsed because the United States and other nations wanted more time.

"The United States, as the world's leading arms supplier, has a special responsibility to provide the leadership needed for an ATT (arms trade treaty) with the highest possible standards for the transfer of conventional arms and ammunition," the groups wrote to Obama in a letter delivered late on Friday.

"The Arms Trade Treaty can provide a key tool to help reduce enormous human suffering caused by irresponsible international arms transfers and arms brokering," the letter said.

The 36 groups that co-authored the letter include Amnesty International USA, Arms Control Association, Friends Committee on National Legislation, Oxfam America, National Association of Evangelicals and other groups.

The point of the treaty is to set standards for all cross-border transfers of any type of conventional weapon - light and heavy. It also would set binding requirements for nations to review all cross-border arms contracts to ensure the munitions will not be used in human rights abuses, do not violate embargoes and are not illegally diverted.

Deputy U.S. National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden confirmed the White House had received the letter, saying it "raises a number of important issues." She said Washington would support a treaty under certain conditions.

"The March 2013 Arms Trade Treaty Conference will seek an Arms Trade Treaty that will contribute to international security, (and) protect the sovereign right of states to conduct legitimate arms trade," she said in an email that provided the most extensive public U.S. statement on the treaty in months.

U.S. SAYS "NO WEAK TREATY"

Hayden said Washington would not support a treaty that infringed on the constitutional right of U.S. citizens to bear arms - a sensitive political issue in America. Since adoption of a treaty next month will require consensus, the United States and all other delegations have de facto veto powers.

"The U.S. objective is to bring other countries in line with existing U.S. best practices, which will have a positive humanitarian impact and reduce the chances that illicit arms flow to terrorists and those that would commit human rights violations," Hayden said.

She also said Washington would not accept a "weak treaty."

If a treaty is approved, it will require ratification by signatories' legislatures before it goes into effect. The leading U.S. pro-gun group, the National Rifle Association (NRA), has vowed to fight hard to prevent ratification of the treaty if it reaches Washington.

The treaty's supporters accuse the NRA of deceiving the U.S. public about the pact, which they say would have no impact on domestic gun ownership and would only apply to exports.

The main reason the arms trade talks are taking place at all is that the United States - the world's biggest arms trader, which accounts for more than 40 percent of global transfers in conventional arms - reversed U.S. policy on the issue after Obama was first elected and decided in 2009 to support a treaty.

The authors of the letter called on Obama to ensure that any approved treaty requires exporting states to "assess the risk of a proposed export being used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international human rights or humanitarian law, or acts of terrorism."

They also urged the United States not to back exclusion of ammunition from the arms trade treaty, which will be negotiated by about 150 countries at U.N. headquarters March 18-28.

"The exclusion of ammunition from the scope of the treaty would greatly reduce the treaty's ability to achieve many of its most important goals," the groups wrote, adding that the United States already licenses the import and export of ammunition.

But the White House made clear it would continue to oppose the inclusion of ammunition in the draft treaty.

"Ammunition is a fundamentally different commodity than conventional arms," Hayden said. "It is fungible, consumable, reloadable, and cannot be marked in any practical way that would permit it to be tracked or traced."

(Reporting By Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-urged-back-tough-arms-trade-treaty-u-000216736.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Bloomberg Bans Bottle Service Soda - Business Insider

Bottle service is a staple of the New York nightlife scene, and a lucrative business for clubs.

But Mayor Michael Bloomberg's large-soda ban could affect the models-and-bottles lifestyle as we know it.

Not only will sugary sodas that are often served as mixers be banned from the tables, but cranberry juice will be too, according to The New York Post. Only water and 100 percent juice will be unlimited, and going against the ban could cost a club $200 per violation.

There's no word yet on how NYC's nightclubs will supplement their mixers, but given that cans of Red Bull are already available at certain bottle service tables, perhaps the carafes of soda will be replaced by cans.

Or clubs will simply turn to diet soda, which is not restricted under the ban. The Post says fruit smoothies with no added sweetener and coffee drinks or milkshakes made with 50 percent milk are safe as well.

Of course, that does little to appease the city's wider worries over the Bloomberg ban. Among the main complaints: that Domino's will no longer sell its 20 ounce sodas, and there will be no more pitchers of sugary drinks at restaurants or bowling alleys.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/bloomberg-bans-bottle-service-soda-2013-2

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Guys on Girls, Season 2

girls_jessa_2_7

Photo by Jessica Miglio/HBO

Jemima Kirke.

David Haglund: Bryan, the last time you and I discussed Girls, after this season?s coke-fueled third episode, you seemed to be coming around to the show?despite your problems with its principal protagonist, Hannah (Lena Dunham). You hoped that she would become more ?self-aware? as the season progressed. Arguably, we saw that happen, at least a little bit, in ?Video Games,? tonight?s episode, though it mostly focused on Jessa (Jemima Kirke). What did you think?

Bryan Lowder: I?ve really come around to the show this season?not necessarily as an avid fan, but as a regular viewer who appreciates the general thrust of the series. And you?re right: This episode absolutely brought a needed dose of reality to Hannah, and I enjoyed watching her deal with it?she even had to walk to the Metro North station all by herself. You forget how much a city like?New York can provide the infrastructure necessary to support a whole class of helpless, un-self-aware narcissists. A trip upstate, to a place where there are no subways that will whisk you home at 5 a.m. can?like a strange, attractive man waiting on the next block to put you up for the weekend?inspire a little reflection on your circumstances.

Haglund: As can a strange, less attractive man?perhaps boy is a more accurate descriptor?whose mother is married to the English father of your eccentric friend. I thought of Hannah?s impulsive, assertive kiss of Joshua (Patrick Wilson) when Frank made a similarly optimistic pass at a more experienced and sophisticated visitor. I wonder if that was a deliberate echo. In any case, the consequences of Frank?s daring seemed much less pleasant (and far more brief) than what Hannah managed with an older paramour a couple episodes ago. Before we get to that eccentric friend, any ideas why Hannah?s urinary tract infection was so prominently featured in this episode? More wisdom through suffering? Or was the point that some pain comes with no reward? Or maybe there was nothing to be gleaned from that at all?

Lowder:?Aww, you had to bring up to the UTI, didn?t you? I?ll get to that in a sec, but first, let me reply to your astute observation about Frank. On a basic level, that plot-line looked at what happens when a bunch of youngish people get together in a cabin-in-the-woods scenario?specifically, situational lust that may or may not be regrettable. More importantly, the encounter forced Hannah to recognize that her experience-seeking actually has consequences for other people. I?m thinking of the scene post-coitus, when Frank says Hannah used him and hints at some kind of sexual confusion with regard to his golden-boy friend, Tyler. Heretofore, Hannah?s sexcapades have been treated as occasionally grotesque and intermittently funny divertissements in which everyone goes back to their apartments in the morning. Here was a young man who really did feel used, and emotionally wounded, even if he initiated the encounter. Couldn?t she tell there was some energy between those two boys? I could.

As for the UTI, I think it was brought in mostly so we could see Hannah peeing by the tracks and making that weird cat sound. But maybe it, too, was meant to hint at the consequences of sex?with Sandy, with Joshua, with whoever punched her in the chest and then came in that spot?

Haglund:?But I thought the Joshua interlude was a fantasy! Actually, I didn?t. And perhaps it was an imaginary sexcapade with real toads in it, so to speak. Or maybe the UTI was just there to highlight Jessa?s hippie inclinations and dubious worldiness?apparently that garlic-clove folk-remedy is really intended for yeast infections.

You know, I feel even more out of my depth discussing this show than usual.?Anyway, you?re exactly right about Frank. For once, Hannah was unquestionably the one being careless about another person?s feelings vis ? vis a sexual encounter. It definitely had a Cabin in the Woods feel: That cemetery setting was no accident, surely?and that ?look ma, no eyes? driving sequence was precisely the sort of thing teenagers do in horror movies before one of them gets brutally murdered.

But let?s talk about Frank?s mom (Rosanna Arquette!)?and stepdad (Ben Mendelsohn). Is he the sort of father you imagined Jessa might have? Does this bit of backstory make her a more interesting, complicated character for you? And do you agree with me that Jemima Kirke pulled off crying on cue better than her castmates, Dunham (who had to do it two episodes ago) and Allison Williams (who did it last week)?

Lowder: You know, now that I think about it, I guess I imagined Jessa would have a colder father, a high-powered businessman or whatnot against whom she might be rebelling. Then again, I guess this dad is cold in his own, hippie-dippie and undependable way. I?m hesitant to let ?daddy issues? explain all of Jessa?s problems, but maybe we?re not meant to take this episode so simply. Remember, dad did remind Jessa that she herself has not shown up for the past six ?occasions??clearly, both people have a problem with follow-through. As for whether it made her more interesting? I guess it made me sad for her more than anything. It made me pity her for how that lack of peace must feel. And I?m guessing that was the point, given Hannah?s call to her parents later. Hannah told them she felt like she had a safety net under her, even though they don?t get along and are all ridiculous in their own ways. Putting such drama aside, there is a core stability there that is a privilege indeed.

Haglund:?Well put, Bryan. Hannah?s description of that feeling?that it?s like ?there?s a hammock under the earth protecting me??was similarly eloquent, and emphasized, consciously or no, the privilege of having such supportive (financially and otherwise) parents. All the dad stuff reminded me of last week, when Ray said he felt like Shoshanna?s father, and Adam called them ?babies holding hands.? In ?Video Games,? Jessa says, ?I?m the child, I?m the child,? while sobbing on a swing?and this after telling Hannah to ?grow up,? just as Marnie did earlier this season. Seems like maybe the show is trying to point out that we don?t ever totally grow up; we just get older, and while we may mature in some ways, our childishness doesn?t ever entirely go away. Or maybe I?m just speaking for myself here.

Speaking of childish things, why do you think the title for this episode was taken from that bizarre ?video games? rant that Petula went off on? That was another bit of thematic oddness I couldn?t quite square.

Lowder:?Well, Petula may be the most childish of them all. Her mother-earth, rabbit-eating, ?seminar?-going schtick was completely insufferable, and suggested a total disconnect from reality. Which is fine, I guess, since she lives in a video game. I?m not sure exactly why (or if) that rant was so thematically important?but I suppose the characters in this episode were in a strange place with unfamiliar challenges? (Like peeing outside, for instance.) And this might be a stretch, but perhaps the notion of a safety net also comes in here: Because of her parent?s stability and support, Hannah could fail and still have a second ?life,? whereas Jessa might not.

Haglund:?Interesting. That?s more than I came up with. (Also: Who would drive with their eyes covered except someone who thought they got an extra life?) Maybe our commenters will have some other suggestions. And perhaps our one-time conversation partner Bruce Eric Kaplan?the second man in a row to get sole writing credit for an episode of Girls?just liked the sound of the phrase. Or was thinking of the Lana Del Rey song?

Speaking of pop songs, I thought the music, one of the real strengths of this show, was particularly good tonight. I have a soft spot for Aimee Mann?whose husband, by the way, scores the series (more ?nepotism?!)?and her ?How Am I Different?? was perfect here, echoing Jessa?s dad?s comments that they?re ?not like other people,? a claim that ?Video Games? both proves and disproves: The Johansson clan is a little weird, to be sure, but deep down, most of our needs are pretty similar. Also, the lines ?Because this show is/ Too well designed/ Too well to be held with only me in mind? are (coincidentally, I assume) a remarkably apt bit of commentary on Season 2 of Girls.

Anything else you particularly liked?or didn?t like?about this episode (besides, of course, Hannah?s comment that old computers ?look like doghouses?)?

Lowder:?I really liked how well the episode caught the experience of being a stranger in a family home. Petula called Hannah the ?cushion,? and that immediately rang true, having gone home with friends and boyfriends to domestic spaces that were sometimes in need of them. And I didn?t really dislike anything this time around?other than the dangerous driving. Definitely hated that.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=c980ba4068ddc7a57ff1535ace09569d

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Bada to be retired, will see its best features absorbed by Tizen

Bada to be retired, will see its best features absorbed by Tizen

It's been over a year since rumors and statements suggested Samsung's Bada OS was due to be terminated, but that some form of it would live on within the open-source Tizen OS. Now, Samsung exec Won-Pyo Hong has confirmed as such with Korean news agency Yonhap. Rather than a complete fusion of the two, Tizen will select only the best qualities of the featurephone-friendly Bada for assimilation. Samsung's Tizen 2.0-based handsets arriving in 2013 will put the final nail in Bada's coffin, but out of respect for its fallen comrade, Tizen will obligingly run apps designed for the retired OS. Like some kind of mobile software Highlander, Tizen is now drawing power from several perished peers, and has even set its sights on the mighty Android. There can be only one.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Yonhap

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/bwrY90Gu6KM/

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