Wednesday, July 3, 2013

PFT: Hernandez may move to jail's general pop.

Graham Harrell, Mike McCarthyAP

There are multiple routes a backup quarterback can take to a starting job.

In the case of Green Bay?s Graham Harrell, he will likely have to take a road familiar to the passers who have played behind Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers in the last 20 years. In short, Harrell?s going to have to show enough in limited playing time, whether in the preseason or in a rare regular-season stint, to attract interest from another club, for the Packers have their starting quarterback in Rodgers.

Harrell is 28, and he is restricted free agent at season?s end. If he progresses in 2013, he could draw a solid tender offer next offseason from Green Bay. Perhaps even a trade market could develop for him.

First things first: Harrell needs to secure the top depth-chart spot behind Rodgers once again. In a feature published Monday, Harrell told Weston Hodkiewicz of the Green Bay Press-Gazette that he?s become more well-versed in the Packers? offense than ever this offseason.

?As a backup, you really get more reps now than you get anytime else,? Harrell told the?Press-Gazette.??I think that?s one of the biggest things and I feel more comfortable now than I?ve ever felt, knowing the protection, pretty much the O-line?and feeling good with protections, because routes when you play quarterback at some point you check defenses similar ways no matter what system you?re in.?

Per the Press-Gazette, Rodgers believes Harrell has taken a step forward like former backup Matt Flynn did in his time in Green Bay.

?I think he?s really improved,? Rodgers told the paper. ?I think you saw it last year throughout the season as he became more comfortable. I look at him as being in the same spot that Flynn was when Flynn was in his last year with us. We?re very confident in the offense and it means more to him to be successful every day in practice like you saw just a slight shift with Matt, and it was no surprise when Matt got a chance to play how well he played.?

Flynn parlayed his rare opportunities to play ? with his 2011 performance vs. Detroit his audition tape ? into a free-agent deal with Seattle. To take the next step up the ladder in his career, Harrell needs to hold off B.J. Coleman and hold his spot as the top backup to Rodgers.

And when it comes to play, Harrell needs to put something good on tape for evaluators to consider.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/07/01/hearing-could-send-hernandez-to-general-population/related/

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Paint Made From People: The Fascinating History Behind Extinct Colors

Paint Made From People: The Fascinating History Behind Extinct Colors

You?d think a paint named ?mummy brown? would be the product of good marketing. In fact, it dates back to the 16th century, when actual mummies were ground up and sold as paint. On Hyperallergic today, Allison Meier takes a look at the surprisingly riveting history of extinct pigments.

It?s common knowledge that certain pigments?including the green paint that likely killed Napoleon?were eventually discovered as toxic, and abandoned. But there are plenty of common colors that went extinct for other reasons. A few highlights from Meier's list:

  • Indian Yellow, unique because it contained the urine of Bihar province cows that were fed only mango leaves and water (it was eventually outlawed).
  • Lapis Lazuli, the deep ultramarine that Yves Klein must?ve admired, made from the ground-up, eponymous precious gem (today, it goes for $360 per five grams).
  • Mummy Brown, the aforementioned pigment made from the ground-up remains of actual Egyptian mummies (both of the human and cat variety). ?By the 16th century, despite legal restrictions, exporting mummies from Egypt to Europe to be ground up and used as ?medicine? was big business,? explains Art in Society. It was used up until the 19th century, when the supply of mummies ran dry.

It?s also worth pointing out that there?s a whole industry dedicated replicating these colors, if only just for preservationists working on restoring great works that used them. NPR did a great story on the topic last year, but meanwhile, Meier is updating her post with new colors as the tips roll in?so be sure to check it out. [Hyperallergic]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/paint-made-from-people-the-fascinating-history-behind-650844628

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UAE sentences 69 in mass coup plot trial

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) ? More than 65 suspects accused of plotting an Islamist coup in the United Arab Emirates received prison sentences of up to 15 years on Tuesday in a mass trial that underscored the widening crackdowns on perceived Arab Spring-inspired dissent across the entire Gulf Arab region.

Rights groups have accused the UAE of widespread violations, including jailhouse abuses against the 94 suspects on trial. The suspects included teachers, lawyers and even the cousin of one of the UAE's rulers.

Authorities have rejected the claims and have moved ahead with further arrests sweeps targeting suspected groups linked to Islamist networks such as Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood.

The UAE ? which allows no political parties ? has not faced any street protests or direct pressures since the Arab Spring uprisings began in the region more than two years ago. But Western-backed officials have turned their attention to suspected Islamist cells and online activists who have called for a greater public voice in the tightly controlled country.

The official news agency WAM said prison terms of 15 years were given to eight suspects tried in absentia. Ten-year sentences were handed to 56 others, including Sheikh Sultan bin Kayed al-Qasimi, who was head of a group known as al-Islah, or Reform. He is a cousin of the ruler in Ras al-Khaimah, the northernmost of the UAE's seven emirates.

Five suspects received seven-year terms. Another 25 people were acquitted. Earlier, prominent rights activist Ahmed Mansoor said 26 people were cleared based on preliminary information from the court.

Security was tight with many foreign journalists, family members and observers blocked from the session. The Abu Dhabi-based newspaper The National reported that chants of "Allahu Akbar," or God is Great, came from defendants and some relatives as the verdicts were read.

Mansoor said at least two brothers of the suspects were detained hours before the verdicts were handed down, reflecting wider trends across the Gulf as leaders attempt to quash any challenges to their rule.

Dozens of people have been jailed across the Gulf for blog posts and Twitter messages deemed offensive to rulers. Authorities in the Gulf also have claimed to have dismantled alleged espionage rings ? some accused of links to rival Iran or its proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council is expected to meet Thursday in Saudi Arabia to discuss further measures against Hezbollah for sending fighters to Syria to aid their ally President Bashar Assad. Already, the Gulf states have moved to expel suspected Hezbollah supporters and strip licenses from groups believed to be backing the Shiite militant group.

But the UAE has been the most aggressive in moving against suspected threats from Sunni Islamist groups.

Last month, UAE officials said they plan another high-profile trial against 30 Egyptian and UAE suspects for alleged coup plots linked to Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood.

The case raised tensions with the Brotherhood-led government of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi who is now under extreme pressure at home from protesters and military officials calling for him to step down.

In the Emirates' case against the 94 suspects, prosecutors claimed that the group al-Islah ? which was headed by the ruler's cousin al-Qasimi ? was influenced by Muslim Brotherhood ideology to oppose the Western-oriented system in the UAE.

The suspects rejected the claims, saying the group only supported Islamic viewpoints and conducted needed social outreach in poorer areas of the country beyond the skylines of Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

Al-Islah has operated openly for decades in the UAE under the tactic agreement that members would not get involved in political affairs.

In London, the director of the Emirates Center for Human Rights said the aim of the trial was to "silence political activists and intimidate others who may support democratic reforms."

"Allegations of torture remain without investigation and numerous fair trial standards have been violated," said Rori Donaghy.

"UAE authorities must quash these verdicts, release these individuals against whom they have presented no credible evidence and investigate the allegations of torture that have been made," Donaghy added.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uae-sentences-69-mass-coup-plot-trial-111900114.html

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Monday, July 1, 2013

'For now, we mourn': Few answers after 19 killed in Arizona wildfire

Governor Jan Brewer says her heart is breaking over the unimaginable loss of the firefighters, and for their families, friends and community.

By Erin McClam and Ian Johnston, NBC News

Arizona authorities struggled for answers Monday after 19 highly trained firefighters were trapped and killed by a windblown wildfire ? a blaze the governor vowed to stop ?before it causes any more heartache.?

One day after the worst loss of life for an American fire department since Sept. 11, investigators said they had not figured out why the men were unable to retreat to a safe zone or otherwise survive the inferno.

?For now, we mourn,? Gov. Jan Brewer said.

The fire, sparked by lightning on Friday, raged uncontrolled for a fourth day. By afternoon it had destroyed more than 200 buildings in Yarnell, a town of about 700 people northwest of Phoenix. It was described as at least 13 square miles and ?zero percent? contained, though more than 400 firefighters were trying.

The wildfire claimed all but one member of the Granite Mountain Hotshots, a team of elite firefighters known for extensive training and a demanding fitness regimen. Officials said only that the survivor might have been repositioning equipment.

Wade Ward, the public information officer for the Prescott Fire Department in Arizona, talks about the tragic loss of 19 firefighters in a massive wildfire, saying "it had to be the perfect storm in order for this to happen."

?We can honor their service with our gratitude and prayers,? Brewer said, ?and through our steadfast dedication to do whatever is necessary to bring this fire under control before it causes any more heartache.?

Mary Rasmussen, a spokeswoman for Prescott National Forest, said it appeared the 19 were engaged in a ?direct attack? ? getting close to the fire and trying to create a break to starve it of fuel.

She described the maneuver as ?one foot in the black and one foot in the green,? and said it was only done when the flames were 5 feet high or less: ?They?re right up against it.?

The conditions Sunday were extreme, with unusual wind, she said, and authorities were checking what other factors might have contributed.

Temperatures soared into the 110s in Arizona over the weekend, and National Weather Service meteorologist Brian Klimowski told The Associated Press that there was a sudden increase and shift in the wind at about the time the men were lost Sunday afternoon.

Art Morrison, a state forestry spokesman, told The Associated Press that the men had been forced to deploy emergency fire shelters ? individual, portable cocoons meant to protect breathable air and shield them from the heat.

Tom Harbour, national fire director for the U.S. Forest Service, said the shelters had saved hundreds of lives over the years. But he said some fires are strong enough, and move quickly enough, to overwhelm them. The fire was the deadliest wildfire in the United States in 80 years.

From the few known details, he said it was not clear that anyone did anything wrong.

?It?s way, way too early to be drawing any conclusions,? said Harbour, who said he had not seen anything like this fire in his 44-year career. ?The only conclusion right now is that souls are dead and half the town of Yarnell is gone.?

David Kadlubowski / The Arizona Republic via AP

Nineteen firefighters - all members of an elite response team - were killed Sunday battling a fast-moving wildfire in Arizona, marking the deadliest single incident for firefighters since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, officials said.

Hotshot fire crews often hike into the wilderness lugging 40 or 50 pounds of equipment, including chain saws and other heavy gear, to clear brush and trees and anything else that might feed the flames.

The Granite Mountain crew had battled blazes in New Mexico and elsewhere in Arizona in recent weeks.

?If you ever met them, you would meet the finest, most dedicated people,? Prescott Fire Chief Dan Fraijo said. ?They?ll sleep out there as they try to develop fire lines and put protection between homes and natural resources and still try to remain safe.?

President Barack Obama, in a statement, described the fallen men as ?heroes,? and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said it was ?as dark a day as I can remember.? Arizona Sen. John McCain said the men?s sacrifice would not be forgotten.

Authorities said they would release names of the dead later. Juliann Ashcraft told the website of The Arizona Republic and NBC affiliate KPNX that she and her four children were watching the news when they learned her husband, Andrew, was among the dead.

?They died heroes,? she said through tears. ?And we?ll miss them. We love them.?

?

Related:

This story was originally published on

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Police questioning of Zimmerman grew more pointed

SANFORD, Fla. (AP) ? Jurors in the George Zimmerman trial on Monday listened to a series of police interviews with detectives growing more pointed in their questioning of the neighborhood watch volunteer's account of how he came to fatally shoot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Prosecutors played audio and video tapes of the interviews that Zimmerman had with Sanford Police investigators Doris Singleton and Chris Serino in the hours and days after he fatally shot the Miami teen.

In an early interview, just hours after the Feb. 26, 2012, shooting, Singleton recounted that Zimmerman noticed a cross she was wearing and said: "In Catholic religion, it's always wrong to kill someone."

Singleton said she responded, "If what you're telling me is true, I don't think that what God meant was that you couldn't save your own life."

But in an interview several days later, Singleton and Serino suggest Zimmerman was running after Martin before the confrontation. They also ask the neighborhood watch volunteer why he didn't explain to Martin why he was following him. The officers insinuate that Martin may have been "creeped out" by being followed.

"Do you think he was scared?" Singleton asked Zimmerman in one video interview.

Under cross-examination, though, Serino said Zimmerman seemed straightforward in his answers and didn't show any anger when talking about Martin. Serino said the increasingly pointed questioning was a tactic known as a "challenge interview" where detectives try to break someone's story to make sure they're telling the truth.

Zimmerman has said he fatally shot the teen in self-defense because the Miami-area black teenager was banging his head into the concrete sidewalk behind the townhomes in a gated community.

Zimmerman, 29, could get life in prison if convicted of second-degree murder. The state argued during its opening statement that Zimmerman profiled and followed Martin in his truck and called a police dispatch number before he and the teen got into a fight. He has denied the confrontation had anything to do with race, as Martin's family and their supporters have claimed.

In his first interview at the police station, Zimmerman said he saw Martin walking through his neighborhood on a dark, rainy night while Zimmerman was driving to the grocery store. He told Singleton that he didn't recognize Martin and that there had been recent break-ins at his townhome complex.

"These guys always get away," Zimmerman told Singleton, a statement similar to one that prosecutors have used previously to try to show that Zimmerman was increasingly frustrated with the burglaries and his encounter with Martin was a breaking point.

Zimmerman told the police officer that he lost track of Martin and got out of his truck to look for a street name he could relay to police dispatcher. When the dispatcher suggested Zimmerman didn't need to follow Martin, Zimmerman started to head back to his vehicle. At that point, Zimmerman said Martin jumped out of some bushes, punched him and he fell to the ground.

Zimmerman said that Martin began hitting his head against the sidewalk as Zimmerman yelled for help and that Martin told him, "You're going to die tonight."

With Zimmerman's shirt and jacket pushed up during the struggle and his holstered gun now visible, he thought Martin was reaching for his firearm holstered around his waist. Zimmerman told the officer that he shot Martin and the teen said, "You got me."

In a written statement, Singleton read in court, Zimmerman refers to Martin as "the suspect." Singleton said it didn't appear that Zimmerman showed any anger when talking about the teen. Prosecutors must show that Zimmerman acted with ill will or a depraved mind in order to get a second-degree murder conviction.

Zimmerman also acted surprised when Singleton told him Martin was dead.

"He's dead?!" Singleton recalled Zimmerman saying, before he lowered his head toward the table in the interrogation room.

Earlier Monday, prosecutors called FBI audio expert Hirotaka Nakasone to focus on the issue of who was screaming for help on 911 calls during the confrontation. Jurors were played the 911 calls several times last week.

The recordings are crucial pieces of evidence because they could determine who the aggressor was in the confrontation. Martin's family contends it was the teen screaming, while Zimmerman's father has said it was his son.

Even though he was a pre-trial witness for the defense, prosecutors called Nakasone to set up later testimony from either the teen's mother or father that they believe it was their son yelling for help.

During his pre-trial testimony, Nakasone testified that there wasn't enough clear sound to determine whether Zimmerman or Martin was screaming on the best 911 sample, an assertion he repeated Monday.

The FBI expert said that it's easier for a person with a familiarity of a voice to identify it than someone who has never heard it previously. That is especially true if the recording is of a subject screaming and the person trying to identify the voice has heard the subject under similarly stressful circumstances previously, Nakasone said.

___

Follow Kyle Hightower on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/khightower.

Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MikeSchneiderAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-questioning-zimmerman-grew-more-pointed-215311801.html

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Local teams eliminated at Dizzy Dean state baseball tournaments

by Scott Herpst Cat Walk Chatt

The weekend was a tough one for local 6-under, 9-under, and 11-under baseball clubs as teams from Catoosa and Walker Counties managed to win just two total games in their respective Dizzy Dean State tournaments.

In the 6-under sanctioned tournament in Gordon County, the Chickamauga Dodgers dropped their opener to the Winston All-Stars on Saturday morning. The Dodgers bounced back to beat Ringgold in their second game, but were eliminated from the tournament with a loss to the Canton Stingers.

Ringgold had lost its initial game to the Acworth Warriors. Boynton lost to the Rome Wolves and the East Cobb Cobras, while LFORA went 0-2, falling to Eastside and Midway.

At the 6-under invitational tournament in Canton, the LaFayette All-Stars ? the area?s lone representative ? was sent home with a pair of losses to Paulding County and Whitfield County.

Back up the road in Rome, LaFayette fared no better in the 9-under sanctioned tournament. The Orange-and-Black dropped their first game to Canton on Friday night before being eliminated by the Winston All-Stars on Saturday.

Ringgold also lost its tournament opener to Alpharetta before rebounding to beat Hobgood. However, Ringgold was also sent packing on Saturday night with a loss to Canton.

And in the 11-under sanctioned tournament at the South Cherokee Recreational Complex in Woodstock, the Rossville Braves quest for a state title was short-lived after back-to-back Saturday losses to the Eastside Hurricanes and the Buckhead Bombers.

Source: http://walkermessenger.com/bookmark/23020724

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NASA turns off it?s Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Spacecraft

?

NASA - National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationPasadena, CA ? NASA has decommissioned its Galaxy Evolution Explorer after a decade of operations in which the venerable space telescope used its ultraviolet vision to study hundreds of millions of galaxies across 10 billion years of cosmic time.

?GALEX is a remarkable accomplishment,? said Jeff Hayes, NASA?s GALEX program executive in Washington. ?This small Explorer mission has mapped and studied galaxies in the ultraviolet, light we cannot see with our own eyes, across most of the sky.?

A speeding star can be seen leaving an enormous trail in this image from NASA?s Galaxy Evolution Explorer. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

A speeding star can be seen leaving an enormous trail in this image from NASA?s Galaxy Evolution Explorer. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

Operators at Orbital Sciences Corporation in Dulles, VA, sent the signal to decommission GALEX at 12:09pm PDT (3:09pm EDT) Friday, June 28th.

The spacecraft will remain in orbit for at least 65 years, then fall to Earth and burn up upon re-entering the atmosphere. GALEX met its prime objectives and the mission was extended three times before being cancelled.

Highlights from the mission?s decade of sky scans include:

  • Discovering a gargantuan, comet-like tail behind a speeding star called Mira.
  • Catching a black hole ?red-handed? as it munched on a star.
  • Finding giant rings of new stars around old, dead galaxies.
  • Independently confirming the nature of dark energy.
  • Discovering a missing link in galaxy evolution ? the teenage galaxies transitioning from young to old.

The mission also captured a dazzling collection of snapshots, showing everything from ghostly nebulas to a spiral galaxy with huge, spidery arms.

This image from NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer shows NGC 4565, one of the nearest and brightest galaxies not included in the famous list by 18th-century comet hunter Charles Messier. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)In a first-of-a-kind move for NASA, the agency in May 2012 loaned GALEX to the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, which used private funds to continue operating the satellite while NASA retained ownership. Since then, investigators from around the world have used GALEX to study everything from stars in our own Milky Way galaxy to hundreds of thousands of galaxies 5 billion light-years away.

In the space telescope?s last year, it scanned across large patches of sky, including the bustling, bright center of our Milky Way. The telescope spent time staring at certain areas of the sky, finding exploded stars, called supernovae, and monitoring how objects, such as the centers of active galaxies, change over time.

GALEX also scanned the sky for massive, feeding black holes and shock waves from early supernova explosions.

This image from NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer shows NGC 6744, one of the galaxies most similar to our Milky Way in the local universe. This ultraviolet view highlights the vast extent of the fluffy spiral arms, and demonstrates that star formation can occur in the outer regions of galaxies. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)?In the last few years, GALEX studied objects we never thought we?d be able to observe, from the Magellanic Clouds to bright nebulae and supernova remnants in the galactic plane,? said David Schiminovich of Columbia University, New York, NY, a longtime GALEX team member who led science operations over the past year. ?Some of its most beautiful and scientifically compelling images are part of this last observation cycle.?

Data from the last year of the mission will be made public in the coming year.

?GALEX, the mission, may be over, but its science discoveries will keep on going,? said Kerry Erickson, the mission?s project manager at NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, CA.

A slideshow showing some of the popular GALEX images is online at: http://go.nasa.gov/17xAVDd

JPL managed the GALEX mission and built the science instrument. The mission?s principal investigator, Chris Martin, is at Caltech. NASA?s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD, developed the mission under the Explorers Program it manages.

Researchers sponsored by Yonsei University in South Korea and the Centre National d?Etudes Spatiales (CNES) in France collaborated on the mission. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.

Graphics and additional information about the Galaxy Evolution Explorer are online at: http://www.nasa.gov/galex

Written By

Alan Buis
NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA

J.D. Harrington
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.


Sections

Technology

Topics

Atmosphere, Black Hole, California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Columbia University, Comet, Dulles VA, earth, Galaxies, GALEX, Large Magellanic Cloud, Milky Way Galaxy, Mira, NASA, NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Nebula, New York NY, Pasadena CA, Small Magellanic Cloud, South Korea, Stars, Supernova, Untraviolet, washington d.c.


Source: http://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2013/06/30/nasa-turns-off-its-galaxy-evolution-explorer-galex-spacecraft/

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Sunday, June 30, 2013

BOX OFFICE: Monsters University Wins Again with $46 Million

Dark enV

Glad Monsters University is doing good, enjoyed it. The Heat, not that big of a surprise to me, McCarthy is showing she's pretty bankable. World War Z doing great, White House Down opened worst than Olympus Has Fallen, I liked Olympus, haven't seen White House Down. Man of Steel still holding good, almost $250 million domestically and over $520 million globally. This Is the End still doing well, and Now You See Me crosses the $100 million mark, what a great accomplishment for the film. Great week

2 hours agoby @dark-envFlag

Source: http://www.movieweb.com/news/box-office-monsters-university-wins-again-with-46-million

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US warns on Egypt travel, moves to reduce presence (The Arizona Republic)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/315956664?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Sky Fighter: Meet the Man Who Wants to Drone-Proof Your Home

Sky Fighter: Meet the Man Who Wants to Drone-Proof Your Home

Last week, FBI Director Robert Mueller finally admitted that the Bureau uses drones to carry out surveillance on Americans (say hi!). Meanwhile, the tweens next door are probably spying on you too, watching you pick your nose using a $300 drone they bought on Amazon. UAV use in America?and public anxiety over it?is exploding. And Domestic Drone Countermeasures, an anti-drone technology startup, is building a business around it.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/2lBC2A4Ux-I/sky-fighter-meet-the-man-who-wants-to-drone-proof-your-600375084

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62 high school students hopeful of a musical crown

In this Thursday, June 27, 2013, photo, Anthony Nappier of Los Angeles practices singing ?I Believe? from ?The Book of Mormon? in New York City, ahead of the National High School Musical Theater Awards on Monday, July 1. Nappier is one of 62 students from across the nation competing for the contest?s top prizes and scholarship money. (AP Photo/Mark Kennedy)

In this Thursday, June 27, 2013, photo, Anthony Nappier of Los Angeles practices singing ?I Believe? from ?The Book of Mormon? in New York City, ahead of the National High School Musical Theater Awards on Monday, July 1. Nappier is one of 62 students from across the nation competing for the contest?s top prizes and scholarship money. (AP Photo/Mark Kennedy)

NEW YORK (AP) ? In a steaming, stuffy classroom downtown, it was time for some talented youngsters to face the music.

Half a dozen high school students from across the country were being critiqued on their singing and performance skills by a coach helping them prepare for the National High School Musical Theater Awards on Monday night.

One student from California was warned to perform "I Believe" from "The Book of Mormon" without an ounce of smirk. A teen from Utah was advised not to overthink a Stephen Sondheim lyric. And when a Colorado student wanted advice on whether she was better off singing a serious song from "Aida" or a funny one from "Cinderella," she was asked to sing both. The funny one came out on top.

"That's the one," said the coach, Tony Award-nominee Liz Callaway, whose Broadway credits include "Miss Saigon" and "Baby." The student, Nicole Seefried, seemed convinced ? and relieved. "It is," she said, happily.

The teens were among 62 hoping to be crowned top actor and top actress at this year's contest. Now in its fifth year, the National High School Musical Theater Awards will be held Monday at the Minskoff Theatre, the long-term home of "The Lion King."

The 62 teens who made it to New York ? 31 girls and 31 boys ? get a five-day theatrical boot camp at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, complete with scrambling to learn an opening and closing group number, intense advice on their solo songs, plus a field trip to watch "Annie" on Broadway and dinner at famed theater-district hangout Sardi's. It's not all glamorous, though. Hours are spent in plain classrooms on plastic chairs, with battered pianos and bottles of water.

"It's an experience that's going to stay with them for the rest of their lives," said Van Kaplan, president of the awards organization and the show's director.

Both top winners will receive a scholarship award, capping a monthslong winnowing process that began with 50,000 students from 1,000 schools. This year's contestants come from 20 states: Georgia, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Illinois, Texas, Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, California, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Nevada, Utah, Wisconsin, Tennessee, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Florida and Kansas.

On Monday night, all 62 will perform snippets of the songs that they sung at regional competitions as part of several large medleys, and then six finalists ? three boys and three girls ? will be plucked to sing solos. The winners will be picked from the last six.

Kyle Selig, 20, of Long Beach, Calif., won the best actor award in 2010 and is now a student at Carnegie Mellon University. He returned to help out this year and managed to cram in a few auditions to Broadway shows, including "The Book of Mormon."

"It was a validation of what I should be doing," he said of his win.

In addition to Callaway, the tutors included theater pros Leslie Odom Jr., Michael McElroy and Telly Leung. The judges on Monday will include Tony-winning director Scott Ellis, Tony nominee Montego Glover and casting professional Bernie Telsey. The hosts will be Laura Osnes and Santino Fontana, who co-star in "Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella."

Nicknamed the Jimmy Awards after theater owner James Nederlander, whose company is a co-sponsor of the ceremony, the awards spotlight a high level of talent and maturity for children ages 14 to 18. Performances can range from "Bye Bye Birdie" to "Legally Blonde" to "Sweeney Todd."

The number of programs sending students grows each year ? it started with 16 and now stands at 31 ? and Kaplan says interest has been fueled by TV shows like "Glee" and "Smash."

The competition has also apparently reversed the trend away from arts funding for many regions. "Where usually arts programs are the very first things that get cut, we're seeing school districts invest in the arts because of programs like this," Kaplan says.

The Jimmy Awards had a profound effect on Stephen Mark, 21, of Norwich, Conn. He was a junior intent on studying computer science in college when he became the competition's first male winner in 2009.

The victory convinced him and his family that he should follow his heart into the performing arts. He is now studying musical theater at New York University. "It actually completely changed my life," he says.

___

Online:

http://www.nhsmta.com

___

Mark Kennedy can be reached at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-06-29-US-High-School-Theater-Awards/id-7b05906dfb9c483888463c6caff747ad

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Keychain Space Invaders Puts Whac-an-Alien in Your Pocket

Keychain Space Invaders Puts Whac-an-Alien in Your Pocket

Even in a time where everything from our phones to our watches could easily serve up a classic game of Space Invaders, there's still something appealing about this miniature keychain version. It actually plays more like a cross between Space Invaders and Whac-A-Mole, but instead of bludgeoning rodents you're taking out blinking alien invaders that are coming for everyone and everything you hold dear.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/L5Lb5BHRq5A/keychain-space-invaders-puts-whac-an-alien-in-your-pock-608507683

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Tiny Allegiant Air thrives on low costs, high fees

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? There are no sure things in this city ? with one exception: Allegiant Air.

While other U.S. airlines have struggled over the past decade from the ups and downs of the economy and the price of jet fuel, Allegiant has been profitable for 10 straight years.

The tiny airline focuses on a niche ignored by other airlines: It only flies from small cities to sunny vacation spots.

Allegiant entices people who otherwise wouldn't fly with low fares and non-stop flights. Then it aggressively pitches them hotels, rental cars, show tickets and other entertainment, earning millions in commissions.

Passengers face fees for almost every service and amenity imaginable. At Allegiant, fees for checked baggage and changing an itinerary ? which are common on many airlines ? are just the beginning.

The Las Vegas-based airline charges extra to book flights online, or to use a credit card. Selecting a seat in advance costs $5 to $75 each way, depending on the length of a flight. Even a bottle of water costs $2.

Flying Allegiant isn't glamorous. While other airlines tout new aircraft with Wi-Fi and TVs in every seat, Allegiant buys old planes to avoid hefty aircraft loans. And to pack in as many passengers as possible, its seats don't recline. But for small-town Americans with limited flight options, these inconveniences are worth it for a few days of sunshine.

"They could be the worst airline in the world and we'd fly them because we want to go to Vegas," says Tom Mayo of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who recently flew there with his family. "It's our only option."

Allegiant offers non-stop service from places like Owensboro, Ky., Casper, Wyo. and Appleton, Wis., to popular destinations in Nevada, Florida, Hawaii and Arizona. These may not be the most coveted routes in the airline business, but that is precisely why Allegiant likes them.

Only 17 of Allegiant's 203 routes are flown non-stop by another airline.

"Typically, the best way to make money is not to compete with somebody," says Andrew C. Levy, president of Allegiant Travel Co., who sits in a cubicle next to the rest of his staff.

Rather than battle major carriers for customers on routes between major cities, Allegiant uses its marketing muscles to convince people in small towns to fly away for a vacation.

"Allegiant tends to bring people into the airport who wouldn't normally fly," says Tim Bradshaw, director of the Eastern Iowa people Airport in Cedar Rapids. "It brings people off the couch."

Last year, 7 million passengers took a flight on Allegiant. That is a sliver of the 642 million people who took a domestic flight last year. But Allegiant earned a whopping $11.22 each way from those passengers. On average, the airline industry earned 37 cents each way, per passenger, according to Airlines for America, the industry's lobbying group. Southwest Airlines, one of the industry's most profitable carriers, made $3.85 per passenger last year.

Allegiant is ruthless about keeping its costs down. Its employees are some of the lowest paid in the industry, in some cases making $20 an hour less than colleagues at other airlines. It pays cash for airplanes nearly twice as old as everyone else. It only sells directly to vacationers, refusing to pay Expedia, Orbitz or other sites to list its flights.

And if you have a question, it will cost you: the airline doesn't have a toll-free number.

Like some other budget airlines, Allegiant advertises extremely low base fares and then tacks on numerous fees. A roundtrip ticket with Allegiant costs $195, on average. But passengers pay an additional $83 in fees ? or 30 percent of the total cost of flying.

To book a trip by phone, Allegiant charges $50 for each roundtrip ticket. To book online costs $20 for each roundtrip ticket. The only way to avoid the fees is to purchase tickets at the airport, something fewer than 3 percent of its customers did last year.

But whether you book by phone, Internet or in person, paying with a credit card costs an extra $8.

Placing a suitcase in an overhead bin is $10 to $25. Boarding passes signify who has paid the fee. If passengers show up at the airport with a large carry-on bag and haven't prepaid the fee, the airline penalizes them an additional $25 to $50, depending on the route.

But what really makes Allegiant different are the commissions it earns from selling hotel rooms, rental cars and other extras including Everglades boat tours and theme-park tickets. It even gets people to attend timeshare sales presentations. Before a passenger can finalize a ticket purchase online, they must click through page after page offering them these add-ons.

Last year, revenue from commissions totaled $36 million, or nearly $12 per roundtrip passenger.

"I don't think of them as an airline. I think of them as a travel company," says Helane Becker, an airline analyst at Cowen Securities.

Once onboard, Allegiant passengers are again bombarded with sales pitches. On a recent flight from Cedar Rapids to Las Vegas, flight attendants came over the loudspeaker and hawked show tickets and airport shuttles. The in-flight magazine is filled with ads for shows and attractions instead of stories. One ad offers $30 off a Las Vegas helicopter tour if purchased from flight attendants, who are paid extra for each item sold.

"They do a fantastic job packaging," says JetBlue CEO David Barger. "I think we can learn a lot from what Allegiant does."

Ben Baldanza, CEO of Spirit Airlines ? the only other U.S. carrier to charge for overhead bin space or for booking over the Internet ? also respects Allegiant's ability to sell extras, such as a round of golf in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

"They developed that expertise earlier than we did," Baldanza says.

Spirit focuses on getting passengers between big cities cheaply; Allegiant taps into people's desire to escape small-town life for a few days.

Most airlines promote their new first-class seats or individual TV screens. Allegiant ? which only offers coach seats ? promotes its destinations: Las Vegas gamblers smiling after winning at roulette, a hot-air balloon floating over the Arizona desert or a woman in a bikini sipping a frozen drink on a Hawaiian beach.

Allegiant's passengers aren't sold on the airline but on the escape.

An hour and a half before a recent flight from Cedar Rapids to Las Vegas, a spare seat couldn't be found in the airport bar. It was only 11 a.m., but travelers like Bridget Estrada and her four friends were too excited for their trip to wait.

It was only Estrada's second trip on a plane and her first in 13 years. She was nervous and gave a quick thought to her husband and three kids at home. But she and her friends quickly got back to drinking hard lemonade, mapping out their weekend away from Iowa.

A few feet away, other passengers shared tips on attractions, buffets and the cheapest blackjack tables.

"You must see the pirate show," one insisted.

Allegiant finds ways to profit on routes other airlines couldn't make work, often swooping in after they pull out. This month, it started flying between Asheville, N.C., and Tampa, Fla., a route abandoned by AirTran after Southwest Airlines acquired it.

Like other discount carriers, Allegiant prefers small airports that charge airlines lower rents, even if they aren't the most convenient. In Orlando, that means flying into Sanford, Fla., 30 minutes further from Walt Disney World than Orlando International Airport.

Frugal decisions like that helped Allegiant post a net profit of $78 million last year on revenue of $909 million. Its 8.6 percent profit margin was the highest of any U.S. airline, making it a darling of Wall Street.

The last five years have been good for airline investors. After a major spike in fuel prices in 2008 and a drop in business travelers, airlines tweaked their business models, adding baggage fees and cutting unprofitable flights. They started to make money and their stock prices climbed. While the S&P 500 climbed 26 percent in the past five years, an index of all U.S. airline stocks has tripled. Allegiant's stock has done even better, increasing more than fivefold to $105.40

Allegiant has 64 planes and flies to 87 cities, but it's tiny compared with an airline like United, which carried 20 times as many people last year, often on much longer flights.

The airline got its start in 1998 as a charter operation with one airplane. By February the following year, it had started scheduled flights between Fresno, Calif. and Las Vegas.

But its business struggled and less than two years later, it filed for bankruptcy protection. Maurice J. Gallagher, Jr., the airline's major creditor and a founder of ValuJet Airlines, gained control during the reorganization and became CEO. ValuJet was a low-cost carrier that changed its name to AirTran after a 1996 fatal crash in Florida.

Gallagher moved the airline from Fresno to Las Vegas; secured a lucrative contract with Harrah's to provide charter services to its casinos in Laughlin, Nev., and Reno, Nev.; and started to transform Allegiant into a low-cost carrier.

"The model evolved out of survival," says Gallagher, who is still CEO.

By 2003, the airline started turning profits, and it hasn't stopped. Gallagher's nearly 20 percent stake in the airline is now worth more than $380 million.

Allegiant benefits from paying lower salaries and having work rules that are more favorable to management than at most airlines. Flight attendants with 15 years of experience are paid $34 for each hour their plane is in the air ? $10 to $20 less than colleagues at larger carriers. Planes and crews typically end up at their home cities overnight, avoiding hotel rooms.

Wages could eventually shoot up. Pilots, flight attendants and dispatchers have all voted in the past two and a half years to join unions. The company has yet to sign a contract with any of them.

"We've been told several times at the (negotiating) table: If you don't like this job, there's the door," says Debra Petersen-Barber, who has been an Allegiant flight attendant for eight years and is the lead negotiator for the Transport Workers Union of America. "We have no value. We're easily replaced."

Thanks to its choice of aircraft, Allegiant has more flexibility than other airlines in deciding when and where to fly.

Instead of buying the newest, most expensive planes, the airline buys used, inexpensive jets. Its planes are 23 years old, on average, compared with the industry average of 14 years.

Each used MD-80 costs $3 million, compared with $40 million for a new Boeing 737 or Airbus A320 of similar size.

"When you have such little investment in an aircraft, you only fly it when it's going to be full of passengers," says Peter B. Barlow, an aircraft finance lawyer at Smith, Gambrell & Russell. "Other airlines don't have that luxury. They need to keep their aircraft in the air in order to make the economics work."

So on Tuesdays, when most of Allegiant's customers are stuck in the office, the airline keeps nearly all its planes on the ground.

Flying older planes has drawbacks, though. They burn more fuel, something Allegiant combats by squeezing 166 passengers onto planes ? 26 more than American Airlines has on comparable jets. They also have more mechanical problems, resulting in more delays.

One of every four Allegiant flights last year was at least 15 minutes late, the worst record in the industry, according to flight tracker FlightAware.

The bigger problem is if a mechanical issue forces a plane to be grounded. Given its limited schedule and packed planes, there usually isn't another flight to book passengers on. Instead, they are left waiting six hours while a new plane is flown in.

Sometimes flights are postponed to the next day. In one extreme situation in March, more than 1,700 passengers flying to and from Hawaii saw multi-day delays, including one flight that was 52 hours late.

That's a lot of time to kill at an airport bar.

__

Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tiny-allegiant-air-thrives-low-costs-high-fees-070304427.html

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Saturday, June 8, 2013

Obama's Now Picking Foreign Targets for a Future Cyberwar

Obama's Now Picking Foreign Targets for a Future Cyberwar

What a week ol' Barry's been having in Washington! First, there was that scoop about the NSA spying on all the Verizon customers. Then, there was this PRISM scandal about how intelligence agencies are basically spying on everyone all the time. Now, there's news that he's making a hitlist of foreign countries to hit with cyberattacks when the time is right. There's probably some spying involved in that, too.

Details of Obama's latest directive?which was drawn up last October?have been revealed by The Guardian's national security hawk Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill who say the step "will heighten fears over the increasing militarization of the internet." And, taken at face value, it probably will. That's probably why the National Security Agency (NSA) refused to disclose the details of the plan after the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) filed a Freedom of Information Act request to see the document. (You can read the full document here.)

It's not like a militarized internet is a new idea. The precursor to the internet's, ARPANET, was built by the military for heaven's sake. It's not like Vint Cerf and friends were trying to create a better way for us to shopping or stay in touch with our friends from college. This amazing thing that we call the internet was a national security weapon from the beginning, even if we didn't use it as such.

This is more or less what the administration has said about the new plan. "Once humans develop the capacity to build boats, we build navies," an unnamed senior administration official told The Guardian. "Once you build airplanes, we build air forces." And so once we built the internet, we started to build a cyber army.

It's been decades in the making, but the United States Hacker Army is finally starting to show its stripes. A little less than a year ago, the Pentagon revealed for the first time that it had been developing not only tools for cyber defense but also weapons for cyber offense. This wasn't a huge surprise, since most experts agree that the highly sophisticated Stuxnet malware deployed in Iran was built by the U.S. and Israel. Since then, we've been learning about some of our new cyberwar tactics, including but not limited to shooting down satellites and spying on Americans.

Honestly, though, there's not much new in this whole strategy besides the president's 18-page policy directive that makes America's cyber strategy official. We've been breaking into other countries' computers for ages. "We hack everyone everywhere," an intelligence officer told Greenwald and MacAskill. "We like to make a distinction between us and the others. But we are in almost every country in the world." [The Guardian]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/obamas-now-picking-foreign-targets-for-a-future-cyberw-511982973

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Friday, June 7, 2013

Samsung's S4 Helps It Beat Apple In U.S. Sales - Business Insider

Samsung sold more smartphones than Apple in May in the U.S., Canaccord Genuity analyst Michael Walkley says in a report this morning.

Walkley's data is based on store surveys he does.

This is the first time Samsung outsold Apple in the U.S. since the iPhone 5 launched at the end of September.

Walkley says, "In the U.S. market, the Samsung Galaxy S4 was the top-selling smartphone at Verizon/Sprint/T-Mobile, and second best-selling smartphone at AT&T to the iPhone 5."

The S4, combined with strong sales of the S3 and Galaxy Note II gave Samsung the top sales spot in the U.S.

Samsung's marketing is the reason its selling more phones than anyone else, says Walkley: "We believe dominant sales of the S4 versus other Android smartphones was driven by Samsung's extremely strong Galaxy consumer brand and well-executed marketing campaign, as our surveys indicated store representatives often recommended the HTC One ahead of the Galaxy S4."

This happened last year, too. Samsung's strong brand is giving it a bump in sales when its new model comes out, just like Apple.

Yesterday, comScore released data saying Apple had 39.2% of the U.S. smartphone market for the three month average ending in April, its highest share yet. It also said Apple had more share of the market than Samsung.

The difference between comScore and Canaccord is that comScore measures what's in people's pockets. Canaccord measures what people were buying last month. As a result, comScore is more backward looking, whereas Canaccord is more forward looking.

Here's a table that looks at the best selling smartphones in the U.S. over the last four months.

This table gives us reason to be skeptical about Walkley's report. He doesn't include the iPhone 4 or iPhone 4S in the February sales at AT&T. Based on comments from AT&T and Apple, it seems like those phones were top sellers. Their absence is suspicious.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/samsungs-s4-helps-it-beat-apple-in-us-sales-2013-6

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

The Long View | When Computers Know How You Feel - BoF - The ...

CAMBRIDGE, United States ? Recent advances in neuroscience reveal that emotions are at the very core of human decision-making. Rather than cognitive thought, emotion is what fundamentally drives the way people engage with brands and products. But traditional methods of measuring emotional response, like surveys and focus groups, generally fail to accurately capture honest, unfiltered and immediate feelings.

Now, by measuring and analysing things like facial expressions, gestures, voice, sweat and heart rate, new ?affective? computing technologies are enabling laptops, smartphones and other personal devices to track and respond to human emotions, with powerful implications for product development, marketing, sales and service.

Indeed, in a not-too-distant future, fashion e-tailers may have the ability to automatically adapt their merchandising strategies, in realtime, in response to the emotional reactions of individual customers, while emotional data gathered from viewers watching online fashion shows could be used to inform collection development and buying.

To find out more, BoF spoke with Rana el Kaliouby, co-founder and chief technology officer of MIT-spinoff Affectiva, about the power of affective computing and the implications for the business of fashion.

BoF: What is affective computing?

At the highest level, our emotions influence every aspect of our lives. So, if you look at health and well-being, emotions are a very important factor. Emotions also play an important role in how we connect with the world and the people around us ? how we socialise with others, what we like to wear, how we want to be perceived. And, of course, emotions drive the decisions we make: what products we buy, what services we use, what content we consume.

Measuring emotions is the next wave in intelligent personal data. If you look at the digital world today, there?s a lot of information about who you are: your Facebook profile, your Twitter profile, location services that know where you are. But there isn?t anything that captures how you really feel. The way you do this today online is really very crude: all you get is a ?Like? button. But our emotions are way richer and much more nuanced than a simple ?Like? button or emoticon. The idea behind affective computing is to bring to the world emotionally aware technologies that are able to sense and adapt to a full range of emotional experiences.

BoF: How does it work? What are the specific technologies?

There are a lot of channels from which we can distil a range of emotional states. The face is one of the most powerful social and emotional communication channels. It can communicate everything from joy to interest to disgust to confusion to worry. Our gestures are also important ? both head gestures and body movements. Similarly our voice carries information on our emotional states. There are also physiological measures. You can look at skin conductance, which is the level of sweat on your skin ? and that gives you a measure of arousal, how activated or calm you are. Of course, you can look at heart rate, and there?s also technology that let?s you gauge heart rate from video, so you don?t have to wear anything. But, of course, you can also do this through wearable devices. So, there are a whole host of technologies that can sense your emotional state.

BoF: How are these new technologies better than traditional ways of measuring emotional response, like surveys and focus groups? What makes emotional data so valuable?

Self-reported measures are interesting. They definitely capture a cognitive aspect of our experience. But they are very filtered. You think very carefully about how you want to respond to a question. And if you are in a focus group, you think even more carefully, because there are other people in the room and you want to come across a certain way. It?s not your unfiltered, immediate emotional response ? but it?s an immediate emotional response that actually drives behaviour and that?s what [affective computing] is trying to capture, this visceral reaction to things.

BoF: Where will we see this technology deployed? And what types of experiences will we start to see?

I think we?re going to see an explosion of devices that sense emotion. It?s going to be everywhere, from our existing gadgets to intelligent earrings and bracelets that monitor heart rate ? maybe even embedded in your clothes. In terms of expression recognition via video, the technology works with any type of camera, so it could be the camera on your laptop, the camera on your phone, the camera on your tablet. So cameras are becoming ubiquitous ? and soon they will be emotionally aware.

One application is tracking emotional health over time. Another is personalised services. For example, you?re watching TV and the system knows what kind of content you like and can better recommend shows or games, based on what we call your ?emotigraphic? profile; it?s taking your demographic profile one step further to capture your emotional preferences.

BoF: How might this apply to fashion??

When I walk into a Zara store, a salesperson walks up to you and knows very quickly, based on how you look and how you are responding, what type of stuff you like and how to make this a more engaging shopping experience. But on a website, there?s none of that.

BoF: What might an emotionally intelligent fashion e-tailer look like?

If I?m browsing and I clearly display a signal of interest about a pair of jeans, the next thing you see could be something similar.

BoF: Emotionally responsive merchandising?

Yes. Or perhaps if you?re browsing and the system senses confusion or frustration, then maybe a customer service person jumps in and offers you help.

BoF: One really important interface between fashion companies and consumers these days is the online fashion show.

Imagine if online fashion shows were emotionally sensitive. I could simply turn on my webcam to share my response to various looks. And surely, that emotional data is very useful for a brand who can use it to optimise its next set of products based on unfiltered, immediate consumer response.

A lot of money goes into creating new products, some of which flop. We have done some testing for a big makeup company ? gauging emotional response to everything from opening the packaging to applying the mascara to looking at yourself in the mirror. All of this can help people who are designing new products to optimise their output.

We talked about the potential for online stores. But I think there?s also an opportunity to use this technology to enhance the physical store. A while ago, when we started doing this research [into video-based facial expression recognition], Armani came to us. Their problem was that a lot of consumers who might otherwise consider buying their products wouldn?t even come close to their stores because they dismissed them as very upscale and ?not my kind of shop.? They wanted to use our technology to understand how people engaged with and responded to the physical store, gauging emotional response and ultimately trying to affect that experience. As consumers stopped at certain shelves or sections of the shop, Armani wanted to measure their interest level. And one thing in particular that they wanted to measure was whether price was really the deterrent.

BoF: What about dynamic pricing based on emotional response?

I think realtime, emotionally responsive pricing is a real possibility. I?m Egyptian and a lot of our markets are dynamically priced [laughs]. Go to the bazaar and the seller sizes you up and gives you a price. And he?ll gauge how much you really want to buy this or not ? and the price reflects that.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

Source: http://www.businessoffashion.com/2013/06/the-long-view-when-computers-know-how-you-feel.html

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Still time to donate items for Oklahoma tornado victims

INWOOD - Sherry Myers and Dara Hutzler have known each other for the better part of 40 years and are still close friends, sharing lives that include children and helping out in the community.

Both are Musselman High School graduates and serve as officers in the school's Parents Teacher Student Association -an offshoot of the national PTA organization.

Not surprisingly, they often think alike and are concerned about the same kinds of issues.

Article Photos

Journal photo by Jenni Vincent

Musselman Parents Teacher Student Association officers, president Sherry Myers, left, and treasurer Dara Hutzler examine some of the items that have already been donated to be sent to Oklahoma tornado victims, but it?s not too late to help, since a tractor trailer won?t be packed until Saturday morning.

It wasn't long after Oklahoma residents were ravaged by tornadoes that the pair shared another idea - collecting items to be sent to storm survivors.

"We were just talking on the phone, brainstorming about what we could do because we wanted to help. And that was the beginning of what we're calling 'Kids helping kids' and all this," Myers said with a smile at Hutzler, as they looked at a growing mound of donated items temporarily being housed in the MHS lobby.

While MHS is serving as the central deposit location, 13 other Berkeley County schools as well as many businesses, banks, organizations and churches have also been active in this drive to collect everything from batteries and flashlights to toiletry and personal hygiene items, she said.

Other participating schools include Back Creek Valley Elementary, Musselman Middle, Mill Creek Intermediate, Valley View Elementary, Rosemont Elementary, Tomahawk Elementary, Spring Hills Primary, Spring Hills Middle, Berkeley Heights Elementary, Bunker Hill Elementary, North Middle School, Orchard View Intermediate and Tuscarora Elementary.

Well-known retailers in Martinsburg have also agreed to participate, including Target - which will be donating household, seasonal items -and Walmart, which is donating personal hygiene items.

However, there's also still time for other folks to donate since a tractor trailer -donated by MHS alumni Virginia Riggers - won't be packed until Saturday at the school beginning at 8 a.m., but that's also another way interested individuals can help, Myers said.

"We really need people to come help us pack boxes and then get them in the trailer. And we're also asking people to bring packing tape with them Saturday," she said, adding that another MHS alumni is donating the boxes.

Donations can also be taken to the MHS lobby on Friday from noon to 3 p.m.

Locally, donations can also be taken to several businesses in Inwood, including United Bank, City Bank, Pizza Oven, and the South Berkeley Little League concession stand at Appleland Park as well as Gold Party Diva East in Darkesville and Appletown Auction in Bunker Hill. Donated items will be collected Friday afternoon.

Additionally, a trailer will be located in the Martinsburg K-Mart Thursday from 6 to 6:30 p.m.

Myers said Riggers is also footing the bill for transporting the donated items to Oklahoma, a two-day trip that will begin Monday.

Thanks to the local group's PTSA affiliation, folks in Oklahoma have already been located who will help unload and distribute the items to storm victims, said Myers, president of MHS' organization.

"It has been truly amazing because, since we are part of a national organization, all we had to do is pick up the phone and make a simple call to get volunteers to help us on that end," Myers said.

Eager to get even more donations, Hutzler said she has already been impressed with both the quantity and quality of donated items.

"There is just so much here that people will be able to use. Things like toothbrushes, toothpaste and soap as well as even lots of tissues and cleaning products. It's just hard to imagine the need, so hopefully this will help some folks as they begin to get back to their normal lives," Hutzler said.

MHS Principal Holly Kleppner said she is proud but not surprised by the local response.

"People here definitely do their best to help others, but especially when there is a problem like this. The people in this community just have good hearts," Kleppner said.

"And since Musselman High is the heart of the south Berkeley community, it also made sense that this effort would come out of here and also that donations be brought here to be prepared for their trip to Oklahoma," she said.

- Staff writer Jenni Vincent can be reached at 304-263-8931, ext. 131.

Source: http://www.journal-news.net/page/content.detail/id/595240.html

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Bangladesh lifts ban on YouTube, blocked after anti-Islam film

DHAKA (Reuters) - Bangladesh on Wednesday lifted a ban on video-sharing site YouTube which has been blocked since September after an online anti-Islam movie spawned violent protests across the Muslim world.

The amateur video that denigrated the Prophet Mohammad, billed as a film trailer and made in California with private funding, provoked a wave of anti-American unrest in dozens of Muslim countries in September.

"The ban has been lifted as it was hurting thousands of people who use YouTube for good purposes such as educational or research," said Sunil Kanti Bose, head of Bangladesh Telecom Regulatory body.

For most Muslims, any portrayal of the Prophet is considered blasphemous.

(Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bangladesh-lifts-ban-youtube-blocked-anti-islam-film-130028972.html

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Will Your Dog Mourn Your Death?

U.S. Capitol Police K-9, Thea, a 4-year-old German shepherd, sits for a picture outside of police headquarters, Oct. 23, 2009. U.S. Capitol Police K-9, Thea, a 4-year-old German shepherd, sits for a picture outside of police headquarters, Oct. 23, 2009.

Photo by Tom Williams/Roll Call/Getty Images

A photograph of a police dog laying its paw on the casket of his slain master went viral over the weekend. Photographer Jonathan Palmer said, ?It seemed like the dog was aware of what was going on.? Do dogs mourn the loss of their owners?

They sometimes mope, but a dog?s emotions are a mystery. If you?re inclined to believe that dogs grieve over their fallen masters, there are plenty of anecdotes to support your view. Dogs sometimes wail plaintively at funerals, refuse to leave the cemetery, and even track down a deceased owner?s grave weeks after the death. The ASPCA conducted a study showing that two-thirds of dogs experience lethargy and loss of appetite after another dog in the household passes, suggesting that dogs are capable of mourning fellow canines, if not human companions. (Prozac is prescribed to deal with intractable canine grief.) Skeptics, however, believe they can explain these stories without attributing humanlike emotions to canines. Unfortunately, the only way to surmise a dog?s emotional state is through its behavior, which is variable and open to interpretation. How you answer this question has more to do with your preferred view of the inner lives of dogs than the evidence itself, which is inconclusive.

The photograph of Figo, the police dog at his master?s funeral, is relatively weak evidence of grief. Dogs are remarkably responsive to subtle human cues. In a 2005 study, food was placed in one of several opaque boxes. When a human pointed, gazed, or nodded in the direction of the box containing the food, most dogs picked up on the signal and found the treat. (Chimpanzees perform significantly worse than dogs in such tests.) It?s entirely possible that curiosity, rather than grief, motivated Figo to inspect the box that was receiving so much attention from the assembled mourners. His behavior away from the funeral, such as his eating habits and energy levels, would be more indicative of mourning than a single snapshot.

Dogs who sit endlessly at a master?s gravesite may be waiting for him to return, rather than mourning his death. Dogs can be very stubborn when it comes to accepting their master is gone. An Akita named Hachiko was renowned in Japan for walking to and from the local train station on his master?s commuting schedule for 10 years after he died. (Apes accept death more quickly: Some have attempted to revive their fallen companions, only to howl and pound the walls of their enclosures when they appear to realize the efforts are in vain.)

When a dog recognizes that its owner has died, the results aren?t always touching. In 2011, seven dogs lived for more than a week by feeding off of the remains of their deceased owners. Both dogs and cats, in fact, occasionally feast on their owners? dead bodies. Skeptics point to this as evidence that dogs are quick to move on once they?re certain an owner is dead, but it?s possible that some dogs are simply more attached than others to their owners.

Evidence of mourning is far stronger for other members of the animal kingdom. Elephants often congregate over the body of a dying matriarch and suffer physically in the days after the death. Chimpanzees have also exhibited mourning behavior, falling silent for days and refusing to eat.

Got a question about today?s news? Ask the Explainer

Explainer thanks Barbara J. King of the College of William and Mary, author of How Animals Grieve.

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Fed survey: Growth improves modestly throughout US

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A Federal Reserve survey says economic growth increased throughout the United States from April through mid-May, fueled by home construction, consumer spending and steady hiring.

Eleven of the Fed's banking districts reported "modest to moderate" economic growth, according to the Beige Book survey released Wednesday. The 12th, in Dallas, reported strong growth.

The survey is based on anecdotal reports. The mostly favorable results of the latest survey suggest that the economy and the job market are improving despite tax increases and government spending cuts that took effect this year.

But the modest or moderate improvement reported for most regions appears to fall short of the strong and sustained growth that several Fed members have said is needed before the Fed starts tapering its bond purchases. Those purchases have helped keep interest rates at record lows.

The Fed has been assessing the job market's health in considering when to start scaling back its support for the economy, including $85-billion-a-month in Treasury and mortgage bond purchases. The information from the latest Beige Book will discussed along with other economic data at the Fed's next policy meeting on June 18-19.

Investors are paying closer attention to the Fed after minutes of the past meeting showed that several members favored reducing the bond purchases if the economy demonstrates strong and sustained growth. And Chairman Ben Bernanke told a congressional panel last month that the Fed could slow the pace of the bond purchases over the next few meetings, if the job market shows "real and sustainable progress."

Still, most of Bernanke's testimony last month focused on the many risks the U.S. economy still faces and the help the Fed's support programs have provided.

And recent data paint a mixed picture of the economy's health.

Home sales and prices are rising, helped by the Fed's low interest-rate policies that have helped make mortgages cheaper. The auto industry is also on pace for another solid year, in part because rates on auto loans remain low.

Steady job growth and low inflation have allowed consumers to keep spending, even after higher Social Security taxes have reduced their paychecks this year.

Still, U.S. factories are feeling the impact of weaker global growth and deep cuts in U.S. government spending that have made businesses more cautious. The Institute for Supply Management's index of manufacturing activity fell in May to its lowest level since June 2009, the last month of the Great Recession.

And while the service sector continued to expand in May, the ISM's survey of those firms showed many held back on hiring. Service firms have been the main source of job gains in the past several months.

The biggest measure of the economy's health comes out Friday when the government releases the May employment report.

Economists forecast that employers added 170,000 jobs, roughly in line with April's pace, while the unemployment rate remained at a four-year low of 7.5 percent.

The overall economy grew at an annual rate of 2.4 percent in the January-March quarter but many analysts believe growth is slowing in the current April-June period to around 2 percent.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-05-US-Beige-Book/id-327a051d396e4eb3b4b1b97c263ad532

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