Friday, May 31, 2013

Obama's likely pick to head FBI widely praised

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Republicans said Thursday they see no major obstacles to Senate confirmation of James Comey, the former deputy attorney general in the Bush administration who is expected to be nominated by President Barack Obama as the next FBI director.

Comey, who would replace Robert Mueller as head of the national security organization, is certain to face tough questions about his work as a counsel for a major hedge fund and his ties to Wall Street as well as how he would handle current, high-profile FBI investigations.

But Republicans and Democrats said the former prosecutor's strong credentials and sterling reputation suggest his path to confirmation should be relatively smooth.

"I think he'll be confirmed" by the Senate, said former Attorney General John Ashcroft, a Missouri Republican who served in the Senate from 1994-2000.

Comey "is an extraordinary individual and I don't know why you wouldn't want a person like this," Ashcroft said of his onetime deputy. As a leader, Comey "welcomes diverse discussions. When he makes a decision and an institution decides a course of action, he is not to be dissuaded by irrelevant or political considerations."

Former Solicitor General Theodore Olson, who served with Comey at the Justice Department and whose opinion carries considerable weight with Republicans, said Comey is "very smart. He's a very straight shooter. He's the FBI's kind of person."

Republican and Democratic congressional aides said they didn't see any looming problems with Obama's likely choice a day after three people with knowledge of the selection said Obama planned to nominate Comey. The aides Thursday spoke on condition of anonymity because the initial internal reactions were private.

Several Democratic senators, including Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy of Vermont, had no immediate comment as they awaited official word from the White House.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest on Thursday declined to comment on Comey's impending nomination, nor would he discuss the timing of any announcement.

Sen. Charles Grassley, the top Republican on the Judiciary panel, said he appreciated that Comey has "a lot of experience on national security issues, which is one of the most important focuses for the FBI in the aftermath of 9/11, and has shown integrity in dealing with these matters."

The Iowa senator said Comey would have to answer questions about his work as counsel for Connecticut-based hedge fund Bridgewater Associates from 2010 until earlier this year.

"The administration's efforts to criminally prosecute Wall Street for its part in the economic downturn have been abysmal, and his agency would have to help build the case against some of his colleagues in this lucrative industry," Grassley said.

Grassley's mix of praise and questions were in sharp contrast to the reaction to another Republican tapped by Obama for a national security job.

When former GOP Sen. Chuck Hagel's name emerged late last year as a possible candidate for defense secretary, outside groups and opposition on Capitol Hill immediately revved up in a concerted effort to scuttle the nomination.

Hagel's votes and statements on Israel, Iran and nuclear weapons drew immediate scrutiny and circulated on Capitol Hill. Some Senate Republicans said flatly they would oppose the selection even before Obama officially announced his choice on Jan. 7.

Hagel, a two-term Nebraska senator, had angered some of his former colleagues when he became an outspoken critic of the Iraq war and President George W. Bush's handling of the conflict.

After a bruising confirmation fight, the Senate approved Hagel's nomination in February.

Comey would be more than a Cabinet pick in a president's second term. If confirmed, the former U.S. attorney would serve a 10-year tenure overseeing an organization responsible for both intelligence and law enforcement with more than 36,000 employees.

Matthew Orwig, a former U.S. attorney, called Comey "an inspired choice. He will run the FBI with the independence required. He's his own man."

"He's not intimidated by anybody; that's something you need in an FBI director," said Mark Corallo, a Justice Department spokesman at the time Comey was deputy attorney general.

Comey would be coming into the FBI at a critical time, with the agency conducting a politically sensitive investigation of the Internal Revenue Service and a probe of the Boston Marathon bombings that have raised some doubts about the FBI's ability to prevent terrorist attacks.

In addition, it is the FBI that is carrying out the Justice Department's aggressive use of subpoenas and in at least one instance, a search warrant, to gather the phone records and emails of some journalists. The aggressive stance has triggered an outcry from the news media and members of Congress on both sides of the aisle.

The Obama administration's actions in the war on terror have drawn scrutiny in Congress and likely will be raised at any confirmation hearing.

Comey was the public face of the Bush administration in defending the military detention of U.S. citizen Jose Padilla. In 2004, Comey was the No. 2 official in the Justice Department when he held a news conference to call Padilla a trained terrorist who met with top al-Qaida leaders, discussed detonating a nuclear bomb in the United States and accepted an assignment to use natural gas to blow up high-rise apartment buildings.

The following year, facing an imminent Supreme Court hearing about whether Americans may be detained without charges, Bush had Padilla moved out of a military brig, and federal prosecutors indicted him on unrelated terrorism support charges in South Florida. He was convicted.

But the sensational accusations Comey made at the Justice Department in 2004 were dropped.

Comey became a hero to Democrats for the central role he played in holding up Bush's warrantless wiretapping program, one of the administration's great controversies and an episode that focused attention on the administration's controversial tactics in the war on terror.

In dramatic testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2007, Comey said he thought Bush's no-warrant wiretapping program was so questionable that Comey refused for a time to reauthorize it, leading to a standoff with White House officials at the hospital bedside of an ailing Ashcroft.

Comey said he refused to recertify the program because Ashcroft had reservations about its legality.

Senior government officials had expressed concerns about whether the National Security Agency, which administered the warrantless eavesdropping program, had the proper oversight in place. Other concerns included whether any president possessed the legal and constitutional authority to authorize the program as it was carried out at the time.

Comey was deputy attorney general in 2005 when he unsuccessfully tried to limit tough interrogation tactics against suspected terrorists. He told then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales that some of the practices were wrong and would damage the department's reputation.

Some Democrats denounced those methods as torture, particularly the use of waterboarding, which produces the sensation of drowning.

Earlier in his career, Comey served as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, one of the nation's most prominent prosecutorial offices and one at the front lines of terrorism, corporate malfeasance, organized crime and the war on drugs.

As an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia, Comey handled the investigation of the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers housing complex near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, which killed 19 U.S. military personnel.

He led the Justice Department's corporate fraud task force and spurred the creation of violent crime impact teams in 20 cities, focusing on crimes committed with guns.

If nominated, Comey is likely to get a warm greeting from at least one member of the Judiciary Committee ? Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.

When Comey testified on June 8, 2011, about extending Mueller's term, Klobuchar said in her introduction that she and Comey were in the "same law school class, graduated together and we've known each other for a long time."

Comey and Klobuchar graduated from the University of Chicago Law School in 1985.

___

Associated Press writers Pete Yost, Mark Sherman, Alan Fram and Nedra Pickler contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obamas-likely-pick-head-fbi-widely-praised-204047222.html

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Motorola's next flagship phone is called Moto X, will be built in former Nokia plant in Texas (updated)

Motorola's next flagship phone is called Moto X, will be built in former Nokia plant in Texas

Outside of possible FCC filings, Motorola has largely been coy about just what its next major smartphone will be -- until now. The firm's Dennis Woodside just revealed at D11 that the new flagship will be called Moto X (previously rumored as the X Phone), and that it will be built in a Fort Worth, Texas factory that was once used to make Nokia phones. Woodside isn't giving away many details at this stage, although he teases that the smartphone will "know what you want to do before you do." Oh, and he has a Moto X in his pocket... not that he's about to show us anything just yet, of course. If you're curious about Woodside's actual quote, it's below:

"It'll be the first Motorola smartphone built in the United States. It'll be built in Texas -- we'll employ around 2,000 people. It's right outside of Fort Worth in a 500,000 square foot facility that was previously used to build Nokia phones."

Update: Woodside had two extra nuggets while on stage -- he mentioned that the Moto X will be "broadly distributed" across numerous carriers, a rarity for Motorola smartphones in recent years. Specifically, he noted: "The Moto X is going to be broadly distributed -- that's a first for Motorola in a number of years. The support of the carriers has been fantastic." In other words, this won't be a Nexus device, and you can count on some amount of skinning and bloatware to muddle things up. On the issue of battery life, Woodside said: "I'll save the details for later, but [the industry issue of] battery life is a huge problem. Motorola has some of the world's best engineers and systems designers who spend their lives on that problem. There are two processors in the device that creates a system that allows you to do such a thing." Two processors, you say? Fascinating!

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/3iGmn-O69s8/

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New Discovery Knocks 'Oldest Bird' Off Its Perch

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Lenovo says quarterly profit up 90 percent

(AP) ? Computer maker Lenovo Group said Thursday its latest quarterly profit rose 90 percent as sales of smartphones and mobile computing technology expanded.

Lenovo said it earned $127 million, or 1.22 cents per share, in the three months ending March 31. Revenue rose 4 percent over a year earlier to $7.8 billion.

Lenovo ranks a close second behind Hewlett-Packard Co. as the biggest maker of personal computer makers but growth in that market has slowed as consumers shift to mobile Web surfing on smartphones and tablets.

Lenovo said sales of desktop and laptop PCs both declined 2 percent to $2.4 billion and $4.2 billion, respectively, but still made up a combined 83 percent of its business.

Sales of smartphones and other mobile Internet and "digital home" products rose 74 percent to $736 million, accounting for 9 percent of revenue.

"We will focus our investments on the fast-growing tablet, smartphone and enterprise hardware areas, while working to enhance the profitability of our core PC business," said chairman Yang Yuanqing.

For its full fiscal year ending March 31, Lenovo's profit rose 34 percent to $635 million on a 15 percent rise in sales to a record $34 billion.

Lenovo, with headquarters in Beijing and in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, entered the wireless Internet market in 2010. It has launched smartphones and Web-linked tablet computers to compete with Apple Inc. and South Korea's Samsung Electronics Corp.

The company said quarterly sales in North America, traditionally a weak area for Lenovo, rose 13 percent over a year earlier to $1.2 billion, accounting for 15 percent of the global total. It said its market share rose 1.8 percentage points to 9.3 percent.

In its home China market, quarterly sales rose 8 percent to $3.1 billion and revenue for mobile Internet products rose 74 percent.

___

Lenovo Group: www.lenovo.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-05-23-China-Earns-Lenovo/id-a3ad78bd3376497d9b0f1c8c612bedc5

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Microsoft unveils new Xbox One game console

REDMOND, Washington (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp gave the world the first look at its new game console on Tuesday, hoping the newly named Xbox One will build on a solid core of gamer fans and become a hub for living room entertainment.

The third-generation Microsoft console, coming eight years after the Xbox 360, was unveiled by games unit chief Don Mattrick at an event at the software company's campus near Seattle.

The Xbox One is an "ultimate all-in-one entertainment system," Mattrick said.

The new device interacts with a user's television, responds to voice and gesture commands, and includes Skype video calling.

It will have 8 gigabytes of memory, with an updated controller and new-generation Kinect sensor that communicates a user's voice and gesture commands to the console. The technology is built on the Xbox operating system and the kernel of Windows software to handle Internet-based content.

The Xbox One will chiefly compete with Nintendo Co.'s new Wii U and Sony Corp.'s forthcoming PlayStation 4 for a bigger slice of the $65 billion-a-year computer game market.

But the world's largest software company also sees it as a broader strategic piece in the battle with Apple Inc., Google Inc. and others to control consumer entertainment in the age of tablets and smartphones.

Microsoft's stock was off 5 cents at $35.03 in afternoon trading on Nasdaq.

(Reporting by Bill Rigby; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Dan Grebler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/microsoft-unveils-xbox-one-game-console-173228599.html

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Obama Approval Rating Not Impacted By Scandals

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/obama-approval-rating-not-impacted-by-scandals/

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Miguel Jumps on Fans' Heads During Billboard Music Awards Performance

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/miguel-jumps-on-fans-heads-during-billboard-music-awards-perform/

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Winning numbers drawn in Powerball jackpot

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) ? Lottery officials say the winning numbers in a near-historic Powerball jackpot have been drawn.

They are: 10, 13, 14, 22, 52 and Powerball 11.

Officials say the latest Powerball jackpot figure results are still pending. They had estimated it at $600 million.

With four of every five possible combinations of Powerball numbers in play, someone is almost sure to win the game's highest jackpot. The problem, of course, is those same odds just about guarantee the lucky person won't be you.

The chances of winning the prize remain astronomically low: 1 in 175.2 million. That's how many different ways you can combine the numbers when you play.

But since about 80 percent of the possible combinations have been purchased, lottery officials say it's likely the winning ticket could be selected.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/winning-numbers-drawn-powerball-jackpot-031819073.html

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ASUS Zenbook Infinity Ultrabook to appear at Computex 2013 with Gorilla Glass 3 lid

ASUS Zenbook Infinity Ultrabook to appear at Computex 2013 with Gorilla Glass 3 lid

ASUS' Transformer Book hybrid may have just graduated from our review testing, but the company already has a new product to tempt you. The Zenbook Infinity will be the "world's first Ultrabook with a lid made form Corning Gorilla Glass 3" and will be revealed in full at Taipei's Computex 2013 in a few weeks. It'll measure in at just 15.5mm thick -- a full 14 percent thinner than previous Zenbooks. Next-generation Gorilla Glass will cover the outer lid and the keyboard surround, although you can expect to see that familiar concentric circle pattern beneath that protection. ASUS says the Ultrabook will launch Q3 2013, but we can expect to see the full specs before then.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ZBeI9YpHtfM/

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Tekken Tag Tournament 2 vs. Dead or Alive 5 ? PlayStation 3 - Bettor

Tekken Tag Tournament 2 vs. Dead or Alive 5 ? PlayStation 3?

Comparing the PlayStation 3 version of two fighting games is never an easy thing to do, especially when the games under discussion are Tekken Tag Tournament 2 and Dead or Alive 5.

Both the games pack a strong punch in their unique way that one often finds oneself wondering why the two games are even being compared.

Irrespective of how unfair, rather pointless, it appears to put Tekken Tag Tournament 2 and Dead or Alive on the table and try to figure out which one of them enjoys an upper hand over the other, the seemingly never-ending debates on various online forums has created a need to get this thing sorted out once and for all.

Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is every fighting game lover?s dream come true. While this may initially come off as an overstatement, you just need to look the different modes, size of character roster, presentation and gameplay of the game to know why the latest title in the Tekken franchise by Namco Bandai Games is considered among the best, if not the best.

Dead or Alive 5 does not fall too far behind its counterpart either. With Team Ninja taking over the development of the game and injecting the pure awesome that one can only expect from the team behind the highly-acclaimed Ninja Gaiden franchise into it, the product which eventually came out was just amazing.

The game has a brilliant presentation, with a beautiful cast of characters to choose from and an addictive gameplay. The development team has clearly spent a lot of time in designing the stages and adding some not-so-unique but definitely refreshing elements to it. The simplistic gameplay of Dead or Alive makes it perfect for fighting-game newbies to pick up the controller and take on a pro.

Now that it has been established that both the games are nothing short of outstanding, the only question which remains to be answered is which of the two games is better.

For someone who has been a Tekken enthusiast since the days of PlayStation One, the comparison between the Tekken Tag Tournament 2 and Dead or Alive 5 would be absurd. The latest Tekken game has nearly gotten rid of everything that kept it from being a perfect fighting game. The experience on offer is one that fans of the genre can truly enjoy without having to make faces and cursing the developers.

However, if a person stays objective, one would surely begin to notice the things that make Dead or Alive 5 slightly better than Tekken Tag Tournament 2.

Even though Team Ninja did not bother to expand the character roster in Dead or Alive 5 too much, they made up for it by brushing up the characters, adding a lot of detail to them, giving them personalities and adding a huge list of moves to their arsenal. The characters in Tekken Tag Tournament 2 sometimes come off as rather shallow, except for a few one.

Another thing that makes Dead or Alive 5 a bit more appealing than Tekken Tag Tournament 2 is that Team Ninja has clearly taken the casual gamers into consideration while developing the gameplay. One does not need to be a hardcore gamer to enjoy the experience. Namco Bandai Games, on the other hand, seem to have ignored the casual gamers and made the move lists, combos and overall gameplay of Tekken Tag Tournament 2 a bit complex.

Irrespective of the comparison drawn between the two games, it would not be an overstatement to say that both Tekken Tag Tournament 2 and Dead or Alive 5 are two of the best fighting games on the PlayStation 3.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are solely of the writer?s and do not reflect bettor.com?s official editorial policy.

?

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Tekken-Tag-Tournament-2-vs-Dead-or-Alive-5-PlayStation-3-a215456

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Individual and small-chain restaurant meals exceed recommended daily calorie needs

May 13, 2013 ? As the restaurant industry prepares to implement new rules requiring chains with 20 or more locations to post calorie content information, the results of a new study suggest that it would be beneficial to public health for all restaurants to provide consumers with the nutritional content of their products. Researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University analyzed meals from independent and small-chain restaurants, which account for approximately 50% of the nation's restaurant locations but will be exempt from the new federal rules. They found that the average single meal contained two to three times the estimated calorie needs of an individual adult at a single meal and 66% of typical daily calorie requirements.

The findings were published today in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Using the bomb calorimetry method, researchers analyzed 157 full meals, including side dishes, from 33 randomly selected individual or small-chain restaurants within 15 miles of downtown Boston, Massachusetts; all restaurants had an online menu but did not provide nutritional information. Researchers collected samples from the most popular food choices in the nine most common restaurant types: Mexican, American, Chinese, Italian, Japanese, Thai, Indian, Greek and Vietnamese. The study was conducted between June and August 2011. Specific meal items selected for the study were identified based on customer rankings and from internet searches for popular foods.

"On average, the meals studied contained 1,327 calories, which significantly exceeds the estimated energy needs of an individual adult at a single meal," said senior and corresponding author Susan B. Roberts, Ph.D., director of the Energy Metabolism Laboratory at the HNRCA. "Meals from all restaurant types provided substantially more energy than is needed for weight maintenance."

Nearly three-quarters (73%) of the meals analyzed contained more than half of the FDA's daily energy recommendation of 2,000 calories, and 12 meals contained more than the entire recommended daily energy intake. Among the meal categories studied, the Italian (1,755 calories), American (1,494 calories) and Chinese (1,474 calories) meals had the highest average calorie levels. Vietnamese meals had the lowest calorie levels as measured by gross energy, with an average of 922 calories. The Japanese meals had the second lowest calories, with an average of 1,027 calories.

Researchers also examined a subset of the independent or small-chain restaurant meals and found that their average calorie content was 6% higher than the stated energy contents of equivalent meals in the largest national chain restaurants; this difference was not statistically significant. On average, the meals served at independent or small-chain restaurants had 1,437 calories, compared to an average of 1,359 calories as self-reported by larger national chain restaurants. "These comparative findings suggest that both non-chain and chain restaurants contribute to the obesity epidemic, which is making people unhealthy and has a huge impact on health care costs," said Dr. Roberts, who is also a professor at the Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University and an adjunct professor of psychiatry at the Tufts University School of Medicine.

"National recommendations for the prevention and treatment of obesity stress individual self-monitoring of food consumption, but there is little available information on the energy content of foods offered by restaurants that are not required to post nutrition information," said first author Lorien Urban, Ph.D., postdoctoral scholar in the Energy Metabolism Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA. "Given that an imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure of only 100 calories per day can lead to a weight gain of between six and fifteen pounds per year, our findings suggest that routine reporting of meal calorie content by all restaurants, not just large chains, would encourage individuals to make informed choices about their diet and would discourage restaurants from offering unhealthy portions."

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/nutrition/~3/3Wa1livuYD0/130513174005.htm

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Bombing bombing suspect's Va. burial was legal, mortiican says

BOSTON (AP) ? The director of the Massachusetts funeral home where Tamerlan Tsarnaev's (TAM'-ehr-luhn tsahr-NEYE'-ehvz) body was held says the family of the Boston Marathon bombing suspect had the right to bury the body as they did.

Peter Stefan said Monday he may not agree with how things were done when Tsarnaev was buried last week in Virginia, but it was legal.

Stefan's comments come as a group critical of the burial says it wants the body disinterred and sent elsewhere. The chairman of the Virginia Anti-Shariah Task Force called the burial "an awful sneak attack."

Stefan says Massachusetts law gives families the right to bury their relatives, and they had a permit to take the body to Virginia.

Stefan says he would have preferred sending the body to Tsarnaev's family in Russia.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mass-mortician-bombing-suspects-burial-legal-172748639.html

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Kate Middleton Pregnancy Craving: Vegetarian Curry!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/kate-middleton-pregnancy-craving-vegetarian-curry/

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Immigration reform too late to fix one big problem, studies say

Two recent studies suggest that the immigration reform bill now making its way through the US Senate may not be able to solve one of the core long-term challenges it seeks to fix.

Beyond the weighty issues of border security and a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, the reform bill also targets America?s migrant labor system, which both workers? rights groups and the agricultural industry say is broken. Agricultural businesses say there is not enough flexibility in the system to meet their employment needs, while workers say they can be trapped in unfair conditions.

Both sides say the reform measure, while not perfect, is an improvement. Yet the two recent studies suggest that economic and demographic trends in Mexico are already changing the dynamics of the American migrant-worker system. In the longer term, the increasing urbanization and prosperity of the Mexican middle class will dramatically diminish the abundant, very cheap Mexican farm labor that has flooded across the southern border for decades to harvest the crops of America.

RECOMMENDED: Could you pass a US citizenship test?

?The longstanding assumption that the region has an endless supply of less-educated workers headed for the US is becoming less and less accurate when it comes to Mexico; and in the years ahead, it is also likely to become less accurate first for El Salvador and then Guatemala,? says the executive summary of the report released Monday by the Migration Policy Institute and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

The second study agrees with the first and connects the trend directly to issues at the heart of immigration reform.

?This [trend] means that immigration policy will cease to be a solution to the US farm labor problem in the long run and probably sooner. In fact, we already may be witnessing the start of a new era in which farmers will have to adapt to labor scarcity by switching to less labor-intensive crops, technologies, and labor management practices,? according to the University of California study released in March.

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Together, the two studies reinforce statistically what experts have been cataloging anecdotally since the 1980s, pointing to several reasons for the historic drop in cheap Mexican farm labor.

? As incomes in Mexico have risen, workers have shifted out of farm work into other sectors. Mexico?s farm workforce fell by nearly 2 million ? 25 percent ? from 1995 to 2010, and its per capita income now exceeds $15,000 per year. ?Moving away from farm work as your income rises, reflects a pattern seen in many other countries,? says Edward Taylor, one of the authors of the University of California report.

? Fertility rates have changed dramatically ? down from a norm of seven children per woman in 1970 to just over two today.

? Rural education has also improved dramatically. The average schooling for rural Mexicans 50 or older is 4.9 years, but for those in their 20s it is 9.7 years. ?Better educated children eschew farm work in Mexico,? says Mr. Taylor.

These developments could help proponents of immigration reform dull some criticism of the plan.

?This study suggests that the level of illegal immigration will never return to its prior levels,? says Steven Schier, a political scientist at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn., referring to the University of California research. ?That may serve to reduce the heat surrounding the issue and prompt Washington to address the problem with legislation for the first time in decades.?

But groups against immigration say the studies show the need to focus on other ways of getting US food harvested.

?American agriculture?s reliance on low-wage foreign labor has impeded capital investment in technology that would have made it more efficient and competitive,? says Ira Mehlman, national spokesman for the Federation of American Immigration Reform. ?There are machines that can do many agricultural jobs much more efficiently and more cost effectively. Our government should have policies in place that incentivize that sort of capital investment in efficiency, not policies that perpetuate exploitative inefficiency.?

More broadly, the research helps clarify the questions Congress ought to be asking, many say.

"This ? raises a series of questions for policymakers and those in the agricultural industry,? says Catherine Wilson, an immigration specialist at Villanova University. ?First, given the increasing trend of Mexicans moving into nonagricultural occupations, how can the US secure a steady and reliable flow of workers in the agricultural industry? And second, does comprehensive immigration reform legislation provide a time-sensitive and effective response to this phenomenon?"

The answers to those questions could push the US toward working with illegal immigrants already in the country, some say.

?The boom in Mexican immigration is over. Mexico's rural sector is declining, labor force growth is decelerating, Mexico is becoming an aging society, its middle class is expanding, and incomes are rising,? says Douglas Massey, a sociologist at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University in New Jersey. ?The critical need at this point is some kind of legalization for those already here.?

Others caution against making too much of the research right away, suggesting that the Mexican developments need to be seen in the larger context of events in the region.

?Things are changing in Mexico in ways that will fundamentally change the migration patterns that have been in place for over a century, but that doesn't mean things will end overnight,? says Lisa Garc?a Bedolla, chairwoman of the Center for Latino Policy Research at the University of California, Berkeley.

After all, what is happening economically and politically in Mexico is somewhat the opposite of what?s happening in other parts of Central America, she says. So while the numbers of Mexican workers may decline, numbers of workers from other Central American countries might not.

According to Pew research, 57 percent of illegal immigrants already in America are Mexican.

In the end, what the study does show is that border enforcement is much less effective in controlling illegal immigration than economic conditions abroad, says Bill Ong Hing, a professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law.

The bipartisan bill in the Senate allocates an additional $6.5 billion for border enforcement. ?Those funds would be spent so much more wisely and effectively on helping Mexico with its economy,? says Professor Hing. ?The notion of a strong border may sound appealing, but a strong Mexican economy is the real way to reduce economic migration.?

RECOMMENDED: Could you pass a US citizenship test?

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/immigration-reform-too-fix-one-big-problem-studies-141516418.html

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No holes in Swiss online networking theory

May 9, 2013 ? Often, it's not what you know, but who you know when it comes to business and research success and that still applies even in the age of online social networking, according to results to be published in the International Journal of Organisational Design and Engineering.

Peter Gloor, Pierre Dorsaz, Hauke Fuehres and Manfred Vogel of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, in Cambridge, Massachusetts have compared the success of startup entrepreneurs and innovators with their activity on the social networking sites LinkedIn and Facebook as well as email networks including swissnex Boston, which acts as a US-based science and technology outpost to connect Swiss and US entrepreneurs and academics. Specifically, they focused on entrepreneurship-coaching programs and found that those people more centrally positioned in the various types of network, tended to be the more successful players in business and research. As one might expect, proximity within the networks to other successful people also correlated with their success.

Interestingly, however, the even more successful members of the networks analyzed tended to have an affiliation or were alumni of the prominent research center ETH Zurich. This confirmed the value of pre-existing social capital acquired while attending such an academic institution, the team suggests. In practical terms, they believe their detailed findings have wider implications for entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, academics and those finding ways to connect these people.

The received wisdom suggests that academic alumni associations and business networking organizations do help startup entrepreneurs become successful, but little quantitative and qualitative research has been carried out previously to demonstrate this idea one way or the other. Gloor and colleagues put the notion on a much firmer theoretical footing and allude to the synergistic effects that might arise between the various offline and online connections individuals make. The team concludes that because online social networking appears to be an efficient tool for business networking, hubs, mentoring organizations and other networks should fully integrate their online presence into their offering in order to support network building between entrepreneurs and academics as part of their so-called mission statement.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Inderscience, via AlphaGalileo.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Peter A. Gloor, Pierre Dorsaz, Hauke Fuehres, Manfred Vogel. Choosing the right friends - predicting success of startup entrepreneurs and innovators through their online social network structure. International Journal of Organisational Design and Engineering, 2013; 3 (1): 67 DOI: 10.1504/IJODE.2013.053668

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/rRIh5ibxGzc/130509090841.htm

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Microsoft: Google Doesn't Get Business Productivity Tools ...

When it comes to productivity apps, Office is still clearly the market leader, and Microsoft is now also quickly iterating on its online apps for Office. When it comes to its competition with Google?s online productivity apps, though, it?s hard to figure out if Microsoft is feeling superior or threatened (or a bit of both). Earlier today, I talked to Michael Atalla, the director of product marketing for Office 365 at Microsoft. In his view, Google doesn?t really get how businesses use productivity apps.

Businesses, Atalla told me, are looking to find the right mix of tools from companies they trust. He believes Microsoft?has the ?broadest vision of productivity? that includes everything from the basic Office tools like Word, Excel and PowerPoint, to database servers, Skype and Lync for connectivity and real-time presence indicators, and support for multiple platforms.

Microsoft's Michael Atalla

Microsoft?s Michael Atalla

Productivity, he said, ?is more than just working in the browser? (a clear nod in Google?s direction), because organizations also want security policies, the ability to work with data on-premise and off-premise, and a full set of business-focused capabilities (including business analytics, for example) ? some of which can?t yet be replicated in a browser or just aren?t part of the standard online productivity suites yet.

He also noted that while Google provides businesses and consumers with the same set of tools, ?one size doesn?t fit all.? And while Microsoft ?deeply understands that businesses need capabilities that go beyond consumer needs,? he clearly implied that Google doesn?t. Google?s focus, he somewhat jokingly added, seems to be on Glass and not on the productivity apps on Drive.

Google?s I/O developer conference will kick off next Wednesday, and chances are the company will announce at least a few updates to its productivity suite. Its acquisition of QuickOffice has given Google access to better technologies to provide Office users with the kind of high-document fidelity that only the Office Web Apps currently offer online.

I can?t help but think that Microsoft is trying to preempt some of these announcements with the release of its Office Web Apps roadmap earlier this week and its overall publicity campaign around productivity (and it?s somewhat infamous Scroogled campaign).

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/05/08/microsoft-google-doesnt-get-business-productivity-tools/

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Amazon Cloud Player App Now Supports Ford Sync

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Source: http://www.iclarified.com/29863/amazon-cloud-player-app-now-supports-ford-sync

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Best Kinds of Tea | Top Tea Varieties List - Ranker

  • 1

  • 2

  • 3

  • 4

  • 5

    Assam

  • 6

  • 7

  • 8

  • 9

  • 10

    Yunnan

  • 11

  • 12

  • 13

    Matcha Japanese Green Tea

  • 14

  • 15

    Darjeeling

  • 16

    Yunnan

  • 17

  • 18

  • 19

    Zhejiang

  • 20

    China

  • 21

    Anhui

  • 22

    Tongxiang, Chuzhou, Bozhou

  • 23

    Zhejiang

  • 24

    Henan

  • 25

  • 26

    Sencha Japanese Green Tea

  • 27

  • 28

    Sri Lanka

  • 29

  • 30

    Brazil

  • Source: http://www.ranker.com/list/best-kinds-of-tea/ranker-food

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    Tuesday, May 7, 2013

    Scenic, struggling S. Illinois braces for oil rush

    In this April, 8, 2013 photo, Lucy Childers, 6, plays on the rock formations at Ferne Clyffe State Park in Goreville, Ill. Southern Illinoisans have hopes and fears surrounding the high-volume oil and gas drilling that may be starting in the Shawnee National Forest. Many people are beginning to brace for change as state lawmakers consider regulations that would allow energy companies to begin drilling deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas, using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

    In this April, 8, 2013 photo, Lucy Childers, 6, plays on the rock formations at Ferne Clyffe State Park in Goreville, Ill. Southern Illinoisans have hopes and fears surrounding the high-volume oil and gas drilling that may be starting in the Shawnee National Forest. Many people are beginning to brace for change as state lawmakers consider regulations that would allow energy companies to begin drilling deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas, using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

    In this April 9, 2013 photo, Ron Duncan, Johnson County economic development director, talks about the immediate economic relief oil drilling may bring because of the hopeful influx of jobs for the community, in Vienna Ill. Southern Illinoisans have hopes and fears surrounding the high-volume oil and gas drilling that may be starting in the Shawnee National Forest. Many people are beginning to brace for change as state lawmakers consider regulations that would allow energy companies to begin drilling deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas, using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

    In this April 9, 2013 photo, cypress trees, many of which are more than 1,000-years-old and exceed 40 feet circumference, stand in the Cache River State Natural Area near Belknap, Ill. Southern Illinoisans have hopes and fears surrounding the high-volume oil and gas drilling that may be starting in the Shawnee National Forest. Many people are beginning to brace for change as state lawmakers consider regulations that would allow energy companies to begin drilling deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas, using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

    In this April 9, 2013 photo, Frank Johnson, 23, of Golconda, Ill., and a mechanic who travels 60 miles to work, talks about fracking and the chance of a job closer to home, in Vienna Ill. Southern Illinoisans have hopes and fears surrounding the high-volume oil and gas drilling that may be starting in the Shawnee National Forest. Many people are beginning to brace for change as state lawmakers consider regulations that would allow energy companies to begin drilling deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas, using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

    In this April 10, 2013 photo, Barney Bush, chairman of a Shawnee Indian settlement in northeastern Pope County, near the Garden of the Gods, ancient rock formations and cliffs within the Shawnee National Forest, says this area is too special to put at risk for what could be short-term gain, while with his dog Lucille Nez at his home near Herod, Ill. Southern Illinoisans have hopes and fears surrounding the high-volume oil and gas drilling that may be starting in the Shawnee National Forest. Many people are beginning to brace for change as state lawmakers consider regulations that would allow energy companies to begin drilling deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas, using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or ?fracking,? that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

    (AP) ? This is the Illinois that many people never see ? the sparsely populated southern tip where flat farmland gives way to rolling hills, rocky outcrops, thick forests and cypress swamps.

    Blacktopped county roads wend through no-stoplight towns. Locals speak in soft drawls and talk of generations who've lived on the same land or in the same villages. The remote and rugged Shawnee National Forest attracts hikers, campers and horseback riders, and offers a stark contrast to the rest of a state that largely has been plowed, paved or suburbanized.

    But many here are beginning to brace for change as the Illinois Legislature considers regulations that could set off a rush among energy companies to drill deep in the southern Illinois bedrock for oil and natural gas. The crews would be using a process known as high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," that has transformed the landscape in places like North Dakota and Pennsylvania.

    After drilling intensively in a handful of states in the Midwest and Southwest in the last few years, the industry is now preparing to push into new territory, hoping to tap deposits long considered out of reach. Residents here ? and some in New York and California that also are part of this next frontier ? have heard the angry clamor over fracking elsewhere, but most have little experience with the oil industry.

    Already, drillers have leased hundreds of thousands of acres throughout southern Illinois, including in scenic Johnson and Pope counties, which hasn't seen conventional drilling and people aren't sure what to expect if a fracking rush becomes a reality.

    Some envision the kind of economic boom they've heard about in other states: tens of thousands of workers drilling for oil and gas, local businesses barely keeping up with demand and many municipal coffers flush with cash.

    Others are spooked by stories of housing shortages, towns overrun with strangers, torn-up roads and claims of polluted water ? and worry that drilling would forever alter the serenity, beauty and very character of an area they consider special.

    "This really is a double-edged sword," says Ron Duncan, Johnson County's economic development director, standing on a corner in downtown Vienna, the once-bustling county seat that now has just a handful of businesses and government offices.

    "This town could use an economic infusion," he says, pausing to wave to an elderly man riding his lawnmower around the courthouse square. "But it's also where people love the rural life, the natural beauty and knowing their neighbors."

    Fracking uses high-pressure mixtures of water, sand or gravel and chemicals to crack rock formations and release oil and natural gas deep underground. Combined with horizontal drilling, it allows access to formerly out-of-reach deposits and has opened large areas of the country for exploration. It has pushed U.S. oil production to its highest level in 20 years, the Energy Department says, and natural gas production to an all-time high, with new estimates that the nation has almost 2,400 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas.

    In Illinois, the industry is eyeing the New Albany Shale formation, and could begin drilling as soon as this summer if the legislature passes regulations introduced in February. That's not a problem for many people in Illinois counties where conventional oil and gas drilling has been going on for over a century.

    "Where we operate now, people aren't afraid," said Brad Richards, executive vice president of the Illinois Oil and Gas Association.

    But those in Pope and Johnson counties, areas Richard said might hold significant oil reserves, are divided.

    The Pope County Board of Commissioners recently voted to support a 2-year drilling moratorium; bills filed in the Illinois House and Senate calling for a drilling delay have gotten little support.

    "We need jobs," says board Chairman Larry Richards. "But will they just bring their own people in, tear our county up, destroy it and then pack up and leave us with a mess?"

    Even so, many locals have leased land to oil companies, regarding it as a quick infusion of cash ? a onetime payment of about $50 per acre ? though they'll receive royalties if oil production is successful.

    "I don't care whether I get (a well) or not," says 69-year-old Johnson County farmer Thomas Trover, who leased more than 1,300 acres to a Kansas oil company. "I got my $60,000."

    Duncan, who raises cattle and hay on about 150 acres, says he also signed a lease, but only to protect himself: His neighbors were leasing, so the drillers could have fracked underneath his land anyway. Plus, he wanted to try to protect a creek that flows through his property.

    He worries that fracking could deplete local water supplies, that there already is a shortage of rental housing and that a large stream of strangers might be more than some locals bargained for. But he also understands the wider economic benefit that could come if fracking creates jobs where there are no factories or Wal-Marts ?the biggest employers are two prisons near Vienna and the school systems.

    The poverty rate in Johnson County is about 15 percent, but it's almost 20 percent among Pope County's 4,400 residents.

    So, fracking is a gamble that many are willing to take.

    "It could be a real good thing," says 23-year-old Frank Johnson, who lives in the Pope County seat of Golconda, a shrinking Ohio River town of 670. He drives an hour each way to his job as a mechanic, but says many of his friends, "had to go in the military to get out of town," and get a job.

    John Towns, who opened the Sweetwater Saloon in Golconda three years ago after a long career as a river captain, says fracking "sure enough wouldn't hurt nothing."

    "It wouldn't bother me a bit," says Towns, a 62-year-old who's lived here all his life and watched friends and neighbors move away. "And maybe some of the workers would want to drink a beer."

    But 68-year-old Barney Bush, chairman of a Shawnee Indian settlement in northeastern Pope County, near the Garden of the Gods ? ancient rock formations and cliffs in the Shawnee National Forest ? says this area is too special to put at risk for what could be short-term gain.

    "This is still a hard place to live in, but it's everything that's left to me," says Bush, who draws his water from a natural spring and hunts the hardwood forests for wild onions, mushrooms and herbs. He fears fracking fluid would spill during drilling and pollute the water, that the sites would destroy forests and bring hundreds of tanker trucks rumbling through the hills.

    "If they poison the water here, that's not just for a week, that's for eternity as far as we know," Bush says.

    A regulatory bill setting rules for drilling is lingering in a House committee while industry and lawmakers hash out last-minute details.

    Wayne Woolsey, the owner of Wichita, Kan.-based Woolsey Energy Corp., has staked out his land, buying leases in Johnson, Pope and eight other counties.

    He says he's ready to get going: "If this is as good as I think it is, it will be a tremendous opportunity for the state of Illinois ? which, by the way is in great debt."

    __

    Follow Tammy Webber at: http:// www.twitter.com/twebber02

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-05-Oil%20Drilling-Illinois/id-8b5dcd98a0be489796dce67d073e0700

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    Hiromi: I've Got Rhythm

    Hiromi is a big deal Japanese jazz pianist who's getting pretty famous in the U.S. now, too. She's been touring around the world for awhile and her compositions are really great. Oh and her playing is totally badass.

    People always talk about Hiromi's energy as the thing that draws them in, and it's definitely a big part of it. I saw her perform last month and she sort of jumps around crazily like she's going to fly off the bench or something. But I think the real draw to her playing, other than her general virtuosity, is her percussive style and internal sense of rhythm. Even when she's playing charts that aren't as recognizable, or as on the nose, as "I've Got Rhythm" you still follow what she's trying to convey.

    If you're bored, jump to the middle or the end of the video and watch/listen to her totally kill it. And definitely the funniest part of watching Hiromi play is when she jumps up toward the audience before she even finishes the last chord.

    Source: http://gizmodo.com/hiromi-ive-got-rhythm-492832717

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    Monday, May 6, 2013

    Cooler weather aids fight against Calif. wildfire

    CAMARILLO, Calif. (AP) ? Cool, moist air moving into Southern California on Sunday helped firefighters build containment lines around a huge wildfire burning through coastal mountains.

    Fire crews took advantage of improved conditions as the high winds and hot, dry air of recent days were replaced by the normal Pacific air, significantly reducing fire activity.

    The 44-square-mile blaze at the western end of the Santa Monica Mountains was 60 percent surrounded Sunday morning.

    Full containment was expected Monday, according to Ventura County fire officials.

    The progress made led authorities to lift evacuation orders Saturday for residences in several areas.

    "The fire isn't really running and gunning," said Tom Kruschke, a Ventura County Fire Department spokesman.

    The National Weather Service said an approaching low pressure system would bring a 20 percent chance of showers Sunday afternoon, with the likelihood increasing into the night and on Monday.

    Nearly 2,000 firefighters using engines, bulldozers and aircraft worked to corral the blaze.

    Firefighting efforts were focused on the fire's east side, rugged canyons that are a mix of public and private lands, Kruschke said.

    The change in the weather was also expected to bring gusty winds to some parts of Southern California, but well away from the fire area.

    Despite its size and speed of growth, the fire that broke out Thursday and quickly moved through neighborhoods of Camarillo Springs and Thousand Oaks has caused damage to just 15 homes, though it has threatened thousands.

    The fire also swept through Point Mugu State Park, a hiking and camping area that sprawls between those communities and the ocean. Park district Superintendent Craig Sap told the Ventura County Star that two old, unused ranch-style homes in the backcountry burned. Restrooms and campgrounds also were damaged. Sap estimated repairs would cost $225,000.

    The only injuries as of Saturday were a civilian and a firefighter involved in a traffic accident away from the fire.

    Residents were grateful so many homes were spared.

    "It came pretty close. All of these houses ? these firemen did a tremendous job. Very, very thankful for them," Shayne Poindexter said. Flames came within 30 feet of the house he was building.

    On Friday, the wildfire reached the ocean, jumped Pacific Coast Highway and burned a Navy base rifle range on the beach at Point Mugu. When winds reversed direction from offshore to onshore, the fire stormed back up canyons toward inland neighborhoods.

    The blaze is one of more than 680 wildfires in the state so far this year ? about 200 more than average.

    East of Los Angeles in Riverside County, a new fire that broke out Saturday afternoon burned 650 acres of wilderness south of Banning. It was 30 percent contained Sunday. Banning has been flanked by a nearly 5-square-mile fire to the north which destroyed one home shortly after it broke out Wednesday. That fire was fully contained late Saturday.

    In Northern California, a fire that has blackened more than 10 square miles of wilderness in Tehama County was a threat to 10 unoccupied summer homes near the community of Butte Meadows, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

    Thunderstorms were expected to bring erratic winds but little rain to the area about 200 miles north of San Francisco.

    Nearly 1,300 firefighters were on the lines and the blaze, which started Wednesday, was 20 percent contained.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cooler-weather-aids-fight-against-calif-wildfire-004957917.html

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