Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Dutch children could have three or more parents : Family First NZ

Posted by Bob on Wednesday, October 31, 2012

AFP 24 Oct 2012
Dutch kids may soon be able to have three or more mothers or fathers after the government said it was seeking to enshrine parenting rights for the Netherlands? 25,000 children in gay families.

?The justice ministry is going to investigate and see what the possibilities are for recognising three parents or more per family,? ministry spokesman Wiebe Alkema told AFP on Wednesday.

The left-wing Green party, but also the Liberal VVD and the Labour PvdA parties that won last month?s parliamentary election, requested the report with a view to amending a lesbian parenting bill currently before parliament.

The Netherlands was the first country to legalise gay marriage in 2001 and when a gay or lesbian couple has a child, another parent is by biological necessity involved.

But, said Green MP Liesbeth van Tongeren, it is also essential to recognise the rights of non-biological parents, including step-parents.

?Currently parenthood in the eyes of the law is almost always the consequence of biological parenthood,? her party said in a statement, stressing that ?this does not represent the diversity of families in the Netherlands.?

?Often enough, the father of a child with lesbian parents also plays a role in the life of the child,? she said.
http://www.afp.com/en/node/616941

Source: http://familyfirst.org.nz/2012/10/dutch-children-could-have-three-or-more-parents/

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The ?thank you? that changed my life | NCZOnline

There?s so much rampant negativity in the world and on the Internet that it can be hard to deal with some days. It seems like more and more, I?m seeing people being mean and succeeding, and that makes me sad. Perhaps the biggest poster child for this was Steve Jobs, who by all accounts was a really big jerk.[1] In one way or another, he seemed to legitimize being an asshole as a good way to do business. And I?ve seen this even more now that I?m involved in startup life.

A situation recently popped up in my life where I had a decision to make. I could do what ?everyone else does?, tell a lie, and end up with a bunch of money. Or, I could tell the truth, and never see a cent. Perhaps because of some abnormal wiring in my brain, the thought of lying didn?t even register as a realistic choice. I was told, ?but this is how things are done.? I didn?t care. That?s not the way that I do things.

I began searching for examples of where being nice and polite actually worked out in business or otherwise. An opportunity where it would have been easy to be mean but being nice changed the result. After struggling to do research and thinking about stories I?ve heard, I came to realize that the best story is my own.

Back in 2003, I was working in a nondescript job that I hated. I was going on year two of an almost unbearable four years at this job and needed a creative outlet. I had started writing articles for several online sites and had gotten the idea to write a book. I wrote every day for about six months straight trying to figure out what this book would be like and what the focus would be. I knew it would be on JavaScript, more specifically all the stuff people didn?t understand, but I really wasn?t sure of the title or the outline or who I would propose the book to. All I knew was that I wanted to write about JavaScript and so that?s what I did.

After that six months, I had enough material to put together a rough outline and start proposing the book to publishers. My first choice was Sitepoint. I had written several articles for their website and they were just starting to publish books. I thought a book on JavaScript would fit in great with what they were trying to do. So I sent over a proposal with a writing sample and anxiously awaited a response. Not too long later, I got a rejection e-mail. And it wasn?t just a rejection e-mail, the person who wrote the e-mail not only didn?t like my idea for the book, he said he didn?t understand why anybody would ever want such a book and also that my writing style was terrible. This was quite a blow to me and my ego, but keeping with what I had been taught growing up, I wrote back to him and thanked him for the feedback. I asked if he could give me any advice on how to improve the book or my writing style. I heard nothing back.

I next approached Apress. At the time, Apress was just getting started with web development books and I was hopeful that they would be interested in a JavaScript book. My proposal was accepted and somebody started to review it. After a couple of months without hearing anything back, I e-mailed this person only to have the e-mail bounce back. Not a good sign. I dug around on the Apress website and found another editor?s email. I e-mailed him and explained the situation: someone was reviewing my proposal and now it appears that he doesn?t work there anymore. I inquired if anybody was looking at it now, and if not, if it would be possible to assign someone. He apologized for the inconvenience and assigned somebody else to review my proposal.

That someone else was John Franklin, a really nice guy who spent some time looking over my proposal and researching potential. After another couple of months, John finally got back to me and said that Apress was going to pass on the project. They felt that the JavaScript book market was already dominated by O?Reilly and Wrox and they were not interested in going head-to-head with them (particularly ironic given the number of JavaScript titles that were later published by Apress). I was disappointed because I felt like there was room for more JavaScript books in the market and they were missing an opportunity. As this was my second rejection, I was a little bit down. Still, I wrote back to John and said thank you for taking the time to review my proposal and for giving me his honest assessment.

Much to my surprise, John wrote back to me. He said that he personally thought that the book was a good idea and that I might be better off going with a larger publisher that might have the resources to pull it off. He gave me the name and contact information for Jim Minatel, an acquisitions editor at Wrox. I had never thought to contact Wrox because they already had several JavaScript books including the original Professional JavaScript by the late Nigel McFarlane.

I e-mailed Jim and introduced myself. It just so happened that he was looking for somebody to rewrite Professional JavaScript from scratch. Jim and I worked together to merge my proposal into his idea for the book and the end result was Professional JavaScript for Web Developers, my first book, which was released in 2005. What happened over the next several years is something that I still can?t believe.

The first interesting thing occurred when I got an e-mail from Eric Miraglia at Yahoo!. He let me know that Yahoo! was using my book to train their engineers on JavaScript. This was really exciting for me, because I had been a longtime Yahoo! user and knew how big the company was. Eric said to let him know if I?m ever in California, because he?d like to meet and show me around. I thanked Eric and told him I wasn?t planning any California trips soon, but I would definitely keep that in mind.

Because of the success of Professional JavaScript for Web Developers, Jim contacted me soon after to ask if I would write a book on Ajax. The Ajax revolution was just starting and Jim wanted to get out in front of it with a book. I initially turned it down because I was burned out on writing and the schedule he was proposing was really aggressive. However, he was eventually able to convince me to do it and Professional Ajax was released in 2006. It turned out to be the second Ajax book on the market and ended up being one of Amazon?s top 10 computer and technology books of 2006.[2]

The success of Professional Ajax was overwhelming. The book put me on the radar for Google, who came calling asking if I would like to work for them. Google was in a big hiring spree, bringing in top tier web developers from around the world. At the time I was still living in Massachusetts and the thought of moving to California wasn?t one that I relished (Google didn?t have the Cambridge office at that point in time). But I saw this as an opportunity I couldn?t pass up and accepted their invitation to fly out and interview.

At the same time, Jim came ringing again asking to update Professional Ajax for the next year. With all of the excitement, the Ajax book market was exploding as people discovered new and interesting ways to use this new technology.

While I was out in California interviewing with Google, I emailed Eric and asked if he would like to get together for drinks. I met with him and Thomas Sha at Tied House in Mountain View. We talked about the current state of the web and how exciting it was to be a web developer working with JavaScript and Ajax. We also talked a little bit about what was going on at Yahoo! at the time. When I got back to Massachusetts, Thomas called and asked if I would be interested in interviewing at Yahoo! as well. After all, he said, if you?re going to move all the way across the country you might as well know what your options are.

I ended up choosing to work for Yahoo! instead of Google and moved to California. I can?t say enough about my time at Yahoo! and how much I enjoyed it. I met so many great people that I can?t even begin to list. However, there are a few that stick out as I look back.

I met Bill Scott through my cubemate, Adam Platti. I had mentioned to Adam that I wanted to start giving talks and I didn?t know how to go about it. Adam said that his friend Bill did talks all the time and I should chat with him to figure out how to do it. He then made an introduction to Bill, and Bill made an introduction to the organizer of the Rich Web Experience, which was taking place in San Jose. That was my first conference speaking opportunity. The experience made me realize that not only could I give a talk, but people actually liked it. From then on, I was giving talks at conferences and other events.

I met Nate Koechley through Eric and Thomas when I arrived in California. Nate gave an introductory class to all new front-end engineers at Yahoo! that I was in and really enjoyed. Over the years, I would get to see him give several talks, and he more than anyone else influenced my speaking style. I loved how visual his slides were and how we could explain complex topics by breaking them down into small chunks. He also had great interactions with the audience, never getting flustered and always being both personable and respectful. I was fortunate to have Nate in some of my talk rehearsals and was the beneficiary of a lot of great feedback from him.

I met Havi Hoffman through email. At the time, she was working for the Yahoo! Developer Network and was looking for somebody to write a book. Yahoo! was just starting a partnership with O?Reilly to have Yahoo! Press-branded books and someone had written a proposal for a book called, High Performance JavaScript. I still to this day don?t know who wrote the original proposal, but that person was unavailable to write the book and so Havi had contacted me to see if I was interested. Havi introduced me to Mary Treseler at O?Reilly, and we all worked to get the book out in 2010.

High Performance JavaScript was also a hit. The time was right for a book on JavaScript performance, and people really liked it. The success of the book led to more speaking engagements which in turn led to requests for more books. In 2012, I proposed Maintainable JavaScript to Mary as a new title, and it was published later in the year. That was after the third edition of Professional JavaScript for Web Developers was released in January 2012.

The success of my books and speaking engagements led me to leave Yahoo! in 2011 to do two things: start a consulting business and attempt to create a Silicon Valley startup with some former colleagues from Yahoo!. Because people knew who I was, it was fairly easy to get consulting work. That was important because we were bootstrapping the start up (WellFurnished) and we would all be chipping in our own money to get it off the ground.

Today, I have the career that I couldn?t even have dreamed of coming out of college. Being able to work for myself, do the things that I love, and still have time to write and give talks is truly a blessing. And all of it, every single piece, can be traced back to a simple ?thank you? I emailed to John Franklin in 2004. If I hadn?t sent that e-mail, I wouldn?t have been introduced to Jim Minatel, which means I wouldn?t have written Professional JavaScript for Web Developers, which means Yahoo! would never have started using it and I never would have written Professional Ajax, which means I never would have been interviewed by Google, which means I never would have met Eric Miraglia and Thomas She, which means I never would have worked at Yahoo!, which means I never would have met Adam Platti, Bill Scott, Nate Koechley, or Havi Hoffman, which means I never would have started giving talks or writing for O?Reilly, which means I never would have been able to start a consulting business, which means I never would have been able to attempt a startup.

My life was taken on a completely different path just by being nice to somebody. The truth is, you never know when that one moment of being nice will turn into a life altering moment. Amazing things can happen when you don?t push people away with negativity. So, embrace every opportunity to be nice, say please when asking for things, and above all, never forget to say ?thank you? when someone has helped you.

  1. Be a Jerk: The Worst Business Lesson From the Steve Jobs Biography (The Atlantic)
  2. Best Books of 2006 -
    Top 10 Editors? Picks: Computers & Internet (Amazon)

Disclaimer: Any viewpoints and opinions expressed in this article are those of Nicholas C. Zakas and do not, in any way, reflect those of my employer, my colleagues, Wrox Publishing, O'Reilly Publishing, or anyone else. I speak only for myself, not for them.

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Source: http://www.nczonline.net/blog/2012/10/30/the-thank-you-that-changed-my-life/

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Android 4.2: Still Jelly Bean, but sweeter

13 hrs.

Along with a small mountain of new Nexus devices, Google announced also?Android 4.2 on Monday. It's still called Jelly Bean, just like the prior version, but it's made just a little bit sweeter by the addition of new?features such as Photo Sphere, Gesture Typing, multi-user support and more.

Photo Sphere
Like iOS, Android now has a baked-in tool that'll help you create panoramic images.?In Android 4.2, you can take photos in any direction???an?improvement?on the panorama feature in iOS 6???and?they'll be put together into "photo spheres," which allow someone to explore the images you took as a 360-degree environment. (If you've ever used Microsoft's?Photosynth app, it sounds a lot like that.)

Gesture Typing
Plenty of third-party keyboards, such as Swype, offer users the ability to type by dragging their fingers across the on-screen keyboard, and now this feature's built right into Android.?Additionally, the new keyboard will "anticipate and predict the next word" you intend on typing so that you can simply select suggested words without even needing to type.

Multi-user support on tablets
Sharing an Android tablet with a family member will be significantly less awkward thanks to multi-user support. Each user can have his or her own homescreen, background, widgets, apps and?games. Toggling between users is supposedly as easy as switching between apps.

Wireless Display
Android 4.2 has a Wireless Display feature, similar to Apple's AirPlay, which allows you to share movies, YouTube clips, and whatever else might be on your screen to an HDTV. You'll just need to attach a little adapter to any HDMI-enabled TV and you're set to mirror content.

Daydream
Daydream is described as something that allows your Android device to "display useful and delightful information when idle or docked." It sounds like a snazzy screensaver, basically.

Souped-up notifications
Swiping down on your Android device reveals the notification pane. And now you can instantly take an action directly from that spot. This means that if you spot a missed call, you'll also see a button allowing you to return it.

When do I get this?
No word as to when Android 4.2 will become available for various Android devices, but we do know that the new Nexus lineup, which ships on Nov. 13, will be pre-loaded with the latest version of Jelly Bean.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/android-4-2-still-jelly-bean-sweeter-1B6743843

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Gallows Humor

Screen Shot 2012-10-30 at 6.52.48 PMManhattan, a place I've always considered a spiritual home and sometimes an actual one, actually turned into?a real life version of all?those post-apocalyptic movies about Manhattan on Monday evening as Superstorm Sandy hit landfall. We all learned that what the disaster?movies miss in their bathos is something elemental to human behavior in these sorts of situations: Gallows humor. Those of us with access to the Internet watched enthralled as the center of world commerce, New York City, was swallowed by flooding that eventually left 43 people dead and millions of dollars of property damaged.?Because of all of the aforementioned disaster movies, the scenes broadcast were eerily familiar. Fake photos of the carnage abounded, trumped only by the more horrific, and real photos of the carnage. And jokes, lots of jokes.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/x7yEYbvsy5c/

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State-by-state look at Sandy's impact

A construction crane was left dangling from the top of a high-rise apartment building in midtown Manhattan Monday as Hurricane Sandy approached. MSNBC's Tamron Hall reports.

New York

Utility companies said tens of thousands of customers were without?electricity on Monday, and officials warned that millions could be without power for days following Hurricane Sandy. Hours before the?Sandy was expected to make landfall, the storm lashed the region with furious winds, blinding rain and flooding.?A mandatory evacuation of more than 375,000 people in low-lying parts of New York City was issued shortly after the entire transit system was brought to a slow, grinding halt Sunday.

Sandy flooding begins, 'only going to get worse'

At?a news briefing Sunday,?New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg told residents that ?if you don?t evacuate, you're not just putting your own life in danger ? you are also endangering the lives of our first responders who may have to come in and rescue you.??A storm surge of 11 feet is possible, the highest of all coastal areas being hit by Sandy. The New York Stock Exchange and other U.S. financial markets shut down for Monday and Tuesday and thousands of flights were canceled at the city's major airports. ?

?Don?t be fooled, don?t look out the window and think it doesn?t look so bad," New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday. "The worst is still coming. Irene levels are currently being seen in the region right now. These forecasts for this surge are really extraordinary. They are talking about surges we?ve never seen before.?

Lucas Jackson / Reuters

After strong winds and heavy rain washed out bridges and damaged homes in multiple countries, the hurricane looks toward the northeastern U.S.

New Jersey

Hurricane Sandy?was accelerating and expected to make landfall near Atlantic City as early as 4 p.m. on Monday, forecasters said. Sandy is already hammering the state with strong winds and flooding rains, bringing rail and road travel to a near standstill.?Police in coastal towns were going door to door Monday as more than 1 million people were given mandatory evacuation orders, and thousands were already without power.

"Staying on the barrier islands for 36 hours is stupid. Don't be stupid; get out. Go to higher, safer ground," New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said at a Sunday afternoon press conference, adding?that residents should "be prepared to stay in your homes for an extended period of time ... perhaps without power or water."

Connecticut

One tenth of all Connecticut residents?-- 360,000 people --?were asked to?evacuate their homes as officials had warned the storm surge could cause massive flooding along the state's coastline.?Power outages were also pervasive Monday, and state officials estimated more than 35,000 people could be without power for as long as 36 hours in the days to come.

John Minchillo / AP

Transportation shuts down and streets empty in preparation for Hurricane Sandy.

"In order to ensure the safety of residents and their belongings, the town has coordinated to establish a strong police presence in evacuation areas," East Haven Mayor Joseph Maturo Jr. told NBCConnecticut.com.

View complete coverage from NBCConnecticut.com

Delaware

Water?covered some major roads on Monday, and residents scrambled to prepare for a week of misery. Hundreds of people fled to shelters as rough surf pounded the coast. On Sunday, Delaware Governor Jack Markell ordered the evacuation of 50,000 coastal residents as the storm threatened to bring up to 12 inches of rain, winds of up to 80 mph and a wall of water as high as 11 feet. ?

Hugh Phillips, 69, and his wife, Martha, were among the first to leave their home in the Long Neck area of Sussex County, an area prone to flooding. ?We were told to get the heck out,? Hugh Phillips told The Associated Press. ?I was going to stay, but it's better to be safe than sorry.?

Washington, D.C.

The region?s entire public transit system was suspended Monday, the largest mass shutdown in the city since Hurricane Isabelle in 2003. Schools, colleges and universities also closed their doors in anticipation of power outages and dangerous road conditions. Some extended their closures into Tuesday and Wednesday. Winds in the city were blowing from about 20 to 36 mph and officials expected them to get stronger later in the day. Washington-area utility providers warned residents to prepare for power outages that could last for weeks.

Pennsylvania

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter warned residents Sunday that the city was directly in the path of the storm and asked them to?leave right now if they live in a flood-prone, low-lying area. Schools, businesses, and city governments?were closed Monday and transit services were suspended, as many residents took shelter at evacuation centers.

?This is a great, old northeastern city, which is one of our great qualities,? Mayor Nutter said. ?But one of the challenges is it?s a great, old northeastern city with old infrastructure, tons of trees and power lines, all of that can be affected by a storm like this. This is all hands on deck.?

Maine

Officials predict coastal flooding and beach erosion, and utility crews have been brought in from Canada to handle anticipated power failures.?Many Mainers hustled with their worst-case scenario preparations, scooping up generators, flashlights and bottles of water. Many schools and universities closed.

But some residents on Maine's islands took a wait-and-see approach. ?They?ll pretty much stay in denial until they see it arrive,? Al Bleau, head of Peaks Island's Community?Emergency Response Team,?told the Bangor Daily News. ?They see all these big storms that form and then nothing happens (locally)."

Rhode Island

Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee urged residents to "make the decision now" to evacuate from coastal and low-lying areas ahead of the storm. Chafee toured coastal areas of Rhode Island, including Narragansett, and early Monday afternoon urged people to consider evacuating before the storm worsens. A decision to shut down highways, including Interstate 95, was under consideration, the governor said. Several hundred members of the Rhode Island National Guard were on standby, ready to provide support to municipalities, NBC 10 in Providence reported.

North Carolina ?

Two U.S. Coast Guard?helicopters rescued 14 crew members that had abandoned the?HMS Bounty, a tall ship built for a 1962 movie, about 90 miles off the coast. Efforts were underway to search for two other crew members. Those rescued?were flown to Air Station Elizabeth City in North Carolina where they were met by emergency medical services personnel,?the Coast Guard said. The storm lashed barrier islands and rendered several homes and businesses nearly?inaccessible.

Vermont

Sandy's approach comes less than 14 months after the state was devastated by Tropical Storm Irene, the most significant natural disaster to hit the state in almost a century. Gov. Peter Shumlin declared a state of emergency to provide access to National Guard troops. The University of Vermont canceled classes. People were starting to report power?outages and damage, according to Vermont Public Radio.?Red Cross officials were preparing to open shelters as needed. The storm was expected to start affecting southern Vermont Monday afternoon, with potentially hurricane-force winds starting later in the day, according to local media reports.

?At this point we do feel that we are adequately prepared,? Public Safety Commissioner Keith Flynn in Waterbury told The Burlington Free Press. ?We?ve really focused on our outreach to the public this time."

Virginia

The worst coastal flooding appears to be over, but a lot of rain and wind are still to come, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. Power blackouts are likely still to come and officials warned that almost 1 million could ultimately lose electricity. A high tide and storm surge Monday flooded streets and yards throughout coastal areas of the state, but there were no reports of injuries or major damages.

?This really is a strange storm," Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell said on MSNBC?s Morning Joe. ?We?ve got coastal flooding, tropical storm and hurricane force winds at the coast, eight to 10 inches of rain at the coast and then in Southwest Virginia we have blizzard warnings, up to a foot or two feet of snow.?

Still, some Virginians seem unaffected by the storm.

?I?m just sitting back watching TV and hoping the electricity doesn?t go out,? Lonnie Moore of Tangier Island, Va., told the Times-Dispatch.

West Virginia

Highway crews?on Monday began what could be a week of snow removal in some areas, as forecasters predicted as much as three feet of snowfall, the Charleston Gazette reported. Forecasters also expanded a blizzard warning Monday to at least 14 counties and predicted wind gusts approaching 50 miles per hour after 4 p.m. The Weather Channel's winter expert Tom Niziol said higher elevations could see 18-24 inches of snow. Monday. Several shelters were put on standby, and power crews were mobilized to handle potential failures, the Associated Press reported.

Ohio

Light rain Wind gusts of up to 60 miles per hour were felt Monday and could blow through the Columbus area over night, the Columbus Dispatch reported. The National Weather Service issued a high-wind warning for much of central Ohio beginning at noon Monday and running through 6 p.m. Tuesday. Forecasters were predicting the worst weather conditions between 8 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday. They also said the light rain could change to a snow mix by midnight with light accumulation possible. Residents of low-lying areas and along Lake Erie were also warned to watch for flooding. ?

Michigan

Some 800 miles away from the coast, the National Weather Service issued a flood advisory for one county and a high wind advisory for a 14-county region, the Michigan News reported. Forecasters cautioned that winds could reach 40 to 50 miles per hour.

Tennessee

The first snowfall of the season was likely to pound areas of the state, the National Weather Service predicted. There were already four inches of snow on the ground in areas of the Great Smoky Mountains Monday, and forecasters said the higher elevations in eastern Tennessee could get up to 17 inches of snow before the storm subsides Wednesday, the News Sentinel reported. Additionally, flights to Nashville International Airport were being cancelled Monday.

NBCNews.com's Andrew Mach and Sevil Omer contributed to this report.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/29/14781430-a-state-by-state-look-at-hurricane-sandys-impact?lite

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Hurricane Sandy, a $4,000 plane ticket and Mitt Romney's America

An America with Republican candidate Mitt Romney as president would be?rational and efficient, guaranteed to maximize profits but fundamentally unfair, Reich writes.

By Robert Reich,?Guest blogger / October 29, 2012

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney speaks at a campaign rally in Davenport, Iowa Monday.

Brian Snyder/Reuters

Enlarge

Leaving New York City yesterday bound for California on one of the last flights out of JFK before the airport closed, a flight attendant told me I was lucky to already have my ticket. In light of the pending hurricane, the airlines had just hours before jacked up ticket prices on the flight to $4,000 (I had paid a few hundred dollars when I bought it last week).?

Skip to next paragraph Robert Reich

Robert is chancellor?s professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Clinton. Time Magazine?named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written 13 books, including ?The Work of Nations,? his latest best-seller ?Aftershock: The Next Economy and America?s Future," and a new?e-book, ?Beyond Outrage.??He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.

Recent posts

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As a result of the last-minute rush for tickets, the flight was oversold by 47 passengers. So the flight attendants offered money to any passengers who volunteered to switch their tickets to the next flight out of NYC, whenever that might be. The first offer of $200 wasn?t enough to elicit 47 volunteers, nor were the subsequent ones of $300 and $350. An offer of $400 finally did the trick.?

Around the Web?

Kick off the week — and Frankstorm — with Monday’s links: The best finds from the ABC Kids Expo – lilSugar.com Jenny McCarthy to pen parenting column for Chicago Sun-Times – Washington Post 15 ways to boost your mood while pregnant – FitPregnancy.com Six-year-old guest at Pippa Middleton‘s book party says she hates princesses – [...]

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/mlEidSddYqs/

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Petronas agrees to renew bid for Canada's Progress: sources

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysian state oil firm Petronas will renew a bid for gas producer Progress Energy Resources, Petronas sources said, seeking to assure the Canadian government that the C$5.17 billion ($5.2 billion) deal will benefit the country.

Canada blocked Petronas' bid for Progress this month after Industry Minister Christian Paradis said it was not likely to bring a "net benefit" to the country. He gave Petronas 30 days to make additional representations to amend its bid.

The Canadian government, sources have told Reuters, wanted to approve the deal but was afraid that would tie its hands when reviewing a much more controversial $15.1 billion bid by China's CNOOC Ltd for Nexen Inc.

Two Petronas sources familiar with the deal told Reuters on Monday that the firm agreed to the extension and was eager to complete the acquisition despite the shock decision by Canada.

The Petronas board agreed to the extension at a regular monthly meeting, the sources told Reuters. The Malaysian firm is also studying additional steps to reassure Canada that the proposed acquisition will meet the "net benefit" requirement, the sources said.

"Petronas will go all the way to secure this deal. It is important to Petronas that the deal is done," one of the sources said.

Spokespeople for Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Paradis were not immediately available for comment.

Officials from Petronas and Progress held talks in Ottawa last week with Investment Canada, part of the country's industry ministry. Canadian officials are drawing up new guidelines for investment by foreign state-owened companies, possibly complicating Petronas' attempt to improve its offer.

Petronas sources said Canada was not keen on Progress being delisted from the Toronto stock exchange if the Petronas buyout was approved, due to concerns about accountability.

CNOOC has pledged to seek a listing of its own shares on the Canadian exchange, establishing international headquarters in Calgary and retaining Nexen's staff and capital spending.

"Progress is a much smaller deal than Nexen is the argument and Petronas has promised to retain Progress staff," said the second Petronas source with direct knowledge of the deal.

"After all, we need the expertise in unconventional oil and gas, but we now need to make changes to convince Canada."

Petronas officials say they will underline their plans with Progress under an existing joint venture to build an LNG export terminal on the Pacific coast.

"Petronas is moving on with this joint venture for the LNG export terminal. It will bring about more jobs," said the second source.

Progress CEO Michael Culbert has blamed a "communications breakdown" for Canada's rejection of the deal, and said he was optimistic the deal could get back on track.

Harper's office has declined to comment on whether CNOOC-Nexen derailed the Petronas-Progress approval, or if there had been any miscommunication between his government and the companies.

(Reporting by Niluksi Koswanage; writing by Stuart Grudgings; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/petronas-agrees-canada-extension-5-2-billion-progress-030857671--finance.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Harvard Professor: Sovereign Debt Defaults by U.S., Japan ...

29 Oct, 2012

Harvard Professor: Sovereign Debt Defaults by U.S., Japan, Germany ?A Real Worry?

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United Nations, 25 Oct 2012, (UN Department of Public Information) ? Any international plan to combat the risks of sovereign debt default must be capable of handling a potential crisis in one of the world?s largest economies, the Second Committee (Economic and Financial) of the 67th UN General Assembly heard today.

Delivering the keynote address during a panel discussion on ?Sovereign debt crises and restructurings: Lessons learned and proposals for debt resolution mechanisms?, Kenneth Rogoff, Professor of Public Policy and Economics at Harvard University, said that while most debt-resolution mechanisms concentrated on resolving problems in developing countries, the euro zone crisis clearly underlined that defaults by larger economies were the ?real worry?, and that it would be ?folly? to build a mechanism that could not handle a default by the United States, Japan or Germany.

Opening the special event were Vuk Jeremi?, President of the General Assembly, and Supachai Panitchpakdi, Secretary-General of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). With Second Committee Chair George Wilfred Talbot (Guyana) presiding, the discussion featured the following panellists: Arvinn Eikeland Gadgil, State Secretary for International Development, Norway; Maria Kiwanuka, Minister for Finance, Planning and Economic Development, Uganda; Adri?n Cosentino, Secretary of Finance, Argentina; Otaviano Canuto, Vice-President, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Network, World Bank;, Shamshad Akhtar, Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development, United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs; and Martin Khor, Executive Director, South Centre.

Mr. Rogoff warned that, although sovereign debt crises had been in existence since countries had been borrowing money, and although defaulting on external debt was much less frequent today than it had been for much of the last 200 years, that was unlikely to last. A new structure was needed to deal with any potential deterioration. Recalling that various plans for an international bankruptcy regime had been tabled over the years, he said they included the ?international debt commission? proposed by the ?Group of 77? in 1979, intended to concentrate on official debt and the development problems of the poorest countries. Another proposal had called for transforming the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from a lender of last resort into an international bankruptcy court.

The eventual IMF proposal for a sovereign debt restructuring mechanism had been met with ?tremendous hostility? by creditor countries, the private sector and even some successful borrowers, he continued. However, the debate had had positive effects, including the establishment of the collective action clauses contained in many current loan contracts. If an international bankruptcy court were to be established, it would need to be kept separate from the IMF in order to be considered an ?honest broker?, he stressed, pointing out the difficulty of a regulator proposing a new regulatory structure and placing itself at its centre.

He called on the United Nations to make the decision and then direct IMF?s restructuring, if that proved to be the plan. Any new regime would address the problem of ?holdouts? while also establishing the principle of creditor seniority. The latter, in particular, must be tackled in a meaningful way so as to establish that some debt, like that owed to official creditors like IMF, for example, must be paid before others.

While accepting that creditors might oppose an international court because it would be too debtor-friendly, he said experience with collective action clauses showed that they had made restructuring easier without pushing up interest rates. It had smoothed the process, with the result that there had been fewer crises, and made accidental defaulting much less frequent. The regional level sovereign debt reduction mechanism being established in Europe was a good proving ground for the idea, because if it failed to take hold in the European Union, it was highly unlikely to gain any traction on the international level, he said.

Mr. Eikeland Gadgil said that a new international mechanism should be designed to react quickly in order to ensure that defaults were not prolonged. Saying he was looking forward to long-term debt-resolution mechanisms that would cover all sovereign debt, including private and commercial debt, he said such a mechanism should also be able to follow the process from the time of default to the delivery of relief. Emphasizing the importance of fairness and justice, he called for an end to the regime that placed debt sustainability above all else. Debt was not only technical, it was also political, he said, adding that the international community was required to examine the underlying causes of the problem and establish an independent mechanism to handle debt in a neutral way.

UNCTAD had brought principles and values to the debt crisis because it examined the situation from the perspective of both the lender and the borrower, he said, adding that more of the international community should follow that innovative approach. Norway was planning a full debt audit to find debt that could be considered illegitimate, he said, encouraging others countries to emulate his country and offering to share some of its experiences and knowledge in that area.

Ms. Kiwanuka said there was high pressure on sovereign States to incur debt in order to meet the financial demands of socio-economic policy obligations, such as the Millennium Development Goals or increasing investment in infrastructure. With Africa needing to invest $93 billion to address its infrastructure deficit, the current situation was like that of the debt pressures on the housing market, which had contributed to the current global financial crisis, she said. Without established practices for resolving sovereign debt crises, a coherent and consistent international framework of policies and regulations was needed to govern the behaviour of sovereign countries and their lenders.

She went on to say that standard procedures were also needed to regulate or guide decisions on debt acquisition and management. They should address increased systemic risk and the difficulties of debt restructuring, while seeking to prioritize short-term social obligations. If accepting a loan could jeopardize the fulfilment of social obligations, it might be necessary to reconsider, she said. The use of such a framework with three of Uganda?s biggest creditors had facilitated debt relief packages under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) and Multilateral Debt Relief initiatives, which had led to a 50 per cent reduction in the total national debt. Uganda had used the increased fiscal space to solidify future debt-absorption capacity and generally improve debt sustainability, she said.

Mr. Costentino, echoing the call for macroeconomic sense, described Argentina?s recovery path from macroeconomic instability, saying it had required a steady and comprehensive plan. In dealing with the current global financial and economic crisis, the international community should implement an open and honest approach that would define priorities and objectives first and foremost, he said. The task required recognizing available resources and then working on a package of proposals, a process that was often inverted, he noted, adding that it was counter-productive not to take basic macroeconomic rules into account. Such negligence was responsible for the debt crisis, he said.

It had taken Argentina three years to establish the environment necessary for a recovery plan to be implemented, with a serious scaling back, or ?haircut?, taking effect in 2005, he recalled. The Government had indexed its debt security to gross domestic product (GDP), thereby improving its ability to repay its debt. Out of a total of $80 billion, 76 per cent had been accepted and Argentina had avoided default, though more work had been needed to manage the debt because even where restructuring had been successful, the small remaining holdout had led to enormous problems. From 2005 onwards, Argentina had continued to work on a liability strategy aimed at clearing non-performing liabilities. Today, the country had active claims on less than 3 per cent of its original default figure, he said.

Argentina had not only restructured most of its debt, but had also implemented a policy to focus on growing from within, using national resources, he said. Emphasizing that he was not urging other countries to follow Argentina?s recovery path, he said that he wished to shed light on the legal vacuum that allowed countries to be placed in situations where sustainability could not work. With the euro zone facing liability restructuring, lessons learned implied a focus on sustainability levels and macroeconomic order, he said. While such an exercise was time-consuming, it was a basic condition for finding a sustainable and long-term solution.

Mr. Canuto said debt restructuring tended to be disorderly and prolonged. Official intervention could help, but it could also make things worse depending on implementation and circumstances. Fiscal fundamentals played a crucial role, internationally, as well as domestically. The Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s had been overcome through a voluntary approach, but official intervention in the Russian Federation and Argentina had not helped at all, he noted. In the current case of Greece, a major risk was contagion spreading to the core of the European Union. That remained the most important economic problem in the world today, he warned. Only Ukraine and Pakistan had restructured debt in an orderly fashion and they were small in size and comparatively isolated.

Official intervention would only be effective if there was a clear distinction between insolvency and liquidity, he said, stressing that procrastination would lead to growing debt levels. He called for private creditors to receive a ?haircut?, vulnerable systemic banks to be protected and official loans to be made on the basis of their seniority. The risk of moral hazard on the part of the debtor country had been overestimated, he said, stressing that a resolution mechanism that could smooth debt restructuring would certainly improve things for everyone, as long as procrastination was avoided. Such a positive outcome would benefit all stakeholders, including those responsible for official debt intervention.

Ms. Akhtar, focusing specifically on the euro zone crisis, placed responsibility for it on weak governance and a lethal combination of problems rather than on the timeliness of the intervention. Within the euro zone, laws, policies and institutional mechanisms remained fragmented and not conducive to strong governance in economic policymaking, she said, while stressing that sovereign debt reflected symptoms, not root causes. Solutions must address the root causes, while also resolving the symptoms.

She said the debate had long been in existence, with each major sovereign debt crisis teaching important lessons. However, no changes were made to the static international financial architecture, and there was no consensus on how, or how far, to change that architecture. As soon as the heat of crises cooled, political will became diluted. The current debt crisis was different from others in that, among other ways, it concerned sovereigns in developed countries. It was also complicated by the rules surrounding monetary union, which made dealing with sovereign debt more complex, despite the fact that 80 per cent of the debts issued between 2003 and 2010 had been issued under local laws. The exchange rate could not be used as a tool to combat the crisis, which further limited the adjustment tools on offer, she said.

Mr. Khor, taking up the idea of seeking solutions, said new efforts were needed to find an institutional solution, describing such an institution as the missing pillar in the international financial architecture. Its features should include a temporary standstill on the servicing of external debt to provide breathing space for planning formal debt-restructuring and servicing. The debtor country should be in unilateral charge of that decision, but an independent panel of experts should agree on the decision, he said, emphasizing that creditors, including IMF, should not be involved at all due to their conflict of interest.

The standstill should bring an immediate end to any attempts at litigation, in a similar way to how the World Trade Organization (WTO) allowed the installation of tariffs in balance-of-payments crises. Debtors should be prepared to carry out selective exchange controls to prevent capital flight, or the whole exercise would be defeated, he warned. New loans should then be provided, lending into arrears to keep the sovereign debt a ?going concern?, and those new loans should conform to the principle of seniority to facilitate new creditors.

In his opening remarks, Assembly President Jeremi? noted that for the first time, a debate on enhancing sovereign debt restructuring and debt resolution mechanisms was taking place had under the auspices of the General Assembly. Hopefully, the exchange would be helpful in shaping the planet?s ?material destiny?, he said, pointing to the far-reaching implications of current events in the euro zone. It was encouraging that many the foreign currency reserves of developing countries still surpassed their external debt levels, despite the global economic crisis, he said, pledging to enable the General Assembly to build more meaningful relations with international financial institutions, such as the World Bank and IMF, as well with as the G-20.

Also making opening remarks, Mr. Panitchpakdi noted the absence of enforceability in sovereign debt issues, saying that the lack of a structured approach had led to calls for a formal mechanism. While some argued that that would make it easier for debtors to default, thereby raising the cost of borrowing, such a mechanism could work with the correct safeguards. The issue was due for a return to the centre of international debate, he stressed.

In the ensuing dialogue, the representative of Greece asked Mr. Rogoff why he had reversed his stance on Greek membership in the euro zone, having recently called for the country?s exit and for a devaluation of its currency to boost exports and tourism.

Mr. Rogoff said he had never favoured euro zone membership for Greece and, looking narrowly at its national interest, the country had a good argument for using its own currency and deeply restructuring its debt.

Ms. Kiwanuka, responding to a question about Uganda?s special knowledge, derived from its own experiences with debt restructuring, said that after two decades of restructuring through HIPC, her country was now incurring debt only on infrastructure projects and those that enhanced agricultural productivity. For social initiatives, it was looking more towards bilateral grants and soft financing, she said, adding that debt was out of the question because solving social problems did not generate income.

Mr. Eikeland Gadgil replied to a question about vulture funds by saying that attempts had been made to regulate them, but a strategic debt reduction mechanism remained the key.

Also participating in the interactive dialogue were representatives of Iceland, Nigeria, United Republic of Tanzania and Cameroon. Representatives of Latindad and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development also took part.

Source: http://www.travel-impact-newswire.com/2012/10/harvard-professor-sovereign-debt-defaults-by-u-s-japan-germany-a-real-worry/

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Gas prices jump as refineries shut ahead of storm

Mike Groll / AP

Motorists fill their vehicles and and gas cans in preparation for Hurricane Sandy Monday in Middleburgh, N.Y. Gas prices are likely to rise in the region until area refineries can safely reopen.

By Reuters

The supply of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel into the East Coast ground virtually to a halt Monday as Hurricane Sandy forced the closure of two-thirds of the region's refineries, its biggest pipeline, and most major ports.

Gasoline prices jumped as much as 11 cents a gallon on commodities markets as traders feared that power outages and flooding could leave refiners struggling to restore operations after the broadest storm ever to hit the United States. Prices later pared gains to close up about 6 cents a gallon at $2.757.

As Sandy neared the coast refinery, pipeline, port and terminal operators shuttered or reduced operations, increasing the risk that bottlenecks would keep fuel supplies from reaching customers.

"Given the recent tightness of supplies in New York Harbor, this weather event is only likely to perpetuate strength in gasoline prices," BNP Paribas oil analysts Harry Tchilinguirian and Gareth Lewis-Davies said in a research note.

Colonial Pipeline, the nation's largest oil products pipeline that connects the East Coast to Gulf Coast refiners, was set to close its main line to Philadelphia and New York, halting delivery of up to 15 percent of the region's fuel demand.

Nearly 70 percent of the region's refining capacity was on track to be idled. Phillips 66
confirmed it had completely shut its giant Bayway, N.J., refinery, the area's second-largest plant, known as the "gasoline machine" for its key role supplying motor fuel to the New York City area.


Philadelphia Energy Solutions began the precautionary closure of key units at its Philadelphia refinery, the region's biggest.

"Many of the process units have been shut down, others are in 'standby,' and the remainder have been brought to their minimum safe operating levels," said spokeswoman Cherice Corley.

The storm comes as low inventories of refined products have stirred concerns of potential price spikes during the winter heating season.

The precautionary refinery closures are more widespread than during Hurricane Irene in August 2011, when only the Bayway plant shut completely.

While refiners escaped any serious damage during that hurricane, many fear Sandy's massive storm surge -- forecast to be as high as 11 feet -- could breach plant defenses and cause damaging flooding, which can sometimes take weeks to repair. Abrupt power outages also can damage refinery equipment.?

Discussing how Hurricane Sandy could impact energy prices in the Northeast, with Matt Smith, Energy Burrito blog author.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://bottomline.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/29/14786125-gas-prices-jump-as-refineries-shut-ahead-of-storm?lite

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Higher Workers Comp Rates in 2013 | FloridaWC

On Friday, October 26, 2012, the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) issued an order stating that it would approve the 6.1% overall workers? compensation rate level increase requested by the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), if NCCI submits another filing addressing several miscellaneous issues. [One of these changes involves the minimum premium ? NCCI had proposed an increase in the maximum minimum premium from $1,000 to $1,250; this was not approved by OIR.]

NCCI?s amended filing is due to OIR by November 2, 2012. These three changes will not affect the overall rate level change, which will be effective January 1, 2013, for new and renewal workers? compensation policies in the state of Florida.

After NCCI submits its amended filing and receives official approval from the OIR, they will publish the new rates for each class code. We expect them to be available before November 15, 2012.

Even with this average rate increase of 6.1%, workers? compensation rates in Florida are more than 56% lower than they were in 2002.

Source: http://www.floridawc.com/insurance/workers-comp-rates-2013/

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iPad mini vs. Nexus 7 and Kindle Fire HD: On display size and density

When Apple introduced the iPad mini, they spent quite a bit of time comparing it to the Google Nexus 7, especially when it came to the merits of the iPad mini's 4:3, 7.9-inch screen over the 16:9, 7-inch screen of the Nexus 7. Physical screen size is only one factor, however. There's also screen resolution to consider, something Apple often touts with their Retina display products like the iPhone 5, iPod touch 5, iPad 4, and MacBook Pro. But not the iPad mini. So, when we put everything on the table, how well does the iPad mini stack up not only to the Nexus 7, but the similarly screened Amazon Kindle Fire HD?

Apple's math highlighted the 35% larger physical screen size (29.6 square inches vs. 21.9 square inches). When Amazon announced their quarterly loss last week, however, they switched the topic to screen resolution, and measured the iPad mini's 1024x768, 163 ppi display against the Kindle Fire HD's (identical to Nexus 7) 1280x800, 254 ppi display. Amazon's math worked out to 30% more pixels (1,024,000 vs. 786,432 pixels) and 33% higher pixel density (216 vs. 163).

Here's how the iPad mini and Nexus 7/Kindle Fire HD 7 compare in terms of physical screen size (left), and in terms of pixel count (right).

That means things will look bigger on the iPad mini (bigger pixels), but you'll see more things on the Android tablets (more pixels). The iPad mini also has greater height (in landscape orientation) and width (in portrait orientation), thanks to its 4:3 aspect ratio. That's great for anything that requires reading, including ebooks, web pages, and even multi-column interfaces. Here's an example of a popular website on the iPad mini (left) and the and the Nexus 7/Kindle Fire HD 7 (right), in both landscape (top) and portrait (bottom). I've highlighted the interface chrome to better differentiate active content areas.

Thanks to the greater height in landscape, you get much more visible content on the iPad mini, and much bigger content, though it's not as sharp as it is on either the Nexus 7 or Kindle Fire HD. Because it isn't as tall in portrait, however, the iPad mini shows slightly less content, though Android 4.1 Jelly Bean's persistent control bar at the bottom mitigates some of the aspect ratio advantage.

Here's an example of a list-view based app, in the case the native mail apps, on the iPad mini (left) and the and the Nexus 7/Kindle Fire HD 7 (right), in portrait orientation. I've highlighted the interface chrome to better differentiate active content areas.

Where the iPad mini shares exactly the same, consistent tablet interface as the iPad, with multicolumn, tablet-class apps, the Nexus 7 combines aspects of Android smartphone and tablet interfaces on an app-by-app basis. That's likely a stop-gap on Google's part, however, and we'll hopefully see more tablet-optimized interface from Google in the near future. Likewise, Apple has over 250,000 iPad-optimized apps on the App Store, all of which will run pixel-perfectly on the iPad mini. Android is still severely lacking when it comes to tablet apps. Again, that should change as Google's tablet platform matures. (The Amazon Kindle Fire isn't really a tablet, it's a media appliance, so while it's interface is good enough for that, it's not really directly comparable to either the iPad mini or Nexus 7).

However, that media content brings up another difference between the small tablets. The Nexus 7 and Kindle Fire 7 HD have the same 16:9 aspect ratio as the iPhone 5, which offers greater width (in landscape orientation) and height (in portrait orientation). That's better for HD video and single column lists. Here's an example of a popular movie on the iPad mini (left) and the and the Nexus 7/Kindle Fire HD 7 (right), in both widescreen (top) and full screen (bottom). I've highlighted the interface chrome to better differentiate active content areas.

The iPad mini shows the wide screen version of the movie at a larger size, but downscales it from 1280 horizontal pixels to 1024 horizontal pixels (and vertically downscales from 720p to 585p). Full motion graphics, like movies and video games, however, are extremely resilient when it comes to screen density (just look at the variety of sizes 1080p television sets come in). So, it won't look terrible, but it won't look as good as the pixel-perfect Android tablets. At full screen, the iPad mini is much bigger, but also cuts off much more of the picture on both sides, an absolute deal-breaker for movie fans.

So what does all this mean? Apple is right in that you do get both bigger content on the iPad mini and more usable display area for most types of apps and media. Amazon is right in that their display is better. For most people, for most things, bigger beats better. Add to that Apple's huge advantage in both tablet software and international content, and it makes it tough to argue that the iPad mini wins by a large margin.

I'm one of those people, however, for whom display density does matter greatly. I'm used to an iPhone 5 and iPad 3 (same as iPad 4) and MacBook Pro all with Retina display. Chunky pixels are like sandpaper on my pampered pupils. Going back to the display density of the iPhone 3GS, which is identical to the iPad mini, is going to be tough.

Design is compromise, however. You can't have everything and you certainly can't have it all now. The iPad mini is 7.2 mm thin, thinner by half than an iPad 3 or iPad 4. If Apple had crammed a Retina display in now, not only would battery life have suffered, but it would have become much thicker and much heavier. If they'd used a 720p display like the Nexus 7 or Amazon Kindle Fire 7 HD, they would have broken compatibility with those 250,000 existing iPad apps. Likewise If they'd switched to the iPhone and iPod touch interface -- they would have made a big iPod touch instead of a small iPad. And Apple made a small (concentrated) iPad.

The iPad mini will likely go Retina with the second or third generation, and all of these concerns will disappear, like the pixels on the display. Until then, check out the example above and see if the difference in size and content area make the iPad mini a good compromise for you, at least for now.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/ntRvPqyHC9M/story01.htm

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

AP analysis of electoral map in presidential race (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/258870429?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sudan rebels shell southern city during defence minister visit

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudanese rebels shelled the main city of the oil-producing South Kordofan state during a visit of Sudan's defence minister, Abdel Raheem Muhammad Hussein, rebels and residents said.

Sudan's army has been fighting rebels of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-North) in South Kordofan, which borders South Sudan, since June last year. But the state capital Kadugli was until this month mainly kept out of the fighting.

SPLM-North spokesman Arnu Lodi said the rebels had fired shells on army positions inside Kadugli on Friday after coming under fire from government warplanes.

"There was an aerial bombardment against SPLM-North positions and villages so we fired back against military positions in Kadugli," he said.

Residents said the shelling started when the defence minister, a close ally of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, was addressing worshippers during prayers marking Eid al-Adha, the Muslim Feast of Sacrifice.

"Some seven rockets hit the town, one of them close to the place where the minister spoke," a resident said, asking not to be named. "Worshippers were really afraid."

Sudan accuses South Sudan, which seceded from the north in July 2011, of backing the SPLM-North, whose fighters were part of the southern rebel army during Sudan's long civil war. South Sudan denies the accusation.

Events in Sudan's border states are hard to verify as the government bans foreign media from travelling there.

Sudan's army spokesman al-Sawarmi Khalid could not be reached on his mobile phone, but the newspaper al-Intibaha, run by an uncle of Bashir, confirmed on Saturday that rebels shelled Kadugli when the defence minister was in town to celebrate Eid.

This was the fourth reported shelling of the state capital this month. The rebels first shelled Kadugli on October 8. At least one rocket hit a U.N. compound, prompting the United Nations to move its staff out of the town.

Lodi, the rebels' spokesman, also accused the army of bombing the rebel-held area of Kauda in South Kordofan on Saturday.

Fighting in South Kordofan and nearby Blue Nile state has displaced or severely affected 900,000 people, the United Nations said a week ago. Sudan agreed in August to let aid into rebel-held areas but the United Nations has been unable to win government approval to go ahead with distributing food.

Under international pressure, Sudan and South Sudan agreed last month to establish a buffer zone along their border after clashing along it several times in the past year. Indirect talks between Khartoum and the rebels, however, have made scant progress.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sudan-rebels-shell-southern-city-during-defence-minister-160808898.html

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Assassin's Creed III: Liberation developers interview | Video Game ...

Published: 27 October 2012 2:40 AM UTC

Posted in: News, Playstation News, PS Vita

Tags: assassins, creed, developers, III, interview, liberation, psvita, Sony, ubisoft

A new video interview with the developers of Assassin?s Creed III: Liberation has been posted on the official Playstation Blog. Developers describe most of the game?s features while showing some never seen before footage. Beware of spoilers!

Assassin?s Creed III: Liberation is the upcoming PSVita entry of the Assassin?s Creed franchise. Developed by Ubisoft Sofia, the game is supposedly a side-story to go alongside Assassin?s Creed III, offering a link up mode with the PS3 game offering characters skins, exclusive weapons and upgrades unobtainable in the main game.
Set in New Orleans between the end of the French and Indian War during the 18th century, AC III: Liberation will star Aveline de Grandpr?, a female french-african assassin recruited by the former slave Agate into the Brotherhood. Players will be able to visit locations across the Gulf Of Mexico and Mexico itself. Unlike mainline entries, Aveline?s story is not witnessed by series? main character Desmond Miles: in a true sidestory fashion, Aveline?s life is used to shed some light on a gray area of the Assassin?s conflict with the Templars through the eyes of an Assassin.

The game should offer slightly different gameplay experience than the main game thanks to PSVita touchscreen, rear touch pad, cameras which will be used for extra features like Chain Kill combat and the pickpocket abilities.
Aveline will also have some peculiar abilities like dual wielding which will contribute in making her different from Assassin?s Creed III main character Connor Kenway whom she?ll also meet during the game.

Assassin?s Creed III: Liberation will launch on PSVita on the same day as Assassin?s Creed III console versions: ?October 30.

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Article from Gamersyndrome.com

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  5. Assassin?s Creed Revelations

Source: http://gamersyndrome.com/2012/news/assassins-creed-liberation-interview/

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

ASUS VivoTab RT review: everything you loved about the Transformer tablets, but with Windows

ASUS VivoTab RT review everything you loved about the Transformer tablets, but with Windows

Read the comments on any of our ASUS Transformer Pad reviews. It doesn't matter if you pick the mid-range TF300 or the high-end Infinity. You'll invariably find someone saying, "That's nice, but can't it run Windows 8?" It's a perfectly sane request: sure, a tablet and optional keyboard dock make for a convenient setup, but how great would it be if you could use that keyboard to get work done in Microsoft Office? Ditto for the dock's USB port: being able to plug in a thumb drive is a good start, but it'd be even sweeter if you could drag and drop files, as you would on a PC.

Well, ladies and gents, you can quit your fantasizing. ASUS is ready to start shipping the VivoTab RT (TF600), and we're guessing it's pretty darn close to whatever Franken-tablet you've been dreaming up. Which is to say, it takes everything we loved about ASUS' Transformer Pads, and adds Windows RT. Like other tablets in ASUS' lineup, it has a 10-inch Super IPS+ display with claimed 178-degree viewing angles and a 600-nit brightness rating. Other tried-and-true specs include a quad-core Tegra 3 chip; an 8-megapixel, autofocusing rear camera capable of recording 1080p video; SonicMaster audio; and long battery life -- in this case, up to nine hours for the tablet and up to seven for the keyboard dock. At 8.3mm thick and 1.2 pounds, it's also about as thin and light as any Transformer Pad. Lastly, the VivoTab has NFC -- something you won't find on any of ASUS' older slates.

The VivoTab RT should be available beginning today, starting at $599 for the 32GB tablet with a keyboard dock included. A 64GB tablet-and-dock bundle will retail for $699. So is this as good a buy as ASUS' earlier tablets. And how does it compare to other Windows RT devices being offered at a similar price? Let's find out.

Continue reading ASUS VivoTab RT review: everything you loved about the Transformer tablets, but with Windows

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/26/asus-vivotab-rt-review/

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Hurricane Sandy slogs toward U.S., 41 killed in Caribbean

MIAMI (Reuters) - Hurricane Sandy, a late-season Atlantic cyclone that threatens to be one of the worst storms to hit the U.S. Northeast in decades, slogged slowly northward on Friday after killing at least 41 people in the Caribbean.

Forecasters said wind damage, widespread and extended power outages and coastal and inland flooding were anticipated across a broad swath of the densely populated U.S. East Coast when Sandy comes ashore early next week.

"We're expecting a large, large storm. The circulation of this storm as it approaches the coast could cover about the eastern third of the United States," said Louis Uccellini, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Centers for Environmental Prediction.

He stopped short of calling Sandy possibly the worst storm to hit the U.S. Northeast in 100 years, as some weather watchers were doing, but said Sandy was shaping up to go down as a storm of "historic" proportions.

The late-season hybrid storm has been dubbed "Frankenstorm" by some weather watchers because it will combine elements of a tropical cyclone and a winter storm. Forecast models show it will have all of the ingredients to morph into a massive and potentially catastrophic "super storm."

On its current projected track, government forecasters said, Sandy could make landfall on Monday night or Tuesday in Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York or southern New England.

In New York City, the global financial hub, officials were considering closing down mass transit before the storm hits.

ROMNEY, BIDEN CANCEL TRIPS

Coming in the final weeks before the U.S. presidential election on November 6, the storm could throw last-minute campaign travel plans into chaos.

An aide to Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney said he had canceled a campaign event scheduled for Sunday night in Virginia Beach, Virginia. President Barack Obama's re-election campaign announced that Vice President Joe Biden had also canceled a trip to Virginia Beach scheduled for Saturday.

The Democratic incumbent was traveling to New Hampshire on Saturday, and on Monday was due to visit Youngstown, Ohio, and Orlando, Florida.

Craig Fugate, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said he and the head of the U.S. National Hurricane Center had briefed the president on preparations for the storm on Friday morning.

"His direction to us again, as always, is to make sure we are prepared to support the states and the governors dependent upon the impacts of the storm," Fugate told reporters.

Much of Florida's northeast coast was under a tropical storm warning on Friday, and storm watches extended up the coast through North Carolina. Winds and rains generated by Sandy were being felt across much of Florida, with schools closed and air travel snarled in many areas.

Sandy weakened to a Category 1 storm as it tore though sparsely populated low-lying southeastern islands in the Bahamas late Thursday, knocking out power and blowing rooftops off some homes.

Some further weakening was forecast over the next two days, but the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said hurricane- or tropical-force winds were still likely by the time Sandy hits the U.S. coast.

Sandy's driving rains and heavy winds were blamed for 41 deaths in the Caribbean, where landslides and flash floods were triggered by the cyclone.

The Cuban government said Sandy killed 11 people when it tore across the island on Thursday. The storm took at least 26 other lives in deeply impoverished Haiti and four people were killed in the Dominican Republic, Jamaica and the Bahamas.

The Haitian dead included a family of five in Grand-Goave, west of the capital Port-au-Prince, killed in a landslide that destroyed their home, authorities said.

The Cuban fatalities were unusual for the communist-ruled country that has long prided itself on protecting its people from storms by ordering mass evacuations.

The National Hurricane Center said Sandy was about 420 miles south-southeast of Charleston, South Carolina, late on Friday afternoon, packing top sustained winds of 75 miles per hour (120 km per hour).

LUNAR TIDE

Sandy was forecast to remain a Category 1 hurricane as it completed it passage over the Bahamas late on Friday, sending swirling rains and winds across areas including Florida.

It was moving slowly, however, making its final trek across the central and northwest corner of the Bahamas islands at 7 mph.

Many forecasters are warning that Sandy could be more destructive than last year's Hurricane Irene, which caused billions of dollars in damage as it battered the U.S. Northeast.

Uccellini said he was reluctant to make comparisons with other storms. But he warned that a full moon on Sunday added to Sandy's potential for destruction when it comes ashore in the United States.

"The lunar tide peaks two days after the full moon, and that's Monday-Tuesday, which is exactly when the storm will be impacting the coastal areas," he said. "We'll have heavy rains and inland river flooding is a real potential here."

Todd Kimberlain said Sandy was somewhat unique because of its integration with the polar trough over the United States.

"We went through this same sort of thing back about 20 years ago around Halloween in 1991 with the 'Perfect Storm,'" Kimberlain said.

That storm, featured in a book and movie of that name, combined several different storm systems to ravage the East Coast.

A forecast report on Friday from AccuWeather.com predicted "a catastrophic storm" for the Middle Atlantic and Northeast.

"It will not be a purely tropical system, with a core of powerful winds near the center, but rather more like a Nor'Easter, with strong winds over a larger area," the report said.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Franks and Nelson Acosta in Havana, Kevin Gray in Miami, Susana Ferreira in Port-au-Prince and Gene Cherry on Hatteras Island, North Carolina; Writing by Tom Brown; Editing by Vicki Allen and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hurricane-sandy-menaces-u-slamming-cuba-035520293.html

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