Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Sorry 'Arrested Development' fans, Netflix series is probably a 'One-Off'

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - "Arrested Development" fans who want the show to come back for good had better start looking for someone to help them out. Netflix will release the fourth season of the show in May, but CEO Reed Hastings said that's all his company has signed up for.

Speaking at Morgan Stanley's Technology, Media & Telecom Conference in San Francisco on Monday, Hastings said he didn't anticipate being able to do season five, six or seven - just the forthcoming fourth season.

"It's a fantastic one-off," Hastings said, citing his company's lack of control over the Fox and Imagine-produced show. "Think about it as a non-repeatable amazing."

Despite its passionate audience, the critically beloved comedy was canceled by Fox in 2006 after three seasons due to low ratings. Years later, Netflix stepped in to distribute a new season.

Creator Mitchell Hurwitz said this month at AllThingsD's Dive Into Media conference that Netflix was one of the only places where the show could live. A movie, he said, would be too difficult because time has passed since the show last aired, but releasing the show all at once, as Netflix will do, enabled him to film around his actors' schedules.

Hastings on Monday tried to downplay the importance of original shows to Netflix's bottom line while concurrently recognizing that they were essential to its future. Netflix, which just released the "House of Cards," has several new shows coming this year, including Eli Roth's "Hemlock Grove" and Jenji Kohan's "Orange is the New Black."

"It may be the center of the PR for a while and that's OK, but i don't want you guys to think that suddenly we're the original content company," Hastings said.

Companies like Hulu and Amazon are also investing in original programming, and Hastings compared them all to successful cable channels, such as HBO, Showtime, FX and Starz. Yet only one can be HBO.

"We want to be HBO," Hastings said. "And let others be the smaller ones."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sorry-arrested-development-fans-netflix-series-probably-one-000557035.html

state of the union drinking game oscar noms capital gains tim thomas oral roberts les paul fred thompson

Monday, February 25, 2013

A closer look at the PS4's specs, and what they mean for you ...

playstation-4

Even though Sony?s PlayStation 4 conference lacked any indication of what the console might look like when it hit store shelves this holiday season, the company did, however, remove the veil from the console?s specifications. Many rumors have been confirmed and we now know some specifics about core count, RAM, and graphics horsepower.

These figures can be opaque to the average gamer, however. What do they mean, and how does the PlayStation 4 stand up to the other gaming systems?

x86 infiltrates a console

Sony will be shipping the new system with an eight-core 64-bit processor based off AMD?s ?Jaguar? processor line. Don?t let the core count fool you ? this is not a high-end PC part. Jaguar is built for mobile products like sleekbooks (AMD?s answer to the ultrabook), not desktops, so the raw power of the PS4?s processor will be behind the typical gaming PC.

That may sound dire, but there?s reason for optimism. Consoles have always benefited from standardization that helps developers optimize their games. Eight x86 cores ? even slow ones ? could be formidable if properly used. PC games have historically made disappointing use of multiple threads, but developers have been constrained by a market dominated by dual-core systems. The PS4 will banish that issue.

PlayStation 4 Press Conference

Building a console off the same instruction set used by PCs is a boon to game development, as well. ?Programmers familiar with the PC will find transitioning to console development easier than ever before and ports between the two will take less time to optimize.

Everyone needs a companion

Though x86 cores are the brunt of the new console?s might, Sony stated at its event that another low-power core will be bundled in, as well. The additional processor exists not to help with games directly but instead to process tasks in the background.

This is a great advantage to the console experience. The PlayStation 3 is notorious for its lengthy downloads which, more often than not, can?t be completed in the background. Sony has also thrown in video recording and real-time sharing features that would certainly reduce performance if the x86 cores were left on their own. This also plays in to one of the new features that Sony announced during the unveiling event ? the ability to play downloadable games almost instantly. Rather than waiting for a sizable game to download, you will be able to begin the download and begin play after only a small portion has been completed, then continue to play as the remainder of the download continues in the background.

The low-power chip could also be used to display the user interface, keeping the console cool and quiet when it?s not running a game. This is speculation on our part, however, as Sony has not specifically mentioned that the low-power core will be used for this purpose.

Radeon conquers another console

Sony states that the PS4?s graphics chip, which is derived from existing Radeon technology and integrated into the Jaguar processor die, can push 1.84 TFLOPS. That number puts the power of the GPU roughly on par with a Radeon HD 7850 video card.

That may seem disappointing because the Radeon HD 7850 is ?only? a mid-range GPU. Again, careful consideration allows for more optimism. Reviews of the Radeon HD 7850 graphics card have already shown that it can handle most current PC games at 1080p with medium to high detail, which is a huge leap over current-gen consoles.

Add in optimization, along with the possibility of rendering at 720p and scaling to 1080p (as current consoles do), and you have the potential for a huge leap forward in quality. The power on tap falls short of enabling support for 4K resolution in games, however. 4K video out will be supported for photos and videos, but games will render at a lower (as yet unspecified) resolution.

Eight is great

The number eight didn?t just show up in the core count. Sony has also packed in eight gigabytes of RAM, an absolutely massive increase over the 512MB (yes, megabytes!) found in the PlayStation 3. And the RAM is high-speed GDDR5, which will let Sony maximize the system?s data pipe.

playstation-4-press-announcement

Why does this matter? More RAM (and faster RAM) will let developers create bigger textures, larger levels, more complex AI and more. The massive improvement in available memory is arguably the new console?s most impressive feature.

The memory is shared system-wide, which means that it?s not exactly equivalent to a PC with eight gigabytes of RAM. If a computer?s video card runs out of video memory the main system memory can?t pick up the slack. The PS3, which used separate main system and video memory (256MB each), also faced this issue. Unifying the memory on the PS4 will make the console easier to develop for and more flexible over time.

Wait, there?s more

There are other improved components worth mentioning. Chief among them is the new Blu-Ray drive with up to 6x speed. This upgrade will roughly triple the maximum data throughput available from a disc, significantly shortening load and install times.

Sony has also ponied up for an unknown number of high-speed USB 3.0 ports, 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth and Gigabit LAN. None of these technologies are new, of course, but they point to a well-rounded system with numerous fast connectivity options for networking and peripherals.

Hard drive speed and size is the only specification that remains unclear. This is likely because it hasn?t been finalized. Sony will almost certainly release several different bundles with drives of varying capacity, and replaceable hard drives is a definite possibility as well.?

How does it compare?

Sony?s new console absolutely demolishes the WiiU on the hardware battlefield. Sony is providing five more cores than Nintendo, a graphics solution that is two generations newer, and four times as much RAM.

Closer examination only widens the gap. The PS4?s processor architecture is more recent, the graphics chip is larger and the RAM much quicker. History is repeating itself. Nintendo?s hardware will once again be substantially behind the competition.

PlayStation 4 Press Conference

Microsoft hasn?t revealed its hand yet, of course, but there have been multiple leaks over the course of the last year. The information available so far indicates a system similar to Sony?s console with eight x86 cores built by AMD. They may even use the same Jaguar architecture. Leaks say the cores will run at 1.6 GHz, a clock speed that?s spot-on for Jaguar cores.

The next Xbox is likely to use an AMD Radeon derived graphics component as well, though the latest leaks say it will serve up about 1.2 TFLOPS of power, less than the 1.84 TFLOPS figure quoted by Sony.

RAM may be the main differentiator. While the next Xbox is rumored to also offer eight gigabytes of memory, leaks say it will be DDR3, which is slower. There?s reason to believe Sony has caught Microsoft a bit off-guard in this area. The GDDR5 memory found in the PS4 is unprecedented. Even Nvidia?s Titan graphics card, which retails at $999, has less.

Is this really the next gen?

Some sources have already pointed out that Sony?s new console does nothing a modern PC can?t offer ? and not a particularly expensive one, at that. An enthusiast could assemble a roughly equivalent system for $600 to $700. A gaming computer with even a moderately powerful graphics component, like the Nvidia GTX 660 Ti, is far more capable than this new console. Specifications suggest the PlayStation 4 isn?t impressive when compared to a PC.

That?s true, but also ignorant of history. The PlayStation 3, for instance, uses a graphics component derived from the Nvidia G70. Graphics cards built with that technology were widely available in PCs at the time of the PS3?s release. Even so, the PS3?s visual fidelity was impressive at release.?

?Next-gen? has always been relative to previous consoles. And from that view the PlayStation 4 is a massive leap forward. The new console, compared to its predecessor, offers sixteen times more raw memory and even more bandwidth (because the memory is also quicker). The power of the PS3?s graphics solution, measured by TFLOPs, is not 100% clear ? but the chip it?s derived from was quoted at 200 GFLOPS, which means the PS4 is about nine times more powerful.

We know that none of the console makers want to repeat Sony?s mistake of launching the PlayStation 3 at $599 for a well-equipped bundle. Given that limitation, Sony has pushed console hardware as far as possible. Finally, after nearly seven years, the next generation of consoles has arrived.?

Source: http://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming/a-look-inside-the-playstation-4/

dallas tornadoes dallas weather nike nfl uniforms ben and jerrys free cone day tornado in dallas texas the island president the maldives

Forget critics?United are too good? |? Video

In this week?s gap between Champions League and the weekend?s league action, the debate resurfaced: How bad are Manchester United?

The discussion?s been a constant in recent years, reaching an apex last season when the Red Devils failed to make it out of their Champions League group. That the Red Devils still nearly won the Premier League was little consolation when their May collapse gifted the title to their crosstown rivals.

It?s a strange discussion given Manchester United?s obvious quality and successes, but when you watch matches like today?s against Queens Park Rangers, you see the point. The Red Devils cruised to a 2-0 victory thanks to an early goal from Rafael and an insurance tally from Ryan Giggs, but given how poor QPR was throughout the match, you?d expect a team of United?s reputation to put them to the proverbial sword. Instead, it was just another day at the office for the mercurial titans.

The curious thing about this round of ?discussion is United?s recent results. After a fall where their defense seemed as weak as a severed Achilles, United?s only three goals in their last six games. That stretch includes a surprise draw at the Santiago Bernabeu, where the Red Devils held Real Madrid to one goal.

This is a team that hasn?t lost since Dec. 15. Even if the?dissection is?apt in general, it?s still ill-timed now.

(MORE: This is a spectacular hit from Rafael.)

The complaints seems to have two foundations, neither independent of the other. First, United generally looks unimpressive, as they did today. Against a QPR team playing that badly, an elite team should put up a number. Second, United?s midfield is not as strong as other European powers. In an era of midfield primacy (at least, as far as tactical analysis is concerned), this is a?capital?offense.

From the linked piece:

The midfield, however, having been the basis for success of Fergie?s previous best teams, is constantly pinpointed as the weak link of the current crop, and it?s difficult to argue against that theory.

source: ReutersI?d like to offer an alternative: Maybe this now conventional wisdom is wrong. Maybe Manchester United?s consistently stellar results (including in Champions League, where there?s been but one, obvious blip) indicate Alex Ferguson knows something we don?t. Perhaps United?s?legendary?penchant for timely goals is indicative of a philosophy that prioritizes moments over spells.

Instead of the all-clock dominance we see from Barcelona and (most of the time) Bayern Munich, Ferguson may subscribe to a view that prefers spending most of the match waiting to exploit moments. Seventy minutes of conservations, 20 minutes of power, perhaps? Unlike a typical implementation of?catenaccio, United seeks to exploit in spells they define rather than in moments defined by others? failures.

Whether that hypothesis is correct or not, it at least does a better job of describing United?s success. The constant discussion of United?s ironic faults in the face of their perpetual results only?highlights the dialog?s faults.

If you?re continuing to try and describe why something fails to meet expectations, shouldn?t you eventually question the root of those expectations??Why do people expect United to fail?

(MORE: Style points, schmyle points for Arsenal.)

The obvious irony here is the dialog itself. Bellicosely describing a team whose grandiosity should be undermined by an obvious flaw, the discussion?s developed an obvious flaw of its own. It?s not considering alternatives. It?s not allowing for another vision, one that would discard narrowly applied tenants and consider something that would more readily explain unexpected results. While exhaustively examining Manchester United, the tactical Zeitgeist has failed to examine itself.

All of United?s faults where on display today at Loftus Road, but maybe they?re not faults at all. No, United didn?t put up a huge win against QPR, but this is a team that?s now 15 points clear in England, just got a result in Madrid, and has been to three Champions League finals in five years.

We might want to reconsider our wisdom.

Source: http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/23/manchester-united-english-premier-league-results-qpr/related/

tyler perry face transplant maundy thursday fab melo google glasses kim kardashian and kanye west henrik stenson

Friday, February 22, 2013

My Biz University 02/21 by Home Based Business | Blog Talk Radio

  • Loading

    On his show, Comedian Rodney Perry covers arts and entertainment, everything from comedy and politics to music and acting, with his signature comedic slant.

  • MashUp Radio is a 30-minute podcast that discusses the fusion of technology, life, culture and science. Host Peter Biddle, engineer and executive for Intel?s Atom Software, dishes up a thought-provoking discussion.

  • Joy Keys provides her listeners with insight to improve their lives mentally, physically, monetarily and emotionally. Past guests on the show have included Meshell Nedegeocello, Blair Underwood, in addition to an impressive list of CEOs, humanitarians and authors.

  • Host Barry Moltz gets small businesses unstuck. He has founded and run small businesses with a great deal of success and failure for more than 15 years. This is a business radio show where he shares all the craziness of small business. It?s that craziness that actually makes it exciting, interesting and totally unpredictable.

  • The Bottom Line Sports Show is hosted by former NBA stars Penny Hardaway, Charles Oakley, Mateen Cleaves. Tune in to get the inside scoop on what's happening in sports today.

  • Deepak Chopra Radio provides an online forum for compelling and thought provoking conversations on success, love, sexuality and relationships, well-being and spirituality.

  • Hits Radio covers basketball, sports culture and entertainment with past guests including Jason Kidd, Robin Lundberg and Chris Herren.

  • Listeners get an earful on The Halli Casser-Jayne Show, Talk Radio for Fine Minds. Whether it?s the current political cocktail or the latest must-read award-winning book, Halli tackles all topics and likes to stir ? and sometimes shakes ? things up.

  • Official Internet radio show of forthcoming epic paranormal investigation book by Eric Olsen and "Haunted Housewife" Theresa Argie.

  • Award-winning World Footprints is a leading voice in socially responsible travel and lifestyle. Hosts Ian & Tonya celebrate culture and heritage and bring a unique voice to the world of travel.

  • Football Reporters Online is a group of veteran football experts in the fields of coaching, scouting, talent evaluation, and writing/broadcasting/media placement. Combined, the group brings well over 100 years of expertise in sports.

  • Host John Martin interviews the nation's leading entrepreneurs and small biz experts to educate small business owners on how to be successful. Past guests have included Emeril Lagasse and Guy Kawasaki.

  • The Movie Geeks share their passion for the art through interviews with the stars of and creative minds behind your favorite flicks and pay tribute to big-screen legends. From James Cameron and Francis Ford Coppola to Ellen Burstyn and Robert Duvall, The Geeks have got'em all.

  • Sylvia Global presents global conversations pertaining to women, wealth, business, faith and philanthropy. Sylvia has interviewed an eclectic mix from CEOs and musicians to fashion designers and philanthropists including Randolph Duke and Ne-Yo.

  • Mr. Media host Bob Andelman goes one-on-one with the hottest, most influential minds from the worlds of film, TV, music, comedy, journalism and literature. That means A-listers like Kirk Douglas, Christian Slater, Kathy Ireland, Rick Fox, Chris Hansen and Jackie Collins.

  • Paula Begoun, best-selling author of Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me, separates fact from fiction on achieving a radiant, youthful complexion at any age. She?s regularly joined by health and beauty experts who offer the latest on keeping your skin in tip-top shape.

  • Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/homebasedbusinessuniversity/2013/02/21/my-biz-university

    Chris Brown Tattoo Innocence of Muslims Clara Schumann Jael Strauss Alison Pill Sam Bacile sprint

    Air Canada, Lufthansa, United tie-up likely to win EU approval: source

    BRUSSELS ? Lufthansa, United Airlines and Air Canada are set to win approval from the European Union?s competition regulator for their transatlantic tie-up with their offer to give up airport slots, a person familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

    The three airlines last year proposed giving up landing and take-off slots at Frankfurt and New York?s airports following a three-year investigation by the European Commission into their revenue-sharing, pricing and capacity pacts.

    The EU antitrust authority sought feedback from rivals and third parties in December last year.

    ?The Commission is likely to accept the airlines? proposal with some fine tuning,? said the person who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

    Regulatory approval means the airlines will not be found guilty of anti-trust infringement and will not face fines which could reach 10% of a company?s global revenues.

    The Commission spokesman for competition policy could not immediately be reached for comment.

    The three carriers are all members of the Star Alliance of airlines, the biggest such marketing group with 27 members accounting for a quarter of global airline capacity.

    Such alliances were set up in the 1990s to enable airlines to extend their apparent networks without having to overcome the industry?s peculiar restrictions on international mergers.

    This would be the second airline network cleared by the Commission. It approved a tighter transatlantic tie-up between British Airways, American Airlines and Iberia in July 2010.

    All three are members of the broader oneworld alliance.

    The EU watchdog is also currently investigating a transatlantic joint venture between Air France-KLM, Alitalia and Delta Airlines.

    ? Thomson Reuters 2013

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FP_TopStories/~3/FpsMJk0r7os/

    sidney crosby at the drive in alternative minimum tax modeselektor gran torino gloria steinem war of the worlds

    Thursday, February 21, 2013

    Obama considers weighing in on gay marriage case

    FILE - In this Feb. 15, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in Chicago. The Obama administration is quietly considering urging the Supreme Court to overturn California?s ban on gay marriage, a step that could be a major political victory for advocates of same-sex unions. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

    FILE - In this Feb. 15, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in Chicago. The Obama administration is quietly considering urging the Supreme Court to overturn California?s ban on gay marriage, a step that could be a major political victory for advocates of same-sex unions. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

    FILE - This Sept. 6, 2011 file photo shows a man walking past a group of people protesting against gay marriage outside a courtroom where the California Supreme Court was hearing arguments in San Francisco. The Obama administration is quietly considering urging the Supreme Court to overturn California?s ban on gay marriage, a step that could be a major political victory for advocates of same-sex unions. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

    (AP) ? The Obama administration is quietly considering urging the Supreme Court to overturn California's ban on gay marriage, a step that would mark a political victory for advocates of same-sex unions and a deepening commitment by President Barack Obama to rights for gay couples.

    Obama raised expectations among opponents of the Proposition 8 ban when he declared in last month's inaugural address that gays and lesbians must be "treated like anyone else under the law." The administration has until Feb. 28 to intervene in the case by filing a "friend of the court" brief.

    The Proposition 8 ballot initiative was approved by California voters in 2008 and overturned a state Supreme Court decision allowing gay marriage. Twenty-nine other states have constitutional amendments banning gay marriage, while nine states and Washington, D.C., recognize same-sex marriage.

    An administration brief alone is unlikely to sway the Justices but the federal government's opinion does carry weight with the court.

    A final decision on whether to file a brief has not been made, a senior administration official said. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli is consulting with the White House on the matter, said the official, speaking only on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to address the private deliberations publicly.

    While the Justice Department would formally make the filing, the president himself is almost certain to make the ultimate decision on whether to file.

    "I have to make sure that I'm not interjecting myself too much into this process, particularly when we're not a party to the case," Obama said Wednesday in interview with San Francisco's KGO-TV.

    He said his personal view is that gay couples should have the same rights as straight couples and said his administration would do whatever it could to promote that principle.

    Obama has a complicated history on gay marriage. As a presidential candidate in 2008, he opposed the California ban but didn't endorse gay marriage. As he ran for re-election last year, he announced his personal support for same-sex marriage but said marriage was an issue that should be decided by the states, not the federal government.

    To some, Obama's broad call for gay rights during his Jan. 21 inaugural address was a signal that he now sees a federal role in defining marriage.

    "Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law," Obama said during his remarks on the steps of the U.S. Capitol. "For if we are truly created equal, than surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well."

    But administration officials said Obama ? a former constitutional law professor ? was not foreshadowing any legal action in his remarks and was simply restating his personal belief in the right of gays and lesbians to marry.

    Seeking to capitalize on growing public support for gay marriage, advocates are calling on the administration to file a broad brief not only asking the court to declare California's ban unconstitutional but also urging the Justices to make all state bans illegal.

    "If they do make that argument and the court accepts it, the ramifications could be very sweeping," said Richard Socarides, an attorney and advocate.

    The administration could also file a narrower brief that would ask the court to issue a decision applying only to California. Or it could decide not to weigh in on the case at all.

    The Supreme Court, which will take up the case on March 26, has several options for its eventual ruling. Among them:

    ? The justices could uphold the state ban on gay marriage and say citizens of a state have the right to make that call.

    ? The court could endorse an appeals court ruling that would make same-sex marriage legal in California but apply only to that state.

    ? The court could issue a broader ruling that would apply to California and seven other states: Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon and Rhode Island. In those states, gay couples can join in civil unions that have all the benefits of marriage but cannot be married.

    ? The broadest ruling would be one that says the Constitution forbids states from banning same-sex unions.

    For weeks, supporters and opponents of Proposition 8 have been lobbying the administration to side with them.

    Last month, Theodore Olson and David Boies, lawyers arguing for gay marriage, met with Verrilli and other government lawyers to urge the administration to file a brief in the case. A few days later, Charles Cooper, the lawyer defending Proposition 8, met with the solicitor general to ask the government to stay out of the case. Those kinds of meetings are typical in a high court case when the government is not a party and is not asked by the court to make its views known.

    Boies and Chad Griffin, president of the advocacy group Human Rights Campaign, also had a meeting at the White House on the case.

    Ahead of next week's deadline, nearly two dozen states have filed briefs with the Supreme Court asking the Justices to uphold the California measure.

    "There's a critical mass of states that have spoken out and believe states should continue to have the right to define marriage as between one man and one woman," said Jim Campbell, legal counsel for the Alliance Defending Freedom, which represents supporters of Proposition 8.

    Public opinion has shifted in support of gay marriage in recent years. In May 2008, Gallup found that 56 percent of Americans felt same-sex marriages should not be recognized by the law as valid. By November 2012, some 53 percent felt they should be legally recognized.

    Obama has overwhelming political support among those who support same-sex marriage. Exit polls from the November election showed that 49 percent of voters believed their states should legally recognize gay marriage. More than 70 percent of those voters backed Obama over Republican nominee Mitt Romney.

    One day after the court hears the California case, the justices will hear arguments on another gay marriage case, this one involving provisions of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, known as DOMA. The act defines marriage as between a man and a woman for the purpose of deciding who can receive a range of federal benefits.

    The Obama administration abandoned its defense of the law in 2011 but continues to enforce it. Because DOMA is a federal law and the government is a party to the case, the administration does not have to state its opposition through a friend of the court brief.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Mark Sherman and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

    ___

    Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-20-Obama-Gay%20Marriage/id-7e543d95039d4871923ebd0053b03dc0

    cpac powell the last lecture kim jong un josh powell madonna halftime show linsanity

    Wednesday, February 20, 2013

    Burger King's Twitter account hacked, hilarity ensues

    Burger King?'s Twitter account shows hacking activity before the account was suspended by Twitter in this screen grab taken on February 18, 2013. (REUTERS/Handout)

    (TheWrap.com) - Someone appears to have been telling some serious whoppers on Burger King's Twitter account.

    The fast-food giant's social-media presence reportedly received an unexpected and surely unwanted revamp on Monday, after a hacker apparently decided to take the Burger King motto "have it your way" to heart in a deliciously devious manner.

    Burger King's verified Twitter account -- or at least an account that seemed to be the company's official account -- was reportedly hacked into on Monday by an unknown perpetrator who rechristened the page into McDonald's' image, and claimed that Burger King's rival had purchased the company.

    Perhaps because of the Presidents' Day holiday, Burger King was slow to respond to the attack; as news outlets throughout the web reported on the hack job, the compromised account remained active for about an hour.

    Burger King Worldwide Inc. suspended its Twitter account about an hour after it learned of the attack at 12:24 p.m. EST on Monday, company spokesman Bryson Thornton said in an email.

    "It has come to our attention that the Twitter account of the BURGER KING brand has been hacked," the company said in a statement. "We have worked directly with administrators to suspend the account until we are able to re-establish our legitimate site and authentic postings."

    "We just got sold to McDonalds! Look for McDonalds in a hood near you," one post read.

    The bogus merger news wasn't the only bit of chicanery to take place on Burger King's Twitter account Monday; in addition to random YouTube videos being linked to on the food chain's page, a number of messages of a seriously non-corporate nature were issued.

    "Try our new BK( ) Bath Salt! 99% Pure MDPV! Buy a Big Mac, get a gram free!" one tweet read.

    "This is why we were sold to @McDonalds! All of our employees crush and sniff percocets in the bathrooms," another read.

    The account also linked to an image purporting to show an employee with a syringe in his arm while in one of the restaurants chain's restrooms.

    Shortly after the account was suspended McDonald's claimed innocence in the matter.

    "We empathize with our @BurgerKing counterparts. Rest assured, we had nothing to do with the hacking," McDonald's announced via Twitter.

    Rival fast-food chains Wendy's and Jack in the Box have so far maintained a perhaps suspicious silence about the hacking on their Twitter accounts.

    Burger King has not yet responded to TheWrap's request for comment. However, a spokesman for Twitter told TheWrap that the company doesn't comment on individual accounts because, perhaps ironically, of "for privacy and security reasons."

    -Reuters contributed to this report

    Source: http://www.mendocinobeacon.com/ci_22615264/burger-kings-twitter-account-hacked-hilarity-ensues?source=rss_viewed

    madison bumgarner wnba draft tax day april 17 boston marathon tu pac hologram shuttle

    Ding-dong, Hotmail's dead: All accounts switching to Outlook.com by summer

    It's official: Outlook.com will fully replace Hotmail as Microsoft's webmail service. The company will begin to auto-update accounts, and hopes they will be fully migrated from Hotmail to Outlook.com by this summer.

    The move was spurred by surprise growth in the Outlook.com mail service, which has amassed 60 million active users in just six months. Microsoft will also remove the "customer preview" label on the product, and launch a multimillion-dollar marketing campaign.

    Also read: How Microsoft can regain its footing (Hint: Less Windows, more Office)

    I know the first thing you're thinking: "Does this mean my Hotmail address will just go away?" No. It just means that when you go to hotmail.com, you will be re-routed to Outlook.com, and when you log in on the Web, you will get the Outlook.com experience. You can keep your @hotmail.com email address forever, but you can also use that account to create multiple new @outlook.com email addresses, too, if you so desire.

    And let me tell you, you shouldn't wait for Microsoft to switch your old Hotmail service over to Outlook.com. I am an unabashed Hotmail hater, but who can forgive the original webmail service for being so far behind the times? Even when Microsoft spent millions on a "new Hotmail" ad campaign a scant two years ago, nobody was fooled: You still had to refresh the thing every time you wanted to know if you had mail.

    Enter Outlook.com, which really can give Gmail a run for its money. It's a very smart service with a very streamlined design, tasteful social integration and auto organization features such as inbox "sweep" and scheduled cleanup. Because of this last bit, it's ideal for use either as a main email or as a "spam account," the kind you provide to online retailers and other data collectors.

    (Switching your account over takes almost no effort: Just log into Hotmail then click Settings at the top right ? you will see the option to convert to Outlook.)

    Though Microsoft was pleased at the sudden growth of Outlook.com users, I grilled David Law, director of product management for Outlook.com, about how many of the 60 million users were just converts from Hotmail's existing 350 million or so accounts. My supposition is that this represents almost all of them, but while Law wouldn't tell me the number, he did say I would be surprised how many were totally fresh.

    Law was forthcoming about a different statistic, one that demonstrates Microsoft's target: About one third of the current Outlook.com users are ? or, at least, were ? also Gmail users.

    Outlook.com is a very welcome email option, and ? when partnered with the company's SkyDrive cloud storage services ? a sign that Microsoft may well regain some traction with consumers looking for reliable Web services.

    One of its only obvious problems is that of branding: Because it's called "Outlook," many people (naturally) assume that it is some kind of Web client for managing any email account. It's not. It's a free service, like Gmail or Yahoo mail or, yes, Hotmail, that provides you with an email account. So don't go asking if you can create an Outlook.com account and then add your corporate email to it, because that's like asking if you can take Google Maps and stick Mapquest into it.

    Perhaps that's why Microsoft is spending a lot of money on explanatory ads now. Like this one, featuring the irresistable audio stylings of Seattle's own Macklemore & Ryan Lewis:

    Wilson Rothman is the Technology & Science editor at NBC News Digital. Catch up with him on Twitter at @wjrothman, and join our conversation on Facebook.

    Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/ding-dong-hotmails-dead-all-accounts-switching-outlook-com-summer-1C8415366

    sprint britney spears At&t Wireless 9/11 Jerry Lawler andy murray Samsung Galaxy S3

    Pistorius' girlfriend cremated in private ceremony

    AAA??Feb. 19, 2013?1:21 PM ET
    Pistorius' girlfriend cremated in private ceremony
    By GERALD IMRAYBy GERALD IMRAY, Associated Press?THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES?

    A woman holds a photo of Reeva Steenkamp, as she leaves her funeral in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp on Valentine's Day. The defense lawyer says it was an accidental shooting. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

    A woman holds a photo of Reeva Steenkamp, as she leaves her funeral in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp on Valentine's Day. The defense lawyer says it was an accidental shooting. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

    Barry Steenkamp, the father of Reeva Steenkamp, leaves his home to attend her funeral ceremony in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp on Valentine's Day. The defense lawyer says it was an accidental shooting. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

    Adam Steenkamp, centre left, the brother of Reeva Steenkamp, walks with family members after attending her funeral, in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is charged with the murder of Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day. The defense lawyer says it was an accidental shooting. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

    South African rugby player Francois Hougaard, left, arrives for the funeral of Reeva Steenkamp in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp on Valentine's Day. The defense lawyer says it was an accidental shooting. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

    People arrive for the funeral of Reeva Steenkamp in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2013. Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius is charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp on Valentine's Day. The defense lawyer says it was an accidental shooting. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

    (AP) ? Reeva Steenkamp's coffin was draped in a white cloth and carried by six pallbearers at a private funeral Tuesday, just a few hours before Oscar Pistorius said in a court affidavit that he mistakenly killed his girlfriend by shooting her through a bathroom door.

    Reeva's uncle, Mike Steenkamp, broke down crying after the cremation ceremony under gray skies in the family's hometown of Port Elizabeth, saying between sobs: "We are here as a family and there's only one thing missing and that's Reeva."

    Family and friends gathered inside the white crematorium, which had a "Strictly Private" sign outside, to pay tribute to the law graduate, model and budding reality TV star.

    Pistorius said in his affidavit he loved her as much as anyone. Prosecutors argue he intended to kill her.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-19-OLY-Pistorius-Girlfriend's-Funeral/id-cca146b1b31742f3bfaed4dbcef1dac7

    guild wars 2 adrian gonzalez Jerry Nelson Foo Canoodle Isaac path Tropical Storm Isaac path

    Samsung intros Galaxy Camera Wi-Fi-only model

    ?

    Samsung adds Wi-Fi-only version of its Android-based Galaxy Camera

    Samsung has revealed a lower cost version of its Galaxy Camera, first revealed at IFA in late August last year. The original version shipped with 4G connectivity built-in, while the new model retains the dual-band Wi-Fi capability for sharing photos and video over a wireless network. Correspondingly, it is expected that dropping the cellular radio will also lead to a drop in price over the original $550.

    Although Samsung has not yet revealed the pricing of the new model by region, it does say that it will be ?more affordable? than its stablemate. The device still sports the same quad-core Exynos processor clocked at 1.4GHz, and retains its 4.8-inch HD Super Clear Touch display. It also continues to run Android 4.1 ?Jelly Bean? and comes pre-loaded with photo and editing software including a photo wizard and video editing utilities.

    The Galaxy Camera (Wi-Fi) incorporates a 16-megapixel BSI CMOS sensor, which is combined with an F2.8 21x Super Long Zoom 23mm wide-angle built-in lens. The device also supports ISO of 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600 and 3200 for good all round performance. In addition to Wi-Fi, GPS and GLONASS functionality is also retained as is Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity. The battery is slightly on the small side at 1,650mAh, but weight is kept to just 300 grams.

    Samsung has yet to reveal when the Galaxy Camera (Wi-Fi) will ship.


    By Electronista Staff

    Source: http://feeds.electronista.com/click.phdo?i=03d43c0be13426992afd5e34ffd54d18

    Jill Kelly McKayla Maroney gronkowski jeremy renner best buy black friday deals breaking dawn part 2 breaking dawn part 2

    Lessons in Customer Service: Don't Act Like the Post Office

    HRmarketer.com Blog: Lessons in Customer Service: Don?t Act Like the Post Office skip to main | skip to sidebar

    Lessons in Customer Service: Don?t Act Like the Post Office


    The United States Postal Service recently announced it would suspend Saturday mail delivery in an attempt to save about $2 billion?and its own skin. That?s sad, but I?m not surprised. The organization is fraught with bureaucratic and pricing structure problems, which are its primary issues. But when an organization also has institutionally poor customer service?well, it?s another nail in the coffin. I?m not talking about the individual employees who serve customers each day; many of them are wonderful. I?m referring to the way the institution thinks about meeting customers? needs.

    Here?s an example. Recently, I needed to send out an event mailing for a client that involved a book and an invitation. The mailing required 12x15 padded envelopes. I called the local post office to ask if there were 60 such envelopes there. The lady who answered said she was busy but would call me back.

    She did not call back. As I was on a tight timeline, I called her back later that afternoon. I was informed that they did not keep this size of envelope in stock, but that I could order them online. Hooray, I thought, and went to the USPS website.

    Whereupon I learned that I could order a maximum of one package of 10 envelopes. Not the 60 that I needed. No explanation was given for this limit. In addition, the envelopes would arrive in 7-10 days. On the bright side, the envelopes were free. Well, that?s because they have ?United States Postal Service? plastered all over them, so you have to go the post office to use them.

    Fair enough, except that I couldn?t use them, because I needed 60, and soon! I called the USPS customer service line to see if any exception could be made, but who was I kidding? Inflexible government-style regulation all the way. Rules are rules.

    In short, the USPS literally made it impossible for me to do business with them. So I called FedEx. The woman who answered put me on hold while she went and hand-counted how many 12x15 envelopes she had in stock, and then told me that she would call around to other local stores to gather the rest. They would be available the next day.

    She called me the next morning to let me know that my envelopes were in. I went in, and the envelopes were actually there, bundled and with my name on them. Easy. Business 101.

    This is a clear example of how the USPS violates basic customer service practices?especially this number one tip from Arnold Sanow?at Customer Service Manager:?
    • How can we make it easier for our customers to do business with us? The USPS made it impossible! FedEx did everything possible for me to give them my business.

    A few of Sanow?s other customer service considerations:
    • Do what you say you are going to do. If you say you?ll call back, then call back. This seems like common sense as well as common courtesy, but?Lack of follow-through says, ?You are not important to us.? It also suggests, ?We are not a reliable organization.? Or even, ?We are a sinking ship that can?t afford to hire enough people to take care of our dwindling customer base.? I am not keen to work with organizations sending me any of these messages.
    • Good, timely response. This goes for your call center, HR department, website?any point of contact with your ?customers.? For good or ill, we live in a 24/7, high-speed world. Whoever your stakeholders are?employees, clients, the public?they have been weaned on microwave dinners, drive-through custom coffee and Instagram. Everything is available instantly all the time. If you keep people waiting, they will go elsewhere.

    And one of my own:?
    • Rules were made to be broken. Of course you have to create standard operating procedures. But beware the dangers of inflexibility. I?m sure the post office thought it was delivering awesome customer service by offering ?free? envelopes to customers but its inability or unwillingness to meet my particular need cost them hundreds of dollars. The larger rule to keep top of mind is, ?If our customers don?t get what they need, they will leave and our enterprise will fail.?

    I hate to see Benjamin Franklin?s dream die, but that seems to be what?s happening at post offices across the country. Of course poor customer service isn?t the only reason why the USPS is doomed, but it doesn?t help. Don?t be like them.



    ?

    Source: http://hrmarketer.blogspot.com/2013/02/lessons-in-customer-service-dont-act.html

    London 2012 Javelin roger federer Olga Korbut Usain Bolt 2012 Olympics Katie Ledecky Aaron Ross Sikh temple

    Opinion: How Microsoft could regain its footing (Hint: more Office, less Windows)

    Even after several months, I don't know what to make of Windows 8. And Microsoft's tablet initiative feels like it's on the rocks. Still, when I look at SkyDrive and Outlook.com ? which will replace Hotmail completely by this summer ? I see hope for the company. All that's missing is Office for iPad ... and iPhone ... and Android.

    Excellent webmail and cloud storage services could help Microsoft grab users from the competition. But Google is doing a great job on both of those fronts, too, and Amazon, Apple and others play in that same space. The big gun, the thing that Microsoft still does better than everybody else, is the office suite. Microsoft's recent launch of the subscription-based any-device Office 365 is testament to the fact that the company ? or at least that incredibly successful division ? understands the benefit of not being locked to one platform. So what are the folks in Redmond waiting for?

    Here's how the pieces fit together: Webmail is the most popular Web service there is, and it's a good gateway to other services. (Just ask Google, which makes a regular practice out of nagging Gmailers to get on Google+.) SkyDrive is a great add-on service because it serves as a spillover for Outlook.com mail: If you have a lot of attachments, or files that are really big, Outlook asks you to throw them into a shareable SkyDrive folder instead. And Office 2013 already connects to SkyDrive to save stuff in the cloud.

    Outlook and SkyDrive are cheerfully platform agnostic: The Outlook team released an Android mail app last fall, and optimized its compatibility with iOS's Mail. Meanwhile, SkyDrive syncs beautifully on Macs and iPhones, and lots of other devices too. Success in webmail and cloud storage leaves a lot of options open for Microsoft, and cross compatibility means decreasing the dependence on Windows. No matter how much Microsoft wants to save Windows, its other businesses need to acknowledge the fact that operating systems don't matter anymore.

    Look, your car may look different than mine, and have more cupholders, but we can both drive on the same roads. Applications (software written for specific computers) gave way to the Internet, where software lived somewhere out in the ether. We are now in a third age where apps, optimized for our devices, bring services from the Internet. I don't care if you love Windows 8 or hate it, ditto for OS X, iOS, Android or even Chrome OS (not that you've necessarily heard of Google's browser-based desktop OS) ? they are but vehicles.

    I know what you are thinking: Apple and Google have been using their recent success to push music and video, storage, photo management, even social networking, all in one "ecosystem." While it makes sense on paper, people don't buy books from Apple, they buy 'em from Amazon; they don't stream music and movies from Google, they get it from Spotify and Netflix. Apple's Ping social network didn't exactly have the momentum of Google+, so it implanted both Twitter and Facebook directly into all of its operating systems.

    Lately I have looked around for services outside of "ecosystems" precisely because they won't tie me down inconveniently to one family of like-branded products. Even if you love Apple (or Samsung) products so much to only buy them, you still have to get every single one of your family members to do the same in order to start enjoying the benefits of some services such as messaging, photo sharing, etc.

    So what about office software? We have seen serviceable iWork apps from Apple, but they won't run on Android. We've seen some shabby free office suites that will. Google Docs, which I use all the time for collaboration, are lightweight and platform indifferent, but they lack the power and versatility of classic Office. Despite the usual design and workflow criticism, we can agree that nobody does the whole package better than Microsoft.

    What we want ? and I'm pretty sure I really am speaking for most of the world here ? is Microsoft's suite on whatever device we happen to be using.

    So how about it, Redmond? Office for the iPad, this year? Seriously. One hundred million iPad users can't be totally wrong. SkyDrive should be integrated for storing documents, and an update for OS X should provide SkyDrive access. Meanwhile, an Outlook.com mail account should be a (free) requirement to sync these services.

    So then, five years from now, when people are laughing about that whole Windows 8 thing, at least the formerly all-powerful software maker will continue to make billions in profit from its Office suite, which would remain a must-have ubiquitous service for paying customers anywhere ... on any device. Ya dig?

    Wilson Rothman is the Technology & Science editor at NBC News Digital. Catch up with him on Twitter at @wjrothman, and join our conversation on Facebook.

    Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/opinion-how-microsoft-could-regain-its-footing-hint-more-office-1C8415556

    zou bisou bisou tim tebow press conference tebow press conference trina rob dyrdek oberon donald driver

    Lebbeus Woods, South Africa and Apartheid at SFMOMA (Photos)

    It's President's Day and while a lot of places are closed, SFMOMA is open for business with a new exhibit of the work of architect Lebbeus Woods. Recognized beyond architecture, Lebbeus Woods (1940?2012) has been hailed by leading designers, filmmakers, writers, and artists alike as a significant voice in recent decades. His works resonate across many disciplines for their conceptual potency, imaginative breadth, jarring poetry, and ethical depth.

    Woods, who sadly passed away last year as planning for this exhibition was under way, had an enormous influence on the field of architecture over the past three decades, and yet the built structures to his name are few. The extensive drawings and models on view present an original perspective on the built environment ? one that holds high regard for humanity's ability to resist, respond, and create in adverse conditions.

    "Maybe I can show what could happen if we lived by a different set of rules," he once said. SFMOMA has collected Woods's work since the mid-1990s, amassing the broadest collection of his work anywhere; the exhibition will feature these holdings, as well as a selection of loans from institutional and private collections.

    From February 16 through June 2, 2013

    South Africa and Apartheid: This exhibition illuminates a vital, difficult, and contested period in the recent history of South Africa from the perspectives of three photographers: David Goldblatt, Ernest Cole, and Billy Monk. The son of Eastern European immigrants, documentary photographer Goldblatt came of age under apartheid and observed the increasing entrenchment of racial inequality in his country. His early project In Boksburg (1982) portrays a typical suburban white community shaped by what the artist calls "white dreams and white proprieties."

    The photographs, taken from a mostly frontal, horizontal view point, could be from any white town in the 1950's, with the same racism and ignorance. At that point, the White Afrikaners did not acknowledge black Afrikaners except as servants, to be kept as far away from their privileged life as possible.

    In one photograph, a Caucasian politician is photographed, standing in front of a banner which ironically calls for the "brotherhood of man." Another photograph shows Black African workers meeting with white management reflecting a snapshot of black African suspicion and fear vs smug white privilege.

    Included at Goldblatt's request, photographs by Cole and Monk expand the exhibition's field of view. Cole, a self-taught black South African documentary photographer, observed the other side of the racial divide in the 1960s, making photographs that are eloquently observant and deeply humane.

    Of the three, it is Cole and Monk whose photos are the most revealing and whose stories have the most tragic outcome.

    Cole, a tiny black photographer with a huge vision was inspired by Henri Cartier-Bresson to created a powerful pictorial record of apartheid South Africa. He was forced into exile in 1966 and his life crumbled. At one point, he was homeless, living on the streets of New York. Mr. Cole died at 49 in 1990, just a week after Nelson Mandela walked free. His sister flew back to South Africa with his ashes on her lap. His images still have the power to shock and anger even those of us who haven't lived under apartheid.

    Monk's work provides an extraordinarily evocative glimpse of Cape Town's little-seen late 60s bohemian demi-monde. Monk was a night club bouncer and not very good at his job. In a bid to supplement his income, he started taking photographs of the clientele.

    Monk would snap his subjects with the 35mm Pentax camera he had offloaded from one of the Japanese sailors trading under-the-table goods, and sell the pictures as mementoes of the evening. He was a trusted fixture in the club, friendly, part of the relaxed atmosphere where all races would mingle and have fun in a place which ignored South Africa's race laws.

    Monk gave up photography when Polaroids begun to flood the snapshot market and tried to make his living in other ways. But his work was discovered by Jac de Villiers, a photographr who had moved into his old studio ? he later told de Villiers he had little feeling for this instant product.

    Despite his distinctly criminal past (he?d been a safe-breaker, a poacher and done jail-time before he ever became a bouncer), he had settled down somewhat, making a small living running a leather shop and a vegetarian restaurant, just a few blocks down from the Catacombs on Long Street.

    An exhibition of the work was opened by David Goldblatt in Johannesburg's Market Gallery in July 1982, but Billy Monk did not attend. He was diving for diamonds off the Port Nolloth coast. The show was critically acclaimed but the itinerant Monk never got to read the reviews nor see the show: he was shot in the chest at close range in a street fight just two weeks after it opened.

    In November of the same year, Lin Sampson wrote a wonderfully descriptive feature on Monk's short, fast life for the South African Sunday Times magazine, which was been reprinted in the book, "Billy Monk: Nightclub Photographs, " by Dewi Lewis.

    "He died on Saturday evening in a house with turquoise-blue walls and a bar with a glitter top that had lost its shine from too many elbows sliding along it ? A girl told me what had happened ? Monk died protecting his friend Lionel in a tacky argument over moving furniture ? Before he fell to the ground, he stood there helpless and plunging, his arms spread out in shock and pleading. 'Now you've gone 'n' killed me,' he said."

    These three groups of pictures are complemented by a selection of Goldblatt's recent, post-apartheid photographs, sober yet hopeful records of an imperfect, still-evolving democracy. Closing March 5.

    http://www.sfmoma.org/

    Source: http://www.examiner.com/article/lebbeus-woods-south-africa-and-apartheid-at-sfmoma?cid=rss

    rick santorum daughter gainesville 2012 royal rumble the grey machine gun kelly saul alinsky annapolis

    Tuesday, February 19, 2013

    A look at Mandiant, allegations on China hacking

    (AP) ? A private technology security firm on Tuesday described in extraordinary detail efforts it blamed on a Chinese military unit to hack into 141 businesses, mostly inside the U.S., and steal commercial secrets. China denies the claim. Here's a look at the company, Mandiant, and why its report is significant.

    What is Mandiant?

    Headquartered in Alexandria, Va., Mandiant was started in 2004 by Kevin Mandia, a retired Air Force officer who carved out a lucrative niche investigating computer crimes. Mandiant says it can detect and trace even quiet intrusions, such as the theft of employee passwords or trade secrets that a company otherwise might not be aware is happening.

    Mandiant was most recently noted for its work in helping The New York Times trace an attack on its employees' computers to China, following a Times investigation into China's Premier Wen Jiabao. The newspaper publicly acknowledged Mandiant's role in the case.

    Are there other companies like Mandiant? Why not just call the FBI?

    There are other companies that specialize in cybercrime response and forensics, including CrowdStrike, Kroll Advisory Solutions, and Stroz Friedberg in New York. Others specialize in establishing and testing a company's computer defenses and monitoring traffic to detect hackers or suspicious behavior.

    Companies can be reluctant to call the FBI. Businesses don't want to hand over their most sensitive information ? including computers and proprietary data ? to the government and would rather maintain control of the investigation. Many companies are less concerned about tracing the origin of an attack than resuming business to make money. They also don't want their vulnerabilities discussed in a courtroom or leaked to news organizations or shareholders, which can happen if the government were involved. Companies like Mandiant have a big financial incentive ? and signed confidentiality promises ? to keep names of clients secret.

    What did Mandiant's report say? Why is it important?

    Mandiant alleges that it has traced a massive hacking campaign on U.S. businesses to a drab, white 12-story office building outside Shanghai run by "Unit 61398" of the People's Liberation Army. The report contains some of the most extensive and detailed accusations on China's cybersnooping publicly available, including a timeline and details of malware used.

    The U.S. government, including its intelligence agencies, almost certainly has similar and even more detailed information but it's regarded as highly classified. Being a private company, Mandiant doesn't have to keep its information secret, although it hasn't released the names of the companies attacked.

    Why did Mandiant publish its findings?

    Mandiant says it was time to call out China for its systematic hacking and that releasing as many details as possible will help security professionals. It acknowledged in a statement that releasing the information was risky because it said the Chinese will change tactics now that some of its techniques are known. Mandiant also said it expects itself to be targeted, beyond what it described as an unsophisticated effort in April to trick some employees into installing malicious software disguised as a draft press release. "We expect reprisals from China as well as an onslaught of criticism," Mandiant wrote.

    Mandiant has an obvious commercial interest in releasing the information, too. The company said its existing customers were already warned about and protected against the techniques it discovered, and it offered a free software tool to companies and organizations to detect suspicious activity. It puts Mandiant front-and-center at a critical time on a national debate about cybersecurity. Its founder testified earlier this month to the House Intelligence Committee on hacking threats. Last week, President Barack Obama signed an executive order aimed at improving government cooperation with industry, and Congress is weighing various legislative proposals on the matter.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-19-China%20Hacking-Security%20Firm/id-d84d12e495ff4624afb867f0edd4fc31

    Azarenka NFL fantasy football Chris Kluwe Jennifer Granholm Tulane player injured fox sports obama speech

    Exploring supercapacitors to improve their structure

    Feb. 18, 2013 ? No matter how intimidating their name, supercapacitors are part of our daily lives. Take buses for example: supercapacitors are charged during braking and supply electricity to open the doors when the vehicle stops! Yet the molecular organization and functioning of these electricity storage devices had never previously been observed. For the first time, researchers from CNRS and the Universit? d'Orl?ans have explored the molecular rearrangements at play in commercially available supercapacitors while in operation. The technique devised by the scientists provides a new tool for optimizing and improving tomorrow's supercapacitors.

    The results are published on-line in Nature Materials on 17 February 2013.

    Supercapacitors are electricity storage devices that are quite different to batteries. Unlike these, they are charged much faster (usually in seconds) and they do not suffer such rapid wear due to charging/discharging. On the other hand, at equivalent size and although they offer greater power, they cannot store as much electrical energy as batteries (carbon-based supercapacitors supply an energy density of around 5 Wh/kg compared to around 100 Wh/kg for lithium-ion batteries). Supercapacitors are used in the recovery of braking energy in numerous vehicles (cars, buses, trains, etc.) and to open the emergency exits of the Airbus A380.

    A supercapacitor stores electricity through the interaction between nanoporous carbon electrodes and ions, which carry positive and negative charges, and move about in a liquid known as an electrolyte (see diagram below). When charging, the anions (negatively charged ions) are replaced by cations (positively charged ions) in the negative electrode and vice versa. The greater this exchange and the higher the available carbon surface area, the greater the capacity of the supercapacitor.

    Using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, the researchers delved deeper into this phenomenon and were able, for the first time, to quantify the proportion in which charge exchanges take place in two supercapacitors using commercially available carbons. By comparing two nanoporous carbon materials, they were able to show that the supercapacitor containing the carbon with the most disordered structure had greater capacitance and improved high-voltage tolerance. This could be due to better electronic charge distribution upon contact with the electrolyte molecules.

    These results stem from a collaboration between two Orleans-based teams: one from the CNRS CEMHTI (1), specialized in NMR and a member of the R?seau Fran?ais sur le Stockage Electrochimique de l'Energie, the other at the Centre de Recherche sur la Mati?re Divis?e (CNRS/Universit? d'Orl?ans), which focuses on the study of new carbon materials for supercapacitors. This complementarity has made it possible to develop a technique that gives research laboratories and industry a genuine tool for optimizing supercapacitors' materials.

    (1) CNRS Laboratoire "Conditions Extr?mes et Mat?riaux : Haute Temp?rature et Irradiation"

    Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

    Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by CNRS (D?l?gation Paris Michel-Ange).

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


    Journal Reference:

    1. Micha?l Deschamps, Edouard Gilbert, Philippe Azais, Encarnaci?n Raymundo-Pi?ero, Mohammed Ramzi Ammar, Patrick Simon, Dominique Massiot, Fran?ois B?guin. Exploring electrolyte organization in supercapacitor electrodes with solid-state NMR. Nature Materials, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/NMAT3567

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

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

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electricity/~3/30mgsQ2ZMOk/130218132420.htm

    whitney houston casket photo match play championship the national enquirer marie colvin cm punk cm punk lint

    Deal of the Day: Body Glove DropSuit Rugged Case for Samsung Galaxy S3

    Deal of the Day The Feb. 18 ShopAndroid.com Deal of the Day is the Body Glove DropSuit Rugged Case for Samsung Galaxy S3. The DropSuit is made of a durable gel material that resists the battles of everyday life. The case has reinforced corners with a unique shock dissipation system to absorb impact and defend against bumps and drops. The strategically placed side bumpers provide a secure grip and added drop protection.

    The Body Glove DropSuit Rugged Case is available for just $10.00, 50% off today only. Backed by our 60-day return policy and fast shipping.

    Never miss a deal. Sign up for Daily Deal alerts!

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/B2mE3f1v4As/story01.htm

    whitney houston funeral live stream kevin costner whitney houston whitney houston funeral live pat buchanan slither slither naacp