Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Hollywood Reporter Names the 50 Power Showrunners of 2013


This story first appeared in the Oct. 25 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. 


After another 12 months of business that saw more headline-grabbing showrunner exits (The Walking Dead’s Glen Mazzara) and audacious debuts (House of CardsBeau Willimon), THR editors and reporters were intrigued once again to answer the question: What really goes into being the CEOs and creative chiefs of TV’s hottest series? Is it balancing multiple writers rooms in a single afternoon? (Yep.) Is it managing the marketing identity of a series, including even the branded Legos? (Uh-huh.) Is it surviving a shooting schedule that can make a Friday so long, one is inspired to create a new day of the week. (Indeed, that would be “Fraturday,” courtesy of first-time showrunner Willimon.) The most influential brains in the business reveal once again that showrunning TV’s biggest series is an occupation both defined by — and dependent on — a near-maniacal commitment to their crafts.


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TV's Top Showrunners Talk Deleted Scenes, Network Censorship, More


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/9EeR-BSb_m4/hollywood-reporter-names-50-power-648546
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Need for Speed: New Series Explores World's Fastest Things



From building the world's fastest cars, trucks and boats to rooting for Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt, humans are obsessed with speed.



In the premiere of the new NOVA series "Making Stuff," which airs tonight at 9 p.m. EDT/8 p.m. CDT on PBS, host and technology columnist David Pogue takes viewers on a whirlwind tour of the world's fastest things.



In the show, Pogue burns rubber in a souped-up electric car, zooms from house to house delivering packages and flies above the waves on the sailboat that won this year's America's Cup.



Humanity's hunger for speed has many roots. "Sometimes, it's financial," and other times, it's prestige, Pogue said. "And the third factor is to dedicate less time to moving ourselves around," he told LiveScience. [Image Gallery: Breaking the Sound Barrier]



Water and wheels



What do sailboats and airplanes have in common? A lot, if you're talking about billionaire Larry Ellison's Oracle yacht, which was built to sail in the America's Cup competition. In the new show, Pogue hitches a ride on the $100 million carbon-fiber vessel.



"It's the closest thing to a flying carpet," he said. Instead of a sail, the boat has a curved, vertical wing. Just as an airplane wing creates lift when air flows more quickly over the curved surface and creates a low-pressure zone, the sailboat's wing creates a pulling force as air whooshes past. In addition, the vessel has an underwater foil that lifts the boat up over the water to reduce drag.



Next, Pogue journeys to Southern Methodist University in Dallas to test out his sprinting chops. In the lab of physiologist Peter Weyand, researchers study the biomechanics of running and other sports. With the world's fastest treadmill, a multidimensional force sensor and top-of-the-line motion-capture video systems, Weyand and his colleagues study what makes people run fast. Surprisingly, fast runners aren't distinguished by their leg movements, Weyand said, but rather how hard they hit the ground. "Elite sprinters will hit with forces four to five times their body weight," he told LiveScience.




Pogue's next stop is Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, where a team of speed enthusiasts is building the world's fastest bicycle. The bike is a "recumbent" style bike, because the rider is practically lying down, and has about half the wind resistance of a normal bike. It has an aerodynamic shell with no windows, and only a webcam for navigation. With a blistering top speed of 80 mph (129 km/h), it's the most efficient human-powered vehicle on the planet.




Of course, sometimes, human power isn't enough. In the world of muscle cars, it's all about acceleration. Pogue visits John "Plasma Boy" Wayland, maker of the "White Zombie" electric car. The car is a 1972 Datsun, but its gasoline engine has been swapped out for a lithium-battery-powered motor. "It looks beat up and pathetic," Pogue said, but "it's insanely fast." In fact, it's not so much fast, as quick. The little Datsun accelerates from 0 to 60 mph in 1.8 seconds — more quickly than even the Bugatti Veyron, the fastest (but not quickest) car in the world.



"We've changed the image of the electric car," Wayland told LiveScience.



Saving time



But speed isn't always about traveling across a distance quickly. Sometimes, it's about doing something in the least amount of time.



What's the best way to deliver UPS packages? The show ponders this classic traveling-salesman problem: The delivery person must visit a certain number of houses in a day, in the least amount of time. UPS mathematicians have developed a delivery algorithm called ORION (On-Road Integrated Optimization and Navigation) that saves the company millions of dollars a year by reducing the number of miles each delivery truck must drive.



What's the fastest way to board an airplane? Pogue speaks to a couple of experts to find out. Simulations suggest that boarding from window to aisle seats works best, but others think random boarding would work just as well. Yet most airlines use neither.



But the greatest leaps in speed aren't in cars or postal deliveries, but in the Internet. Today, fiber-optic cables transmit signals at the speed of light — orders of magnitude faster than early dial-up connections. In the stock market, time is money, and traders rely on überfast fiber-optic links between New York and Chicago. The latest idea involves sending the data by a series of microwave towers, since electromagnetic signals travel even more quickly through air than along a fiber.



"In terms of physical vehicles, we've been pushing the envelope for many, many years," Pogue said. "But the speed of the Internet — we're just getting started."



Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.



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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/speed-series-explores-worlds-fastest-things-210233411.html
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America Movil drops multi-billion-euro offer for Dutch KPN


The Hague (AFP) - America Movil of Mexico, controlled by one of the world's richest men Carlos Slim, said Wednesday it was dropping a multi-billion-euro bid for Netherlands operator KPN after a Dutch foundation blocked the takeover.


"America Movil will not launch the intended offer," the company said in a statement.


The bombshell announcement came after an independent foundation linked to KPN moved to block the deal in late August by exercising a call option to acquire preferred shares.


The move by Foundation Preference Shares B KPN gave it just under 50 percent of voting rights and issued shares in the lumbering Dutch operator, enabling it to then block the deal.


America Movil has been planning to offer 2.40 euros ($3.20) in a hostile bid to take control of KPN, one of the largest fixed and mobile operators in the Netherlands and the third-largest in Germany and Belgium.


When it announced the bid in August, it valued the Dutch company at 10.2 billion euros ($13.6 billion).


America Movil "has carefully reviewed the options available to it in relation to the exercise of the call option by the Foundation," the Mexican company said.


It "now concludes, in view of the Foundation's position and the discussions with KPN, that (the) aim to acquire more than 50 per cent of the voting rights in KPN... will not be met by making the intended offer," the company said.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/america-movil-drops-multi-billion-euro-offer-dutch-173112044.html
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Yahoo's Alibaba stake takes heat off weak forecast


By Alexei Oreskovic


SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Investors cheered Yahoo Inc's plans to keep a larger-than-expected stake in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, overlooking continuing softness in its core online advertising business.


Yahoo rose nearly 1 percent to $33.70 in afterhours trading as it said it would sell fewer shares than originally agreed from its 24 percent stake when Alibaba goes public.


That means Yahoo will reap more gains if Alibaba's stock surges after the IPO, said Ben Schachter, an analyst with Macquarie Research.


"The idea is you don't want to have to sell at the IPO price, you want to sell later to potentially get the appreciation going up," he said.


Yahoo's core business of selling online display and search advertising remained soft in the third quarter under fierce competition from Facebook Inc and Google Inc.


Prices for Yahoo's display ads declined 7 percent year-over-year, while the number of display ads sold increased roughly 1 percent.


Revenue from search advertising, which accounts for 39 percent of the total, was up 3 percent year-over-year, excluding certain costs.


Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer pointed to improvements in user traffic to the company's various Web destinations and said the increasing usage would start to show up in Yahoo's revenue growth in the coming year.


She said that users of Yahoo's mobile products increased 15 percent from the previous quarter to 390 million, while traffic to a revamped version of Yahoo's sports website had doubled.


"We are in this to win and to win big," Mayer said during a post-earnings video conference that was streamed live on the company's website.


She said new "native" ad formats that Yahoo had begun experimenting with had encouraging results that could help Yahoo boost revenue on its mobile products, which she described as "under-monetized."


INVESTING FOR GROWTH


Yahoo said it earned $297 million in net income in the third quarter, or 28 cents a share, compared to $3.16 billion or $2.64 a share in the third quarter of 2012, when Yahoo's results included a $2.8 billion gain from the sale of a portion of its stake in Alibaba Group.


Excluding certain items, Yahoo said it earned 34 cents per share, a penny above the average analyst estimate.


Yahoo's stock price has more than doubled since Mayer took the reins in July 2012. But analysts say much of the gain is due to aggressive stock buybacks and Alibaba's expected IPO.


"They're very fortunate that people aren't putting that much emphasis on the core business, they're owning it as a proxy for Alibaba," said Colin Gillis, an analyst with BGC Partners.


Yahoo included Alibaba's second-quarter financial results in its quarterly earnings report on Tuesday.


Alibaba grew revenue 61 percent to $1.74 billion in the April to June period, while net income leapt 159 percent to $707 million. That pace of revenue growth is down from 71 percent in the first quarter, but still exceeded Gillis' forecast for about 54 percent.


Yahoo took down its own forecast for the full 2013 year, trimming the midpoint of its net revenue guidance from $4.5 billion to $4.425 billion. The company also said its adjusted operating income would be lower than it previously projected.


"They're clearly investing, putting more dollars to work here," said JMP Securities analyst Ronald Josey, adding that it was unclear when those investments would start to pay off.


Mayer, a former Google executive, has focused on revamping Yahoo's Web products since joining the company in July 2012.


But while Mayer has brought back some buzz to the Yahoo brand, analysts say the company's business remains challenged by an industry-wide shift to automated online advertising exchanges. These exchanges, which allow marketers to buy ads across a wide variety of websites, have pushed down the price of the premium display ads that Yahoo sells.


"The premium business is changing and getting smaller," said BGC Partner's Gillis. Until Yahoo adjusts its online ad sales business to the changes, "it's going to be painful," he said.


The Web portal reported $1.081 billion in net revenue, which excludes fees paid to third-party websites, in the three months ended September 30, compared with $1.089 billion in the year-ago period. The average analyst expectation was for net revenue of $1.082 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.


(Editing by Andre Grenon and Stephen Coates)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yahoos-alibaba-stake-takes-heat-off-weak-forecast-010615293--sector.html
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Yasser Arafat: The Dark History of Polonium



Little did scientists Marie and Pierre Curie suspect, when they discovered polonium in 1898, that the radioactive element would go on to have one of the darkest and most intriguing histories of any known substance.



In 2004, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat died of uncertain causes in Percy Hospital in Paris. He complained of nausea and stomach pain, suffered liver and kidney failure, and eventually lapsed into a coma before dying. In 2012, Arafat's remains were exhumed because of persistent rumors that he was the victim of an assassination that used polonium as a deadly weapon.



A report published last week in the medical journal The Lancet confirmed that traces of polonium were found on Arafat's toothbrush, underwear and other personal items, fueling reports that he was assassinated. And Arafat isn't the first person who's believed to have been murdered by polonium. [The 13 Oddest Medical Case Reports] 



Polonium can't penetrate unbroken skin, but if ingested or inhaled it can cause severe radiation damage to bodily tissues, organs and DNA, according to the U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Exposure to polonium also increases the risk of cancer, while an amount smaller than a grain of salt is enough to kill an adult.



'The angel of death'



Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian political dissident, was living in London in 2006 when, on Nov. 1, he was enjoying a pot of tea in the Pine Bar of the Millennium Hotel with two other Russian men. Later that day, he became severely ill, and it wasn't long before poisoning was suspected.



Tests eventually discovered that polonium-210 (an isotope of polonium) was not only in Litvinenko's body, but was found in lethal amounts throughout the Pine Bar and the adjacent kitchen area. One of Litvinenko's dining companions, Andrei Lugovoy, was a former KGB officer who emerged as a prime suspect in the poisoning.



Litvinenko died a few weeks later, but on his deathbed, he accused Russian president Vladimir Putin of orchestrating his assassination. "As I lie here I can distinctly hear the beating of wings of the angel of death," Litvinenko said in a statement, according to the Washington Post. "You may succeed in silencing one man, but the howl of protest from around the world will reverberate, Mr. Putin, in your ears for the rest of your life." [How 13 of the World's Worst Dictators Died]



The assassination set off an international scandal: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called it "intolerable" that Russian authorities refused to extradite Lugovoy for trial. "You cannot have people assassinated on British soil, and then discover that we wish to arrest someone who is in another country, and not be in a position to do that," according to the Telegraph.



Putin dismissed Brown's statements as "insulting," and the case remains a diplomatic sticking point between the two nations — and a chilling reminder that Cold War-style political intrigue is not just the stuff of Tom Clancy thrillers.



Evidence of polonium-210 found



The eight years that passed between Arafat's death and the time his body was exhumed for examination have made it more difficult to determine a cause of death, partly because polonium-210 has a biological half-life — the time needed for its levels in the body to fall by half — of just 50 days, and because Arafat's widow requested no autopsy following his death, the Guardian reports.



"An autopsy would have been useful in this case because, although potential polonium poisoning might not have been identified during that procedure, body samples could have been kept and tested afterwards," the authors of the Lancet report wrote.



Nonetheless, the authors found evidence that "support the possibility of Arafat's poisoning with polonium-210," adding that "although the absence of myelosuppression [decrease in bone marrow activity] and hair loss does not favor acute radiation syndrome, symptoms of nausea, vomiting, fatigue, diarrhea and anorexia, followed by hepatic and renal failures, might suggest radioactive poisoning."



The evidence that Arafat might have been killed by polonium has reignited some claims that he was assassinated, either by political rivals within the Palestinian community or by Israeli authorities, a claim that Israel has repeatedly denied.



A trail of death



Arafat and Litvinenko aren't the only two people who are suspected of dying after exposure to polonium, which Marie Curie named after her beloved native Poland.



Irène Joliot-Curie, the daughter of Marie and Pierre Curie, may have been the first person to die of exposure to polonium, possibly related to a laboratory accident in 1946 (like her parents, Irène was a noted scientist who won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1935). She fell ill shortly thereafter and died of leukemia in 1956.



Despite its hazards, polonium — a soft, silvery-gray metal — does have some industrial applications. It can be used to eliminate static electricity in machine processes such as paper rolling and fiber spinning, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.



And because of its radioactivity, polonium-210 has been used as a heat source in satellites and in the Soviet 1970s-era Lunokhod moon rovers.



Follow Marc Lallanilla on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.



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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yasser-arafat-dark-history-polonium-124153719.html
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Graham Nash Has 'Wild Tales' To Spare






Graham Nash has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice — once in 1997 as a member of Crosby, Stills and Nash, and once in 2010 as a member of the Hollies.



Eleanor Stills/Courtesy of Crown Archetype


Graham Nash has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice — once in 1997 as a member of Crosby, Stills and Nash, and once in 2010 as a member of the Hollies.


Eleanor Stills/Courtesy of Crown Archetype



Graham Nash first came to the United States as part of the British Invasion with his band The Hollies, which got its start at the same time as The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, and shared bills with both bands in England. But Nash later helped to define a kind of West Coast sound, singing harmonies as part of Crosby, Stills & Nash. Nash wrote some of the most famous songs by the powerhouse group (who would add Neil Young to its roster in 1969), including "Our House," "Teach Your Children" and "Marrakesh Express."


In a new memoir called Wild Tales: A Rock n Roll Life, Nash touches on those memories and many others. He recently spoke with Fresh Air's Terry Gross, just a few hours before Crosby, Stills & Nash performed at the Royal Albert Hall in London.



Interview Highlights


On the influence of The Everly Brothers' harmonies


"I was about 15 years old; Allan [Clarke, founding member of The Hollies] and I were attending a catholic schoolgirls' dance on a Saturday evening. I remember going down the stairs and giving the young lady our tickets. 'You Send Me' by Sam Cooke had just stopped playing, and of course that was a slow dance where every boy and girl were feeling each other up and getting close and the teachers were trying to separate them. So, the song finished and the ballroom floor cleared, and Allan and I saw a friend across the way that we both wanted. And we got halfway across the floor and 'Bye Bye Love' by The Everly Brothers came on — and it stopped us in our tracks. We sang together, so we knew what two-part harmony was, but this sounded so unbelievably beautiful. They're brothers, of course, and they're from Kentucky and have these beautiful accents. They could harmonize unbelievably, very much like The Louvin Brothers, who they probably learned from. And ever since that day, I decided that whatever music I was going to make in the future, I wanted it to affect people the same way The Everly Brothers' music affected me on that Saturday night."


On Buddy Holly's ordinary charm


"Buddy Holly was one of us. He was an ordinary-looking kid, wore big thick glasses. He wasn't shakin' his hips and being sexy — he was actually one of us. We could be Buddy Holly. It was very hard to be Elvis; only Elvis was Elvis. But with Buddy Holly, he was one of us and he touched our hearts in a very simple way. What a lot of people don't realize is that the kid only recorded for less than two years before he was tragically killed with the Big Bopper and Richie Valens ... He was very dear to us. His music was very simple: Everybody could play it if you knew three chords. It had great energy, great simplicity. I often wonder what Buddy Holly would be doing with today's technology."


On his early infatuation with America


"Coming to America was amazing to me. The phone rang exactly as it did in John Wayne movies. You could get a real hamburger — because in England at the time there were only these things called 'wimpy burgers,' and they were like shoe leather. You could get food brought in! Unheard of in England. I loved America from the moment I set foot on it, I really did. When we actually got a chance to go and fly to Los Angeles I climbed the nearest palm tree and I told Allan Clarke that there was no way I was going back."


On how marijuana use changed his song-writing style


"I think alcohol is a depressive drug, whereas marijuana is not. I never got depressed when I smoked dope at all; it was a joyful experience. I'm not condoning my drug use. ... I go into great detail in the book about Crosby's spiraling down into cocaine madness, but at that time, smoking dope wasn't that big of a deal. Quite frankly, I loved it. It expanded my mind, it made me think about more profound issues. The Hollies were great at creating a two-and-a-half-minute pop song, to be played right before the news. ... In hanging out with David [Crosby] and Stephen [Stills] and Neil [Young] and Joni [Mitchell], I began to realize that you could write catchy melodies that would attract people but you could talk about real things. I began to change the way I wrote songs. I was trained to write good pop songs, and I took that sensibility and talked about what I considered to be deeper, more profound subjects."


On how adding Neil Young changed Crosby, Stills & Nash


"It's more difficult to sing four-part [harmonies]; you've got to start shifting parts around and stuff. Neil brings a darker edge to our music, and I don't mean that in a negative way. ... It's more intense. That first album of Crosby, Stills & Nash is kind of summery: lots of palm trees in it feeling, a cool-breeze-through-the-canyons kind of music. Actually, Jimi Hendrix, when asked what he thought of Crosby, Stills & Nash, looked at the interviewer and said, 'That's Western sky music.' And I thought, 'Wow. That's brilliant.' The point is that Neil brings a different kind of musical intensity to the band, and the music of Crosby, Stills & Nash and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young is very, very different."



Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/15/234683906/graham-nash-has-wild-tales-to-spare?ft=1&f=1039
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

British Retailer Takes Site Offline to Clear Out Disgusting E-Books

Today in international tech news: A British retailer takes its UK site offline because of unwitting sales of nasty e-books. Also: An Australian police recruitment ad ends up on the home page of an illegal biker gang; BlackBerry insists it is fine in open letter; Edward Snowden's former email service files suit; and Norway's new coalition vows broadband for all.


British retailer WH Smith has shuttered its UK site and will keep it offline until all particularly objectionable sexual content is removed from its offerings.


Last week, technology news site The Kernel reported that WH Smith -- along with Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other retailers -- was selling pornographic e-books, including titles that featured rape, incest and bestiality.


WH Smith takes e-book content from Kobo.com, a Toronto-based e-reading company. Kobo.com reacted by conceding that some authors and publishers had violated its self-publishing policies, but added that it still strived "not to negatively impact the freedom of expression" found at Kobo.com.


Not long after issuing that statement, Kobo removed all self-published e-books from its shelves.


Amazon, too, has been cleansing itself of such content.


[Source: BBC]


Aussie Police Recruitment Ad Lands on Criminal Website


Online banner advertisements for Australia's Victoria Police appeared on the website of a motorcycle gang, the Mongols Nation Motorcycle Club.


Police Minister Kim Wells accused Google of not adhering to ad placement guidelines set out by Victoria Police.


The twist is that Victoria law enforcement has launched a campaign against bike gangs, and even established an investigation team -- "Echo Taskforce" -- assigned with stamping out the gangs.


The ads reportedly garnered about 200 clicks, meaning the police would theoretically be on the hook for paying Google about US$2.00. Google, however, reportedly will refund the dough.


[Source: B&T via The Register]


BlackBerry: It's All Good!


BlackBerry penned an open letter -- ostensibly for customers and partners, but republished in dozens of outlets in numerous countries -- to declare that the company is "here to stay" despite red ink-soaked books and massive layoffs.


BlackBerry Chief Marketing Officer Frank Boulben told Reuters that the letter was inspired in part by the "noise and confusion" created by news stories about BlackBerry. He was talking, presumably, about stories like BlackBerry laying off dozens of U.S. workers, or Blackberry laying off 40 percent of its workforce, or BlackBerry being in even worse shape than experts had initially thought.


Boulben stressed that the company has cash on hand, and that it has no debt.


Fairfax Financial Holding has made a $9-a-share offer for BlackBerry, but Google, Cisco and SAP have all reportedly been in talks with BlackBerry about acquiring some or even all of the smartphone maker.


[Source: Reuters]


Snowden's Email Service Files Suit


Attorneys representing Lavabit, the Texas-based email service used by Edward Snowden, have filed their opening brief in a case that is reportedly linked to the Justice Department's handling of the Snowden investigation.


Lavabit founder Ladar Levison this summer declined federal requests to fork over encryption information to gain access to data stored on the company's servers. Instead, he simply shut down the service. He was found in contempt of court, but now is fighting in the hope of proving that requests to access Lavabit information were unlawful.


Snowden, the man at the center of all this, is still in Russia. He recently received a visit from his father.


[Source: Slate]


New Norwegian Coalition Vows Better Broadband


The coalition government elected in Norway's recent parliamentary elections put better nationwide broadband on its agenda.


The government said that all citizens should have access to a 100 Mbps connection, a significant increase over the previous target. The government also said that it will take on more responsibility to ensure nationwide broadband access, while the previous administration had a more free market approach.


[Source: ZDNet]



David Vranicar is a freelance journalist and author of The Lost Graduation: Stepping off campus and into a crisis. You can check out his ECT News archive here, and you can email him at david[dot]vranicar[at]newsroom[dot]ectnews[dot]com.


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/79195.html
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Apple Solicits Developers For OS X Mavericks-Ready Apps, Signaling Imminent Release

Screen Shot 2013-10-15 at 3.43.08 PMApple sent a message on its (public) developer news boards today encouraging developers to submit apps that are fully compatible with its upcoming operating system OS X Mavericks. If the fact that Mavericks went GM (Gold Master) recently isn't enough for you, we're hearing that it is indeed "ready" for release, hence the encouragement on Apple's part.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/HW5hOpH3tPo/
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Apple's October 22 iPad And Mac Event Now Official As Press Receive Invites

d5abea52_6222_4d16_b54c_cd907d2b16bc_02Apple has announced a special event to be held next week on October 22, after that date was leaked first by AllThingsD and then later confirmed by The Loop's Jim Dalrymple. If rumors prove correct, the event will most likely feature the reveal of a fifth generation iPad, a Retina iPad mini, new Haswell-powered Retina MacBook Pros with better battery life, and potentially a ship date for the already-announced new Mac Pro.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/SgL5zFQtgyo/
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Beyoncé Is Still Beying Good! Watch The Inspiring Video HERE!






THIS is why they call her Queen Bey!


Beyonce rules!


Not only can she sing, dance, play wifey and mama, but she also finds time to spread some inspiration!


The diva debuted a brand new video of her time spent in Latin America where she spent her free moments encouraging young Beyonce beylievers to be AHmazing!


While surrounded by a group of kids in the video, she preached:



"I just encourage you to find your passion and to stay focused and positive. Thank you guys for coming. I'm so proud of you. You inspire me and so many other people. Hopefully people will see that you work so hard and are so positive and will wanna do the same thing."



OMG! It's officially impossible for her to be any more fantastic.


Ch-ch-check out the video (above) and hail the fierceness!!!!


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Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-10-beyonce-beygood-latin-america-video
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Millions Of Miles From Shutdown, Mars Rovers Keep Working




A photo released by NASA this summer shows a photo composed of nearly 900 images taken by the rover Curiosity, showing a section of Gale Crater near the equator of Mars. The rovers are continuing to work through the U.S. government shutdown.








NASA/AP




A photo released by NASA this summer shows a photo composed of nearly 900 images taken by the rover Curiosity, showing a section of Gale Crater near the equator of Mars. The rovers are continuing to work through the U.S. government shutdown.

NASA/AP







The budget negotiations in Washington are not front-page news on Mars. There, millions of miles away, NASA's rovers continue to operate, taking photographs and collecting data as they prepare for the coming Martian winter.

NPR's Joe Palca has this report for our Newscast unit:

"NASA's newest rover, called Curiosity, is on the move. It's headed to the base of Mount Sharp, a mountain that towers three-and-a-half miles above the floor of Gale crater where the rover landed. Scientists hope the foothills of the mountain will reveal some of the ancient geologic history of Mars.

"The other rover called Opportunity is studying something similar at the rim of Endeavor crater. In January, the rover that was designed to last 90 days will mark its tenth year on Mars.

"Some of Opportunity's instruments have stopped working, but it's still taking pictures and still roves across the surface, albeit quite a but slower than its newer partner on the other side of the planet."

The two rovers are taking in data and getting into strategic locations before winter arrives on Mars in a few months.

The scarcity of sunlight shouldn't pose a challenge for Curiosity, whose systems are powered by heat generated by the radioactive decay of plutonium. NASA hopes that the older Opportunity, which powers itself with solar panels, will be aided by its position on a north-facing slope.

As the Planetary Society website notes, this will be Opportunity's sixth winter:

"Harsh beyond belief, winters on Mars are life threatening, even for robots. Opportunity must endure constant, sometimes radical fluctuations in daily temperatures, not to mention survive temperatures as low as 100 degrees below freezing, all of which is really tough on her metal parts. Of course, the veteran rover has proved its resilience many times over while exploring this sub-freezing planet."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/14/234256158/thousands-of-miles-from-shutdown-mars-rovers-keep-working?ft=1&f=1007
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On the Run... With a friend




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On the Run... With a friend


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Sunday, October 13, 2013

Cyclone Phailin Leaves Debris And Relatively Few Casualties






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    A woman returns to the cyclone-hit Arjipalli village on the Bay of Bengal coast in Ganjam district, Orissa state, India, Sunday. The state's Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik says that a full recovery will be a "big challenge."





    Biswaranjan Rout/AP






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    A family uses a motorcycle to cross a flooded road as they return to their village near Gopalpur, Orissa state, India, Sunday.





    Bikas Das/AP






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    A displaced Indian man carries his children at Sonupur village, around 15 kilometers from Gopalpur, Sunday.





    MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP/Getty Images






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    People try to remove an electric pole that fell down at the cyclone-hit Arjipalli village on the Bay of Bengal coast in Ganjam district, Orissa state, India, Sunday. Mass evacuations spared India the widespread deaths many had feared from a powerful cyclone that roared ashore over the weekend.





    Biswaranjan Rout/AP






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    An Indian woman carries empty water pots at the fisherman's colony in Gopalpur Sunday. Cyclone Phailin left a trail of destruction along India's east coast after a large evacuation helped minimize casualties.





    MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP/Getty Images






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    A municipal workers cuts an uprooted tree from Cyclone Phailin to clear a main highway in Berhampur, India, Sunday. The immense and powerful cyclone that lashed the Indian coast forced nearly a million people to evacuate from the coast.





    Bikas Das/AP






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    A woman rests near her damaged house after returning to the cyclone hit Podampeta village on the Bay of Bengal coast in Ganjam district, Orissa state, India, Sunday.





    Biswaranjan Rout/AP






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    Residents walk through floodwaters Sunday near where cyclone Phailin made landfall at Gopalpur one day earlier. Phailin left a trail of destruction along India's east coast and at least 14 people dead, officials say.





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    An Indian man rides a bicycle past an uprooted tree following the cyclone in Gopalpur on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013.





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Indian officials are reporting far fewer casualties than had been feared when the large and powerful cyclone Phailin struck the country's east coast Saturday. But the storm, which forced the evacuation of nearly one million people, has left flooding and destruction in its path.


One day after the storm struck the states of Orissa and Andhra Pradesh with winds of at least 125 mph, crews are working to clear fallen trees off roads and to open railway lines. And officials were voicing relief that the cyclone didn't approach the devastation brought by a 1999 "super-cyclone" that killed some 10,000 people in the same area.


Phailin has been blamed for 17 deaths, many caused by falling tree branches and collapsed houses. On Sunday, National Disaster Management Authority Marri Shashidhar Reddy said the mass evacuation had been effective. And he criticized international groups that had warned of more damage and stronger winds.


"After the exaggerated manner international agencies tried to portray it (the cyclone and disaster), the NDMA has done an excellent job," he said, according to Agence France-Presse.


The fact that this year's storm didn't exact such a staggering human toll as in 1999 is due to advances in India, according to Victor Mallet, the South Asia bureau chief for The Financial Times.


"Many more people have mobile phones. In the old days, it was just very hard to make contact with remote areas by landline, and now almost everybody has a mobile phone," Mallet tells NPR's Rachel Martin on today's Weekend Edition.



"So, I think that the better infrastructure plus the predictions that the storm was coming and the preparations that were made meant that the human damage, at least, was not as severe as it was back then," he says.


While India's chief weather agency has a website, it also used Facebook to raise alerts about the cyclone. Visits to the agency's site on Saturday found that its servers seemed to be overwhelmed — but the alerts were appearing on Facebook, making social media efforts even more vital.


The storm has left cars and trucks, trees and utility poles strewn across streets. Thousands of people who were displaced by the cyclone remain in temporary housing. The storm also destroyed hundreds of thousands of hectares of crops, officials say.


In Orissa, the state's Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik says that recovering from the strike will be a "big challenge," reports NDTV.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/13/233264356/cyclone-phailin-leaves-debris-and-relatively-few-casualties?ft=1&f=1004
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Monday, August 5, 2013

Nissan Terrano Coming to India on 20 August; Pitted against Ford EcoSport

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Saturday, August 03, 2013
Nissan's much anticipated compact SUV Terrano is all set to take the roads in India on 20 August. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/496530/20130803/nissan-terrano-india-launch-features-renault-duster.htm

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Transport Agency hears community voice for new bridge

  • Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Auckland Airport Auckland Airport to help sporting teams shoot for goldAuckland Airport Gold Medal Awards open today for applications and offer a total sponsorship fund of up to $30,000 for sports clubs, schools and Marae within the greater Auckland region.The Gold Medal Awards are available to sports groups, schools and Marae who wish to apply for assistance to support their sport or ...

  • IPCA report into Shane Leggs injury

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    New Zealand Police Northland Police response to the IPCA report into Shane Legg's injury.Northland Police accept the findings of the Independent Police Conduct Authority's (IPCA) report regarding the serious injury to Shane Legg following his arrest in April last year.About 9pm on April 24, 2012 Police signalled a car driven by Mr Legg to stop. The car had been clocked at ...

  • Cruise ship earnings could reach $150m in next 5 years

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Auckland Council Cruise ship earnings could reach $150m in next 5 years With the addition of Shed 10, Auckland is on track to significantly grow earnings from cruise ship visits in the next five years says Mayor Len Brown. "Last season, we welcomed 100 cruise ships to Auckland, bringing $116 million into the region's economy," Len Brown said. "This has been our ...

  • Kids get ready to vote

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Auckland Council 5 August 2013 Kids get ready to vote Auckland schools have three weeks left to give their pupils a voice at October's local body elections.Over 6800 children from 253 classes at 32 schools have already signed up to take part in Kids Voting 2013.With registration closing on Friday 23 August, teachers across the region are urged to make sure youngsters from years ...

  • Waitemata Police seek witnesses to Silverdale crash

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    New Zealand Police Waitemata Police seek witnesses to Silverdale crash At around 4.22pm on Thursday 1st August, Police attended the scene of a serious motor vehicle collision on the Hibiscus Coast Highway at Silverdale, opposite the BP Service Station. A 59 year-old male pedestrian was struck by two vehicles and critically injured. He passed away in Auckland Hospital from his injuries ...

  • Auckland house prices rise as listings jump - Barfoot

    TVNZ - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Spike in house prices nationwide Auckland house prices rose for a third month in July as listings and sales jumped, according to Barfoot & Thompson, the city's biggest realtor. The average sale price rose 0.7% to $654,379 last month, adding to a 0.8% gain in June, the firm said. The median price fell to $585,000 from $590,000. A shortage of new homes in New Zealand's biggest city ...

  • Body found in car south of Dunedin

    New Zealand Herald - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    A body has been found in a car at Taieri Ferry Road, near Waihola, this morning. Police say they are investigating to determine whether there are any suspicious circumstances. The body was found about ...

  • Milk scare Formula safety not guaranteed

    New Zealand Herald - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    The manufacturer of Karicare is meeting with the Ministry for Primary Industries to understand why it has expanded its advice to avoid all of their Stage 1 and Stage 2 formula products. Nutricia says it has not received any new information from the diary giant that could indicate the contamination has stretched further than the three batches they recalled yesterday. Late last night, the MPI ...

  • Death a reminder of driveway dangers

    NZ City - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    The death of a toddler in south Auckland is a reminder of just how dangerous driveways can be, Safekids New Zealand says.The 18-month-old boy was run over outside an address in Otahuhu on Saturday afternoon and died in Middlemore Hospital.Safekids New Zealand director Ann Weaver says there hasn't been a drop in the number of children killed in driveway accidents.She told NZ Newswire four to ...

  • Dog walker missing near Christchurch

    NZ City - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    An elderly woman walking her dog in hills near Christchurch has gone missing and police are concerned for her wellbeing.Helen Thirza Cummack, 80, is understood to have been walking her cocker spaniel dog when she went missing near the Summit Road between Sumner and Lyttelton.Her car was found in the car park at Rapanui Bush at around 7.30am on Monday.Police say she has medical conditions.A ...

  • Officer faulted in broken back arrest

    NZ City - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    A Northland man suffered a broken back during his arrest because a police officer had handcuffed him and unnecessarily forced him to climb a fence, an investigation has found.However, while the officer had failed in his duty of care, it wasn't bad enough for him to face criminal charges, Independent Police Conduct Authority chairman, former judge Sir David Carruthers, says.Shane Legg, 28, ...

  • Answers sought from Fonterra over scare

    NZ City - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Fonterra will need to answer questions about the timing of its botulism scare announcement, but only after markets are reassured, the trade minister ...

  • ComCom approves Auckland Airport profits

    NZ City - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    The regulator says Auckland Airport's anticipated profits are not excessive after it was compelled to disclose information to the Commerce ...

  • NZX companies raise $1.46b in July

    NZ City - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    NZX-listed issuers raised almost $1.46 billion last month, including Ebos Group's $149 million rights issue to fund its Symbion acquisition, the most in a month since December, though cash trading continued to slow after a flurry of activity at the start of the year.Listed companies raised some $954 million in primary equity and $504 million in dual and secondary equity across 17 events in ...

  • Young rugby player in coma after game

    New Zealand Herald - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    A young Dunedin rugby player is in a coma after collapsing during a game over the weekend. Kavanagh College halfback, Matthew Martin collapsed while putting the ball into a scrum in an under-18s game against Kings High School on Saturday. It's believed the 17-year-old sustained the injury in a tackle shortly before he lost consciousness. Kavanagh College deputy principal, Colin MacLeod, says ...

  • Fiji Airways plane makes emergency landing

    The Aucklander - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    A Fiji Airways aircraft made an emergency landing at Auckland International Airport this morning. The plane, a 737-700, suffered an "engine defect" after take-off en-route to Suva. Flights have been delayed at Auckland Airport as a result. The plane landed safely, with emergency services in attendance. Catherine Jehly said there was a "loud banging on the right side of ...

  • Suspicious fire at Point Chev school

    The Aucklander - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Police and fire inspectors were called to a suspicious primary school fire in Auckland over the weekend. Just before 4:00am Saturday morning emergency services responded to a fire at the Pt Chevalier Primary School. The fire had caused extensive damage to several buildings at the school. Nobody was injured and the cause of the fire appears to have been deliberately started. As a ...

  • $30000 Jetstar grant to Big Buddy

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Haystac Big Buddy mentoring extends its work in Wellington thanks to Jetstar $30,000 grant $30,000 awarded to Big Buddy by the Jetstar Flying Start Programme Grant will expand Big Buddy in the Wellington region where demand continues to grow Hundreds of fatherless boys in the capital city to benefit from mentoring Jetstar today announced Big Buddy as the airline's sixth Flying ...

  • Transport Agency hears community voice for new bridge

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    NZTA 5 August 2013 l NZ Transport Agency - Auckland Transport Agency hears community voice for new bridge Community feedback from both sides of Auckland's Manukau Harbour has made a significant impact on the next phase of the NZ Transport Agency's project to replace the Old Mangere Bridge.The Transport Agency has advertised tenders to design the new bridge and its Highway ...

  • St George?s Hospital announces redevelopment plans

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    St George's Hospital 2 August 2013 Christchurch's St George's Hospital announces redevelopment plans.St George's Hospital in Christchurch announced their plans for the redevelopment of hospital facilities today.Like many organisations in Christchurch, St George's suffered damage during the Canterbury earthquakes of 2010 and 2011.Working closely with Trengrove ...

  • WEL Networks to Deploy 25000 Smart Meters in Far North

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Wel Networks 5 August 2013WEL Networks to Deploy 25,000 Smart Meters in Far NorthWEL Networks (WEL) today announced that it has signed an agreement with Top Energy and SmartCo to extend its Smart Network to their electricity distribution network in New Zealand's upper North Island. WEL, a member of SmartCo, will deploy a SilverSpring RF mesh smart network on Top Energy's ...

  • Time to ?Unblock the Gridlock?

    Scoop - Sunday 4th August, 2013

    Christine Rose Time to 'Unblock the Gridlock' says Waitakere Council Candidate Christine RoseWest Auckland needs an urgent gridlock fix says newly declared Waitakere Ward Councillor candidate, Christine Rose. "Streets in the Henderson-Massey area are blocked to a standstill at times" she says. "Streets feeding into and including Lincoln Road, such as Central ...

  • Source: http://www.aucklandnews.net/index.php/sid/216239257/scat/0b75a2fd5e16e87e

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    Dos horas a cuatro bandas con 'Diablo III' en PS3

    Diablo III

    Llevamos algo m?s de un a?o con ?Diablo III? tanto en Mac como en PC, pero todav?a tenemos que esperar un poquito m?s para verlo en consolas, tal y como pas? con el primer ?Diablo? en PSone. En esta ocasi?n las agraciadas ser?n PS3 y Xbox 360, el pr?ximo 3 de septiembre en Espa?a.

    M?s adelante har? lo propio en PS4, pero por lo pronto llegar? a esas dos consolas dentro de un mes. Una de las principales caracter?sticas de esta versi?n para consolas ser? la posibilidad de jugar con tres colegas en modo local, por si preferimos este m?todo cl?sico en vez del juego online, y es precisamente lo que vamos a ver ahora al detalle gracias a la gente de Penny Arcade.

    Dos horas de juego a cuatro bandas, ni m?s ni menos. Toda una locura que nos servir? para comprobar qu? cambios ha experimentado el juego multijugador de ?Diablo III? trasladado al modo local. Como tener que pausar el juego cuando un usuario abre el inventario, entre otras cosas.

    Source: http://feeds.weblogssl.com/~r/vidaextra/~3/kzrocbDRt3Q/dos-horas-a-cuatro-bandas-con-diablo-iii-en-ps3

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    Sunday, August 4, 2013

    Researchers demo exploits that bypass Windows 8 Secure Boot

    The Windows 8 Secure Boot mechanism can be bypassed on PCs from certain manufacturers because of oversights in how those vendors implemented the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) specification, according to a team of security researchers.

    The researchers Andrew Furtak, Oleksandr Bazhaniuk and Yuriy Bulygin demonstrated Wednesday at the Black Hat USA security conference in Las Vegas two attacks that bypassed Secure Boot in order to install a UEFI bootkit -- boot rootkit -- on affected computers.

    [ InfoWorld's expert contributors show you how to secure your Web browsers in the "Web Browser Security Deep Dive" PDF guide. Download it today! | Stay up to date on the latest security developments with InfoWorld's Security Adviser blog and Security Central newsletter. ]

    Secure Boot is a feature of the UEFI specification that only allows software components with trusted digital signatures to be loaded during the boot sequence. It was designed specifically to prevent malware like bootkits from compromising the boot process.

    According to the researchers, the exploits demonstrated at Black Hat are possible not because of vulnerabilities in Secure Boot itself, but because of UEFI implementation errors made by platform vendors.

    The first exploit works because certain vendors do not properly protect their firmware, allowing an attacker to modify the code responsible for enforcing Secure Boot, said Bulygin who works at McAfee.

    The exploit is designed to modify the platform key -- the root key at the core of all Secure Boot signature checks -- but in order to work it needs to be executed in kernel mode, the most privileged part of the operating system.

    This somewhat limits the attack because a remote attacker would first have to find a way to execute code in kernel mode on the targeted computer.

    The researchers demonstrated their kernel-mode exploit on an Asus VivoBook Q200E laptop, but some Asus desktop motherboards are also affected according to Bulygin.

    Asus released BIOS updates for some motherboards, but not for the VivoBook laptop, the researcher said. He believes that more VivoBook models might be vulnerable.

    Asus did not respond to a request for comment sent Thursday.

    The second exploit demonstrated by the researchers can run in user mode, which means that an attacker would only need to gain code execution rights on the system by exploiting a vulnerability in a regular application like Java, Adobe Flash, Microsoft Office or others.

    The researchers declined to reveal any technical details about the second exploit or to name the vendors whose products are affected by it because the targeted vulnerability was discovered recently.

    The issue that makes the kernel-mode exploit possible was discovered and reported to the affected platform vendors over a year ago, Bulygin said. At some point, after enough time has passed, the public needs to know about it, he said.

    Several other issues that can be used to bypass Secure Boot have also been identified and their disclosure is being coordinated with Microsoft and the UEFI Forum, the industry standard body that manages the UEFI specification, Bulygin said.

    "Microsoft is working with partners to help ensure that secure boot delivers a great security experience for our customers," Microsoft said Thursday in an emailed statement.

    Despite these vendor implementation problems, Secure Boot is still a huge step forward, Bulygin said. To install bootkits now, attackers first need to find a vulnerability that would allow them to bypass Secure Boot, while on legacy platforms there was nothing to stop them, he said.

    Source: http://images.infoworld.com/d/security/researchers-demo-exploits-bypass-windows-8-secure-boot-223980?source=rss_

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    HBCUs work to improve NCAA academic guideline scores

    When Donovan Rose took over as Hampton University's football coach in 2009, he aimed to restore the program to its place atop the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and into the national postseason discussion.

    Rose quickly learned that he had an equally daunting task: keeping the Pirates compliant with NCAA measures that tracked athletes' academic eligibility and retention.

    After four years of fits and starts, of penalties that included scholarship reductions, reduced practice time and postseason ineligibility, Rose believes that he finally has a handle on the team's classroom commitment.

    ?I had to clean up, literally,? Rose said. ?I had to get rid of a lot of players and some coaches. I had to be smart. I had to hire coaches not just with an impressive r?sum?. I had to hire coaches who were going to be loyal, guys I could trust who felt like they had a vested interest in the program. The players see that. They see coaches who care about them. When I first started, we had coaches who said, ?I'm not going to baby-sit these kids.' I said, ?Yes you are.' Because they need us.?

    Hampton football is back in the NCAA's good graces and eligible for postseason, due to a one-year improvement that moved the program above the penalty threshold. But Rose knows that he and the school must remain vigilant.

    Despite steady progress overall on the APR front, Historically Black Colleges and Universities score consistently lower and are disproportionately penalized. Seventy-eight percent of Division I teams that scored below 900 on the APR, the cutoff for postseason eligibility, were from HBCUs, in the most recent data released earlier this summer.

    Four of the 10 men's basketball teams in the Southwestern Athletic Conference are ineligible for the 2014 NCAA tournament due to poor performances. Waiver requests are pending.


    ?It's been stated over and over and over that one of the major reasons HBCUs are having a difficult time with the APR is the lack of funding,? Norfolk State athletic director Marty Miller said. ?Many of the institutions just don't have the resources needed to provide all of the academic support and other expenses that are required to stay on top of these students, academically.

    ?You need a certain number of academic coordinators, tutors,? Miller said. ?You need the appropriate type of study-hall environment. That's been cited over and over, that's the primary reason that most of them don't have the resources to be able to do all that's necessary. You run into difficulties, because if you don't have the appropriate staff, things can fall through the cracks.?

    Norfolk State's men's and women's track teams and women's volleyball squad were penalized for the coming school year because of poor APR scores. The men's indoor team scored 866 and the outdoor team scored 867, resulting in postseason bans and reduction in practice time. The women's teams have reduced practice time after the indoor track team scored 876 and the outdoor track team 873. It was the first time either team had drawn penalties.

    Miller cited a couple of factors for the teams' penalties: Several athletes left the program, causing the teams to lose points; the graduation rate fell below 50 percent. Had the graduation rate been above 50 percent, even with a low APR score, the Spartans would have avoided the penalty.

    ?It doesn't take a large number of individuals to leave your program or not be eligible, and that adds up very quickly,? Miller said. ?Overall, our graduation rates have continued to climb in athletics. That's a reflection of the purpose of the APR, to get more students to graduate, and that's what we've been doing. It just so happens that the track numbers were poor last time.?

    The APR is one of the NCAA's more arcane statistics, designed to measure both retention and eligibility. A perfect score is 1,000 ? all scholarship athletes remain in school, all are eligible ? and most athletic teams fall somewhere between 900 and 1,000. A score of 925 equates to roughly a 50-percent graduation rate.

    Under the NCAA formula, every athlete receiving scholarship aid gets one point for staying in school and one point for remaining eligible. Here's a sample APR calculation: Say a Football Championship Subdivision program has the maximum 63 players on scholarship. Fifty-eight players stay in school and are eligible. Two stay in school, but are academically ineligible. Three drop out, ineligible. That's 118 total points out of the maximum of 126. Divide 118 by 126 and multiply by 1,000. The team's score is 936.

    Scores are calculated on one-, two-, and four-year averages. The NCAA will require increased scores in the coming years in order for teams to be eligible for postseason: a 900 four-year average or a 930 two-year average in 2013 and '14. In 2015, teams must earn a 930 four-year APR or a 940 two-year average.

    ?I think that we're moving in the right direction, and that's based on the overall numbers for our institutions,? MEAC commissioner Dennis Thomas said. ?There's been a commitment on the part of presidents and chancellors to activate a comprehensive program to continue to improve our APR and graduation rates.?

    Thomas, who has served on numerous NCAA committees through the years, including as chair of the powerful Committee on Infractions, says that the governing body is sensitive to the challenges faced by HBCUs and other Division I programs with small budgets.

    He pointed out that the NCAA has set aside money to provide funds for lower-resource programs struggling with APR compliance. Coppin State received approximately $900,000 over a three-year period, he said, while Norfolk State received $330,000 for academic support units.

    The NCAA also routinely grants waivers and exceptions for HBCUs and other lower-resource programs if it appears that they're making progress academically in measures beyond the APR.

    Source: http://www.dailypress.com/sports/dp-spt-apr-hampton-nsu-hbcu-20130803,0,7804634.story?track=rss

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    Double Fine's Dropchord entrances iOS, Android and Ouya users

    Double Fine's rave simulator rhythm-driven Dropchord launched for iOS, Android and the Ouya this week for $3.

    Dropchord assigns ends of a line to each of a player's fingers and tasks them with gathering notes and dodging scratches. The game focuses on getting the highest score possible and its leaderboards encourage competitive play with friends. Dropchord's neon visuals pulse to the beat of its electronic soundtrack and switch styles with each song.

    The game's Standard Mode moves players through stages while gradually adding new gameplay mechanics, while a Full Mix Mode supplies an endless session that gradually becomes more difficult.

    Dropchord previously launched on PC and Mac for the hands-oriented Leap Motion.Double Fine's Dropchord entrances iOS, Android and Ouya users originally appeared on Joystiq on Sat, 03 Aug 2013 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Source: http://www.evilavatar.com/forums/showthread.php?t=195969&goto=newpost

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