Sunday, November 27, 2011

Arabs give Syria one day to agree monitors or face sanctions (Reuters)

CAIRO (Reuters) ? The Arab League gave Syria one day to sign a protocol allowing monitors into the country or face sanctions over its crackdown on protests including halting flights and suspending transactions with the central bank.

Arab foreign ministers who met in Cairo on Thursday said unless Syria agreed to let the monitors in to assess progress of an Arab League plan to end eight months of bloodshed, officials would consider imposing sanctions on Saturday.

Under a November 2 Arab League initiative, Syria agreed to withdraw troops from urban centers, release political prisoners, start a dialogue with the opposition and allow monitors and international media into the country.

Since then hundreds of people, civilians, security forces and army deserters, have been killed as the unrest which the United Nations says has killed 3,500 people since March continued unabated.

The violence prompted former ally Turkey to bluntly tell President Bashar al-Assad to step down and led France to propose "humanitarian corridors" in Syria to help transport medicines or other supplies to civilians in need.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said he would discuss the idea with the Arab League but a source at the 22-member body said the proposal was not brought up at the Cairo meeting.

"In the case that Syria does not sign the protocol ... or that it later violates the commitments that it entails, and does not stop the killing or does not release the detainees ... (Arab League officials) will meet on Saturday to consider sanctions on Syria," the Arab ministers said in a statement.

They said possible sanctions, which were not intended to affect ordinary Syrians, included suspending flights to Syria, stopping dealings with the central bank, freezing Syrian government bank accounts and halting financial dealings with Syria.

They could also decided to stop commercial trade with the Syrian government "with the exception of strategic commodities so as not to impact the Syrian people," the statement said.

Syria's economy is already reeling from the eight months of unrest, aggravated by U.S. and European sanctions on oil exports and several state businesses.

"HUMANITARIAN CORRIDORS"

After months in which the international community has seemed determined to avoid direct entanglement in a core Middle East country, the diplomatic consensus seems to be changing.

The Arab League suspended Syria's membership two weeks ago, while this week the prime minister of regional heavyweight Turkey - a NATO member with the military wherewithal to mount a cross-border operation - told Assad to quit and said he should look at what happened to fallen dictators such as Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini and Libya's deposed leader Muammar Gaddafi.

France became the first major power to seek international intervention in Syria when it called for "humanitarian corridors" in Syria to alleviate civilian suffering.

A Western diplomatic source said the French plan, with or without approval from Damascus, could link Syrian civilian centers to frontiers such as Turkey and Lebanon, to the Mediterranean coast or to an airport.

Its aim would enable the transport of humanitarian supplies or medicines to a population that is suffering, the source said.

Juppe insisted the plan fell short of a military intervention, but acknowledged that humanitarian convoys would need armed protection.

"There are two possible ways: That the international community, Arab League and the United Nations can get the regime to allow these humanitarian corridors," he told French radio on Thursday. "But if that isn't the case we'd have to look at other solutions ... with international observers."

Asked if humanitarian convoys would need military protection, he said: "Of course... by international observers, but there is no question of military intervention in Syria."

He added that he had spoken to partners at the United Nations and U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, and would speak later on Thursday to the Arab League. On Wednesday Juppe also said the exiled opposition Syrian National Council was a legitimate group that France sought to work with.

In a sign of Paris' growing frustration at events on the ground, Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said France was particularly concerned with what was happening in the city of Homs, which has become a center of resistance against Assad.

"Information from several sources tells us that the situation in Homs is particularly worrying. It would appear to be under siege today, deprived of basic materials and experiencing a brutal repression," he said.

"A way must be found so that this city is supplied with humanitarian aid," he added.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based group, said at least 23 people were killed in Syria on Thursday, including six civilians in the city of Homs.

Eleven military and security personnel were killed by army deserters in the city of Houla, the Observatory said. Alongside the mainly peaceful protests, armed insurgents have increasingly attacked military targets in recent weeks.

State media have reported the funerals of 34 soldiers and police in the last four days. Since the outbreak of the uprising officials have blamed armed groups for the violence and say 1,100 members of the security forces have been killed.

"MOST DANGEROUS PHASE"

Activists and a resident said Syrian troops in tanks fired on hideouts of army deserters near the central town of Rastan on Thursday, two months after the authorities said they had regained control of the region.

"The Syrian crisis may or may not have entered its final phase, but it undoubtedly has entered its most dangerous one to date," the International Crisis Group said on Thursday.

"Many in Syria and abroad are now banking on the regime's imminent collapse and wagering that all then will be for the better. That is a luxury and optimism they cannot afford."

Washington repeated an appeal on Wednesday for U.S. citizens to leave Syria: "The U.S. Embassy continues to urge U.S. citizens in Syria to depart immediately while commercial transportation is available," the embassy said on its website.

The U.S. navy said the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush arrived this week in the Mediterranean, en route to the United States.

"It is probably routine movement," said a Western diplomat in the region. "But it is going to put psychological pressure on the regime, and the Americans don't mind that."

NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said allies were watching the situation in Syria with great concern, but reiterated that the alliance had no intention to intervene in Syria as it had done in Libya.

"There's been no request and there is no specific discussion about these proposals," she said in response to Juppe's proposal.

She said the situation in Syria could not be compared with Libya, where NATO had a clear United Nations mandate for intervention and support from the Arab League.

Assad, 46, seems prepared to fight it out, playing on fears of a sectarian war if Syria's complex ethno-sectarian mosaic shatters and relying on support of senior officials and the military to suppress the protests, inspired by Arab uprisings which toppled the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen.

However many experts say Assad, who can depend mainly on the loyalty of two elite Alawite units, cannot maintain current military operations without cracks emerging in the armed forces.

(Additional reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis in Amman, Marwa Awad and Ayman Samir in Cairo, John Irish in Paris, David Brunnstrom, Robin Emmot and Justyna Pawlak in Brussels; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Peter Graff and Louise Ireland)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/ts_nm/us_syria

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

New Zealand polls open with premier riding high (AP)

WELLINGTON, New Zealand ? New Zealand voters are going to the polls Saturday in an election in which Prime Minister John Key enters with overwhelming popularity and a historic chance to win an outright majority for his center-right party.

Polling stations opened across the country at 9 a.m. local time and will remain open through 7 p.m. A winner is expected to emerge by 10 p.m.

If opinion polls hold, Key's National Party would be the first party to secure a majority on its own since the country abolished a winner-take-all voting system and replaced it in 1996 with a proportional one that generally results in a more fractured parliament.

Anything short of a majority, however, and Key will need to find political partners to form a stable government.

What's not in doubt is Key's personal popularity ? despite a scandal in recent days over a recorded conversation. After three years in power, polls show the former currency trader is far more popular than his main opponent, Labour party leader Phil Goff. Key has earned the nickname "Teflon John" for the way that nothing politically damaging seems to stick to him.

"He's a clever strategist and a good manager," said Jennifer Lees-Marshment, a political studies lecturer at the University of Auckland.

She said Key has been adept at knowing when to forge ahead with policies and when to pull back. His common touch was reassuring to people when a deadly earthquake struck Christchurch in February, she said, and enabled him to share in their excitement in October when the country's national All Blacks team won the Rugby World Cup.

Key's campaign has focused primarily on the economy. He's promising to bring the country back into surplus and begin paying down the national debt within three years. Part of his plan to achieve that is to sell minority stakes in four government-owned energy companies and in Air New Zealand.

That's where the center-left Labour party has found its biggest point of difference. Goff is promising not to sell anything and to raise money by other means, including by introducing a capital gains tax and by raising the age at which people get government pensions by two years to 67.

On the campaign trail, however, those issues got crowded out by something that became known as the teapot tape saga.

Key had invited media along to an Auckland cafe where he was meeting a political ally. After a photo opportunity, Key asked the media to leave in order to talk privately with the man.

However, one cameraman left a recording device running in a cloth pouch. Key complained to the police, saying it was an illegal recording of a private conversation. But the cameraman maintained that he'd taped the conversation inadvertently in the confusion of the media scrum, and besides, it wasn't a private setting anyway.

The tape has never been publicly aired, although opponents, who may have been leaked transcripts, claim the prime minister makes rude and embarrassing political comments. Three days before the election, police began serving search warrants on four media outlets, seeking the tape and related material.

Lees-Marshment said she thinks the saga had a curious effect. At first, she said, people thought Key might have something to hide. But then they tired of the attention given to the story, she said, and may have begun feeling more sympathetic toward Key.

"It became a story about the story," she said. "The voters got put off by it."

The saga certainly didn't seem to do much to boost the campaign of Goff, who was effectively shut out of any coverage for a few days. Labour's lackluster polling, about 28 percent, has pundits speculating Goff will be replaced as leader of the party within days of the election.

But the saga did seem to boost the fortunes of Winston Peters, who leads the small New Zealand First party. Peters grabbed the headlines with pointed criticism of Key over the affair and his poll numbers shot up.

Another winner in the election is likely to be the Green party, which is polling about 12 percent, putting it on target for its best ever showing.

Voters will also decide whether to keep their electoral system, in which parties get a proportion of parliamentary seats based on the proportion of the votes they receive. Some want to return to a winner-takes-all format, although polls indicate most favor sticking with their current system.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_as/as_new_zealand_election

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Highlights: EU's Barroso and Rehn on new economic governance (Reuters)

BRUSSELS (Reuters) ? The European Commission proposed on Wednesday new, intrusive laws to make sure budgets of euro zone countries do not break EU rules and that their borrowing falls, which could lead to joint debt issuance in the future.

Following are comments from the Commission on its plans:

EUROPEAN COMMISSION PRESIDENT JOSE MANUEL BARROSO

ON ROLE OF EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK:

"Reality is of course the teacher, but in the European Union we are a community based on the rule of law. We cannot go against the rules of law and our own principles. And the ECB has to act in a framework of the treaty.

"As you know, we fully respect the independence of the ECB. We believe it is critically important for the credibility not only of the ECB, but also of the euro and the euro area, and we are confident the ECB will take all the necessary measures to guarantee, of course, not only price stability but also financial stability. As they have been doing."

ON JOINTLY ISSUED EURO BONDS:

"We are launching the debate. At this moment, the Commission has not yet decided on the preferred approach. We believe it is better to put those different options, in what I believe is a very objective way, based on sound analysis, to (a) public consultation, including of course all our member states, but also the citizens of Europe, the experts (and) the different elements of our civil society."

ON INTENTION OF JOINTLY ISSUED BONDS:

"Let me repeat what I have said a number of times -- stability bonds will not solve our immediate problems and cannot replace the reforms that are needed in countries currently under pressure.

"But it is also important to show to public opinion and to international investors that we are serious about stronger governance in the euro area, both in discipline and in convergence, and stability bonds are exactly an example of that.

"An example of reinforced governance, of a strong will to live together in the euro area, and a good example of discipline and convergence."

ASKED IF THE EURO BOND PAPER GOES AGAINST THE WISHES OF GERMANY:

"I think that to consider this against any government or any member state, that of course is completely inappropriate.

"And it would be absolutely completely inappropriate to consider a debate, a serious debate, on very important issues as something against a specific member state... and the most important economy.

"So certainly our intention is not to go against anybody and certainly not against the member state that is the biggest economy in the euro area and in the European Union."

ON OPPOSITION TO JOINT BONDS IN GERMANY:

"I absolutely don't agree, that there is absolute opposition of any country. On the contrary, in my contacts I get the exactly the opposite impression, that the idea of having stability bonds is making its way.

"If you look at those comments made by people from Germany, they are in fact most of all about the timing of the options we are now putting (forward)."

ON BUDGET PROPOSALS:

"Under the new rules, the Commission will have greater surveillance powers, so that we do not face again the situation where failing in one country endangers the stability of the euro area as a whole.

"National budgets will of course be prepared by governments and voted on by national parliaments. Parliaments will of course have the final say.

"The difference with the current system is that the Commission will have the right to issue an opinion and may request changes. National parliaments will for the first time have the full information on all other countries in the euro area."

EU ECONOMIC AND MONETARY AFFAIRS COMMISSIONER OLLI REHN ON GENERAL PROPOSALS ON FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:

"It suggests that the Commission will have the right to propose to the council to recommend that a member state to request financial assistance. The proposal would be based on the commission's analysis in line with... the European Central Bank."

ON SITUATION IN SPAIN:

"As regards the policies for fiscal consolidation and structural reform of Spain... they are on track. Spain has taken very significant decisions in the field of fiscal consolidation, especially in the past year.

"...There is a very clear need to reinforce work in the field of structural reforms, not least in the labor market."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/bs_nm/us_eurozone_budgets_highlights

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Doom 3 source code available now, gory customizations welcomed

Doom for everyone. It's not a particularly festive message, but as promised earlier this month, the Doom 3 source code is now out on a general public license. Programming types can meddle with the game's inner workings as wintery temperatures force them to huddle close to the warm hum of excessive gaming rigs. Doom dad John Carmack announced the release to his horde of Twitter followers, while doffing his cap to Timothee Besset, who helped sidestep some shadow rendering license issues that had dogged an earlier release. Peer into the source code at the link below, and know the true face of despair Doom.

Doom 3 source code available now, gory customizations welcomed originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Nov 2011 06:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Verge  |  sourceGithub, @id_aa_carmack (Twitter)  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/IGalMQEkY9g/

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Mick Foley leaves NYC in stitches after Survivor Series

NEW YORK - After 17,000-plus cleared out of Madison Square Garden following Sunday night?s Survivor Series, a select portion of the WWE Universe headed a few blocks south of The World?s Most Famous Arena to the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre to have a few laughs before the night ended.?

However, the headliner at the club for this intimate midnight show was no ordinary comedian. On this night, the top-billed performer was former three-time WWE Champion Mick Foley. The Hardcore Legend had the crowd in stitches after John Cena and The Rock electrified them shortly before.

?The Rock, he was getting the adulation of 17,000,? Foley jokingly said afterward. ?I didn?t think it was too much to ask that I get 1/100th of that type of adulation here at the theatre.?

The show came about after Foley met UCBW, a comedy troupe that parodies the colorful world of sports-entertainment. With the 25th anniversary of Survivor Series blocks away, it was the perfect opportunity to try out a post-pay-per-view comedy show.

Though he was excited for his performance, the events happening just north of the UCB Theatre caused Foley to reflect on his career for a brief moment. The Great One?s return to the ring meant one of The Hardcore Legend?s fondest moments didn?t hold as much meaning anymore.

?A little part of me was sad because up until tonight, [The Rock?s] last match ever was with me, in The Garden, seven years ago,? Foley recalled. ?Now it?s not.?

Even after Foley was on the receiving end of a Rock Bottom from his former tag team partner during his surprise return to WWE on RAW GETS ROCKED, The Hardcore Legend has no ill will toward The People?s Champion. Looking back, he?s a little glad The Brahma Bull put an end to John Cena?s ?This Is Your Life!?

?I had four or five more guests lined up. It was just dying a loud, painful death and The Rock came out and put it out of its misery,? he joked.

Source: http://www.wwe.com/inside/overtheropes/mick-foley-nyc-comedy-show

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

J. Lo?s Dangerous Boy Toy

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No doubt, Jennifer Lopez, 42, enjoys basking in a hot guy?s attention again. But while it?s fun, it could be dangerous as well. ?He wants to be rich and famous,? snipes an insider to In Touch about her new guy, Casper Smart, 24. ?He?s a smooth talker and he obviously thinks J. Lo will be his meal ticket.? Compounding the problem, In Touch has learned Casper could soon be cooling his heels behind bars. He has a January court date to face charges for recklessly drag-racing a friend down an LA freeway last winter. And it doesn?t bode well that in 2006, he was found guilty for driving without a license. As a mom already responsible for 3-year-old twins Emme and Max, it looks like Jennifer might now have another child on her hands.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/InTouchWeekly/~3/pVIfyoTyMx0/j_los_dangerous_boy_toy.php

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Galaxy Nexus 'volume bug' on EDGE networks captured on video

Read our Galaxy Nexus Review!

Android Central

We've received several tips about a possible bug on the new Samsung Galaxy Nexus (check our review) which results in the phone schizophrenically switching between volume modes, or randomly muting itself. During the course of our review we didn't notice this at all, but today we received a tip suggesting it could have something to do with the EDGE (2G) radio. As such, we set our Nexus to 2G-only mode, and sure enough, when switching between EDGE and 3G or EDGE and Wifi, we found that our unit fell victim to the glitch, too.

Right now we're guessing that something about the way the EDGE radio works is interfering with the volume rocker, causing the down volume key to be triggered repeatedly. There've also been suggestions that only 900MHz EDGE networks are affected, but we haven't been able to confirm this.

In any case, we've got the whole thing captured on video. Hit the jump if you want to take a look.

Thanks to Andrew and everyone who sent this in!

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/bT6c_Twu56A/story01.htm

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Khmer Rouge No. 2 gives insight to his role in Cambodia's 'killing fields'

Nuon Chea, the deputy leader of the Khmer Rouge regime blamed for 1.7 million deaths in Cambodia's 'killing fields' told the tribunal today that he carried out its policies to protect the country.

The second-in-command of Cambodia?s brutal Khmer Rouge regime told a war crimes tribunal today that he was a patriot who fought to free his country from colonialism and foreign invasion, giving insight to his role in the death of 1.7 million people in the 1970s.

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In Nuon Chea's first public comments since his trial opened at the UN-backed court on Monday, the regime?s chief ideologue pinned most of the country?s problems on neighboring Vietnam.

?I had to leave my family behind to liberate my motherland from colonialism and aggression and oppression by the thieves who wish to steal our land and wipe Cambodia off the face of the earth,? Nuon Chea told the court.

?We wanted to free Cambodia from being a servant of other countries and we wanted to build Cambodia as a society that is clean and independent without any killing of people or genocide.?

The frail octogenarian, who is accused of involvement in the deaths of at least 1.7 million people during the Khmer Rouge?s 1975-79 rule, addressed his hour-long speech to ?my beloved Cambodian people.?

Nuon Chea is being tried alongside Khieu Samphan, the former Khmer Rouge head of state, and ex-foreign minister Ieng Sary. The three octogenarians face a raft of charges, including genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. A fourth defendant, Ieng Thirith, the former minister of social affairs, has been ruled unfit to stand trial.

Nuon Chea?s address came after prosecutors gave a grisly and vividly detailed summary of Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, describing it as ?a massive slave camp.? In his opening statements today, international co-prosecutor Andrew Cayley told the court not be tempted by feelings of sympathy for the old men who had ?murdered, tortured, and terrorized? their own people.

After toppling a US-based regime on April 17, 1975, the Khmer Rouge ? led by ?Brother No 1? Pol Pot ? forcibly evacuated the capital Phnom Penh and put Cambodians to work in vast rural labor communes.

Hundreds of thousands died from overwork, starvation, and summary execution as the regime embarked on a series of brutal internal purges. The Khmer Rouge were eventually toppled by a Vietnamese invasion in early 1979.

During his remarks, Chea repeatedly accused Vietnam of plotting to ?swallow? Cambodia. He also turned his blame on the protracted US bombing of eastern Cambodia in the early 1970s, saying Washington tried to ?suppress the movement of struggle of the Indochinese people.?

Anne Heindel, a legal adviser at the Documentation Center of Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities, says Nuon Chea?s comments offered a fascinating insight into the mind of the aged ideologue. ?In his view he was defending the nation from the Vietnamese? This is the way he sees the world.?

Though there was a glaring lack of reference to the human suffering brought on by his regime?s policies, Ms. Heindel says it was vital the frail leader broke his silence and addressed survivors in person. ?It?s a tremendously important part of the process,? she says.

The trial continues tomorrow with opening statements from defence lawyers. The first section of the trial, focusing on the establishment of the Khmer Rouge regime and the forced evacuation of Phnom Penh, begins next month.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vdCIl8lCeQM/Khmer-Rouge-No.-2-gives-insight-to-his-role-in-Cambodia-s-killing-fields

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Kodak EasyShare Touch M5370


The Kodak EasyShare Touch M5370 ($159.95 direct) is a tough camera to peg. Its image quality is pretty good, but it doesn't do well in low light, and its performance is downright sluggish. The 16-megapixel pocket camera is one of the most affordable touch-based shooters on the market, but it's priced just a little too high to qualify as a budget camera. It's got a dedicated Easyshare button for quick, simple photo sharing, but its major selling point is a touch-screen interface which is, frankly, a hindrance to its usability. Our Editors' Choice mid-range compact camera, the Canon PowerShot Elph 310 HS ($259.99, 4 stars), while more expensive, rights a lot of what's wrong with the M5370.

Design and Features
Available in blue or silver, the 4.8-ounce M5370 is quite compact, measuring just 2.3 by 3.9 by 0.8 inches. This puts it in the same class as one of Canon's more pocketable shooters, the 2.2 by 3.7 by 0.8-inch, 4.8-ounce PowerShot Elph 100 HS ($199.99, 3.5 stars). The Kodak's 5x zoom lens covers a 28-140mm (35mm equivalent) field of view, which gives it a longer reach than the 100 HS, but if you're willing to give up the touch input you can opt for the 8x-equipped General Electric E1480W ($169.99, 3 stars) for just $10 more.

The camera's 3-inch LCD is its main rear feature and control interface. Despite the large size, the resolution is only 230,000 dots, which results in some fuzziness when reviewing and framing images. This is the same resolution found on the 2.7-inch screen our budget Editors' Choice, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX3 ($129.99, 4 stars). The lack of sharpness is compounded by the darkening of the top and bottom of the display, where the touch-based menu options reside. You can hide these options by tapping on the screen, which will provide you with an unobstructed view of your frame, however.

The touch screen itself is frustrating. It supports swiping left and right to scroll through menu options and images, but the response is rather slow. This can lead you to wonder if the screen has registered your input. Features that need to be activated quickly to be useful, such as exposure compensation, can only be activated by touch?which costs critical time when shooting. This won't be a big deal if you leave the camera in Automatic mode, but if you're the type who wants to control over your photography, the M5370 presents a less-than-optimal user experience. The interface on Sony's iteration of the touch camera, the Cyber-shot DSC-T110 ($219.99, 4 stars), provides a much nicer user experience.

One quirk I ran into when testing the camera was the color setting. When the camera is set to automatic mode, colors were bright and crisp. But changing it to Program Mode, which I used to test the camera, resulted in images that were dull and lacking color. It seems that, by default, the camera uses a Basic Color setting in Program Mode, as opposed to the more natural Full Color setting. Normal colors are a menu setting away, but without that knowledge you'll be confused as to why photos look dull and bleak once the camera is no longer set to auto.

You do get a few physical controls. There's an On/Off button, ashutter release, a zoom rocker, and a movie record button on the top of the camera, and the picture playback and Share button are located on the rear. Pressing the Share button brings up a thumbnail display of your photos, and you can select which ones you'd like to select for sharing via email and services like Twitter and Facebook. When you plug the camera into your computer, the EasyShare software automatically launches and shares your images.

Performance and ConclusionsKodak EasyShare Touch M5370 Benchmark Tests
No speed demon, the M5370 requires a full 4.6 seconds to start up and take a shot, requires you to wait 2.4 seconds between photos, and the shutter lag?the time between pressing the shutter and the camera taking the photo?is 0.6 second. ?To compare, the $170 GE 1480W was slower to recycle between shots, requiring 2.9 seconds to do so, but started up in 2.5 seconds and managed a 0.4-second shutter lag.

In terms of image sharpness, the camera did okay, recording 1,713 lines per picture height of resolution, just shy of the 1,800-line mark that denotes a sharp image in Imatest. The camera actually edged out the Canon PowerShot 100 HS here, which only managed 1,692 lines. Our Editors' Choice Canon 310 HS, a much more expensive camera, managed 1,857 lines. The M5370 doesn't excel in low light. The camera was able to keep image noise below 1.5 percent (the acceptability threshold) through ISO 400. It did manage to better the GE 1480W in this regard?that camera only performed well at ?ISO 100. The 100 HS does a better job here as well, keeping noise at acceptable levels through ISO 1600.

Even though the M5370 shoots video in 720p format, the quality is not that great. Details are a bit fuzzy, and the optical zoom is disabled during recording. There is a digital zoom available, but using it turns the footage into a fuzzy mess very quickly. Video is saved in MP4 format so you can upload it to the Web with ease. The camera doesn't have an HDMI port, so you'll need to deliver the video to your HDTV via some other means. Kodak opted to support only microSD and microSDHC memory cards in this camera, which are much smaller than standard SD cards, but also more expensive. Most laptops don't support these cards without the use of an adapter, so you may find yourself plugging the camera in via USB to offload photos. The M5370 does have a standard micro USB port for data transfer and battery charging. You'll need to charge the battery in the camera, as there is no dedicated charger included.

I found using the Kodak EasyShare M5370 to be an exercise in frustration. The camera is very uneven?even though it produces passable images, it doesn't perform that well in low light. It takes a long time to start up and shoot, and its touch screen is sometimes unresponsive. You'd be better served spending a bit more money on the Canon PowerShot 100 HS, which is comparable in image quality, starts faster, and performs much better in low light. If you're sold on a touch camera, the Sony Cyber-shot T110 gives you a nicer interface, but it is priced $60 higher. Our Editors' Choice in this midrange compact category, the Canon PowerShot 310 HS, is priced a full hundred dollars more than the Kodak, and predictably bests it in every regard. If you're looking for a good camera, and are happy to avoid the poorly implemented touch-screen interface, you may want to give our Editors' Choice for budget compacts, the $130 Panasonic Lumix DMC-S3. The S3 does sacrifice some zoom range and sharpness, but performs well in low light and records better-looking video. If zoom is a priority, the General Electric E1480W is only $10 more than the M5370 and gives you an 8x lens and records sharp images, but is troubled by noise in low light.

More Digital Camera reviews:
??? Kodak EasyShare Touch M5370
??? Canon PowerShot S100
??? Fujifilm Finepix F600EXR
??? Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ150
??? Pentax Q
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/LuRMtFEwJ1o/0,2817,2396425,00.asp

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Week 12 college football Top 25 roundup

Sporting News gets you up to speed with the results of Week 12's Top 25 games. After you watch all the action, enter your Top 25 in our Fan Poll.

Stay on top of all the action with our live scoreboard.

No. 20 Michigan 45, No. 17 Nebraska 17 | recap | box score

ANN ARBOR, Mich.?It?s one of the iron-clad unwritten rules of college football: Average teams don?t travel well.

And Nebraska?certainly by Big Ten standards?is little more than an average team.

The 17th-ranked Huskers (8-3, 4-3) were mauled at No. 20 Michigan. Both teams were eliminated from the Legends Division race before the game even ended?way to spoil a good time, Michigan State?but the Wolverines (9-2, 5-2) walked off the field still clinging to their good name, not to mention at-large BCS hopes.

Nebraska? Nothing but misery and bewilderment.

Huskers coach Bo Pelini, in his fourth season, already has 15 losses. That?s not getting it done.

But the program?s recent road history is what?s most revealing. Since winning at No. 2 Washington in 1997, the highest-ranked team Nebraska has beaten outside of Lincoln was No. 6 Tennessee at the 2000 Fiesta Bowl.

But as a true road team? We?re not making this up: The Huskers? ?best? win since 1997 came last weekend at No. 12 Penn State.

The Huskers were dominated by Michigan nearly from the outset. They were outgained (418-261) and outpained (it?s a wonder Taylor Martinez is still standing).

They were severely outplayed by a better team. Turns out there are several better teams than Nebraska in the Big Ten, at least this season. ? Steve Greenberg

No. 12 Michigan State 55, Indiana 3 | recap | box score

After taking care of business Saturday, all the Spartans have to do to win the Legends Division title is beat Northwestern on the road next week.

Kirk Cousins threw three touchdowns passes, including two to B.J. Cunningham, and Edwin Baker added two of his own on the ground as the Spartans cruised.

Michigan State was able to move the ball at will on the Hoosiers, as they converted on third down 6-of-10 times and rolled up over 400 yards of offense.

Indiana?s only points of the game came on a 22-yard field goal from Mitch Ewald early in the second quarter.

No. 15 Wisconsin 28, Illinois 17 | recap | box score

It?s still there for Wisconsin. The Leaders Division, the Big Ten title and even the Rose Bowl.

After back-to-back losses to Michigan State and Ohio State, it looked like the Badgers were about to waste all of their talent and dash all of their expectations. But Wisconsin is now in position to make a big splash, needing to beat Penn State next week to secure the Leaders Division title.

And who knows what happens after that.

Running back Montee Ball had 38 carries for 224 yards and two touchdowns. After starting out slow, Wisconsin broke the game open in the third quarter when Ball scored on a 5-yard reception, then again on a 17-yard run early in the fourth quarter.

Ball has 30 touchdowns this season. Only four other players in NCAA history have reached that mark. While his teammate, quarterback Russell Wilson was hyped early as the Heisman favorite, it?s clear who the best player on this team is?and who the most legitimate Heisman candidate is among the Badgers.

FRIDAY NIGHT

Iowa State 37, No. 2 Oklahoma State 31, 2 OTs | recap | box score

It?s hard to fully comprehend the cascade of sorrow in Stillwater, Okla., right now.

A football game?just a football game?cannot mitigate the tragedy of a deadly plane crash under any circumstances.

At least that?s what we?d like to believe.

But one night after Oklahoma State women?s basketball coaches Kurt Budke and Miranda Serna died along with two others in a plane crash?nearly 11 years after the plane crash that killed 10 members of the OSU men?s basketball program?the Cowboys lost a football game.

They lost 37-31 at Iowa State in double overtime, their national championship dreams gone into the night.

It is what it is. It?s a terrible time for the Oklahoma State athletics family and the university community at large. Unimaginably terrible. Cruelly terrible.

And, because people are human, it is rendered something ever more painful by a football defeat.

Let?s not tread too lightly on that point. For most of three months, the Cowboys football team brought their people much joy. A win at Iowa State, setting up the biggest game in program history on Dec. 3 vs. Oklahoma and a potential trip to New Orleans to play for the championship?those things would?ve been wonderful for the folks in Stillwater.

It?s sad they won?t get that now.

And it?s more than a little awkward?as it was all evening in Ames?to turn the conversation entirely to football.

We won?t do that here. ? Steve Greenberg

THURSDAY NIGHT

No. 9 Virginia Tech 24, North Carolina 21 | recap | box score

The Hokies wrapped up their eighth straight 10-win season by hanging on to beat the Tar Heels. They can wrap up the ACC Coastal Division title Saturday night if Virginia loses to Florida State.

But if the Cavaliers win, that sets up a game for the division title next week in Charlottesville.

?I?d love to see them go out there and win and make it mean a lot more next week,? Virginia Tech Logan Thomas said of the Cavaliers.

UAB 34, No. 22 Southern Miss 31 | recap | box score

The Blazers? upset of the Golden Eagles wasn?t one your really could see coming. UAB entered the game 2-8, but they hung in after getting down 14-0 early to win the game.

Ty Long?s 38-yard field goal with 3:04 left held up as the winning margin. UAB?s victory was just its third ever against a ranked opponent. The others came against No. 17 East Carolina in 1999 and No. 24 UTEP in 2005.

If Southern Miss beats Memphis next weekend, it will advance to the Conference USA title game, presumably against Houston.

Source: http://aol.sportingnews.com/ncaa-football/story/2011-11-19/week-12-college-football-top-25-roundup

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Could NFL and NBA be less functional than baseball? (Reuters)

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) ? Who would have thought Major League Baseball, usually the archaic and dysfunctional sports league, would be the one getting things done?

Commissioner Bud Selig said on Thursday that, pending a final decision from the league's special committee for on-field issues, it will shuffle its playoff format to the benefit of teams and broadcasters everywhere.

There will be an additional wild-card team in the playoffs, meaning an additional play-in game and a whole lot more television revenue.

As of now, Fox and Turner pay MLB about $400 million for the rights to the playoffs and some regular season games. Given that rights fees continue to escalate for sports on TV, that number could go up quite a bit.

By giving teams another opening to make the playoffs, it should also maintain fan interest through those long summers -- or at least that's the idea.

Another change is that in 2013 the Houston Astros will switch divisions so that each league has 15 teams. As of now, the National League has 16 and the American League has 14. Making sure each league has an equal number of teams took how many years again?

Still, this is progress, especially if you look at what the other leagues are going through.

The NBA has its lockout, costing its players, broadcasters and certain teams millions. The NFL almost had a lockout, and still has to deal with many of its players getting concussed.

College football has the mother of all scandals, and college basketball seems to have just secured its own sexual abuse allegation.

But the MLB? Its season ended a few weeks ago, and everything is peachy. The owners and players reached a labor agreement quietly and quickly.

Now the league has a plan that, if implemented, should boost revenue.

This is the league that won't let its own clips on YouTube.

The world has officially been turned upside down.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111118/tv_nm/us_mlb

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Kampmann survives early rush, edges Story at UFC 139

Kampmann survives early rush, edges Story at UFC 139

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Martin Kampmann's been around for a long time, so he wasn't going to fold when Rick Story pressed him early. The veteran let Story gas himself and took over in the second half of the fight to pick up a split decision victory, 30-27, 29-28 and 28-29 in fight No. 2 of the UFC 139 pay-per-view at the HP Pavilion.

Story looked dynamite early in the fight. His volume blew away Kampmann, who appear to be a little tight in the first three minutes. Kampmann, who suffered a small cut on his forehead during the early onslaught, clearly has a chin, because he absorbed some heavy shots. It may have discouraged Story to see Kampmann standing in front of him shaking his head to show the shots weren't hurting.

Kampmann (18-5, 9-4 UFC) further broke down Story's will with a very effective jab. By the end of the first round, which looked like it was going to be a cakewalk, Story had his own cut over his right eye.

Story's a good wrestler, but he was taken down in each of the final two rounds.

"I feel good. You know I'm really happy but at the same time I'm disappointed. I promised you guys I'd go in and get a finish. My arms felt so heavy out there, like I had lead in my hands.?I came out here way too relaxed tonight and needed a few punches to wake up.?It's a relief to come out and get a win," said Kampmann.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Kampmann-survives-early-rush-edges-Story-at-UFC?urn=mma-wp9727

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Michael Lucas: The Hard Fall of the Arab Spring

After decades in power, a brutal dictator in a Muslim country is dramatically deposed by a massive popular uprising. Sound familiar? Of course: that's what happened in Egypt and Libya this year, as part of what's known as the Arab Spring. But it's also what happened in Iran in 1979 -- and that should make us pause for a moment.

It's easy to cheer for democratic change and celebrate the downfall of tyrants like Egypt's Hosni Mubarak and Libya's Muammar Gaddafi. But what if the end of one kind of oppression brings about the rise of another? As history has shown us time and again, revolutions are often turns for the worse.

Gay people should be especially wary when the forces of religious fundamentalism are involved. And nowhere are those forces stronger today than in the Muslim world. The power behind the Arab Spring came in large part from the coiled energy of Islamic groups that had been suppressed by secular dictatorships; as the old regimes crumble, hard-core Islamists are eager to take their place.

If the past is any guide, that's bad news for gays in the Muslim world. Consider Iran. Under the Shah, Tehran had room for gay nightclubs and artists. That tolerance ended when the ayatollahs took over in the Islamic revolution of 1979 and instituted a fundamentalist form of Quranic law, or Shariah, under which gay sex is punishable by death. (Three Iranian men were hanged for sodomy in September, and hundreds of others have reportedly been executed for gay-related offenses.)

Or consider the explosion of anti-gay violence that followed the end of Saddam Hussein's secular regime in Iraq. The powerful cleric Ali al-Sistani, who had been kept in check by Saddam, issued a 2005 fatwa calling for gay men and lesbians to be killed "in the worst, most severe way of killing." In recent years, according to human-rights groups, scores of Iraqi gays have been abducted and murdered -- often through gruesome torture and mutilation -- by sectarian death squads and even by members of their own families (in so-called "honor killings").

Iraqi authorities have mostly turned a blind eye to this "sexual cleansing." Should we be surprised? After all, Shariah is now officially the law of the land. The 2005 Iraqi constitution includes talk about equal rights for all citizens, but its Article 2 calls Islam "the official religion of the State" and says that "no law that contradicts the established provisions of Islam may be established."

Whether by law (in Iran) or by acceptance of lawlessness (in Iraq), the increased power of Islam in daily life has been a disaster for Muslim gays. Will things be different in the Arab Spring countries?

We have reason to worry. Egypt's constitution also has an Article 2, which says the same thing as Iraq's, that "Islam is the religion of the state," and that "the principal source of legislation is Shariah." Egyptian voters had the chance to change that language in a March referendum, but they chose to keep it.

Mubarak was no friend to gay Egyptians, and in the past decade his government stepped up its persecution. But as the Egyptian-born LGBT scholar Hassan El Menyawi has pointed out, this policy was largely motivated by Mubarek's desire to "shore up [his] Islamic credentials" with a radicalized Egyptian population that was happy to see gays targeted.

A Pew Research Center poll last year found that 82 percent of Egyptian Muslims support stoning people who commit adultery, and 84 percent support the death penalty for Muslims who leave the religion. It's not hard to imagine the same group's attitudes toward homosexuality. Any government that results from Egypt's planned 2012 elections is sure to reflect the country's widespread religious conservatism.

In Libya, as well, the future will almost certainly be less rosy than we'd like. Last month, the world's jubilation at the death of Gaddafi turned sour when graphic evidence emerged of the mob's savagery toward the captured leader. (One video shows Gaddafi being sodomized with a stick.) Libyan liberals, and Western ones, were further disturbed a week later when the head of the transitional government suggested that polygamy should be legalized, in line with Shariah.

Optimists say that the practical concerns of democracy -- getting elected, building coalitions -- will keep radical Islam in check. I think they're being deeply na?ve. The expectations raised by the Arab Spring will be hard to live up to; soon, the new governments will start looking for scapegoats and distractions. Gays have always played those roles too well.

By supporting the revolutions in Egypt and Libya, the West has meddled where it didn't belong and unleashed the beast of fundamentalism in those countries, just as it did in Iraq. It's only a matter of time until that beast starts to bite. And when the tyranny of the religious majority starts trampling on sexual minorities -- not to mention women and non-Muslims -- the world's pride in the Arab Spring will turn out to have gone before a very long, very hard fall.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-lucas/arab-spring-gay-rights_b_1095798.html

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Niki Taylor Gives Birth to Fourth Child (omg!)

It's a boy -- again -- for Niki Taylor.

The model and her husband, former NASCAR driver Burney Lamar, welcomed a son on Wednesday, People reports.

Niki Taylor expecting baby No. 4

Rex Harrison was born at 11:03 a.m. and weighed 7 pounds, 5 ounces. No word on what inspired the name, but Rex Harrison is also the famed actor who played Prof. Henry Higgins in the big-screen adaptation of My Fair Lady.

Baby Rex joins sister Ciel, who's 2 1/2, and 16-year-old twin brothers Jake and Hunter, who are Taylor's children from a previous marriage.

Taylor wed Lamar in December 2006.

What do you think of the name Rex Harrison?

?

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_niki_taylor_gives_birth_fourth_child001000304/43626645/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/niki-taylor-gives-birth-fourth-child-001000304.html

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Google partners with Universal, EMI, Sony Music, 23 independent labels on Google Music, scores exclusive content

A music store isn't much without plenty of music, and Google's new offering launched with some big backing today. The company is partnering with Universal, EMI, Sony Music and no less than 23 independent labels on the service -- according to Google, that covers about 13 million songs in total, 8 million of which are available today. Speaking at the launch event, Universal's Rob Wells said that he expects Google Music to be a "rich new revenue stream for our artists," and further noted that he's excited about the "global rollout" across all Android devices, although we're unfortunately not hearing many specifics about availability outside the US just yet. What's more, Google also announced that Google Music will have a number of exclusive offerings from the labels, including concerts from the likes of The Rolling Stones, Coldplay, Pearl Jam and The Dave Matthews Band, and the exclusive debut of Busta Rhymes' latest album.

Continue reading Google partners with Universal, EMI, Sony Music, 23 independent labels on Google Music, scores exclusive content

Google partners with Universal, EMI, Sony Music, 23 independent labels on Google Music, scores exclusive content originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Nov 2011 17:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/16/google-partners-with-universal-emi-sony-music-23-independent/

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Lawyer: Client ready to testify against Sandusky

FILE - In this Oct. 8, 2011, file photo, Penn State assistant football coach Mike McQueary looks on during an NCAA college football game against Iowa in State College, Pa. Neither campus nor city police received reports from McQueary who testified to a grand jury that he saw a former defensive coordinator raping a boy in the team showers in 2002, the departments said Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Gene Puskar, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 8, 2011, file photo, Penn State assistant football coach Mike McQueary looks on during an NCAA college football game against Iowa in State College, Pa. Neither campus nor city police received reports from McQueary who testified to a grand jury that he saw a former defensive coordinator raping a boy in the team showers in 2002, the departments said Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Gene Puskar, File)

In this undated photo released by Penn State University, Dr. David M. Joyner is shown. On Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2011, Penn State named Joyner, an orthopedic surgeon who got his bachelor's degree and medical degree from the university, as acting athletic director. (AP Photo/Penn State University)

FILE - In this Nov. 5, 2011 file photo, former Penn State football defensive coordinator Gerald "Jerry" Sandusky sits in a car as he leaves the office of Centre County Magisterial District Judge Leslie A. Dutchcot in State College, Pa. Sandusky, who is charged with sexually abusing eight boys in a scandal that has rocked the university, said in an telephone interview with Bob Costas Monday night on NBC News' "Rock Center" that there was no abuse and that any activities in a campus shower with a boy were just horseplay, not molestation. (AP Photo/The Patriot-News, Andy Colwell, File)

(AP) ? A lawyer said Wednesday that his client will testify that he was sexually abused by former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, and Pennsylvania state lawmakers are starting to plan for a special commission that will examine the legal issues raised by the child sex-abuse scandal.

Harrisburg attorney Ben Andreozzi said he represents a client who will testify against Sandusky, who is accused of abusing eight boys, some on campus, over 15 years.

"I am appalled by the fact that Mr. Sandusky has elected to re-victimize these young men at a time when they should be healing," Andreozzi said, in a statement released by his office. "He fully intends to testify that he was severely sexually assaulted by Mr. Sandusky."

Sandusky's lawyer, Joe Amendola, appeared with him on NBC's "Rock Center" on Monday night and cast doubt on the evidence in the case.

"We anticipate we're going to have at least several of those kids come forward and say, 'This never happened. This is me. This is the allegation. It never occurred,'" Amendola said.

Andreozzi said he has his "finger on the pulse" of the case and knows of no accusers changing their stories or refusing to testify.

"To the contrary, others are actually coming forward, and I will have more information for you later this week," Andreozzi said.

Sandusky, 67, appeared on the show by phone and said he had showered with boys but never molested them.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvania legislative leaders said they will set up a bipartisan, bicameral commission to consider changes to state law in the wake of the scandal. The plan was described as being in the planning stage, including meetings of leaders and their aides.

Topics are likely to include mandatory reporting of suspected abuse, and the legal definition of child abuse, said Senate Democratic spokeswoman Lisa Scullin.

Also Wednesday, Penn State campus police and their counterparts in State College said they had no record of Mike McQueary reporting an alleged sexual assault by Jerry Sandusky on a 10-year-old boy in a campus shower.

The details ran counter to McQueary's claims in an email to former teammates and made available to The Associated Press this week.

McQueary, then a graduate assistant for the football team, wrote in the email that he had discussions with police about what he saw. In the email, McQueary did not specify which police department he spoke to.

State College borough police Chief Tom King said McQueary didn't make a report to his department.

Campus police referred questions on the Sandusky case to the university's public information office.

"At this point we have no record of any police report being filed in 2002" by McQueary in connection with the Sandusky case, university spokeswoman Annemarie Mountz said, adding police searched their records Wednesday.

The football building is on university property, so campus police would have been the most likely to respond for a police call.

Mountz also noted the 23-page grand jury report was the state attorney general's summary of testimony, so it's unclear what McQueary's full testimony was.

The news came after a new judge was assigned to handle the child sex abuse charges against Sandusky, whose televised defense earlier this week drew a rebuke from a lawyer for one of his accusers.

The change removed a State College judge with ties to a charity founded by Sandusky for at-risk children, The Second Mile.

Sandusky is due in court on Dec. 7, and the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts announced that a Westmoreland County senior district judge would preside over his preliminary hearing. Robert E. Scott is taking over the hearing from Centre County District Judge Leslie Dutchcot.

Dutchcot has donated money to The Second Mile, where authorities say Sandusky met his victims.

The office said Scott has no known ties to Penn State or The Second Mile.

It remains unclear how many accusers have surfaced more than a week after state police and the attorney general's office said at a news conference they were seeking additional potential victims and witnesses.

State police spokeswoman Maria Finn said investigators have told her that published accounts reporting how many people have come forward are inaccurate and they are not disclosing their internal figures.

Some plaintiffs' lawyers are starting to advertise on their websites for potential Sandusky victims, vowing to get justice. Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul, Minn., attorney, has long represented clergy abuse victims and told The Associated Press that he has been retained by several people he described as Sandusky victims.

"There's a great deal of fury and confusion," particularly because Sandusky is free on bail, Anderson said. "Getting (them) help and cooperating with law enforcement is our first priority."

The "time for reckoning," in the form of civil lawsuits, will come later, Anderson said.

Anderson declined to say whether his clients are among the eight boys who were labeled as victims in the grand jury report.

In State College, Penn State announced a physician and member of its board of trustees who played football and wrestled for the school would serve as acting athletic director. The school named Dr. David M. Joyner, an orthopedic surgeon who specializes in sports medicine and is a business consultant, as the interim replacement for Tim Curley.

Curley is on leave as athletic director as he defends himself against criminal charges that he failed to properly alert authorities when told of an allegation of a sexual assault by Sandusky against a child and that he lied to a grand jury. He maintains his innocence.

Joyner's position on the board, where he has been a trustee since 2000, is being suspended as he takes on the new duties.

Gov. Tom Corbett again defended the pace of the investigation, which he helped launch and oversaw while serving as attorney general until January.

"Could anybody guarantee he wasn't out there touching children? There are no such guarantees, unless he was sitting in jail," Corbett, a Republican, said in Philadelphia. "But we did what we thought was in the best interests of the investigation in getting a good case put together."

And new details were emerging about how the case ended up in the hands of the state attorney general's office.

Former Centre County District Attorney Michael Madeira said that his wife's brother was Sandusky's adopted son.

"I reviewed it, and I made the decision it needed to be investigated further," Madeira said. "But the apparent conflict of interest created an impediment for me to make those kinds of decisions."

___

Scolforo reported from Harrisburg. Dale and AP writer Kathy Matheson reported from Philadelphia.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-17-Penn%20State-Abuse/id-7b980d1dd97444809409c06aed917f42

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

This Death Star Planetarium Is Your Interstellar Deal of the Day [Dealzmodo]

Remember when you were a kid and you started gazing longingly up at the sky? It wasn't any innate, primal curiosity about the stars, it was Star Wars. Remember how disappointed you were when you realized that the Death Star wasn't really up there? Crushing. But even with your dreams of becoming an X-Wing pilot dashed, your curiosity persisted. Well now you can once again join your undying passion obsession religious devotion to Star Wars with the cosmos above you. This tabletop Death Star planetarium for $15 projects both our night sky as well as the night sky of the galaxy far far away. -MA More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/rqm9l4Zd664/this-death-star-planetarium-is-your-interstellar-deal-of-the-day

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How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should Subscribe [Explainer]

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should SubscribeApple's much-delayed iTunes Match service launched today, bringing their vision of music in the cloud to iTunes and iOS users alike. But what is it, exactly, and is it worth your money? Here's a look at how iTunes Match works and if it's right for you.

What Is iTunes Match?

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should SubscribeiTunes Match is a service from Apple that allows you to keep a cloud-based music collection for $25 per year. Unlike Google Music and Amazon Cloud Player, however, this doesn't necessarily involve uploading your music and using a web-based player to stream your collection. Instead, iTunes scans the music you already have in your library and tells Apple you've got a copy. Apply then allows you access to any music in their collection, all encoded as 256kbps AAC files with absolutely no copy protection. What's especially great is that you get these high-quality files even if your files aren't as good. The iTunes catalog is huge, so chances are most of the songs you own are already in it. If they're not, however, iTunes will upload a copy of your music to store and sync as well. All your music will be transferred to other machines running iTunes (both Mac and Windows PCs) as well as any iOS devices. This way you'll automatically have all your music synchronized and backed up in the cloud. If you lose all your music in a hard drive crash, you'll be able to get it all back without issue so long as you're an iTunes Match subscriber.

Should I Buy iTunes Match?

Whether or not you should bother purchasing an iTunes Match subscription is going to depend on your needs. To get a better idea of what's best for you, here's a look at the upsides and downsides to help you make the right choice.

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should Subscribe

The Upsides

The obvious benefits of iTunes Match are easy synchronization, a backup of your music collection, and access to music files encoded at a high bit rate?a bit rate likely higher than most of your existing collection. The service is pretty cheap, as $25 isn't much money at all on a yearly basis. If you like and use iTunes, plus have an iDevice or two, it's one of your best options for cloud-based music services.

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should Subscribe

The Downsides

While it's great that iTunes Match can keep your music in sync across devices, that same feature is also one of its limitations. Because you're not able to stream your music in the same way you can with Google Music and Amazon Cloud Player (or a streaming music service like Spotify), you only retrieve as much of your matched collection as your computer or mobile device can accommodate. This does not mean iTunes Match is incapable of streaming, but while doing so it downloads the file to your device. You don't have the option of streaming only. (One exception appears to be that can stream unsync'd music if your device is too full to accommodate any additional downloads.) This can get a little frustrating if you don't want to download a song to your device simply because you've chosen to listen to it. Additionally, there is no option to stream via a web browser so your listening options are limited to your computers (of which you can have a maximum of five) and iDevices.

The Bottom Line

How iTunes Match Works and Whether or Not You Should SubscribeIf you're into all things Apple, iTunes Match is likely the best service for you. It's cheap, it keeps your music backed up and synced without the need to upload your entire collection (or possibly any of it), and it'll work with all of your devices.

If you're not fully entrenched in the Apple ecosystem, iTunes Match might not be your ideal service. If you need your music on an Android device, for example, you're out of luck. If you're simply dealing with a mix of Mac and Windows PCs, plus an iPhone or iPad here and there, it should work just fine. Plus, if you do have an Android device you will have physical copies of the music files you can transfer over and play without issue. You could even subscribe to an additional service like Google Music or Amazon Cloud Player and use both in conjunction. Because iTunes Match match provides cloud music storage rather than streaming, these services can work well together. But if you find yourself wanting to use both you might be better off with Spotify, which offers a hybrid of the two via its premium service.

If you loathe iTunes, then iTunes Match is clearly not for you. Even if you really like the service, it requires the use of the iTunes software to manage your collection. If you can't buy into that you should definitely look for something else.


Have you already subscribed to the iTunes Match service and have some initial thoughts? Let us know how you're liking it (or not) in the comments.

You can follow Adam Dachis, the author of this post, on Twitter, Google+, and Facebook. ?Twitter's the best way to contact him, too.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/C3hQ7tSWcwY/what-is-itunes-match-and-should-i-subscribe

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