Tuesday, January 29, 2013

How well do you know 'Pride and Prejudice'?

With one of the most famous opening lines of all time ? 'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife' ? and one of literature's most beloved love stories, as well as satire that is still admired today, Jane Austen's novel 'Pride and Prejudice' is still an acknowledged classic 200 years after its publication in 1813. How well do you know the story of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy? Test your knowledge!

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vrzgbBd2J6M/How-well-do-you-know-Pride-and-Prejudice

John Witherspoon george michael usain bolt Closing Ceremony London 2012 Tom Daley Leryn Franco The Campaign

Do You Know More Information About Wealth Building For Personal ...

With real estate, you typically buy a property and then make money through selling it eventually for a much higher value than its purchase price or becoming a landlord and letting the property.? One of the advantages of real estate investing is using the principle of leverage to buy an asset that you otherwise couldn?t afford.

Even already rich people have a problem obeying this principle and can sometimes end up broke as a result. So, only gratify your non-essential desires if you can do so without spending more than nine-tenths of your earnings. Wealth building requires discipline and self-control. You must continue to save one-tenth of what you bring in no matter what. This is the key to building some capital which you can then use to invest. Find something that you love to do and that solves the needs of a target market. Then sell that product or service through relentless marketing and sales. Create efficient systems to sell more, more often. And work towards growing the value of your business by making it less dependent on you so that you can eventually sell it to a new owner. Paying debts down fast and taking care of family and friends is also essential and will increase your ability to earn money.

Seek the advice of those experienced in the profitable handling of money and be wary of following friends and relatives into so-called investment opportunities. Educate yourself and research your investments thoroughly before parting with your hard-earned money. Whatever investment options you pick, you should understand that each has its own time line from start to finish that needs to be followed to fruit-ration. There is no shortcut for this. Every option has a process that needs to be followed through. If you know more information about wealth building, we can have this topic through dedicated servers or buy domain name in domain shop.

Source: http://freefinancearticles.info/do-you-know-more-information-about-wealth-building-for-personal-finance

don t trust the b in apartment 23 world financial center shabazz muhammad angela corey zimmerman charged bonobos charles manson

Friday, January 25, 2013

Guavus Buys Mobile Analytics And Data Intelligence Company Neuralitic Systems

Neuralitic SystemsFresh off raising $30 million in new funding, enterprise data-analytics company Guavus is making a key acquisition today--Neuralitic Systems. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Neuralitic has raised a total of $20 million in venture capital from BlackBerry Partners Fund, BDC Venture Capital, Vertex Venture Capital and GO Capital LP.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IO2escI6mmM/

sea lion si swimsuit 2012 westminster dog show abe lincoln vampire hunter xi jinping matt bomer westminster kennel club dog show

Panetta says women in combat is a strength

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Allowing women to serve in combat roles will strengthen the U.S. military's ability to win wars, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Thursday, shortly before his official announcement of the landmark change.

"Our military is more capable, and our force is more powerful, when we use all of the great diverse strengths of the American people," Panetta said at a Pentagon ceremony in remembrance of Martin Luther King Jr.

"Every person in today's military has made a solemn commitment to fight and, if necessary, to die, for our nation's defense," he said. "We owe it to them to allow them to pursue every avenue of military service for which they are fully prepared and qualified. Their career success and their specific opportunities should be based solely on their ability to successfully carry out an assigned mission. Everyone deserves that chance."

The decision to lift the ban on women serving in combat presents a daunting challenge to top military leaders who now will have to decide which, if any, jobs they believe should be open only to men.

Panetta planned to announce at a Pentagon news conference that more than 230,000 battlefront posts ? many in Army and Marine infantry units and in potentially elite commando jobs ? are now open to women. It will be up to the military service chiefs to recommend and defend whether women should be excluded from any of those more demanding and deadly positions, such as Navy SEALs or the Army's Delta Force.

The historic change, which was recommended by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, overturns a 1994 rule prohibiting women from being assigned to smaller ground combat units.

The change won't take place overnight: Service chiefs will have to develop plans for allowing women to seek the combat positions, a senior military official said. Some jobs may open as soon as this year, while assessments for others, such as special operations forces, may take longer. The services will have until January 2016 to make a case to that some positions should remain closed to women.

Officials briefed The Associated Press on the changes Wednesday on condition of anonymity so they could speak ahead of the official announcement.

There long has been opposition to putting women in combat, based on questions of whether they have the necessary strength and stamina for certain jobs, or whether their presence might hurt unit cohesion.

But as news of Panetta's expected order got out, many members of Congress, including the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., announced their support.

"It reflects the reality of 21st century military operations," Levin said.

Objections were few. Jerry Boykin, executive vice president of the Family Research Council, called the move "another social experiment" that will place unnecessary burdens on military commanders.

"While their focus must remain on winning the battles and protecting their troops, they will now have the distraction of having to provide some separation of the genders during fast-moving and deadly situations," said Boykin, a retired Army lieutenant general. He noted that small units often are in sustained combat for extended periods of time under primal living conditions with no privacy.

Panetta's move comes in his final weeks as Pentagon chief and just days after President Barack Obama's inaugural speech in which he spoke passionately about equal rights for all. The new order expands the department's action of nearly a year ago to open about 14,500 combat positions to women, nearly all of them in the Army.

In addition to questions of strength and performance, there also have been suggestions that the American public would not tolerate large numbers of women being killed in war.

Under the 1994 Pentagon policy, women were prohibited from being assigned to ground combat units below the brigade level. A brigade is roughly 3,500 troops split into several battalions of about 800 soldiers each. Historically, brigades were based farther from the front lines, and they often included top command and support staff.

The necessities of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, however, propelled women into jobs as medics, military police and intelligence officers that were sometimes attached ? but not formally assigned ? to battalions. So while a woman couldn't be assigned as an infantryman in a battalion going out on patrol, she could fly the helicopter supporting the unit, or move in to provide medical aid if troops were injured.

And these conflicts, where battlefield lines are blurred and insurgents can lurk around every corner, have made it almost impossible to keep women clear of combat.

Still, as recent surveys and experiences have shown, it will not be an easy transition. When the Marine Corps sought women to go through its tough infantry course last year, two volunteered and both failed to complete the course. And there may not be a wide clamoring from women for the more intense, dangerous and difficult jobs, including some infantry and commando positions.

Two lawsuits were filed last year challenging the Pentagon's ban on women serving in combat, adding pressure on officials to overturn the policy. And the military services have been studying the issue and surveying their forces to determine how it may affect performance and morale.

The Joint Chiefs have been meeting regularly on the matter and they unanimously agreed to send the recommendation to Panetta earlier this month.

A senior military official familiar with the discussions said the chiefs laid out three main principles to guide them as they move through the process. Those were to maintain America's effective fighting force, preserve military readiness and develop a process that would give all service members the best chance to succeed.

Women comprise about 14 percent of the 1.4 million active military personnel. More than 280,000 women have been sent to Iraq, Afghanistan or to jobs in neighboring nations in support of the wars. Of the more than 6,600 U.S. service members who have been killed, 152 have been women.

The senior military official said the military chiefs must report back to Panetta with their initial implementation plans by May 15.

___

AP National Security Writer Robert Burns and AP Broadcast reporter Sagar Meghani contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/panetta-says-women-combat-strength-150027932--politics.html

whitney houston autopsy dobie gray bruce springsteen grammy nominations lil boosie bobbi kristina brown new edition

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Higher Education?s Darkest Secret

With days to go before classes begin, it's not uncommon for department heads, or even deans, to ask adjunct professors to take on last-minute teaching assignments.

For one professor, this offer was tempting. She was a "part-time" professor and her husband was unemployed. She had taken on more classes at several area colleges in order to support her family and afford health insurance. Despite the extra work, she was still making under $25K per year.? The professor knew that refusing the offer could mark her as "uncooperative" and torpedo her chances for a full-time teaching position. Yet she knew there was no way she?or any of her colleagues?could take on yet another class. Better to cancel the class, she suggested to the dean, than to give students a teacher who cannot serve her students.

The dean nodded gravely and said with some urgency, "But we don't want to cancel the class. Really, all we need is a warm body in the classroom."

The dean's words reflect a grossly utilitarian managerial approach now common in higher education, one that is not well known to the public. Students are exposed to this approach when they peruse class schedules and observe that one remarkable professor seems to teach the majority of classes. This teacher is called "Professor Staff."

Professor Staff is actually the majority of the faculty known as adjuncts, lecturers, part-time profs and other confusing titles. In the U.S., they number roughly one million. These teachers work on temporary, low-wage contracts, largely ineligible for basic job protections that support academic quality in the classroom.

At the community college where I teach, the percentage of "part-time" professors has gone from 14.1 percent in 1995 to 77.7 percent in 2009, according to a database maintained by the Modern Language Association.

The shift in faculty employment from secure, living-wage jobs to temporary, un-benefited, low-wage work is consistent with what is occurring in the economy. The National Employment Law Project calls it a "good jobs deficit."?

At colleges and universities, this deficit has existed for decades. It has gone unnoticed only because faculty regularly make enormous sacrifices to shield their students from its worst effects.

Those effects, documented in a report I cowrote with the grassroots Campaign for the Future of Higher Education and based on a fall 2011 nationwide survey of adjunct professors, include teaching assignments with three weeks or fewer to prepare and scanty access to critical campus resources, from phones, computers, and other technology to offices, textbooks, orientation, and professional development.?

Adjuncts prepare to teach on their own dime, knowing that their classes can be, and often are, canceled or reassigned at the last minute, for any reason. Generally denied benefits or retirement unless they are part of the 30 percent of all adjuncts who are unionized, these faculty have found themselves in increasingly dire economic circumstances.?

The Chronicle of Higher Education reported in May that the percentage of graduate degree holders who receive food stamps or some other aid more than doubled between 2007 and 2010. While there are no statistics indicating exactly how many of those people are adjuncts, the documented average annualized income that adjuncts receive likely qualifies them for various forms of assistance. However, they are often reluctant to take advantage of it. In two recent cases, students and colleagues extended private aid to adjuncts in the form of fundraisers and food drives.

Meanwhile, colleges and universities regularly misrepresent their employment status to federal and state agencies, thereby blocking their access to economic lifelines like unemployment insurance, student loan forgiveness, and now, the healthcare meant to be provided under the Affordable Care Act.

Professors without independent financial support work elsewhere to make a living, lessening the time they have for students. This creates an odd twist on class-based access in higher education: A professor's individual economic circumstances, rather than her dedication or qualifications, becomes disproportionately important in determining her effectiveness.

Our report calls these practices "just-in-time" (JIT) hiring, after the business model that higher education has adopted so uncritically. Treating faculty as an interchangeable, inventory of warm bodies is an example of the harm the approach inflicts on both faculty and students.

As a faculty member, I have experienced this shockingly unprofessional treatment firsthand. When I've spoken up against it, I've been told that if I don't like it, I should simply leave. Instead, I have dedicated myself to exposing and reforming these practices by cofounding and building the New Faculty Majority and the New Faculty Majority Foundation, national nonprofits that work exclusively on improving the quality of? higher education by improving the working conditions of the majority of its faculty.? I do this work not just because I am a professor, but also because my children, including one with Asperger's Syndrome, are future college students, and because I believe firmly that faculty working conditions are student learning conditions.

JIT faculty hiring means students cannot plan to take classes with adjuncts they know or were recommended. Without offices or time to meet, these professors are hard pressed to provide the help and mentoring that research shows is crucial to student success. They can be hard to track down for letters of reference.

We cannot expect college students to learn the skills of the future if we treat the majority of their professors with the dehumanizing managerial practices of the past.

Students seem to understand the problem. In a recent Gates Foundation-funded survey, community college students said introductory courses, the ones most likely to be taught by adjuncts and subject to JIT hiring, "are not offered in a way to help them succeed." Faculty who give their support and guidance are in high demand but "hard to come by."

Many administrators understand the problem too. In 2008, the then-vice president for human resources at the University of Akron, A.G. Monaco, declared, "Wal-Mart is a more honest employer of part-time [faculty] than are most colleges and universities."

Those who pin their hopes for a more robust economic recovery on higher education need to pay attention to the lessons "Professor Staff" is teaching us. Higher education needs to be more transparent about its adjunct faculty employment practices?and correct them. We cannot expect college students to learn the skills of the future if we treat the majority of their professors with the dehumanizing managerial practices of the past.

These are solely the author's opinions and do not represent those of TakePart, LLC or its affiliates.

Related Stories on TakePart:

? 10 States Where Colleges Will Make You Go Broke

? 2012 List: The Most Expensive Colleges in America

? 10 Shocking Truths You Need to Know About Student Loan Debt


Maria Maisto is a once and future adjunct professor, president of the national nonprofit advocacy group New Faculty Majority and the executive director of the New Faculty Majority Foundation. She is co-author of the report ?Who is Professor ?Staff? and how can this person teach so many classes?? as well as several other publications on the effect of faculty hiring practices on the quality of higher education.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/higher-education-darkest-secret-203800964.html

Olympic Games Dana Vollmer phillies phillies Ryan Dempster Phelps NBC Olympics Live

Can I legally make a personal backup copy of my DVDs?

Can I legally make a personal backup copy of my DVDs?Great discussions are par for the course here on Lifehacker. Each day, we highlight a discussion that is particularly helpful or insightful, along with other great discussions and reader questions you may have missed. Check out these discussions and add your own thoughts to make them even more wonderful!

Discussion of the Day

Other Great Discussions

Get Involved

Great Discussions Any Time

To join or start great discussions on any topic, be sure to visit the Openthread forum.

If you've got a cool project, inspiration, or just something fun to share, be sure to let us know in our Tips forum.

Happy Lifehacking, everybody!

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/kgw9AL4T7Oo/can-i-legally-make-a-personal-backup-copy-of-my-dvds

super bowl coin toss madonna super bowl halftime kelly clarkson super bowl giants super bowl 2012 half time show halftime show 2012 kelly clarkson super bowl 2012

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Protests mark anniversary of landmark abortion ruling

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Americans on Tuesday marked the 40th anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion, even as battles over the contentious issue have largely shifted from the federal courts to statehouses.

Dozens of protesters braved frigid temperatures to gather in front of the Supreme Court on the anniversary of the landmark January 22, 1973, Roe v. Wade ruling that made abortion legal in the first three months of pregnancy. With a companion ruling, the decision declared abortion a constitutional right.

Anti-abortion activists spread 3,300 flowers out on the Washington sidewalk to represent the number of abortions they said took place daily in the United States.

Away from Washington, about two dozen abortion rights activists rallied in front of Mississippi's sole abortion clinic, the Jackson Women's Health Organization in Jackson.

The supporters, including the National Organization of Women, said they wanted to celebrate the ruling and show that the fight to preserve women's rights continued.

"Choice is good," said Alex McInick, 18, a student at Millsaps College in Jackson. "Nobody should be able to tell someone what they should do to their body."

Across the street, Roy McMillen, 69, an anti-abortion activist, said the procedure led to social ills that cost everyone.

Surrounded by graphic posters of aborted fetuses, McMillen said, "The worst thing that happened in the 20th century was the advent of birth control and the legalization of abortion."

The protests and others this week come in the wake of a Pew Research Center poll which found that most Americans remained opposed to overturning the decision, with opinions little changed over two decades.

"Millions of women have been bruised and diminished. Our country has violated the principles on which it was founded," the Reverend Patrick Mahoney of the Christian Defense Coalition told reporters outside the Supreme Court.

Mahoney was nearly drowned out by a handful of abortion rights activists who chanted "Abortion without demand and without apology" and profanity-laced slogans.

Mahoney said the anti-abortion movement had been energized by the re-election of President Barack Obama, who favors abortion rights and backs Roe v. Wade.

Despite his abortion rights stance, Obama has been a "silver lining" since he had helped move anti-abortion campaigns to the state and local level, away from federal policy-makers, he said.

The highlight of Washington events is expected to be a March for Life rally near Capitol Hill on Friday, with former Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum among the scheduled speakers.

The rally, which has drawn thousands of protesters in past years, will be followed by a march on the Supreme Court building.

Separate prayer services also are scheduled in Washington by the National Pro-Life Religious Council and the U.S. Catholic bishops' Committee on Pro-Life Activities.

Among other anti-abortion events, the conservative Family Research Council is hosting on Friday its yearly ProLifeCon, which gathers bloggers, activists and lawmakers.

Abortion rights campaigners have few Washington events scheduled around the anniversary, with NARAL Pro-Choice America promoting "Blog for Choice Day" on Tuesday.

The Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive health and rights organization, said this month that 2012 brought the second-highest number of state-level restrictions, trailing only 2011.

"More than half of all U.S. women of reproductive age (15-44) now live in a state that is hostile to abortion rights, whereas fewer than one-third did a decade ago," the group said in a statement.

Recent Washington fights over reproductive rights have centered on Obama's healthcare law. The Senate in March rejected a Republican measure that would have let employers opt out of birth control coverage and other services on moral grounds.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington and Emily Le Coz in Jackson; Editing by Paul Thomasch, Nick Zieminski and Dan Grebler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prayers-marches-mark-anniversary-landmark-abortion-ruling-172759584.html

notre dame notre dame football Bcs Bowl Chuck Hagel ncaa football irs CES

Activists: Fighting rages as Russians leave Syria

BEIRUT (AP) ? Government forces and rebels battled in the suburbs of Damascus and elsewhere in Syria on Tuesday as the first group of Russian citizens prepared to be evacuated from the country to escape nearly two years of conflict.

Russia is sending two planes to Lebanon to start evacuating its citizens from Syria, the strongest sign yet that President Bashar Assad's most important international ally has serious doubts about his ability to cling to power.

Russian officials said Monday that about 100 of their citizens in Syria will be taken out overland to Lebanon and flown home from there, presumably because of renewed fighting near Damascus airport. They also said thousands more could follow ? many of them Russian women married to Syrians ? and later evacuations could be by both air and sea.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said clashes between opposition fighters and troops were concentrated in the areas around the capital, including along the road linking it to the international airport. Persistent fighting along the airport road has prompted regional and international airlines to suspend flights to Damascus in recent weeks, although Syrian officials maintain that the airport facility remains open.

No casualties were immediately reported in Tuesday's fighting.

The Observatory said government forces have renewed artillery shelling of the central city of Homs, adding that several shells also hit the southern opposition stronghold of Daraa and the rebellious neighborhoods outside Damascus that the Syrian army has been trying to rid of rebels, posing a threat to the capital which is the seat of Assad's power.

Russia has been Assad's main ally since the uprising against him began in March 2011, using its veto power in the U.N. Security Council to shield Damascus from international sanctions for brutal crackdown on dissent.

Assad has dismissed calls that he step down, claiming that the country is fighting Islamic extremists and terrorists. He has proposed a national reconciliation conference, elections and a new constitution, but the opposition insists he play no role in a resolution to the conflict.

Last month, Russia started distancing itself from Assad, with President Vladimir Putin saying that he understands Syria needs change and that he was not protecting the Syrian ruler.

Syrian conflict began as peaceful protests against Assad's rule but turned into civil war that has claimed more than 60,000 lives, according to a recent United Nations estimate.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activists-fighting-rages-russians-leave-syria-101949333.html

eric cantor HGTV Sugar Bowl 2013 chick fil a chick fil a rose parade bowl games

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Philippines seeks U.N. help to resolve maritime row with China

MANILA (Reuters) - The Philippines has asked an international tribunal to intervene in its longstanding South China Sea territorial dispute with China and declare that Beijing's claims are invalid, the government said on Tuesday.

Manila asked the tribunal of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to order a halt to China's activities that the Philippines says violates the Southeast Asian nation's sovereignty.

China's claims over islands, reefs and atolls in resource-rich waters off its south coast and to the east of mainland Southeast Asia set it directly against U.S. allies Vietnam and the Philippines, while Brunei, Taiwan and Malaysia also lay claim to parts.

"The Philippines has exhausted almost all political and diplomatic avenues for a peaceful negotiated settlement of its maritime dispute with China," Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario told reporters.

"To this day, a solution is still elusive. We hope that the arbitral proceedings shall bring this dispute to a durable solution," he said.

But it was not clear how the tribunal can help. While all its decisions are binding on countries concerned, it has no power to enforce them.

China, in response, restated its claims to the territory and dismissed any need for external intervention.

State news agency Xinhua quoted Ma Keqing, China's ambassador to the Philippines, as saying that China "has indisputable sovereignty" over the South China Sea islands and adjacent waters.

"The Chinese side strongly holds that the disputes on the South China Sea should be settled by parties concerned through negotiations," Ma was quoted as saying after meeting a senior Philippine diplomat.

The Philippines has previously sought the support of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on the territorial dispute, with ASEAN agreeing to ask China to start talks on a code of conduct.

But Beijing says it wants to address the disputes via bilateral talks. Its relations with Tokyo are also under strain after the Japanese government bought disputed islands from a private Japanese owner in September, triggering violent protests and calls for boycotts of Japanese products across China.

Manila said that any joint development with China should respect Philippine laws. A unit of Philippine firm Philex Petroleum Corp is hoping to resume talks with Chinese state-owned offshore oil producer CNOOC on joint exploration of oil and gas fields in the South China Sea.

(Reporting by Rosemarie Francisco in MANILA and Koh Gui Qing in BEIJING; Editing by Nick Macfie and Ron Popeski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/philippines-seeks-u-n-help-resolve-maritime-row-103351979.html

hopkins dear john derrick rose torn acl pacers undrafted free agents braveheart earthquake california

Lanvin plays on proportions, as snow quilts Paris

PARIS (AP) ? The snow fell in Paris all day, blanketing the left bank's grand Fine Arts School, the stage for Lanvin's fall-winter 2013 show.

The snowy cover saw the building reduced to all white ? distilling its 19th-century stones to pure form and shapes.

It's perhaps appropriate that designers Alber Elbaz and Lucas Ossendrijver thus chose to explore shapes and proportions for their menswear collection.

With a futurist and sporty edge, 46 looks saw some of the silhouettes expanded out in baggy coats, boxy jackets, and voluminous pants with a low slung crotch.

But then others were shrunk, for instance, in a sexy fitted black leather jacket with square geometric sections, a tight pentagon-shaped tank top, or skinny pants.

While many of the individual ensembles looked incredibly slick ? the diverse play on proportion made the collection as a whole feel a little like the silhouette couldn't quite make up its mind.

The colors got it right. Like last season, there was a lot of black, but the palette included a great tonal range of blues: from dark midnight blue, to a warm blue on big parkas and jackets, and the softest see-through blue.

With its mixture of classical tailoring and a fashion-forward attitude, Elbaz has transformed the storied house since he took over in 2001.

Lanvin is, and continues to be, one of the hottest tickets at Paris fashion week.

Its front-row turnout on Sunday's show is testament to this, including singer Kanye West and artist Aaron Young.

____

Thomas Adamson can be followed at http://Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lanvin-plays-proportions-snow-quilts-paris-172031674.html

colton dixon houston weather dwyane wade the night they drove old dixie down levon oklahoma city bombing robbie robertson

Monday, January 21, 2013

TIM TEBOW DATING MANTI'S FAKE GIRLFRIEND | Weekly World ...

Tim Tebow announced today that he is dating Lennay Kekua ? Manti Te?o's fake girlfriend.

Tim Tebow announced today that he is dating Lennay Kekua ? Manti Te?o's fake girlfriend.

Tebow and Te?o are similar in many ways ? talented football players, devout believes in Christ, kind, generous and giving. ?And now, apparently, they are attracted to the same types of women.

tebow_mantiD

?Tim had been in touch with Manti after Lennay passed away in September,? a close friend of Tebow?s told WWN. ??He offered his condolences and told Manti that he would do anything to help him through this difficult time in his life.?

tebow_mantiE

But when Tebow learned that Lennay was not dead and that most people in America thought it was all a hoax, Tebow couldn?t believe it. ??There?s no way Manti would be duped like that. ?I think she is real and she just needs more love in her life,? Tebow reportedly told friends.

Tebow then reached out to Kekua on Twitter and in the last week they have become ?very close.? ? According to friends, Tim has fallen hard for Lennay. ??She is everything he wants in a woman. ?She is beautiful, kind, loving and very spiritual.?

tebow_mantiC

Here?s Tebow speaking with Kekua on the practice field.

tebow_mantiY

Tebow has no plans to meet Kekua at this point. ??It?s too so0n,? ?he told friends. ?But Tebow has sent her a million dollars to help with a new round of leukemia treatments. ?Tim is very generous that way,? his friend told WWN.

tebow_mantiZ

Tebow is happy with his online love and has even hinted at marrying her, once she recovers from all the negative publicity surrounding Manti.

?

?

?

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://weeklyworldnews.com/sports/54093/tim-tebow-dating-mantis-fake-girlfriend/

modesto st louis weather guinea bissau google stock google stock china gdp dont trust the b in apartment 23

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Which machine will flex most muscle: Next Xbox, PlayStation?

Featured

11 days

Video

2012 was a great year for video games, but one game stood out from all of the rest. NBCNews.com's Todd Kenreck reports. Play video

17 hrs.

Let's set aside for a moment the fact that neither Microsoft nor Sony have officially said?that they are working on new home?game machines. For a moment, let's just accept the fact that, as?everyone who is anyone in the game industry knows: Microsoft and Sony ARE working new game machines.

As many,?many sources have confirmed, Microsoft's yet-to-be-revealed?new machine is code-named Durango while?Sony's new machine is code-named Orbis. But while these two game consoles remain?unannounced?that has not stopped industry insiders from leaking?specs and sizing up what is sure to be a big ol' Microsoft vs. Sony showdown.

In fact, this post-Consumer Electronics Show?week has been awash in new Xbox and PlayStation rumors and information ??much of?which seems very?reliable. Perhaps the most interesting new details come from gaming site VG247 which has spoken to "developer?sources" who say that Orbis (aka the PlayStation 4) will be more powerful than Durango (aka the Xbox 720).

The site says it spoke to?sources at CES who told them that Sony's machine?will have 50 percent more?raw computational power than Microsoft's machine,?as measured in teraflops ??a measure of computing power. (Orbis will boast?1.84 teraflops to Durango's 1.23.) But on the flip?side, VG247's?sources say that?Microsoft's machine will have?significantly more memory ??8GB of RAM ??while Sony's machine has?4GB.

Meanwhile, Digital Foundry, quoting?"trusted sources," has just?published an extensive report on Orbis' guts, confirming 1.84 teraflops and 4GB of?RAM for the forthcoming Sony?machine.

Additional?console details include:?VG247 reports that both machines will read Blu-ray discs. And Digital Foundry reports that both?will feature eight-core CPUs. Meanwhile, game site CVG is reporting that its sources say Microsoft will will replace the?Xbox Live voice chat with?Skype for its next console and that Sony is working on a new controller that may include a touch-screen and biometric sensors.?

The Xbox and PlayStation have always gone head-to-head in the power and features?department, each attempting to woo serious?gamers to its fold, and it looks like new machines only mean more muscle flexing. But it's important to?remember that Nintendo didn't rely on a lot of muscle to sell a whole lot of Wii game machines during the last console generation. That is, it will take a lot more than winning?teraflop and gigabyte numbers to triumph in the end.

And ultimately, what gamers want to know is: When will these machines arrive and how much will they cost?

Speaking of which, in other post-CES news, tech analysts are telling their investors?that they expect the two new machines to cost U.S. gamers between $350 and $400 (compared to the $300/$350 price tag on Nintendo's new Wii U machine).?As?GamesIndustry.Biz reports, Baird Equity Research has sent a note to its?investors explaining that?it arrived?at?the?above?retail price after speaking "with a number of companies involved in video game development and distribution" at CES.

In that note,?Baird senior research analyst Colin Sebastian said he expects Microsoft and Sony to reveal their new machines prior to the Electronic Entertainment Expo in June.?Meanwhile,?he expects Sony to launch its new machine in October and Microsoft to launch its in?November.

With new machines from Microsoft and Sony on the way???not to mention Valve's forthcoming Steam Box machines somewhere on the horizon ??the gaming business is going to get very, very interesting very soon. The question is: Which machine will you make room for in your home and in your budget?

Winda Benedetti?writes about video?games for NBC?News. You can follow her tweets about games and other things?on Twitter?here?@WindaBenedetti?and you can?follow her?on?Google+.?Meanwhile, be sure to check?out the?IN-GAME?FACEBOOK PAGE?to discuss the day's?gaming news and reviews.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/ingame/which-machine-will-flex-most-muscle-next-xbox-or-playstation-1B8030756

Hurricane Isaac Sam Claflin Tony Farmer West Nile virus symptoms snooki ll cool j amy schumer

Friday, January 18, 2013

US ITC pushes back Samsung-Apple ruling another month

?

Three delays thus far raise questions on Samsung complaint

Though it is difficult to keep track at times, the latest update in the ongoing various and sundry legal battles between Apple and Samsung comes from the US International Trade Commission (ITC), which has been examining a complaint made by Samsung accusing Apple of infringing on four of Samsung's patents. The resolution of the complaint has been delayed again, for at least the second time, and is now scheduled for March 7. An ITC ruling on a Apple complaint against Samsung was pushed back last week to March 27.

In the initial review of the case, Judge James Gildea harshly rebuked [PDF] Samsung's entire case, though he also belittled Apple's proposed defense against Samsung had his ruling granted legitimacy to Samsung's patent claims. As it was, Gildea ruled that Apple was not infringing on any of Samsung's patents, and that at least two (and possibly all four) of the claimed patents were likely SEPs and thus ineligible for litigation. A later review of the judgement by ITC found no flaw in Gildea's ruling, a strong hint -- but no guarantee -- of how the final full review is likely to go.

The delay in the final ruling is likely due to the ongoing and overlapping investigations of Samsung's possible abuse of standards-essential patents (SEPs) in its legal fights against Apple and other companies. In light of the current European Commission's accusation that Samsung is indeed wielding SEPs as legal weapons to try and suppress competition, Apple has asked Samsung to withdraw all of its SEP-centered claims in various courts, which would render the Samsung ITC complaint moot since all or most of the claims are based on SEPs. Samsung did withdraw all SEP-based claims from court cases in Europe just before the commission levelled its accusations (in an attempt to appease the investigation), but has not done the same in the US or elsewhere -- a fact Apple has used in court to accuse the company of hypocrisy and double standards.

In the previous announcement of a delay in resolving the complaint, the ITC referred to "numerous submissions" concerning possible misbehavior by Samsung (along with Google and its subsidiary Motorola Mobility) over the fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) licensing of SEPs both in this case and generally among tech companies. Apple, Microsoft, Ericsson and other tech companies have argued that FRAND-eligible SEPs should not be able to be used in court except in extreme cases of disagreement over reasonable terms -- a position the Department of Justice, the FTC and the European Commission (along with several courts, most notably ITC Judge Richard Posner) all agree with. Samsung, Google and Motorola have all been accused of setting unreasonable royalty rates on their SEPs, and refusing to license to some competitors (such as Apple).

The Samsung ITC case against Apple was originally filed in June of 2011 and was expected to be resolved within 18 months, according to patent case analyst Florian Mueller. Part of what is causing the delay can almost certainly be attributed to the combination of the EC investigation along with the new consent decree Google agreed to accept after negotiations with the US government over numerous abusive practices by the company, as well as comments by Judge Richard Posner in a separate case on software patents.

One stipulation of the ten-year agreement Google signed (that has not yet been fully implemented by Google and Motorola) is the withdrawal of all court cases based on disputes over SEPs. Apple filed that document, along with the EC Statement of Objections against Samsung, with the ITC court last month.

It becomes increasingly likely that the ITC will bow to pressure from various US government agencies and throw out any portions of Samsung's case against Apple the pertains to SEPs, as several courts and the EC have already found that Apple is a "willing licensee" of SEP patents held by competitors in all but one instance. Should that ruling occur, it would have no effect on Apple's counter-complaint to the ITC about Samsung's patent infringement, as none of Apple's lawsuits -- in any court -- against other companies have involved SEPs.

Apple's complaint against Samsung has already had a preliminary ruling, and Samsung was found guilty of violating four Apple patents, though the full six-judge panel will weigh in on the final judgement. Samsung is facing the strong possibility of fines and sales bans in the matter. Both Apple and Samsung may appeal the ITC rulings to the US Federal courts if they lose.

By Electronista Staff

Source: http://electronista.feedsportal.com/c/34342/f/626172/s/27a54d09/l/0L0Selectronista0N0Carticles0C130C0A10C180Cthree0Bdelays0Bthus0Bfar0Braise0Bquestions0Bon0Bsamsung0Nplaint0C/story01.htm

fashion star andrew bird lizzie borden lizzie borden iona taylor allderdice mixtape andrew bogut

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Catherine Zeta-Jones Planning Pilgrimage To India

Movie star Catherine Zeta-Jones is planning to take a family trip to India this month so she can soak up the Kumbh Mela Hindu pilgrimage.
The Oscar winner, her husband Michael Douglas and their kids are all planning to take the sacred journey to the Sangam, where India?s rivers Ganges, Yamuna and Sarasvati meet, to purify themselves.
Hindus believe bathing in the waters will wash away sin.
The Kumbh Mela festival is held every 12 years ? the last gathering set records in 2001 when more than 40 million people bathed in one day.
The current Kumbh Mela began on Monday in Allahabad, and Zeta-Jones hopes to be a part of the event this year.
She was recently quoted by an Indian website as saying, ?I really want to visit India again specifically during the Kumbh Mela pilgrimage and I?m told it is a sight to behold for the eyes and soul. I?m hoping to find what I?m looking for here. I?m trying to make this happen with my family. If that doesn?t work out I?m definitely coming on my own.?
And it seems she?ll be more than welcome ? Hindu statesman Rajan Zed tells WENN he?d be thrilled if the Hollywood star makes the pilgrimage to Sangam.
He says, ?We Hindus welcome Catherine Zeta-Jones, but she and her family should come as pilgrims and not as tourists.
?In addition to immersing herself in the holy Sangam waters, she should also explore the rich philosophy which Hinduism offers. I would be glad to help in such exploration.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/wenn/dGjW/~3/r0POp6Hbn_8/

anthony davis palm sunday toure patti smith lottery winners lottery winners april fools day pranks

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Society magazine Tatler's office puppy, Alan, killed after getting ...

He was one of London?s best connected young canines: a regular feature in the corridors of Tatler, if not its pages, and connoisseur of the lamposts of Mayfair.

But now Alan TBH Plumptre - Alan to his friends, @TatlerAlan to his thousands of followers on Twitter - is dead, killed by the cruellest revolving door in publishing.

Only a couple of days ago the long-haired dachshund was making jokes about snow and posting pictures of a housemate who ?looks like a shagpile carpet?.

His owner Jennifer George, events manager at the society journal, noted proudly that he had eight times as many

Source: http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/article3658278.ece

2012 masters the borgias shroud of turin warren sapp the masters i robot the big c

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Apple cuts orders for iPhone 5 parts on weak demand: Report

11 hrs.

Apple has cut orders for LCD screens and other parts for the iPhone 5 this quarter due to weak demand, the Nikkei reported on Monday, in a further sign the U.S. firm is losing ground to Asian smartphone rivals.

Shares of the Cupertino, California-based company fell more than 4 percent to $498.20 before the bell on Monday. They closed at $520.30 on Friday on the Nasdaq. The news also dragged shares of Apple suppliers such as Cirrus Logic and Qualcomm.

Apple has asked Japan Display, Sharp and South Korea's LG Display to roughly halve supplies of LCD panels from an initial plan for about 65 million screens in January-March, the Japanese daily said, citing people familiar with the situation, adding the U.S. firm also cut orders for other iPhone components.

The move, if confirmed, would tally with analysts saying that sales of the new iPhone 5, which was released in September, have not been as strong as anticipated.

Apple was not immediately available for comment outside regular U.S. business hours. No one at Sharp was immediately available to comment on Monday???a national holiday in Japan???and parts suppliers to Apple in Taiwan declined to comment.?

Apple has lost ground in the $200 billion plus global smartphone market to South Korean rival Samsung Electronics and smaller Chinese rivals such as Huawei and ZTE.

Jefferies analyst Peter Misek trimmed his iPhone shipment estimates for the January-March quarter on Dec. 14, saying that the technology company had started cutting orders to suppliers to balance excess inventory.

Apple also cut its orders for memory chips for its new iPhone from its main supplier and competitor Samsung, Reuters reported in September, quoting sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

The company has been cutting back its orders from Samsung as it seeks to diversify its memory chip supply lines.

Samsung overtakes Apple
Samsung said on Monday that global sales of its flagship Galaxy S smartphones had topped 100 million since the first model was launched in May 2010. The Galaxy S3, launched last May, sold more than 40 million in seven months.

The new Galaxy S IV is widely expected to be released within months, and may have an unbreakable screen, full high-definition quality resolution boasting 440 pixels per inch, and a more powerful processor.

Samsung has overtaken Apple, helped in part by the popularity of its Galaxy Note II phone-cum-tablet, reinforcing the benefits of offering a wider range of handheld devices at most price points, while Apple rolled out just a single new smartphone last year globally, analysts have said.

Samsung is expected to increase its smartphone sales by more than a third this year, and widen its lead over Apple, according to researcher Strategy Analytics, which has forecast Samsung will sell 290 million smartphones in 2013 versus iPhone sales of 180 million.

Kim Sung-in, an analyst at Kiwoom Securities in Seoul, sees Samsung shipping 320 million smartphones this year and doubling sales of its tablets to 32 million.

Japan Display's plant in Nomi, southwest Japan, where Apple has invested heavily, is expected to temporarily reduce output by up to 80 percent from October-December levels, the Nikkei reported, while Sharp's dedicated facility for iPhone 5 LCD panels will trim production in January-February by about 40 percent.

(Reporting by Tokyo bureau, Avik Das and Sayantani Ghosh in Bangalore and Clare Jim in Taipei; Editing by Ian Geoghegan, Supriya Kurane)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2013. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/apple-cuts-orders-iphone-5-parts-weak-demand-report-1B7956611

bulls heat goldman sachs brandon carr knicks coach encyclopedia britannica pi white lion

Monday, January 14, 2013

NCAA Syracuse Orangemen 8GB High-Speed USB Flash Drive with Swivel Cap and Lanyard

Related:
  • SYRACUSE
  • 8GB
  • IPOD TOUCH 8GB
  • 8GB RAM
  • IPOD 8GB
  • 8GB SD CARD
Search Tips:
  • Reduce the number of search terms.
  • Try alternate spellings for your search terms.
  • Use different search terms.

Shopping

International

  • Australia
  • Canada
  • France
  • Germany
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Spain

Mobile

Merchants

My Account

About Us

Customer Service

How Are We Doing?

  • Tell Us What You Think

More Fun Stuff

  • Travel
  • Deals
  • Blog

? 1999-2013, Nextag, Inc.

Source: http://prf.hn/click/foreign_identifier%3A2828/destination%3Ahttp%3A//xml.nextag.com/goto.jsp%3Fp=2828&search=8+gb+flash+drive&syndctx=AQATUPy8Kn8skz840skKWhaqDwfv9zBqJpgyNtOOGQIIuQ~~&url=%252FNCAA-Syracuse-Orangemen-8GB-9857

steven tyler national anthem paterno newt gingrich joe pa joe pa joe paterno dead

Ravens beat NFL Broncos in overtime

Baltimore has taken a 38-35 NFL playoff win over Denver while San Francisco downed Green Bay.

Photo: Australian News Channel Pty Ltd

Baltimore's Justin Tucker has booted a 47-yard field goal to give the Ravens a 38-35 NFL playoff win over Denver while San Francisco downed Green Bay.

The improbable victory means Baltimore veteran Ray Lewis, who says he'll retire at the end of the season, isn't done yet.

The Ravens' triumph brought quarterback great Peyton Manning's first season in Denver to a disappointing close.

The Ravens advanced to the American Conference (AFC) championship game, where they'll face either New England or Houston for a berth in the Super Bowl. The NFL championship spectacular will be played in New Orleans on February 3.

The San Francisco 49ers advanced to the National Conference (NFC) championship game with a 45-31 victory over the Green Bay Packers.

San Francisco signal-caller Colin Kaepernick set an NFL rushing record for a quarterback with 181 yards and two scores. He also threw for 263 yards and two touchdowns - both to Michael Crabtree.

The 49ers next play the winner of Sunday's game between NFC top seeds Atlanta and Seattle.

Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers threw for 257 yards with two touchdowns and an interception.

In Denver, Tucker's deciding field goal came four plays after the Ravens' Corey Graham intercepted Manning in Broncos territory for the second time of the game.

Baltimore quarterback Joe Flacco had connected with Jacoby Jones on a 70-yard touchdown pass with just 31 seconds left in regulation to tie the score at 35-35 and force overtime.

Flacco also hit Torrey Smith for a pair of touchdowns earlier in the game, finishing with 331 passing yards.

Ray Rice contributed 131 rushing yards and a touchdown.

'It was pretty incredible,' Flacco said. 'We overcame some things today and we fought until the very end.'

Manning entered the matchup having beaten the Ravens nine consecutive times - including a pair of post-season contests - during his long tenure with Indianapolis. He threw for 290 yards and three touchdowns and the two interceptions.

The Broncos, who had won their last 11 regular-season games to claim the top seed in the AFC and a first-round bye, endured their first playoff loss at home since 1996.

Speedster Trindon Holliday delivered a stand-out performance in the defeat, returning both a punt and a kickoff for Denver touchdowns and establishing an NFL playoff record for the longest return for each.

'Unless you're hoisting that Lombardi Trophy at the end, it's disappointing,' said Broncos head coach John Fox. 'We had plenty of opportunities in this game, we just came up short.'

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BigpondsportcomLatestNews/~3/QaawG_J88oY/default.aspx

joe oliver joba chamberlain new york mega millions jetblue jetblue michelle malkin october baby

Friday, January 11, 2013

Ohio State University Men's Basketball vs. Michigan

Ohio State University Men's Basketball vs. Michigan

Dates: January 13, 2013
Location: Value City Arena at the Jerome Schottenstein Center
Hours: Sunday 1:30 p.m. or 4:30 p.m.
Address: 555 Borror Dr., Columbus, 43210
Phone: 614-292-2624
Web: www.OhioStateBuckeyes.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ColumbusSports/~3/lcFK-1tZP5A/event-detail.cfm

olympia snowe davey jones dead

Tolland to Hold Delinquent Tax Property Auction - Tolland, CT Patch

The Town of Tolland will be auctioning off properties to settle delinquent tax debts amounting to $118,793.04 ?this March, according to the Tax Collector's Office.

While many of the properties are smaller, residential parcels, business owners who are tenants of the plazas at 12 and 24 Goose Lane could be affected as the property changes hands.

Attorney Adam Cohen of Pullman & Comley, who is executing the auction for the town, said that the winning bidder will have the right to either keep the current Goose Lane tenants or lease to new businesses.

According to signage at the properties, the following businesses are located at the two addresses:

  • David E. Palozej, Eye Care Associates, LLC
  • Frederick Daniels, DDS, Family Dentistry, LLC
  • The Hand Center
  • Plan B, Retail Design and Project Management, LLC
  • Davis, Mascola & Phillips, CPAs
  • B & D Insurance Associates, LLC
  • Salon Gio
  • Tolland Therapeutic Massage & Integrated Wellness
  • A Touch of Magic
  • Tolland Counseling Center
  • Cultivating Change Counseling Services, LLC

The title of the commercial property, currently owned by Goose Lane, LLC, would be transferred to the winning bidder six months after the March 19 auction.


Let Patch save you time. Get great local stories like this delivered right to your inbox or smartphone every day with our free newsletter. Simple, fast sign-up here.


It is also possible, Cohen added, that the bank holding mortgages on the property could redeem the property by paying the delinquent taxes to the town. Sovereign Bank holds mortgages on both Goose Lane parcels, Cohen said.

Tolland Collector of Revenue Linda Calabrese said that the auction is the end of several years of attempts to contact the property owners for payment. A number of notices were sent out, payment plans were drafted and numerous telephone calls were made before scheduling the auction, she said.

And for some property owners, the auction is a welcome solution, since a few have filed letters expressing an interest in giving up the parcels, Calabrese noted.

The town also had to ensure that several requirements were met before the properties can head to auction:

  • Taxes not paid for at least a year and a half
  • A threshold of $10,000 or more in taxes owed
  • Appropriate measures made to collect
  • Committee of town council members, Human Services Director, Town Manager, Finance Director and Collector of Revenue approve the property for auction

The complete list of auctioned properties reads as follows, according to the tax office notice:

  • 12 and 24 Goose Lane
  • 64 Columbine Road
  • 34 Old Farms Road
  • 5 Amanda Way
  • 636 Sugar Hill Road
  • 423 Hunter Road
  • 60 Gehring Road Extension

Cohen's fees for handling the case will be paid by setting a minimum bid at the auction, Calabrese said.

The auction is scheduled for 10 a.m. on March 19 at town hall.?

Source: http://tolland.patch.com/articles/tolland-to-hold-delinquent-tax-property-auction

Tagg Romney Bosses Day Cabin Fever 2 Alexis Wright Zumba binder full of women Microsoft Surface Candy Crowley

Thursday, January 10, 2013

TV-over-Internet service expands despite lawsuits

In this Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, photo, Chet Kanojia, founder and CEO of Aereo, Inc., stands next to a server array of antennas as he holds an antenna between his fingers, in New York. Aereo is one of several startups created to deliver traditional media over the Internet without licensing agreements. Past efforts have typically been rejected by courts as copyright violations. In Aereo?s case, the judge accepted the company?s legal reasoning, but with reluctance. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

In this Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, photo, Chet Kanojia, founder and CEO of Aereo, Inc., stands next to a server array of antennas as he holds an antenna between his fingers, in New York. Aereo is one of several startups created to deliver traditional media over the Internet without licensing agreements. Past efforts have typically been rejected by courts as copyright violations. In Aereo?s case, the judge accepted the company?s legal reasoning, but with reluctance. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

In this Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, photo, Chet Kanojia, founder and CEO of Aereo, Inc., listens during a tour of the company's technology floor in New York. Aereo is one of several startups created to deliver traditional media over the Internet without licensing agreements. Past efforts have typically been rejected by courts as copyright violations. In Aereo?s case, the judge accepted the company?s legal reasoning, but with reluctance. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

In this Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, photo, Chet Kanojia, founder and CEO of Aereo, Inc., listens during a tour of the company's technology floor in New York. Aereo is one of several startups created to deliver traditional media over the Internet without licensing agreements. Past efforts have typically been rejected by courts as copyright violations. In Aereo?s case, the judge accepted the company?s legal reasoning, but with reluctance. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

In this Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012, photo, Chet Kanojia, founder and CEO of Aereo, Inc., gives a tour of the company's technology floor in New York. Aereo is one of several startups created to deliver traditional media over the Internet without licensing agreements. Past efforts have typically been rejected by courts as copyright violations. In Aereo?s case, the judge accepted the company?s legal reasoning, but with reluctance. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

NEW YORK (AP) ? The Barry Diller-backed Internet company that challenged cable and satellite TV services by offering inexpensive live television online plans to expand beyond New York City this spring.

In the wake of a federal court ruling that tentatively endorsed its legality, Aereo will bring its $8-a-month service to Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington and 18 other markets in the U.S., as well as to New York's suburbs. For the past year, the service had been limited to New York City residents as the company fine-tuned its technology and awaited guidance on whether its unlicensed use of free, over-the-air broadcasts amounted to a copyright violation.

A federal judge in New York ruled in July that the service doesn't appear to violate copyright law because individual subscribers are assigned their own, tiny antenna at Aereo's Brooklyn data center, making it analogous to the free signal a consumer would get with a regular antenna at home. Aereo spent the subsequent months selecting markets for expansion and renting space for new equipment in those cities.

"The court decision was the green light in our perspective," CEO and founder Chet Kanojia said in a recent interview at Aereo's sparse offices in a former engine factory in Queens. "This is an opportunity of a lifetime to build up something meaningful to change how people access TV."

Aereo is one of several startups created to deliver traditional media over the Internet without licensing agreements. Past efforts have typically been rejected by courts as copyright violations. In Aereo's case, the judge accepted the company's legal reasoning, but with reluctance.

If the ruling stands, Aereo could cause a great deal of upheaval in the broadcast industry. It could give people a reason to drop cable or satellite subscriptions as monthly bills rise. It also might hinder broadcasters' ability to sell ads because it's not yet clear how traditional audience measures will incorporate Aereo's viewership. In addition, it could reduce the licensing fees broadcasters collect from cable and satellite companies.

Broadcasters have appealed the July ruling. At a November hearing, appellate judges expressed skepticism about the legality of Aereo's operations. In addition, the original judge's ruling was preliminary, made as part of a decision to let Aereo continue operating while the lawsuits wind their way through court. Even if courts continue to side with Aereo on the legality of its setup, broadcasters still could nitpick on the details and try to argue that the antennas don't actually operate individually as claimed.

Despite Aereo's initial win, copyright attorney Kevin Goldberg with the firm Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth rated Aereo's chances "a toss-up. You really are trying to break new ground here."

Goldberg, who isn't representing either side in the case, noted that a federal judge in Los Angeles already has ruled against a copycat service called Aereokiller. Furthermore, he said, Congress can step in at any time to clarify the law.

Kanojia said he didn't want to wait for a final resolution, which could take years. He said all startups accept some risk when they try to shake up an industry.

With average monthly TV bills exceeding $75, Aereo is positioning itself as a cheaper alternative. For $8 a month, subscribers in New York get 29 over-the-air stations. They can watch shows live and record up to 20 hours using Aereo's Internet-based digital video recorder. Subscribers get 40 hours of DVR space for $12 a month and can reduce that to less than $7 by paying for a year in advance.

While cable and satellite services are geared toward watching television on TVs, Aereo streams feeds over the Internet to Windows and Mac computers, iPhones, iPads and boxes such as Roku and Apple TV for feeding Internet content to regular TVs. Android support is expected this year. Services such as Hulu and Apple's iTunes also offer television over the Internet, but not live.

The downside: Aereo doesn't offer cable channels such as CNN, HBO, ESPN and regional sports networks. The exception is Bloomberg TV financial news channel, which reached a deal in which Aereo is paying an unspecified fee. Cable lineups typically have hundreds of channels, compared with a few dozen for Aereo.

The 22 markets Aereo plans for this spring's expansion are Atlanta, Austin, Baltimore, Birmingham, Ala., Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Kansas City, Madison, Wis., Miami, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Providence, R.I., Raleigh-Durham, N.C., Salt Lake City, Tampa, Fla., and Washington. With that, Aereo estimates that the service will reach nearly 100 million potential customers.

After that, Aereo plans to add more cities a few times each year.

Aereo announced the expansion on Tuesday in Las Vegas, as the annual International CES gadget show formally opened.

One factor for the initial round was a market's proximity to Aereo's headquarters in New York, in case engineers need to board a train or a plane to resolve problems. Weather also was a factor, as much of the construction is taking place during winter months.

Another consideration was demographics. One key target will be people in their 20s who have never subscribed to cable or satellite TV, a group Aereo terms the "cord nevers." Research from Nielsen shows that younger Americans tend to watch more video over the Internet and less on traditional TV than older audiences.

Kanojia said Aereo is offering broadcasters a way to reach younger audiences where they spend their time.

The National Association of Broadcasters disagrees. NAB spokesman Dennis Wharton likened Aereo to someone who steals a six-pack of Coke, shares cans with friends and then claims to be helping the soda company promote its product.

"If you're selling the program for a fee and not compensating the rights holder for that product, that's fundamentally unfair and violates the copyright law," Wharton said.

Aereo, which wouldn't reveal how many subscribers it has, said it will keep prices the same in the new markets, though the available channels will vary.

Not all channels will be offered to everyone in a given market. For example, a Virginia subscriber might be blocked from a Maryland station even though both are in the Washington market. Aereo said it will use data from the Federal Communications Commission to calculate whether that subscriber would normally be able to pick up that station using a regular antenna.

Out-of-market stations won't be available, even if both markets are served by Aereo after the expansion. A New York subscriber who takes a trip to Chicago, for instance, would be able to watch only Chicago stations ? and not New York channels ? while in the Windy City.

In doing so, Aereo continues to tread the boundaries of copyright law.

A 1992 federal cable law allows broadcasters to demand licensing fees from services that retransmit their signals, even if a station offers its signal over the air for free. Cable and satellite companies spend millions of dollars for those rights and often blame price hikes on the fees. High-profile disputes over such fees have led to blackouts of stations on some TV lineups, as broadcasters aren't required to offer their signals to any of these services.

Aereo argues that it isn't subject to those fees because it uses thousands of dime-size antennas to pick up signals and assigns them to subscribers one at a time. The company insists it is merely renting an antenna to the customer, and it's the customer who enables the transmission, the way one would with a home antenna. If two subscribers record the same show, two antennas would be assigned and two copies would be stored on the virtual DVR. The setup is inefficient; Aereo admits it's done solely because of copyright law.

Judge Alison Nathan sided with Aereo last summer, denying broadcasters a request to shut down the service pending resolution of the lawsuits filed in March by major networks and local stations, as well as producers of some of their shows. Nathan ruled that while the service might hurt broadcasters' ability to make money, the law left her no other choice.

Nathan had relied on a 2008 court decision involving a remote DVR service offered by Cablevision Systems Corp. In their appeal, broadcasters pointed out that Cablevision was already paying licensing fees for TV signals, so the court was deciding whether the company had to pay extra for the new service. Cable and satellite TV operators are not plaintiffs in the lawsuits against Aereo, but Cablevision filed a brief saying that Aereo should be subject to the same fees that cable companies have to pay.

Aereo's early investors include Diller's IAC/InterActiveCorp, which owns Match.com, Ask.com and other websites. On Tuesday, Aereo said it has closed on a second round of financing, worth $38 million and led by IAC and Highland Capital Partners.

___

Online:

Aereo: http://aereo.com

Legal blog entry on Aereo: http://bit.ly/ZCT1Pa

Broadcasters group: http://nab.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-08-TV%20on%20the%20Internet/id-c136bbb40a5f451d8c0814b64b672971

Secede ben roethlisberger Diwali elmo nascar Kevin Clash Walmart Black Friday 2012

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Transcript from the Santa Barbara Film Society OTR Screening Q&A ...

In December, Kristen attended a screening of On The Road hosted by the Santa Barbara Cinema Society that was followed by a Q&A Session with her co-star Garrett Hedlund. Here is a transcript of Kristen?s portions. You can read the entire transcript at SBIFF?website.

SBIFF: And Kristen, you?ve also been involved with this project for a very long time, since, Into The Wild with Sean Penn?

Kristen Stewart: It was a little after that. I think it was in 2007, I was seventeen.

SBIFF: What was it that attracted you to this role?

Stewart: On The Road was my first favorite book. I read it as a freshman in high school. And then when I heard Walter was directing it I would have done anything to be involved. I would have been his assistant on it. I would have done craft service. The reason you love something, it?s so clear. I don?t even really remember the details of the initial conversation; I think I just drove away shaking. I mean I was fairly certain. Not necessarily that I would get the part, because it could have been decades and we still would have had to wait fifty years for it to begin, but that I wanted to commit to something like that. Which is obviously, at least the way I remember, so irresponsible of me. I wasn?t ready for that part yet, at all. I got involved when Garrett did, and if fifty years had gone by and we?d missed out then it would have been a really painful experience.

SBIFF: Kristen, in the book the women, especially Mary Lou, are shall I say, underwritten. Were you involved in the process of expanding the character of Mary Lou?

Stewart: Yeah, she?s definitely on the periphery of the story. I think some of the people behind the characters thought it would be easier to not change the story necessarily and never add anything really. It was always just sort of felt. I think a really common idea in the book is that the women are treated as sort of playthings like they?re ambience or sexy wild things

SBIFF: Which seems like misogyny to some people.

Stewart: Yeah, which is interesting to me because I always hear men say that like, ?So hey, don?t you think there?s a chauvinist feeling to the use of women in the story?? and I think that?s a kind of simplistic way of looking at it. They?re not on the forefront of the story so you don?t know where their hearts or where their minds are. But at the same time, getting to know Luanne especially, I don?t think anyone could have taken from her. She was so generous and giving and what she was getting in return was not leaving her empty. The same goes for Dean. She was an incredibly formidable partner and talk about a girl who doesn?t know fear. She was just a teenager and it?s not a very typical quality for a teenager to have. That like, really hungry and unselfconscious and self-aware thing. It?s not common. As soon as I met her daughter, she went into great detail; she?s got a killer memory as well, and everything just made sense. I think we were able to feel them instead of having to have to illustrate it. It sort of just came across as we got to know them and how we loved the people.

Hedlund: She?s wise beyond her years, this character. I mean, she?s the one who left me in New York at the beginning. I just thought Dean and MaryLou were so parallel because she was wise beyond her years, he was as well, and they were kind of just great travelling companions. She was kind of the mirror image of him in a way, because just like that she left him to go back to Denver when she reveals that she has a husband to return to.

Stewart: They kind of helped to raise each other.

SBIFF: Kristen, the Hudson is another character in the movie and you obviously spent a lot of time inside this car. What was that experience like, it seemed awfully claustrophobic.

Stewart: Really?

Hedlund: Remember Argentina?

Stewart: Yeah, that got old.

Hedlund: After Montreal we needed snow in August. So we went all the way down to Patagonia in Chile and shot for three days. I remember there was a banana on the backseat floor and that?s how you could tell how long the day was by the current state of the banana. Obviously the banana was getting squished on the backseat floor, and whoever was in the backseat would be you know?

Stewart: Making disgusting jokes about the state of the banana that don?t need to be repeated here.

SBIFF: Kristen, you mentioned MaryLou?s daughter?Has the family seen the film? And what was their reaction?

Stewart: Yeah, I think Anne Marie saw it a few weeks ago, we were in San Francisco and she attended a screening with her husband and daughter. I think she?s really happy with it. The thing that Luanne always did with her daughter, and probably with many other aspects of her life as well, was that she really kept things separate. Which is why I got a really interesting perspective through her daughter. Her values, and desires, and ideals were pretty varying. And yet she was able to provide herself with the life she wanted to live. I mean afterwards, she was just smiling a lot. Her mother had just passed away right before we were about to get this thing going. Out of a lot of characters in the book, she would have been one of the ones that would have been really enthusiastic and into it and would have loved to talk to us, and it?s too bad that it was timed badly. But yeah, I think she?s happy with it. She said that she?s always really shocked and surprised by that aspect of her mom?s life because she came right after. She would tell us stories about people coming back to the house and her mom would never explain to her who they were, so one day she was sitting there, she was sixteen years old and she answered the door to Neal Cassady. He looked at her and?he could always never accept the fact that she wasn?t his daughter. So he was always like, ?Oh look! She?s got my eyes!? when she was a little baby, and Luanne would be like, ?Uh, no, she doesn?t.? Which is crazy, it?s always insane to me that they never had a child together after all that. But anyway, Neal looked at her and said, ?Oh, you?re not as pretty as Jack said you were. Where?s your mom?? and she was like, ?Who are you?? Then she found out years later who he was, and he had shown up on the bus actually.

Hedlund: Oh yeah, the bus from the Electric Kool-Aid Acid test days. But it?s also special, Anne Marie the other night had given each of us a vinyl from her mom?s personal collection. Her mom, appreciated her vinyl so much that all of these had her initials on the back in the top right corner so?

Stewart: Yeah, there?s a little ?Lu? and it?s really cute.

SBIFF: So the jazz, I wanted to ask Walter about the music but one of my favorite moments in the movie is your dance sequence. Was that choreographed, or could you explain how that scene was shot?

Hedlund: Yeah, it was maybe choreographed in the way of memorizing your lines and knowing what to say but having the freedom to improvise. Because at that point, and I know that later we found out that Luanne?s favorite dance was the jitterbug but that would have been a little too clich? for this moment, and at that period we couldn?t find any reference of dance because they were coming out of swing and moving into be-bop. So we just interpreted that and learned a few interesting steps and what to do, and it was much more on the seductive side. Really we just learned a few steps and Walter would film ten minutes without calling cut. So of course we had to use a song that was cut to ten minutes so those were some of the most exhausting days of the shoot. We were just being maniacal on the dance floor and a big sort of bash was going on but after ten minutes, cut. Then we?d run outside to catch our breath.

Stewart: There was no air in the room either. It was totally like a vacuum. It was hot.

via

Source: http://kstewartnews.com/2013/01/08/transcript-from-the-santa-barbara-film-society-otr-screening-qa/

oscar nominees oscar nominations 2012 kombucha tea