Thursday, May 23, 2013

That's something that a teacher can't teach | Blogging Bayport ...

That?s something that a teacher can?t?teach

Remember Garfield High I referenced a few posts ago under ?how much does historic restoration of a high school cost?? ? Well some more interesting things have been going on there when it comes to actual education at that High School and in Seattle in general. ? Earlier this week after months of boycotting the high stakes standardized testing unique to that school district the district caved. ? The tests called MAP (Measures of Academic Progress) had been used to evaluate teachers even though the test itself was not designed to do so.

It took a petition and nearly all of the teachers at ?Seattle high schools to refuse to administer the test to their students to get the school district to back down on its position. ? I?m sure that most of the complaints about the MAP tests are the same that you would hear from all teachers about the assorted standardized tests floating out there that are largely useless except to be used as an arbitrary measure for people who haven?t stepped foot into an actual classroom in forever to complain about how ?good? or ?bad? a particular school is without an actual reference point to the quality of the teaching or the educational value of the curriculum.

Anyhow, the efforts of the teachers and the community members resulted in the Seattle School District deciding that the MAP would no longer be?mandatory for high school graduation?and it would be up to the school leadership to decide whether or not to administer the test.

Since I?m on the subject of education in general, the Alameda Magazine has in its latest issue probably my favorite feature ever ?in the Alameda Magazine. ? Every year they have profiles of graduating Alameda students who are doing amazing things as high schoolers. ? This year?s crop is no exception to the impressive Alameda students that have been featured in this series. ? ?For example check out Emani Pollard from Encinal High School, yes she is daughter of Clay Pollard who ran for School Board in 2010. ? While I strongly disagree with Clay Pollard?s politics, his daughter is?breathtakingly well rounded and, well, impressive. ? ?And check out from ASTI Andy Lau (two AA degrees! ?job! volunteers! ) and Leon Liang (AA! College teaching aide! Tutors college students! Revising college lab manual! Elementary school volunteer!). ? I love the kids in these profiles, it really always leaves me in a better mood.

Every year I read this I grow more and more impressed by little Alameda Science and Technology?Institute (ASTI)?located at the College of Alameda. ? It?s a magnet Alameda Unified School District high school and the big selling point is that if the student is diligent enough, that student can graduate high school with an Associates of Arts (AA) degree from the Peralta College family depending on the subject selected. ? While the limitations of ASTI is that there are no Advanced Placement classes, the only real reward of AP classes is the ability to transfer those credits to college credits and the fact that they pad your GPA by an extra 1.0 resulting in the seriously strange looking 4.83 GPAs that kids these days can earn. ? ?ASTI kids can exit with AA degrees which shows colleges that they are able to handle college level coursework and might be an even bigger leg up for college admissions.

Anyway, when the comments around here bitching about the schools always get me down, I always think of these profiles and while most of these kids are just about as motivated as students as you?ll ever get, it is thanks to Alameda schools that cultivated and provided them with (some) of the opportunities that they had to excel.

Source: http://laurendo.wordpress.com/2013/05/22/thats-something-that-a-teacher-cant-teach/

peter facinelli bobby rush supreme court justices 19 kids and counting danny o brien alicia silverstone park slope food coop

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Insight: No more easy pickings in Russia's banking market

By Megan Davies

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Foreign banks that once treated Russia as virgin land where easy money could be made are now finding it a cut-throat market tougher than some bargained for.

While players such as Citi and Austria's Raiffeisen thrive, many have found post-Soviet Russia too hard to crack: rife with credit, legal and corruption risks, and dominated by state giants Sberbank and VTB.

The latest to hit trouble has been France's Societe Generale. Vladimir Golubkov, the head of its Russian unit, was charged with bribery last week after being caught on film in a police sting operation with piles of cash on his office desk.

"Fifteen years ago all you had to do was turn up and open your doors, and people would queue up, because you knew what customer service was and you understood what products were," said Stuart Lawson, who opened Citi's Moscow operations in the 1990s and ran HSBC's Russian operations from 2008 to 2010.

"Now ... the state banks have hired graduates from the foreign banks or from overseas and they're full of people who understand it. The game is a lot tougher now."

Western banks with a bit of nerve flocked to Russia after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, but this no longer fits President Vladimir Putin's vision for a country which was badly exposed to the Wall Street crash almost two decades later.

Now, savvier homegrown banks have significant control.

Yet Russia remains "under-banked" compared with other countries, offering tempting growth prospects. Russia's banking system is worth around 50 trillion roubles ($1.6 trillion) by assets - about the same as Ireland and dwarfed by the $14.5 trillion banking system in the United States.

That also bears out when compared to the BRIC group of countries. Credit provided by banks to the domestic economy accounts for just 40 percent of Russia's gross domestic product. In China, that figure was 146 percent, in Brazil 98 percent and India 74 percent, according to World Bank figures from 2011. The lack of affordable credit has hit investment and weighed on the growth of Russia's $2 trillion economy.

DO THE HOMEWORK

Those banks which have prospered in Russia got the timing right, didn't overpay, had headquarters which were involved with the running of the business and had staying power during difficult times.

SocGen bought in haste, without proper due diligence and failed to assert control quickly, says one former French bank executive in Russia, criteria that are crucial in a market where courts are little trusted and corruption widespread.

SocGen has spent around 4 billion euros ($5.2 billion) since 2006 building up an 82 percent stake in Rosbank - previously owned by Russian tycoons Vladimir Potanin and Mikhail Prokhorov.

"The expatriates systematically find themselves holding the No.2 position," said the executive, adding it was "incomprehensible" why they did not install a more senior French executive. "It shows the naivet? of SocGen."

SocGen declined to comment.

Other banks have also struggled with valuing Russian assets.

Britain's Barclays paid four times book value for Expobank in 2008, before the global financial crisis hit. It later sold below cost to banker Igor Kim, who has been snapping up distressed banking assets.

"Although they are my competitors I felt sorry that some banks, including Barclays, withdrew from Russia," said VTB's CEO Andrei Kostin, who said VTB has a stake of around 10 percent in Rosbank. "But maybe they entered the wrong time, the wrong way."

HSBC was a latecomer and decided to pull out of retail banking in Russia in 2011 as part of a global reorganization.

"Foreign banks largely entered Russia to operate on the retail market but many faced tough competition. They didn't expect that," said Anatoly Aksakov, head of the Association of Regional Banks of Russia, and a member of Russia's parliament.

Kim said he had seized on the opportunity presented by the weakness of foreign players, which in selling out of Russia cheaply surrendered banking operations that were well run and not burdened with balance-sheet risks.

Kim said in an interview with Reuters that he only buys assets once he is fully satisfied that all the "skeletons" have been disposed of or properly provided for with provisions.

There are some notable Western survivors.

Citi entered in 1992 and expanded organically. It reported over $300 million in profit from Russia last year and CEE Cluster Head Zdenek Turek called it one of the "top priority countries for Citi".

Italy's Unicredit has been in the Russian market for more than 20 years, growing by acquisition, and is profitable, as is Raiffeisen, which opened up shop back in 1989 and gained scale through its $550 million acquisition of Impexbank in 2006.

BULLDOZER WITH HANDBRAKE OFF

Hard to beat are the state players Sberbank and VTB, which dominate the retail market and are strong in investment banking.

"The bulldozer with the handbrake off, heading down the hill - that's the state banks," said one senior banker.

"They've got momentum. They've got product, low capital cost and vastly improved management, and they're heading in the direction of the private sector banks."

The country's largest bank, Sberbank, has undergone a transformation under former Economy Minister German Gref, defending its market share in lending and still controlling nearly 46 percent of Russian retail deposits.

Once synonymous with queues and hour-long waits, the bank has improved its service and is a popular stock among foreign investors.

Russia's second largest bank VTB, once the Soviet foreign trade bank, has a retail franchise with 8.7 percent of deposits. It is serious investment banking player, and has been swiping bankers from foreign rivals.

So far this year, VTB is top in M&A based on fee income, fifth in equity and third in bonds, according to data from Thomson Reuters/Freeman Consulting.

Russia's laws prohibit foreign banks from opening branches but allow them to operate subsidiaries subject to regulation by the central bank. One banker says there is equal opportunity.

"Foreign banks have been treated on a level playing field (in Russia)," said Lawson, now an executive director at Ernst & Young in Moscow. "Once you've locally capitalized, except for the reality that the state banks dominate the market, all else is on a pretty equal footing."

WILD EAST

Foreign bankers with an appetite for risk sought out Russia in the turbulent years that followed the Soviet collapse, as the industrial legacy of the command economy came up for grabs.

New Zealander Stephen Jennings came to Moscow in 1992, aged 32, with Credit Suisse First Boston to advise on privatizations that created a new class of billionaire business oligarch.

He founded Renaissance Capital in 1995, making his name and fortune as a risk taker and dealmaker. But, after surviving the 1998 and 2008 crashes, his dream finally unraveled last year after three consecutive years of losses.

Jennings abruptly left Moscow after RenCap suffered a ratings downgrade. He has declined to comment since.

Prokhorov, who had already saved RenCap in 2008, bought the rest of the bank and pumped in extra liquidity. Renaissance announced a loss of $378 million for 2012 but says its investment bank is now operationally profitable.

Unlike the United States, which is lucrative for business such as capital- and debt-raisings, and M&A, commissions are lower in Russia, one banker said.

"Here, fee scale means nothing, every single thing is highly negotiated and the state sector will always be tougher and more competitive," the banker said.

Still, there is money to be made and Wall Street banks JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are present in Moscow with gleaming offices and aggressive bankers. Bank of America Merrill Lynch recently hired RenCap alumnus Alexander Pertsovsky to head its Moscow team.

KREMLIN GAMBIT

For the government, Western banks are sought as promoters of Russia's investment story - one of Putin's ambitious aims is to build a global financial center and Goldman Sachs has a mandate to help the country attract foreign capital.

Western banks are also advising on the state's privatization program in which the government has reduced its share in both Sberbank and VTB in recent years but kept majority stakes.

Whether Putin will go further and cede control is open to doubt. The 2008 crash revealed just how exposed Russia was to the Wall Street crash - $130 billion fled Russia in the fourth quarter of that year alone.

Russia's banks were only saved from collapse by the central bank, which spent $200 billion of its reserves to defend the exchange rate - thus allowing them to refinance their foreign debts - before finally devaluing the rouble by 25 percent.

Finding a niche has paid off for some mavericks in the consumer banking sector.

Oleg Tinkov supplies credit cards to regions neglected by the big banks. Using direct mail and online advertising, Tinkoff Credit Systems is profiting from increasing demand for consumer loans in a country where credit card penetration is tiny.

He sees no threat to his marketing-led approach from Western banks, whose business model he sees as broken.

"When I see a French banker, I laugh. They don't succeed in Russia because they are so amateur. They are bureaucrats," said Tinkov.

($1 = 31.4240 Russian roubles)

(Additional reporting by Katya Golubkova and Douglas Busvine in Moscow, Lionel Laurent and Jean-Michel Belot in Paris, Michael Shields in Vienna and Steve Slater in London; editing by Douglas Busvine, Elizabeth Piper and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-no-more-easy-pickings-russias-banking-market-063446177.html

Doug Martin Barack Obama & Joe Biden Am I registered to vote Voter registration Election Election results 2012 exit polls

A Great Pair of Wireless Desktop Speakers Is Your Deal of the Day

Just because a pair of speakers uses Bluetooth doesn't mean they're going to sound like crap. Audyssey's Wireless Bluetooth Speakers received several surprising rave reviews when they came out because they sound great and look handsome, too. But they were pricey.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/QcG_hbt2QkI/a-great-pair-of-desktop-speakers-is-your-deal-of-the-da-509083791

Boy Meets World elizabeth taylor cam newton FedEx Gabriel Aubry cyber monday deals small business saturday

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Human-like opponents lead to more aggression in video game players

May 20, 2013 ? Video games that pit players against human-looking characters may be more likely to provoke violent thoughts and words than games where monstrous creatures are the enemy, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Connecticut and Wake Forest University.

"The Perception of Human Appearance in Video Games: Toward an Understanding of the Effects of Player Perceptions of Game Features," published in the May 2013 issue of Mass Communication and Society, comes as lawmakers and the public are freshly debating the possible risks that violent games may pose to impressionable players.

"It's important to think in terms of risk factors," says Kirstie Farrar, associate professor of communication at UConn and the lead researcher on the study. "The research clearly suggests that, among other risk factors, exposure to violent video games can lead to aggression and other potentially harmful effects."

In the study, 148 participants played the first-person shooter Quake 3 Revolution, in which the gamer battles onscreen opponents whose appearance can range from human-like to completely non-human, such as a giant floating eyeball. Farrar and colleague Rory McGloin, an assistant professor-in-residence, along with Wake Forest professor Marina Krcmar, a former UConn faculty member, then used a series of tests to measure participants' levels of verbal, cognitive, and physical aggression.

Participants who battled what they perceived as human-looking characters in the game were more likely to have aggressive thoughts and words than those who had shot down monstrous nonhuman characters.

"The more human players perceived the aggressive targets to be, the more verbally aggressive they were and the more violent words they generated," the study says. "Although we predicted that less human targets would result in more aggression, players seemed to be more aggressive after perceiving more human targets."

The prospect that fighting human-looking characters can provoke more aggression than unleashing violence against characters with no real-world counterparts could have implications for debates over gaming, especially as video games become more sophisticated and immersive, Farrar says.

"A lot of games are becoming incredibly easy to customize now," she said. "I can upload pictures of myself into a game, for example. Or I can upload pictures of people I don't like."

But the study also notes there was no significant increase in levels of physical aggression after fighting human-looking video game characters, something that suggests social prohibitions against violent acts remain strong.

"There are obvious consequences for physical violence," McGloin says. "But we're much more tolerant as a society of aggressive thoughts, as long as they don't lead to aggressive behavior."

Farrar and McGloin have plans to develop the research, including a study that uses realistic-looking gun-shaped controllers to see if that has any effect on players' aggression. They also want to research more fully whether playing frequently changes how gamers react to violence in video games. In previous work, the researchers found that frequent players of violent video games are more aggressive overall and more attracted to violent games.

As lawmakers in Connecticut and elsewhere contemplate studying the effects of violent games, the researchers say that the more data available, the better.

"We can talk about violent video games and aggression all day, but we need to be careful," McGloin says. "We're not going to find one answer and be able to say, 'This game's good, this game's bad.' It's never going to be that simple."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/MGYciqx-Cmo/130520163904.htm

carmen whitney houston last performance cpac straw poll i will always love you whitney cummings maine caucus whitney houston has died

Auto Insurance Quotes for the Top Selling Cars in 2013 | 800 Jixie

d3212 buying cars online gI 83788 2013Bestsellers Auto Insurance Quotes for the Top Selling Cars in 2013
(PRWEB) May 21, 2013

Summer is coming, and thousands of people are thinking of buying a new car this year. And why not? The American auto industry is making a big comeback, offering well-made vehicles that the public wants to buy again.

This year, 10 models by five different car companies dominated the best-selling lists, led all three months by two pick-up trucks, the Ford F-Series and the Chevy Silverado. The top-selling sedan was the Toyota Camry, and other popular passenger cars included the Honda Accord, Nissan Altima, and Ford Fusion.

The only SUV on the list was the Ford Escape, but this model includes all of the features that have made SUVs popular for nearly 20 years, without the notoriously poor gas mileage and large size. Unlike its larger cousins, the Escape is more compact and efficient, and comes with an optional electric/gas hybrid engine, offering green-minded drivers more flexibility.

While all of these automobiles are excellent buys depending on the buyer?s needs and budget, one of them is consistently cheaper to insure.

EINSURANCE conducted an objective survey of insurance companies to determine which of the top-selling cars of 2013 got the best auto insurance quotes. The winner is the 2013 Ford Escape.

Many factors come into play when determining auto insurance rates, including safety features, rates of theft, and cost of repair of the vehicle to be insured, as well as the driving record, age, residence, and lifestyle of the vehicle?s main driver. For example, a person driving a luxury auto might pay higher insurance rates because where that person lives may increase the risk of theft or damage.

The Ford Escape comes with many state-of-the-art safety features, including side-impact airbags, anti-rollover protection, and anti-theft features. While other vehicles may be more popular, the Ford Escape consistently got the lowest auto insurance quotes in the survey.

EINSURANCE is not obligated to any auto or insurance company. Its goal is to simply help people find the best information and insurance rates online.

To conduct the survey, EINSURANCE researched auto insurance quotes for a hypothetical single woman, 33 years old, holding a postgraduate degree, and employed as an accountant. She owned her home and had a clean driving record.

The sample subject resided in one of four states: California, Illinois, Texas, and New York. For each vehicle, EINSURANCE used three companies: Progressive, Esurance, and Geico. EINSURANCE compiled 116 quotes in total, 29 for each zip code. Dodge Rams were not quoted through Esurance, because it did not list Dodge Ram pickups as an option.

Based on the analysis, the Ford Escape costs less to insure than the other nine vehicles on the top 10 list and could be the best buy for a new car in 2013.

EINSURANCE offers convenient and comprehensive information about auto insurance. Get free auto insurance quotes now.

Source: http://800jixie.com/2013/05/21/auto-insurance-quotes-for-the-top-selling-cars-in-2013/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=auto-insurance-quotes-for-the-top-selling-cars-in-2013

april 17 tu pac hologram shuttle pippa middleton space shuttle discovery spacex tupac hologram

Monday, May 20, 2013

Officer who shot NY student faced harrowing choice

In this photo copied from the 2010 Sleepy Hollow High School yearbook, high school student Andrea Rubello is shown. Police said Rubello, a junior at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., was shot and killed Friday, May 17, 2013, during a break-in near the college campus. (AP Photo/Sleepy Hollow High School)

In this photo copied from the 2010 Sleepy Hollow High School yearbook, high school student Andrea Rubello is shown. Police said Rubello, a junior at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., was shot and killed Friday, May 17, 2013, during a break-in near the college campus. (AP Photo/Sleepy Hollow High School)

This undated photo provided by the Nassau County Police Department shows Dalton Smith of Hempstead, N.Y. On Saturday, May 18, 2013, police identified Smith the alleged home invader involved in the fatal slaying of a New York college student early Friday morning. Police say that Smith, who was currently on parole for robbery in the first degree, was the person attempting to rob the off-campus home where Andrea Rebello was shot and killed. (AP Photo/Nassau County Police Department)

The Tarrytown, N.Y., home of the family of Hofstra University student Andrea Rubello is seen on Friday, May 17, 2013. Police say Rubello was shot and killed Friday, May 17, 2013, during a break-in near the college campus in Uniondale, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jim Fitzgerald)

Hofstra University students gather near the house where another student and an armed intruder were killed during an overnight house break-in next to the campus, Friday, May 17, 2013, in Uniondale, N.Y. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano)

Officers continue working the scene at the house, left, where a Hofstra University student and an armed intruder were killed during an overnight break-in next to the campus, Friday, May 17, 2013, in Uniondale, N.Y. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano)

(AP) ? The police officer who accidentally killed a Long Island college student along with an armed intruder faced perhaps the most harrowing decision in law enforcement: choosing the split-second moment when the risk is so high that you must pull the trigger.

That's the moment authorities say a Nassau County police officer experienced early Friday morning when a masked man holding 21-year-old Andrea Rebello in a headlock pointed a loaded handgun at him.

"The big question is, how do you know, when someone's pointing a gun at you, whether you should keep talking to them, or shoot?" said Michele Galietta, a professor of psychology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice who helps train police officers. "That's what makes the job of an officer amazingly difficult."

She spoke Sunday as Hofstra University students honored Rebello, a popular public relations major, by wearing white ribbons at their graduation ceremony.

On Saturday evening, flags on the Hempstead campus were at half-staff and students held a silent outdoor vigil in front of a photo of the young woman. Surrounded by candles and flowers, they sang "Ave Maria."

Rebello's funeral is scheduled for Wednesday in Sleepy Hollow, in Westchester County, north of New York City.

Her life ended in the seconds that forced the veteran police officer to make a fatal decision, but the questions surrounding the student's death are just beginning, along with an internal investigation by the Nassau County Police Department.

The bare facts are simple. Rebello and the intruder, Dalton Smith, died early Friday when the officer fired eight shots, hitting him seven times, with one bullet striking Rebello once in the head, according to county homicide squad Lt. John Azzata.

With a gun pointed at her, Smith "kept saying, 'I'm going to kill her,' and then he pointed the gun at the police officer," according to Azzata.

The officer acted quickly, saying later that he believed his and Rebello's life were in danger, according to authorities.

No doubt, he was acting to try to save lives ? his own and that of the young woman, Galietta said.

"What we're asking the cop to anticipate is, 'What is going on in the suspect's mind at the moment?'" she said. "We're always trying to de-escalate, to contain a situation, but the issue of safety comes in first, and that's the evaluation the officer has to make."

Eugene O'Donnell, a former New York City police officer and professor of law and police studies at John Jay College, said the crucial issue may be whether or not police had deemed it a hostage situation. If so, he said, there are protocols police follow to buy time, slow down, isolate and assess.

But O'Donnell said the officers may have had few options because of "an eyeball to eyeball confrontation between the officer and the offender."

"It may have been too fluid to deteriorate for the officers to do anything else," O'Donnell said. "It underscores that there's no two of these that are exactly alike."

Police tactical manuals are meant to assist officers in making the best decision possible, but in the end, "they're not 100 percent foolproof," Galietta said. "In a situation like that, you can follow procedure, and it doesn't mean it comes out perfectly."

The officer who fired the shots is an eight-year NYPD veteran and has been with Nassau County police for 12 years.

He is now out on sick leave, Azzata said.

Procedurally, the Nassau County district attorney's office would determine whether an officer's use of deadly force was justified. O'Donnell said. A spokesman for the district attorney's office did not respond to a request for comment Saturday night.

There are some rules governing the use of force for New York police officers. A subsection of Article 35 of New York Penal Law prohibits against recklessly endangering innocent people.

___

Associated Press writers Frank Eltman in Mineola, N.Y., and Jake Pearson contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-20-US-Hofstra-Student-Shot/id-e2de907a08fa44569fd6c98cce535bff

allen west north korea missile don t trust the b in apartment 23 world financial center shabazz muhammad angela corey zimmerman charged

Syrian army pushes assault on rebel-held town

This citizen journalism image provided by Edlib News Network, ENN, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows black smoke rising from what rebels say is a helicopter that was shot down at Abu Dhour military airbase which is besieged by the rebels, in the northern province city of Idlib, Syria, Friday May 17, 2013. Rights activists have found torture devices and other evidence of abuse in government prisons in the first Syrian city to fall to the rebels, Human Rights Watch said in a report Friday. (AP Photo/Edlib News Network ENN)

This citizen journalism image provided by Edlib News Network, ENN, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows black smoke rising from what rebels say is a helicopter that was shot down at Abu Dhour military airbase which is besieged by the rebels, in the northern province city of Idlib, Syria, Friday May 17, 2013. Rights activists have found torture devices and other evidence of abuse in government prisons in the first Syrian city to fall to the rebels, Human Rights Watch said in a report Friday. (AP Photo/Edlib News Network ENN)

A Syrian supporting the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, holds a placard with his picture and the national flag as he participates in a protest outside the US Embassy in central London, Saturday, May 18, 2013. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

(AP) ? Syrian troops backed by tanks and warplanes launched an assault Sunday on a strategic rebel-held town near the Lebanese border, pounding the area with airstrikes and artillery salvos that killed at least 30 people and forced residents to scramble for cover in basements and makeshift bunkers, activists said.

The town of Qusair has been besieged for weeks by regime troops and pro-government gunmen backed by the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group. The siege is part of a regime offensive that aims to regain control of the towns and villages along the frontier with Lebanon.

The border region's strategic value is twofold: it links Damascus with the Mediterranean coastal enclave that is the heartland of President Bashar Assad's Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam; and rebels smuggle weapons and supplies from Lebanon across the porous frontier to opposition fighters inside Syria.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 30 people, including 16 rebel fighters and one woman, were killed in Qusair in fighting Sunday morning, but that the death toll was expected to rise as government troops continue to try to push into the town.

A government official in the nearby provincial capital of Homs said that regime troops have encircled the town and that "the offensive to liberate Qusair has begun."

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media, said the army has built up its forces on three fronts around Qusair while leaving one clear for "safe passage for fleeing civilians and the armed terrorists who want to surrender."

The official said government forces have advanced into the town, taking over the municipality building and other vital government institutions.

But Hadi Abdullah, an activist in Qusair reached on Skype, denied the regime made any advances on the ground. He said the municipality was destroyed in fighting six months ago, and that there's no government building left to take over.

He said heavy shelling began late Saturday and continued through Sunday, and that civilians have sought shelter in basements

"It's the heaviest since the beginning of the revolution," he said, adding that at least 17 houses have been destroyed.

The discrepancy in the accounts could not be immediately verified.

Separately, an official at the Homs governor's office said two suicide bombings in the town of Deir Balbaa just outside of Homs killed at least three people and wounded 15 others. The official declined to be identified because he is not allowed to make public comments.

Another pair of bombings struck near a factory on a different Homs highway, killing four people and wounding 13, the state news agency reported.

The regime' offensive on Qusair comes as the United States and Russia push a joint effort to get Assad and his opponents to negotiate an end to the country's civil war. Previous attempts to solve the conflict peacefully have failed.

The U.S.-Russian plan, similar to one set out last year in Geneva, calls for talks on a transition government and an open-ended cease-fire.

More than 70,000 people have been killed and several million displaced since the uprising against Assad erupted in March 2011 and escalated into a civil war. The fighting has also spilled over into neighboring states, including Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon and Israel, all of which are anxious about the ripple effect of Syria's conflict on their own nations.

On Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned at a weekly Cabinet meeting Sunday that the Jewish state was prepared to act if there were more shipments to Hezbollah from Syria.

"We are following the developments and changes there closely and we are prepared for every scenario," he said.

Israeli warplanes carried out two rounds of airstrikes on Damascus early this month on what officials have said were sophisticated missiles bound for Hezbollah.

On Saturday, Assad said in a newspaper interview that he won't step down before elections and that the United States has no right to interfere in his country's politics.

Assad's comments to the Argentine newspaper Clarin were the first about his political future since Washington and Moscow agreed earlier this month to try to bring the regime and the opposition to an international conference for talks about a peaceful resolution to the conflict. The U.S. and Russia have backed opposite sides in the conflict, but appear to have found common ground in the diplomatic push.

The White House and the Kremlin envision holding the meeting next month, but no date has been set. Neither Assad nor the Syrian National Coalition, the main Western-backed opposition coalition group, has made a firm commitment to attend.

In the interview, Assad seemed to play down the importance of such a conference, saying a decision on Syria's future is up to the Syrian people, not the U.S. He also said a decision on his political future must be made in elections, and not during such a conference.

As the regime and opposition decides whether to even take part in the conference, the planning for the potential talks looked set to move forward.

Jordan is to host Western and Arab foreign ministers, including U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, for a meeting Wednesday that brings together the Syrian opposition's foreign supporters to plan for the peace talks.

In Egypt, the Arab League said its ministerial committee on Syria will meet Thursday to discuss ways to convene the international conference on Syria. The Syrian opposition said they will meet in Turkey that same day to discuss whether to take part in an international conference on the conflict.

___

Associated Press writers Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria, Aron Heller in Jerusalem, Maamoun Youssef in Cairo, Egypt, and Yasmine Saker in Beirut contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-19-ML-Syria/id-ca1419401906426f8919b05c07f1d5f4

theraflu joe avezzano kanye west theraflu joey votto the masters live mega millions winner holy thursday

Aid group: Syrian refugees face dire health risks

BEIRUT (AP) ? An international aid organization is appealing for more funds to help Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan, saying warmer weather will increase health risks due to lack of shelter, water and basic sanitation.

Oxfam says it needs $53 million dollars to improve access to water and proper sanitation for Syrian refugees. So far the aid group has received $10.6 million dollars.

The Britain-based group said in a statement Monday that diarrhea and skin infections have already been noted among refugees in Jordan and Lebanon. The two countries host the bulk of 1.5 million Syrians who have fled the civil war at home, seeking shelter in neighboring countries.

Oxfam says it needs the funds quickly as temperatures are expected to soar in the region in the coming weeks.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/aid-group-syrian-refugees-face-dire-health-risks-062310708.html

giuliana rancic giuliana rancic elie wiesel temptations work hard play hard tim ferriss wmt

Sunday, May 19, 2013

The periodic table of elements, in song (video) (Americablog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306712491?client_source=feed&format=rss

lotto winners mega ball winning numbers baltimore county current tv megamillions ncaa basketball tournament 2012 megamillions winning numbers

BenQ MX518


As the middle-resolution model of three recently released budget BenQ DLP data projectors, the BenQ MX518 has much in common with the BenQ MS517 and BenQ MW519: respectable brightness; a good price for the resolution; data image quality suitable for typical classroom presentations and video suitable for shorter clips; feeble audio; a good assortment of ports, 3D compatibility (you supply the glasses), and a variety of eco-friendly features. Like its siblings, it's a solid choice as a low-priced educational (or business) projector.

The MX518 provides XGA (1,024 by 768 pixel) resolution, between the MS-517's SVGA (800 by 600) and the MW519's WXGA (1,280 by 800) resolution. Like the other two models, it's rated at 2,800 lumens of brightness.

The MX518 is all black, with rounded corners and a slightly bowed top. It has a very modest manual zoom (1.1:1), and the focus was fairly responsive. At 8.7 by 11.9 by 4.4 inches (HWD) and 5.1 pounds, the MX518 is quite portable, though it lacks a soft carrying case. It should be easy enough to tote within a school or on trips.

The MX518 has a good selection of ports for a low-priced projector, including HDMI; composite video/audio; S-video; two VGA inputs to connect with computers and one to connect with a monitor; an audio-out jack, an RS232 jack, and a USB type B connector for connecting with a computer.

Testing
The image filled our test screen (about 60 inches on a diagonal) with the projector about seven feet away from the screen. As befitting its 2,800-lumen rated brightness, it was able to stand up to considerable ambient light without it looking degraded.

In data testing, I ran our standard suite of DisplayMate tests over a VGA connection, and then over an HDMI connection. With VGA, when I first loaded the tests using default settings, I saw extensive pixel jitter?moving, thin dark lines appearing to flicker across the screen. I went into the menu and adjusted the Phase setting, and only a trace of the jitter remained. When I switched to HDMI, the jitter completely disappeared.

In our type test, text was slightly blurred at the second smallest white-on-black size, and barely readable at the smallest. As for color, there was some mild green tinting to gray images in both VGA and (to a lesser extent) HMDI. Colors, most notably reds and yellows, generally looked somewhat dull, regardless of the projector's mode or connection type.

One issue that I noted, which is often an issue in DLP projectors, is the rainbow effect, in which bright areas seen against dark backgrounds seem to break up into little red-green-blue rainbows. As is typical, in data images it wasn't severe enough to be problematic, even to people who are sensitive to it.

Video
The rainbow effect was also visible in video images. Rainbow artifacts were apparent enough in some scenes that people who are sensitive to the effect are likely to be distracted by it, making this projector best for relatively short clips as part of a presentation or lecture. Another issue I encountered was posterization, rapid changes in color from one part of an image to another where they should be gradual.

Another impediment to video is this projector's feeble 2-watt audio system. It makes the MX518 best for a small room or if you're sitting quite close to the projector. It does have an audio-out port, so you could always hook it to powered external speakers if need be.

The MX518 has several eco-friendly features that can conserve power and help extent lamp life, up to a claimed maximum of 6,500 hours. EcoBlank mode lets teachers easily take a break from a presentation, blanking the screen out and lowering energy consumption up to 70% while paused. The projector will also automatically enter EcoBlank mode after 3 minutes without a signal. SmartEco mode automatically adjusts lamp brightness depending on lighting conditions.

The MX518 is 3D-capable, with support for 3D Blu-Ray via HDMI as well as NVIDIA 3DTV Play, enabling it to display 3D content from NVIDIA 3D Vision. The active shutter 3D glasses are not included, and can cost up to $70 per pair, so equipping a class with them could prove a pricey proposition.

The Editors' Choice Epson PowerLite 93+ is not 3D capable, but being LCD based, it is immune from the rainbow effect. It provides superb audio and video quality, and loud audio, too. Another XGA projector, the ViewSonic PJD5234, is very similar to the MX518 in features and performance.

All three of the new BenQ budget data projectors are capable of handling the demands of a classroom, providing multiple connection choices, solid data image quality, and good enough video for typical school use. They're 3D capable, with eco-friendly features that should prolong lamp life. On the downside are very soft audio and the rainbow effect. Choosing between them mostly depends on the level of detail you need to display?for typical presentations, the BenQ MX518 should do fine?and how much you're willing to spend.

The MX518 is 3D-capable, with support for 3D Blu-Ray via HDMI as well as NVIDIA 3DTV Play, enabling it to display 3D content from NVIDIA 3D Vision. The active shutter 3D glasses are not included, and can cost up to $70 per pair, so equipping a class with them could prove a pricey proposition.

The Editors' Choice Epson PowerLite 93+ is not 3D capable, but being LCD based, it is immune from the rainbow effect. It provides superb audio and video quality, and loud audio, too. Another XGA projector, the ViewSonic PJD5234, is very similar to the MX518 in features and performance.

All three of the new BenQ budget data projectors are capable of handling the demands of a classroom, providing multiple connection choices, solid data image quality, and good enough video for typical school use. They're 3D capable, with eco-friendly features that should prolong lamp life. On the downside are very soft audio and the rainbow effect. Choosing between them mostly depends on the level of detail you need to display?for typical presentations, the BenQ MX518 should do fine?and how much you're willing to spend.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/AYIwZHKwypk/0,2817,2418318,00.asp

Zero Hour Funny Valentines Chris Kyle Russian meteor Meteor Hits Russia Dorner Manifesto Valentines Day Quotes

Chinese premier visits India to boost ties

NEW DELHI (AP) ? Just weeks after a tense border standoff, China's new premier visited India on Sunday on his first foreign trip as the neighboring giants look to speed up efforts to settle a decades-old boundary dispute and boost economic ties.

China says Premier Li Keqiang's choice of India for his first trip abroad since taking office in March shows the importance Beijing attaches to improving relations with New Delhi.

"We think very highly of this gesture because it is our view that high-level political exchanges between our two countries are an important aspect and vehicle for our expanded cooperation," said India's external affairs ministry spokesman, Syed Akbaruddin.

Jasjit Singh, a defense analyst and director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in New Delhi, said last month's border standoff was unlikely to overshadow Li's three-day visit, the first stop of a foreign tour in which he will also visit Pakistan, Switzerland and Germany.

Singh said Indian and Chinese leaders are likely to review border talks that have failed to produce a breakthrough despite 15 rounds of discussions over the past 10 years. The two sides also will probably discuss working together in Afghanistan after next year's U.S. pullout and cooperation with Southeast Asian countries, he said.

But tensions run high between the two nations. China already sees itself as Asia's great power, while India hopes its increasing economic and military might ? though still far below its neighbor's ? will eventually put it in the same league.

While China has worked to shore up relationships with Nepal and Sri Lanka in India's traditional South Asian sphere of influence, India has been venturing into partnerships with Southeast Asian nations.

Other irritants remain in the bilateral relationship. China is a longtime ally and weapons supplier to Pakistan, India's bitter rival. Also, the presence in India of Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama and the self-declared Tibetan government-in-exile is a source of tension. China accuses the Dalai Lama of wanting to split Tibet off from the rest of China, but he says he seeks more autonomy for Tibetans, not independence.

Unresolved border issues between the two nations have flared as well.

In last month's incident, India said Chinese troops crossed the countries' de facto border on April 15 and pitched camp in the Depsang valley in the Ladakh region of eastern Kashmir. New Delhi responded with diplomatic protests and then moved its soldiers just 300 meters (yards) from the Chinese position.

The two sides negotiated a peaceful end to the standoff by withdrawing troops to their original positions in the Ladakh area.

Gautam Bambawale, a senior external affairs ministry official, said Saturday that India and China are negotiating a Border Defense Cooperation Agreement, but declined to give details. Indian media reports said the agreement proposes a freezing of troop levels in the disputed border region as the two countries make efforts to settle the issue.

Bambawale also said Indian and Chinese officials recently held talks in Beijing on the future of Afghanistan. China, India and Russia have discussed the matter trilaterally with the idea of giving full support to Afghanistan's government as it makes the transition following the withdrawal of U.S. forces in 2014.

Li was to meet with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh later Sunday and attend a dinner hosted by Singh.

Delegation-level talks between the two sides are scheduled for Monday. Li is to attend a business summit in Mumbai, India's financial capital, among other activities.

The border spat last month prompted the Indian opposition and media to pressure the government to take on China and call off Li's visit. The government, however, chose to go ahead with the trip, highlighting its policy of trying to widen areas of cooperation with China while attempting to resolve key differences.

China has become India's biggest trading partner, with two-way trade jumping from $5 billion in 2002 to nearly $75 billion in 2011, although that figure declined to $61.5 billion last year because of the global economic downturn. Trade remains heavily skewed in China's favor, another source of concern for India.

India and China have had chilly relations since they fought a brief but bloody border war in 1962.

India says China is occupying 38,000 square kilometers (15,000 square miles) of its territory in the Aksai Chin plateau in the western Himalayas, while China claims around 90,000 square kilometers (35,000 square miles) in India's northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh.

Dorjee Tseten, director of Students for a Free Tibet, said Sunday that New Delhi police had declined permission for Tibetans to hold a demonstration against Li's visit.

"Tibetan activists are currently on the run evading imminent police arrest," he said in a statement, complaining of a heavy police presence in a New Delhi area where a large number of Tibetans-in-exile live.

Police detained a Tibetan man as he tried to burn the Chinese flag near China's embassy in the Indian capital.

Police, however, allowed about two dozen members of Shiv Sena, a Hindu right-wing political party, to demonstrate near India's Parliament, where they burned an effigy of the Chinese premier.

"Go back, go back," chanted the protesters, who also carried placards urging the Indian government to respond toughly to China's alleged border incursion. The powerful regional party held power in Mumbai from 1995 to 2000.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chinese-premier-visits-india-boost-ties-101859231.html

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

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Welcome to whitenoise!

Welcome old friends and lost travelers! One way or another you have found your way to whitenoise! But what is this place? And what can be your role here? Good questions! The shortest, easiest answer to both questions is: Just about whatever you want it to be.

To the best of my knowledge, whitenoise was formed back in 2009. It's Gizmodo's side blog that more or less serves as an open thread anyone to talk about anything. Each of the Gawker sites have such a place. Naturally, the subject matter on whitenoise leaned towards technology and attracted a tech savy crowd. Over time the conversation evolved to practically everything under the sun*. Cat gifs? Bring em on. Have an issue with an editor? We'll listen to you. This was always meant to be a safe place. Have a question about your phone? Ask and you might get a great answer. We're here for each other.

From about 2009-2011 whitenoise grew to be a very popular hangout. I would guess there were well more than 50 regular folk in here and hundreds of people passed through daily. Without getting into details, whitenoise has been in a bit of a lull since they hay days of yesteryear but, I think that Kinja's recent release makes this a time ripe for a resurgence. If things work out here like they did on Jalopnik, post something really neat and the editors may notice and report you to the front page. You could be famous! No promises though.

For a while, I was posting a morning post under the heading "Roll Call!". I got a bit sidetracked there but perhaps I'll take it up again soon. If so, I encourage you to stop by at any time of the day and make a comment -any comment. It's a neat way to watch the place grow again. I tend to build these a few days out and schedule them to publish at 7am EST. Oh, some of you may be wondering "Who the hell are you anyway?" Just some guy who'd like to see whitenoise come back to life again. I'm not an employee of Gawker or attached to them in any official manner. I'm just another one of you folks.

So here's the important question: How do YOU contribute? Well, start by leaving a comment below and let me know you want in. There are a few of us around who can grant you authorship rights -and take them away if you get too unruly. I'd like to see as many of you submitting threads as possible. So switch on and be heard.

*Please use common sense house rules related NSFW, hate speech and so on. Otherwise, the Terms of Use and Content Guidelines which are linked from the bottom of each page governs all of Gawker Media and every Kinja site, and there will be no tolerance for spam.

Source: http://whitenoise.gizmodo.com/welcome-to-whitenoise-478286112

nba all star reserves rock center christine christine double fine adventure turbo tax katharine mcphee

Canada quake shakes Rochester (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306463893?client_source=feed&format=rss

lena horne klay thompson kate upton one world trade center Benghazi Ariel Castro Filomena Tobias

Most scientists agree: Humans are causing climate change

Friday, May 17, 2013

Do most scientists agree that human activity is causing global climate change? Yes, they do, according to an extensive analysis of the abstracts or summaries of scientific papers published over the past 20 years, even though public perception tends to be that climate scientists disagree over the fundamental cause of climate change.

To help put a stop to the squabbling, two dozen scientists and citizen-scientists from Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the US?including Sarah Green, professor and chair of chemistry at Michigan Technological University in Houghton, Mich.? analyzed the abstracts of nearly 12,000 peer-reviewed scientific papers on climate change published between 1991 and 2011. They also surveyed the authors of those papers, to find out how well the analysis agreed with the authors' own views on how their papers presented the cause of climate change.

They found that more than 97 percent of the scientists who expressed any opinion in their papers about the primary cause of global climate change believed that human activity was the cause. Approximately the same percentage of authors who responded to the survey said that their papers endorsed anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change. Nine of the scientists, including Green, reported their findings today in the journal Environmental Research Letters, published by the Institute of Physics.

Green says she got involved because she was curious about the apparent disconnect between the general public's lack of concern about climate change and what she calls "the clear scientific evidence that humans are changing the planet's atmosphere." That led her to SkepticalScience.com, a web site that tracks and addresses common myths about climate change. She has since contributed several articles.

John Cook, who maintains the web site, is a climate communications fellow for the Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland in Australia. He found that one dominant myth about climate change is the idea that scientists disagree about the cause. To investigate how much disagreement there really is in the peer-reviewed scientific literature, Cook set up an on-line system that enabled a group of SkepticalScience.com authors to rate nearly 12,000 abstracts from the Web of Science database (1991-2011) on whether they report human activities as the main contributors to climate change.

"John cleverly set up the rating process so it felt like a game to me," says Green. "After I rated five abstracts, another five would quickly appear, and counters showed how many each person had done, making it like a contest."

The abstract raters were a combination of professional and citizen-scientists from Australia, Canada, the UK, Finland, the US and Germany. The group was organized through the skeptical science web site.

"I read and rated 4,146 abstracts for this study, over about 4 months in winter/spring 2012," Green explains. "This is the first time I've published a paper where all the research was accomplished sitting on my couch."

Green adds, "I found it fascinating to see the array of implications of climate change identified in the abstracts?beyond the usual ones we hear about. They examined everything from production of tea in Sri Lanka, the stripes on salamanders, child undernutrition, frequency of lightning strikes, distribution of prickly pear cactus (and pine trees, kelp beds, wild boars, penguins, arctic fishes, canine leishmaniasis, and many, many others), mitochondrial electron transport activity in clams, copper uptake by minnows, lake effect snowfall, the rotational speed of the Earth and the prevalence of naked foxes in Iceland."

Green also found a large number of papers addressing mitigation of climate change through alternative energy and other ways to limit carbon emissions.

"It is critical to raise public awareness of the scientific consensus on climate change, so the public can make policy decisions based on factual evidence," she says. "Typically, the general public thinks that only around 50 percent of climate scientists agree that humans are causing global warming. This research has shown that the reality is 97 percent."

###

Michigan Technological University: http://www.mtu.edu

Thanks to Michigan Technological University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 46 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128294/Most_scientists_agree__Humans_are_causing_climate_change

carrie underwood garth brooks miranda lambert george strait Trey Burke Peyton Siva Hunter Hayes

Mo'Nique Weight Loss: 80 Pounds!!!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/monique-weight-loss-80-pounds/

alabama football florida lotto sean taylor Lisa Robin Kelly Nexus 4 Girl Meets World Jason Babin

Friday, May 17, 2013

Tech News Headlines - Yahoo! News

Is half of America really mentally ill at some point? A Yahoo! News chat

Join Yahoo! News? Lizzie O?Leary, Dr. Sally Satel, psychiatrist and fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and Dr. William Glazer, the president of More??

Yahoo! News - 5 hrs ago

Source: http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/techblog

dropkick murphys guernsey colcannon dystonia tourettes rosie o donnell soda bread recipe

NYC artist's secret photos raise privacy issues

NEW YORK (AP) ? In one photo, a woman is on all fours, presumably picking something up, her posterior pressed against a glass window. Another photo shows a couple in bathrobes, their feet touching beneath a table. And there is one of a man, in jeans and a T-shirt, lying on his side as he takes a nap.

In all the photos, taken by New York City artist Arne Svenson from his second-floor apartment, the faces are obscured or not shown. The people are unidentifiable.

But the residents of a glass-walled luxury residential building across the street had no idea they were being photographed and they never consented to being subjects for the works of art that are now on display ? and for sale ? in a Manhattan gallery.

"I don't feel it's a violation in a legal sense but in a New York, personal sense there was a line crossed," said Michelle Sylvester, who lives in the residential building called the Zinc Building, which stands out with its floor-to-ceiling windows in a neighborhood of cobblestone streets and old, brick warehouse buildings.

Svenson's apartment is directly across the street, just to the south, giving him a clear view of his neighbors by simply looking out his window.

"I think there's an understanding that when you live here with glass windows, there will be straying eyes but it feels different with someone who has a camera," Sylvester said.

Svenson's show, "The Neighbors," opened last Saturday at the Julie Saul Gallery in Chelsea, where about a dozen large prints are on sale for up to $7,500. His exhibit is drawing a lot of attention, not for the quality of the work, but for the manner in which it was made.

Svenson did not respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press, but says in material accompanying the exhibit that the idea for it came when he inherited a telephoto lens from a friend, a birdwatcher who recently died.

"For my subjects there is no question of privacy; they are performing behind a transparent scrim on a stage of their own creation with the curtain raised high," Svenson says in the gallery notes. "The Neighbors don't know they are being photographed; I carefully shoot from the shadows of my home into theirs."

That explanation has done little to satisfy some residents of the Zinc Building, where a penthouse was once listed at nearly $6 million. In an email circulating among the building's owners and renters this week, a resident whose apartment was depicted in Svenson's photographs suggested legal recourse against the artist.

"I am not an expert in this area of the law, but I do think we may have some rights and the ability to stop this," the email reads. "I love art, but find this to be an outrageous invasion of privacy."

Civil rights lawyer Norman Siegel said that according to New York civil rights law, there may be a way for Svenson's subjects to challenge him in court but the case will depend entirely on context.

"The question for the person who's suing is, if you're not identifiable, then where's the loss of privacy?" he said. "These issues are a sign of the times. How do you balance the right of privacy vis-?-vis the right of artistic expression?"

Linda Darcia, an exchange student from Colombia living with a family on the sixth floor facing Svenson's studio, said she had no idea whether or not she was depicted in any of the pieces but she was anxious to go to the gallery and find out.

"I'm not really upset about it because that's his job," she said. "But maybe he should have asked before the gallery opens. Everybody's talking about it."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nyc-artists-secret-photos-raise-privacy-issues-062729120.html

Robert Guerrero Call Of Duty Ghosts may day 747 crash lil wayne Kentucky Derby 2013 Barcelona

New Google Now cards and 'hot words' for voice search launching today

Google Now

Reminders. Music albums. TV shows. Public transit. Books. Video Games.

Update: The newest version of Google Search has just been pushed out to the Play Store

In among the host of other search features unveiled at the Google I/O keynote today, Google announced that six new cards will be coming to its card-based predictive search system, Google Now. Reminders -- like "get milk" -- details for music, TV, books and video games and public transit messages.

Google also demonstrated "hot words" in Google voice search, allowing potentially ambiguous queries such as "show me my photos from New York" or "when does my flight leave" to produce accurate results based on the information at Google's disposal. The demo ran remarkably smoothly and quickly, and with seemingly perfect accuracy.

The new Google Now cards will begin rolling out from today. Remember we're still liveblogging the I/O keynote, so head over there to see everything as it happens.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ykJML8kyCuY/story01.htm

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