Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Android Is The New Windows

Android Is The New WindowsA flexible, customizable operating system that's farmed out to third-party hardware makers and dominates market share but not profits? You're not the only one experiencing d?j? vu. The parallels of Android and Windows are striking. But can that which is unique about Android save it from the fate befalling Microsoft's stumbling OS?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Rz72PgE_JR4/

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Ex-Pro Wrestler Stabs Girlfriend To Death Before Posting Bloody Photo To Facebook

By Alan with comments July 27, 2013 08:15

He then led cops on a car chase until he crashed and was arrested.

Brian McGhee, 29, who wrestled under the names DT Porter and Donovan ?The Future? Ruddick, stabbed girlfriend Bianca McGaughey, 25, several times outside her Tampa home at around 8:30 p.m. [Thursday]?Around the same time, he posted a photo of a bloody body part on Facebook, cops said.

He then led police on a chase through Tampa in a Pontiac Grand Prix before he crashed into a guardrail and was captured, the Times reported.

Source: http://www.alan.com/2013/07/27/ex-pro-wrestler-stabs-girlfriend-to-death-before-posting-bloody-photo-to-facebook/

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

India launches advanced weather satellite


Bangalore, July 26 (IANS): India's advanced weather satellite Insat-3D was launched early Friday onboard Ariane-5 rocket from Kourou in French Guiana off the Pacific coast.

"After a perfect lift-off at 01:24 a.m. from the European Arianespace spaceport at Kourou, the two-tonne advanced weather satellite was placed in the geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO) 32 minutes later, about 36,000 km above from earth," the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said in a statement here.

The sophisticated spacecraft is orbiting at perigee (closer to earth) 249.9 km and apogee of 35,880 km in the orbit.

"The satellite's solar panel was automatically deployed soon after it was separated from the rocket's upper cryogenic stage and our master control facility at Hassan took over its control for further manoeuvres," the statement said. Hassan is about 200km from Bangalore.

Preliminary checks of the subsystems showed the health of the spacecraft was satisfactory.

"The MCT will perform the orbit-raising manoeuvres over the next few days using the satellite's propulsion system to place it in the intended geostationary orbit," the statement pointed out.

The satellite's observational instruments will be switched on during the second week of August after it reaches the orbital slot at 82 degrees east to the equatorial plane for extensive tests by the MCF.

The four instruments onboard the spacecraft are Imager, Sounder, Data Relay Transponder and Satellite Aided Search & Rescue. The six channel imager can take weather pictures of the earth and has improved features compared to the instrument in (Kalpana-1) and Insat-3A, the two Indian geostationary satellites, which have been providing weather services over the past decade.

"The 19-channel sounder payload adds a new dimension to monitor weather through its atmospheric sounding system, and provides vertical profiles of temperature, humidity and integrated ozone," the statement noted.

Data relay transponder receives meteorological, hydrological, oceanographic parameters sent by the automatic data collection platforms located at remote uninhabited places and relays them to a processing centre for generating accurate weather forecasts.

The search and rescue instrument picks up and relays alert signals originating from the distress beacons of maritime, aviation and land-based users and relays them to the mission control centre to facilitate speedy search and rescue operations.

The state-run space agency will process the satellite's data and the derivation of meteorological parameters with the Indian meteorological department in New Delhi.

An indigenously designed and developed meteorological data processing system has been commissioned at IMD, with a mirror site at the space agency's space applications centre at Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh and Ahmedabad in Gujarat.

Source: http://www.daijiworld.com/news/news_disp.asp?n_id=181088

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Homeland Security Is Moving Into an Abandoned Insane Asylum

Homeland Security Is Moving Into an Abandoned Insane Asylum

Did you know that the US government's third-largest agency is ramping up a 20-year, $4.5 billion construction project that will turn the grounds of a former mental hospital into an "elaborate" headquarters for its sprawling network of agencies? It's already a decade behind schedule and $1 billion over budget.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/pQtC4LcniyU/homeland-security-is-moving-into-an-abandoned-insane-as-922239941

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SAMUELSON: Trend toward part-time jobs shows economy's weakness

WASHINGTON ? Just when you thought that America?s labor market was improving, with employment gains averaging about 200,000 a month, comes Mort Zuckerman, real estate magnate and chairman of U.S. News & World Report, throwing cold water on any optimism.

The truth, writes Zuckerman in The Wall Street Journal, is that, according to the Labor Department?s household survey, almost three-quarters of new jobs in 2013 have been part time. These need to be discounted in judging the economy?s strength, argues Zuckerman.

?At this stage of an expansion you would expect the number of part-time jobs to be declining, as companies would be doing more full-time hiring,? he writes. ?Not this time. In the long misery of this post-recession period, we have an extraordinary situation: Americans by the millions are in part-time work because there are no other employment opportunities.?

Ugh. To Zuckerman, work is increasingly catch as catch can, with firms relying more ?on independent contractors and part-time, temporary and seasonal employees.? He also blames the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), which has been criticized as discouraging full-time hiring. Companies with fewer than 50 full-time workers don?t have to provide health insurance; nor are part-time employees (defined as less than 30 hours a week) entitled to company coverage. These are powerful deterrents to adding full-time workers.

On some counts, Zuckerman?s critique is overwrought.

For starters, it belittles genuine job progress. Gains since the recession?s trough in 2009, though inadequate, are still substantial. ?Companies (now) seem to be holding on to their employees,? says economist Beth Ann Bovino of Standard & Poor?s. Initial weekly unemployment claims peaked at about 650,000; now they?re about half that, 334,000 in a recent week, she says. The unemployment rate has dropped from 10 percent in October 2009 to 7.6 percent.

Nor is there much evidence that, in the recovery, part-time workers have represented a disproportionate share of new jobs. Economist Scott Anderson of the Bank of the West analyzed employment gains since January 2009 and found that in June part-time jobs accounted for 19.5 percent of total employment, ?exactly the average share ... since January 2009.? Part-time jobs sometimes surge for a few months, he noted, but then the rapid gains have been reversed.

(Page 2 of 2)

Finally, Zuckerman doesn?t acknowledge that most part-time jobs are desired by workers. Of the 27 million part-time workers in June, slightly more than 19 million were voluntary: students splitting jobs and studies; retirees wanting extra income or human contact; and parents juggling the demands of jobs and child-rearing.

Still, the core of Zuckerman?s argument stands. This recovery, compared to its post-World War II predecessors, has been exceptionally weak. The number of part-time workers who would like full-time jobs (defined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as 35 hours a week or more) has dropped very slowly. In May 2009, it peaked at 9.1 million; as of last month, it was 8.2 million. Moreover, the level was almost twice as high as before the recession ? 4.2 million in December 2006. As Zuckerman argues, this suggests many companies are quietly shifting employment practices.

Firms seek to minimize fixed labor costs by using contractors, ?temps? and part-timers. Obamacare intensifies the pressures, because of the incentives against hiring full-time workers.

Up to a point, part-time jobs reflect the flexibility of the U.S. economy ? but we are well beyond that point. They increasingly signify weakness.

Source: http://www.app.com/article/20130725/NJOPINION03/307250010/1028/OPINION&source=rss

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President Obama Addresses America's Real Concern: Jobs

Major policy addresses are as rare in non-presidential campaign years as payphones in Manhattan. But Wednesday, President Obama braved the media obsession with the new royal baby and a childish mayoral candidate to deliver a major speech on economic policy.

Yesterday's speech at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., was the first in a series of speeches that the president hopes will focus Congress on the economy. You would never know it by listening to what passes for debate in D.C., but Americans are more concerned about the economy and jobs than they are about the budget and the national debt.

Last month, CBS News and the New York Times conducted a national survey and asked Americans what they thought was the most important problem facing the nation. It really wasn't much of a contest, as the survey indicated that concern about the economy and jobs overwhelmed everything else.

[See a collection of political cartoons on the budget and deficit.]

One in three (34 percent) Americans indicated that the economy was the biggest problem facing the United States. Concern about everything else, ?including the national debt (6 percent), religious values (3 percent) and big government (3 percent), was in single digits. But Washington is obsessed with the budget. This is just one of many examples of Washington's indifference to the public's concerns. Unless the president gets his way, we'll hear a lot of talk about the deficit but little discussion of jobs for the next several months.

Hopefully, Americans and members of Congress will hear what the president says and tune out wall-to-wall Weiner media and the coverage of the naming rights to the royal baby.

Wednesday, the president honed in on economic inequality. He pointed out that the economic gains in the last 10 years have mostly benefitted rich people at the expense of the middle class."This growing inequality is not just morally wrong: it's bad economics," he said. "Because when middle-class families have less to spend, guess what? Businesses have fewer consumers."

[Read the U.S. News debate: Is Obama Turning the Economy Around?]

It's unlikely that the president can get the House Republican caucus to pass or even consider his proposals. The GOP majority in the U.S. House of Representatives never took a vote or even debated the merits of the American Jobs Act when President Obama submitted it to Congress in 2012. That legislation would have given tax breaks to companies that hire new employees, put unemployed Americans to work rebuilding our failing bridges and water systems and put thousands of public school teachers, police officers, firefighters and paramedics back to work.????

With his economic speech, the president took his second opportunity in a week to speak from the bully pulpit. His remarks about Trayvon Martin and yesterday's speech on the economy suggest that the president has decided to speak directly to Americans. The president sees the radical Republican majority as a lost cause, but he still has faith in the American people.

Source: http://www.usnews.com/blogs/brad-bannon/2013/7/25/president-obama-addresses-americas-real-concern-jobs?s_cid=rss:brad-bannon:president-obama-addresses-americas-real-concern-jobs

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