Friday, May 31, 2013

'Breaking Bad' creator: Saul spin-off possible

TV

1 hour ago

Image: Bob Odenkirk

Ursula Coyote / AMC

Bob Odenkirk as Saul Goodman on "Breaking Bad."

Will Saul Goodman find new life after "Breaking Bad"?

Vince Gilligan, creator of the AMC hit, offered an update on a proposed spin-off centering on the criminally gifted lawyer played by Bob Odenkirk. Though the spin-off is in early development and no deals are done, Gilligan told Yahoo TV the project is still ?very much? a possibility.

Photos from THR: Cooking up season 5 on set with Cranston, Gilligan

?Nothing's written in stone, but we are working away on it,? Gilligan said. ?My writer and producer, Peter Gould, who created the character of Saul way back in season two, he and I have been talking, trying to figure out what a Saul Goodman show would look like. What would be the details of it, the particulars of it? And we're getting together to hash that out every chance we get.?

Gilligan added they are trying to decide if the show would work better as a sequel or a prequel to "Breaking Bad."

Saul Goodman has connected Walter White (Bryan Cranston) with some of the worst of Albuquerque?s underbelly, and knows ?all the major players? in town, Gilligan said.

Photos from THR: 'Breaking Bad' principals pose for a cover shoot

"So we just have to figure out exactly what kind of story we're telling. Is it a story about his creation of his own character? Because Saul Goodman, as he explains in his first episode, is not his real name,? Gilligan said. ?He is a self-created character, much like Heisenberg. Do we tell the story of his origins? We're still trying to hash that out. But there are a lot of fun possibilities.

"Breaking Bad returns with the second half of its fifth and final season Aug. 11 on AMC.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/breaking-bad-creator-saul-spin-very-much-possibility-6C10141003

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Cholesterol sets off chaotic blood vessel growth

May 29, 2013 ? A study at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine identified a protein that is responsible for regulating blood vessel growth by mediating the efficient removal of cholesterol from the cells. Unregulated development of blood vessels can feed the growth of tumors.

The work, led by Yury Miller, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine at UC San Diego, will be published in the advance online edition of the journal Nature on May 29.

Cholesterol is a structural component of the cell and is indispensable for normal cellular function, although its excess often leads to abnormal proliferation, migration, inflammatory responses or cell death. The researchers studied how the removal of cholesterol from endothelial cells (cells that line the blood vessels) impacts the development of new blood vessels, the process called angiogenesis.

According to Miller, removal of excess cholesterol from endothelial cells is essential for restraining excessive growth of blood vessels.

"Too much cholesterol increases the abundance of lipid rafts, areas in the plasma membrane where surface receptors initiate signaling events leading to angiogenesis," Miller said. VEGFR2 is such a receptor, playing a central role in the development of blood vessels. Research into the process of angiogenesis suggests that VEGF-induced signaling within endothelial cells is important to tumor growth.

In this study, the scientists show that apoA-I binding protein (AIBP) is secreted by surrounding tissues and facilitates cholesterol removal from endothelial cells. This process interferes with the VEGFR2 receptor function, in turn inhibiting angiogenesis.

"Studying the process in zebrafish, we found that the timing and the pattern of AIBP expression is such that it helps guide segmental arteries to grow strictly in the dorsal direction, instead of an aberrant sideways direction," said first author Longhou Fang, who added that future studies will explore if AIBP or its derivatives can be used to inhibit pathologic angiogenesis in tumors. Alternatively, blocking AIBP activity in the heart may, in principle, stimulate re-growth of blood vessels after a heart attack.

Additional contributors to the study include Soo-Ho Choi, Ji Sun Baek, Chao Liu, Felicidad Almazan, Philipp Wiesner, Adam Taleb, Elena Deer, Jennifer Pattison and Andrew C. Li, UCSD Department of Medicine; and Florian Ulrich and Jes?s Torres-V?zquez, Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine at New York University Langone Medical Center.

The study was funded in part by National Institutes of Health grants HL093767, HL055798 and HL114734; a fellowship from the UC Tobacco-Related Disease Program; and a UCSD Neuroscience Microscopy Facility Grant.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/QEJXqUK6fC0/130529133149.htm

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Arrested Development, Season 4

In?Slate?s?Arrested Development?TV Club, two fans will IM about each episode of Season 4 once they finish watching it. Today interactives editor Chris Kirk and senior project manager David Stern discuss Episode 4, ?The B. Team.?

Chris Kirk: ?The B. Team? sees Michael Bluth taken out of his element, the real estate business, and thrown into the film business. But before we get into this episode, what are your thoughts on the season thus far?

David Stern: I?m mixed about it. It?s great to see all these characters again, and to see how some of them have evolved in our years apart. I think what?s missing is their ability to interact with each other. They?re a lot less funny as individuals than they are when can play off each other. But we?ve learned to be patient with this series?there have often been long setup stretches punctuated by short periods of almost unparalleled hilarity. I just wish the interludes between the funny bits were shorter.

Kirk: Because the episodes focus on one character at a time, it?s almost as if each is an episode in a different Arrested Development spinoff series. And spinoffs only succeed when they develop their own compelling identity, characters, and plot threads. I?m not sure that Arrested Development has really succeeded in giving each character a good spinoff. But after ?The B. Team,? I think I'm starting to like Michael?s. As the episode opens, Michael is getting a new car, which is (what I presume to be) one of the cars that Google deploys to take the pictures that show up on Google Maps.

Stern: That?s a safe assumption. ?Hey Gare-bear, I think we got an ostrich!? yells one Google employee to the other.

Kirk: ?I?m used to some stares? or, rather, ?I?m used to some stairs,? has become my favorite line of the season so far. It somehow went right over my head in the season trailer. Though I am sad to see the stair car go, I think the Google car is a promising successor. I also appreciated the reappearance of Bob Loblaw with his ?Bob Loblaw Law Bomb.?

Stern: That also made me laugh. And it was a nice continuation of a long series of plays on?Bob Loblaw?s name. We also saw a lot of Barry Zuckerkorn, whom I haven?t found particularly amusing in the past, but whose cocky and obnoxious younger self tickles my funny bone.?

Kirk: Michael goes to Imagine, Ron Howard?s real-life production company. The sign on the top of the building reads: ?Where dreams drop into make-believe as surely as a drop of water falls into a bigger thing of water in slow motion,? a play on the Imagine logo that you?ve seen a hundred times. Michael runs into Kitty.

Stern: I?ve really enjoyed Kitty?s evolution. She?s gone from hilariously misinterpreting every situation as an opportunity to lift up her shirt (?this is the last time you?ll ever see these!?) to hilariously misinterpreting every situation as an opportunity to shout down perceived male competitive aggression. This seems to have accompanied her rise from George Bluth Sr.?s secretary to movie executive.

Kirk: I liked the flashback in which she throws Maeby?s script into a bin labeled ?Not going forward development.? Sometimes I find little things like that on Arrested Development inexplicably funny.

Stern: ?All the stuff about the moon landing being fake didn?t really work for me, though.

Kirk: As is often the case with Arrested Development, I?m not sure if it wasn?t funny or that I just didn?t get it. Maybe a commenter can explain to me why that part was in fact hilarious.

Stern: While on-screen Ron Howard wasn?t funny on his own, I hope and expect they?ll use the interaction between his narrator self and actual self in interesting ways. Isla Fisher, who recently appeared in The Great Gatsby, is another celebrity showing up this season. What did you make of her as Michael?s new romantic interest?

Kirk: This episode continued several running gags about Michael and women, which include but are not limited to: 1) He?s a bumbling fool with them; 2) he?s oblivious to critical details about them; and 3) he maintains elaborate lies to hold their attention, e.g., that he?s a movie producer or likes Scottish music.

Stern: Or that his son was seven?teen. He makes an absurd and awkward comment, as usual, telling her that she reminds him of his dead wife.

Kirk: George Sr. also appears to be finding new love with Lucille 2. Michael talks to him in the hallway, and another one my favorite exchanges in this episode happens. ?You sign this and I don?t see any reason why we can't make him seem very, um, uh, uh ... ?

Stern: ?Nice?? George Bluth does eventually come around, though I was left wondering if this was another example of his manipulative trickery. A theme of the first three seasons was George Sr. pretending to do something nice for his family while actually working purely for his own self-interest. Or maybe he?s really changed? He seems far less confident after the failure of his desert hallucination business. Maybe his Mexican porn peace offering was given with good intentions?

Kirk: Let?s finish up by discussing the actual B Team that Michael assembles.

Stern: Warden Gentles, Carl Weathers, and Andy Richter! Quite a trio. James Lipton is the only one who doesn?t get to play himself. Although in a way his character?s basically the prison warden version of the host of Inside the Actor?s Studio.

Kirk: The show continues, I think with some effectiveness, the gag that Carl Weathers is a huge freeloader. Thoughts on the episode as a whole?

Stern: This felt like we were getting a narrative arc for the season as a whole. The movie-within-a-TV-show (which will eventually become a movie, in theory) paradigm is a powerful one that?s been applied many times before. It?s reminiscent most recently of The Office?s final season, but also of The Producers and even Fellini?s 8?.

Kirk: It?s good to see a primary plot thread crystallize, if that?s what we?re looking at here. I liked "The B. Team." Parts of it fell flat. Parts of it went completely over my head. Parts of it were hilarious. In short, it was like any other episode of Arrested Development.

Stern: Except for one key difference: We?re watching it for the first time!

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=1076e02f0c0a1a0ab55ee62b313963c1

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Apple's Ive played "key" role in developing upcoming iOS 7

During his interview at the D11 conference, Apple CEO Tim Cook noted that the company's Senior Vice President of Industrial Design Jonathan Ive was key in creating the next generation operating system set to be unveiled at WWDC in June.


Apple CEO Tim Cook at the D11 conference. | Source: AllThingsD
Walt Mossberg of AllThingsD's asked Cook about Ive's involvement in Apple's forthcoming iOS 7, set for reveal at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference next month.

?Yes. Jony is really key,? Cook said.

He went on to say describe the management shake up that occurred last fall which ultimately led to the axing of then iOS chief Scott Forstall.

"What we did last fall was change things up, to really ramp up our innovation," Cook said. "The key in the post-PC era for having a great product is incredible hardware, incredible software, and incredible services, and to combine them so you can't tell what's what. The magic is at the intersection."

When probed on Forstall's departure, Cook had nothing to say, instead deflecting the question to focus on the progress being made in iOS and OS X.

?We recognized that Jony had contributed significantly to the look and feel of Apple for many, many years and could do that for software as well, and I think it?s absolutely incredible," Cook said of Ive.

As for the general state of affairs in Apple's two flagship operating systems, Cook appears pleased with the results.

"Now it's seven months later, and I think it's been an incredible change," he said. "Craig [Federighi] is running iOS and OS X, which has been fantastic."

Federighi took his post as part of the change last fall.

Cook said "the future of iOS and OS X" will rollout at WWDC 2013 in June.

Source: http://appleinsider.com.feedsportal.com/c/33975/f/616168/s/2c89b86e/l/0Lappleinsider0N0Carticles0C130C0A50C280Capples0Eive0Eplayed0Ekey0Erole0Ein0Edeveloping0Eupcoming0Eios0E7/story01.htm

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

The Top 10 Jobs for New College Graduates

College Graduation

The job market is tough for new college graduates, but opportunities still abound. In fact, the Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution in Washington estimates that a four-year college degree is equivalent to an investment that returns 15.2 percent ? even when factoring in lost wages while in school, according to The New York Times.?So what are 10 of the hottest, highest-paying jobs for new college graduates? The answer may surprise you. (Data courtesy of Indeed.com.)

#10 ? Nurse

As America ages, the healthcare industry booms. Nurses and other health professionals are in high demand. The average salary of a nurse is $72,000. The typical nurse may work for?Hospital Corporation of America?(NYSE:HCA).

#9 ? Web Designer

The world is smaller than it ever has been before, largely due to the Internet. Website designers are in big demand. The average salary of a web designer is $62,000. The typical web designer may work for AT&T (NYSE:T).

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#8 ? Pharmaceutical Representative

There are worse jobs than working for big pharma. A lot. As America continues to age, big drug companies are poised to reap the rewards. The average salary of a pharmaceutical representative is $65,000. The typical pharmaceutical representative may work for?Pfizer?(NYSE:PFE).

#7 ? Financial Analyst

The recession wiped out the retirement savings of many. Incidentally, financial analysts are in high demand, as their pay can attest. The average salary of a financial analyst is $67,000. The typical financial analyst may work for JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM).

Source: http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/the-top-10-jobs-for-new-college-graduates.html/

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Why Nikkei Sell-Off May Foreshadow Things to Come

Tuesday, May 28th, 2013
By George Leong, B.Comm. for Profit Confidential

Why Nikkei Sell-Off May Foreshadow Things to ComeThe one-day sell-off last week in Japan?s equities market with the benchmark Nikkei 225 plummeting more than seven percent in one day should not be ignored; in fact, the drop may be a harbinger of things to come. I don?t have a crystal ball, but my market sense is tingling.

The reality is that the sell-off in the equities market was not a surprise, given that the Nikkei has advanced 70% over the past six months. And this advance was driven largely by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe?s aggressive 10-year stimulus strategy to jumpstart the dormant Japanese economy.

Yet what was more concerning was the lack of a follow-through by the Nikkei equities market after the sell-off, as the index rallied a mere 0.9% the following day.

Nikkei equities market

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

The market?s fear is that if the selling continues on the Nikkei, this could drive down confidence in the equities market and trigger deeper losses on the horizon, including declines in domestic trading.

The Japanese equities market could easily go lower, given the advance so far.

For Prime Minister Abe, should the Japanese equities market reverse course and decline, the move would likely erode confidence in Japan and test Abe and the country?s resolve.

In my view, as I have discussed in these pages in my previous commentary on Japan (read ?Japan Not Home-Free Despite Strong GDP?), the country?s aggressive fiscal and monetary policy is not a sure bet to get Japan out of its economic abyss.

In fact, the aggressive printing of money in Japan will create a bloated national debt level on the country?s balance sheet, which is already one of the weakest in the world.

The ability to drive the economy by spending trillions may work in the upcoming years, but I wouldn?t feel good about amassing the amount of debt that Japan is.

The sell-off in the Nikkei equities market could make investors uneasy on this side of the Pacific.

Domestically, the market is concerned about the Federal Reserve looking at a possible reduction of its bond-buying program as early as June during the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting that is scheduled for that month.

The fear is that more selling in the Nikkei equities market may trigger deeper losses to come not only in Japan, but elsewhere; so there may be some apprehension to jump into stocks at this point.

The chart of the S&P 500 below suggests that a possible correction may be in the works, as shown by the ovals. Note also that in 2012, the S&P 500 gained a mere seven points from May 1 to October 31?historically the weakest six months for stocks, according to the Stock Trader?s Almanac?but advanced 13.4% for the year, so we could be headed for some slack.

S&P 500 chart

Chart courtesy of www.StockCharts.com

I would want to see a bigger sell-off here before considering injecting new capital into stocks.

Again, while the advance has been financially rewarding, I still feel a correction is on the horizon. A big sell-off could be an opportunity to buy.

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Source: http://www.profitconfidential.com/stock-market/why-nikkei-sell-off-may-foreshadow-things-to-come/

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'Fast And Furious 6' Blows Past 'Hangover Part III' At The Box Office

In the battle of two franchises, only one was able to walk out with its head held high. "Fast and Furious 6" punched the nitro and cruised past expectations to a four-day total of $120 million over Memorial Day weekend, according to Box Office Mojo. The Wolfpack, on the other hand, scored an impressive pile [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/05/28/fast-and-furious-6-box-office/

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This Sonos All-In-One Wireless Speaker Is Your Deal of the Day

This Sonos All-In-One Wireless Speaker Is Your Deal of the Day

Sonos wireless sound systems are the gold standard for people looking for effortless music streaming around the house, but you'll pay for quality and convenience. If you've been looking to make the investment, Sonos is offering a bundle that'll save you a few bucks.

If you're not familiar with why you'd want a Sonos over, say, an Airplay or Bluetooth speaker, first read Brian Lam's Lifechanger piece.

If you know you want a Sonos, here's what this deal offers: For $300 you get a Sonos Play:3, a Sonos Bridge, and 90 days of Rhapsody. The Sonos Play:3 is the entry-level Sonos speaker?it's wireless and tiny, and if you get two of them, they can function as wireless stereo speakers. It's usually $300?which is the price of this deal?but Amazon and Sonos are also throwing in a free Sonos Bridge and three months of Rhapsody. The bridge hooks up to your router and extends your Sonos network?it's certainly something you'll want if you're piecing together a whole Sonos system. And while Rhapsody isn't one of our favorite music streaming services, free is free.

The offer is available on the Sonos website and Amazon. [Sonos, Amazon]

Top Deals

? Sonos 4 + Sonos Bridge + 90 days of Rhapsody ($300) | Amazon

? Sonos Test Pack ($300) | Sonos via Dealmac | Originally $400

Accessories

? Logitech M137 Wireless Optical Mouse ($10) | Best Buy via Deals | Lowest ever

Miscellaneous

? 500GB Usenet Block ($20) | Newsgroup Direct via Fatwallet | Originally $40

? Windows 8 Touchpad ($25) | Lenovo via Buyvia | Originally $50 | Use coupon code USP1MA441641

? 18v Bosch Coreless Drill ($100) | Lowe's via Fatwallet | Originally $150

? $5 off $15 LivingSocial | Living Social via Fatwallet | Use coupon code MEMORIAL

Gaming

I'm counting the days until June 11, which is when the Mac port of the newest SimCity will be released. I believe that if you buy a copy now, you'll have access when the Mac port comes out?and something tells me that Mac gamers who don't think ahead will be paying more than $32 come June 11. [Green Man Gaming]

? SimCity ($32) | Green Man Gaming via Hard Forum | Originally $60 | Use coupon code GMG20-LLASD-D8WBQ

PC

? SimCity 4 Deluxe [Not Steam] ($5) | Amazon via Deals

? Overlord Complete Pack [Steam] ($5.50) | Green Man Gaming via TechBargains | Use code GMG20-LLASD-D8WBQ

? Legacy of Kain Games [Steam] ($1.40/each) | Green Man Gaming | Use code GMG20-LLASD-D8WBQ

Xbox

? Today Only Injustice: Gods Among Us ($35) | Amazon via Deals | Lowest ever

? Alan Wake's American Nightmare ($4) | Microsoft

? Bioshock 1+2 Ultimate Rapture Edition ($20) | Amazon

PS3

? Today Only Injustice: Gods Among Us ($35) | Amazon via Deals | Lowest ever

? Sly Cooper: Thieves in Time [Cross-Buy] ($30) | Amazon
? Bioshock 1+2 Ultimate Rapture Edition ($20) | Amazon

Special thanks to Shane Roberts from the Moneysaver covering for me last week?definitely check 'em out if you want more Steam games in your queue you'll never play.

Audio

See top deals.

? $20 ExtremeMac Soma Poolside Speaker | Buydig | $50 at Amazon

Clothing

? Superga Shoes Sale | Oi Polloi via Put This On | A lot of sizes sold out but good prices for Supergas

? adidas Terrex Swift Soft-Shell ($37) | REI via Fatwallet | Originally $100

? Kelty Coyote 80 Backpack ($80) | REI via Deals Kinja | Originally $180

Dumb TV ? Smart TV

Nah.

Physical Media

? Firefly: The Complete Series [Blu-ray] ($20) | Amazon via Daily DVD Deals

? Rocko's Modern Life: Complete Series on DVD ($15) | Amazon via Brand Name Coupons | Originally $30

? Arrested Development Seasons 1-3 ($25) | Arrested Development via Deals Kinja | Originally $50 | Or, y'know, subscribe to Netflix or Amazon Prime

? Star Trek: Original Motion Picture Collection on Blu-ray ($33) | Amazon via Hard Forum | Originally $50

Digital Media

? David Byrne + St. Vincent, Brass Tactics EP

?Diplo's six-hour summer playlist

Laptops

Nope.

Desktops

? HP ENVY h8-1360t Desktop, i7-3770, Radeon HD 7570, 10GB RAM, Bluetooth Wireless-N LAN card, 460W power supply, Windows 7 ($650) | HP via Dealzon | Originally $1,000 - use coupon code MEMPC

Tablets

No touching!

Screens

? 23" Dell IPS Monitor ($153) | Newegg via Hard Forum | Originally $180 | Use coupon code DSKBNCE27

Portables

? 8GB Sansa Fuse ($20) | Dealfisher via 9to5Toys | Originally $50

Camera

? Sony NEX-VG900 w/ 28-75mm f/2.8 Lens ($3696) | Amazon via Photography Bay | Originally $4000

Bare Drives

Right now at Rakuten Marketplace anything sold by beachcamera.com gets $50 taken off at the checkout?which means the Samsung 840 Pro is at one of the lowest prices we've seen. Most folks will be fine with the vanilla Samsung 840, but if you demand the best speeds from your components, $190 for a fast 240GB drive ain't bad. Note: you won't see the discount until you're checking out. [Rakuten]

? 240GB Samsung 840 Pro ($188) | Rakuten via Fatwallet | Originally $240 | Add to checkout to see $50 discount

Apps

iOS

? Closet ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $5

? Fragger ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $1

? Mind Watering ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $5

? The Dark Knight Rises ($1) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $7

? Amazing Spider-Man ($1) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $7

iPad Only

? Inkist ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $2

? Fragger HD ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $3

? SimCity Deluxe for iPad ($1) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $7

? Tetris for iPad ($1) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $3

? Command and Conquer Red Alert ($1) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $5

Android

? Relax Melodies Premium ($0) | Amazon Appstore via Brand Name Coupons | Originally $3

? Tetris Blitz ($0) | Amazon Appstore via Brand Name Coupons | Originally $1

? Cut The Rope HD Lantern Box ($1) | Google Play via App-sales.net | Originally $2

? MapMyRide+ ($1) | Google Play via App-sales.net | Originally $2

? Welder ($1) | Google Play via App-sales.net | Originally $3

? My Media Center ($3) | Google Play via App-sales.net | Originally $5

? Jump Desktop ($5) | Google Play via App-sales.net | Originally $10

Hobomodo

? Free Bag of Cracker Jack ($0) | Cracker Jack via Reddit | Originally $1 | Giving away 1000 per day, so if it's sold out try again tomorrow

Keep up with Kif Leswing on Kinja and Twitter. Check out The Moneysaver for more great tech deals, and deals.kinja.com for even more discounts.


A note on Dealzmodo: We're professional shoppers. Yes, we make money if you end up buying. That's capitalism, but we're absolutely looking out for your best interest. Read this if you want to know more.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-sonos-all-in-one-wireless-speaker-is-your-deal-of-510112005

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Chambers-O?Brien pairing highlights 17th Annual CVC Golf Tournament on May 31

You are here: Home / Sports / PSU Sports News / Chambers-O?Brien pairing highlights 17th Annual CVC Golf Tournament on May 31














Bill O?Brien will tee it up alongside host Patrick Chambers with one lucky foursome at the 17th Annual Coaches vs. Cancer Golf Tournament, Friday, May 31, at the Penn State Blue and White Golf Courses. The pairing of the Penn State football and men?s basketball coaches highlights a strong field of celebrity captains that will be among approximately 300 golfers and 60 groups participating in the event that will push CVC-Penn State past the $2 million mark in total funds raised since the organization?s inception in 1996.



Source: http://gantdaily.com/2013/05/28/chambers-obrien-pairing-highlights-17th-annual-cvc-golf-tournament-on-may-31/

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Britain: EU ends arms embargo on Syrian opposition

British Foreign Secretary William Hague, left, talks with Belgium's Foreign Minister Didier Reynders, during the EU foreign ministers meeting, at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, May 27, 2013. The European Union nations remain divided on Monday whether to ease sanctions against Syria to allow for weapons shipments to rebels fighting the regime of Syria's President Bashar Assad. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

British Foreign Secretary William Hague, left, talks with Belgium's Foreign Minister Didier Reynders, during the EU foreign ministers meeting, at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, May 27, 2013. The European Union nations remain divided on Monday whether to ease sanctions against Syria to allow for weapons shipments to rebels fighting the regime of Syria's President Bashar Assad. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

In this photo released on Sunday, May 26, 2013, by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syrian forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad take their position during a clashes against Syrian rebels, in Aleppo, Syria. Syria's Information Ministry says rebels have killed a TV correspondent who was covering clashes near the border with Lebanon. (AP Photo/SANA)

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, right, talks with Belgium's Foreign Minister Didier Reynders, left, Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn, second right, and Spain's Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo y Marfil, second left, during the EU foreign ministers meeting, at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, May 27, 2013. The European Union nations remain divided on Monday whether to ease sanctions against Syria to allow for weapons shipments to rebels fighting the regime of Syria's President Bashar Assad. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

FILE - In this Saturday, May 25, 2013 file photo, Republican Sen. John McCain speaks at a news conference at the World Economic Forum, held at the King Hussein Bin Talal Convention center, in Southern Shuneh, 34 miles (55 kilometers) southeast of Amman, Jordan. McCain has quietly slipped into Syria for a meeting with Syrian rebels, spokeswoman Rachael Dean confirmed Monday, May 27, 2013. She declined further comment about the trip. The visit took place amid meetings in Paris involving efforts to secure participation of Syria's fractured opposition in an international peace conference in Geneva. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon, File)

In this photo released on Sunday, May 26, 2013, by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syrian forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad take their position during clashes against Syrian rebels, in Aleppo, Syria. Syria's Information Ministry says rebels have killed a TV correspondent who was covering clashes near the border with Lebanon. (AP Photo/SANA)

(AP) ? The European Union said its member states within days will be able to send weapons to help Syria's outgunned rebels, seeking to pressure President Bashar Assad's regime ahead of planned peace talks mediated by the United States and Russia.

Though no EU country has any such plans now to send arms, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the decision "sends a very strong message from Europe to the Assad regime." He spoke after an all-day meeting of foreign ministers Monday that laid bare EU hesitation on feeding arms in a foreign conflict only months after the 27-member bloc won the Nobel Peace Prize.

"It is extremely important not to do anything to rock the boat. Start delivering weapons now would rock the boat. No one is intending to do that," Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said.

But in a bid to force Syria to participate in good faith at the prospective "Geneva II" talks next month, the meeting in Brussels dangled the option of sending in weapons and military equipment as soon as Saturday, when the current sanctions regime ends.

The prospect of EU weapons for the rebels, while maintaining stiff economic sanctions against Assad's regime, also sends a message to Russia. Moscow has unabashedly sent weapons to Assad's regime ? and EU arms deliveries could partially re-balance the civil war when it comes to firepower.

Several EU ministers said arming the opposition would create a more level playing field that could force Assad into a negotiated settlement.

Britain and France ? the EU's biggest military powers ? had been pushing the bloc to lift its embargo on delivery of weapons into Syria to help the embattled opposition. But Austria, which has sent peacekeepers to the Golan Heights between Syria and Israel, was vocally opposed ? one of several EU countries that argued that the region is already awash in weapons.

EU countries will individually examine their export license applications one by one and will not proceed "at this stage" with deliveries of military equipment, the joint declaration said, though it did not specify when that might change.

EU ministers agreed to revisit the issue before Aug. 1, but countries, based on previous EU guidelines, can now decide for themselves whether they want to arm the rebels.

The EU nations also agreed everything possible should be done to control any exports and make sure they do not fall into the hands of extremists or terrorists ? one of the thorniest issues for France and Britain in their calls to arm the rebels. Each country will require "adequate safeguards against misuse of authorizations (for export) granted," the EU text said.

Hague said Britain would only send in weapons "in company with other nations, in carefully controlled circumstances, and in compliance with international law."

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius left the talks earlier Monday to return to Paris to meet with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who are leading the effort to bring the two warring Syrian sides to the negotiating table.

Assad's government has agreed in principle to participate in peace talks in Geneva, but the exact date, agenda and participants still remain unclear.

In Paris, officials traveling with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry had no comment on the EU arms decision.

A State Department official also said the department was aware of Sen. John McCain, a proponent of arming Syrian rebels, crossing into Syrian territory on Monday. Further questions were referred to McCain's office, which confirmed the unannounced trip but gave no details.

McCain met with anti-government fighters in Syria. The fierce critic of Obama administration policy in Syria has stopped short of backing U.S. ground troops there.

France added urgency to the EU arms debate Monday, with Fabius pointing to increasing signs that chemical weapons were being used in the conflict.

The EU nations have been steadfast opponents of Assad in the war and have steadily increased restrictive measures against his regime, including visa restrictions and economic sanctions. In February, the bloc amended the arms embargo to allow for non-lethal equipment and medicine to protect Syrian civilians. All those measures had been set to expire on May 31, but nearly all of the sanctions, including restrictions on exports and imports, visas, and funding for some Syrian companies, were extended for a year.

Washington has been reluctant to provide rebels with more sophisticated weapons for fear they might end up in the hands of the radical Islamic factions, including the al-Qaida-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra, a group that has been the most effective fighting force on the opposition side.

___

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper in Paris contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-27-EU-Syria/id-318192220cc84434b77bd17a5e81fa92

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Chander and Sunder, 'Copyright's Cultural Turn' - Private Law Theory

Abstract:
How ironic that the scholarship on the area of law most directly regulating the culture industries has long resisted learning from scholarship on culture! Rather than turning to cultural studies, anthropology, geography, literary theory, science and technology studies, and media studies, over the last few decades, copyright scholars have relied largely on economics for methodology. In this review essay, we argue that Julie Cohen?s new book, Configuring the Networked Self: Law, Code, and the Play of Everyday Practice, is part of a cultural turn in intellectual property scholarship. Cohen?s book marks an important expansion of the tools available to analyze intellectual property.

In this paper, we contextualize her book through comparison with the reigning law and economics approach. We go further to highlight some aspects of a cultural analysis of copyright. We identify two central insights of the cultural turn in copyright: the relationship between cultural products and the self, and the relationship between culture and human development, which we characterize as the relationship between goods and a good life. Under Martha Nussbaum?s and Amartya Sen?s capabilities approach, which Cohen embraces, intellectual property policy would be evaluated under a new metric, not simply increased products (in the form of patents, copyrighted works, or trademarked goods), or its contribution to the gross domestic product, but rather its role in enhancing human capabilities. A cultural approach to copyright would measure law?s success by its ability to better the lives of real people.

Chander, Anupam and Sunder, Madhavi, Copyright?s Cultural Turn (May 22, 2013). Texas Law Review, 2013; UC Davis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 341.

Source: http://private-law-theory.org/?p=3038

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Aldeburgh Food and Drink Festival | Suffolk Produce | The Suffolk ...

Aldeburgh Food and Drink Festival

Live cooking demonstrations are a great part of the festival

Over 80 Suffolk food and drink producers; demonstrations from leading chefs including Daniel Clifford, Valentine Warner, Henry Harris and Sarah Raven; a weekend of hands-on workshops, over 50 fringe events and a conference chaired by BBC Radio 4?s Sheila Dillon: these are just some of the highlights of the 2013 Aldeburgh Food & Drink Festival.

Now in its eighth year, the Aldeburgh Food & Drink Festival is a two-week celebration of the best food and drink in the county. Considering the inimitable quality of local produce in this part of the world, it?s no surprise that Aldeburgh is consistently rated as one of the best food and drink ?festivals in the UK.

?There isn?t a better, more enjoyable, more educational, more beautiful food and drink festival in Britain,? says Sheila Dillon, presenter of BBC Radio 4?s The Food Programme.

The Aldeburgh Food and Drink Festival runs over the weekend of the 28th and 29th September at Snape Maltings. There will be demonstrations from Valentine Warner, Henry Harris, Sarah Raven and Lucas Hollweg. East Anglia has its fair share of well-known chefs who?ll also appear, including Galton Blackiston (Morston Hall, Norfolk & Saturday Kitchen); Paul Foster (Tuddenham Mill, Young Chef of the Year, Observer Food Monthly 2012); Daniel Clifford (Midsummer House, Cambridge, 2 Michelin Stars) and Madelene Bonvini-Hamel (British Larder, Woodbridge, International Gourmand Award for Cookbook of the Year by a female chef.)

Chaired by Sheila Dillon, the Festival Conference returns this year. Food Security for the Nation and Suffolk. The conference will explore how with a growing world population, more pressure on our natural resources and an uncertain climate, both science and local communities have a role to play in ensuring we don?t go hungry in the future. Keynote speaker, renowned agricultural economist, Sir Gordon Conway of Imperial College, London and author of One Billion Hungry will discuss global food security and the role of science. Other speakers will raise national and regional challenges of food security, sustainability and agricultural production.

The location of the Festival is very special. Snape Maltings has a stunning setting by the River Alde where reed-covered marshlands stretch into the distance. It is also home to Aldeburgh Music, who celebrate their founder Benjamin Britten?s centenary this year. The atmosphere is relaxed and informal, and despite receiving over 12,000 visitors in 2012, there is always space to sit back and enjoy a beer from the main sponsors Adnams or a glass of cider from sponsors Aspall.

Suffolk has?wonderful produce and producers and the festival draws together many of the best in the region. With more than 80 local food and drink companies exhibiting it is a food-lovers heaven. There is a packed programme of workshops from bread or pasta making, to wine and spirit tasting.

The Fringe Festival extends the celebrations for a further two weeks and offers unique opportunities for farm walks, behind-the-scenes visits to producers, celebrations dinners, workshops and talks.

Source: http://www.thesuffolkcoast.co.uk/the-suffolk-coast/food-drink/the-aldeburgh-food-and-drink-festival/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-aldeburgh-food-and-drink-festival

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

A Jewish renaissance, tucked away in a Budapest apartment

Budapest's Teleki Square synagogue has survived two World Wars, the rise of the 'anti-Zionist' Jobbik party, and rotting fixtures ? and is now part of a resurgent Jewish community.

By Andrew Connelly,?Contributor, Helene Bienvenu,?Contributor / May 25, 2013

The Teleki Square shul was established by Jews from Ukraine that settled in Budapest in the 1920s. The shul survived World War two bombings and the religious repression during Communism. Orthodox rules are strictly kept in the shul. Men seat on one side (on the left) whereas women seat on the right, behind a light curtain and don't interact directly with the liturgy.

Helene Bienvenu

Enlarge

Too often recently, Hungary has been in the news for all the wrong reasons. The elevation of the ultranationalist Jobbik party to the parliament in 2010 and the provocative, anti-Semitic statements made by their members that followed has led many to wonder: Who would want to be Jewish in this Central European, former Communist state?

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However, hidden away through a courtyard in Budapest?s ramshackle District VIII, an area of the Hungarian capital known for its high population of Roma gypsies and immigrants, the shul ("synagogue" in Yiddish) on Teleki Square is quietly challenging this notion. It is one of the very last surviving "apartment synagogues" in the country and may well represent the spirited renewal of Jewish life that is currently sweeping the city.

For nearly a century since the shul?s foundation by Hassidic Jews from Ukraine at the beginning of the 1920s, it has survived World War II bombings, Communist oppression, and the damp ? but from the last, only barely.

When chairman Andras Mayer, his brother Gabor, a dozen other members and a South African rabbi decided to renovate the shul ? which like many prayer houses of its era?situated inside an unassuming, shabby apartment ? the ceiling was near collapse and the walls rotting.

?Everyone was waiting for this place to close down and nobody really cared about it," says Gabor. "This was nothing to do with the original Hungarian Jewish establishment. It was simply formed by a bunch of friends, they opened it and it was no one else?s business.?

The shul has never closed down, even during the war, always keeping a skeletal attendance. But in the last few years, the Mayer brothers and friends started to invigorate the community with new and young members.

?People were getting older and dying off. It was a disappearing culture, so it was not just a renovation needed here; we had to start a new life.?

A dwindling population

For centuries Hungary has been home to important and vibrant Jewish communities that, until World War II, lived in relative peace. They acquired a more prominent role in the late 19th century after many Jews took part in the revolution against the Habsburg monarchy in 1848, an event that is still considered a milestone in Hungarian history. Jews grew in number as the prosperous dual monarchy of Austro-Hungary established itself and many prominent figures of world Judaism claim Hungarian roots, such as the father of Zionism, Theodor Herzl.

During the interwar period, up to 25 percent of Budapest?s population was Jewish. But under Mikl?s Horthy?s rule as regent of post-World War I Hungary, numerous anti-Jewish laws were established restricting Hungarian Jews? ability to study and even cohabitate. This was the first of many discriminatory policies, culminating in the deportation of Jewish families with the active collaboration of the Hungarian Gendarmerie. Recently, some local municipalities in rural Hungary have caused uproar by erecting statues and renaming parks in honor of Mr. Horthy.

The deportation was was almost completed when Arrow Cross, the Hungarian fascist party, took power in October 1944 under pressure from Nazi Germany. In just a few weeks, around 450,000 Hungarian Jews perished at Auschwitz, leaving the country's Jewish population a mere fraction of its former self.

At Teleki Square, even with the new blood, it is still sometimes a struggle on Saturday mornings to make a "minyan," the 10-man quorum required for communal worship under Orthodox Jewish law. On the more quiet Sabbath mornings, some members walk to the neighboring synagogue to humbly ask to borrow a man or two.

For Sholom Hurwitz, serving as the shul?s rabbi since its revival, the job can be sometimes challenging.

?After the Holocaust and the Communist suppression of religious organizations, lots of Hungarians forgot their faith, and this shul is part of the Jewish renaissance we see in Budapest," he says. "Not everybody present can read Hebrew, and in the beginning people had their mobile phone out on Sabbath! But there is a strong feeling of community here, and everyone agrees on Orthodox standards. I?m proud to say we are user-friendly and, being so diverse, we?re one of the least sectarian prayer house in the city.?

Renaissance

The "Jewish renaissance" underway in the Hungarian capital is twofold. Previously a tumbledown, crime ridden corner of the city, Budapest?s historic Jewish quarter has morphed into a gentrified nexus of bohemia, replete with Jewish restaurants full of tourists and wine bars peppered amongst the towering synagogues. On a more intellectual level, the elevation of the ultranationalist Jobbik party and the virulently anti-Semitic beliefs held by some of their members have prompted a renewed wave of Jewish political engagement. Initiatives like the Sir?ly cultural center organize direct activism whilst running cultural events designed to encourage observant and non-affiliated Jewish youth alike to explore their heritage.

The majority of the congregation, at Teleki Square, where baseball caps are sported alongside yarmulkes, do not identify themselves as particularly religious, despite the synagogue?s loose affiliation with the Orthodox movement. However, the stringent rules of a kosher kitchen and the Jewish lineage of the members ensure that they can also open their doors to whoever wants to observe.

Certainly within the walls on Sabbath morning, all the traditions are strictly kept, despite the often lighthearted atmosphere that pervades. As the rabbi chants in Hebrew from the hefty scrolls resting atop the bimah (table), the adjacent wall is dominated by a modern white clock inscribed with Hebrew numbers whose hands intriguingly tick backward.

?We wanted a nice ornate clock with a pendulum but some guy brought this back from Israel as a joke and it has stayed. It doesn?t mean anything, although entering this shul is a bit like stepping into a time machine,? Gabor remarks, exposing the modern idiosyncrasies that speckle the pious history of the shul.

The Mayer brothers are almost evangelistic when it comes to their passion for revitalizing and unearthing the Jewish history of the neighborhood, with ambitious plans afoot for two books, a documentary, specialized Teleki Square merchandise including branded yarmulkes, and even homemade brandy.

Not every synagogue has a metallic vat of strong Hungarian "Palinka" fermenting in the kitchen, but then the shul is not like other synagogues. The equipment is brand-new, the apple mush has been checked for worms, and the whole process supervised by the resident rabbi thus denoting the potent house spirit to be kosher.

?I think we are going to become very popular,? muses Andras. However, discussions about the local area are always bittersweet.

?The saddest part about the history of this neighborhood is that people don?t know about it. Sometimes that?s for the best because there have been some nasty stories going on in some of the houses here. During the war this was one of the only sites of Jewish resistance against the Nazis, and there was a big bloodshed as a result. With brooms they were sweeping up the blood on the streets.?

In Jobbik's shadow

Mere blocks away stands a foreboding gray edifice emblazoned with the banner of the Jobbik party, currently the third largest political force in the Hungarian parliament.

Its vocal "anti-Zionist" stance has been accused by some as being a smokescreen for general anti-semitism, a charge that Jobbik vigorously denies, and many have drawn comparisons between the uniformed members present at their political rallies and soldiers of the Arrow Cross. Despite ? or more likely because of ? the high Roma and migrant population in District VIII, they maintain a high profile here.

Andras pays little heed to Jobbik. ?People make distinctions between Nazis, neo-Nazis, and Arrow Cross, but what difference does that make to me? They don?t care what kind of Jew I am and I don?t care what kind of Nazi they are.?

In a country with a tragic past too often misunderstood and manipulated for political gain, the restoration of the Teleki Square shul seems very much the symbol of the wider reconstitution of Hungary?s Jewish identity: recovering, resilient, and threatened, but reasserting itself with characteristic quirkiness.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/iLwkP5t9sSg/A-Jewish-renaissance-tucked-away-in-a-Budapest-apartment

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Google Play Magazines app updated with new UI

Play Magazines

New 'Holo light' UI brings Magazines in line with latest Play Music and Play Store apps

Google has updated the Play Magazines app for Android to verison 2.0, bringing a new, lighter user interface. The new version of the app draws inspiration from the recent updates to Google Play Music and the Play Store, both of which have received UI updates in the past month or so. Everything's generally a lot lighter and brighter, and there's a new slide-out sidebar allowing you to switch between Read Now, Library and Shopping views. The official changelog also lists bug fixes in this new version of Play Magazines.

If you're already using Play Magazines, hit "My Apps" in the Play Store app to update. Alternatively we've got a Google Play web link up above.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/qW1i_SLJypo/story01.htm

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Friday, May 24, 2013

A Closer Look at Geoff Manaugh, Gizmodo's New Editor in Chief

In an in-depth Q&A published last night, The New York Times' Steven Kurutz talks to our new Editor in Chief, Geoff Manaugh, about his vision for Gizmodo.

In the profile, Manaugh discusses everything from military technology to elevators, commenting on how his voice will fit in with Gizmodo's focus on gadgets:

You might come to Gizmodo expecting to read about an Apple conference, and we will still cover that sort of thing. But if you see a compelling article about 3-D printing or elevator design, I think you?ll be interested in that.

It?s taking all of the things Gizmodo is good at and has an audience for, but it?s adding urbanism and architecture and design. You?ll see interviews with architects, coverage of building projects around the world. It?s treating gadgets as design objects.

The profile comes on the heels of our announcement about the new voices you're going to see around Gizmodo this month, including the addition of Paleofuture to the Kinja universe, and the introduction of Adam Clark Estes as Senior Staff Writer. On Friday, we had a chance to celebrate our new comrades at a shindig at the New Museum?and in case you missed it, here's the photographic evidence.

[Image via The New York Times; all other images courtesy of Victory Jeffreys II.]

Geoff Manaugh introduces himself on Friday night.

Nick Denton; Peter Ha; Tom Plunkett; Brian Barrett; Joel Johnson; and Julia Alvidrez.

Joseph Grima; James Del; Jason Deland; Geoff Manaugh; Heather Corcoran; Iwan Baan.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-new-york-times-profiles-gizmodos-new-editor-in-chie-509492250

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Lenovo IdeaCentre Horizon


The Lenovo IdeaCentre Horizon ($1,849 list) is the largest of the portable all-in-one desktop PCs that we've seen. Its 27-inch screen houses the notebook-class components of a Windows 8 PC, in a large semi-portable desktop system. The system's touch screen is the centerpiece of what could've been a good argument for merging the portable and desktop form factors. However, the myriad concessions that Lenovo had to make to bring this PC to the market are daunting and ultimately spoil the party.

Design and Features
The IdeaCentre Horizon is so huge that it looks like a portable HDTV. The front face is dominated by the 27-inch screen, bordered by a black bezel. The edges of the IdeaCentre Horizon are coated in a soft rubber material for comfort. The back panel of the system is silver colored metal. Its dimensions run about 17 by 27.25 by 1.25 (HWD), so it's a big sucker. You'd never in a million years consider this to be an upsized tablet, as it weighs 18.02 pounds and is merely transportable, not really portable. With that 27-inch width, you'll need a large table or desk to rest it on. It's gargantuan compared to the Sony VAIO Tap 20 ($999.99) and Dell XPS 18 ($1,349.99), two other portable all-in-one desktop PCs we've seen recently. In fact, next to the IdeaCentre Horizon, the 18-inch XPS 18 almost looks like it's pocket sized (though it most certainly is not). The IdeaCentre Horizon can be carried around by hand, but institutional users and people who plan to move the system often should think about adding the Multimode cart as an accessory. The Multimode cart should be available in the July 2013 time frame.

There is a reason for the IdeaCentre Horizon's size, however. It is meant to be a sharable PC. Its 27-inch diagonal, 10-point touch screen can be laid flat and can be used simultaneously by a three-person family, plus two to three more people. The system has a beefy metal arm permanently attached that is spring loaded, so it can recline from a few degrees from vertical down to a 60-degree angle comfortably. Past 60 degrees, you can lay the IdeaCentre Horizon flat, which turns the pseudo-tablet into a table PC. Once laid flat, the IdeaCentre Horizon automatically launches its Aura overlay, which covers up Windows with a sci-fi movie style interface that lets you open media like music, photos, and videos, as well as a selection of touch-optimized games. The system asks if you want to return to Windows when you tilt the screen back up.

Aura uses a puck-like controller on the screen, which opens up to show media like photos, videos, or music, depending on the type of media you select on the puck. The puck can be moved around the screen, as can the photos, video, and music tiles. The puck and daughter tiles have inertia and friction, so they keep moving for a bit if you flick them across the screen. It's all like a science fiction movie in execution, and it works well enough. The Aura interface lets you interact with your digital life, no matter which side of the screen you're sitting on. You can rotate and zoom into media with two-finger pinch and zoom gestures. It's all very cool, but since most of us are used to using the PC in a traditional way, we have a feeling that the Aura interface will be trotted out once in a while to show off the PC, but hardly used at any other time.

The system comes with a handful of pre-loaded apps on the Windows 8 Start screen, including some that work fine with the screen vertical, like Accuweather, rara.com, YouCam, Kindle, and several Lenovo-branded kids apps. Within Aura, there are several touch-optimized apps like Air Hockey, Roulette, Draw Race 2, Raiding Company, Monopoly, and Texas Hold 'Em Poker. Texas Hold 'Em is notable for its ability to use Android phones or tablets to view your hole cards. Otherwise you'd have to view them on the screen, covering them with your hand so others can't see your cards.

The IdeaCentre Horizon comes with several specialized controllers that work with the touch screen: a joystick that stays put via a suction cup, strikers that slide like air hockey paddles, and an electronic die (E-Dice) that works with board games like the copy of Monopoly that was installed on our review unit. The physical controllers blur the divide between the real world and the virtual world, but it remains to be seen if software developers will code their games with these controllers in mind.

The system came with a copy of BlueStacks, which lets you use Android apps on a Windows (or Mac) PC. BlueStacks kind of works, but load times are a lot longer than on your smartphone or tablet due to the emulation performance hit and the slow hard drive. Smartphone apps also have a problem when blown up to 1080p, with jaggy text and graphics elements. One tower defense game we tried was unplayable, since the app's menu screens wouldn't render right. If you really need to run both Android and Windows on the same system, the Asus Transformer AIO (P1801-B037K) ($1,299) is a better solution because that system is essentially a Windows PC with an Android tablet used as its screen.

The system has a wide expanse of space on the sides for I/O ports, so it's kind of puzzling why there are only two USB 3.0 ports on the IdeaCentre Horizon, particularly because the wireless keyboard mouse combo we got in with our review unit came with a USB receiver dongle. If you're using the keyboard and mouse, then the IdeaCentre Horizon effectively has only one USB 3.0 port. That's puzzling because the IdeaCentre Horizon comes with Bluetooth and could've simply been served by a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse, like the Dell XPS 18. If you simultaneously use the keyboard/mouse dongle and the USB dongle for the E-Dice, then you fill the system's USB ports. The system comes with an HDMI-in port, which is nice if you're going to connect the system up to your cable box or newer PC once this system becomes obsolete. The IdeaCentre Horizon comes with a SD card reader and audio ports, but that's the limit of the system's I/O. Speakers were fine, they sounded like a large laptop or small HDTV. The 27-inch Acer Aspire 7600U (A7600U-UR308) ($1,899) doesn't have a built in battery, but it has HDMI in and out, two USB 3.0, four USB 2.0, audio, memory card reader, and an Ethernet port in a system that takes up just about the same amount of desk space. The IdeaCentre Horizon's lack of ports really hurt its overall score.

Another problem with the IdeaCentre Horizon is its day-to-day performance. The combination of a huge screen and a 5,400rpm SATA drive mean that using the system with touch is a frustratingly laggy experience. When using the system in table PC mode, tiles and the puck interface in Aura sometimes render a few centimeters behind a fast dragging finger, at least until the puck catches up to your finger. Also, loading apps and documents take a lot longer than they would on a SSD-powered system like the XPS 18 or slate tablets like the Razer Edge Pro ($1,449). Taken alone, each delay is miniscule, but you're going to quickly notice the load and lag issues pile up during a normal computing session.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/mThe_Pyl_9Q/0,2817,2419218,00.asp

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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Jesse James severs fingertip, Instagrams injury

Celebs

14 hours ago

Jesse James.

Getty Images file

Jesse James.

If laughter really is the best medicine, Jesse James should make a full recovery in no time.

On Tuesday, Sandra Bullock's ex-husband accidentally cut off the tip of his pinky finger while working in his Austin, Texas, shop. The 44-year-old motorcycle guru Instagrammed some very graphic pictures of the gruesome injury and even joked about his damaged digit.

"OOOpps, Bad day at the office," James captioned the first bloody shot. "Headed 2 Surgery in a few #PayUpSucker @ University Medical Center."

PHOTO: Jesse James posts wedding pic with new bride Alexis DeJoria

He then added a particularly graphic, do-not-click-if-you-have-a-weak-stomach pic of his severed fingertip detached from his pinky nub, writing, "Doesn't look like this little dude's gonna make it, Nice know'n you little buddy."

And as James was "Heading 2 surgery," he posted a picture from his hospital bed. Looking none too frightened, he showed off his injury once more and managed to self-promote, writing, "#jessejames #westcoastchoppers #StillMetal."

Big thumbs up to James for keeping a positive attitude about it all.

PHOTOS: Ouch! More injured celebs

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/jesse-james-severs-fingertip-accident-instagrams-injury-6C10018474

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