Friday, May 24, 2013

Apple ?iWatch? Will Hit Market Only By Next Year: Analyst

Apple 'iWatch'
A representative image showing Apple's upcoming 'iWatch.' (Photo: Nickolay Lamm, MyVoucherCodes)

If you are waiting for Apple's rumored wearable, watch-like device dubbed as 'iWatch' to be released later this year it looks like you are in for a disappointment.

According to a KGI Securities Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, who has previously offered accurate information about Apple's product plans on a number of occasions believes that both hardware and software issues will force the company to develop and launch the 'iWatch' possibly only in the second half of 2014.

"Apple may not have adequate resources to develop an iWatch version of iOS because it may require big changes to iPhone and iPad iOS this year," said Ming-Chi Kuo.

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"In addition, wearable device components aren't mature. For these reasons, we think mass production of the iWatch is more likely to begin in 2H14, not 2H13 as the market speculates," Kuo added.

Speaking on the hardware part of the device, the analyst said that the company will probably use a 1.5 to 2.0-inch screen, as well as make use of biometric security. ?

"Currently, the iPod nano uses the same GF2 touch technology as used by the iPad mini," said Kuo. "Since the size and computing ability requirements of the iWatch are similar to those of the iPod nano, we think iWatch will use iPod nano's GF2 touch technology and AP [application processor]."

Initially, rumors about Apple's plan heated up in February following a report by the New York Times predicting that Apple was "experimenting" with a wearable gadget.

Coming a step ahead of the New York Times, Bloomberg later reported that a team of around 100 Apple staff were working on such a device.

Since then, Apple fans have been anticipating the device anxiously.

According to the rumors, even Apple's rival companies like Samsung, Microsoft and Google are showing interest in the concept of building watch-like wearable devices.

For tips, complaints and observations on all things digital, email us at tips [at] idigitaltimes.com

? 2012 iDigitalTimes All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Source: http://www.idigitaltimes.com/articles/17755/20130523/apple-iwatch-will-hit-market-next-year.htm

Andrew Wiggins

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Study Drugs: Most Parents Unaware When Teens Take Stimulants Without Prescription

By: Rachael Rettner, LiveScience Senior Writer
Published: 05/20/2013 12:47 PM EDT on LiveScience

Many parents are not aware that their teenage children abuse "study drugs," a new poll suggests.

In the poll, just 1 percent of parents said their teenage children had taken drugs such as Adderall or Ritalin without a prescription.

That is much lower than the percentage of teens that surveys suggest are using the drugs. For example, a 2012 study of high schoolers found that about 10 percent of sophomores and 12 percent of seniors said they had used the drugs without a prescription.

The new finding highlights the growing issue of stimulant drug abuse, or when teens take stimulant medication (or "study drugs") to help them study for a test or stay awake to do homework. Such medications are prescribed for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Teens without the condition may fake symptoms in order to get a prescription, or obtain the drugs from friends.

The new findings, from the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health, examined parents' awareness of the issue, surveying parents of U.S. children ages 13 to 17. About 11 percent of parents said their teens had been prescribed stimulant medication for ADHD.

Among parents of children who were not prescribed ADHD medications, 1 percent said their teens had used these drugs for study purposes. About 4 percent said they didn't know if their teen had abused these drugs, and 95 percent said their teens had never abused the drugs.

This disconnect between teen drug abuse and parents' awareness of drug abuse may be in part due to the fact that study drugs have more subtle effects than drugs such as heroin and cocaine, allowing teens to more easily hide their drug use, the researchers said.

About half of parents polled said they were very concerned about teens in their communities abusing study drugs. And more than three-quarters supported school policies aimed at stopping this type of drug abuse, such as rules that would require children with prescription ADHD medications to keep the pills in a secure place like the school nurse's office.

The findings "underscore the need for greater communication among public health officials, schools, parents, and teens regarding this issue," the researchers said.

Follow Rachael Rettner @RachaelRettner. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily @MyHealth_MHND, Facebook & Google+. Originally published on LiveScience.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. ]]>

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/21/study-drugs-parents-unaware_n_3314054.html

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Xbox One has non-replaceable hard drive, external storage is supported

Xbox One hard drive is nonuserreplaceable, can install games to external storage

We had the opportunity to chat with Albert Penello, senior director of product planning at Microsoft this afternoon, who was kind enough to clarify a few topics for us regarding the recently-unveiled Xbox One. One thing we were quick to ask about was the integrated storage. 500GB sounds like a lot today -- but so did the 20GB unit in the original Xbox 360. The HDD there was, at least, replaceable. Can you do the same with its successor? Sadly, no. Hard drives in the Xbox One are non-user-serviceable, but Penello confirmed that the USB 3.0 port is there for external storage, which can be used for everything the internal storage can be used for. That includes game installs and downloads. So, don't fret: adding storage will be just as easy as ever.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/21/xbox-one-hard-drive/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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New technique may open up an era of atomic-scale semiconductor devices

May 22, 2013 ? Researchers at North Carolina State University have developed a new technique for creating high-quality semiconductor thin films at the atomic scale -- meaning the films are only one atom thick. The technique can be used to create these thin films on a large scale, sufficient to coat wafers that are two inches wide, or larger.

"This could be used to scale current semiconductor technologies down to the atomic scale -- lasers, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), computer chips, anything," says Dr. Linyou Cao, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering at NC State and senior author of a paper on the work. "People have been talking about this concept for a long time, but it wasn't possible. With this discovery, I think it's possible."

The researchers worked with molybdenum sulfide (MoS2), an inexpensive semiconductor material with electronic and optical properties similar to materials already used in the semiconductor industry. However, MoS2 is different from other semiconductor materials because it can be "grown" in layers only one atom thick without compromising its properties.

In the new technique, researchers place sulfur and molybdenum chloride powders in a furnace and gradually raise the temperature to 850 degrees Celsius, which vaporizes the powder. The two substances react at high temperatures to form MoS2. While still under high temperatures, the vapor is then deposited in a thin layer onto the substrate.

"The key to our success is the development of a new growth mechanism, a self-limiting growth," Cao says. The researchers can precisely control the thickness of the MoS2 layer by controlling the partial pressure and vapor pressure in the furnace. Partial pressure is the tendency of atoms or molecules suspended in the air to condense into a solid and settle onto the substrate. Vapor pressure is the tendency of solid atoms or molecules on the substrate to vaporize and rise into the air.

To create a single layer of MoS2 on the substrate, the partial pressure must be higher than the vapor pressure. The higher the partial pressure, the more layers of MoS2 will settle to the bottom. If the partial pressure is higher than the vapor pressure of a single layer of atoms on the substrate, but not higher than the vapor pressure of two layers, the balance between the partial pressure and the vapor pressure can ensure that thin-film growth automatically stops once the monolayer is formed. Cao calls this "self-limiting" growth.

Partial pressure is controlled by adjusting the amount of molybdenum chloride in the furnace -- the more molybdenum is in the furnace, the higher the partial pressure.

"Using this technique, we can create wafer-scale MoS2 monolayer thin films, one atom thick, every time," Cao says. "We can also produce layers that are two, three or four atoms thick."

Cao's team is now trying to find ways to create similar thin films in which each atomic layer is made of a different material. Cao is also working to create field-effect transistors and LEDs using the technique. Cao has filed a patent on the new technique.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/27kcmlQl6-k/130522112032.htm

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Cancer Society hits 100 as US cancer rate falls

NEW YORK (AP) -- The American Cancer Society ? one of the nation's best known and influential health advocacy groups ? is 100 years old this week.

Back in 1913 when it was formed, cancer was a lesser threat for most Americans. The biggest killers then were flu, pneumonia, tuberculosis, and stomach bugs. At a time when average life expectancy was 47, few lived long enough to get cancer.

But 15 doctors and businessmen in New York City thought cancer deserved serious attention, so they founded the American Society for the Control of Cancer. The modern name would come 31 years later.

The cancer society's rise coincided with the taming of infectious diseases and lengthening life spans. "Cancer is a disease of aging, so as people live longer there will be more cancer," explained Dr. Michael Kastan, executive director of Duke University's Cancer Institute.

Cancer became the nation's No. 2 killer in 1938, a ranking it has held ever since. It also became perhaps the most feared disease ? the patient's own cells growing out of control, responding only to brutal treatments: surgery, radiation and poisonous chemicals.

The cancer society is credited with being the largest and most visible proponent of research funding, prevention and programs to help house and educate cancer patients.

Last year, the organization had revenues of about $925 million. It employs 6,000 and has 3 million volunteers, calling itself the largest voluntary health organization in the nation.

"The American Cancer Society really is in a league of its own," Kastan said. The rate of new cancer cases has been trending downward ever so slightly.

Some historical highlights:

1913 ? The American Society for the Control of Cancer is founded in New York City.

1944 ? The organization is renamed the American Cancer Society. The change is spurred by Mary Lasker, the wife of advertising mogul Albert Lasker.

1946 ? A research program is launched, built on $1 million raised by Mary Lasker. A year later, Dr. Sidney Farber of Boston announces the first successful chemotherapy treatment.

1948 ? The cancer society pushes the Pap test, which has been credited with driving a 70 percent decline in uterine and cervical cancer.

1964 ? Prodded by the cancer society and other groups, U.S. Surgeon General Luther Terry issues a report irrefutably linking smoking to cancer.

1971 ? The cancer society helps lead passage of the National Cancer Act to ramp up research money. President Nixon declares a national "war on cancer," which becomes an extended effort derided by some as a "medical Vietnam."

1976 ? The cancer society suggests women 40 and older consider a mammogram if their mother or sisters had breast cancer.

1976 ? The cancer society hosts a California event to encourage smokers to quit for the day. A year later, the annual Great American Smokeout is launched nationally.

1988 ? Atlanta becomes headquarters for the society.

1997 ? The cancer society recommends yearly mammograms for women over 40.

2000 ? Dr. Brian Druker of Oregon reports the first success with "targeted" cancer therapy.

2003 ? The cancer society stops recommending monthly breast self-exams. But it continues to urge annual mammograms for most women over 40, even after a government task force says most don't need screening until 50.

2012 ? The cancer society reports the rate of new cancer cases has been inching down by about half a percent each year since 1999.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cancer-society-hits-100-us-140221002.html

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Gold ETFs Are Liquidating By the Ton | Breakout - Yahoo! Finance

An ounce of gold, often represented by a single American Eagle coin, is a fairly easy thing to visualize. Even a 400 ounce gold bar, like the ones held at Fort Knox, is a fairly fathomable concept. But when you try to get your head around just how much of the metal an ETF like the SPRD Gold Shares (GLD) owns, it can get a little daunting. And the same is true when you try to track how much they've had to sell as the price of gold slips to a 2-1/2 year low.

"300 tons," says Tom Lydon, the editor of ETF Trends, in the attached video, calling the disposal of over 600,000 pounds of gold so far this year "amazing" and "incredible."

This, of course, as the largest metal-tracking fund has gone from briefly being the biggest ETF, to being a top-5 player after being cut in half to approximately $46 billion in value today, holding just over 1,000 tons of gold in its vaults.

While gold is clearly out of favor forcing the hand of holders to sell into weakness, Lydon says it won't always be that way.

"Central banks maybe aren't as concerned," he lists as one reason why gold is down. "I think the average investor, with stocks and bonds doing so well, I think they say, 'hey, I don't need to hedge, so that gold position I had, I'm going to put that into stocks for now.'"

It's a reality, a trend, a self-perpetuating sell-off that seems to have no bottom in sight, as the darling of last decade turns into the dog of 2013.

"It's been tough enough to beat the S&P this year, and if you've had money in gold, that has hurt you," Lydon says.

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/breakout/gold-etfs-liquidating-ton-112206437.html

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Turkish Prime Minister visits Apple, and others, ahead of a 10.6 million unit order for tablets

10.6 million tablets is a whole heck of a lot, and that's the number that the Turkish Prime Minister is talking about purchasing. Recep Erdo?an is visiting the U.S. on a very large shopping spree, and is visiting Microsoft, Google and Apple personally, before splashing the cash.

The visit is part of the FATIH Project, designed to modernize Turkish schools by replacing textbooks and chalkboards with tablets and electronic whiteboards. The whole project is expected to cost in the region of $3billion - $4billion and take 4 years to complete.

Apple of course unveiled their interactive Textbooks back in early 2012, in a definite move to try and change the way we use tablets in education. Apple sells a lot of tablets, tens of millions every quarter, but an order such as this is not to be sniffed at.

Who out there already uses their iPad at school? Are you making use of the textbooks, or just using it as a productivity tool. We'd love to know, so drop a line in the comments below!

via 9to5Mac

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/o086EI8lvco/story01.htm

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Friday, May 17, 2013

What to Do in Detroit This Weekend: May 17-19, 2013

Forecasts promise warm weather with some thunderstorms this weekend, May 17-19, for Detroit. But don't let thunder and lightning stop you from having fun.

Russell Industrial Center Summer Festival Kickoff

Friday-Sunday, May 17-19, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. daily

Russell Industrial Center

1600 E. Clay, Detroit

Free

Start summer with an outdoor blast like only Russell Industrial Center can provide. Each weekend, come visit outdoor specialty vendors. Bring the family for live entertainment, games, giveaways, food trucks, chefs, flowers, produce, arts and crafts, and more. Celebrate all that's unique and wonderful about Detroit.

St. Sebastian Spring Festival

Friday, May 17, 6 p.m.-midnight; Saturday, May 18, 1 p.m.-midnight; Sunday, May 19, 2 p.m.-10 p.m.

St. Sebastian Catholic Church

20710 Colgate, Dearborn Heights

Varied fees for rides, food, and beverages; $20 ride-all-day passes

Free live entertainment includes: Annabelle Road, Johnny and the Moondogs, Junction Groove, Misty Blues, and Matt King & The Roustabout Show Band (Elvis tribute). Food booths feature: Mexican, Polish, and concessions. Sit-down pork chop and roast beef dinners available. Families and kids can enjoy big top games, thrill rides, and kiddie rides ($20 wristband). Adults can enjoy casino games, bingo, raffle, and alcoholic beverages.

Aida

Friday, May 17, 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, May 18, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, May 19, 2:30 p.m.

Detroit Opera House

1526 Broadway, Detroit

From $69

If you see Verdi's "Aida" only for the lavish costumes, glorious sets, and innovative staging, you'll be getting a treat. And that doesn't even touch Latonia Moore's glorious "Ma tu, Re, tu signore possente" and other arias. Let the Ethiopian princess Aida, her lover Radames, and their entourage transport you to ancient Egypt for passion, edge-of-your-seat drama, and pathos. Soprano Celeste Cole, the first black woman to sing the "Aida," was a Detroiter. You can see her home at 693 Edison in the historic Boston-Edison neighborhood.

Impact Fight League 57: War of Aggression

Saturday, May 18, 7 p.m.

Joe Louis Arena

19 Steve Yzerman Drive, Detroit

From $15

Donofrio MMA (Mixed Martial Arts), Michigan's premier MMA promoter, is hosting a debut event at the Joe. Impact Fight League 57: War of Aggression showcases matchups between the best of up-and-coming mixed martial artists. Enjoy a live DJ, light show, sonic booms, and ring announcer Phil "The Voice" Davey.

The Legends of Hip-Hop

Saturday, May 18, 8 p.m.

Fox Theatre

2211 Woodward, Detroit

From $39.50

This hip-hop blowout features Big Daddy Kane, Doug E Fresh, MC Lyte, Slick Rick, the Sugarhill Gang, Rob Base, and Whodini. These award-winning legends defined the genre. Doug E. Fresh is known as the first human beatbox. There's one performance only -- don't miss it.

Eastern Market Flower Day

Sunday, May 19, 7 a.m.-5 p.m.

Eastern Market

2934 Russell St., Detroit

Free

Flower Day is one of the largest flower shows in the country. Over 200,000 people visit each year. Don't miss this 47th annual one. Growers from around Michigan, neighboring states, and Canada bring an array of annuals, perennials, shrubs, trees, exotics, tropical plants, flats, hanging baskets, and more. Enjoy kids activities, food vendors, games, and Eastern Market's many buskers.

First Container Collision Works Story Box

Sunday, May 19, 8 a.m.

Eastern Market

2934 Russell St., Detroit

Free

See First Container, the Collision Works Story Box community center. Come for a special grand opening of this shipping-container prototype building. Funds were raised to erect an arts-urban garden collective meeting space. It will be on display through October, and there are plans to build a larger shipping-crate hotel on the Dequindre Cut. Opening Day includes storyteller Ivory Williams and Marsha Music. Deep Dive Detroit's Lauren Hood will be playing records. Enjoy Speed Story, an interactive story-telling game.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/detroit-weekend-may-17-19-2013-220900035.html

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Monday, May 13, 2013

Project aims to track big city carbon footprints

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Every time Los Angeles exhales, odd-looking gadgets anchored in the mountains above the city trace the invisible puffs of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases that waft skyward.

Halfway around the globe, similar contraptions atop the Eiffel Tower and elsewhere around Paris keep a pulse on emissions from smokestacks and automobile tailpipes. And there is talk of outfitting Sao Paulo, Brazil, with sensors that sniff the byproducts of burning fossil fuels.

It's part of a budding effort to track the carbon footprints of megacities, urban hubs with over 10 million people that are increasingly responsible for human-caused global warming.

For years, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse pollutants have been closely monitored around the planet by stations on the ground and in space. Last week, worldwide levels of carbon dioxide reached 400 parts per million at a Hawaii station that sets the global benchmark ? a concentration not seen in millions of years.

Now, some scientists are eyeing large cities ? with LA and Paris as guinea pigs ? and aiming to observe emissions in the atmosphere as a first step toward independently verifying whether local ? and often lofty ? climate goals are being met.

For the past year, a high-tech sensor poking out from a converted shipping container has stared at the Los Angeles basin from its mile-high perch on Mount Wilson, a peak in the San Gabriel Mountains that's home to a famous observatory and communication towers.

Like a satellite gazing down on Earth, it scans more than two dozen points from the inland desert to the coast. Every few minutes, it rumbles to life as it automatically sweeps the horizon, measuring sunlight bouncing off the surface for the unique fingerprint of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.

In a storage room next door, commercially available instruments that typically monitor air quality double as climate sniffers. And in nearby Pasadena, a refurbished vintage solar telescope on the roof of a laboratory on the California Institute of Technology campus captures sunlight and sends it down a shaft 60 feet below where a prism-like instrument separates out carbon dioxide molecules.

On a recent April afternoon atop Mount Wilson, a brown haze hung over the city, the accumulation of dust and smoke particles in the atmosphere.

"There are some days where we can see 150 miles way out to the Channel Islands and there are some days where we have trouble even seeing what's down here in the foreground," said Stanley Sander, a senior research scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

What Sander and others are after are the pretty much invisible greenhouse gases spewing from factories and freeways below.

There are plans to expand the network. This summer, technicians will install commercial gas analyzers at a dozen more rooftops around the greater LA region. Scientists also plan to drive around the city in a Prius outfitted with a portable emission-measuring device and fly a research aircraft to pinpoint methane hotspots from the sky (A well-known natural source is the La Brea Tar Pits in the heart of LA where underground bacteria burp bubbles of methane gas to the surface.)

Six years ago, elected officials vowed to reduce emissions to 35 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 by shifting to renewable energy and weaning the city's dependence on out-of-state coal-fired plants, greening the twin port complex and airports and retrofitting city buildings.

It's impractical to blanket the city with instruments so scientists rely on a handful of sensors and use computer models to work backward to determine the sources of the emissions and whether they're increasing. They won't be able to zero in on an offending street or a landfill, but they hope to be able to tell whether switching buses from diesel to alternative fuel has made a dent.

Project manager Riley Duren of JPL said it'll take several years of monitoring to know whether LA is on track to reach its goal.

Scientists not involved with the project say it makes sense to dissect emissions on a city level to confirm whether certain strategies to curb greenhouse gases are working. But they're divided about the focus.

Allen Robinson, an air quality expert at Carnegie Mellon University, said he prefers more attention paid to measuring a city's methane emissions since scientists know less about them than carbon dioxide release.

Nearly 58 percent of California's carbon dioxide emissions in 2010 came from gasoline-powered vehicles, according to the U.S. Energy Department's latest figures.

In much of the country, coal ?usually as fuel for electric power ? is a major source of carbon dioxide pollution. But in California, it's responsible for a tad more than 1 percent of the state's carbon dioxide emissions. Natural gas, considered a cleaner fuel, spews one third of the state's carbon dioxide.

Overall, California in 2010 released about 408 million tons of carbon dioxide into the air. The state's carbon dioxide pollution is greater than all but 20 countries and is just ahead of Spain's emissions. In 2010, California put nearly 11 tons of carbon dioxide into the air for every person, which is lower than the national average of 20 tons per person.

Gregg Marland, an Appalachian State University professor who has tracked worldwide emissions for the Energy Department, said there's value in learning about a city's emissions and testing techniques.

"I don't think we need to try this in many places, but we have to try some to see what works and what we can do," he said.

Launching the monitoring project came with the usual growing pains. In Paris, a carbon sniffer originally tucked away in the Eiffel Tower's observation deck had to be moved to a higher floor that's off-limits to the public after tourists' exhaling interfered with the data.

So far, $3 million have been spent on the U.S. effort with funding from federal, state and private groups. The French, backed by different sponsors, have spent roughly the same.

Scientists hope to strengthen their ground measurements with upcoming launches of Earth satellites designed to track carbon dioxide from orbit. The field experiment does not yet extend to China, by far the world's biggest carbon dioxide polluter. But it's a start, experts say.

With the focus on megacities, others have worked to decipher the carbon footprint of smaller places like Indianapolis, Boston and Oakland, where University of California, Berkeley researchers have taken a different tack and blanketed school rooftops with relatively inexpensive sensors.

"We are at a very early stage of knowing the best strategy, and need to learn the pros and cons of different approaches," said Inez Fung, a professor of atmospheric science at Berkeley who has no role in the various projects.

___

Follow Alicia Chang at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-05-12-Megacities-Carbon%20Footprint/id-c45948afb7a74d73ae1dd3a171e9d0c9

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Syrian rebels release 4 UN Filipino peacekeepers

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) ? Syrian rebels on Sunday released four Filipino U.N. peacekeepers they abducted last week in a dramatic incident that prompted warnings from the Philippines that the nation could pull out its contingent from the Golan Heights.

Meanwhile, a Syrian official said President Bashar Assad's troops have the right to enter the Israeli-occupied Golan whenever they wish ? a veiled threat at Israel to stay out of Syria's conflict.

Also Sunday, Damascus rejected Turkey's allegations that Syria was behind two car bombings that killed 46 people in Turkey and wounded dozens more the day before.

The four Filipinos, seized Tuesday, were apparently unharmed, but will undergo a medical checkup and stress debriefing, said Brig. Gen. Domingo Tutaan.

A statement issued by the rebel group holding the peacekeepers ? the Yarmouk Martyrs Brigade ? said the four were handed over to a U.N. delegation in the border area on Sunday, but provided no other details.

The peacekeepers are part of a U.N. contingent that patrols a buffer zone between Syria and the Golan Heights, a plateau Israel captured from Syria in 1967.

It was the second abduction of Filipino peacekeepers since March, when 21 were held for three days by rebels fighting the regime of Assad.

The Philippine foreign secretary has said he would recommend withdrawing Filipinos from the peacekeeping contingent in Syria, but the final decision is up to the country's president.

Nearly 1,000 U.N. peacekeepers are patrolling the Golan Heights. Other major contributors are India and Austria. Croatia has recently withdrawn its contingent.

The buffer zone had been largely quiet for four decades, but tensions have risen there since the outbreak of the revolt in Syria more than two years ago.

In Damascus, Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi told a news conference on Sunday that Syria has the right to enter the Golan Heights.

"The Golan is Syrian Arab territory and will remain so even if the Israeli army is stationed there. We have the right to go in and out of it whenever we want and however we please," he said.

His comments came in response to last week's Israeli airstrikes on Syria which Israeli officials say targeted advanced Iranian missiles intended for Hezbollah.

The strikes marked a sharp escalation of Israel's involvement in the Syrian civil war and raised fears that a conflict that has repeatedly spilled over Syria's borders in the past 26 months could turn into a full-fledged regional war.

Syria has threatened to retaliate but the official response was relatively mute.

"Israel should understand that the Syrian skies are not a picnic for anyone," al-Zoubi warned, adding that Syria would retaliate.

"We are a people who do not forget to retaliate against those who commit aggression against us, and we do not forget our martyrs or those who killed them."

Assad's regime might be reluctant to open a new front against Israel with his army already stretched thin in the deadlocked fight with the rebels.

But he has a history of operating through proxies, such as the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group or radical Syrian-based Palestinian factions who can potentially launch attacks on Israel from the Golan.

The Syrian uprising escalated into a civil war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced millions of Syrians so far. The two sides have been largely deadlocked on the battlefield.

In the latest violence in the capital, Damascus, six mortar shells struck a neighborhood causing damage and casualties, a Syrian official said on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to brief reporters.

The mortars hit the predominantly Alawite district of Mazzeh 86 during morning rush hour, he said. Sunday is the first day of the work week in Syria.

Alawites, including Assad, are followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, and have dominated government under Assad family rule. Rebels and regime forces have been fighting in parts of Damascus, and have fired mortars at neighborhoods seen as pro-Assad.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an activist group, confirmed that mortars struck Mazzeh 86, but said it had no immediate reports of casualties.

On the bombings in Turkey, al-Zoubi said that "no one has the right to make false accusations." He said that "this is not the behavior" of the Syrian government.

Zoubi's comments were the first official Syrian response since Saturday's blasts in the Turkish border town of Reyhanli, near Syria.

The bombings left 46 people dead and marked the biggest incident of violence across the border since the start of Syria's bloody civil war, raising fears of Turkey ? once one of Syria's top allies in the region ? being pulled deeper into the conflict.

The Syrian minister alleged that Turkey is responsible "for all that happened in Syria and what happened in Turkey yesterday," accusing Istanbul of facilitating the entry of "terrorists" to Syria.

The Syrian regime routinely describes rebels fighting to topple Assad as terrorists.

"The Turkish terrorist government is responsible for transforming the border areas into ... centers for international terrorism," he said.

Al-Zoubi also launched one of the harshest personal attacks on Turkey's prime minister by a Syrian official so far, demanding that Recep Tayyip Erdogan "step down as a killer and as a butcher."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-rebels-release-4-un-filipino-peacekeepers-143724598.html

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Grab Adobe Ideas For iOS For Free Right Here

Hot on the heels of Adobe's announcement yesterday that Creative Suite is going to get a lot more cloud, they've made Adobe Ideas, a vector-based drawing app for iOS, absolutely free. The app also received a hefty update, adding several of the Creative Cloud features announced yesterday and a slew of new brushes. Of course, there's also a few new in-app purchases to unlock full pro-level functionality, but the app was $10 yesterday, and now it's free. And if you bought it in the past three months, you can get a refund here. [iTunes]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/grab-adobe-ideas-for-ios-for-free-right-here-494040313

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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

The iPhone Is One of the Best Android Phones You Can Buy

The addition of Google Now to the iOS App Store has granted iPhone owners access to one of Google's most useful products. But it did something else, too. It made the iPhone a better Android phone than the vast majority of Android phones you can buy.

Read more...

    


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EV Grieve: [Updated] Here is your East Fourth Street Citi Bikes ...

Do you think we'll see drunken woo-hooers careening around the streets of the East Village on these bikes this summer? I do. And I'm scared.

It's a fair question and is cause for some concern, but I don't think so. First of all, they travel in packs, second of all, lost bikes cost $1,200 dollars.

They're going a bit overboard with this. Mainly tourists will use the bikes. We reallt don't need tourists who don't know their way around changing directions at th elast moment. I predict many more car on bike accidents.

What's up with the abandonned scooter and head of lettuce?

Why don't people just buy real bikes? It's the same price if not less.

The last picture I see a scooter, lettuce and a dog taking a dump in the street...I don't get it...

Anonymous. What's to get about a "scooter and a head of lettuce" This is the East Village and there is a wonderful Organic Food Coop on the block. Also scooters are definitely in the spirit of alternative transportation. And you know what, they are sidewalk legal and closer to the sidewalk in the event of a fall.

Anonymous. Anyone can see that the dog is waiting for the O.K. to pee on the bike racks. This is not a pooping dog!


I am so baffled by all the haters. Do you really think bikes at Ave _D_ are going to be used by tourists? So what if they are? Or might they help 30 locals get to/from the train faster and generally do a lot more good than parking four cars?

Re: buying your own bike, I think Bike Snob put it best. To paraphrase: I also own my own toilet but I don't always have it with me and sometimes I find it convenient to use a public one.

I look forward to tourists, drunks, and other squids badly biking en masse. It means pedestrians and drivers are going to finally start having bikes on their minds. I hope it means bikers will have to start obeying traffic laws and generally acting less retarded.

Admit it. This makes NYC a better place.

Yes, I admit it, this makes NYC better for the tourists, drunks, transients, the self-entitled, those who only think about themselves.

The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few or the one.

hey Anon 7:10 - do you need to provide your personal credit information and leave a money deposit (no puns needed) in a public toilet?

I can see plenty of good use for this for actual NYC residents.

I've seen Capital Bikeshare in action in DC. Sure tourists use it but they don't really take it out all day. The pricing is way too expensive for that and CitiBike has also made the pricing too expensive to take all day. Most of the time in DC, people use it to commute without having to worry about taking their own bike home. It just makes things easier. If you took your own bike somewhere and your plans need to change, well, you might still have to take your bike home. CitiBike is a good way not to worry about lugging a bike all over town in the event your plans change.

This bike is designed to take you from point A to point B and not for personal enjoyment all day. The pricing clearly reflects that.

Spock: "The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few or the one."

Exactly. Which is why one or two parking spaces for private vehicles are being replaced with spaces for dozens of bikes for public use.

Anon. 9:57 AM, DC isn't NYC, size and populationwise. What works for DC doesn't mean it'll work for NYC and vice versa.

Anon. 9:58 am, by public use, you mean the very few tourists, and self-entitled narcissists transients who are only here for a few moment of time. Live long and prosper, but doubt it with this bike sharing shitshow shoved down by your throats by your Daddy Khanberg.

Spock 9:08, I'm confused. Serious question: It's obvious how tourists and drunks are a concern with this program, but how are transients a factor? How does public bike transportation favor the self-entitled and self-interested, as compared to car- and cab-oriented streets? It seems exactly the opposite to me. What am I missing?

nygrump: touche, but I can't think of any scenarios where people can borrow easily-stolen equipment worth hundreds of dollars without ID and collateral. Can you?

- Anon 7:10

@ Spock

DC and NYC are different but I still think CitiBike will work well here. DC only has just over half a million in population and the city is not too dense. Bike share in DC works because the Metro doesn't stop in as many places. They use it to either bike directly to work or to a Metro stop.

Here, I think you'll see a lot of residents using CitiBike in that same manner except here, there's a lot more density and a lot more people. I can think of a lot of people who would take CitiBike to go crosstown since it takes forever to go crosstown in a car, taxi, or bus. It makes sense for trips where from point A to point B would either 1) take too much time to walk, 2) would require transferring at least once on the subway, and/or 3) have no direct bus route.

Oh and with the DC comparison, at least people in DC are forced to pay for street parking in residential neighborhoods. Why doesn't NYC do that? The percentages of DC residents owning cars is much higher than those in Manhattan.

Spock: so "the needs of many" mean the need for two people who could probably afford to park in a garage who instead use public space maintained at taxpayer expense to park their private vehicle, and "the needs of few" are the thousands of New Yorkers who have already paid for annual memberships to use this new transit system.

Okay, sure.

I ask again: what is it about the mere mention of bikes that causes everyone to lose every ounce of common sense?

Source: http://evgrieve.com/2013/04/here-are-your-east-fourth-street-citi.html

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