Thursday, August 29, 2013

What To Know For College Football's Week 1

Now that the latest bit of Johnny Football drama has been settled, the college football season can start with five days of games to satisfy fans who have been craving competition since Nick Saban was raising a crystal football in south Florida and trying to look as if he was having a good time.

The season starts, as always, with more mismatches than marquee games, but that's OK. The important thing is there will be college football and plenty of it, starting Thursday night with North Carolina at No. 6 South Carolina and ending Labor Day night with No. 11 Florida State at Pittsburgh.

Five things to know about the opening weekend as you prepare to overdose on college football:

  • 1) NO. 1 SHOULD BE SAFE

    The last time the preseason No. 1 team in the country lost its opening game was 1990, when the defending champion Miami Hurricanes were upset by BYU in Provo, Utah. The game launched Ty Detmer's Heisman Tophy-winning season. No. 1 Alabama is the two-time defending champion and a 19 1/2-point favorite to beat Virginia Tech at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Saturday. If the Hokies can pull the upset, quarterback Logan Thomas will have to put on a Detmer-esque performance.

  • 2) SLUMP-BUSTER

    Southern Mississippi was the lone winless team in major college football in 2012, a remarkable collapse for a program that hadn't had a losing season since 1993. The Golden Eagles of Conference USA enter 2013 with a new coach, former Oklahoma State offensive coordinator Todd Monken, and the longest losing streak in the nation. Southern Miss opens at home Saturday against Texas State, a Sun Belt team that went 4-8 last season, its first against a full slate of FBS opponents. If the Golden Eagles don't snap that streak this week, it could be a while. Their next three opponents: No. 18 Nebraska, Arkansas and No. 19 Boise State, all on the road. Two teams have 11-game losing streaks: Kansas, which is off this week before opening with South Dakota on Sept. 7; and New Mexico State, which opens at Texas.

  • 3) STREAKING

    Ohio State was the only undefeated team in the country last season and the second-ranked Buckeyes enter the season with a nation-best 12-game winning streak. Thirteen in a row seems like a safe bet with Urban Meyer's team opening against Buffalo at the Horseshoe on Saturday. The Bulls have one of the best linebackers in the country in Khalil Mack ? but not much else that will help them match up against the Buckeyes, who are favored by five touchdowns. Stanford (off until Sept. 7 against San Jose State) and Arkansas State, which opens against Arkansas-Pine Bluff, have the next-best winning streaks at eight games.

  • 4) IS HE OR IS HE NOT PLAYING?

    No. 12 LSU and No. 20 TCU meet in Arlington, Texas, in an SEC-Big 12 tussle that has been spiced up a bit by who is and is not playing. The Horned Frogs announced in May that star defensive end Devonte Fields would not play the first two games of the season because of an unspecified violation of "university and team policy." But TCU coach Gary Patterson said this week that Fields will be in uniform, and when asked if the sophomore would play, the coach replied, "find out at game time." Patterson then strongly suggested Fields would be out. Earlier in the month, Patterson made some seemingly critical comments about LSU coach Les Miles' decision to let his players decide whether Tigers running back Jeremy Hill, who pleaded guilty in July to misdemeanor battery, would be allowed to remain on the team. Hill got to stay on the team, but Miles will not say whether he will play Saturday night.

  • 5) WELCOME TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD

    Pittsburgh will play its first game as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and it'll be quite a welcome to the league. Defending ACC champion Florida State visits Pitt, which was 6-7 in its first season under coach Paul Chryst and last as a member of the Big East.


___

Follow Ralph D. Russo at www.Twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/29/college-football-week-1-5-things-to-know_n_3837295.html?utm_hp_ref=sports

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

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JAPAN'S KIROBO BECOMES FIRST HUMANOID ROBOT LAUNCHED INTO SPACE

Kirobo, a knee-high talking robot, has blasted off from Japan for the International Space Station to test how machines can help astronauts with their work.

His mission is to be a companion to Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata onboard the ISS.

Kirobo was on board Konotori 4, an un-manned space cargo transporter, and is expected to reach the ISS on August 9.

Source: http://www.ntv7.com.my/7edition/international-en/JAPAN_S_KIROBO_BECOMES_FIRST_HUMANOID_ROBOT_LAUNCHED_INTO_SPACE.html

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Facebook's resurgent stock closes above IPO price of $38 for 1st time since market debut

MENLO PARK, Calif. - Facebook's resurgent stock has closed above its IPO price for the first time since the online social networking leader made its debut on Wall Street more than 14 months ago.

The shares gained 56 cents to finish Friday's session at $38.05. That's the stock's highest closing price since ending its first day of trading at $38.23 in May of last year.

Facebook Inc. priced its initial public offering at $38 per share amid lofty expectations that investors would be clamouring to buy a stake in one of the world's best-known websites. Instead, trading glitches marred the company's stock market debut and then worries about Facebook's growth prospects triggered a sell-off that dropped the stock as low as $17.55.

The stock began soaring last week when Facebook reported better second-quarter earnings than analysts anticipated. The report for the three months ended in June showed that the Menlo Park, Calif., company is selling more ads on smartphones and tablet computers, allaying fears that Facebook wouldn't be able to make money off the growing number of its more than 1.1 billion members who regularly check into the social network on mobile devices.

More than 40 per cent of Facebook's ad revenue flowed from mobile devices in the second quarter, up from 30 per cent during the first three months of the year.

The accelerating growth on mobile devices is the main reason that Facebook's stock has jumped 44 per cent since it announced quarterly results on July 24.

Source: http://www.cumberlandnewsnow.com/Canada---World/Society/2013-08-02/article-3337871/Facebooks-resurgent-stock-closes-above-IPO-price-of-$38-for-1st-time-since-market-debut/1

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Golf tournament to benefit Wichita parks

The Wichita Parks Foundation is having a fundraising golf tournament on Aug. 23 at Tex Consolver Golf Course, 1931 S. Tyler.

The foundation is raising money for recreation programs and for a community scholarship fund for 2014 summer camps.

Registration for a four-person team is $500. Registration includes breakfast, lunch, dinner and cart rental. All golfers will receive a free round of golf at a Wichita course.

Registration and breakfast begin at 7 a.m.; shotgun start is at 8:30 a.m. For more information, visit www.wichitaparksfoundation.org.

Source: http://www.kansas.com/2013/08/02/2920812/golf-tournament-to-benefit-wichita.html

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Google Play edition HTC One and Galaxy S4 start to see Android 4.3 OTA

GPe

The latest version of Jelly Bean seems to be on it's way, giving us a better idea of what "timely" updates are

Scattered reports of users with both the HTC One Google Play edition and the Galaxy S4 Google Play edition phones seeing an OTA update to Android 4.3 are coming in this evening. We've seen the kernel source for both devices uploaded to the web — a legal requirement before any software is delivered — so we've been expecting the updates.

Users should see the same basic experience that Nexus users have been playing with, plus the few minor additions that Samsung and HTC have made with Boomsound and Flipcover support. 

There are bound to be a few bugs, but perhaps the most exciting part of the whole thing is that we've got a good idea what "timely" updates means, at least this time around.

If you've got either of the Google Play edition devices, start hammering that button.

More: Android Central forums. Thanks, everyone who sent this in! 

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/5VYQCnQqdSk/story01.htm

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Twitter updates Windows 8 app with multiple account access

DNP Twitter update for Windows 8

While the latest Twitter update for Windows 8 doesn't feature a major overhaul, it adds a handful of useful functions to the app. Perhaps the most notable addition is multiple account sign-in that gives you power to easily juggle several Twitter personas. Another nice new feature is the ability to pin users' accounts and lists to your home screen, so you can follow them closely. Seeing as you can now also view lists on profiles, the list you pin doesn't even have to be yours. This makes it easy to discover new users you might want to follow... unless having Twitter feeds in plain sight makes you feel even more alone.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/08/02/twitter-windows-8-update-multiple-account-signin/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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US economy recovery sustainable? Jobs growth improves, but challenges remain

The US economy managed to stay on track last quarter, defying fears of another spring swoon, but doubts remain as to whether it will finally gain the kind of sustained momentum that has proved so elusive since the recovery began four years ago.

The mixed picture facing the country was evident Wednesday, as the Commerce Department reported that the economy, adjusted for inflation, expanded at a better-than-expected annual rate of 1.7 per cent in the April-June quarter, even as inflation-adjusted growth in the first part of the year now appears slower than first thought. In a separate statement after a two-day meeting of policy makers at the Federal Reserve, the central bank said the economy was on a "modest" trajectory but gave no clue as to when it might start tapering back its huge stimulus efforts.

Like economists, traders, as well as the 12 million unemployed Americans looking for work, the Fed is struggling to gauge whether better growth does indeed lie ahead.

Optimists point to improved levels of job creation in recent months, a more robust housing sector and a surging stock market that has lifted the value of investment and retirement accounts for millions of consumers. Pessimists focus on the fact that the estimated economic growth rate of about 1.4 per cent so far in 2013 is well below last year's levels of 2.8 per cent, even as automatic cuts in federal spending and higher taxes continue to bite.

There were pockets of strength in Wednesday's data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, all of which will be subject to further revision as the Commerce Department gathers more information about the economy. For example, residential fixed investment increased by 13.4 per cent, a sign that housing continues to rebound. Personal consumption rose 1.8 per cent, as consumers showed some resiliency, especially given the increase in payroll taxes at the beginning of 2013.

Wednesday's report also comes as government experts introduced the first comprehensive change in four years in how the economy is measured. They revised figures all the way back to 1929, while also restating more recent data to show the 2007-09 recession was slightly milder than originally estimated and growth in 2012 was a bit better.

Still, economists emphasized that although the economy's performance in the second quarter was significantly stronger than had been feared - Wall Street experts forecast growth would come in at just under 1 per cent - big challenges remain.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international-business/us-economy-recovery-sustainable-jobs-growth-improves-but-challenges-remain/articleshow/21526347.cms

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Anglican Church sets its sights on predatory lenders

But the Church of England initiative to drive payday lenders out of business is drawing scrutiny to its own investments.

By Ben Quinn,?Correspondent / July 31, 2013

The new Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby (l.) is welcomed by the Bishop of Dover Trevor Willmott, at his first service at Canterbury Cathedral in southern England in March. Mr. Welby announced last week that he intends to have the Church of England drive payday lenders that he accuses of preying on the poor 'out of business.'

Luke MacGregor/Reuters/File

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It was not the ideal start to the Archbishop of Canterbury's grand initiative to bring a new morality to Britain's banking sector.

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Just months into his tenure at the head of the Church of England, the Most Rev. Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, last week announced plans to use the Church's clout to take on a controversial new breed of money lender and "compete [them] out of business." With the financial clout and moral authority of the Church of England behind it, the proposal was not made lightly.

Then came the revelation a few days later that the church?s own pension fund holds a stake in one of those very lenders, Wonga. It was, as Archbishop Welby himself admitted to the BBC, "very embarrassing."

But despite the stumble out of the gate, Welby appears committed to taking on payday loans ? small, high-interest, short-term loans to those who can't get credit elsewhere ? as a means of "speaking for the poor." And his plan raises questions about just how much clout the Church of England wields through its portfolio of investments and through the influence the church has over its flock ? how it ought to wield it.

A campaign against usury

Appearing Tuesday at a Christian festival in Shepton Mallet, a small town in the English county of Somerset, Welby said that despite the pension-fund embarrassment, he has seen strong initial support for his initiative, which will involve expanding credit unions as an alternative to financiers charging enormous interest on payday loans.

"For a start, the positive comments have outweighed the negative ? which in the letters that come to me is unusual,? he said. ?What people have commented on is a church speaking for the poor. And when the Church is real, people pay attention."

Welby ? a former oil trader who has been highly critical of banking practices while serving on Britain's Banking Standards Commission, a cross party group consisting of MPs and members of the House of Lords ? wants to drive payday lenders out of business by launching a network of credit unions.

Struggling families and individuals unable to get credit from banks are among the customers of the pay lenders, who provide loans of up to ?1,000 ($1,500) to be repaid when weekly or monthly wages come through. Though meant to be short-term, the loans involve astronomical annualized interest rates ? for example, those offered by Wonga, which Welby specifically criticized, amount to 6,000 percent.

Welby?s initiative is the centerpiece thus far of a markedly more activist approach to his role from predecessors. But can he really hope to compete the lenders, whose business he describes as ?morally wrong,? out of existence?

'It could deliver'

Elizabeth Oldfield, the director of Theos, a London-based religion and society think tank, says that plans come with significant risks, particularly for an institution juggling a range of other challenges, not least declining church attendances. But ?at the same time, if the church threw its weight and resources behind it, it could deliver,? she adds.

?You are still talking about an organization with billions of pounds behind it, people in every parish, a high amount of social and volunteer capital, and a more energizing connection with community organizations.?

Oldfield also says that the church has bounced back quickly from last week?s controversy, helped by Welby?s public mea culpa and very evident annoyance with an investment that he had been unaware of. Welby ordered an independent inquiry into investments by the Church?s ?5.2 billion ($7.9 billion) investment fund, which holds a small, indirect stake in Wonga via a US venture capital fund it has invested in.

?Holding up his hands and saying ?we should not have done this,? in PR terms, was much better than trying to justify it. We have also had five to 10 years of realizing that the economy is much more complex than we thought and that it?s sometimes unclear where our money is. A lot of people may have thought, ?Gosh this could somehow have happened to me as well.'?

Investment morality

Now, the Church could well look to speed up divestment of the more questionable interests in its investment portfolio, which grew in value last year by 9.7 percent.

Under existing rules, it cannot invest in firms that make more than 10 percent through arms dealing, more than 3 percent from pornography, or more than 25 percent through payday lending or gambling. Those limits, and particularly the 25 percent one, are now expected to be reconsidered.

And it is already facing calls to divest for other moral reasons.

Last year, the church sold its ?1.9 million ($2.9 million) share in News Corp after concluding it was not satisfied with the media company?s handling of the scandal surrounding allegations of phone-hacking. A Conservative member of Parliament, Claire Perry, has urged the Church to disinvest from Google in protest at a perceived failure to tackle online child pornography. And environmentalist members of the church want it to end investments with connection to fossil fuels.

?Having a church that does not have an involvement with fossil fuels means that it can then speak about climate change from a real position of integrity,? says Siobhan Grimes, a young campaigner and worshiper in the London diocese of Southwark.

Grimes was involved in a vote by the diocese?s local assembly on July 5 to call on the Church of England?s general synod to ensure that the Church?s investment policy was ?in line with its theological, moral and social priorities including the Christian responsibility to care for the planet.?

Grimes says that the Church should be actively thinking about what genuinely progressive sectors it should be invested in. ?It is possible not to invest in fossil fuels, and I think that?s infinitely more sensible from an environmental and theological viewpoint."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/world/~3/80w4FJnrFyE/Anglican-Church-sets-its-sights-on-predatory-lenders

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

New report: Gitmo costs U.S. $2.7 million per prisoner

The United States government spends about $2.7 million per prisoner per year to operate the Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba, the Washington Post reports.

That estimate comes from a recent study by the Miami Herald?s Carol Rosenberg, who has covered Gitmo since 2002. According to Rosenberg, the U.S. will spend $454 million this year to maintain the facility and pay troop salaries, among other fees ? a little under half a billion dollars.

With only 166 prisoners, that works out to an annual cost of about $2.7 million per detainee. For a point of comparison, California spends an annual $47,000 per prisoner, according to a 2010 study from that state?s government.

According to the Post, Rosenberg?s study serves as a reminder of the tremendous cost and inefficiency of running Gitmo and why the detention facility has been such a thorn in the side of the Obama administration.

In January 2009, President Barack Obama issued an executive order to close the camp, but the process has been stymied at every turn by a veritable Gordian knot of political and legal obstacles as well as national security concerns. Finding a place to put the prisoners if Gitmo were shuttered has been a contentious issue in both domestic politics and international diplomacy.

?I think for a lot of Americans, the notion is out of sight, out of mind,? Obama said at a press conference in April, insisting he would resume efforts to close the prison. ?I?m going to go back at it because I think it?s important.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/new-report--gitmo-costs-u-s---2-7-million-per-prisoner-134148004.html

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Sci-Fi Film 'Europa Report' Launches in New York City Tonight

NEW YORK ??The science fiction film "Europa Report" is set to hit movie theaters Friday (Aug. 2), but tonight, the film will launch at one of the major science centers in the Big Apple: the American Museum of Natural History.

"Europa Report" documents the fictional tale of the first manned mission to Jupiter's icy moon Europa on a hunt for life. The film features mock interviews with people involved in the mission as the truth about the harrowing trip to the moon is revealed. [See photos from the film "Europa Report"]

"The American Museum of Natural History is the perfect venue to premiere 'Europa Report,'" associate producer Matt Levin said in an email. "There's no better place than the Hayden Planetarium to showcase a film about the spirit of human exploration and our search for extraterrestrial life."

"Europa Report" director Sebasti?n Cordero will be in attendance during tonight's premiere and Bear McCreary, the composer of the movie's music, will perform the score from the film. Actors Christian Camargo, who portrays scientist Daniel Luxembourg, and Karolina Wydra, who plays marine scientist Katya Petrovna in the movie, will also be in attendance.

Cordero, Camargo, Wydra, McCreary and producer Ben Browning will take part in a question and answer session with a sold-out crowd moderated by Popular Science's Dave Mosher after the screening.

Some fans of the film are billing it as one of the most scientifically accurate movies about human spaceflight in recent memory. The realism of "Europa Report" was part of the reason Cordero was interested in the script ? written by Philip Gelatt ? in the first place.

"One of the first things that drew me to the script was the fact that, as I was reading it, everything in there seemed to be at least inspired by what we know both about space travel and the possibility of what could be found on Europa while at the same time keeping a great equilibrium with making a movie that was also thrilling and interesting that kept me gripped until I finished the last page of the script," Cordero told SPACE.com.

Two NASA scientists ? Kevin Hand and Steven Vance ? acted as science advisors for the film. They were involved throughout production and post-production, helping the cast and crew understand the science of Europa.

"Europa is what I study, and of course, I was a little bit nervous because it's a subject matter that's near and dear to might heart," Hand told SPACE.com. "If they were going to tackle that subject matter I wanted to make sure that they were committed to getting the science correct. Thankfully that team, the writer, the director, the producers, the actors were very dedicated to telling the compelling story and getting the science right."

In addition to launching in theaters nationwide on Friday, "Europa Report" has also been available via video on demand services since late June.

Follow Miriam Kramer @mirikramer and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookand Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sci-fi-film-europa-report-launches-york-city-152809633.html

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Japan resumes wheat imports - Wed, 31 Jul 2013 PST

July 31, 2013 in City, Health
Washington growers particularly?relieved

From Staff And Wire Reports

Japan has lifted its import restrictions and will again buy wheat grown in the Pacific Northwest, a boon to farmers now harvesting this year?s grain?crop.

Japan is arguably the most important customer of American wheat. Last year it bought about $1 billion worth of wheat, much of it the soft white variety grown across Washington. Japan suspended purchases in May after genetically modified wheat was found in an Oregon?field.

Washington growers and lawmakers lauded the decision after weeks of assuring foreign markets the Oregon discovery was an anomaly and not indicative of U.S.?exports.

?That?s??


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Japan has lifted its import restrictions and will again buy wheat grown in the Pacific Northwest, a boon to farmers now harvesting this year?s grain?crop.

Japan is arguably the most important customer of American wheat. Last year it bought about $1 billion worth of wheat, much of it the soft white variety grown across Washington. Japan suspended purchases in May after genetically modified wheat was found in an Oregon?field.

Washington growers and lawmakers lauded the decision after weeks of assuring foreign markets the Oregon discovery was an anomaly and not indicative of U.S.?exports.

?That?s a huge announcement for sure,? said Eric Maier, a Ritzville wheat grower and legislative chairman for the Washington Association of Wheat Growers. ?That?s what we?ve been waiting?for.?

Maier was harvesting Tuesday evening when he heard the news. Farmers in the area will have more certainty about their crop for next year as they enter the fall seeding season, he?said.

According to translated remarks the Oregon Wheat Commission provided from Japan?s minister of agriculture, Japan will begin to accept U.S. Western wheat again on Thursday and soft white on Aug. 7. Sources in the wheat industry said Tuesday that Japan had tendered a purchase of 90,000 metric tons of Western wheat to leave Pacific Northwest ports within the?week.

The USDA on Tuesday confirmed Japan?s resumption of wheat imports. Japan will test U.S. imports for genetically modified wheat for an undisclosed period of?time.

After the discovery of the modified strains, U.S. Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Spokane, sent a letter to Kevin Shea, acting director of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, the federal agency in charge of investigating the wheat?s source, urging a swift probe that wouldn?t delay wheat exports for an extended?period.

On Tuesday, McMorris Rodgers praised Japan?s?decision.

?The Pacific Northwest provides reliable, high-quality wheat and I am glad that Japan, a key trading partner, will resume its purchase of wheat from the U.S.,? she said in a?statement.

Agriculture Department officials have said the modified wheat discovered in the Oregon field is the same strain as a genetically modified wheat that was designed to be herbicide-resistant and was legally tested by seed giant Monsanto a decade ago but never?approved.

Most of the corn and soybeans grown in the United States are already modified or genetically altered to include certain traits, often resistance to herbicides or pesticides. But the country?s wheat crop is not, as many wheat farmers have shown reluctance to use genetically engineered seeds since their product is usually consumed directly. Much of the corn and soybean crop is used as feed for?livestock.

The USDA has said the wheat would be safe to eat if consumed. But American consumers, like many consumers in Europe and Asia, have shown an increasing interest in avoiding genetically modified?foods.

There has been little evidence to show that foods grown from engineered seeds are less safe than their conventional counterparts. But Washington voters this fall will vote on a state ballot measure mandating labeling for genetically modified?foods.

The Associated Press and Spokesman-Review writers Kip Hill and John Stucke contributed to this?report.

Source: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2013/jul/31/japan-resumes-wheat-imports/

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