Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Gun-toting robots may fight alongside soldiers in future battles



American soldiers may soon be joined on the battlefield by machine gun-toting robots on wheels, according to U.S. Army officials.



Earlier this month, military leaders attended a technology demonstration at Fort Benning, Ga., where robotics companies exhibited their most advanced weaponized creations, reported ComputerWorld.com. The display was designed to show the potential ways robots could support troops in combat.



Army leaders watched a human controller command a wheeled robot, positioned more than 300 feet (90 meters) away, open fire with an M240 machine gun. The robot, which also uses thermal-imaging technology to spot concealed enemies, could protect soldiers from potentially dangerous assaults.



Humanoid robots fighting alongside troops on the battlefield may be some time off, the current wheel-bound creations already show strong promise, according to the Army. [Humanoid Robots to Flying Cars: 10 Coolest DARPA Projects]



"We were hoping to see how they remotely control lethal weapons," Lt. Col. Willie Smith, chief of unmanned ground vehicles at Fort Benning, told ComputerWorld of the technology demonstration. "We were pleased with what we saw here. The technology is getting to be where it needs to be. It's a start."



While gun-toting robots are not yet officially used by the military in combat, the U.S. Army and the U.S. Marines have experimented with prototype machines.



Smith said he is unsure how soon armed robots may join the Army's ranks, but he hopes the military will begin introducing these types of robots into battlefield settings within five years. "They're not just tools, but members of the squad. That's the goal," Smith told ComputerWorld.



Northrop Grumman, iRobot Corp, HDT Robotics and QinetiQ were among the commercial companies demonstrating their hardware for the military, reported ComputerWorld. The robots can be equipped with a variety of weapons, and are capable of performing a range of tasks.



Northrop Grumman's robot, the Carry-all Mechanized Equipment Landrover or CaMEL, uses a telescope and thermal-imaging technology to identify enemies up to 2 miles (3.5 kilometers) away. The robot can operate for more than 20 hours on 3.5 gallons of fuel, according to Northrop Grumman. The CaMEL is also capable of wielding a number of lethal weapons, including a grenade launcher, an automatic weapon and anti-tank missiles.



The robots, which can be operated through satellite communications, ensure that human soldiers can remain safely out of harms way, in some cases hundreds of miles away from the battlefield.



Executives from the robotics companies say the robots can be air-dropped into a war zone from a helicopter or plane, or may rove alongside the troops on patrol, reported ComputerWorld.



Still, don't expect these mechanized warriors to take over completely for human soldiers. At least not yet, said Tollie Strode Jr., a senior project officer with the Maneuver Battle Lab at Fort Benning.



"The robot may acquire an enemy target, but it will still always ask a human for permission to fire," Strode told ComputerWorld. "I think the ability for a robot to acquire and assess a target and ID it as a threat and fire is probably five or 10 years out. However, even if that capability exists … we'll have a human in the process of deciding what to do."



Follow Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow. Follow LiveScience @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.



Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gun-toting-robots-may-fight-alongside-soldiers-future-225612827.html
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Revolt TV CEO on Sean Combs' Plan to Conquer Cable


Sean Combs is betting big on Revolt TV.



At 5 p.m. EST Monday, the all music channel goes live in the homes of about 22 million Comcast subscribers and 12 million Time Warner Cable customers, marking one of the biggest launches of a cable channel in years.


Revolt TV is the latest brainchild of Combs (aka Diddy, P. Diddy, Puff Daddy), a serial entrepreneur who has found success in music as an executive and hip hop artist as well as in fashion, liquor, marketing and more, helping him accumulate a fortune that Forbes estimated in 2012 at $550 million.


Now, seven years after he first conceived a new kind of all music channel, Combs is pouring tens of millions of that into launching a service aimed at 18 to 34 year olds – members of the Millennial generation – who consume more music than ever but not necessarily in traditional ways like listening to the radio or watching cable TV. In fact, they are the generation often described as “cord cutters,” because they haven’t rushed to subscribe to cable and often are more likely to view TV on a mobile phone or tablet computer than on the living room flat screen.


PHOTOS: 81 of Fall TV's Biggest Stars: THR's Exclusive Portraits


Combs has chosen Keith Clinkscales, who helped Quincy Jones launch Vibe magazine and spent years doing content development for ESPN, to be CEO of Revolt TV. He hired former MTV programming chief Andy Schuon as president. They have been working with a team of more than 100 other hires, mostly at Los Angeles headquarters and in New York City, to figure out how to make the all music formula work on TV.


Clinkscales says it's a good time to launch because music and digital consumption are both up.


"You have more and more bands and artists going across the whole eco system. Music is very healthy," Clinkscales tells The Hollywood Reporter. "To have a place that can be the center of that—we would like to earn that position by reaching our fans well. We have to have good access and engage with the artists and be able to go ahead and provide sponsors, advertisers, and record companies a place we can meet."


Two decades after he founded Bad Boy Records, Combs at 44 seems confident he can reach the younger generation and build a significant business by reaching his audience on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other social media as a way to lure them to watch his cable channel. He calls it the first launch in the era of social media.


His pitch is simple. It will be fresh, new and unlike what you have seen before. “I said it twice,” he recently tweeted, “and imma say it again. No Rules. Anything can happen. @RevoltTV.”


PHOTOS: 20 Best and Worst Music to Movie Crossovers


Combs has crisscrossed the country in the last year meeting with brands and advertisers, talking up his channel vision to advertisers, media and some private investors who have joined his latest venture as minority investors.


He seems confident even though there are lots of challenges for a music channel. Consider that MTV started with a business plan similar to what Combs has in mind – get lots of videos at little cost from record companies and artists, present them with exciting young personalities, fill in airtime with music oriented news and attract advertisers who are hip to the value of this audience.


What happened, however, was that over time MTV couldn’t generate high enough ratings with that formula. So it shifted its focus to individual shows, first with reality and then scripted, pushing the music to MTV 2, until that too became more series oriented.


There is also Fuse, a music channel owned by The Madison Square Garden Company, Mark Cuban’s AXS pay channel, and of course Viacom’s VH-1, which programs music and series but for a somewhat older crowd. All have struggled to build their own viewership to a significant level. 


PHOTOS: TV Showdown: Exclusive Portraits of 4 Top Executives


Revolt TV is one of about ten channels chosen by Comcast for carriage in fulfillment of a 2011 agreement when the big cable company bought NBCUniversal to provide more diversity across the dial. Combs was one of those who sought such carriage and he won that lottery; but now he has to prove his formula will really draw Millennials.


Clinkscales says that both Comcast and Time Warner Cable, which is also a charter carrier of Revolt TV, see this as a way to turn those cable cutters into cable consumers. The two cable giants are distributing but are not investors in Revolt TV.


“The leadership opportunity for them was to recognize what were trying to do is reach a new generation of people that are going to be watching cable in the future,” says Clinkscales. “When I came out of college getting cable was an extremely important thing in my life. For the generation currently coming out of college and going into the workforce that challenge is something cable operators have to address. We’re hoping to develop the kind of product that can help them meet that challenge.”


Clinkscales says that they believe the combination of social media, an online presence (but not a full stream of the channel) and smart programming carefully targeted at their Millennial audience will draw in viewers, who then will return because of the environment of music, culture, fashion and insider insights that they will create.


“This won’t be just a channel,” says Clinkscales. “The main thing were going to do is be a place where you can get news and information about music. We want to make sure when you come to Revolt, you’re getting a full picture of what is happing in the world of music.”


PHOTOS: 10 Highly Paid Entertainment CEOs


In September, Revolt TV hired Bruce Perlmutter, the former editor of E! News and E! Online, to head the news operation. Clinkscales says they will have reports not only about music newsmakers, but also behind the scenes at concerts, music festivals and related events.


The shows being planned are being designed both to attract Millennials and to interact with them. One called Power To The People is supposed to reflect content based on feedback from the audience.


Combs' presence suggests that music and the related news will be mostly urban, hip-hop and possibly R&B-related, but Combs has said (and Clinkscales is adamant) it will program beyond that.


“We are working hard from the launch to be not just an urban channel but a channel that covers all music from alternative to rock and roll to hip-hop and down the line.”


Even country? “If young people bang it,” promises Clinkscales, “we’ll cover it. If the target audience we are after likes electronic dance music, we’re going to be there.”


They don’t plan to sign a lot of artists to exclusive music and video breaks, at least not initially. And Clinkscales insist that it will be one of the few places to discover emerging artists – whom it plans to identify early on and bring to the market.


“We want artists to be more vulnerable & say what they really feel,” read a recent Revolt TV tweet, “even introduce us into their private lives. Don't be upset when they do.”


“We're out here on a mission,” read another tweet, “to use music as an influence to make your OWN rules. Get it ? No Rules.”


Revolt TV also has a movie division, Revolt Film, which to date has one picture and one documentary under its belt. The movie, Lawless, starring Shia LaBeouf and Jessica Chastain, was released in Aug. 2012 and grossed about $51 million worldwide. Revolt Film came on board Lawless as a financier after it's premiere at the Cannes International Film Festival.


So will Combs rule as he has in hip-hop, fashion and as a vodka salesman? He has said he is ready to do and spend what it takes for as long as it takes.


“You can feel music now bringing back the excitement and emotion of the timeless years,” read another Revolt TV tweet. “It's a marathon, not a sprint.”


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/business/~3/t2XjlCkaFxQ/story01.htm
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Inside 'Murdoch's World': A Peek Into A Media Empire


Media mogul Rupert Murdoch's vast empire encompasses everything from newspapers to television networks to tabloids. Steve Inskeep talks with NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik about his new book, Murdoch's World: The Last of the Old Media Empires.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/21/238899506/inside-murdochs-world-a-peek-into-a-media-empire?ft=1&f=1008
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Lost for Words: Film Review


An American ex-Marine and a Chinese ballerina find love, if not much of anything else interesting, in Stanley J. Orzel’s romantic drama. While Lost for Words, the title of which burdens the film with an unfortunate comparison to the similarly cross-culturally themed Lost in Translation, serves as a picturesque travelogue of Hong Kong, its glacial pacing and blandly drawn central characters make it heavy going.



After a portentous opening in which we see Michael (Sean Faris) in prison for an unspecified crime, the action flashes back to several months earlier, when the former soldier arrived in the cosmopolitan city to do IT work for a corporation. He soon runs across -- literally, as they meet while jogging in a park -- Anna (Grace Huang), a dancer being groomed for a showcase solo in a new piece by a modern dance company. The two immediately seem perfect for each other, if only for their similar degree of gorgeousness. But they struggle with a language barrier, each knowing only a smattering of the other's native tongue. Mutually exploring the city's photogenic environs, their relationship deepens as they give each other language lessons.


Personal issues rise to the fore as well. Michael is still reeling from the Dear John video he received from his former girlfriend upon arriving in the city. And the chaste Anna is reluctant to take the relationship to a physical level, despite the entreaties of her freewheeling dancer friend Mei Mei (Joman Chiang).


From the officious dance company captain (Terence Yin) who harbors a not-so-secret yen for Anna to the Michael being haunted by his tour of duty in Afghanistan, the film traffics in overly familiar elements. The dramatic tension rises only towards the end, when Anna takes Michael home for the Chinese New Year. There he has a resonant encounter with her grandfather, who fought in the Korean War opposite Michael’s grandfather in the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, and gets into trouble with the authorities during a raid of the secret Catholic Church service the family attends.


Even taking the language gap into consideration, the lead characters rarely say anything particularly interesting, making our involvement in their burgeoning relationship tenuous at best. While the filmmaker’s reluctance to indulge in cheap melodrama is admirable, the resolutely old-fashioned Lost for Words lacks the necessary dramatic texture to compensate for its banal storyline.


Opened Oct. 18 (Studio Strada)
Cast: Sean Faris, Grace Huang, Will Yun Lee, Terence Yin, Joman Chiang
Director: Stanley J. Orzel
Screenwriters: Stanely J. Orzel, C. Joseph Bendy
Producer: Maria Lo Orzel
Executive producers: Richard J. Siemens, Sean Faris, Dino May

Director of photography: Jimmy Wong
Editor: Darren Richter
Production designer: Siu-Hong Cheung
Composer: Andre Matthias
Not rated, 107 min. 


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/film/~3/mF4f0dUel4M/649826
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Here’s Everything We Expect From Apple’s Big iPad Event

Here’s Everything We Expect From Apple’s Big iPad Event
Apple is holding a second fall media event Tuesday, and we're expecting a boatload of new products and announcements. The company even admitted as much in its "We still have a lot to cover" invite. Here's what we know -- ...


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Monday, October 21, 2013

Official BBM how-to videos show the ropes to new users

Got BBM on Android? Here are the basics.

BBM is starting to get (kinda-sorta) rolled out today on Android, and to get folks acclimatized, BlackBerry has posted a few how-to videos on their YouTube channel. Videos show how to manage groups, how read/delivered receipts work, handling multi-person chat, checking status updates, sharing files, and adding contacts.

read more


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/L-lP313jW_8/story01.htm
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Redskins' Meriweather suspended 2 games for hits

Chicago Bears running back Matt Forte (22) drags Washington Redskins strong safety Brandon Meriweather, center, and inside linebacker London Fletcher, right, into the end zone for a touchdown during the second half of a NFL football game in Landover, Md., Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)







Chicago Bears running back Matt Forte (22) drags Washington Redskins strong safety Brandon Meriweather, center, and inside linebacker London Fletcher, right, into the end zone for a touchdown during the second half of a NFL football game in Landover, Md., Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)







(AP) — Washington Redskins free safety Brandon Meriweather's dangerous habit of leading with his helmet will cost him two games, the latest sanction from a league determined to make the game safer by discouraging blows to the head.

The NFL announced Monday that Meriweather will be suspended for this week's game against the Denver Broncos and the following game against the San Diego Chargers, a severe blow to a struggling defense as the Redskins try to recover from their poor start to the season.

Meriweather has the right to appeal. If he does, an expedited hearing will be held this week and a ruling issued before the Broncos game.

He was flagged twice for hits on defenseless receivers in Sunday's 45-41 win over the Chicago Bears, in the third quarter for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Alshon Jeffery in the fourth quarter for a helmet-first hit to the head and neck area of Brandon Marshall.

In announcing the suspension, the league cited Meriweather's status as a repeat offender. He was fined $42,000 for a helmet-first hit on Green Bay Packers running back Eddie Lacy in Week 2, forcing Lacy out of the game with a concussion. Later in that same game, another helmet-first hit left Meriweather with a concussion, knocking him out of the game.

The two-game suspension will cost Meriweather $141,176 in salary. He will not be allowed to participate in any football activities with the team during the suspension.

Meriweather said after Sunday's game that he thought both hits against the Bears were legal. He said he's tried to change his game to suit the NFL's tackling rules.

"I wasn't trying to be dirty. I wasn't trying to hurt nobody," he said. "I didn't lead with my, didn't launch with my head. I used my shoulder like they told me to do."

Coach Mike Shanahan said earlier Monday that he didn't think Meriweather would be suspended.

"I think he knows exactly what he has to do," Shanahan said. "And sometimes the intent — there's no intent there — sometimes you hit a guy a little bit higher than anticipated. Even the last one, he came to the sideline and says, 'Hey, one guy told me it was a good hit and the other official told me he saw it differently.' So there's a lot of different interpretations of it, and at the end of the day we'll find out."

The suspension could leave the Redskins without their two starting safeties when they face Peyton Manning and the Broncos. Strong safety Reed Doughty suffered a concussion Sunday when the Bears attempted an onside kick in the fourth quarter. He will have to pass the league's required tests before he can be cleared to play next week at Denver.

The Redskins are already thin at safety. Rookie Phillip Thomas was lost for the season with an injury during training camp, and rookie Bacarri Rambo lost his starting job after struggling in the first two games.

The only other safeties on the roster are Jose Gumbs, who has played in two NFL games, and Trenton Robinson, who was signed last week.

Washington is ranked 24th in the NFL against the pass and gave up 24 second-half points Sunday against a backup quarterback.

Shanahan was asked how he would manage if he doesn't have Meriweather and Doughty.

"Not a whole lot you can do about it," Shanahan said, "except prepare the best way you can."

___

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org

___

Follow Joseph White on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-10-21-FBN-Redskins-Meriweather-Hits/id-c83a4d52225e4a16b27c3e0dd00f8dbb
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