Thursday, June 27, 2013

Cambridge Audio's Minx Air 200 Earns The Crown For Best Home ...

If you?re a high-end audio fan, you?ve probably heard of Cambridge Audio, the London-based firm that makes some of the best equipment in the business. The brand is currently undergoing some changes that involve targeting the growing number of users who are looking for wireless in-home and portable speaker solutions. Hence the new Minx line of devices, which borrows its name from Cambridge?s affordable home-theater speaker range, but adds goodies like AirPlay and Bluetooth.

The Minx Air 200 is part of this new effort. It?s a large home speaker that packs in AirPlay, Bluetooth, two 2.25-inch drivers and one 6.5-inch subwoofer, as well as direct access to up to five preset Internet radio stations without requiring a connection to an iPhone, smartphone or computer. The Minx Air 200 is a beast of a networked speaker system, and at $599 it compares price-wise to other higher-end options like the Bowers & Wilkins Zeppelin Air or the Libratone Live Speaker.

basics-subhead

  • AirPlay
  • Bluetooth
  • 3.5mm and RCA wired input
  • 802.11 b/g
  • Ethernet
  • 200W amplifier output
  • MSRP: $599
  • Product info page

design-subhead

The Minx Air 200 is somewhat sober in its design choices if I had to pick one word to describe it. It?s white plastic, with a light gray front grill and metallic rim bordering the front grill. Unlike some of the competition like the Zeppelin, the Minx isn?t trying to draw too much attention to itself. The arc of it adds a little bit of design flare, but mostly this is a speaker that strikes you as subdued, and that?s just fine. The Air 200 isn?t bad looking, it just is. Which sets the stage for it to live or die based on its performance.

features-subhead

You?ll be able to connect to the Minx Air no matter what type of device you?re trying to use as your music source, and the AirPlay connectivity is solid (the protocol seems to have come a long way in terms of stability, which is a bonus for Cambridge, who are relative latecomers to the market). And Ethernet support is a hugely welcome addition if you?re the type that can?t even fathom the idea of an occasional drop-out. It?s probably not going to be much use to most looking for a wireless speaker, but the fact that it?s there at all is excellent.

Preset Internet radio stations is another huge advantage for the Minx Air 200. With the Minx Air app, you can change settings on your device and cycle through 10 preset stations. Minx sets these up automatically, but you can change them within the app. Best of all, you can switch between five presets on the Air 200 itself with hardware buttons, giving you access to Internet radio without any kind of connected device required. That?s a huge advantage versus the competition when it comes to features.

True to its audiophile roots, Cambridge has also included advanced audio signal-boosting technologies, including built-in digital to analog converters (DACs) and AAC decoding, as well as tech designed to maximize the quality of Bluetooth stereo streaming to CD-quality standards.

performance-subhead

All those claims of better sound bring us to the money question: Is the?sound?actually better? Yes, yes it is. Put simply, this is the best-sounding AirPlay speaker I?ve reviewed, and the best-sounding Bluetooth one, too. AT $599, it isn?t cheap, but in this case you definitely get what you pay for. Bass performance is impressive, as is max volume, though even Cambridge admits this won?t go as loud as some of the competitors in the interest of preventing any kind of distortion even at the top end, something competitors aren?t necessarily as concerned about.

Cambridge may be trying to move into more mass-market products, but the Minx Air 200 still demonstrates the company?s audiophile roots. Audio clarity is great, even from streamed online sources like Rdio being streamed once again over the local network. The connection doesn?t seem to suffer from excess network traffic, either, and Bluetooth connections are likewise solid (with the usual limits on proximity), and sound quality also shines there. If you?ve been making do with even something as good as an Audyssey Audio Dock Air, you?ve been missing out. And that?s what Cambridge wants to do with the Minx line: Show a generation that hasn?t been particularly focused on audio quality what a difference it can make when someone pays attention to that above all. Mission accomplished.

Bottom Line

This is an excellent choice for an AirPlay/wireless home speaker. A battery would be nice, as there?s a handle for easy enough portability, but in its category, it?s still by far the best choice at the current price, and probably a better option than some of the more expensive ones out there. Cambridge Audio may have waited and let its competitors get a head start in this category, but the wait paid off: The Minx Air 200 is a polished, well-designed piece of audio hardware that confidently tops the?competition.


Cambridge Audio designs products to make music sound amazing.

? Learn more

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/06/26/cambridge-audios-minx-air-200-earns-the-crown-for-best-home-airplay-speaker/

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Microbes Make Cozy Homes in Ocean's Garbage

For about four decades, it's been known that plastic is collecting in the open ocean. Now, scientists have found this debris harbors unique communities of microbes, and the tiny residents of this so-called plastisphere may help break down the marine garbage.

Inhabitants of the plastisphere include members of a group of bacteria, the vibrios, known to cause disease, and microbes known to break down the hydrocarbon bonds within plastics, genetic analysis revealed. But most important, the communities of microbes on the plastic pieces were quite different from those found in samples of surrounding seawater.

"It's not a piece of fly paper out there with things just sticking to it randomly," said study researcher Tracy Mincer, an associate scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, referring to the plastic. "There are specific groups of microbes that are attracted to that environment and are adhering to it and living on it." [In Photos: Trash Litters Deep Seafloor]

Potential pathogens & plastic degraders

Vibrios accounted for nearly 24 percent of the residents on one of the six small pieces of plastic used in the study.

"Because most plastic originates from land it begs the question how far these vibrios are coming from. ? And are they potential pathogens, not just of humans, but for animals, such as fish," said study researcher Linda Amaral-Zettler, an associate scientist at the Marine Biological Laboratory. Some species in the genus Vibrio cause disease, but it?s not clear what species were within the samples, since the analysis for this study did not identify individual species of bacteria. ??

Burrowed in

Meanwhile, microscope images revealed microbestucked into pits that conformed to the shape of their single-celled bodies. The pits suggest the microbes are perforating the plastic and accelerating the natural weathering process, breaking it down, Mincer said. (The researchers aren?t certain which bacteria are in the pits; most bacteria cannot be identified through microscope images.)

"Either the cells have to settle into the perfectly shaped pits or they have something to do with creating the pits," said study researcher Erik Zettler, associate dean and professor of oceanography at the Sea Education Association in Woods Hole, Mass.

If the microbes are indeed burrowing into the plastic, they may be doing so mechanically or they could be metabolizing, otherwise known as "eating," the plastic, Zettler said.

The presence of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria, related to those that bloomed after the Deep Horizon oil spill, indicates that bacteria may indeed be responsible for the pits.

Good or bad for ocean life?

The scientists aren't sure if bacteria-aided breakdown of plastics is good or bad for ocean ecosystems.

Whereas smaller pieces may accelerate the removal of plastics from the oceans, they may also have negative consequences. Smaller trash bits have a larger surface area (and more contact with the surrounding water) relative to volume so they can release more of the pollutants that plastics can absorb.

These itsy bits of plastic are also morelikely to enter the bottom of food chains when animals such as tiny, floating creatures called zooplankton consume them,and accumulate in the predatorsat the top, Zettler said.???

Much of the plastic debris in the ocean has been broken down into confetti-size pieces. During voyages in the North Atlantic, researchers and students onboard a Sea Education vessel collected bits of plastic for this study, which was published online by the journal Environmental Science & Technology on June 7.

This research is part of a National Science Foundation-funded project to study microbes living on marine plastic.

Going forward, Mincer is interested in finding the genetic mechanism that has enabled the plastic colonizers to attach to it so quickly and effectively.

"We think it may lead to a story of microbes adapting to a changing world," he said, pointing out that plastics are quite different from any surface upon which open ocean microbes would naturally settle.

Follow?LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/microbes-cozy-homes-oceans-garbage-190936473.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Cool Biz stress

Advertisement

During a summer day, at what point do you sweat the most? graph of japanese statisticsWith the Japanese summer comes Cool Biz (and Ultra Cool Biz), an energy-saving initiative where everyone is encouraged to turn their air conditioning to 28 degrees and wear lighter and more casual clothes in the office. Shiseido, a cosmetics company, conducted a survey into awareness of smells in the workplace to see, amongst other things, if sweat was a source of stress.

Demographics

Over the 27th and 28th of March 2013, 1,248 business persons living in Tokyo and Osaka and their surrounding areas were interviewed. The ages ranged from 20 to 59 years old, but no further information was provided.

I probably sweat the most in the office; my problem with commuting is usually far too cold a carriage!

This year I?m trying out Uniqlo?s AIRism underneath my work shirts. So far they feel great, and they stop my back sweat soaking into my shirt, but I?ll wait until it gets a lot hotter before delivering my final verdict. Its odour neutralising properties, however, are no match for my underarms!

Research results

Q1: What stresses do you feel regarding Cool Biz? (Sample size=1,248, multiple answer)

Worry about the smell of my own sweat 44.8%
Feeling all sticky with sweat 42.3%
Cannot concentrate in the heat 38.9%
Get irritable in the heat 32.3%
Worry about sweat stains 31.3%
Bothered by the smell of other people?s sweat 25.5%
Dark office 11.8%
I look all dishevelled 7.9%
Don?t know what to wear 7.9%
Other 1.0%
Don?t feel any particular stress 26.2%

Q2: Do you worrk about smells in business-related situations more than in causal ones? (Sample size=1,248)

Very much so 13.9%
Yes 50.0%
No 30.7%
Not at all 5.4%

Q3: During a summer day, at what point do you sweat the most? (Sample size=1,248)

Commuting 55.0%
In the office 18.6%
On returning home 10.2%
After 5 pm 6.5%
On waking 6.3%
After returning home 2.7%
Other 1.0%
Read more on: shiseido,smell,stress,sweat

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/pYXsACKungA/

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Travels of Joy and Beyond: Seek Legal Help for Personal Injuries

During summer time, a lot of people tend to go to a different state for a family or couple getaway just to enjoy what life has to offer and also to experience being away from the stressful world for once. I knew some people who loves to go to Florida for a family vacation. Sometimes, they do rent rental vacation homes or an apartment for a week to also save money compare to staying in a hotel. I'm sure a lot of people did the same thing in order to fully enjoy their family vacation getaway, it's also a must have to save money as much as possible. Therefore, things like this also the best alternative to spend more money.

However, we may never know what's ahead, especially with kids, we will never deny that for once in a while, accidents may happen. What if you've been injured or someone in your family are? It may be weird to think about it, but sometimes, it is important to consider things. If injuries ruined your vacation, then maybe it's time to seek help to an expert when it comes to Premises Liability Injuries that you or someone in your household had suffer, to seek liability particularly to injuries involving children.

Sometimes, this can happen during a vacation or staying at rental vacation homes that aren't really well maintenance or fully well maintained. So, if these happen to you, then contact the Personal Injury Lawyers in Fort Lauderdale located in Florida. Then, you and your family member's medical needs will be meet such as medical bills, lost wages and out-of-pocket expenses. To resolve your injury claim or accident, then it's time to seek legal help. You deserve to be compensated. Life is too short to suffer and be in anguish, where you supposed to enjoy your family vacation, rather, sometimes life is too complicated but with the help of an attorney, life can be good.

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Source: http://www.pinayinstates.us/2013/06/seek-legal-help-for-personal-injuries.html

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14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Batman had one under his mansion outside Gotham. Osama bin Laden was found in one just in the Afghani desert. Underground lairs are an integral part of pop culture fantasy and real-life current events?but whether they're fake or real, they're always cloaked in intrigue. And frankly, they're cool as hell.

They're also increasingly common. In a Vanity Fair article this month, we learned that in cities where historic preservation is a major issue?like London?more and more homeowners are expanding downward, digging out space under their Victorian homes for "underground recreation centers, golf-simulation rooms, squash courts, bowling alleys, hair salons, ballrooms, and car elevators to the underground garages for their vintage Bentleys."

In other cases, the landscape itself dictates the terms of a lair?for example, in some examples below, you'll see entire buildings carved into the face of boulders and cliffs. And often, an underground space is the perfect place to store sensitive materials?whether it's vintage photos or internet servers.

Below, you'll find a collection of lairs that house everything from luxury homes to public fire brigades.


Villa Vals, a home in Switzerland, was built into a mountainside because the village maintains strick rules about homes that disturb the natural beauty around the Alpine valley.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


This is an entire colony of subterranen homes?also in Switzerland.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


Pionen Data Center is Sweden's largest ISP, located 100 feet below the ground in Stockholm. It can withstand the impact of a hydrogen bomb.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Image credit: Atlas Obscura


This is an abandoned bunked off the coast of Senegal, just south of Dakar. Overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, it is known to locals as "la caverne."

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Image credit: Atlas Obscura


Should the United States befall a nuclear attack, the government will takeover a fallout shelter in the basement of West Virginia's five star Greenbrier Resort. This bunker was kept secret until 1992.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Image credit: Atlas Obscura


Wolf's Lair was Hitler's secret hideout in the woods Poland. It served as the Eastern European headquarters for Nazi forces.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Image credit: Wikipedia


This was Osama bin Laden's secret compound in Abbottabad.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Image credit: Faisal Mahmood/Reuters


This 10,000 square foot former limestone mine is where Corbis stores all its photos, from the iconic image of Rosa Parks sitting on a bus to a picture of Einstein sticking out of his tongue. The facility is kept at 45 degrees Fahrenheit and 37 percent relative humidity at all times.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


This is Norway's Olavsvern Naval Base. Carved into the side of a mountain, the now-inactive military facility has 145,000 square feet of above-ground real estate, and an additional 270,000 square feet of bombproof space inside the mountain.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


The Palm Springs Elrod House?and its retractable glass windows? were actually featured in Diamonds are Forever. That's some respectable secret lair street cred right there. It was designed by John Lautner, the architect behind many of LA's most notable homes from the 1960s and 70s.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


Believe it or not, this is a super energy efficient fire department built into the Italian Alps.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


Live in the Waterwood Estate in Vermillion, Ohio and you pretty much never have to go outside. Seated on a 160 acre plot, it's made up of a bunch of interconnecting glass pods that mask amenities like five kitchens, an indoor pool, and a helipad. Privacy to the max!

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


To permeate the interior of Point Place in Laguna Beach, California, you enter through a street level hydraulic lift. Then you have to walk through an underground passage way to access the actual house, which is not visible from the road.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


The Chulo Canyon Cave House in Bisbee, Arizona is another super private lair. Built into the side of a boulder, it sits on 37 acres of land, which also house a guest house and a standalone library building?which houses a full-on panic room. Jodie Foster would approve.

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain


Source: http://gizmodo.com/14-underground-lairs-fit-for-a-mega-villain-577761350

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 9:45PM ET

Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 530PM ET

It's Monday Tuesday, and you know what that means; another Engadget HD Podcast. We hope you will join us live when the Engadget HD podcast starts recording at 9:45PM. If you'll be joining us, be sure to go ahead and get ready by reviewing the list of topics after the break, then you'll be ready to participate in the live chat.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/25/join-the-engadget-hd-podcast-live/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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A House Divided

Students at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein. Andricia Hinckemann, Abel Jordaan, Emme-Lancia Faro and Phiwe Mathe at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein, South Africa

Photo by Sonia Small/Kaleidoscope Studios

BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa?Billyboy Ramahlele heard the riot before he saw it. It was a February evening in 1996, autumn in South Africa, when cooling breezes from the Cape of Good Hope push north and turn the hot days of the country?s agricultural heartland into sweet nights, when the city of Bloemfontein?s moonlit trees and cornfields rustle sultrily beneath a vast sky glittering with stars. The 32-year-old dormitory manager at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein was relaxing in front of a wildlife program on the TV with his door open.

Suddenly, he became aware of a new noise. Could it be the trees, rustling in a gust? No, it was heavier, more like trampling. Could it be his TV? He switched it off. The noise grew louder.

Ramahlele got up and poked his head out the door. There he saw the students of the dorm he managed, which housed about 100 black males, some of the first blacks to attend the historically white university since it had integrated four years earlier. And he immediately saw the source of the noise: His boys were stampeding out of the dorm entryway and running toward central campus. Some of them were singing militant songs from an earlier era, when blacks fought against apartheid rule, including one that went?Kill the Boer, a nickname for white Afrikaners. Many were holding sticks or cricket bats.

They said they wanted to confront the white boys on campus. The whites, they claimed, refused to treat them as they should be treated in South Africa?s new democracy, and they wanted to put an end to their insolence once and for all. More than one boy opened up his jacket to show Ramahlele a gun tucked inside.

Racing alongside the group, Ramahlele wasn?t truly worried until he rounded the corner and saw, under the starlight, a line of white boys at least as long as his line of black students, standing shoulder-to-shoulder. ?It looked like an army flank,? he remembered. The whites were also holding cricket bats, cocked on their shoulders like rifles. Unlike his students, they were eerily silent?until, all as one, they opened their mouths and began to sing. The song was Die Stem, the old apartheid-era national anthem.

Ramahlele?s heart sank. He felt as though he might cry. ?The history,? he explained, ?is if they?re singing that, somebody is going to die.?

I first set foot on the University of the Free State (UFS) campus in February of 2010 to study Afrikaans. On paper, the school was integrated: 70 percent of the student body was black. But 15 years after the end of apartheid?the infamous system of racial separation and black oppression that lasted from 1948 until the coming of democracy in 1994?it felt as though apartheid had never ended. The white and black students still seemed to operate in totally different worlds. There were classes in Afrikaans for the whites and classes in English for the blacks, and separate choirs and church services for both. I almost never saw a mixed-race group of students. And they didn?t live together?there were all-white dorms and all-black dorms.

UFS is in the heart of the Free State, the traditional center of Afrikaner power, settled in the mid-19th century by Dutch settlers who trekked inland in covered wagons from the Dutch East India Company?s colony at the Cape of Good Hope 600 miles southwest. They believed they had been sent to Africa by God to become a new people, the Afrikaners (?Africans? in Dutch), to tame the desert?like the Israelites in Canaan?and turn it into a garden. They plowed the region into a fertile grain belt, setting up a republic and naming a capital, pronounced ?BLOOM-fun-tayn,? meaning ?fountain of blossoms.? The city became a laboratory for the formation of Afrikaner identity. The Afrikaner National Party, the political party that designed apartheid, was established there in 1912. UFS, founded at the same time, was the first South African university to conduct classes in Afrikaans, the Dutch dialect the Afrikaners proudly formalized as part of their new Africa-based ethnicity.

I assumed that old-line attitudes demanding racial separation had never budged in this Afrikaner redoubt. But one day my Afrikaans teacher, Matilda, a warm, arty woman with flowing brown hair, told me there was a much more complicated and disturbing story behind the campus?s racial divide. ?Once, this place was the model of integration,? she lamented over coffee at the campus cafe. Leaning forward conspiratorially over her cup, she gave me a clue. ?Go to a dorm called Karee,? she said, ?and look at a set of photos hanging in the front hall. There, you?ll begin to understand what really happened.?

I went. Karee?named for a drought-resistant tree found in the South African desert?had been built in 1978, as apartheid rule was consolidating and Afrikaans-language universities were expanding. The photos my teacher had mentioned were class photographs. The first dozen or so showed only white boys arranged on the dorm stoop, mugging for the camera. Then, in 1992, a few blacks appeared. There was one looking proud in a mauve suit, and another in a yellow shirt, his hip popped out in a jaunty contrapposto, his lips stretched wide in an enigmatic smile. 1993, 1994, 1995: Every year there were more black students, intermingled with the whites.

And then, in 1997, one year after the riot Billyboy Ramahlele witnessed, something new appeared in the photo: two flags from the age of white supremacy in South Africa?one from the old Afrikaner republic and one from the apartheid state that followed it. They were jarring to see, held high by two white boys in the last row right over the head of a black boy in a wide-brimmed hat. Over the following years, the flags remained, but the black students in the photos disappeared. By 1999, the class photo was all white again, and it stayed that way until 2008, the last year for which there was a picture.

Those images became a consuming mystery for me. UFS hadn?t remained segregated after apartheid?s end?it had integrated and then resegregated later. I wanted to know why the white students raised those ancient flags, and why the black students had left Karee. I uncovered a tale of mutual exhilaration at racial integration giving way to suspicion, anger and even physical violence. It seemed to hold powerful implications well beyond South Africa, about the very nature of social change itself. In our post?civil rights struggle era, we tend to assume progress toward less prejudice and more social tolerance is inevitable?the only variable is speed.

But in Bloemfontein, social progress surged forward. Then it turned back.

Karee is one of about 20 dorms at UFS that house a few hundred students each. The large brick buildings are situated around the edges of the stately, tree-lined campus, like guardians of tradition, which is what they once were. They had legacy admission. If your mother or father had been in a certain dorm, you?d be in that one, too. In one dorm, freshmen wore striped coats. In another, everybody but the seniors walked in through the back door.

In the early 1990s, South Africa?s universities, all public institutions, were required to integrate as part of the country?s transition to multiracial democracy. Then-UFS President Francois Retief, who was tasked with incorporating black students into an all-white campus, worried about the dorms, he explained in the drawing room of his house in an old-age village on the edge of Bloemfontein. Retief seriously considered housing blacks separately from the whites. ?Our dorms were historically more like your fraternities,? he said. ?They had a lot of in-house culture. We called them?die huise [the houses] and their culture was?die tradisies?[the traditions].?

These traditions were arbitrary, but they distinguished one dorm from another and fostered a sense of group pride and belonging. Retief feared that his white students might be reluctant to let blacks partake in their long-standing dorm culture. In 1990, he polled the student body to ask their views. To his great surprise, 86 percent welcomed the idea of housing the new black students in the white dorms. So, starting in 1992, he did just that. And it was a ?roaring success,? he recounted. The first black students ?fit in exactly!?

Lebohang Mathibela was the boy in the mauve suit in the 1992 class photo on the wall in Karee and one of the first eight black students to live in a UFS dorm. Integration ?was beautiful,? he raved when we met at the main campus caf?. Dressed in a cheerful red T-shirt, Mathibela, now 42, hardly looked older than the 21-year-old in the photo, with cheeks as round as a cherub?s and a pealing laugh. Mathibela has had an accomplished career as a linguist, speaking all 11 official South African languages.

UFS wasn?t a natural choice for a black boy from Johannesburg, his hometown. There were two kinds of historically white colleges in South Africa: those that taught in English and those that taught in Afrikaans. (There were also historically black colleges, but they have generally been of lower academic quality.) The English universities cultivated a liberal, multicultural, anti-apartheid identity; they started admitting black students in the 1980s, when it was still technically illegal to do so. The Afrikaans colleges were reputed to be everything the ?English? ones weren?t: conservative, mono-cultural, isolationist. UFS was the most daunting because it was marooned in the grain belt. For most aspirational black college applicants in the 1990s, venturing to UFS would be like choosing Mordor to study.

But UFS was also known for nurturing Afrikaans as a poetic language. That?s what drew Mathibela. In elementary school, he had developed a deep affection for Afrikaans, which was a mandatory school subject under apartheid. It was a mystery to his friends and relatives. ?I decided to come to UFS because of my love of Afrikaans,? he said. ?My mom was so angry. She said to me, ?Other children are going to Wits [the University of the Witwatersrand],? ? Johannesburg?s premier English university. ?She says to me, ?You are not my son anymore!? ?

After he was placed into Karee, he proceeded to fall in love with UFS?s dorm culture. His favorite ritual was freshman initiation. He laughed as he described it to me, because he recognized that it seemed an unlikely memory to cherish. ?We queued blindfolded and half-naked,? he recounted. Seniors painted the freshmen?s bodies in red and yellow stripes to resemble the dorm mascot, a bee. Then they made each initiate drink tomato juice from a toilet bowl. ?It looked like vomit! It was horrible! Guys were really getting sick!? Finally, the freshmen were led to a ?huge drum filled with water, cow dung and grass.? A senior shouted at them to?dyk?dive! ?Then you get out. You?re dripping, smelling like cow dung.?

After the cow-dung dip, the black and white freshmen were instructed to go back to their rooms, shower, change into a jacket and tie, and head to the dorm courtyard, where smiling seniors were waiting to hand them a plate of barbecued meat and a beer. ?You are a member now,? they informed Mathibela. ?Color doesn?t count.?

?I felt proud,? he remembered.

Like Mathibela, most of the first black students to brave UFS were gung-ho about the dorm culture. UFS had been closed to them, and it was thrilling to be let in and to belong. Another former black student who lived in a mostly white dorm in the early 1990s told me he felt like he was ?ascending.?

Their enthusiasm made the white students feel as if they had something worth sharing, bolstering their sense of pride. Mathibela recalls that a white student named Coenraad Jonker pulled him aside. ?Where did you learn to speak such beautiful Afrikaans?? he marveled. ?You are definitely going to make it here.? White students even bent some of the dorm rules to make it easier on the black students.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2013/06/university_of_the_free_state_in_bloemfontein_s_segregation_how_the_legacy.html

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Finding Murray's magic: Ability to manage goals makes an athlete successful

June 24, 2013 ? Research suggests that it is Andy Murray?s ability to manage his goals, as well as his skill, determination and motivation that makes him such a successful athlete. Murray dropped out of the French Open after a back injury this year, missing out on his goal of playing in four grand slam finals in a row. But this decision has allowed him to recuperate in time for Wimbledon this month. According to new research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), athletes who recognise early when a goal is unattainable and switch their focus to other objectives are the most successful at achieving their main career goals.

The researchers, from the universities of Birmingham and Southampton, found that the reasons why a person is motivated to achieve tough sporting goals influence how well that person does in pursuing these goals. A person who is motivated by the enjoyment or personal importance of a goal will strive harder and for longer and will be more successful in achieving an increasingly difficult goal, compared to someone motivated by external pressure or feelings of guilt.

But when the goal becomes so difficult that it is unattainable, people who are self-motivated find it harder to stop striving for their goal. This persistence can cause psychological distress. However the research identified that when athletes with high self-motivation recognised early when a goal was impossible they were able to quickly disengage from the goal and then re-engage with challenging, new targets that were also compatible with their overall objectives. This group of athletes made the most progress toward achieving their central goal.

?Our experiments showed the importance of a person realising early enough when it was better to continue striving for a goal or when it was best to let go and adopt another similar goal,? said Professor Nikos Ntoumanis, an exercise and sport psychologist from the University of Birmingham. ?Our research also showed that the reasons behind a sportsperson?s goal are important to know, not just the actual goal.?

This research goes a step further than the existing body of knowledge on the role of goal-setting in sport by examining the impact of different types of motivation in the face of tough goals. The researchers carried out two sophisticated experiments that asked over 180 athletes to complete a range of cycling tests. By ensuring some of the tests were unattainable, the psychologists were able to explore how the athletes coped with goal failure.

?We found autonomous motives such as enjoyment or personal importance were a double-edged sword,? explained Professor Sedikides, a social and personality psychologist from the University of Southampton. ?Athletes with autonomous motives put in more effort and persisted for longer which helped them reach higher levels of performance with increasingly difficult but attainable goals. Yet when the goal became unachievable, they had great difficulty realising this, which led to brooding over the failure as the athletes struggled to disengage from the goal.?

The research concludes that coaches and applied sport psychologists need to be aware of athletes? motives for their goals to help them be most effective, successful and adaptive in their goal striving. Future research aims to explore how to help sportspeople (and individuals with other goals, such as weight loss) realise early that some goals are unachievable and to have the flexibility to develop alternative goals that contribute to their long-term objectives.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/kBIEEJrvmx4/130624075854.htm

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European Commission approves NYSE takeover

BRUSSELS (AP) ? The European Commission on Monday approved InterContinentalExchange's proposed $8.2 billion takeover of NYSE-Euronext, saying the two are not direct competitors in most markets and will continue to face strong competition from other exchanges.

ICE, based in Atlanta, Georgia, is best known as a commodities marketplace. It announced its stock-and-cash offer for NYSE-Euronext, valued at $33.12 per share, in December.

The deal will give ICE control of the New York Stock Exchange and London-based Liffe, Europe's second-largest derivatives market.

"The market investigation revealed that they do not exert a greater potential competitive threat on each other compared to other exchanges," the Commission said in a statement detailing its decision. "Any anticompetitive effects can therefore be excluded."

The combined ICE-NYSE Euronext is slated to become the third-largest exchange group globally, behind Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing and CME Group.

Commission approval had been widely expected: after a joint bid for NYSE-Euronext by ICE and Nasdaq failed last year, ICE had proactively asked the Commission to examine the new bid.

The Commission said it had examined in particular markets for agricultural commodities, as well as U.S. equity index derivatives.

"The Commission's investigation found that the proposed transaction would not raise competition concerns in any of these fields, as NYX and ICE are offering contracts belonging to different product markets so their activities do not overlap," the Commission said in a statement.

The deal was approved by NYSE-Euronext shareholders earlier this month and is expected to close in the second half of 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/european-commission-approves-nyse-takeover-141115061.html

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George Zimmerman "Viciously Attacked" By Trayvon Martin, Defense Claims

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/george-zimmerman-viciously-attacked-by-trayvon-martin-defense-cl/

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Obama Urges Congress to Pass Immigration Reform (ABC News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/314519575?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Mursi's controversial Islamist Luxor governor to quit: party

By Yasmine Saleh

CAIRO (Reuters) - The governor of Egypt's Luxor province, controversially appointed despite belonging to a hardline Islamist group that massacred 58 tourists in Luxor in 1997, will step down on Sunday "for the sake of Egypt", the group said.

President Mohamed Mursi of the moderate Islamist Muslim Brotherhood infuriated many last Monday with his appointment of Adel Mohamed al-Khayat, reaching out for a political alliance with the more radical al-Gamaa al-Islamiya ahead of a big wave of opposition-led protests expected to start on June 30.

But al-Gamaa al-Islamiya, which has renounced violence, appeared to want to show that it could put Egypt's needs first - especially the tourist industry, a mainstay of the economy that has suffered badly in two years of unrest.

Safwat Abdel Ghani, one of the group's leaders, was quoted by the state-owned Al-Ahram news website as saying the governor would announce his resignation on Sunday. Sources in the cabinet and the presidency said they were not aware of such move.

"We are not after any post," Abdel Ghani told an earlier news conference. "We asked the new governor to resign for the sake of Egypt."

Both Mursi's Islamists and the leftist-secular opposition are trying to marshal support before June 30.

On Friday, thousands of protesters from al-Gamaa al-Islamiya, the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist groups staged a big pro-Mursi rally and warned opponents, who they described as atheists, Western agents and anti-Islamic, that they would be crushed if they forced Mursi out. The opposition called it an attempt to "terrorise" them.

PROTESTS

Mursi's appointment of a large number of Islamist governors including Khayat triggered protests in many cities.

Mursi himself defended the appointment of Khayat in the newspaper Akhbar Al-Youm on Saturday, saying there had "never been a court ruling" against him, and cautioned that the state would act if the June 30 rally turned violent.

The protest is being organised by a group of young independent Egyptians called Tamarud (Rebel), which says it has gathered over 15 million signatures in a month - more than one in six of the population - calling for Mursi to quit.

Both the youth movement and established opposition leaders are demanding an early presidential election after what they describe as Mursi's failure to live up to any of his promises of more freedoms and better economic and living conditions.

But Mursi's allies say he needs more than a year in office to tackle Egypt's deep economic and political problems.

Al-Gamaa al-Islamiya renounced violence and condemned al Qaeda in ideological U-turns a decade ago, and recently founded the Building and Development Party to expand its political presence.

Many of its members were jailed for decades under president Hosni Mubarak, who was toppled by mass protests more than two years ago. Mursi freed them last year, shortly after his election, with many moving into public life.

However, some of the recently freed members still defend their violent past. Assem Abdel Maged, convicted and jailed for his role in the killing of more than 100 policemen in one attack in the 90s and now leading a pro-Mursi campaign, said he had never regretted any of his actions.

(Additinal reporting by Omar Fahmy and Ahmed Tolba; Writing by Yasmine Saleh; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hardliners-call-luxor-governor-quit-mursi-defense-131835196.html

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Switched On: Touchy subjects

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

DNP Switched On Touchy subjects

In 2002, the first LCD-based iMac succeeded the translucent PowerPC G3-based models that the original Bondi Blue iMac begat. The new generation was much more striking than the one that had placed Apple on the comeback trail. The iMac G4 mounted the display on a balanced arm similar to a Luxo lamp while the motherboard resided in a hemispherical base. This allowed the display to be adjusted to a wide range of heights and angles and each of the two main sections to be "true to itself."

Alas, the design had its limits. It's difficult to imagine today's ample 27-inch iMac displays balancing off such a mount. Furthermore, after the switch to Intel, processor thermals improved to help enable the slim iMac of today. The idea of efforts being true to themselves (at least until nearly compromise-free convergence is possible), however, has stayed a hallmark of Apple. For example, the company would resist adding video to the iPod for years after competitors had the feature.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/23/touchy-subjects/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Career in IT (Information Technology) ~ Placement News

As most of you may already aware of the current situation. There are not so many Jobs and Vacancies for Youngsters. Companies mostly prefer to recruit Professionals with Experience and freshers who just completed their degree of bachelor or master end up frustrated. So, here we are going to give you some tips on career opportunities in IT Sector that is in 'Information Technology'.
In Today's fast growing and developed world, the computer and technology is being used everywhere and almost in every field of work there will be need of Computer Technology so as some kind of technician or operator to work on it. So there are many opportunities in Information Technology for getting Jobs or getting hired at some good organization or company. There are many Jobs in Companies like Web Hosting and Cloud Computing etc.But we should also aware of the fact that there are too many Students and Freshers are wandering for IT Jobs or Employment in IT, which results in having very few chances of you to get a dream job in IT sector. Do you know what is the main problem with those unemployed bachelors? What is the reason that they cannot get a Job in the field which is in such high demand? You may wonder to know the fact. The reason behind this is Kids start playing games on their computers and laptops and then start thinking that they have interest in Computer or IT Field. So they join Information Technology as their Major or Degree Course. Some of Students just joins IT Field because of their friend joined the same or their teacher or mentor said that IT has a great scope of Jobs. Well, there may be some other reasons but this is the main reason behind those poor unemployed students that they are not in the field because of their interest. They are just here to make money and then spend it on their interests. And what is so good in getting a job in such organization if you have nothing to do there. I have friends who got employed in some company because of their grades but after their first month they got thrown out from the company because they failed to handle the work.
The Information Technology Field is full with Jobs but only if you are really into doing something in this field, not just to make money. Why would some organization give you money if you are no use to them? Following are some tips and reasons for students to go in IT field. Read them carefully and only then choose this field if you are really interested in this field not because it got great scope of jobs or something.

Tips For Successful Career in IT

  • Choose only your interested field.
  • The main requirement of IT field or main scope is in 'Cloud Computing'. But it doesn't mean that you should go for it even if you don't have any interest in this.
  • Start doing some work, like working on major or minor project etc to improve your skills in your niche.
  • Use internet to find resources and information related to your niche.
This tips guide will be updated with new resources and tips. So keep visiting to stay updated.

Source: http://placementnewsblog.blogspot.com/2013/06/career-in-it-information-technology.html

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

The Bump and PEOPLE Team Up for Royal-Worthy Giveaway

Enter for your chance to win a Kate Middleton-inspired giveaway featuring prizes worth up to $5,000.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/7epKHaQ7LDM/

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89% In the House

All Critics (70) | Top Critics (24) | Fresh (62) | Rotten (8)

The film treats imagination-and talent-in certain hands as an almost mystical force.

Ozon and the script move a little too far afield and hold on a bit too long as the film approaches its end. Still, "In the House" has enough trippy truth to it to grab your interest and shake your mind.

It's fiction about life that becomes fiction that might be life - and the viewer happily dives in.

The expected punch line... never materializes, so I guess this must be a drama after all.

Savor In the House for its meta-exploration of adolescence, class resentment and suppressed desire, but don't expect much more.

The seductions of storytelling drive "In the House," a cleverly structured comic thriller rich with narrative trickery and macabre humor.

Provocative, playful, entertaining and audacious, In the House is a writer showing us the inner workings of writing, complete with its power to subvert, to imagine and to deceive

Occasionally too clever for its own good, the film may go one step too far, but Ozon manages the hybrid of genres beautifully and ultimately it is his superb cast that sells the nuances and the concept

A sly, stylish blend of melodrama and suspense that's also a cunning commentary on the seductiveness and danger inherent in storytelling itself.

Director/scriptwriter Francois Ozon knows his Hitchcock well. He employs him effectively, but the clutter is his own.

An almost perverse delight, an egghead thriller that slyly shell-games its truer purpose as an inquiry into the construction -- and deconstruction -- of fiction. Scratch deconstruction: Make that tear-the-house-down demolition.

It's partly real and partly a fable, full of events that might have happened or could never have happened, with intrigues that defy us to take them seriously.

In the House is a structurally solid thriller that is both inventive and absolutely seductive in nature.

Inviting photography and a relentless pace complement Claude's unfolding narrative, but the big thrills are in the deftly drawn characters...and the incisive satire...

A slick psychological thriller that veers into dark comedy the more absurd it gets, "In the House" demonstrates the dangers of addiction -- not to sex or drugs, but to story.

Captures why we do what we do, and the extent to which stories reflect both the writer and the reader.

It's amusing and unexpected, capturing the compulsive spirit of writing with wit and attention to mischief that keeps it unpredictable to the very end.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/in_the_house_2013/

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Beyond silicon: Transistors without semiconductors

June 21, 2013 ? For decades, electronic devices have been getting smaller, and smaller, and smaller. It's now possible -- even routine -- to place millions of transistors on a single silicon chip.

But transistors based on semiconductors can only get so small. "At the rate the current technology is progressing, in 10 or 20 years, they won't be able to get any smaller," said physicist Yoke Khin Yap of Michigan Technological University. "Also, semiconductors have another disadvantage: they waste a lot of energy in the form of heat."

Scientists have experimented with different materials and designs for transistors to address these issues, always using semiconductors like silicon. Back in 2007, Yap wanted to try something different that might open the door to a new age of electronics.

"The idea was to make a transistor using a nanoscale insulator with nanoscale metals on top," he said. "In principle, you could get a piece of plastic and spread a handful of metal powders on top to make the devices, if you do it right. But we were trying to create it in nanoscale, so we chose a nanoscale insulator, boron nitride nanotubes, or BNNTs for the substrate."

Yap's team had figured out how to make virtual carpets of BNNTs,which happen to be insulators and thus highly resistant to electrical charge. Using lasers, the team then placed quantum dots (QDs) of gold as small as three nanometers across on the tops of the BNNTs, forming QDs-BNNTs. BNNTs are the perfect substrates for these quantum dots due to their small, controllable, and uniform diameters, as well as their insulating nature. BNNTs confine the size of the dots that can be deposited.

In collaboration with scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), they fired up electrodes on both ends of the QDs-BNNTs at room temperature, and something interesting happened. Electrons jumped very precisely from gold dot to gold dot, a phenomenon known as quantum tunneling.

"Imagine that the nanotubes are a river, with an electrode on each bank. Now imagine some very tiny stepping stones across the river," said Yap. "The electrons hopped between the gold stepping stones. The stones are so small, you can only get one electron on the stone at a time. Every electron is passing the same way, so the device is always stable."

Yap's team had made a transistor without a semiconductor. When sufficient voltage was applied, it switched to a conducting state. When the voltage was low or turned off, it reverted to its natural state as an insulator.

Furthermore, there was no "leakage": no electrons from the gold dots escaped into the insulating BNNTs, thus keeping the tunneling channel cool. In contrast, silicon is subject to leakage, which wastes energy in electronic devices and generates a lot of heat.

Other people have made transistors that exploit quantum tunneling, says Michigan Tech physicist John Jaszczak, who has developed the theoretical framework for Yap's experimental research. However, those tunneling devices have only worked in conditions that would discourage the typical cellphone user.

"They only operate at liquid-helium temperatures," said Jaszczak.

The secret to Yap's gold-and-nanotube device is its submicroscopic size: one micron long and about 20 nanometers wide. "The gold islands have to be on the order of nanometers across to control the electrons at room temperature," Jaszczak said. "If they are too big, too many electrons can flow." In this case, smaller is truly better: "Working with nanotubes and quantum dots gets you to the scale you want for electronic devices."

"Theoretically, these tunneling channels can be miniaturized into virtually zero dimension when the distance between electrodes is reduced to a small fraction of a micron," said Yap.

Yap has filed for a full international patent on the technology.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/JY7mkn1cLuE/130621121015.htm

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YouTube Says It Will Bring Advertisers Into Its Partner Program, Starting This Fall

youtube logoYouTube just announced (as part of this week's Cannes Lions advertising event) that it's expanding its partner program to include advertisers. The program already provides the top YouTube content creators with access to resources for improving their production skills and distribution (and as a result improve their monetization).

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/itp5QjlbbLk/

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FAA moving toward easing electronic device use

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The government is moving toward easing restrictions on airline passengers using electronic devices to listen to music, play games, read books, watch movies and work during takeoffs and landings, but it could take a few months.

An industry-labor advisory committee was supposed to make recommendations next month to the Federal Aviation Administration on easing the restrictions. But the agency said in a statement Friday the deadline has been extended to September because committee members asked for extra time to finish assessing whether it's safe to lift restrictions.

"The FAA recognizes consumers are intensely interested in the use of personal electronics aboard aircraft; that is why we tasked a government-industry group to examine the safety issues and the feasibility of changing the current restrictions," the statement said.

The agency is under public and political pressure to ease the restrictions as more people bring their e-book readers, music and video players, smartphones and laptops with them when they fly.

Technically, the FAA doesn't bar use of electronic devices when aircraft are below 10,000 feet. But under FAA rules, airlines that want to let passengers use the devices are faced with a practical impossibility ? they would have to show that they've tested every type and make of device passengers would use to ensure there is no electromagnetic interference with aircraft radios and electrical and electronic systems.

As a result, U.S. airlines simply bar all electric device use below 10,000 feet. Airline accidents are most likely to occur during takeoffs, landings, and taxiing.

Cellphone calls and Internet use and transmissions are also prohibited, and those restrictions are not expected to be lifted. Using cellphones to make calls on planes is regulated by the Federal Communications Commission. There is concern that making calls from fast-flying planes might strain cellular systems, interfering with service on the ground. There is also the potential annoyance factor ? whether passengers will be unhappy if they have to listen to other passengers yakking on the phone.

The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that a draft report by the advisory committee indicates its 28 members have reached a consensus that at least some of the current restrictions should be eased.

An official familiar with FAA's efforts on the issue said agency officials would like to find a way to allow passengers to use electronic devices during takeoffs and landings the same way they're already allowed to use them when planes are cruising above 10,000 feet. The official requested anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak by name.

FAA Administrator Michael Huerta told a Senate panel in April that he convened the advisory committee in the hope of working out changes to the restrictions.

"It's good to see the FAA may be on the verge of acknowledging what the traveling public has suspected for years ? that current rules are arbitrary and lack real justification," Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., one of Congress' more outspoken critics of the restrictions, said in a statement. She contends that unless scientific evidence can be presented to justify the restrictions, they should be lifted.

Edward Pizzarello, the co-founder of frequent flier discussion site MilePoint, says lifting the restriction is "long overdue."

"I actually feel like this regulation has been toughest on flight attendants. Nobody wants to shut off their phone, and the flight attendants are always left to be the bad guys and gals," said Pizzarello, 38, of Leesburg, Va.

Actor Alec Baldwin became the face of passenger frustration with the restrictions in 2011 he was kicked off a New York-bound flight in Los Angeles for refusing to turn off his cellphone. Baldwin later issued an apology to fellow American Airlines passengers who were delayed, but mocked the flight attendant on Twitter.

"I just hope they do the sensible thing and don't allow people to talk on their cellphones during flight," said Pizzarello, who flies 150,000 to 200,000 miles a year. "There are plenty of people that don't have the social skills necessary to make a phone call on a plane without annoying the people around them. Some things are better left alone."

"It'll be nice not to have to power down and wait, but it never really bothered me. As long as they don't allow calls I'll be happy," said Ian Petchenik, 28, a Chicago-based consultant and frequent flier.

Airline consultant Robert Mann said the biggest benefit would come on short flights, where passengers would have much more time to use the devices since they are above 10,000 feet for a shorter period of time. That would ultimately give the airlines more time to sell stuff ? whether that's Wi-Fi or movies and TV shows on demand.

Henry Harteveldt, an analyst with Hudson Crossing, said airlines would only profit if the FAA also amended the rules to allow passengers to access the Internet earlier ? something that is not being suggested.

"Unless the FAA is considering relaxing the rules on Wi-Fi access, this is not about making money. This is about keeping the passenger entertained," he said.

Heather Poole, a flight attendant for a major U.S. airline, blogger and author of the novel "Cruising Attitude," said easing the restrictions would make flight attendants' jobs "a whole lot easier."

There is a lot of pressure for airlines to have on-time departures, she said. Flight attendants are dealing with an "out-of-control" carry-on bag situation and then have to spend their time enforcing the electronics rule.

"These days, it takes at least five reminders to get people to turn off their electronics, and even then, it doesn't always work," Poole said. "I think some passengers believe they're the only ones using their devices, but it's more like half the airplane doesn't want to turn it off."

But there is concern about whether easing restrictions will result in passengers becoming distracted by their devices when they should be listening to safety instructions.

On a recent flight that had severe turbulence, a business class passenger wearing noise-canceling headphones missed the captain's announcement to stay seated, Poole recalled.

"Takeoff and landing is when passengers need to be most aware of their surroundings in case ? God forbid ? we have to evacuate," she said. "I don't see that guy, or any of the ones like him, reacting very quickly."

___

Mayerowitz reported from New York.

___

Follow Joan Lowy on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/faa-moving-toward-easing-electronic-device-183139775.html

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Capital Pride Showcases Community: Annual parade and festival celebrate LGBT people and allies, along with a show-stopping proposal

For the tens of thousands of D.C.-area residents and out-of-town visitors who flocked to Washington over the past weekend, the 38th annual Capital Pride celebration provided multiple opportunities to celebrate LGBT identity. For one lucky couple it also offered the perfect opportunity to affirm a lifelong commitment.

Midway through the live musical performances at Sunday's Capital Pride Festival, longtime Capital Pride volunteer Dane Austin proposed to his partner, Joshua David-Giamichael, presenting him with a ring as the crowd went wild witnessing the marriage proposal.

Capital Pride Festival view from the main stage

Capital Pride Festival view from the main stage

Engagements aside, Capital Pride also offered plenty of opportunities to cheer local politicians, dancers and others ? from celebrities to community stalwarts ? as Saturday's parade passed through the streets of the city's historically gay Dupont Circle and Logan Circle neighborhoods. The Sunday festival followed with music headliners and rows of booths touting local businesses, organizations and social clubs along Pennsylvania Avenue NW between 3rd and 7th Streets NW.

At one of those booths, manned by Mike Antonelli, the goal was signing up attendees for OutCamping, a local LGBT camping club that hosts regular outings in the Shenandoah Valley. Antonelli was particularly pushing ''FAB Fest,'' the group's annual kickoff party.

''FAB Fest is what we want people to come out for,'' Antonelli said, proud that the club has a 90 percent return rate among those who attend a camping trip. ''FAB Fest is social networking in the woods. It's a way to meet someone without the bar. It's why this group was started.''

A few hundred feet away, perched on a small loveseat, dressed in a pink tutu and crown, was Capital Pride visitor Juno, who declined to give a last name, but who expressed a sentiment similar to Antonelli's. Juno, a native of Southeast Washington, said he was about to come out of the closet to family and friends as LGBT and had decided to forge ahead by joining the festivities and expressing his newfound identity.

''What brought me to Pride? Beautiful people, drag performances, the general atmosphere, just pure concentrated love and awesomeness in one place,'' Juno said of the sense of camaraderie among those at the festival. ''I always knew [Capital Pride] was big, but to see an ocean of people here, especially straight allies, was just something I did not see coming at all.''

On the other side of the festival, dressed in a light-blue Speedo, superhero-style cape, sandals and a giant pair of blue wings was Randy Snight, playing a ''fairy'' to call attention to Synetic Theater's upcoming production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, set to run from July 18 to Aug. 4. As people jostled for position to take their picture with Snight, he said Synetic's marketing seemed to be working.

''We've received only positive feedback,'' he told Metro Weekly. ''Everybody is so nice and welcoming here.''

For Craig Cabrera, Sunday's festival marked his very first Capital Pride celebration. Flanked by friends, he tried to explain his reflections on the annual celebration with Metro Weekly.

''I think it's great, because we celebrate not only the diversity in our community, but also the fact that we're all born this way and it's not a choice,'' Cabrera said. ''It's a great way to show who you are.''

Source: http://www.metroweekly.com/feature/?ak=8408

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