শনিবার, ২৭ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Greg Abbott?s pledge to fight Obama on voting rights a political win with Texas GOP primary voters

In the runup to his campaign for governor, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott said he considered suing the Obama administration?a big part of his job. Now the Obama administration is turning the tables ? or at least going to court to blunt an effort by Abbott to maintain congressional and legislative lines as drawn by the Republican Legislature. A federal appeals court panel has ruled that the districts deliberately discriminate against Hispanics. The case is in litigation. But in the process, Abbott has declared a recent Supreme Court decision striking down a portion of the Voting Rights Act means Texas doesn?t need federal approval anymore to change its election laws. ?He has announced the state?s current districts should stand and that a photo-ID requirement for voters, which critics say discriminates against minorities, will now be in effect in Texas elections.

Abbott pledges to fight Obama on voting rights challenge (AP)

Attorney General Eric Holder announced today the Justice Department is going to federal court in an attempt to require the state of Teas to continue getting approval before making changes to the state?s voting process. The move was a response to last month?s Supreme Court decision. Abbott responded to Holder?s announcement: ?I?ll fight Obama?s effort to control our elections.?

Abbott has made voter-ID an important part of his appeal to Republican voters. Several years ago, Abbott announced there was an ?epidemic? of voter fraud in Texas and he launched an investigation. But his investigation and subsequent prosecutions failed to confirm any such epidemic. Abbott found fewer than three dozen cases to prosecute ? all against Democrats, all but one against blacks or Hispanics. Of those, two-thirds were technical violations in which voters were eligible, votes were properly cast and no vote was changed. None of the cases would have been affected by the voter ID requirement. Abbott has defended his crackdown, saying voter fraud is a very real problem. The voter ID requirement is popular with Republican voters Abbott will need in next year?s governor?s race. And Holder?s action today will likely be a plus for Abbott in the GOP primary. At the same time, Holder?s action will highlight Texas? treatment of minority voting rights ? which would not be particularly helpful with a broader group of Texas voters in a general election.

This entry was posted in 2014 Elections, Issues, Redistricting, Republicans by Wayne Slater. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2013/07/greg-abbotts-pledge-to-fight-obama-on-voting-rights-a-plus-with-texas-gop-primary-voters.html/

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৬ জুলাই, ২০১৩

In pictures: The 'glamor red' HTC One

HTC's recently taken the wraps off a new color variant for the HTC One — anodized "glamor red" — and we've had the change to get our hands on the new, eye-catching version of HTC's latest. The red version, which is exclusive to Phones4u in the UK, is most reminiscent of the black variant, being twinned with a dark grey accents around its sides and back. The Beats Audio branding, red and white on other HTC Ones, is a lighter shade of gray on the "glamor red." The anodized finish also gives the device a smoother feel than the more common silver version.

Besides these superficial changes, we're dealing with the same phone we're already more than familiar with — quad-core Snapdragon 600 CPU, 1080p SuperLCD display, "Ultrapixel" camera — you get the idea.

Check out our gallery after the break for a closer look at this new flavor of HTC One.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Gk9SBIIEZfM/story01.htm

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Kevin Costner in negotiations to star in Guillermo del Toro's 'Midnight Delivery'

By Jeff Sneider

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Hot off his turn as Pa Kent in "Man of Steel," Kevin Costner is in negotiations to star in "Midnight Delivery" for Universal Pictures.

"Pacific Rim" director Guillermo del Toro will produce along with David Linde of Lava Bear Films. Gary Ungar, Tory Metzger and Russell Ackerman will serve as executive producers.

Neil Cross, who created the BBC series "Luther" and co-wrote Universal's hit horror movie "Mama," has written the script, which is based on an original idea by del Toro.

Universal's exec VP of production Scott Bernstein and creative executive Sara Scott will oversee the project for the studio.

Costner has had a resurgence in the feature world since winning an Emmy for "Hatfields & McCoys." In addition to "Man of Steel," he next stars opposite Chris Pine in Paramount's "Jack Ryan," which hits theaters this Christmas. Costner, who just wrapped Summit's NFL-themed movie "Draft Day," is currently filming Mike Binder's indie drama "Black and White" with Octavia Spencer. Costner next stars in McG's Relativity thriller "Three Days to Kill." He's repped by WME, One Talent Management and attorney Daniel M. Grigsby.

Del Toro is represented by WME, Exile Entertainment and Hirsch Wallerstein Hayum Matlof and Fishman.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kevin-costner-negotiations-star-guillermo-del-toros-midnight-235800980.html

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Italy politician under fire for racist slur

ROME (AP) ? Calls mounted Monday for the Senate vice president to resign after he compared Italy's first black Cabinet minister to an orangutan, with the Italian premier lamenting that the country had been "shamed" by such insults and demanding they stop immediately.

Roberto Calderoli, a leader of the anti -immigrant Northern League, has insisted he was only joking when he made the "aesthetic" comment about Cecile Kyenge at a League rally last weekend. He told the Corriere della Sera newspaper on Monday that he compares all his colleagues to animals and that what he says at a political rally shouldn't have any bearing on his work as the Senate No. 2.

Kyenge, a Congolese-born eye doctor, has been insulted with racist slurs from the Northern League ever since she was named integration minister in April. One Northern League politician has called her a Congolese "monkey," while another has said she deserved to be raped.

Kyenge responded to Calderoli's latest insult by saying it's not for her to demand his resignation but for Italians to reflect on the merits of public office-holders.

"We have to use messages that don't instigate violence," the ANSA news agency quoted Kyenge as telling a rally in Pescara. "Surely it's not my job to respond to violence with violence."

Premier Enrico Letta, though, told League leader Roberto Maroni to put an end to the slurs from within his party ranks.

"I think we've had enough shame so far," Letta said, noting how the story has been playing internationally.

Letta's Democratic Party has called for Calderoli's resignation, as have a few ministers. The president of the Senate, anti-Mafia prosecutor Pietro Grasso, has called Calderoli's comments "racist verbal aggression."

Letta was particularly irked that another League official, Matteo Salvini, had chastised Italy's respected president for coming to Kyenge's defense after Calderoli's insult.

On his Facebook page, Salvini essentially told President Giorgio Napolitano to keep quiet. By Monday afternoon, the comment had received more than 850 "likes."

"What Italy has been going through since yesterday on such issues is a page of shame which is absolutely unbearable," Letta said at a news conference with the visiting Maltese prime minister. He issued what he called a "sincere appeal" to Maroni to put a stop to it.

"Please close this episode as soon as possible," he said.

The Northern League, which helped author Italy's strict immigration law, is vehemently opposed to Kyenge's call for children born in Italy to immigrants to be able to gain Italian citizenship. Currently, such children must wait until they are 18 to apply, and often bureaucratic snafus interfere.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-politician-under-fire-racist-slur-140533274.html

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সোমবার, ১৫ জুলাই, ২০১৩

US Patent Office Launches Global Patent Search Tool Providing ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Good News :) researchers, patent agents, and patent searchers worldwide who want to study and search patent specifications written and filed in Chinese languages can now online access the same. Recently, the US Patent ...

Source: http://intellectuallylegal.wordpress.com/2013/07/15/uspto-patent-office-launches-global-patent-free-search-chinese-patent-translation/

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Pa. man charged with burning girlfriend's son, 7 (Providence Journal)

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

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Spilled K-Y Lube Leads To Evacuation Of Alabama Post Office

This certainly didn't make the mail come faster.

A post office in Guntersville, Ala. was evacuated Tuesday after some K-Y Intense Arousal gel leaked out of a package and spread throughout the post office at about 9 a.m., WAFF reported.

Not knowing what the slippery substance was, post office officials evacuated the place and called in hazmat teams. Two employees felt sick after coming into contact with the gel, according to AL.com. They were hospitalized, but are now in stable condition. Additionally, 12 - 15 other packages were contaminated with the material.

The gel was addressed to someone in the "entertainment" industry, according to the Associated Press. The recipient's name has not been released.

USPS postal inspector Tony Robinson told AL.com he has no idea why the employees felt sick, since they substance was proven to be non-toxic. However, Amazon.com reviews for the product state that the gel "burned to a painful degree" and "caused a rash."

Officials say the post office will contact the sender of the gel and instruct him or her on how to properly stuff it in to prevent future package mishaps.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/15/spilled-lube-post-office-alabama_n_3598807.html

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রবিবার, ১৪ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Q&A with Washington Attorney General and former King County Councilman Bob Ferguson

Even as the state tightens its belt, Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson wants to do more.

Ferguson, Bothell and Kenmore's former representative on the King County Council, shared his goals and challenges in consumer protection, privacy, a high-profile discrimination lawsuit and the latest scams.

Elected to the state's top legal job last November, Ferguson beat fellow King County Council member Reagan Dunn by about 200,000 votes. Ferguson replaced Rob McKenna, who unsuccessfully faced Jay Inslee in the 2012 state governor race.

Q: You've made helping veterans a priority. What are you doing to serve Washington vets?

A: "My father was a veteran. Both my grandfathers, and my great-great-grandfather, were veterans. I'm from a large family. All my uncles served in World War II. Fortunately, they all returned home. I've always had strong views about veterans issues?about mental health issues related to vets, the disproportionate number of homeless who are vets, job training. On the King County Council, I got very involved in veterans issues, and proposed the Veterans and Human Services Levy, which voters approved in 2005. I wrote it, I proposed it.

"One thing I did in taking office was seeing what we do, currently, in the AG's office around veterans. The answer was 'Not a whole lot.' We changed that. We have a robust web presence. We're about to go public with resource guides related to veterans' legal rights. We want to make sure we're educating veterans. When someone calls in with a consumer complaint, one question we ask is, 'Are you a veteran?' We want to know that, and be able to track cases that are targeting vets?. Veterans (and) active-duty (service-people) have certain rights other folks don't."

Q: Why did the state file suit against Arlene's Flowers, the Tri-Cities business that refused to serve a gay customer?

A: "Under our consumer protection laws, we have broad authority to make sure businesses follow our laws.? Our law against discrimination has a group of protected classes. You can't discriminate on the basis of race, religion? In 2006, the legislature added sexual orientation as a protected class. In our view, it's the clear the owner discriminated against an individual because of his sexual orientation: He wanted flowers for his same-sex wedding. You just can't do that. We are confident this case will end up in the state's Supreme Court and that we'll prevail.

"Often with a small business, when we think they're violating our consumer protection laws, we'll send them a letter. We did that in this case. All (the owner) had to do was agree not to refuse such service in the future. She didn't have to admit she did anything wrong. She decided to contest it. That's her right? I do feel our argument is very strong."

?

Q: You've been working with Google on privacy concerns. What are your thoughts about privacy in the digital age?

"I joined 22 other attorney generals in writing a letter to Google. Google changed its privacy controls, but didn't notify folks, giving them the chance to opt out or adjust their privacy settings?. (That change) shouldn't happen automatically. (Residents) should have the chance to weigh in and have the settings they want to protect their data as they move through the internet. Technology is moving at a rapid rate. In our office, we have to work hard to keep up with that, and protect customers.

"It's our job and responsibility to hold powerful interests accountable who don't play by the rules. The average Washingtonian can't afford a high-priced lawyer. We're the advocate for the people."

?

Q: What are the latest scams that residents should watch out for?

A: "Many scams? often have similar aspects. During the summer months, when the weather is good, you see folks come to your door, offering services? (and) contractors coming by, offering a great deal. Folks should always go our webpage to get information about the person at their door. Any deal that seems too good to be true, usually is."

?

Q: What else are you proud of?

A: "We've got 266 people civilly committed at McNeil Island. These individuals are the worst of the worst? sexually violent predators. Every year, they come up with the possibility of being released. So we work to keep folks civilly committed. This year, we had 17 cases for recommitment. We have been successful in 16 of those.

"There are sensitive constitutional issues at play. We take seriously the responsibility to protect the public. We're taking a look at what we can do, so that the legislature that gives us the proper tools to ensure the worst of the worst stay civilly committed."

Q: What do the latest round of state budget cuts mean for your office?

A: "Everybody's got to do more with less. But to be candid, those cuts have real impacts?. I don't intend to scale back our customer protection efforts. If anything, we should be enhancing those. In a conversation with state legislators, I said, 'I'm about to hand you a (settlement) check for $5.5 million. Just leave me $2 million.' They said no. That's frustrating. (The Attorney General's) Consumer Protection (Division) brings in millions to the state for education campaigns, for folks to avoid being scammed. Tens of millions of dollars went to organizations that help keep people in their homes. One case generated more money for the state general fund than the state gave to the entire Consumer Protection Division."

"Salaries were frozen for our attorneys for a number of years. A first-year attorney makes $50,000. A second-year, third-, fourth-, fifth-, sixth-year attorney makes $50,000 a year. You have a challenge recruiting and retaining the top talent with that system?. Our attorneys handle huge tort cases, where the state is being sued for millions. You have to have good attorneys. We're losing attorneys all the time?. Thankfully, the freeze was eliminated this year?. Addressing it is tough when our budget is being cut, but I felt something has to be done, because it'll ultimately cost the state more, as well as being unfair to those who are working extremely hard."

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/kirnews/~3/ZxkNU6uD6IU/215254061.html

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Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari says Baghdad has not found any military eq...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/PRESSTV/posts/568119523229839

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Slapshot Game Review ? Father Geek

GD Star Rating
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slapshot_top

The Basics:

  • For ages 5 and up (Publisher suggests 8+)
  • For 2 to 6 players
  • Approximately 45 minutes to complete

Geek Skills:

  • Counting & Math
  • Logical & Critical Decision Making
  • Hand/Resource Management

Learning Curve:

  • Child ? Easy
  • Adult ? Easy

Theme & Narrative:

  • Lead your ice hockey team to the playoffs and to greatness!

Endorsements:

  • Gamer Geek rejected!
  • Parent Geek approved!
  • Child Geek approved!

Overview

The air is cool and the ice is smooth. All around you scream the fans and before you sits your team. They look up to you, their Team Manager, and wait for your words of wisdom before taking the ice. You have worked hard to create the best team possible, trading players and drafting new ones. A quick look at the opposite team tells you they think they have the advantage, but a game is not won until it?s played. And, baby, you can play a mean game of ice hockey.

Slapshot, designed by?Tom Dalgliesh,?Ron Gibson,?John Gordon,?Lance Gutteridge and published by?Columbia Games, is comprised of 27 Forwards, 18 Defensemen, and 9 Goalies for a total of 54 cards. Included with the game is 1 Scoreboard and 6 square wooden game tokens (in six different colors, one for each player). The artwork on the cards looks to be HIGHLY influenced by?Heinz Edelmann, the talented graphic designer and illustrator who brought us the 1968 animated Beatles film ?Yellow Submarine?. All the game components are durable and are of excellent quality.

Pregame Locker Room Set Up

To set up the game, first place the Scoreboard in the middle of the game playing area and have each player select one of the tokens. Place the tokens on the space titled ?Preseason? on the Scoreboard.

Second, separate the cards by type (represented by different colors). When completed, there should be three different piles of cards: 1 Forward pile (blue), 1 Defensemen pile (green), and 1 Goalie pile (orange). Shuffle each pile separately.

From left to right:

From left to right: Goalie, Defensemen, and Forward

Third, deal to each player 3 Forwards, 2 Defensemen, and 1 Goalie card from their respective decks, face-down. Players should pick up their cards, but keep them hidden from their opponents? at all times. This represents the player?s starting hockey team.

Fourth, place each deck face-down underneath its labeled section found on the Scoreboard.

slapshot_setup

You are now ready to play some hockey! Let the season begin!

Slapping Pucks

Slapshot is played in turns with no set number of turns or rounds in a single game. A player?s turn is comprised of 1 of 3 possible actions. A player must select which action they want to take on each of their turns. A typical player?s turn is summarized here and described based on the action selected. Once a player completes their selected action, the next player in turn order sequence (going clockwise) takes their turn.

Draft

This action allows the player to discard one card from their hand, placing it at the bottom of the deck that matches the card-type selected. The player then draws the top card of the same deck they just placed their card under.?For example, if the player selected a Forward, they would place the Forward card at the BOTTOM of the Forward deck and then draw the top card from the Forward deck. When completed, the player should have 1 new card with a total of 6 cards in their hand (3 Forwards, 2 Defensemen, and 1 Goalie).

Trade

This action allows the player to force an opponent to trade a card with them. The player?s opponent places their cards in a row, face-down. The player now selects, at random, one of their opponent?s face-down cards and adds it to their hand. The player must then take a card of the same card-type, but NOT the card they just drew, and give it to their opponent, face-down. When completed, both players should have 1 new card with a total of 6 cards in their hand (3 Forwards, 2 Defensemen, and 1 Goalie).

Game

This action allows the player to force an opponent to get on the ice and play a game of hockey! Both players organize their cards in their hand so as to determine the order in which the cards will be played. Cards will be placed face-down on the table in a deck during a ?Game? action instead of held in the hand. This means that if a player wants a card to go first, it should be placed on the top of their deck so it?s the first card to be drawn.

Note that when a player initiates a ?Game? action, they are considered the Visiting team. Their opponent is the Home team. Home teams automatically get a 1 goal advantage. Essentially, the score starts out as 0 to 1, with the player?s opponent currently winning the game as the Home team.

When both players are done and their cards are placed face-down in front of them in a deck, they will both draw their top card simultaneously and determine who wins. In almost all cases, the card with the highest number value (ranging from 0 to 10) scores a ?goal?. Then both cards are set aside and each player draws the next top card from their deck to reveal the number. This continues until all 6 cards have been played. There are a few exceptions and some extra rules that should be noted.

  • If both cards share the same number value, no goal is scored.
  • A Goalie will almost always block an attempt to score a goal, regardless of the other card?s number value. There are two exceptions to this rule. First, if two Goalies faceoff, the Goalie with the highest number value will score a goal. Second, the ?Tiny Tim? Defensemen card will always score against a Goalie.
  • If a card is a ?Bruiser? (indicated with a ?plus? sign next to the card?s number value), they will injure their opponent?s card. A goal is scored or blocked as normal. The injured card is then set aside for the duration of the ?Game? turn.

slapshot_bruiser

After the 6th card has been played, one of the participants in the ?Game? action might have more goals than the other. This player has won the ?Game? action and advances their token on the Scoreboard one space towards the ?Playoffs?. If there were any injured Forwards, Defensemen, or Goalies, they are now replaced using the ?Draft? action. This is a free action and is played out of turn starting with the Home team. Replacing injured cards must be done by both participants of the ?Game? action before the player?s turn is over. All the players then pick up their cards.?When completed, both players should each have a total of 6 cards in their hand (3 Forwards, 2 Defensemen, and 1 Goalie).

In the event that a ?Game? action results in a tie, both participants play another ?Game? action and the first player to score a ?goal? will advance their token forward on the Scoreboard.

Playoffs

The game continues until a player moves their token into the ?Playoff? space on the Scoreboard. This triggers the endgame. The player who just triggered the endgame and their opponent who is in second place, point-wise, will now play a series of ?Game? actions (7 in total). The player who triggered the playoffs has home ice advantage for games 1, 2, 5, and 7. Their opponent has home ice advantage for games 3, 4, and 6. If there is a tie for second place, a best of 3 games is completed (semifinals, if you will). No ?Trade? or ?Draft? actions are available during the playoffs, but players must always replaced injured players after a game before starting a new ?Game? action.

The player who wins the majority of ?Game? actions during the playoffs wins!

Game Variants

There are two game variants that are explained in the game?s rules. We have summarized them here.

  • League Schedule: This game variant forces all the players to participate in at least 1 ?Game? action with each of their opponents before they can challenge another opponent to a second game. The Scoreboard is not used to keep track of individual players? wins. Instead, a scorekeeper is designated. When each player has participated in 4 ?Game? actions with each of their opponents, the top 2 players then participate in the playoffs as normal.
  • Draft and Trade Limits: Players are limited to 4 ?Draft? and 4 ?Trade? actions per game. Injured players are still replaced as normal after a ?Game? action.

House Rule

We created a House Rule to correct what we saw as a fault in the game. Feel free to use it, improve it, or completely ignore it.

  • Shorter Season: Play until a single player wins 5 ?Game? actions, which will then trigger the playoffs. The playoffs are the best of 3 games instead of 7.

To learn more about?Slapshot, visit the game?s web page.

Prediction

Essentially,?Slapshot?is?War?with card drafting and deck management game mechanisms thrown in. This works, as the game?s theme and narrative asks the players to take on the roles of Team Managers. Trading and drafting is essential as a Team Manger in order to create the best possible team to play on the ice. Just based on the rules, game play is very straightforward and intuitive. The numbers used are small and there is no text other than the names of the wacky characters on the cards. This should allow young Child Geeks to have an opportunity to play the game without issue.

I believe?Slapshot?will do well with the Child Geeks and the Parent Geeks but will fail miserably with the Gamer Geeks. While the card drafting and the deck management aspects of the game would suggest that?Slapshot?has depth and strategy, it?s very thin on both accounts. The actual use of the cards, which is exactly like?War,?requires the players to just flip cards in hopes that theirs has a larger number value than their opponent?s. No additional thought is necessary or even possible. There is an opportunity here to collect nothing more than ?Bruisers?, but since the ?Trade? and ?Draft? actions are blind, a player will find they are spending more time hunting for a card that might or might not be available in the deck versus interacting with the other players. There is also the overall duration of the game to consider. Individual ?Game? actions are fairly quick (you are only ever playing 6 cards), but the number of times you have to use that action will get exceedingly repetitive. The 7-game playoff at the end of the game also sounds like it?s going to overstay its welcome with the Gamer Geeks.

Teaching?Slapshot?is a very simple exercise. Just tell your players what they need to do to win and you?ll be set. The number of actions available to each player is limited and straightforward, too, making the learning curve very easy, indeed. For the ?Trade? and the ?Draft? actions, the goal is to always get a better card, and the ?Game? action goal is to win. And that?s really all there is to it.?There shouldn?t be any confused players at your gaming table.

After teaching the game to my 5 and 8-year-old, they had no questions or concerns with what they had heard. And so, as I shuffled the cards, I asked them both their thoughts on the game so far.

?This is War on ice, which sounds like a movie.??~ Liam (age 8)

?I really like the characters on the cards! Can I see them all when we are done playing???~ Nyhus (age 5)

The illustrations on the cards are indeed eye-catching. Let?s see if the game is as fun to play as it is to look at or this simple card game falls through the ice.

Final Word

The Child Geeks had a great time with?Slapshot, but the overall game length went a bit long for them. That?s why we created the House Rule we noted above. For the older Child Geeks, the normal duration of the game wasn?t any problem. They stayed focused and participated throughout. The younger and less experienced Child Geeks started to drift away from the table as the game continued. According to one Child Geek, ?The game is OK, but it gets a bit boring with all the other players in the game taking long turns.? And by ?long turns?, the Child Geek was referring to the ?Game? action. The ?Draft? and the ?Trade? actions are very quick, but the Child Geeks went a bit slower with the ?Game? action. When we reduced the overall game length, the younger Child Geeks had no problem being as active and engaged as their older peers. All the Child Geeks voted to approve the game with some of them liking it a bit better than others, but all of them happy with the overall game playing experience.

My little geeks ham it up for the camera...

My little geeks ham it up for the camera?

The Parent Geeks were less enamoured with Slapshot, but found it to be an enjoyable experience as a family game. When played with just their peers,?Slapshot didn?t do as well. According to one Parent Geek, ? This game is just a bit too easy and repetitive for me, even though I prefer casual games over harder games.??Slapshot is very casual and very easy to play. This resulted in a reduction to the overall level of ?fun? the game provided for the Parent Geeks. Introduce Child Geeks, however, and the view of?Slapshot quickly changed. ?This is a lot of fun to play with my kids and a great way to get them interested in playing more complicated games,? said one Parent Geek and there were head nods of approval around the table. In the end, the Parent Geeks voted to approve?Slapshot, finding it to be an easy game to learn, fun to play with the family, and a great excuse to talk about hockey. But as a casual game to be played with just adults, they suggested that?Slapshot missed its goal.

Gads were our Gamer Geeks bored. And when they are bored, they get belligerent. Mostly towards me because I am ?forcing them? to play games they would have otherwise not wanted to play. The overall game play was found to be way too simple and way too repetitive for the majority of the Gamer Geeks. Even those elitists who have no problem playing casual games were yawning and became more and more interested in what their smartphones were telling them versus the game play at the table. In fact, the Gamer Geeks kept asking me if they were playing the game right after reading several comments on Board Game Geek that suggested that?Slapshot was a game they would enjoy. According to one Gamer Geek, ?This is not a game I will ever play again. It is too long, too repetitive, and too mindless.? Another Gamer Geek stated, ?This is?War with card drafting and nothing more.? Only 10 minutes into the game, and all the Gamer Geeks just started to take the ?Game? action towards each other in an attempt to get the game done. You should have seen their faces when I told them that the players in first and second place had to go through 7 games. Hilarity. All the Gamer Geeks voted to reject Slapshot?and asked that it never again be brought to their gaming table.

Personally, I wasn?t all that impressed with Slapshot. It?s ?War on ice? (to quote my little geek),?with the only interesting aspects of the game play being the trading and drafting actions that allowed me to tailor my deck. But overall, the game felt bogged down by its simple repetitive actions and length of play. Slapshot was a fun time?with my little geeks, but those are the only players I enjoy playing the game with. Adults don?t seem enthralled with the game?s approach to ?fun? and the Gamer Geeks would prefer to watch paint dry. When smack talking at the table was present, the game was a lot more entertaining, but the game?s overall length and repetitive nature started to push the players away instead of keeping them engaged. A pity, as the game does makes use of some interesting and easy game mechanisms.

I?d be hard pressed to suggest this game to another adult player. There are more interesting card games available today that are just as easy to learn and I find more entertaining.?Slapshot is not a bad game by any means, but it is very simple. And its simplicity leads me to believe, based on our observations, that this game?would be a good one?for families and Child Geeks, but would have a difficult time scoring points with more mature and experienced game players.

This game was given to Father Geek as a review copy. Father Geek was not paid, bribed, wined, dined, or threatened in vain hopes of influencing this review. Such is the statuesque and legendary integrity of Father Geek.

Source: http://fathergeek.com/slapshot/

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শনিবার, ১৩ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Planned audit file release a time bomb for China cleantech sector

China?s cleantech sector could be in for something of a shock as the country?s securities watchdog said it is ready to turn over one particular Chinese company's audit documents to US regulators.

This may the beginning of the end of story that has seen a string of US-listed Chinese cleantech companies accused of accounting frauds, with some also under scrutiny for listing irregularities. To date, however, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been unable to gain access files in China.

Many of the companies concerned are big names in China's cleantech sector and their management will be worrying that their numbers are being turned over to the Americans. While there are dozens of cases pending against Chinese companies, this move will see only one company's files released and it remains unnamed.

There has been fierce resistance in China to turning over documents because of concerns over state-secrets and sovereignty concerns. Many of China?s cleantech companies have their roots in the state-owned sector or have deep lines of credit with local governments and state-owned banks.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) is now ready to transfer audit papers to the SEC and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, a CSRC spokesman told Reuters.

For the commercial sector in general the move will be seen as good news, signaling better co-operation between the two countries and restoring some business confidence and support to the capital markets which saw US investors losing billions of dollars due to frauds in 2010 and 2011.

What action might arise from the release of these files remains to be seen but many China cleantech companies and their directors must be worried that more material might follow.

Allegations of fraud have made against quite a few Chinese cleantech companies as their business performance has borne little resemblance to figures supplied in listing documentation. Questions arose over the back-door listing practices that allowed them easy access to the US equity markets.

Chinese companies had been getting an existing US-listed shell company to "acquire" their non-listed business, at which point the target firm's shareholders take control of the combined entity. And this enabled them to go public without any real scrutiny; for example there was no need to provide a year's operating accounts and some of those that were submitted bore no resemblance to reality.

Cleantech companies were particularly attracted to this sort of entry to the US markets. Both of the US equities markets owned by NYSE Euronex - the New York Stock Exchange and the small-cap NYSE Amex Equities market ? have subsequently submitted new standards to the SEC, tightening reverse-merger rules as the scandal developed.

By the middle of 2011, a long list of Chinese companies were being questioned over their auditing practices, with the resignation list of auditors and directors mounting weekly. LDK Solar, Trina Solar, A-Power Energy Generation Systems, Suntech Power and JA Solar Holdings all had accounting problems and some had their US stock exchange listings suspended.

Less well-known green companies were found up to their eyes in dubious practices. Duoyuan Global Water, HQ Sustainable Marine were suspended by the SEC. Other companies that were relegated to the OTC markets from the exchanges included: Rino International Corp; China Integrated Energy; China Agritech; and China Ritar Power.?

Source: http://www.cleanbiz.asia/news/planned-audit-file-release-time-bomb-china-cleantech-sector

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College or pros: Choice not clear cut for baseball draftees

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Source: http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20130713/SPORTS05/307130030/1002/rss02

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Video: Joe Torre Beyond the Pinstripes

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52463409/

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শুক্রবার, ১২ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Biostar H61MLC Ver. 6.5 Intel RST Driver 11.5.0.1207 for Windows 8

Specifications:

Chipset:
- Intel H61

CPU SUPPORT:
- Intel Core i7 LGA 1155 Processor
- Intel Core i5 LGA 1155 Processor
- Intel Core i3 LGA 1155 Processor
- Intel Pentium LGA 1155 Processor
- Maximum CPU TDP (Thermal Design Power) : 95Watt

MEMORY:
- Support Dual Channel DDR3 1066/1333/1600 MHz
- 2 x DDR3 DIMM Memory Slot
- Max. Supports up to 16GB Memory

EXPANSION SLOT:
- 1 x PCI-E x16 3.0 Slot (supported by Core i5 -3xxx / Core i7 3xxx CPU)
- 2 x PCI-E x1 2.0 Slot

STORAGE:
- 4 x SATA2 Connector

USB:
- 4 x USB 2.0 Port
- 2 x USB 2.0 Header

LAN:
- Realtek RTL8105E - 10/100 Controller

INTEGRATED VIDEO:
- By CPU model

CODEC:
- Realtek ALC662 6-Channel HD Audio

REAR I/O:
- 1 x PS/2 Mouse
- 1 x PS/2 Keyboard
- 4 x USB 2.0 Port
- 1 x VGA Port
- 1 x RJ-45 Port
- 3 x Audio Connector

INTERNAL I/O:
- 1 x Printer Header
- 2 x USB 2.0 Header
- 4 x SATA2 3Gb/s Connector
- 1 x Front Audio Header
- 1 x Front Panel Header
- 1 x CPU FAN Header
- 1 x System FAN Header
- 1 x Serial Header

FEATURES:
- Windows 8 Ready
- Supports BIO-Remote 2
- Supports Solid capacitor
- Supports Charger Booster
- Supports BIOS Online Update

It is highly recommended to always use the most recent driver version available.

Do not forget to check with our site as often as possible in order to stay updated on the latest drivers, software and games.

Try to set a system restore point before installing a device driver. This will help if you installed a wrong driver. Problems can arise when your hardware device is too old or not supported any longer.

Source: http://drivers.softpedia.com/get/MOTHERBOARD/Intel/Biostar-H61MLC-Ver-65-Intel-RST-Driver-11501207-for-Windows-8.shtml

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Internet Pioneer Vint Cerf on Online Privacy, Google Glass, More

From online banking to exploring the farthest reaches of the universe, it?s difficult to imagine how we ever got by without the Internet.

We can work, study, order groceries, watch movies, book flights? all from a cheap laptop and leather sofa. While some would argue that?s actually not healthy, the fact that it?s even possible is a marvel in itself.

To say it has fundamentally changed how we live our lives would be a truism for sure, but sometimes it?s worth just sitting back and considering: how did we get here?

Key figures

a3 730x363 Internet pioneer Vint Cerf talks online privacy, Google Glass and the future of libraries

There are many notable figures in the history of Internet. Tim Berners-Lee is one such luminary, the British computer scientist who created the World Wide Web ? a way of accessing information on the Internet ? while working at CERN.

As you?ll no doubt know, the Web and the Internet ? while reliant on each other ? are different things. The Internet is a network infrastructure that provides the framework for computers to connect globally. And long before Berners-Lee arrived on the scene, another computer scientist, going by the name of Vint Cerf, was working on the building blocks of the modern-day Internet as we know it now.

Cerf was involved in the project that saw the first ever message sent from one computer to another on the ARPANET, a predecessor to the Internet, way back in 1969. And after receiving his doctorate from UCLA, Cerf became an assistant professor at Stanford University where he started research on packet network interconnection protocols and co-designed the Department of Defense (DoF) TCP/IP protocol suite.

Today, Cerf is VP and Chief Internet Evangelist for a rather large online company you may have heard of before. Google.

When Cerf arrived at The?Guardian?s Activate?conference in London this week to talk all-things-Internet, TNW was eager to hear what he had to say. He?s one of the founding-fathers of that thing you?re reading this on, after all. And we don?t mean your iPad.

What better topic to start on than with PRISM, the controversial data-collection program set-up in the wake of the Protect America Act? Journalism professor Jeff Jarvis was on interview duties.

IMG 1597 730x339 Internet pioneer Vint Cerf talks online privacy, Google Glass and the future of libraries

Maintaining privacy online

?There are lots of dangers, the situation that we?re reading about with PRISM, among other things, they raise a lot of privacy questions, but there are many other dangers on the Internet that we need to protect against,? says Cerf.

?The ?net started out as a place built by almost-homogenous geeks, but once it gets into public hands, you essentially touch the entire population. So we?re faced with the general population problem.?

Choosing to side-step specific issues around PRISM, Cerf opted for a more general online privacy and security route, but it made for an interesting dialogue anyway.

Cerf on two-factor authentication

?There are technological things that can be done, should be done and are being done to improve the network?s resilience against various forms of attack,? he said. ?Cryptography is often mentioned as a solution, but it?s not the solution to everything. There?s no one place where you can fully barrier some of the problems.?

Indeed, Cerf looked to some of the most obvious ways of protecting yourself online, including choosing solid passwords. But he had a particular penchant for 2-factor authentication.

?Two-factor authentication is kind of annoying, but it?s actually much better than reusable passwords,? says Cerf.

?I just moved to London and I?ve already been accepted by Barclaycard. And you know that reader they send you (a personal device required to log into your Internet banking account), I was thinking ?what?s that??. Now I understand that this is two-factor authentication right there, and I?m damned impressed. And I?m also impressed that people are actually using it, because it?s slightly annoying having to carry one around with you.?

b4 730x336 Internet pioneer Vint Cerf talks online privacy, Google Glass and the future of libraries

Cerf on encryption

Certainly, with all that?s been going on of late with PRISM, there is a growing anxiety about what the future holds for the Internet with its current trajectory. The reason authorities are able to access so much information about people is two-fold ? data is increasingly being stored in the cloud. And frankly, the public are willing participants in sharing their information.

Jarvis said that he feared there would be a big push against this, with companies instilling stricter controls and people becoming far more dubious about ?the cloud? and the way their data is managed. More specifically, that ??wonderful moment when Google can read my email and give me my boarding pass? ? does that go away with encryption?

?We generally prefer to encrypt things that go in and go out ? information that?s in transit,? says Cerf.

?When it?s inside, it?s frequently not encrypted, and that means we can look at your calendar, and we realize you?re supposed to be somewhere at a certain time. We try very hard to ensure all information in there is isolated. We also care a great deal about making sure we?ve strongly authenticated the users, so that the wrong user doesn?t get to someone else?s data. And that?s why two-factor authentication is important. ?

Sure, but what about encrypting everything on the inside, once it?s arrived at the destination? That?s the real conundrum ? if it?s encrypted, it seriously hinders many online services we all enjoy today.

?I?m not sure encrypting everything inside the system would be a smart move,? continues Cerf. ?For us (Google), if it prevents us from offering the services that enable all the applications that you get for free, that would not be a good thing from a business point-of-view, and it wouldn?t be a good thing for your point-of-view either.

?I think the answer to this is a very careful architecture, that says ?once you?re inside this box, you?re safe?. And don?t go outside of this box, without making sure the information is protected.?

Cerf on the media?

IMG 1580 730x336 Internet pioneer Vint Cerf talks online privacy, Google Glass and the future of libraries

Given this was a very media-focused gathering and, well, ?newspapers? and ?digital? are becoming increasingly inseparable, it would seem somewhat remiss not to delve a little into the current news-publication climate.

?Having spent time in England since the 1970s, I?ve read a lot of the different newspapers, and I?ve been disappointed that The Times (a Murdoch-owned daily) has disintegrated,? he says. ?As far as I can tell, The Guardian may be the last bastion of good quality reporting.?

Though this was indeed a Guardian event, assurances were given that this wasn?t a paid endorsement. But given Google?s often been fingered for its role in the demise of the newspaper industry (rightly or wrongly), the debate about the state of the press is certainly a relevant discussion point for Google?s prominent evangelist.

?The question is how do you rebuild the model that supports good quality journalism, which I submit to you is absolutley essential for a democratic society,? says Cerf. ?We must have a press that is high quality, and willing to take risk.?

Indeed, Cerf also posited that the whole news-reporting model will likely have to change as we know it, so that it shifts beyond one of mere information-sharing to one of empowerment.

?What if the information we got from the news was not just information? What if it allowed us to take actions in response to what we?d learned?,? he says. ?What if you were guided to places to take action?? What we?re talking here is news becoming a service.

Cerf?s crystal ball: Internet of Things, Fiber and Google Glass

glass 730x280 Internet pioneer Vint Cerf talks online privacy, Google Glass and the future of libraries

An interesting comparison was drawn between Gutenberg?s invention of the printing press way back in the 1400s, centering around notions that it would disrupt the Catholic Church and spark revolutions.

For Cerf, as one of the key figures in developing the medium known as the Internet, Jarvis hypothesized that we?re now at the equivalent of 1472 in his Internet. So ? where does he see things going from here?

?One nightmare is that we aren?t able to keep it stable, and we?re not able to sustain the growth or protect people?s safety,? says Cerf. ?I worry about that and I lose sleep over it.?

?On the other hand, I?m an engineer, and so problems are what you want?engineers love to have problems so they can solve them.?

In specific terms, Cerf says that he sees the so-called Internet of Things as one of the most obvious and biggest developments ? ?there?s no way of stopping that,? he says.

And faster Internet speeds, enabled by the likes of the Google Fiber roll-out that?s currently restricted to the Kansas City area, will help progress things massively. ?People will see that it?s possible to build, at reasonable costs, these kinds of high-speed systems,? says Cerf.

But the real next big thing, according to Cerf, will be in relation to how computers augment human intellect. ?This is what Doug Engelbart hoped for (he invented the computer mouse, and he sadly passed away just last week aged 88), and he worked very hard to build a system that did that, in the 1960s and demonstrated it in 1968, called The Mother of all Demos.?

Perhaps the most pertinent modern example of this is Google Glass, which is certainly a push in this direction ? it becomes more of a partner than an accessory per se.

?You?ve got a computer sitting on your head, looking at what you?re looking at, hearing what you?re hearing, seeing your gestures, and having access to the Internet and all the assets that are there,? says Cerf.

?So this thing is a facilitator, a partner, an enabler in your ecosystem,? he continues. ?At some point it should be perfectly reasonable to be wearing Google Glass and be pointing at something, and say ?What?s that???, or ?Can you translate this menu, I don?t speak Bulgarian??. The ability to have? a conversation with a computer, about what you?re trying to do as opposed to typing commands, is utterly beguiling. We?re not there yet, but we?re getting closer.?

Cerf on the future of libraries

d3 730x291 Internet pioneer Vint Cerf talks online privacy, Google Glass and the future of libraries

As with the newspaper industry, Google has had an immeasurable impact on how people access information. Indeed, most petty arguments are settled in seconds now thanks to smartphones and search engines.

When asked what he saw as the ?future? of libraries, he expressed deep concern about the way information will be stored and passed through generations. Books, if looked after, can be passed down through many generations ? but the rate at which technology is evolving leads to some concerns about so-called bit-rot.

?You have no idea how eager I am to ensure that the notion of library does not disappear ? it?s too important. But the thing is, it?s going to have to curate an extremely broad range of materials, and increasingly digital content,? says Cerf.

?I am really worried right now, about the possibility of saving ?bits? but losing their meaning and ending up with bit-rot,? he continues. ?This means, you have? a bag of bits that you saved for a thousand years, but you don?t know what they mean, because the software that was needed to interpret them is no longer available, or it?s no longer executable, or you just don?t have a platform that will run it. This is a serious, serious problem and we have to solve that.?

Certainly at a more recent micro-level, think of all those floppy disks or Zip disks from school or college that are pretty much redundant now. Sure, they?re? not entirely inaccessible ? but you have to go to great pains to obtain information from them. Now, amplify that scenario over tens, or hundreds of years and there is a real risk of losing a lot of information through the foggy ruins of time.

Perhaps a more near-term concern is one of the whole concept of what a library means. To you and me, it probably still means a bricks-and-mortar building filled with paper books. At a more abstract level, it?s really just a repository of information that can be accessed by anyone.

?We have to retain this notion of a place where information is accumulated and kept and curated and managed,? says Cerf.

?So for some people, who imagine ?Well, it?s all digital, and all we have to do is run the Google index?, I don?t think that?s exactly right,? he says. ?I think there?s a whole infrastructure that has to be not only created, but invented and sustained in order to make sure the knowledge that we?ve been digitizing is retained and reusable over a long period of time. Otherwise, we?ll have denied ourselves what is the most important potential I can think of ? to have all the knowledge of human-kind at our fingertips.?

Image Credits

Feature Image -?Getty Images | Image 1 ? AFP/Getty | Image 2 ? Thinkstock | Image 3 ? Ole Spata/AFP/Getty Images | Image 4 ? Thinkstock

Source: http://thenextweb.com/insider/2013/07/12/vint-cerf/

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Bishop Emeritus Bosco left ?legacy of leadership? in church


By Mary Pickels

Published: Wednesday, July 10, 2013, 3:24?p.m.
Updated 32 minutes ago

Hundreds of mourners filled Blessed Sacrament Cathedral in Greensburg for the funeral Mass of Bishop Emeritus Anthony G. Bosco.

A steady stream of mourners slowly walked past Bosco's open casket, pausing to pray or briefly touch his hands.

Bishop of the Diocese of Greensburg from 1987 to 2004, Bosco, 85, died on July 2 in his Unity home.

He celebrated his last Mass at the cathedral three days earlier.

Bishop Lawrence E. Brandt greeted those who filled the cathedral to its capacity of 900.

?At the same time I express heartfelt sympathy for all of us here who mourn him. ... We pray together in thanksgiving and gratitude for the time he was ours,? Brandt said.

Monsignor Roger A. Statnick, who served as vicar general during most of Bosco's episcopacy, gave a funeral homily punctuated with tears and laughter.

He recalled Bosco, the third bishop of Greensburg, overseeing the construction of several new church buildings and launching the diocese's first capital campaign.

?And although I can't verify the accuracy of the claim, I think he could make a case for the most bowls of pipe tobacco smoked within one lifetime,? Statnick joked.

But buildings and programs did not constitute Bosco's legacy, Statnick said.

He told the story of two disciples on the road to Emmaus, who meet up with a fellow traveler. The stranger takes over the conversation and proceeds to interpret for the disciples the meaning of the Scriptures.

?Can't you just hear Bishop Bosco in those words? He loved a good conversation seasoned with differences of opinion. He loved to teach. He would take an idea and provoke a debate, not to win any particular point but to clarify the issue ? not to hear himself expound erudite platitudes but to discover the links of mind and heart that make sense of life,? Statnick said.

?Bishop Bosco's legacy is not about what he did and said, but what God did and said through his leadership in the church,? Statnick said.

Bosco was a shepherd, directing in ways sometimes casual and personal.

Statnick recalled some of Bosco's turns of phrase: ?You got to work with the wood that you have? and ?I want to be your older brother, not your father.?

Bosco was a storyteller, he said, whose tales of family and experiences in his ministry were of ?ordinary situations and how to keep moving forward through them faithfully on the journey.?

Statnick recalled John ?Jack? Robertshaw, a former member of the Diocesan Finance Council, commending Bosco after finance council meetings.

?He said, ?Bishop, when you are gone, they are going to thank you for the decisions you are making.' And he would say, ?I wish they would thank me now,'? drawing chuckles from the pews.

His voice breaking, Statnick gave Bosco his due.

?Oh, good and faithful servant, thank you. We love you. Walk now with God in peace on the journey of eternal life,? he said.

Bosco's funeral Mass was celebrated by Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Philadelphia.

The casket, closed and draped, was carried from the cathedral for the final time.

Committal services were held in the Bishops' Plot at the Greensburg Catholic Cemetery in Hempfield.

Brandt declared Wednesday an official day of mourning in the Diocese of Greensburg, closing the city's pastoral center and parish offices.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/alltribstories/~3/kdJfcjR9Kyc/bosco-statnick-bishop

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১১ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Apple, Amazon End ?App Store? Scuffle

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Source: marketnewstweets.com --- Tuesday, July 09, 2013
Apple and Amazon.com ended a lawsuit over who can use the term 'app store' in describing their mobile software shops. ...

Source: http://marketnewstweets.com/2013/07/apple-amazon-end-app-store-scuffle/

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Chinese troops entered Ladakh, took away surveillance camera


NEW DELHI: The People's Liberation Army (PLA) continues to needle Indian forces all along the unresolved Line of Actual Control (LAC) - from Arunachal Pradesh to Ladakh - despite all the "good atmospherics" generated during the recent visits of Chinese premier Li Keqiang here and defence minister A K Antony to Beijing.

In yet another incursion in south-eastern Ladakh, a PLA patrol crossed into Indian territory in the crucial Chumar post area and took away an Indian surveillance camera after dismantling it on June 17.

The video camera was returned only on July 3 after the Indian Army-ITBP team lodged a strong protest during a flag meeting at Spanggur Gap in Chushul sector on June 19.

The Chumar post on the Ladakh-Himachal Pradesh border was the bone of contention even during the 21-day military face-off in April-May, which saw the two rival armies pitching tents and indulging in banner drills after PLA troops intruded 19 km into the Indian territory in the Depsang Bulge area of the Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) sector.

Though Chumar is some 250-km south of DBO, Indian observation posts and surveillance cameras there have for long irked the PLA since they can "look" into Chinese territory and track troop movements there.

Rajat Pandit, TNN | Jul 9, 2013, 09.32 PM IST TOI

Source: http://forum.santabanta.com/showthread.htm?324748-Chinese-troops-entered-Ladakh-took-away-surveillance-camera&goto=newpost

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বুধবার, ১০ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Football Needs A Guardian, Not A CEO

Aaron Hernandez, who appears to be a monster, can no more be held up as representative of football than can Oscar Pistorius be fairly presented as an archetype of track and field.

But still, Hernandez does become a culminating figure. The sport is simply more and more identified with violence, both in its inherent nature and in its savage personnel.

For so long, of course, we were all complicit in ignoring how dangerous was America's favorite game. All of us ? not just the coaches and players and fans, but no less the media and the team doctors, too. More recently, we've tended to excuse the virtual cavalcade of criminal actions committed by players away from the gridiron. Why, 29 NFL players have been arrested just since the Super Bowl.

Institutions ? especially popular cultural ones ? periodically need overhauls. With football right now, it isn't just a matter of tidying up. We need to somehow clean the Aegean stables of the stink of violence. This will be difficult, for violence is the very essence of the sport's appeal, and notwithstanding all the talk about concussions and thugs, football is more popular than ever. It is not like baseball found itself after the Black Sox scandal of 1919, when America seemed ready to abandon such a corrupt competition.

But there is a lesson there: Baseball, desperate, created the position of commissioner and brought in an outside magistrate, the federal judge, Kenesaw Mountain Landis.

By contrast, the current NFL commissioner, Roger Goodell, like all his predecessors, is an insider. He's been superb as a businessman ? stiff-arming the players union, ransacking the networks' exchequers ? but in response to revelations of how barbarous modern football really is, Goodell, like so many men who have been inoculated by football, has only reacted ... hesitantly, incrementally.

Now, yes, football extends well beyond the domain of the NFL ?? from the cruel college system right on down to little boys scrimmaging ?? but the NFL commissioner is, in effect, the spiritual head of the game. Where else do we turn for moral leadership? The NCAA? The presidents of the Southeastern Conference? The network pregame shows?

Our other team sports ?? baseball, basketball, ice hockey, not to mention soccer ?? all have strong foreign elements. Football is the all-American game, but, ironically, already middle-class all-American parents ???? even fathers who played themselves ?? are showing a reluctance to allow their sons to play.

Whenever Roger Goodell steps away, his legacy will be determined not by how much his franchises grew in value but whether he saved our American sport from becoming a gladiator game. Or perhaps football can only be cleansed by someone like Judge Landis, with no previous commitment to the enterprise. Whether Goodell or an outsider, football now needs a guardian, not a CEO.

Source: http://news.wbfo.org/post/football-needs-guardian-not-ceo

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Calling all golfers: So what is the state of your golf game?

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Source: http://newberggraphic.com/news/2013/July/10/Sports/calling.all.golfers.so.what.is.the.state.of.your.golf.game/news.aspx

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Video: Knapp: Any Little Rally Should Be Sold

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52442643/

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Among SKoreans, plane crash felt as point of shame

Asiana Airlines President and CEO Yoon Young-doo, left, answers reporters' questions before heading to San Francisco at the flight gate of the Incheon International Airport in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A South Korean official says both U.S. and Korean investigators have been interviewing the pilots who were in the cockpit when an Asiana Airlines plane clipped a seawall before crash landing at San Francisco International Airport Saturday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, Pool)

Asiana Airlines President and CEO Yoon Young-doo, left, answers reporters' questions before heading to San Francisco at the flight gate of the Incheon International Airport in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A South Korean official says both U.S. and Korean investigators have been interviewing the pilots who were in the cockpit when an Asiana Airlines plane clipped a seawall before crash landing at San Francisco International Airport Saturday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, Pool)

Asiana Airlines President and CEO Yoon Young-doo answers reporters' questions before heading to San Francisco at the flight gate of the Incheon International Airport in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A South Korean official says both U.S. and Korean investigators have been interviewing the pilots who were in the cockpit when an Asiana Airlines plane clipped a seawall before crash landing at San Francisco International Airport Saturday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, Pool)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, a United Airlines plane passes on the adjacent runway next to the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco, earlier in the day. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, a United Airlines plane passes on the adjacent runway next to the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco, earlier in the day. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Foto proporcionada del domingo 7 de julio de 2013 de la Junta Nacional de Seguridad en el Transporte muestra fotos del avi?n Boeing 777 de Asiana Airlines que se accident? el 6 de julio en el Aeropuerto Internacional de San Francisco. (Foto AP/NTSB)

(AP) ? When a jet from a Seoul-based airline crashed over the weekend in San Francisco, South Koreans took it personally.

The president issued a statement of regret. With a low bow, Asiana Airlines' chief apologized not just to passengers and their families but to all of South Korea. Along with sadness over one of the highest-profile crashes by a Korean air carrier in recent years, average South Koreans expressed shame and embarrassment about how it would reflect on their country.

It is a reaction that would be difficult to imagine coming from people in the U.S. or many other countries. The successes and failures of big South Korean firms are intimately linked to this small, proud, recently developed country's psyche.

"I really think that foreigners see this accident as a reflection on all of South Korea," Cheon Min-jun, an office worker in his mid-30s, said Tuesday in Seoul.

South Koreans take great interest in the global profile of local companies and of ethnic Koreans on the world stage. Many feel pride, for instance, seeing Samsung billboards in New York's Times Square. And when a company's stumbles draw international attention, there's a collective sense of national shame, even for South Koreans who have no connection to the company beyond nationality.

"In the West, the separation between governments and society and businesses is more distinct," said Robert Kelly, a political science professor at Pusan National University in South Korea. "The large organizations in Korean life are not standing independently of each other; they're working together, in unity, pursuing a grand vision of Korea Inc."

The attitude may stem from recent economic developments and the cozy link between autocratic political leaders and businesses in the 1960s and 1970s. After the devastation of the 1950-53 Korean War, Seoul provided easy money to big companies and controlled the imports of certain goods to protect those firms. These government-driven economic plans provided crucial early support for companies that have since become globally recognized brands, including Samsung, Hyundai and LG.

The dizzying economic rise from poverty ? sometimes dubbed the Miracle on the Han, after the river that runs through Seoul ? has made South Korea the fourth-largest economy in Asia.

Asiana is a large corporation known by many foreigners and "easily falls into the category of flag-carrying national champion," Kelly said.

"No corporation captures American imagination and political attention the way Korea's largest firms do," he said. "Local nationalism is channeled through successful firms."

The stories of Asiana crew members heroically working to save passengers have inspired feelings of pride. But even before investigators determine what happened, there's already a sense of shame that a South Korean company was involved in the crash, which left two people dead and dozens more injured among the 307 aboard.

"It's a bit embarrassing," said Son Eun-jung, a 25-year-old office worker in Seoul. "I'm concerned about whether I should be flying on Asiana. If I'm South Korean and thinking this way, I worry what people from other countries might be thinking about Asiana."

While not in the same league as Samsung and Hyundai, Asiana Airlines Inc. is a flagship company of Kumho Asiana Group, South Korea's 16th-largest private conglomerate. It has many international routes as the country's second-largest air carrier, after Korean Air Lines Co., giving it exposure to global consumers and businesses.

The two victims were Chinese, both teenage girls. South Korean President Park Geun-hye sent a letter to Beijing, expressing condolences to President Xi Jinping, Chinese citizens and the girls' families.

Park said the Asiana crash is "regrettable," something an American politician would be unlikely to say, Kelly said, in part because of fears of possible legal action.

The accident was the first by a South Korean jetliner that led to passengers' deaths since a 1997 Korean Air crash in Guam, according to the transport ministry. South Korean air carriers and the government made efforts to improve safety systems and their reputations after a series of airliner accidents in the 1990s and a downgrade by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration in 2001 marred the industry.

The efforts paid off. South Korea's two largest air carriers made inroads into the global markets, emerging as renowned airlines in recent years. Incheon International Airport, South Korea's main international airport near Seoul, was the second-largest airport in the world in cargo transportation volume in 2011 and has ranked tops in airport service for eight straight years by Airports Council International.

The link between the success or failure of South Korean firms and a sense of national pride or shame extends also to the actions of ethnic Koreans who become famous ? or infamous.

This was true of the 2007 Virginia Tech University shooting rampage in which South Korea-born student Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people and then himself. After the news reached South Korea, many in America were surprised by the outpouring of emotion, which included candlelight vigils in the streets and widespread expressions of shame. Even though Cho left South Korea young and grew up in the U.S., some South Koreans felt responsibility.

Separately, when the French president appointed Fleur Pellerin, who was adopted by French parents as an infant, as minister of digital economy, the South Korean media aggressively covered her life story, even though Pellerin doesn't speak Korean and had not visited South Korea before being appointed minister.

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AP writer Elizabeth Shim contributed to this report from Seoul.

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Follow Foster Klug on Twitter at ?www.twitter.com/APklug

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Follow Youkyung Lee on Twitter at ?www.twitter.com/YKLeeAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-07-09-San%20Francisco%20Airliner%20Crash-SKorea-Wounded%20Pride/id-9b539c27f315477ea852ec67b127aa86

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