Wednesday, November 30, 2011

IAB: U.S. Internet Advertising Q3 Revenue Up 22 Percent To $7.9 Billion

iab-1The Internet Advertising Bureau just released its third quarter numbers, with internet advertising revenues in the U.S. hitting $7.88 billion for the third quarter of 2011, up 22 percent from Q3 2010. This also is a 2.7 percent increase from the record-setting revenues of the second quarter of 2011. This is the eighth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/a-Jn1u2vyUw/

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Guide To Cheap Annual Travel Insurance - Networked Politics

Vacations are for fun, it means leaving behind your job and responsibilities for a while. Having travel insurance is one way of putting your mind at complete rest. It?s a lot easier to enjoy your trip if you know that you are covered from luggage lost to sickness.

The further your trip will be, the more you will need travel insurance. This is common sense, as international trips are costly, so there?s a need to protect your hard earned travel money. So wherever you go, to a local or international destination, it?s very important that you have the necessary insurance coverage.

Cheap annual travel insurance is an alternative choice for those budget- conscious travelers who are making more than one trip a year. The main feature of the annual travel insurance against regular travel insurance is that it saves you money. For a once annual payment, you become covered whenever you travel during the year. The terms and conditions vary between companies, but annual insurance for unlimited travel is also available. Cheap annual travel insurance provides substantial cost savings than any regular type of travel insurance.

Here are some tips for choosing your best cheap annual travel insurance:

1. Sign up with a reputable insurance company that has worldwide offices which can easily be contacted during emergency needs.

2. The insurance company should have a 24/7 customer assistance which is an essential for international travelers.

3. Always make your office?s 1-800 number available to you when you are abroad.

4. The cost of the insurance should not be more than 10% of your investment.

5. Read the terms and conditions of the policy to make sure you aren?t buying unnecessary or inadequate coverage.

6. Look for refundable policy, especially if you have the history of changing your mind too often.

7. A good insurance should cover at least the following:

a. Flight cancellation or delay b. Luggage loss and delay c. Sickness and accident during the trip. d. Evacuation support during an emergency situation such as natural calamities

Cheap annual travel insurance is good for you if you take vacations more than once a year. Instead of taking several insurance each time you travel, you can make use of a single travel insurance that could save you a lot of money and time. On the other hand, if you travel less often, an annual insurance policy is not for you since you will not be able to recover the cost.

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Source: http://www.networked-politics.info/?p=8390

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Netflix Login Problems - Business Insider

Summary

Netflix offers an online flat rate DVD and Blu-ray rental by mail, as well as video streaming in the US. It is headquartered in Los Gatos, California. In 2009, Netflix offered a collection of 100,000 titles on DVD and had... More ?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/netflix-login-problems-2011-11

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Speed's death casts pall

Tebow takes Broncos to yet another win

Matt Prater kicked a 37-yard field goal with 29 seconds left in overtime to lift Tim Tebow and the Denver Broncos to a 16-13 victory Sunday over the San Diego Chargers, who've lost six straight games for the first time in 10 years.

Steelers stuff Chiefs thanks to four turnovers

Ben Roethlisberger threw a short touchdown pass to Weslye Saunders and the Pittsburgh Steelers took advantage of four turnovers by Tyler Palko to beat the Kansas City Chiefs 13-9 on Sunday night.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45455742/ns/sports-soccer/

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Obama to be just at fan at this basketball game

President Barack Obama gives a thumbs-up as he leaves the athletic facility at Fort McNair in Washington Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, after playing basketball. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama gives a thumbs-up as he leaves the athletic facility at Fort McNair in Washington Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, after playing basketball. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama gives the thumbs-up as he leaves the athletic facility at Fort McNair in Washington Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, after playing basketball in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama waves as he leaves the athletic facility at Fort McNair in Washington Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011, after playing basketball. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama will be just a fan at this basketball game.

Obama, who plays in pick-up games as often as he can, is bringing his family to Towson University, just north of Baltimore, to watch Towson play Oregon State on Saturday afternoon.

The first lady's brother, Craig Robinson, is Oregon State's head coach.

Catching an Oregon State game has become a post-Thanksgiving tradition for the Obamas.

Last Thanksgiving, the Beavers came to Washington and beat Howard. The year before that, Oregon State made the trip east and defeated George Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-26-Obama/id-5a352349df5b425ebde15336a19d188f

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Tom Wicker Dead: Former NYT Columnist, Author Dies

MONTPELIER, Vt. ? Tom Wicker, the former New York Times political reporter and columnist whose career soared following his acclaimed coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, died Friday at his home in Rochester, Vt. He was 85.

Wicker died after an apparent heart attack Friday morning, his wife Pamela said.

"He'd been ill with things that come from being 85," she said. "He died in his bedroom looking out at the countryside that he loved."

Wicker grew up in poverty in Hamlet, N.C., and wanted to be a novelist, but pursued journalism when his early books didn't catch fire. He worked at weekly and daily newspapers in North Carolina before winning a spot as a political correspondent in the Times' Washington bureau in 1960.

Three years later, he was the only Times reporter to be traveling with Kennedy when the president was shot in Dallas.

Gay Talese, author of the major history of The New York Times, wrote of Wicker's coverage: "It was a remarkable achievement in reporting and writing, in collecting facts out of confusion, in reconstructing the most deranged day in his life, the despair and bitterness and disbelief, and then getting on a telephone to New York and dictating the story in a voice that only rarely cracked with emotion."

One year later, Wicker was named Washington bureau chief of the Times, succeeding newspaper legend James Reston, who had hired Wicker and called him "one of the most able political reporters of his generation."

In 1966, Wicker began his "In the Nation" column, becoming, along with colleague Anthony Lewis, a longtime liberal voice on the Op-Ed page. Two years later he was named associate editor of the Times, a post he held until 1985.

He ended his column and retired to Vermont in 1991 but continued to write. He published 20 books, ranging from novels about gritty, hard-scrabble life in the South to reflections on the presidents he knew.

Among his books was "A Time to Die," winner of the Edgar Allan Poe Award in 1976, which recounted Wicker's 1971 experience as an observer and mediator of a prison rebellion at New York's Attica prison.

Wicker, the son of a railroad man, started in journalism in 1949 at the weekly Sandhill Citizen in Aberdeen, N.C., where he was paid $37.50 a week to report on such local news stories as the discovery of "the first beaver dam in anyone's memory on a local creek."

He moved on to a local daily and then to the larger Winston-Salem Journal, where he worked for most of the 50s, with time out in 1957-58 to serve as a Nieman fellow at Harvard University. He went to work for the Nashville Tennessean in 1959 but then a year later was hired by Reston.

In mid-1961, when Times veteran Bill Lawrence abruptly quit his post as White House correspondent in a dispute with management, Wicker got the assignment. He said it was a dream assignment ? "sooner or later most of the government's newsworthy business passes through the White House" ? and especially covering the excitement of the Kennedy era.

On Nov. 22, 1963, Wicker was in the first press bus following the Kennedy motorcade when the president was assassinated. He would later write in a memoir that the day was a turning point for the country: "The shots ringing out in Dealey Plaza marked the beginning of the end of innocence."

At that moment, however, all he knew was that he was covering one of the biggest stories in history. "At first no one knew what happened, or how, or where, much less why," he later wrote. "Gradually, bits and pieces began to fall together."

Wicker dictated his story from phones grabbed here and there, with most of his writing done at a desk in the upper level of the Dallas airport. "I would write two pages, run down the stairs, across the waiting room, grab a phone and dictate," Wicker later wrote. "Dictating each take, I would throw in items I hadn't written, sometimes whole paragraphs."

Although Wicker didn't even have a reporter's notebook that day and scribbled all of his notes on the backs of printed itineraries of the presidential visit, his story captured the detail and color of the tragic events.

Describing the president's widow as she left the hospital in Dallas, Wicker wrote: "Her face was sorrowful. She looked steadily at the floor. She still wore the raspberry-colored suit in which she greeted welcoming crowds in Fort Worth and Dallas. But she had taken off the matching pillbox hat she had worn earlier in the day, and her dark hair was windblown and tangled. Her hand rested lightly on her husband's coffin as it was taken to a waiting hearse."

In 1966, Wicker was named a national columnist, replacing retiring Times' icon Arthur Krock, who had covered 10 presidents. Wicker's first column reported on a political rally in Montana. He would later say that it was a huge step to move from detached observer to opinion holder ? and especially in the times he was writing.

"My own transition from reporter to columnist coincided roughly with the immense American political re-evaluation that sprang in the sixties from the Vietnam War and the movement against it, from the ghetto riots in the major cities, and from the brief flowering of the counterculture," Wicker wrote in his 1978 book, "On Press."

Wicker was not lacking in opinions, though, and over the years took strong and sometimes unpredictable stands, emphasizing such issues as the nation's racial divide.

On race, he said in a 1991 interview in the Times: "I think the attitudes between the races, the fear and the animosity that exist today, are greater than, let us say, at the time of the Brown case, the famous school desegregation decision in 1954."

Although Wicker was attacked by President Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew for his negative coverage during the Nixon administration, he argued in a 1991 book, "One of Us: Richard Nixon and the American Dream," that Nixon accomplished much in his presidency and deserves a high ranking in history.

In his final column, published Dec. 29, 1991, Wicker commented on the fall of the Soviet Union and urged President George H.W. Bush to "exercise in a new world a more visionary leadership" on non-military issues like the environment.

"As the U.S. did not hesitate to spend its resources to prevail in the cold war, it needs now to go forward as boldly to lead a longer, more desperate struggle to save the planet, and rescue the human race from itself," he wrote.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/25/tom-wicker-dead-_n_1113548.html

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Pakistan: 25 troops dead in NATO helicopter attack (AP)

PESHAWAR, Pakistan ? Pakistan on Saturday accused NATO helicopters of firing on an army checkpoint in the northwest and killing 25 soldiers, then closed a key border crossing used by the coalition to supply its troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

The alleged Friday night attack was a major blow to already strained relations between Pakistan and U.S.-led forces fighting in Afghanistan. The incident came a little over a year after U.S. helicopters accidentally killed two Pakistani soldiers near the Afghan border, whom the pilots mistook for insurgents. Pakistan responded by closing the Torkham border crossing to NATO supplies ? as it did Saturday ? for 10 days until the U.S. apologized.

In a statement sent to reporters, the Pakistan military blamed NATO for Friday's attack in the Mohmand tribal area, saying the helicopters "carried out unprovoked and indiscriminate firing." It said casualties have been reported but details were still coming.

Pakistan state TV said the helicopters killed 25 Pakistani soldiers. Two government officials in Mohmand confirmed the death toll and said 14 other soldiers were wounded.

The helicopters attacked the checkpoint twice, and two officers were among the dead, said a government official in Mohmand and a security official in Peshawar, the main city in Pakistan's northwest.

The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

NATO officials in Kabul said Saturday morning that they were aware of the incident, and would release more information after they were able to gather more facts about what happened.

The governor of Pakistan's northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province criticized the incident, calling it "an attack on Pakistani sovereignty."

A Pakistani customs official told The Associated Press that he received verbal orders Saturday to stop all NATO supplies from crossing the border through Torkham in either direction. A transporter who runs a terminal at the border where NATO trucks park before they cross confirmed the closure. They spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Torkham runs through the famed Khyber Pass and is the main crossing to Afghanistan from Pakistan, the country through which NATO ships about 30 percent of the non-lethal supplies used by its Afghan-based forces.

The checkpoint that was attacked had been recently set up in Mohmand's Salala village by the army to stop Pakistani Taliban militants holed up in Afghanistan from crossing the border and staging attacks, said two local government administrators, Maqsood Hasan and Hamid Khan.

The military has blamed Pakistani Taliban militants and their allies for killing dozens of security forces in such cross-border attacks since the summer. Pakistan has criticized Afghan and foreign forces for not doing enough to stop the attacks, which it says have originated from the eastern Afghan provinces of Kunar and Nuristan. The U.S. has largely pulled out of these provinces, leaving the militants in effective control of many areas along the border.

The Afghan-Pakistan border is a constant flashpoint, with both nations and the U.S. exchanging accusations of violations and of negligence in preventing cross-border attacks. The border is disputed in many areas and not clearly marked, adding to the difficulty.

The U.S. and Afghan governments have long accused Pakistan of not doing enough to prevent its territory from being used by Afghan Taliban militants and their allies to stage attacks against forces in Afghanistan.

The Afghan government blamed Pakistan for firing hundreds of rockets into eastern Afghanistan earlier this year that killed dozens of people. The Pakistan army has denied it intentionally fired rockets into Afghanistan, but acknowledged that several rounds fired at militants conducting cross-border attacks may have landed over the border.

The Afghan and Pakistani Taliban are allies but have largely focused their attacks on opposite sides of the border. The Afghan Taliban aims to topple the U.S.-allied government in Kabul, and the Pakistani Taliban has tried to do the same in Islamabad.

Frustration about cross-border attacks in both directions has contributed to deteriorating ties between the U.S. and Pakistan. The relationship took an especially hard hit from the covert U.S. commando raid that killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town on May 2. The Pakistanis were outraged that they were not told about the operation beforehand, and now are angered even more than before by U.S. violations of the country's sovereignty.

The U.S. helicopter attack that killed two Pakistani soldiers on Sept. 30 of last year took place south of Mohmand in the Kurram tribal area. A joint U.S.-Pakistan investigation found that Pakistani soldiers fired at the two U.S. helicopters prior to the attack, a move the investigation team said was likely meant to notify the aircraft of their presence after they passed into Pakistani airspace several times.

Pakistan moved swiftly after the attack to close Torkham to NATO. Suspected militants took advantage of the impasse to launch attacks against stranded or rerouted trucks carrying NATO supplies.

Senior U.S. diplomatic and military officials eventually apologized for the attack, saying it could have been prevented with greater coordination between the U.S. and Pakistan. Pakistan responded by reopening the border crossing.

____

Abbot reported from Islamabad. Associated Press writer Anwarullah Khan contributed to this report from Khar, Pakistan.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

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Portia De Rossi & Ellen DeGeneres Buying Brad Pitt?s Malibu House

Portia De Rossi & Ellen DeGeneres Buying Brad Pitt’s Malibu House

Talk show host Ellen DeGeneres and her wife Portia de Rossi are reportedly purchasing Brad Pitt’s Malibu home. The couple put their $49 million Beverly [...]

Portia De Rossi & Ellen DeGeneres Buying Brad Pitt’s Malibu House Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2011/11/25/portia-de-rossi-ellen-degeneres-buying-brad-pitts-malibu-house/

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PURE Contour iPhone/iPod Dock and Internet Radio Review

If you store your music on an iPhone or iPod and also enjoy internet radio, the PURE Contour is a one of the nicer speaker systems that I’ve had the opportunity to review. It offers a dock for playing the music on an iPhone/iPod while also charging its batteries, Internet streaming radio, FM radio and [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/11/25/pure-contour-iphoneipod-dock-and-internet-radio-review/

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Mexico battered by worst drought in 70 years

Mexico is being battered its worst drought in seven decades, which has devastated farm life and is expected to continue into next year.

The lack of rainfall has affected almost 70 percent of the country and northern states like Coahuila, San Luis Potosi, Sonora, Tamaulipas and Zacatecas have suffered the most acute water shortage.

Due to the drought and a cold snap at the start of the year, the government has cut its forecast for corn production two times in 2011.

Crops that cover tens of thousands of acres have been lost this year and roughly 450,000 cattle have died in arid pastures. Crucial dams, typically full at this time of year, are at 30 to 40 percent of capacity.

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'Very serious'
"This is very serious," Ignacio Rivera, an official at the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, told Reuters. "Statistics on precipitation in the country show us that this year has been the driest in the last 70 years."

Mexico is one of the world's five top corn producers.

Rivera said some 600,000 claims have been lodged for land insured by the government against natural disaster.

Drought kills thousands of Christmas trees

The Mexican government has so far set aside some 1.6 billion pesos ($113 million) to cover the losses.

Forecasts do not signal any near-term relief, but rather more losses ahead as the winter season brings damaging frost.

"It's a troubling situation, and is more worrisome because the rainy season is over ... the hope is that by June it starts to rain," said Felipe Arreguin, deputy director of the National Water Commission.

In the northern state of Durango, where a third of the population lives in the countryside, authorities expect significant losses in grain and seed production as well as bean and corn, which are a staple in the Mexican diet.

Story: Time running out for deal at climate talks

"It's a tragedy because there is virtually no harvest. It's a critical situation that we don't even have beans for home consumption," the state governor Jorge Herrera told Reuters.

Official figures show an expected 28 percent loss in production of beans this year.

If the drought does not lift soon, analysts say authorities will be forced to raise its food imports to cover lower domestic production.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45437328/ns/world_news-americas/

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NASA rover launched to seek out life clues on Mars (Reuters)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) ? An unmanned Atlas 5 rocket blasted off from Florida on Saturday, launching a $2.5 billion nuclear-powered NASA rover toward Mars to look for clues on what could sustain life on the Red Planet.

The 20-story-tall booster built by United Launch Alliance lifted off from its seaside launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 10:02 a.m. EST (3:02 p.m. GMT).

It soared through partly cloudy skies into space, carrying NASA's Mars Science Laboratory on a 354-million mile (556 million km), nearly nine-month journey to the planet.

"I think this mission is an important next step in NASA's overall goal to address the issue of life in the universe," lead scientist John Grotzinger, with the California Institute of Technology, told reporters shortly after the launch.

The car-sized rover, nicknamed Curiosity, is expected to touch down on August 6, 2012, to begin two years of detailed analysis of a 96-mile (154-km) wide impact basin near the Martian equator called Gale Crater.

The goal is to determine if Mars has or ever had environments to support life. It is the first astrobiology mission to Mars since the 1970s-era Viking probes.

Scientists chose the landing site because it has a three-mile-high (4.8-km high) mountain of what appears from orbital imagery and mineral analysis to be layers of rock piled up like the Grand Canyon, each layer testifying to a different period in Mars' history.

The rover has 17 cameras and 10 science instruments, including chemistry labs, to identify elements in soil and rock samples to be dug up by the probe's drill-tipped robotic arm.

'LONG SHOT'

The base of the crater's mountain has clays, evidence of a prolonged wet environment, and what appears to be minerals such as sulfates that likely were deposited as water evaporated.

Water is considered to be a key element for life, but not the only one.

Previous Mars probes, including the rovers Spirit and Opportunity, searched for signs of past surface water.

"We are not a life-detection mission," Grotzinger said. "We have no ability to detect life present on the surface of Mars. It's an intermediate mission between the search for water and future missions, which may undertake life detection."

With Curiosity, which is twice as long and three times heavier than its predecessors, NASA shifts its focus to look for other ingredients for life, including possibly organic carbon, the building block for life on Earth.

"It's a long shot, but we're going to try," Grotzinger said.

Launch is generally considered the riskiest part of a mission, but Curiosity's landing on Mars will not be without drama.

The 1,980-pound (898 kg) rover is too big for the airbag or thruster-rocket landings used on previous Mars probes, so engineers designed a rocket-powered "sky-crane" to gently lower Curiosity to the crater floor via a 43-foot (13-meter) cable.

"We call it the 'six-minutes of terror,'" said Doug McCuistion, director of NASA's Mars Exploration Program, referring to the landing. "It is pretty scary, but my confidence level is really high."

Curiosity is powered by heat from the radioactive decay of plutonium. It is designed to last one Martian year, or 687 Earth days.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111126/ts_nm/us_space_mars

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Insert Coin: Twine connects your whole world to the internet

In Insert Coin, we look at an exciting new tech project that requires funding before it can hit production. If you'd like to pitch a project, please send us a tip with "Insert Coin" as the subject line.

Wouldn't it be great if your laundry emailed you when it had finished? You got a tweet every time the room got too cold, or your basement sent you a text if it began to flood? "Easy," says the Arduino expert in the peanut gallery, but what about those with neither the time nor inclination to solder and program it from scratch? Fortunately, the gentlemen who founded Supermechanical feel our pain and have just the tonic for our maladies -- head on past the break to find out more.

Continue reading Insert Coin: Twine connects your whole world to the internet

Insert Coin: Twine connects your whole world to the internet originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Nov 2011 12:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/24/insert-coin-twine-connects-your-whole-world-to-the-internet/

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Sonakshi Sinha adorns the cover of FHM magazine

Sonakshi who swept the world with her innocent charm in ?Dabangg? has donned a dapper chic look for FHM?s new cover page. The actress will be seen radiating pride and confidence in the men?s magazine latest issue. Ms. Sinha is completely at ease changing over from a village belle to a fashion diva. ?I think [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/newslatest/~3/HgpBLraKR9g/7677.html

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Gingrich risk: Will the GOP cast its lot with him? (The Arizona Republic)

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/165735287?client_source=feed&format=rss

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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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Xbox Live Users Scammed in Phishing Attack (NewsFactor)

Bringing back memories of the Sony PlayStation hack that compromised thousands of gamer accounts, some British Microsoft Xbox Live users have been scammed in a phishing attack. Although Microsoft insists its network has not been hacked, the phishers have nonetheless fooled some gamers into disclosing credit-card information.

The Sun, a paper in the U.K., first reported that online crooks hacked into thousands of Xbox Live accounts to steal millions of dollars. The paper said the average catch was 100 British pounds, or a bit over $150 -- but that many suffered losses of more than 200 pounds.

"Xbox Live has not been hacked. Microsoft can confirm that there has been no breach to the security of our Xbox Live service," Microsoft said in a statement. "In this case, a number of Xbox Live members appear to have recently been victim of malicious 'phishing' scams."

Microsoft's Response

News reports suggest some Xbox Live users received e-mails tricking them into visiting "spoofed" Web sites and entering their personal information, including their credit-card numbers. Microsoft said it consistently takes measures to protect Xbox Live against ever-changing threats, and listed three current initiatives. Those initiatives sound like a lesson in basic Internet security 101.

For example, Microsoft is warning people against opening unsolicited e-mails because the messages may contain spyware or other malware that can access personal information on their computer without their knowledge or permission. Microsoft is also reminding all customers that they should be very careful to keep all personal information secure whenever online and never supply e-mail addresses, passwords or credit card information to strangers.

Finally, Microsoft said it is working closely with Xbox Live users who have been in touch with the company to investigate and/or resolve any unauthorized changes to their accounts resulting from phishing scams.

Back To Internet Basics

"It looks like these phishers convinced gamers that they were visiting an Xbox site and got the users to give up IDs and passwords and their credit card numbers," said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at Enderle Group. "The bad guys got enough information to actually charge the credit card, then pulled in small amounts of money over a long period of time."

News reports have suggested the phishers convinced gamers to enter the information in exchange for reward points. Enderle expects most credit card companies will indemnify the victims if they dispute the charges.

"This story points to the typical warning for anyone using the Internet: If someone is representing themselves as the vendor, they already have your password and ID. They don't have to ask you for it," Enderle said. "So it should be a red flag if anybody asks you for both your password or ID. Never provide it, even if the site looks to be safe."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111123/bs_nf/81096

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

French former first lady Mitterrand dies at 87

Well before the Occupy movement took on Wall Street, the former first lady of France, Danielle Mitterrand, was leading the charge against capitalist excess.

"Everybody knows that the foundation of the system today is money: Money is the guru, money decides everything ... That's why we are working to get out of this system," she told RTL radio last month, summing up a lifelong cause in one of her last interviews before her death Tuesday at 87.

Such resistance defined the life of Mitterrand, the widow of France's first Socialist president, Francois Mitterrand.

At age 19, with World War II raging, she went underground in the Burgundy hills with the French Resistance. She was awarded the Croix de Guerre for her work against the Nazi occupation of France and met her future husband, who had joined up under the code name "Francois Morland."

That union eventually gave her a bully pulpit ? during Francois' 14 years as president ? that she used to advocate for many left-leaning causes. She supported Marxist rebels in El Salvador, ethnic minorities such as Kurds and Tibetans and vociferously opposed capitalist excess.

They also had three sons together, one of whom, Pascal, died at a young age.

Danielle Mitterrand died before dawn after being hospitalized at Georges Pompidou hospital in Paris in recent days for fatigue, her foundation France Libertes said.

As first lady, Mitterrand shucked the tradition of her predecessors who largely kept to the background. In a 1986 interview with The Associated Press, her blue eyes flashed at the suggestion she resembled a high-profile American first lady.

"There is no traditional role" for a first lady, Mitterrand said. "Each woman has her own personality and ... acts according to her conscience and her sensibilities."

Yet in contrast to her outspoken approach to politics, she kept quiet for years about one aspect of her personal life: a secret relationship her husband had had with Anne Pingeot, a museum curator 28 years his junior and the mother of his long-secret daughter, Mazarine Pingeot.

He died of cancer less than a year after leaving office in 1995. In an especially poignant moment in French politics, the widowed Danielle stood before the late president's coffin alongside his mistress and daughter, whose out-of-wedlock birth and existence were long kept from the French public.

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Her foundation said Danielle Mitterrand found guidance in a phrase of French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre: "It's not right to want to heal the suffering of people without committing to fight the very causes of this suffering."

She created several charities and crisscrossed the world in defense of human rights. She once even kissed Cuba's revolutionary Fidel Castro at a residence for visiting dignitaries near the presidential Elysee Palace.

Mitterrand urged worldwide unity to "put an end to economic and financial dictatorship, the henchman of political dictators. Finally, they seem to be shaken by the anger of peoples."

"Of course, the world revolves around the Dow Jones, the Nikkei stock index or the CAC 40 (French stock index). ... But all around the world, little voices are being raised to say that man is unhappy even if the stock market is doing well," Mitterrand told Le Figaro newspaper in 1996.

Thirteen years ago, Mitterrand visited in prison Mumia Abu-Jamal, a former Black Panther who has spent nearly 30 years on death row over his 1982 conviction for killing a white police officer in Philadelphia.

And in 2008, Mitterrand denounced American support for foes of Bolivia's leftist president Evo Morales, and accused "fascist gangs" of intimidating native peoples in the South American country.

France Libertes, whose focus has been human rights and had recently made a top priority of getting drinking water to those without it around the world, said Mitterrand left behind "a message of hope."

Praise and appreciation for her poured in from across France's political spectrum Tuesday.

President Nicolas Sarkozy's office said: "Neither the setback or the victory caused her to deviate from the road she had laid for herself: giving a hearing to the voice of those that no one wanted to hear."

Her nephew Frederic Mitterrand, who now serves as culture minister in Sarkozy's conservative government, told BFM TV that his aunt "did a lot to humanize the role of first ladies."

Danielle Emilienne Isabelle Gouze was born Oct. 29, 1924 in Verdun, a town in northeastern France known as one of World War I's biggest killing fields.

Under the Nazi collaborationist Vichy regime during World War II, her father, a Socialist-leaning school principal, lost his job after refusing a state order to list all Jewish students and teachers for authorities, according to Mitterrand's foundation.

In March 1944, she took her own stand and joined the Resistance.

She is survived by sons Gilbert and Jean-Christophe. A burial service is planned Saturday in the eastern town of Cluny, her foundation said.

____

Associated Press writer Elaine Ganley in Paris contributed this report.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45398662/ns/world_news-europe/

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The Supercommittee: A History Lesson (Powerlineblog)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/164896487?client_source=feed&format=rss

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1st Artificial Windpipe Made With Stem Cells Seems Successful (HealthDay)

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 23 (HealthDay News) -- A 36-year-old husband and father of two children with an inoperable tumor in his trachea (windpipe) has received the world's first artificial trachea made with stem cells.

A report published online Nov. 23 in The Lancet described the transplant surgery, which was performed in June at the Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden.

Without the transplant, the authors of the report explained, the man from Reykjavik, Iceland would have died. A golf ball-sized tumor on his trachea had begun to restrict his breathing. In a 12-hour procedure, doctors completely removed the affected area of his trachea and replaced it with an artificial one.

The artificial trachea was custom-made using three-dimensional imaging. First, a glass model was built to help shape an artificial scaffold. Stem cells were then inserted into the scaffold to create a functioning airway, the authors explained in a journal news release.

The scientists said their technique is an improvement over other methods because they used the patient's own cells to create the airway so there is no risk of rejection and the patient does not have to take immunosuppressive drugs.

In addition, they noted, because the trachea was custom-made it would be an ideal fit for the patient's body size and shape, and would eliminate the need to remain on a waiting list for a human donor.

"The patient has been doing great for the last four months and has been able to live a normal life. After arriving in Iceland at the start of July, he was one month in hospital and another month in a rehabilitation center," a co-author of the study and the physician who referred the patient for the procedure, Tomas Gudbjartsson, of Landspitali University Hospital and University of Iceland, Reykjavik, said in the news release.

The transplant team has since performed another transplant on a second patient from Maryland with cancer of the airway. This patient's bioartificial scaffold, however, was made from nanofibers. They now hope to treat a 13-month-old South Korean infant also using this method.

"We will continue to improve the regenerative medicine approaches for transplanting the windpipe and extend it to the lungs, heart and esophagus. And investigate whether cell therapy could be applied to irreversible diseases of the major airways and lungs," said Gudbjartsson.

Although the technique shows promise, Dr. Harald C. Ott and Dr. Douglas J. Mathisen, from Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, cautioned that more research must to be done to fully evaluate its safety and effectiveness.

"To be adjudged successful, bioartificial organs must function over a long time -- short-term clinical function is an important achievement, but is only one measure of success. Choice of ideal scaffold material, optimum cell source, well-defined tissue culture conditions, and perioperative management pose several questions to be answered before the line to broader clinical application of any bioartificial graft can be crossed safely and confidently," Ott and Mathisen concluded in the news release.

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health has more about stem cells.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111124/hl_hsn/1startificialwindpipemadewithstemcellsseemssuccessful

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Olympus BioScapes winners find art in microscopic life

16:47 21 November 2011

The 2011 Olympus BioScapes competition brings the beauty of micro-organisms out of the lab. Here is a gallery of our favourite images from the contest, including petite plankton, dinky Drosophila and miniscule mould spores.

Image 1 of 6

Hairy wheels

The fast-moving cilia, or hairs, that give this rotifer ? "wheel bearer" ? the illusion of rotating wheels are frozen in time in this winning image from the 2011 Olympus BioScapes competition. The cilia on the lobes of the rotifer Floscularia ringens gather food particles from the surrounding water and direct them toward its mouth. Charles Krebs of Issaquah, Washington, used a technique called differential interference contrast microscopy to make this image of the creature sitting in a self-made tube constructed from detritus.

(Image: Charles Krebs)

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1a46839b/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cgallery0Cbioscapes0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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A cheat sheet for acing your Black Friday spree

This holiday season, American shoppers plan to spend an average of $831 on holiday gifts for friends and family, $121 more than they spent in 2010, according to a new report by American Express. But despite the noted increase in spending, shoppers are no less interested in scoring a deal.

With that in mind, interest in Black Friday shopping (which saw a dip in 2010) is back in full-force this year, meaning the majority of American consumers, some 42 percent of them, will be hitting the stores and the web post-Thanksgiving, up 11 percent from 2010. In fact, according to Deloitte, 12 percent say they?ll get the majority of their holiday spending over with on that single day. But the savviest of holiday spenders will get started much sooner, planning budgets, finding the deepest discounts and taking advantage of mobile and social campaigns that can help them save even more. ?There?s an art to conquering Black Friday and it doesn?t always include joining the pre-dawn stampede,? says consumer expert Andrea Woroch. Above all, she says, it?s about doing your homework.

?Not every person on your list needs a $20 present,? says financial expert and founder of LearnVest Alexa von Tobel. That may be true ? but while some acquaintances will be happy with a homemade batch of cookies, others' gifts will put a much bigger dent in your budget. ?Set a top-line budget and work backwards,? says Woroch. Prioritize your gift list with those you know you?ll spend on and any others ? like coworkers and acquaintances ? you can spend on if you have room left in your budget. Put a dollar amount to each person and be sure to keep your list on-hand as you research pricing and hit the stores.

Forbes.com slideshow: 10 must-buy toys for Black Friday

Credit expert Todd Mark, VP of Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Dallas warns that planning your method of purchase for each item can be as important as setting a budget. ?If you plan to use credit,? he says, ?only use your cards with the lowest interest rates and don?t charge anything you can?t safely pay off in three months.? Many shoppers will also be able to take advantage of points and cash-back rewards associated with their cards on bigger purchases, so brushing up on fine print is also a good tip, he says. However, if you lack the discipline to stick to your budget and use your credit responsibly, he says, ?It?s best to withdraw your budgeted amount of holiday cash and leave your credit cards at home.?

A 2011 survey by DailyDeals.com shows that 52 percent of consumers spend a considerable amount of time ? more than an hour per purchase ? researching the very best deals. But as retailers notoriously keep them under wraps until the last minute, this can be a tricky practice around the holidays. ?If someone is waiting for all the ads to come in the day before Thanksgiving, they?re giving themselves just 48 hours to go through and digest a tremendous amount of sales information,? says Michael Brim, the cofounder of BFAds.net, one of many low-profile websites where holiday deals are leaked. Chances are good that hot items or great deals will be lost in the shuffle. Best to know (long) before you go.

But how? Officially speaking, Black Friday deals are not released to the public until the Thanksgiving week. But shoppers with ingenuity ? and internet know-how ? can find deals much sooner at hubs like BFAds where Brim posts deals and discounts leaked straight from the gift-horse?s mouth (pun-intended). ?Most of the time the release date of an advertisement solely depends on our source,? he says. ?If the source is involved in the design process, we?ll generally get the ad earlier than if the source were involved with the distribution process.? Last year, for example, BFAds posted the ads of most major retailers more than two weeks early.

Forbes.com: America?s hottest clothing chains

Woroch stresses that while sourcing deals early is a good step, don?t consider your homework done once you?ve found ?deals,? as some price strategies can prove nefarious. ?Check prices against manufacturer?s suggested retail pricing as some markdowns can be misleading,? she says. Think inflated ?original prices? to make the discount appear to be a better value. Tricky, no?

The naughty side of America?s biggest shopping day gets worse: Black Friday deals are meant to do one thing this holiday season ? get your body (and your credit cards) into stores. But with deeply discounted ?door-busters,? retailers look to other strategies to keep revenues up. ?Stores may mark down the price of the big-screen TV but push to sell you the accessories at full cost,? says Woroch. Avoid extra costs by skipping the add-ons like cables or add-ons like Internet-TV boxes which she says can often be found for a steal on sites like eBay or Amazon. ?Just buy the TV on Black Friday and buy any extras online a few days later to save costs. Those additional items might not be marked up, but they?re definitely not going to be on sale and can break a budget for sure.?

Other troubling purchases to avoid: the eye-catching displays nearest to the registers boasting $10 scarves, jewelry or kid?s toys. It?s easy to grab one or two things as stocking stuffers, Woroch says, ?But tacking $40 onto every check-out will really add up.?

Forbes.com: 10 best ways to enjoy Thanksgiving leftovers

If you?re not Facebook ?Friends? with your favorite retailers, now?s the time to make nice. Mark says that more retailers are going social, offering special discount codes to preferred friends on Facebook and Twitter. ?It?s a good idea to add your favorite stores to your friend list ? at least for the time being,? he says. Scott Silverman, cofounder of marketing firm ifeelgoods agrees, explaining that leading retailers like the Gap are even providing Facebook Credit as rewards to users who sign up for its email newsletter. ?Because of Facebook?s Open Graph, ?shares? are automatically embedded into user?s newsfeeds and visible to friends,? he says, ?thereby multiplying its viral effect. Brands will be leveraging Facebook?s strong viral nature to strengthen brand leadership and engage with fans.? The savings can add up, making letting retailers piggyback on your social activity seem an inexpensive trade-off.

Another new trend consumers can take advantage of to make the most of leaving the house Black Friday is the explosion of mobile apps that enhance the shopping experience. Woroch says to keep your smartphone at the ready on the big day to fact-check any deals before purchasing. Her pick for price-scanning? Red Laser. Mobile coupons? CouponSherpa. With Holiday Gift List you can track your spending and stick to your budget while FourSquare can help you take advantage of local sales and deals based on location, or even freebie restaurant offers of cheap coffee breaks during your shopping spree.

Forbes.com: America?s best chain restaurants??
Forbes.com: America?s favorite brands
Forbes.com: Restaurant foods that are ripping you off

? 2011 Forbes.com

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45347032/ns/business-holiday_retail/

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Sennheiser X320 gaming headset pictures and hands-on - Pocket-lint

If you take your gaming seriously then chances are you will have come across the idea of a proper headset before. Useful for cross game chat, as well as in game audio, they can be a relatively cheap way to enhance your gaming experience.?

The Xbox 360 has long suffered from a mediocre headset included, which whilst providing no actual game audio, does give you the capability of communicating with friends. It is however of a seriously low quality, with game talk turning you into more of an?unrecognisable?dalek than being of any use.

Sennheiser has the answer in the form of the x320 headset, which combines high quality audio with a noise cancelling mic. The idea is that the headset replaces the need for a hifi or any fancy equipment, lets you game in silence so as not to disturb others and get pro quality audio if you play a lot with friends.

The design of the headset itself is typical Sennheiser stuff. Built like anything you would expect the Germans to work their magic on, it is hardy yet simple and stylish. One of the better looking Xbox accessories we have seen yet. The big Sennheiser logo on the top of the headphone band is a particularly nice touch, as is the green rings around each side of the headset. It is just enough to let you know it is an Xbox-centric device.?

The mic itself swivels down and can be muted by simply swivelling it back up into a locked position. This means no reaching for a mute key when you want to chat to someone nearby, a nice touch and something which experienced gamers will enjoy.?

Plugging the X320 is a bit of an issue, in that, thanks mainly to the Xbox's design itself, it requires a lot of different cables and connections. First you need to plug the actual headset into the back of the TV, via either red and white or a 3.5mm headphone jack. Then from there you need to plug the headset in via USB to the console, to give it power, then after that you need to connect the mic of the controller to a connector on the Sennheiser remote. It all ends up being a bit over fussy and leaves a serious mess of wires to contend with. We can't really blame Sennheiser too much for this as sending mic audio can only be done via the Xbox 360 controller.?

Audio quality more than makes up for the wiring issue. At ?100 it sounds great, essentially like a set of high quality headphones you would normally connect up to the hifi. Sound is balanced, with enough bass to keep things like FPS titles exciting. Explosions and surround sound also particularly impress.?

From what we have heard from those who played against us, the noise cancelling mic included in the headset cleans up audio no end. We also found listening to friends, via the dedicated voice channel (which has its own volume control) sounded a lot cleaner. This made for a good online experience.?

The X320 is for those who want the benefits of high quality gaming audio, without the price or added living room space/noise it requires. Having a good mic is merely a bonus, but a great one at that.?

What do you think to the X320? Let us know in the comments below ...?

Source: http://www.pocket-lint.com/news/43149/sennheiser-x320-pictures-hands-on

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Vanessa Minnillo Drops Her Maiden Name for Lachey

Farewell, Vanessa Minnillo, hello Vanessa Lachey! In celebration of her recent marriage to Nick Lachey, the 31-year-old newlywed has officially changed her name to Lachey.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/vanessa-minnillo-drops-her-maiden-name-lachey/1-a-404424?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Avanessa-minnillo-drops-her-maiden-name-lachey-404424

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Republicans seek Iowa social conservatives' nod

At an event sponsored by an Iowa Christian group, Republican candidates tried to gain a political edge with social conservatives. But some of the discussion turned uncharacteristically personal.

Six Republican presidential candidates dove deep into how their religious faith influences their public life, during a free-flowing forum before a large, influential audience of social conservatives in early-voting Iowa on Saturday.

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At an event sponsored by an Iowa Christian group, the candidates tried at times to gain a political edge with potent Iowa conservatives. But some of the discussion turned uncharacteristically personal, with the would-be presidents tearfully revealing formative chapters that shaped their faith.

Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, whose recent rise has renewed scrutiny of his two divorces, admitted taking the advice of a recovering alcoholic to soothe the demons he had treated for years with his own national ambition.

MONITOR QUIZ: Weekly News Quiz for Nov. 13-18, 2011

"I wasn't drinking but I had precisely the symptoms of someone who was collapsing under this weight," Gingrich said. "And I found myself, this emerging national figure ? trying to understand where I had failed, why I was empty and why I had to turn to God."

Businessman Herman Cain, accused of sexually harassing four subordinates more than a decade ago, didn't address the accusations which he has denied vigorously. But he acknowledged not being home enough during his career's meteoric rise to the top of a national restaurant chain, and he credited his marriage with helping him after being diagnosed with cancer in 2006.

"Before my wife and I were about to head to the care, I said, 'I can do this,'" Cain recalled. "She said, 'We can do this.'"

The event occurred while many evangelical conservatives, a powerful force in Iowa's caucuses, still look for a more conservative alternative to Mitt Romney. The former Massachusetts governor has not courted this segment of the voting bloc aggressively in his second bid for the GOP nomination.

The format was a sharp departure from the 10 GOP debates that have already been held in the 2012 campaign. Instead of the rapid questions and timed answers of the televised debates, Saturday's forum was held around a large dining table on a stage with fall-themed decorations, aimed at resembling a family Thanksgiving dinner scene. Pollster Frank Luntz moderated the two-hour event, which often flowed conversationally.

Notably absent was Romney, a leader in most national and Iowa polls this year but who has not campaigned vigorously for the social conservative vote.

Also missing was former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, who is focusing his early-state campaign on New Hampshire, where his moderate positions on gay rights are not as glaring a liability.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who has campaigned aggressively for the support of evangelical conservatives in Iowa, tearfully confessed to have resisted loving his severely disabled daughter.

"I had decided that the best thing I could do was to treat her differently and not love her the way I did because it wouldn't hurt as much if I'd lost her," Santorum told an audience of 3,200 in a large, evangelical Des Moines church.

And Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann described the pain and uncertainty of her parents' divorce when she was an adolescent girl, but held back somewhat when asked what prompted her Christian awakening when she was 16.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/xAB0h_03BJw/Republicans-seek-Iowa-social-conservatives-nod

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