Sunday, August 4, 2013

Switched On: The camera phone

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

DNP Switched On The camera phone

In that human-behavior lab known as the New York City subway, a vacationing family recently sought to get in a group self-portrait on their last day in the Big Apple. But the rocking train kept thwarting the capture of their jostled bodies. To frame the picture, they tried trading the quality of their smartphone's rear camera for the one above the phone's display so they could better preview the picture, but still had trouble composing the shot. Finally, a local passenger riding with them stepped in and offered to take their photo, which he did to their expressions of gratitude.

The incident served as an illustration of the often precarious situations in which we use our smartphone cameras. Had their phone been Nokia's Lumia 1020 and the stranger not intervened, the 41 megapixels of light-capturing prowess might have gone for naught as the family would've had to rely on the phone's middling front-facing camera.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/dH9B-YFO1pI/

lotto Illinois Lottery texas lottery Dell Levis Fireman Ed Allegiant Air

Boston mob boss 'Whitey' Bulger says he will not testify at trial

BOSTON (Reuters) - Former mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger said on Friday he will not take the witness stand in his defense at his trial on charges linked to 19 murders in the 1970s and '80s, and called the trial a sham.

"My thing is, as far as I'm concerned, this is a sham and do what you want with me," he told U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper after his lawyer announced he would not testify.

Bulger, 83, was once Boston's most-feared criminal, running the Winter Hill gang for decades before fleeing the city in 1994 on a tip from a corrupt FBI agent that arrest was imminent.

(Reporting by Daniel Lovering; Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boston-mob-boss-whitey-bulger-says-not-testify-150901533.html

PGA Championship 2012 John Witherspoon george michael usain bolt Closing Ceremony London 2012 Tom Daley Leryn Franco

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Serbian president supports PM, urges faster government reshuffle

Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic has urged the government, and particularly the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), to wrap up the government reshuffle quickly and continue working on reforms, dismissing the idea of early elections.

After Nikolic?s meeting with Prime Minister Ivica Daicic on Tuesday evening, the Office of the Serbian President issued a statement saying that the people of Serbia expect the state to create a better life for them and the government to create conditions the same as in all modern countries.

The coalition government, which was formed one year ago, set as its goal to resolve the accumulated economic and social problems, issues that have previously remained unsolved for years, the statement said.

Although the Serbian government showed excellent results in many areas in the first year of its term, the situation in the country remains quite complex, and it turned out that not all actors in the Serbian government took careful account of the promises given to the citizens, the statement said.

It is time for the adoption of very important decisions for the future of Serbia and its citizens, it is time to show that the government is accountable to the people, and that a minister and his party cannot be more important than the interests of the ordinary citizen, the president said.

It turns out that certain ministers, whose primary concern should have been economic and social recovery of the country, still consider themselves to be indispensable, although it is obvious that they have not showed the results that they promised to the citizens, the statement reads.

The Serbian president urged the government, particularly the biggest party in the government, the SNS, to bring the reshuffle to an end as soon as possible and to continue working on reforms.

The president sent a special message to the Serbian Progressive Party to rise above the party interests that are telling it to go to new elections because of the reputation it now enjoys among the people.

?Let all those who consider Serbia's well-being to be their most important goal, let us all together try to maintain the stability of the institutions of the government that should lead us further on our European way. There is always time for elections,? the statement says.

Nikolic met with Dacic on Tuesday evening after Dacic announced that the government "will continue without the United Regions of Serbia party (URS)" and that Finance and Economy Minister Mladjan Dinkic and another two minister from the URS will no longer be members of his cabinet.

Dacic, who is the leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), spoke about the results of the coalition negotiations on a government reshuffle, explaining that if Aleksandar Vucic's Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) fails to support this, early elections would be called, "or some coalition will be formed without the SNS."

Dinkic then held a news conference at which he accused Dacic of being afraid of the elections because he wanted to save this position as prime minister.

?He is afraid for his position, given the support Aleksandar Vucic enjoys. He actually sees Vucic as prime minister but he wants to keep that position formally at least for a while, Dinkic said.

Dinkic claims that Dacic allegedly told him that his position of the prime minister would be threatened should there be no changes at the helm of the ministry of Finance and the Economy. According to Dinkic, should Vucic?s SNS party be given both portfolios, there will be no excuse to call early election.

Serbian coalition government was formed on 27 July 2012 and it is comprised of parties gathered around Vucic?s SNS party, Dacic?s SPS party and the URs, led by Mladan Dinkic

(Hina)

Source: http://dalje.com/en-world/serbian-president-supports-pm-urges-faster-government-reshuffle/477975

andrew luck pro day josh johnson kim kardashian flour matt forte jeremy shockey new orleans saints ireland

Paul Krugman: ?Madness of the GOP Is the Central Issue of Our Time?

Story Info

Paul Krugman: ?Madness of the GOP Is the Central Issue of Our Time?

Over the longer run the point is that one of America?s two major political parties has basically gone off the deep end; policy content aside, a sane party doesn?t hold ...

Today | Opinion (Article)

Close this panel

Thanks for your review!

Your review has been saved, but will not be published due to your member status. For help, check our .

Close this panel

Source: http://newstrust.net/stories/9344228/toolbar?ref=rss

chandler jones peyton hillis fletcher cox charlotte bobcats new york rangers nfl mock draft 2012 norfolk island

Friday, August 2, 2013

UN: Afghan civilian casualties on the rise amid new fighting

Reversing a downward trend, civilian casualties have risen 23 percent, in part because of fighting between government forces and insurgents.

By Jeremy Ravinsky,?Correspondent / July 31, 2013

A shoe of a civilian is seen at the site of a suicide car bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, June 11. In a new UN report, Afghan civilian casualties are rising, noting an increase of 23 percent in the first half of 2013.

Omar Sobhani/Reuters/File

Enlarge

A new UN report on the protection of civilians in Afghanistan is painting a bleak picture of the country after the withdrawal of American forces. Issued by the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), the report said that Afghan civilian casualties are rising, noting an increase of 23 percent in the first half of 2013.

Skip to next paragraph Jeremy Ravinsky

Correspondent

Jeremy Ravinsky is an intern at the Christian Science Monitor's international desk. Born and raised in Montreal, Canada, Jeremy has lived in Boston for a number of years, attending Tufts University where he is a political science major. Before coming to the Monitor, Jeremy interned at GlobalPost in Boston and Bturn.com in Belgrade, Serbia.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The upsurge has reversed a downward trend from 2012 and calls into question the ability of Afghan forces to take over security responsibilities when the US forces leave.

According to the report, between January and June of this year, 1,319 civilians were killed, while 2,533 more were injured. Women and children casualties are also on the rise, increasing by 61 and 30 percent, respectively. While the highest number of casualties came from improvised explosive devices (IEDs), a new trend in 2013 shows fallout from fighting between government forces and insurgents to be another major cause for civilian death and injury.

The spike in casualties comes as US troops begin to wrap up their operations in the country, closing down bases and handing over responsibility to their Afghan counterparts for providing security. As the report notes:

The stepped-up transition of security responsibilities from international military forces to Afghan forces and closure of international forces? military bases was met with increased attacks by Anti-Government Elements on Afghan National Security Forces mainly at checkpoints, on strategic highways, in some areas that had been transitioned and in districts bordering neighboring countries.

The Taliban has condemned the report as propaganda, saying that the use of the word ?civilian? is misleading, as many included are government workers.

Criticism for excessive violence against civilians has seen the Taliban make efforts to stem the number of civilian casualties over the past few years, reports The New York Times. Unfortunately, these efforts have not borne the desired results, as civilian casualty rates remain high.

And there are fears that the violence will only intensify as the imminent departure of US troops may see mounting challenges to territorial control from insurgents, challenges that many believe the Afghan National Army ? whose desertion rates are among the highest in the world ? is not prepared to face, according to Reuters. The continued battles between the Taliban and the government, as well as reported abuse against civilians on the part of Afghan police forces, has seriously undermined trust in the government?s ability to provide protection and order.

Many in both Afghanistan and the US have been hoping that an agreement will be struck to extend the presence of US forces past 2014, reports The Christian Science Monitor. But as recent events have cooled relations between US President Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the zero option is looking more and more possible.

While the more than decade-long US-led war with the Taliban is slated to come to a close, Afghanistan?s future is much more uncertain, with more public officials voicing concerns over the transition process, writes Voice of America.

Angheza Shinwari, a member of the provincial council of Afghanistan's eastern Nangarhar province, says Afghan security forces are not prepared to defend the population.
?
She says that she is not optimistic about the security transition process. She praised?Afghan men as being "very brave" and having God to help them. But she is not hopeful for what happens next.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/ibdZOKvF86U/UN-Afghan-civilian-casualties-on-the-rise-amid-new-fighting

dickclark gavin degraw gavin degraw alec time 100 bob beckel anna paquin

Summertime in Paris plays with light and intimacy - Montreal Gazette

?

Ellipse CMCYCK, 2011-18, on display at Galerie Hugues Charbonneau, was painted by Julie Trudel, winner of the $25,000 Plaskett award.

MONTREAL - Summertime in Paris is almost over, and an exhibition will soon close that features works by Julie Trudel, the artist who just won the $25,000 Plaskett award that will help her live in Berlin for a year.

But if you can catch the last day of Summertime at the Parisian Laundry, check out a couple other galleries in the area. Galerie Division and the Arsenal are not far away and the Global Art League is having its first show at the Montreal Art Centre.

All is light and bright at Summertime in Paris. Celia Perrin Sidarous arranges objects against a white background and photographs them as still lifes. They could be product shots for advertisers, except the objects are ambiguous.

Derrick Piens pieces together strips of painted wood veneer that resemble deformed and stitched-together Rubik?s cubes.

Down in the dark basement space is Olivia Boudreau?s film of a couple in a bathtub. Megan Bradley, the Parisian Laundry?s director of exhibitions, said Boudreau hired two actors unknown to each other to pose in the intimate space of a bathtub. It?s an uncomfortable intimacy; the man mechanically splashes water on the woman?s chest and even strokes her breast a few times. The woman smiles a bit uncertainly a couple times, but nothing breaks the uneasy silence.

Galerie Division is inside the Arsenal, which always has at least two exhibitions even with the departure of Galerie Ren? Blouin for Old Montreal. The long passageway to Division is a showcase for the Majudia collection.

The exhibition is a changing one, but the day I visited, works by Nicolas Baier, Fran?ois Lacasse, Daniel Richter, Marc S?guin, Dil Hildebrand and Evan Penny were on display. So was Maskull Lassere?s Four Foot Length, a maple bough carved in the middle to expose a skeletal spine.

Division is showing work by Michel de Broin, Sarah Anne Johnson and John Brown, a Toronto painter who makes black and white paintings with spots of colour tints.

Brown builds up layers of paint on wood panels and scrapes off most of it before applying more paint, Galerie director Dominique Toutant said. Scraping is so soothing to the artist that Brown paints to its recorded sound, Toutant said. The process of painting and scraping is repeated until an image develops.

Sarah Anne Johnson is an artist in the realm of relational esthetics. For the body of work shown in Arctic Wonderland, Johnson went on a polar expedition in a sailing vessel.

She added splashes of photo-retouching colour to her photographs, creating scenes of apparent fireworks in the sunlit midsummer polar nights, an artificial aurora borealis and unnecessary addition to a scene of stark beauty.

A couple blocks away, the Montreal Art Centre is exhibiting entries in its Global Art League competition. About 80 artists from around the world, including members who rent space in the art centre, are competing for $2,000 in prizes.

The art league is the brainchild of Allan Diamond, who founded the art centre and rents studio space to about 50 local artists. Their individual spaces are small but open, and half the building is common area, including a lounge and gallery.

Diamond said he painted as a youth, but stopped during his career in real estate and marketing. But in 1997, his wife gave him a box of paints, and he started taking art classes, where he realized the importance for artists to feel a sense of community.

Diamond decided to build his own art community in a building at the corner of William and des Seigneurs Sts. Some members are hobbyists, others are emerging professional artists, he said.

And there is Barry MacPherson, a long-time artist who does psychological portraits in an exacting, precise style.

MacPherson was almost alone in the building on a hot summer day, working on an oil painting with the words ?Push Back? inscribed. It?s time for people to stand up and push back, he said.

Standing up for oneself resonates throughout the artistic realm.

?To be a painter, you have to fight for it and be strident in your convictions,? said Landon Mackenzie, an artist who is represented by Art 45 and who co-ordinates the Plaskett award for the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.

That description certainly fits Trudel, the abstract painter who won the $25,000 national award for her painstaking experiments in pouring inks, drop by drop, to discover how colours combine with the physical qualities of paint to create an effect she likes.

Trudel understands that painting is a language, Mackenzie said in an interview. ?Julie is using digital and screen-based processes to build her own language that references and updates Quebec abstraction,? she said. ?She has a good sense of art history ? it both supports and challenges her.?

Hugues Charbonneau, whose gallery is currently showing the work of Trudel and three other artists, said Trudel addresses the mechanical and digital roots of contemporary images, up to how billboards are printed. Her abstract painting also refers to Claude Tousignant?s targets and Guido Molinari?s investigations into colour shifts, he said.

She exercises quality control over every aspect of her work, from the height and angles of how her work is hung, right down to the press release, Charbonneau said.

?She never turns off the idea machine.?

Point, line, plane, point, line, plane, point, line, plane, with work by Julie Trudel and others, continues until Aug. 8 at Galerie Hugues Charbonneau, 372 Ste-Catherine St. W, Suite 308. Information: huguescharbonneau.com, julietrudel.ca and joeplaskett.com.

Summertime in Paris continues until Saturday, Aug. 3 at Parisian Laundry, 3550 St-Antoine St. W. Information: parisianlaundry.com.

An exhibition of works by Michel de Broin, John Brown and Sarah Anne Johnson continues until Aug. 31 at Galerie Division, 2020 William St. Information: galeriedivision.com.

The Global Art League exhibition of emerging and professional artists continues until Aug. 17 at the Montreal Art Centre, 1844 William St. Information: montrealartcentre.com.

john.o.pohl@gmail.com

? Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

?

?

?

?

?

?

Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/Summertime+Paris+plays+with+light+intimacy/8738056/story.html

case mccoy case mccoy UFC 155 Jack Klugman merry Christmas a christmas story twas the night before christmas

Bennett resigns as Florida education commissioner

Former IndianSuperintendent Public InstructiTony Bennett |  (AP Photo/Michael Conroy file)

Former Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett | (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, file)

storyidforme: 52918103
tmspicid: 4699496
fileheaderid: 2347180

Updated: August 1, 2013 12:56PM

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) ? Florida?s education commissioner resigned Thursday amid allegations that he changed the grade of a charter school run by a major Republican donor during his previous job as Indiana?s school chief.

Tony Bennett announced his immediate resignation at a news conference, saying that he while he did nothing wrong he didn?t want to be a distraction to Gov. Rick Scott?s efforts to overhaul Florida?s education system. Emails published by The Associated Press this week show that Bennett and his Indiana staff scrambled last fall to ensure Christel DeHaan?s school received an A, despite poor 10th-grade algebra scores that initially earned it a C.

Bennett called that interpretation ?malicious and unfounded? and said he would call for Indiana?s inspector general to look into the allegations because he is certain he will be cleared of wrongdoing.

He said it would be unfair to Scott ?to have to spend my time and the State Board (of Education?s) time, as things continue to trickle out, defending myself.? He called the allegations ?politically motivated.?

Bennett lost his re-election bid last November in Indiana. He was hired by Florida as its education commissioner, a nonelected post, in December.

Indiana uses the A-F grades to determine which schools get taken over by the state and whether students seeking state-funded vouchers to attend private school need to first spend a year in public school. They also help determine how much state funding schools receive. A low grade also can detract from a neighborhood and drive homebuyers elsewhere.

After Bennett learned about a likely low grade for Christel House, he fired off a Sept. 12 email to his chief of staff.

?This will be a HUGE problem for us,? Bennett wrote. ?They need to understand that anything less than an A for Christel House compromises all of our accountability work.?

Bennett, who now is reworking Florida?s grading system as the state?s education commissioner, denied that DeHaan?s Christel House Academy school received special treatment. He said discovering that the charter would receive a low grade raised broader concerns with grades for other ?combined? schools ? those that included multiple grade levels ? across the state.

Bennett downplayed the emails on Tuesday, repeating his assertion that he took action because he was concerned there was a flaw in the formula.

?It is absurd that anyone would believe that I would change the grade of a school based on a political donor or trying to hide schools from accountability,? Bennett said. ?That?s fictitious at best, and it?s totally unfounded.?

He acknowledged that the problem was identified and fixed prior to the release of school grades but maintained the change affected as many as 13 schools.

?We did nothing wrong. We did nothing covert. We did nothing secretive,? Bennett said.

The revelations that Bennett and Indiana officials scrambled to change the grade of one school come amid a strong debate over Florida?s grading system.

Bennett earlier this month pushed the Florida board that oversees education policy to adopt a ?safety net? provision that prevented the grades of more than 500 schools from dropping more than one grade this year.

That provision was adopted by a 4-3 vote amid much debate and criticism that the move would ?mask? the true performance of schools. Bennett?s plan was even opposed by the education foundation set up by Bush. The grades released last week still showed a sharp drop in the number of A-rated schools and a jump in the number of F-rated ones.

Source: http://posttrib.suntimes.com/news/21660682-418/bennett-resigns-as-florida-education-commissioner.html

sweet potato pie Turkey Cooking Time Kmart Black Friday PlanetSide 2 sweet potato casserole Pumpkin Pie Recipe wii u