Friday, July 19, 2013

WATCH LIVE: President Obama Makes Speech On Affordable Care Act From White House

President Obama is scheduled to deliver remarks about a key provision of the Affordable Care Act from the White House, Thursday morning beginning at approximately 11:25am ET. The president will outline the details of the medical loss ratio provision of the law, which requires insurers to refund customers when they spend less than 80% of premiums collected.

Watch live stream below, via The White House:

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>> Follow Matt Wilstein (@TheMattWilstein) on Twitter

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/watch-live-president-obama-makes-speech-on-affordable-care-act-from-white-house/

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Atiz Scandock (for iPhone)


You may not need a scanner?or, for that matter, a computer?to get high-quality photo scans. With the Scandock ($499 direct) from Atiz Innovations, an iPhone placed in the elegantly designed dock becomes the scanner, and the Scandock app automatically color-corrects your scans, making this apparatus a potential replacement for a flatbed scanner. Most of my test scans of photos, once processed by the app, showed good, true-looking color. For document scanning it's a mixed bag, and the app could use more detailed instructions.

Atiz?which also sells its BookDrive book scanners to libraries, universities, and other institutions?bills the Scandock as a "post-PC scanner." The futuristic dock employs an aluminum frame with a dual-track lighting system, with two beams holding 4 two-bulb lamps, one positioned above and outside each corner of the scan area. The light turns on when you place your iPhone in the dock, and turns off when you remove it.

Anatomy of a Post-PC Scanner
The Scandock's footprint is 17.5 by 20.5 inches, and it is 15 inches tall. This is considerably larger than the Plustek OpticBook 3800, a basic book scanner. Unlike a flatbed scanner like the Plustek OpticBook, the Scandock has an open frame. This means that it's potentially subject to glare from direct light sources above it or nearby, as I found in my testing. (Ambient light shouldn't be an issue.) Thus, you'd want to place it away from direct lighting or turn off the lights near it when it's in use, neither of which may be viable in a business situation. I was able to shield it from stray light with a makeshift hood, by placing a large sheet of cardboard over the dock.

The base consists of a flatbed, slightly larger than letter size, on which you set the page to be scanned. Along one short edge is the Image IQ, a set of grayscale and color swatches that the app uses to auto-correct the scanned image, to ensure that color is correct under different lighting conditions. The item to be scanned is placed on a slightly sticky silicone "flat mat" to hold it in place and minimize folds or curls.

The Scandock ships with two docks, both black: one for the iPhone, and a Universal dock that fits larger phones or phablets (Atiz will soon release an app for Android phones.) I tried the Scandock with both an iPhone 3GS and iPhone 5. To fit my iPhone 5 into the dock, I had to remove it from its tight-fitting case, which proved to be no easy feat, and then squeeze it back into the case when it was done?not a task I'd want to do on a regular basis. A workable alternative is that it can rest on top of the dock; you may need to move the phone around a little for optimal positioning (to make sure the swatches are in the shot).

Although the iPhone 3GS is shorter, it's the same width as the iPhone 5, so you'd likely run into the same issue of having to remove it from its case to fit in the dock, even with snug, minimalist cases. With a loose iPhone, you have the option of locking it into the dock while you're using it. When locked in, needless to say, it's a lot harder to use as a phone should you get a call while you're scanning, though you could conceivably do so on speakerphone.

Using the Scandock App
The printed User Guide (which is identical to the downloadable version on the Scandock support page) only describes the hardware operation. Although you can adjust settings within the app through a gear icon, the app lacks clear instructions?a tips page only gives you a few basic pointers?and its features aren't always intuitive. For instance, it took me quite a while to figure out simply how to complete a scan when I'd scanned the desired pages. (Once you've scanned a page, a green label appears to the right of the Scan icon, labeled 1 OK, 2 OK, etc., the number changing depending on how many pages you've scanned. Tapping that button will stop and display the scan.)

The top part of the Scandock app lets you initiate scans or import a photo from your photo albums. You can either scan individual pages, or scan more than one item (for instance, receipts) at once, and save them on different pages After you've scanned, you get some choices (with icons at the screen's bottom) as to what to do with the scan: email it, save it to PDF, delete it, send it to Twitter, Facebook, save it to your iPhone's camera roll, print, or copy it. You can also edit it (deleting specific pages).

Along with automatic color correction, you can also manually adjust settings such as brightness, contrast, and paper size. You can manually adjust cropping using a green grid system that's displayed.

Although iPhone apps such as CamScanner will let you initiate and manage scans with your phone, they lack the dock and the color correction system that Atiz, which also makes high-end book scanners, has developed. I was pleased with the color accuracy that the Scandock provided.

Document Scanning
Although you can scan text documents and save them to PDF, it's the non-searchable image PDF format. Although documents are easier to peel up from the sticky flat mat than photos, the peeling process does add time. If you don't use the sticky mat (and you can cover it with a sheet of acetone), you could always place a multipage document face-up on the scanner and pull the pages off one by one as you scan them. I tried that and was able to scan a 12-page document in just under a minute, although page alignment and shading suffered for it.

The "grid scan" feature lets you scan multiple documents (receipts, for example) either to separate files or to one file, and then, say, save to image PDF or JPEG. You may be best off in removing the sticky mat for grid-mode scans, as small and delicate documents can get damaged when you pull them up, as happened once in my testing.

For $500, you get the dock (with base and lighting system) and the app; you have to supply the iPhone, of course. The lighting system, which does a good job of providing uniform luminosity across the scan area, is a big plus, as is the color correction system, in which the app, by interpreting scans with the help of the color swatches at the dock's base, is able to render good-quality photo scans. It can also be used for document scanning, which you can do quickly enough with a bit of practice or in "grid" mode, though you're limited to scanning to non-searchable image PDF format.

On the downside, the Scandock is larger than conventional flatbed scanners and some flatbed book scanners, and may require shielding from nearby direct lighting. It's somewhat pricey when you consider that no actual scanner (image sensor) is included. The app lacks clear instructions and is not very intuitive, so it takes some practice to effectively use the app to initiate and manage scans, and it doesn't scan to searchable PDF.

The Atiz Innovations Scandock is best for individuals or businesses in need of good-quality photo scans, and who may need to do occasional document scanning but not to searchable PDF format. It's a unique and elegant replacement for a flatbed scanner.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/ITGvkoFuPmc/0,2817,2421684,00.asp

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Las Vegas Summer League 2013: NBA D-League Select vs. Los Angeles Clippers Game Notes

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Source: http://www.ridiculousupside.com/2013/7/14/4523526/las-vegas-summer-league-2013-nba-d-league-select-vs-los-angeles

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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Chris Weidman, Brian Stann, and jerkfaces: Where did they fall on Cagewriter?s Hot or Not list?

This week has been about adjusting to an MMA world where Anderson Silva is not the UFC's middleweight champ. Who had a good week, and who didn't?

Hot -- Chris Weidman: After winning the UFC middleweight belt by knocking out Anderson Silva in a shocking fashion, he celebrated in Las Vegas before heading home to New York. He then went on to a media tour and got to relish his victory.

Not -- The jerkfaces who forced Invicta's Ashley Cummins to close her Twitter and Facebook accounts: In addition to being a fighter, Cummins is a police officer. After she lost in October, she told Bleacher Report she was inundated with anti-law enforcement messages and even death threats on Facebook and Twitter. It takes a special kind of coward to go after someone you don't know who puts her life on the line to keep others safe. She ended up deleting her accounts, which is one of the main ways fighters market themselves and stay in touch with fans.

Hot -- Brian Stann: The UFC middleweight decided to retire to focus on his family and a burgeoning broadcast career. In addition to work for Fox on fight nights, he will also cover college football for the network.

Not -- Tito Ortiz: This week, the UFC Hall of Famer hinted about a comeback. This isn't what put him in the "not hot" category. It's the reaction. Never have Cagereaders on Twitter and Facebook been so united behind an idea. Not one wanted to see him fight again.

Still taking temperature -- Marloes Coenen: The onetime Strikeforce champ is getting another shot at another Strikeforce champ, Cristiane Cyborg. Will Coenen get the win this time? Check it out on Invicta's pay-per-view on Saturday night.

Thank you for reading Cagewriter. Follow on Twitter and Facebook because it's a good time.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/chris-weidman-brian-stann-jerkfaces-where-did-fall-184223690.html

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Dozens feared dead in Quebec oil-train derailment

Canada Oil Train Derailment

Charred tanker cars are piled up in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. Investigators are looking for the cause of the fiery oil train derailment Saturday that led to the explosions that killed at least 13 people. (AP Photo/THE CANADIAN PRESS,Jacques Boissinot )

LAC-MEGANTIC, Quebec (AP) ? Blackened debris, twisted metal and gas leaks hampered rescue workers' search for perhaps dozens of bodies Tuesday, three days after a runaway oil train smashed into this small lakeside town and incinerated homes, a library and a crowded bar.

Thirteen people were confirmed dead and nearly 40 others were still missing in a catastrophe that raised questions about the safety of transporting oil by rail instead of pipeline.

Investigators were zeroing in on whether a blaze on the same train a few hours before the disaster set off the deadly chain of events.

Rescue workers labored to reach the bodies believed to be in the ruins.

"Those sectors are extremely complicated to investigate. There is debris. This is a very risky environment. We have to secure the safety of those working there. We have some hotspots on the scene. There is some gas," Quebec Provincial Police Sergeant Benoit Richard said.

He said recovery efforts had to be halted briefly Monday for health reasons, and some officers needed to be removed from the scene. He did not elaborate. The bodies that have been recovered were burned so badly they have yet to be identified.

The Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway train broke loose early Saturday, speeding downhill nearly seven miles (11 kilometers) and jumping the tracks at 63 mph (101 kph) in Lac-Megantic, near the Maine border, investigators said. All but one of the 73 cars were carrying oil. At least five exploded.

The blasts destroyed about 30 buildings, including the Musi-Cafe, a popular bar that was filled at the time, and forced about a third of the town's 6,000 residents from their homes. Much of the area where the bar stood was burned to the ground. Burned-out cars dotted the landscape.

The same train caught fire hours earlier in a nearby town, and the engine was shut down ? standard operating procedure dictated by the train's owners, Nantes Fire Chief Patrick Lambert said.

Edward Burkhardt, president and CEO of the railway's parent company, Rail World Inc., suggested that shutting off the locomotive to put out the fire might have disabled the brakes.

"An hour or so after the locomotive was shut down, the train rolled away," he told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.

Lambert defended the fire department, saying that the blaze was extinguished within about 45 minutes and that's when firefighters' involvement ended.

"The people from MMA told us, 'That's great ? the train is secure, there's no more fire, there's nothing anymore, there's no more danger,'" Lambert said. "We were given our leave, and we left."

Transportation Safety Board investigator Donald Ross said the locomotive's black box has been recovered.

"The extent to which (the fire) played into the sequences of events is a focal point of our investigation," Ross said, but he cautioned that the investigation was still in its early stages.

The accident has also thrown a spotlight on MMA's safety record.

Before the Lac-Megantic accident, the company had 34 derailments since 2003, five of them resulting in damage of more than $100,000, according to the U.S. Federal Railroad Administration.

Burkhardt, however, said the figures were misleading.

"They're not apples-to-apples figures. This is the only significant mainline derailment this company has had in the last 10 years. We've had, like most railroads, a number of smallish incidents, usually involving accidents in yard trackage and industry trackage," Burkhardt told CBC in TV interview.

Ross told The Associated Press that the tanker cars involved in the crash were the DOT-111 model. The DOT-111 is a staple of the American freight rail fleet whose flaws have been noted as far back as a 1991 safety study.

Among other things, experts say its steel shell is so thin that it is prone to puncture in an accident, potentially spilling cargo that can catch fire, explode or contaminate the environment.

The derailment also raised questions about the safety of Canada's growing practice of transporting oil by train, and is sure to bolster arguments in favor of a proposed oil pipeline running from Canada across the U.S. ? a project that Canadian officials badly want.

___

Associated Press writers Rob Gillies and Charmaine Noronha contributed from Toronto. James MacPherson contributed from Bismarck, N.D.

(Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Source: http://cnsnews.com/news/article/dozens-feared-dead-quebec-oil-train-derailment

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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Birthstone Spirits: Goddess and Her Children


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The custom-built "roleplay" system was designed and implemented by Eric Martindale as of July 2009. All attempts to replicate or otherwise emulate this system and its method of organizing roleplay are strictly prohibited without his express written and contractual permission; violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/13st-_S8DMw/viewtopic.php

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

'Bless my Hotshot crew': Survivor speaks at vigil

PRESCOTT VALLEY, Ariz. (AP) ? On a day filled with speeches from dignitaries including the vice president, the words of the lone survivor of a fire crew overrun by flames resonated deepest in an arena packed with firefighters from around the nation.

A stone-faced Brendan McDonough filed onto the stage at the end of the service and offered what's called "The Hot Shot's Prayer," calmly reciting the words: "For if this day on the line I should answer death's call, Lord, bless my Hotshot crew, my family, one and all."

He concluded by telling the crowd: "Thank you, and I miss my brothers."

McDonough spoke at a memorial for the 19 members of the Prescott-based Granite Mountain Hotshots who died June 30 when a wind-fueled, out-of-control fire overran them as they tried to protect a former gold-mining town from the inferno.

Vice President Joe Biden called them "men of uncommon valor" while thanking God that one member of the crew survived unhurt.

"There's an old saying: All men are created equal, and then a few became firefighters," Biden said. "Thank God for you all. Thank God for your willingness to take the risks you do."

The event was marked by an outpouring of support from firefighters from across the country, who traveled to the Prescott area to honor their fallen brethren.

They talked about how firefighters are accustomed to answering the call of duty when the alarm sounds and sends them into harm's way, whether it's a fire in a forest, house or apartment. And they noted that the same can be said when a fellow firefighter dies.

"When you hear of a death, especially a group of firefighters, and there's 19 that we're here to mourn, there's no question that at the drop of a hat you do what you can to go and support the fire service and their families," said Capt. Steve Brown of the Rancho Cucamonga, who brought 17 others in his department of 85 uniformed firefighters from California.

The memorial in Prescott Valley began with a choir singing "On Eagle's Wings" as Biden sang along from the sidelines. Homeland Security Secretary and former Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano looked on, as did Sen. John McCain and his wife, Cindy, and other members of the state's congressional delegation.

Biden talked about the 1972 death of his wife and young daughter in a traffic crash, and how firefighters freed his sons from the mangled wreckage.

"I don't have the privilege of knowing any of these heroes personally, but I know them. I know them because they saved the lives of my two sons," Biden said. He also said firefighters rushed him to a hospital after he suffered an aneurysm in 1998, and he credited firefighters with saving his wife Jill after lightning once struck their home.

Gov. Jan Brewer praised people around the country for responding as she hoped they would ? with candlelight vigils, financial contributions, prayers, and flowers and notes placed at makeshift memorials.

"Of course our hearts are filled with profound sadness today, but they're also filled with great pride," she said. "How wonderful is it to know that Arizona was home to 19 men like those we honor today."

Outside the minor league hockey arena, each of the 19 firefighters was represented by a U.S. flag and a purple ribbon with his name. A bronze statue of a wildland firefighter with an ax in hand, stood in front as if guarding the building.

Inside, each firefighter's name scrolled across an electronic board on two sides of the arena. Lined up in front of the stage were 19 sets of firefighting gear, complete with commemorative Pulaski tools similar to the ones the elite crew uses to dig lines around fires.

Prescott Fire Chief Dan Fraijo gave the tools to the firefighters' families, along with flags that had been flown in their honor.

Alumni of the Granite Mountain Hotshots sat in the front rows, with about 1,000 members of the fallen firefighters' families surrounding them in seats on the floor of the arena. Those who first responded to the Yarnell Hill Fire sat in the rows behind them.

Darrell Willis, a Prescott Fire Department division chief, said he traveled with the crew a couple of years ago when they fought a fire in Colorado. On the way back, the unit stopped in Glenwood Springs and then climbed Storm King Mountain, where 14 firefighters died in 1994.

"We spent the entire sunny summer afternoon evaluating, studying, talking about what happened there 19 years ago," Willis said. "They were truly committed to never letting something like this ever happen again. They were committed to returning to you after every assignment. But there was another plan."

The highly specialized crew was part of a small community of Hotshots nationwide. There are only about 110 of the 20-person teams, mostly stationed west of the Mississippi River.

McDonough was assigned to give a "heads-up on the hillside" for the team on that fateful afternoon, said Prescott Fire Department spokesman Wade Ward. McDonough notified the crew of the rapidly changing weather that sent winds swirling erratically and caused the fire to cut off his team's escape route, then swiftly left his post for safety.

Ward has said it's just been too tough on McDonough, but that "he did exactly what he was supposed to."

Tuesday's memorial was the last of a handful of vigils for the men before the first of 19 funerals begin later in the week.

Ron Merrell, pastor of Heights Church, asked for comfort in an opening prayer, saying the past week has felt like "hell on Earth," leaving the families and firefighting community broken, confused, hurt and numb. He held up the firefighters as heroes who gave the ultimate sacrifice not only in death but in life.

Two tolls of a bell rang out as each firefighter's name was called, and a member of his family stood up in the audience.

An honor guard that included alumni of the Granite Mountain Hotshots carried the flags and Pulaski tools through the aisles, turning to face the family members who accepted the items on behalf of the firefighters.

Some of the family members then hugged others next to them, as the men's pictures flashed on screens overhead and the choir began singing "You Raise Me Up."

Other photos showed the men playing with their children, riding bikes, carrying crew members on their backs, hanging out at camp and in close encounters with fire.

Biden offered the families some solace as he wrapped up his remarks.

"As unbelievable as it is to even fathom ... the day will come when the memory of your husband, your son, or your dad or your brother will bring a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eye," he said. "My prayer for all of you is that that day will come sooner than later, but I promise you as unbelievable as it is, it will come."

Biden met privately with family members after the memorial.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bless-hotshot-crew-survivor-speaks-vigil-214920039.html

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Monday, July 8, 2013

What if Turks and Caicos were part of Canada?

Turks and Caicos
The pristine beach along Grace Bay, on Turks and Caicos' Providenciales Island, stretches for more than 20 km and is never crowded. JOE BELANGER/QMI AGENCY

Report an error

Should Turks and Caicos become part of Canada? Well, according to Conservative MP Peter Goldring, it should. But this isn't the first time annexation has been discussed. Plans for Canada to annex the islands have fallen through at least three times: in the 1910s, the 1970s and the 1980s.

Learn more about Turks and Caicos' history and culture by clicking on the infographic to the left side of this page.

Source: http://www.calgarysun.com/2013/07/04/what-if-turks-and-caicos-was-part-of-canada

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

?Conoc?is el Office 365? La suite de Microsoft llega a la nube. http://bit.ly/15...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=10151701007805935&id=54999640934

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National security: New policy draws on Chinese, Malaysian models



A scholarly article on TTP

Narratives on the TTP

Asad Munir
Saturday, July 06, 2013
From Print Edition

Nawaz Sharif wants to talk to the Taliban. Imran Khan has, for many years, considered negotiations to be the only option to get rid of terrorism and is convinced that Waliur Rehman was a pro-Pakistan militant, who was only droned because the US wants to sabotage the process of negotiations with the TTP.

Two APCs, attended by all political parties, also preferred the option of negotiations over the use of force. So the majority of Pakistanis want to negotiate with the terrorists. In a democratic state we must honour the opinion of the majority and go for the option of dialogue.

An offer of talks was initiated by the TTP through a Punjabi Taliban leader Asmatullah Muawiya in late 2012, laying down three conditions, ?The government should make independent foreign policy, withdraw from the Afghan war, and form and implement a new Islamic constitution in the country?. The offer was later endorsed by the TTP, naming three politicians ? Nawaz Sharif, Fazlur Rehman and Munawar Hasan ? to act as guarantors for the implementation of any agreement that was finalised through the negotiations.

This offer was withdrawn once Waliur Rehman was killed in a drone strike. Since the TTP is so sure that the nation is in favour of talks, it has conditionally renewed the offer ?if the group sees that the elected government is able to take a stand against the country?s intelligence agencies, only then will the option of talks be considered?.

Before opting for talks, the Taliabanisation of Pakistan needs to be understood in its correct perspective. This process did not start with the US war on terror, as believed by the majority of Pakistanis.

In 1994 the Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) initiated an armed movement for enforcement of shariah in the Malakand Division. The group took control of some districts through the use of force. It took the troops of Frontier Corps more than a month to dislodge the TNSM from the areas it had captured. Nizam-e-Adl was introduced and established in Malakand in 1995 ? later revised in 1998.

However, the issue was not completely resolved and TNSM activists continued with their protests till 2001. Leaders of the TNSM enforced Taliban?s rule in Swat and Bajaur, led by Fazlullah ? son-in-law of Sufi Mohammad ? and Faqir Mohammad respectively. In 1996 the Afghan Taliban captured Kabul. Inspired by their achievements, a Taliban force was raised in the Orakzai Agency in 1997. In 1998 a Taliban force emerged in Mirali, North Waziristan.

A few tribals from South Waziristan had joined the Afghan Taliban and taken part in battles against the Northern Alliance. By the year 2000 Talibanisation had spread to Fata and some districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Once Afghanistan was invaded, the Pakistani Taliban were already active in some parts of Fata. They provided the required support system to the foreign militants who fled Afghanistan and took refuge in Pakistan.

The army was inducted into Waziristan in 2001/2002 with two objectives ? to develop infrastructure in the inaccessible areas of Waziristan and to conduct targeted operations against foreign militants who had entered Waziristan in large numbers in March 2002. The narrative that there was no terrorism before 2004 and it started because the army entered Fata is not based on facts. The army entered Fata because there were a large number of Al-Qaeda terrorists in Waziristan. These militants had plans to create a state with Fata and some border districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa included in it.

The other popular narrative believed by Pakistanis is that the issue of terrorism cannot be addressed by the use of force as we have failed to eliminate terrorism in the last eleven years. The fact is that in 2008-2009 there were eighteen administrative units, districts, tribal agencies and frontier regions that were either completely or partially under the influence of the TTP. Now they have their bases only in North Waziristan. They have been dislodged from all other areas through the use of force; they refuse to surrender through negotiations.

Very few people know that negotiations with the tribals were initiated in 2002, before the start of any operations ? and the process of dialogue continued all through these eleven years. Numerous peace deals were inked, but none produced the desired results. All such deals were used by the Taliban to their advantage; they regrouped, increased their strength, trained their fighters, explored avenues of funding and extended their influence from two tribal agencies to the whole of Fata and Malakand Division in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Negotiations are likely to be a complicated process, which will require many issues to be addressed as well as a framework accepted by both parties. Since the offer has been made by Hakeemullah Mehsud, talks will be held with his group. There are many other groups of the TTP like those of Fazlullah of Malakand, Faqir Mohammad of Bajaur, and Khalid Umer of the Mohmand Agency. Some of these militants are presently based in Kunar and the Nuristan province of Afghanistan.

Are they still part of Hakeemullah Mehsud?s TTP? Will they accept any agreement reached between the state and the TTP led by Hakeemullah Mehsud? In all probability they will not.

What about Mangal Bagh and other groups operating in the Khyber Agency? What will be the fate of Al-Qaeda and other foreign militants presently operating from North Waziristan? Will they surrender and agree to be handed over to their countries of origin or decide to live as peaceful refugees in Pakistan? What about the LeJ and other groups operating in Waziristan?

Hafiz Gul Bahadur and Mullah Nazir?s groups are presently not conducting terrorist activities inside Pakistan ? will they disband their forces once the US leaves Afghanistan? In all probability they will not; they will either join the Afghan Taliban in their battle for the capture of Kabul. If that does not happen they will keep their forces, control Waziristan and try to expand their influence to other parts of Fata, like the TTP did .

The PML-N should go ahead with the negotiations ?option?, but in all probability it may not achieve the desired results, and may not bring peace and end terrorism in this unfortunate country.

The TTP is likely to make unconstitutional and unreasonable demands. But the only advantage of such talks, in my opinion, is that it may help in building a national consensus that the use of force is the only language terrorists like the TTP understand.

The writer is a retired brigadier. Email: [email?protected]

Narratives on the TTP - Asad Munir

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/national-political-issues/262580-national-security-new-policy-draws-chinese-malaysian-models.html

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Heated NYC mayor's race is a star-studded affair

One makes a video with Steve Buscemi and rockers Vampire Weekend. Another gets shout-outs from Whoopi Goldberg and Brooke Shields. A third hobnobs over cocktails with an actor from "The Sopranos."

No, it's not an awards show weekend. It's the New York City mayor's race, featuring a cast of celebrities like few other municipal elections.

Last weekend, Democratic mayoral contender Christine Quinn unfurled a star-dusted list of pro-gay-rights backers of her bid to become the city's first female and first openly gay mayor. Among them: singer Lance Bass, actor Neil Patrick Harris, director Rob Reiner and "Project Runway" style czar Tim Gunn, who said Quinn would "make the position of mayor the bully pulpit it needs to be to fight for all New Yorkers. "

Ten days earlier, Alec Baldwin announced that he'd raffle off two dinner invites to any-amount donors to Democratic candidate Bill de Blasio.

"There are few things I enjoy more than a good meal with good company, particularly when an issue as urgent as the New York City mayoral election is up for discussion," the "30 Rock" actor told de Blasio supporters in an email, saying the candidate "understands the inequality crisis facing our city."

And in May, a fundraiser for Republican hopeful Joe Lhota spotlighted as "special guest" Steve Schirripa, best known as gentle-spirited goodfella Bobby "Bacala" Baccalieri on "The Sopranos."

With the super-competitive campaign to lead the nation's biggest city in high gear since spring, the day-to-day menu of candidate forums, policy speeches and endorsements from political figures and interest groups has increasingly been sprinkled with a healthy dash of glitz.

One day, it's a video from hip-hop impresario Russell Simmons praising de Blasio, now the city public advocate. Another day, it's Goldberg posting on her Facebook page to cheerlead for Quinn, now the City Council's leader. Or salsa star Willie Colon tweeting a link to a song he wrote lauding Democratic contender Bill Thompson, a former city comptroller.

Indeed, the race can sometimes seem like something of a ballot-box version of "Battle of the Network Stars." De Blasio's "LGBT for BdB" gala is headlined by Sarah Jessica Parker and Cynthia Nixon of "Sex and the City" fame and Tony Award-winning actor Alan Cumming? Well, here comes the "LGBT for Quinn" team, with actor-playwright Harvey Fierstein and actors Cheyenne Jackson and George Takei, along with Bass, Harris, Reiner and Gunn.

Republican candidate George McDonald, meanwhile, has links to actor Ethan Hawke, a longtime supporter of the Doe Fund, the homelessness-services nonprofit McDonald runs. GOP rival John Catsimatidis has been cultivating a theatrical tie of his own ? the billionaire businessman has been underwriting performances of "The Little Flower," actor Tony Lo Bianco's one-man show about former New York Mayor Fiorello La Guardia.

Entertainers, athletes and other pop culture icons have lent star power to national politics since at least 1920, when singer and comedian Al Jolson wrote a campaign song for Republican nominee Warren Harding and ushered dozens of theater performers to a rally at Harding's Ohio home. Later, show business would pave the path for several stars to win office themselves, most prominently President Ronald Reagan.

And celebrities' politics can be local, too, particularly in such fame havens as New York and Los Angeles, where the recent mayoral contest drew in Salma Hayek, Moby, Jimmy Kimmel and Magic Johnson, among other buzzerati.

In places where voter rolls are stuffed with boldface names, candidates can almost feel pressed to get celebs on their side, says former New York mayoral candidate Tom Allon, a newspaper publisher who dropped his campaign in March. He doesn't think stars' political opinions carry much weight with New Yorkers, but if he'd kept running and could tap some famous endorsers, "I'm sure I would have tried," he said.

While celebrities' imprimatur may not sway voters, stars can help campaigns more indirectly, political observers say.

"The crude notion that celebrities are persuasive, most of the time, for how people vote is just wrong. But I think celebrities are very important in certain situations: fundraising, attracting crowds and interest where it otherwise might not exist," says North Carolina State University political science professor Michael Cobb, who has researched whether celebrity endorsements affect voters.

A star might get more people to a rally or fundraiser, generate press coverage or write checks and round up wealthy friends to do likewise. (Several celebrities are bringing their pocketbooks to bear on the New York mayoral campaign, including Quinn donors Tom Hanks and Jon Bon Jovi and de Blasio contributors Paul Simon and John Turturro.)

And a celebrated backer can contribute to voters' view of a candidate, especially if the star's known for political activism.

Baldwin, for example, is so outspoken about city matters that he flirted with a mayoral run himself. Buscemi, a former city firefighter, got arrested alongside de Blasio in 2003 while protesting plans to close a firehouse.

Such supporters "may be famous, but they are also progressive New Yorkers and passionate activists who care deeply about the future of our city and believe we need real change" after Mayor Michael Bloomberg's 12 years, de Blasio said in a statement. His campaign's famous friends also include Susan Sarandon.

Campaigns can run the risk that celebrity supporters will distract from their message instead of amplifying it. Just ask Mitt Romney about Clint Eastwood's Republican National Convention speech to an empty chair or query President Barack Obama about Robert de Niro's crack about some GOP candidates' wives at a fundraiser earlier in 2012.

De Blasio faced questions last week after Baldwin lashed out at a British journalist with a vulgar Twitter tirade using an anti-gay term. Baldwin apologized in a statement to the gay rights group GLAAD, and a de Blasio spokesman called the actor's language "clearly unacceptable."

And Quinn was on the spot when illustrious feminist Gloria Steinem publicly threatened to forsake Quinn's mayoral campaign if Quinn kept preventing the council from voting on requiring many businesses to provide paid sick time. Quinn ultimately backed the proposal, and Steinem endorsed her.

Some candidates say their campaigns aren't courting stars. Average New Yorkers' votes "are way more valuable than the endorsement of the 'Sex and the City' cast," said Todd Brogan, a spokesman for Democratic contender Sal Albanese, a former city councilman.

Another candidate is well-known enough in his own right, for good or ill: Anthony Weiner, the Democratic former congressman felled by smutty tweets. Weiner hasn't announced any endorsements since he jumped into the race roughly six weeks ago.

Campaigns that are embracing luminaries say they're keeping fame in perspective.

"We're always so appreciative to have them," said Jessica Proud, a spokeswoman for Lhota, an ex-Metropolitan Transportation Authority boss. But ultimately, Proud said, "people want to know what you're going to do with them in office."

"You're not running for 'American Idol,'" she added. "You're running for mayor."

___

Associated Press writer Colleen Long contributed to this report.

___

Follow Jennifer Peltz at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz

Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.wral.com/heated-nyc-mayor-s-race-is-a-star-studded-affair/12632985/

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FROM A BARNYARD FAR, FAR AWAY: Someone spotted something from another galaxy in...

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Saturday, July 6, 2013

Cut-Way Enterprise Model Makes It Way Easier To Build Your Own Starship

Cut-Way Enterprise Model Makes It Way Easier To Build Your Own Starship

If you've tried and failed to build your own starship to explore the universe, it's maybe because you just didn't have a thorough understanding of how a craft like the U.S.S. Enterprise works. So if you've got it in you to try one more time, this cutaway model of Kirk's pride and joy should give you all the insight you need to build a ship capable of traveling at the speed of light.

All of the Enterprise's secrets are laid bare with this 18-inch long, eight-inch tall model. From engineering, to the warp nacelles, to the bridge, they're all visible on the left side of the craft under a protective clear plastic outer layer. You'll have to scale up the dimensions, of course, if you intend to catch a ride. And while some might balk at the model's $175 price tag, that's a drop in the cosmic bucket if you're hoping to explore the heavens. [ThinkGeek]

Cut-Way Enterprise Model Makes It Way Easier To Build Your Own Starship

Cut-Way Enterprise Model Makes It Way Easier To Build Your Own Starship

Source: http://gizmodo.com/cut-way-enterprise-model-makes-it-way-easier-to-build-y-678699893

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Sunday, June 9, 2013

Buyer, Seller or Borrower out of town for their closing? Make sure ...

Three ?things every Realtor and Lender should know about Power of Attorney documents (also commonly known as ?POA?):

#1: 99% of Power of Attorneys are prepared incorrectly and not suitable for closing unless they were prepared by the title company or real estate attorney handling the actual closing.

#2: ?99% of title companies and real estate attorneys will not accept a power of attorney for the signing of any deed by a seller. The criteria in Florida are very stringent for valid POA deed signings and most companies won?t take the risk.

#3: 99% of banks wont allow a Power of Attorney signing on a loan document. If they do allow it, the Power of Attorney will have to be approved by lender?s legal counsel far in advance of closing.

Here is a real world example of a POA that won?t work for a real transaction:

incorrectly prepared POA

For a Power of Attorney to work for a real estate transaction, it must contain the following essential elements:

  • The Principal-Grantor(s) full legal name, mailing address and marital status
  • Full legal name and mailing address of designated Attorney-in-fact (?the POA?)
  • Full legal description of the property being purchased or refinanced from the title commitment
  • Specific powers being granted to the Power of Attorney (i.e. signing mortgage, note, HUD, affidavits, etc.)
  • expiration date, if applicable
  • Two witnesses
  • Notarized
  • If any of the documents will be recorded in public record, the Power of Attorney must also contain as per Florida law, an Attorney in Fact Affidavit.

If your buyer has not yet selected a specific property??and is leaving town- NOT A PROBLEM! The Power of Attorney can contain all the above elements and state ?exhibit A? for the legal description which can be added to document once a property has been selected! A flexible, simple and effective solution.

Need a Power of Attorney prepared? Download our Power of Attorney Order Form?and we will get it done for you!

Please contact info@theclosingcompany.net ?or call 305-271-0100?701 for more information.

Legal disclaimer: I am not an attorney and I am not providing legal advice. I am not a Certified Public Accountant and am not providing tax advice. ?Please?consult with a licensed Attorney for legal advice or before signing any legal documents. Please consult with a CPA for tax planning and tax advice.

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Source: http://www.theclosingcompany.net/blog/buyer-seller-or-borrower-out-of-town-for-their-closing-make-sure-that-power-of-attorney-will-cut-it/

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Familiar names highlight Day 2 of baseball draft

By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 7:14 p.m. ET June 7, 2013

NEW YORK (AP) - The New York Mets found a familiar name during the second day of the Major League Baseball draft.

University of Connecticut infielder L.J. Mazzilli, son of Lee, was drafted by the Mets in the fourth round Friday - 40 years after the elder Mazzilli was a first-round pick of New York.

L.J. Mazzilli helped lead the Huskies to the Big East tournament title and an automatic berth to the NCAA tournament. He hit a team-best .354 with six home runs, 51 RBIs and 29 stolen bases.

The Yankees also went after famous bloodlines, drafting University of Michigan outfielder Michael O'Neill, nephew of Paul, in the third round.

"Congrats to my nephew Michael O'Neill," Paul O'Neill wrote on his Twitter page. "Drafted by the Yankees today!!!"

It's the second time Michael O'Neill was drafted by the Yankees after being selected by them in the 42nd round out of high school in 2010. He led the Wolverines in batting average (.356), slugging percentage (.498), on-base percentage (.396), runs scored (46), hits (85), doubles (17), home runs (5) and stolen bases (23) this season.

Coastal Carolina outfielder Jacob May, son of Lee May Jr. and grandson of Lee May, was also selected in the third round by the Chicago White Sox.

Northwestern right-hander Luke Farrell, son of Red Sox manager John Farrell, was drafted by the Kansas City Royals in the sixth round.

Georgia Tech outfielder Kyle Wren was taken in the eighth round by the Atlanta Braves, whose general manager is his father Frank.

Cal State Fullerton catcher Chad Wallach, the son of former All-Star third baseman Tim Wallach, was drafted in the fifth round by the Miami Marlins.

The wait finally ended for Jon Denney, an Oklahoma high school catcher who was drafted 81st overall by Boston after being the only one of nine prospects in attendance at the draft site at MLB Network Studios in Secaucus, N.J., on Thursday night not selected.

"This is awesome," Denney wrote on Twitter shortly after being drafted. "I have been a Red Sox fan my whole life! Ever since I started watching MLB baseball, now I'm a part of their organization!"

Rounds 3-10 were held via conference call with each team, with rounds 11-40 to be completed Saturday.

Houston selected Stanford pitcher Mark Appel with the No. 1 overall pick Thursday night. The Astros opened the second day by taking another college pitcher, drafting University of North Carolina left-hander Kent Emanuel with the first pick of the third round.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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All about his legacy

The story of Major League Baseball potentially handing out mass suspensions to alleged PED users is not about the players, nor their dealer, Tony Bosch. It's about a man named Allan Huber (Bud) Selig.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/47699445/ns/sports-baseball/

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Saturday, June 8, 2013

Judge orders inquiry in Paris Jackson wellbeing

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? An investigation into Paris Jackson's well-being has been ordered by a judge overseeing the guardianship of Michael Jackson's three children, court records show.

Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff ordered an investigator to look into Paris Jackson's health, education and welfare and recommend whether any changes are necessary on Thursday, one day after she was taken by ambulance from her family's home and hospitalized.

Authorities have said they were dispatched to the home on a report of a possible overdose, but have not released any additional details.

"There have been communications between the court and counsel and we're completely supportive of the court's actions," Katherine Jackson's attorney, Perry Sanders Jr., said Friday.

He has said the 15-year-old is physically fine and receiving appropriate medical treatment. He declined further comment on her health status Friday.

Beckloff issued a similar inquiry into the well-being of Michael Jackson's three children, Prince, Paris and Blanket, last year after an incident in which Katherine Jackson was out of communication with them for several days. The Jackson family matriarch had been taken by some of her children to a resort in Arizona, prompting an agreement that led to another guardian being temporarily instated.

Tito Jackson's son, TJ, was appointed co-guardian over the children.

"This is standard protocol in a high profile case," his attorney Charles Shultz wrote in an email. "The court is doing what we fully expected the court to do."

An attorney for Jackson's estate said it would assist Katherine and TJ Jackson however necessary to help Paris Jackson.

"The estate will work with Paris's guardians to provide whatever is required for her best interests," estate attorney Howard Weitzman wrote in a statement. "We are totally and completely supportive of Paris as her well-being is our foremost concern."

The earlier report to Beckloff was not made public, although he has stated that he believed Katherine Jackson was doing a good job of raising her son's children.

Beckloff's order requires an investigator to prepare a report that only he will be allowed to review. He did not include instructions on how the review should occur or when the report was due. Last year, Beckloff required an investigator to interview each of the children separately.

The filing was first reported Friday by celebrity website TMZ.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/judge-orders-inquiry-paris-jackson-wellbeing-200717197.html

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Italy must stand up to Germany, Berlusconi says

ROME (Reuters) - Silvio Berlusconi urged Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta on Friday to seek a "test of strength" with Germany, saying budget austerity imposed by Berlin was killing Italian companies and putting the euro zone at risk.

Italy's economy is mired in a recession that has been dragging on since mid-2011, driving up unemployment and forcing the closure of thousands of companies.

Germany, Europe's biggest economy, has resisted calls to loosen budgetary constraints on southern European countries.

Berlusconi's comments underline the challenge facing Letta, whose fragile left-right coalition depends on support from the media tycoon's centre-right People of Freedom party but who must also balance commitments made to Italy's European partners.

In remarks published in the political daily Il Foglio, former premier Berlusconi said Europe needed "decisively expansive" economic policies to prevent the single currency being destabilized.

"The government has to seek a test of strength without creating a big outcry but with great resolution, with the aim of convincing countries in Europe and particularly Angela Merkel's Germany that we face a stark choice," the billionaire said.

"Either our voice is heard strongly and clearly or the government will lose the popular legitimacy which national unity, in support of a grand coalition, guarantees it," he said.

Italy, struggling with a public debt of more than 130 percent of gross domestic product despite repeated rounds of tax hikes and spending cuts, has record jobless levels and a youth unemployment rate of about 40 percent.

Letta has called for greater emphasis on stimulating economic growth but he has also pledged to maintain Italy's strict budgetary targets, keeping the public deficit below 3 percent of gross domestic product.

Berlusconi's remarks were the latest in a series of barbs directed against Germany. He said Italy could not accept seeing its companies forced out of business, move abroad or be obliged to "restructure to the point of destruction".

"An Italy which loses weight and wealth beyond what we have lost already, ready to be auctioned off through the domineering methods of those in a position of strength ... is not acceptable," he said.

(Reporting By James Mackenzie; Editing by Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-must-stand-germany-berlusconi-says-102048230.html

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What you should know about NSA phone data program

A sign stands outside the National Security Administration (NSA) campus in Fort Meade, Md., Thursday, June 6, 2013. The Obama administration on Thursday defended the National Security Agency's need to collect telephone records of U.S. citizens, calling such information "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats." (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

A sign stands outside the National Security Administration (NSA) campus in Fort Meade, Md., Thursday, June 6, 2013. The Obama administration on Thursday defended the National Security Agency's need to collect telephone records of U.S. citizens, calling such information "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats." (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

This undated US government photo shows an aerial view of the National Security Agency (NSA) in Fort Meade, Md. The Obama administration on Thursday defended the National Security Agency's need to collect telephone records of U.S. citizens, calling such information "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats." (AP Photo/US Government)

FILE - In this Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2012, file photo, customers walk into a Verizon Wireless store in Dallas. The Obama administration on Thursday, June 6, 2013, defended the government's need to collect telephone records of American citizens, calling such information "a critical tool in protecting the nation from terrorist threats." Britain's Guardian newspaper reported that the NSA has been collecting the telephone records of millions of Verizon customers under a top secret court order. (AP Photo/LM Otero, File)

(AP) ? The government knows who you're calling.

Every day. Every call.

Here's what you need to know about the secret program and how it works:

___

Q: What happened and why is it a big deal?

A: The Guardian newspaper published a highly classified April U.S. court order that allows the government access to all of Verizon's phone records on a daily basis, for both domestic and international calls. That doesn't mean the government is listening in, and the National Security Agency did not receive the names and addresses of customers. But it did receive all phone numbers with outgoing or incoming calls, as well as the unique electronic numbers that identify cellphones. That means the government knows which phones are being used, even if customers change their numbers.

This is the first tangible evidence of the scope of a domestic surveillance program that has existed for years but has been discussed only in generalities. It proves that, in the name of national security, the government sweeps up the call records of Americans who have no known ties to terrorists or criminals.

___

Q: How is this different from the NSA wiretapping that was going on under President George W. Bush?

A: In 2005, The New York Times revealed that Bush had signed a secret order allowing the NSA to eavesdrop on Americans without court approval, a seismic shift in policy for an agency that had previously been prohibited from spying domestically. The exact scope of that program has never been known, but it allowed the NSA to monitor phone calls and emails. After it became public, the Bush administration dubbed it the "Terrorist Surveillance Program" and said it was a critical tool in protecting the United States from attack.

"The NSA program is narrowly focused, aimed only at international calls and targeted at al-Qaida and related groups," the Justice Department said at the time.

But while wiretapping got all the attention, the government was also collecting call logs from American phone companies as part of that program, a U.S. official said Thursday. After the wiretapping controversy, the collection of call records continued, albeit with court approval. That's what we're seeing in the newly released court document: a judge's authorization for something that began years ago with no court oversight.

___

Q: Why does the government even want my phone records?

A: They're not interested in your records, in all likelihood, but your calls make up the background noise of the global phone system.

Look at your monthly phone bill, and you'll see patterns: calls home as you leave work, food delivery orders on Friday nights, that once-a-week call to mom and dad.

It's like that, except on a monumentally bigger scale.

The classified court ruling doesn't say what the NSA intends to do with your records. But armed with the nation's phone logs, the agency's computers have the ability to identify what normal call behavior looks like. And, with powerful computers, it would be possible to compare the entire database against computer models the government believes show what terrorist calling patterns look like.

Further analysis could identify what are known in intelligence circles as "communities of interest" ? the networks of people who are in contact with targets or suspicious phone numbers.

Over time, the records also become a valuable archive. When officials discover a new phone number linked to a suspected terrorist, they can consult the records to see who called that number in the preceding months or years.

Once the government has narrowed its focus on phone numbers it believes are tied to terrorism or foreign governments, it can go back to the court with a wiretap request. That allows the government to monitor the calls in real time, record them and store them indefinitely.

___

Q: Why just Verizon?

A: It's probably not. A former U.S. intelligence official familiar with the NSA program says that records from all U.S. phone companies would be seized, and that they would include business and residential numbers. Only the court order involving Verizon has been made public.

In 2006, USA Today reported that the NSA was secretly collecting the phone call records of tens of millions of Americans. The newspaper identified phone companies that cooperated in that effort. The newspaper ultimately distanced itself from that report after some phone companies denied being part of such a government program.

The court document published by The Guardian, however, offers credence to the original USA Today story, which declared: "The NSA program reaches into homes and businesses across the nation by amassing information about the calls of ordinary Americans ? most of whom aren't suspected of any crime."

___

Q: But in this case, a judge approved it. Does that mean someone had to show probable cause that a crime was being committed?

A: No. The seizure was authorized by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which operates under very different rules from a typical court. Probable cause is not required.

The court was created by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 and is known in intelligence circles as the FISA court. Judges appointed by the president hear secret evidence and authorize wiretapping, search warrants and other clandestine efforts to monitor suspected or known spies and terrorists.

For decades, the court was located in a secure area at Justice Department headquarters. While prosecutors in criminal cases must come to court seeking subpoenas, the FISA judges came to the Justice Department. That changed in 2008 with the construction of a new FISA court inside the U.S. District Court in Washington. The courtroom is essentially a vault, designed to prevent anyone from eavesdropping on what goes on inside.

In this instance, Judge Roger Vinson authorized the NSA to seize the phone records under a provision in the USA Patriot Act, which passed shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and vastly expanded the government's ability to collect information on Americans.

___

Q: If not probable cause, what standard did the government use in this case?

A: The judge relied on one of the most controversial aspects of the Patriot Act: Section 215, which became known colloquially as the "library records provision" because it allowed the government to seize a wide range of documents, including library records. Under that provision, the government must show that there are "reasonable grounds to believe" that the records are relevant to an investigation intended to "protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities."

Exactly what "relevant" meant has been unclear. With the release of the classified court order, the public can see for the first time that everyone's phone records are relevant.

The Justice Department has staunchly defended Section 215, saying it was narrowly written and has safeguarded liberties.

Some in Congress, however, have been sounding alarms about it for years. Though they are prohibited from revealing what they know about the surveillance programs, Democratic Sens. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Mark Udall or Colorado have said the government's interpretation of the law has gone far beyond what the public believes.

"We believe most Americans would be stunned to learn the details of how these secret court opinions have interpreted section 215 of the Patriot Act," the senators wrote in a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder last year.

___

Q: Why don't others in Congress seem that upset about all this?

A: Many members of Congress have known this was going on for years. While Americans might be surprised to see, in writing, an authorization to sweep up their phone records, that's old news to many in Congress.

"Everyone should just calm down and understand that this isn't anything that's brand new," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Thursday. "It's been going on for some seven years."

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Vice Chairman Saxby Chambliss issued a similar statement:

"The executive branch's use of this authority has been briefed extensively to the Senate and House Intelligence and Judiciary Committees, and detailed information has been made available to all members of Congress."

___

Q: What does the Obama administration have to say about this?

A: So far, very little. Despite campaigning against Bush's counterterrorism efforts, President Barack Obama has continued many of the most controversial ones including, it is now clear, widespread monitoring of American phone records.

The NSA is particularly reluctant to discuss its programs. Even as it has secretly collected millions of phone records, it has tried to cultivate an image that it was not in the domestic surveillance business.

In March, for instance, NSA spokeswoman Vanee Vines, emailed an Associated Press reporter about a story that described the NSA as a monitor of worldwide internet data and phone calls.

"NSA collects, monitors, and analyzes a variety of (asterisk)(asterisk)(asterisk)FOREIGN(asterisk)(asterisk)(asterisk) signals and communications for indications of threats to the United States and for information of value to the U.S. government," she wrote. " (asterisk)(asterisk)(asterisk)FOREIGN(asterisk)(asterisk)(asterisk) is the operative word. NSA is not an indiscriminate vacuum, collecting anything and everything."

___

Q: Why hasn't anyone sued over this? Can I?

A: People have sued. But challenging the legality of secret wiretaps is difficult because, in order to sue, you have to know you've been wiretapped. In 2006, for instance, a federal judge in Detroit declared the NSA warrantless wiretapping program unconstitutional. But the ruling was overturned when an appeals court that said the plaintiffs ? civil rights groups, lawyers and scholars ? didn't have the authority to sue because they couldn't prove they were wiretapped.

Court challenges have also run up against the government's ability to torpedo lawsuits that could jeopardize state secrets.

The recent release of the classified court document is sure to trigger a new lawsuit in the name of Verizon customers whose records were seized. But now that the surveillance program is under the supervision of the FISA court and a warrant was issued, a court challenge is more difficult.

Suing Verizon would also be difficult. A lawsuit against AT&T failed because Congress granted telecommunications companies retroactive immunity for cooperating with warrantless surveillance. In this instance, Verizon was under a court order to provide the records to the government, making a lawsuit against the company challenging.

___

Q: Can the government read my emails?

A: Not under this court order, but it's not clear whether the NSA is monitoring email content as part of this program.

In 2006, former AT&T technician Mark Klein described in federal court papers how a "splitter" device in San Francisco siphoned millions of Americans' Internet traffic to the NSA. That probably included data sent to or from AT&T Internet subscribers, such as emails and the websites they visited.

Most email messages are sent through the Internet in "plain-text" form, meaning they aren't encrypted and anyone with the right tools can view their contents. Similar to an old-fashioned envelope and letter, every email contains details about whom it's from and where it's supposed to go.

Unlike postal letters, those details can include information that can be linked to a subscriber's billing account, even if he or she wants to remain anonymous.

In May 2012, Wyden and Udall asked the NSA how many people inside the United States had their communications "collected or reviewed."

The intelligence community's inspector general, I. Charles McCullough III, told the senators that providing such an estimate "would likely impede the NSA's mission" and "violate the privacy of U.S. persons."

___

Associated Press writers Jack Gillum and Lara Jakes contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-06-NSA-Phone%20Records-QandA/id-503fa4acbeb841ae9d912628e35f5752

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Electronic implants: New fast transcutaneous non-invasive battery recharger and energy feeder

Apr. 9, 2013 ? Ant?nio Abreu, a Sustainable Energy Systems PhD Student under the MIT Portugal Program, currently developing research work at LNEG (Laborat?rio Nacional de Energia e Geologia I.P.) has developed a non-invasive battery recharger system for electronic implants that allows a longer life for the internal implantable devices in the human body such as, pacemakers, defibrillators, electric heart, delaying considerable the usual customary surgery intervention for replacement.

According to the world health organization, cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of deaths. On a last resource, patients with cardiovascular disease have to be aided through surgery and medical devices to help them perform the basic functions. Nevertheless medical devices, such as pacemaker that sends electrical impulses to the heart muscle to maintain a suitable heart rate and rhythm, need a source of energy and once the battery has run out they required a surgical procedure similar to the initial implantation to replace the device.

With the non-invasive battery recharger for electronic cardiac implants the need for a new surgical intervention is reduced, since it primes from being rechargeable, i.e. the patient will not need to be operated upon to change batteries every five to seven years, since these are rechargeable by irradiant electricity passing through the body. Ant?nio Abreu adds that "The non-invasive battery also allows for a customize energy consumption of the cardiac implants, therefore the consumption of energy can be regulated to adapted to its function and patients' pathology and activity. It guarantees the energetic supply of a communication channel between the exterior for diagnosis and/or implant reprogramming. In this case, there will be no demand of energy from the internal battery."

The principle of the operation is the use of a high efficient Transcutaneous Power System. However, these typical systems use electronic converters witch generate hazard electromagnetic interferences (EMI) that causes damage to the implants as to the patients. The present innovation takes into account the Energy Efficiency in electric transmission systems without ferromagnetic cores, regarding medical application. In practice it eliminates the Gibbs phenomena.

The invention optimizes the energy flow determined by the regime of exploration previewed at the innovative Predictor-Corrector Abacus conception.

The Predictor-Corrector Abacus is a representation in the complex plan of a situation where a specific load is supplied by an electrical energy to the Active Power P, and Reactive Power Q. What characterizes this Abacus is the circumstance of considering the effect of the reactance and the resistance of longitudinal transmission lines that is evident at the figure by the position of the angles of segments lines that proliferate in the first and second quadrants of the Argand's complex plan. The best position of the segments lines defines the maximum of power transference without electromagnetic interferences.

The Prototype, patented by Ant?nio Abreu in the USA and in Europe with the collaboration and support of the PRIME (Incentive Program for the Modernization of the Economy) program and approved by the European Commission, was initially designed for pacemakers application but currently, and according to the medical development, new improved technics were made to be suitable for high power (and high voltages too) devices, such defibrillators, electric heart, insulin pumps or other type of implantable prosthesis.

Moreover, the same principle that allows the supply of lower energy voltages can be applied to improve the high power electrical transmission and distribution systems (electrical grid) to reduce costs due the consumer electric consumption, according to the results obtained.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electricity/~3/howWyuk3dac/130409131804.htm

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