Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Officially announced: Samsung Galaxy Tab 3

We had a lot of leaked and speculated information regarding Samsung Galaxy Tab 3, and now, we?re proud to inform you that Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 has been officially announced.



Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 comes with 7-inch 1024?600 169 PPI display. As for other hardware, this tablet uses 1.2 GHz dual-core processor and 1GB or RAM. Regarding the storage space, this tablet comes with 8GB or 16GB of built-in memory, but there?s also a microSD card slot, so you you can easily expand it.

In addition, Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 comes with 3MP main camera and 1.3MP front camera for video calls. Regarding the operating system, Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 runs on Android 4.1 Jelly Bean mobile operating system.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 is almost identical to its predecessor, although it has few enhanced hardware specs, so you might think twice before upgrading from your Galaxy Tab 2. As for the availability, we should see WiFi-only model in May, while the 3G version should be released in June. So far, we have no information regarding the price.

[via Ubergizmo]

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Mobile, Social Newsreader Flud Finds A Home In The Enterprise With A SharePoint & Yammer-Integrated Service For Both Private And Public Content

flud-handThe newsreader business has undergone major shifts in recent months. Flipboard has emerged as the consumer's preferred mobile magazine, Pulse was acquired by LinkedIn for $90 million, Google Reader is shutting down, and now another early entrant, Flud, has?refocused on?the enterprise market. The company began quietly testing the waters about six months ago after feedback from customers hinted at demand for a white-labeled option that could be used to read private, corporate content.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/btBB1Nvqcr0/

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Obama to honor bombing victims in Boston

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama is seeking to refocus a nervous nation's attention on those killed and gravely wounded in what he called an "act of terror" at the Boston Marathon.

Americans also will be looking to the president to offer reassurances about the nation's safety as investigators scramble to answer key questions about an attack with origins that are yet unknown.

The president was to speak Thursday at an interfaith service in Boston honoring the three people killed and 170 injured when a pair of bombs ripped through the crowd gathered Monday afternoon near the finish line of the famous race. Investigators have an image of a potential suspect, though much about what happened remains a mystery, keeping tensions high in Boston and elsewhere around the country.

Compounding the nation's jitters were letters sent to Washington officials that contained suspicious substances, including ones addressed to Obama and Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., that showed traces of poisonous ricin in initial tests. The letters evoked eerie parallels to the anthrax attacks that followed the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

It's against that backdrop that Obama and his wife, Michelle, are heading to Boston for the "Healing Our City" service. He may also meet with some of those injured, as well as the first responders who rushed toward the blast to help the scores of runners and spectators.

"We send our support and encouragement to people who never expected that they'd need it ? the wounded civilians who are just beginning what will be, I'm sure for some of them, a long road to recovery," Obama said Wednesday in a likely preview of his remarks at the service.

The president has stepped into this role as the nation's consoler in chief many times before in his presidency, most recently in December after the massacre of 20 first-graders and six educators at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn. Before that, there were the deadly shootings in Aurora, Colo., Tucson, Ariz., and Fort Hood, Texas, as well as the natural disasters that tore apart towns and neighborhoods in Missouri and the New York-New Jersey area.

This time, Obama must confront the unique challenges of a terror attack that inevitably revived memories of 9/11. As he did in a statement from the White House on Tuesday, the president was expected to urge the public to remain vigilant, while declaring that "the American people refuse to be terrorized."

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-honor-bombing-victims-boston-065945585--politics.html

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Friday, April 19, 2013

MTN says U.S. ruling a "positive" in Iran suit defense

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The chief executive of South African telecom MTN Group on Thursday hailed a U.S. Supreme Court ruling as a major boost to its defense against a $4.2 billion lawsuit from rival Turkcell.

"It's definitely a positive for our case," Sifiso Dabengwa told Reuters in a telephone interview on Thursday.

Turkcell is suing MTN, Africa's biggest mobile phone company, in a U.S. federal court using a 224-year-old law.

However, the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday limited the ability of human rights plaintiffs to invoke that law, a ruling seen as a major victory for foreign multinationals.

The federal court had delayed ruling on the Turkcell suit filed a year ago, pending the outcome of Wednesday's Supreme Court ruling.

Critically for Turkcell's suit - which involves two companies that are not based in the United States - the ruling is seen as limiting the reach of U.S. courts in claims seen as lacking sufficient connection to the United States.

Turkcell said in a statement it was "inappropriate" to comment before a ruling from the federal court, adding that its case could be addressed in the coming weeks.

Turkey's largest cell phone firm alleges that MTN used bribery and peddling of political influence to win a mobile license in Iran that was first awarded to Turkcell.

MTN has denied the charges.

Shares of MTN were up 0.81 percent at 163.51 rand at 1105 GMT. Turkcell's shares were also little changed.

(Reporting by David Dolan; Editing by Ed Cropley)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mtn-says-u-ruling-positive-iran-suit-defense-111900015--finance.html

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Watch Cat Zingano?s emotional walk-in from ?The Ultimate Fighter? finale win

Cat Zingano won in her UFC debut on Saturday with a TKO of Miesha Tate in the third round. Her emotional walk-in didn't make the broadcast, but it's definitely worth watchin now.

Crying is not a sign of weakness. It's just one way to show emotion, no different than yelling, punching the air or jumping up and down. Zingano was so moved by the moment of her first UFC fight that she was moved to tears, but then showed minutes later just how strong she is.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/watch-cat-zingano-emotional-walk-ultimate-fighter-finale-131531834--mma.html

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

War correspondent pays tribute to comrade who died in Libya

Hetherington in Afghanistan (courtesy HBO)

Tim Hetherington is trying to explain why he's drawn to documenting wars.

?There are all sorts of generalizations made up about [war]. But in going to these extremities, what?s interesting is that you see that?even in these terrible times, in these terrible moments and in these terrible extremities?people are still human. That for me is the redeeming factor of the human experience,? Hetherington says somberly before breaking into laughter. ?No,? he adds, aware of how clich? he sounds. ?That?s too f-cking bullsh-t.?

The footage, outtakes from a British television interview with Hetherington?who was killed while covering the uprising in Libya in April 2011?kicks off ?Which Way is the Front Line from Here," a posthumous documentary about the photojournalist?s life directed by his friend and colleague Sebastian Junger.

When Hetherington was killed, Junger tried to make sense of the tragedy by seeking out and questioning the journalists who had been with him when he died.

?I had a lot of questions,? Junger told Yahoo News. ?All I had known is that he had been killed. I didn?t even know what the wound was. My first impulse was to interview the journalists who had been with him to answer those questions. Very quickly I realized I was making a film.?

While Hetherington had laughed off his answer, the film shows how invested he was in seeking out the "human experience." It quickly shifts to footage Hetherington shot while covering the Libyan uprising. Sitting inside a car on a dusty road in Misrata, Hetherington slowly pans around the vehicle to film a normal-looking scene with his colleagues--including Getty Images photographer Chris Hondros, who seems to be bobbing his head to the song on the radio: ?How Deep is Your Love?? by the Bee Gees.

But you soon realize this is no ordinary car ride. Their driver, who calmly smokes a cigarette, sits close to his machine gun as he speeds along a deserted road littered with bombed-out cars and buildings. In a nearby car, two little kids hang out a back window and flash peace signs to the camera.

?Which way is the front line from here?? Hetherington asks at one point. He doesn?t get an answer, but just hours later, he and Hondros would be dead, killed in a mortar attack on the very front line they'd been looking for.

Nearly two years later, Junger is still struggling to understand why Hetherington died. The two barely knew each other when they were paired by Vanity Fair magazine in 2007 to embed with a platoon of soldiers in a remote area of Afghanistan. Junger was basically a celebrity, known for his best-selling book 'The Perfect Storm," about a fishing boat caught up in the wild seas. Hetherington was a veteran war photographer, known for his coverage of conflicts in West Africa. Together, they made a film about the war called "Restrepo," which was nominated for an Oscar in 2011. Along the way, the two had become as close as brothers.

But as they attended the Academy Award ceremony that year, Hetherington was antsy. Overseas, the Arab world was in flames. A revolution was overtaking Egypt, and rebel forces were rising up against Libyan ruler Muammar Qaddafi.

?He wanted to be there,? Junger told Yahoo News.

So just weeks after walking the Oscars red carpet, Hetherington was on the ground in Libya, back in his element and aiming to document what had been a long theme in his work: Why are young men so drawn to war? Junger?s documentary is influenced by Hetherington?s quest to understand this. But Junger?s inquiry seems to be: Why was Hetherington so drawn to war?

That exploration leads to an examination of Hetherington?s life and work?dating back to his 2003 coverage of the political upheaval in Liberia, where he was only one of a handful of foreign journalists behind rebel lines during the country?s civil war.

The film includes harrowing footage of Hetherington under fire. But it also includes footage and photographs Hetherington took when he paused to engage with his subjects. It was that desire to talk that made Hetherington unique among photojournalists, said Junger, since many combat photographers tend to keep their distance from their subjects. In the footage, Hetherington is shown laughing with children in Sri Lanka and joking around with the soldiers he was embedded with in Afghanistan. His sense of humor and joy for life is evident, even in what were often difficult circumstances.

?He was not interested in war, but he was really interested in people and what happens to people in war,? Junger said.

In the film, James Brabazon, who covered the Liberian civil war alongside Hetherington, says of his friend, ?He didn?t see a division between being a photographer or a videographer or a journalist or a humanitarian or a participant. He was just Tim. It?s very hard to find that.?

But Junger?s film also seems to question whether Hetherington took his desire to be on the front line too far. According to the documentary, Hetherington, who was 40 when he died, was conflicted about his desire to settle down with his girlfriend, Idil Ibrahim, and his quest to tell the story of war. In the documentary he even acknowledges that war photography can be a ?very destructive thing to carry on beyond a certain age.?

The film ends with footage Hetherington shot in Misrata before he and Hondros were killed, including a visit inside a building were rebel soldiers were trying to smoke out enemy snipers by sending burning tires into rooms where they were barricaded.

The area felt unsafe to some journalists who had been with Hetherington and his group earlier that day, including photographer Andre Liohn, who questions in the film whether the group had put themselves in unnecessary danger.

?In the war you lose a lot of things, one of the things that you lose can be the original connection that took you there,? Liohn says. ?I felt they were not paying the proper attention and the proper respect to everything that was happening around. They were trying to get in front of the rebels.?

Junger said he included Liohn?s comments because he still struggles with the question of whether Hetherington took too much of a risk that day.

?The decision to go out to the front line is inherently risky. It?s inherently understandable because front lines are compelling. And it?s inherently stupid. It?s all of them at the same time,? Junger said. ?Everyone makes that decision, and most of the time it goes fine. And when it doesn?t go fine everyone goes, ?What the hell were you thinking???

Junger added, ?That said, I do wonder why after the intensity of fighting that Tim was part of in the morning, why he felt compelled to go out for a second dose, a second helping? That I don?t quite get. But had I been there, I think I would have been perfectly capable of doing the same thing. So I don?t want to be too judgmental about it. But I do wonder.?

Hetherington and Hondros were standing near each other when Qaddafi forces lobbed an artillery shell at the group of rebels they were photographing. Hondros died from severe head trauma, while Hetherington died from massive blood loss from an injury near his groin.

After Hetherington?s death, Junger launched a non-profit called Reporters Instructed in Saving Colleagues (RISC) to give reporters and photographers combat medical training that some say could have saved Hetherington?s life. The training is free.

Junger said he hopes the documentary will help Hetherington?s memory live on and help viewers appreciate the risks that photojournalists take in covering conflict. But it?s also an inherent lesson for journalists in how to cover war?not just visually, but also in how to stay safe while doing so.

The film premieres on HBO just two days before the second anniversary of Hetherington?s death. In the film, Junger recalls an email he received from a Vietnam veteran about Hetherington being killed, who told him that the ?reality of war? is that you?re ?guaranteed to lose your brothers.?

Junger admitted he still struggles with his friend's death.

?He was my brother,? Junger said. ?And I miss him.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/sebastian-junger-pays-tribute-tim-hetherington-documentary-140752344.html

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

Some 50,000 flee Sudan into Chad after Darfur clashes

N'DJAMENA (Reuters) - Some 50,000 Sudanese have fled into southeastern Chad in the past week following fresh tribal conflict in the restive Darfur region, U.N. and Chadian officials said on Friday.

Melissa Fleming, a spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commission for Refugees, said the fighting had spread as each side received reinforcements from tribal allies and had become more violent, with entire villages being razed.

A total of 74,000 refugees had fled to Chad in the past two months, she said.

"People are arriving wounded and telling us their houses are destroyed and their villages completely burned down, with many people killed," she told a news conference in Geneva.

The refugees have fled to an arid area along the Chad, Sudan and Central African Republic border.

"The area they are arriving in is very remote. They left with nothing: there is no water, no food. They are sleeping under trees," Fleming said, adding there was a risk of disease.

General Moussa Haroun Tirgo, the governor of the Sila region of southeastern Chad where the refugees have fled, told Reuters that about 52 wounded had arrived since Thursday.

"The situation is worrying given that the zone does not have enough medical infrastructure," Tirgo said. "We're evaluating the needs with the help of NGOs but the situation is very serious."

Conflict has ravaged Sudan's western Darfur region since 2003 when mainly non-Arab rebels took up arms against the Arab-led government, accusing it of politically and economically marginalizing the region.

Violence has subsided from its peak in 2003 and 2004, but a surge has forced more than 130,000 people to flee their homes this year, according to the United Nations.

(Reporting by Madjiasra Nako in N'djamena and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; Writing by Bate Felix; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/50-000-flee-sudan-chad-darfur-clashes-125131452.html

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Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Three Tour Operators To Earn Scholarships for the 2013 Adventure ...

Seattle, WA?? Providing financial support to early-stage adventure tourism enterprises is the purpose behind the Tour Operator Scholarships launched today by the Adventure Travel Trade Association (ATTA) and the ?legal office of Rome McGuigan, P.C., adventure travel legal specialists. ?

Deserving scholarship winners for 2013 will gain access to the Adventure Travel Trade Association?s global network of nearly 900 members, its membership resources and travel fare and a delegate seat for the 2013 Adventure Travel World Summit set for October 26-31, 2013 in Windhoek and Swakopmund, Namibia.

Scholarship winners will use these ATTA resources to help them grow their business, network, develop their professional skills and be inspired by industry peers and influencers, all with the end goal of providing them the chance to take their business to the next level.

Specifically, each of the three scholarship recipients selected by May 15, 2013, will receive:

  • One annual Tour Operator membership in the Adventure Travel Trade Association ($600)

  • One pass for one person from the Tour Operator company to attend the Adventure Travel World Summit held October of this year ($1,150)

  • $1,500 USD for Scholarship winner?s travel to the Summit

All entries will be reviewed by members of the ATTA?s staff and Advisory Board, and then voted upon to determine the winners based on the following criteria:

  • Demonstrated need ie. start-ups, non-profit status, located in an emerging, but impoverished destination, etc.;

  • Potential for positive impact on local cultural, ecological, and/or historical resources;

  • Exemplary ecological, historical, and cultural practices;

  • Exemplary efforts to work with local and indigenous peoples;

  • Proof of the highest level of professional ethics and practices; and,

  • Ability to prove how this Scholarship will be used to elevate the business to a higher level of success ? and how it can be utilized over the long run in order to build long-term and lasting success for the company.

Tour operators must be at least 18 years of age, legally able to travel to Namibia, incorporated adventure travel tour operators only, have been in business for more than three years and bring in less than $250,000 USD each year in gross revenue

The Scholarship submission period opened April 1st, with final entries due by 11:59 p.m. (PDT) on April 30, 2013. Only 100 applicants will be accepted, if they are received prior to April 30 than the application period will close early. Qualified tour operators may access the Tour Operator Scholarship Submission Form and the complete and official program and application details at: https://www.adventuretravel.biz/connect/summit/scholarship/

?

About Rome McGuigan

The law firm of Rome McGuigan, P.C. enjoys an enviable niche among law firms with its Travel and Tourism Department. This group, led by Attorney Jeff Ment, represents many facets of the travel industry ? tour operators, suppliers, agents and insurers. Among the broad range of travel and tourism services offered, one key speciality is handling the immediate needs following an incident or accident. Another core focus of the Department is to assist clients with day to day operations including drafting contracts, waivers and terms and conditions; reviewing marketing materials; providing risk management services; preparing critical incident protocols; and navigating effective relationships with vendors, DMCs, providers of accommodations and travel agents. The firm and its lawyers are members of many trade organizations: Adventure Travel Trade Association, United States Tour Operators Association, National Tour Association, Academy of Hospitality Industry Attorneys, Leisure Industries section of the International Bar Association, the Air & Space section of the American Bar Association, and the International Forum of Travel & Tourism. Our clients range from small, start-up operators to some of the world?s most respected companies in the travel industry.

About Adventure Travel Trade Association

Established in 1990, the Adventure Travel Trade Association (ATTA) serves nearly 900 members in 80 countries worldwide. Members predominantly include tour operators, tourism boards, specialty agents and accommodations with a vested interest in the sustainable development of adventure tourism. The ATTA delivers solutions and connections that propel members towards their business goals and the industry toward a responsible and profitable future. Through its regional AdventureConnect events and annual Adventure Travel World Summit trade conference, the ATTA excels in professional learning, networking and partnering services. With expertise in research, education, adventure travel industry news and promotion, members of the ATTA receive competitive opportunities that help establish them as leaders in adventure tourism.

Source: http://www.adventuretravelnews.com/three-tour-operators-to-earn-scholarships-for-the-2013-adventure-travel-world-summit

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Monday, April 1, 2013

NCAA 'BracketRacket' roundup

With Syracuse and Wichita State moving on to the Final Four, the Associated Press has a roundup of notable moments and predictions for the NCAA tournament thus far.

By Aaron Beard,?AP Basketball Writer / March 31, 2013

Wichita State Shockers' Carl Hall, Chadrack Lufile, Demetric Williams and Cleanthony Early (r. to l.) celebrate defeating the Ohio State Buckeyes in their West Regional NCAA men's basketball game in Los Angeles, California, Saturday.

Lucy Nicholson/Reuters

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Welcome back to BracketRacket, your one-stop shopping place for all things?NCAA.

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It's our first edition for the regional finals, with Syracuse and Wichita State having secured the first spots in the Final Four. Stops along our tour include: the bracket-busting Shockers, Coach K's ever-present concerns about conference realignment, former Georgia Tech star John Salley's excitement at having the Final Four in Atlanta, a heartwarming tale of sportsmanship and a farewell to tournament darling Florida Gulf Coast.

THE SHOCKING SHOCKERS

Wichita State has gone from a ninth-seeded mid-major aiming to win an?NCAA?game to an unexpected arrival in the Final Four.

Just how unexpected?

According to ESPN, less than 1 percent ? 0.24 percent, to be exact ? of 8.15 million brackets submitted in ESPN's Fantasy Tournament Challenge had the Shockers reaching the national semifinals.

Head over to Yahoo! for its Tourney Pick 'Em contest, and only 32 percent of more than 3.3 million brackets had the Shockers even winning their opener against Pittsburgh, much less beating top seed Gonzaga and No. 2 seed Ohio State on the way to the West Region title.

WICHITA STATE 101

Since Wichita State isn't a household name, here's a quick primer to impress friends with your Missouri Valley Conference knowledge:

The school opened in 1895 as Fairmount College, then became the Municipal University of Wichita in 1926 on the way to becoming a state university in 1964. It has an enrollment of 14,893 students.

The "Shockers" mascot is short for "Wheatshockers" and recalls when students shocked wheat to earn money during the harvest season, according to the school's web site.

While the Shockers reached the Final Four in 1965 and won the College World Series in 1989, the most successful athletic program has been ? surprise! ? bowling. Wichita State has 19 national championships between its men's and women's programs since 1975.

Among the school's biggest sports names: former NFL coach Bill Parcells, a former Shockers football player; former NBA player Xavier "The X-Man" McDaniel; and former big leaguer Joe Carter, who hit the World Series-clinching home run for Toronto in 1993 against Philadelphia.

K, THE ACC AND THE FUTURE

AP Sports Writer Michael Marot reports from Indianapolis that Duke's Mike Krzyzewski is thinking about more than just Sunday's regional final against future Atlantic Coast Conference member Louisville.

"For all these schools that have joined, it makes (the ACC) the most powerful basketball conference, I think ever," Krzyzewski said Saturday of the latest round of conference realignment. "I hope our league is able to understand the assets that we've accumulated and what it does to the assets we already have. I think if positioned properly, it sets us apart from anybody, and we should look at where football is or whatever."

Next year, the league will add Syracuse ? which beat Marquette in a Big East matchup for the East Regional title Saturday ? along with Pittsburgh and Notre Dame. The Cardinals are scheduled to join in 2014 when Maryland bolts for the Big Ten.

Krzyzewski is already urging ACC officials to start contemplating what they need to do to avoid other leagues from poaching ACC schools. He said the best way is to rethink how the ACC does business ? down to developing its own TV network or where it holds its tournament.

"In other words, to take a real close look at our league with the new members and say: Why are we different, why are we better and how can we be the top league?" Krzyzewski said. "If we don't do that, then we're negligent, to be quite frank with you."

CIVIC PRIDE

John Salley says he'll feel like a proud host when the Final Four returns to Atlanta.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vbjH7rRj2Uo/NCAA-BracketRacket-roundup

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